2017-07-25 0:35 GMT+02:00 Doug Ewell via Unicode :
> J Decker wrote:
>
> > I generally accepted any utf-8 encoding up to 31 bits though ( since
> > I was going from the original spec, and not what was effective limit
> > based on unicode codepoint space)
>
> Hey, everybody:
J Decker wrote:
> I generally accepted any utf-8 encoding up to 31 bits though ( since
> I was going from the original spec, and not what was effective limit
> based on unicode codepoint space)
Hey, everybody: Don't do that.
UTF-8 has been constrained to the Unicode code space (maximum
On Mon, Jul 24, 2017 at 1:50 PM, Philippe Verdy wrote:
> 2017-07-24 21:12 GMT+02:00 J Decker via Unicode :
>
>>
>>
>> If you don't have that last position in a variable, just use 3 tests but
> NO loop at all: if all 3 tests are failing, you know the input
2017-07-24 22:50 GMT+02:00 Philippe Verdy :
> 2017-07-24 21:12 GMT+02:00 J Decker via Unicode :
>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Jul 24, 2017 at 10:57 AM, Costello, Roger L. via Unicode <
>> unicode@unicode.org> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Folks,
>>>
>>> 2. (Bug) The sending
2017-07-24 21:12 GMT+02:00 J Decker via Unicode :
>
>
> On Mon, Jul 24, 2017 at 10:57 AM, Costello, Roger L. via Unicode <
> unicode@unicode.org> wrote:
>
>> Hi Folks,
>>
>> 2. (Bug) The sending application performs the folding process - inserts
>> CRLF plus white space
On Mon, Jul 24, 2017 at 10:57 AM, Costello, Roger L. via Unicode <
unicode@unicode.org> wrote:
> Hi Folks,
>
> 2. (Bug) The sending application performs the folding process - inserts
> CRLF plus white space characters - and the receiving application does the
> unfolding process but doesn't
Hi Folks,
Thank you very much for your fantastic comments!
Below I summarized the issue and your comments. At the bottom is a set of
proposed requirements (for my clients) on applications that receive iCalendar
files.
Some questions:
- Have I captured all your comments? Any more comments?
-
Costello, Roger L. wrote:
> Suppose an application splits a UTF-8 multi-octet sequence. The
> application then sends the split sequence to a client. The client must
> restore the original sequence.
>
> Question: is it possible to split a UTF-8 multi-octet sequence in such
> a way that the client
Also note that the maximum line-length in that RFC is a SHOULD and not a
MUST. This is intended to give a reasonable hint for the limit used in
implementations that process data in the given format: The RFC suggests a
maximum line length of 75 "characters", excluding the CRLF+SPACE
continuation
But at the same time that RFC makes a direct reference as UTF-8 as being
the default charset, so an implementation of the RFC cannot be agnostic to
what is UTF-8 and will not break in the middle of a conforming UTF-8
sequence.
When the limit is reached, that implementations knows that it cannot
"Costello, Roger L. via Unicode" wrote:
|Suppose an application splits a UTF-8 multi-octet sequence. The application \
|then sends the split sequence to a client. The client must restore \
|the original sequence.
|
|Question: is it possible to split a UTF-8 multi-octet
Hello Unicode Experts!
Suppose an application splits a UTF-8 multi-octet sequence. The application
then sends the split sequence to a client. The client must restore the original
sequence.
Question: is it possible to split a UTF-8 multi-octet sequence in such a way
that the client cannot
Speaking of which—sorry if this is going off-topic, but I don't know where
else could I ask—I don't think there's a way to configure Linux or Android
systems to always prefer text rendering for emojis, is there? (I love text
emojis.)
2017-07-24 16:24 GMT+02:00 Christoph Päper via Unicode
Leonardo Boiko:
>
> It would just be more
> satisfying for me if the blue books were encoded in the font as U+1F4D8s,
> rather than U+F02Ds. Or, if the colors are done at a CSS level, as
> U+1F4D5 CLOSED BOOKs or the like. Same goes for the other icons in FA
> which *do *have an emoji
I don't have anything against that, in principle. It would just be more
satisfying for me if the blue books were encoded in the font as U+1F4D8s,
rather than U+F02Ds. Or, if the colors are done at a CSS level, as
U+1F4D5 CLOSED BOOKs or the like. Same goes for the other icons in FA
which *do
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