From 4474f67fa3f915f7e09fddc3df42cd97403752f9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jelmer Vernooij Date: Wed, 26 Mar 2003 11:09:12 +0000 Subject: - Patch from John to update PDC-HOWTO, add ServerType and CUPS (not finished yet) - Regenerate docs - Update docs-status (This used to be commit adbb714ade8ab6f4e9b5d80f0f85041746c0edf1) --- docs/docbook/projdoc/unicode.sgml | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) (limited to 'docs/docbook/projdoc/unicode.sgml') diff --git a/docs/docbook/projdoc/unicode.sgml b/docs/docbook/projdoc/unicode.sgml index a467a0d4e7..7d8f0a03be 100644 --- a/docs/docbook/projdoc/unicode.sgml +++ b/docs/docbook/projdoc/unicode.sgml @@ -2,10 +2,10 @@ JelmerVernooij - + Samba Team
jelmer@samba.org
-
+
25 March 2003
@@ -18,8 +18,8 @@ Computers communicate in numbers. In texts, each number will be translated to a corresponding letter. The meaning that will be assigned -to a certain number depends on the character set(charset) - that is used. +to a certain number depends on the character set(charset) + that is used. A charset can be seen as a table that is used to translate numbers to letters. Not all computers use the same charset (there are charsets with German umlauts, Japanese characters, etc). Usually a charset contains @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ samba knows of three kinds of character sets: unix charset This is the charset used internally by your operating system. - The default is ASCII, which is fine for most + The default is ASCII, which is fine for most systems. -- cgit