default charset for imlicit locale specificatio
Corinna Vinschen
corinna-cygwin@cygwin.com
Wed Jan 20 13:00:00 GMT 2010
On Jan 20 12:40, Andy Koppe wrote:
> 2010/1/20 Corinna Vinschen:
> >>  1257 ANSI/Baltic       -> ISO-8859-4
>
> ISO-8859-13?
Yes, you're right.
> >>  1258 ANSI/Vietnamese     -> UTF-8
> >> 65001 UTF-8 Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â -> UTF-8
> >>
> >> Is that a valid transition?
>
> Yeah, good enough anyway. There will be special cases, but tough.
I already found one: et_EE -> cp 1257, Linux ISO-8859-1, not -13.
Maybe later.
> > I also noticed that on Linux two-letter settings like "de" or "ja" do not
> > change the charset from ASCII to something else.
>
> Such locales don't usually exist on Linux, i.e. it's probably that
> setlocale is failing, leaving the
> program in "C".
Uh, you're right. I mislead myself by the entries in /usr/share/locale,
but the system locales are in /usr/lib/locale and there are no "de" or
"jp" locales there.
Nevertheless, maybe we should treat the languages w/o TERRITORY the same?
Corinna
--
Corinna Vinschen Please, send mails regarding Cygwin to
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