I thought I had UTF-8 set throughout my app; source files are encoded in it, I
set it everywhere I can think of (requests, responses, JVM, HTML and JSP tags).
I we re-doing the HTML for my site, fancifying it with bootstrap and all that
goodness, when I noticed that the copyright symbol I typed
Hmm. Seems like if I %@ include a file that contains
%@ page contentType=text/html; charset=UTF-8%
Then it doesn't work. If I include that @ page line directly, it gets the
encoding right.
On Feb 28, 2014, at 04:45 , Rick Mann rm...@latencyzero.com wrote:
I thought I had UTF-8 set throughout
On 2/28/14, 4:47 AM, Rick Mann wrote:
Hmm. Seems like if I %@ include a file that contains
%@ page contentType=text/html; charset=UTF-8%
Then it doesn't work. If I include that @ page line directly, it gets the
encoding right.
I believe that's correct, though. The top page is responsible
On Feb 28, 2014, at 08:55 , Scott Ferguson f...@caucho.com wrote:
On 2/28/14, 4:47 AM, Rick Mann wrote:
Hmm. Seems like if I %@ include a file that contains
%@ page contentType=text/html; charset=UTF-8%
Then it doesn't work. If I include that @ page line directly, it gets the
encoding
Traditionally the JSP spec has mandated ISO-8859-1 if nothing else is
explicitly specified.
However I notice recent versions have a facility to specify it more broadly
in web.xml
Case in point is section JSP.3.3.4 in version 2.2 of the spec:
You could also use a jsp prelude to include whatever directives you need. A
bit of a hack, but it gets the job done.
Sent from my cool new iPad Mini
On Feb 28, 2014, at 3:22 PM, Knut Forkalsrud knut-cau...@forkalsrud.org
wrote:
Traditionally the JSP spec has mandated ISO-8859-1 if
Thank you. Adding this:
jsp-config
jsp-property-group
url-pattern*.jsp/url-pattern
page-encodingUTF-8/page-encoding
/jsp-property-group
/jsp-config
To the bottom of my web.xml seems to have