AAAAAAAAAAAA WATASIHABAKAYAROUDA GOMENNE
This is what I get when I have no sake and no Unicode book. OOF. So let's see. I have FIRST the shi and THEN the dakuten. Or if you like roses, use ba for bara. Ha and then dakuten, right? Or if you like Pokémon, use ho and then handakuten, right? In one of my games, the ha looks different than a ba-wipe-out-the-dakuten. らんま ★じゅういっちゃん★ ×あかね ーーーーー PTKA IZGT F SFNNGYGB ZRMSFTB WM あまんけ NFEGT FM MGYWPRMKA FM F SFNNGYGB IWOG ねけあず IWKK QGT FT IPQGT ZFXG GHRFK YWJZNM. らんま ーーーーー いいなずけ --- Original Message --- 差出人: Otto Stolz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; 宛先: 11 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED];[EMAIL PROTECTED]; 日時: 01/06/15 21:00 件名: Re: First of many newbie questions >Am 2001-06-14 um 20:17 h PDT hat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> geschrieben: >> With a pen [...]: e, THEN circumflex >> With Unicode decomposed: circumflex, THEN e >> With Unicode composed: e with circumflex >... >> Unicoders, did I say it right? > >No. One item wrong, one item (at least) missing. > >In Unicode, the diacritic always follows its base character. >Cf. TUS 3.0, section 3.5, in particular definition D17, >also in <http://www.unicode.org/unicode/uni2book/ch03.pdf>. >This topic is extensively covered in the FAQ, >see <http://www.unicode.org/unicode/faq/char_combmark.html>. > >The missing item: keyboard input. Many keyboard drivers >indeed implement diacritics via dead keys, i. e., you have >to hit first the circumnflex key, then the "e" key, in >order to enter U+00EA Latin small letter E with circumflex. >However, this has nothing to do with Unicode decomposed >characters. > >Best wishes, > Otto Stolz > >

