These are very handsome and interesting. But for the purposes of my project, 
which involves folks here, there, and everywhere working on editorial problems 
relating to digital transcriptions of Early Modern texts, the cardinal 
requirement is that the character can be found on and deployed from any 
Windows, Linux, or OS 10 machin. We have used the black dot (\u25cf) as a 
kludge. Since it does not occur in the source data, there is no ambiguity. It 
is relatively easy to produce on a keyboard. From a visual perspective it is 
preferable to the diamond with a question mark—although that is semantically 
more obvious. But it is visually very disruptive, and it is much harder to find 
on a standard character map than the black dot, which is predictably located in 
geometrical shapes. 

It’s a kludge, but it works, and it looks to me superior to any of the 
alternatives. But I can be persuaded otherwise. 

With thanks for the help of all of you

MM

On 12/22/16, 6:03 AM, "William_J_G Overington" <[email protected]> 
wrote:

    Martin Mueller wrote:
    
    > Is there a Unicode character that says “I represent an alphanumerical 
character, but I don’t know which”.  This is a very common problem in the 
transcription of historical texts where you have lacunas. 
    
    I have been reading this thread with interest.
    
    I have produced nine designs for glyphs.
    
    If you so choose, you can assign specific meanings to one, some, or all of 
them. If you need more than nine designs please say.
    
    Please find attached nine .png files, one glyph design in each file.
    
    The size of each of the images and the names of the files follow the 
following specification.
    
    
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.unicode.org_emoji_selection.html-23images&d=CwIFaQ&c=yHlS04HhBraes5BQ9ueu5zKhE7rtNXt_d012z2PA6ws&r=rG8zxOdssqSzDRz4x1GLlmLOW60xyVXydxwnJZpkxbk&m=rtTUf0iueQJPUWv8oFWfDyJBHafFPYQJ5mZelPYN_mE&s=VMzwU8ONTcLHvFcK5hcR9yj5TT3SzYSs-YYB8IGRq_A&e=
 
    
    However the images are not congruently in accordance with those rules as 
there is a one pixel width transparent surround as the designs were made using 
filled rectangles upon a theoretical seven row by seven column arrangement of 
blocks, each block ten pixels by ten pixels. I used the Serif PagePlus X7 
desktop publishing program.
    
    The characters are not intended as emoji, I just applied the above 
specification as it is convenient to make the designs compatible with that 
specification as far as possible.
    
    I have assigned Private Use Area code points of U+EA60 through to U+EA68 to 
the glyphs. The specific code point for each glyph is indicated in the file 
name of the image of that glyph.
    
    I have chosen those code points as the Alt codes for U+EA60 through to 
U+EA68 are Alt 60000 through to Alt 60008 respectively. My thinking being that 
if the designs are implemented in fonts that those easy to remember Alt codes 
might be helpful to someone using the Microsoft WordPad program.
    
    I checked that those code points are not being used in the Medieval Unicode 
Font Initiative.
    
    
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__skaldic.abdn.ac.uk_db.php-3Fcp-3DEA-26if-3Dmufi-26table-3Dmufi-5Fchar&d=CwIFaQ&c=yHlS04HhBraes5BQ9ueu5zKhE7rtNXt_d012z2PA6ws&r=rG8zxOdssqSzDRz4x1GLlmLOW60xyVXydxwnJZpkxbk&m=rtTUf0iueQJPUWv8oFWfDyJBHafFPYQJ5mZelPYN_mE&s=z5-Sl6Aw2Dr0dYsoZ9xgzqCpXjzoot1TnwUrJKqNHpo&e=
 
    
    Readers who so choose are welcome to implement these glyphs in fonts.
    
    The 
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.unicode.org_emoji_selection.html-23images&d=CwIFaQ&c=yHlS04HhBraes5BQ9ueu5zKhE7rtNXt_d012z2PA6ws&r=rG8zxOdssqSzDRz4x1GLlmLOW60xyVXydxwnJZpkxbk&m=rtTUf0iueQJPUWv8oFWfDyJBHafFPYQJ5mZelPYN_mE&s=VMzwU8ONTcLHvFcK5hcR9yj5TT3SzYSs-YYB8IGRq_A&e=
  specification mentions licensing. For the avoidance of doubt these designs 
are free to share and use.
    
    A Private Use Area solution is not ideal, yet may be helpful in getting 
things started and could be helpful in establishing usage, which could help in 
getting the characters implemented into regular Unicode.
    
    I am attaching the images to this email. The nature of the email system is 
that the order of the images might not be in the order of the code points, yet 
each image has an indication of the code point within its name so that 
information should help to resolve any such problem in the transmission of the 
email attachments.
    
    William Overington
    
    Thursday 22 December 2016
    
    


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