Jeremy Katz wrote:
Some people just can't let go of the past.
The problem is that "some people" here actually means millions of people.
Just look at the encoding for the top newspapers in Norway:
www.vg.no, www.dagbladet.no and www.aftenposten.no
Please don't frame this as
US vs Europe as it's anything *but* -- the transition in Red Hat Linux
back in the day was actually driven by a *Norwegian*. And this was over
5 years ago now.
Yes, I remembe. It was teg who did that I guess.
I sorry to say it, however iso-8859-1 will be here the next 5 years and
even longer.
The key is consistency. We mandate that strings (and po files, etc) in
yum are UTF-8 and then don't worry about it. If someone happens to be
running in a non-UTF8 locale, then gconv bits in glibc will take care of
things for them.
Okay, I will convert the file in question to utf-8.
- Terje
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