On 11/12/2012 10:13 AM, Philippe Verdy wrote:
2012/11/12 Asmus Freytag <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>

    On 11/11/2012 9:26 PM, Philippe Verdy wrote:
    2012/11/12 Asmus Freytag <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>>


        However, the half-filled, five pointed stars are
        "garden-variety" type symbols, and, as I keep pointing out,
        they absolutely fall within the scope of geometrical symbols
        for which there is ample precedent supporting both plain text
        usage as well as a standardized encoding.


    I oppose your argument of "garden-variety" type symbols because
    consistancy of this usge with a defined pattern is not
    demonstated, included in the precise domain where they are found.
    That does not mean that it's not important to show that there is
    "at least one" usage for that that is consistent with plain-text.


That's exactly what I meant. There must be at least one precise domain where this usage is consistent.

No, there's no need for usage to be "consistent". The only requirement is that it occurs.

Unicode is not designed to be in the business of what people write, only in the business of enumerating the basis elements (written signs) needed for that communication.

In some cases, a wide variety of shapes will be understood to represent a single written sign, with the alternation being "stylistic". That's the case you have with letters and fonts.

In other cases, it is not possible to a-priori, or reliably, or ever to decide what variance in shape can legitimately happen under the umbrella of a single written sign (as conventionally understood).

At some point, all you have to go on is the shape itself.

Whether an arrow is barbed or not, single or double stroked, filled or outlined makes no difference in its basic identification as "arrow" and no difference at all when it is used to merely point. However, different contexts (mathematics for one) have ascribed conventional meanings to some of the various appearances.

In order to make the case for encoding them, the primary task is to show that they can and will be used in contrast. If that can be shown, the details of what each style represents is of lesser importance. Those details come into play when the use is not so much one that is in contrast with the "generic" usage, but one where a convention arbitrarily requires a specific shape - and followers of that convention will not recognize a generic substitute as being the particular written sign in question.

A./

I certainly NOT meant ONE AND ONLY ONE. So all the rest about the (for example) use of the full stop for various purposes is not relevant: at least some of these uses are consistent in their domain.

But for now we've not seen any one for the half stars, and I don't know why you think they will be more important to encode than the various other representations of ratings or similar concepts like gauges which largely overwhelm in all these many variants seen the particular cases where an half star MAY very infrequently be used without any consistency, as if it was a sort of "standard" (the purpose of Encoding in Unicode is to endorse such existant standard or norm, either national or international, or adopted by a measurable community over some large enough period, and not in isolated documents, whatever their medium, electronic or physical).


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