Re: Mis-interpreted extended character - Mailing list pgsql-admin

From Chris
Subject Re: Mis-interpreted extended character
Date
Msg-id 1071329925.2161.22.camel@linuxbox
Whole thread Raw
In response to Mis-interpreted extended character  (Andrew Biagioni <andrew.biagioni@e-greek.net>)
Responses Re: Mis-interpreted extended character  (Andrew Biagioni <andrew.biagioni@e-greek.net>)
List pgsql-admin
> Our database ( (PostgreSQL) 7.3.5 ) uses Unicode encoding:
> [...]

> For some reason, If I try to use an extended character (ASCII code >
> 127) in a string, I get this peculiar result:

> [...]

Probably your terminal is set to ISO-8859-1 ("latin 1") or something
like that, while your database is set to unicode as you showed.

Hence the mismatch. In unicode (for example UTF-8) non-US-ASCII
characters are encoded with two bytes (as opposed to one byte > 127
as happens with ISO-8859-1). Solution is to have everything agree on the
encoding. Terminal + DB or Web Browser + DB.

Btw. you _do_ actually have an influence on what encoding a web browser
uses by setting the "encoding" HTTP header.

According to my experience, if you have to deal with only western
european encodings, you're better off (still) with ISO-8859-1 (or
ISO-8859-15 to have the EUR symbol too).


Short answer: not PostgreSQL's fault.


Bye, Chris.



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