fixit.texi (Spelling): Set default dictionary. Improve descriptions (Bug#2554)
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ebc956ca 1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
b65d8176 2@c Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,
6ed161e1 3@c 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
ebc956ca 4@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
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5@node Mac OS / GNUstep, Microsoft Windows, Antinews, Top
6@appendix Emacs and Mac OS / GNUstep
7@cindex Mac OS X
ebc956ca 8@cindex Macintosh
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9@cindex GNUstep
10
11 This section briefly describes the peculiarities of using Emacs built with
12the GNUstep libraries on GNU/Linux or other operating systems, or on Mac OS X
13with native window system support. For Mac OS X, Emacs can be built either
14without window system support, with X11, or with the Cocoa interface. This
15section only applies to the Cocoa build. Emacs 23 does not support Mac OS
16Classic.
17
18 Emacs, when built on Mac OS X, uses the Cocoa application interface. For
19various historical and technical reasons, Emacs uses the term @samp{Nextstep}
20internally, instead of ``Cocoa'' or ``Mac OS X''; for instance, most of the
21commands and variables described in the following sections begin with
22@samp{ns-}, which is short for @samp{Nextstep}. NeXTstep was an application
23interface released by NeXT Inc during the 1980s, of which Cocoa is a direct
24descendent. Apart from Cocoa, there is another NeXTstep-style system:
25GNUstep, which is free software. As of this writing, the GNUstep support is
26alpha status (see @pxref{GNUstep Support}), but we hope to improve it in the
27future.
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28
29@menu
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30* Mac / GNUstep Basics:: Basic Emacs usage under GNUstep or Mac OS.
31* Mac / GNUstep Customization:: Customizations under GNUstep or Mac OS.
32* Mac / GNUstep Events:: How window system events are handled.
33* GNUstep Support:: Details on status of GNUstep support
34*
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35@end menu
36
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37@node Mac / GNUstep Basics, Mac / GNUstep Customization, , Mac OS / GNUstep
38@section Basic Emacs usage under Mac OS and GNUstep
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39
40 By default, the @key{alt} and @key{option} keys are the same as
41@key{Meta} when running under Mac OS. The Mac @key{Cmd} key is the
42same as @key{Super}, and Emacs provides a set of keybindings using
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43this modifier key that mimic other Mac / GNUstep applications (@pxref{Mac /
44GNUstep Events}). You can change these bindings in the usual way (@pxref{Key
959d68bd 45Bindings}).
8be76823 46
271736fc 47 The standard Mac / GNUstep font and color panels are accessible via Lisp commands.
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48 To use the color panel, drag from it to an Emacs frame to change the
49foreground color of the face at that position (if the @key{shift} key
50is held down, it changes the background color instead). To discard the
8be76823 51settings, create a new frame and close the altered one.
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52@c [unclear if the following holds.]
53@c To finalize the settings for either color or font, choose @samp{Save Options} in the @samp{Options} menu.
8be76823 54
e93bc142 55 @key{S-Mouse-1} (i.e., clicking the left mouse button
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56while holding down the @key{Shift} key) adjusts the region to the
57click position, just like @key{Mouse-3} (@code{mouse-save-then-kill});
58it does not pop up a menu for changing the default face, as
59@key{S-Mouse-1} normally does (@pxref{Temporary Face Changes}). This
e93bc142 60change makes Emacs behave more like other Mac / GNUstep applications.
8be76823 61
a00c191c 62 When you open or save files using the menus, or using the
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63@key{Cmd-o} and @key{Cmd-S} bindings, Emacs uses graphical file
64dialogs to read file names. However, if you use the regular Emacs key
65sequences, such as @key{C-x C-f}, Emacs uses the minibuffer to read
66file names.
67
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68 On GNUstep, in an X-windows environment you need to use @key{Cmd-c}
69instead of one of the @key{C-w} or @key{M-w} commands to transfer text
70to the X primary selection; otherwise, Emacs will use the
71``clipboard'' selection. Likewise, @key{Cmd-y} (instead of @key{C-y})
72yanks from the X primary selection instead of the kill-ring or
73clipboard.
74
8be76823 75
a71703d3 76@subsection Grabbing environment variables
8be76823 77
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78Many programs which may run under Emacs like latex or man depend on the
79settings of environment variables. If Emacs is launched from the shell, it
80will automatically inherit these environment variables and its subprocesses
e93bc142 81will inherit them from it. But if Emacs is launched from the Finder it
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82is not a descendant of any shell, so its environment variables haven't been
83set which often causes the subprocesses it launches to behave differently than
84they would when launched from the shell.
8be76823 85
a00c191c 86As for the PATH and MANPATH variables, a system-wide method
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87of setting PATH is recommended on Mac OS X 10.5 and later, using the
88@file{/etc/paths} files and the @file{/etc/paths.d} directory.
8be76823 89
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90@node Mac / GNUstep Customization, Mac / GNUstep Events, Mac / GNUstep Basics, Mac OS / GNUstep
91@section Mac / GNUstep Customization
8be76823 92
e93bc142 93Emacs can be customized in several ways in addition to the standard
a71703d3 94customization buffers and the Options menu.
8be76823 95
8be76823 96
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97@subsection Font and Color Panels
98
271736fc 99The Font Panel may be accessed with M-x ns-popup-font-panel. It
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100will set the default font in the frame most recently used or clicked
101on.
102
103@c To make the setting permanent, use @samp{Save Options} in the
104@c Options menu, or run @code{menu-bar-options-save}.
a71703d3 105
271736fc 106You can bring up a color panel with M-x ns-popup-color-panel. and
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107drag the color you want over the emacs face you want to change. Normal
108dragging will alter the foreground color. Shift dragging will alter the
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109background color.
110
111@c To make the changes permanent select the "Save Options"
112@c item in the "Options" menu, or run @code{menu-bar-options-save}.
113
114Useful in this context is the listing of all faces obtained by @key{M-x}
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115@code{list-faces-display}.
116
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117@subsection Open files by dragging to an Emacs window
118
119The default behaviour when a user drags files from another application
120into an Emacs frame is to insert the contents of all the dragged files
121into the current buffer. To remap the @code{ns-drag-file} event to
122open the dragged files in the current frame use the following line:
123
124@lisp
125(define-key global-map [ns-drag-file] 'ns-find-file)
126@end lisp
127
128
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129@node Mac / GNUstep Events, GNUstep Support, Mac / GNUstep Customization, Mac OS / GNUstep
130@section Windowing System Events under Mac OS / GNUstep
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131
132 Nextstep applications receive a number of special events which have
133no X equivalent. These are sent as specially defined ``keys'', which
134do not correspond to any sequence of keystrokes. Under Emacs, these
135``key'' events can be bound to functions just like ordinary
136keystrokes. Here is a list of these events.
137
138@table @key
139@item ns-open-file
140@vindex ns-pop-up-frames
141This event occurs when another Nextstep application requests that
142Emacs open a file. A typical reason for this would be a user
143double-clicking a file in the Finder application. By default, Emacs
144responds to this event by opening a new frame and visiting the file in
145that frame (@code{ns-find-file}), As an exception, if the selected
146buffer is the @samp{*scratch*} buffer, Emacs visits the file in the
6be93a16 147selected frame.
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148
149You can change how Emacs responds to @key{ns-open-file} by changing
150the variable @code{ns-pop-up-frames}. Its default value,
151@code{'fresh}, is what we have just described. A value of @code{t}
152means to always visit the file in a new frame. A value of @code{nil}
153means to always visit the file in an existing frame.
154
155@item ns-open-temp-file
156This event occurs when another application requests that Emacs open a
157temporary file. By default, this is handled by just generating a
158@code{ns-open-file} event, the results of which are described above.
159
160You can bind @key{ns-pop-up-frames} and @key{ns-open-temp-file} to
161other Lisp functions. When the event is registered, the name of the
162file to open is stored in the variable @code{ns-input-file}.
163
164@item ns-open-file-line
165Some applications, such as ProjectBuilder and gdb, request not only a
166particular file, but also a particular line or sequence of lines in
167the file. Emacs handles this by visiting that file and highlighting
168the requested line (@code{ns-open-file-select-line}).
169
170@item ns-drag-file
171This event occurs when a user drags files from another application
172into an Emacs frame. The default behavior is to insert the contents
173of all the dragged files into the current buffer
174(@code{ns-insert-files}). The list of dragged files is stored in the
175variable @code{ns-input-file}.
176
177@item ns-drag-color
178This event occurs when a user drags a color from the color well (or
179some other source) into an Emacs frame. The default behavior is to
180alter the foreground color of the area the color was dragged onto
181(@code{ns-set-foreground-at-mouse}). If this event is issued with a
182@key{Shift} modifier, Emacs changes the background color instead
183(@code{ns-set-background-at-mouse}). The name of the dragged color is
184stored in the variable @code{ns-input-color}.
185
186@item ns-change-font
187This event occurs when the user selects a font in a Nextstep font
188panel (which can be opened with @kbd{Cmd-t}). The default behavior is
189to adjust the font of the selected frame
190(@code{ns-respond-to-changefont}). The name and size of the selected
191font are stored in the variables @code{ns-input-font} and
192@code{ns-input-fontsize} respectively.
193
194@item ns-power-off
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195This event occurs when the user logs out and Emacs is still running, or when
196`Quit Emacs' is chosen from the application menu.
197The default behavior is to save all file-visiting buffers.
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198@end table
199
200 Emacs also allows users to make use of Nextstep services, via a set
201of commands whose names begin with @samp{ns-service-} and end with the
202name of the service. Type @kbd{M-x ns-service-@key{TAB}@key{TAB}} to
203see a list of these commands. These functions either operate on
204marked text (replacing it with the result) or take a string argument
205and return the result as a string. You can also use the Lisp function
206@code{ns-perform-service} to pass arbitrary strings to arbitrary
207services and receive the results back. Note that you may need to
208restart Emacs to access newly-available services.
209
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210
211@node GNUstep Support, , Mac / GNUstep Events, Mac OS / GNUstep
212@section GNUstep Support
213
214Emacs can be built and run under GNUstep however building is difficult and
215there are some limitations to functionality. In particular, it may be
216necessary to run @samp{make bootstrap} with a plain X configuration, then
217@samp{make clean} and @samp{./configure --with-ns} followed by @samp{make
218install}.
219
220Currently CANNOT_DUMP is automatically enabled in GNUstep configurations,
221because the unex file(s) for GNUstep, mainly @samp{unexelf.c}, have not been
222updated yet with the ``zone'' code in and related to @samp{unexmacosx.c}.
223
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224@ignore
225 arch-tag: a822c2ab-4273-4997-927e-c153bb71dcf6
226@end ignore