![]() >Whereas with an RAR or 7z archive, there will be no problem :) If system locale is set right, everything will be ok. >For example, If someone stores russian filenames in a zip archive, and then try to extract this >archive on an english Windows, >On Windows, 7-zip/winzip/winrar store, in the zip format, the filenames with a locale encoded >characters. these formats >can store reliably all the International characters (English = ANSI, French, Russian, Japanese. >On Windows, the 7z format and RAR format store Unicode encoded filenames, i.e. Unzip will be able to restore the filenames.īut if your locale is something like "en_EN.UTF8", the command "unzip" cannot successfully restore a "russian" zip ! I think that the command "unzip" on Linux, try to convert the filenames from a Zip archive created On Windows.įor example, if your locale is something like "ru_RU.UTF8" and the zip archive was created on a russian Windows, then So, you should really use a format that can reliably store international characters ! Whereas with an RAR or 7z archive, there will be no problem :) ![]() ![]() ![]() On Windows, 7-zip/winzip/winrar store, in the zip format, the filenames with a locale encoded characters.įor example, If someone stores russian filenames in a zip archive, and then try to extract this archive on an english Windows, these formats can store reliably all the International characters (English = ANSI, French, Russian, Japanese. On Windows, the 7z format and RAR format store Unicode encoded filenames, i.e.
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