Hungarian man page on DigitalUNIX

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Hungarian(5)							  Hungarian(5)

NAME
       Hungarian, hungarian - Introduction to Hungarian language support

DESCRIPTION
       This  reference	page  describes the codeset, locale, device, and other
       kinds of support for the Hungarian language.

   Codesets
       The operating system supports the following coded character sets (code‐
       sets)  for  Hungarian by means of locales, codeset converters, or both:
       ISO 8859-2 (ISO Latin-2)

	      ISO8859-2 is the string that  represents	this  codeset  in  the
	      names  of	 locales  and codeset converters. See iso8859-2(5) for
	      more information.	 UTF-16, UCS-4, and UTF-8

	      UTF-16, UCS-4, and UTF-8 are the strings	that  represent	 these
	      encoding formats in the names of locales and codeset converters.
	      See Unicode(5) for more information.  PC code pages

	      cp852 and cp1250 are the strings that represent  these  encoding
	      formats  in  the	names of codeset converters.  See code_page(5)
	      for more information.

       See i18n_intro(5) and l10n_intro(5)  for	 introductory  information  on
       codesets. See iconv_intro(5) for a discussion of codeset converters and
       how to use them.

   Locales
       The  operating  system  provides	 the  following	  Hungarian   locales:
       hu_HU.ISO8859-2

	      This  locale also exists under the name hu_HU.ISO8859-2@ucs4 for
	      use by applications that need to convert file data in  ISO8859-2
	      format  to UCS-4 process code to perform certain kinds of	 char‐
	      acter operations.	 hu_HU.UTF-8

	      UTF-8 locales  support  file  code  and  internal	 process  code
	      according	 to  ISO  10646	 and  Unicode standards. File code, in
	      UTF-8 locales, may include characters encoded  in	 more  than  1
	      byte;  therefore,	 use  these  locales  in applications that can
	      process multibyte data. The UTF-8 locale supports the euro mone‐
	      tary symbol; see euro(5).

       You  can	 use  the  locale  command  (see  locale(1)) to find out which
       locales are installed on your system. See i18n_intro(5) for information
       on setting a locale from the operating system command line.

       In  the	Common	Desktop Environment (CDE), you need to set a locale by
       setting the session language. To do this, from the Options menu of  the
       Login  window,  choose  Language. Then, from the Language options menu,
       choose a session language.

   Keyboards
       The operating system supports the following VT-style and PC-style  key‐
       boards with Hungarian characters printed on the keys:

       ──────────────────────────────────────────────
       VT-Style (105/108 keys)	 PC-Style (102 keys)
       ──────────────────────────────────────────────
       LK411-BQ			 LK471-BQ
       LK461-BQ			 LK47W-BQ
       LK46W-BQ			 LK97W-BQ
				 PCXAL-HQ
				 PCXAL-LQ
				 PCXAL-PQ

				 PCXAL-SQ
       ──────────────────────────────────────────────

       For your keyboard to function correctly with your system, you must load
       a keyboard mapping table (keymap) that is  appropriate  for  your  key‐
       board's	model  and language. If you load a keymap that does not corre‐
       spond to your keyboard's model and language, your keyboard behavior  is
       unpredictable.  The  label  located on the bottom surface of a keyboard
       usually specifies its model (five-letter code) and language (two-letter
       code).  See keyboard(5) for general information on keymaps and instruc‐
       tions for loading them in different formats.  The following tables sup‐
       ply Hungarian-specific information that you need when loading keymaps.

       Selecting keymaps in xkb format:

       ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       For VT-Style		For PC-Style
       Keyboard:      Select:	Keyboard:      Select:
       ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       LK411-BQ	      lk411	LK471-BQ       lk471bq or lk471
       LK461-BQ	      lk461	LK47W-BQ       lk471bq or lk471
       LK46W-BQ	      lk461	LK97W-BQ       lk97wbq or lk97w
				PCXAL-HQ       pcxalhq
				PCXAL-LQ       pcxallq
				PCXAL-PQ       pcxalpq
				PCXAL-SQ       pcxalsq
       ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

       Selecting keymaps in xmodmap format:

       ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       For VT-Style			  For PC-Style
       Keyboard:      Select:		  Keyboard:	 Select:
       ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       LK411-BQ	      hungarian lk411bq	  LK471-BQ	 hungarian pcxalhq
       LK461-BQ	      hungarian lk411bq	  LK47W-BQ	 hungarian pcxalhq
       LK46W-BQ	      hungarian lk411bq	  PCXAL-HQ	 hungarian pcxalhq
					  PCXAL-LQ	 hungarian pcxallq
					  PCXAL-PQ	 hungarian pcxalpq
					  PCXAL-SQ	 hungarian pcxalhq
       ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

       Keyboards  can  have  keys with characters printed on both the left and
       right half of the keycap. The way you set or use your keyboard to  send
       different sets of characters varies from one keyboard model to another.
       Furthermore, your keyboard allows you to	 enter	more  characters  than
       those printed on the keycaps. See keyboard(5) for information on how to
       enter characters.

   Printers
       See i18n_printing(5) for a discussion of printer-support	 options.  The
       PostScript  fonts  available  for languages supported by the ISO 8859-2
       codeset are listed in iso8859-2(5).

SEE ALSO
       Commands: locale(1)

       Others: code_page(5), i18n_intro(5), i18n_printing(5),  iconv_intro(5),
       iso8859-2(5), keyboard(5), l10n_intro(5), Unicode(5)

       Writing Software for the International Market

								  Hungarian(5)
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