[ 
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CODEC-127?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
 ]

Sebb updated CODEC-127:
-----------------------

    Comment: was deleted

(was: Sebb:

I get errors when I try your perl script on Windows with the latest perl (64 
bit) from ActiveState. Rather than use this space to figure out why, can you 
please run it again and check if we are done with this ticket? 

Thank you,
Gary)

> Non-ascii characters in source files
> ------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CODEC-127
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CODEC-127
>             Project: Commons Codec
>          Issue Type: Bug
>            Reporter: Sebb
>
> Some of the test cases include characters in a native encoding (possibly 
> UTF-8), rather than using Unicode escapes.
> This can cause a problem for IDEs if they don't know the encoding (e.g. cause 
> compilation errors, which is how I found the issue), and possibly some 
> transformations may corrupt the contents, e.g. fixing EOL.
> I think we should have a rule of using Unicode escapes for all such non-ascii 
> characters.
> It's particularly important for non-ISO-8859-1 characters.
> Some example classes with non-ascii characters:
> {code}
> binary\Base64Test.java:96         byte[] decode = 
> b64.decode("SGVsbG{´┐¢´┐¢´┐¢´┐¢´┐¢´┐¢}8gV29ybGQ=");
> language\ColognePhoneticTest.java:110             {"m├Ânchengladbach", 
> "664645214"},
> language\ColognePhoneticTest.java:130         String[][] data = 
> {{"bergisch-gladbach", "174845214"}, {"M├╝ller-L├╝denscheidt", "65752682"}};
> language\ColognePhoneticTest.java:137             {"Meyer", "M├╝ller"},
> language\ColognePhoneticTest.java:143             {"ganz", "Gänse"},
> language\DoubleMetaphoneTest.java:1222         
> this.getDoubleMetaphone().isDoubleMetaphoneEqual("´┐¢", "S");
> language\DoubleMetaphoneTest.java:1227         
> this.getDoubleMetaphone().isDoubleMetaphoneEqual("´┐¢", "N");
> language\SoundexTest.java:367         if (Character.isLetter('´┐¢')) {
> language\SoundexTest.java:369                 Assert.assertEquals("´┐¢000", 
> this.getSoundexEncoder().encode("´┐¢"));
> language\SoundexTest.java:375             Assert.assertEquals("", 
> this.getSoundexEncoder().encode("´┐¢"));
> language\SoundexTest.java:387         if (Character.isLetter('´┐¢')) {
> language\SoundexTest.java:389                 Assert.assertEquals("´┐¢000", 
> this.getSoundexEncoder().encode("´┐¢"));
> language\SoundexTest.java:395             Assert.assertEquals("", 
> this.getSoundexEncoder().encode("´┐¢"));
> {code}
> The characters are probably not correct above, because I used a crude perl 
> script to find them:
> {code}
> perl -ne "$.=1 if $s ne $ARGV;print qq($ARGV:$. $_) if 
> m/\P{ASCII}/;$s=$ARGV;" xxxx.java
> {code}
> language\SoundexTest.java:367 in particular is incorrect, because it's 
> supposed to be a single character.
> Now one might think that native2ascii -encoding UTF-8 would fix that, but it 
> gives:
> if (Character.isLetter('\ufffd'))
> which is an "unknown" character.
> Similarly for binary\Base64Test.java:96.
> It's not all that clear what the Unicode escapes should be in these cases, 
> but probably not the unknown character.
> [Possibly the characters got mangled at some point, or maybe they have always 
> been wrong]
> The ColognePhoneticTest.java cases are less serious, as the characters are 
> valid ISO-8859-1 (accented German), but given that the rest of the file uses 
> unicode escaps, I think they should be changed too (but add comments to say 
> what they are, e.g. o-umlaut, u-umlaut)

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