+Complete note:
+UNICODE transmission test.
+Each UNICODE character is stored in Hi-Lo order (non-Intel)
+The transmission does NOT start with a byte order mark (BOM)
+Each line is terminated using carriage return + line feed.
+This GEDCOM transmission contains a charcter set test. It consists
+of a single family (two parents, many children). The parents are used
+to test the cyrillic and greek letters. In both 'persons' the
+BIRT.PLAC tag contains some capital and the DEAT.PLAC tag some
+small letters of alphabet.
+The children contain some combined letters and special charcters.
+The NAME tag of each 'person' is the name of the characters tested
+within the person.
+The first children contain some special characters. Here the strings
+given in BIRT.PLAC and DEAT.PLAC are 'character name (test character), ...'
+where 'character name'is the name of the character (like 'british pound')
+and 'test character' is a single byte representing this character
+in ANSEL.
+The last children contain some combined characters. The name tag gives
+the name of the non-spacing character tested within the 'person'.
+Within the name the hex-values of the non-spacing character is given
+UNICODE. The DEAT.PLAC tag contains all latin characters which are
+combined with the non-spacing character tested here and which have
+a UNICODE code point. The BIRT.PLAC tag contain the same letters
+without the non-spacing part.
+Example: One 'person' is named 'ring above'. The BIRT.PLAC
+tag contains all latin letters which have a UNICODE code point if
+combined with a ring above. The DEAT.PLAC tag contain the same
+charcters combined with this ring.
+Note: Not all charcters can be displayed on all computers.
+This strongly depends on the installed fonts and codepages.
+This file based on the following source:
+www.unicode.org delivered the connection from the code point names
+to the actual values. Note, that much more UNICODE characters are
+possible (like the chinese alphabet).