Mercurial > emacs
changeset 44325:79f4beb26480
Minor cleanups.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 01 Apr 2002 23:04:46 +0000 |
parents | def57419f6ec |
children | c69907b4eb03 |
files | man/mule.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) [+] |
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line diff
--- a/man/mule.texi Mon Apr 01 23:04:46 2002 +0000 +++ b/man/mule.texi Mon Apr 01 23:04:46 2002 +0000 @@ -232,7 +232,7 @@ @findex set-language-environment @vindex current-language-environment - To select a language environment, customize the option + To select a language environment, you can customize the variable @code{current-language-environment} or use the command @kbd{M-x set-language-environment}. It makes no difference which buffer is current when you use this command, because the effects apply globally to @@ -714,12 +714,12 @@ reasons to specify a language environment. @findex prefer-coding-system - However, you can alter the priority list in detail with the command -@kbd{M-x prefer-coding-system}. This command reads the name of a coding -system from the minibuffer, and adds it to the front of the priority -list, so that it is preferred to all others. If you use this command -several times, each use adds one element to the front of the priority -list. + However, you can alter the coding system priority list in detail +with the command @kbd{M-x prefer-coding-system}. This command reads +the name of a coding system from the minibuffer, and adds it to the +front of the priority list, so that it is preferred to all others. If +you use this command several times, each use adds one element to the +front of the priority list. If you use a coding system that specifies the end-of-line conversion type, such as @code{iso-8859-1-dos}, what this means is that Emacs @@ -1220,9 +1220,9 @@ @node Undisplayable Characters @section Undisplayable Characters - Your terminal may be unable to display some non-ASCII -characters. Most non-windowing terminals can only use a single -character set (use the variable @code{default-terminal-coding-system} + There may be a some non-ASCII characters that your terminal cannot +display. Most non-windowing terminals support just a single character +set (use the variable @code{default-terminal-coding-system} (@pxref{Specify Coding}) to tell Emacs which one); characters which can't be encoded in that coding system are displayed as @samp{?} by default.