00766nam a2200193 i 450099100430543620753620240201163231.0240201s2007 mx r 000 0 spa 9789707128217Bibl. Dip.le Aggr. Scienze Giuridiche - Sez. Centro Studi sul RischioitaSuprema corte de justicia de la nacion21585365Reglamento de la Comision Nacional de etica judical /Suprema corte de justicia de la nacionMexico :Suprema corte de justicia de la nacion,2007VIII, 41 p. ;19 cm.DirittoRapporti con l'eticaGiudizio<etica>991004305436207536Reglamento de la Comision Nacional de etica judical3870193UNISALENTO05854oam 2200793 c 450 991096743380332120251202090341.0978383826703638382670369783838267036(CKB)3710000000679479(EBL)4333673(OCoLC)946091614(MiAaPQ)EBC4333673(MiAaPQ)EBC5781845(Au-PeEL)EBL5781845(OCoLC)967395062(Perlego)773257(ibidem)9783838267036(EXLCZ)99371000000067947920251202d2015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierSetting Signs for Europe Why Diacritics Matter for European Integration /Bernd Kappenberg, Peter Schlobinski, Andreas Umland1st ed.Hannoveribidem20151 online resource (307 p.)Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society139Description based upon print version of record.9783838206639 3838206630 9783838207032 3838207033 Includes bibliographical references.Contents; Foreword ; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Problem description; 1.2 Process is running-coordination is missing; 1.3 Touched policies and policy levels; 1.4 Definition of terms; 1.5 How this book is structured; 2 Definition of the required character repertoire; 2.1 Narrowing the topic; 2.2 Basic letters; 2.3 Variants of letters; 2.4 Letters from other scripts; 2.5 Ligatures; 2.5.1 Ligatures based on handwriting; 2.5.2 Typographic ligatures; 2.6 Diacritics; 2.7 Conclusion; 3 History of character sets; 3.1 BAUDOT code; 3.2 MURRAY code; 3.3 ASCII; 3.3.1 ISO 6463.4 8-bit codes (extended ASCII formats)3.4.1 ISO 8859; 3.4.2 Windows-125x ("ANSI"); 3.5 EBCDIC; 3.6 ISO/IEC 10646 (Universal Character Set) and Unicode; 3.6.1 Unicode transformation formats (UTFs); 3.6.2 Windows Glyph List 4 (WGL4); 3.7 Success of Unicode; 3.8 Mojibake; 4 Unicode-compatible fonts; 5 State of the "diacritical integration" in the media; 5.1 Diacritics in news agencies; 5.2 Examples from selected media; 5.2.1 Print media; 5.2.2 Online media; 5.3 Case study: dpa; 5.3.1 Problems of limitation to ISO 8859-1; 5.3.2 The upcoming solution: Unicode-compatible so ware6 Failure examples6.1 Incompatible character sets; 6.2 Do-It-Yourself diacritics; 6.3 Incorrect operation of dead keys; 6.4 Ignorance of the differences between diacritics; 6.5 Use of combining diacritics; 6.6 Replacement by images; 6.7 Replacement by escape sequences; 6.8 Conclusion; 7 Diacritics as style element inbrand and product names; 7.1 Macron as distorted French acute; 7.2 Macron as distorted French accent; 7.3 Macron as allusion to a special shape on a shoe's sole; 7.4 Macron as artistic alienation of the umlaut; 7.5 Trema points as allusion for bubbles9.1.1 Charter of the United Nations9.1.2 Universal Declaration of Human Rights; 9.1.3 European Convention on Human Rights; 9.1.4 UN International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights; 9.1.5 Helsinki Final Act; 9.1.6 Convention on the indication of surnames and forenames in civil status registers; 9.1.7 Document of the Copenhagen Meeting; 9.1.8 Charter of Paris for a New Europe; 9.1.9 UN Declaration on Minority Rights; 9.1.10 European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages; 9.1.11 Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities9.1.12 Oslo Recommendations Regarding the Linguistic Rights of National MinoritiesMore than 20 years have passed since the introduction of the Universal Character Set. However, legacy applications still cannot even render German umlauts correctly. Part of this problem is a hidden political agenda: Consciously or unconsciously, patterns of the Cold War are continued in the interaction between Western and Eastern European languages. This book examines the current use of diacritical marks in Western Europe, such as the use of names from Slavic languages in electronic data processing systems. The role of the media as multiplier receives particular attention, with most error examples taken from actual media coverage. Considering international, EU, and national law and referring to landmark court decisions, Kappenberg answers the question: 'Is there a right to diacritical marks in people's names?' This is followed by a description of current practice in several European countries. Finally, Setting Signs for Europe answers the question how in the framework of the EU's multilingualism policy, effective approaches can be created to raise awareness among software vendors, the media, government agencies, and individuals regarding the correct handling of diacritics. Kappenberg also assesses the use of diacritics as a style element and offers an improved input method for diacritics.Soviet and post-Soviet politics and society ;139.diacriticEuropean integrationlanguageselectronic data processing systemmultilingualismpolicySlavicdiacriticEuropean integrationlanguageselectronic data processing systemmultilingualismpolicySlavic320Kappenberg Berndaut1649493Schlobinski PeterauiUmland AndreasedtMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910967433803321Setting signs for Europe4096335UNINA