Date: Thu, 11 Apr 2002 07:38:04 -0400 From: "Dan Langille" <dan@langille.org> To: Terry Lambert <tlambert2@mindspring.com> Cc: chat@freebsd.org Subject: Re: what are these characters please? Message-ID: <20020411113858.E48BB3F30@bast.unixathome.org> In-Reply-To: <3CB571D6.2C10B9AA@mindspring.com>
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On 11 Apr 2002 at 4:21, Terry Lambert wrote:
> Dan Langille wrote:
> > On 10 Apr 2002 at 19:59, Terry Lambert wrote:
> > > > Ville Skytt^[,Ad^[(B <ville.skytta@iki.fi>
> > >
> > > ANSI character set selector escape sequence for 7 bit representation of
> > > 8 bit characters.
> > >
> > > If I had to guess, I would say "eth", which is a "D" with a bar in it,
> > > unlike "thorn", which is an "O" with a forwars slash through it. 8-).
> > >
> > > Obviously a deficiency in the encapsulation of a cut-and-paste
> > > that was not attributed by encoding, because CVS commit logs are
> > > not MIME encapsulated.
> >
> > Given that I'm trying to process the cvs-all messages into XML documents
> > (using the perl module XML::Writer which does not do any encoding beyond
> > characters such as >, <, etc), any suggestions as to how to deal with
> > such characters? I've been looking through cpan but I suspect I'm using
> > the wrong search criteria ("encoding"). Any clues?
>
> The character sets selected are documented in ANSI 3.64; you can
> also find them in the VT220 and VT320 programming guides. Given
> that the committer was likely using EUC encoding for JIS-208, it
> seems unrecoverable.
>
> Most likely, you are going to have to live with it.
I have to find a solution as non-ISO-8859-1 are causing grief when it
comes to reading in the XML. See below.
> So you would need to know the original character set (ISO-8859-1 is
> my guess, given the poster's Finnish email address), and the input
> method and display character set used (I would say it was cut from
> a "kterm" and pasted through a Kanji EUC or Shift-JIS input method,
> given the committers email address).
I'm not at all worried about restoring the original text. I'm going for a
"ignore what I can't use"-solution.
> Basically, anything that isn't ISO-8859-1 is pretty much lost, since
> that's what CVS stores.
ISO-8859-1 is fine by me. FWIW, the XML headers include:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
The encoding problem actually occurs later when I try to process the XML
with XML::Parser :
not well-formed (invalid token) at line 14, column 34, byte 559 at
/usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/i386-freebsd/XML/Parser.pm line 185
And line 14 is:
[Submitted by: Ville SkyttESC,AdESC(B <ville.skytta@iki.fi>]
I think my goal here is remove all non-ISO-8859-1 characters from the
incoming cvs-all message. I've been searching newsgroups (comp.lang.perl
and comp.text.xml) trying to find a simple solution.
> If you want to get complicated, the email address is actually
> <ville.skytta@iki.fi>, and anything not inside the "<" ">" is
> comments. Email addresses aren't allowed to have special
> characters in them (US ASCII strikes again!).
I agree, it's too complicated for the objective at hand.
--
Dan Langille
The FreeBSD Diary - http://freebsddiary.org/ - practical examples
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