> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
> Of Dean Snyder

> >[Legibility] is not the only consideration in whether we do unify
> >characters, however, and the situation wrt Fraktur does not tell us
> >anything additional that pertains to that issue.
> 
> But the alleged illegibility issue has been raised multiple times as
> being somehow important in the decision making process. I am only
> pointing out that it should be applied judiciously, and I don't believe
> it is currently being so applied by some.

OK, let us summarize, then:

The legibility situation for PH vis-à-vis square Hebrew is similar to the Fraktur 
situation:

- The average speaker of Modern Hebrew (or other language written in square Hebrew) 
finds PH text to be illegible. A relatively small population -- some / all experts in 
Semitic paleography -- has no difficulty with Hebrew-language text presented using PH 
glyphs.

- The majority of users of Latin script cannot read Fraktur, but there is a small 
sub-population that can. 


The situation wrt perceptions regarding character identity for PH is not the same as 
the Fraktur situation:

- In the case of Fraktur, *all* of the Fraktur-using sub-population consider these to 
be Latin characters. (Separate characters encoded for math usage, along with other 
counterparts in other Latin styles, are irrelevant here.)

- In the case of PH, some / all Semitic paleographers consider these to be the same 
characters as square Hebrew characters. There are others, however, who do not.


Can we agree to drop the discussion of Fraktur now?



Peter
 
Peter Constable
Globalization Infrastructure and Font Technologies
Microsoft Windows Division


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