On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 10:37 PM, Edward K. Ream <[email protected]> wrote:

> P.S.  I'd like to repeat that it is unlikely that Leo is to blame for
> this situation.  The off-by-one nature of the bug can not come from
> Leo, because the code usually works.  It is much more likely to come
> from Qt's failure to manage the internal representation of
> variable-length encodings of unicode characters.

I agree that this is surprising - even if they are not fixing it, they
should at least document it.

You should probable attach Terry's brilliant analysis about compound
unicode characters in the bug report.

Remember that the right place to complain about this is Qt, not PyQt...

-- 
Ville M. Vainio
http://tinyurl.com/vainio

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