Ad 1:
...
PV = 0x81757e8 "mp3_v4.csv"\0
I think the file name in the CSV file - the one with the "Déjà" - would be more interesting :) —
which is what ikegami meant...
Ad 2:
...
PV = 0x817dad8 "D\303\251j\303\240 Vu"\0
This verifies that the filesystem encoding of that file is UTF-8.
So, presumably, the file name in the CSV file isn't in UTF-8.
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Aha - I see.
SV = PV(0x8154064) at 0x8153594
REFCNT = 1
FLAGS = (PADBUSY,PADTMP,POK,READONLY,pPOK)
PV = 0x8187b58 "/media/usbdisk/music/checkit/Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young/D\303\251 Vu/06 - D\303\251 Vu.mp3"\0
CUR = 80
LEN = 84
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The file name you're quoting here doesn't contain a 'j' at all, so even if all your encoding issues are fixed, you won't get a match. The \303\251 sequence is just an UTF-8 encoded é.
Please post a bit of your script so that we can see what you're actually doing. Missing characters are rather atypical for encoding problems (at least in that form).
Update: after thinking a bit more about your problem, I think your console/terminal might be b0rked. Can you enter and view accented characters on the command line? Are the entries of the file displayed correctly if you simply cat them to the console?
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PV = 0x8187b58 "/media/usbdisk/music/checkit/Crosby, Stills, Nash & Yo
+ung/D\303\251 Vu/06 - D\303\251 Vu.mp3"\0
Ok, so that's valid UTF-8, too, but a different file name, i.e. ".../Dé Vu/06 - Dé Vu.mp3"... (somehow, the "jà" is missing).
When you view the CSV file with some other tool/editor (which one
are you using?), what do you see displayed?
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