Hi,

Current web browsers implement octal escape sequences of the form \52, 
representing the character of code 0o52, in string literals in sloppy mode 
only, and in regexps (at the condition there is less than 52 capturing groups) 
in both sloppy and strict mode.

(In order to avoid confusion: I am *not* concerned with legacy octal integer 
literals of the form: 052, representing the number 0o52.)

As far as I can infer from archives of es-discuss, these escape sequences was 
an undesired feature that was not standardised (in ES3), but that everyone 
implemented and was needed for web compatibility. So, it was decided to exclude 
it from ES5 strict mode, and therefore from Harmony which was thought to be 
built on strict mode, for 1JS wasn't invented back then.

Now, times have changed, and, in the sake of 1JS, new features are implemented 
in both sloppy and strict mode; or otherwise said, the difference between the 
two modes is kept as small as possible.

From that new perspective, is there still a strong enough reason to exclude 
these escape sequences from string literals in strict mode, that would justify 
the discrepency between strict and sloppy modes? And if so, what to do with 
regexps?

—Claude
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