Changing filenames from Greeklish => Greek (subprocess complain)
Cameron Simpson
cs at zip.com.au
Sun Jun 9 05:12:36 EDT 2013
On 09Jun2013 02:00, =?utf-8?B?zp3Or866zr/PgiDOk866z4EzM866?= <nikos.gr33k at gmail.com> wrote:
| Steven wrote:
| >> Since 1 byte can hold up to 256 chars, why not utf-8 use 1-byte for
| >> values up to 256?
|
| >Because then how do you tell when you need one byte, and when you need
| >two? If you read two bytes, and see 0x4C 0xFA, does that mean two
| >characters, with ordinal values 0x4C and 0xFA, or one character with
| >ordinal value 0x4CFA?
|
| I mean utf-8 could use 1 byte for storing the 1st 256 characters. I meant up to 256, not above 256.
Then it would not be UTF-8. UTF-8 will encode an Unicode codepoint. Your suggestion will not.
I'd point out that if you did this, you'd be back in the same
situation you just encountered with ASCII: the first above-255 value
would raise a UnicodeEncodeError (an error which does not even exist
at present:-)
| >> UTF-8 and UTF-16 and UTF-32
| >> I though the number beside of UTF- was to declare how many bits the
| >> character set was using to store a character into the hdd, no?
|
| >Not exactly, but close. UTF-32 is completely 32-bit (4 byte) values.
| >UTF-16 mostly uses 16-bit values, but sometimes it combines two 16-bit
| >values to make a surrogate pair.
|
| A surrogate pair is like itting for example Ctrl-A, which means is a combination character that consists of 2 different characters?
| Is this what a surrogate is? a pari of 2 chars?
Essentially. The combination represents a code point.
| >UTF-8 uses 8-bit values, but sometimes
| >it combines two, three or four of them to represent a single code-point.
|
| 'a' to be utf8 encoded needs 1 byte to be stored ? (since ordinal = 65)
| 'α΄' to be utf8 encoded needs 2 bytes to be stored ? (since ordinal is > 127 )
| 'a chinese ideogramm' to be utf8 encoded needs 4 byte to be stored ? (since ordinal > 65000 )
|
| The amount of bytes needed to store a character solely depends on the character's ordinal value in the Unicode table?
Essentially. You can read up on the exact process in Wikipedia or the Unicode Standard.
Cheers,
--
Cameron Simpson <cs at zip.com.au>
The most annoying thing about being without my files after our disc crash was
discovering once again how widespread BLINK was on the web.
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