I agree Gary.

Windows 2000 Notepad, however, does not agree and writes one.

Since Notepad in prior versions of Windows was in fact the defacto standard
for HTML editor (<g>), clearly it is a program to be reckoned with. People
should be aware of the fact that there are going to MANY files out there
that are UTF-8 and do have a BOM.

I do not believe that this will require it to be added to a standard, and
this is a non-standard usage, but life is about dealing with things as they
are (and this is how they are!).

Michael

> ----------
> From:         Gary L. Wade[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent:         Thursday, June 22, 2000 9:08 AM
> To:   Unicode List
> Subject:      UTF-8 BOM Nonsense
> 
> Please!
> 
> After hundreds of e-mails on this topic, let it die!
> 
> The BOM is only useful with UTF-16 or UCS-4 characters.
> 
> There is no such thing as byte ordering when each character is a byte or
> a multibyte sequence with a well-documented ordering denoting how to
> interpret this!  For further reference, turn to page 20 in the Unicode
> 3.0 book and let us get back to more important things, such as how to
> represent the price of tea in China!  ;-)
> -- 
> Gary L. Wade
> Product Development Consultant
> DesiSoft Systems             | Voice:   214-642-6883
> 9619 E. Valley Ranch Parkway | Fax:     972-506-7478
> Suite 2125                   | E-Mail:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Irving, TX 75063             |
> 

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