Dnia 2010-11-06, sob o godzinie 20:46 +0100, Milan Zamazal pisze:
> The Czech translation file is encoded in ISO 8859-2 which means that all
> Scid translated texts are displayed incorrectly in standard UTF-8
> environment.  When I convert the file to UTF-8, translated texts in Scid
> are fine.
> 
> Is there any reason to keep czech.tcl in ISO 8859-2
Yes, Windows.

>  or can it be
> converted to UTF-8 to make Scid work correctly in common UTF-8
> environment?
I tried to convince one of Scid maintainer (don't remember who it was
then) but it turned out that UTF-8 works well in Linux but is broken in
Windows. CP1250 works OK in Windows but of course is broken in Linux.

Therefore the maintainer decided to go for multiplatform solution,
choosing ISO8859-2 which is broken on both platforms...
-- 
Michał Rudolf

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