Adnrew and Harm
Thank you for helping. It is not mandatory to use UTF-8 characters for file 
name, but it will be a bonus. Since file system (window 10) support utf-8 for 
file name, the file name with UTF-8 be pass through lilypond as in header, 
lyrics do. I did some test UTF-8 can also be used as variable-name as well.
Andrew: Thank you for invest time to look into this UTF-8 behavior in filename. 
Harm: Thank you for Guile analysis.  Hope this will be resolved soon  -  a 
bonus for UTF-8 user.
Immanuel,Ming.

      From: Andrew Bernard <andrew.bern...@gmail.com>
 To: MING TSANG <tsan...@rogers.com> 
Cc: Lilypond-usermailinglist <lilypond-user@gnu.org>
 Sent: Saturday, November 26, 2016 11:49 PM
 Subject: Re: LSR - file information [0.24759]
   
Hi Ming,


Indeed yes that fails, using a filename with Chinese characters. As as aside, I 
myself have been learning to read and write and speak Chinese for a long time. 
However, I have never had the need to do it in Lilypond. I am not sure that 
lilypond has focused on Chinese character support very much - but I am not 
sure. Lilypond does of course support UTF-8, so there is something fishy going 
on.

I'll have a look more deeply into this for you. In the meantime, as 
Anglocentric as it may be, can you work with English filenames?

Andrew



   
_______________________________________________
lilypond-user mailing list
lilypond-user@gnu.org
https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user

Reply via email to