Argh! ={ Didn't think about it... well, I usually don't use accents on file names, but this of course doesn't mean I won't run into probls.
So, the conclusion is that UTF-8 support for i18n still needs a lot of work to correctly support some Latin languages (at least Portuguese and Spanish, from what I've been reading on this forum). Or am I missing something?
Does anyone here knows if using ISO-8859-1 as default locale (instead of UTF-8) is dangerous in anyway to ext[23]?
Best,
Andre
On 01 Dec 2003 13:22:47 -0200 Alexandre Oliva aoliva@redhat.com wrote:
On Dec 1, 2003, Andre Costa acosta@ar.microlink.com.br wrote:
Now all seems to work just fine (of course, I lost UTF-8 support, but that doesn't seem to be a probl at the moment).
Note that switching to a non-UTF-8 environment doesn't make you exempt from the requirement that filenames in ext[23] must be in UTF-8 form. I don't know what kind of problems you can run into for not meeting this requirement.
-- Alexandre Oliva Enjoy Guarana', see http://www.ic.unicamp.br/~oliva/ Red Hat GCC Developer aoliva@{redhat.com, gcc.gnu.org} CS PhD student at IC-Unicamp oliva@{lsd.ic.unicamp.br, gnu.org} Free Software Evangelist Professional serial bug killer