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Considering past rejected attempts #8

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oxinabox opened this issue Jun 6, 2017 · 11 comments
Open

Considering past rejected attempts #8

oxinabox opened this issue Jun 6, 2017 · 11 comments

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@oxinabox
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oxinabox commented Jun 6, 2017

Looking at https://www.quora.com/Why-is-there-no-character-for-superscript-q-in-Unicode

It mentions some past attempts:

superscript q

These comments were found:

Also
All subscripts and superscript letters:

I think there is probably a way to use document numbers to look up more about the rejections.

@stevengj
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stevengj commented Jun 6, 2017

I think I already commented on these previous rejections in the draft; did I miss something?

@oxinabox
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oxinabox commented Jun 6, 2017

Sorry it looks like I never completed my thoughts before posting the issue.

You give some solid reasons for the difference for sure.
But I think it would be good to point-by-point quote and refute the rejection reasons.
Either in the document itself, or in an issue, to just make sure our coverage is tight.

This means finding the formal rejection notices.
I'll give that a shot shortly.

@stevengj
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stevengj commented Jun 6, 2017

Yes, if you can find the formal rejection notices that would be extremely helpful! I never managed to locate those.

@oxinabox
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oxinabox commented Jun 7, 2017

the minutes where the proposal for a q was rejected are terse to say the least
I suggest that it is worth contacting Karl Pentzlin.
Not only to get the exact rejection reason.
But because he is someone who has made many proposal's to the Unicode Technical Committee.
His feedback would be valuable.

It looks like: LATIN LETTER SMALL CAPITAL Q
Is already incoming
AllocationL A7AF
Count: 1
Name: LATIN LETTER SMALL CAPITAL Q
UTC Status 2016-Jan-25 Accepted
ISO StageL 2016-Jun-07 Stage 5

http://www.unicode.org/alloc/Pipeline.html

Re: http://unicode.org/L2/L2011/11208-n4068.pdf
I have found some more feedback:
from German NB http://unicode.org/L2/L2011/11227-n4085.pdf
But I can't find it in the minutes:
It was a agendaed as C.2: http://www.unicode.org/L2/L2011/11260.htm
But never discussed AFAICT: http://www.unicode.org/consortium/utc-minutes/UTC-128-201108.html

@stevengj
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stevengj commented Jun 16, 2017

Because the super/subscript Latin characters were added at different times for different reasons, they don't necessarily go well together in any given font. My current thinking is to suggest that the complete set be re-added as "mathematical superscript a", "mathematical superscript b", etcetera in a new block.

@stevengj
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I sent Pentzlin an email.

@cshaa
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cshaa commented Feb 16, 2020

@stevengj Did you recieve a response? Did you learn something valuable you'd like to share?

@stevengj
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I still haven't gotten around to finishing this proposal up and submitting it…

@thchr
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thchr commented Feb 14, 2021

Just happened upon this semi-recent related proposal (L2/18-206) which seems to have been rejected in 2018 (section 1.b, p. 2).
The L2/18-206 proposal doesn't seem particularly thorough but I figured it might be worthwhile to point it out here - and particularly to highlight the consortium's comments:

Document: L2/18-206 1120 more superscripts, subscripts and small capitals – Grochowski

Comments: We reviewed this document, which requests adding 1,120 superscripts, subscripts, and
small capitals. In our opinion, adding 1,120 such characters is not a good idea architecturally. A full
proposal with orthographic evidence for the specific characters could, however, be considered, if the
author provided such a document.

Recommendations: We recommend the UTC note this document, relaying to the author that if
orthographic evidence were provided, the request could be re-considered (although a full proposal is
required).

I'm not completely clear on what they mean by "orthographic evidence", but I'm assuming it's coming back to the point raised elsewhere in this repo that the typesetting of sub/superscripts itself need to be more than a mere resizing.

PS. This strange guess-if-the-sub/superscript-exists is such a pain.

@stevengj
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stevengj commented Feb 15, 2021

I think "orthographic evidence" refers to evidence of the characters being in use and having semantic meaning distinct from formatting.

@thchr
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thchr commented Jun 24, 2024

A separate attempt was made in 2021 with the L2/21-043 proposal, but also failed.
To my mind, it's a nice, well-structured proposal, arguing the need for subscript variants from a different angle (mainly phonetics usage).

The Unicode voting group unfortunately were also not swayed by this proposal, opting to simply note the proposal but take no action:

Document: L2/21-043 Unicode request for subscript modifier-letter support – Miller
Comments: This proposal covers subscript modifiers in a variety of traditions. The proposed subscript modifier letters were never in official IPA usage.

During discussion there was concern that some of the figures do not make a clear case for the proposed subscripts to be carried in plain text. Rather, the evidence shows mixed orthographic conventions.
Figures 7 and 8, for example, demonstrate a subscripting convention for segmental or morphological analysis that is already representable as rich text. A more convincing scenario would be evidence of two authors communicating a transcription via print using the same subscript convention.

Recommendation: We recommend the UTC make the following disposition:
Notes this document (L2/21-043) but takes no further action.

Relative to the rejection of the 2018 L2/18-206 proposal, the critique has now moved from a lack of "orthographic evidence" to "evidence shows mixed orthographic conventions" 🤷 .

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