X-VM-v5-Data: ([nil nil nil nil nil nil nil nil nil] ["561" "Wed" " 2" "February" "1994" "10:46:34" "+0100" "Jiri Zlatuska" "zlatuska@MUNI.CZ" "<199402021219.AA15650@mail.cs.tu-berlin.de>" "13" "Re: Language numbers" "^Date:" nil nil "2" "1994020209:46:34" "Language numbers" nil "<199402020924.AA15068@aragorn.ics.muni.cz>"]) Return-Path: Received: from sc.ZIB-Berlin.DE (mailserv) by dagobert.ZIB-Berlin.DE (4.1/SMI-4.0/24.6.93) id AA25788; Wed, 2 Feb 94 13:21:32 +0100 Received: from mail.cs.tu-berlin.de by sc.ZIB-Berlin.DE (4.1/SMI-4.0-sc/03.06.93) id AA15506; Wed, 2 Feb 94 13:19:30 +0100 Received: from tubvm.cs.tu-berlin.de by mail.cs.tu-berlin.de with SMTP id AA15650 (5.65c8/IDA-1.4.4(mail.m4[1.12]) for <@MAIL.CS.TU-BERLIN.DE:Schoepf@SC.ZIB-BERLIN.DE>); Wed, 2 Feb 1994 13:19:28 +0100 Message-Id: <199402021219.AA15650@mail.cs.tu-berlin.de> Received: from TUBVM.CS.TU-BERLIN.DE by tubvm.cs.tu-berlin.de (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 6815; Wed, 02 Feb 94 13:18:52 +0200 Received: from VM.URZ.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE (NJE origin MAILER@DHDURZ1) by TUBVM.CS.TU-BERLIN.DE (LMail V1.2a/1.8a) with BSMTP id 6814; Wed, 2 Feb 1994 13:18:52 +0200 Received: from VM.URZ.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE (NJE origin LISTSERV@DHDURZ1) by VM.URZ.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE (LMail V1.2a/1.8a) with BSMTP id 4932; Wed, 2 Feb 1994 13:18:27 +0000 Reply-To: Mailing list for the LaTeX3 project Organization: Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic In-Reply-To: <199402020924.AA15068@aragorn.ics.muni.cz> from "Richard Walker" at Feb 2, 94 06:05:59 pm Date: Wed, 2 Feb 1994 10:46:34 +0100 From: Jiri Zlatuska Sender: Mailing list for the LaTeX3 project To: Multiple recipients of list LATEX-L Subject: Re: Language numbers Status: R X-Status: X-Keywords: X-UID: 1373 > Is there an `official' numbering of \languages for use > with 2e? E.g. 0=US English, etc. If not, isn't it > time we decided on one? i would recommend thinking about some `official' interface for accessing \language's from your preloaded format for 2e or 3. however, that should *not* be related (the only exception being the default \language numbered 0) to any internal numbers under which the patterns are stored. any piece of code which has to refer to explicit numbers assigned to hyphenation patterns is definitely a *very* bad one. --jiri zlatuska