I suggested the mysqld as the culprit because I had some bad experience with it.
Namely it always comes compiled with latin1 as the dafault charset and unless
you recompile it either with some other charset or utf8
you cannot get back the right encoding of the string data that you through at
it.
If you are dead sure that this is sorted out in your case - then there are only
two things more that you can do:
1.In Settings -> Options -> Default (tag) make sure you have chosen a font
that has the right characters at the right encoding slots for your specific
encoding.
2. In Settings -> Options -> Regional (tag) give the right locale for the
strings to be shown correctly. In my case it is bg_BG.utf8, which stands for
bulgarian utf locale - but in your case you should put your desired locale (it
must be present on your computer though !).
And maybe as a precaucion - in Settings -> Options -> Printer (tag) choose for
Embed fonts - yes , in order to have the reports sent to the printer print
correctly.
If NONE of these help then we may be in deep waters - you should check if you
system supports either iconv or libiconv for conversion of charsets . Anyway
this is way beyond my understanding and I couldn't be of help there.
Cheers
Wish you good luck
Todor
25.2.2009
Haskovo
_________________________________________________________________
More than messages–check out the rest of the Windows Live™.
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowslive/
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Open Source Business Conference (OSBC), March 24-25, 2009, San Francisco, CA
-OSBC tackles the biggest issue in open source: Open Sourcing the Enterprise
-Strategies to boost innovation and cut costs with open source participation
-Receive a $600 discount off the registration fee with the source code: SFAD
http://p.sf.net/sfu/XcvMzF8H
_______________________________________________
Hk-classes-discuss mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/hk-classes-discuss