On 12/20/07, Martijn van Oosterhout <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 18, 2007 at 02:53:16PM +0800, bookman bookman wrote:

> > I know that every line of utf8 files  is started with "fffe" or "feff"
> >  and ended with "\r\n" in windows but not in linux,so  the character
> > "1" has a space before it in the error line.

> Err, no. In UTF-16 files it is common to begin the *file* with that
> character, but UTF-8 doesn't have that character anywhere, it's
> illegal. Just stripping them out should be fine.

A BOM is perfectly legal in UTF-8, and it's commonly used as a
signature to indicate the text is UTF-8 instead of another encoding.
But yes, it is at the beginning of the file only.

http://unicode.org/faq/utf_bom.html#29

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