Ar 01:05 -0800 2001-01-24, scríobh Marco Cimarosti: >Some of these characters are quite common in modern life (e.g., "oxygen" is >certainly written somewhere in all Chinese hospitals), so it would surprise >me if they are not in Unicode. There is no reason the Chinese or anyone else cannot write this with LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O and SUBSCRIPT TWO. Michael Everson ** Everson Gunn Teoranta ** http://www.egt.ie 15 Port Chaeimhghein Íochtarach; Baile Átha Cliath 2; Éire/Ireland Mob +353 86 807 9169 ** Fax +353 1 478 2597 ** Vox +353 1 478 2597 27 Páirc an Fhéithlinn; Baile an Bhóthair; Co. Átha Cliath; Éire
- Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Erik Garr�s
- Re: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) David Starner
- RE: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Marco Cimarosti
- Re: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) akerbeltz.alba
- RE: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Michael Everson
- RE: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Marco Cimarosti
- RE: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Erik Garr�s
- RE: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Pierpaolo BERNARDI
- RE: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Pierpaolo BERNARDI
- RE: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Thomas Chan
- RE: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Pierpaolo BERNARDI
- Re: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) John Jenkins
- Re: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Kenneth Whistler
- Re: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) John Cowan
- Re: Chemistry on chinesse. (CJK) Pierpaolo BERNARDI

