From: Eli Zaretskii Date: Sat, 22 Jul 2000 10:12:00 +0000 (+0000) Subject: (Recognize Coding): Document the variable inhibit-iso-escape-detection. X-Git-Tag: emacs-pretest-21.0.90~2686 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=5be757c32b9bcf2c14ea31a3b99a438a90f054e9;p=emacs.git (Recognize Coding): Document the variable inhibit-iso-escape-detection. --- diff --git a/man/mule.texi b/man/mule.texi index 021bd6d290e..89d46cd1683 100644 --- a/man/mule.texi +++ b/man/mule.texi @@ -576,6 +576,7 @@ a regular expression that determines which files this applies to, and the third argument says which coding system to use for these files. @vindex inhibit-eol-conversion +@cindex DOS-style end-of-line display Emacs recognizes which kind of end-of-line conversion to use based on the contents of the file: if it sees only carriage-returns, or only carriage-return linefeed sequences, then it chooses the end-of-line @@ -583,6 +584,29 @@ conversion accordingly. You can inhibit the automatic use of end-of-line conversion by setting the variable @code{inhibit-eol-conversion} to non-@code{nil}. +@vindex inhibit-iso-escape-detection +@cindex escape sequences in files + By default, the automatic detection of coding system is sensitive to +escape sequences. If Emacs sees a sequence of characters that begin +with an @key{ESC} character, and the sequence is valid as an ISO-2022 +code, the code is determined as one of ISO-2022 encoding, and the file +is decoded by the corresponding coding system +(e.g. @code{iso-2022-7bit}). + + However, there may be cases that you want to read escape sequences in +a file as is. In such a case, you can set th variable +@code{inhibit-iso-escape-detection} to non-@code{nil}. Then the code +detection will ignore any escape sequences, and so no file is detected +as being encoded in some of ISO-2022 encoding. The result is that all +escape sequences become visible in a buffer. + + The default value of @code{inhibit-iso-escape-detection} is +@code{nil}, and it is strongly recommended not to change it. That's +because many Emacs Lisp source files that contain non-ASCII characters +are encoded in the coding system @code{iso-2022-7bit} in the Emacs +distribution, and they won't be decoded correctly when you visit those +files if you suppress the escape sequence detection. + @vindex coding You can specify the coding system for a particular file using the @samp{-*-@dots{}-*-} construct at the beginning of a file, or a local