d fulano wrote:
[...]

In contrast,in UTF-8 when you type é (e accent) this signifies
the first of 3 bytes, which actually encode chinese characters
at Unicode 9000+.

Yes, I agree, because the é you have used in your example is
not a Unicode é but rather an ISO 8859-1 é.  But my é was not
not an ISO 8859-1 é but rather a Unicode é (all examples so
far are still using your ISO 8859-1 encoding, so as not to
make the discussion unreadable).  So given that I am inputting
a real Unicode é, why would that cause XeTeX to interpret it
as a Ctrl-Z ?

Philip Taylor




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