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Unicode. It defines a supposedly universal system of codes for writing
all the languages of the world. Thanks to Unicode, non-ASCII characters
are no longer the broken mess that they once were; you can write
non-ASCII characters and have a reasonable chance of it actually working
in more than one application.
What it perhaps less known is that Unicode also has codepoints for
really, *really* obscure stuff - alphabets that haven't been written for
thousands of years, such as Linear-B, Cuneiform, etc. This stuff is
presumably highly useful to scholars of ancient languages - and utterly
useless to the rest of human civilisation.
But what I didn't know was this:
http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U1F600.pdf
For real. This is an actual thing.
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Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
> What it perhaps less known is that Unicode also has codepoints for
> really, *really* obscure stuff
Hmm, it seems that Cirth[1] and Tengwar[2] are still not in there, but
they are noted on the roadmap[3].
[1] http://std.dkuug.dk/JTC1/SC2/WG2/docs/n1642/n1642.htm
[2] http://std.dkuug.dk/JTC1/SC2/WG2/docs/n1641/n1641.htm
[3] http://www.unicode.org/roadmaps/smp/
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On Mon, 10 Jun 2013 20:01:21 +0100, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
> This stuff is presumably highly useful to scholars of ancient languages
> - and utterly useless to the rest of human civilisation.
Well, ancient language scholars use computers, too. ;)
The link you found, though - very interesting. I wonder...
😹
Yep, it's in the GNOME3 charmap app. :)
Jim
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>> This stuff is presumably highly useful to scholars of ancient languages
>> - and utterly useless to the rest of human civilisation.
>
> Well, ancient language scholars use computers, too. ;)
Indeed.
> The link you found, though - very interesting. I wonder...
>
> 😹
>
> Yep, it's in the GNOME3 charmap app. :)
I was wondering... Just because a Unicode codepoint exists, does not
mean that any font anywhere on Earth actually has a glyph for it. But
apparently whatever monospace font Thunderbird uses does... (Not that
the glyph is legible.)
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On Sat, 15 Jun 2013 09:08:15 +0100, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
>> The link you found, though - very interesting. I wonder...
>>
>> 😹
>>
>> Yep, it's in the GNOME3 charmap app. :)
>
> I was wondering... Just because a Unicode codepoint exists, does not
> mean that any font anywhere on Earth actually has a glyph for it. But
> apparently whatever monospace font Thunderbird uses does... (Not that
> the glyph is legible.)
Well, true, and I see many unicode characters in the charmap application
that don't render for me.
But it's fun to see that there are a lot that do. I was surprised when I
was looking at the Egyptian hieroglyphs codepage that those actually do
render on my system.
Jim
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