@copying
This file documents the Emacs MIME interface functionality.
-Copyright @copyright{} 1998--2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+Copyright @copyright{} 1998--2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@quotation
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
@vindex mm-coding-system-priorities
Prioritize coding systems to use for outgoing messages. The default
is @code{nil}, which means to use the defaults in Emacs, but is
-@code{(iso-8859-1 iso-2022-jp iso-2022-jp-2 shift_jis utf-8)} when
-running Emacs in the Japanese language environment. It is a list of
-coding system symbols (aliases of coding systems are also allowed, use
-@kbd{M-x describe-coding-system} to make sure you are specifying correct
-coding system names). For example, if you have configured Emacs
-to prefer UTF-8, but wish that outgoing messages should be sent in
-ISO-8859-1 if possible, you can set this variable to
-@code{(iso-8859-1)}. You can override this setting on a per-message
-basis by using the @code{charset} @acronym{MML} tag (@pxref{MML Definition}).
+@code{(iso-8859-1 iso-2022-jp utf-8)} when running Emacs in the Japanese
+language environment. It is a list of coding system symbols (aliases of
+coding systems are also allowed, use @kbd{M-x describe-coding-system} to
+make sure you are specifying correct coding system names). For example,
+if you have configured Emacs to prefer UTF-8, but wish that outgoing
+messages should be sent in ISO-8859-1 if possible, you can set this
+variable to @code{(iso-8859-1)}. You can override this setting on a
+per-message basis by using the @code{charset} @acronym{MML} tag
+(@pxref{MML Definition}).
As different hierarchies prefer different charsets, you may want to set
@code{mm-coding-system-priorities} according to the hierarchy in Gnus.
(mm-coding-system-priorities '(iso-8859-15 iso-8859-1 utf-8)))
("^fj\\." ;; Japanese
(mm-coding-system-priorities
- '(iso-8859-1 iso-2022-jp iso-2022-jp-2 shift_jis utf-8)))
+ '(iso-8859-1 iso-2022-jp utf-8)))
("^ru\\." ;; Cyrillic
(mm-coding-system-priorities
'(koi8-r iso-8859-5 iso-8859-1 utf-8))))
(date-to-time "Sat Sep 12 12:21:54 1998 +0200")
@result{} (13818 19266)
-(time-to-seconds '(13818 19266))
+(float-time '(13818 19266))
@result{} 905595714.0
(seconds-to-time 905595714.0)
@item date-to-time
Take a date and return a time.
-@item time-to-seconds
-Take a time and return seconds. Note that Emacs has a built-in
-function, @code{float-time}, that does this.
+@item float-time
+Take a time and return seconds. (This is a built-in function.)
@item seconds-to-time
Take seconds and return a time.