On Mon, 26 Sep 2011 15:25:06 +0200, Kean Johnston wrote: > You asked the question slightly incorrectly: which is more likely to > happen: a user have a file on their filesystem that their system codepage > cannot support or having a symlink. I'd say the latter is more frequent > because every single home directory of every user has a bunch of them,
Actually, I only seem to have them in 32bit installs of Windows 7 - 64bit installs don't have them in the user profile (they are there in the root of the drive). > whereas if a filesystem has funny characters in its file names there's a > much greater chance the system generated them and can therefore read them. > Plus I am fairly sure (but not 100%) that MBCS can represent all of the > characters UTF-16 can (which is what the _wstat function uses). MBCS isn't able to represent all the characters (though depending on the codepage, it does cover a fair amount), but that's not really relevant - how do you represent тест in CP-1250? -- < Jernej Simončič ><><><><>< http://eternallybored.org/ > _______________________________________________ gtk-devel-list mailing list gtk-devel-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-devel-list