At 12:10 AM +0900 4/8/01, Tomohiro KUBOTA wrote: >If you really want to insist unification of Japanese and Chinese >glyph, please insist unification of Latin and Cyrillic glyph also. The same principles of unification have in fact been applied to Latin and Cyrillic. Kurdish Cyrillic Q, for example, is unified with Latin Q. Within Cyrillic, quite different glyphs for U+0442, CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER TE have been unified. They look somewhat like T and m. Latin letters that appear in ASCII cannot be unified with Russian Cyrillic letters because of the source separation rule. They have separate code points in some Chinese and Japanese character sets, and therefore must be kept separate in Unicode and ISO 10646. Basic Greek cannot be unified with either Latin or Cyrillic, for the same reason. "On the Internet, it is very important to check your facts before posting nonsense."--James "Kibo" Parry - Linux-UTF8: i18n of Linux on all levels Archive: http://mail.nl.linux.org/lists/
