52 lines
2.0 KiB
Plaintext
52 lines
2.0 KiB
Plaintext
$ $XConsortium: fmt_tbl.msg /main/3 1995/11/08 13:19:33 rswiston $
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$set 1
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$
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$ This file is to specify special formatting characteristics of a
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$ language. It defines which characters of the language can not end a
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$ line of text, begin a line of text or whether to replace internal
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$ newlines with spaces.
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$ This file is ONLY necessary for languages with MULTIBYTE character
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$ sets. For single byte character sets (I.E. English, German, French,
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$ etc.), the system has a built in default list of characters that can
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$ not begin and end a line. For single byte languages, the system will
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$ also always replace newlines with spaces.
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$
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$ This table is for <???>
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$
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$ message #1 indicates the list of 2byte punctuation, special characters
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$ and double consonants that cannot start a line.
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$
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1 <여기에 목록을 놓으십시오.>
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$
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$ message #2 indicates the list of 2byte punctuation, special characters
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$ and double consonants that cannot end a line.
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$
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2 <여기에 목록을 놓으십시오>
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$
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$ message #3 indicates whether the language wants all end-of-lines in
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$ text to be changed into spaces. I.E. in english if you had
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$
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$ 'the quick brown fox'
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$ 'jumps over the lazy dog'
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$
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$ would be output as 'the quick brown fox jumps....'. If this was
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$ translated into Japanese but leaving the break where it appeared in the
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$ sentence, the newline between 'fox' and 'jumps' would be compressed out
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$ and no space would be put between the two words. But if 'fox' was in
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$ Japanese and 'jump' was in english, the newline would be turned into a
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$ space. The same (newline -> space) would occur if 'fox' was in english
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$ and 'jumps' was in Japanese.
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$
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$ Therefore, the values for message #3 should be
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$ 1 - means that newlines are always turned into spaces.
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$ 0 - means that newlines are turned into space only if they
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$ occur between a multibyte character and a single byte
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$ character.
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$ Example:
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$ For Japanese, the 'value' of message #3 would be '0'
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$
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3 1
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