From d1ab4089659235b396ad897b4e1b1935413f6262 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: David Lawrence Ramsey
5.1. There's no translation for my language!
- 5.2. I don't like the translation for <x> in my language. How can I fix it? + 5.2. I don't like the translation for <x> in my language. How can I fix it?
5.3. What is the status of Unicode support?
6.1. Why should I use nano instead of Pico?
@@ -223,7 +223,7 @@5.2. I don't like the translation for <x> in my language. How can I fix it?
The best way would probably be to e-mail the person listed in the
Last-Translator:
field in the <your_language>.po file with your suggested corrections and they can make the changes reach the nano-devel list.5.3. What is the status of Unicode support?
-+With the latest development version (1.3.9+), Unicode should be mostly usable. There are a few quirks with character counting, but with the proper terminal and encoding, you should be able to enter and save Unicode text.
With the latest development version (1.3.9+), Unicode should be mostly usable. With your terminal, locale (LC_ALL and similar environment variables), and encoding configured to properly support UTF-8, you should be able to enter and save Unicode text.
6. Advocacy and Licensing
6.1. Why should I use nano instead of Pico?
@@ -255,7 +255,8 @@Re-read Section 7.4 and you should know the answer.
8. ChangeLog
-2005/11/19 - Add a new section 5.3 to explain the status of nano's Unicode support. (Mike Frysinger, minor tweaks by DLR)
+2005/11/21 - Clarify section 5.3 to better explain how to enable Unicode support, and remove the mention of quirks, since they turned out to not be a nano problem. (Mike Frysinger and DLR)
+2005/11/19 - Add a new section 5.3 to explain the status of nano's Unicode support. (Mike Frysinger, minor tweaks by DLR)
2005/08/27 - Update email address. (DLR)
2005/08/10 - Add a new section 4.3, and move all section 4 entries after it down one number, to explain how to deal with numeric keypad problems. (DLR)
2005/08/08 - Update section 3.8 to mention that verbatim input mode now takes a six-digit hexadecimal number. (DLR)
-- 2.39.5