From 08504087f66ab23e39c082782524e2d1e531e3e7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Siri Hansen
Date: Tue, 11 Nov 2014 15:16:03 +0100
Subject: Remove comments about unicode atoms in OTP 18
There was once a plan to implement support for unicode atoms in OTP
18. This plan has been stopped until further notice, and the
information about this is now removed from the documentation.
---
lib/stdlib/doc/src/unicode_usage.xml | 15 +++++----------
1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
(limited to 'lib/stdlib')
diff --git a/lib/stdlib/doc/src/unicode_usage.xml b/lib/stdlib/doc/src/unicode_usage.xml
index bebfbd4514..29b8940c62 100644
--- a/lib/stdlib/doc/src/unicode_usage.xml
+++ b/lib/stdlib/doc/src/unicode_usage.xml
@@ -50,12 +50,8 @@
encoded files in several circumstances. Most notable is the support
for UTF-8 in files read by file:consult/1, release handler support
for UTF-8 and more support for Unicode character sets in the
- I/O-system.
-
- In Erlang/OTP 17.0, the encoding default for Erlang source files was
- switched to UTF-8 and in Erlang/OTP 18.0 Erlang will support atoms in the full
- Unicode range, meaning full Unicode function and module
- names
+ I/O-system. In Erlang/OTP 17.0, the encoding default for Erlang source files was
+ switched to UTF-8.
This guide outlines the current Unicode support and gives a couple
of recipes for working with Unicode data.
@@ -289,8 +285,8 @@
The language
- Having the source code in UTF-8 also allows you to write
string literals containing Unicode characters with code points >
- 255, although atoms, module names and function names will be
- restricted to the ISO-Latin-1 range until the Erlang/OTP 18.0 release. Binary
+ 255, although atoms, module names and function names are
+ restricted to the ISO-Latin-1 range. Binary
literals where you use the /utf8 type, can also be
expressed using Unicode characters > 255. Having module names
using characters other than 7-bit ASCII can cause trouble on
@@ -385,8 +381,7 @@ external_charlist() = maybe_improper_list(char() |
using characters from the ISO-latin-1 character set and atoms are
restricted to the same ISO-latin-1 range. These restrictions in the
language are of course independent of the encoding of the source
- file. Erlang/OTP 18.0 is expected to handle functions named in
- Unicode as well as Unicode atoms.
+ file.
Bit-syntax
The bit-syntax contains types for coping with binary data in the
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