Glad you corrected this - I'm not that proficient on Windows ;-)
UCS-2 and UTF-16 are practically identical. The former is fixed width (like iso-latin-1) and the latter is variable width (like UTF-8). The pros and cons for using UTF-8 over iso-latin-1 also apply to using UTF-16 over UCS-2.
Windows uses UCS-2LE. Not knowing anything about UCS-2 'til today, I've been blindly using UTF-16LE.
I wonder about the leading sequence 0xff 0xfe in notepad saved text files - is that some marker indicating the encoding type?
It's a Byte Order Mark (BOM).
In reply to Re^6: Unicode2ascii
by ikegami
in thread Unicode2ascii
by Haspalm2
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