Doug,

> You might remember that I chided Microsoft for 
> its definition of "Unicode" in
> Windows 2000 Help, where Unicode was described 
> as a "16-bit standard" that was "developed between 
> 1988 and 1991," implying that the work was
> finished.  Even at the time Windows 2000 was being 
> developed, there was quite a bit of room for 
> improvement in this definition.

You are right however, Unicode was officially still 16 bit when Win2000 was released 
to manufacturing.  We though they knew about surrogates and new planes, it was not 
official and could have been changed.

I still think that it was close enough that they should have enabled surrogate support 
by default.

Carl



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