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chrtbl(M)

collation(S)

locale(M)

numtbl(M)

mestbl(M)

montbl(M)

timtbl(M)

setlocale(S)



     COLTBL(M)                XENIX System V                 COLTBL(M)



     Name
          coltbl - Create a collation locale table.

     Syntax
          coltbl [ specfile ]

     Description
          The utility coltbl is provided to allow LC_COLLATE locales
          to be defined. It reads in a specification file (or standard
          input if specfile is not defined), containing defintions for
          a particular locale's collation ordering, and produces a
          concise format table file, to be read by setlocale(S).

          In general, characters may be specified in one of six
          different ways (the following examples all specify the ASCII
          character ``A''):

                          65       decimal
                          0101     octal
                          0x41     hexadecimal
                          'A'      quoted character
                          '\101'   quoted octal
                          '\x41'   quoted hexadecimal

          The information in the specification file is to an extent
          free format. A particular type of definition is started by
          one of the following keywords:

                      PRIM:
                      ZERO:
                      EQUIV:
                      DOUBLE:

          The keywords, PRIM:, ZERO: and EQUIV:, are concerned
          directly with the setting of the collation ordering of
          characters

          A group of characters which are to be collated as equal,
          unless all other characters in a pair of strings are also
          equal, are grouped together with the PRIM: keyword. The
          position of a particular group in the specification file is
          significant as far as the collation ordering is concerned.
          Collating elements following the PRIM: keyword are separated
          by white spaces. A two character collating element can be
          specified here by (a b), where a and b are the two
          characters making up the sequence. The order of the
          collating elements defined in one group is significant in
          secondary collation ordering. It is also possible to define
          a range of characters, for example:

                      PRIM: 'a' - 'z'




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     COLTBL(M)                XENIX System V                 COLTBL(M)



          Collating elements following the ZERO: keyword, are to be
          ignored when collating. The format of the definitions is the
          same as with PRIM: . Ranges of characters can also be
          defined, as for example:

                      ZERO: 0x80 - 0x9f

          EQUIV: is used to give two collating elements identical
          positions in the collation ordering. The syntax is:

                      EQUIV: a = b

          where a and b are the two equal collating elements. There
          can be only one definition for each occurrence of this
          keyword.

          Single characters which are to be collated as two
          characters, for example the German sharp s, are defined with
          the DOUBLE: keyword. The syntax is:

                      DOUBLE: a = (b c)

          where a is the single character, and b and c are the two
          characters in the collating sequence. There can be only one
          definition for each occurrence of this keyword. The single
          character a must not also appear after a PRIM: , a ZERO: or
          a EQUIV: keyword.

          All characters following the hash character are treated as a
          comment and ignored up to the end of the line, unless the
          hash is within a quoted string.

          The concise format locale table is placed in a file named
          collate in the current directory. This file should be copied
          or moved to the correct place in the setlocale(S) file tree
          (see locale(M)).  To prevent accidental corruption of the
          output data, the file is created with no write permission;
          if the coltbl utility is run in a directory containing a
          write-protected collate file, the utility will ask if the
          existing file should be replaced - any response other than
          ``yes'' or ``y'' will cause coltbl to terminate without
          overwriting the existing file.

     See Also
          chrtbl(M), collation(S), locale(M), numtbl(M), mestbl(M),
          montbl(M), timtbl(M), setlocale(S)

     Diagnostics
          All error messages printed are self explanatory.






     Page 2                                           (printed 2/7/91)



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