Kang Seonghoon
Kang Seonghoon
이것이 원본입니다.  우리 모두 직접 만들어 보아요. ```html body{background:#1263CE url(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/41/Green_Field_Blue_Sky_Clouds.jpg/1280px-Green_Field_Blue_Sky_Clouds.jpg);color:white;} div{float:left;font:300pt Verdana;transform-style:preserve-3d;transform:translateX(-200px) perspective(1000px) rotateX(-50deg) translateX(200px);} span{position:absolute;color:rgba(255,255,255,0.8);text-shadow:0 0 10px white;} div=document.getElementsByTagName('div')[0]; for(let i=0;i
@jagracey I think I'm a terrible writer :P (even in my native tongue). I can list some interesting bits about CJK and Unicode, however: - [Han unification](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Han_unification), a large-scale merger...
@nexusanphans You cannot directly write precomposed syllables (there are 11,172 modern ones), there should be multiple keystrokes to complete one syllable. Hangul is simple enough to not require a dictionary-based...
> Looking at [this Wikipedia page](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hangul_jamo), it seems to be used only for compatibility purpose with another, older encoding system (Unicode is too concerned with backward compatibility, IMO). That was...
I should note that the specification is ambiguous when there are multiple `n` such that `last_pass[n]` is equal to the pass index, so if we are going to fix libjxl...
Looks good to me too, and I'd like to point out that: > So I propose to add to the spec that (after adding the implicit (1, num_passes-1) pair), there...
> gain an opcode for "jump past the next N bytes". Unless carefully specified, this would mean that jumping to the middle of other operation is possible. I don't think...
> Well, this requires deciding how long (in bytes) each reserved opcode will be. That's true, but it is not much different from putting the length information for any subsequent...
> Indeed, but is that really a problem? Are there real world examples of icons with 60-stop gradients? I agree this is an edge case, but people do try to...
That makes sense. As noted above, runs of 3 or 4 consecutive H/V commands are also very common, only seconded by runs of a single H/V command. Many of them...