Character Set Support

Hi,
I need to open my application for international users and support multi lingual languages, mostly confined to Europe.
I am using Forms 4.5 with Oracle 8.1.6 on HP Unix.
My questions are
Is UTF8 character set supported by Forms 4.5? I know forms 6i can.
Has anyone tried to achieve it? Someone can share his experience here?
Thanks in advance
Sanjay
null

Any one...

Similar Messages

  • Character set supported by post and util.zip

    hi friends
    in my application i was sending a file(in client) using post method and in server getting using servlets.i what that file to be compressed using util.zip in client and uncompresed in server but i was unsucessful .i think the file before post (compressed one) and retrieving one are not same. is it problem different character set supported by http and zip files? or any thing else?
    plz help me.......

    Just ran into this myself yester day.
    There is a Metalink Note on it.
    http://metalink.oracle.com/metalink/plsql/ml2_documents.showFrameDocument?p_database_id=NOT&p_id=190281.1
    Problem Description
    You are using OC4J and trying to connect to a database using JDBC OCI and
    are getting:
    "java.sql.SQLException: Character Set Not Supported !!: DBConversion"
    Solution Description
    Replace the <OC4J_HOME>\jdbc\lib\classes12dms.jar with
    <ORACLE_HOME>\jdbc\lib\classes12.jar and rename it with classes12dms.jar.
    Explanation
    It seems there is a mismatch of classes12.zip supplied with OC4J 9.0.2
    and the Oracle9i client libraries ocijdbc8.dll or ocijdbc8.so.
    OC4J 9.0.2 does not use jdbc\lib\classes12.jar instead it uses
    jdbc\lib\classes12dms.jar. So, in order to use the 9.0.1 client with OC4J, you
    will need to make a copy of classes12.jar and rename it to classes12dms.jar
    References
    [NOTE:108876.1] Creating Connection gives "No ocijdbc8 in java.library.path"
    [NOTE:174808.1] JDev9i and OCI Connections
    I copied and renamed the jar (classes12.jar) as they stated.
    Note: It should be in the directory you set in the JDev.conf, mine is
    AddNativeCodePath D:\OraNT\9iDS\bin
    Didn't try the other reply's suggestion of setting an environment variable.

  • BIG5 and HKSCS Character Set Support

    Hi,
    We're experiencing some problems inserting a string containing both BIG5 and HKSCS characters to a 7.3.4 Oracle DB using JDBC. The underlying character set used by the DB is ZHT16BIG5 (this cannot be changed). The characters can be inserted correctly if we use SQLPlus/WorkSheet.
    Take note that the BIG5 character set can be inserted correctly. The problem occurs if we include HKSCS characters in the statement.
    We have tried a number of ways already but failed to convert the data properly.
    We tried converting the data using ByteToCharConverter.getConverter("Big5") but this cannot handle the HKSCS properly.
    We even tried using the CharacterSet.ZHT16BIG5_CHARSET provided by the NLS character set but it cannot convert all HKSCS characters correctly.
    Any ideas on how to solve this problem? Or is it because the HKSCS character set is NOT supported by the JDBC driver?
    Below is a sample text containg both BIG5 and HKSCS characters:
    'i$h%49D$G$Q$T89     Ize     _     ^     S(     R     @     A     Y     q
    Any help/suggestion is most welcome.
    Thanks,
    Cis
    null

    I got the exact same problem as you.
    (The Oracle I using is 8.1.7)
    Can any one help??

  • 9iLite and multibyte character set support

    Does 9iLite support a character set that will allow for accented characters?
    for example: i

    "NLS Character Integrity Issues for Consolidator
    When Mobile Sync synchronizes with an Oracle database which has a
    multibyte character set other than UTF8, the character integrity issue
    occurs. Mobile Sync retrieves data from the server database through Oracle
    8.1.7 OCI JDBC Driver for Oracle9iAS version 1.0.2.2, and 9i for Oracle9iAS
    version 2.0. Character sets are converted from database character sets to
    UTF8 by Oracle Servers NLS functions. In the code conversion, some
    multibyte characters are garbled because of the difference of the character
    mapping. This is not a bug of Mobile Sync.
    For more Information, see "Character Integrity Issues in NLS Environment"
    technical paper on Oracle Technology Network (technet.oracle.com)
    Java/SQLJ & JDBC section in Technologies category."
    from the Readme file with the media (read the manual I guess)

  • Multi character set support

    we plan to implement Interconnect to get new customer records created in many databases (at distributed locations) to be populated into a central system.
    all the databases are running on Oracle Database 9.x and we plan to use DB adapters to access each of them.
    3 of these databases store data in double-byte format (Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Japanese). others are in standard US/American English
    my questions are:-
    1) does my central system's database have to be set to use a certain character set too ?
    2) do i have to configure Interconnect to ensure that data from non-English systems are retrieved and populated correctly into my central database
    thanks for any response

    Hi,
    We are also facing similar problem. We are using IC version 9.0.2. We have AQ adapter at source and DB adapter at destination. The characterset at DB application database is UTF-8. Where as in AQ application database is AR8MSWIN1256. We are using request/reply scenario. But the reply message which gets enqueued to the queue by AQ adapter contains '??????' (arabic data)
    We have specified the encoding type in both adapter.ini files but no use.
    We also followed the steps as stated in Metalink bug id 2375248. But nothing works. Can somebody help us???
    -Vimala

  • Java.sql.SQLException: Non supported character set: oracle-character-set-17

    Hi,
    i am trying to execute an Oracle procedure from JDBC. The procedure accepts a Nested table as an input parameter. Definition of the nested table is given below.
    Database – Oracle 10g.
    Application Server – JBOSS 4.2.1
    I get the following exception._
    java.sql.SQLException: Non supported character set: oracle-character-set-178
    at oracle.gss.util.NLSError.throwSQLException(NLSError.java:46)
    I.  JDBC  Code_
    Session s = HibernateUtil.getSession();
    Transaction tr = s.beginTransaction();
    con=s.connection();
    oraConn = (OracleConnection) con.getMetaData().getConnection();
    TableObject obj=new TableObject();
    obj.setId(new Integer(123));//Tested ok, stroing in DB
    obj.setDescr("test"); // this line throwing error
    obj.setCre_user(new Integer(456));
    obj.setUpd_user(new Integer(789));
    obj.setXfr_flag("Y");
    ArrayList al=new ArrayList();
    al.add(obj);
    Object[] objAray = al.toArray();
    ArrayDescriptor arrayDescriptor =ArrayDescriptor.createDescriptor("T_TEST_SYN", oraConn);
    ARRAY oracleArray = new ARRAY(arrayDescriptor, oraConn, objAray);
    cs = (OracleCallableStatement)oraConn.prepareCall("call PKG_OBJ_TEST.accept_ui_input(?) ");
    cs.setArray(1, oracleArray);
    cs.execute();
    tr.commit();
    public class TableObject implements SQLData{
    private String sql_type = "T_OBJ_TEST";
    private int id;
    private String descr;
    //private Date cre_date;
    private int cre_user;
    //private Date upd_date;
    private int upd_user;
    private String xfr_flag;
    public TableObject()
    public TableObject (int id,String descr,int cre_user,int upd_user,String xfr_flag)
    // this.sql_type = sql_type;
    this.id = id;
    this.descr = descr;
    // this.cre_date=cre_date;
    this.cre_user=cre_user;
    //this.upd_date=upd_date;
    this.upd_user=upd_user;
    this.xfr_flag=xfr_flag;
    public String getSQLTypeName() throws SQLException {
    return "T_OBJ_TEST";
    public void readSQL(SQLInput stream, String typeName) throws SQLException {
    //sql_type = typeName;
    id=stream.readInt();
    descr=stream.readString();
    //cre_date=stream.readDate();
    cre_user=stream.readInt();
    //upd_date=stream.readDate();
    upd_user=stream.readInt();
    xfr_flag=stream.readString();
    public void writeSQL(SQLOutput stream) throws SQLException {
    try {
    stream.writeInt(this.id);
    System.out.println("Iddddd");
    stream.writeString(this.descr);
    System.out.println("Desccccccccccccccc"+":"+descr);
    //stream.writeDate(cre_date);
    stream.writeInt(this.cre_user);
    System.out.println("userrrrrrrrrrrr");
    //stream.writeDate(upd_date);
    stream.writeInt(this.upd_user);
    System.out.println("upd uiserrrrrrrrrrr");
    stream.writeString(this.xfr_flag);
    System.out.println("flagggggggggggggggggggg"+xfr_flag);
    }catch (SQLException se) {
    System.out.println("Table object sql exception");
    se.printStackTrace();
    catch (Exception e) {
    System.out.println("Table object exception");
    * @return the id
    public int getId() {
    return id;
    * @param id the id to set
    public void setId(Object obj) {
    Integer iobj= (Integer)obj;
    this.id =iobj.intValue();
    * @return the descr
    public String getDescr() {
    System.out.println("getDescr "+descr);
    return descr;
    * @param descr the descr to set
    public void setDescr(Object obj) {
    System.out.println("setDescr "+obj);
    String sobj = (String)obj;
    this.descr=sobj.toString();
    System.out.println("setDescr "+obj);
    * @return the cre_user
    public int getCre_user() {
    return cre_user;
    * @param cre_user the cre_user to set
    public void setCre_user(Object obj) {
    Integer iobj=(Integer)obj;
    this.cre_user = iobj.intValue();
    * @return the upd_user
    public int getUpd_user() {
    return upd_user;
    * @param upd_user the upd_user to set
    public void setUpd_user(Object obj) {
    Integer iobj=(Integer)obj;
    this.upd_user = iobj.intValue();
    * @return the xfr_flag
    public String getXfr_flag() {
    return xfr_flag;
    * @param xfr_flag the xfr_flag to set
    public void setXfr_flag(Object obj) {
    this.xfr_flag = (String)xfr_flag;
    II.  Oracle database object details
    Details of Object and Nested table created in the database.
    T_TEST_SYN is a public synonym created for t_tab_obj_test
    CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE t_obj_test as object (
    id number(10),
    descr varchar2(100),
    --cre_date  date,
    cre_user number(10),
    --upd_date  date,
    upd_user number(10),
    xfr_flag varchar2(1),
    CONSTRUCTOR FUNCTION t_obj_test ( id IN NUMBER DEFAULT NULL,
    descr IN varchar2 default null,
    --cre_date  in date      default null,
    cre_user in number default null,
    --upd_date  in date      default null,
    upd_user in number default null,
    xfr_flag in varchar2 default null ) RETURN SELF AS RESULT ) ;
    CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE BODY t_obj_test as
    CONSTRUCTOR FUNCTION t_obj_test ( id IN NUMBER DEFAULT NULL,
    descr IN varchar2 default null,
    --cre_date  in date      default null,
    cre_user in number default null,
    --upd_date  in date      default null,
    upd_user in number default null,
    xfr_flag in varchar2 default null ) RETURN SELF AS RESULT IS
    BEGIN
    SELF.id := id ;
    SELF.descr := descr ;
    --SELF.cre_date  := cre_date ;
    SELF.cre_user := cre_user ;
    --SELF.upd_date  := cre_date ;
    SELF.upd_user := cre_user ;
    SELF.xfr_flag := xfr_flag ;
    RETURN ;
    END ;
    END ;
    CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE t_tab_obj_test AS TABLE OF t_obj_test ;
    CREATE OR REPLACE PACKAGE BODY PKG_OBJ_TEST AS
    PROCEDURE accept_ui_input ( p_tab_obj_test in T_TAB_OBJ_TEST ) IS
    BEGIN
    FOR row IN p_tab_obj_test.First .. p_tab_obj_test.LAST
    LOOP
    INSERT INTO OBJ_TEST ( ID,
    DESCR,
    CRE_DATE,
    CRE_USER,
    UPD_DATE,
    UPD_USER,
    XFR_FLAG )
    VALUES ( p_tab_obj_test(row).ID,
    p_tab_obj_test(row).DESCR,
    NULL,
    p_tab_obj_test(row).CRE_USER,
    NULL,
    p_tab_obj_test(row).UPD_USER,
    p_tab_obj_test(row).XFR_FLAG ) ;
    END LOOP ;
    COMMIT ;
    END accept_ui_input ;
    END PKG_OBJ_TEST;
    /

    Check your CLASSPATH enviroment variable. Try to add something like c:\Ora10g\jlib\orai18n.jar.
    From "JDBC Developer’s Guide and Reference":
    orai18n.jar
    Contains classes for globalization and multibyte character sets support
    This solved the same error in my case.

  • Use of UTF8 and AL32UTF8 for database character set

    I will be implementing Unicode on a 10g database, and am considering using AL32UTF8 as the database character set, as opposed to AL16UTF16 as the national character set, primarily to economize storage requirements for primarily English-based string data.
    Is anyone aware of any issues, or tradeoffs, for implementing AL32UTF8 as the database character set, as opposed to using the national character set for storing Unicode data? I am aware of the fact that UTF-8 may require 3 bytes where UTF-16 would only require 2, so my question is more specific to the use of the database character set vs. the national character set, as opposed to differences between the encoding itself. (I realize that I could use UTF8 as the national character set, but don't want to lose the ability to store supplementary characters, which UTF8 does not support, as this Oracle character set supports up to Unicode 3.0 only.)
    Thanks in advance for any counsel.

    I don't have a lot of experience with SQL Server, but my belief is that a fair number of tools that handle SQL Server NCHAR/ NVARCHAR2 columns do not handle Oracle NCHAR/ NVARCHAR2 columns. I'm not sure if that's because of differences in the provided drivers, because of architectural differences, or because I don't have enough data points on the SQL Server side.
    I've not run into any barriers, no. The two most common speedbumps I've seen are
    - I generally prefer in Unicode databases to set NLS_LENGTH_SEMANTICS to CHAR so that a VARCHAR2(100) holds 100 characters rather than 100 bytes (the default). You could also declare the fields as VARCHAR2(100 CHAR), but I'm generally lazy.
    - Making sure that the client NLS_LANG properly identifies the character set of the data going in to the database (and the character set of the data that the client wants to come out) so that Oracle's character set conversion libraries will work. If this is set incorrectly, all manner of grief can befall you. If your client NLS_LANG matches your database character set, for example, Oracle doesn't do a character set conversion, so if you have an application that is passing in Windows-1252 data, Oracle will store it using the same binary representation. If another application thinks that data is really UTF-8, the character set conversion will fail, causing it to display garbage, and then you get to go through the database to figure out which rows in which tables are affected and do a major cleanup. If you have multiple character sets inadvertently stored in the database (i.e. a few rows of Windows-1252, a few of Shift-JIS, and a few of UTF8), you'll have a gigantic mess to clean up. This is a concern whether you're using CHAR/ VARCHAR2 or NCHAR/ NVARCHAR2, and it's actually slightly harder with the N data types, but it's something to be very aware of.
    Justin

  • How to change the character set encoding not being a superset one

    HI, i have a fresh installed database, but i realize the character set support in my client is not good enough, since its a not production database i want to change the character set encoding to anothor one not being a superset of the old one.
    I have tried the "ALTER DATABASE CHARACTER SET WE8MSWIN1252" but it fails claiming i need a superset one.
    I guess its just a single steps to do it, i have all the privileges, just not the time to reinstall and setup everything.

    Do you know what that does to the existing data, though? My hunch would be that any characters which have a different binary representation in the source & target character sets would be corrupted.
    Justin
    Distributed Database Consulting, Inc.
    http://www.ddbcinc.com/askDDBC

  • Message uses a character set that is not supported by the internet service

    Does any one have any advice on how to fix this problem?
    E-mails sent from my iphone 3G periodically arrive in an unreadable form at the recipient. The body of the e-mail has been replaced with the message "This message uses a character set that is not supported by the internet service...." The problem e-mails also include an attachment that contains an unformatted text file containing the original message surrounded by what appears to be lots of formatting data that is displayed as gibberish.
    This occurs sometimes, but not always, even with the same recipients. I am sending e-mail through a G-mail account that is configured on the iphone using IMAP. I have tried the gmail account to use the two available formatting options for mail, but neither fixes the problem.
    I have also upgraded to 2.01 and restored a few times without impact.

    Hi,
    I got somewhat similar problem with special charecters(German umlaud �,�,�..).
    I create a file with java having special charecters in it. Now if I open this file I am able to view the special charecters in it.But If I attach this file send it using following code then receiver can not see the umlaud charecters in it.They get replaced by _ or ?
    MimeBodyPart mbp2 = new MimeBodyPart();
    FileDataSource fds = new FileDataSource(fileName);
    mbp2.setDataHandler(new DataHandler(fds));
    mbp2.setFileName(output.getName());
    Multipart mp = new MimeMultipart();
    mp.addBodyPart(mbp2);
    msg.setContent(mp);
    Transport.send(msg);
    From you message it looks like you are able to send the mail attachment correctly(by preserving special charecters).
    Can you tell me what might be wrong in my code.
    I appriciate your efforts in advance.
    Prasad

  • Character Set Migration - Arabic & English Language Support

    Hi,
    Sofware Specifications:
    OS Version : Windows 2003 EE Server, SP2, 32-Bit
    DB Version : 9.2.0.1
    Application : Lotus Domino 6.5
    Existing Set Up:
    DB CHAR SET : WE8MSWIN 1252
    National Character Set : AL16UTF16
    NLS_LANG : NA
    Now the customer extended their business in EGYPT.
    They need the existing database to support ARABIC & ENGLISH Languages.
    Kindly let me know how to do this character set migration and achieve the client specification.
    Regards
    Suresh

    Check Metalink
    Note:179133.1
    Subject:      The correct NLS_LANG in a Windows Environment
    Note:187739.1
    Subject:      NLS Setup in a Multilingual Database Environment
    Note:260023.1
    Subject:      Difference between AR8MSWIN1256 and AR8ISO8859P6 characterset
    Also, please list all the steps you have performed till now

  • Cdrtools package, support for nls/utf8 character sets

    Hello ppl,
    I've been trying desperetly to burn a cd/dvd(k3b) with greek filenames and directory names. I ended up with file names like "???????????????????? (invalid unicode)"
    After a lot of searching, i managed to isolate and solve the problem. There has been a patch(http://bugs.gentoo.org/attachment.cgi?id=52097) for cdrtools to support nls/utf8 character sets.
    I guess that 90%+ of people using arch and burning cd's/dvd's, ignore the problem cause they just burn cd's/dvd's using standard english characters.
    For all others here it is     :
    # Patched cdrtools to support nls/utf8 character sets
    # Contributor: Akis Maziotis <[email protected]>
    pkgname=cdrtools-utf8support
    pkgver=2.01.01
    pkgrel=3
    pkgdesc="Tools for recording CDs patched for nls/utf8 support!"
    depends=('glibc')
    conflicts=('cdrtools')
    source=(ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/cdrecord/alpha/cdrtools-2.01.01a01.tar.gz http://bugs.gentoo.org/attachment.cgi?id=52097)
    md5sums=('fc085b5d287355f59ef85b7a3ccbb298' '1a596f5cae257e97c559716336b30e5b')
    build() {
    cd $startdir/src/cdrtools-2.01.01
    msg "Patching cdrtools ..."
    patch -p1 -i ../attachment.cgi?id=52097
    msg "Patching done "
    make || return 1
    make INS_BASE=$startdir/pkg/usr install
    It's a modified pkgbuild of the official arch cdrtools package (http://cvs.archlinux.org/cgi-bin/viewcv … cvs-markup) patched to support nls/utf8 character sets.
    Worked like a charm. 
    If u want to install it, u should uninstall the cdrtools package
    pacman -Rd cdrtools
    P.S.: I've issued this as a bug in http://bugs.archlinux.org/task/3830 but nobody seemed to care...    :cry:  :cry:  :cry:

    Hi Bharat,
    I have created a Oracle 8.1.7 database with UTF8 character set
    on WINDOWS 2000.
    Now , I want to store and retrieve information in other languages
    say Japanese or Hindi .
    I had set the NLS Language and NLS Terrritory to HINDI and INDIA
    in the SQL*PLUS session but could not see the information.You cannot view Hindi using SQL*Plus. You need iSQL*Plus.
    (Available as a download from OTN, and requiring the Oracle HTTP
    server).
    Then you need the fonts (either Mangal from Microsoft or
    Code2000).
    Have your NLS_LANG settings in your registry to
    AMERICAN_AMERICA.UTF8. (I have not tried with HINDI etc, because
    I need my solution to work with 806,817 and 901, and HINDI was
    not available with 806).
    Install the language pack for Devanagari/Indic languages
    (c_iscii.dll) on Windows NT/2000/XP.
    How can I use the Forms 6i to support this languages ?I am not sure about that.
    Do write back if this does not solve your problem.
    --Shirish

  • Oracle 10G support for both Cyrillic and Western European Character Sets

    Dear all,
    Our DB currently supports western EU characters sets but we need to also support Russian Characters.
    Is there a common character set for both? or some trick that does the job?
    Thanks.
    DB: Oracle 10G R2
    OS: Linux
    Current Char Set:
    NLS_CHARACTERSET     WE8ISO8859P1
    NLS_CALENDAR     GREGORIAN
    NLS_NCHAR_CHARACTERSET     AL16UTF16

    AL32UTF8 will always do the job.
    CL8ISO8859P5
    CL8MSWIN1251
    could to the job according to http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/B19306_01/server.102/b14225/applocaledata.htm#sthref1960.
    Edited by: P. Forstmann on 9 août 2011 17:41

  • Non supported character set error

    Hello, I have a j2ee application that uses OLAP API to make queries against cubes created with cwm2 packages, in a database (db 1).
    I've replicated the schema in another db (db 2), importing the user (with a dmp file) and throwing the object creation scripts. This works right, and the objects in the catalog are all validated. But my j2ee application doesn't work against this new user; some errors appears.
    The two databases are the same version, the only difference is that db 2 was installed using WE8ISO8859P15 character set. Is there any problem with this set and the olap api ? The character set in db 1 is WE8ISO8859P1.
    The error is:
    "oracle.express.idl.util.OlapiException: Non supported character set: oracle-character-set-46".
    I'm using ojdbc14.zip and orai18n.zip in the WEB-INF/lib directory of my application. My database version is 10g r. 2 (10.2.0.1.0)
    Thanks by your reply.

    At what point does this error occur? Can you provide more of the stack trace?
    Geof

  • Non supported character set: ...

    Hi,
    I'm sure I have a well known problem. When trying to post a new row to my DB (Oracle 9i Rel. 2) a java.sql.SQLException is thrown with the message Non supported character set: oracle-character-set-178
    What I did to fix this error is:
    - checked if nls_charset12.jar is in the classpath (it is)
    - tried thin instead of oci (the error is the same)
    - changed my NLS_LANG to ....UTF8 or ....WE8ISO8859P1 (didn't help also)
    Does anybody know something else what I can do?
    Thank you.
    Axel

    I found the solution myself.
    I had to use the classes12.jar (etc) shipped with JDeveloper. I replaced these some day because OCI access didn't work with these classes. But now it seems to work.

  • Non-supported Character Set-36

    I'm using Oracle8 and I have a Java application that tries to insert a text message in a queue. The file works in my company, but when I try to run it from another place it produces an error saying:
    oracle.jms.AQjmsException: Non supported character set: oracle-character-set-36
    Knowing that NLS_LANG parameter is set to American_America.AR8ISO8859P6 (it must be kept as AR due to another application).
    So how can I get rid of this error??
    thanks a lot

    I'm using Oracle8 and I have a Java application that tries to insert a text message in a queue. The file works in my company, but when I try to run it from another place it produces an error saying:
    oracle.jms.AQjmsException: Non supported character set: oracle-character-set-36
    Knowing that NLS_LANG parameter is set to American_America.AR8ISO8859P6 (it must be kept as AR due to another application).
    So how can I get rid of this error??
    thanks a lot

Maybe you are looking for