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NAME

       yudit - Unicode Editor for The X Window System

SYNOPSIS

       yudit [ -e encoding ] [[ file-name [ file-name...  ]]

DESCRIPTION

       yudit is an unicode text editors.

       When   a   user   runs   yudit   for   the   first  time  $HOME/.yudit,
       $HOME/.yudit/data, and $HOME/.yudit/fonts are created.

       The configuration file can be edited inside  yudit.  For  the  detailed
       description  of  usage  and  configuration  take  a look at the on-line
       manual.

       If you are planning to save files  with  yudit  please  note  that  the
       format preferred by edit for unicode files is UTF8.

       yudit can convert between different encodings, but if you do not need a
       GUI consider uniconv.

ARGUMENTS

       -e encoding
              The  encoding  determines  how   yudit   interacts   with
              character  streams:  file  input,  file  output,  cut and
              paste. XInput encoding is set up to use  an  independent,
              fixed encoder.

              If you received yudit through the yudit distribution, the
              following encodings are inclusively supported:

              UTF8,  UTF7,  8859_1,  8859_2,  8859_5,  8859_7,  8859_9,
              KOI8_R,  JIS,  SJIS,  EUC_JP,  ISO2022_KR, EUC_KR, JOHAB,
              UHC, GB2312_7, GB2312_8, HZ, BIG5, CTEXT_JA, 10646  JAVA.

              For  a  detailed  description  of  these  please refer to
              uniconv man page.

       file-name
              is the file yudit should read into its buffer  at  start-
              up.

ENVIRONMENT

       The  environment  variable  HOME should point to the user’s home
       directory, where the  yudit  configuration  file  (.yuditrc)  is
       kept.  If  the file is corrupt yudit exits with an error dialog.
       Errors messages are usually replicated  in  the  standard  error
       ouput of the yudit.

SEE ALSO

        mytool, uniconv, uniprint

AUTHOR

       This  program   was  written by gsinai@iname.com (Gaspar Sinai),
       Tokyo, 10 November, 1997 (yutex) and was updated on  1  December
       1997.   Many  thanks  to  Andrew Weeks at University of Bath for
       releasing his TrueType to  postscript  (ttf2pfa)  program  which
       formed the base of printing support in yudit.

       This  manual  page was copied from old yudit 1.6 distribution by
       Radovan Garabik <garabik@melkor.dnp.fmph.uniba.sk> and  modified
       for  yudit  2.4  distribution for Debian/GNU system before being
       edited for yudit 2.8.  It may contain obsolete information.