Around 14 o'clock on Aug 14, Owen Taylor wrote:

> The current Korean orthography looks like a combination
> of KSC-5607.1987 with the complete Hangul Syllables
> area of Unicode.
>
> However, there are fonts out there that only have
> the Hangul syllables in  KSC-5607.1987 ... one example
> would be the freely available 'Baekmuk Batang' font;
> such fonts are *not* currently recognized as supporting
> Korean.

I'm not happy with this situation as well, but I'm not quite sure what the 
right answer is.  A document using glyphs from KSC-5601.1992 that aren't in 
KSC-5607.1987 will end up using two fonts if the 5607 font is first in the 
list.

Keith Packard        XFree86 Core Team        HP Cambridge Research Lab


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