The most unixy way is to treat everything as binary UTF-8 and then forget about encodings. The following program works just fine:
#include <stdio.h> int main() { printf("Hello שלום!\n"); } Compile with: cc -o hello hello.c ./hello Hello שלום! (Though שלום is inversed in the terminal). On Sun, Jan 12, 2014 at 9:02 PM, Baruch Siach <bar...@tkos.co.il> wrote: > Hi Dov, > > On Sun, Jan 12, 2014 at 08:53:38PM +0200, Dov Grobgeld wrote: > > Writing hebrew to the terminal is a bad idea because terminals do not > > support BiDi reordering. > > > > That said, doing "cat small-hello.utf8"[1] works for me in gnome-term > > (though it is reversed). No special environment variables were defined. > > But Ori has specifically asked about sending just one character to > terminal. > cat treats everything like binary data. > > baruch > > > On Sun, Jan 12, 2014 at 8:34 PM, Ori Idan <o...@helicontech.co.il> wrote: > > > I need to print several Hebrew characters (UTF-8) to the terminal. > > > My locale is set to he_IL.UTF-8 so it shows Hebrew on the terminal, > > > however printing from C gives me Chinese characters. > > > My question is how to print one character such as 'א' to the terminal. > > > > > > -- > > > Ori Idan > > -- > http://baruch.siach.name/blog/ ~. .~ Tk Open > Systems > =}------------------------------------------------ooO--U--Ooo------------{= > - bar...@tkos.co.il - tel: +972.2.679.5364, http://www.tkos.co.il - >
_______________________________________________ Linux-il mailing list Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il