Hello, I have now tried this in the latest snapshot and now it works. Bengt Larsson wrote: >I seem to have a problem with wildcards from the Windows command line >when there are high-bit characters in a filename. > >A directory contains only the two files "user" and "användare" >("användare" being user in Swedish): > > C:\Documents and Settings\Bengt2\Desktop\test\ttt>ls -l > total 0 > -rw-r--r-- 1 Bengt2 Users 0 2009-12-30 02:23 användare > -rw-r--r-- 1 Bengt2 Users 0 2009-12-30 02:23 user > > C:\Documents and Settings\Bengt2\Desktop\test\ttt>ls u* > user > > C:\Documents and Settings\Bengt2\Desktop\test\ttt>ls a* > ls: cannot access a*: No such file or directory > > C:\Documents and Settings\Bengt2\Desktop\test\ttt>ls * > ls: cannot access *: No such file or directory > >It works in bash and dash: > > C:\Documents and Settings\Bengt2\Desktop\test\ttt>bash > /users/Bengt2/Desktop/test/ttt: ls u* > user > /users/Bengt2/Desktop/test/ttt: ls a* > användare > /users/Bengt2/Desktop/test/ttt: ls * > användare user > >I have LANG and CYGWIN set, but not having them set doesn't change the >outcome.
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