acter class that most characters match and you look for the
> exceptions. Would that help?
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* George Milten [mailto:george.mil...@gmail.com]
> *Sent:* dinsdag 10 februari 2015 15:56
> *To:* Kool,Wouter
> *Cc:* perl4lib@perl.org
> *Subject:
quite satisfactory results with this approach in a
slightly different use case.
From: George Milten [mailto:george.mil...@gmail.com]
Sent: dinsdag 10 februari 2015 16:09
To: Kool,Wouter
Cc: perl4lib@perl.org
Subject: Re: UNICODE character identification
yes probably this is where i was also
il.com]
> *Sent:* dinsdag 10 februari 2015 15:56
> *To:* Kool,Wouter
> *Cc:* perl4lib@perl.org
> *Subject:* Re: UNICODE character identification
>
>
>
> utf-8,
>
>
>
> thank you
>
>
>
> 2015-02-10 16:54 GMT+02:00 Kool,Wouter :
>
> What encodin
most characters match and you look for the
exceptions. Would that help?
From: George Milten [mailto:george.mil...@gmail.com]
Sent: dinsdag 10 februari 2015 15:56
To: Kool,Wouter
Cc: perl4lib@perl.org
Subject: Re: UNICODE character identification
utf-8,
thank you
2015-02-10 16:54 GMT+02:00
utf-8,
thank you
2015-02-10 16:54 GMT+02:00 Kool,Wouter :
> What encoding is your data in? utf8? Single-byte encoding? Marc8? That
> information matters a lot to determine whether your idea would work. If it
> is in a single-byte encoding there is often no way to determine the script
> the char
What encoding is your data in? utf8? Single-byte encoding? Marc8? That
information matters a lot to determine whether your idea would work. If it is
in a single-byte encoding there is often no way to determine the script the
character belongs to.
Wouter Kool
Metadata Specialist ยท OCLC B.V.
Sch