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From: | Peter Dyballa |
Subject: | Re: input: "f7" --> get: "oe" |
Date: | Wed, 7 Dec 2005 22:58:19 +0100 |
Am 07.12.2005 um 21:54 schrieb christop:
I don't know if it's really answer my questin since the only character I'm interested in is the one I pointed before and which is part of iso-latin-1, hence 8-bit encoded, and of whom I already know the 8bit code, which is "f7" (hexa).
No, you're definitely wrong here! œ and Œ are *not* part of ISO Latin-1 (it has Æ and æ)! f7 in ISO Latin-1 is ÷, the DIVISION SIGN. You can find œ in Mac Greek. And in Unicode utf-8 at U+0153, UTF-8 representation as C5 93. Yes, I have to admit: in some Losedows code pages too. I know of CP 1252:
[Œ] 140 214 8C CAPITAL DIGRAPH OE [œ] 156 234 9C SMALL DIGRAPH OEWhen you set your encoding to this you can simply input œ by typing C-q 2 3 4 <SPC>. In an UTF-8 encoded buffer it's C-q 5 2 3 <SPC>. <SPC> is just a proposal. Any non-digit key input would finish the alt mode.
-- Greetings Pete "engineer: a mechanism for converting caffeine into designs"
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