Thanks J, it's work and i want to share about encoding hope it help for others.
try this free site : http://www.w3schools.com/xml/xml_encoding.asp Terima kasih, Ali ----- Original Message ----- From: J.Pietschmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Sunday, June 02, 2002 3:00 PM Subject: Re: UniCode - ? [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > yeah that is what i mean. Where and how i put the encoding? (the declaration > or what ever in my line code..) The first line of an XML file is the XML declaration. <?xml version="1.0"?> You can declare an encoding there: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> UTF-8 ist the default encoding, so the two declarations are equivalent. Every XML parser has to understand UTF-8 and UTF-16, most understand other encodings, like ISO-8859-1 (Latin-1). > and how i know the type of encoding that i use? There is no way to diagnose this remotely, you have to know this by yourself. Most editors only know "native encoding", some of the more recent provide for choosing an encoding while saving. > actually i want to use Thai > encoding, but i don't know from where i get the encoding type for the Thai. In general, you don't have to. If you have an editor which natively supports entering Thai characters, check the documentation or whatever configuration settings the editor has for the encoding used. Set the encoding name in the XML declaration and hope the XML parser understands it (if not, you'll get an error). If you can choose the encoding, prefer UTF-8 or UTF-16. If you have an ASCII editor, you can use XML character references for entering Thai characters. You just wont see Thai glyphs on the screen. The Thai characters start at Unicode code point U+0E00, you can use &0x0E01; etc. J.Pietschmann