On Thu, 2002-08-01 at 06:45, Robin Berjon wrote: > On Thursday 01 August 2002 00:42, brian wheeler wrote: > > We have a series of documents which are in Spanish. The ñ entity > > is used quite a bit and everything seems to parse ok. However, when the > > data gets to the client, all they get is a square (or on my linux box, a > > question mark). I did a manual request via telnet and when the data > > comes back, the ntildes are just fine. The header returned is: > > > > HTTP/1.1 200 OK > > Date: Wed, 31 Jul 2002 22:37:46 GMT > > Server: Apache/1.3.26 (Unix) AxKit/1.6 mod_perl/1.27 > > Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 > > Did you serve content in UTF-8 previously? Have you tried to save the output > and run it through a parser to see if it's valid? Note that to display UTF-8 > you need a font that supports the characters you want to see. Note also that > Netscape 4 will most likely break on UTF-8 (but then I guess no one in his > right mind is still using that thing). >
Yeah, we are still serving it on our production site (which runs 1.4). http://icpac.indiana.edu/publications/#espanol is a page with tildes and accents, etc. One of our development copies of the same page can be found by prepending 'bdwheele.' to the host name of the url above. The development copy is running 1.6. I'm seeing this on galeon 1.2.0 (a mozilla derivitive) and others have seen it on opera and internet explorer. When I do the same request (via telnet) to the production version, the ntildes don't come out right...they appear as two bytes...which they should when in utf-8. Brian > -- > Robin Berjon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > There are things that are so serious that you can only joke about > them. > -- Heisenberg > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
