On Sun, Jan 07, 2007 at 09:48:34PM +0100, Willy Tarreau wrote: > On Sun, Jan 07, 2007 at 08:11:38PM +0100, Jan Engelhardt wrote: > > > > On Jan 7 2007 17:06, Russell King wrote: > > >On Mon, Jan 08, 2007 at 12:29:05AM +0800, David Woodhouse wrote: > > > > > >$ git log | head -n 1000 | tail -n 200 > o > > >$ file -i o > > >o: text/plain; charset=us-ascii > > >$ git log | head -n 1000 | tail -n 300 > o > > >$ file -i o > > >o: text/plain; charset=us-ascii > > >$ git log | head -n 1000 | tail -n 400 > o > > >$ file -i o > > >o: text/plain; charset=utf-8 > > > > I am inclined to say that "file" does not count, because it tries to guess > > an > > ambiguous mapping from bytes to character set. Even more, file should be > > _unable at all_ to distinguish an iso-8859-1 from an iso-8859-2 (or worse: > > 15) > > file. This program is soo... forget it, it's not an argument. It works well > > for > > headerful files, but text files don't really contain one. The next best > > thing > > would be html, with a proper <meta http-equiv=Content> tag. > > The stupidity from the start up with those character sets is that they > consider that a whole file is written with a given set. In fact, the > charset should apply to characters themselves. At least, the > quoted-printable, non-human friendly, encoding was the least stupid.
I doubt doing this would really be worth the effort. In the 21st century, people should simply use UTF-8. > Now that UTF8 comes everywhere, everyone receives tons of mangled mails, > and even mailers which correctly support UTF8 and use it by default manage > to shoot themselves in the foot when they reply to, or forward a mail. The > system is completely broken because limited by design, and we have to learn > to live with this brokenness. Only if MUAs have broken charset support or don't set a correct "charset" header in the mails they are sending. If some software still can't handle UTF-8 correctly more than 10 years after it was introduced, that's not a brokenness you can blame on UTF-8. > Willy cu Adrian -- "Is there not promise of rain?" Ling Tan asked suddenly out of the darkness. There had been need of rain for many days. "Only a promise," Lao Er said. Pearl S. Buck - Dragon Seed - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/