From: "Peter Kirk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > The representative glyph for this character seems to be good. But, given > that the name is so misleading but cannot be changed, it is good that > there is a note "= gha" in the Unicode character charts. > > But in the light of naming errors like this one implementers should be > advised not to use character names, because they are not reliably helpful.
In Unicode, the glyphs are normative in a way that they allow character identification, but they are not mandatory, so they are mostly informative. Names are normative, but if they are wrong, we have no other hint to see which semantic is good. The "= gha" notice in the charts is also informative, not normative... In this case, the assignment is weak, and it allows several interpretations. Fixing it in a later specification may break applications that have already been created to map legacy charsets to this code point. What can be done then? Only a more informative notice in the charts, which explicits how this character should be used and interpreted... in this case the interpretation as "gha" should be more explicit, and a note should be given that says explicitly that "IO" is misleading and just relates to a possible approximate glyph. My view about the glyph in Arail Unicode MS is that it keeps the weakness of interpretation as either "o with a iota hook" or as "gha" as a variant of "g" (which was initially what I read when I first found it). Concerning the character you were initially describing, I had not noticed it in the GIF image you sent to the list which also displays the I with hook below, which is so close to the angular L letter with a final hook (in fact your exhibit shows only the uppercase letter I with hook, not the lowercase one). Thanks for correcting it. So be careful when describing characters, as I did not notice you were exhibiting the two letters simultaneously. Notably because you described lowercase letters (and the Latin GHA/IO letter has nearly the same form in both cases, the lowercase being like a smallcap of the corresponding capital letter). So we have effectively two letters in your image: - the "IO"/GHA uppercase letter, - and the L-shaped I with a downward hook on the right (which has been deprecated in favor of the "b"-shaped I with upward hook on the right, which closely ressembles to the cyrillic soft-sign, but which looks more like a reversed Gamma with a upward hook connected on its right, and sometimes is handwritten like a reversed-esh with a lower loop or curl by people more used to the Latin script).

