note
graff
I tried a bunch of other variations on the same sort of theme. I have only taken a quick glance at the C code created by enc2xs (and the differences in C code resulting from different variations of ucm), and I still don't understand exactly what's wrong with this process. But based on what I've seen, the symptom appears to be something like this:
<P>
For any mapping that includes strings of 3 or more "non-unicode" bytes equating to unicode code points, the arrangement of definitions in the ucm file should have at least one of the 3-byte strings before any of the longer string definitions. That is:
<c>
...
<Uhhhh> \xhh\xhh\xhh |0 # first mention of any multi-byte mapping
...
<Uhhhh> \xhh\xhh\xhh\xhh |0
...
</c>
The above arrangement will work, whereas the arrangement below will have the problem as described in the OP:
<c>
...
<Uhhhh> \xhh\xhh\xhh\xhh |0 # first mention of any multi-byte mapping
...
<Uhhhh> \xhh\xhh\xhh |0
...
</c>
(updated to remove spurious spaces)
<P>
Bear in mind that the ucm definitions don't need to be in unicode code-point order -- enc2xs doesn't care about the ordering (except when it comes to triggering this one strange little bug).
<P>
It probably applies to any mapping involving 2-byte strings as well, (that would seem logical), but I haven't tested that. In a nutshell, try ordering your definitions with respect to how long the encoded byte strings are, or at least put one instance of a 3-byte string mapping ahead of all instances of 4-byte mappings.
<P>
(So it was just "coincidental" that I chose q-mark for the initial attempt in my first reply -- it only worked because it just happened to be conventionally placed above the accented letters.)
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