| <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> | |
| <!--Arbortext, Inc., 1988-2005, v.4002--> | |
| <!DOCTYPE concept PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DITA Concept//EN" | |
| "..\dtd\concept.dtd"> | |
| <concept id="cencoding" xml:lang="en-us"> | |
| <title>File Encoding</title> | |
| <shortdesc></shortdesc> | |
| <prolog><metadata> | |
| <keywords><indexterm>character encoding<indexterm>location in files</indexterm></indexterm> | |
| <indexterm>JSP files<indexterm>character encoding</indexterm></indexterm> | |
| <indexterm>XHTML<indexterm>character encoding</indexterm></indexterm> | |
| <indexterm>XML<indexterm>character encoding</indexterm></indexterm> | |
| </keywords> | |
| </metadata></prolog> | |
| <conbody> | |
| <p> The character encoding in XML, (X)HTML files, and JSP files can be specified | |
| and invoked in many different ways; however, we recommend that you specify | |
| the encoding in each one of your source files, for that is where many XML, | |
| HTML, JSP editors expect to find the encoding.</p> | |
| <p>For example, for JSP files, you might use the pageEncoding attribute and/or | |
| the contentType attribute in the page directive, as shown in the following | |
| example:<codeblock><%@ page language="java" contentType="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" | |
| pageEncoding="ISO-8859-1"%> | |
| </codeblock></p> | |
| <p>For XML files, you might use the encoding pseudo-attribute in the xml declaration | |
| at the start of a document or the text declaration at the start of an entity, | |
| as in the following example: <codeblock><?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1" ?></codeblock></p> | |
| <p>For (X)HTML files, you might use the <meta> tag inside the <head> | |
| tags, as shown in the following example:<codeblock><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" /></codeblock></p> | |
| </conbody> | |
| </concept> |