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The Capital Sharp S in now part of the official German orthography

Ralf Herrmann


The Council for German Orthography published a new 2017 version of the German orthography. Among the changes is the inclusion of the Capital Sharp S. The German alphabet is now finally complete.

When the German lowercase letter ß (“sharp s”) was standardized and added to all German typefaces around 1900, the addition of a capital version was planned as well. But the introduction was postponed, because the committee couldn’t agree on a design in time. In the end it took over 100 years to get the ball rolling again. 

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Fonts with a Capital Sharp S made in the early 20th century. Their use didn’t catch on and it wasn’t part of the German orthography. 

The discussion around the missing uppercase letter started again in the 21st century after changes to the German orthography, which reduced the occurrences  of the letter ß, but gave it a more distinct phonetic function. But this function was lost when texts were set in uppercase only and German names became ambiguous as well. So once again, the introduction of a Capital Sharp S was proposed. In 2008 it was added to the Unicode standard and after that type designers could start to add it to their typefaces. More than a thousand new type families containing a Capital Sharp S have been released since then—and a keyboard layout with support for the Capital Sharp S was standardized as well. 

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A children’s book from 2014 using a Capital Sharp S

And even though the letter wasn’t yet part of the official German orthography, more and more people started to use it. The Council for German Orthography as well as the publishers of German dictionaries like Duden had acknowledged the usefulness of a Capital Sharp S years ago, but they couldn’t prescribe the use of a letter that wasn’t available on keyboards and in fonts. 

Eight years after the addition to the Unicode, the Council for German Orthography decided that the time was now right for an uppercase ß. They proposed a change to the orthography in 2016 and after the approval process in all the countries using the German language the change became official in June of 2017. 

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The change doesn’t mean that everyone now has to use a Capital Sharp S. The previous spelling of replacing ß with SS in uppercase texts remains the default for the time being. But using the Capital Sharp S is now officially allowed as well and wouldn’t count as spelling mistake anymore. 

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I don't get it... why would you need the upper case variant? Are there any German words that start with a ß then? I can't think of one. You would for instance write Strasse (Straße) but not STRASSE. Capitalization is at the start of a sentence or word, not in the middle?

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6 hours ago, Bram Stolk said:

I don't get it... why would you need the upper case variant? 

You need it for all all-caps texts. Just like the Ð in Icelandic for example. 

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In Icelandic, ð represents a (usually apical) voiced alveolar non-sibilant fricative [ð̠], similar to the th in English that, but it never appears as the first letter of a word, where þ is used in its stead.

 

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Unfun fact: In Beta 1 of macOS High Sierra the system font San Francisco renders the ẞ as a ligature of SS.

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Still an issue. :sad: As far as I can see, the “Apple System (UI)” fonts have the wrong drawing in the uni1E9E slot. *sigh*

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On 7/4/2017 at 4:39 PM, Tim Tepaße said:

Already done, rdar://33122001 .

Are you the author of that report? 

It’s still an issue even after a major update with lots of “refinements”. 

I even added a new bug report last year, but it was marked as duplicate without access to the other report. So I have no idea if they were any discussions in the first bug report. 

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Has anyone checked in Catalina? I have not upgraded yet. 

But I see that the download versions of SF Pro now have a proper capital sharp s and iOS 13 has one as well. 

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