It may also be the system which is actually doing the display to the terminal. In my case, I was displaying a UTF-8 document on Linux, using Konsole. I had set LC_ALL to en_US.UTF-8. The file had the UTF-8 sequence 0xe2 0x80 0x93, which is U+2013, or an "en dash". But I was seeing an "latin small letter a with a circumflex". The reason was that Konsole normally displays characters based on the old DEC VT100 character map. To see the proper character, I had to run the Linux command:
echo -e "\e%G" which sets Konsole from ISO8859-1 character set to UTF-8 character set. I don't know what system, program, etc the OP is using, but it may need to be customedto cause the display to render the proper glyphs. On Thu, Sep 5, 2013 at 7:08 AM, Richard Hipp <d...@sqlite.org> wrote: > On Thu, Sep 5, 2013 at 6:16 AM, Sarith San <khmeres...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > Dear Sir or Madam > > > > How do integrate Khmer unicode into sqlite? > > When I try to use Khmer unicode with sqlite, the characters does not > > display. All I see, they display in > > English. > > > > SQLite is a C-library. It does not "display" anything. You must be > confusing SQLite with an interactive shell program of some kind that lets > you interact with an SQLite database using typed-in commands. The > "display" is an operation of the shell program, not of SQLite itself. If > Khmer unicode is not being displayed correctly, then that is a fault in the > shell program, not of SQLite. > > So what shell program are you using? > > D. Richard Hipp > d...@sqlite.org > _______________________________________________ > sqlite-users mailing list > sqlite-users@sqlite.org > http://sqlite.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sqlite-users > -- As of next week, passwords will be entered in Morse code. Maranatha! <>< John McKown _______________________________________________ sqlite-users mailing list sqlite-users@sqlite.org http://sqlite.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sqlite-users