They can't be far off. The dye sub version was already proposed a few months back.
http://deskthority.net/group-buys-f50/s ... ml#p211330
They can't be far off. The dye sub version was already proposed a few months back.
Ah, I see.
Looks like DT needs you to lead the design work for Round 6.
Perfect explanation. Nice to see there are people who know and also careHalvar wrote: No, [ß] hasn't been dropped, they just changed the rules on when to use it to make it more consistent. If the vocal before it is pronounced short we now use "ss", and if it's long, it's "ß". So "daß" (that) is now "dass", "muß" (must) is now "muss", but "Straße" (street) is still "Straße" and "groß" (big, tall) is still "groß".
Capital ß is just an academic thing and officially not part of German, but it's still been in Unicode for some time for whatever reason. ẞ never appears at the beginning of a word in German, and it is normally replaced by "SS" when capitalizing whole words, but capital ß can be useful in more pathological cases, e.g. in this sentence here.
Sure is! All the row 3 HONEY/FUNCTION2 keys are in this pic:
Can we have a group buy please?
Looking at the R5 leftovers wiki page, the kits look identical so I'd expect they are. Further back in this topic 7bit specifically mentioned the FUNCTION2/E was full extra sets. Perhaps that's what /E is; though I also notice a /F...
When I was learning German, I remember being freaked out the first time I saw ß. WTF is that!? How many more additional letters do they have? Sound the alarm! Fortunately, you guys only really have that one. (And the Swiss, very sensibly, nixed it.) Umlauts aren't so bad. We English speakers generally just plough through foreign words with diacriticals anyway. Whatever the damage! This works especially well in diacritical crazy Turkish.
Yeah but you've got the ÆØÅ! (And I can actually type those, I don't have to copypaste them.)