| [ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
nil. If from
is a string, the string is the specified text, and to is ignored.
If default-coding-system is non-nil, that is the first
coding system to try; if that can handle the text,
select-safe-coding-system returns that coding system. It can
also be a list of coding systems; then the function tries each of them
one by one. After trying all of them, it next tries the user's most
preferred coding system (see section `the description of prefer-coding-system' in GNU Emacs Manual), and after that the current buffer's value
of buffer-file-coding-system (if it is not undecided).
If one of those coding systems can safely encode all the specified
text, select-safe-coding-system chooses it and returns it.
Otherwise, it asks the user to choose from a list of coding systems
which can encode all the text, and returns the user's choice.
The optional argument accept-default-p, if non-nil,
should be a function to determine whether the coding system selected
without user interaction is acceptable. If this function returns
nil, the silently selected coding system is rejected, and the
user is asked to select a coding system from a list of possible
candidates.
If the variable select-safe-coding-system-accept-default-p is
non-nil, its value overrides the value of
accept-default-p.
Here are two functions you can use to let the user specify a coding system, with completion. See section 20.5 Completion.
| [ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |