Mercurial > emacs
changeset 60497:c40fb3b5ae9e
Fix usage of "e.g.".
(HTTP language/coding): Explain the rules for these strings.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 08 Mar 2005 03:01:55 +0000 |
parents | 3a569489ffdb |
children | f779a0469755 |
files | man/url.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 20 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/url.texi Tue Mar 08 02:57:30 2005 +0000 +++ b/man/url.texi Tue Mar 08 03:01:55 2005 +0000 @@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ the possible exception of @code{telnet}, it is rare for ports to be specified, and it is possible using a non-standard port may have undesired consequences if a different service is listening on that -port (e.g.@: an HTTP URL specifying the SMTP port can cause mail to be +port (e.g., an HTTP URL specifying the SMTP port can cause mail to be sent).@c , but @xref{Other Variables, url-bad-port-list}. The meaning of the @var{path} component depends on the service. @@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ @noindent where @table @var @item type -is the type of the URL scheme, e.g.@: @code{http} +is the type of the URL scheme, e.g., @code{http} @item user is the username associated with it, or @code{nil}; @item password @@ -182,7 +182,7 @@ @findex url-set-attributes @findex url-set-full These attributes have accessors named @code{url-@var{part}}, where -@var{part} is the name of one of the elements above, e.g.@: +@var{part} is the name of one of the elements above, e.g., @code{url-host}. Similarly, there are setters of the form @code{url-set-@var{part}}. @@ -317,7 +317,12 @@ @subsection Language and Encoding Preferences HTTP allows clients to express preferences for the language and -encoding of documents which servers may honour. +encoding of documents which servers may honour. For each of these +variables, the value is a string; it can specify a single choice, or +it can be a comma-separated list in descending order of preference. +Each element can be followed by @samp{;q=@var{priority}} to specify +its preference level; e.g., for @code{url-mime-language-string}, +@w{@code{"de, en-gb;q=0.8, en;q=0.7"}}. @defopt url-mime-charset-string @cindex character sets @@ -325,23 +330,22 @@ This variable specifies a preference for character sets when documents can be served in more than one encoding. -HTTP allows specifying a list of MIME charsets which indicate your -preferred character set encodings, e.g.@: Latin-9 or Big5, and these -can be weighted. This list is generated automatically from the list -of defined coding systems which have associated MIME types. These are -sorted by coding priority. @xref{Recognize Coding, , Recognizing -Coding Systems, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. +HTTP allows specifying a series of MIME charsets which indicate your +preferred character set encodings, e.g., Latin-9 or Big5, and these +can be weighted. The default series is generated automatically from +the associated MIME types of all defined coding systems, sorted by the +coding system priority specified in Emacs. @xref{Recognize Coding, , +Recognizing Coding Systems, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. @end defopt @defopt url-mime-language-string @cindex language preferences A string specifying the preferred language when servers can serve -files in several languages. Use RFC 1766 abbreviations, e.g.@: -@samp{en} for English, @samp{de} for German. It can be a -comma-separated list in descending order of preference. The ordering -can be made explicit using `q' factors defined by HTTP, e.g.@: -@w{@samp{de, en-gb;q=0.8, en;q=0.7}}. It can be @samp{*} to get the -first available language (as opposed to the default). +files in several languages. Use RFC 1766 abbreviations, e.g., +@samp{en} for English, @samp{de} for German. + +The string can be @code{"*"} to get the first available language (as +opposed to the default). @end defopt @node HTTP URL Options