Alright, I solved it.

The problem is that emacs' shell-command doesn't use the same environment,
so it wasn't picking up the value of those three vars:

✗ export | grep UTF
    LANG=en_US.UTF-8
    LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
    LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8

So, I did this:

(defun test ()
  (setenv "LANG" "en_US.UTF-8")
  (setenv "LC_ALL" "en_US.UTF-8")
  (setenv "LC_CTYPE" "en_US.UTF-8")
        (shell-command  "/Users/myself/.rvm/bin/rvm ruby-1.9.3-p194 do
/usr/bin/rubyscript")
        )

And now it works fine.

Cheers,

- Marcelo.




On Fri, Aug 31, 2012 at 2:51 PM, Nick Dokos <nicholas.do...@hp.com> wrote:

> Marcelo de Moraes Serpa <celose...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hey list,
> >
> > I've tried posting on help-gnu-emacs mailing list first, but not luck so
> far, so I thought I'd try here, as I know there are many savvy emacs users
> around.
> >
> > I have a small Ruby CLI program that I want to call from emacs. This
> script simply opens an emacs orgmode file from a specific location in my
> hard drive, and does some text processing. When I call it from the terminal
> directly, it works fine. When I call it from emacs, the
> > script fails with an encoding error.
> >
> > I'm using this elisp to call it from emacs after a buffer is saved:
> >
> >     (defun test ()
> >       (let ((universal-coding-system-argument 'utf-8-unix))
> >             (shell-command  "/Users/myself/.rvm/bin/rvm ruby-1.9.3-p194
> do /usr/bin/myrubyscript")
> >         ))
> >     (add-hook 'after-save-hook 'test)
> >
> > NOTE: The (let ((universal-coding-system-argument 'utf-8-unix)) was an
> attempt to fix it, but it made no difference whatsoever.
> >
>
> Probably wrong, but who knows? it may work by some miracle:
>
> (let ((coding-system-for-read 'utf-8-unix)
>       (coding-system-for-write 'utf-8-unix))
>   (shell-command "/Users/myself/.rvm/bin/rvm ruby-1.9.3-p194 do
> /usr/bin/myrubyscript")
>
>
> > After I save a buffer, the shell-command function is fired, but I get
> the following output in the "*Shell Command Output*" buffer:
> >
> >     F, [2012-08-30T01:59:18.688827 #94004] FATAL -- : invalid byte
> sequence in US-ASCII (ArgumentError)
> >
> /Users/myself/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.3-p194/gems/org-ruby-0.6.3/lib/org-ruby/parser.rb:89:in
> `split'
> >
> /Users/myself/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.3-p194/gems/org-ruby-0.6.3/lib/org-ruby/parser.rb:89:in
> `initia
> >
>
> But this looks like ruby is expecting ASCII and is getting something else
> (probably UTF-8).
> What does the output of the command, when executed from a terminal, look
> like? Redirect it into
> a file and then use od to look at bytes.
>
> Also, you can try adding an output buffer as argument to the shell-command
> and then eyeballing the
> output in that buffer to see if it matches the terminal output.
>
> Nick
>
> > The strange thing is that the file that this script opens *is*
> accessible, and is the same file it would open if it were fired up from the
> terminal. For some reason, Emacs is getting in the way, but I have no idea
> what that could be. Am I missing something? If someone could
> > enlighten me here, I'd be really grateful!
> >
> > Thanks in advance,
> >
> > - Marcelo.
> >
> >
> > ----------------------------------------------------
> > Alternatives:
> >
> > ----------------------------------------------------
>

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