Excuse me, but long s is a narrower letter so it saves space, which in an electronic world is… uh… well, okay, it’s not at a premium. :)
Good point on thorn/eth. I suppose the complication is having to use four new letters (caps/lower) to replace two old letters (well… four old letters, caps/lower again. heh). On any sort of serious note? Eh. There’s so much with English anyway, cobbled together from so many languages… I’m not sure I’d argue to solve just that problem. But I’d be fine enough with it if it became a thing, sure.
And it wouldn’t be too terrible in most cases to make it work. I’m a fan of the compose key, and frankly, compose+fs for long ess isn’t bad; same with compose+th for þ, compose+TH for Þ. And dh/DH for ð/Ð. It slows down typing a little bit to hit three keys instead of two (compose+dh instead of just th), but it’s really not a big deal. I use symbols like £€°¿‽≠—é and many more only barely thinking about them because I use them a lot. And before Lemmy, using ¹ a lot because Lemmy has built-in footnotes, but I manually made my own elsewhere. heh.
I wish more people used the compose key to use the real symbols. They’re there, and they’re more pleasant to read. :) (and Windows users have wincompose to give them the compose key)
Excuse me, but long s is a narrower letter so it saves space, which in an electronic world is… uh… well, okay, it’s not at a premium. :)
Good point on thorn/eth. I suppose the complication is having to use four new letters (caps/lower) to replace two old letters (well… four old letters, caps/lower again. heh). On any sort of serious note? Eh. There’s so much with English anyway, cobbled together from so many languages… I’m not sure I’d argue to solve just that problem. But I’d be fine enough with it if it became a thing, sure.
And it wouldn’t be too terrible in most cases to make it work. I’m a fan of the compose key, and frankly, compose+fs for long ess isn’t bad; same with compose+th for þ, compose+TH for Þ. And dh/DH for ð/Ð. It slows down typing a little bit to hit three keys instead of two (compose+dh instead of just th), but it’s really not a big deal. I use symbols like £€°¿‽≠—é and many more only barely thinking about them because I use them a lot. And before Lemmy, using ¹ a lot because Lemmy has built-in footnotes, but I manually made my own elsewhere. heh.
I wish more people used the compose key to use the real symbols. They’re there, and they’re more pleasant to read. :) (and Windows users have wincompose to give them the compose key)