mag@xxxxxxxx ("Magnus Naeslund(t)") wrote in message news:<425AAE6D.6080008@xxxxxxxx>... > Fritz Bayer wrote: > > Hello, > > > > I`m using postgresql 7.2.1. According to the following lines data in > > my database gets encoded as unicode. Server and client communication > > seems to use unicode as well: > > > > woody=# select version(); > > version > > --------------------------------------------------------------- > > PostgreSQL 7.2.1 on i686-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by GCC 2.95.4 > > (1 row) > > > > woody=# select getdatabaseencoding(); > > getdatabaseencoding > > --------------------- > > UNICODE > > (1 row) > > > > woody=# show client_encoding; > > NOTICE: Current client encoding is 'UNICODE' > > SHOW VARIABLE > > > > I have a java program, which writes words containing german umlauts > > like äöü into the database. As you probably know, those characters > > belong to the ISO-8859-1 character encoding set. > > > > In my java webapplication those umlauts (äöü) get displayed correctly. > > So they actually get stored correctly in the database. > > > > I know I had to set the charSet option in the connection URL to get > stuff working once: > > "jdbc:postgresql://server/database?charSet=LATIN1" > > Maybe that would work for UNICODE? > As far I have heard the charSet property is ignored by the jdbc drivers. However, somebody patched them an introduced this property. > Regards, > Magnus > > > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate > subscribe-nomail command to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx so that your > message can get through to the mailing list cleanly ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 8: explain analyze is your friend