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author | Walter Dörwald <walter@livinglogic.de> | 2006-01-09 12:45:01 (GMT) |
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committer | Walter Dörwald <walter@livinglogic.de> | 2006-01-09 12:45:01 (GMT) |
commit | b754fe4e7f6331df129fa904a48a9f55faf37b82 (patch) | |
tree | 56c1def0f1e7543e980d75cebbe9b3e2f30cd0b5 /Doc/lib | |
parent | 4372558a95f59d03a018994089868f93e3585589 (diff) | |
download | cpython-b754fe4e7f6331df129fa904a48a9f55faf37b82.zip cpython-b754fe4e7f6331df129fa904a48a9f55faf37b82.tar.gz cpython-b754fe4e7f6331df129fa904a48a9f55faf37b82.tar.bz2 |
Fix typos.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/lib')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/libcodecs.tex | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libcodecs.tex b/Doc/lib/libcodecs.tex index 71d6fe8..b306606 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/libcodecs.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/libcodecs.tex @@ -546,7 +546,7 @@ There's another group of encodings (the so called charmap encodings) that choose a different subset of all unicode code points and how these codepoints are mapped to the bytes 0x0-0xff. To see how this is done simply open e.g. encodings/cp1252.py (which is an encoding that -is used primarily on Windows). There's string constant with 256 +is used primarily on Windows). There's a string constant with 256 characters that shows you which character is mapped to which byte value. @@ -584,7 +584,7 @@ there are no issues with byte order in UTF-8. Each byte in a UTF-8 byte sequence consists of two parts: Marker bits (the most significant bits) and payload bits. The marker bits are a sequence of zero to six 1 bits followed by a 0 bit. Unicode characters are encoded like this -(with x being a payload bit, which when concatenated give the Unicode +(with x being payload bits, which when concatenated give the Unicode character): \begin{tableii}{l|l}{textrm}{}{Range}{Encoding} @@ -608,7 +608,7 @@ which encoding was used for encoding a Unicode string. Each charmap encoding can decode any random byte sequence. However that's not possible with UTF-8, as UTF-8 byte sequences have a structure that doesn't allow arbitrary byte sequence. To increase the reliability -with which an UTF-8 encoding can be detected, Microsoft invented a +with which a UTF-8 encoding can be detected, Microsoft invented a variant of UTF-8 (that Python 2.5 calls "utf-8-sig") for its Notepad program: Before any of the Unicode characters is written to the file, a UTF-8 encoded BOM (which looks like this as a byte sequence: 0xef, |