surabhi.ahuja wrote:
i checked the locale it is giving:
LANG=en_US.iso885915
LC_CTYPE="en_US.iso885915"

If you Google for "ISO-8859-15 Latin9" the top two results seem to give details. Oh - there are two naming systems for character sets, just to make things even more complicated.

Now, traditionally you'd have used Latin1 (ISO-8859-1), but the introduction of the Euro meant they needed to introduce a new character. They took the opportunity to make some other changes too and called the results Latin9 (ISO-8859-15).

OK - now the original problem was with a database not having a UNICODE encoding. It does look like this is because the environment on this machine is Latin9 rather than UTF-8. It's easy to have this problem, and I always recommend setting the encoding explicitly when creating a database cluster (initdb --encoding=UTF8). If you installed from a package, it might have chosen a default for you though.

HTH
--
  Richard Huxton
  Archonet Ltd

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