Re: Latin digraph characters

2001-03-03 Thread Marcin 'Qrczak' Kowalczyk
Wed, 28 Feb 2001 13:35:17 -0800 (GMT-0800), Pierpaolo BERNARDI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> pisze: > The initial character of the name is transliterated as CH in English, > TCH in French, TSCH in German, C or CI in Italian, C WITH CARON in the > official Russian transliteration. And CZ in Polish. --

Bidi 3.1.0

2001-03-03 Thread Roozbeh Pournader
Dear Unicoders, Where can I find a copy of Bidi 3.1.0? It is referenced in PDUTR #27, but it is linked to the 3.0.1 version. I am specially interested in checking the "Retaining Format Codes" section. --roozbeh

RE: Help with Greek special casing

2001-03-03 Thread Carl W. Brown
Mark, "We are right in the middle of the Unicode 3.1 release" You have a new special casing file as part of the 3.1 beta and I thought that this would be a part of 3.1. http://www.unicode.org/Public/3.1-Update/SpecialCasing-4d1.beta.txt That file defines FINAL as: # FINAL: The letter is no

Unicode and ISO terminology

2001-03-03 Thread J M Sykes
Can anyone tell me whether there is any prospect of terminology being harmonised or reconciled between Unicode and ISO 10646? A joint glossary would be useful. Obvious synonyms (e.g. byte vs. octet) don't bother me, but differences between the structures apparently defined by the two sets of term

Re: Help with Greek special casing

2001-03-03 Thread Mark Davis
Yes, that was filed as a bug, and will be fixed the next time we update the case mappings. We are right in the middle of the Unicode 3.1 release, so that will be coming sometime later. Mark - Original Message - From: "Nick Nicholas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Unicode List" <[EMAIL PROTECTE

RE: Help with Greek special casing

2001-03-03 Thread Nick Nicholas
At 09:56 -0800 2001-03-01, Carl W. Brown wrote: >It looks like the Unicode TR 21 special casing rules for the Greek final >sigma are not quite right. > >The final sigma in modern Greek should only be used at the end of a word >including the case where separate words are joined with hard hyphens.