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[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/files.texi
From: |
Eli Zaretskii |
Subject: |
[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/files.texi |
Date: |
Sun, 02 Nov 2003 02:01:44 -0500 |
Index: emacs/man/files.texi
diff -c emacs/man/files.texi:1.84 emacs/man/files.texi:1.85
*** emacs/man/files.texi:1.84 Mon Sep 22 11:49:13 2003
--- emacs/man/files.texi Sun Nov 2 02:01:06 2003
***************
*** 139,145 ****
@code{substitute-in-file-name}. The substitution is performed only on
file names read as such using the minibuffer.
! You can include non-ASCII characters in file names if you set the
variable @code{file-name-coding-system} to a address@hidden value.
@xref{Specify Coding}.
--- 139,145 ----
@code{substitute-in-file-name}. The substitution is performed only on
file names read as such using the minibuffer.
! You can include address@hidden characters in file names if you set the
variable @code{file-name-coding-system} to a address@hidden value.
@xref{Specify Coding}.
***************
*** 316,322 ****
system. @xref{Frames}.
@findex find-file-literally
! If you wish to edit a file as a sequence of ASCII characters with no special
encoding or conversion, use the @kbd{M-x find-file-literally} command.
It visits a file, like @kbd{C-x C-f}, but does not do format conversion
(@pxref{Formatted Text}), character code conversion (@pxref{Coding
--- 316,322 ----
system. @xref{Frames}.
@findex find-file-literally
! If you wish to edit a file as a sequence of @acronym{ASCII} characters with
no special
encoding or conversion, use the @kbd{M-x find-file-literally} command.
It visits a file, like @kbd{C-x C-f}, but does not do format conversion
(@pxref{Formatted Text}), character code conversion (@pxref{Coding
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Eli Zaretskii <=