#! /bin/bash if [ -z "$1" ]; then echo "Usage: doit " exit fi # In some CP866 texts used "Yo" and "N" simbols from CP1251 encoding. This fixes it. dos2unix -U $1 cat $1 | sed -e "s/¸/ñ/g" | sed -e "s/¹/N/g;s/°/ø/g" | iconv -f CP866 -t KOI8-R > $1.koi cat $1 | sed -e "s/¸/ñ/g" | sed -e "s/¹/ü/g;s/°/ø/g" | iconv -f CP866 -t CP1251 > $1.win cat $1 | sed -e "s/¸/ñ/g" | sed -e "s/¹/ü/g;s/°/ø/g" | iconv -f CP866 -t UTF-8 > $1.utf