In the bad old days this used to be quite a hassle. Every
separate program had to be convinced individually to leave your
bits alone. Not that all is easy now, but recently a lot of gnu
utilities have learned to react to
LC_CTYPE=iso_8859_1 or
LC_CTYPE=iso-8859-1. Try this first, and if it
doesn't help look at the hints below. Note that in recent
versions of libc the routine setlocale() only works if you have
installed the locale files (e.g. in
/usr/lib/locale).
First of all, the 8-th bit should survive the kernel input
processing, so make sure to have stty cs8 -istrip
-parenb set.
A. For emacs the details strongly depend on the
version. The information below is for version 19.34. Put lines
into your(set-input-mode nil nil 1) (standard-display-european t) (require 'iso-syntax)
$HOME/.emacs. The first line
(to be precise: the final 1) tells emacs not to
discard the 8-th bit from input characters. The second line tells
emacs not to display non-ASCII characters as octal
escapes. The third line specifies the syntactic properties and case
conversion table for the Latin-1 character set These last two lines
are superfluous if you have something like
LC_CTYPE=ISO-8859-1 in your environment. (The variable
may also be LC_ALL or even LANG. The
value may be anything with a substring `88591' or `8859-1' or
`8859_1'.)
This is a good start. On a terminal that cannot display non-ASCII ISO 8859-1 symbols, the command
will cause accented characters to be displayed comme {,c}a. If your keymap does not make it easy to produce non-ASCII characters, then(load-library "iso-ascii")
will make the 2-character sequence Ctrl-X 8 a compose character, so that the 4-character sequence Ctrl-X 8 , c produces c-cedilla. Very inconvenient.(load-library "iso-transl")
The command
will toggle ISO-8859-1 accent mode, in which the six characters ', `, ", ^, ~, / are dead keys modifying the following symbol. Special combinations: ~c gives a c with cedilla, ~d gives an Icelandic eth, ~t gives an Icelandic thorn, "s gives German sharp s, /a gives a with ring, /e gives an a-e ligature, ~< and ~> give guillemots, ~! gives an inverted exclamation mark, ~? gives an inverted question mark, and '' gives an acute accent. This is the default mapping of accents. The variable(iso-accents-mode)
iso-languages is a list of pairs (language name,
accent mapping), and a non-default mapping can be selected using
Here LANGUAGE can be one of(iso-accents-customize LANGUAGE)
"portuguese",
"irish", "french",
"latin-2", "latin-1".
Since the Linux default compose character is Ctrl-. it might be convenient to use that everywhere. Try
The latter line will not work under(load-library "iso-insert.el") (define-key global-map [?\C-.] 8859-1-map)
xterm, if you use emacs -nw, but in that
case you can put
in yourXTerm*VT100.Translations: #override\n\ Ctrl <KeyPress> . : string("\0308")
.Xresources.)
B. For less, put LESSCHARSET=latin1 in
the environment. This is also what you need if you see
\255 or <AD> in man
output: some versions of less will render the soft
hyphen (octal 0255, hex 0xAD) this way when not given permission
to output Latin-1.
C. For ls, give the option -N.
(Probably you want to make an alias.)
D. For bash (version 1.13.*), put
into yourset meta-flag on set convert-meta off set output-meta on
$HOME/.inputrc.
E. For tcsh, use
If you have nls on your system, then the corresponding routines are used. Otherwisesetenv LANG US_en setenv LC_CTYPE iso_8859_1
tcsh will assume
iso_8859_1, regardless of the values given to LANG and LC_CTYPE.
See the section NATIVE LANGUAGE SYSTEM in tcsh(1). (The Danish
HOWTO says: setenv LC_CTYPE ISO-8859-1; stty pass8)
F. For flex, give the option -8 if the
parser it generates must be able to handle 8-bit input. (Of
course it must.)
G. For elm, set displaycharset to
ISO-8859-1. (Danish HOWTO: LANG=C and
LC_CTYPE=ISO-8859-1)
H. For programs using curses (such as lynx) David
Sibley reports: The regular curses package uses the high-order
bit for reverse video mode (see flag _STANDOUT defined in
/usr/include/curses.h). However,
ncurses seems to be 8-bit clean and does display
iso-latin-8859-1 correctly.
I. For programs using groff (such as
man), make sure to use -Tlatin1 instead
of -Tascii. Old versions of the program
man also use col, and the next point
also applies.
J. For col, make sure 1) that it is fixed so as to
do setlocale(LC_CTYPE,""); and 2) put
LC_CTYPE=ISO-8859-1 in the environment.
K. For rlogin, use option -8.
L. For joe,
metalab.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/apps/editors/joe-1.0.8-linux.tar.gz
is said to work after editing the configuration file. Someone
else said: joe: Put the -asis option in
/isr/lib/joerc in the first column.
M. For LaTeX: \documentstyle[isolatin]{article}. For
LaTeX2e:
\documentclass{article}\usepackage{isolatin} where
isolatin.sty is available from ftp.vlsivie.tuwien.ac.at/pub/8bit.
A nice discussion on the topic of ISO-8859-1 and how to manage
8-bit characters is contained in the file
grasp.insa-lyon.fr:/pub/faq/fr/accents (in French).
Another fine discussion (in English) can be found in
rtfm.mit.edu:pub/usenet-by-group/comp.answers/internationalization/iso-8859-1-charset.
If you need to fix a program that behaves badly with 8-bit characters, one thing to keep in mind is that if you have a signed char type then characters may be negative, and using them as an array index will fail. Several programs can be fixed by judiciously adding (unsigned char) casts.