From: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen Date: Sun, 10 Jul 2011 14:40:21 +0000 (+0200) Subject: (Mode Line): Clarify that coding systems are characters, not letters. X-Git-Tag: emacs-pretest-24.0.90~104^2~402 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=32a214fe829e1e73844c0593125fc495fea8b072;p=emacs.git (Mode Line): Clarify that coding systems are characters, not letters. Fixes: debbugs:1749 --- diff --git a/doc/emacs/ChangeLog b/doc/emacs/ChangeLog index 9993f5f883e..af58a83b9e7 100644 --- a/doc/emacs/ChangeLog +++ b/doc/emacs/ChangeLog @@ -1,5 +1,8 @@ 2011-07-10 Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen + * screen.texi (Mode Line): Clarify that coding systems are + characters, not letters (bug#1749). + * cmdargs.texi (Environment): Mention removing variables (bug#1615). Text suggested by Kevin Rodgers. diff --git a/doc/emacs/screen.texi b/doc/emacs/screen.texi index 0bc3ce3db8c..145687270ca 100644 --- a/doc/emacs/screen.texi +++ b/doc/emacs/screen.texi @@ -190,7 +190,7 @@ sometimes useful to have this information. Systems}). If it is a dash (@samp{-}), that indicates the default state of affairs: no special character set handling, except for the end-of-line translations described in the next paragraph. @samp{=} -means no conversion whatsoever. Letters represent various nontrivial +means no conversion whatsoever. Characters represent various nontrivial @dfn{coding systems}---for example, @samp{1} represents ISO Latin-1. On a text-only terminal, @var{cs} is preceded by two additional characters that describe the coding system for keyboard input and the