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Re: [plt-dev] pgsql package: msg#00093plt-dev
Thanks for the reply, Dave! The encoding of my database is SQL_ASCII which, IIUC, means that the bug really is in the SCheme code side for putting the data in one way and expecting it to come out the other way. I don't suppose you (or anyone!) could recommend how this should work? If I change the encoding to latin-1 and then change it to utf-8 and then change it back to SQL_ASCII, woudl htat effectively translate the entire database to utf-8? --- Ryan said earlier that the line numbers I sent don't match up, but I'm actually using version (2 3) of spgsql.plt so I was a bit surprised about that. I'm using this package, specifically: http://planet.plt-scheme.org/display.ss?package=spgsql.plt&owner=schematics and I can see the utf-8 call in this file: http://planet.plt-scheme.org/package-source/schematics/spgsql.plt/2/3/private/io.ss and the latin-1 call in this file: http://planet.plt-scheme.org/package-source/schematics/spgsql.plt/2/3/private/sql-data.ss so that's another mystery that it would be nice to have resolved. Robby On Wed, Jul 29, 2009 at 10:26 AM, Dave Gurnell<d.j.gurnell@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Robby wrote: >> >> Hi all (Ryan?): I've got a question about pgsql. From what I can tell, >> string data is stored in the database in the latin-1 encoding >> (sql-data.ss line 191), but is then retrieved from the database in the >> utf-8 encoding (io.ss line 205). Am I getting that right? >> >> This doesn't mean much, but I changed planet's copy of io.ss to use >> bytes->string/latin-1 instead of bytes->string/utf-8, and I was able >> to avoid crashing (but the latin-1 encoding might not have any >> unencodable octets, so that isn't really saying too too much). > > PostgreSQL lets you specify character encodings on a per-database and > per-client basis. The shell command: > > Âpsql -l > > will show you your setting for each database on your server. The psql > command: > > Â \encoding > > will show you your client encoding for your current session. You can set > your client encoding using the psql command: > > Â Â\encoding UTF8 > > I'm guessing backslash commands can also be sent over an SPGSQL > connection... you could try doing: > > Â Â(send conn exec "\\encoding UTF8") > > as soon as you connect. If that works, perhaps it's something that could be > rolled into SPGSQL's "connect" procedure? > > Hope this helps, > > -- Dave > > _________________________________________________ > ÂFor list-related administrative tasks: > Âhttp://list.cs.brown.edu/mailman/listinfo/plt-dev > _________________________________________________ For list-related administrative tasks: http://list.cs.brown.edu/mailman/listinfo/plt-dev
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