* canonically decomposed Unicode 2.1 in UTF-16 format File: "Jamón" Type: regular Size: 0 Mode: 0644 J a m o 314 201 n Certain Unicode characters can be encoded in more than one way. For example, an (A acute) can be encoded either precomposed, as U+00C1 (LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH ACUTE), or decomposed, as U+0041 U+0301 (LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A followed by a COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT). Precomposed characters are more common in the Windows world, whereas decomposed characters are more common on the Mac. When working within Mac OS you will find yourself using a mixture of precomposed and decomposed Unicode. For example, HFS Plus converts all file names to decomposed Unicode, while Macintosh keyboards generally produce precomposed Unicode. This isn't a problem as long as you use system-provided APIs to process text. Apple's APIs correctly handle both precomposed and decomposed Unicode. However, you may need to convert to precomposed Unicode when you interact with other platforms. For example, the following are all valid reasons why you might want to convert to precomposed Unicode. * If you implement a network protocol which is defined to use precomposed Unicode. * When creating a cross-platform file (or volume) whose specification dictates precomposed Unicode. * If you incorporate a large body of cross-platform code into your application, where that code is expecting precomposed Unicode.