Mercurial > emacs
changeset 34691:a80251dea213
keyboard-coding-system
author | Dave Love <fx@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 18 Dec 2000 17:13:16 +0000 |
parents | 971ef1cef2cd |
children | d78158ad0c3d |
files | man/mule.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/mule.texi Mon Dec 18 17:11:17 2000 +0000 +++ b/man/mule.texi Mon Dec 18 17:13:16 2000 +0000 @@ -843,7 +843,9 @@ @kindex C-x RET k @findex set-keyboard-coding-system +@vindex keyboard-coding-system The command @kbd{C-x @key{RET} k} (@code{set-keyboard-coding-system}) +or the Custom option @code{keyboard-coding-system} specifies the coding system for keyboard input. Character-code translation of keyboard input is useful for terminals with keys that send non-ASCII graphic characters---for example, some terminals designed @@ -1160,15 +1162,13 @@ @itemize @bullet @cindex 8-bit input @item +@findex set-keyboard-coding-system +@vindex keyboard-coding-system If your keyboard can generate character codes 128 and up, representing -non-ASCII characters, you can execute the following expression to enable -Emacs to understand them: - -@example -(set-input-mode (car (current-input-mode)) - (nth 1 (current-input-mode)) - 0) -@end example +non-ASCII characters, use the command @code{M-x +set-keyboard-coding-system} or the Custom option +@code{keyboard-coding-system} to specify this in the same way as for +multibyte usage (@pxref{Specify Coding}). It is not necessary to do this under a window system which can distinguish 8-bit characters and Meta keys. If you do this on a normal