testing comment title containing UTF-8 chars; posting format: "Plain Old Text"
SOURCE DATA: cut-and-paste of parent text's reversed and inverted (upside-down and backward) version of: "an the site now handle this?" into both the subject field and the comment field.
When initially pasted in, the subject text looked correct.
When initially pasted in, the comment text looked correct.
Pressed preview button
In "Preview Comment" area, saw subject text change to mojibake.
In "Preview Comment" area, saw comment text change to mojibake.
In "Edit Comment" area, saw subject text entry field change to a *sequence* of: ampersand, pound sign (aka sharp, hash mark, number sign, or octothorpe), digits, semicolon.
In "Edit Comment" area, saw cut-and-pasted text appear as originally pasted (and as appeared in parent post).
Posting as "Plain Old Text". I wrote the first row just typing in my keyboard (Spanish layout), and the second row by their character entities, i.e. á for á, etc. So there's at least a workaround, but it is so 90's.:P
(Score: 1) by stderr on Sunday February 16 2014, @05:18PM
ÆØÅæøå (Some Danish letters)
©® (Copyright and Reg.)
€¥ (Euro and Yen)
←↓→↑ (Left, down, right, up)
(Posting as "Plain Old Text")
alias sudo="echo make it yourself #" #
(Score: 1) by stderr on Sunday February 16 2014, @05:21PM
©® (Copyright and Reg.)
€¥ (Euro and Yen)
←↓→↑ (Left, down, right, up)
(Same test as "Extrans")
alias sudo="echo make it yourself #" #
(Score: 1) by stderr on Sunday February 16 2014, @05:25PM
ÆØÅæøå (Some Danish letters)
©® (Copyright and Reg.)
€¥ (Euro and Yen)
←↓→↑ (Left, down, right, up)
(Same test as "Code")
alias sudo="echo make it yourself #" #
(Score: 1) by stderr on Sunday February 16 2014, @05:27PM
Again, it looked ok in preview. :-/
ÆØÅæøå (Some Danish letters)
©® (Copyright and Reg.)
€¥ (Euro and Yen)
←↓→↑ (Left, down, right, up)
(Same test as "HTML")
alias sudo="echo make it yourself #" #
(Score: 1) by NCommander on Sunday February 16 2014, @06:12PM
Techwolf_Lupindo> ¿sᴉɥʇ ǝlpuɐɥ ʍou ǝʇᴉs ǝɥʇ uɐ
Still always moving
(Score: 1) by martyb on Sunday February 16 2014, @10:53PM
testing comment title containing UTF-8 chars; posting format: "Plain Old Text"
SOURCE DATA: cut-and-paste of parent text's reversed and inverted (upside-down and backward) version of: "an the site now handle this?" into both the subject field and the comment field.
When initially pasted in, the subject text looked correct.
When initially pasted in, the comment text looked correct.
Pressed preview button
In "Preview Comment" area, saw subject text change to mojibake.
In "Preview Comment" area, saw comment text change to mojibake.
In "Edit Comment" area, saw subject text entry field change to a *sequence* of: ampersand, pound sign (aka sharp, hash mark, number sign, or octothorpe), digits, semicolon.
In "Edit Comment" area, saw cut-and-pasted text appear as originally pasted (and as appeared in parent post).
(Score: 1) by tftp on Tuesday February 18 2014, @12:50PM
When posting Cyrillic in HTML mode the whole comment becomes blank.
In Extrans and Code modes the characters are shown as HTML entities.
In Plain Text mode the characters are truncated to $deity knows what: СпециалиÑÑ‚Ñ‹
Here is a link for testing: http://lenta.ru/articles/2014/02/18/fusion/ [lenta.ru]
(Score: 1) by deif on Tuesday February 18 2014, @06:51AM
I think UTF8 support is broken right now, even the most basic one:
áéÃóú = "áéíóú" accented vowels
ÃÉÃÓÚ = "ÁÉÍÓÚ" capital accented vowels
à èìòù = "àèìòù" vowels with grave accent
ÀÈÌÒÙ = "ÀÈÌÒÙ" capital vowels with grave accent
ñ = ñ
Ñ = Ñ
Posting as "Plain Old Text". :P
I wrote the first row just typing in my keyboard (Spanish layout), and the second row by their character entities, i.e. á for á, etc.
So there's at least a workaround, but it is so 90's.
∀(x, y ∈ A ∪ B; x ≠ y) x² - y² ≥ 0
(Score: 1) by NCommander on Sunday February 16 2014, @07:46PM
Test
Still always moving
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 16 2014, @07:58PM
tet testetetwerw
(Score: 1) by kbahey on Tuesday March 11 2014, @08:57PM
2bits.com, Inc: Drupal, WordPress, and LAMP performance tuning [2bits.com].