Dennis Bjorklund kirjutas T, 25.11.2003 kell 14:51: > On Tue, 25 Nov 2003, Tatsuo Ishii wrote: > > > I'm tired of telling that Unicode is not that perfect.
Of course not, but neither is the current multibyte with only marginal support for unicode (many people actually need upper()/lower() ) > Another gottcha > > with Unicode is the UTF-8 encoding (currently we use) consumes 3 > > bytes for each Kanji character, while other encodings consume only 2 > > bytes. I think that for *storage* we should use SCSU (the Standard Compression Scheme for Unicode). > IMO 3/2 storage ratio could not be neglected for database use. SCSU should solve that (actually it should use less than 2 bytes char for encoding any single language) > The rest of the world seems to select unicode as the way to handle > different languages in the UI of programs. For example gnome supports > nothing but unicode. How is that handled in your country? I know that you > are tired of people who don't understand how difficult it is for you, but > I really would like to know. Is gnome not used over there because of this? > > About storing data in the database, I would expect it to work with any > encoding, just like I would expect pg to be able to store images in any > format. > > I'll try to not mention unicode near you in the feature :-) --------------- Hannu ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs/FAQ.html