Hi, Thanks Mario for your advices. It works now . and thanks seb for the .emacs file you sent to me. Now stays the problem of the accent characters that are in use in french language. For example the "é" or the "è" or lots of others characters. They are writen and pronounced by emacspeak as "~" followed by a serial of numbers. It's not very cool in this conditions to read text ! I don't know if this problem is part of Emacs or part of Emacspeak but it's certainly a problem of lack of internationnalisation. what should we do to try to solve this kind of problems ? Is there other languages who have this kind of specificity ? Thanks for your ideas and suggests. -- Nath *********** REPLY SEPARATOR *********** On 17/07/02 at 17:07 Mario Lang wrote: >"Nath" <nath31@ifrance.com> writes: > >> Yes I've red your message til the end but I don't know where to put this >> code you indicate to switch between languages. I've never used >> Emacs/Emacspeak before then ... I will adapt the code for french but >please >> where to write this lines ? > >They obviously belong in ~/.emacs > >I'd strongly suggest you learn Emacs, before you dive >into Emacspeak. > >-- >CYa, > Mario ______________________________________________________________________________ ifrance.com, l'email gratuit le plus complet de l'Internet ! vos emails depuis un navigateur, en POP3, sur Minitel, sur le WAP... http://www.ifrance.com/_reloc/email.emailif