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From: | Peter Dyballa |
Subject: | Re: Customizing coding priority |
Date: | Thu, 18 Jan 2007 17:32:01 +0100 |
Am 18.01.2007 um 17:12 schrieb Sven Bretfeld:
Anyway, what Peter and Tom remark sounds strange. There must be some difference in the umlauts of the two coding systems, at least for Emacs.
Yes, there is in GNU Emacs. The characters don't stand alone, they have some encoding attribute. Unicode Emacs 23.0.0 cancels this, finally.
'locale -a' should display which encodings your system knows. But this should not have any influence on GNU Emacs: it has its own ELisp files to handle these encodings. And internally all files are held in a common encoding, which is then presented to the user by the encoding used in this buffer.
Probably vm has some restrictions. GNU Emacs 22 won't solve the problem, GNU Emacs 23 might! (I simply gave up and switched to a different MUA.)
-- Mit friedvollen Grüßen Pete UNIX is user friendly, it's just picky about who its friends are.
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