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Apologies if this is a very amateurish question! I know Eclipse uses Cp1252 as the default for its encoding.
I recently created a program using hash maps to convert letters input to Braille. To do this, I had to change the encoding method to UTF-8.

I know very little about either, but everything I've read indicates UTF-8 can represent every character in Unicode and has a much bigger library of recognised symbols.

Why then is it not the preferred encoding style for Eclipse?

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  • what do you mean by Eclipse uses Cp1250 as the default for its encoding. ? The console in eclipse uses the dafault encoding of your OS. Or are you talking about file IO?
    – jlordo
    Dec 9, 2012 at 21:35
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    Eclipse must be using the default encoding on your computer, which must be a Windows box set to CP1250. That's probably what you want to change. Dec 9, 2012 at 21:36
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    He's actually asking a valid question: "Why then is it not the preferred encoding style for Eclipse?" that is, why isn't Eclipse pre-configured to assume UTF-8 for text files? That's a very good question.
    – Isaac
    Dec 9, 2012 at 21:49
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    I was asking myself exactly the same question, since it is a recurring problem when working in teams. The answer is that it has been an open issue for almost 10 years now: bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=108668 Vote for it if you do not agree with the "Platform default" (which you usually did not choose)
    – Didier L
    Dec 3, 2014 at 10:22

1 Answer 1

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When you start Eclipse against a brand new workspace, Eclipse has to decide which encoding to use, by default, when handling certain types of text-based files: text files, Java source files, JSP files, XML and so forth.

By default, then, Eclipse uses the default platform encoding, which is derived from your operating system's settings.

As to why UTF-8 isn't the default encoding for text files, the reason is that still, throughout the world, there is a significant number of plain text files for which UTF-8 is not backward compatible. While UTF-8 is backward compatible with most western encodings, that is not the case for other encodings.

You can change these default encodings by modifying the workspace's settings. Remember, though, that these settings are stored at the workspace level; if you later start a new workspace, the new workspace will have the default encodings set.

To change the default encodings, just go to Workspace -> Preferences, and type "encoding" in the search box at the top left of the dialog. Eclipse will filter the preferences' dialog to contain items that are relevant for encodings.

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  • I have Windows 8 - does it use Cp1252 by default (apologies - I originally posted it was Cp1250, but it is Cp1252)? Dec 9, 2012 at 21:45
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    Any version of Windows (including 8), set to English-US (and possibly other types of English, such as English-Canada, and certain other languages) will end up defaulting to Cp1252.
    – Isaac
    Dec 9, 2012 at 21:45
  • Thanks, that's just what I wanted to know. That's because it's a Microsoft encoding tool, isn't it? Dec 9, 2012 at 21:47
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    Your question "why UTF-8 isn't the default encoding for text files" is a very good question. I edited my answer to elaborate on that.
    – Isaac
    Dec 9, 2012 at 21:48
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    Thanks for the info Isaac, except I'm not in total agreement with your answer on UTF-8 defaults. I would imagine (although admittedly from a western-centric point of view) that the lion's share of plain text files are ASCII. Unless you were thinking of another format, this invalidates your response because UTF-8 was designed to be backwards compatible with ASCII. Nov 15, 2013 at 3:29

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