Dwayne Cole wrote:
> OK I just need to clarify, because once I make this change it will have and
> impact on 10 sites
I certainly hope not. I hope it will have an impact on your
development environment though.
Changing a charset is not some minor change like updating a
copyright statement fro
OK I just need to clarify, because once I make this change it will have and
impact on 10 sites (each using the same templates).
Will this work with MS Access and MS SQL, or will I need some special drivers?
-- Original Message --
From: Jochem van Diete
Dwayne Cole wrote:
> So on the CMS side this:
>
>
>
>
>
> should be
>
>
>
>
No, instead of "Unicode" use "UTF-8".
>
Yes.
Jochem
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So on the CMS side this:
should be
and on the Presentation side, this:
should be
?
Dwayne.
>Just use Unicode.
>
>
>> I'm using this at the top of the page.
>>
>>
>>
>> OK that seems to work sometimes and other times, well.
>
>The prefered way is to set the ch
Dwayne Cole wrote:
> Presenting the chinese character is another challenge
Just use Unicode.
> I'm using this at the top of the page.
>
>
>
> OK that seems to work sometimes and other times, well.
The prefered way is to set the charset in an actual HTTP header,
i.e. using cfcontent. That ta
Dwayne Cole wrote:
>
cf ignores this. though it's a good idea for other reasons.
> I've gone to sites that present both english and chinese without setting the
> charset.
bad bad habit to follow. i assure you these sites also have issues, i'll
bet a beer in it.
"hint early, hint often". an
Presenting the chinese character is another challenge
I'm using this at the top of the page.
OK that seems to work sometimes and other times, well.
I've gone to sites that present both english and chinese without setting the
charset.
Any advice.
Dwayne cole
~~
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