>>>>> Edward Cherlin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

    > Chinese scholar-officials in training used to practice writing the
    > 3000 Character Classic over and over and over...and yes, it contained
    > 3000 distinct characters once each.

What is this book? The Thousand Character Classic is famous, of course.

    > URW worked on this problem for a time, and showed a partially developed
    > system for composing Chinese glyphs from components at Seybold in the
    > early 1990s. Mike Parker told me later that URW had to give it up
    > because the shaping behavior was too complex, and it was easier to do
    > the glyphs individually. Automatic hinting didn't work well enough
    > either. Mike also told me that the leading Japanese font houses had
    > their glyphs individually written by master calligraphers, and regarded
    > the originals as their most important intellectual property. At least
    > one refused to license digital versions at all back then, but I haven't
    > heard about later developments.

Yes, in designing *fonts* this would be the case, I completely agree.

I have always been concerned with a discussion of the advantages and
disadvantages of analyzing Chinese characters (not glyphs) into hemigrams
(yielding about 2000), not into purely graphical elements, which would yield
about 300 - 500 and pose the kind of problems mentioned above.

BTW, this thread has been moved to another list, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Jon

-- 
Jon Babcock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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