Re: Automatic Filter for Accented Characters ?

Jose Fernando Tepedino Martins wrote [about named entities]:

>    I've been using for a long time files with characters with accents 
> (ISO 8859 standard) in most of my editing works (vi, textedit, latex). 

>    I have now a lot of documents with accented characters, and I love 
> them, because they make the text much more readable than using any other
> codification. I've been wondering if I really should run a transformation
> program for each HTML file I write before putting it in the WWW Server
> public area.

No. (Provided you mean 8859-1). These characters are entirely legal.

You _might_ need such a filter if you want to send these HTML documents
via a medium that may not be 8-bit clean, such as email.

But for serving via HTTP, leave them as they are. The named entities
such as &eacute; (that's <tt>&amp;eacute;</tt> for people reading 
hypermail archives!) are an additional method, for those people whose 
keyboards or editors do not permit entering the characters directly.

-- 
Chris Lilley, Technical Author
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Received on Monday, 19 June 1995 05:53:51 UTC