Great! The long WString works for me now. But I never seen this
kind of C++ style constructor like: WString(L"some string..."), 
big L ahead of string, it belongs to the standard of C++ ? And 
how I can define this kind of constructor?

"""
This is what I wrote a couple of days ago on this list (You can
probably replace WString by WText):

"""
Quick fix 1: try WString(L"Frankfürt") (and make sure your compiler
speaks your .cpp file's locale)
Quick fix 2: try WString(tr("Frankfurt")) and put Frankfurt in a message 
bundle

The correct response involves locale of files and compilers, combined
with how the standard specifies it should be done. TreeViewDragDrop.C
is saved in UTF-8 (but the file doesn't start with the UTF-8 cookie),
which apparently causes the compiler to store the UTF-8 encoded string
in the const char * sequence.

Quick fix 2 will work for sure across all platforms and compilers.
"""

Best regards,
Wim.

2010/2/23  <[email protected]>:
>
> hi, Zhimin:
>
> doesn't work, unreadable code show me again.
>
> Regards
> Jiongliang
>
> hi, Nianzhong:
> You can try
>> root()->addWidget(new WText(WString("Chinese words in here....")));
> Regards
> Zhimin
>
> 2010/2/23  <[email protected]>
>
> I have this code, but can't show chinese words in the browser web page.
>
>> root()->addWidget(new WText("Chinese words in here...."));
>
> got unreadable code in the browser web page.
>
> how to resolve this problem, maybe using <link> tag can do, but I don't
> know how.
>


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