Subject: Re: [xsl] International Characters in attributes From: "Michael Beddow" <mbnospam@xxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Fri, 9 Feb 2001 20:20:11 -0000 |
On Friday, February 09, 2001 7:45 PM Michael Storm wrote: [DC] > >You might want to output HTML in iso-8859-1 rather than utf-8. > > That definitely solves the problem, however, I am not able to hardcode the > encoding type into the XSL, since the application could be viewed by two or > more different viewers at the same time (possiby one viewing a french > version, and another in japanese and another in english). Which argues in favour of utf-8 for everyone, provided the clients support it. The apparently strange values you quoted before will display as the correct characters if the browser is set to utf-8. Otherwise you have to get messy and deliver different encodings to different clients (if you are indeed sending Japanese to those Japanese users: if you're simply sending Latin script to people in Japan whose browsers may be expecting Shift-JIS or EUC you'll may get away with it - depends just what accented characters you want to send). Michael ------------------------------------------ Michael Beddow http://www.mbeddow.net/ XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
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