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[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/mule.texi


From: Reiner Steib
Subject: [Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/mule.texi
Date: Mon, 29 Nov 2004 11:08:37 -0500

Index: emacs/man/mule.texi
diff -c emacs/man/mule.texi:1.68 emacs/man/mule.texi:1.69
*** emacs/man/mule.texi:1.68    Thu Mar  4 17:23:24 2004
--- emacs/man/mule.texi Mon Nov 29 15:58:12 2004
***************
*** 195,209 ****
  characters.
  
    Emacs normally loads Lisp files as multibyte, regardless of whether
! you used @samp{--unibyte}.  This includes the Emacs initialization
! file, @file{.emacs}, and the initialization files of Emacs packages
! such as Gnus.  However, you can specify unibyte loading for a
! particular Lisp file, by putting @address@hidden: t;-*-}} in a
! comment on the first line.  Then that file is always loaded as unibyte
! text, even if you did not start Emacs with @samp{--unibyte}.  The
! motivation for these conventions is that it is more reliable to always
! load any particular Lisp file in the same way.  However, you can load
! a Lisp file as unibyte, on any one occasion, by typing @kbd{C-x
  @key{RET} c raw-text @key{RET}} immediately before loading it.
  
    The mode line indicates whether multibyte character support is enabled
--- 195,209 ----
  characters.
  
    Emacs normally loads Lisp files as multibyte, regardless of whether
! you used @samp{--unibyte}.  This includes the Emacs initialization file,
! @file{.emacs}, and the initialization files of Emacs packages such as
! Gnus.  However, you can specify unibyte loading for a particular Lisp
! file, by putting @address@hidden: t;-*-}} in a comment on the first
! line (@pxref{File Variables}).  Then that file is always loaded as
! unibyte text, even if you did not start Emacs with @samp{--unibyte}.
! The motivation for these conventions is that it is more reliable to
! always load any particular Lisp file in the same way.  However, you can
! load a Lisp file as unibyte, on any one occasion, by typing @kbd{C-x
  @key{RET} c raw-text @key{RET}} immediately before loading it.
  
    The mode line indicates whether multibyte character support is enabled




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