Sebastian Kapfer wrote:
On Tue, 07 Oct 2003 05:00:09 +0200, Joe Drew wrote:Note that this doesn't mean that they are displayed in UTF-8, only that the names are stored in UTF-8 on disk. Once you've got a known encoding you can easily convert to the user's local encoding.Non-GTK apps won't do that conversion, at least not automatically. That's my whole point :-)
"Non-GTK apps are broken if they don't use UTF-8 for filenames; as asserted above, it is the only sane choice."