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Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars
From: |
Richard Stallman |
Subject: |
Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars |
Date: |
Sun, 08 Dec 2002 20:45:26 -0500 |
> Emacs normally does warn when the coding system doesn't handle all the
> characters in the file. Is there a common scenario where that warning
> is bypassed?
I don't know how common, but for example: broken code (Gnus at times,
I'd bet) or customizations (select Latin-1 for your BBDB database) and
C-x RET c. Basically whenever the coding system is actually specified
rather than selected from the set of somehow-preferred coding systems.
If you specify a coding system with C-x RET c, and it doesn't
handle all the text, should Emacs warn about that?
- Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars, Richard Stallman, 2002/12/02
- Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars, Dave Love, 2002/12/06
- Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars,
Richard Stallman <=
- Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars, Dave Love, 2002/12/10
- Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars, Richard Stallman, 2002/12/11
- Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars, Kenichi Handa, 2002/12/12
- Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars, Richard Stallman, 2002/12/14
- None, Kenichi Handa, 2002/12/17
Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars, Kenichi Handa, 2002/12/09
Re: iso-8859-1 and non-latin-1 chars, Dave Love, 2002/12/15