Re: Character encoding
Hello Georg, On Friday, April 1, 2005 at 12:01:15 PM +0200, Georg Bauhaus wrote: > The apostrophy might have been typed as an accent (acute) really Most probably the RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK U+2019, <’>, encoded in UTF-8, then wrongly seen as being CP-1252. It would look like "’" (a circumflex, euro symbol, trademark sign), and once transliterated to Latin-1 like "âEUR(tm)". Bye!Alain. -- When you want to reply to a mailing list, please avoid doing so from a digest. This often builds incorrect references and breaks threads.
RE: Character encoding
The solution is to explicitly set the character encoding to utf-8. I do this in the aspx file's head section and it works fine. This is kinda wierd though as with an aspx file, it seems that dotnet will always insert this charset header for you by default (you can see this by running wget in debug mode, withough setting the charset in the head section). However this does not work when using wget. It does work in normal browsers though as aspx files with utf-8 chars obvioulsy display fine. Anyway problem solved, just thought I'd let you know. -Original Message- From: Hrvoje Niksic [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: March 31, 2005 3:19 PM To: Alan Hunter Cc: 'wget@sunsite.dk' Subject: Re: Character encoding I'm not sure what causes this problem, but I suspect it does not come from Wget doing something wrong. That Notepad opens the file correctly is indicative enough. Maybe those browsers don't understand UTF-8 (or other) encoding of Unicode when the file is opened on-disk?
RE: Character encoding
>>but I suspect it does not come from Wget doing something wrong. I'm not so sure about that, it displays different output for the same infile, when only the extension of the infile changes. I tried with the exact same file spidered three times, only changing the extension between each spider. infile = 69 bytes .html outfile = 69 bytes .zzz outfile = 69 bytes .aspx outfile = 66 bytes So either it is wget or something screwy with asp.net. As I said, i don't know the inner workings of either so i'm not sure. I'll try to set up the example on a public svr in the next few days. -Original Message- From: Hrvoje Niksic [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: March 31, 2005 3:19 PM To: Alan Hunter Cc: 'wget@sunsite.dk' Subject: Re: Character encoding I'm not sure what causes this problem, but I suspect it does not come from Wget doing something wrong. That Notepad opens the file correctly is indicative enough. Maybe those browsers don't understand UTF-8 (or other) encoding of Unicode when the file is opened on-disk?
Re: Character encoding
Hrvoje Niksic wrote: Maybe those browsers don't understand UTF-8 (or other) encoding of Unicode when the file is opened on-disk? Or they may not have been told the .aspx's stream's encoding? (Windows CP ?) Just speculating: The apostrophy might have been typed as an accent (acute) really, so it is not a 7bit ASCII character. This could explain the funny characters, to some extent. Could you type "Example's" and "Example´s" in you editors and save using various encodings, then look at the bytes. What do you get? (If you have the Unix "cat" utility, what does ...> cat -v yourfilehere print? Or use "type" in a command window. Georg
Re: Character encoding
I'm not sure what causes this problem, but I suspect it does not come from Wget doing something wrong. That Notepad opens the file correctly is indicative enough. Maybe those browsers don't understand UTF-8 (or other) encoding of Unicode when the file is opened on-disk?
RE: Character encoding
Hi, Thanks for the reply. It is the page text that is the problem. When I started to investigate it further I found that it actually only happens when the page being "wgot" is a .aspx (.net asp) file. I made 3 identical files (as below), one with .html ext, 1 with .aspx ext and one with .zzz ext (just an unknown filetype under IIS), then wgot each one and changed the output file to a .html extension. when I open in my browser both the .html and .zzz files are fine, but the one that came from the .aspx file has the funny chars. Why this is so I have no idea. the output file looks fine when i open it in Notepad (ie the quote looks right), but when i open it in firefox/ie it shows the funny chars (see below). If I then just save the file in notepad, without changing a thing, the problem is fixed in firefox/ie. I am now really really confused :) ---Input file note the ' char, you'll need to spider under IIS with a .aspx ext to replicate--- Example's --FIREFOX VIEW SOURCE on output file--- ExampleâEUR(tm)s
Re: Character encoding
Wget shouldn't alter the page contents, except for converted links. Is the funny character in places which Wget should know about (e.g. URLs in links) or in the page text? Could you page a minimal excerpt from the page, before and after garbling done by Wget? Alternately, could you post a URL where we could try this?