- From: Terry Allen <tallen@sonic.net>
- Date: Fri, 14 Mar 1997 08:37:55 -0800
- To: davep@acm.org, lee@sq.com, w3c-sgml-wg@w3.org
Dave Peterson asks: | Does Unicode or 10646 really define "<" and ">" as left and right | angle brackets? In most of the character sets I've seen, they are | less-than and greater-than signs. And those character sets that | mention angle brackets treat them as different characters. (Not | to mention that they are usually associated with different glyphs | in any glyph-rich font.) Taking only <, Unicode has 003C Less-than sign 2039 Single left-pointing angle quotation mark = left pointing single guillemet [hyphenation sic] 2329 Left-pointing angle bracket = BRA 3008 Left angle bracket (in "CJK symbols and punctuation") [a case of failure to unify with 2329?] | Same question about "`". Really just a stand-alone accent? That involves Unicode's theory of combining characters; I'll leave the answer to Unicode specialists. Regards, Terry Allen Electronic Publishing Consultant tallen[at]sonic.net specializing in Web publishing, SGML, and the DocBook DTD http://www.sonic.net/~tallen/ A Davenport Group Sponsor: http://www.ora.com/davenport/index.html
Received on Friday, 14 March 1997 11:37:09 UTC