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Re: Red Hat 8 now uses UTF-8 by default for all non-CJK users



> And different glyphs are needed in a document which wishes to show the
> difference between English and German conventions of the 1920's. Does
> that mean that Fraktur and Antigua should have been encoded
> seperately?


Somehow I think the differences are somewhat more significant than that.
Do you think it is possible to fully represent traditional Chinese and
Japanese adequately in a single font?

Ive read comments by some Japanese claiming that a large number of the
kanji in a chinese-oriented font seemed ill-proportioned, even though
they contained the exact same stroke order (and not in a stylistic
sense).

--
Linux-UTF8:   i18n of Linux on all levels
Archive:      http://mail.nl.linux.org/linux-utf8/