Posted by Michael Gilligan on 16/06/2018 23:01:48:
Posted by SillyOldDuffer on 16/06/2018 22:15:35:
A new level of pedantry coming next, shock horror!
0216 isn't the diameter symbol, it's a Latin O with stroke – Ø
2205 is the real McCoy – ∅
See the difference ∅Ø∅Ø∅Ø! That nasty embellished Ø would never appear on a proper technical drawing. In future marks will be deducted for getting this wrong…
![smiley smiley](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==)
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Interesting, Dave …
I checked your big 'Unicode Table'
Searching for 'Diameter Sign' returns U+2300 not U+2205
U+2205 is identified as the 'Related character' for an Empty Set
MichaelG.
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P.S. neither of them seems to be available in some popular fonts.
Good spot! The plot thickens:
U+2300 = ⌀
U+2205 = ∅
Unicode is a sort of unifying super-font. Older fonts were limited by technology to 8-bit characters (max 256). Unicode is extensible and able to use 8, 16 or 32 bit numbers to represent gigantic numbers of different symbols. The latest version defines about 150,000 symbols.
Older software and printing technologies are stuck with less flexible font systems; to get more characters you have to load another font. Having to manage multiple fonts is limiting and causes serious incompatibility problems. One reason Word documents are so big is they often include a copy of the fonts used as well as what was typed.
Unicode isn't perfect, but it does much to reduce the problem. Being universal, it's a feature of systems rather than individual documents, and it doesn't have to be copied about. Unfortunately, rather a lot of software has yet to catch up with Unicode, and – even when it does – we're probably stuck with the older font systems for ever. The number of legacy documents produced with ancient versions of MSWord must be enormous.
Dave
Edited By SillyOldDuffer on 17/06/2018 19:58:32