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In addition to the specific excape sequences for special important control characters, Emacs provides general categories of escape syntax that you can use to specify non-ASCII text characters.
For instance, you can specify characters by their Unicode values.
?\unnnn
represents a character that maps to the Unicode code
point ‘U+nnnn’. There is a slightly different syntax for
specifying characters with code points above #xFFFF
;
\U00nnnnnn
represents the character whose Unicode code point is
‘U+nnnnnn’, if such a character is supported by Emacs. If the
corresponding character is not supported, Emacs signals an error.
This peculiar and inconvenient syntax was adopted for compatibility with other programming languages. Unlike some other languages, Emacs Lisp supports this syntax in only character literals and strings.
The most general read syntax for a character represents the character code
in either octal or hex. To use octal, write a question mark followed by a
backslash and the octal character code (up to three octal digits); thus,
‘?\101’ for the character A, ‘?\001’ for the character
C-a, and ?\002
for the character C-b. Although this
syntax can represent any ASCII character, it is preferred only
when the precise octal value is more important than the ASCII
representation.
?\012 ⇒ 10 ?\n ⇒ 10 ?\C-j ⇒ 10 ?\101 ⇒ 65 ?A ⇒ 65 |
To use hex, write a question mark followed by a backslash, ‘x’, and the
hexadecimal character code. You can use any number of hex digits, so you
can represent any character code in this way. Thus, ‘?\x41’ for the
character A, ‘?\x1’ for the character C-a, and
?\x8e0
for the Latin-1 character
‘a’ with grave accent.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 13 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.