I am in the process of moving some tables from MySQL 5.1 on Squeeze to
MariaDB 10.1 on Buster.
One of the tables stores binary data (either a PDF or JPEG) as a
LONGBLOB. The code that reads & writes to the table is PHP and hasnt
changed other than having the url of the database server altered.
-- Forwarded message --
From: Frederic Marchal
Date: 18 July 2015 at 12:41
Subject: Re: Changing the terminal character set
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
On Saturday 18 July 2015 10:52:33 Alex Naysmith wrote:
> I'm writing python scripts with the curses GUI and I
On Saturday 18 July 2015 10:52:33 Alex Naysmith wrote:
> I'm writing python scripts with the curses GUI and I need the CP437
> character set.
>
> How can I change the character encoding in the XFCE terminal [v0.4.8]
from
> UTF-8 to CP437 or IBM437?
>
> Alternatively, I
Le decadi 30 messidor, an CCXXIII, Alex Naysmith a écrit :
> I'm writing python scripts with the curses GUI and I need the CP437
> character set.
Why exactly? All the characters in CP437 are present in Unicode, as far as I
can see. Therefore, you could just map the code point in the
I'm writing python scripts with the curses GUI and I need the CP437
character set.
How can I change the character encoding in the XFCE terminal [v0.4.8] from
UTF-8 to CP437 or IBM437?
Alternatively, I did attempt to change the system locale from en_GB.UTF-8
to one that contained CP437/I
Hello!
I use debian sarge with mysql 4.1.
The problem is the following:
I set the deafault character set, and collation in my.cnf, and I check it:
mysql> show variables like '%server';
+--+-+
| Variable_name
On Sat, 2004-12-25 at 20:37 +0100, Bayrouni wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> When I execute graphical program under kde in command line, I have this
> warning: (
> Missing character set "ISO8859-1". )
> How can I fixe this?
>
i am unfamiliar with kde and that error messa
Hello all,
When I execute graphical program under kde in command line, I have this
warning: (
Missing character set "ISO8859-1". )
How can I fixe this?
Thank you very much
Bayrouni
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On Thursday 02 September 2004 14:21,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The Linux kernel supports several windows codepages. If you have
> support for this compiled in (or as a module) you can probably mount
> the file system with the corresponding codepage. Try that first and
> see if it helps. Are we ta
Hi,
On Thu, 2 Sep 2004 12:58:17 +0300, David Baron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> There are incompatibilies between characters permitted in Windoze file names,
> both English and localized versions (I am not addressing Unicode or Asian
> issues here!) and those permitted in Debian. Doing cp or rsync
There are incompatibilies between characters permitted in Windoze file names,
both English and localized versions (I am not addressing Unicode or Asian
issues here!) and those permitted in Debian. Doing cp or rsync will reject
files with these characters, even if the copy is between FAT32 partit
On Sat, 6 Dec 2003 17:00:59 +0100
Nicos Gollan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have a strange problem with special characters over samba. Some
> filenames have umlauts in them which
> - are not displayed correctly by konsole (replaced by "?")
> - *are* displayed correctly on the exporting servers
On Sat, 06 Dec 2003 22:30:32 -0200
Leandro Guimarães Faria Corsetti Dutra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Em Sat, 06 Dec 2003 17:00:59 +0100, Nicos Gollan escreveu:
>
> > With LANG set to en_US.UTF-8, konsole even accepts and prints
> > umlauts on the command line.
>
> Do you have .UTF-8 in y
Em Sat, 06 Dec 2003 17:00:59 +0100, Nicos Gollan escreveu:
> With LANG set to en_US.UTF-8, konsole even accepts and prints umlauts on
> the command line.
Do you have .UTF-8 in your /etc/environment or something
the like? Looks like you don't, then you set it in konsole. That way
only ko
I have a strange problem with special characters over samba. Some
filenames have umlauts in them which
- are not displayed correctly by konsole (replaced by "?")
- *are* displayed correctly on the exporting servers text console
- are converted to many strange things on the mounting machine (:x8,
E=C;LC_COLLATE=C;LC_\
MONETARY=C;LC_MESSAGES=C;LC_PAPER=C;LC_NAME=C;LC_ADDRESS=C;LC_TE\
LEPHONE=C;LC_MEASUREMENT=C;LC_IDENTIFICATION=C"
(Missing character set "ISO8859-1")
(Missing character set "ISO8859-1")
I've gone through the mailing list archives and only found
At 05:31 PM 5/18/02 -0400, Andy Saxena wrote:
On Fri, May 17, 2002 at 11:16:58PM -0700, Ross Boylan wrote:
> Then I read the KDE docs, and attempted to reset the default LANG in
> the control center. However, C was the only choice it would show me.
> Even after all the steps below, and restartin
On Fri, May 17, 2002 at 11:16:58PM -0700, Ross Boylan wrote:
> Then I read the KDE docs, and attempted to reset the default LANG in
> the control center. However, C was the only choice it would show me.
> Even after all the steps below, and restarting KDE, this is still the
> only choice.
>
> The
charset="iso-8859-1"
>
> You might want to try adjusting your $LC_CTYPE to something with the
> ISO-8859-1 character set. (I use LC_CTYPE=en_GB.ISO-8859-1, for
> example.) On woody/sid, you'll also need to generate any extra locales
> you use with 'dpkg-reconfi
On Fri, May 17, 2002 at 06:04:17PM -0700, Ross Boylan wrote:
> I am seeing the ? character instead of actual accented characters in
> mail I get, even if it has
> Content-Type: text/plain;
> charset="iso-8859-1"
>
> I am using mutt in a KDE console on woody, so I'm not even sure what
> com
hing with the
ISO-8859-1 character set. (I use LC_CTYPE=en_GB.ISO-8859-1, for
example.) On woody/sid, you'll also need to generate any extra locales
you use with 'dpkg-reconfigure locales'.
--
Colin Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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I am seeing the ? character instead of actual accented characters in
mail I get, even if it has
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset="iso-8859-1"
I am using mutt in a KDE console on woody, so I'm not even sure what
component I should be looking at.
When I visit my mail file in emacs the acce
On Sun, May 06, 2001 at 08:29:36PM -0700,
Dale Morris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I have a question about character sets. Currently I have my
> locale set to US IS0-8859-1. Should I edit this to use other
> locales, and if so, what locales should I use?
Should be fine.
> The problem I am expe
I have a question about character sets. Currently I have my
locale set to US IS0-8859-1. Should I edit this to use other
locales, and if so, what locales should I use?
The problem I am experiencing is when I am using mutt to
read email, and I receive a mail from Thomas Kohler (I
think) it shows up
I have a question about character sets. Currently I have my
locale set to US IS0-8859-1. Should I edit this to use other
locales, and if so, what locales should I use?
The problem I am experiencing is when I am using mutt to
read email, and I receive a mail from Thomas Kohler (I think) it shows up
Hi,
I dedicated the previous days to locales (on potato). After reading all
HOW-TOs, mailing list archives etc. I could find, I finally managed to
have special chars in the console _and_ an english gnome. However, I've
come across some things I still don't understand.
First, here are my locale se
[EMAIL PROTECTED] on Tue, Mar 10, 1998 at 09:10:07PM +:
> I heard that glibc2 (libc6) supports an extended character set.
> Is it correct ?
> Where (www.where) can I learn more about this support ?
Are you refering to glibc-localedata? An external tar that is a compile
time option
I heard that glibc2 (libc6) supports an extended character set.
Is it correct ?
Where (www.where) can I learn more about this support ?
Thank you.
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