Encoding Recogniser  Encoding Recogniser

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Helps you determine the encoding of a file by displaying the beginning of it in hex and decoded characters in any of the supported Java encodings. If the file is made only of printable ASCII characters, then almost any encoding can be used to read it. If the display shows blanks between each character then chances are you have some variant of UTF-16 encoding. The BOMs (Byte Order Marks) can also be a clue to the encoding. Also try the national encodings of the country where the document came from. Sorry, you need Java 1.5+ to run this Applet.

If, encodingrecogniser, the above Encoding Recogniser signed Java Applet does not work…

  1. This signed Java Applet needs Java 1.5 or later, best version 1.5.0_19 or later, version 1.6.0_14 recommended and a recent browser.
  2. You should see the Applet above looking much like the screenshot. If you don’t, the following should help you get it working:
  3. If you are using Microsoft Internet Explorer, try another browser. Seriously. Microsoft has taken great pains, over and over, to screw up Java and every other multi-platform standardisation.
  4. If you are using Internet Explorer 7 or 8, you must allow blocked content permission for Active X to run. This also gives permission to Java to run. Click the Information bar, and then click Allow blocked content. Unfortunately, this also allows dangerous ActiveX code to run. However, you must do this in order to get access to perfectly-safe Java Applets running in a sandbox. This is part of Microsoft’s war on Java. Don’t put up with it! Use a different browser.
  5. For this Applet to work, you must click grant/accept to give it permission to read a file whose encoding you want to determine..
  6. Optionally, you may permanently install the Canadian Mind Products code-signing certificate so you don’t have to grant each time.
  7. If the above Applet appears to freeze-up, click Alt-Esc repeatedly to check for any buried permission dialog box.
  8. If you have certificate troubles, check the installed certificates and remove or update any obsolete or suspected defective certificates. The only certificate used by this program is mindprodcert2009dsa.
  9. Especially if this Applet has worked before, try clearing the browser cache and rebooting.
  10. To ensure your Java is up to date, check with Wassup. First, download it and run it as an application independent of your browser, then run it online as an Applet to add the complication of your browser.
  11. If the above Applet does not work, check the Java console for error messages.
  12. If the above Applet does not work, you might have better luck with the downloadable version.
  13. If you are using Mac OS X and would like an improved Look and Feel, download the QuaQua look & feel from randelshofer.ch/quaqua. UnZip the contained quaqua.jar and install it in ~/Library/Java/Extensions or one of the other ext dirs.
  14. If you still can’t get the program working click HELP for more detail.
  15. If you can’t get the above Applet working after trying the advice above and from the HELP button below, have bugs to report or ideas to improve the program or its documentation, please send me an email atemail Roedy Green.
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PackageVersionReleasedLicenceLanguageNotes 
encodingrecogniser
Encoding Recognizer
1.1 2008-04-01 free Java
summaryfactsscreenshotbrowse source repository for the current version of Encoding Recognizer. Helps determine a file’s encoding by displaying it presuming all the different supported encodings.
download Encoding Recognizer Java source and compiled class files to run on your own machine as an application or Applet.

First install the most recent Java.

To install, extract the zip download with WinZip, (or similar unzip utility) into any directory you please, often J:\ — ticking off the “user folder names” option.

To check out the corresponding source from the Subversion repository, use the TortoiseSVN repo-browser to
access encodingrecogniser source in repository with [Tortoise] Subversion client on wush.net/svn/mindprod/com/mindprod/encodingrecogniser/.

After you have installed the jar, you can run it as an application. Type:

java -jar J:\com\mindprod\encodingrecogniser\encodingrecogniser.jar

adjusting as necessary to account for where the jar file is.

download ASP PAD XML program description for the current version of Encoding Recognizer.

Encoding Recognizer is free. Full source included. You may even include the source code, modified or unmodified in commercial programs that you write and distribute. Non-military use only.
   
 
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