Mercurial > emacs
changeset 24615:393b5f9a3631
Fix wording for the last change.
author | Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 12 Apr 1999 10:46:39 +0000 |
parents | ea0ab5644dca |
children | a647cbfb4169 |
files | man/msdog.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/msdog.texi Mon Apr 12 08:50:02 1999 +0000 +++ b/man/msdog.texi Mon Apr 12 10:46:39 1999 +0000 @@ -531,7 +531,7 @@ your init file. @cindex language environment, automatic selection on @r{MS-DOS} - Multibyte Emacs supports only certain DOS codepages, those which can + Multibyte Emacs supports only certain DOS codepages: those which can display Far-Eastern scripts, like the Japanese codepage 932, and those that encode a single ISO 8859 character set. @@ -542,16 +542,16 @@ pertain to codepages that encode ISO 8859 character sets. For the codepages which correspond to one of the ISO character sets, -Emacs it knows which ISO character set is that based on the codepage -number. Emacs automatically creates a coding system to support reading -and writing files that use the current codepage, and uses this coding -system by default. The name of this coding system is -@code{cp@var{nnn}}, where @var{nnn} is the codepage number.@footnote{The -standard Emacs coding systems for ISO 8859 are not quite right for the -purpose, because typically the DOS codepage does not match the standard -ISO character codes. For example, the letter @samp{@,{c}} (@samp{c} -with cedilla) has code 231 in the standard Latin-1 character set, but -the corresponding DOS codepage 850 uses code 135 for this glyph.} +Emacs knows the character set name based on the codepage number. Emacs +automatically creates a coding system to support reading and writing +files that use the current codepage, and uses this coding system by +default. The name of this coding system is @code{cp@var{nnn}}, where +@var{nnn} is the codepage number.@footnote{The standard Emacs coding +systems for ISO 8859 are not quite right for the purpose, because +typically the DOS codepage does not match the standard ISO character +codes. For example, the letter @samp{@,{c}} (@samp{c} with cedilla) has +code 231 in the standard Latin-1 character set, but the corresponding +DOS codepage 850 uses code 135 for this glyph.} @cindex mode line @r{(MS-DOS)} All the @code{cp@var{nnn}} coding systems use the letter @samp{D} (for