From b0144eca96780a19481aa92cbc9210ce3b28f4f1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Wayne Davison Date: Sun, 18 Dec 2005 20:06:00 +0000 Subject: Changed UTF-8 closing-single-quotes into ASCII apostrophes. --- Etc/FAQ.yo | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'Etc/FAQ.yo') diff --git a/Etc/FAQ.yo b/Etc/FAQ.yo index 7463b085a..204018701 100644 --- a/Etc/FAQ.yo +++ b/Etc/FAQ.yo @@ -2073,7 +2073,7 @@ sect(How do I ensure multibyte input works on my system?) extensive support for localization and may work correctly as soon 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 + the relevant resources; you don't 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): @@ -2087,7 +2087,7 @@ sect(How do I ensure multibyte input works on my system?) 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); + force use of UTF-8 characters if your locale system isn't 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 -- cgit 1.4.1