- From: Richard Ishida <ishida@w3.org>
- Date: Tue, 6 Apr 2004 10:56:30 +0100
- To: "'Asmus Freytag'" <asmusf@ix.netcom.com>
- Cc: <www-international@w3.org>, <www-i18n-comments@w3.org>
Do you mean use 'encoding form' where it says 'Unicode encoding' or where it says 'and forms'? See the text at http://www.w3.org/International/tutorials/tutorial-char-enc.html#choosing RI > -----Original Message----- > From: Asmus Freytag [mailto:asmusf@ix.netcom.com] > Sent: 06 April 2004 01:52 > To: Richard Ishida > Cc: www-international@w3.org; www-i18n-comments@w3.org > Subject: RE: New Tutorial: Character sets & encodings in > XHTML, HTML and CSS > > > At 03:18 AM 3/25/2004, Richard Ishida wrote: > >Changed to: > >A Unicode encoding can support many languages and can > accommodate pages > >and forms in any mixture of those languages. Its use also > eliminates... > > Do you mean 'encoding form' here? > > I admit I'm responding to this without having tracked it back to the > section in the text, > so this may not be at issue, but just in case it is, I want > to put a word > in for not using > as Unicode-defined terms as much as possible when referring > to aspects of > Unicode. > > A./ > >
Received on Tuesday, 6 April 2004 05:56:29 UTC