GNU bug report logs -
#48902
28.0.50; Directory names containing apostrophes and backticks cause problems
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Reported by: Rudolf Adamkovič <salutis <at> me.com>
Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2021 14:05:02 UTC
Severity: normal
Found in version 28.0.50
Fixed in version 28.1
Done: Alan Third <alan <at> idiocy.org>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
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Message #50 received at 48902 <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):
> Date: Tue, 8 Jun 2021 17:19:44 +0100
> From: Alan Third <alan <at> idiocy.org>
> Cc: larsi <at> gnus.org, naofumi <at> yasufuku.dev, 48902 <at> debbugs.gnu.org,
> salutis <at> me.com
>
> In this case the call to ENCODE_FILE in allocInitFromFile is actually
> redundant because image_find_image_fd already calls ENCODE_FILE on the
> filename before passing it back. So we get a UTF-8 string no matter
> what.
Then why was the code re-encoding t in UTF-16? A bug?
> NSString can read in almost anything, and Mattias extended it to read
> in multibyte (and ascii) lisp strings, so we don't need a UTF-16 input
> specifically. It would probably be nice if NSString was also able to
> recognise that a lisp string is UTF-8 and handle that itself, but I
> don't think that's really possible, unless we make the assumption that
> any unibyte string it's passed will already be ascii or UTF-8.
>
> I don't know if that's a reasonable assumption.
Any file name passed through ENCODE_FILE should be in UTF-8 on macOS,
as I understand that's how the macOS filesystems work. Am I mistaken?
Can the value of default-file-name-coding-system on macOS be anything
other than UTF-8?
This bug report was last modified 4 years and 59 days ago.
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