(Wdired): Mention C-x C-q key binding.
[bpt/emacs.git] / man / frames.texi
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6bf7aab6 1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
b65d8176 2@c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2000,
4e6835db 3@c 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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4@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5@node Frames, International, Windows, Top
9c75b187 6@chapter Frames and Graphical Displays
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7@cindex frames
8
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9 When using a graphical display, you can create multiple windows at
10the system in a single Emacs session. Each system-level window that
11belongs to Emacs displays a @dfn{frame} which can contain one or
12several Emacs windows. A frame initially contains a single
13general-purpose Emacs window which you can subdivide vertically or
14horizontally into smaller windows. A frame normally contains its own
15echo area and minibuffer, but you can make frames that don't have
16these---they use the echo area and minibuffer of another frame.
6bf7aab6 17
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18 To avoid confusion, we reserve the word ``window'' for the
19subdivisions that Emacs implements, and never use it to refer to a
20frame.
21
22 Editing you do in one frame affects the other frames. For
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23instance, if you put text in the kill ring in one frame, you can yank it
24in another frame. If you exit Emacs through @kbd{C-x C-c} in one frame,
25it terminates all the frames. To delete just one frame, use @kbd{C-x 5
85d6c6e7 260} (that is zero, not @kbd{o}).
6bf7aab6 27
9c75b187 28 Emacs compiled for MS-DOS emulates some windowing functionality,
6bf7aab6 29so that you can use many of the features described in this chapter.
af330736 30@iftex
e691d082 31@xref{MS-DOS Mouse,,,emacs-xtra,Specialized Emacs Features}.
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32@end iftex
33@ifnottex
34@xref{MS-DOS Mouse}.
35@end ifnottex
36
6bf7aab6 37@menu
e22f9f45 38* Cut and Paste:: Mouse commands for cut and paste.
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39* Mouse References:: Using the mouse to select an item from a list.
40* Menu Mouse Clicks:: Mouse clicks that bring up menus.
41* Mode Line Mouse:: Mouse clicks on the mode line.
6bf7aab6 42* Creating Frames:: Creating additional Emacs frames with various contents.
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43* Frame Commands:: Iconifying, deleting, and switching frames.
44* Speedbar:: How to make and use a speedbar frame.
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45* Multiple Displays:: How one Emacs job can talk to several displays.
46* Special Buffer Frames:: You can make certain buffers have their own frames.
47* Frame Parameters:: Changing the colors and other modes of frames.
48* Scroll Bars:: How to enable and disable scroll bars; how to use them.
70c88b57 49* Wheeled Mice:: Using mouse wheels for scrolling.
cc9355ea 50* Drag and Drop:: Using drag and drop to open files and insert text.
6bf7aab6 51* Menu Bars:: Enabling and disabling the menu bar.
2beab0db 52* Tool Bars:: Enabling and disabling the tool bar.
70c88b57 53* Dialog Boxes:: Controlling use of dialog boxes.
6f58eede 54* Tooltips:: Displaying information at the current mouse position.
43391ff3 55* Mouse Avoidance:: Moving the mouse pointer out of the way.
6bf7aab6 56* Non-Window Terminals:: Multiple frames on terminals that show only one.
da53afb0 57* Text-Only Mouse:: Using the mouse in text-only terminals.
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58@end menu
59
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60@node Cut and Paste
61@section Killing and Yanking on Graphical Displays
62
63 This section describes facilities for selecting a region, killing,
64and yanking using the mouse.
65
66@menu
67* Mouse Commands:: Moving, cutting, and pasting, with the mouse.
68* Cut/Paste Other App:: Transfering text between Emacs and other apps.
69* Word and Line Mouse:: Mouse commands for selecting whole words or lines.
70* Secondary Selection:: Cutting without altering point and mark.
71* Clipboard:: Using the clipboard for selections.
72@end menu
73
6bf7aab6 74@node Mouse Commands
e22f9f45 75@subsection Mouse Commands for Editing
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76@cindex mouse buttons (what they do)
77
78 The mouse commands for selecting and copying a region are mostly
79compatible with the @code{xterm} program. You can use the same mouse
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80commands for copying between Emacs and other window-based programs.
81Most of these commands also work in Emacs when you run it under an
82@code{xterm} terminal.
6bf7aab6 83
0e824f4f 84@kindex DELETE @r{(and mouse selection)}
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85 If you select a region with any of these mouse commands, and then
86immediately afterward type the @key{DELETE} function key, it deletes the
87region that you selected. The @key{BACKSPACE} function key and the
76dd3692 88@acronym{ASCII} character @key{DEL} do not do this; if you type any other key
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89in between the mouse command and @key{DELETE}, it does not do this.
90
91@findex mouse-set-region
92@findex mouse-set-point
93@findex mouse-yank-at-click
94@findex mouse-save-then-click
95@kindex Mouse-1
96@kindex Mouse-2
97@kindex Mouse-3
98@table @kbd
99@item Mouse-1
100Move point to where you click (@code{mouse-set-point}).
101This is normally the left button.
102
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103@vindex x-mouse-click-focus-ignore-position
104Normally, Emacs does not distinguish between ordinary mouse clicks and
105clicks that select a frame. When you click on a frame to select it,
106that also changes the selected window and cursor position according to
107the mouse click position. On the X window system, you can change this
108behavior by setting the variable
109@code{x-mouse-click-focus-ignore-position} to @code{t}. Then the
110first click selects the frame, but does not affect the selected window
111or cursor position. If you click again in the same place, since that
112click will be in the selected frame, it will change the window or
113cursor position.
114
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115@item Drag-Mouse-1
116Set the region to the text you select by dragging, and copy it to the
117kill ring (@code{mouse-set-region}). You can specify both ends of the
118region with this single command.
119
120@vindex mouse-scroll-min-lines
121If you move the mouse off the top or bottom of the window while
122dragging, the window scrolls at a steady rate until you move the mouse
123back into the window. This way, you can select regions that don't fit
124entirely on the screen. The number of lines scrolled per step depends
125on how far away from the window edge the mouse has gone; the variable
126@code{mouse-scroll-min-lines} specifies a minimum step size.
127
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128@vindex mouse-drag-copy-region
129If the variable @code{mouse-drag-copy-region} is @code{nil}, this
130mouse command does not copy the selected region into the kill ring.
131
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132@item Mouse-2
133Yank the last killed text, where you click (@code{mouse-yank-at-click}).
134This is normally the middle button.
135
136@item Mouse-3
137This command, @code{mouse-save-then-kill}, has several functions
138depending on where you click and the status of the region.
139
140The most basic case is when you click @kbd{Mouse-1} in one place and
141then @kbd{Mouse-3} in another. This selects the text between those two
142positions as the region. It also copies the new region to the kill
143ring, so that you can copy it to someplace else.
144
145If you click @kbd{Mouse-1} in the text, scroll with the scroll bar, and
146then click @kbd{Mouse-3}, it remembers where point was before scrolling
147(where you put it with @kbd{Mouse-1}), and uses that position as the
148other end of the region. This is so that you can select a region that
149doesn't fit entirely on the screen.
150
151More generally, if you do not have a highlighted region, @kbd{Mouse-3}
152selects the text between point and the click position as the region. It
153does this by setting the mark where point was, and moving point to where
154you click.
155
156If you have a highlighted region, or if the region was set just before
157by dragging button 1, @kbd{Mouse-3} adjusts the nearer end of the region
158by moving it to where you click. The adjusted region's text also
159replaces the old region's text in the kill ring.
160
161If you originally specified the region using a double or triple
162@kbd{Mouse-1}, so that the region is defined to consist of entire words
163or lines, then adjusting the region with @kbd{Mouse-3} also proceeds by
164entire words or lines.
165
166If you use @kbd{Mouse-3} a second time consecutively, at the same place,
167that kills the region already selected.
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168@end table
169
170 The simplest way to kill text with the mouse is to press @kbd{Mouse-1}
171at one end, then press @kbd{Mouse-3} twice at the other end.
172@xref{Killing}. To copy the text into the kill ring without deleting it
173from the buffer, press @kbd{Mouse-3} just once---or just drag across the
174text with @kbd{Mouse-1}. Then you can copy it elsewhere by yanking it.
175
176@vindex mouse-yank-at-point
177 To yank the killed or copied text somewhere else, move the mouse there
178and press @kbd{Mouse-2}. @xref{Yanking}. However, if
179@code{mouse-yank-at-point} is non-@code{nil}, @kbd{Mouse-2} yanks at
180point. Then it does not matter where you click, or even which of the
181frame's windows you click on. The default value is @code{nil}. This
182variable also affects yanking the secondary selection.
183
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184@cindex Delete Selection mode
185@cindex mode, Delete Selection
186@findex delete-selection-mode
187 Many graphical applications follow the convention that insertion while text
188is selected deletes the selected text. You can make Emacs behave this
189way by enabling Delete Selection mode---with @kbd{M-x
190delete-selection-mode} or using Custom. Another effect of this mode
191is that @key{DEL}, @kbd{C-d} and some other keys, when a selection
192exists, will kill the whole selection. It also enables Transient Mark
193mode (@pxref{Transient Mark}).
194
195@node Cut/Paste Other App
196@subsection Cut and Paste with Other Window Applications
197
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198@cindex cutting
199@cindex pasting
6bf7aab6 200@cindex X cutting and pasting
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201 To copy text to another windowing application, kill it or save it in
202the kill ring. Then use the ``paste'' or ``yank'' command of the
203other application to insert the text.
6bf7aab6 204
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205 To copy text from another windowing application, use its ``cut'' or
206``copy'' command to select the text you want. Then yank it in Emacs
207with @kbd{C-y} or @kbd{Mouse-2}.
6bf7aab6 208
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209@cindex primary selection
210@cindex cut buffer
211@cindex selection, primary
212@vindex x-cut-buffer-max
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213 When Emacs puts text into the kill ring, or rotates text to the
214front of the kill ring, it sets the @dfn{primary selection} in the
215window system. This is how other windowing applications can access
216the text. On the X Window System, emacs also stores the text in the
217cut buffer, but only if the text is short enough (the value of
218@code{x-cut-buffer-max} specifies the maximum number of characters);
219putting long strings in the cut buffer can be slow.
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220
221 The commands to yank the first entry in the kill ring actually check
222first for a primary selection in another program; after that, they check
223for text in the cut buffer. If neither of those sources provides text
224to yank, the kill ring contents are used.
225
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226 The standard coding system for X Window System selections is
227@code{compound-text-with-extensions}. To specify another coding
228system for selections, use @kbd{C-x @key{RET} x} or @kbd{C-x @key{RET}
229X}. @xref{Communication Coding}.
230
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231@node Word and Line Mouse
232@subsection Mouse Commands for Words and Lines
233
234 These variants of @kbd{Mouse-1} select entire words or lines at a time.
235
236@table @kbd
237@item Double-Mouse-1
238This key sets the region around the word which you click on. If you
239click on a character with ``symbol'' syntax (such as underscore, in C
240mode), it sets the region around the symbol surrounding that character.
241
242If you click on a character with open-parenthesis or close-parenthesis
243syntax, it sets the region around the parenthetical grouping
244which that character starts or ends. If you click on a character with
245string-delimiter syntax (such as a singlequote or doublequote in C), it
246sets the region around the string constant (using heuristics to figure
247out whether that character is the beginning or the end of it).
248
249@item Double-Drag-Mouse-1
250This key selects a region made up of the words you drag across.
251
252@item Triple-Mouse-1
253This key sets the region around the line you click on.
254
255@item Triple-Drag-Mouse-1
256This key selects a region made up of the lines you drag across.
257@end table
258
6bf7aab6 259@node Secondary Selection
e22f9f45 260@subsection Secondary Selection
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261@cindex secondary selection
262
263 The @dfn{secondary selection} is another way of selecting text using
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264the X Window System. It does not use point or the mark, so you can
265use it to kill text without setting point or the mark.
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266
267@table @kbd
268@findex mouse-set-secondary
269@kindex M-Drag-Mouse-1
270@item M-Drag-Mouse-1
271Set the secondary selection, with one end at the place where you press
272down the button, and the other end at the place where you release it
273(@code{mouse-set-secondary}). The highlighting appears and changes as
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274you drag. You can control the appearance of the highlighting by
275customizing the @code{secondary-selection} face (@pxref{Face
276Customization}).
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277
278If you move the mouse off the top or bottom of the window while
279dragging, the window scrolls at a steady rate until you move the mouse
280back into the window. This way, you can mark regions that don't fit
281entirely on the screen.
282
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283This way of setting the secondary selection does not alter the kill ring.
284
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285@findex mouse-start-secondary
286@kindex M-Mouse-1
287@item M-Mouse-1
288Set one endpoint for the @dfn{secondary selection}
289(@code{mouse-start-secondary}).
290
291@findex mouse-secondary-save-then-kill
292@kindex M-Mouse-3
293@item M-Mouse-3
294Make a secondary selection, using the place specified with @kbd{M-Mouse-1}
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295as the other end (@code{mouse-secondary-save-then-kill}). This also
296puts the selected text in the kill ring. A second click at the same
297place kills the secondary selection just made.
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298
299@findex mouse-yank-secondary
300@kindex M-Mouse-2
301@item M-Mouse-2
302Insert the secondary selection where you click
303(@code{mouse-yank-secondary}). This places point at the end of the
304yanked text.
305@end table
306
307Double or triple clicking of @kbd{M-Mouse-1} operates on words and
308lines, much like @kbd{Mouse-1}.
309
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310If @code{mouse-yank-at-point} is non-@code{nil}, @kbd{M-Mouse-2} yanks
311at point. Then it does not matter precisely where you click, or even
312which of the frame's windows you click on. @xref{Mouse Commands}.
6bf7aab6 313
d235b2db 314@node Clipboard
e22f9f45 315@subsection Using the Clipboard
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316@cindex clipboard
317@vindex x-select-enable-clipboard
318@findex menu-bar-enable-clipboard
319@cindex OpenWindows
320@cindex Gnome
321
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322 Apart from the primary and secondary selection types, Emacs can
323handle the @dfn{clipboard} selection type which is used by some
324applications, particularly under OpenWindows and Gnome.
d235b2db 325
099bfef9 326 The command @kbd{M-x menu-bar-enable-clipboard} makes the @code{Cut},
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327@code{Paste} and @code{Copy} menu items, as well as the keys of the same
328names, all use the clipboard.
177c0ea7 329
19b2c4ca 330 You can customize the variable @code{x-select-enable-clipboard} to make
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331the Emacs yank functions consult the clipboard before the primary
332selection, and to make the kill functions to store in the clipboard as
333well as the primary selection. Otherwise they do not access the
99ce07a6 334clipboard at all. Using the clipboard is the default on MS-Windows and Mac,
9c75b187 335but not on other systems.
d235b2db 336
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337@node Mouse References
338@section Following References with the Mouse
511002e9 339@kindex Mouse-1 @r{(selection)}
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340@kindex Mouse-2 @r{(selection)}
341
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342 Some read-only Emacs buffers include references you can follow, or
343commands you can activate. These include names of files, of buffers,
344of possible completions, of matches for a pattern, as well as the
345buttons in Help buffers and customization buffers. You can follow the
346reference or activate the command by moving point to it and typing
347@key{RET}. You can also do this with the mouse, using either
348@kbd{Mouse-1} or @kbd{Mouse-2}.
349
350 Since yanking text into a read-only buffer is not allowed, these
351buffers generally define @kbd{Mouse-2} to follow a reference or
352activate a command. For example, if you click @kbd{Mouse-2} on a file
353name in a Dired buffer, you visit that file. If you click
354@kbd{Mouse-2} on an error message in the @samp{*Compilation*} buffer,
355you go to the source code for that error message. If you click
356@kbd{Mouse-2} on a completion in the @samp{*Completions*} buffer, you
357choose that completion.
358
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359 However, most applications use @kbd{Mouse-1} to do this sort of
360thing, so Emacs implements this too. If you click @kbd{Mouse-1}
361quickly on a reference or button, it follows or activates. If you
362click slowly, it moves point as usual. Dragging, meaning moving the
363mouse while it is held down, also has its usual behavior of setting
ab95e99c 364the region.
6bf7aab6 365
ab95e99c 366@vindex mouse-1-click-in-non-selected-windows
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367 Normally, the @kbd{Mouse-1} click behavior is performed on links in
368any window. The variable @code{mouse-1-click-in-non-selected-windows}
369controls whether @kbd{Mouse-1} has this behavior even in non-selected
370windows, or only in the selected window.
371
922bc663 372@vindex mouse-highlight
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373 You can usually tell when @kbd{Mouse-1} and @kbd{Mouse-2} have this
374special sort of meaning because the sensitive text highlights when you
375move the mouse over it. The variable @code{mouse-highlight} controls
376whether to do this highlighting always (even when such text appears
377where the mouse already is), never, or only immediately after you move
378the mouse.
6bf7aab6 379
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380@vindex mouse-1-click-follows-link
381 In Emacs versions before 22, only @kbd{Mouse-2} follows links and
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382@kbd{Mouse-1} always sets point. If you prefer this older behavior,
383set the variable @code{mouse-1-click-follows-link} to @code{nil}.
384This variable also lets you choose various other alternatives for
385following links with the mouse. Type @kbd{C-h v
386mouse-1-click-follows-link @key{RET}} for more details.
ab95e99c 387
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388@node Menu Mouse Clicks
389@section Mouse Clicks for Menus
390
9c75b187 391 Several mouse clicks with the @key{CTRL} and @key{SHIFT} modifiers
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392bring up menus.
393
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394@table @kbd
395@item C-Mouse-1
239e21e2 396@kindex C-Mouse-1
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397This menu is for selecting a buffer.
398
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399The MSB (``mouse select buffer'') global minor mode makes this
400menu smarter and more customizable. @xref{Buffer Menus}.
239e21e2 401
6bf7aab6 402@item C-Mouse-2
239e21e2 403@kindex C-Mouse-2
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404This menu is for specifying faces and other text properties
405for editing formatted text. @xref{Formatted Text}.
406
407@item C-Mouse-3
239e21e2 408@kindex C-Mouse-3
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409This menu is mode-specific. For most modes if Menu-bar mode is on,
410this menu has the same items as all the mode-specific menu-bar menus
411put together. Some modes may specify a different menu for this
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412button.@footnote{Some systems use @kbd{Mouse-3} for a mode-specific
413menu. We took a survey of users, and found they preferred to keep
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414@kbd{Mouse-3} for selecting and killing regions. Hence the decision
415to use @kbd{C-Mouse-3} for this menu. To use @kbd{Mouse-3} instead,
416do @code{(global-set-key [mouse-3] 'mouse-popup-menubar-stuff)}.} If
417Menu-bar mode is off, this menu contains all the items which would be
418present in the menu bar---not just the mode-specific ones---so that
419you can access them without having to display the menu bar.
6bf7aab6 420
099bfef9 421@item S-Mouse-1
9c75b187 422This menu is for specifying the frame's default font.
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423@end table
424
425@node Mode Line Mouse
426@section Mode Line Mouse Commands
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427@cindex mode line, mouse
428@cindex mouse on mode line
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429
430 You can use mouse clicks on window mode lines to select and manipulate
431windows.
432
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433 Some areas of the mode line, such as the buffer name and the major
434mode name, have their own special mouse bindings. These areas are
435highlighted when you hold the mouse over them, and information about
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436the special bindings will be displayed (@pxref{Tooltips}). This
437section's commands do not apply in those areas.
07039174 438
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439@table @kbd
440@item Mouse-1
099bfef9 441@kindex Mouse-1 @r{(mode line)}
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442@kbd{Mouse-1} on a mode line selects the window it belongs to. By
443dragging @kbd{Mouse-1} on the mode line, you can move it, thus
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444changing the height of the windows above and below. Changing heights
445with the mouse in this way never deletes windows, it just refuses to
446make any window smaller than the minimum height.
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447
448@item Mouse-2
099bfef9 449@kindex Mouse-2 @r{(mode line)}
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450@kbd{Mouse-2} on a mode line expands that window to fill its frame.
451
452@item Mouse-3
099bfef9 453@kindex Mouse-3 @r{(mode line)}
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454@kbd{Mouse-3} on a mode line deletes the window it belongs to. If the
455frame has only one window, it buries the current buffer instead, and
456switches to another buffer.
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457
458@item C-Mouse-2
099bfef9 459@kindex C-mouse-2 @r{(mode line)}
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460@kbd{C-Mouse-2} on a mode line splits the window above
461horizontally, above the place in the mode line where you click.
462@end table
463
099bfef9 464@kindex C-Mouse-2 @r{(scroll bar)}
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465@kindex Mouse-1 @r{(scroll bar)}
466 Using @kbd{Mouse-1} on the divider between two side-by-side mode
467lines, you can move the vertical boundary left or right. Using
468@kbd{C-Mouse-2} on a scroll bar splits the corresponding window
779bc800 469vertically. @xref{Split Window}.
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470
471@node Creating Frames
472@section Creating Frames
473@cindex creating frames
474
475@kindex C-x 5
476 The prefix key @kbd{C-x 5} is analogous to @kbd{C-x 4}, with parallel
477subcommands. The difference is that @kbd{C-x 5} commands create a new
478frame rather than just a new window in the selected frame (@pxref{Pop
479Up Window}). If an existing visible or iconified frame already displays
480the requested material, these commands use the existing frame, after
177c0ea7 481raising or deiconifying as necessary.
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482
483 The various @kbd{C-x 5} commands differ in how they find or create the
484buffer to select:
485
486@table @kbd
487@item C-x 5 2
488@kindex C-x 5 2
489@findex make-frame-command
490Create a new frame (@code{make-frame-command}).
491@item C-x 5 b @var{bufname} @key{RET}
492Select buffer @var{bufname} in another frame. This runs
493@code{switch-to-buffer-other-frame}.
494@item C-x 5 f @var{filename} @key{RET}
495Visit file @var{filename} and select its buffer in another frame. This
496runs @code{find-file-other-frame}. @xref{Visiting}.
497@item C-x 5 d @var{directory} @key{RET}
498Select a Dired buffer for directory @var{directory} in another frame.
499This runs @code{dired-other-frame}. @xref{Dired}.
500@item C-x 5 m
501Start composing a mail message in another frame. This runs
502@code{mail-other-frame}. It is the other-frame variant of @kbd{C-x m}.
503@xref{Sending Mail}.
504@item C-x 5 .
505Find a tag in the current tag table in another frame. This runs
506@code{find-tag-other-frame}, the multiple-frame variant of @kbd{M-.}.
507@xref{Tags}.
508@item C-x 5 r @var{filename} @key{RET}
509@kindex C-x 5 r
510@findex find-file-read-only-other-frame
511Visit file @var{filename} read-only, and select its buffer in another
512frame. This runs @code{find-file-read-only-other-frame}.
513@xref{Visiting}.
514@end table
515
516@cindex default-frame-alist
517@cindex initial-frame-alist
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518@cindex face customization, in @file{~/.emacs}
519@cindex color customization, in @file{~/.emacs}
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520 You can control the appearance of new frames you create by setting the
521frame parameters in @code{default-frame-alist}. You can use the
522variable @code{initial-frame-alist} to specify parameters that affect
523only the initial frame. @xref{Initial Parameters,,, elisp, The Emacs
524Lisp Reference Manual}, for more information.
525
526@cindex font (default)
527 The easiest way to specify the principal font for all your Emacs
528frames is with an X resource (@pxref{Font X}), but you can also do it by
529modifying @code{default-frame-alist} to specify the @code{font}
530parameter, as shown here:
531
532@example
533(add-to-list 'default-frame-alist '(font . "10x20"))
534@end example
535
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536@noindent
537Here's a similar example for specifying a foreground color:
538
539@example
7ce1c508 540(add-to-list 'default-frame-alist '(foreground-color . "blue"))
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541@end example
542
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543@noindent
544By putting such customizations in your @file{~/.emacs} init file, you
545can control the appearance of all the frames Emacs creates, including
546the initial one.
547
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548@node Frame Commands
549@section Frame Commands
550
551 The following commands let you create, delete and operate on frames:
552
553@table @kbd
554@item C-z
555@kindex C-z @r{(X windows)}
556@findex iconify-or-deiconify-frame
557Iconify the selected Emacs frame (@code{iconify-or-deiconify-frame}).
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558When typed on an Emacs frame's icon, deiconify instead.
559
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560The normal meaning of @kbd{C-z}, to suspend Emacs, is not useful under
561a graphical display that allows multiple applications to operate
31909de7 562simultaneously in their own windows, so Emacs gives @kbd{C-z} a
f97b3732 563different binding in that case.
099bfef9 564
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565@item C-x 5 0
566@kindex C-x 5 0
567@findex delete-frame
568Delete the selected frame (@code{delete-frame}). This is not allowed if
569there is only one frame.
570
571@item C-x 5 o
572@kindex C-x 5 o
573@findex other-frame
574Select another frame, raise it, and warp the mouse to it so that it
575stays selected. If you repeat this command, it cycles through all the
576frames on your terminal.
577
578@item C-x 5 1
579@kindex C-x 5 1
580@findex delete-other-frames
581Delete all frames except the selected one.
582@end table
583
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584@vindex focus-follows-mouse
585 To make the command @kbd{C-x 5 o} work properly, you must tell Emacs
586how the system (or the window manager) generally handles
587focus-switching between windows. There are two possibilities: either
588simply moving the mouse onto a window selects it (gives it focus), or
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589you have to click on it in a suitable way to do so. On X, this focus
590policy also affects whether the focus is given to a frame that Emacs
591raises. Unfortunately there is no way Emacs can find out
592automatically which way the system handles this, so you have to
593explicitly say, by setting the variable @code{focus-follows-mouse}.
594If just moving the mouse onto a window selects it, that variable
595should be @code{t}; if a click is necessary, the variable should be
596@code{nil}.
597
598The window manager that is part of MS-Windows always gives focus to a
599frame that raises, so this variable has no effect in the native
600MS-Windows build of Emacs.
93d177d5 601
6bf7aab6 602@node Speedbar
de22e5d1 603@section Speedbar Frames
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604@cindex speedbar
605
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606@cindex attached frame (of speedbar)
607 The @dfn{speedbar} is a special frame for conveniently navigating in
608or operating on another frame. The speedbar, when it exists, is
609always associated with a specific frame, called its @dfn{attached
610frame}; all speedbar operations act on that frame.
611
612 Type @kbd{M-x speedbar} to create the speedbar and associate it with
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613the current frame. To dismiss the speedbar, type @kbd{M-x speedbar}
614again, or select the speedbar and type @kbd{q}. (You can also delete
615the speedbar frame like any other Emacs frame.) If you wish to
616associate the speedbar with a different frame, dismiss it and call
617@kbd{M-x speedbar} from that frame.
618
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619 The speedbar can operate in various modes. Its default mode is
620@dfn{File Display} mode, which shows the files in the current
621directory of the selected window of the attached frame, one file per
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622line. Clicking on a file name visits that file in the selected window
623of the attached frame, and clicking on a directory name shows that
624directory in the speedbar (@pxref{Mouse References}). Each line also
625has a box, @samp{[+]} or @samp{<+>}, that you can click on to
626@dfn{expand} the contents of that item. Expanding a directory adds
627the contents of that directory to the speedbar display, underneath the
628directory's own line. Expanding an ordinary file adds a list of the
629tags in that file to the speedbar display; you can click on a tag name
630to jump to that tag in the selected window of the attached frame.
631When a file or directory is expanded, the @samp{[+]} changes to
632@samp{[-]}; you can click on that box to @dfn{contract} the item,
633hiding its contents.
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634
635 You navigate through the speedbar using the keyboard, too. Typing
636@kbd{RET} while point is on a line in the speedbar is equivalent to
637clicking the item on the current line, and @kbd{SPC} expands or
638contracts the item. @kbd{U} displays the parent directory of the
639current directory. To copy, delete, or rename the file on the current
640line, type @kbd{C}, @kbd{D}, and @kbd{R} respectively. To create a
641new directory, type @kbd{M}.
642
643 Another general-purpose speedbar mode is @dfn{Buffer Display} mode;
644in this mode, the speedbar displays a list of Emacs buffers. To
645switch to this mode, type @kbd{b} in the speedbar. To return to File
646Display mode, type @kbd{f}. You can also change the display mode by
647clicking @kbd{mouse-3} anywhere in the speedbar window (or
648@kbd{mouse-1} on the mode-line) and selecting @samp{Displays} in the
649pop-up menu.
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650
651 Some major modes, including Rmail mode, Info, and GUD, have
652specialized ways of putting useful items into the speedbar for you to
653select. For example, in Rmail mode, the speedbar shows a list of Rmail
654files, and lets you move the current message to another Rmail file by
655clicking on its @samp{<M>} box.
656
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657 For more details on using and programming the speedbar, @xref{Top,
658Speedbar,,speedbar, Speedbar Manual}.
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659
660@node Multiple Displays
661@section Multiple Displays
662@cindex multiple displays
663
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664 A single Emacs can talk to more than one X display. Initially, Emacs
665uses just one display---the one specified with the @env{DISPLAY}
666environment variable or with the @samp{--display} option (@pxref{Initial
667Options}). To connect to another display, use the command
668@code{make-frame-on-display}:
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669
670@findex make-frame-on-display
671@table @kbd
672@item M-x make-frame-on-display @key{RET} @var{display} @key{RET}
673Create a new frame on display @var{display}.
674@end table
675
676 A single X server can handle more than one screen. When you open
677frames on two screens belonging to one server, Emacs knows they share a
678single keyboard, and it treats all the commands arriving from these
679screens as a single stream of input.
680
681 When you open frames on different X servers, Emacs makes a separate
682input stream for each server. This way, two users can type
683simultaneously on the two displays, and Emacs will not garble their
684input. Each server also has its own selected frame. The commands you
685enter with a particular X server apply to that server's selected frame.
686
687 Despite these features, people using the same Emacs job from different
688displays can still interfere with each other if they are not careful.
689For example, if any one types @kbd{C-x C-c}, that exits the Emacs job
690for all of them!
691
692@node Special Buffer Frames
693@section Special Buffer Frames
694
695@vindex special-display-buffer-names
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696 You can make certain chosen buffers, which Emacs normally displays
697in ``another window,'' appear in special frames of their own. To do
698this, set the variable @code{special-display-buffer-names} to a list
699of buffer names; any buffer whose name is in that list automatically
700gets a special frame, when an Emacs command wants to display it ``in
701another window.''
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702
703 For example, if you set the variable this way,
704
705@example
706(setq special-display-buffer-names
707 '("*Completions*" "*grep*" "*tex-shell*"))
708@end example
709
710@noindent
711then completion lists, @code{grep} output and the @TeX{} mode shell
712buffer get individual frames of their own. These frames, and the
713windows in them, are never automatically split or reused for any other
714buffers. They continue to show the buffers they were created for,
715unless you alter them by hand. Killing the special buffer deletes its
716frame automatically.
717
718@vindex special-display-regexps
719 More generally, you can set @code{special-display-regexps} to a list
720of regular expressions; then a buffer gets its own frame if its name
721matches any of those regular expressions. (Once again, this applies only
9c75b187 722to buffers that normally get displayed for you in ``another window.'')
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723
724@vindex special-display-frame-alist
725 The variable @code{special-display-frame-alist} specifies the frame
726parameters for these frames. It has a default value, so you don't need
727to set it.
728
729 For those who know Lisp, an element of
730@code{special-display-buffer-names} or @code{special-display-regexps}
731can also be a list. Then the first element is the buffer name or
732regular expression; the rest of the list specifies how to create the
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733frame. It can be an association list specifying frame parameter
734values; these values take precedence over parameter values specified
735in @code{special-display-frame-alist}. If you specify the symbol
736@code{same-window} as a ``frame parameter'' in this list, with a
737non-@code{nil} value, that means to use the selected window if
738possible. If you use the symbol @code{same-frame} as a ``frame
739parameter'' in this list, with a non-@code{nil} value, that means to
740use the selected frame if possible.
741
742 Alternatively, the value can have this form:
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743
744@example
745(@var{function} @var{args}...)
746@end example
747
748@noindent
749where @var{function} is a symbol. Then the frame is constructed by
750calling @var{function}; its first argument is the buffer, and its
751remaining arguments are @var{args}.
752
753 An analogous feature lets you specify buffers which should be
754displayed in the selected window. @xref{Force Same Window}. The
755same-window feature takes precedence over the special-frame feature;
756therefore, if you add a buffer name to
757@code{special-display-buffer-names} and it has no effect, check to see
758whether that feature is also in use for the same buffer name.
759
760@node Frame Parameters
761@section Setting Frame Parameters
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762@cindex Auto-Raise mode
763@cindex Auto-Lower mode
764
9c75b187 765@kindex S-Mouse-1
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766 You can specify the font and colors used for text display, and the
767colors for the frame borders, the cursor, and the mouse cursor, by
768customizing the faces @code{default}, @code{border}, @code{cursor} and
769@code{mouse}. @xref{Face Customization}. You can also set a frame's
770default font through a pop-up menu. Press @kbd{S-Mouse-1} to activate
771this menu.
6bf7aab6 772
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773 These commands are available for controlling the window management
774behavior of the selected frame.
6bf7aab6 775
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776@table @kbd
777@findex auto-raise-mode
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778@item M-x auto-raise-mode
779Toggle whether or not the selected frame should auto-raise. Auto-raise
780means that every time you move the mouse onto the frame, it raises the
781frame.
782
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783Some window managers also implement auto-raise. If you enable
784auto-raise for Emacs frames in your window manager, it will work, but
785it is beyond Emacs' control, so @code{auto-raise-mode} has no effect
786on it.
6bf7aab6 787
9c75b187 788@findex auto-lower-mode
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789@item M-x auto-lower-mode
790Toggle whether or not the selected frame should auto-lower.
791Auto-lower means that every time you move the mouse off the frame,
9c75b187 792the frame moves to the bottom of the stack on the screen.
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793
794The command @code{auto-lower-mode} has no effect on auto-lower
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795implemented by the window manager. To control that, you must use the
796appropriate window manager features.
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797@end table
798
799 In Emacs versions that use an X toolkit, the color-setting and
800font-setting functions don't affect menus and the menu bar, since they
801are displayed by their own widget classes. To change the appearance of
186e9bcc 802the menus and menu bar, you must use X resources (@pxref{Resources}).
89c8e752 803@xref{Colors}, regarding colors. @xref{Font X}, regarding choice of
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804font.
805
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806 Colors, fonts, and other attributes of the frame's display can also
807be customized by setting frame parameters in the variable
808@code{default-frame-alist} (@pxref{Creating Frames}). For a detailed
809description of frame parameters and customization, see @ref{Frame
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810Parameters,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
811
812@node Scroll Bars
813@section Scroll Bars
814@cindex Scroll Bar mode
815@cindex mode, Scroll Bar
816
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817 On graphical displays, Emacs normally makes a @dfn{scroll bar} at
818the left of each Emacs window.@footnote{Placing it at the left is
819usually more useful with overlapping frames with text starting at the
820left margin.} The scroll bar runs the height of the window, and shows
821a moving rectangular inner box which represents the portion of the
822buffer currently displayed. The entire height of the scroll bar
823represents the entire length of the buffer.
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824
825 You can use @kbd{Mouse-2} (normally, the middle button) in the scroll
826bar to move or drag the inner box up and down. If you move it to the
827top of the scroll bar, you see the top of the buffer. If you move it to
828the bottom of the scroll bar, you see the bottom of the buffer.
829
830 The left and right buttons in the scroll bar scroll by controlled
831increments. @kbd{Mouse-1} (normally, the left button) moves the line at
832the level where you click up to the top of the window. @kbd{Mouse-3}
833(normally, the right button) moves the line at the top of the window
834down to the level where you click. By clicking repeatedly in the same
835place, you can scroll by the same distance over and over.
836
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837 You can also click @kbd{C-Mouse-2} in the scroll bar to split a
838window vertically. The split occurs on the line where you click.
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839
840@findex scroll-bar-mode
70c88b57 841@vindex scroll-bar-mode
6bf7aab6 842 You can enable or disable Scroll Bar mode with the command @kbd{M-x
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843scroll-bar-mode}. With no argument, it toggles the use of scroll
844bars. With an argument, it turns use of scroll bars on if and only if
845the argument is positive. This command applies to all frames,
846including frames yet to be created. Customize the variable
847@code{scroll-bar-mode} to control the use of scroll bars at startup.
848You can use it to specify that they are placed at the right of windows
849if you prefer that. You have to set this variable through the
850@samp{Customize} interface (@pxref{Easy Customization}), or it will
851not work properly.
852
853 You can also use the X resource @samp{verticalScrollBars} to control
854the initial setting of Scroll Bar mode. @xref{Resources}.
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855
856@findex toggle-scroll-bar
857 To enable or disable scroll bars for just the selected frame, use the
eca274b1 858command @kbd{M-x toggle-scroll-bar}.
6bf7aab6 859
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860@vindex scroll-bar-width
861@cindex width of the scroll bar
862 You can control the scroll bar width by changing the value of the
863@code{scroll-bar-width} frame parameter.
864
70c88b57 865@node Wheeled Mice
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866@section Scrolling With ``Wheeled'' Mice
867
868@cindex mouse wheel
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869@cindex wheel, mouse
870@findex mouse-wheel-mode
871@cindex Mouse Wheel minor mode
872@cindex mode, Mouse Wheel
873 Some mice have a ``wheel'' instead of a third button. You can
874usually click the wheel to act as either @kbd{Mouse-2} or
875@kbd{Mouse-3}, depending on the setup. You can also use the wheel to
099bfef9 876scroll windows instead of using the scroll bar or keyboard commands.
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877Mouse wheel support only works if the system generates appropriate
878events; whenever possible, it is turned on by default. To toggle this
879feature, use @kbd{M-x mouse-wheel-mode}.
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880
881@vindex mouse-wheel-follow-mouse
882@vindex mouse-wheel-scroll-amount
b50352ec 883@vindex mouse-wheel-progressive-speed
df7593dd 884 The two variables @code{mouse-wheel-follow-mouse} and
c08e161b 885@code{mouse-wheel-scroll-amount} determine where and by how much
b50352ec 886buffers are scrolled. The variable
d9cb626b 887@code{mouse-wheel-progressive-speed} determines whether the scroll
b50352ec 888speed is linked to how fast you move the wheel.
70c88b57 889
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890@node Drag and Drop
891@section Drag and Drop
54900736 892@cindex drag and drop
54900736 893
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894 Emacs supports @dfn{drag and drop} using the mouse. For instance,
895dropping text onto an Emacs frame inserts the text where it is dropped.
896Dropping a file onto an Emacs frame visits that file. As a special
897case, dropping the file on a Dired buffer moves or copies the file
898(according to the conventions of the application it came from) into the
899directory displayed in that buffer.
511002e9 900
9a49a36b 901@vindex dnd-open-file-other-window
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902 Dropping a file normally visits it in the window you drop it on. If
903you prefer to visit the file in a new window in such cases, customize
9a49a36b 904the variable @code{dnd-open-file-other-window}.
511002e9 905
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906 The XDND and Motif drag and drop protocols, and the old KDE 1.x
907protocol, are currently supported.
54900736 908
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909@node Menu Bars
910@section Menu Bars
911@cindex Menu Bar mode
912@cindex mode, Menu Bar
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913@findex menu-bar-mode
914@vindex menu-bar-mode
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915
916 You can turn display of menu bars on or off with @kbd{M-x
19b2c4ca 917menu-bar-mode} or by customizing the variable @code{menu-bar-mode}.
2beab0db 918With no argument, this command toggles Menu Bar mode, a
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919minor mode. With an argument, the command turns Menu Bar mode on if the
920argument is positive, off if the argument is not positive. You can use
921the X resource @samp{menuBarLines} to control the initial setting of
186e9bcc 922Menu Bar mode. @xref{Resources}.
2beab0db 923
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924@kindex C-Mouse-3 @r{(when menu bar is disabled)}
925 Expert users often turn off the menu bar, especially on text-only
926terminals, where this makes one additional line available for text.
927If the menu bar is off, you can still pop up a menu of its contents
47d7776c 928with @kbd{C-Mouse-3} on a display which supports pop-up menus.
099bfef9 929@xref{Menu Mouse Clicks}.
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930
931 @xref{Menu Bar}, for information on how to invoke commands with the
27c4f6c0 932menu bar. @xref{X Resources}, for how to customize the menu bar
9c75b187 933menus' visual appearance.
6bf7aab6 934
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935@node Tool Bars
936@section Tool Bars
937@cindex Tool Bar mode
938@cindex mode, Tool Bar
7114be0e 939@cindex icons, toolbar
2beab0db 940
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941 The @dfn{tool bar} is a line (or lines) of icons at the top of the
942Emacs window, just below the menu bar. You can click on these icons
943with the mouse to do various jobs.
099bfef9 944
511002e9 945 The global tool bar contains general commands. Some major modes
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946define their own tool bars to replace it. A few ``special'' modes
947that are not designed for ordinary editing remove some items from the
948global tool bar.
943a8bb7 949
511002e9 950 Tool bars work only on a graphical display. The tool bar uses colored
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951XPM icons if Emacs was built with XPM support. Otherwise, the tool
952bar uses monochrome icons (PBM or XBM format).
099bfef9 953
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954@findex tool-bar-mode
955@vindex tool-bar-mode
511002e9 956 You can turn display of tool bars on or off with @kbd{M-x
d78e9711 957tool-bar-mode} or by customizing the option @code{tool-bar-mode}.
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958
959@node Dialog Boxes
960@section Using Dialog Boxes
961@cindex dialog boxes
962
963@vindex use-dialog-box
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964 A dialog box is a special kind of menu for asking you a yes-or-no
965question or some other special question. Many Emacs commands use a
966dialog box to ask a yes-or-no question, if you used the mouse to
967invoke the command to begin with.
968
19b2c4ca 969 You can customize the variable @code{use-dialog-box} to suppress the
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970use of dialog boxes. This also controls whether to use file selection
971windows (but those are not supported on all platforms).
70c88b57 972
1394f7f5 973@vindex use-file-dialog
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974 A file selection window is a special kind of dialog box for asking
975for file names. You can customize the variable @code{use-file-dialog}
976to suppress the use of file selection windows, even if you still want
977other kinds of dialogs. This variable has no effect if you have
978suppressed all dialog boxes with the variable @code{use-dialog-box}.
1394f7f5 979
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980@vindex x-gtk-show-hidden-files
981 For Gtk+ version 2.4 and newer, Emacs use the Gtk+ file chooser
982dialog. Emacs adds a toggle button that enables and disables showing
983of hidden files (files starting with a dot) in that dialog. The
984variable @code{x-gtk-show-hidden-files} controls whether to show
985hidden files by default.
1394f7f5 986
6e76f111 987@vindex x-gtk-use-old-file-dialog
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988 For Gtk+ versions 2.4 through 2.10, you can select the old file
989dialog (@code{gtk-file-selector}) by setting the variable
990@code{x-gtk-use-old-file-dialog} to a non-@code{nil} value. If it is
991@code{nil}, Emacs uses @code{gtk-file-chooser}. If Emacs is built
992with a Gtk+ version that has only one file dialog, this variable has
993no effect.
1394f7f5 994
d7131bd3 995@vindex x-gtk-file-dialog-help-text
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996 Emacs adds help text to the Gtk+ file chooser dialog. The variable
997@code{x-gtk-file-dialog-help-text} specifies the text to add; if it is
998@code{nil}, that disables the added text.
d7131bd3 999
70c88b57 1000@node Tooltips
6f58eede 1001@section Tooltips
aac19cea 1002@cindex tooltips
70c88b57 1003
aac19cea 1004 @dfn{Tooltips} are small windows that display text information at the
6f58eede 1005current mouse position. They activate when there is a pause in mouse
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1006movement. There are two types of tooltip: help tooltips and GUD
1007tooltips.
6f58eede 1008
aac19cea 1009 @dfn{Help tooltips} typically display over text---including the mode
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1010line---but are also available for other parts of the Emacs frame, such
1011as the tool bar and menu items.
d9701e91 1012
099bfef9 1013@findex tooltip-mode
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1014 You can toggle display of help tooltips (Tooltip mode) with the
1015command @kbd{M-x tooltip-mode}. When Tooltip mode is disabled, the
1016help text is displayed in the echo area instead.
6f58eede 1017
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1018 @dfn{GUD tooltips} show values of variables. They are useful when
1019you are debugging a program. @xref{Debugger Operation}.
70c88b57 1020
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1021@vindex tooltip-delay
1022 The variables @code{tooltip-delay} specifies how long Emacs should
1023wait before displaying a tooltip. For additional customization
1024options for displaying tooltips, use @kbd{M-x customize-group
1025@key{RET} tooltip @key{RET}}. @xref{X Resources}, for information on
1026customizing the windows that display tooltips.
9638f5c2 1027
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1028@node Mouse Avoidance
1029@section Mouse Avoidance
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1030@cindex avoiding mouse in the way of your typing
1031@cindex mouse avoidance
43391ff3 1032
099bfef9 1033@vindex mouse-avoidance-mode
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1034Mouse Avoidance mode keeps the mouse pointer away from point, to avoid
1035obscuring text you want to edit. Whenever it moves the mouse, it also
19b2c4ca 1036raises the frame. To use Mouse Avoidance mode, customize the variable
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1037@code{mouse-avoidance-mode}. You can set this to various values to
1038move the mouse in several ways:
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1039
1040@table @code
1041@item banish
47d7776c 1042Move the mouse to the upper-right corner on any key-press;
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1043@item exile
1044Move the mouse to the corner only if the cursor gets too close,
1045and allow it to return once the cursor is out of the way;
1046@item jump
1047If the cursor gets too close to the mouse, displace the mouse
1048a random distance & direction;
1049@item animate
1050As @code{jump}, but shows steps along the way for illusion of motion;
1051@item cat-and-mouse
1052The same as @code{animate};
1053@item proteus
1054As @code{animate}, but changes the shape of the mouse pointer too.
1055@end table
1056
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1057@findex mouse-avoidance-mode
1058You can also use the command @kbd{M-x mouse-avoidance-mode} to enable
43391ff3 1059the mode.
70c88b57 1060
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1061@node Non-Window Terminals
1062@section Non-Window Terminals
1063@cindex non-window terminals
1064@cindex single-frame terminals
1065
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1066 On a text-only terminal, Emacs can display only one Emacs frame at a
1067time. However, you can still create multiple Emacs frames, and switch
1068between them. Switching frames on these terminals is much like
1069switching between different window configurations.
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1070
1071 Use @kbd{C-x 5 2} to create a new frame and switch to it; use @kbd{C-x
10725 o} to cycle through the existing frames; use @kbd{C-x 5 0} to delete
1073the current frame.
1074
1075 Each frame has a number to distinguish it. If your terminal can
1076display only one frame at a time, the selected frame's number @var{n}
1077appears near the beginning of the mode line, in the form
1078@samp{F@var{n}}.
1079
1080@findex set-frame-name
1081@findex select-frame-by-name
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1082 @samp{F@var{n}} is in fact the frame's initial name. You can give
1083frames more meaningful names if you wish, and you can select a frame
1084by its name. Use the command @kbd{M-x set-frame-name @key{RET}
1085@var{name} @key{RET}} to specify a new name for the selected frame,
1086and use @kbd{M-x select-frame-by-name @key{RET} @var{name} @key{RET}}
1087to select a frame according to its name. The name you specify appears
1088in the mode line when the frame is selected.
6bf7aab6 1089
da53afb0 1090@node Text-Only Mouse
70c88b57 1091@section Using a Mouse in Terminal Emulators
da53afb0 1092@cindex mouse support
43391ff3 1093@cindex terminal emulators, mouse support
70c88b57 1094
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1095Some terminal emulators support mouse clicks in the terminal window.
1096
1097@cindex xterm
1098In a terminal emulator which is compatible with @code{xterm},
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1099you can use @kbd{M-x xterm-mouse-mode} to give Emacs control over
1100simple use of the mouse---basically, only non-modified single clicks
1101are supported. The normal @code{xterm} mouse functionality for such
1102clicks is still available by holding down the @kbd{SHIFT} key when you
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1103press the mouse button. Xterm Mouse mode is a global minor mode
1104(@pxref{Minor Modes}). Repeating the command turns the mode off
1105again.
6a9526ba 1106
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1107In the console on GNU/Linux, you can use @kbd{M-x t-mouse-mode}. You
1108need to have the gpm package installed and running on your system in
1109order for this to work.
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1110
1111@ignore
1112 arch-tag: 7dcf3a31-a43b-45d4-a900-445b10d77e49
1113@end ignore