>>>> "APA" == Adrian Aichner
<adrian(a)xemacs.org> writes:
APA> Any takers?
He's obviously not using Mule; that's why the information seems vague
to him---he has never experienced the problems addressed in the FAQ.
Nor has he RTFM'd. If he had, he'd know what a coding system is and
either know how to use it or have a specific question about it.
I've thought about this issue, and it's just plain hard to document.
Mule is designed to be transparent to the user (and mostly to the Lisp
programmer too); when it breaks down, there generally is not a
FAQ-style "use this magic incantation" answer. There's very little
documentation, period; what I know of that isn't in the manuals is in
Japanese....
I'll update the FAQ, Sec. 1.3, one of these days (it's wa-a-ay old),
but I don't think he'll be any happier.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Tristan Miller <psy(a)cs.toronto.edu>
Subject: XEmacs FAQ
To: faq(a)xemacs.org
Date: Thu, 17 Oct 2002 12:05:26 -0400
Message-ID: <Pine.GSO.4.44.0210171159110.28218-100000(a)qew.cs>
Organization:
http://www.nothingisreal.com/
Greetings.
I would like to suggest an addition to the XEmacs FAQ. Section 1.3 and
Q3.5.7 both address the issue of using XEmacs to edit non-English text;
however, the information seems extremely vague to me. The FAQ basically
says that XEmacs supports internationalization through MULE, but doesn't
say how to use it, or where to get more information on it.
My specific problem (which I imagine is shared by many others) is that I
want to be able to edit text which uses a character set different from the
default. Since most X Windows systems have fonts available in various
character sets (ISO-8859-1, ISO-8859-2, etc.) I was hoping the FAQ would
tell me how to change the character set of the font used to display a
particular buffer. Unfortunately, it does not, nor can I find any link to
this information.
Perhaps the I18n section of the FAQ could be revised, with at least some
pointers to MULE guides, tutorials, references, etc.
Thanks for considering,
--
\\\ Tristan Miller [en, (fr, de, ia)]
\\\ Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto
\\\
http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~psy/
----------
--
Adrian Aichner
mailto:adrian@xemacs.org
http://www.xemacs.org/
--
Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences
http://turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp
University of Tsukuba Tennodai 1-1-1 Tsukuba 305-8573 JAPAN
My nostalgia for Icon makes me forget about any of the bad things. I don't
have much nostalgia for Perl, so its faults I remember. Scott Gilbert c.l.py