See also: byte order mark

English

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Noun

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byte-order mark (plural byte-order marks)

  1. Alternative spelling of byte order mark
    • 2013 January 31, Richard Ishida, “The byte-order mark (BOM) in HTML”, in World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)[1], archived from the original on 2024:
      To communicate which byte order was in use, U+FEFF (the byte-order mark) was used at the start of the stream as a magic number that is not logically part of the text the stream represents.
    • 2020 July 8, “Byte-order mark”, in Distributed Proofreaders[2], archived from the original on 2024:
      A byte-order mark (BOM) is a special Unicode character.

References

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  • John Daintith and Edmund Wright, "byte-order mark (BOM)", in A Dictionary of Computing, 6th edition (2008), Oxford University Press, →ISBN: "The Unicode codepoint U+FEFF when occurring at the start of a file. […] The file's content is considered to start at the position following the byte-order mark."