On Sun, Jan 20, 2019 at 11:53 PM James Kass via Unicode <unicode@unicode.org> wrote: > Even though /we/ know how to do > it and have software installed to help us do it.
You're emailing from Gmail, which has support for italics in email. The world has, in general, solved this problem. > > How do you envision this working? > > Splendidly! (smile) Social platforms, plain-text editors, and other > applications do enhance their interfaces based on user demand from time > to time. User demand, at least on Twitter, seems established. Then it would take six months, tops, for Twitter to produce and release a rich-text interface for Twitter. Far less time than waiting for Unicode to get around to it. > When corporate > interests aren't interested, third-party developers develop tools. Where are these tools? As I said, third-party developers could develop tools to convert a _underscore_ or /slash/ style italics to real italics and back without waiting on Twitter or Unicode. > Copy/pasting from a web page into a plain-text editor removes any > italics content, which is currently expected behavior. Opinions differ > as to whether that represents mere format removal or a loss of meaning. > Those who consider it as a loss of meaning would perceive a problem with > interoperability. Copy/pasting from a web page into a plain-text editor removes any pictures and destuctures tables, which definitely loses meaning. It also removes strike-out markup, which can have an even more dramatic effect on meaning than removing italics. As you pointed out below, it removes superscripts and subscripts; unless you wish to press for automatic conversion of those to Unicode, that's going to continue happening. It drops bold and font changes, and any number of other things that can carry meaning. > Copy/pasting an example from the page into plain-text results in “ma1, > ma2, ma3, ma4”, although the web page displays the letters as italic and > the digits as (italic) superscripts. IMO, that’s simply wrong with > respect to the superscript digits and suboptimal with respect to the > italic letters. The superscripts show a problem with multiple encoding; even if you think they should be Unicode superscripts, and they look like Unicode superscripts, they might be HTML superscripts. Same thing would happen with italics if they were encoded in Unicode. -- Kie ekzistas vivo, ekzistas espero.