Eric Scace" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>    The set of symbols in use has been standardized for many decades
>  by the World Meteorological Organization.

Anywhere this standard can be found on line? or in an official publication?

--
Christopher J. Fynn



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Eric Scace" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, December 04, 2003 2:33 AM
Subject: meteorological symbols


> Hello --
>
>    I am at the start of a font development project.  The target font will
include some meteorological symbols which were in
> extensive use in the mid-20th century on teletypewriter networks used to
exchange meteorological data around the world.  But there
> is a stumbling block in the assignment of certain glyphs: no apparent Unicode
allocation.
>
>    At the risk of re-triggering yet another "what is a character"
discussion... Have meteorological symbols been considered for
> incorporation in Unicode?  (A search of the archives did not turn up any
discussion.)
>
>    The set of symbols in use has been standardized for many decades by the
World Meteorological Organization.  The total set is
> around 150 characters.  However, some are already available in Unicode in
various locations (arrows, simple thunderstorm symbol,
> lightning, and other glyphs which can be re-applied in their meteorological
context such as various kinds of fog)... and some others
> can be decomposed in a manner similar to basic letters and diacritical marks.
>
>    Thanks for your kind assistance.
>
> -- Eric Scace
>
>
>
>


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