If I want a portable program, I’ll generate Unicode output.

If I want a non-portable program, I’ll generate output in some non-portable, legacy vendor encoding.

I never ever do the second.

It’s a shame that Microsoft is still lagging behind on proper Unicode support, but that is hardly Perl’s fault. Perl makes it easy to write portable programs, and bending over backwards to accomodate Microsoft-only idio(t)syncrasies seems like a self-limiting and very niche environment.


In reply to Re^3: Determine encoding of STDOUT by tchrist
in thread Determine encoding of STDOUT by Dirk80

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