Edit C:\Program Files (x86)\PostgreSQL\9.5\pgAdmin III\docs\en_US\hints\encoding-ascii.html
<html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> <link rel="STYLESHEET" type="text/css" href="../pgadmin3.css"> <title>Guru Hints</title> </head> <body> <h3>Database encoding</h3> <p> The database <INFO> is created to store data using the SQL_ASCII encoding. This encoding is defined for 7 bit characters only; the meaning of characters with the 8th bit set (non-ASCII characters 127-255) is not defined. Consequently, it is not possible for the server to convert the data to other encodings. </p> <p> If you're storing non-ASCII data in the database, you're strongly encouraged to use a proper database encoding representing your locale character set to take benefit from the automatic conversion to different client encodings when needed. If you store non-ASCII data in an SQL_ASCII database, you may encounter weird characters written to or read from the database, caused by code conversion problems. This may cause you a lot of headache when accessing the database using different client programs and drivers. </p> <p> For most installations, Unicode (UTF8) encoding will provide the most flexible capabilities. </p> </body> </html>
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