Unicode control characters: Difference between revisions

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m Undid revision 1021471748 by Meowowo (talk) nope, the term is format effector (or FE); i.e. code which creates formatting.
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These language tag characters would not be displayed themselves. However, they would provide information for text processing or even for the display of other characters. For example, the display of Unihan ideographs might have substituted different glyphs if the language tags indicated Korean than if the tags indicated Japanese. Another example, might have influenced the display of decimal digits 0 through 9 differently depending on the language they appeared in.
 
The tag characters U+E0001, U+E0020–U+E007E, and U+E007F were deprecated in Unicode 5.1 (2008) and should not be used for language information.<ref>{{cite webdocument|url=http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6082|title=RFC6082: Deprecating Unicode Language Tag Characters: RFC 2482 is Historic | publisher=Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)|date=November 2010|last1=Klensin |first1=John C. |last2=Presuhn |first2=Randy |last3=Whistler |first3=Ken |last4=Dürst |first4=Martin J. |last5=Adams |first5=Glenn }}</ref>
 
With the release of Unicode 8.0 (2015), U+E0020–U+E007E are no longer deprecated characters.