Philip Newton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>On Thu, 26 Oct 2000, Mark Leisher wrote:
>
>> Following the first page will be all the other pages, each in the same
>> format as the first: one number identifying the page followed by 256
>> double-byte Unicode (UCS-2) characters. If a character in the encoding maps
>> to the Unicode character 0000, it means that the character doesn't actually
>> exist. If all characters on a page would map to 0000, that page can be
>> omitted.
>
>This would mean that there is no good Unicode character to map ASCII 0x00
>to. The obvious character is U+0000 "<control> = NULL", but that's
>reserved here. So if I'm translating a string containing NULs, those
>characters will be treated as "not-a-character"?
ASCII NUL 0x00, maps to U+0000 as a special case.
>
>Cheers,
>Philip
--
Nick Ing-Simmons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Via, but not speaking for: Texas Instruments Ltd.