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emacs/man/mule.texi
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@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
@c Copyright (C) 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,
@c 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
@node International, Major Modes, Frames, Top
@chapter International Character Set Support
@cindex MULE
@cindex international scripts
@cindex multibyte characters
@cindex encoding of characters
@cindex Celtic
@cindex Chinese
@cindex Cyrillic
@cindex Czech
@cindex Devanagari
@cindex Hindi
@cindex Marathi
@cindex Ethiopic
@cindex German
@cindex Greek
@cindex Hebrew
@cindex IPA
@cindex Japanese
@cindex Korean
@cindex Lao
@cindex Latin
@cindex Polish
@cindex Romanian
@cindex Slovak
@cindex Slovenian
@cindex Thai
@cindex Tibetan
@cindex Turkish
@cindex Vietnamese
@cindex Dutch
@cindex Spanish
Emacs supports a wide variety of international character sets,
including European and Vietnamese variants of the Latin alphabet, as
well as Cyrillic, Devanagari (for Hindi and Marathi), Ethiopic, Greek,
Han (for Chinese and Japanese), Hangul (for Korean), Hebrew, IPA,
Kannada, Lao, Malayalam, Tamil, Thai, Tibetan, and Vietnamese scripts.
Emacs also supports various encodings of these characters used by
other internationalized software, such as word processors and mailers.
Emacs allows editing text with international characters by supporting
all the related activities:
@itemize @bullet
@item
You can visit files with non-@acronym{ASCII} characters, save non-@acronym{ASCII} text, and
pass non-@acronym{ASCII} text between Emacs and programs it invokes (such as
compilers, spell-checkers, and mailers). Setting your language
environment (@pxref{Language Environments}) takes care of setting up the
coding systems and other options for a specific language or culture.
Alternatively, you can specify how Emacs should encode or decode text
for each command; see @ref{Text Coding}.
@item
You can display non-@acronym{ASCII} characters encoded by the various
scripts. This works by using appropriate fonts on graphics displays
(@pxref{Defining Fontsets}), and by sending special codes to text-only
displays (@pxref{Terminal Coding}). If some characters are displayed
incorrectly, refer to @ref{Undisplayable Characters}, which describes
possible problems and explains how to solve them.
@item
You can insert non-@acronym{ASCII} characters or search for them. To do that,
you can specify an input method (@pxref{Select Input Method}) suitable
for your language, or use the default input method set up when you set
your language environment. If
your keyboard can produce non-@acronym{ASCII} characters, you can select an
appropriate keyboard coding system (@pxref{Terminal Coding}), and Emacs
will accept those characters. Latin-1 characters can also be input by
using the @kbd{C-x 8} prefix, see @ref{Unibyte Mode}.
On X Window systems, your locale should be set to an appropriate value
to make sure Emacs interprets keyboard input correctly; see
@ref{Language Environments, locales}.
@end itemize
The rest of this chapter describes these issues in detail.
@menu
* International Chars:: Basic concepts of multibyte characters.
* Enabling Multibyte:: Controlling whether to use multibyte characters.
* Language Environments:: Setting things up for the language you use.
* Input Methods:: Entering text characters not on your keyboard.
* Select Input Method:: Specifying your choice of input methods.
* Multibyte Conversion:: How single-byte characters convert to multibyte.
* Coding Systems:: Character set conversion when you read and
write files, and so on.
* Recognize Coding:: How Emacs figures out which conversion to use.
* Specify Coding:: Specifying a file's coding system explicitly.
* Output Coding:: Choosing coding systems for output.
* Text Coding:: Choosing conversion to use for file text.
* Communication Coding:: Coding systems for interprocess communication.
* File Name Coding:: Coding systems for file @emph{names}.
* Terminal Coding:: Specifying coding systems for converting
terminal input and output.
* Fontsets:: Fontsets are collections of fonts
that cover the whole spectrum of characters.
* Defining Fontsets:: Defining a new fontset.
* Undisplayable Characters:: When characters don't display.
* Unibyte Mode:: You can pick one European character set
to use without multibyte characters.
* Charsets:: How Emacs groups its internal character codes.
@end menu
@node International Chars
@section Introduction to International Character Sets
The users of international character sets and scripts have
established many more-or-less standard coding systems for storing
files. Emacs internally uses a single multibyte character encoding,
so that it can intermix characters from all these scripts in a single
buffer or string. This encoding represents each non-@acronym{ASCII}
character as a sequence of bytes in the range 0200 through 0377.
Emacs translates between the multibyte character encoding and various
other coding systems when reading and writing files, when exchanging
data with subprocesses, and (in some cases) in the @kbd{C-q} command
(@pxref{Multibyte Conversion}).
@kindex C-h h
@findex view-hello-file
@cindex undisplayable characters
@cindex @samp{?} in display
The command @kbd{C-h h} (@code{view-hello-file}) displays the file
@file{etc/HELLO}, which shows how to say ``hello'' in many languages.
This illustrates various scripts. If some characters can't be
displayed on your terminal, they appear as @samp{?} or as hollow boxes
(@pxref{Undisplayable Characters}).
Keyboards, even in the countries where these character sets are used,
generally don't have keys for all the characters in them. So Emacs
supports various @dfn{input methods}, typically one for each script or
language, to make it convenient to type them.
@kindex C-x RET
The prefix key @kbd{C-x @key{RET}} is used for commands that pertain
to multibyte characters, coding systems, and input methods.
@node Enabling Multibyte
@section Enabling Multibyte Characters
By default, Emacs starts in multibyte mode, because that allows you to
use all the supported languages and scripts without limitations.
@cindex turn multibyte support on or off
You can enable or disable multibyte character support, either for
Emacs as a whole, or for a single buffer. When multibyte characters
are disabled in a buffer, we call that @dfn{unibyte mode}. Then each
byte in that buffer represents a character, even codes 0200 through
0377.
The old features for supporting the European character sets, ISO
Latin-1 and ISO Latin-2, work in unibyte mode as they did in Emacs 19
and also work for the other ISO 8859 character sets. However, there
is no need to turn off multibyte character support to use ISO Latin;
the Emacs multibyte character set includes all the characters in these
character sets, and Emacs can translate automatically to and from the
ISO codes.
To edit a particular file in unibyte representation, visit it using
@code{find-file-literally}. @xref{Visiting}. To convert a buffer in
multibyte representation into a single-byte representation of the same
characters, the easiest way is to save the contents in a file, kill the
buffer, and find the file again with @code{find-file-literally}. You
can also use @kbd{C-x @key{RET} c}
(@code{universal-coding-system-argument}) and specify @samp{raw-text} as
the coding system with which to find or save a file. @xref{Text
Coding}. Finding a file as @samp{raw-text} doesn't disable format
conversion, uncompression and auto mode selection as
@code{find-file-literally} does.
@vindex enable-multibyte-characters
@vindex default-enable-multibyte-characters
To turn off multibyte character support by default, start Emacs with
the @samp{--unibyte} option (@pxref{Initial Options}), or set the
environment variable @env{EMACS_UNIBYTE}. You can also customize
@code{enable-multibyte-characters} or, equivalently, directly set the
variable @code{default-enable-multibyte-characters} to @code{nil} in
your init file to have basically the same effect as @samp{--unibyte}.
@findex toggle-enable-multibyte-characters
To convert a unibyte session to a multibyte session, set
@code{default-enable-multibyte-characters} to @code{t}. Buffers which
were created in the unibyte session before you turn on multibyte support
will stay unibyte. You can turn on multibyte support in a specific
buffer by invoking the command @code{toggle-enable-multibyte-characters}
in that buffer.
@cindex Lisp files, and multibyte operation
@cindex multibyte operation, and Lisp files
@cindex unibyte operation, and Lisp files
@cindex init file, and non-@acronym{ASCII} characters
@cindex environment variables, and non-@acronym{ASCII} characters
With @samp{--unibyte}, multibyte strings are not created during
initialization from the values of environment variables,
@file{/etc/passwd} entries etc.@: that contain non-@acronym{ASCII} 8-bit
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 @w{@samp{-*-unibyte: 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 in the current buffer. If it is, there are two or more
characters (most often two dashes) near the beginning of the mode
line, before the indication of the visited file's end-of-line
convention (colon, backslash, etc.). When multibyte characters
are not enabled, nothing precedes the colon except a single dash.
@xref{Mode Line}, for more details about this.
@node Language Environments
@section Language Environments
@cindex language environments
All supported character sets are supported in Emacs buffers whenever
multibyte characters are enabled; there is no need to select a
particular language in order to display its characters in an Emacs
buffer. However, it is important to select a @dfn{language environment}
in order to set various defaults. The language environment really
represents a choice of preferred script (more or less) rather than a
choice of language.
The language environment controls which coding systems to recognize
when reading text (@pxref{Recognize Coding}). This applies to files,
incoming mail, netnews, and any other text you read into Emacs. It may
also specify the default coding system to use when you create a file.
Each language environment also specifies a default input method.
@findex set-language-environment
@vindex current-language-environment
To select a language environment, you can customize the variable
@code{current-language-environment} or use the command @kbd{M-x
set-language-environment}. It makes no difference which buffer is
current when you use this command, because the effects apply globally to
the Emacs session. The supported language environments include:
@cindex Euro sign
@cindex UTF-8
@quotation
ASCII, Belarusian, Brazilian Portuguese, Bulgarian, Chinese-BIG5,
Chinese-CNS, Chinese-EUC-TW, Chinese-GB, Croatian, Cyrillic-ALT,
Cyrillic-ISO, Cyrillic-KOI8, Czech, Devanagari, Dutch, English,
Esperanto, Ethiopic, French, Georgian, German, Greek, Hebrew, IPA,
Italian, Japanese, Kannada, Korean, Lao, Latin-1, Latin-2, Latin-3,
Latin-4, Latin-5, Latin-6, Latin-7, Latin-8 (Celtic), Latin-9 (updated
Latin-1 with the Euro sign), Latvian, Lithuanian, Malayalam, Polish,
Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Tajik, Tamil,
Thai, Tibetan, Turkish, UTF-8 (for a setup which prefers Unicode
characters and files encoded in UTF-8), Ukrainian, Vietnamese, Welsh,
and Windows-1255 (for a setup which prefers Cyrillic characters and
files encoded in Windows-1255).
@tex
\hbadness=10000\par % just avoid underfull hbox warning
@end tex
@end quotation
@cindex fonts for various scripts
@cindex Intlfonts package, installation
To display the script(s) used by your language environment on a
graphical display, you need to have a suitable font. If some of the
characters appear as empty boxes, you should install the GNU Intlfonts
package, which includes fonts for most supported scripts.@footnote{If
you run Emacs on X, you need to inform the X server about the location
of the newly installed fonts with the following commands:
@example
xset fp+ /usr/local/share/emacs/fonts
xset fp rehash
@end example
}
@xref{Fontsets}, for more details about setting up your fonts.
@findex set-locale-environment
@vindex locale-language-names
@vindex locale-charset-language-names
@cindex locales
Some operating systems let you specify the character-set locale you
are using by setting the locale environment variables @env{LC_ALL},
@env{LC_CTYPE}, or @env{LANG}.@footnote{If more than one of these is
set, the first one that is nonempty specifies your locale for this
purpose.} During startup, Emacs looks up your character-set locale's
name in the system locale alias table, matches its canonical name
against entries in the value of the variables
@code{locale-charset-language-names} and @code{locale-language-names},
and selects the corresponding language environment if a match is found.
(The former variable overrides the latter.) It also adjusts the display
table and terminal coding system, the locale coding system, the
preferred coding system as needed for the locale, and---last but not
least---the way Emacs decodes non-@acronym{ASCII} characters sent by your keyboard.
If you modify the @env{LC_ALL}, @env{LC_CTYPE}, or @env{LANG}
environment variables while running Emacs, you may want to invoke the
@code{set-locale-environment} function afterwards to readjust the
language environment from the new locale.
@vindex locale-preferred-coding-systems
The @code{set-locale-environment} function normally uses the preferred
coding system established by the language environment to decode system
messages. But if your locale matches an entry in the variable
@code{locale-preferred-coding-systems}, Emacs uses the corresponding
coding system instead. For example, if the locale @samp{ja_JP.PCK}
matches @code{japanese-shift-jis} in
@code{locale-preferred-coding-systems}, Emacs uses that encoding even
though it might normally use @code{japanese-iso-8bit}.
You can override the language environment chosen at startup with
explicit use of the command @code{set-language-environment}, or with
customization of @code{current-language-environment} in your init
file.
@kindex C-h L
@findex describe-language-environment
To display information about the effects of a certain language
environment @var{lang-env}, use the command @kbd{C-h L @var{lang-env}
@key{RET}} (@code{describe-language-environment}). This tells you
which languages this language environment is useful for, and lists the
character sets, coding systems, and input methods that go with it. It
also shows some sample text to illustrate scripts used in this
language environment. If you give an empty input for @var{lang-env},
this command describes the chosen language environment.
@vindex set-language-environment-hook
You can customize any language environment with the normal hook
@code{set-language-environment-hook}. The command
@code{set-language-environment} runs that hook after setting up the new
language environment. The hook functions can test for a specific
language environment by checking the variable
@code{current-language-environment}. This hook is where you should
put non-default settings for specific language environment, such as
coding systems for keyboard input and terminal output, the default
input method, etc.
@vindex exit-language-environment-hook
Before it starts to set up the new language environment,
@code{set-language-environment} first runs the hook
@code{exit-language-environment-hook}. This hook is useful for undoing
customizations that were made with @code{set-language-environment-hook}.
For instance, if you set up a special key binding in a specific language
environment using @code{set-language-environment-hook}, you should set
up @code{exit-language-environment-hook} to restore the normal binding
for that key.
@node Input Methods
@section Input Methods
@cindex input methods
An @dfn{input method} is a kind of character conversion designed
specifically for interactive input. In Emacs, typically each language
has its own input method; sometimes several languages which use the same
characters can share one input method. A few languages support several
input methods.
The simplest kind of input method works by mapping @acronym{ASCII} letters
into another alphabet; this allows you to use one other alphabet
instead of @acronym{ASCII}. The Greek and Russian input methods
work this way.
A more powerful technique is composition: converting sequences of
characters into one letter. Many European input methods use composition
to produce a single non-@acronym{ASCII} letter from a sequence that consists of a
letter followed by accent characters (or vice versa). For example, some
methods convert the sequence @kbd{a'} into a single accented letter.
These input methods have no special commands of their own; all they do
is compose sequences of printing characters.
The input methods for syllabic scripts typically use mapping followed
by composition. The input methods for Thai and Korean work this way.
First, letters are mapped into symbols for particular sounds or tone
marks; then, sequences of these which make up a whole syllable are
mapped into one syllable sign.
Chinese and Japanese require more complex methods. In Chinese input
methods, first you enter the phonetic spelling of a Chinese word (in
input method @code{chinese-py}, among others), or a sequence of
portions of the character (input methods @code{chinese-4corner} and
@code{chinese-sw}, and others). One input sequence typically
corresponds to many possible Chinese characters. You select the one
you mean using keys such as @kbd{C-f}, @kbd{C-b}, @kbd{C-n},
@kbd{C-p}, and digits, which have special meanings in this situation.
The possible characters are conceptually arranged in several rows,
with each row holding up to 10 alternatives. Normally, Emacs displays
just one row at a time, in the echo area; @code{(@var{i}/@var{j})}
appears at the beginning, to indicate that this is the @var{i}th row
out of a total of @var{j} rows. Type @kbd{C-n} or @kbd{C-p} to
display the next row or the previous row.
Type @kbd{C-f} and @kbd{C-b} to move forward and backward among
the alternatives in the current row. As you do this, Emacs highlights
the current alternative with a special color; type @code{C-@key{SPC}}
to select the current alternative and use it as input. The
alternatives in the row are also numbered; the number appears before
the alternative. Typing a digit @var{n} selects the @var{n}th
alternative of the current row and uses it as input.
@key{TAB} in these Chinese input methods displays a buffer showing
all the possible characters at once; then clicking @kbd{Mouse-2} on
one of them selects that alternative. The keys @kbd{C-f}, @kbd{C-b},
@kbd{C-n}, @kbd{C-p}, and digits continue to work as usual, but they
do the highlighting in the buffer showing the possible characters,
rather than in the echo area.
In Japanese input methods, first you input a whole word using
phonetic spelling; then, after the word is in the buffer, Emacs
converts it into one or more characters using a large dictionary. One
phonetic spelling corresponds to a number of different Japanese words;
to select one of them, use @kbd{C-n} and @kbd{C-p} to cycle through
the alternatives.
Sometimes it is useful to cut off input method processing so that the
characters you have just entered will not combine with subsequent
characters. For example, in input method @code{latin-1-postfix}, the
sequence @kbd{e '} combines to form an @samp{e} with an accent. What if
you want to enter them as separate characters?
One way is to type the accent twice; this is a special feature for
entering the separate letter and accent. For example, @kbd{e ' '} gives
you the two characters @samp{e'}. Another way is to type another letter
after the @kbd{e}---something that won't combine with that---and
immediately delete it. For example, you could type @kbd{e e @key{DEL}
'} to get separate @samp{e} and @samp{'}.
Another method, more general but not quite as easy to type, is to use
@kbd{C-\ C-\} between two characters to stop them from combining. This
is the command @kbd{C-\} (@code{toggle-input-method}) used twice.
@ifnottex
@xref{Select Input Method}.
@end ifnottex
@cindex incremental search, input method interference
@kbd{C-\ C-\} is especially useful inside an incremental search,
because it stops waiting for more characters to combine, and starts
searching for what you have already entered.
To find out how to input the character after point using the current
input method, type @kbd{C-u C-x =}. @xref{Position Info}.
@vindex input-method-verbose-flag
@vindex input-method-highlight-flag
The variables @code{input-method-highlight-flag} and
@code{input-method-verbose-flag} control how input methods explain
what is happening. If @code{input-method-highlight-flag} is
non-@code{nil}, the partial sequence is highlighted in the buffer (for
most input methods---some disable this feature). If
@code{input-method-verbose-flag} is non-@code{nil}, the list of
possible characters to type next is displayed in the echo area (but
not when you are in the minibuffer).
@node Select Input Method
@section Selecting an Input Method
@table @kbd
@item C-\
Enable or disable use of the selected input method.
@item C-x @key{RET} C-\ @var{method} @key{RET}
Select a new input method for the current buffer.
@item C-h I @var{method} @key{RET}
@itemx C-h C-\ @var{method} @key{RET}
@findex describe-input-method
@kindex C-h I
@kindex C-h C-\
Describe the input method @var{method} (@code{describe-input-method}).
By default, it describes the current input method (if any). This
description should give you the full details of how to use any
particular input method.
@item M-x list-input-methods
Display a list of all the supported input methods.
@end table
@findex set-input-method
@vindex current-input-method
@kindex C-x RET C-\
To choose an input method for the current buffer, use @kbd{C-x
@key{RET} C-\} (@code{set-input-method}). This command reads the
input method name from the minibuffer; the name normally starts with the
language environment that it is meant to be used with. The variable
@code{current-input-method} records which input method is selected.
@findex toggle-input-method
@kindex C-\
Input methods use various sequences of @acronym{ASCII} characters to
stand for non-@acronym{ASCII} characters. Sometimes it is useful to
turn off the input method temporarily. To do this, type @kbd{C-\}
(@code{toggle-input-method}). To reenable the input method, type
@kbd{C-\} again.
If you type @kbd{C-\} and you have not yet selected an input method,
it prompts for you to specify one. This has the same effect as using
@kbd{C-x @key{RET} C-\} to specify an input method.
When invoked with a numeric argument, as in @kbd{C-u C-\},
@code{toggle-input-method} always prompts you for an input method,
suggesting the most recently selected one as the default.
@vindex default-input-method
Selecting a language environment specifies a default input method for
use in various buffers. When you have a default input method, you can
select it in the current buffer by typing @kbd{C-\}. The variable
@code{default-input-method} specifies the default input method
(@code{nil} means there is none).
In some language environments, which support several different input
methods, you might want to use an input method different from the
default chosen by @code{set-language-environment}. You can instruct
Emacs to select a different default input method for a certain
language environment, if you wish, by using
@code{set-language-environment-hook} (@pxref{Language Environments,
set-language-environment-hook}). For example:
@lisp
(defun my-chinese-setup ()
"Set up my private Chinese environment."
(if (equal current-language-environment "Chinese-GB")
(setq default-input-method "chinese-tonepy")))
(add-hook 'set-language-environment-hook 'my-chinese-setup)
@end lisp
@noindent
This sets the default input method to be @code{chinese-tonepy}
whenever you choose a Chinese-GB language environment.
@findex quail-set-keyboard-layout
Some input methods for alphabetic scripts work by (in effect)
remapping the keyboard to emulate various keyboard layouts commonly used
for those scripts. How to do this remapping properly depends on your
actual keyboard layout. To specify which layout your keyboard has, use
the command @kbd{M-x quail-set-keyboard-layout}.
@findex quail-show-key
You can use the command @kbd{M-x quail-show-key} to show what key (or
key sequence) to type in order to input the character following point,
using the selected keyboard layout. The command @kbd{C-u C-x =} also
shows that information in addition to the other information about the
character.
@findex list-input-methods
To see a list of all the supported input methods, type @kbd{M-x
list-input-methods}. The list gives information about each input
method, including the string that stands for it in the mode line.
@node Multibyte Conversion
@section Unibyte and Multibyte Non-@acronym{ASCII} characters
When multibyte characters are enabled, character codes 0240 (octal)
through 0377 (octal) are not really legitimate in the buffer. The valid
non-@acronym{ASCII} printing characters have codes that start from 0400.
If you type a self-inserting character in the range 0240 through
0377, or if you use @kbd{C-q} to insert one, Emacs assumes you
intended to use one of the ISO Latin-@var{n} character sets, and
converts it to the Emacs code representing that Latin-@var{n}
character. You select @emph{which} ISO Latin character set to use
through your choice of language environment
@iftex
(see above).
@end iftex
@ifnottex
(@pxref{Language Environments}).
@end ifnottex
If you do not specify a choice, the default is Latin-1.
If you insert a character in the range 0200 through 0237, which
forms the @code{eight-bit-control} character set, it is inserted
literally. You should normally avoid doing this since buffers
containing such characters have to be written out in either the
@code{emacs-mule} or @code{raw-text} coding system, which is usually
not what you want.
@node Coding Systems
@section Coding Systems
@cindex coding systems
Users of various languages have established many more-or-less standard
coding systems for representing them. Emacs does not use these coding
systems internally; instead, it converts from various coding systems to
its own system when reading data, and converts the internal coding
system to other coding systems when writing data. Conversion is
possible in reading or writing files, in sending or receiving from the
terminal, and in exchanging data with subprocesses.
Emacs assigns a name to each coding system. Most coding systems are
used for one language, and the name of the coding system starts with the
language name. Some coding systems are used for several languages;
their names usually start with @samp{iso}. There are also special
coding systems @code{no-conversion}, @code{raw-text} and
@code{emacs-mule} which do not convert printing characters at all.
@cindex international files from DOS/Windows systems
A special class of coding systems, collectively known as
@dfn{codepages}, is designed to support text encoded by MS-Windows and
MS-DOS software. The names of these coding systems are
@code{cp@var{nnnn}}, where @var{nnnn} is a 3- or 4-digit number of the
codepage. You can use these encodings just like any other coding
system; for example, to visit a file encoded in codepage 850, type
@kbd{C-x @key{RET} c cp850 @key{RET} C-x C-f @var{filename}
@key{RET}}@footnote{
In the MS-DOS port of Emacs, you need to create a @code{cp@var{nnn}}
coding system with @kbd{M-x codepage-setup}, before you can use it.
@iftex
@xref{MS-DOS and MULE,,,emacs-extra,Specialized Emacs Features}.
@end iftex
@ifnottex
@xref{MS-DOS and MULE}.
@end ifnottex
}.
In addition to converting various representations of non-@acronym{ASCII}
characters, a coding system can perform end-of-line conversion. Emacs
handles three different conventions for how to separate lines in a file:
newline, carriage-return linefeed, and just carriage-return.
@table @kbd
@item C-h C @var{coding} @key{RET}
Describe coding system @var{coding}.
@item C-h C @key{RET}
Describe the coding systems currently in use.
@item M-x list-coding-systems
Display a list of all the supported coding systems.
@end table
@kindex C-h C
@findex describe-coding-system
The command @kbd{C-h C} (@code{describe-coding-system}) displays
information about particular coding systems, including the end-of-line
conversion specified by those coding systems. You can specify a coding
system name as the argument; alternatively, with an empty argument, it
describes the coding systems currently selected for various purposes,
both in the current buffer and as the defaults, and the priority list
for recognizing coding systems (@pxref{Recognize Coding}).
@findex list-coding-systems
To display a list of all the supported coding systems, type @kbd{M-x
list-coding-systems}. The list gives information about each coding
system, including the letter that stands for it in the mode line
(@pxref{Mode Line}).
@cindex end-of-line conversion
@cindex line endings
@cindex MS-DOS end-of-line conversion
@cindex Macintosh end-of-line conversion
Each of the coding systems that appear in this list---except for
@code{no-conversion}, which means no conversion of any kind---specifies
how and whether to convert printing characters, but leaves the choice of
end-of-line conversion to be decided based on the contents of each file.
For example, if the file appears to use the sequence carriage-return
linefeed to separate lines, DOS end-of-line conversion will be used.
Each of the listed coding systems has three variants which specify
exactly what to do for end-of-line conversion:
@table @code
@item @dots{}-unix
Don't do any end-of-line conversion; assume the file uses
newline to separate lines. (This is the convention normally used
on Unix and GNU systems.)
@item @dots{}-dos
Assume the file uses carriage-return linefeed to separate lines, and do
the appropriate conversion. (This is the convention normally used on
Microsoft systems.@footnote{It is also specified for MIME @samp{text/*}
bodies and in other network transport contexts. It is different
from the SGML reference syntax record-start/record-end format which
Emacs doesn't support directly.})
@item @dots{}-mac
Assume the file uses carriage-return to separate lines, and do the
appropriate conversion. (This is the convention normally used on the
Macintosh system.)
@end table
These variant coding systems are omitted from the
@code{list-coding-systems} display for brevity, since they are entirely
predictable. For example, the coding system @code{iso-latin-1} has
variants @code{iso-latin-1-unix}, @code{iso-latin-1-dos} and
@code{iso-latin-1-mac}.
@cindex @code{undecided}, coding system
The coding systems @code{unix}, @code{dos}, and @code{mac} are
aliases for @code{undecided-unix}, @code{undecided-dos}, and
@code{undecided-mac}, respectively. These coding systems specify only
the end-of-line conversion, and leave the character code conversion to
be deduced from the text itself.
The coding system @code{raw-text} is good for a file which is mainly
@acronym{ASCII} text, but may contain byte values above 127 which are
not meant to encode non-@acronym{ASCII} characters. With
@code{raw-text}, Emacs copies those byte values unchanged, and sets
@code{enable-multibyte-characters} to @code{nil} in the current buffer
so that they will be interpreted properly. @code{raw-text} handles
end-of-line conversion in the usual way, based on the data
encountered, and has the usual three variants to specify the kind of
end-of-line conversion to use.
In contrast, the coding system @code{no-conversion} specifies no
character code conversion at all---none for non-@acronym{ASCII} byte values and
none for end of line. This is useful for reading or writing binary
files, tar files, and other files that must be examined verbatim. It,
too, sets @code{enable-multibyte-characters} to @code{nil}.
The easiest way to edit a file with no conversion of any kind is with
the @kbd{M-x find-file-literally} command. This uses
@code{no-conversion}, and also suppresses other Emacs features that
might convert the file contents before you see them. @xref{Visiting}.
The coding system @code{emacs-mule} means that the file contains
non-@acronym{ASCII} characters stored with the internal Emacs encoding. It
handles end-of-line conversion based on the data encountered, and has
the usual three variants to specify the kind of end-of-line conversion.
@findex unify-8859-on-decoding-mode
@anchor{Character Translation}
The @dfn{character translation} feature can modify the effect of
various coding systems, by changing the internal Emacs codes that
decoding produces. For instance, the command
@code{unify-8859-on-decoding-mode} enables a mode that ``unifies'' the
Latin alphabets when decoding text. This works by converting all
non-@acronym{ASCII} Latin-@var{n} characters to either Latin-1 or
Unicode characters. This way it is easier to use various
Latin-@var{n} alphabets together. (In a future Emacs version we hope
to move towards full Unicode support and complete unification of
character sets.)
@vindex enable-character-translation
If you set the variable @code{enable-character-translation} to
@code{nil}, that disables all character translation (including
@code{unify-8859-on-decoding-mode}).
@node Recognize Coding
@section Recognizing Coding Systems
Emacs tries to recognize which coding system to use for a given text
as an integral part of reading that text. (This applies to files
being read, output from subprocesses, text from X selections, etc.)
Emacs can select the right coding system automatically most of the
time---once you have specified your preferences.
Some coding systems can be recognized or distinguished by which byte
sequences appear in the data. However, there are coding systems that
cannot be distinguished, not even potentially. For example, there is no
way to distinguish between Latin-1 and Latin-2; they use the same byte
values with different meanings.
Emacs handles this situation by means of a priority list of coding
systems. Whenever Emacs reads a file, if you do not specify the coding
system to use, Emacs checks the data against each coding system,
starting with the first in priority and working down the list, until it
finds a coding system that fits the data. Then it converts the file
contents assuming that they are represented in this coding system.
The priority list of coding systems depends on the selected language
environment (@pxref{Language Environments}). For example, if you use
French, you probably want Emacs to prefer Latin-1 to Latin-2; if you use
Czech, you probably want Latin-2 to be preferred. This is one of the
reasons to specify a language environment.
@findex prefer-coding-system
However, you can alter the coding system priority list in detail
with the command @kbd{M-x prefer-coding-system}. This command reads
the name of a coding system from the minibuffer, and adds it to the
front of the priority list, so that it is preferred to all others. If
you use this command several times, each use adds one element to the
front of the priority list.
If you use a coding system that specifies the end-of-line conversion
type, such as @code{iso-8859-1-dos}, what this means is that Emacs
should attempt to recognize @code{iso-8859-1} with priority, and should
use DOS end-of-line conversion when it does recognize @code{iso-8859-1}.
@vindex file-coding-system-alist
Sometimes a file name indicates which coding system to use for the
file. The variable @code{file-coding-system-alist} specifies this
correspondence. There is a special function
@code{modify-coding-system-alist} for adding elements to this list. For
example, to read and write all @samp{.txt} files using the coding system
@code{chinese-iso-8bit}, you can execute this Lisp expression:
@smallexample
(modify-coding-system-alist 'file "\\.txt\\'" 'chinese-iso-8bit)
@end smallexample
@noindent
The first argument should be @code{file}, the second argument should be
a regular expression that determines which files this applies to, and
the third argument says which coding system to use for these files.
@vindex inhibit-eol-conversion
@cindex DOS-style end-of-line display
Emacs recognizes which kind of end-of-line conversion to use based on
the contents of the file: if it sees only carriage-returns, or only
carriage-return linefeed sequences, then it chooses the end-of-line
conversion accordingly. You can inhibit the automatic use of
end-of-line conversion by setting the variable @code{inhibit-eol-conversion}
to non-@code{nil}. If you do that, DOS-style files will be displayed
with the @samp{^M} characters visible in the buffer; some people
prefer this to the more subtle @samp{(DOS)} end-of-line type
indication near the left edge of the mode line (@pxref{Mode Line,
eol-mnemonic}).
@vindex inhibit-iso-escape-detection
@cindex escape sequences in files
By default, the automatic detection of coding system is sensitive to
escape sequences. If Emacs sees a sequence of characters that begin
with an escape character, and the sequence is valid as an ISO-2022
code, that tells Emacs to use one of the ISO-2022 encodings to decode
the file.
However, there may be cases that you want to read escape sequences
in a file as is. In such a case, you can set the variable
@code{inhibit-iso-escape-detection} to non-@code{nil}. Then the code
detection ignores any escape sequences, and never uses an ISO-2022
encoding. The result is that all escape sequences become visible in
the buffer.
The default value of @code{inhibit-iso-escape-detection} is
@code{nil}. We recommend that you not change it permanently, only for
one specific operation. That's because many Emacs Lisp source files
in the Emacs distribution contain non-@acronym{ASCII} characters encoded in the
coding system @code{iso-2022-7bit}, and they won't be
decoded correctly when you visit those files if you suppress the
escape sequence detection.
@vindex auto-coding-alist
@vindex auto-coding-regexp-alist
@vindex auto-coding-functions
The variables @code{auto-coding-alist},
@code{auto-coding-regexp-alist} and @code{auto-coding-functions} are
the strongest way to specify the coding system for certain patterns of
file names, or for files containing certain patterns; these variables
even override @samp{-*-coding:-*-} tags in the file itself. Emacs
uses @code{auto-coding-alist} for tar and archive files, to prevent it
from being confused by a @samp{-*-coding:-*-} tag in a member of the
archive and thinking it applies to the archive file as a whole.
Likewise, Emacs uses @code{auto-coding-regexp-alist} to ensure that
RMAIL files, whose names in general don't match any particular
pattern, are decoded correctly. One of the builtin
@code{auto-coding-functions} detects the encoding for XML files.
@vindex rmail-decode-mime-charset
When you get new mail in Rmail, each message is translated
automatically from the coding system it is written in, as if it were a
separate file. This uses the priority list of coding systems that you
have specified. If a MIME message specifies a character set, Rmail
obeys that specification, unless @code{rmail-decode-mime-charset} is
@code{nil}.
@vindex rmail-file-coding-system
For reading and saving Rmail files themselves, Emacs uses the coding
system specified by the variable @code{rmail-file-coding-system}. The
default value is @code{nil}, which means that Rmail files are not
translated (they are read and written in the Emacs internal character
code).
@node Specify Coding
@section Specifying a File's Coding System
If Emacs recognizes the encoding of a file incorrectly, you can
reread the file using the correct coding system by typing @kbd{C-x
@key{RET} r @var{coding-system} @key{RET}}. To see what coding system
Emacs actually used to decode the file, look at the coding system
mnemonic letter near the left edge of the mode line (@pxref{Mode
Line}), or type @kbd{C-h C @key{RET}}.
@vindex coding
You can specify the coding system for a particular file in the file
itself, using the @w{@samp{-*-@dots{}-*-}} construct at the beginning,
or a local variables list at the end (@pxref{File Variables}). You do
this by defining a value for the ``variable'' named @code{coding}.
Emacs does not really have a variable @code{coding}; instead of
setting a variable, this uses the specified coding system for the
file. For example, @samp{-*-mode: C; coding: latin-1;-*-} specifies
use of the Latin-1 coding system, as well as C mode. When you specify
the coding explicitly in the file, that overrides
@code{file-coding-system-alist}.
If you add the character @samp{!} at the end of the coding system
name in @code{coding}, it disables any character translation
(@pxref{Character Translation}) while decoding the file. This is
useful when you need to make sure that the character codes in the
Emacs buffer will not vary due to changes in user settings; for
instance, for the sake of strings in Emacs Lisp source files.
@node Output Coding
@section Choosing Coding Systems for Output
@vindex buffer-file-coding-system
Once Emacs has chosen a coding system for a buffer, it stores that
coding system in @code{buffer-file-coding-system}. That makes it the
default for operations that write from this buffer into a file, such
as @code{save-buffer} and @code{write-region}. You can specify a
different coding system for further file output from the buffer using
@code{set-buffer-file-coding-system} (@pxref{Text Coding}).
You can insert any character Emacs supports into any Emacs buffer,
but most coding systems can only handle a subset of these characters.
Therefore, you can insert characters that cannot be encoded with the
coding system that will be used to save the buffer. For example, you
could start with an @acronym{ASCII} file and insert a few Latin-1
characters into it, or you could edit a text file in Polish encoded in
@code{iso-8859-2} and add some Russian words to it. When you save
that buffer, Emacs cannot use the current value of
@code{buffer-file-coding-system}, because the characters you added
cannot be encoded by that coding system.
When that happens, Emacs tries the most-preferred coding system (set
by @kbd{M-x prefer-coding-system} or @kbd{M-x
set-language-environment}), and if that coding system can safely
encode all of the characters in the buffer, Emacs uses it, and stores
its value in @code{buffer-file-coding-system}. Otherwise, Emacs
displays a list of coding systems suitable for encoding the buffer's
contents, and asks you to choose one of those coding systems.
If you insert the unsuitable characters in a mail message, Emacs
behaves a bit differently. It additionally checks whether the
most-preferred coding system is recommended for use in MIME messages;
if not, Emacs tells you that the most-preferred coding system is not
recommended and prompts you for another coding system. This is so you
won't inadvertently send a message encoded in a way that your
recipient's mail software will have difficulty decoding. (You can
still use an unsuitable coding system if you type its name in response
to the question.)
@vindex sendmail-coding-system
When you send a message with Mail mode (@pxref{Sending Mail}), Emacs has
four different ways to determine the coding system to use for encoding
the message text. It tries the buffer's own value of
@code{buffer-file-coding-system}, if that is non-@code{nil}. Otherwise,
it uses the value of @code{sendmail-coding-system}, if that is
non-@code{nil}. The third way is to use the default coding system for
new files, which is controlled by your choice of language environment,
if that is non-@code{nil}. If all of these three values are @code{nil},
Emacs encodes outgoing mail using the Latin-1 coding system.
@node Text Coding
@section Specifying a Coding System for File Text
In cases where Emacs does not automatically choose the right coding
system for a file's contents, you can use these commands to specify
one:
@table @kbd
@item C-x @key{RET} f @var{coding} @key{RET}
Use coding system @var{coding} for saving or revisiting the visited
file in the current buffer.
@item C-x @key{RET} c @var{coding} @key{RET}
Specify coding system @var{coding} for the immediately following
command.
@item C-x @key{RET} r @var{coding} @key{RET}
Revisit the current file using the coding system @var{coding}.
@item M-x recode-region @key{RET} @var{right} @key{RET} @var{wrong} @key{RET}
Convert a region that was decoded using coding system @var{wrong},
decoding it using coding system @var{right} instead.
@end table
@kindex C-x RET f
@findex set-buffer-file-coding-system
The command @kbd{C-x @key{RET} f}
(@code{set-buffer-file-coding-system}) sets the file coding system for
the current buffer---in other words, it says which coding system to
use when saving or reverting the visited file. You specify which
coding system using the minibuffer. If you specify a coding system
that cannot handle all of the characters in the buffer, Emacs warns
you about the troublesome characters when you actually save the
buffer.
@cindex specify end-of-line conversion
You can also use this command to specify the end-of-line conversion
(@pxref{Coding Systems, end-of-line conversion}) for encoding the
current buffer. For example, @kbd{C-x @key{RET} f dos @key{RET}} will
cause Emacs to save the current buffer's text with DOS-style CRLF line
endings.
@kindex C-x RET c
@findex universal-coding-system-argument
Another way to specify the coding system for a file is when you visit
the file. First use the command @kbd{C-x @key{RET} c}
(@code{universal-coding-system-argument}); this command uses the
minibuffer to read a coding system name. After you exit the minibuffer,
the specified coding system is used for @emph{the immediately following
command}.
So if the immediately following command is @kbd{C-x C-f}, for example,
it reads the file using that coding system (and records the coding
system for when you later save the file). Or if the immediately following
command is @kbd{C-x C-w}, it writes the file using that coding system.
When you specify the coding system for saving in this way, instead
of with @kbd{C-x @key{RET} f}, there is no warning if the buffer
contains characters that the coding system cannot handle.
Other file commands affected by a specified coding system include
@kbd{C-x i} and @kbd{C-x C-v}, as well as the other-window variants
of @kbd{C-x C-f}. @kbd{C-x @key{RET} c} also affects commands that
start subprocesses, including @kbd{M-x shell} (@pxref{Shell}). If the
immediately following command does not use the coding system, then
@kbd{C-x @key{RET} c} ultimately has no effect.
An easy way to visit a file with no conversion is with the @kbd{M-x
find-file-literally} command. @xref{Visiting}.
@vindex default-buffer-file-coding-system
The variable @code{default-buffer-file-coding-system} specifies the
choice of coding system to use when you create a new file. It applies
when you find a new file, and when you create a buffer and then save it
in a file. Selecting a language environment typically sets this
variable to a good choice of default coding system for that language
environment.
@kindex C-x RET r
@findex revert-buffer-with-coding-system
If you visit a file with a wrong coding system, you can correct this
with @kbd{C-x @key{RET} r} (@code{revert-buffer-with-coding-system}).
This visits the current file again, using a coding system you specify.
@findex recode-region
If a piece of text has already been inserted into a buffer using the
wrong coding system, you can redo the decoding of it using @kbd{M-x
recode-region}. This prompts you for the proper coding system, then
for the wrong coding system that was actually used, and does the
conversion. It first encodes the region using the wrong coding system,
then decodes it again using the proper coding system.
@node Communication Coding
@section Coding Systems for Interprocess Communication
This section explains how to specify coding systems for use
in communication with other processes.
@table @kbd
@item C-x @key{RET} x @var{coding} @key{RET}
Use coding system @var{coding} for transferring selections to and from
other window-based applications.
@item C-x @key{RET} X @var{coding} @key{RET}
Use coding system @var{coding} for transferring @emph{one}
selection---the next one---to or from another window-based application.
@item C-x @key{RET} p @var{input-coding} @key{RET} @var{output-coding} @key{RET}
Use coding systems @var{input-coding} and @var{output-coding} for
subprocess input and output in the current buffer.
@item C-x @key{RET} c @var{coding} @key{RET}
Specify coding system @var{coding} for the immediately following
command.
@end table
@kindex C-x RET x
@kindex C-x RET X
@findex set-selection-coding-system
@findex set-next-selection-coding-system
The command @kbd{C-x @key{RET} x} (@code{set-selection-coding-system})
specifies the coding system for sending selected text to other windowing
applications, and for receiving the text of selections made in other
applications. This command applies to all subsequent selections, until
you override it by using the command again. The command @kbd{C-x
@key{RET} X} (@code{set-next-selection-coding-system}) specifies the
coding system for the next selection made in Emacs or read by Emacs.
@kindex C-x RET p
@findex set-buffer-process-coding-system
The command @kbd{C-x @key{RET} p} (@code{set-buffer-process-coding-system})
specifies the coding system for input and output to a subprocess. This
command applies to the current buffer; normally, each subprocess has its
own buffer, and thus you can use this command to specify translation to
and from a particular subprocess by giving the command in the
corresponding buffer.
You can also use @kbd{C-x @key{RET} c} just before the command that
runs or starts a subprocess, to specify the coding system to use for
communication with that subprocess.
The default for translation of process input and output depends on the
current language environment.
@vindex locale-coding-system
@cindex decoding non-@acronym{ASCII} keyboard input on X
The variable @code{locale-coding-system} specifies a coding system
to use when encoding and decoding system strings such as system error
messages and @code{format-time-string} formats and time stamps. That
coding system is also used for decoding non-@acronym{ASCII} keyboard input on X
Window systems. You should choose a coding system that is compatible
with the underlying system's text representation, which is normally
specified by one of the environment variables @env{LC_ALL},
@env{LC_CTYPE}, and @env{LANG}. (The first one, in the order
specified above, whose value is nonempty is the one that determines
the text representation.)
@node File Name Coding
@section Coding Systems for File Names
@table @kbd
@item C-x @key{RET} F @var{coding} @key{RET}
Use coding system @var{coding} for encoding and decoding file
@emph{names}.
@end table
@vindex file-name-coding-system
@cindex file names with non-@acronym{ASCII} characters
The variable @code{file-name-coding-system} specifies a coding
system to use for encoding file names. It has no effect on reading
and writing the @emph{contents} of files.
@findex set-file-name-coding-system
@kindex C-x @key{RET} F
If you set the variable to a coding system name (as a Lisp symbol or
a string), Emacs encodes file names using that coding system for all
file operations. This makes it possible to use non-@acronym{ASCII}
characters in file names---or, at least, those non-@acronym{ASCII}
characters which the specified coding system can encode. Use @kbd{C-x
@key{RET} F} (@code{set-file-name-coding-system}) to specify this
interactively.
If @code{file-name-coding-system} is @code{nil}, Emacs uses a
default coding system determined by the selected language environment.
In the default language environment, any non-@acronym{ASCII}
characters in file names are not encoded specially; they appear in the
file system using the internal Emacs representation.
@strong{Warning:} if you change @code{file-name-coding-system} (or the
language environment) in the middle of an Emacs session, problems can
result if you have already visited files whose names were encoded using
the earlier coding system and cannot be encoded (or are encoded
differently) under the new coding system. If you try to save one of
these buffers under the visited file name, saving may use the wrong file
name, or it may get an error. If such a problem happens, use @kbd{C-x
C-w} to specify a new file name for that buffer.
@findex recode-file-name
If a mistake occurs when encoding a file name, use the command
@kbd{M-x recode-file-name} to change the file name's coding
system. This prompts for an existing file name, its old coding
system, and the coding system to which you wish to convert.
@node Terminal Coding
@section Coding Systems for Terminal I/O
@table @kbd
@item C-x @key{RET} k @var{coding} @key{RET}
Use coding system @var{coding} for keyboard input.
@item C-x @key{RET} t @var{coding} @key{RET}
Use coding system @var{coding} for terminal output.
@end table
@kindex C-x RET t
@findex set-terminal-coding-system
The command @kbd{C-x @key{RET} t} (@code{set-terminal-coding-system})
specifies the coding system for terminal output. If you specify a
character code for terminal output, all characters output to the
terminal are translated into that coding system.
This feature is useful for certain character-only terminals built to
support specific languages or character sets---for example, European
terminals that support one of the ISO Latin character sets. You need to
specify the terminal coding system when using multibyte text, so that
Emacs knows which characters the terminal can actually handle.
By default, output to the terminal is not translated at all, unless
Emacs can deduce the proper coding system from your terminal type or
your locale specification (@pxref{Language Environments}).
@kindex C-x RET k
@findex set-keyboard-coding-system
@vindex keyboard-coding-system
The command @kbd{C-x @key{RET} k} (@code{set-keyboard-coding-system})
or the variable @code{keyboard-coding-system} specifies the coding
system for keyboard input. Character-code translation of keyboard
input is useful for terminals with keys that send non-@acronym{ASCII}
graphic characters---for example, some terminals designed for ISO
Latin-1 or subsets of it.
By default, keyboard input is translated based on your system locale
setting. If your terminal does not really support the encoding
implied by your locale (for example, if you find it inserts a
non-@acronym{ASCII} character if you type @kbd{M-i}), you will need to set
@code{keyboard-coding-system} to @code{nil} to turn off encoding.
You can do this by putting
@lisp
(set-keyboard-coding-system nil)
@end lisp
@noindent
in your @file{~/.emacs} file.
There is a similarity between using a coding system translation for
keyboard input, and using an input method: both define sequences of
keyboard input that translate into single characters. However, input
methods are designed to be convenient for interactive use by humans, and
the sequences that are translated are typically sequences of @acronym{ASCII}
printing characters. Coding systems typically translate sequences of
non-graphic characters.
@node Fontsets
@section Fontsets
@cindex fontsets
A font typically defines shapes for a single alphabet or script.
Therefore, displaying the entire range of scripts that Emacs supports
requires a collection of many fonts. In Emacs, such a collection is
called a @dfn{fontset}. A fontset is defined by a list of fonts, each
assigned to handle a range of character codes.
Each fontset has a name, like a font. However, while fonts are
stored in the system and the available font names are defined by the
system, fontsets are defined within Emacs itself. Once you have
defined a fontset, you can use it within Emacs by specifying its name,
anywhere that you could use a single font. Of course, Emacs fontsets
can use only the fonts that the system supports; if certain characters
appear on the screen as hollow boxes, this means that the fontset in
use for them has no font for those characters.@footnote{The Emacs
installation instructions have information on additional font
support.}
Emacs creates two fontsets automatically: the @dfn{standard fontset}
and the @dfn{startup fontset}. The standard fontset is most likely to
have fonts for a wide variety of non-@acronym{ASCII} characters;
however, this is not the default for Emacs to use. (By default, Emacs
tries to find a font that has bold and italic variants.) You can
specify use of the standard fontset with the @samp{-fn} option. For
example,
@example
emacs -fn fontset-standard
@end example
@noindent
You can also specify a fontset with the @samp{Font} resource (@pxref{X
Resources}).
A fontset does not necessarily specify a font for every character
code. If a fontset specifies no font for a certain character, or if it
specifies a font that does not exist on your system, then it cannot
display that character properly. It will display that character as an
empty box instead.
@node Defining Fontsets
@section Defining fontsets
@vindex standard-fontset-spec
@cindex standard fontset
Emacs creates a standard fontset automatically according to the value
of @code{standard-fontset-spec}. This fontset's name is
@example
-*-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-16-*-*-*-*-*-fontset-standard
@end example
@noindent
or just @samp{fontset-standard} for short.
Bold, italic, and bold-italic variants of the standard fontset are
created automatically. Their names have @samp{bold} instead of
@samp{medium}, or @samp{i} instead of @samp{r}, or both.
@cindex startup fontset
If you specify a default @acronym{ASCII} font with the @samp{Font} resource or
the @samp{-fn} argument, Emacs generates a fontset from it
automatically. This is the @dfn{startup fontset} and its name is
@code{fontset-startup}. It does this by replacing the @var{foundry},
@var{family}, @var{add_style}, and @var{average_width} fields of the
font name with @samp{*}, replacing @var{charset_registry} field with
@samp{fontset}, and replacing @var{charset_encoding} field with
@samp{startup}, then using the resulting string to specify a fontset.
For instance, if you start Emacs this way,
@example
emacs -fn "*courier-medium-r-normal--14-140-*-iso8859-1"
@end example
@noindent
Emacs generates the following fontset and uses it for the initial X
window frame:
@example
-*-*-medium-r-normal-*-14-140-*-*-*-*-fontset-startup
@end example
With the X resource @samp{Emacs.Font}, you can specify a fontset name
just like an actual font name. But be careful not to specify a fontset
name in a wildcard resource like @samp{Emacs*Font}---that wildcard
specification matches various other resources, such as for menus, and
menus cannot handle fontsets.
You can specify additional fontsets using X resources named
@samp{Fontset-@var{n}}, where @var{n} is an integer starting from 0.
The resource value should have this form:
@smallexample
@var{fontpattern}, @r{[}@var{charset}:@var{font}@r{]@dots{}}
@end smallexample
@noindent
@var{fontpattern} should have the form of a standard X font name, except
for the last two fields. They should have the form
@samp{fontset-@var{alias}}.
The fontset has two names, one long and one short. The long name is
@var{fontpattern}. The short name is @samp{fontset-@var{alias}}. You
can refer to the fontset by either name.
The construct @samp{@var{charset}:@var{font}} specifies which font to
use (in this fontset) for one particular character set. Here,
@var{charset} is the name of a character set, and @var{font} is the
font to use for that character set. You can use this construct any
number of times in defining one fontset.
For the other character sets, Emacs chooses a font based on
@var{fontpattern}. It replaces @samp{fontset-@var{alias}} with values
that describe the character set. For the @acronym{ASCII} character font,
@samp{fontset-@var{alias}} is replaced with @samp{ISO8859-1}.
In addition, when several consecutive fields are wildcards, Emacs
collapses them into a single wildcard. This is to prevent use of
auto-scaled fonts. Fonts made by scaling larger fonts are not usable
for editing, and scaling a smaller font is not useful because it is
better to use the smaller font in its own size, which is what Emacs
does.
Thus if @var{fontpattern} is this,
@example
-*-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-24-*-*-*-*-*-fontset-24
@end example
@noindent
the font specification for @acronym{ASCII} characters would be this:
@example
-*-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-24-*-ISO8859-1
@end example
@noindent
and the font specification for Chinese GB2312 characters would be this:
@example
-*-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-24-*-gb2312*-*
@end example
You may not have any Chinese font matching the above font
specification. Most X distributions include only Chinese fonts that
have @samp{song ti} or @samp{fangsong ti} in @var{family} field. In
such a case, @samp{Fontset-@var{n}} can be specified as below:
@smallexample
Emacs.Fontset-0: -*-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-24-*-*-*-*-*-fontset-24,\
chinese-gb2312:-*-*-medium-r-normal-*-24-*-gb2312*-*
@end smallexample
@noindent
Then, the font specifications for all but Chinese GB2312 characters have
@samp{fixed} in the @var{family} field, and the font specification for
Chinese GB2312 characters has a wild card @samp{*} in the @var{family}
field.
@findex create-fontset-from-fontset-spec
The function that processes the fontset resource value to create the
fontset is called @code{create-fontset-from-fontset-spec}. You can also
call this function explicitly to create a fontset.
@xref{Font X}, for more information about font naming in X.
@node Undisplayable Characters
@section Undisplayable Characters
There may be a some non-@acronym{ASCII} characters that your terminal cannot
display. Most text-only terminals support just a single character
set (use the variable @code{default-terminal-coding-system}
(@pxref{Terminal Coding}) to tell Emacs which one); characters which
can't be encoded in that coding system are displayed as @samp{?} by
default.
Graphical displays can display a broader range of characters, but
you may not have fonts installed for all of them; characters that have
no font appear as a hollow box.
If you use Latin-1 characters but your terminal can't display
Latin-1, you can arrange to display mnemonic @acronym{ASCII} sequences
instead, e.g.@: @samp{"o} for o-umlaut. Load the library
@file{iso-ascii} to do this.
@vindex latin1-display
If your terminal can display Latin-1, you can display characters
from other European character sets using a mixture of equivalent
Latin-1 characters and @acronym{ASCII} mnemonics. Customize the variable
@code{latin1-display} to enable this. The mnemonic @acronym{ASCII}
sequences mostly correspond to those of the prefix input methods.
@node Unibyte Mode
@section Unibyte Editing Mode
@cindex European character sets
@cindex accented characters
@cindex ISO Latin character sets
@cindex Unibyte operation
The ISO 8859 Latin-@var{n} character sets define character codes in
the range 0240 to 0377 octal (160 to 255 decimal) to handle the
accented letters and punctuation needed by various European languages
(and some non-European ones). If you disable multibyte characters,
Emacs can still handle @emph{one} of these character codes at a time.
To specify @emph{which} of these codes to use, invoke @kbd{M-x
set-language-environment} and specify a suitable language environment
such as @samp{Latin-@var{n}}.
For more information about unibyte operation, see @ref{Enabling
Multibyte}. Note particularly that you probably want to ensure that
your initialization files are read as unibyte if they contain
non-@acronym{ASCII} characters.
@vindex unibyte-display-via-language-environment
Emacs can also display those characters, provided the terminal or font
in use supports them. This works automatically. Alternatively, on a
graphical display, Emacs can also display single-byte characters
through fontsets, in effect by displaying the equivalent multibyte
characters according to the current language environment. To request
this, set the variable @code{unibyte-display-via-language-environment}
to a non-@code{nil} value.
@cindex @code{iso-ascii} library
If your terminal does not support display of the Latin-1 character
set, Emacs can display these characters as @acronym{ASCII} sequences which at
least give you a clear idea of what the characters are. To do this,
load the library @code{iso-ascii}. Similar libraries for other
Latin-@var{n} character sets could be implemented, but we don't have
them yet.
@findex standard-display-8bit
@cindex 8-bit display
Normally non-ISO-8859 characters (decimal codes between 128 and 159
inclusive) are displayed as octal escapes. You can change this for
non-standard ``extended'' versions of ISO-8859 character sets by using the
function @code{standard-display-8bit} in the @code{disp-table} library.
There are two ways to input single-byte non-@acronym{ASCII}
characters:
@itemize @bullet
@cindex 8-bit input
@item
You can use an input method for the selected language environment.
@xref{Input Methods}. When you use an input method in a unibyte buffer,
the non-@acronym{ASCII} character you specify with it is converted to unibyte.
@item
If your keyboard can generate character codes 128 (decimal) and up,
representing non-@acronym{ASCII} characters, you can type those character codes
directly.
On a graphical display, you should not need to do anything special to use
these keys; they should simply work. On a text-only terminal, you
should use the command @code{M-x set-keyboard-coding-system} or the
variable @code{keyboard-coding-system} to specify which coding system
your keyboard uses (@pxref{Terminal Coding}). Enabling this feature
will probably require you to use @kbd{ESC} to type Meta characters;
however, on a console terminal or in @code{xterm}, you can arrange for
Meta to be converted to @kbd{ESC} and still be able type 8-bit
characters present directly on the keyboard or using @kbd{Compose} or
@kbd{AltGr} keys. @xref{User Input}.
@kindex C-x 8
@cindex @code{iso-transl} library
@cindex compose character
@cindex dead character
@item
For Latin-1 only, you can use the key @kbd{C-x 8} as a ``compose
character'' prefix for entry of non-@acronym{ASCII} Latin-1 printing
characters. @kbd{C-x 8} is good for insertion (in the minibuffer as
well as other buffers), for searching, and in any other context where
a key sequence is allowed.
@kbd{C-x 8} works by loading the @code{iso-transl} library. Once that
library is loaded, the @key{ALT} modifier key, if the keyboard has
one, serves the same purpose as @kbd{C-x 8}: use @key{ALT} together
with an accent character to modify the following letter. In addition,
if the keyboard has keys for the Latin-1 ``dead accent characters,''
they too are defined to compose with the following character, once
@code{iso-transl} is loaded.
Use @kbd{C-x 8 C-h} to list all the available @kbd{C-x 8} translations.
@end itemize
@node Charsets
@section Charsets
@cindex charsets
Emacs groups all supported characters into disjoint @dfn{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 @acronym{ASCII} into two charsets:
@acronym{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
@code{ascii} plus the Emacs charset @code{latin-iso8859-1}.
Emacs characters belonging to different charsets may look the same,
but they are still different characters. For example, the letter
@samp{o} with acute accent in charset @code{latin-iso8859-1}, used for
Latin-1, is different from the letter @samp{o} with acute accent in
charset @code{latin-iso8859-2}, used for Latin-2.
@findex list-charset-chars
@cindex characters in a certain charset
@findex describe-character-set
There are two commands for obtaining information about Emacs
charsets. The command @kbd{M-x list-charset-chars} prompts for a name
of a character set, and displays all the characters in that character
set. The command @kbd{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 @kbd{C-u C-x =}.
@ignore
arch-tag: 310ba60d-31ef-4ce7-91f1-f282dd57b6b3
@end ignore