On 3/19/2009 6:09 AM, Corinna Vinschen wrote: > If you've set $LANG to, say, "en_US.UTF-8", Cygwin would use the UTF-8 > charset *iff* the application switched the codepage by calling something > along the lines of `setlocale(LC_ALL, "");'. > An application which does not call setlocale (which means, it's not > native language aware anyway) would still use the default ANSI codepage.
First, please forgive my ignorance about LC_ALL, LANG, etc. I ran into an issue yesterday where I was trying to "du -sh" a directory that contained files whose names included UTF characters, I think. Without CYGWIN=codepage:utf8, this failed. It worked fine when I added CYGWIN=codepage:utf8. So my question is, will this work if codepage is dropped and I set LANG to en_US.UTF-8? Is there anything in the Cygwin DLL itself that uses codepage that might be valuable to enable even for applications that aren't native language aware and don't call setlocale()? -- David Rothenberger ---- daver...@acm.org A musician, an artist, an architect: the man or woman who is not one of these is not a Christian. -- William Blake -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/