Re: GB 18030 question

From: Markus Scherer (markus.scherer@jtcsv.com)
Date: Fri Feb 15 2002 - 20:23:51 EST


Yung-Fong Tang wrote:

> By printing a glyph for those character in the GB18030, it really
> DEFINED what those characters should be in Unicode- which I think is not

It does not make it a character from the point of view of the Unicode standard, but it amounts to an "agreement between sender and recipient" that if they interpret the data in a GB 18030-related context, they treat this code point as being assigned this character.
It's like agreeing to have Seuss characters there and printing something with a code chart with the Seuss characters.

You may want to get a font that is designed for GB 18030 and see if it shows that glyph for that code point.
Using such a font should be sufficient to enter into the above "agreement".

Similarly, when you are on a Windows or IBM or Apple machine and you display PUA code points, you will want to display the glyphs/characters that Windows respectively IBM or Apple assign there, at least with _some_ font(s).

markus



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.2 : Fri Feb 15 2002 - 19:43:14 EST