Hello Unicode Experts!
As I understand it, endian-ness applies to multi-byte words.
Endian-ness does not apply to ASCII characters because each character is a single byte.
Endian-ness does apply to UTF-16BE (Big-Endian), UTF-16LE (Little-Endian), UTF-32BE and UTF32-LE because each character uses multiple bytes.
Clearly endian-ness does not apply to single-byte UTF-8 characters. But what about UTF-8 characters that use multiple bytes, such as the character é, which uses two bytes C3 and A9; does endian-ness apply? For example, if a file is in Little Endian would the character é appear in a hex editor as A9 C3 whereas if the file is in Big Endian the character é would appear in a hex editor as C3 A9?
/Roger
Received on Mon Feb 04 2019 - 13:21:25 CST
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