Leonardo M. Ramé wrote: > Hi, I'm experiencing a weird behavior when storing latin characters to a > PostgreSQL 8.3.1.876 server. The database is Latin1 encoded, and it is > working since September 2008, it wasn't updated nor replaced since its > first installation. > > The weirdness of the problem is that sometimes the characters are stored > correctly, but sometimes doesn't (allways by the same program), the > field type is Varchar(30), and for example the text "NUÑEZ" is stored as > "NU?EZ". > > The data comes from an external application in an XML file (also > Latin1), then, a Delphi service parses the XML and create the > Insert/Update statements to store the data in the database. I'd try to > reproduce the bug by sending XML files with 'Ñ' to the service, but it > is stored correctly. > > Also, there's a front end that allows users to see/edit the data in a > user friendlier way. Again, I checked by inserting records with 'Ñ' > using this front-end, and also are stored correctly. > > Does anyone faced the same problem? any workaround? Well, there *must* be one client that stores wrong data... As a first step, can you find out the code point of the character that is represented as "?" in your E-Mail? Something like SELECT ascii(substr('NU?EZ', 3, 1)); except that instead of the string literal you substitute the column containing the bad value. Yours, Laurenz Albe -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general