Right. So #1 is utf-8. Then #2 is utf-16?

So then why does this:

use utf8; my $string = "Queensr˙che"; no utf8;
Produce this:
81 Q Q 117 u u 101 e e 101 e e 110 n n 115 s s 114 r r 255 {ff} 99 c c 104 h h 101 e e - this is utf8
When this:
#use utf8; my $string = "Queensr˙che"; #no utf8;
Produces this:
81 Q Q 117 u u 101 e e 101 e e 110 n n 115 s s 114 r r 195 191 99 c c 104 h h 101 e e - this is NOT utf8
If the two bytes are "there", why is "use utf8" yielding a dec 255 for the "˙" which is not valid utf8?

"The first 128 characters (US-ASCII) need one byte. The next 1,920 characters need two bytes to encode." - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8


In reply to Re^4: The Queensr˙che Situation by Rodster001
in thread The Queensr˙che Situation by Rodster001

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