> My bet is that they'll prefer using whatever code they want, hacking
fonts as necessary to overtake another political symbol when they'll want.
They could liberate a code point from the private use area.
2016-06-24 14:10 GMT-03:00 Philippe Verdy <verdy_p_at_wanadoo.fr>:
> My bet is that they'll prefer using whatever code they want, hacking fonts
> as necessary to overtake another political symbol when they'll want. They
> could do that easily with Webfonts today (by designing a tiny webfont with
> just one glyph mapped to any code point, including some ASCII symbol such
> as the DOLLAR sign). They would even refuse any normalization and would not
> even use the codepoint proposed for them, or by remapping some ASCII-art
> string (the classic emoticons of Usenet; if we even attempt to define
> standard colors, or glyph design, they'll invent another incompatible
> design, will change colors, will rotate it, will change it into an
> exploding star...). However the historic anarchists symbol that was seen on
> walls and painted banners in Europe in the 19th and early 20th century was
> only black.
>
> And it was not really a star, but derived from the A letter in a circle,
> with the horizontal bar frequently replaced by some fire arm, or slnated
> and looking more like a thin arrow head slightly pointing upward (Various
> decorations could be added on top: a striker throwing a mollotov... or
> flowers; a plus sign; a "V" on top to mean "victory"). The strokes were
> most often very irregular, as if they were brushed very rapidly on a wall.
> More polished forms have been used where it is a standard A in an circle
> open at the bottom and a small curved leg. Not all of them want flags with
> colors. Other groups just use a red-filled standard 5-pointed star, over a
> plain black background.
>
> In London still today, there's most often no star, just a red and black
> flag (color cut on the diagonal). The red side or black side may be
> attached on the hanging stem, but generally a black side is below the right
> side. The red color varies also (green, dark purple, pink, orange,
> white...) but the black color is seems to be always there (even if it's
> just the classic circle A, that black may be used to fill the glyph, or the
> background. There's no dedicated support, the symbols may be used
> everywhere, integrated in all sort of graphics, made with various materials.
>
> The flag may be raised in all positions. In Australia, this is a vertical
> rainbow over a black area.
>
> Other symbols of anarchism include a closed hand (fist) raised upward (in
> a sign of protest) with a venom snake. The anarchist movements have always
> been inventive and protecting against all sort of political regimes,
> democartic or not, in fact they protest against all forms of state
> government, and their official symbols.
>
> 2016-06-24 17:55 GMT+02:00 Garth Wallace <gwalla_at_gmail.com>:
>
>> But would anarchists even want their symbol to be encoded?
>>
>> On Fri, Jun 24, 2016 at 7:04 AM, "Jörg Knappen" <jknappen_at_web.de> wrote:
>>
>>> Talking about fancy five stars, besides the vertically split ones there
>>> is the "Anarchist star" (a symbol for anarcho-syndicalism)
>>> with a diagonal split in a upper left red half and a lower left black
>>> half. Since there are political and ideological symbols encoded
>>> in UNicode, maybe this one is worth encoding as well (probably twice,
>>> once as a black and white plain symbol and once as a colourful Emoji).
>>>
>>> See here:
>>> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Anarcho-Syndicalism#/media/File:Anarchist_star.svg
>>>
>>> FIVE PIONTED STAR WITH BLACK LOWER RIGHT HALF = anarchist star
>>> ANARCHIST STAR EMOJI
>>>
>>> --Jörg Knappen
>>>
>>> *Gesendet:* Freitag, 24. Juni 2016 um 14:12 Uhr
>>> *Von:* "Frédéric Grosshans" <frederic.grosshans_at_gmail.com>
>>> *An:* unicode_at_unicode.org
>>> *Betreff:* Re: Adding half-star to Unicode?
>>> Le 24/06/2016 00:37, Leo Broukhis a écrit :
>>> > For a previous discussion on the topic, please see
>>> > the thread "Missing geometric shapes" around 11/12/12
>>> The thread starts here :
>>> http://www.unicode.org/mail-arch/unicode-ml/y2012-m11/0008.html
>>>
>>> It contains an example of half-filled star used in RTL (Hebrew) context,
>>> in an advertisement in Haaretz here
>>> http://www.unicode.org/mail-arch/unicode-ml/y2012-m11/0024.html
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
Received on Fri Jun 24 2016 - 12:21:10 CDT
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