The unicode is
and it's being used in an XML document.
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4That's not unicode, it's a numeric character entity.– Alan MooreJun 11, 2010 at 20:22
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1Agreed. Read the XML standard (w3.org/TR/xml), in particular section 4.1 ("Character and Entity References").– Remy LebeauJun 11, 2010 at 21:56
4 Answers
It's the ASCII character LF, Line Feed.
Some systems (e.g. Windows) use the combination CR+LF,
, for line break, some systems (e.g. Linux) use only LF as line break, some systems (e.g. Macintosh) use only CR as line break.
So, only a LF character in an XML value would be a line break from a Linux system (or similar).
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6This is an old post but just to point out that Macs used CR back in the days of OS 9 in the 90s. These days they use LF, since the operating system is based on Unix. Aug 4, 2016 at 9:33
There are some great lookup tools on the Web:
It's the newline character.
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While that is correct, what would be more helpful is a reference so he can look up entities himself in the future.– Michael Myers ♦Jun 11, 2010 at 18:31