First, I recommend that you read The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets (No Excuses!).
When i read this line from file using
standard library file i/o routines, i
don't perform any character encodings
work.. (or do i??)
That depends heavily on which standard library you mean.
In C, when you write:
FILE* f = fopen("filename.txt", "w");
fputs("Sic semper tyrannis", f);
No encoding conversion is performed; the chars in the string are just written to the file as-is (except for line breaks). (Encoding is relevant when you're editing the source file.)
But in Python 3.x, when you write:
f = open('filename.txt', 'w', encoding='UTF-8')
f.write('Sic semper tyrannis')
The write function performs an internal conversion from the UTF-16/32 encoding of the Python str types to the UTF-8 encoding used on disk.
The question is: Which software
component actually converts 0s and 1s
into characters(i.e. contains
algorithm for converting 0s and 1s
into characters)?? Is it OS
component?? Which one??
The decoding function (like MultiByteToWideChar or bytes.decode) for the appropriate character encoding converts the bytes into Unicode code points, which are integers that uniquely identify characters. A font converts code points to glyphs, the images of the characters that appear on screen or paper.