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authorMunyoki Kilyungi2023-08-29 13:25:55 +0300
committerMunyoki Kilyungi2023-08-29 13:25:55 +0300
commit6dd80b077cc2aeb84d9ecd4ae48186bf5a88f276 (patch)
tree438f86febe7b6a45afcbe0e4287e44f0fee86eee /issues
parent9a0aee26331ef875b70fa98f539483fea9585490 (diff)
downloadgn-gemtext-6dd80b077cc2aeb84d9ecd4ae48186bf5a88f276.tar.gz
Mention tables that were converted in clased utf-8 issue
Signed-off-by: Munyoki Kilyungi <me@bonfacemunyoki.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'issues')
-rw-r--r--issues/fix-broken-utf8-chars.gmi5
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/issues/fix-broken-utf8-chars.gmi b/issues/fix-broken-utf8-chars.gmi
index 7e6b5fe..161c3b0 100644
--- a/issues/fix-broken-utf8-chars.gmi
+++ b/issues/fix-broken-utf8-chars.gmi
@@ -18,4 +18,9 @@ An example of a broken unicode character is: ">". The character ">" a
To find the correct replacement for the character ">", or any other character for the matter, you can look up its Unicode code point. In this case, the code point for ">" is "U+2273", which corresponds to the character "≥". You can then use this code point to search for and replace the broken character with the correct character in the text.
+Tables I've had to convert:
+
+* Investigators
+* InfoFiles
+
* closed