On Jun 23 15:45, Thomas Wolff wrote: > Corinna Vinschen wrote: > > On Jun 22 16:48, Thomas Wolff wrote: > > > Since the latest locale-related changes, the default codepage after > > > starting cygwin _without_ explicit setting (of a locale variable) > > > seems to have changed from CP1252 ("Windows ANSI") to ISO 8859-1 ("Latin > > > 1"). > > > Was this change on purpose? > > > > There was no such change at all. The default codepage is still the > > default ANSI codepage on your system. The internal conversion from > > Windows functions to the POSIX multibyte environment and vice versa > > uses UTF-8, though, so that all existing filenames have a valid > > representation even when using characters not available in your > > current codepage. > If I do the following: > * Open cmd console window. > * Go into cygwin 1.7 directory. > * Call cygwin.bat. > * In cygwin, "cat" a file with all 8 bit characters from U+20 to U+FF. > Then there are no printable characters in the range U+80...U+9F > (the difference between ISO 8859-1 and Windows "Western" CP1252). > No. The difference between UTF-8 and CP1252. 0x80-0x9f are not valid codepoints in UTF-8 and the Cygwin console is using UTF-8 by default as well.
> [I'll attach screen shots and the test file to a copy of this mail only > sent to Corinna, as I seem to remember attachments are not desired on > this mailing list.] I'd be grateful if you could refrain from personal mail unless I'm asking for it. There's really no need to send a screenshot. Corinna -- Corinna Vinschen Please, send mails regarding Cygwin to Cygwin Project Co-Leader cygwin AT cygwin DOT com Red Hat -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple