This thread seems to have morphed from unicore to unicode.
tex

John Cowan wrote:
> 
> Murray Sargent scripsit:
> 
> > "Sentinel" is fairly commonly used in computer science and program code for data 
>delimiters. "Delimiter" is also a good word for this (I use it in RichEdit code), but 
>one may well use "delimiter" to describe a quote character (like U+0022), whereas 
>I've never seen "sentinel" used for a quote. As such "sentinel" seems less ambiguous 
>for Unicode code points like U+FDD0 - U+FDEF. It would be interesting to know if 
>anyone is using these Unicode "noncharacters" for purposes other than sentinels.
> 
> We could use the IBM slang term "zigamorph" for these codepoints.  This
> was applied to EBCDIC FF, and I tried to popularize extending to U+FFFF,
> but it really could apply just fine to all the others as well.
> 
> U+FFFE is probably not used as a sentinel, but rather as a "swap bytes"
> indicator.
> 
> --
> John Cowan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>     http://www.reutershealth.com
> I amar prestar aen, han mathon ne nen,    http://www.ccil.org/~cowan
> han mathon ne chae, a han noston ne 'wilith.  --Galadriel, _LOTR:FOTR_

-- 
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Tex Texin
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.i18nGuy.com
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For a compelling demonstration for Unicode:
http://www.i18nguy.com/unicode/unicode-example-intro.html

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