+ A backslash is allowed, and harmless, preceding any character without
+a special escape meaning; thus, @samp{?\+} is equivalent to @samp{?+}.
+There is no reason to add a backslash before most characters. However,
+you should add a backslash before any of the characters
+@samp{()\|;'`"#.,} to avoid confusing the Emacs commands for editing
+Lisp code. You can also add a backslash before whitespace characters such as
+space, tab, newline and formfeed. However, it is cleaner to use one of
+the easily readable escape sequences, such as @samp{\t} or @samp{\s},
+instead of an actual whitespace character such as a tab or a space.
+(If you do write backslash followed by a space, you should write
+an extra space after the character constant to separate it from the
+following text.)
+
+@node General Escape Syntax
+@subsubsection General Escape Syntax
+
+ In addition to the specific excape sequences for special important
+control characters, Emacs provides general categories of escape syntax
+that you can use to specify non-ASCII text characters.
+
+@cindex unicode character escape
+ For instance, you can specify characters by their Unicode values.
+@code{?\u@var{nnnn}} represents a character that maps to the Unicode
+code point @samp{U+@var{nnnn}}. There is a slightly different syntax
+for specifying characters with code points above @code{#xFFFF};
+@code{\U00@var{nnnnnn}} represents the character whose Unicode code
+point is @samp{U+@var{nnnnnn}}, if such a character is supported by
+Emacs. If the corresponding character is not supported, Emacs signals
+an error.
+
+ This peculiar and inconvenient syntax was adopted for compatibility
+with other programming languages. Unlike some other languages, Emacs
+Lisp supports this syntax in only character literals and strings.
+
+@cindex @samp{\} in character constant
+@cindex backslash in character constant
+@cindex octal character code
+ The most general read syntax for a character represents the
+character code in either octal or hex. To use octal, write a question
+mark followed by a backslash and the octal character code (up to three
+octal digits); thus, @samp{?\101} for the character @kbd{A},
+@samp{?\001} for the character @kbd{C-a}, and @code{?\002} for the
+character @kbd{C-b}. Although this syntax can represent any
+@acronym{ASCII} character, it is preferred only when the precise octal
+value is more important than the @acronym{ASCII} representation.
+
+@example
+@group
+?\012 @result{} 10 ?\n @result{} 10 ?\C-j @result{} 10
+?\101 @result{} 65 ?A @result{} 65
+@end group
+@end example
+
+ To use hex, write a question mark followed by a backslash, @samp{x},
+and the hexadecimal character code. You can use any number of hex
+digits, so you can represent any character code in this way.
+Thus, @samp{?\x41} for the character @kbd{A}, @samp{?\x1} for the
+character @kbd{C-a}, and @code{?\x8e0} for the Latin-1 character
+@iftex
+@samp{@`a}.
+@end iftex
+@ifnottex
+@samp{a} with grave accent.
+@end ifnottex
+
+@node Ctl-Char Syntax
+@subsubsection Control-Character Syntax
+