Dear Sir/Madam
Please unsubscribe Angus Mann angusm...@pobox.com from your database. My
husband passed away 6 May 2010.
Thank you
Sonya Mann
- Original Message -
From: "tedd"
To:
Sent: Monday, May 31, 2010 12:20 AM
Subject: Re: [PHP] Convert UTF-8 to PHP defines
A
At 10:20 PM +0200 5/29/10, Nisse =?utf-8?Q?Engstr=C3=B6m?= wrote:
On Sat, 29 May 2010 10:16:39 -0400, tedd wrote:
At 7:15 AM +0200 5/29/10, Nisse =?utf-8?Q?Engstr=C3=B6m?= wrote:
No. There are no glyphs in Unicode. This is spelled out for
you in chapter 2, figure 2-2. "Characters versus Glyp
On Sat, 29 May 2010 10:16:39 -0400, tedd wrote:
> At 7:15 AM +0200 5/29/10, Nisse =?utf-8?Q?Engstr=C3=B6m?= wrote:
>>
>>No. There are no glyphs in Unicode. This is spelled out for
>>you in chapter 2, figure 2-2. "Characters versus Glyphs".
> Code points are simply unique numbers assigned to speci
At 7:15 AM +0200 5/29/10, Nisse =?utf-8?Q?Engstr=C3=B6m?= wrote:
No. There are no glyphs in Unicode. This is spelled out for
you in chapter 2, figure 2-2. "Characters versus Glyphs".
*blink* *blink* *blink*
I read it, but that's not addressing the issue here -- that's
something different.
On Fri, 28 May 2010 16:52:09 -0400, tedd wrote:
> At 8:52 PM +0200 5/28/10, Nisse =?utf-8?Q?Engstr=C3=B6m?= wrote:
>>On Fri, 28 May 2010 11:13:35 -0400, tedd wrote:
>>
>> > As is my understanding, UTF-8 will accommodate all the languages
>>> (glyphs) of the world and then some. It will be a whil
At 8:52 PM +0200 5/28/10, Nisse =?utf-8?Q?Engstr=C3=B6m?= wrote:
On Fri, 28 May 2010 11:13:35 -0400, tedd wrote:
> As is my understanding, UTF-8 will accommodate all the languages
(glyphs) of the world and then some. It will be a while before we
need UTF-16 or UTF-32 but those are just a lar
On Fri, 28 May 2010 11:13:35 -0400, tedd wrote:
> Bob wrtote:
>
>>>The real question is whether unicode is even relevant now that the UTF
>>>series is available.
>
> Ashley answered:
>
>>Bob, UTF is unicode (Unicode Transformation Format)
Or more precisely, UTF-{8,16,32} are different ways to
At 8:33 PM +0100 5/27/10, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
Tedd, does that URL actually go anywhere, as I got nothing when I
tried visiting it, both the actual URL and the punycode version.
Ash:
Try it again (it worked for me).
In any event, the link was supposed to be redirected to this site:
http://
Bob wrtote:
The real question is whether unicode is even relevant now that the UTF
series is available.
Ashley answered:
Bob, UTF is unicode (Unicode Transformation Format)
Yes, Ashley is correct. UTF-8 is Unicode, as is UTF-16 and UTF-32,
which all use different a number of bytes for eac
On 28 May 2010 04:47, Guus Ellenkamp wrote:
> And I need(ed) this stuff especially for non-ASCII characters like Chinese,
> Arabic and stuff :)
>
> "Ashley Sheridan" wrote in message
> news:1274976794.2202.274.ca...@localhost...
> On Thu, 2010-05-27 at 12:08 -0400, Adam Richardson wrote:
>
>> On
On Fri, 2010-05-28 at 11:51 +0800, Guus Ellenkamp wrote:
> I would like if you stick to the original issue: can a PHP source file be in
> utf-8. It's not about the output, that is properly supported.
>
> Think it would be a good idea anyhow that PHP would support utf-8 source
> files as it seem
I would like if you stick to the original issue: can a PHP source file be in
utf-8. It's not about the output, that is properly supported.
Think it would be a good idea anyhow that PHP would support utf-8 source
files as it seems utf-8 is going to be the de-facto standard for text files
anyhow.
And I need(ed) this stuff especially for non-ASCII characters like Chinese,
Arabic and stuff :)
"Ashley Sheridan" wrote in message
news:1274976794.2202.274.ca...@localhost...
On Thu, 2010-05-27 at 12:08 -0400, Adam Richardson wrote:
> On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 9:45 AM, Guus Ellenkamp
> wrote:
>
On Thu, 2010-05-27 at 15:28 -0400, Bob McConnell wrote:
> From: tedd
>
> > The Unicode database uses the same lower
> > character values (i.e., "code points") as does
> > ASCII, namely 0-127, and thus UFT-8 (8-bit
> > variable width encoding) is really a super-set
> > which includes the sub-s
From: tedd
> The Unicode database uses the same lower
> character values (i.e., "code points") as does
> ASCII, namely 0-127, and thus UFT-8 (8-bit
> variable width encoding) is really a super-set
> which includes the sub-set of ASCII.
>
> The "Wingdings" font that Ash refers to is the
> rea
At 7:11 PM +0100 5/27/10, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Thu, 2010-05-27 at 14:06 -0400, Bob McConnell wrote:
> From: Ashley Sheridan
> > I don't use the higher range of characters often, but I do sometimes use
> them for things like the graphical glyphs (12)&, etc) I know I could do
> those wit
On Thu, 2010-05-27 at 14:06 -0400, Bob McConnell wrote:
> From: Ashley Sheridan
>
> >On Thu, 2010-05-27 at 12:08 -0400, Adam Richardson wrote:
> >
> >> On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 9:45 AM, Guus Ellenkamp
> >> wrote:
> >>
> >> > Thanks, but are you sure of that? I did some research a while ago and
>
From: Ashley Sheridan
>On Thu, 2010-05-27 at 12:08 -0400, Adam Richardson wrote:
>
>> On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 9:45 AM, Guus Ellenkamp
>> wrote:
>>
>> > Thanks, but are you sure of that? I did some research a while ago and found
>> > that officially PHP files should be ascii and not have any speci
At 5:13 PM +0100 5/27/10, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
I don't use the higher range of characters often, but I do sometimes use
them for things like the graphical glyphs (12)&, etc) I know I could do
those with regular text and the Wingdings font, but that's not available
on every computer, and break
On Thu, 2010-05-27 at 12:08 -0400, Adam Richardson wrote:
> On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 9:45 AM, Guus Ellenkamp
> wrote:
>
> > Thanks, but are you sure of that? I did some research a while ago and found
> > that officially PHP files should be ascii and not have any specific
> > character encoding. I
On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 9:45 AM, Guus Ellenkamp
wrote:
> Thanks, but are you sure of that? I did some research a while ago and found
> that officially PHP files should be ascii and not have any specific
> character encoding. I believe it will work anyhow (did not try this one),
> but would like to
On Thu, 2010-05-27 at 21:45 +0800, Guus Ellenkamp wrote:
> Thanks, but are you sure of that? I did some research a while ago and found
> that officially PHP files should be ascii and not have any specific
> character encoding. I believe it will work anyhow (did not try this one),
> but would li
Thanks, but are you sure of that? I did some research a while ago and found
that officially PHP files should be ascii and not have any specific
character encoding. I believe it will work anyhow (did not try this one),
but would like to stick with the standards.
"Ashley Sheridan" wrote in messa
Hello Guus,
Actually, we are using the same method here on http://oire.org/. We
have all of the language files in UTF8 format and everything seems to
be OK. Yes, unicode support in PHp laisse à désirer, like the French
say, but it does support UTF8 files.
--
With best regards from Ukraine,
Andre
On Wed, 2010-05-26 at 22:20 +0800, Guus Ellenkamp wrote:
> We use PHP defines for defining text in different languages. As far as I
> know PHP files are supposed to be ASCII, not UTF-8 or something like that.
> What I want to make is a conversion program that would convert a given UTF-8
> file
25 matches
Mail list logo