view lib-src/gnudoit @ 4600:dcfd965d65a1

Correct invalid-sequence-coding-system spec, Roman-alphabet languages. I had been testing with the Cyrillic language environments, and I have code in my own init file that does something similar, so I hadn't noticed that this had gone wrong. lisp/ChangeLog addition: 2009-02-04 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * mule/latin.el: Specify windows-1250 as the invalid-sequence-coding-system for the iso-8859-2 languages; actually *use* the invalid-sequence-coding-system for German and the other iso-8859-1 language environments.
author Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
date Wed, 04 Feb 2009 13:12:21 +0000
parents 3ecd8885ac67
children 061f4f90f874
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#! /bin/sh

# This file is part of XEmacs.

# Copyright (C) 1997  Free Software Foundation, Inc.

# XEmacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
# under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
# Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any
# later version.

# XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
# ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License
# for more details.

# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with XEmacs; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to
# the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
# Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.

if [ x"$1" = x-q ]
then
    quick=-q
    shift
fi

if [ $# -eq 0 ]
then
    exec gnuclient $quick -batch 
else
# I use "$*" instead of "$@" intentionally -- I don't want to have the
# arguments split.
    exec gnuclient $quick -batch -eval "$*"
fi