Quote:
Originally posted by Salem
Nope - illegal escape sequences require a diagnostic from the compiler.
All the unused lower case letters are reserved, so you really wouldn't want your code doing something new and interesting just because you used a previously undefined escape sequence.
You have no sense of adventure, also after actually looking up conversion specifications '.' only appears after the % and before conversion type. oops. gcc accepts \. as an escape for '.' don't know why now, might be a bug.