Options:
Buy vs. Build - you can use a tool such as InCtrl5 to see what has
changed on your system between two points in time. Unfortunately, it's
difficult to obtain InCtrl5.
You could export the registry as a regedit v4 file, which I believe is
utf-8, or at least it's mostly ascii.
Summary: How to use Perl 5.8.0 to handle files encoded using utf-16 on
Windows?
Details:
I have read that perl 5.8 ought to handle utf-16 without me needing to
tell it anything.
But I am now getting the behavior I expect.
Specifically, I want to find what changed in a Registry after I install
a
From: Tolkin, Steve [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2006 16:51:04 -0400
Summary: How to use Perl 5.8.0 to handle files encoded using utf-16 on
Windows?
Details: . . .
How about trying to re-encode it as UTF-8 first? This should at least
give you some compression of the