2013/4/13 Behdad Esfahbod <[email protected]>: > On 13-04-12 01:03 PM, Dohyun Kim wrote: >> In short, Uniscribe in Windows 8 is completely following >> KS X 1026-1 only and no more. > > Really? That's a bit odd since Windows typically doesn't break backwards > compatibility of such stuff. > > Can you roughly describe, in no more than 5 lines, what it does? >
As the file size of usp10.dll is very small, some other library might be doing the real job. Anyway, new version of Uniscribe sets up boundaries * between Hangul syllable letter (including LV type) and any trailing Jamo. * between elemental Jamos of a composite Jamo newly added by Unicode 5.2. The latter is acceptable and I have no complaint. The first, however, must be undesirable in open-source world, where various libraries and applications are exchanging texts and informations between them without any control tower. -- Dohyun Kim College of Law, Dongguk University Seoul, Republic of Korea _______________________________________________ HarfBuzz mailing list [email protected] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/harfbuzz
