;;;### (autoloads (ps-mule-begin-page ps-mule-begin-job ps-mule-encode-header-string
;;;;;; ps-mule-initialize ps-mule-plot-composition ps-mule-plot-string
;;;;;; ps-mule-set-ascii-font ps-mule-prepare-ascii-font ps-multibyte-buffer)
-;;;;;; "ps-mule" "ps-mule.el" "464a9fb9d59f7561a46bcd5ca87d85db")
+;;;;;; "ps-mule" "ps-mule.el" "cbb193f9b6bebd27378819035d3788f7")
;;; Generated autoloads from ps-mule.el
(defvar ps-multibyte-buffer nil "\
-*Specifies the multi-byte buffer handling.
+Specifies the multi-byte buffer handling.
Valid values are:
- nil This is the value to use the default settings which
- is by default for printing buffer with only ASCII
- and Latin characters. The default setting can be
- changed by setting the variable
+ nil This is the value to use the default settings;
+ by default, this only works to print buffers with
+ only ASCII and Latin characters. But this default
+ setting can be changed by setting the variable
`ps-mule-font-info-database-default' differently.
The initial value of this variable is
`ps-mule-font-info-database-latin' (see
documentation).
- `non-latin-printer' This is the value to use when you have a Japanese
+ `non-latin-printer' This is the value to use when you have a Japanese
or Korean PostScript printer and want to print
buffer with ASCII, Latin-1, Japanese (JISX0208 and
JISX0201-Kana) and Korean characters. At present,
- it was not tested the Korean characters printing.
+ it was not tested with the Korean characters printing.
If you have a korean PostScript printer, please,
test it.
- `bdf-font' This is the value to use when you want to print
+ `bdf-font' This is the value to use when you want to print
buffer with BDF fonts. BDF fonts include both latin
and non-latin fonts. BDF (Bitmap Distribution
Format) is a format used for distributing X's font
`bdf-directory-list' appropriately (see ps-bdf.el for
documentation of this variable).
- `bdf-font-except-latin' This is like `bdf-font' except that it is used
+ `bdf-font-except-latin' This is like `bdf-font' except that it uses
PostScript default fonts to print ASCII and Latin-1
characters. This is convenient when you want or
need to use both latin and non-latin characters on