On 7/30/2015 7:38 AM, J Andrew Lipscomb wrote:
In French at least, the second character of N° is properly U+00B0 DEGREE SIGN.
The superscript o stands for an "o" and U+00B0 ° DEGREE SIGN is nowhere close to being the correct representation for it (it's another matter whether that superscript o should look like a circle or not). As noted before, because it is easy to find "n<sup>os</sup>" (for the plural), the characters U+00BA º MASCULINE ORDINAL INDICATOR and U+2116 № NUMERO SIGN are not very useful in modern representations of "n<sup>o</sup>". Furthermore, if I am not mistaken, U+2116 № NUMERO SIGN was introduced in Unicode for compatibility with East Asian character sets, and probably would not have been encoded on its own merit. In modern text representations, markup is the only sane way to go. And in plain text, "no." and "nos." are probably the best approximations. Eric.