Mercurial > emacs
changeset 36413:f5625ac53fba
Made minor editing changes.
author | Andrew Choi <akochoi@shaw.ca> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 27 Feb 2001 05:46:51 +0000 |
parents | 4fbcbbb88ef0 |
children | 575c9b78d09c |
files | man/anti.texi man/macos.texi |
diffstat | 2 files changed, 14 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/anti.texi Tue Feb 27 03:29:08 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/anti.texi Tue Feb 27 05:46:51 2001 +0000 @@ -251,7 +251,7 @@ this feature. @item -The @code{field} property does not exist in Emasc 20, so various +The @code{field} property does not exist in Emacs 20, so various packages that run subsidiary programs in Emacs buffers cannot in general distinguish which text was user input and which was output from the subprocess. If you need to try to do this nonetheless, Emacs 20
--- a/man/macos.texi Tue Feb 27 03:29:08 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/macos.texi Tue Feb 27 05:46:51 2001 +0000 @@ -62,14 +62,14 @@ The Mac keyboard ordinarily generates characters in the Mac Roman encoding. To use it for entering ISO Latin-1 characters directly, set the value of the variable @code{mac-keyboard-text-encoding} to -@code{kTextEncodingISOLatin1}. Note that that not all Mac Roman -characters that can be entered at the keyboard can be converted to ISO -Latin-1 characters. +@code{kTextEncodingISOLatin1}. Note that not all Mac Roman characters +that can be entered at the keyboard can be converted to ISO Latin-1 +characters. To enter ISO Latin-2 characters directly from the Mac keyboard. Set the value of @code{mac-keyboard-text-encoding} to @code{kTextEncodingISOLatin2}. Then let Emacs know that the keyboard -generates Latin-2 codes by typink @kbd{C-x RET k iso-latin-2 RET}. To +generates Latin-2 codes by typing @kbd{C-x RET k iso-latin-2 RET}. To make this setting permanent, put this in your @file{.emacs} init file: @lisp @@ -90,9 +90,9 @@ Any native (non-symbol) Mac font can be used to correctly display characters in the @code{mac-roman} coding system. - The fontset @code{fontset-mac} is created automatically when Emacs is -run on the Mac by the following expression. It displays characters in -the @code{mac-roman} coding system using 12-point Monaco. + The fontset @code{fontset-mac} is created automatically when Emacs +is run on the Mac. It displays characters in the @code{mac-roman} +coding system using 12-point Monaco. To insert characters directly in the @code{mac-roman} coding system, type @kbd{C-x RET k mac-roman RET}, or put this in your @file{.emacs} @@ -192,22 +192,21 @@ font name. I.e., @smallexample --@var{foundry}-@var{family}-@var{weight}-@var{slant}-@var{width}--@var{pixels}-@var{points}-@var{hres}-@var{vres}-@var{spacing}-@var{avewidth}-@var{charset} +-@var{maker}-@var{family}-@var{weight}-@var{slant}-@var{widthtype}-@var{style}@dots{} +@dots{}-@var{pixels}-@var{height}-@var{horiz}-@var{vert}-@var{spacing}-@var{width}-@var{charset} @end smallexample @noindent -where the fields refer to foundry, font family, weight, slant, width, -pixels, point size, horizontal resolution, vertical resolution, -spacing, average width, and character set, respectively. Wildcards +@xref{Font X}. Wildcards are supported as they are on X. - Native Apple fonts in Mac Roman encoding has foundry name @code{apple} + Native Apple fonts in Mac Roman encoding has maker name @code{apple} and charset @code{mac-roman}. For example 12-point Monaco can be specified by the name @samp{-apple-monaco-*-12-*-mac-roman}. Native Apple Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Japanese, and -Korean fonts have charsets @samp{big5-0}, @samp{gb2312-0}, -@samp{jisx0208.1983-sjis}, and @samp{ksc5601-1}, respectively. +Korean fonts have charsets @samp{big5-0}, @samp{gb2312.1980-0}, +@samp{jisx0208.1983-sjis}, and @samp{ksc5601.1989-0}, respectively. Single-byte fonts converted from GNU fonts in BDF format, which are not in the Mac Roman encoding, have foundry, family, and character sets