[Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries]

Subject: Re: dash
From: Mike Brown <mike@xxxxxxxx>
Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2001 22:20:19 -0700 (MST)
Peter Flynn wrote:
> Be careful, Yue: 0150 is an en-dash or en-rule

No it isn't! At least not in the coded character set shared by Unicode and
ISO/IEC 10646. This is what an XML or HTML numeric character reference like
&#150; references, by definition. &#150; always means the non-printing
control character with the legacy name START OF GUARDED AREA.

Character number 150 is only the EN DASH character in Windows 8-bit
codepages, which are irrelevant when you write a numeric character
reference. See http://www.eki.ee/letter/chardata.cgi?ucode=2013 as well as
the relevant specs. Numeric character references never refer to Windows
codepages, even though browsers may erroneously exhibit such behavior.

You were right to point out &#x2013; and &#x2014; though.

   - Mike
____________________________________________________________________
Mike J. Brown, software engineer at            My XML/XSL resources: 
webb.net in Denver, Colorado, USA              http://skew.org/xml/

 XSL-List info and archive:  http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list


Current Thread
  • dash
    • YueMa - Tue, 13 Mar 2001 17:44:38 -0500 (EST)
      • Wendell Piez - Tue, 13 Mar 2001 18:01:39 -0500 (EST)
        • Peter Flynn - Tue, 13 Mar 2001 19:39:48 -0500 (EST)
          • Mike Brown - Wed, 14 Mar 2001 00:19:32 -0500 (EST) <=
          • YueMa - Wed, 14 Mar 2001 12:27:01 -0500 (EST)
          • David Carlisle - Wed, 14 Mar 2001 13:05:13 -0500 (EST)
          • YueMa - Wed, 14 Mar 2001 15:01:26 -0500 (EST)
          • Mike Brown - Thu, 15 Mar 2001 02:25:02 -0500 (EST)
Site Map | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Trademarks
Free Stylus Studio XML Training:
W3C Member