Re: Changing encoding in Dolphin

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Dotan Cohen wrote:
> On 25/01/2008, Michael Mauch <michael.mauch@xxxxxx> wrote:
>> Dotan Cohen wrote:
>>
>>> Thanks. After some time googling, I suspect that I need to add the
>>> iso-8859-8 codepage to the fstab entry. However, I don't seem to have
>>> it:
>>> Anybody know how to install nls_iso8859-8.ko on Ubuntu? I'll ask on
>>> the Ubuntu list, but someone here may know as well. Thanks.
>> There is no nls_iso8859-8.ko in current Linux kernels. These are the
>> available choices in the kernel "make menuconfig":
>>
>>    <M>   NLS ISO 8859-1  (Latin 1; Western European Languages)
>>    < >   NLS ISO 8859-2  (Latin 2; Slavic/Central European Languages)
>>    < >   NLS ISO 8859-3  (Latin 3; Esperanto, Galician, Maltese, Turkish)
>>    < >   NLS ISO 8859-4  (Latin 4; old Baltic charset)
>>    < >   NLS ISO 8859-5  (Cyrillic)
>>    < >   NLS ISO 8859-6  (Arabic)
>>    < >   NLS ISO 8859-7  (Modern Greek)
>>    < >   NLS ISO 8859-9  (Latin 5; Turkish)
>>    < >   NLS ISO 8859-13 (Latin 7; Baltic)
>>    < >   NLS ISO 8859-14 (Latin 8; Celtic)
>>    <M>   NLS ISO 8859-15 (Latin 9; Western European Languages with Euro)
>>
>>
>> But probably you don't need that module.
>>
>> These iocharset mount options (e.g. iocharset=iso8859-7) are used to set
>> the character set that is used on the Linux side. Ubuntu uses UTF-8,
>> which can display all characters, not just 256 characters like the old
>> ISO 8859 character sets. You could try iocharset=utf8 (though I hope
>> that would be the default on Ubuntu).
>>
>> But there is another option, named "codepage", to tell in which
>> character set the filenames on your FAT filesystem are. For Hebrew
>> filenames that could be cp862. So try with
>> "codepage=cp862,iocharset=utf8".
>>
>> Regards...
>>                 Michael
> 
> Thanks, Michael. 862 is, if I'm not mistaken, the old IBM encoding. A
> more common encoding today is cp1255 or 1255, which it turns out is a
> superset of iso8859-8 and that's why Linux does not need iso8859-8.
> Codepage cp1255 and 1255 did not help me read the card, though
> (Non-ascii characters in filenames remained as question marks). Any
> other ideas? Thanks.

I seem to be running out of them (ideas).  One question, what do you get 
with:

	echo $LANG

??

-- 
JRT
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