Elaine,

E. Keown wrote:
         Elaine Keown
         Tucson

Dear Michael Everson:

The *point* is that everything that's screwed up in
Unicode Biblical Hebrew (well, almost everything)
could have been done correctly in the first edition of
Unicode, if the early Unicoders had listened to Alan
Groves and others.



I don't know how anyone else on the list feels but I am really tired of global and unspecified claims of errors in Unicode. I seem to recall someone who claimed that more than half of the characters necessary to encode Biblical Hebrew were missing from Unicode but has been unable for years to produce a list of the missing characters.


Yes, yes, had it been done correctly...., whatever you think about how it was done, what are we gaining now by chewing over old hurts and slights?

The Semitic scholars I have spoken to are very interested in getting it right for a number of Semitic languages and not avenging old wrongs.

Offering specific comments and evidence on what you think are errors would be a lot more productive. With an emphasis on evidence and not opinions based on undisclosed evidence. And excluding the "somebody done somebody wrong" song that seems so popular in this thread.

I have in the past and will no doubt in the future disagree with any number of people on this list but there is little hope of a useful discussion if all we do is cite opinions and not evidence to each other.

Patrick

--
Patrick Durusau
Director of Research and Development
Society of Biblical Literature
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Chair, V1 - Text Processing: Office and Publishing Systems Interface
Co-Editor, ISO 13250, Topic Maps -- Reference Model

Topic Maps: Human, not artificial, intelligence at work!





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