.SH LOCALES AND CHARACTER ENCODINGS
-wimlib 1.3.0 has improved support for alternate character encodings.
-However, not everything has been well tested, and on UNIX you are strongly
-encouraged to use a UTF-8 locale so that you do not run into any problems.
-In particular, if your locale uses a character encoding that is
-not UTF-8, then you will not be able to open or capture WIM files containing
-files with paths not representable in the current locale's character encoding.
-
-Similar restrictions apply to the Windows-native build of wimlib, but
-unfortunately Windows does not support UTF-8 locales. So you will not be able
-to apply a WIM image containing files with names not representable in the
-current Windows code page, nor will you be able to capture a directory tree
-containing files with names not representable in the current Windows code page.
+On Windows, wimlib 1.3.2 and later works in UTF-16LE, and there should be no
+problems with character encodings.
+
+On UNIX, wimlib works primarily in the locale-dependent multibyte encoding,
+which you are strongly recommended to set to UTF-8 to avoid any problems.
.SH WARNING
*
* \section encodings Locales and character encodings
*
- * wimlib 1.3.0 has improved handling of different character encodings compared
- * to previous versions. Functions are explictly noted as taking
- * ::wimlib_mbchar strings, which are encoded in the locale-dependent multibyte
- * encoding (e.g. ASCII, ISO-8859-1, or UTF-8), or ::wimlib_utf8char strings,
- * which are encoded in UTF-8. Generally, filenames and paths are in the
- * locale-dependent multibyte encoding, while other types of data must be
- * provided in UTF-8. Please see the man page for @b wimlib-imagex for more
- * information. However, I strongly recommend that you use UTF-8 for your
- * locale's encoding so that ::wimlib_mbchar strings will be encoded the same
- * way as ::wimlib_utf8char strings.
+ * To support Windows as well as UNIX, wimlib's API typically takes and returns
+ * strings of "tchars", which are in a platform-dependent encoding.
+ *
+ * On Windows, each "tchar" is 2 bytes and is the same as a "wchar_t", and the
+ * encoding is UTF-16LE.
+ *
+ * On UNIX, each "tchar" is 1 byte and is simply a "char", and the encoding is
+ * the locale-dependent multibyte encoding. I recommend you set your locale to a
+ * UTF-8 capable locale to avoid any issues. Also, by default, wimlib on UNIX
+ * will assume the locale is UTF-8 capable unless you call wimlib_global_init()
+ * after having set your desired locale.
*
* \section Limitations
*