Synopsis:
set translation [<character set>]
Description:
This setting defines the character set for the client to use for text
input and display. The client default is ASCII, a 7-bit set that is
available on nearly every known platform and terminal emulation.
ASCII is a subset of the 8-bit Latin-1 character set, which is among
the most widely used character sets in the world. It is standard under
numerous computing environments, including the MIT X Window System, MS
Windows, AmigaDOS, as well as modern ANSI terminals, such as Digital's
VT series and MS Kermit.
Not all environments support, or are conducive to, this default. Some
users must use dated equipment that cannot display 8-bit clean text,
while others use a written language that is not consistent with the
Western-oriented Latin-1 set. IrcII-EPIC supports numerous specialized
character sets:
Character Set Bit Description
cp437 8 Old IBM PC (MS DOS), Atari ST
cp850 8 New IBM PC (PC DOS), IBM PS/2
dec_mcs 8 DEC Multinational Character Set; VAX/VMS,
| DEC 8-bit terminals (vt320, etc.); Latin_1
| generally preferred
dg_mcs 8 Data General Multinational Character Set
hp_mcs 8 Hewlett-Packard Extended Roman 8
latin_1 8 ISO 8859/1; defacto standard
macintosh 8 Apple Macintosh
next 8 NeXT, NeXTStep environments
ascii 7 American, ANSI ASCII, ISO Reg.006; this is
| the only one hardcoded into the client,
| should work if all else fails; DEFAULT
danish 7 Norwegian and Danish
dutch 7 Dutch
finnish 7 Finnish
french 7 French, ISO Reg.025
french_canadian 7 French in Canada
german 7 German, ISO Reg.025
irv 7 International Reference Version, ISO Reg.002;
| for use in strict ISO 646 environments
italian 7 Italian, ISO Reg.015
jis 7 Japanese, JIS ASCII, ISO Reg.014; Japanese
| ASCII hybrid
norwegian_1 7 Norwegian, ISO Reg.060 (version 1)
norwegian_2 7 Norwegian, ISO Reg.061 (version 2)
portugese 7 Portugese, ISO Reg.016
portugese_com 7 Portugese on DEC terminals
spanish 7 Spanish, ISO Reg.017
spanish_com 7 Spanish on DEC terminals
swedish 7 Swedish, ISO Reg.010
swedish_names 7 Swedish, ISO Reg.011 (for names)
swedish_names_com 7 Sewdish on DEC terminals (for names)
swiss 7 Swiss
united_kingdom 7 United Kingdom, ISO Reg.004
united_kingdom_com 7 United Kingdom on DEC and HP terminals
Only support for ASCII is hardcoded into the client. The remaining
character sets are defined in external files in the client's library.
These are usually installed with the client, though not always. If all
else fails, ASCII is generic enough to suffice in most environments.
See Also:
digraph(4); set(4) eight_bit_characters
Other Notes:
The ircII translation tables are maintained by tomten@solace.hsh.se
(Tomten on irc).