Thanks for the immediate response. Yes ISO8859-7 is Greek. BUT, also ISO8859-1 seems to have the greek characters in the extended set (above 127). What do you mean by doable ? Do I have to make changes to the kannel source code ?
-----Original Message----- From: M3ta [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2003 2:44 PM To: Stamatopoulos Panagiotis ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Extended Character Set in Kannel Hello Stamatopoulos, Isn't Greek ISO8859-7? *offtopic* I had to do a translation table between iso8859-1 and iso8859-7 some months ago (not in kannel), and it wasnt easy at all, but it's doable. \\pb Tuesday, July 29, 2003, 12:47:55 PM, you wrote: SPpsig> Hi, SPpsig> I wanted to ask about setting up a service in Kannel. The problem I am SPpsig> facing, is when I send a message from a mobile using language other than SPpsig> english (greek for example), kannel does not recognize the characters SPpsig> (receives "?") , so every time it executes the "default" service. The SPpsig> problem exists in all 3 versions of kannel that I used (1.2.1, 1.3.1, SPpsig> cvs-20030722). Both Windows (Cygwin) and Linux platforms appear to have the SPpsig> same problem. The phone I am using as an SMSC is a Siemens-S45. Greek SPpsig> characters (as many others in a number of other european languages) appear SPpsig> to be in the extended set of the ISO8859-1 (Latin 1). Any suggestions ? SPpsig> Thanks in advance SPpsig> Panagiotis Stamatopoulos ########################################### This message has been scanned by F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange.
