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Posted by Alan J. Flavell on 10/21/15 11:48
On Wed, 24 May 2006, Smike wrote:
> I do not know about Chinese, but Cyrillic (Russian) version is
> suggested to be done in 16-bit code version.
Pardon?
> No charset specification is required,
Do you have the remotest clue what you are talking about?
> Cyrillic text will be visible in most modern web browsers
> immediately without Encoding selection.
If you understand what you're doing, it will, yes. Sometimes, by
chance, even if you don't.
> View source of this example:
> http://bratok.prison.se/heros.htm
As far as I can see, the encoding is us-ascii. It doesn't contain
any actual Cyrillic characters - only numerical character references
(&#number;). This is a permissible option - but rarely the option of
choice. Although it can be useful for authors who haven't a clue what
they're doing. If you catch my drift.
> To convert Cyrillic text to HTML to 16-bit code presentation, use the
> following tool
> http://russiantext.ircdb.org/ruseditE.htm
> Format menu->Code conversion.
This seems to be completely pointless. Any decent i18n software can
do this without fuss, and not only for Cyrillic.
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