Is utf8::downgrade always guaranteed to produce a string with the required encoding for any environment though?
No, it just convert UTF-8 back to Latin1 (or EBCDIC in case you're using an A/400 or S/390). It simply looks like your file names are encoded in Latin1 on your drives. IIRC windows 2000 used Latin1, while Windows XP uses utf8. I may be wrong though because I'm a strict Un*x/Linux guy :)
In reply to Re^3: utf8 filenames
by wazoox
in thread utf8 filenames
by cjk32
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