It is always possible to find fault with any code.

They are all engineering compromises among conflicting objectives.

What I have sensed in a number of posts in this thread is a mixture of
anglophone bigotry and anglophone provinciality, both of them
disagreeable.

Most of the time and in most of the situations we here on IBM-MAIN
deal with Unicode is a DBCS.

Moreover, I suspect that familiarity has desensititized us to the
deficiencies of both ASCII and EBCDIC.  In both, for example,  '-'
sorts higher than '+'; and they share many other deficiencies in one
context or another.

It is clear beyond argument that 256 code points are not enough, and
there are---mostly non-anglophone---contexts in which 65536 code
points are not enough either.  MBCSs are thus all but certainly in the
womb of time, but they will anyway be an improvement on code-page
juggling.

John Gilmore, Ashland, MA 01721 - USA

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