Summary: | Filename encoding is hardcoded to be latin1 (iso-8859-1) | ||
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Product: | BpmDj - old linux tools | Reporter: | Tilman Vogel <tilman.vogel> |
Component: | selector | Assignee: | Werner Van Belle <werner> |
Status: | ASSIGNED --- | ||
Severity: | normal | CC: | bernard.fortz |
Priority: | Future | ||
Version: | 3.8 | ||
Hardware: | PC | ||
OS: | Linux |
Comment 2
Werner Van Belle
2010-08-10 15:27:20 CEST
Indeed I have the same problem. I think the idea to fix it should be to make the encoding depend on the LANG environment variable of the system. The music-directory scanner assumes the filenames to be latin1 encoded. I am using UTF-8 (as most current Linux distros do). When filenames contain special characters as üöäø, bpmdj will show funny characters instead. I temporarily worked around that by renaming my files to latin1 (using convmv) but now they look strange in the shell, of course... (Anyway, as this is my first report: I am _deeply_ impressed by bpmdj! Thank you!) |