08.04.2017 u 19:56, Michael Wolf je napisao/la:
Krunose schrieb:
No, HTML entities probably wouldn't work. Letter 'đ' is not passed
like that. Don't know if they can fix that easily.
This letter works with me by Alt+numeric 240 (208 is upper case)
method on Windows 10 on three Pootle projects: Mozilla, LO and Pootle
2.8.0. I tested it with Icelandic.
I don't understand characters encodings at all, but if you referring to
'đ', appears it's passed plainly as 'đ' to URL from Pootle. I was
wondering if 'č', 'š', 'ć', and 'ž' can be passed as percent encoding to
improve Pootle's search functionality?
Hope someone will give as answer.
Kruno
Michael
08.04.2017 u 19:38, Krunose je napisao/la:
Does that mean Pootle can't be set to this to work? Don't think
chines characters are ASCII but I guess they can use there script.
Think it's related to what is passed to URL.
These character should be passed to URL as html entities and think
that would fix it. That's what happens to 'đ' when search for that
letter.
Can you confirm that to mailing list? Think they can fix that?
Kruno
08.04.2017 u 19:33, Michael Wolf je napisao/la:
Krunose schrieb:
And seams that 'đ' is recognized correctly. Maybe because that
letter is used in other languages?
Yes, it's ASCII. It exists in Icelandic and Faroese. \u00D0 and
\u00F0 (hexadecimal).
--
To unsubscribe e-mail to: l10n+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/l10n/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted