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I am reading an c++ document, it said as this,

Wide characters are used mainly to represent non-English or exotic character sets.

What's the exactly meaning for exotic character sets?

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3 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

I think it has no "technical" meaning, it's used as in "strange" or "unusual" character sets.

Since we're talking about wide characters, in general we are actually talking about Unicode; I'd say that Cuneiform or Klingon1 could be considered as "exotic character sets". Or even those Unicode blocks not intended for languages, but for symbols of various nature (mathematical symbols, arrows, alchemical symbols, ...).


  1. Not actually included in the Unicode standard, but available in the PUA of some fonts (link).
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1  
Unicode even includes obscure languages like Sanskrit, Linear-B and Ugaritic, to name precious few. Their goal seems to be to support every known written language on Earth. – greyfade Apr 9 '11 at 15:35
@greyfade: given that Sanskrit is the official language of at least one region in the world, I don't consider it "obscure" (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanskrit). It's also of important cultural heritage to be able to digitalize historical documents written in archaic languages in their original form! – André Caron Apr 9 '11 at 16:06

I think the author means characters such as : § ¨ © ¢ ¡ U ï ð ¥ ¦ â ß à á â ã ¶ æ and suchlikes!

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All of those characters are found in common single-byte character sets, including ISO Latin-1. Some may be non-English but they are not exotic. – mark4o Apr 9 '11 at 16:28

Maybe special charset that are used mainly for printing symbols or older charset as IBM's EBCDIC.

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