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Subject: CVS commit: pkgsrc/editors/emacs
From: Masao Uebayashi
Date: 2003-04-12 12:16:40
Message id: 20030412101640.83F75B004@cvs.netbsd.org
Log Message:
Update to Emacs 21.3.
Changes from etc/NEWS:
** The obsolete C mode (c-mode.el) has been removed to avoid problems
with Custom.
** UTF-16 coding systems are available, encoding the same characters
as mule-utf-8. Coding system `utf-16-le-dos' is useful as the value
of `selection-coding-system' in MS Windows, allowing you to paste
multilingual text from the clipboard. Set it interactively with
C-x RET x or in .emacs with `(set-selection-coding-system
'utf-16-le-dos)'.
** There is a new language environment for UTF-8 (set up automatically
in UTF-8 locales).
** Translation tables are available between equivalent characters in
different Emacs charsets -- for instance `e with acute' coming from
the
Latin-1 and Latin-2 charsets. User options
`unify-8859-on-encoding-mode'
and `unify-8859-on-decoding-mode' respectively turn on translation
between ISO 8859 character sets (`unification') on encoding
(e.g. writing a file) and decoding (e.g. reading a file). Note that
`unify-8859-on-encoding-mode' is useful and safe, but
`unify-8859-on-decoding-mode' can cause text to change when you read
it and write it out again without edits, so it is not generally
advisable.
By default `unify-8859-on-encoding-mode' is turned on.
** In Emacs running on the X window system, the default value of
`selection-coding-system' is now `compound-text-with-extensions'.
If you want the old behavior, set selection-coding-system to
compound-text, which may be significantly more efficient. Using
compound-text-with-extensions seems to be necessary only for decoding
text from applications under XFree86 4.2, whose behaviour is actually
contrary to the compound text specification.
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