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Emacs groups all supported characters into disjoint charsets. Each
character code belongs to one and only one charset. For historical reasons,
Emacs typically divides an 8-bit character code for an extended version of
ASCII into two charsets: ASCII, which covers the codes 0
through 127, plus another charset which covers the “right-hand part” (the
codes 128 and up). For instance, the characters of Latin-1 include the
Emacs charset ascii
plus the Emacs charset latin-iso8859-1
.
Emacs characters belonging to different charsets may look the same, but they
are still different characters. For example, the letter ‘o’ with acute
accent in charset latin-iso8859-1
, used for Latin-1, is different
from the letter ‘o’ with acute accent in charset
latin-iso8859-2
, used for Latin-2.
There are two commands for obtaining information about Emacs charsets. The command M-x list-charset-chars prompts for a name of a character set, and displays all the characters in that character set. The command M-x describe-character-set prompts for a charset name and displays information about that charset, including its internal representation within Emacs.
To find out which charset a character in the buffer belongs to, put point before it and type C-u C-x =.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.