On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 2:09 AM Torsten Hämmerle <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Freeman Gilmore wrote
> > That is interesting, it is in the Private Use Area of Unicode, same area
> > as
> > Bravura.
>
> Yup. In Emmentaler, there is one big exception I forgot to mention (but
> this
> has nothing to do with accidentals):
>
> The dynamic characters (f, m, p, etc.) are part of Emmentaler's text
> encoding and can be found in their "proper" places (just as ordinary text)
> so that you can use them directly by typing something like
> \markup { \dynamic sms }
>
Yes i found that in the Notation Manual 3.3.3 in my search.
>
> The other glyphs are considered non-standard and therefore, all of them
> have
> been stowed away into the Private Use Area, just one after the other.
> Mostly
> encoding vector after encoding vector, sorted in alphabetical order (by
> glyph name) or, more precisely, just as they are generated in
> metafont/metapost:
> rests, accidentals, dots, arrowheads, scripts, trills, clefs, etc., etc.
>
> Every time a new glyph joins the party, they all get shifted around from
> release to release.
> The accidentals in 2.20 will have moved compared to 2.18.2, because new
> rest
> symbols (256th, 512th, 1024th rests!) have been shoved in in front of the
> accidentals. This way, the sharp glyph will have moved from U+E110 to
> U+E113. And that's just one out of many examples.
>
SMuFL uses a name ans code point that does not Chang. It leave plenty of
room along the way for adding similar glyph.
Thank you, ƒg
> Cheers,
> Torsten
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> --
> Sent from: http://lilypond.1069038.n5.nabble.com/User-f3.html
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