Re: Standaridized variation sequences for the Desert alphabet?

From: Michael Everson <everson_at_evertype.com>
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 2017 21:56:14 +0100

On 26 Mar 2017, at 21:48, Richard Wordingham <richard.wordingham_at_ntlworld.com> wrote:

>> Come on, Doug. The letter W is a ligature of V and V. But sure, the glyphs are only informative, so why don’t we use an OO ligature= instead?
>
> A script-stlye font might legitimately use a glyph that looks like a small omega for U+0077 LATIN SMALL LETTER W.

As I said to Asmus, my analogy was about ligatures made from underlying letters. Yours doesn’t apply because it’s just talking about glyph shapes.

> Small omega, of course, is an οο ligature.

True. :-) Isn’t history wonderful?

> More to the point, a font may legitimately use the same glyphs for U+0067 LATIN SMALL LETTER G and U+0261 LATIN SMALL LETTER SCRIPT G.

A good font will still find a way to distinguish them. :-)

> A more serious issue is the multiple forms of U+014A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER ENG, for which the underlying unity comes from their being the capital form of U+014B LATIN SMALL LETTER ENG.

We could have, and should have, solved this problem *long ago* by encoding LATIN CAPITAL LETTER AFRICAN ENG and LATIN SMALL LETTER AFRICAN ENG.

> Are there not serious divergences with the shapes of the Syriac letters?

That is analogous to Roman/Gaelic/Fraktur. That analogy doesn’t apply to these Deseret characters; it’s not a whole-script gestalt.

Michael Everson
Received on Sun Mar 26 2017 - 15:56:34 CDT

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