Re: A Great Idea (tm) about reimplementing NLS.
From: Patrick McFarland
Date: Wed Jun 15 2005 - 20:44:36 EST
On Wednesday 15 June 2005 05:28 pm, Lennart Sorensen wrote:
> What do you do if the underlying filesystem can not store some unicode
> characters that are allowed on others?
Um, thats impossible, unless you're implying something like the file system
not being 8-bit safe. The only thing UTF-8 does is store data in bytes, it
doesn't need any real support from the file system.
> > It depend's on what it is used for. It is very good fs for removable
> > media. None of linux native filesystems is good for this because of
> > different uids on different machines. Since VFAT uses unicode it is
> > possible to see the filenames properly on systems using different
> > codepages for the same language (1:1 is possible).
> VFAT uses unicode? I thought it used the same codepage silyness as FAT
> did, since after all ti was just supposed to be a long filename
> extension to FAT. Do they use unicode in the long filenames only?
I mentioned earlier that VFAT uses 8-bit encodings, none of them (supported by
Windows, at least) are Unicode.
> I think UDF is a better filesystem for many types of media since it is
> able to me more gently to the sectors storing the meta data than VFAT
> ever will be.
I agree. UDF is the true successor to the portable media throne.
--
Patrick "Diablo-D3" McFarland || pmcfarland@xxxxxxxxxxxx
"Computer games don't affect kids; I mean if Pac-Man affected us as kids, we'd
all be running around in darkened rooms, munching magic pills and listening to
repetitive electronic music." -- Kristian Wilson, Nintendo, Inc, 1989
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