Re: non-ASCII chars in resource names (e.g. german umlauts)

2005-09-23 Thread Jacob Lund
I do not think it is a OS problem either - it was just to check if slide stored the files correctly. The only difference between you store configuration and mine it that I have not defined any encoding for the store. I am not really sure what is going on. Try to use the TcpTrace program from

Re: non-ASCII chars in resource names (e.g. german umlauts)

2005-09-23 Thread Carlos Villegas
I haven't read all the details but if the OS's locale is chinese, then Windows runs with a default double-byte character encoding, not UTF-8. File names from the file explorer will be sent URL encoded but in this double-byte code. Well, the problem is that WebFolders is not consistent and