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 thread  Author  Topic: Is it just me?  (Read 1258 times)
James
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xx Is it just me?
« Thread started on: Feb 9th, 2012, 2:38pm »

Is it just me, or does LBB have a bit of Unicode capability?

I read a line in of Unicode, trim$() it, and it looked clean. smiley

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Richard Russell
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xx Re: Is it just me?
« Reply #1 on: Feb 9th, 2012, 3:05pm »

on Feb 9th, 2012, 2:38pm, James wrote:
Is it just me, or does LBB have a bit of Unicode capability?

No, it's ANSI, like LB. Because, in both LB and LBB, strings can contain anything there is no reason why you shouldn't store Unicode text (in either UTF-8 or UTF-16 encoding) in a string variable, but there's no native way of displaying it.

What exactly do you want to do?

Richard.
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James
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xx Re: Is it just me?
« Reply #2 on: Feb 9th, 2012, 4:56pm »

on Feb 9th, 2012, 3:05pm, Richard Russell wrote:
What exactly do you want to do?

Richard.


I would like to be able to read/write Korean, Chinese, Arabic, and Russian text files. smiley

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xx Re: Is it just me?
« Reply #3 on: Feb 9th, 2012, 9:27pm »

on Feb 9th, 2012, 4:56pm, James wrote:
I would like to be able to read/write Korean, Chinese, Arabic, and Russian text files.

There shouldn't be any problem with the files, or with string variables, as they can both contain Unicode text. If you want to make use of native functions like INSTR, STR$, VAL, WORD$ or WINSTRING then you will almost certainly need to use UTF-8 encoding rather than UTF-16.

The only real issue is actually displaying the text, since the native controls are ANSI only. You'd need to use the Windows API for that.

I certainly don't take the view that LB (or LBB) are unsuitable for Unicode applications, it just requires a little more effort.

Richard.
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xx Re: Is it just me?
« Reply #4 on: Feb 9th, 2012, 10:08pm »

on Feb 9th, 2012, 3:05pm, Richard Russell wrote:
No, it's ANSI, like LB.

To avoid any misunderstanding, LBB does have some limited support for Unicode in the mainwin and when outputting to the printer using lprint, but that's all.

For example try this:

Code:
 !@vdu.m.c& OR= &80
 print "Это демонстрация российского текста, "; 
 print "это пишется слева направо." 
(the strings are UTF-8, but displayed here as ANSI).

Richard.
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