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Date:      Mon, 16 Oct 1995 04:13:55 +0300 (MSK)
From:      =?KOI8-R?Q?=E1=CE=C4=D2=C5=CA_=FE=C5=D2=CE=CF=D7?= (aka Andrey A. Chernov, Black Mage) <ache@astral.msk.su>
To:        "Kaleb S. KEITHLEY" <kaleb@x.org>
Cc:        hackers@freefall.FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: A couple problems in FreeBSD 2.1.0-950922-SNAP
Message-ID:  <KkJ7RWmaE4@ache.dialup.demos.ru>
In-Reply-To: <199510160100.VAA06828@exalt.x.org>; from "Kaleb S. KEITHLEY" at Sun, 15 Oct 1995 21:00:27 EST
References:  <199510160100.VAA06828@exalt.x.org>

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In message <199510160100.VAA06828@exalt.x.org> Kaleb S. KEITHLEY
    writes:


>> Historycally ctype(>127) returns 0 in many systems that I see,

>Every day that goes by there are fewer and fewer people using those
>systems. Just because the U.S.-centric computer industry used to have
>tunnel vision when it came to i18n doesn't mean that "modern" systems 
>should perpetuate the same mistakes into the future, especially when 
>there's no reason not to fix it.

I agree. But disagree of your default touching. POSIX says
that "C" locale must be strict ASCII.

>> If you want 8859-1, just use proper locale.

>A nice suggestion. Too bad it doesn't work. ANSI/POSIX1 say that a
>program does the equivalent of setlocale(LC_ALL, "C") on startup. Given
>that ls, and I gather everything else, disregard my LANG, LC_ALL, and 
>LC_CTYPE environment variables, I'm left wondering how it is you think
>that using the "proper locale" will help. Are you assuming that I'm
>using the undocumented hack of setting the ENABLE_STARTUP_LOCALE 
>environment variable?

Yes, for FreeBSD I assume this. Some other systems, like Xenix
with international support and some Sun's locale variants
call setlocale() from crt0 without additional asking. Basically
you must cleanup your ctype-oriented program to work
with multi-byte chars before inserting setlocale() call into main().
Don't forget: ctype famaly works with multi-byte chars too.
If you simple insert setlocale in 'ls' f.e. it becomes very broken
for Japanese chars f.e. because it assumed that char type == char
everywhere. My strategy allows to 'ls' stays to ASCII when LANG
sets to Japanese. If 'ls' stays to 8859-1 as you suggest,
it overwrites chars in Japanese environment!

>> >>>fixes some bugs in mklocale's lt_LN LC_CTYPE template.
>> 
>> >>BLANK fixes are incorrect, see isblank(3).
>> 

>As I said, at least one system's docs claim it spec'd in ISO8859-1. I
>don't have an ISO8859-1 at hand, and I'm not even sure I have one at
>work, although I must, somewhere.

I don't need 8859-1 docs, I already have them. I need any isblank()
references. Maybe ANSI?

-- 
Andrey A. Chernov        : And I rest so composedly,  /Now, in my bed,
ache@astral.msk.su       : That any beholder  /Might fancy me dead -
FidoNet: 2:5020/230.3    : Might start at beholding me,  /Thinking me dead.
RELCOM Team,FreeBSD Team :         E.A.Poe         From "For Annie" 1849



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