Well, trying to calm things abit down ...

Joshua is right when he says, that the ß today is no ligature, is not
used as one and doesn't carry any of the specific meaning of a ligature
(typographical enhancement, equivalence to decomposed character pair,
etc.).

David is right when he says that common glyph design of the ß today
originated from the typographical composition (= ligature!) of two glyps
(ſ + s/z).

The current discussion about how the capital glyph represented today
seems to divide people into two camps:

 - Those who see the problem of people using lower case letters in a
all-uppercase setting as the most important one seem to favor the
approach of adjusting the lowercase letter to better fit with the other
letters, mostly trying to preserve the characteristics of ß to make it
as easy as possible for readers to understand from where this character
comes from.

 - Those who see the ß as an old-fashioned replacement for ss start from
the original design of the two glyph pair two glyps (ſ + s/z) and look
for a solution to supply U+1E9E with a good glyph.

I'm interested how both approaches work out and will love to comment on
them even if I don't always share the same opinion with everyone here.

History seems to show that the designs of the first camp are generally
preferred because they didn't evolve "re-educating readers", but I'm
delighted seeing a design of the second approach capturing the essential
meaning and semantic of an uppercase ß.

Bye,


Simon

-- 
Expansion: 'ẞ' LATIN CAPTIAL LETTER SHARP S (U+1E9E)
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/650498
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