> As a non-European, you can take this with a grain of salt. However:
> is any self-respecting European IT application really using seven
> bits?
> [Carrasco Benitez Manuel]
> You will be surprised.
>
> I think that e-acute and u-umlaut are more important to
> Europeans than the Euro symbol.
> [Carrasco Benitez Manuel]
> About the same.
>
> More importantly, I think you're unaware of the importance of
> the pipe character to existing IT
> applications. You find the strange mnemonic that ECU-ECU means
> "logical or", while a single ECU means "bitwise or". And you will
> hear European UNIX users say, "ECU the grep results through sed."
> [Carrasco Benitez Manuel]
> Perhaps I am less attached emotionally to the "|" pipe -:), because I
> am from the generation of the "^" pipe and this is why I did not
> proposed "^". Though, I am ready to accept the position of "^" and
> if this annoy the very old Unix boys/girls, the "~" and other
> positions
> on 0-127.
>
> I have been living for a very long time with commenting in
> "#" and "pounds", as many programmer in the U.K.
>
> By the way, it will be: "EURO the grep results through sed"
>
> Redefine the generic currency symbol instead. As far as I can tell,
> its primary use is the end-of-table-cell marker in MS Word; is anyone
> actually using it for currency? I *think* it was intended as a
> placeholder for local currencies anyway.
> [Carrasco Benitez Manuel]
> Again over 127.
>
> And as the world moves towards full Unicode support, local 8-bit
> character sets will become less necessary except as encodings of
> Unicode. If the ECU is properly defined in Unicode, it's probably not
> even necessary to define a new 8-bit character set.
> [Carrasco Benitez Manuel]
> I vote for Unicode, also. But this will not make the 7 and 8 bits
> systems
> go away.
>
> > 3) HTML
> >
> > A new entity
> > €
>
> Nice, but unnecessary, since one can use ₠ in HTML now, and will
> be able to use ₠ in XML and define named entities on a per-
> document basis.
> [Carrasco Benitez Manuel]
> I wanted to make it more explicit.
>
> Regards
> Tomas
>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.2 : Tue Jul 10 2001 - 17:20:37 EDT