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    UTF-8 doc becomes ANSI doc !

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    • Claudia FrankC
      Claudia Frank @Bahram Yaghobinia
      last edited by

      @Bahram-Yaghobinia

      I agree with guy, but I would say that your process, which creates the xml needs to take care
      about it as utf-8 is the standard encoding for xml. If this process was designed for writing xml
      it should have an option to save as utf-8 encoded. Did you double check this?

      Cheers
      Claudia

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Jim DaileyJ
        Jim Dailey
        last edited by

        @Bahram-Yaghobinia

        Do the XML files contain something like this as their first line:

        <?xml version="1.0" encoding="???" ?>
        

        If so, can you provide that line to us?

        If there is no such line, or if it does not include information about the encoding method, then UTF-8 is assumed.

        I think that means that if the file contains a £ encoded as “A3” instead of “C2 A3”, that it isn’t technically valid XML (because it isn’t encoded as UTF-8).

        Guy, Claudia, or anyone else who has a better understanding please correct me if I am wrong.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • Bahram YaghobiniaB
          Bahram Yaghobinia
          last edited by

          Jim, all the XMLs have
          <?xml version=“1.0” encoding=“UFT-8” ?>
          I am working on the source as well to see if there is anything can be done to save as UFT-8. I would like to approach the script option (Python), but at this time I do not have any idea how it is done.

          Claudia FrankC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Jim DaileyJ
            Jim Dailey
            last edited by

            @Bahram-Yaghobinia
            Sorry, I can’t help you with Python, but it seems like this part of the process:

            • A job picks up the data. Converts to xml and saves the xml in text file.

            is broken because it does not (always) create valid XML. The XML is invalid any time it claims to be in UTF-8 but includes characters encoded in a single byte (e.g. a “£” encoded as 0xA3) that require multiple bytes to be properly encoded in UTF-8 (e.g. “£” should be encoded as 0xC2 0xA3).

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • Claudia FrankC
              Claudia Frank @Bahram Yaghobinia
              last edited by

              @Bahram-Yaghobinia

              I still think this is the wrong way to solve the problem because you loose the automatism by interacting
              with npp to run the script, but you insist on the python script plugin solution so the lines in question are

              notepad.runMenuCommand("Encoding", "Convert to UTF-8")
              notepad.save()
              

              But this does only work if you have an english ui, in case you use a different language than you have to replace
              “Encoding” and “Convert to UTF-8” with the ones from your language.

              Cheers
              Claudia

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • MahabarataM
                Mahabarata
                last edited by

                For me the problem is rather a problem of npp than anything.

                The encoding of a text with no special character could be anything : iso-8859-1, iso-8859-2, iso-8859-15, windows-1252, utf-8, ASCII and I imagine a lot of others.
                The encoding of a file with only normal characters can’t not be known just by looking at it !!!

                In php, there is a function : mb_detect_encoding($txt, array(encoding1, encoding2)).
                When you use it, php try to know which encoding is used in the string $txt : it begins to look at the encoding1, if it fits the function answers encoding1, if it doesn’t the function try the second encoding and so and on.

                So if there is no special character in the $txt, the function will tell you the encoding is encoding1. In your case, with encoding1=utf-8, the function will tell you that the $txt is a utf-8 even if it’s impossible to know !

                npp has no option to do the same (it is what I was looking for between my first post and my second one) except the “Settings - Preferences… - New Document - Apply to opened ANSI file” (thanks again Claudia).
                You can’t obtain from npp that your docs are forever iso-5988-1, iso-5988-2 or ASCII ! For me it’s a big pb because a polish guy will probably use an ISO-5988-2 encoding and npp will tell some docs are in ANSI (that is windows-1252) and others are in ISO-5988-2 !

                So the pb is not only a pb with utf-8/ANSI but with a lot of encodings !

                I think it will be a good evolution of npp to add an option to tell what to do when a doc is open and it is impossible to know the encoding : only the user can tell it, npp what clever it is will never !

                Claudia FrankC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Claudia FrankC
                  Claudia Frank @Mahabarata
                  last edited by

                  @Mahabarata

                  you are correct, there is no way to always guess the correct encoding.
                  In regards to phps mb_detect_encoding function, npp is,
                  when “Autodetect character encoding” is checked, using mozillas chardet library,
                  so it has such functionality but, as you found already out, cannot guess the
                  correct encoding all time.

                  I would also find it very useful if the setting
                  New Document->Encoding: UTF-8 and Apply to opened ANSI files (or any other configured encoding)
                  would force npp to treat all new opened documents as “configured encoding” when
                  auto detection of encoding has been disabled.

                  Cheers
                  Claudia

                  gerdb42G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • gerdb42G
                    gerdb42 @Claudia Frank
                    last edited by

                    @Claudia-Frank

                    Let’s assume a file contains Byte-sequence 20-A9-20 (in ANSI this would be Space-Copyright-Space). This Sequence is invalid in UTF-8 so NPP has no alternative other than assuming an single-Byte encoding. And since it never does changes to the file’s content on its own, it is left to treat such a file as ANSI (or whatever your favorite single-Byte encoding is).

                    This is not a shortcoming of NPP but part of that single-Byte heritage we still have to deal with today.

                    Claudia FrankC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • Claudia FrankC
                      Claudia Frank @gerdb42
                      last edited by

                      @gerdb42

                      I assume we have the same understanding so I’m interested to know
                      what I have written that could be misunderstood?
                      Could you point me to my error?

                      Thank you and cheers
                      Claudia

                      gerdb42G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • gerdb42G
                        gerdb42 @Claudia Frank
                        last edited by

                        @Claudia-Frank said:
                        Not quite an error, but

                        I would also find it very useful if the setting
                        New Document->Encoding: UTF-8 and Apply to opened ANSI files (or any other configured encoding)
                        would force npp to treat all new opened documents as “configured encoding” when
                        auto detection of encoding has been disabled.

                        would require an implicit conversion to UTF-8. And besides breaking the principle of not doing changes without user action, it will pop up a whole bunch of other issues.

                        Claudia FrankC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • Claudia FrankC
                          Claudia Frank @gerdb42
                          last edited by

                          @gerdb42

                          I agree that this would break the principle but on the other hand it could be beneficial as well.
                          But, now as I’m typing I’m thinking, when this conversion takes place and you don’t know from which encoding it came from
                          you might corrupt the document without knowing how to fix it.
                          Yes - bad idea.

                          Cheers
                          Claudia

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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