Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view man/lispref/back.texi @ 4489:b75b075a9041
Support displaying invalid UTF-8 in language-environment-specific ways.
2008-08-05 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* specifier.el (current-display-table): Initialise this here, not
in x-init.el, since we want it even on non-X builds to use the
support for displaying Unicode error sequences according to the
current locale.
* mule/mule-cmds.el (set-language-info):
Document error-sequence-coding-system, used to describe how to
display characters that are not valid Unicode on disk.
* mule/mule-cmds.el (finish-set-language-environment):
Implement error-sequence-coding-system.
* unicode.el (unicode-error-sequence-warning-face):
New face, to make it possible to distinguish invalid Unicode
sequences from the characters given by the valid Unicode
sequences.
* mule/cyrillic.el ("Russian"):
("Ukrainian"):
("Bulgarian"):
("Belarusian"):
("Cyrillic-ALT"): Add support for error-sequence-coding-system for
all these languages.
* mule/latin.el:
Add support for error-sequence-coding-system for the
Latin-alphabet language environments.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 05 Aug 2008 09:06:41 +0200 |
parents | 3ecd8885ac67 |
children |
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\input /home/gd/gnu/doc/texinfo.tex @c -*-texinfo-*- @c %**start of header @setfilename ../../info/back-cover @settitle XEmacs Lisp Reference Manual @c %**end of header . @sp 7 @center @titlefont {XEmacs Lisp} @sp 1 @quotation Most of the XEmacs text editor is written in the programming language called XEmacs Lisp. You can write new code in XEmacs Lisp and install it as an extension to the editor. However, XEmacs Lisp is more than a mere ``extension language''; it is a full computer programming language in its own right. You can use it as you would any other programming language. Because XEmacs Lisp is designed for use in an editor, it has special features for scanning and parsing text as well as features for handling files, buffers, displays, subprocesses, and so on. XEmacs Lisp is closely integrated with the editing facilities; thus, editing commands are functions that can also conveniently be called from Lisp programs, and parameters for customization are ordinary Lisp variables. This manual describes XEmacs Lisp. Generally speaking, the earlier chapters describe features of XEmacs Lisp that have counterparts in many programming languages, and later chapters describe features that are peculiar to XEmacs Lisp or relate specifically to editing. @end quotation @hfil @bye