diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'erts/doc')
-rw-r--r-- | erts/doc/src/erl.xml | 14 |
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/erl.xml b/erts/doc/src/erl.xml index e737727941..6428a24209 100644 --- a/erts/doc/src/erl.xml +++ b/erts/doc/src/erl.xml @@ -535,12 +535,15 @@ </item> <tag><marker id="file_name_encoding"></marker><c><![CDATA[+fnl]]></c></tag> <item> - <p>The VM works with file names as if they are encoded using the ISO-latin-1 encoding, disallowing Unicode characters with codepoints beyond 255. This is default on operating systems that have transparent file naming, i.e. all Unixes except MacOSX.</p> + <p>The VM works with file names as if they are encoded using the ISO-latin-1 encoding, disallowing Unicode characters with codepoints beyond 255.</p> <p>See <seealso marker="stdlib:unicode_usage#unicode_file_names">STDLIB User's Guide</seealso> for more infomation about unicode file names.</p> </item> <tag><c><![CDATA[+fnu[{w|i|e}]]]></c></tag> <item> - <p>The VM works with file names as if they are encoded using UTF-8 (or some other system specific Unicode encoding). This is the default on operating systems that enforce Unicode encoding, i.e. Windows and MacOSX.</p> + <p>The VM works with file names as if they are encoded using + UTF-8 (or some other system specific Unicode encoding). This + is the default on operating systems that enforce Unicode + encoding, i.e. Windows and MacOS X.</p> <p>The <c>+fnu</c> switch can be followed by <c>w</c>, <c>i</c>, or <c>e</c> to control the way wrongly encoded file names are to be reported. <c>w</c> means that a warning is @@ -556,7 +559,12 @@ </item> <tag><c><![CDATA[+fna[{w|i|e}]]]></c></tag> <item> - <p>Selection between <c>+fnl</c> and <c>+fnu</c> is done based on the current locale settings in the OS, meaning that if you have set your terminal for UTF-8 encoding, the filesystem is expected to use the same encoding for file names (use with care).</p> + <p>Selection between <c>+fnl</c> and <c>+fnu</c> is done based + on the current locale settings in the OS, meaning that if you + have set your terminal for UTF-8 encoding, the filesystem is + expected to use the same encoding for file names. This is + default on all operating systems except MacOS X and + Windows.</p> <p>The <c>+fna</c> switch can be followed by <c>w</c>, <c>i</c>, or <c>e</c>. This will have effect if the locale settings cause the behavior of <c>+fnu</c> to be selected. |