Mercurial > emacs
changeset 37244:c1ad9d98c553
(MS-DOS and MULE): IBM graphics characters are no longer displayed
as dos-unsupported-character-glyph.
author | Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 06 Apr 2001 11:12:12 +0000 |
parents | 0833a3e62d28 |
children | 1828bb79abd9 |
files | man/msdog.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/msdog.texi Fri Apr 06 10:24:47 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/msdog.texi Fri Apr 06 11:12:12 2001 +0000 @@ -668,14 +668,20 @@ columns on the screen, it is really still just a single character, and all Emacs commands treat it as one. -@vindex dos-unsupported-character-glyph +@cindex IBM graphics characters (MS-DOS) +@cindex box-drawing characters (MS-DOS) +@cindex line-drawing characters (MS-DOS) Not all characters in DOS codepages correspond to ISO 8859 characters---some are used for other purposes, such as box-drawing -characters and other graphics. Emacs cannot represent these characters -internally, so when you read a file that uses these characters, they are -converted into a particular character code, specified by the variable -@code{dos-unsupported-character-glyph}. +characters and other graphics. Emacs maps these characters to two +special character sets called @code{eight-bit-control} and +@code{eight-bit-graphic}, and displays them as their IBM glyphs. +However, you should be aware that other systems might display these +characters differently, so you should avoid them in text that might be +copied to a different operating system, or even to another DOS machine +that uses a different codepage. +@vindex dos-unsupported-character-glyph Emacs supports many other characters sets aside from ISO 8859, but it cannot display them on MS-DOS. So if one of these multibyte characters appears in a buffer, Emacs on MS-DOS displays them as specified by the