Search Results

Search found 13217 results on 529 pages for 'non unicode'.

Page 7/529 | < Previous Page | 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14  | Next Page >

  • Unicode Regex; Invalid XML characters

    - by Ambush Commander
    The list of valid XML characters is well known, as defined by the spec it's: #x9 | #xA | #xD | [#x20-#xD7FF] | [#xE000-#xFFFD] | [#x10000-#x10FFFF] My question is whether or not it's possible to make a PCRE regular expression for this (or its inverse) without actually hard-coding the codepoints, by using Unicode general categories. An inverse might be something like [\p{Cc}\p{Cs}\p{Cn}], except that improperly covers linefeeds and tabs and misses some other invalid characters.

    Read the article

  • MySQL don't want to store unicode charecter

    - by Qiao
    Why MySQl don't wont to store unicode character ??? Yes, it is rare hieroglyph, you wouldn't see it in the browser. UTF16 is U+2B5EE Warning: #1366 Incorrect string value: '\xF0\xAB\x97\xAE' for column 'ch' at row 1 Is it possible to store this character in MySQL?

    Read the article

  • Does Lua support Unicode?

    - by TimK
    Based on the link below, I'm confused as to whether the Lua programming language supports Unicode. http://lua-users.org/wiki/LuaUnicode It appears it does but has limitations. I simply don't understand, are the limitation anything big/key or not a big deal?

    Read the article

  • Unicode filename to python subprocess.call()

    - by otrov
    I'm trying to run subprocess.call() with unicode filename, and here is simplified problem: n = u'c:\\windows\\notepad.exe ' f = u'c:\\temp\\nèw.txt' subprocess.call(n + f) which raises famous error: UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character u'\xe8' Encoding to utf-8 produces wrong filename, and mbcs passes filename as new.txt without accent I just can't read any more on this confusing subject and spin in circle. I found here lot of answers for many different problems in past so I thought to join and ask for help myself Thanks

    Read the article

  • Unicode Kangxi radicals range 2F00–2FDF not displayed on iphone device, but in simulator

    - by sadfadfasd
    Hi, Kangxi radicals in the range 2F00-2FDF (see link text) are not displayed correctly on the iPhone device. They appear as a crossed-out box. In the simulator they display correctly. I tried the system font and also the [UIFont fontWithName:@"STHeitiTC-Medium" size:24]; ... Is the unicode codepoint coverage limited on the iphone (in my case OS 3.1.3)? How to make those radicals appear??? Thx

    Read the article

  • regex unicode charater in vim

    - by aidan
    I'm being an idiot. Someone cut and pasted some text from microsoft word into my lovely html files. I now have these unicode characters instead of regular quote symbols, (i.e. quotes appear as <92 in the text) I want to do a regex replace but I'm having trouble selecting them. :%s/\u92/'/g :%s/\u5C/'/g :%s/\x92/'/g :%s/\x5C/'/g ...all fail. My google-fu has failed me.

    Read the article

  • MySQL dno't wont to store unicode charecter

    - by Qiao
    Why MySQl don't wont to store unicode character ??? Yes, it is rare hieroglyph, you wouldn't see it in the browser. UTF16 is U+2B5EE Warning: #1366 Incorrect string value: '\xF0\xAB\x97\xAE' for column 'ch' at row 1 Is it possible to store this character in MySQL?

    Read the article

  • Unicode symbols coming wrong

    - by robert
    Obviously, there must be something stupid i'm doing. The unicode chart for subscripts and superscripts says #00B2 is superscript 2, but i get scrambled output. 0078 is x, but I get N, and 0120 is x. Am i reading wrong manual? EDIT $x = '&#0078;'; print html_entity_decode($x, ENT_NOQUOTES, 'UTF-8') . "\n";

    Read the article

  • How do I convert filenames from unicode to ascii

    - by zedwarth
    I have a bunch of music files on a NTFS partition mounted on linux that have filenames with unicode characters. I'm having trouble writing a script to rename the files so that all of the file names use only ASCII characters. I think that using the iconv command should work, but I'm having trouble escaping the characters for the mv command.

    Read the article

  • converting array of bytes to UTF-8 unicode

    - by user394242
    I have a file saved as UTF-8, and i'm reading it like this: ReadFile(hFile, pContents, pFile->nFileSize, &dwRead, NULL); (pContents is a BYTE* of size nFileSize) its just a small file with 100 bytes or so, contains text which i want to read into memory in wchar_t* format, so i can set the text of edit and static controls with the unicode text. How can i convert the bytes to UTF-8? edit (i don't want to use fstream or wfstream)

    Read the article

  • Conversion of text to unicode strings...

    - by user154301
    I have to process JSON files that looks like this: \u0432\u043b\u0430\u0434\u043e\u043c <b>\u043f\u0443\u0442\u0438\u043c<\/b> \u043d\u0430\u0447 Unfortunately, I'm not sure how this encoding is called. I would like to convert it to .NET Unicode strings. What's the easies way to do it? Thanks in advance!

    Read the article

  • how non-programmer become developer

    - by Sarang
    Every year there are different types of freshers getting recruited. But, our IT field is not only limited to IT Engineers & Computer Engineers. It is full of all different types of engineers. What is a way an engineer can be a proper developer ? I am asking this because, whatever engineering the student gone for, one can be shifted to IT development if he/she has some particular qualities within. What are those quelities required to be in a developer or required to be implemented to be developer ?

    Read the article

  • Non-Unicode strings in VB.NET? (7 replies)

    I've been reading the MSDN documentation on the System.Char and System.String types and they mention Unicode throughout without even mentioning non Unicode versions. How do I get a gool 'ol one byte char and non Unicode string in .NET? Thanks, Alain

    Read the article

  • Non-Unicode strings in VB.NET? (7 replies)

    I've been reading the MSDN documentation on the System.Char and System.String types and they mention Unicode throughout without even mentioning non Unicode versions. How do I get a gool 'ol one byte char and non Unicode string in .NET? Thanks, Alain

    Read the article

  • Access 2007 and Special/Unicode Characters in SQL

    - by blockcipher
    I have a small Access 2007 database that I need to be able to import data from an existing spreadsheet and put it into our new relational model. For the most part this seems to work pretty well. Part of the process is attempting to see if a record already exists in a target table using SQL. For example, if I extract book information out of the current row in the spreadsheet, it may contain a title and abstract. I use SQL to get the ID of a matching record, if it exists. This works fine except when I have data that's in a non-English language. In this case, it seems that there is some punctuation that is causing me problems. At least I think it's punctuation as I do have some fields that do not have punctuation and are non-English that do not give me any problems. Is there a built-in function that can escape these characters? Currently I have a small function that will escape the single quote character, but that isn't enough. Or, is there a list of Unicode characters that can interfere with how SQL wants data quoted? Thanks in advance.

    Read the article

  • A better way of converting Codepage-1251 in RTF to Unicode

    - by blue painted
    I am trying to parse RTF (via MSEDIT) in various languages, all in Delphi 2010, in order to produce HTML in unicode. Taking Russian/Cyrillic as my starting point I find that the overall document codepage is 1252 (Western) but the Russian parts of the text are identified by the charset of the font (RUSSIAN_CHARSET 204). So far I am: 1) Use AnsiString (or RawByteString) when parsing the RTF 2) Determine the CodePage by a lookup from the font charset (see http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc194829.aspx) 3) Translating using a lookup table in my code: (This table generated from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-gb/goglobal/cc305144.aspx) - I'm going to need one table per supported codepage! There MUST be a better way than this? Preferably something supplied by the OS and so less brittle than tables of constants.

    Read the article

  • Python MQTT: TypeError: coercing to Unicode: need string or buffer, bool found

    - by user2923860
    When my python code tries to connect to the MQTT broker it gives me this Type Error: Update- I added the Complete Error Traceback (most recent call last): File "test.py", line 20, in <module> mqttc.connect(broker, 1883, 60, True) File "/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/mosquitto.py", line 563, in connect return self.reconnect() File "/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/mosquitto.py", line 632, in reconnect self._sock = socket.create_connection((self._host, self._port), source_address=(self._bind_address, 0)) File "/usr/lib/python2.7/socket.py", line 561, in create_connection sock.bind(source_address) File "/usr/lib/python2.7/socket.py", line 224, in meth return getattr(self._sock,name)(*args) TypeError: coercing to Unicode: need string or buffer, bool found The code of the python file is: #! /usr/bin/python import mosquitto broker = "localhost" #define what happens after connection def on_connect(rc): print "Connected" #On recipt of a message do action def on_message(msg): n = msg.payload t = msg.topic if t == "/test/topic": if n == "test": print "test message received" # create broker mqttc = mosquitto.Mosquitto("python_sub") #define callbacks mqttc.on_message = on_message mqttc.on_connect = on_connect #connect mqttc.connect(broker, 1883, 60, True) #Subscribe to topic mqttc.subscribe("/test/topic", 2) #keep connected while mqttc.loop() == 0: pass I have no idea why its giving me this it work 2 days ago.

    Read the article

  • Unicode characters in URLs

    - by Pekka
    In 2010, would you serve URLs containing UTF-8 characters in a large web portal? Unicode characters are forbidden as per the RFC on URLs (see here). They would have to be percent encoded to be standards compliant. My main point, though, is serving the unencoded characters for the sole purpose of having nice-looking URLs, so percent encoding is out. All major browsers seem to be parsing those URLs okay no matter what the RFC says. My general impression, though, is that it gets very shaky when leaving the domain of web browsers: URLs getting copy+pasted into text files, E-Mails, even Web sites with a different encoding HTTP Client libraries Exotic browsers, RSS readers Is my impression correct that trouble is to be expected here, and thus it's not a practical solution (yet) if you're serving a non-technical audience and it's important that all your links work properly even if quoted and passed on? Is there some magic way of serving nice-looking URLs in HTML http://www.example.com/düsseldorf?neighbourhood=Lörick that can be copy+pasted with the special characters intact, but work correctly when re-used in older clients?

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14  | Next Page >