On 2003.10.30, 15:48, Jim Allan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I offered a suggestion on cedilla and combining undercomma:
<...>
> One wants to find matches for Romanian and Latvian personal names or
> place names or individual forms using cedilla or undercomma regardless
> of the language in which they are embedded.

All this cedilla vs. undercomma reminds me of something I spotted last
summer (and will have on photo ASAP): Portuguese roadsigns are usually
set in a type whose cedilla glyphs are shaped like undercommas (which
are less frequent than the connecting variant but nonetheless correct).

A large sign at the main western road access to Miranda do Douro,
Portugal's northeasternmost city, informs that if you take the road to
the left out of the next roundabout you will reach the neighboring city
Bragança...

All this quite OK, but for some weird reason the cedilla was placed
under the second "a" instead of under the "c". Now the real challenge is
to try and encode this typo: someone learned in Portuguese would prefer

0042 0072 0061 0067 0061 0327 006E 0063 0061

but any other would never know and have it

0042 0072 0061 0067 0061 0326 006E 0063 0061

of course the same can be said about any correctly spelt word, but these
may be checked against a dictionary and corrected -- typoes cannot.

Anyway -- who ever decided that cedilla and undercomma are different
things? Do they have different origins? Any language / orthography using
both distinctly?...

--                                                                   ____.
António MARTINS-Tuválkin,                                           |  ()|
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>                                           |####|
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