On Wed 24 Jan 2018 at 16:18:26 (+0100), David Kastrup wrote: > Karlin High <[email protected]> writes: > > > On 1/24/2018 4:34 AM, David Kastrup wrote: > >> { ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ } > > > > How did you do that, David? > > Probably a copy&paste from a Unicode table of math fraktur code points. > Emacs identifies the first of the above as > > position: 488 of 866 (56%), restriction: <195-867>, column: 7 > character: ๐ (displayed as ๐) (codepoint 120198, #o352606, > #x1d586) > preferred charset: unicode (Unicode (ISO10646)) > code point in charset: 0x1D586 > script: mathematical > syntax: w which means: word > category: .:Base, L:Left-to-right (strong) > to input: type "C-x 8 RET 1d586" or "C-x 8 RET MATHEMATICAL BOLD > FRAKTUR SMALL A" > buffer code: #xF0 #x9D #x96 #x86 > file code: #xF0 #x9D #x96 #x86 (encoded by coding system > utf-8-emacs-unix) > display: by this font (glyph code) > xft:-PfEd-Unifont Upper-normal-normal-normal-*-15-*-*-*-d-0-iso10646-1 > (#x156D) > > Character code properties: > name: MATHEMATICAL BOLD FRAKTUR SMALL A > general-category: Ll (Letter, Lowercase) > decomposition: (font 97) (font 'a') > > > I'm using Thunderbird here, I think it has the Consolas font for > > plain-text email. That quoted text comes through as pretty first-rate > > Fraktur letters, which I sure wasn't expecting to see in a plain-text > > email. > > Unicode has a lot of codepoints. I mean, there are even things like > > ๐ฝ > > which you need to display in a large font to even have a chance at > recognizing. In my default font size it looks like some sort of camel > or space invaders attacker.
โฆ and of course the attachment itself was correctly encoded thus: Content-Type: text/x-lilypond; charset=utf-8 Content-Disposition: inline; filename=tabber.ly Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable which mutt shows as [text/x-lilypond, quoted, utf-8, 3.5K] Cheers, David. _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
