diff options
author | Skip Montanaro <skip@pobox.com> | 2003-06-29 16:01:51 (GMT) |
---|---|---|
committer | Skip Montanaro <skip@pobox.com> | 2003-06-29 16:01:51 (GMT) |
commit | 32a5e878d7385569b5f43bddcad5a511455222a3 (patch) | |
tree | b6087a75e90fb2aca46abcc0fed61cd257e4b660 /Doc/tut | |
parent | b4e9986782f86833979810305878100e31647603 (diff) | |
download | cpython-32a5e878d7385569b5f43bddcad5a511455222a3.zip cpython-32a5e878d7385569b5f43bddcad5a511455222a3.tar.gz cpython-32a5e878d7385569b5f43bddcad5a511455222a3.tar.bz2 |
minor wordsmithing
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/tut')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/tut/tut.tex | 12 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/tut/tut.tex b/Doc/tut/tut.tex index 1885f5a..9386774 100644 --- a/Doc/tut/tut.tex +++ b/Doc/tut/tut.tex @@ -307,28 +307,28 @@ comment in Python. It is possible to use encodings different than ASCII in Python source files. The best way to do it is to put one more special comment line -right after \code{\#!} line making proper encoding declaration: +right after the \code{\#!} line to define the source file encoding: \begin{verbatim} # -*- coding: iso-8859-1 -*- \end{verbatim} -With that declaration, all characters in the source file will be -treated as belonging to \code{iso-8859-1} encoding, and it will be +With that declaration, all characters in the source file will be treated as +{}\code{iso-8859-1}, and it will be possible to directly write Unicode string literals in the selected -encoding. The list of possible encodings can be found in the +encoding. The list of possible encodings can be found in the \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}, in the section on \module{codecs}. If your editor supports saving files as \code{UTF-8} with an UTF-8 signature (aka BOM -- Byte Order Mark), you can use that instead of an -encoding declaration. IDLE supports such saving if +encoding declaration. IDLE supports this capability if \code{Options/General/Default Source Encoding/UTF-8} is set. Notice that this signature is not understood in older Python releases (2.2 and earlier), and also not understood by the operating system for \code{\#!} files. -By using UTF-8 (either through the signature, or a an encoding +By using UTF-8 (either through the signature or an encoding declaration), characters of most languages in the world can be used simultaneously in string literals and comments. Using non-ASCII characters in identifiers is not supported. To display all these |