I will ask him to do it, however my guess is that he was not aware of the encoding and tried to use the default encoding which was probably windows-1251 (Latin-1) and thus got the gibrish. In open office it also happened. Open office recognized UTF-8 by itself but could not recognize windwos-1255 and gave by default windows-1251.
-- Ori Idan On Sat, Jul 31, 2010 at 11:31 PM, Omer Zak <w...@zak.co.il> wrote: > Hello Ori, > I suggest that you ask your client for a screenshot of the Excel window > displaying the sample imported *.csv file. > > How can this benefit: > > 1. Clear up any miscommunication - maybe the client is viewing a view > not containing the cells having the Hebrew text; or another equally > ridiculous misunderstanding. > > 2. From the gibberish which the client does see (and captured by the > screenshot) you can guess which encoding did his Excel use to import the > file. > > --- Omer > > > On Sat, 2010-07-31 at 23:04 +0300, Ori Idan wrote: > > I have tested google docs with the same file translated using iconv to > > UTF-8 and it works great. > > I still have a problem with excel, my customer claims he can not see > > the hebrew in the file. > > Does someone on this list has access to Excel and can tell me how to > > tell excel the right encoding so it can import the hebrew? > > I myself don't have access to Exccel and thus can not test it. > > I can send a sample file. > > > > -- > > Ori Idan > > > > > > On Sat, Jul 31, 2010 at 12:47 AM, Omer Zak <w...@zak.co.il> wrote: > > > > On Sat, 2010-07-31 at 00:20 +0300, Ori Idan wrote: > > > > > > > > > On Sat, Jul 31, 2010 at 12:17 AM, Omer Zak <w...@zak.co.il> > > wrote: > > > My experience is limited to whatever my CPA is using > > (I think > > > he uses > > > Excel). By experimenting with utf-8, cp862, > > iso_8859-8 and > > > windows-1255 > > > encodings, we found that windows-1255 worked for > > him. > > > > > > If you find that Google Docs and Excel have > > contradictory > > > expectations, > > > then I suggest that you allow people to export the > > CSV file in > > > either > > > "Google Docs compatible" encoding or "Excel > > compatible" > > > encoding. > > > > > > What is google docs compatible format? > > > > > > By trial, I found that utf-8 is the Google Docs compatible > > encoding: > > 1. Create in Google Docs a spreadsheet with Hebrew text. > > 2. Export it in CSV format to a file in your PC. > > 3. Open the file in gedit and modify some cells. > > 4. Import the file into Google Docs and demonstrate that it > > displays > > correctly the modified values. > > 5. By means of xxd -g 1 (or other means), confirm that the > > file is in > > utf-8 encoding. > > > > By the way, I expect Excel to be configurable to accept also > > other > > encodings - but you'll have to find how to do it, and to write > > clear > > instructions for the users. > > -- > Every good master plan involves building a time machine. Moshe Zadka > My own blog is at http://www.zak.co.il/tddpirate/ > > My opinions, as expressed in this E-mail message, are mine alone. > They do not represent the official policy of any organization with which > I may be affiliated in any way. > WARNING TO SPAMMERS: at http://www.zak.co.il/spamwarning.html > > > _______________________________________________ > Linux-il mailing list > Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il > http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il >
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