On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 12:43:05AM +0100, Jean-François Colson wrote: > > (I believe that people associate left ↔ counterclockwise etc only > > because for many shapes, visually, the bottom is just a pedestal > > for the top. So you “grab” the shape “on top”.] > > Look at this picture: > http://www.permisecole.com/code-route/priorites/faux-carrefour-a-sens-giratoire.jpg > Imagine you sit in this car and you want to turn RIGHT. What will > you do? Will you turn the driving wheel clockwise or > counterclockwise?
It is not clear what you mean here. Should I take into account that the car is parked (judging by the hands being not on the steering wheel in 1:51 position)? (And parked where parking is more or less clearly illegal?) Should I take into account that the previous stretch of the road is curving right, but the current short segment is straight? [You see: currently, I teach very small kids, and try to make my problems as unambiguous as possible. ;-] Ilya _______________________________________________ Unicode mailing list [email protected] http://unicode.org/mailman/listinfo/unicode

