User-agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.2 (X11/20050317)
Soobok Lee wrote:
U+1160 is a space-like char and even stringprep/nameprep does not
filter it out because the char is not for punctuational purpose.
U+1160 is HANGUL JUNGSEONG FILLER and it is used to transform
nonstandard syllables into standard ones (Unicode 3.0 section 3.11 (RFC
3454 refers to Unicode 3.2.0)). However, this transformation is one of
the additional transformations not considered part of Unicode
normalization (3.2.0's UAX #15 Annex 10). So this character is not
generated by Stringprep/Nameprep.
However, it is not prohibited either, so it may occur in the input to
(and output from) Stringprep/Nameprep. I read some of the sections on
Hangul in the Unicode book and Web site, but I did not see any rules
regarding repeated occurrences of U+1160 (as you had in your example,
not quoted above). I also did not see any rules about what to do when a
filler is not followed by a Hangul jamo. It would be nice to have these
rules in Unicode or in Stringprep.
I tried U+1160 followed by a Latin character in MSIE with i-Nav and in
Firefox with IDN turned on, and it was displayed as a wide space. It is
unfortunate that both implementations chose to display it as a space
instead of deleting it.