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Once Emacs has chosen a coding system for a buffer, it stores that coding
system in buffer-file-coding-system
. That makes it the default for
operations that write from this buffer into a file, such as
save-buffer
and write-region
. You can specify a different
coding system for further file output from the buffer using
set-buffer-file-coding-system
(voir la section Specifying a Coding System for File Text).
You can insert any character Emacs supports into any Emacs buffer, but most
coding systems can only handle a subset of these characters. Therefore, you
can insert characters that cannot be encoded with the coding system that
will be used to save the buffer. For example, you could start with an
ASCII file and insert a few Latin-1 characters into it, or you
could edit a text file in Polish encoded in iso-8859-2
and add some
Russian words to it. When you save that buffer, Emacs cannot use the
current value of buffer-file-coding-system
, because the characters
you added cannot be encoded by that coding system.
When that happens, Emacs tries the most-preferred coding system (set by
M-x prefer-coding-system or M-x set-language-environment), and
if that coding system can safely encode all of the characters in the buffer,
Emacs uses it, and stores its value in buffer-file-coding-system
.
Otherwise, Emacs displays a list of coding systems suitable for encoding the
buffer's contents, and asks you to choose one of those coding systems.
If you insert the unsuitable characters in a mail message, Emacs behaves a bit differently. It additionally checks whether the most-preferred coding system is recommended for use in MIME messages; if not, Emacs tells you that the most-preferred coding system is not recommended and prompts you for another coding system. This is so you won't inadvertently send a message encoded in a way that your recipient's mail software will have difficulty decoding. (You can still use an unsuitable coding system if you type its name in response to the question.)
When you send a message with Mail mode (@pxref{Sending Mail}), Emacs has
four different ways to determine the coding system to use for encoding the
message text. It tries the buffer's own value of
buffer-file-coding-system
, if that is non-nil
. Otherwise, it
uses the value of sendmail-coding-system
, if that is non-nil
.
The third way is to use the default coding system for new files, which is
controlled by your choice of language environment, if that is
non-nil
. If all of these three values are nil
, Emacs encodes
outgoing mail using the Latin-1 coding system.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.