Article ID: 169779
Article Last Modified on 9/30/2003
APPLIES TO
- Microsoft Commercial Internet System 1.0 Service Pack 2
This article was previously published under Q169779
SYMPTOMS
An administrator starts the Address Book Server (ABS) Web administration page (Abscreate.asp) to create a user in the database. The administrator types a user name, password, or other information in a language that uses the double-byte character set (DBCS--for example, Japanese, Korean, Chinese, and so on) and also types an e-mail address in a non-DBCS language (for example English). The characters are all displayed properly on the screen and are entered correctly into the database.
When you attempt to list a DBCS entry by way of the ABS search page (Ablist.asp), you find nothing. If you search using a non-DBCS entry (for example, the English e-mail address you entered), you find the original entry that was entered in DBCS is not displayed properly and therefore is not being found by the search page
CAUSE
The problem is caused by the fact that the *.asp files (for example, Ablist.asp) are requesting specific font types to be used and therefore the DBCS characters are not being displayed properly.
RESOLUTION
To resolve this problem:
Remark out any lines in the *.asp files for ABS that ask to use a specific font. Do this for all the *.asp files for Address Book Server (ablist.asp, abcreate.asp etc.) if you are planning to use DBCS names.
For example, if you open Ablist.asp in Microsoft Notepad and search on "Font Face," you will see the following:</title> </head> <body bgcolor=#ffffff vlink="#228b22" link="#0000ff" alink="#00ff00"> <font face="Arial,Helvetica"> <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0 width=100% > <tr>
Remark out the "Font face" line with an exclamation point (!) and save the file.
The DBCS characters (foreign names) will now display properly.
Additional query words: ABS LDAP DBCS
Keywords: kbbug kbnetwork kbother KB169779