On 2013-12-03, Scott Kostyshak wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 30, 2013 at 2:01 AM, Scott Kostyshak <skost...@lyx.org> wrote:
>> On Fri, May 17, 2013 at 8:49 PM, Scott Kostyshak <skost...@lyx.org> wrote:
>>> On Sun, Apr 14, 2013 at 3:39 AM, Scott Kostyshak <skost...@lyx.org> wrote:
>>>> I get utf-8 and utf8x errors.

>>>> Is there a fix for this while preserving export with pdflatex and latex?

>>> Any ideas?

>> It is still failing for me with LuaTeX and XeTeX.
>> Adding the option "latin2" fixes it for me. Is that the right thing to do?
>> The following seems relevant:
>> (from http://mirrors.ctan.org/macros/latex/contrib/europecv/europecv.pdf)
>> The default input encoding for the europecv class is UTF-8. If you have
>> a Unicode capable text editor, you should be able to directly type text
>> with accents, diacritics and so on (i.e., no need to use LATEX commands for
>> special characters). In order for this to work, you must ensure that your
>> document is saved using the UTF-8 text encoding. As an alternative, you
>> may specify a different input encoding for your document (see options
>> below). Please note that the ucs and inputenc packages are needed no
>> matter which encoding you use (see Section 5).

> I will change the encoding to "latin2" unless someone objects.

I propose to change Document>Settings>Language>encoding to utf8x.
This way it is in line with the default setting of europecv
(where the utf8 option selects utf8x).

Additionally, I would file a bug report/request to the europecv author to
ask for an option to bypass the internal call to inputenc so that
customization (like using the standard utf8 option) becomes possible.

Günter


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