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Certain blocks of Unicode are removed at most SE sites – some of these, per decree, because lots of spam uses Chinese characters. (I darenot say whether this is because it is generally believed by spammers to circumvent spam filters, or whether this has been identified as a main source of spam itself.)

There are reasonable exceptions, though: imagine such a ban on Chinese Language (beta)Chinese Language (beta).

One could propose a similar exception for Programming Puzzles & Code , as there are a few exotic programming languages that deliberately make use of Unicode characters.

However.

The specific range of characters you ask about is the Control Character Block C0:

In addition to the special characters defined in the Unicode Standard for a number of purposes, the standard incorporates the legacy control codes for compatibility with the ISO/ IEC 2022 framework, ASCII, and the various protocols that make use of control codes. Rather than simply being defined as byte values, however, the legacy control codes are assigned to Unicode code points: U+0000..U+001F, U+007F..U+009F.
(The Unicode® Standard, Version 9.0 – Core Specification, p. 68)

and

The Unicode Standard provides for the intact interchange of these code points, neither adding to nor subtracting from their semantics. The semantics of the control codes are generally determined by the application with which they are used.
(ibid., p.822)

That means that, for a web interface, the exact behavior of inserting these characters is determined by the local user interface: your browser. Browsers in general can handle only a very few control characters (the two return types and tab are the only ones I can think of), and, even more, they usually do so through the intermediary form of a HTML page, which has even more restrictions.

Simply put: there is no valid way to insert these essentially non-HTML compatible characters in a compatible way. It is not a limitation of code blocks either; code blocks are formatted by SE's local version of Markdown to regular HTML.

Certain blocks of Unicode are removed at most SE sites – some of these, per decree, because lots of spam uses Chinese characters. (I darenot say whether this is because it is generally believed by spammers to circumvent spam filters, or whether this has been identified as a main source of spam itself.)

There are reasonable exceptions, though: imagine such a ban on Chinese Language (beta).

One could propose a similar exception for Programming Puzzles & Code , as there are a few exotic programming languages that deliberately make use of Unicode characters.

However.

The specific range of characters you ask about is the Control Character Block C0:

In addition to the special characters defined in the Unicode Standard for a number of purposes, the standard incorporates the legacy control codes for compatibility with the ISO/ IEC 2022 framework, ASCII, and the various protocols that make use of control codes. Rather than simply being defined as byte values, however, the legacy control codes are assigned to Unicode code points: U+0000..U+001F, U+007F..U+009F.
(The Unicode® Standard, Version 9.0 – Core Specification, p. 68)

and

The Unicode Standard provides for the intact interchange of these code points, neither adding to nor subtracting from their semantics. The semantics of the control codes are generally determined by the application with which they are used.
(ibid., p.822)

That means that, for a web interface, the exact behavior of inserting these characters is determined by the local user interface: your browser. Browsers in general can handle only a very few control characters (the two return types and tab are the only ones I can think of), and, even more, they usually do so through the intermediary form of a HTML page, which has even more restrictions.

Simply put: there is no valid way to insert these essentially non-HTML compatible characters in a compatible way. It is not a limitation of code blocks either; code blocks are formatted by SE's local version of Markdown to regular HTML.

Certain blocks of Unicode are removed at most SE sites – some of these, per decree, because lots of spam uses Chinese characters. (I darenot say whether this is because it is generally believed by spammers to circumvent spam filters, or whether this has been identified as a main source of spam itself.)

There are reasonable exceptions, though: imagine such a ban on Chinese Language (beta).

One could propose a similar exception for Programming Puzzles & Code , as there are a few exotic programming languages that deliberately make use of Unicode characters.

However.

The specific range of characters you ask about is the Control Character Block C0:

In addition to the special characters defined in the Unicode Standard for a number of purposes, the standard incorporates the legacy control codes for compatibility with the ISO/ IEC 2022 framework, ASCII, and the various protocols that make use of control codes. Rather than simply being defined as byte values, however, the legacy control codes are assigned to Unicode code points: U+0000..U+001F, U+007F..U+009F.
(The Unicode® Standard, Version 9.0 – Core Specification, p. 68)

and

The Unicode Standard provides for the intact interchange of these code points, neither adding to nor subtracting from their semantics. The semantics of the control codes are generally determined by the application with which they are used.
(ibid., p.822)

That means that, for a web interface, the exact behavior of inserting these characters is determined by the local user interface: your browser. Browsers in general can handle only a very few control characters (the two return types and tab are the only ones I can think of), and, even more, they usually do so through the intermediary form of a HTML page, which has even more restrictions.

Simply put: there is no valid way to insert these essentially non-HTML compatible characters in a compatible way. It is not a limitation of code blocks either; code blocks are formatted by SE's local version of Markdown to regular HTML.

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Certain blocks of Unicode are removed at most SE sites – some of these, per decree, because lots of spam uses Chinese characters. (I darenot say whether this is because it is generally believed by spammers to circumvent spam filters, or whether this has been identified as a main source of spam itself.)

There are reasonable exceptions, though: imagine such a ban on Chinese Language (beta).

One could propose a similar exception for Programming Puzzles & Code Programming Puzzles & Code , as there are a few exotic programming languages that deliberately make use of Unicode characters.

However.

The specific range of characters you ask about is the Control Character Block C0:

In addition to the special characters defined in the Unicode Standard for a number of purposes, the standard incorporates the legacy control codes for compatibility with the ISO/ IEC 2022 framework, ASCII, and the various protocols that make use of control codes. Rather than simply being defined as byte values, however, the legacy control codes are assigned to Unicode code points: U+0000..U+001F, U+007F..U+009F.
  
(The Unicode® Standard, Version 9.0 – Core Specification, p. 68)

and

The Unicode Standard provides for the intact interchange of these code points, neither adding to nor subtracting from their semantics. The semantics of the control codes are generally determined by the application with which they are used.
  
(ibid., p.822)

That means that, for a web interface, the exact behavior of inserting these characters is determined by the local user interface: your browser. Browsers in general can handle only a very few control characters (the two return types and tab are the only ones I can think of), and, even more, they usually do so through the intermediary form of a HTML page, which has even more restrictions.

Simply put: there is no valid way to insert these essentially non-HTML compatible characters in a compatible way. It is not a limitation of code blocks either; code blocks are formatted by SE's local version of Markdown to regular HTML.

Certain blocks of Unicode are removed at most SE sites – some of these, per decree, because lots of spam uses Chinese characters. (I darenot say whether this is because it is generally believed by spammers to circumvent spam filters, or whether this has been identified as a main source of spam itself.)

There are reasonable exceptions, though: imagine such a ban on Chinese Language (beta).

One could propose a similar exception for Programming Puzzles & Code , as there are a few exotic programming languages that deliberately make use of Unicode characters.

However.

The specific range of characters you ask about is the Control Character Block C0:

In addition to the special characters defined in the Unicode Standard for a number of purposes, the standard incorporates the legacy control codes for compatibility with the ISO/ IEC 2022 framework, ASCII, and the various protocols that make use of control codes. Rather than simply being defined as byte values, however, the legacy control codes are assigned to Unicode code points: U+0000..U+001F, U+007F..U+009F.
  (The Unicode® Standard, Version 9.0 – Core Specification, p. 68)

and

The Unicode Standard provides for the intact interchange of these code points, neither adding to nor subtracting from their semantics. The semantics of the control codes are generally determined by the application with which they are used.
  (ibid., p.822)

That means that, for a web interface, the exact behavior of inserting these characters is determined by the local user interface: your browser. Browsers in general can handle only a very few control characters (the two return types and tab are the only ones I can think of), and, even more, they usually do so through the intermediary form of a HTML page, which has even more restrictions.

Simply put: there is no valid way to insert these essentially non-HTML compatible characters in a compatible way. It is not a limitation of code blocks either; code blocks are formatted by SE's local version of Markdown to regular HTML.

Certain blocks of Unicode are removed at most SE sites – some of these, per decree, because lots of spam uses Chinese characters. (I darenot say whether this is because it is generally believed by spammers to circumvent spam filters, or whether this has been identified as a main source of spam itself.)

There are reasonable exceptions, though: imagine such a ban on Chinese Language (beta).

One could propose a similar exception for Programming Puzzles & Code , as there are a few exotic programming languages that deliberately make use of Unicode characters.

However.

The specific range of characters you ask about is the Control Character Block C0:

In addition to the special characters defined in the Unicode Standard for a number of purposes, the standard incorporates the legacy control codes for compatibility with the ISO/ IEC 2022 framework, ASCII, and the various protocols that make use of control codes. Rather than simply being defined as byte values, however, the legacy control codes are assigned to Unicode code points: U+0000..U+001F, U+007F..U+009F. 
(The Unicode® Standard, Version 9.0 – Core Specification, p. 68)

and

The Unicode Standard provides for the intact interchange of these code points, neither adding to nor subtracting from their semantics. The semantics of the control codes are generally determined by the application with which they are used. 
(ibid., p.822)

That means that, for a web interface, the exact behavior of inserting these characters is determined by the local user interface: your browser. Browsers in general can handle only a very few control characters (the two return types and tab are the only ones I can think of), and, even more, they usually do so through the intermediary form of a HTML page, which has even more restrictions.

Simply put: there is no valid way to insert these essentially non-HTML compatible characters in a compatible way. It is not a limitation of code blocks either; code blocks are formatted by SE's local version of Markdown to regular HTML.

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Certain blocks of Unicode are removed at most SE sites – some of these, per decree, because lots of spam uses Chinese characters. (I darenot say whether this is because it is generally believed by spammers to circumvent spam filters, or whether this has been identified as a main source of spam itself.)

There are reasonable exceptions, though: imagine such a ban on Chinese Language (beta).

One could propose a similar exception for Programming Puzzles & Code , as there are a few exotic programming languages that deliberately make use of Unicode characters.

However.

The specific range of characters you ask about is the Control Character Block C0:

In addition to the special characters defined in the Unicode Standard for a number of purposes, the standard incorporates the legacy control codes for compatibility with the ISO/ IEC 2022 framework, ASCII, and the various protocols that make use of control codes. Rather than simply being defined as byte values, however, the legacy control codes are assigned to Unicode code points: U+0000..U+001F, U+007F..U+009F.
(The Unicode® Standard, Version 9.0 – Core Specification, p. 68)

and

The Unicode Standard provides for the intact interchange of these code points, neither adding to nor subtracting from their semantics. The semantics of the control codes are generally determined by the application with which they are used.
(ibid., p.822)

That means that, for a web interface, the exact behavior of inserting these characters is determined by the local user interface: your browser. Browsers in general can handle only a very few control characters (the two return types and tab are the only ones I can think of), and, even more, they usually do so through the intermediary form of a HTML page, which has even more restrictions.

Simply put: there is no valid way to insert these essentially non-HTML compatible characters in a compatible way. It is not a limitation of code blocks either; code blocks are formatted by SE's local version of Markdown to regular HTML.