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Diffstat (limited to 'manual/charset.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | manual/charset.texi | 12 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/manual/charset.texi b/manual/charset.texi index 39e2062ca0..bb9cc64b8d 100644 --- a/manual/charset.texi +++ b/manual/charset.texi @@ -218,8 +218,7 @@ the environment and for the texts to be handled. There exist a variety of different character sets which can be used for this external encoding. Information which will not be exhaustively presented here--instead, a description of the major groups will suffice. All of -the ASCII-based character sets [_bkoz_: do you mean Roman character -sets? If not, what do you mean here?] fulfill one requirement: they are +the ASCII-based character sets fulfill one requirement: they are "filesystem safe". This means that the character @code{'/'} is used in the encoding @emph{only} to represent itself. Things are a bit different for character sets like EBCDIC (Extended Binary Coded Decimal @@ -229,11 +228,12 @@ system calls have to be converted first anyhow. @itemize @bullet @item -The simplest character sets are single-byte character sets. There can be -only up to 256 characters (for @w{8 bit} character sets) which is not +The simplest character sets are single-byte character sets. There can +be only up to 256 characters (for @w{8 bit} character sets) which is not sufficient to cover all languages but might be sufficient to handle a -specific text. Another reason to choose this is because of constraints -from interaction with other programs (which might not be 8-bit clean). +specific text. Handling of @w{8 bit} character sets is simple. This is +not true for the other kinds presented later and therefore the +application one uses might require the use of @w{8 bit} character sets. @cindex ISO 2022 @item |