Looks like I’m guilty of putting answers in comments. Lemme fix that. :)
I was trying to provide the heavy metal umlauts of "Spinal Tap" for this answer, and neither I nor another user was able to do so (the current hack has an umlaut between the "n" and the "a"). By contrast, using the same browser I was able to do so on Wikipedia.
Is it a problem with my browser, or with Stack Exchange?
First, let’s look at your two strings from the sources you cite:
So the two strings are essentially the same (there’s an “is” vs “Is” difference). Although there is a combining character, the strings are in NFC already, because there is no pre-combined form which that can reduce to.
The thing that’s different is the fonts used. The one on SO is in an oblique font, whereas the one on Wikipedia is in roman; both are sans-serif.
I imagine what’s happening is that the rules the browser is using for generating dynamic glyphs on the fly have slightly suboptimal placement rules in one case or the other. If you run this bit of Perl code in a terminal window set to use UTF-8:
binmode(STDOUT, ":utf8");
$string = q<I use Opera, and I haven't had any problems "decorating" my postings! :)>;
$string =~ s/(\S)/$1\x{308}\x{324}/g;
print "$string\n";
It will generate a string full of both kinds of diaereses: top and bottom. You can then use murine snarf-N-barf to enter it into SO. In my Mac Terminal window, the diaereses all line up just fine. But here on SO under Opera or Safari, they are ok in the text entry widget, as that is not a proportional width font, but don’t look as good down later in the rendered version. Let’s try it under a collection of fonts:
- Ï̤ ṳ̈s̤̈ë̤ Ö̤p̤̈ë̤r̤̈ä̤,̤̈ ä̤n̤̈d̤̈ Ï̤ ḧ̤ä̤v̤̈ë̤n̤̈'̤̈ẗ̤ ḧ̤ä̤d̤̈ ä̤n̤̈ÿ̤ p̤̈r̤̈ö̤b̤̈l̤̈ë̤m̤̈s̤̈ "̤̈d̤̈ë̤c̤̈ö̤r̤̈ä̤ẗ̤ï̤n̤̈g̤̈"̤̈ m̤̈ÿ̤ p̤̈ö̤s̤̈ẗ̤ï̤n̤̈g̤̈s̤̈!̤̈ :̤̈)̤̈
- Ï̤ ṳ̈s̤̈ë̤ Ö̤p̤̈ë̤r̤̈ä̤,̤̈ ä̤n̤̈d̤̈ Ï̤ ḧ̤ä̤v̤̈ë̤n̤̈'̤̈ẗ̤ ḧ̤ä̤d̤̈ ä̤n̤̈ÿ̤ p̤̈r̤̈ö̤b̤̈l̤̈ë̤m̤̈s̤̈ "̤̈d̤̈ë̤c̤̈ö̤r̤̈ä̤ẗ̤ï̤n̤̈g̤̈"̤̈ m̤̈ÿ̤ p̤̈ö̤s̤̈ẗ̤ï̤n̤̈g̤̈s̤̈!̤̈ :̤̈)̤̈
- Ï̤ ṳ̈s̤̈ë̤ Ö̤p̤̈ë̤r̤̈ä̤,̤̈ ä̤n̤̈d̤̈ Ï̤ ḧ̤ä̤v̤̈ë̤n̤̈'̤̈ẗ̤ ḧ̤ä̤d̤̈ ä̤n̤̈ÿ̤ p̤̈r̤̈ö̤b̤̈l̤̈ë̤m̤̈s̤̈ "̤̈d̤̈ë̤c̤̈ö̤r̤̈ä̤ẗ̤ï̤n̤̈g̤̈"̤̈ m̤̈ÿ̤ p̤̈ö̤s̤̈ẗ̤ï̤n̤̈g̤̈s̤̈!̤̈ :̤̈)̤̈
Ï̤ ṳ̈s̤̈ë̤ Ö̤p̤̈ë̤r̤̈ä̤,̤̈ ä̤n̤̈d̤̈ Ï̤ ḧ̤ä̤v̤̈ë̤n̤̈'̤̈ẗ̤ ḧ̤ä̤d̤̈ ä̤n̤̈ÿ̤ p̤̈r̤̈ö̤b̤̈l̤̈ë̤m̤̈s̤̈ "̤̈d̤̈ë̤c̤̈ö̤r̤̈ä̤ẗ̤ï̤n̤̈g̤̈"̤̈ m̤̈ÿ̤ p̤̈ö̤s̤̈ẗ̤ï̤n̤̈g̤̈s̤̈!̤̈ :̤̈)̤̈
At least on my system, only the last of those, the one that’s set in a non-proportional, constant-width font, looks any good. Look at the words and and any. On all the others safe the last, the diaeresis on the n is misplaced to the right, colliding with the one over the d or y, respectively. It’s like Morse Code. :)
This does not occur with the n’s in haven't, decorting, or postings, but it does seem to be problem with both m’s that occur, the ones in my and problems.
So I don’t think it is an SO bug. I think it is a bug in the rules for superpositioning that particular diacritic atop certain letters in certain fonts. I rather suspect there are kerning rules involved, since it does not happen with a constant width font.
s/(\S)/$1\x{308}\x{324}/g– tchrist Apr 29 '11 at 4:43