On Mon, Aug 10, 2009 at 19:53 +0100, Roger Leigh wrote: > On Mon, Aug 10, 2009 at 01:45:40PM +0200, Siggy Brentrup wrote:
> > While utf-8 covers the broadest set of character glyphs possible, it > > suffers from size as well as performance penalties. Characters no > > longer are guaranteed to fit in a byte, how do you define > > strlen(utf8_string) &c pp. All these issues have been solved but not > > for free. > Of course there's a penalty for certain operations. But UTF-8 is about > as compact as an extended encoding is going to get. It's not Huffman (just kidding :), stating the obvious you're trading time efficiency for space efficiency. > > There are a lot of users out there that are not willing to pay the price > > for increased generality. > These users will need to change their character encoding to something else. > But the Debian default should remain UTF-8. Those not willing to pay the > flexibility/performance tradeoff are the exception, and will need to > customise their environment accordingly. Either my memory is wrong or I seem to have missed some fundamental change in Debian Policy during my 5 year of absence. From those days I seem to remember that Debian supported use of low end machines in the past while they seem to be deprecated now as I was told in another thread on d-u iirc. Call me a dinosaur, I'm not yet decided how to think about this. Regards Siggy -- Please don't Cc: me when replying, I might not see either copy. bsb-at-psycho-dot-informationsanarchistik-dot-de or: bsb-at-psycho-dot-i21k-dot-de O< ascii ribbon campaign - stop html mail - www.asciiribbon.org
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