On 2016/10/04 19:35, Marcel Schneider wrote:
On Mon, 3 Oct 2016 13:47:09 -0700, Asmus Freytag (c) wrote:

Later, the beta and gamma were encoded for phonetic notation, but not the
alpha.

As a result, you can write basic formulas for select compounds, but not all.
Given that these basic formulae don't need full 2-D layout, this still seems
like an arbitrary restriction.

When itʼs about informatics, arbitrary restrictions are precisely what gets me
upset. Those limitations are—as I wrote the other day—a useless worsening
of the usability and usefulness of a product.

This kind of "let's avoid arbitrary limitations" argument works very well for subjects that are theoretical, straightforward, and rigid in nature. Many (but not all) subjects in computer science (informatics) are indeed of such a nature.

The Unicode Consortium (or more specifically, the UTC) does a lot of hard work to create theories where appropriate, and to explain them where possible. But they recognize (and we should do so, too) that in the end, writing is a *cultural* phenomenon, where straightforward, rigid theories have severe limitations.

From a certain viewpoint (the chemist's in the example above), the result may look arbitrary, but from another viewpoint (the phoneticist's), it looks perfectly fine. At first, it looks like it would be easy to fix such problems, but each fix risks to introduce new arbitrariness when seen from somebody else's viewpoint. Getting upset won't help.

Regards,    Martin.

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