Fully Unicode OS?
Greetings,
I have a problem with the display of file names in different languages. I am
not sure this is the most suitable newsgroup to put my question - if not,
please accept my apologies - but after browsing the hierarchy I could not
find a better place.
I now live in France, but I lived for several years in Japan (although I am
neither Japanese nor French). When I moved to France, I brought here a
brand-new Windows 2000 Japanese (regularly bought on the market) and I am
still running under this OS (with all SP and patches). There reason why I
chose to stick to the Japanese version is that it treats file names as
double-byte (sorry if my description is imprecise). However, it is not really
a fully Unicode OS: in fact, when I receive a file whose name is in French,
with some characters like "è" or "ç", these are not correctly shown and if I
try to open it I get an error message "file does not exist". I have to rename
the file in order to open it.
The situation is even worse if try the opposite, i.e. a file whose name is
in Japanese under a western version of Windows: the file name is not shown at
all, I get something like "_______.doc" and I cannot even rename it (and yes,
I have installed Japanese IME).
In this situation, if I wanted to upgrade to XP or Vista (something I should
do in order to run some software that does not run under 2K), I would need
the Japanese version, in order to keep the possibility of opening all the
files. The problem is that it is hard to get this version in France.
Furthermore, my employer (University) should buy the licences, not me, but I
cannot ask for a different language version (perhaps English would be
possible, but that would not solve my problem).
So, my question is: does XP or Vista treat filenames as Unicode, or is there
some way to get filemanes shown correctly in whatever charset they are
encoded?
I am afraid that my description is a bit approximate, but I hope that the
essence of the problem is understandable.
Thank you in advance for any help!
date: Thu, 10 Jul 2008 01:07:00 -0700
author: Massimo Nespolo