On Thu, 18 Jul 2019 01:54:52 +0200 Philippe Verdy via Unicode <unicode@unicode.org> wrote:In fact the ligatures system for the "cursive" Egyptian Hieratic is so complex (and may also have its own variants showing its progression from Hieroglyphs to Demotic or Old Coptic), that probably Hieratic should no longer be considered "unified" with Hieroglyphs, and its existing ISO 15924 code is then not represented at all in Unicode.Writing hieroglyphic text as plain text has only been supported since Unicode 12.0, so it may take a little while to explore workable encoding conventions. A significant issue is that the hieratic script is right to left but Unicode only standardises the encoding of left-to-right transcriptions. I don't recall the difference between retrograde v. normal text being declared a style difference.
Use directional overrides. Those have been in the standard
forever.
A./
For comparison, we still have no guidance on how to encode sexagesimal Mesopotamian cuneiform numbers, e.g. '610' v. '20' written using the U graphic element. Richard.
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