604d0dd551
Japanese keyboards traditionally use 0x5c for both Japanese yen sign key and backslash key. While a Japanese yen sign is depicted on the keytop, most of Japanese expect that the scan code 0x7d gives a backslash (0x5c), not a Japanese yen sign (0xa5). This is because JIS X 0201 encoding (aka ISO/IEC 646-JA, an extended version of ASCII which is very popular in Japan) has Japanese yen sign at 0x5c and no backslash. On the other hand, ISO/IEC 8859-1 has Japanese yen sign at 0xa5. This difference has caused a confusion after Unicode became popular since ISO/IEC 10646 adopted 8859-1 for the plane 0. MFC after: 1 week |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
colldef | ||
ctypedef | ||
dict | ||
doc | ||
dtrace | ||
examples | ||
i18n | ||
keys | ||
man | ||
misc | ||
mk | ||
monetdef | ||
msgdef | ||
numericdef | ||
security | ||
sendmail | ||
skel | ||
snmp | ||
syscons | ||
tabset | ||
termcap | ||
tests | ||
timedef | ||
vt | ||
zoneinfo | ||
Makefile | ||
Makefile.inc |