Sure: People find a font that isn’t a truly functional, Unicode-conformant font 
for script X and…


-          They try using it, find it doesn’t display text as expected, and 
conclude that Unicode doesn’t work for their script

-          The font has glyphs mapped from ASCII characters; they try typing 
and it seems to display their text as desired, so they start generating 
content. Now we have data interop problems.

-          The font kinda works, but not perfectly. They decide that they can 
fix it by just changing some of the glyphs to certain presentation forms and by 
adding certain other glyphs on some unused code positions. Then they start 
generating content. Now we have data interop problems.

The last scenario is really similar to the serious problems we have now for 
Myanmar. Iow, this isn’t just hypothetical.



Peter

From: Shriramana Sharma [mailto:samj...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2014 4:48 PM
To: Peter Constable
Cc: Andrew West; Andrew Glass (WINDOWS); Unicode Public
Subject: Re: fonts for U7.0 scripts

On Thursday, October 23, 2014, Peter Constable 
<peter...@microsoft.com<mailto:peter...@microsoft.com>> wrote:
. But publishing fonts created for the purpose of chart production may lead to 
all kinds of problems if they are not truly functional, Unicode-conformant 
fonts -

Dear Peter,

Can you clarify what "all kinds of problems" you foresee?


--
Shriramana Sharma ஶ்ரீரமணஶர்மா श्रीरमणशर्मा
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