Nick> Following the first page will be all the other pages, each in the Nick> same format as the first: one number identifying the page followed Nick> by 256 double-byte Unicode characters. If a character in the Nick> encoding maps to the Unicode character 0000, it means that the Nick> character doesn't actually exist. If all characters on a page would Nick> map to 0000, that page can be omitted. There may some day be a use for the Unicode codepoint 0x0000. It might be better to make this 0xFFFF, which is a guaranteed non-character in Unicode and probably in ISO10646. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Mark Leisher Computing Research Lab Cinema, radio, television, magazines are a New Mexico State University school of inattention: people look without Box 30001, Dept. 3CRL seeing, listen without hearing. Las Cruces, NM 88003 -- Robert Bresson
- Encode's .enc files and a question Peter Prymmer
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Philip Newton
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Nick Ing-Simmons
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Mark Leisher
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Nick Ing-Simmons
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Mark Leisher
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Philip Newton
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Nick Ing-Simmons
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Mark Leisher
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Nick Ing-Simmons
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Peter Prymmer
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Nick Ing-Simmons
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Philip Newton
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Mark Leisher
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Peter Prymmer
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Philip Newton
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Mark Leisher
- Re: Encode's .enc files and a question Nick Ing-Simmons