accented Latin characters. Languages that can employ ISO 8859-1
include all the languages covered by ASCII as well as Afrikaans,
Albanian, Basque, Catalan, Danish, Faroese, Finnish, Norwegian,
-Portugese, Spanish, and Swedish. Dutch is covered albeit without
+Portuguese, Spanish, and Swedish. Dutch is covered albeit without
the ij ligature. French is covered too but without the oe ligature.
German can use ISO 8859-1 but must do so without German-style
quotation marks. This set is based on Western European extensions
available from the shell or from the C library. Consult your system's
documentation for information on iconv.
-On OS/390 or z/OS see the iconv(1) man page. One way to invoke the iconv
+On OS/390 or z/OS see the iconv(1) manpage. One way to invoke the iconv
shell utility from within perl would be to:
# OS/390 or z/OS example
was known to strip accented characters to their unaccented counterparts
while attempting to view this document through the B<pod2man> program
(for example, you may see a plain C<y> rather than one with a diaeresis
-as in E<yuml>). Another nroff truncated the resultant man page at
+as in E<yuml>). Another nroff truncated the resultant manpage at
the first occurrence of 8 bit characters.
Not all shells will allow multiple C<-e> string arguments to perl to