Why I can not read comments in Chinese in my Mfile?
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In the past, I wrote a Mfile with very much comments in Chinese (after character %) in my PC with Windows7(x64) and Matlab 2013b. Last month, I have setup my PC with Windows10 and Matlab2015b but now although I can open this Mfile but I can not read those Chinese comments. Those Chinese comments's characters is not Chinese characters. Now I also have many Chinese fonts (include Chinese font I have used to write this Mfile) in my Windows/Fonts. Please let me know how I have to do to read those importan comments in my Mfile! Thank you very much!
2 Comments
Christine Tobler
on 31 Dec 2015
That sounds very annoying. Can you attach a small example of such a file to this post? I have some different operating systems and MATLAB versions available, and could try where the problem comes from.
Answers (3)
Jan
on 1 Jan 2016
Edited: Jan
on 1 Jan 2016
The Chinese characters appear directly, when I open the M-file with Notepad++, althought I did not install any Chinese fonts and run an English version of the OS (Win7 64). When I open the File in Matlab R2009a, R2011b and 2015b, the pure ASCII characters are shown.
I had no success with http://www.mathworks.com/help/toolbox/simulink/slref/slcharacterencoding.html. But I'm not sure.
You can try this - I'm not sure if this works reliably on all operating systems:
- At first check your locale value:
feature('locale')
- Then open the locale data XML file:
edit(fullfile(matlabroot, '/bin/lcdata.xml'))
- Replace (in my case):
<locale name="en_US" encoding="ISO-8859-1" xpg_name="en_US.ISO8859-1">
by
<locale name="en_US" encoding="UTF-8" xpg_name="en_US.UTF-8">
7 Comments
Shaul Shvimmer
on 31 Jul 2020
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 6 Aug 2020
This is everything that appear in my lcdata.xml file, using MATLAB 2020a in Windows 10, and still I'm getting the error message below when trying to use Hebrew in the matlab's editor, for using Hebrew in GUI.
How can this be solved ?
Thank you.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<!-- MathWorks Locale Database -->
<!-- File Name: lcdata.xml -->
<!-- Copyright 2007-2016 The MathWorks, Inc. -->
<lcdata xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="lcdata.xsd">
<!-- Note: -->
<!-- This locale database is used to customize the MathWorks locale database. -->
<!-- Codeset entry example -->
<!-- <codeset> -->
<!-- <encoding name="StandardEncodingName" jvm_encoding="JavaEncodingName"> -->
<!-- <encoding_alias name="AliasName"/> -->
<!-- </encoding> -->
<!-- </codeset> -->
<!-- Locale entries example -->
<!-- <locale name="StandardLocaleName" encoding="EncodingName" xpg_name="XpgLocaleName"> -->
<!-- <alias name="AliasName"/> -->
<!-- "region_alias" is only for Mac -->
<!-- <region_alias name="RegionAliasName"/> -->
<!-- </locale> -->
</lcdata>
Walter Roberson
on 6 Aug 2020
Shaul: Would it be possible for to attach a sample file that is giving this windows-1255 problem?
Kin Sung Chan
on 13 Dec 2022
Well, I use VSCode to open the Matlab .m file, and resave with GBK encoding. (bottom right button of the VSCode interface next to Spaces) (Well, I try with different types of encoding, and only this one works)
After that, Matlab can display the Chinese characters with no issues.
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