- ANSI (Windows-1252): This was the original Windows character set. It’s identical to ASCII for the first 127 characters, includes special characters from 128 to 159, and maps to UTF-8 from 160 to 255. You can specify it using <meta charset="Windows-1252"> in HTML.
- UTF-8: Widely used and recommended, UTF-8 accommodates most character sets across all languages. To set the source and execution character sets to UTF-8 in Visual Studio, use the /utf-8 compiler option.
- Unicode: Word automatically saves files encoded as Unicode (UTF-16), allowing cross-language compatibility. It’s a safe choice for sharing files across systems with different language settings.
weboptions w/ Windows encoding
3 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Afficher commentaires plus anciens
Hi
What's the CharacterEncoding option for Windows?
Example only lists 'US-ASCII', 'UTF-8', 'latin1', 'Shift_JIS', and'ISO-8859-1'.
0 commentaires
Réponses (1)
Amith
le 11 Août 2024
Hi Pete,
When dealing with text encoding in Windows, you have several options. Let’s explore them:
Hope this helps!
0 commentaires
Voir également
Catégories
En savoir plus sur Environment and Settings dans Help Center et File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!