Eric S Fraga <ucec...@ucl.ac.uk> wrote: > Nick Dokos <nicholas.do...@hp.com> writes: > > [...] > > > There are a couple of assumptions here (and in Eric F.'s mail about the > > TeX input method as well). One is that the buffer is encoded in UTF-8: > > if you use e.g iso-8859-1, you can use whatever input method you want, > > but you'll end up with a byte in your file that LaTeX won't like. > > Umm, just to clarify something: the file can well be in iso-8859-1 > encoding. It need not be in UTF-8 if all you want are typical west > European characters (umlauts etc.). For instance, the following file > contents work just fine (I've forced iso-8859-1 encoding although I use > UTF-8 more often than not): > > # -*- coding: iso-8859-1; -*- > > * Introduction > > This text includes a number of characters from España because we want > to say /cigüeña/ instead of /swan/. > > This exports just fine to latex and org automatically includes the line: > > : \usepackage[latin1]{inputenc} > > I've attached the org file in case anybody wants to play with this very > small example. > >
Ah, thanks: I forgot how smart org is. Nick _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode