I was fiddling around with parsing in C# and found that for every string I tried, string.StartsWith("\u2D2D")
will return true. Why is that?
It seems it works with every char. Tried this code with .Net 4.5 the Debugger did not break.
for (char i = char.MinValue; i < char.MaxValue; i++)
{
if(!i.ToString().StartsWith("\u2d2d"))
{
Debugger.Break();
}
}
I think I'll have a try.
From what I get, is that U+2D2D was added in Unicode v6.1 (source / source).
The .NET framework, or the native calls rather, support a lower version:
The culture-sensitive sorting and casing rules used in string
comparison depend on the version of the .NET Framework. In the .NET
Framework 4.5 running on the Windows 8 operating system, sorting,
casing, normalization, and Unicode character information conforms to
the Unicode 6.0 standard. On other operating systems, it conforms to
the Unicode 5.0 standard. (source)
Thus it is required to mark it as an ignorable character, which behaves just as if the character wasn't even there.
Character sets include ignorable characters, which are characters that
are not considered when performing a linguistic or culture-sensitive
comparison. (source)
Example:
var culture = new CultureInfo("en-US");
int result = culture.CompareInfo.Compare("", "\u2D2D", CompareOptions.None);
Assert.AreEqual(0, result);
string.StartsWith
uses a similar implementation, but uses CompareInfo.IsPrefix(string, string, CompareOptions)
instead.