In the following
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@address@hidden@address@hidden@address@hidden@address@hidden
@end smallexample
+ (In this, @var{charset} actually consists of two fields, separated by
+ a dash, see below.)
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I have to question the use of the term "charset" which has a different
meaning in Mule, which also historically typically used names (such as
latin-iso8859-1) that are not valid XLFD registries. It is true that
most Mule charsets correspond to an XLFD registry, but not all do. I
would substitute "registry", which is a strange term to most people,
but won't bring in the connotations of "charset."