From hlj@posix Tue Nov 19 01:51:54 1991 Received: from uunet.UU.NET by dkuug.dk via EUnet with SMTP (5.64+/8+bit/IDA-1.2.8) id AA23386; Tue, 19 Nov 91 01:51:54 +0100 Received: from posix.UUCP by uunet.UU.NET with UUCP (5.61/UUNET-uucp-primary) id AA03040; Mon, 18 Nov 91 19:52:06 -0500 Received: by posix.COM (smail2.5) id AA10869; 18 Nov 91 16:08:31 PST (Mon) Subject: .0/d14 online To: sc22wg15rin@dkuug.dk Date: Mon, 18 Nov 91 16:08:29 PST From: Hal Jespersen Organization: POSIX Software Group, 447 Lakeview Way, Redwood City, CA 94062 Phone: +1 (415) 364-3410 FAX: +1 (415) 364-4498 X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.2 PL0] Message-Id: <9111181608.AA10865@posix.COM> X-Charset: ASCII X-Char-Esc: 29 Hi. Here is access info for p1003.0 Draft 14 (from which you want to access section 5.1 on internationalization). Hal Assuming you have access to the Internet, the scenario is approximately ftp research.att.com # research's IP address is 192.20.225.2 cd posix/p1003.0/d14 get toc index binary get p1-20.Z The draft is available in several forms. The table of contents can be found in toc, pages containing a particular section are stored under the section number, sets of pages are stored in files with names of the form pn-m, and the entire draft is stored in all. By default, files are ASCII. A .ps suffix indicates PostScript. A .Z suffix indicates a compress'ed file. The file index contains a general description of the files available. These files are also available via electronic mail by sending a message like echo send 5.1 from posix/p1003.0/d14 | mail netlib@research.att.com If you use email, you should not ask for the compressed version. For a more complete introduction to this form of netlib, send the message send help