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Full Discussion: characters ô ö à é è
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting characters ô ö à é è Post 302071417 by cbkihong on Wednesday 19th of April 2006 10:52:41 AM
Old 04-19-2006
Well ... Unicode is designed to make this easy in certain environments.

For example, the following works on my system (bash):

Code:
cbkihong@cbkihong:~$ LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 \ 
iconv -f 'iso-8859-15' -t 'utf-8' /tmp/testfile_ISO8859_15.txt \
| sed -e s/[$'\303\264'$'\303\266']/o/g -e s/$'\303\240'/a/g

I don't find the solution to translate 
 o o as o
 a as a
 é è as e
 ç as c
 
 With the command tr or sed? 
 I can't write sed 's/o/o/g' because the copy/paste o don't work.

(The \ are line continuation)

I copied the content of your post in the file testfile_ISO8858_15.txt with the ISO-8859-15 character set, which supports all the accented characters you listed. The command converts the file into Unicode on the fly (if you have the source files in UTF-8, you can save this step!), then make use of the bash $'\nnn' syntax to refer to the character by code without literally typing them out.

Here I have the first two done for you as an example. If you decide on expanding it you should be able to complete the rest. Of course you can redirect the output to a file, and/or convert the encoding as you prefer.
 

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NWBPSET(1)							      nwbpset								NWBPSET(1)

NAME
nwbpset - Create a bindery property or set its value SYNOPSIS
nwbpset [ -h ] [ -S server ] [ -U user name ] [ -P password | -n ] [ -C ] DESCRIPTION
nwbpset Reads a property specification from the standard input and creates and sets the corresponding property. The format is determined by the output of 'nwbpvalues -c'. nwbpset will hopefully become an important part of the bindery management suite of ncpfs, together with 'nwbpvalues -c'. See util/nwbpsecurity for an example. As another example, look at the following command line: nwbpvalues -t 1 -o supervisor -p user_defaults -c | sed '2s/.*/ME/'| sed '3s/.*/LOGIN_CONTROL/'| nwbpset With this command, the property user_defaults of the user object 'supervisor' is copied into the property login_control of the user object 'me'. nwbpvalues -t 1 -o me -p login_control -c | sed '9s/.*/ff/'| nwbpset This command disables the user object me. Feel free to contribute other examples! nwbpset looks up the file $HOME/.nwclient to find a file server, a user name and possibly a password. See nwclient(5) for more information. Please note that the access permissions of $HOME/.nwclient MUST be 600 for security reasons. OPTIONS
-h -h is used to print out a short help text. -S server server is the name of the server you want to use. -U user user is the user name to use for login. -P password password is the password to use for login. If neither -n nor -P are given, and the user has no open connection to the server, nwbpset prompts for a password. -n -n should be given if no password is required for the login. -C By default, passwords are converted to uppercase before they are sent to the server, because most servers require this. You can turn off this conversion by -C. AUTHORS
nwbpset was written by Volker Lendecke. See the Changes file of ncpfs for other contributors. nwbpset 8/7/1996 NWBPSET(1)
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