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Recently, I have written one shell script in Notepad++ on Windows machine. But when I transferred this script to Linux box I observed that the commands containing - (dash or hyphen or minus) sign got replaced with <96>. e.g. the original command is like below -

unzip -d $dir_to_unzip file.zip

But when transferred to Linux server it became like below-

unzip <96>d $dir_to_unzip file.zip

I am not an Unix expert and not able to find what is causing this change and how to correct it. Any help would be really appreciated.

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    0x96 is the code for the EN DASH character in the Windows-1252 character set. The original command does not have the hyphen character you want; it has a representation of the EN DASH character. The two characters look very similar on Windows, but Linux doesn't use the Windows-1252 character set, so 0x96 is some non-printable control character, which is being rendered as <96>. (The Unicode code for EN DASH is 0x2013.) May 19, 2015 at 21:19

2 Answers 2

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Notepad++ has a set of menus for specifying the encoding. A quick check with its default (UTF-8 without BOM) does not give me a non-ASCII text for a simple shell script. It is possible that you got this example by pasting text into Notepad++ from some webpage (which frequently are misencoded).

However, to ensure that you get the results which you expect, you can override the encoding using Notepad++ menus, and re-save the file. Besides UTF-8, other possibly useful choices include (via the cascading menu for "Western European"...) ISO-8859-1.

You should avoid using "ANSI" in Notepad++, because it is an ambiguous term which includes the sort of character redefinition which is causing you problems. For further discussion on this, see

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You'll either have to figure out how to type a real (ASCII) minus sign in Notepad, or you'll have to avoid using your Windows machine to edit ASCII text files intended for use on linux or unix hosts.

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