Mercurial > emacs
changeset 24813:f581efbf0caf
(standard-display-european):
For an interactive call by the user,
don't set enable-multibyte-characters,
and don't set the terminal coding system.
author | Karl Heuer <kwzh@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 04 Jun 1999 18:42:20 +0000 |
parents | 4bdc30f27628 |
children | 4c57b458fa9b |
files | lisp/disp-table.el |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 30 insertions(+), 20 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lisp/disp-table.el Fri Jun 04 18:40:43 1999 +0000 +++ b/lisp/disp-table.el Fri Jun 04 18:42:20 1999 +0000 @@ -177,31 +177,38 @@ ;;;###autoload (defun standard-display-european (arg &optional auto) - "Toggle display of European characters encoded with ISO 8859. + "Semi-obsolete way to toggle display of ISO 8859 European characters. -This function is semi-obsolete; you can use `set-language-environment' -coupled with either the `--unibyte' option, the EMACS_UNIBYTE -environment variable or customizing `enable-multibyte-characters' if -you prefer to use unibyte characters. +This function is semi-obsolete; if you want to do your editing with +unibyte characters, it is better to `set-language-environment' coupled +with either the `--unibyte' option or the EMACS_UNIBYTE environment +variable, or else customize `enable-multibyte-characters'. + +With prefix argument, this command enables European character display +if arg is positive, disables it otherwise. Otherwise, it toggles +European character display. -When enabled, characters in the range of 160 to 255 display not -as octal escapes, but as accented characters. Codes 146 and 160 -display as apostrophe and space, even though they are not the ASCII -codes for apostrophe and space. +When this mode is enabled, characters in the range of 160 to 255 +display not as octal escapes, but as accented characters. Codes 146 +and 160 display as apostrophe and space, even though they are not the +ASCII codes for apostrophe and space. -With prefix argument, enable European character display iff arg is positive. - -Normally, this function turns off `enable-multibyte-characters' for -existing and subsequently created Emacs buffers. This is because -users who call this function probably want to edit European characters -in single-byte mode." +Enabling European character display with this command noninteractively +from Lisp code also selects Latin-1 as the language environment, and +selects unibyte mode for all Emacs buffers \(both existing buffers and +those created subsequently). This provides increased compatibility +for users who call this function in `.emacs'." ;; If the optional argument AUTO is non-nil, this function ;; does not alter `enable-multibyte-characters'. ;; AUTO also specifies, in this case, the coding system for terminal output. ;; The AUTO argument is meant for use by startup.el only. ;; which is why it is not in the doc string. - (interactive "P") + + ;; AUTO is `lambda' for an interactive call so that it will not + ;; set enable-multibyte-characters but also will not call + ;; set-terminal-coding-system. + (interactive (list current-prefix-arg 'lambda)) (if (or (<= (prefix-numeric-value arg) 0) (and (null arg) (char-table-p standard-display-table) @@ -209,9 +216,11 @@ (equal (aref standard-display-table 161) [161]))) (progn (standard-display-default 160 255) - (unless (memq window-system '(x w32)) - (set-terminal-coding-system nil))) - ;; If the user does this explicitly, + (unless (or (memq window-system '(x w32)) + (eq auto 'lambda)) + (and (terminal-coding-system) + (set-terminal-coding-system nil)))) + ;; If the user does this explicitly from Lisp (as in .emacs), ;; turn off multibyte chars for more compatibility. (unless auto (setq-default enable-multibyte-characters nil) @@ -226,7 +235,8 @@ (unless auto (if (equal current-language-environment "English") (set-language-environment "latin-1"))) - (unless (or noninteractive (memq window-system '(x w32))) + (unless (or noninteractive (memq window-system '(x w32)) + (eq auto 'lambda)) ;; Send those codes literally to a non-X terminal. ;; If AUTO is nil, we are using single-byte characters, ;; so it doesn't matter which one we use.