On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 12:24:29PM +0900, Martin J. Dürst wrote:
> On 2017/01/11 17:32, Richard Wordingham wrote:
>
> > The truly straight Unicode approach in HTML is to use 1945.
> > Just entering those 5 characters into a text entry box in Firefox gave
> > me a properly formatted vulgar
> This is a character under ballot for Amendment 1 to the 5th edition. It
> isn't part of the repertoire planned for publication as part of Unicode 10.0
> in June.
I see. Thank you for the information.
I'll remember it until Unicode 11's term.
2017-01-12 4:37 GMT+09:00 Ken Whistler
On 2017/01/11 17:32, Richard Wordingham wrote:
The truly straight Unicode approach in HTML is to use 1945.
Just entering those 5 characters into a text entry box in Firefox gave
me a properly formatted vulgar fraction. That is how vulgar fractions
are supposed to work. Unfortunately, one may
On Tue, 10 Jan 2017 17:25:06 -0800
Asmus Freytag wrote:
> On 1/10/2017 2:54 PM, Richard Wordingham wrote:
> There are many different tacks that can be taken to make spoofing
> more difficult.
>
> Among them, for critical identifiers:
> 1) allow only a restricted
On 12/9/2016 7:04 AM, Ken Whistler wrote:
About the bug you note in BidiReferenceC, I'll investigate.
Any news on this?
Thanks,
-Fabian
This is a character under ballot for Amendment 1 to the 5th edition. It
isn't part of the repertoire planned for publication as part of Unicode
10.0 in June.
So if you want to have any impact on the subhead used in the charts for
A7AF, the correct mechanism now is to get a national body
On Wed, 11 Jan 2017 08:32:12 +, Richard Wordingham wrote:
>
> On Wed, 11 Jan 2017 07:00:52 +0100 (CET)
> Marcel Schneider wrote:
>
> > The phenomenon isnʼt actually limited to plain text environments. See:
> >
> >
On Wed, 11 Jan 2017 07:00:52 +0100 (CET)
Marcel Schneider wrote:
> The phenomenon isnʼt actually limited to plain text environments. See:
>
> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13878772/how-to-display-classic-fractions-in-css-javascript
> | You can also use the straight
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