Le Mer 11 avril 2007 08:55, Toshio Kuratomi a écrit : > On Wed, 2007-04-11 at 08:14 +0200, Nicolas Mailhot wrote: >> Le mardi 10 avril 2007 à 17:07 -0700, Toshio Kuratomi a écrit : >> > On Wed, 2007-04-11 at 00:37 +0200, Nicolas Mailhot wrote: >> >> > > Every filename must be encoded as UTF-8. Filenames using characters >> > > outside the range 0000–007F as defined in page 2 of >> > > http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U0000.pdf may need conversion. >> > >> > Because I think more people will understand what ASCII means than >> > U0000.pdf? >> >> Page 2 of the linked pdf is a glyph chart which in my experience people >> understand way more easily than ASCII (even with added textual >> explanations) > >> the wikipedia article is too long and dense, people will zap it >> > Then we link to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:ASCII_full.svg This will be fine http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII#ASCII_printable_characters may work too (although the text before the table may be confusing) > We could define it as a negative "(ASCII does not include accented > letters or special symbols like ©)". Been there, tried that, anything but a chart or an image like the one you proposed is not a sufficient cluestick > Basically, I think a good portion of anglo-centric packagers won't know > what the relationship is between ASCII and UTF-8. Sure. But a good portion of anglo-centric packagers won't know what ASCII is either. Try to poll people someday you'll be surprised. Regards, -- Nicolas Mailhot -- Fedora-maintainers mailing list Fedora-maintainers@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-maintainers -- Fedora-maintainers-readonly mailing list Fedora-maintainers-readonly@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-maintainers-readonly