From 48870849c6f5031dd4308344f896f904fca44e42 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eli Zaretskii Date: Mon, 12 Apr 1999 10:46:39 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Fix wording for the last change. --- man/msdog.texi | 22 +++++++++++----------- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) diff --git a/man/msdog.texi b/man/msdog.texi index 695f3587ba..74654e4d42 100644 --- a/man/msdog.texi +++ b/man/msdog.texi @@ -531,7 +531,7 @@ codepage for Emacs to use by setting the variable @code{dos-codepage} in your init file. @cindex language environment, automatic selection on @r{MS-DOS} - Multibyte Emacs supports only certain DOS codepages, those which can + Multibyte Emacs supports only certain DOS codepages: those which can display Far-Eastern scripts, like the Japanese codepage 932, and those that encode a single ISO 8859 character set. @@ -542,16 +542,16 @@ The special features described in the rest of this section mostly pertain to codepages that encode ISO 8859 character sets. For the codepages which correspond to one of the ISO character sets, -Emacs it knows which ISO character set is that based on the codepage -number. Emacs automatically creates a coding system to support reading -and writing files that use the current codepage, and uses this coding -system by default. The name of this coding system is -@code{cp@var{nnn}}, where @var{nnn} is the codepage number.@footnote{The -standard Emacs coding systems for ISO 8859 are not quite right for the -purpose, because typically the DOS codepage does not match the standard -ISO character codes. For example, the letter @samp{@,{c}} (@samp{c} -with cedilla) has code 231 in the standard Latin-1 character set, but -the corresponding DOS codepage 850 uses code 135 for this glyph.} +Emacs knows the character set name based on the codepage number. Emacs +automatically creates a coding system to support reading and writing +files that use the current codepage, and uses this coding system by +default. The name of this coding system is @code{cp@var{nnn}}, where +@var{nnn} is the codepage number.@footnote{The standard Emacs coding +systems for ISO 8859 are not quite right for the purpose, because +typically the DOS codepage does not match the standard ISO character +codes. For example, the letter @samp{@,{c}} (@samp{c} with cedilla) has +code 231 in the standard Latin-1 character set, but the corresponding +DOS codepage 850 uses code 135 for this glyph.} @cindex mode line @r{(MS-DOS)} All the @code{cp@var{nnn}} coding systems use the letter @samp{D} (for -- 2.39.2