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authorEli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>2001-04-07 08:00:51 +0000
committerEli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>2001-04-07 08:00:51 +0000
commitcf47c5b2caeea44ee1e5be897595471abc05be44 (patch)
treecd5afc60e0559a3e9854bd1985bcbdadb183438a /man/msdog.texi
parent51f32106f2de16e15de19e15ae714ff7f3e82b22 (diff)
downloademacs-cf47c5b2caeea44ee1e5be897595471abc05be44.tar.gz
(MS-DOS and MULE): Make the wording about a single-codepage-until-reboot
operation more careful, since third-party software breaks this limitation to some degree.
Diffstat (limited to 'man/msdog.texi')
-rw-r--r--man/msdog.texi15
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/man/msdog.texi b/man/msdog.texi
index 349059b7c74..a3e382d1474 100644
--- a/man/msdog.texi
+++ b/man/msdog.texi
@@ -593,12 +593,15 @@ Each DOS codepage is identified by a 3-digit number, such as 850, 862,
etc.
In contrast to X, which lets you use several fonts at the same time,
-MS-DOS doesn't allow use of several codepages in a single session.
-Instead, MS-DOS loads a single codepage at system startup, and you must
-reboot MS-DOS to change it@footnote{Normally, one particular codepage is
-burnt into the display memory, while other codepages can be installed by
-modifying system configuration files, such as @file{CONFIG.SYS}, and
-rebooting.}. Much the same limitation applies when you run DOS
+MS-DOS normally doesn't allow use of several codepages in a single
+session. MS-DOS was designed to load a single codepage at system
+startup, and require you to reboot in order to change
+it@footnote{Normally, one particular codepage is burnt into the display
+memory, while other codepages can be installed by modifying system
+configuration files, such as @file{CONFIG.SYS}, and rebooting. While
+third-party software is known to exist that allows to change the
+codepage without rebooting, we describe here how a stock MS-DOS system
+behaves.}. Much the same limitation applies when you run DOS
executables on other systems such as MS-Windows.
@cindex unibyte operation @r{(MS-DOS)}