+@var{string} is a multibyte string or consists entirely of
+@acronym{ASCII} characters, it is returned unchanged. In particular,
+if @var{string} is unibyte and entirely @acronym{ASCII}, the returned
+string is unibyte. (When the characters are all @acronym{ASCII},
+Emacs primitives will treat the string the same way whether it is
+unibyte or multibyte.) If @var{string} is unibyte and contains
+non-@acronym{ASCII} characters, the function
+@code{unibyte-char-to-multibyte} is used to convert each unibyte
+character to a multibyte character.
+@end defun
+
+@defun string-to-multibyte string
+This function returns a multibyte string containing the same sequence
+of character codes as @var{string}. Unlike
+@code{string-make-multibyte}, this function unconditionally returns a
+multibyte string. If @var{string} is a multibyte string, it is
+returned unchanged.
+@end defun
+
+@defun multibyte-char-to-unibyte char
+This convert the multibyte character @var{char} to a unibyte
+character, based on @code{nonascii-translation-table} and
+@code{nonascii-insert-offset}.
+@end defun
+
+@defun unibyte-char-to-multibyte char
+This convert the unibyte character @var{char} to a multibyte
+character, based on @code{nonascii-translation-table} and
+@code{nonascii-insert-offset}.