=item Regular Expressions
-The regular expression compiler does now attempt to produce polymorphic
-opcodes. That is the pattern should now adapt to the data and
-automaticaly switch to the Unicode character scheme when presented with Unicode data,
-or a traditional byte scheme when presented with byte data.
-The implementation is still new and (particularly on EBCDIC platforms) may
-need further work.
+The regular expression compiler does now attempt to produce
+polymorphic opcodes. That is the pattern should now adapt to the data
+and automatically switch to the Unicode character scheme when presented
+with Unicode data, or a traditional byte scheme when presented with
+byte data. The implementation is still new and (particularly on
+EBCDIC platforms) may need further work.
=item C<use utf8> still needed to enable a few features
If the C<-C> command line switch is used, (or the ${^WIDE_SYSTEM_CALLS}
global flag is set to C<1>), all system calls will use the
corresponding wide character APIs. This is currently only implemented
-on Windows.
+on Windows since UNIXes lack API standard on this area.
Regardless of the above, the C<bytes> pragma can always be used to force
byte semantics in a particular lexical scope. See L<bytes>.