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I write my SQL-queries with Emacs. Now, I encountered the following problem. I have a query which has the greek letter μ.

SELECT *
FROM tab.labor
WHERE unit = 'μg/l'

To write the μ, I used the suggestion from greek:

M-x set-input-method RET TeX

and to go back:

M-x toggle-input-method

When I close the file and reopen it, I got the following query:

SELECT *
FROM tab.labor
WHERE unit = 'μg/l'

If I open the file with notepad I got the correct version. How can I set Emacs to get greek letters?

Thanks for help.

PS:
Windows 7
GNU Emacs 24.3.1 (i386-mingw-nt6.1.7601)

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  • 1
    Fixed your "entering μ in SO" problem. You may want to keep in mind that, whenever your "weird" character is replaced by three other weird characters, it's almost always the UTF-8 encoding :-)
    – paxdiablo
    Nov 11, 2014 at 8:38
  • @paxdiablo Thanks. I see: `μ'. I couldn't find it in the help. Yes, it is an encoding problem, one of the most difficult problem for non-professional programmaers.
    – giordano
    Nov 11, 2014 at 8:56
  • @paxdiablo: It's (new) Greek, that ends up as two characters. Chinese code points end up as 3 characters. Old Greek may end up as 4 characters.
    – MSalters
    Nov 11, 2014 at 9:48
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    @giordano: You actually may want to use µ instead (U+00BE), which is the actual micro-sign instead of the μ (U+03BC) which is the Greek letter mu.
    – MSalters
    Nov 11, 2014 at 9:50
  • I believe I read recently that Windows uses utf-16, in which case that may very likely be the actual encoding for the file (given that Notepad has no issues with it). Worth checking, at least.
    – phils
    Nov 11, 2014 at 12:34

2 Answers 2

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Try M-x revert-buffer-with-coding-system and specify utf-8. It looks like the file was saved in UTF-8, but Emacs opened it as Latin-1 for some reason.

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  • Thanks. I tried it but the weird characters remained.
    – giordano
    Nov 11, 2014 at 13:10
  • @giordano: It helps to remember that the file contains bits, not characters. Emacs displaying it incorrectly is a matter of interpretation, the bits are correct UTF-8.
    – MSalters
    Nov 12, 2014 at 7:57
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Specify the encoding of the file you want to open:

C-xEntercutf-8EnterC-xC-ffilenameEnter

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  • Thanks for answer. I open the file with "weird" characters (file x.sql) and entered the commands as you described. The weird characaters remains. How can I change the "weird" characters into greek letters?
    – giordano
    Nov 11, 2014 at 9:11
  • @giordano: What encoding is the file saved in? Try also utf-16 or whatever.
    – choroba
    Nov 11, 2014 at 9:20
  • The default encoding is utf-8. I tried other encodings but nothing changed. At the end I arrived to the conclusion that I have to write again a μ with the above method and replace all μg with μ. I don't know why μ changed to μg. I will see if this happened again in the future and pay more attention when it changed again to weird characters.
    – giordano
    Nov 11, 2014 at 13:09

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