This is a test to explore display of non-ascii in email clients.

These are all the printable special characters known to the latin1
(iso8859-1) encoding scheme.

==> BUT: I am composing and transmitting this as utf8.
In utf8 encoding, non-ascii has multi-byte values; the latin1 subset of
the full unicode has byte-pairs with the first byte being 0xC2 or 0xC3
and the second byte something greater than 0x7F.

 
¡¢£¤¥¦§¨©ª«¬­®¯°±²³´µ¶·¸¹º»¼½¾¿ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖרÙÚÛÜÝÞßàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõö÷øùúûüýþÿ

Your email client may re-encode the incoming characters, per client and
your settings. If your email client has trouble (re-encoding or)
displaying some of these characters, it may replace the troublesome ones
with something which should at least catch the eye. I'm not sure what
replacement method is used by what client. Unicode does have a special
character signifying "unknown" -- a black-diamond with white question mark.

Regards,
..jim


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