From: Eli Zaretskii Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2018 17:40:24 +0000 (+0200) Subject: Minor changes in mule.texi X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=a8e5163dcb5bb71af15bd2741cfa4b036d64c4e1;p=emacs.git Minor changes in mule.texi * doc/emacs/mule.texi (International, Coding Systems) (Bidirectional Editing): Minor wording changes and typo fixes. Suggested by Michael Albinus in emacs-manual-bugs@gnu.org. --- diff --git a/doc/emacs/mule.texi b/doc/emacs/mule.texi index dc80bc92172..5ddfb7defd2 100644 --- a/doc/emacs/mule.texi +++ b/doc/emacs/mule.texi @@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ others. @item You can insert non-@acronym{ASCII} characters or search for them. To do that, you can specify an input method (@pxref{Select Input Method}) suitable -for your language, or use the default input method set up when you chose +for your language, or use the default input method set up when you choose your language environment. If your keyboard can produce non-@acronym{ASCII} characters, you can select an appropriate keyboard coding system (@pxref{Terminal Coding}), and Emacs @@ -698,7 +698,7 @@ carriage-return (Mac). Describe coding system @var{coding} (@code{describe-coding-system}). @item C-h C @key{RET} -Describe the coding systems currently in use. +Describe the coding systems currently in use (@code{describe-coding-system}). @item M-x list-coding-systems Display a list of all the supported coding systems. @@ -936,7 +936,7 @@ or a local variables list at the end (@pxref{File Variables}). You do this by defining a value for the ``variable'' named @code{coding}. Emacs does not really have a variable @code{coding}; instead of setting a variable, this uses the specified coding system for the -file. For example, @samp{-*-mode: C; coding: latin-1;-*-} specifies +file. For example, @w{@samp{-*-mode: C; coding: latin-1; -*-}} specifies use of the Latin-1 coding system, as well as C mode. When you specify the coding explicitly in the file, that overrides @code{file-coding-system-alist}. @@ -1207,13 +1207,13 @@ using the internal Emacs representation. @cindex file-name encoding, MS-Windows @vindex w32-unicode-filenames When Emacs runs on MS-Windows versions that are descendants of the -NT family (Windows 2000, XP, Vista, Windows 7, and all the later -versions), the value of @code{file-name-coding-system} is largely -ignored, as Emacs by default uses APIs that allow passing Unicode file -names directly. By contrast, on Windows 9X, file names are encoded -using @code{file-name-coding-system}, which should be set to the -codepage (@pxref{Coding Systems, codepage}) pertinent for the current -system locale. The value of the variable @code{w32-unicode-filenames} +NT family (Windows 2000, XP, and all the later versions), the value of +@code{file-name-coding-system} is largely ignored, as Emacs by default +uses APIs that allow passing Unicode file names directly. By +contrast, on Windows 9X, file names are encoded using +@code{file-name-coding-system}, which should be set to the codepage +(@pxref{Coding Systems, codepage}) pertinent for the current system +locale. The value of the variable @code{w32-unicode-filenames} controls whether Emacs uses the Unicode APIs when it calls OS functions that accept file names. This variable is set by the startup code to @code{nil} on Windows 9X, and to @code{t} on newer versions of @@ -1779,8 +1779,9 @@ of the first character you read precedes that of the next character. Reordering of bidirectional text into the @dfn{visual} order happens at display time. As a result, character positions no longer increase monotonically with their positions on display. Emacs implements the -Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm (UBA) described in the Unicode -Standard Annex #9, for reordering of bidirectional text for display. +Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm (UBA) described in the +@uref{http://unicode.org/reports/tr9/, Unicode Standard Annex #9}, for +reordering of bidirectional text for display. It deviates from the UBA only in how continuation lines are displayed when text direction is opposite to the base paragraph direction, e.g., when a long line of English text appears in a right-to-left