From bb61b0380f53ef090f5827271dfb4200806a8f48 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Richard M. Stallman" Date: Sat, 25 Aug 2001 02:05:59 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Standardize on ASCII without @sc. --- man/anti.texi | 2 +- man/mule.texi | 4 ++-- 2 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/man/anti.texi b/man/anti.texi index 5ca2dd196d7..95debe1fb83 100644 --- a/man/anti.texi +++ b/man/anti.texi @@ -129,7 +129,7 @@ It does not try to see if the preferred coding system is suitable. Commands which provide detailed information about character sets and coding systems, such as @code{list-charset-chars}, @code{describe-character-set}, and the @kbd{C-u C-x =} key-sequence, -no longer exist. The less said about non-@sc{ascii} characters, the +no longer exist. The less said about non-ASCII characters, the better. @item diff --git a/man/mule.texi b/man/mule.texi index 838c6d08b3f..3359892fb0e 100644 --- a/man/mule.texi +++ b/man/mule.texi @@ -1260,8 +1260,8 @@ instead, e.g.@: @samp{"o} for o-umlaut. Load the library @vindex latin1-display If your terminal can display Latin-1, you can display characters from other European character sets using a mixture of equivalent -Latin-1 characters and @sc{ascii} mnemonics. Use the Custom option -@code{latin1-display} to enable this. The mnemonic @sc{ascii} +Latin-1 characters and ASCII mnemonics. Use the Custom option +@code{latin1-display} to enable this. The mnemonic ASCII sequences mostly correspond to those of the prefix input methods. @node Single-Byte Character Support -- 2.39.5