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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.acorn.tech
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- From: /G=Owen/S=Smith/O=SJ-Research/ADMD=INTERSPAN/C=GB/@mhs-relay.ac.uk
- Subject: International Currency Sybol
- Message-ID: <ARM200-921116113421-581F3C23*@MHS>
- Sender: /G=Owen/S=Smith/O=SJ-Research/ADMD=INTERSPAN/C=GB/@mhs-relay.ac.uk
- Organization: Yale CS Mail/News Gateway
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 11:34:21 GMT
- Lines: 39
-
- ahersee@dcs.warwick.ac.uk (Andrew Hersee) wrote:
-
- >I now use a special character I never have used '*'. In my original letter I
- >used * since the character I use does not exist in unix. I did in fact
-
- > \.-./
- > | |
- > /`-'\
-
- >Well nearly anyway :-) Nothing uses that at the moment and I have never seen
- >a sprite in the icon sprite pool with that character in it. Anyone know what
- >that character is called ?
-
- If you're talking about the character on the same key as the pound sign,
- it's the International Currnency Symbol. It means "a random unspecified
- currency" so you can stick it in front of a number and people know that you
- are talking about a monetary quantity in an unspecified currency. That's the
- theory anyway. In practice it's a minefield. The character appears at all
- sorts of different locations in various different character sets (says he
- putting his X.400 mail hat on) and has a nasty tendency to get used as a
- catch all in character set conversions so you mail a dollar sign and it
- comes out as an international currency symbol and vice versa. Indeed
- Americans can be particularly insular about this - the standard X.400
- character set (IA5 IRV - International Alpabet 5, International Reference
- Version) is only 7 bit and it doesn't have a dollar sign or any other
- currency symbol except the international currency symbol. Various American
- customers of the company I worked for (Data General) insisted that we use
- this character position for shipping around dollar signs instead. We
- resisted (on the basis that it was wrong and that they and the systems they
- were talking to should instead use a 16 bit character set) until they
- threatened to take their money elsewhere, at which point we did them a
- grungy patch :-(.
-
- My advice - avoid this character like the plague. It's a top bit set
- character too, which is another reason to avoid it if you want file
- portability (anyone tried putting it on a DOS disk and then seeing what
- MS-DOS thinks of it?).
-
- Owen.
-