Yes, that's it, thanks! Now I'm using:

myFolderItem.AbsolutePath.ConvertEncoding(Encodings.MacRoman)

It seems to work...

Thanks a lot,
Jochen

Am 08.08.2006 um 21:41 schrieb dda:

Same encoding – utf-8 – but different ways of representing the same
character, ä.
C3A4 is ä, whereas 61 CC88 is a + ¨, which parses to ä too.

see http://www.unicode.org/charts/normalization/chart_Latin.html

HTH

-- dda
libcurl4RB, [S]FTP transfers made easy
http://sungnyemun.org/?q=node/8


On 8/8/06, Jochen Machatschke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi List,

is it possible, that the "AbsolutePath" has a different encoding
under Windows and MacosX? In need strings with the same encoding in
order to compare them. I found differents for non-ascii characters:

This is an hex-dump of an excerpt from two file-listings, created by
my program for the same File "Proaktve Tätigkeiten.doc"


Win32:

0150: 74 69 76 65 20 54 C3 A4 74 69 67 6B 65 69 74 65 tive T..tigkeite


Mac:

02E0: 52 20 50 72 6F 61 6B 74 69 76 65 20 54 61 CC 88 R Proaktive Ta.. 02F0: 74 69 67 6B 65 69 74 65 6E 2E 64 6F 63 09 32 30 tigkeiten.doc.20

Cheers,
Jochen_______________________________________________
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