popular modern editors have UTF-8 support, for example, vim, Emacs,
jEdit, and GEdit do. All MS Windows systems later than NT use
Unicode as their native character encoding, so even Notepad can
-edit and save a file in UTF-8 format. A more functional
+edit and save a file in UTF-8 format. A more functional
alternative for Windows is BabelPad.
If a LilyPond input file containing a non-ASCII character is not
Here is an example showing Cyrillic, Hebrew and Portuguese
text:
-@lilypond[verbatim,quote]
+@lilypond[quote]
+%c No verbatim here as the code does not display correctly in PDF
% Cyrillic
bulgarian = \lyricmode {
Жълтата дюля беше щастлива, че пухът, който цъфна, замръзна като гьон.