On the surface, yes, it looks bad. But from my experience, you can cover nearly all cases (like 99.5% or so) by following some simple rules, no matter the encoding:

The basic ugliness of Unicode (or other text encodings) stems not from their engineers but from the basic fact that human language is a complicated mess. And written language is still a somewhat new concept in human evolution and we are still trying to figure out the finer details. At least with Unicode, you don't have to constantly switch schemes depending on who is using your software.

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In reply to Re^3: My UTF-8 text isn't surviving I/O as expected by cavac
in thread My UTF-8 text isn't surviving I/O as expected by ibm1620

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