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 -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex
