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[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/emacs-mime.texi


From: Dave Love
Subject: [Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/emacs-mime.texi
Date: Thu, 12 Sep 2002 13:14:25 -0400

Index: emacs/man/emacs-mime.texi
diff -c emacs/man/emacs-mime.texi:1.16 emacs/man/emacs-mime.texi:1.17
*** emacs/man/emacs-mime.texi:1.16      Fri Aug 16 02:29:39 2002
--- emacs/man/emacs-mime.texi   Thu Sep 12 13:14:25 2002
***************
*** 18,24 ****
  
  This file documents the Emacs MIME interface functionality.
  
! Copyright (C) 1998,99,2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  
  Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
  under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
--- 18,24 ----
  
  This file documents the Emacs MIME interface functionality.
  
! Copyright (C) 1998,99,2000, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  
  Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
  under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
***************
*** 47,53 ****
  @page
  
  @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
! Copyright @copyright{} 1998,99,2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  
  Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
  under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
--- 47,53 ----
  @page
  
  @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
! Copyright @copyright{} 1998,99,2000, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  
  Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
  under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
***************
*** 1264,1270 ****
  be chosen.
  
  @vindex mail-parse-charset
! If you are running a non-Mule Emacs, this process is simple: if the part
  contains any address@hidden (8-bit) characters, the @sc{mime} charset
  given by @code{mail-parse-charset} (a symbol) is used.  (Never set this
  variable directly, though.  If you want to change the default charset,
--- 1264,1272 ----
  be chosen.
  
  @vindex mail-parse-charset
! @cindex unibyte Emacs
! If you are running a non-Mule XEmacs, or Emacs in unibyte
! address@hidden, this process is simple: if the part
  contains any address@hidden (8-bit) characters, the @sc{mime} charset
  given by @code{mail-parse-charset} (a symbol) is used.  (Never set this
  variable directly, though.  If you want to change the default charset,
***************
*** 1274,1296 ****
  @sc{ascii} characters, the @sc{mime} charset @samp{US-ASCII} is used, of
  course.
  
! @cindex Mule
! @cindex UTF-8
! @cindex Unicode
  @vindex mm-mime-mule-charset-alist
! Things are slightly more complicated when running Emacs with Mule
! support.  In this case, a list of the Mule charsets used in the part is
! obtained, and the corresponding @sc{mime} charsets are determined.  If
! this results in a single @sc{mime} charset, this is used to encode the
! part.  But if the resulting list of @sc{mime} charsets contains more
! than one element, two things can happen: if it is possible to encode the
! part via UTF-8, this charset is used.  (For this, Emacs must support the
! @code{utf-8} coding system, and the part must consist entirely of
! characters which have Unicode counterparts.)  If UTF-8 is not available,
! the part is split into several, so that each one can be encoded with a
! single @sc{mime} charset.  The part can only be split at line
! boundaries, though---if more than one @sc{mime} charset is required to
! encode a single line, it is not possible to encode the part.
  
  @node Conversion
  @section Conversion
--- 1276,1306 ----
  @sc{ascii} characters, the @sc{mime} charset @samp{US-ASCII} is used, of
  course.
  
! @cindex multibyte Emacs
! @cindex @code{mime-charset} property
! In a normal (multibyte) Emacs session, a list of coding systems is
! derived that can encode the message part's content and correspond to
! MIME charsets (according to their @code{mime-charset} property).  This
! list is according to the normal priority rules and the highest priority
! one is chosen to encode the part.  If no such coding system can encode
! the part's contents, they are split into several parts such that each
! can be encoded with an appropriate coding system/@sc{mime}
! address@hidden part can only be split at line boundaries,
! though---if more than one @sc{mime} charset is required to encode a
! single line, it is not possible to encode the part.}  Note that this
! procedure works with any correctly-defined coding systems, not just
! built-in ones.  Given a suitably-defined UTF-8 coding system---one
! capable of encoding the Emacs charsets you use---it is not normally
! necessary to split a part by charset.
! 
  @vindex mm-mime-mule-charset-alist
! @cindex XEmacs/Mule
! It isn't possible to do this properly in XEmacs/Mule.  Instead, a list
! of the Mule charsets used in the part is obtained, and the
! corresponding @sc{mime} charsets are determined by lookup in
! @code{mm-mime-mule-charset-alist}.  If the list elements all
! correspond to a single @sc{mime} charset, that is used to encode the
! part.  Otherwise, the part is split as above.
  
  @node Conversion
  @section Conversion




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