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22095: more multibyte notes.

This commit is contained in:
Peter Stephenson 2005-12-18 19:47:13 +00:00
parent e56c3b8214
commit f3100e855a
3 changed files with 28 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -1,3 +1,7 @@
2005-12-18 Peter Stephenson <p.w.stephenson@ntlworld.com>
* 22095: INSTALL, Etc/FAQ.yo: more multibyte notes.
2005-12-17 Wayne Davison <wayned@users.sourceforge.net>
* 22091: Src/hist.c: improved HIST_SAVE_BY_COPY to have it (1)

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@ -2071,7 +2071,25 @@ sect(How do I ensure multibyte input works on my system?)
it() The terminal emulator. Those that are supplied with a recent
desktop environment, such as gnome-terminal, are likely to have
extensive support for localization and may work correctly as soon
as they know the locale.
as they know the locale. You can enable UTF-8 support for
tt(xterm) in its application defaults file. The following are
the relevant resources; you donʼt actually need all of them, as
described below. If you use a mytt(~/.Xdefaults) or
mytt(~/.Xresources) file for setting resources, prefix all the lines
with mytt(xterm):
verb(
*wideChars: true
*locale: true
*utf8: 1
*vt100Graphics: true
)
This turns on support for wide characters (this is enabled by the
tt(utf8) resource, too); enables conversions to UTF-8 from other
locales (this is the key resource and actually overrides
mytt(utf8)); turns on UTF-8 mode (this resource is mostly used to
force use of UTF-8 characters if your locale system isnʼt up to it);
and allows certain graphic characters to work even with UTF-8
enabled. (Thanks to Phil Pennock for suggestions.)
it() The font. If you selected this from a menu in your terminal
emulator, there's a good chance it already selected the right
character set to go with it. If you hand-picked an old fashioned

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@ -276,12 +276,14 @@ be appreciated. The developers are not aware of any need to use
multibyte mode is believed to work automatically on:
- All(?) current GNU/Linux distributions
- All(?) current BSD variants
- OS X 10.4.3
and to work when configured with --enable-multibyte on:
- Solaris 8 and later
- OS X 10.4.3 (problems have been reported with multibyte characters
in HFS file names)
- NetBSD 2.0.2
Any help with Solaris 8 or 9 would be appreciated.
The main shell is not yet aware of multibyte characters, so for example the
length of a scalar parameter will return the number of bytes, not