You may have seen stories today about a French spelling reform, promising "the end of the circumflex" or the like. Well, don't get your hopes up - it's much more limited, and confusing, than that. And they are adding a load of accents too, notable grave ones (some replacing acute with no change in pronunciation).
In any case the change is introduced first in schools, and is optional for those who are old enough to have learnt the old rules (even if they didn't). So it may be some time before it is visible - presumably first on line, where news items are (and may still be in twenty years time) cobbled together by kids.
What I suspect may be most noticeable to us is the change in the rules for "immigrant" words, a lot of which of course come from English. In general these will become single words (no hyphen), and will pluralise with an added -s (usually silent) whatever happens in in the source language. Thus
week-end becomes
weekend,
jazzmen becomes
jazzmans, (matches is already
matchs) and
lieder becomes
lieds.
Incidentally, grahame reported in another thread:
Sorry about the 10 minute outage - just back. You may find special characters "breeding" again - don't worry; I'll take them out next time. I only realised once I'd taken the database down that the trick code was ... there in the database!
What exactly is that "trick code"? Is it what's needed to trap the sequences to be removed, or is it the code that produced them (either during read or write of backups) in the first place? Or something else altogether?