5

If the file name contains accents, it works as expected in Opera, FF, Chrome and IE9.

But in IE8 file type is "unknown file type", and shows "file" as the file name (actually the last part of the URL).

Does anyone know a workaround? Other than replacing the "special" characters in the file name?

The test code: (file | new project | add controller)

public class FileController : Controller
{
    public ActionResult Index(bool? Accents)
    {
        byte[] content = new byte[] { 1, 2, 3, 4 };

        return File(content, "application/octet-stream", true.Equals(Accents) ? "dsaé.txt" : "dsae.txt");
    }
}

test it like this: http://localhost/file, and http://localhost/file?accents=true

Edit => The "solution" for me, if anyone interested:

public class FileContentResultStupidIE : FileContentResult //yeah, maybe i am not totally "politically correct", but still...
{
    public FileContentResultStupidIE(byte[] fileContents, string contentType) : base(fileContents, contentType) { }

    public override void ExecuteResult(ControllerContext context)
    {
        var b = context.HttpContext.Request.Browser;
        if (b != null && b.Browser.Equals("ie", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) && b.MajorVersion <= 8)
        {
            context.HttpContext.Response.AppendHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=\"" + HttpUtility.UrlPathEncode(base.FileDownloadName) + "\"");
            WriteFile(context.HttpContext.Response);
        }
        else
        {
            base.ExecuteResult(context);
        }
    }
}
Akos Lukacs
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2 Answers2

2

Try adding the following line inside your controller action:

Response.HeaderEncoding = Encoding.GetEncoding("iso-8859-1");

You may take a look at the following blog post which discusses those issues. Unfortunately there isn't a general solution which will work among all browsers.

Darin Dimitrov
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0

Is this a file the user is uploading to your system at some point? If so, restrict the use of accents in a file name. If not - don't use accents in your file names :).

Jack
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  • Not using accents is not really an option. As a developer I know accents, space, etc are problematic. But living in a country where accents are used every day, I can't say "no accents!"... – Akos Lukacs Aug 04 '11 at 14:58
  • I know this is a rather simplistic answer, but I like to KISS. Otherwise I will bang my head for hours on a problem that can take 15 minutes to fix. – Jack Aug 04 '11 at 14:59
  • Btw, the file list comes from an external system, and users could upload/modify files from that external system. So the most I could do is check if the browser is IE 8, or worse, and replace the special characters when sending the file to download. But still that could cause other problems, since if they re-upload the file, file name is changed... – Akos Lukacs Aug 04 '11 at 15:03