> >>> This looks like it would conflict with Emacs usage. > >> > >> Where is the conflict? This is precisely the syntax for declaring > >> an encoding to Emacs, and by now Emacs also recognizes standard > >> encoding names like "GB2312" and "UTF-8". > > > > It's also the method to describe a minor mode to Emacs. For > > example, all my documents start with: > > > > .\" This file is in -*- nroff-fill -*- mode > > > > More importantly though, you intend this to talk to groff, not to > > Emacs.
The syntax needs the `coding:' tag; everything else is ignored. I don't see a problem here. > > groff defines the term 'request' specially: it refers to the > > commands that start at the beginning of the line with . or '. I > > was thinking more like: > > > > .Character-Encoding EUC-JP > > > > This would incidentally also allow changing the character set in > > mid-stream, at least syntactically. I suspect there may be > > reasons that make it impractical. Exactly. Basically, the encoding of a file is a meta information and should stayed fixed for the whole document. Werner _______________________________________________ Groff mailing list Groff@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/groff