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The ISO 8859 Latin-n character sets define character codes in the range 0240 to 0377 octal (160 to 255 decimal) to handle the accented letters and punctuation needed by various European languages (and some non-European ones). Note that Emacs considers bytes with codes in this range as raw bytes, not as characters, even in a unibyte buffer, i.e., if you disable multibyte characters. However, Emacs can still handle these character codes as if they belonged to one of the single-byte character sets at a time. To specify which of these codes to use, invoke M-x set-language-environment and specify a suitable language environment such as ‘Latin-n’. See Disabling Multibyte Characters in GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
Emacs can also display bytes in the range 160 to 255 as
readable characters, provided the terminal or font in use
supports them. This works automatically. On a graphical display,
Emacs can also display single-byte characters through fontsets,
in effect by displaying the equivalent multibyte characters
according to the current language environment. To request this,
set the variable
unibyte-display-via-language-environment to a
non-nil value. Note that setting this only affects
how these bytes are displayed, but does not change the
fundamental fact that Emacs treats them as raw bytes, not as
characters.
If your terminal does not support display of the Latin-1
character set, Emacs can display these characters as
ASCII sequences which at least give you a
clear idea of what the characters are. To do this, load the
library iso-ascii. Similar libraries for other
Latin-n character sets could be implemented, but have
not been so far.
Normally non-ISO-8859 characters (decimal codes between 128
and 159 inclusive) are displayed as octal escapes. You can change
this for non-standard extended versions of ISO-8859 character
sets by using the function standard-display-8bit in
the disp-table library.
There are two ways to input single-byte non-ASCII characters:
On a graphical display, you should not need to do anything
special to use these keys; they should simply work. On a text
terminal, you should use the command M-x
set-keyboard-coding-system or customize the variable
keyboard-coding-system to specify which coding
system your keyboard uses (see Terminal Coding).
Enabling this feature will probably require you to use
ESC to type Meta characters; however, on
a console terminal or in xterm, you can arrange
for Meta to be converted to ESC and
still be able type 8-bit characters present directly on the
keyboard or using Compose or AltGr keys. See User Input.
C-x 8 works by loading the
iso-transl library. Once that library is loaded,
the Alt modifier key, if the keyboard
has one, serves the same purpose as C-x 8: use
Alt together with an accent character to
modify the following letter. In addition, if the keyboard has
keys for the Latin-1 dead accent characters, they too are
defined to compose with the following character, once
iso-transl is loaded.
Use C-x 8 C-h to list all the available C-x 8 translations.
Next: Charsets, Previous: Undisplayable Characters, Up: International [Contents][Index]