On 07/08/2003 09:27, Kent Karlsson wrote:

I was so glad that you got things so nearly right for once, and then
you go and spoil it with:



Another similar case would be the use of a isolated nukta (which
normally modifies a following base character): the sequence
<nukta, SPACE>



Like all other combining characters, NUKTA follows the base character (the consonant) in the character stream. But I'm not sure if <consonant, nukta, vowel> *should* be any different from <consonant, vowel, nukta>, but maybe they should be different since they are not canonically equivalent. (But...)

/kent k





Please can you clarify. Is there anything unusual about positioning of nukta, or is it just like any other combining character? In a sequence <A, B, nukta, C>, where A, B and C are base characters, where is the nukta located relative to these three base characters?

--
Peter Kirk
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (personal)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.qaya.org/





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