Hi there,
I had a similar problem. It looks like it is not possible to write the
umlauts correctly in java code itself. If you use a properties file
instead (which you obviously already configured) the strings read from
there will work fine.
In your code try something like
return getMess
Andy Pahne-3 wrote:
>
> I have a problem with a german web application which doesn't show german
> umlaute like ä ö ü correctly.
You could try using the HTML entity instead. Not the ideal solution, I
know...
Ü -> Ü
ü -> ü
http://www.utexas.edu/learn/html/spchar.html More here .
-
I already added -Dfile.encoding=utf-8 to the tomcat options.
I am currently trying the solution that Salamon posted, I'll let you
know if that works...
Andy
Lukas Ruetz schrieb:
Hi,
If all your property-files are encoded in UTF-8 then it's maybe your
servlet-container - in case of tomcat t
Hi,
If all your property-files are encoded in UTF-8 then it's maybe your
servlet-container - in case of tomcat try to start it with the
option "-Dfile.encoding=utf-8". I'm using T4.0 but I think there's
no difference in 4.1
hth,
lukas
Am Mittwoch, 12. Dezember 2007 10:46 schrieb Andy Pahne:
> He
I think you should use the tapestry localization capabilities.
If you create or not a properties file, you should use unicode
escapes characters in place of normal german characters.
example:
Übernachtungen=\u00dcbernachtungen
Every not english character have an equivalent unicode escape cha