On 2013-08-08, at 23:26, Nicolas Cellier nicolas.cellier.aka.nice@gmail.com wrote:
And this happened between http://source.squeak.org/trunk/Multilingual-nice.91.mcz http://source.squeak.org/trunk/Multilingual-ul.141.mcz http://source.squeak.org/trunk/Multilingual-nice.142.mcz
For simpler access:
http://source.squeak.org/trunk/Multilingual-nice.91.diff http://source.squeak.org/trunk/Multilingual-ul.141.diff http://source.squeak.org/trunk/Multilingual-nice.142.diff
- Bert -
2013/8/8 Nicolas Cellier nicolas.cellier.aka.nice@gmail.com Well, that's already some time ago, but from memory the main things were:
- set leadingChar 0 as synonym of unicode
- set leadingChar for several language environment to 0 (unicode) (Greek, Russian, ...)
2013/8/8 Yoshiki Ohshima Yoshiki.Ohshima@acm.org On Tue, Aug 6, 2013 at 1:25 PM, Nicolas Cellier nicolas.cellier.aka.nice@gmail.com wrote:
Last thing, we have our squeakism: the #leadingChar. I let you dig into its usage, but it should be restricted for east asian languages support since squeak 4.x at least.
I am not on top of things (anything, really) but what has changed since Squeak 4.x in this regard?
Just a historical note, but the concept of leadingChar was borrowed from the multilingual Emacs effort, which eventually folded into the mainstream Emacs.
-- -- Yoshiki