Re: Combining solidus above for transcription of poetic meter

From: eduardo marin <nobody_uses_at_outlook.com>
Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2017 18:46:45 +0000

You would need to propose the entire set of symbols, like the caret the reverse solidus and the x above, furthermore you would need to make the solidus small so it doesn't interfere with the line of text above. So go for it.


________________________________
De: Rebecca T <637275_at_gmail.com>
Enviado: viernes, 17 de marzo de 2017 10:53 a. m.
Para: Unicode Public
Asunto: Combining solidus above for transcription of poetic meter

When transcribing poetic meter (scansion<https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scansion>), it is common to use two symbols
above the line (usually a breve [U+306 ̆] for stressed syllables and a solidus
/ slash [U+2F /] for unstressed syllables) to indicate stress patterns. Ex:

     ̆ / ̆ / ̆ / ̆ / ̆ /
    When I consider how my light is spent

    (John Milton, On His Blindness)

Other symbols used in place of the breve are a cross / x (U+D8 × or U+78 x) or
bullet (U+B7 · or U+2022 •).

This approach, however, is problematic; the lack of a combining slash above
character means that two lines of text must be used, and any non-monospaced
font (or any platform where multiple consecutive spaces are truncated into one
by default, such as HTML) makes keeping the annotations properly aligned with
the text difficult or impossible — depending on your email client, the above
example may be entirely misaligned. Being able to use combining diacritics for
scansion would make these problems obsolete and enable a semantic transcription
of meter.

Would a proposal to add a combining solidus above (and possibly a combining
reversed solidus above to support Hamer, Wright, and Trager-Smith notations) be
supported?
Received on Fri Mar 17 2017 - 13:47:29 CDT

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