Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> Quan Qiu writes:
>
>> Thanks a lot. You are very right about this problem! Now, Fedora can
>> display Chinese file names properly although the font doesn't look
>> pretty. :-D
>>
>> One more question, when I used Putty to SSH the server, all files
>> named in Chinese could
- "Elliott Chapin" wrote:
> DejaVu sans has nice ch. char. in OpenOffice. I forget whether this
> started to happen before I upgraded to F13.
The new Chinese font you are seeing may be wqy-zenhei-fonts. :)
It is the default now for zh_CN. Dejavu has no Chinese coverage.
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On 08/30/2010 11:59 PM, Quan Qiu wrote:
> Thanks a lot. You are very right about this problem! Now, Fedora can
> display Chinese file names properly although the font doesn't look
> pretty. :-D
>
> One more question, when I used Putty to SSH the server, all files named
> in Chinese couldn't display
Quan Qiu writes:
Thanks a lot. You are very right about this problem! Now, Fedora can
display Chinese file names properly although the font doesn't look pretty.
:-D
One more question, when I used Putty to SSH the server, all files named in
Chinese couldn't display properly. Is that because o
Thanks for pointing me. I setup Putty to use UTF8, right now Chinese file
names can be displayed :-)
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 12:31 PM, Ding Yi Chen wrote:
> Perhaps you can set the putty to use Chinese font,
> I used to use putty with Chinese BBS, should be all right.
>
> Or you may want to tr
On 08/31/2010 01:32 PM, Hiisi wrote:
> Yes, I know. And enconv can be used exactly the same way that iconv
> used in the proposed script. But you don't have to guess the encoding.
Well, you may still have to guess if the sample size is small such that
it can't accurately determine it. In looking
2010/8/31 Ed Greshko :
>>>
>>> Sometimes the hardest thing is to determine what encoding the file names
>>> are in to start. :-(
>>>
<--SNIP-->
>
> Well...the man page says "enca -- detect and convert encoding of text
> files" and we are talking about file names not the contents of the
> file. I
Perhaps you can set the putty to use Chinese font,
I used to use putty with Chinese BBS, should be all right.
Or you may want to try pietty:
http://ntu.csie.org/~piaip/pietty/
- "Quan Qiu" wrote:
> Thanks a lot. You are very right about this problem! Now, Fedora can display
> Chinese f
Thanks for pointing. I will look at the convmv tool
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 11:18 AM, Jens Petersen wrote:
> > ls | while read filename
> > do
> > mv -i "$filename" "`echo \"$filename\" | iconv -f GB2312 -t UTF8`"
> > done
>
> Or you can use the convmv tool (in fedora) to do that too.
> --
> u
On 08/31/2010 11:54 AM, Hiisi wrote:
> 2010/8/31 Ed Greshko :
> <--SNIP-->
>> Hadn't known about that command. Thanks
>>
>> Sometimes the hardest thing is to determine what encoding the file names
>> are in to start. :-(
>>
>> --
>> A tall, dark stranger will have more fun than you. 葛斯克 愛德華
Thanks a lot. You are very right about this problem! Now, Fedora can display
Chinese file names properly although the font doesn't look pretty. :-D
One more question, when I used Putty to SSH the server, all files named in
Chinese couldn't display properly. Is that because of the Putty doesn't
sup
2010/8/31 Ed Greshko :
<--SNIP-->
>
> Hadn't known about that command. Thanks
>
> Sometimes the hardest thing is to determine what encoding the file names
> are in to start. :-(
>
> --
> A tall, dark stranger will have more fun than you. 葛斯克 愛德華 / 台北
> 市八德路四段
>
>
For that purpose there's a p
On 08/31/2010 11:18 AM, Jens Petersen wrote:
>> ls | while read filename
>> do
>> mv -i "$filename" "`echo \"$filename\" | iconv -f GB2312 -t UTF8`"
>> done
> Or you can use the convmv tool (in fedora) to do that too.
Hadn't known about that command. Thanks
Sometimes the hardest thing is to
> ls | while read filename
> do
> mv -i "$filename" "`echo \"$filename\" | iconv -f GB2312 -t UTF8`"
> done
Or you can use the convmv tool (in fedora) to do that too.
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On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 12:51 PM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> Quan Qiu writes:
>
>> « HTML content follows »
>> Thanks for reply.
>>
>> 1. Where did the imported files come from?
>>
>> Those files were copied from Windows XP through ssh.
>>
>> 2. Are you certain that the file names are in UTF8 and
Quan Qiu writes:
« HTML content follows »
Thanks for reply.
1. Where did the imported files come from?
Those files were copied from Windows XP through ssh.
2. Are you certain that the file names are in UTF8 and not, for
example, GB2312?
Most of files are .doc or .xls. Do you know how to co
Thanks for reply.
1. Where did the imported files come from?
Those files were copied from Windows XP through ssh.
2. Are you certain that the file names are in UTF8 and not, for
example, GB2312?
Most of files are .doc or .xls. Do you know how to convert them to GB2312 ?
On Tue, Aug 31, 201
Thanks for reply. I tried *yum groupinstall "Chinese Support"*, then restart
the server, but didn't get any luck.
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 9:02 AM, Chris Smart wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 10:57 AM, Quan Qiu wrote:
> > Could anyone help me with this? I appreciate any response.
>
> Does this
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 10:57 AM, Quan Qiu wrote:
> Could anyone help me with this? I appreciate any response.
Does this help?
yum groupinstall "Chinese Support"
-c
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On 08/31/2010 08:57 AM, Quan Qiu wrote:
> I installed fedora 12 (English version) on a Dell R300 server, as well
> as SVN and Trac, after I imported files into Linux, all files named in
> Chinese became black squares or question marks when listing them, and
> there were additional strings "invalid
I installed fedora 12 (English version) on a Dell R300 server, as well as
SVN and Trac, after I imported files into Linux, all files named in Chinese
became black squares or question marks when listing them, and there were
additional strings "invalid encoding" attached after each filename. In
addit
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