GenoPro Home
|
Get Started With My Genealogy Tree
|
Buy
|
Login
|
Privacy
|
Search
|
Site Map
GenoPro Support Forum
Home
Search
Tags
Who's On
Welcome Guest
(
Login
|
Register
)
Recent Posts
Popular Topics
Home
»
GenoPro
»
Suggestions, Wish List and Feature Requests
»
Gedcom in Ansi(Ascii)
Gedcom in Ansi(Ascii)
Rate Topic
Topic View
Topic Options
Author
maru-san
Posted Thursday, March 25, 2010
-
Post #25693
Forum Master
Customers
Important Contributors
FamilyTrees.GenoPro.com
Translator
GenoPro version: 3.1.0.1
Last Login: Sunday, March 21, 2021
Posts: 716,
Visits: 12,927
From the file menu we can export a
Unicode
formatted
GedCom file
for Genopro, but also in other encoding formats.
I do have some cousins back in Germany who work with
genealogy programs
(other than GenoPro) which only accept Ansi(Ascii) formatted files.
What needs to be done to change the encoding format for Gedcom files exported through the
report generator
?
jcmorin
Posted Thursday, March 25, 2010
-
Post #25695
Forum Master
Gamma
Moderators
Administrators
FamilyTrees.GenoPro.com
Customers
GenoPro version: 3.1.0.1
Last Login: Monday, May 12, 2025
Posts: 952,
Visits: 10,077
ASCII is a very old character set that have no accent or any foreign
alphabet
, but if you generate English report only I guess you could do that.
You can open any file in Unicode and convert it to ASCII/ANSI using notepad "Save As..." menu.
Edited:
Thursday, March 25, 2010 by
JcMorin
Nand
Posted Thursday, March 25, 2010
-
Post #25696
Famous Writer
Customers
FamilyTrees.GenoPro.com
GenoPro version: 3.1.0.1
Last Login: Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Posts: 495,
Visits: 3,391
ANSI is perfectly capable to handle the national character sets of 15+ European
languages
. Not just plain English.
jcmorin
Posted Friday, March 26, 2010
-
Post #25700
Forum Master
Gamma
Moderators
Administrators
FamilyTrees.GenoPro.com
Customers
GenoPro version: 3.1.0.1
Last Login: Monday, May 12, 2025
Posts: 952,
Visits: 10,077
Nand (3/25/2010)
ANSI is perfectly capable to handle the national character sets of 15+ European languages. Not just plain English.
Your right but that depend on the codepage used... and that where the nightmare start!
If you write the file on your computer and shared it with someone using a different base codepage all characters can be wrongly interpreted.
Since Unicode with UTF-8 encoding have been widely accepted as simpler and superior to handle all characters for all languages ANSI have been pretty much abandon, it's a legacy for old software.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows-1252
<- most used codepage for Latin based language.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_page
<- read more
about
codepage.
Edited:
Friday, March 26, 2010 by
JcMorin
Similar Topics
Reading This Topic
Powered By InstantForum.NET 2010-3-x © 2025
Execution: 0.016.
2 queries.
Compression Enabled.
Search All Forums...
GO
Advanced Search
Rate Topic
Great
Good
Average
Bad
Poor
Rate This Topic
Flat Ascending
Flat Descending
Threaded
Subscribe To Topic
Print This Topic
Goto Topics Forum