Asmus Freytag wrote:

The "critical mass" of support is now assumed for currency symbols,
some special symbols like emoji, and should be granted to additional
types of symbols, punctuations and letters, whenever there is an
"authority" that controls normative orthography or notation.

Whether this is for an orthography reform in some country or addition
to the standard math symbols supported by AMS journals, such external
adoption can signify immediate "critical need" and "critical mass of
option" for the relevant characters.

To me, it is remarkable that the "critical mass of support" argument that is applied, entirely appropriately, to new currency symbols (however misguided the motives for such might be) and math symbols and characters for people's names, is now also applied to BURRITO and UNICORN FACE.

But then, I remember when folks used to cite the WG2 "Principles and Procedures" document for examples of what was and was not a good candidate for encoding. That seems so long ago now.

--
Doug Ewell | Thornton, CO, USA | http://ewellic.org ­
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