Thanks to everyone who replied.
One of the devs found a workaround...we set the filter to set the encoding
of both the request and the response (previously we only tried setting one
or the other...apparently both have to be set correctly)
Regards,
Roy
On 4/10/06, roy tang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wr
I'm running using Unicode for international characters, and I have
-Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 set on my VMs. Also, at the top of all my JSP
pages, I have:
<%@ page language="java" pageEncoding="UTF-8"%>
...we may also have a Filter set up to something in the chain, but I
can't check that right no
Hi,
This may not be relevant here, but one standard "gotcha" that keeps
hitting me is a difference in the platforms default encoding. Ie some
machines have a default of ISO-88591, some CP1252, and some UTF-8. The
JVM then just merrily does stuff using the default encoding, and thus
developers ge
So, what are the differences on the machines that have the problem vs
the ones that don not??
roy tang wrote:
Hi,
I'm new to this list, hope someone here can help. :)
We're developing a webapp that should be able to accept Chinese input. We
also have a filter installed in the webapp for some