Hola Bruce, I have entered the text meta ... " surrounded by angle brackets in the FPH of the report. Ran the report. It's still failing.
Should consecutive field formats be entered as ;;T;;W or ;;TW? I am going to check your other message, test it and report. All the best, Tony -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Bruce Conrad Sent: Tuesday, May 25, 2010 6:17 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [Dataperf] Printing accented letters & othercharacterscorrectly in HTML pages. Hi Tony, Try adding this line as the first line in the "head" section. Put angle brackets around it. I omit them here as some email clients would interpret them and not display the line. meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" This tells the browser that your characters are in the ISO-Latin-1 character set (whose official name is ISO-8859-1). My safari browser (on an iMac) just assumed this, and IE and Firefox on my Windows XP laptop assumed it as well, but Firefox on the iMac did not. Putting in that meta tag solved the problem. Best wishes, Bruce On May 25, 2010, at 3:51 PM, Tony Perez wrote: > Hi Bruce, > > Thanks for chiming in. I have tried that and am failing. > > At first I thought it might be my browser. I recently changed to > Google Chrome. I opened the file in IE and failed also. > > Is there something else that I need to do? > > I have looked at some old reports where we used the > > á = á > é = é > í = í > ó = ó > ú = > ñ = > Ñ = > ¿ = > ½ = > ¼ = > > scheme to generate reports in Spanish. > > Will keep plugging at it and report results as soon as I have them. > > All the best, > Tony > > -----Original Message----- > From: [email protected] > [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Bruce Conrad > Sent: Tuesday, May 25, 2010 6:24 AM > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: [Dataperf] Printing accented letters & other > characterscorrectly in HTML pages. > > Hi Tony, > > When selecting the field containing these characters in a report, > format using the print indicator ;;W. > > This translates from the DOS character set into the ISO-Latin-1 > character set commonly used in browsers. > > Best wishes, > Bruce > > On May 23, 2010, at 11:42 PM, Tony Perez wrote: > >> Hello all, >> >> Greetings from a cold Northern California. >> >> I have mapped DP keystrokes to produce accented letters and other >> characters in a DP app. >> >> e.g. alt-n to render "ñ"; alt-a to render "á"; alt-h to render "½" >> ... >> >> What do I need to add to the report so the appropriate characters >> appear on a live internet browser instead of some junk? >> >> I look forward to your thoughts/comments. >> >> All the best, >> Tony >> _______________________________________________ >> Dataperf mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://lists.dataperfect.nl/mailman/listinfo/dataperf > > _______________________________________________ > Dataperf mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.dataperfect.nl/mailman/listinfo/dataperf > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG - www.avg.com > Version: 8.5.437 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2891 - Release Date: > 05/25/10 > 06:26:00 > > _______________________________________________ > Dataperf mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.dataperfect.nl/mailman/listinfo/dataperf _______________________________________________ Dataperf mailing list [email protected] http://lists.dataperfect.nl/mailman/listinfo/dataperf No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.437 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2895 - Release Date: 05/25/10 06:26:00 _______________________________________________ Dataperf mailing list [email protected] http://lists.dataperfect.nl/mailman/listinfo/dataperf
