Message: The following issue has been resolved as CANNOT REPRODUCE.
Resolver: fabrizio giustina Date: Mon, 15 Nov 2004 4:22 PM testcase added: in rc2 encoding is always preserved during export. If you set utf-8 encoding in page with <jsp:directive.page contentType="text/html; charset=UTF8" /> or response.setContentType("text/html; charset=utf-8"); displaytag correctly preserve encoding and csv/excel output is written using utf8. Are you sure you are setting the output encoding correctly? Are you facing this problem with the displaytag filter enabled or not? Which version of displaytag are you using? Please reopen the bug if you are trying with the latest snapshot and you are sure everything has been done correctly (i.e. charset is set to utf8 when not exporting). You can look in displaytag test code for DISPL-107.jsp and Displ107.java for an example of a working utf8 export. --------------------------------------------------------------------- View the issue: http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/DISPL-107 Here is an overview of the issue: --------------------------------------------------------------------- Key: DISPL-107 Summary: Excel and Text exports use Windows Latin-1 encoding Type: Bug Status: Resolved Priority: Minor Resolution: CANNOT REPRODUCE Original Estimate: Unknown Time Spent: Unknown Remaining: Unknown Project: DisplayTag Components: Export Fix Fors: 1.0 RC2 Versions: 1.0 RC2 Assignee: fabrizio giustina Reporter: J. Patterson Waltz III Created: Fri, 12 Nov 2004 10:12 PM Updated: Mon, 15 Nov 2004 4:22 PM Description: Data coming out of my UTF-8 format Postgres database appears correctly in displaytag tables on webpages, but when I request an export in Excel or text format, all non ASCII characters are garbled. I am using the Mac OS X Platform. After some exploration, I determined that this is due to the file encoding being set to Windows Latin-1. Excel documents which were created on Windows and that I open on my Mac do not have garbled non-ASCII text, so I suspect that all that is missing in the exported file is some way to indicate to Excel what encoding has been used. Some of my recent web searches suggest that at least the more recent versions of Office store characters in little-endian UCS2 encoding. For text files, it seems to me that UTF-8 would be the the most platform and language agnostic encoding to use. --------------------------------------------------------------------- JIRA INFORMATION: This message is automatically generated by JIRA. If you think it was sent incorrectly contact one of the administrators: http://jira.codehaus.org/secure/Administrators.jspa If you want more information on JIRA, or have a bug to report see: http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by: InterSystems CACHE FREE OODBMS DOWNLOAD - A multidimensional database that combines robust object and relational technologies, making it a perfect match for Java, C++,COM, XML, ODBC and JDBC. www.intersystems.com/match8 _______________________________________________ displaytag-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/displaytag-devel