This chapter covers the special issues relating to non-ASCII characters and how they are stored in strings and buffers.
Emacs has two text representations---two ways to represent text in a string or buffer. These are called unibyte and multibyte. Each string, and each buffer, uses one of these two representations. For most purposes, you can ignore the issue of representations, because Emacs converts text between them as appropriate. Occasionally in Lisp programming you will need to pay attention to the difference.
In unibyte representation, each character occupies one byte and
therefore the possible character codes range from 0 to 255. Codes 0
through 127 are ASCII characters; the codes from 128 through 255
are used for one non-ASCII character set (you can choose which
character set by setting the variable nonascii-insert-offset
).
In multibyte representation, a character may occupy more than one byte, and as a result, the full range of Emacs character codes can be stored. The first byte of a multibyte character is always in the range 128 through 159 (octal 0200 through 0237). These values are called leading codes. The second and subsequent bytes of a multibyte character are always in the range 160 through 255 (octal 0240 through 0377); these values are trailing codes.
In a buffer, the buffer-local value of the variable
enable-multibyte-characters
specifies the representation used.
The representation for a string is determined based on the string
contents when the string is constructed.
nil
, the buffer contains multibyte text; otherwise,
it contains unibyte text.
You cannot set this variable directly; instead, use the function
set-buffer-multibyte
to change a buffer's representation.
(default-value
'enable-multibyte-characters)
, and setting this variable changes that
default value. Setting the local binding of
enable-multibyte-characters
in a specific buffer is not allowed,
but changing the default value is supported, and it is a reasonable
thing to do, because it has no effect on existing buffers.
The `--unibyte' command line option does its job by setting the
default value to nil
early in startup.
t
if string contains multibyte characters.
Emacs can convert unibyte text to multibyte; it can also convert multibyte text to unibyte, though this conversion loses information. In general these conversions happen when inserting text into a buffer, or when putting text from several strings together in one string. You can also explicitly convert a string's contents to either representation.
Emacs chooses the representation for a string based on the text that it is constructed from. The general rule is to convert unibyte text to multibyte text when combining it with other multibyte text, because the multibyte representation is more general and can hold whatever characters the unibyte text has.
When inserting text into a buffer, Emacs converts the text to the
buffer's representation, as specified by
enable-multibyte-characters
in that buffer. In particular, when
you insert multibyte text into a unibyte buffer, Emacs converts the text
to unibyte, even though this conversion cannot in general preserve all
the characters that might be in the multibyte text. The other natural
alternative, to convert the buffer contents to multibyte, is not
acceptable because the buffer's representation is a choice made by the
user that cannot be overridden automatically.
Converting unibyte text to multibyte text leaves ASCII characters
unchanged, and likewise 128 through 159. It converts the non-ASCII
codes 160 through 255 by adding the value nonascii-insert-offset
to each character code. By setting this variable, you specify which
character set the unibyte characters correspond to (see section Character Sets). For example, if nonascii-insert-offset
is 2048, which is
(- (make-char 'latin-iso8859-1) 128)
, then the unibyte
non-ASCII characters correspond to Latin 1. If it is 2688, which
is (- (make-char 'greek-iso8859-7) 128)
, then they correspond to
Greek letters.
Converting multibyte text to unibyte is simpler: it performs
logical-and of each character code with 255. If
nonascii-insert-offset
has a reasonable value, corresponding to
the beginning of some character set, this conversion is the inverse of
the other: converting unibyte text to multibyte and back to unibyte
reproduces the original unibyte text.
self-insert-command
inserts a character in the unibyte
non-ASCII range, 128 through 255. However, the function
insert-char
does not perform this conversion.
The right value to use to select character set cs is (-
(make-char cs) 128)
. If the value of
nonascii-insert-offset
is zero, then conversion actually uses the
value for the Latin 1 character set, rather than zero.
nonascii-insert-offset
. You can use it to specify independently
how to translate each code in the range of 128 through 255 into a
multibyte character. The value should be a vector, or nil
.
If this is non-nil
, it overrides nonascii-insert-offset
.
Sometimes it is useful to examine an existing buffer or string as multibyte when it was unibyte, or vice versa.
nil
, the buffer becomes multibyte. If multibyte
is nil
, the buffer becomes unibyte.
This function leaves the buffer contents unchanged when viewed as a sequence of bytes. As a consequence, it can change the contents viewed as characters; a sequence of two bytes which is treated as one character in multibyte representation will count as two characters in unibyte representation.
This function sets enable-multibyte-characters
to record which
representation is in use. It also adjusts various data in the buffer
(including overlays, text properties and markers) so that they cover the
same text as they did before.
If string is unibyte already, then the value is string itself.
If string is multibyte already, then the value is string itself.
The unibyte and multibyte text representations use different character codes. The valid character codes for unibyte representation range from 0 to 255--the values that can fit in one byte. The valid character codes for multibyte representation range from 0 to 524287, but not all values in that range are valid. In particular, the values 128 through 255 are not legitimate in multibyte text (though they can occur in "raw bytes"; see section Explicit Encoding and Decoding). Only the ASCII codes 0 through 127 are fully legitimate in both representations.
t
if charcode is valid for either one of the two
text representations.
(char-valid-p 65) => t (char-valid-p 256) => nil (char-valid-p 2248) => t
Emacs classifies characters into various character sets, each of which has a name which is a symbol. Each character belongs to one and only one character set.
In general, there is one character set for each distinct script. For
example, latin-iso8859-1
is one character set,
greek-iso8859-7
is another, and ascii
is another. An
Emacs character set can hold at most 9025 characters; therefore, in some
cases, characters that would logically be grouped together are split
into several character sets. For example, one set of Chinese
characters, generally known as Big 5, is divided into two Emacs
character sets, chinese-big5-1
and chinese-big5-2
.
t
if object is a character set name symbol,
nil
otherwise.
In multibyte representation, each character occupies one or more bytes. Each character set has an introduction sequence, which is normally one or two bytes long. (Exception: the ASCII character set has a zero-length introduction sequence.) The introduction sequence is the beginning of the byte sequence for any character in the character set. The rest of the character's bytes distinguish it from the other characters in the same character set. Depending on the character set, there are either one or two distinguishing bytes; the number of such bytes is called the dimension of the character set.
This is the simplest way to determine the byte length of a character set's introduction sequence:
(- (char-bytes (make-char charset)) (charset-dimension charset))
The functions in this section convert between characters and the byte values used to represent them. For most purposes, there is no need to be concerned with the sequence of bytes used to represent a character, because Emacs translates automatically when necessary.
(char-bytes 2248) => 2 (char-bytes 65) => 1 (char-bytes 192) => 1
The reason this function can give correct results for both multibyte and unibyte representations is that the non-ASCII character codes used in those two representations do not overlap.
(split-char 2248) => (latin-iso8859-1 72) (split-char 65) => (ascii 65)
Unibyte non-ASCII characters are considered as part of
the ascii
character set:
(split-char 192) => (ascii 192)
split-char
. Normally, you should specify either one or two
byte-values, according to the dimension of charset. For
example,
(make-char 'latin-iso8859-1 72) => 2248
If you call make-char
with no byte-values, the result is
a generic character which stands for charset. A generic
character is an integer, but it is not valid for insertion in the
buffer as a character. It can be used in char-table-range
to
refer to the whole character set (see section Char-Tables).
char-valid-p
returns nil
for generic characters.
For example:
(make-char 'latin-iso8859-1) => 2176 (char-valid-p 2176) => nil (split-char 2176) => (latin-iso8859-1 0)
Sometimes it is useful to find out which character sets appear in a part of a buffer or a string. One use for this is in determining which coding systems (see section Coding Systems) are capable of representing all of the text in question.
The optional argument translation specifies a translation table to
be used in scanning the text (see section Translation of Characters). If it
is non-nil
, then each character in the region is translated
through this table, and the value returned describes the translated
characters instead of the characters actually in the buffer.
The optional argument translation specifies a
translation table; see find-charset-region
, above.
A translation table specifies a mapping of characters into characters. These tables are used in encoding and decoding, and for other purposes. Some coding systems specify their own particular translation tables; there are also default translation tables which apply to all other coding systems.
(from
. to)
; this says to translate the character from into
to.
You can also map one whole character set into another character set with the same dimension. To do this, you specify a generic character (which designates a character set) for from (see section Splitting Characters). In this case, to should also be a generic character, for another character set of the same dimension. Then the translation table translates each character of from's character set into the corresponding character of to's character set.
In decoding, the translation table's translations are applied to the
characters that result from ordinary decoding. If a coding system has
property character-translation-table-for-decode
, that specifies
the translation table to use. Otherwise, if
standard-character-translation-table-for-decode
is
non-nil
, decoding uses that table.
In encoding, the translation table's translations are applied to the
characters in the buffer, and the result of translation is actually
encoded. If a coding system has property
character-translation-table-for-encode
, that specifies the
translation table to use. Otherwise the variable
standard-character-translation-table-for-encode
specifies the
translation table.
When Emacs reads or writes a file, and when Emacs sends text to a subprocess or receives text from a subprocess, it normally performs character code conversion and end-of-line conversion as specified by a particular coding system.
Character code conversion involves conversion between the encoding used inside Emacs and some other encoding. Emacs supports many different encodings, in that it can convert to and from them. For example, it can convert text to or from encodings such as Latin 1, Latin 2, Latin 3, Latin 4, Latin 5, and several variants of ISO 2022. In some cases, Emacs supports several alternative encodings for the same characters; for example, there are three coding systems for the Cyrillic (Russian) alphabet: ISO, Alternativnyj, and KOI8.
Most coding systems specify a particular character code for conversion, but some of them leave this unspecified--to be chosen heuristically based on the data.
End of line conversion handles three different conventions used on various systems for representing end of line in files. The Unix convention is to use the linefeed character (also called newline). The DOS convention is to use the two character sequence, carriage-return linefeed, at the end of a line. The Mac convention is to use just carriage-return.
Base coding systems such as latin-1
leave the end-of-line
conversion unspecified, to be chosen based on the data. Variant
coding systems such as latin-1-unix
, latin-1-dos
and
latin-1-mac
specify the end-of-line conversion explicitly as
well. Most base coding systems have three corresponding variants whose
names are formed by adding `-unix', `-dos' and `-mac'.
The coding system raw-text
is special in that it prevents
character code conversion, and causes the buffer visited with that
coding system to be a unibyte buffer. It does not specify the
end-of-line conversion, allowing that to be determined as usual by the
data, and has the usual three variants which specify the end-of-line
conversion. no-conversion
is equivalent to raw-text-unix
:
it specifies no conversion of either character codes or end-of-line.
The coding system emacs-mule
specifies that the data is
represented in the internal Emacs encoding. This is like
raw-text
in that no code conversion happens, but different in
that the result is multibyte data.
mime-charset
.
That property's value is the name used in MIME for the character coding
which this coding system can read and write. Examples:
(coding-system-get 'iso-latin-1 'mime-charset) => iso-8859-1 (coding-system-get 'iso-2022-cn 'mime-charset) => iso-2022-cn (coding-system-get 'cyrillic-koi8 'mime-charset) => koi8-r
The value of the mime-charset
property is also defined
as an alias for the coding system.
The principal purpose of coding systems is for use in reading and
writing files. The function insert-file-contents
uses
a coding system for decoding the file data, and write-region
uses one to encode the buffer contents.
You can specify the coding system to use either explicitly
(see section Specifying a Coding System for One Operation), or implicitly using the defaulting
mechanism (see section Default Coding Systems). But these methods may not
completely specify what to do. For example, they may choose a coding
system such as undefined
which leaves the character code
conversion to be determined from the data. In these cases, the I/O
operation finishes the job of choosing a coding system. Very often
you will want to find out afterwards which coding system was chosen.
write-region
. When those operations ask the
user to specify a different coding system,
buffer-file-coding-system
is updated to the coding system
specified.
write-region
. When saving the buffer asks the
user to specify a different coding system, and
save-buffer-coding-system
was used, then it is updated to the
coding system that was specified.
Warning: Since receiving subprocess output sets this variable, it can change whenever Emacs waits; therefore, you should use copy the value shortly after the function call which stores the value you are interested in.
The variable selection-coding-system
specifies how to encode
selections for the window system. See section Window System Selections.
Here are Lisp facilities for working with coding systems;
nil
, the value includes only the
base coding systems. Otherwise, it includes variant coding systems as well.
t
if object is a coding system
name.
coding-system-error
.
eol-type
.
eol-type should be unix
, dos
, mac
, or
nil
. If it is nil
, the returned coding system determines
the end-of-line conversion from the data.
nil
, it returns
undecided
, or one of its variants according to eol-coding.
If the text contains no multibyte characters, the function returns the
list (undecided)
.
(undecided)
.
Normally this function returns a list of coding systems that could
handle decoding the text that was scanned. They are listed in order of
decreasing priority. But if highest is non-nil
, then the
return value is just one coding system, the one that is highest in
priority.
If the region contains only ASCII characters, the value
is undecided
or (undecided)
.
detect-coding-region
except that it
operates on the contents of string instead of bytes in the buffer.
See section Process Information, for how to examine or set the coding systems used for I/O to a subprocess.
The optional argument preferred-coding-system specifies a coding
system to try first. If that one can handle the text in the specified
region, then it is used. If this argument is omitted, the current
buffer's value of buffer-file-coding-system
is tried first.
If the region contains some multibyte characters that the preferred coding system cannot encode, this function asks the user to choose from a list of coding systems which can encode the text, and returns the user's choice.
One other kludgy feature: if from is a string, the string is the target text, and to is ignored.
Here are two functions you can use to let the user specify a coding system, with completion. See section Completion.
This section describes variables that specify the default coding system for certain files or when running certain subprograms, and the function that I/O operations use to access them.
The idea of these variables is that you set them once and for all to the
defaults you want, and then do not change them again. To specify a
particular coding system for a particular operation in a Lisp program,
don't change these variables; instead, override them using
coding-system-for-read
and coding-system-for-write
(see section Specifying a Coding System for One Operation).
(pattern . coding)
, where pattern is a regular
expression that matches certain file names. The element applies to file
names that match pattern.
The CDR of the element, coding, should be either a coding system, a cons cell containing two coding systems, or a function symbol. If val is a coding system, that coding system is used for both reading the file and writing it. If val is a cons cell containing two coding systems, its CAR specifies the coding system for decoding, and its CDR specifies the coding system for encoding.
If val is a function symbol, the function must return a coding system or a cons cell containing two coding systems. This value is used as described above.
file-coding-system-alist
, except that pattern is
matched against the program name used to start the subprocess. The coding
system or systems specified in this alist are used to initialize the
coding systems used for I/O to the subprocess, but you can specify
other coding systems later using set-process-coding-system
.
Warning: Coding systems such as undecided
which
determine the coding system from the data do not work entirely reliably
with asynchronous subprocess output. This is because Emacs handles
asynchronous subprocess output in batches, as it arrives. If the coding
system leaves the character code conversion unspecified, or leaves the
end-of-line conversion unspecified, Emacs must try to detect the proper
conversion from one batch at a time, and this does not always work.
Therefore, with an asynchronous subprocess, if at all possible, use a
coding system which determines both the character code conversion and
the end of line conversion--that is, one like latin-1-unix
,
rather than undecided
or latin-1
.
file-coding-system-alist
,
with the difference that the pattern in an element may be either a
port number or a regular expression. If it is a regular expression, it
is matched against the network service name used to open the network
stream.
The value should be a cons cell of the form (input-coding
. output-coding)
. Here input-coding applies to input from
the subprocess, and output-coding applies to output to it.
(decoding-system encoding-system)
The first element, decoding-system, is the coding system to use for decoding (in case operation does decoding), and encoding-system is the coding system for encoding (in case operation does encoding).
The argument operation should be an Emacs I/O primitive:
insert-file-contents
, write-region
, call-process
,
call-process-region
, start-process
, or
open-network-stream
.
The remaining arguments should be the same arguments that might be given
to that I/O primitive. Depending on which primitive, one of those
arguments is selected as the target. For example, if
operation does file I/O, whichever argument specifies the file
name is the target. For subprocess primitives, the process name is the
target. For open-network-stream
, the target is the service name
or port number.
This function looks up the target in file-coding-system-alist
,
process-coding-system-alist
, or
network-coding-system-alist
, depending on operation.
See section Default Coding Systems.
You can specify the coding system for a specific operation by binding
the variables coding-system-for-read
and/or
coding-system-for-write
.
nil
, it specifies the coding system to
use for reading a file, or for input from a synchronous subprocess.
It also applies to any asynchronous subprocess or network stream, but in
a different way: the value of coding-system-for-read
when you
start the subprocess or open the network stream specifies the input
decoding method for that subprocess or network stream. It remains in
use for that subprocess or network stream unless and until overridden.
The right way to use this variable is to bind it with let
for a
specific I/O operation. Its global value is normally nil
, and
you should not globally set it to any other value. Here is an example
of the right way to use the variable:
;; Read the file with no character code conversion. ;; Assume CRLF represents end-of-line. (let ((coding-system-for-write 'emacs-mule-dos)) (insert-file-contents filename))
When its value is non-nil
, coding-system-for-read
takes
precedence over all other methods of specifying a coding system to use for
input, including file-coding-system-alist
,
process-coding-system-alist
and
network-coding-system-alist
.
coding-system-for-read
, except that it
applies to output rather than input. It affects writing to files,
subprocesses, and net connections.
When a single operation does both input and output, as do
call-process-region
and start-process
, both
coding-system-for-read
and coding-system-for-write
affect it.
nil
, no end-of-line conversion is done,
no matter which coding system is specified. This applies to all the
Emacs I/O and subprocess primitives, and to the explicit encoding and
decoding functions (see section Explicit Encoding and Decoding).
All the operations that transfer text in and out of Emacs have the ability to use a coding system to encode or decode the text. You can also explicitly encode and decode text using the functions in this section.
The result of encoding, and the input to decoding, are not ordinary
text. They are "raw bytes"---bytes that represent text in the same
way that an external file would. When a buffer contains raw bytes, it
is most natural to mark that buffer as using unibyte representation,
using set-buffer-multibyte
(see section Selecting a Representation),
but this is not required. If the buffer's contents are only temporarily
raw, leave the buffer multibyte, which will be correct after you decode
them.
The usual way to get raw bytes in a buffer, for explicit decoding, is
to read them from a file with insert-file-contents-literally
(see section Reading from Files) or specify a non-nil
rawfile
argument when visiting a file with find-file-noselect
.
The usual way to use the raw bytes that result from explicitly
encoding text is to copy them to a file or process--for example, to
write them with write-region
(see section Writing to Files), and
suppress encoding for that write-region
call by binding
coding-system-for-write
to no-conversion
.
Raw bytes sometimes contain overlong byte-sequences that look like a proper multibyte character plus extra bytes containing trailing codes. For most purposes, Emacs treats such a sequence in a buffer or string as a single character, and if you look at its character code, you get the value that corresponds to the multibyte character sequence--the extra bytes are disregarded. This behavior is not quite clean, but raw bytes are used only in limited places in Emacs, so as a practical matter problems can be avoided.
Emacs can decode keyboard input using a coding system, and encode
terminal output. This is useful for terminals that transmit or display
text using a particular encoding such as Latin-1. Emacs does not set
last-coding-system-used
for encoding or decoding for the
terminal.
nil
if no coding system is to be used.
nil
,
that means do not decode keyboard input.
nil
for no encoding.
nil
,
that means do not encode terminal output.
Emacs on MS-DOS and on MS-Windows recognizes certain file names as text files or binary files. By "binary file" we mean a file of literal byte values that are not necessary meant to be characters. Emacs does no end-of-line conversion and no character code conversion for a binary file. Meanwhile, when you create a new file which is marked by its name as a "text file", Emacs uses DOS end-of-line conversion.
buffer-file-coding-system
, this variable is
used to determine which coding system to use when writing the contents
of the buffer. It should be nil
for text, t
for binary.
If it is t
, the coding system is no-conversion
.
Otherwise, undecided-dos
is used.
Normally this variable is set by visiting a file; it is set to
nil
if the file was visited without any actual conversion.
nil
for text, t
for binary, or a function to call to
compute which. If it is a function, then it is called with a single
argument (the file name) and should return t
or nil
.
Emacs when running on MS-DOS or MS-Windows checks this alist to decide
which coding system to use when reading a file. For a text file,
undecided-dos
is used. For a binary file, no-conversion
is used.
If no element in this alist matches a given file name, then
default-buffer-file-type
says how to treat the file.
file-name-buffer-file-type-alist
says nothing about the type.
If this variable is non-nil
, then these files are treated as
binary: the coding system no-conversion
is used. Otherwise,
nothing special is done for them--the coding system is deduced solely
from the file contents, in the usual Emacs fashion.
Input methods provide convenient ways of entering non-ASCII characters from the keyboard. Unlike coding systems, which translate non-ASCII characters to and from encodings meant to be read by programs, input methods provide human-friendly commands. (See section `Input Methods' in The GNU Emacs Manual, for information on how users use input methods to enter text.) How to define input methods is not yet documented in this manual, but here we describe how to use them.
Each input method has a name, which is currently a string; in the future, symbols may also be usable as input method names.
nil
if no input method is active in the
buffer now.
current-input-method
, this variable is
normally global.
default-input-method
to input-method.
If input-method is nil
, this function deactivates any input
method for the current buffer.
nil
, that is returned
by default, if the user enters empty input. However, if
inhibit-null is non-nil
, empty input signals an error.
The returned value is a string.
(input-method language-env activate-func title description args...)
Here input-method is the input method name, a string; language-env is another string, the name of the language environment this input method is recommended for. (That serves only for documentation purposes.)
title is a string to display in the mode line while this method is active. description is a string describing this method and what it is good for.
activate-func is a function to call to activate this method. The args, if any, are passed as arguments to activate-func. All told, the arguments to activate-func are input-method and the args.
The fundamental interface to input methods is through the
variable input-method-function
. See section Reading One Event.
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