![]() ![]() ![]() Is this in Greek or in English? I typed it in English, because I forgot to change the language after typing NVIDIA XG4400, right after. What if I wanted to search all products with “ΜΕ ΤΖΑΜΙ” ? Imagine what happens if I have a product named If there ARE Latin only characters, I can quickly find out whats wrong. The first indication that the word I typed, while I was looking at my computer, that told me I am typing in english was when I hit the L. If I start typing a word I will only see the mistake of wrong picked up language when I hit a letter that doesn’t look greek. I am not talking about Word-Number Combination such as X3434 or A3235 or H45345 which …ok you get i.t Lets say I am typing a word with greek letters.įor capital letters, there are exactly 11 words with a combination 11 of those 14 capital letters.Īnd these are the words that ACTUALLY exist. But on the ones that look EXACTLY the same. The problem doesn’t arise on latin letters that “KINDA” look like the Greek letters. And do you match Japanese エ to the Latin I and also to the Greek I? And so on and so on. There may be a customary way to do the matching for Greek, but how does it apply to Cyrillic? Could it be that the custom for Greek is to match by appearance, but for Cyrillic the custom is to match by sound, for example? Would Cyrillic B match with Latin B or V? Would Cyrillic B match with Greek B, for that matter?Īnd would someone else say that Hebrew א sort of looks like an X when printed so it should match and sort of looks like a K when handwritten so it should match that too, or that Hebrew ס looks like O in some fonts but not at all – even though none of these “matches” sound alike. How do you define equivalence in letters? Is it based on the character’s appearance or its transliteration? For example, is Greek P matched with Latin P (by appearance) or R (by sound)? Does Greek Δ match with Latin D because it sounds the same and kind of looks almost the same? I’m no expert on this, but it seems like this could become a bit of a slippery slope. It will really skyrocket how fast one could work with manager, and avoid errors of having a duplicate item, with the only difference having the letter in the “other” language. Those letters due to their similarity should be interchangeable in search, and drop down menus. To insert a product in invoices and a list of other problems To know if you used the product name to avoid duplicates Greek letters for addresses,names,descriptions of items.Īnd now it is impossible to use Χ that on the search. These letters in bold, are the same as you can see.when adding new names/products/invoices etc, create a problem as we use english letters for codes, The Greek Capital Letter Alpha is U+0391 or & #913’ for greek and looks like Α again.ĭon’t know if that helps, it was an example that might help. The Latin Capital Letter A is U+0041 or & #65’ and looks like A for english If manager.io uses unicode or html-code then ![]() AB CD E FG H I J K L MN O P QR S T UVW XY Z -english alphabet- duh ![]()
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