Beispiel: <glyphName> (character glyph name)
These search results reproduce every example of the use of <glyphName> in the Guidelines, including all localised and translated versions. In some cases, the examples have been drawn from discussion of other elements in the Guidelines and illustrating the use of <glyphName> is not the main focus of the passage in question. In other cases, examples may be direct translations of each other, and hence identical from the perspective of their encoding.
5 Representation of Non-standard Characters and Glyphs
5.2 Markup Constructs for Representation of Characters and Glyphs
<glyph xml:id="z103">
<glyphName>LATIN LETTER Z WITH TWO STROKES</glyphName>
<mapping type="standardized">Z</mapping>
<mapping type="PUA">U+E304</mapping>
</glyph>
</charDecl>
<glyph xml:id="r1">
<glyphName>LATIN SMALL LETTER R WITH ONE FUNNY STROKE</glyphName>
<charProp>
<localName>entity</localName>
<value>r1</value>
</charProp>
<figure>
<graphic url="r1img.png"/>
</figure>
</glyph>
<glyph xml:id="r2">
<glyphName>LATIN SMALL LETTER R WITH TWO FUNNY STROKES</glyphName>
<charProp>
<localName>entity</localName>
<value>r2</value>
</charProp>
<figure>
<graphic url="r2img.png"/>
</figure>
</glyph>
</charDecl>
<!-- in the charDecl -->
<glyph xml:id="Filig">
<glyphName>LATIN UPPER F AND LATIN LOWER I LIGATURE</glyphName>
<figure>
<graphic url="Filig.png"/>
</figure>
</glyph>
<glyphName>LATIN SMALL LETTER R WITH A FUNNY STROKE</glyphName>
<charProp>
<localName>entity</localName>
<value>rstroke</value>
</charProp>
<figure>
<graphic url="glyph-rstroke.png"/>
</figure>
</glyph>