[
  {
    "Id": "118049",
    "ThreadId": "35513",
    "Html": "Hello<br>\r\n<br>\r\nI was wondering if I missed something regarding options on how to use localized letters (in this case the Danish Æ, Ø, Å).<br>\r\n<br>\r\nI got the library to work just fine (it's great!), and I string replaced the danish letters so Æ was made into Ae, Ø into Oe and Å into Aa. Thats the old way of writing those letters.<br>\r\nI just want to make sure there's no way to make the filenames appear correct? If not, it's no biggie, the library still covers my most important uses.<br>\r\n<br>\r\nBest Regards,<br>\r\nThomas Lund<br>\r\n<br>\r\n",
    "PostedDate": "2008-09-12T00:54:12.673-07:00",
    "UserRole": null,
    "MarkedAsAnswerDate": null
  },
  {
    "Id": "118144",
    "ThreadId": "35513",
    "Html": "Support for that stuff is an open work item!&nbsp; <br>\r\nSo, no, you are not missing anything.&nbsp; The library doesn't yet properly handle files with such names.<br>\r\nI hope to get to that soon, and I need testers!<br>\r\nCan you send me a zipfile with filenames that have localized letters? <br>\r\n<br>\r\nAnd also, can you tell me how to create one?&nbsp; I have Windows Vista and cannot create a zip (compressed folder) that contains files with such names.<br>\r\nIt doesn't work for me. <br>\r\n<br>\r\nAs a result I don't know how to verify that a zipfile created by the DotNetZip library, containing filenames with &quot;localized letters&quot;, &nbsp;is valid. <br>\r\n<br>\r\n",
    "PostedDate": "2008-09-12T07:54:00.44-07:00",
    "UserRole": null,
    "MarkedAsAnswerDate": null
  }
]