Marco,
>(For what concerns the Lira Symbol, please don't remove it
>until my last wills are open. I don't want my heirs to inherit
>a few millions question marks. :-)
A good example of an obsolete currency mark is the Brazilian Cruzeiro.
(u\20A2)
They kept that one. Your problem will be finding a font that will support
it. I suggest that you amend your will and change it to Euros.
Carl
-----Original Message-----
From: unicode-bounce@unicode.org [mailto:unicode-bounce@unicode.org]On
Behalf Of Marco Cimarosti
Sent: Wednesday, April 04, 2001 11:29 AM
To: Unicode List; 'D.V. Henkel-Wallace'
Subject: RE: OT obsolete symbols was: Iranian Rial sign proposal
D.V. Henkel-Wallace wrote:
> At 16:03 2001-04-04 +0200, Marco Cimarosti wrote:
>
> > U+20A5 (MILL SIGN): which currency is so worthy to
> require a special
> >symbol for 1/1000?
> >
> >And it is also true for many currency symbols in other blocks:
> >
> > U+00A4 (CURRENCY SIGN): who ever used this?
>
> Both are (/were ?) used in banking; MILL for basis points.
> Next time you fly, peek at the reservation screen and you'll see the
> currency symbol overloaded there too.
> I still read books that use shillings and half crowns; should
> I excise that now-obsolete system of my childhood?
Perhaps I didn't make my point: I was not discussing whether those symbols
have to be in Unicode or not.
Of course obsolete currency symbols *are* necessary -- at least until the
last electronic contract, payroll, or retirement record using that symbol
exists.
(For what concerns the Lira Symbol, please don't remove it until my last
wills are open. I don't want my heirs to inherit a few millions question
marks. :-)
I was rather meaning that many of the characters in the Currency Symbols
block have only a legacy significance, and thus, Roozbeh's Rial sign could
stay in that block too.
_ Marco
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.2 : Fri Jul 06 2001 - 00:17:15 EDT