Philippe Verdy scripsit: > > On Mac Classic, > > \n is 15, and on EBCDIC systems, it's also 15, though for a different > > reason. > > Correction: On Mac Classic and in EBCDIC, \n is 015 (or 13), not 15: > please don't mix in the same sentence the decimal, > and octal notations.
It's worse than that. On Mac Classic, \n is 015 or 13, whereas in EBCDIC, \n is 0x15, or 21. Some mornings I just don't know the difference between up and Tuesday, that's all. -- John Cowan [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.reutershealth.com www.ccil.org/~cowan Assent may be registered by a signature, a handshake, or a click of a computer mouse transmitted across the invisible ether of the Internet. Formality is not a requisite; any sign, symbol or action, or even willful inaction, as long as it is unequivocally referable to the promise, may create a contract. --_Specht v. Netscape_