Because of this confusion ISO does not use the term, it uses "octet"
instead.

General usage dates from the IBM 360 and PDP-11 is defined today by
C-programmers (a scary thought, especially to us, their Pascal-programming
parents) as "byte"=8-bits; "nybble"=4-bits; and "word"=16 bits.
Clive

> -----Original Message-----
> From: jgo [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Saturday, July 22, 2000 7:10 PM
> To:   Unicode List
> Cc:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject:      Re: Unicode FAQ addendum
> 
> > Addison wrote:
> > 1. 1 byte != 1 character: deal with it.
> 
> Hmm, depends on how you define "byte".
> I've seen them in 8-bit, 12-bit, 16-bit and 18-bit varieties.
> 
> The trouble, though, is that 1 character (in this context)
> can be represented by from 16 bits to 6*16 bits.
> 
> John G. Otto                             Nisus Software, Engineering
> www.infoclick.com  www.mathhelp.com  www.nisus.com  software4usa.com
> EasyAlarms  PowerSleuth  NisusEMail  NisusWriter  MailKeeper  QUED/M
>    My opinions are probably not those of Nisus Software, I

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