[6903] in www-talk@info.cern.ch

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Re: Followup on I18N comments

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Sandra Martin O'Donnell)
Fri Dec 2 09:17:46 1994

Date: Fri, 2 Dec 1994 14:33:52 +0100
Errors-To: listmaster@www0.cern.ch
Reply-To: odonnell@osf.org
From: "Sandra Martin O'Donnell" <odonnell@osf.org>
To: Multiple recipients of list <www-talk@www0.cern.ch>

    >Unicode (ISO 10646) as a transfer form rather than UTF-8. However,
    >the major difference between your suggestion and our implementation
    >is that we require support for Unicode as a transfer encoding
    >but do *not* require that all transfers be done in Unicode. . . 
    
    Unless we define some method of negotiating character set encoding for
    WWW, I think that the solution you outline above could not be
    implemented, though given encoding negotiation, it obviously *is* of
    great practical value.

Yes, encoding negotiation is what we have in DCE, and you're right
that such a method would be required for the Web as well.
    
    Interestly enough, I spoke to 2 technical documentation
    writer/translators who were vehemently against Unicode because it does
    not support every possible character in the world...
    
    Still, as a lowest common denominator, I think it will handle most
    (90%) situations, and I think *that* by itself, is a big step forward.

I agree that Unicode/ISO 10646 is a good solution when one
needs support for a universal code set. It does cover most
characters in use on computers today. However, there are
many cases when there's no need for a universal code set,
and it's certainly valid for local users to ask for support
for their own code sets -- or at least a representative
sample of them. 

There will never be a single code set that contains every
possible character in the world. Just as English keeps
inventing new words, Chinese, Japanese, and others keep
inventing new ideographs.

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Sandra Martin O'Donnell                 email: odonnell@osf.org
Open Software Foundation                phone: +1 (617) 621-8707
11 Cambridge Center                     fax:   +1 (617) 225-2782
Cambridge, MA 02142  USA
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