> On 22 Oct 2015, at 16:00, Stephan Eggermont <step...@stack.nl> wrote:
> 
> On 22/10/15 12:01, Sven Van Caekenberghe wrote:
>> 
>>> On 22 Oct 2015, at 11:14, Hilaire <hila...@drgeo.eu> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Le 21/10/2015 22:26, olivier auverlot a écrit :
>>>> Hi Hilaire,
>>>> 
>>>> Take a look in the Artefact demos. I think there are a PDF document
>>>> with a monetary character.
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> Indeed ((128 asCharacter) asString).
>> 
>> I am pretty sure this is wrong. The Unicode code point for the Euro symbol 
>> is decimal 8364 and not 128.
> 
> Yes, it might be ISO-Latin-1. There are several codepages having € at 128. 
> PDF support several encodings, I don't know what Artefact uses by default.
> 
> Stephan

Indeed, I spoke too quickly, several indeed do (44 out of 69 defined):

ZnByteEncoder knownEncodingIdentifiers select: [ :each | 
  (ZnByteEncoder newForEncoding: each) characterDomain includes: $€ ].
        
(ZnByteEncoder knownEncodingIdentifiers 
   collect: [ :each | ZnByteEncoder newForEncoding: each ])
     select: [ :each | each characterDomain includes: $€ ]
     thenCollect: [ :each | each identifier -> (each encodeString: $€ asString) 
].

Most but not all use 128 as encoding. But Latin1 is not one of them (at least 
not in the strict interpretation).
        
ZnCharacterEncoder latin1 encodeString: $€ asString. 

Sven



Reply via email to