lotus

previous page: 5.2.3 Coding Hungarian accents: Text formatting languages
  
page up: Hungarian FAQ
  
next page: 5.2.5 Coding Hungarian accents: Switching binary to ASCII and vice versa

5.2.4 Coding Hungarian accents: Microcomputer products: The word processors




Description

This article is from the Hungarian FAQ, by Zoli Fekete fekete@bc.edu with numerous contributions by others.

5.2.4 Coding Hungarian accents: Microcomputer products: The word processors

Different word processors on different microcomputers use several
proprietary internal control sequences to handle accented characters,
as much as other symbols, and other text formatting commands. If you
want to transfer a document like this, you have to convert this [very
probably] binary file (8-bit ASCII with all kinds of binary crap) to
text (7-bit ASCII), see 5.2.5.1, unless your mailer can handle binary
directly, see 5.2.5.2. Make sure, however, that the recipient of your
document also possesses the same or equivalent word processor, or a
word processor supporting the format you used.

It might happen that you want to use your document in another word
processing system, or a plain text editor. Today's word processors
offer conversion to a few formats, and also pure text with different
character sets (5.2.2). The resulting file, if necessary, can be
converted further to 7-bit ASCII as shown in 5.2.6. (The output is
already 7-bit ASCII in Microsoft's RTF, see 5.2.3.3.)

 

Continue to:













TOP
previous page: 5.2.3 Coding Hungarian accents: Text formatting languages
  
page up: Hungarian FAQ
  
next page: 5.2.5 Coding Hungarian accents: Switching binary to ASCII and vice versa