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All the operations that transfer text in and out of Emacs have the ability to use a coding system to encode or decode the text. You can also explicitly encode and decode text using the functions in this section.
The result of encoding, and the input to decoding, are not ordinary text. They logically consist of a series of byte values; that is, a series of characters whose codes are in the range 0 through 255. In a multibyte buffer or string, character codes 128 through 159 are represented by multibyte sequences, but this is invisible to Lisp programs.
The usual way to read a file into a buffer as a sequence of bytes, so
you can decode the contents explicitly, is with
insert-file-contents-literally
(see Reading from Files);
alternatively, specify a non-nil
rawfile argument when
visiting a file with find-file-noselect
. These methods result in
a unibyte buffer.
The usual way to use the byte sequence that results from explicitly
encoding text is to copy it to a file or process—for example, to write
it with write-region
(see Writing to Files), and suppress
encoding by binding coding-system-for-write
to
no-conversion
.
Here are the functions to perform explicit encoding or decoding. The decoding functions produce sequences of bytes; the encoding functions are meant to operate on sequences of bytes. All of these functions discard text properties.
This function encodes the text from start to end according to coding system coding-system. The encoded text replaces the original text in the buffer. The result of encoding is logically a sequence of bytes, but the buffer remains multibyte if it was multibyte before.
This function encodes the text in string according to coding system coding-system. It returns a new string containing the encoded text. The result of encoding is a unibyte string.
This function decodes the text from start to end according to coding system coding-system. The decoded text replaces the original text in the buffer. To make explicit decoding useful, the text before decoding ought to be a sequence of byte values, but both multibyte and unibyte buffers are acceptable.
This function decodes the text in string according to coding system coding-system. It returns a new string containing the decoded text. To make explicit decoding useful, the contents of string ought to be a sequence of byte values, but a multibyte string is acceptable.