MUME Help
ASCII, CHANGE CHARSET, CHANGE ENCODING, CHARACTER ENCODING, CHARSET, ENCODING, UTF-8, UTF8
It depends on your client (the program you use to connect to MUME) which one you should choose. Some clients may set it automatically if they support RFC 2066.
You change your current character encoding using one of:
>If your terminal doesn't show accented characters correctly in either Latin-1 or UTF-8 modes, usechange encoding ascii
>change encoding latin-1
>change encoding utf-8
change encoding ascii
. In this mode, MUME
changes accented characters into their unaccented 7
bit version (or the closest match available; e.g., the
copyright sign gets replaced by C
).
Using change encoding utf-8
or cha enc latin-1
,
MUME will send you accented
characters.
On modern Unix installations, the default is to use the UTF-8 character
encoding. Note, however, that while UTF-8 can encode any Unicode
character, MUME will only accept
those that exist in Latin-1. See help latin-1
for a list of the allowed characters.
In order to save people from having to type all the obscure characters to identify objects, players and such, all keyword comparison is done on unaccented letters.
If your keyboard lacks the keys to type accented letters, there are various
ways to do this. If you are running Windows, you can use an
"International" character set which lets you
type 'A
for an accented A.
A Compose key is a special prefix key that you press in order to
write compound characters, so
Compose " E
would give you an
E
with an umlaut.
If your computer is running some Unix variant, you can configure your keyboard to have a Compose key. On most modern Linux installations you can do this in the normal keyboard configuration dialogs.
See also: | CHANGE, LATIN1, https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2066 |
Generated on Thu Sep 5 18:09:39 2024