Thanks Adrian, however for mswindows I use setup.exe to install packages and
mule is not listed among the available packages. I tried to install
mule-base manually and now if I do M-x list-system-coding it works but it
gived an error:
Symbol's function definition is void: coding-system-get
Is this a problem with the windows port?
"Adrian Aichner" <adrian(a)xemacs.org> wrote in message
news:ptr6f8k1.fsf@smtprelay.T-Online.De...
>>>>> "Yadin" == Yadin Y Goldschmidt
<yadin(a)pitt.edu> writes:
Yadin> Thanks, but how do I execute coding-system-list? if I do M-x
Yadin> coding-system-list it does not work!
Yadin> Yadin.
Yadin> <Robinows(a)aol.com> wrote in message
news:82.24f0d555.2b4f0017@aol.com...
Yadin> C-h a coding-system
Yadin> In a message dated 1/9/2003 10:39:37 AM Eastern Standard Time,
Yadin> yadin(a)pitt.edu writes:
Yadin> I tried the command M-x list-coding-systems in Xemacs for
Yadin> windows, (21.4.11, cygwin flavor) and it does not seem to
Yadin> exist. Nor does C-h C work to describe coding systems. how
Hi Yadin!
list-coding-systems
is an interactive command defined in the mule-base package.
You probably don't have mule-base installed?
See item 7 in
http://www.xemacs.org/Install/index.html
coding-system-list is a non-interactive function.
It's actually a primitive or built-in function, which means it's
defined in C, not lisp.
See also
(Info-goto-node "(lispref)What Is a Function")
Hope this helps,
Adrian
Yadin> do I check for coding systems and current coding in Xemacs?
Yadin> It works in standard emacs for cygwin.
--
Adrian Aichner
mailto:adrian@xemacs.org
http://www.xemacs.org/