this post was submitted on 24 Sep 2023
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Programming

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[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It's better and worse at the same time: it just doesn't bother with it for the most part. If you have files named with UTF-8 characters, and run it with a locale that uses an ISO-whatever charset, it just displays them wrong. As long as the byte is not a zero or an ASCII forward slash, it'll take it.

There's still a path length limit but it's bigger: 255 bytes for filenames and 4096 bytes for a whole path. That's bytes, not characters. So if you use UTF-16 like on Windows, those numbers are halved.

That said, it's assumed to be UTF-8 these days and should be interpreted as UTF-8, nobody uses non-UTF-8 locales anymore. But you technically can.