Does regular Unicode have a character that looks like a space to a human yet is not treated as a space by software please?

From: William_J_G Overington <wjgo_10009_at_btinternet.com>
Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2014 08:13:52 +0000 (GMT)

Does regular Unicode have a character that looks like a space to a human yet is not treated as a space by software please?

Please consider my use of U+E001 in the following thread.

https://community.serif.com/forum/pageplus/9646/formatting-poetry-for-e-books

Essentially, can that effect be achieved without using a Private Use Area character?

William Overington

27 March 2014

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Received on Thu Mar 27 2014 - 03:15:21 CDT

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