Printable Unicode characters are referred to in at least five different ways:
        U+003D EQUALS SIGN (<code title="">=</code>)
        U+003D EQUALS SIGN ("<code title="">=</code>")
        U+003D EQUALS SIGN character (=)
        U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-")
        U+003D EQUALS SIGN

Printable ASCII-characters are usually referred to as follows:
        0x3D (ASCII '=')

The ideal solution would of course be to make this fully consistent — e.g., by using the style U+... (<code>...</code>) for Unicode all the time and perhaps also 0x... (ASCII <code>...</code>) for ASCII.

Failing that, "'" and '"' (two occurrences of each, excluding an unrelated unproblematic instance inside a script) should be changed since they appear confusingly as ''''' and '''' in a sans-serif typeface.

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Øistein E. Andersen

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