From: Mark Davis (mark.davis@jtcsv.com)
Date: Tue Feb 11 2003 - 11:13:48 EST
You're welcome.
> (Congratulations also on technical grounds -- for the first time I was
unable to capture a page's HTML source...)
I take no credit for that -- to be able to withstand ISPs periodically dying
out from under me, I use a service called NameSecure, that redirects my
domain from the virtual macchiato.com to the 'real' name (currently
http://www273.pair.com/med/; actually, pair.com has been quite a good
service, so I may change that since there are some disadvantages to domain
redirection).
Mark
________
mark.davis@jtcsv.com
IBM, MS 50-2/B11, 5600 Cottle Rd, SJ CA 95193
(408) 256-3148
fax: (408) 256-0799
----- Original Message -----
From: "Anto'nio Martins-Tuva'lkin" <antonio@tuvalkin.web.pt>
To: <unicode@unicode.org>
Sent: Monday, February 10, 2003 18:36
Subject: Re: LATIN LETTER N WITH DIAERESIS?
> On 2003.01.28, 16:41, Mark Davis <mark.davis@jtcsv.com> wrote:
>
> > I have a chart at
> > http://www.macchiato.com/unicode/composition_chart.html that makes it
> > pretty easy to find all those odd precomposed characters.
>
> A superb resource, thank you! I enjoyed especially to pan it about using
> Opera's zoom facility. (Congratulations also on technical grounds -- for
> the first time I was unable to capture a page's HTML source...)
>
> Anyway, I noted once more that many cyrillic letters I'd consider as
> "base letter + diacritical" composites are not decomposable according to
> Unicode. I planned to dwell deeper into this, but is there a short
> answer for it?
>
> -- ____.
> António MARTINS-Tuválkin (with no diaeresis) | ()|
> <antonio@tuvalkin.web.pt> |####|
> R. Laureano de Oliveira, 64 r/c esq. |
> PT-1885-050 MOSCAVIDE (LRS) Não me invejo de quem tem |
> +351 917 511 459 carros, parelhas e montes |
> http://www.tuvalkin.web.pt/bandeira/ só me invejo de quem bebe |
> http://pagina.de/bandeiras/ a água em todas as fontes |
>
>
>
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