Markus Scherer scripsit:

> There are also some (obsolete) Unicode 1.1 charsets registered:
> 
> UNICODE-1-1-UTF-7 (MIBenum  103) csUnicode11UTF7
> UNICODE-1-1       (MIBenum 1010) csUnicode11 [this uses the UCS-2BE encoding scheme]

The use of these forms means specifically that the old encoding of Hangul
is in use.  For all other Unicode 1.1 text, some UTF-* charset should be
given.

> This is even more obsolete:
> 
> ISO-10646-UTF-1   (MIBenum  27) csISO10646UTF1 [Unicode 1.0? Very obsolete encoding 
>scheme.]

That's the predecessor of UTF-8, the one that reserves 0x80-0x9F octets.

-- 
John Cowan   <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>   http://www.ccil.org/~cowan
"One time I called in to the central system and started working on a big
thick 'sed' and 'awk' heavy duty data bashing script.  One of the geologists
came by, looked over my shoulder and said 'Oh, that happens to me too.
Try hanging up and phoning in again.'"  --Beverly Erlebacher

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