-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 My reply to Arthur interspersed.
Originating Question Where to get the sourcecode of relevent (version) UTF-8?: in order to checksum text against the specific encoding map (codepage). from [email protected] Sent with Proton Mail secure email. On Tuesday, November 5th, 2024 at 08:59, Arthur Rosendahl via Unicode <[email protected]> wrote: > > This is pretty much the reverse of what I have asked for: reverse engineering an UTF-8 string in order to re-create the sourcecode I have asked for. You shouldn't have to reverse engineer. What I have asked for is the whole intention of open-source software and the crux of which all programming relies on; writing sourcecode in UTF-8 would mean nothing. It is actually a praxis required in the whole picture of computer science. If you do not have sourcecode for UTF-8 then it is more than likely the standard does sit on the sidelines disconnected from whatever is being called Unicode and UTF-8 actually software in use. You shouldn't have to reverse engineer the software to contrast it against the Unicode standard it purports to have been. > I think that’s what the OP means. He has a UTF-8-encoded string > which he wants to map to a sequence of code points. That’s my guess > anyway. > > Arthur -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: ProtonMail wnUEARYKACcFgmcqG0EJkKkWZTlQrvKZFiEEZlQIBcAycZ2lO9z2qRZlOVCu 8pkAAIp+AP4jx7+9/FmMd1qtKbETlg4+YOf96Lf0PZWE8ks7oT4FGQD+MzfP 9LJRTda5uqw3nTaphAEGSppcsYmetB05zs/lygk= =vrwS -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
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