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0 Command: eucset | Section: 1 | Source: Digital UNIX | File: eucset.1.gz
eucset(1) General Commands Manual eucset(1) NAME eucset - Sets and gets EUC code widths for the terminal SYNOPSIS eucset [cswidth] eucset -p OPTIONS Displays the current settings of the EUC character widths for the ter- minal DESCRIPTION The eucset command sets or gets the encoding and display widths of the Extended UNIX Code (EUC) characters processed by the current input ter- minal. EUC is an encoding method for code sets composed of single or multiple bytes. It permits applications and the terminal hardware to use the 7-bit US ASCII code and up to three single- or multibyte code sets simultaneously. If you use the eucset command to set EUC character widths, but do not specify the cswidth argument, 7-bit U.S. ASCII is applied as a default code set. You must use the command to specify any other EUC code sets, whether they are single-byte or multibyte. EUC Code Set Classes EUC divides code sets into four classes. Each code set class has two characteristics: the number of bytes for encoding the characters in the class, and the number of display columns to display the characters in the class. All characters within a class possess the same characteris- tics. Class 0 consists of all 7-bit, single-byte ASCII characters. The most- significant bit of each of these characters is 0 (zero). Characters in class 0 require one byte for encoding, and occupy one display column. These values are fixed for class 0 (zero). The 7-bit US ASCII code is the primary EUC code set, which is available to users without direct specification. A class 1 code set is a supplementary EUC code set. Class 1 characters have an initial byte whose most-significant bit is 1. If character classes 2 or 3 are to be used, this initial byte must not be the SS2 or SS3 character, as these designate character classes 2 and 3. Charac- ters in class 1 may require more than 1 byte for encoding, and may re- quire more than 1 display column. The eucset command must be used to set the characteristics for code set class 1. Class 2 and 3 code sets are supplementary EUC code sets. Characters in these classes have an initial byte of SS2 or SS3, respectively. They require more than 1 byte for encoding, and may require more than 1 dis- play column. The eucset command must be used to set the characteris- tics for code set classes 2 and 3. The cswidth argument in the eucset command line is a character string that describes the character widths for code set classes 1 through 3. The string is of the following format: X1[:Y1], X2[:Y2], X3[:Y3] The value X1 is the number of bytes required to encode a character in code set class 1. Y1 is the number of display columns needed to dis- play characters in this class. X2 is the number of bytes required to encode a character in code set class 2, not counting the SS2 byte, and Y2 is the number of display columns for code set class 2 characters. X3 is the number of bytes needed to encode characters in code set class 3, not counting the SS3 byte, and Y3 is the number of display columns required for these characters. The values for the column widths can be omitted if they are equal to the number of encoding bytes. If the en- coding value of any of the EUC code sets is set to 0 (zero), this indi- cates that the code set does not exist. If no cswidth argument is supplied, the eucset command uses the value of the CSWIDTH environment variable. If this variable is not present, the default string 1:1,0:0,0:0 is substituted. This default string des- ignates that the environment uses a single-byte EUC code set that has characters in the EUC code set class 1 format. If the environment uses a multibyte EUC code set in the code set class 1 format, single- or multibyte EUC code sets in the code set class 2 or 3 format, or both, the default setting cannot be used. DIAGNOSTICS Your standard input is not an interactive terminal. The maximum char- acter width of 8 was exceeded. EXAMPLES To display the encoding and display widths for the EUC code set classes 1-3 in your environment, enter: eucset -p To change the current set- tings of the encoding and display widths for the EUC characters in code set classes 1 and 2 to 2 bytes each, enter: eucset 2:2,2:2,0:0 or eucset 2,2,0 SEE ALSO Interfaces: eucioctl(7) eucset(1)

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