Fix and docfix for the minibuffer-eldef-shorten-default feature.
[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / emacs / display.texi
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802b0ea7 1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
acaf905b 2@c Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1993-1995, 1997, 2000-2012
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3@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
6bf7aab6 5@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
abb9615e 6@node Display
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7@chapter Controlling the Display
8
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9 Since only part of a large buffer fits in the window, Emacs has to
10show only a part of it. This chapter describes commands and variables
11that let you specify which part of the text you want to see, and how
12the text is displayed.
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13
14@menu
8838673e 15* Scrolling:: Commands to move text up and down in a window.
e7a3ff06 16* Recentering:: A scroll command that centers the current line.
43d67313 17* Auto Scrolling:: Redisplay scrolls text automatically when needed.
54952612 18* Horizontal Scrolling:: Moving text left and right in a window.
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19* Narrowing:: Restricting display and editing to a portion
20 of the buffer.
a6326082 21* View Mode:: Viewing read-only buffers.
54952612 22* Follow Mode:: Follow mode lets two windows scroll as one.
8838673e 23* Faces:: How to change the display style using faces.
8863a584 24* Colors:: Specifying colors for faces.
44e97401 25* Standard Faces:: The main predefined faces.
d366bd53 26* Text Scale:: Increasing or decreasing text size in a buffer.
b8f3a9e3 27* Font Lock:: Minor mode for syntactic highlighting using faces.
b8f3a9e3 28* Highlight Interactively:: Tell Emacs what text to highlight.
fad78d58 29* Fringes:: Enabling or disabling window fringes.
9d2908a6 30* Displaying Boundaries:: Displaying top and bottom of the buffer.
2d2f6581 31* Useless Whitespace:: Showing possibly spurious trailing whitespace.
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32* Selective Display:: Hiding lines with lots of indentation.
33* Optional Mode Line:: Optional mode line display features.
34* Text Display:: How text characters are normally displayed.
099bfef9 35* Cursor Display:: Features for displaying the cursor.
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36* Line Truncation:: Truncating lines to fit the screen width instead
37 of continuing them to multiple screen lines.
458db4b6 38* Visual Line Mode:: Word wrap and screen line-based editing.
0015d677 39* Display Custom:: Information on variables for customizing display.
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40@end menu
41
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42@node Scrolling
43@section Scrolling
550f41cd 44@cindex scrolling
dc917bd9 45
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46 If a window is too small to display all the text in its buffer, it
47displays only a portion of it. @dfn{Scrolling} commands change which
48portion of the buffer is displayed.
dc917bd9 49
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50 Scrolling ``forward'' or ``up'' advances the portion of the buffer
51displayed in the window; equivalently, it moves the buffer text
52upwards relative to the window. Scrolling ``backward'' or ``down''
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53displays an earlier portion of the buffer, and moves the text
54downwards relative to the window.
55
56 In Emacs, scrolling ``up'' or ``down'' refers to the direction that
57the text moves in the window, @emph{not} the direction that the window
58moves relative to the text. This terminology was adopted by Emacs
59before the modern meaning of ``scrolling up'' and ``scrolling down''
60became widespread. Hence, the strange result that @key{PageDown}
61scrolls ``up'' in the Emacs sense.
dc917bd9 62
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63 The portion of a buffer displayed in a window always contains point.
64If you move point past the bottom or top of the window, scrolling
65occurs automatically to bring it back onscreen (@pxref{Auto
66Scrolling}). You can also scroll explicitly with these commands:
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67
68@table @kbd
dc917bd9 69@item C-v
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70@itemx @key{next}
71@itemx @key{PageDown}
61436e9f 72Scroll forward by nearly a full window (@code{scroll-up-command}).
dc917bd9 73@item M-v
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74@itemx @key{prior}
75@itemx @key{PageUp}
61436e9f 76Scroll backward (@code{scroll-down-command}).
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77@end table
78
79@kindex C-v
80@kindex M-v
81@kindex next
82@kindex prior
83@kindex PageDown
84@kindex PageUp
85@findex scroll-up-command
86@findex scroll-down-command
87 @kbd{C-v} (@code{scroll-up-command}) scrolls forward by nearly the
88whole window height. The effect is to take the two lines at the
89bottom of the window and put them at the top, followed by lines that
90were not previously visible. If point was in the text that scrolled
91off the top, it ends up on the window's new topmost line. The
92@key{next} (or @key{PageDown}) key is equivalent to @kbd{C-v}.
93
94 @kbd{M-v} (@code{scroll-down-command}) scrolls backward in a similar
95way. The @key{prior} (or @key{PageUp}) key is equivalent to
96@kbd{M-v}.
97
98@vindex next-screen-context-lines
99 The number of lines of overlap left by these scroll commands is
100controlled by the variable @code{next-screen-context-lines}, whose
101default value is 2. You can supply the commands with a numeric prefix
102argument, @var{n}, to scroll by @var{n} lines; Emacs attempts to leave
103point unchanged, so that the text and point move up or down together.
104@kbd{C-v} with a negative argument is like @kbd{M-v} and vice versa.
105
106@vindex scroll-error-top-bottom
107 By default, these commands signal an error (by beeping or flashing
108the screen) if no more scrolling is possible, because the window has
109reached the beginning or end of the buffer. If you change the
110variable @code{scroll-error-top-bottom} to @code{t}, the command moves
111point to the farthest possible position. If point is already there,
112the command signals an error.
113
114@vindex scroll-preserve-screen-position
115@cindex @code{scroll-command} property
116 Some users like scroll commands to keep point at the same screen
117position, so that scrolling back to the same screen conveniently
118returns point to its original position. You can enable this behavior
119via the variable @code{scroll-preserve-screen-position}. If the value
120is @code{t}, Emacs adjusts point to keep the cursor at the same screen
121position whenever a scroll command moves it off-window, rather than
122moving it to the topmost or bottommost line. With any other
123non-@code{nil} value, Emacs adjusts point this way even if the scroll
124command leaves point in the window. This variable affects all the
125scroll commands documented in this section, as well as scrolling with
b63a8e8e 126the mouse wheel (@pxref{Mouse Commands}); in general, it affects any
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127command that has a non-@code{nil} @code{scroll-command} property.
128@xref{Property Lists,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
129
130@vindex scroll-up
131@vindex scroll-down
132@findex scroll-up-line
133@findex scroll-down-line
134 The commands @kbd{M-x scroll-up} and @kbd{M-x scroll-down} behave
135similarly to @code{scroll-up-command} and @code{scroll-down-command},
136except they do not obey @code{scroll-error-top-bottom}. Prior to
137Emacs 24, these were the default commands for scrolling up and down.
138The commands @kbd{M-x scroll-up-line} and @kbd{M-x scroll-down-line}
139scroll the current window by one line at a time. If you intend to use
140any of these commands, you might want to give them key bindings
141(@pxref{Init Rebinding}).
142
143@node Recentering
144@section Recentering
145
146@table @kbd
147@item C-l
148Scroll the selected window so the current line is the center-most text
149line; on subsequent consecutive invocations, make the current line the
150top line, the bottom line, and so on in cyclic order. Possibly
151redisplay the screen too (@code{recenter-top-bottom}).
152
153@item M-x recenter
154Scroll the selected window so the current line is the center-most text
155line. Possibly redisplay the screen too.
156
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157@item C-M-l
158Scroll heuristically to bring useful information onto the screen
159(@code{reposition-window}).
160@end table
161
162@kindex C-l
956c76ef 163@findex recenter-top-bottom
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164 The @kbd{C-l} (@code{recenter-top-bottom}) command @dfn{recenters}
165the selected window, scrolling it so that the current screen line is
166exactly in the center of the window, or as close to the center as
167possible.
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168
169 Typing @kbd{C-l} twice in a row (@kbd{C-l C-l}) scrolls the window
170so that point is on the topmost screen line. Typing a third @kbd{C-l}
171scrolls the window so that point is on the bottom-most screen line.
41859241 172Each successive @kbd{C-l} cycles through these three positions.
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173
174@vindex recenter-positions
175 You can change the cycling order by customizing the list variable
176@code{recenter-positions}. Each list element should be the symbol
177@code{top}, @code{middle}, or @code{bottom}, or a number; an integer
41859241 178means to move the line to the specified screen line, while a
91ed7ea8 179floating-point number between 0.0 and 1.0 specifies a percentage of
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180the screen space from the top of the window. The default,
181@code{(middle top bottom)}, is the cycling order described above.
182Furthermore, if you change the variable @code{scroll-margin} to a
183non-zero value @var{n}, @kbd{C-l} always leaves at least @var{n}
184screen lines between point and the top or bottom of the window
185(@pxref{Auto Scrolling}).
956c76ef 186
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187 You can also give @kbd{C-l} a prefix argument. A plain prefix
188argument, @kbd{C-u C-l}, simply recenters point. A positive argument
189@var{n} puts point @var{n} lines down from the top of the window. An
190argument of zero puts point on the topmost line. A negative argument
191@var{-n} puts point @var{n} lines from the bottom of the window. When
192given an argument, @kbd{C-l} does not clear the screen or cycle
193through different screen positions.
dc917bd9 194
666e158e 195@vindex recenter-redisplay
91ed7ea8 196 If the variable @code{recenter-redisplay} has a non-@code{nil}
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197value, each invocation of @kbd{C-l} also clears and redisplays the
198screen; the special value @code{tty} (the default) says to do this on
199text-terminal frames only. Redisplaying is useful in case the screen
200becomes garbled for any reason (@pxref{Screen Garbled}).
201
202@findex recenter
41859241 203 The more primitive command @kbd{M-x recenter} behaves like
550f41cd 204@code{recenter-top-bottom}, but does not cycle among screen positions.
666e158e 205
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206@kindex C-M-l
207@findex reposition-window
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208 @kbd{C-M-l} (@code{reposition-window}) scrolls the current window
209heuristically in a way designed to get useful information onto the
210screen. For example, in a Lisp file, this command tries to get the
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211entire current defun onto the screen if possible.
212
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213@node Auto Scrolling
214@section Automatic Scrolling
215
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216 Emacs performs @dfn{automatic scrolling} when point moves out of the
217visible portion of the text.
218
dc917bd9 219@vindex scroll-conservatively
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220 Normally, this centers point vertically within the window. However,
221if you set @code{scroll-conservatively} to a small number @var{n},
222then if you move point just a little off the screen (less than @var{n}
223lines), Emacs scrolls the text just far enough to bring point back on
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224screen. If doing so fails to make point visible, Emacs centers point
225in the window. By default, @code{scroll-conservatively} is@tie{}0.
226If you set @code{scroll-conservatively} to a large number (larger than
227100), Emacs will never center point as result of scrolling, even if
228point moves far away from the text previously displayed in the window.
229With such a large value, Emacs will always scroll text just enough for
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230bringing point into view, so point will end up at the top or bottom of
231the window, depending on the scroll direction.
232
233@vindex scroll-step
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234 An alternative way of controlling how Emacs scrolls text is by
235customizing the variable @code{scroll-step}. Its value determines how
236many lines to scroll the window when point moves off the screen. If
237moving by that number of lines fails to bring point back into view,
238point is centered instead. The default value is zero, which causes
239point to always be centered after scrolling.
240
241 Since both @code{scroll-conservatively} and @code{scroll-step}
242control automatic scrolling in contradicting ways, you should set only
243one of them. If you customize both, the value of
244@code{scroll-conservatively} takes precedence.
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245
246@cindex aggressive scrolling
247@vindex scroll-up-aggressively
248@vindex scroll-down-aggressively
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249 When the window does scroll by a distance longer than
250@code{scroll-step}, you can control how aggressively it scrolls by
251setting the variables @code{scroll-up-aggressively} and
252@code{scroll-down-aggressively}. The value of
253@code{scroll-up-aggressively} should be either @code{nil}, or a
254fraction @var{f} between 0 and 1. A fraction specifies where on the
255screen to put point when scrolling upward, i.e.@: forward. When point
256goes off the window end, the new start position is chosen to put point
257@var{f} parts of the window height from the bottom margin. Thus,
258larger @var{f} means more aggressive scrolling: more new text is
259brought into view. The default value, @code{nil}, is equivalent to
2600.5.
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261
262 Likewise, @code{scroll-down-aggressively} is used for scrolling
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263down, i.e.@: backward. The value specifies how far point should be
264placed from the top margin of the window; thus, as with
3b361baf 265@code{scroll-up-aggressively}, a larger value is more aggressive.
dc917bd9 266
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267 These two variables are ignored if either @code{scroll-step} or
268@code{scroll-conservatively} are set to a non-zero value.
269
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270@vindex scroll-margin
271 The variable @code{scroll-margin} restricts how close point can come
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272to the top or bottom of a window (even if aggressive scrolling
273specifies a fraction @var{f} that is larger than the window portion
274between the top and the bottom margins). Its value is a number of screen
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275lines; if point comes within that many lines of the top or bottom of
276the window, Emacs performs automatic scrolling. By default,
277@code{scroll-margin} is 0.
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278
279@node Horizontal Scrolling
280@section Horizontal Scrolling
281@cindex horizontal scrolling
282
956c76ef 283@vindex auto-hscroll-mode
dc917bd9 284 @dfn{Horizontal scrolling} means shifting all the lines sideways
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285within a window, so that some of the text near the left margin is not
286displayed. When the text in a window is scrolled horizontally, text
287lines are truncated rather than continued (@pxref{Line Truncation}).
288If a window shows truncated lines, Emacs performs automatic horizontal
289scrolling whenever point moves off the left or right edge of the
290screen. To disable automatic horizontal scrolling, set the variable
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291@code{auto-hscroll-mode} to @code{nil}. Note that when the automatic
292horizontal scrolling is turned off, if point moves off the edge of the
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293screen, the cursor disappears to indicate that. (On text terminals,
294the cursor is left at the edge instead.)
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295
296@vindex hscroll-margin
297 The variable @code{hscroll-margin} controls how close point can get
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298to the window's edges before automatic scrolling occurs. It is
299measured in columns. For example, if the value is 5, then moving
300point within 5 columns of an edge causes horizontal scrolling away
301from that edge.
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302
303@vindex hscroll-step
304 The variable @code{hscroll-step} determines how many columns to
305scroll the window when point gets too close to the edge. Zero, the
306default value, means to center point horizontally within the window.
307A positive integer value specifies the number of columns to scroll by.
308A floating-point number specifies the fraction of the window's width
309to scroll by.
310
311 You can also perform explicit horizontal scrolling with the
312following commands:
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313
314@table @kbd
315@item C-x <
316Scroll text in current window to the left (@code{scroll-left}).
317@item C-x >
318Scroll to the right (@code{scroll-right}).
319@end table
320
321@kindex C-x <
322@kindex C-x >
323@findex scroll-left
324@findex scroll-right
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325 @kbd{C-x <} (@code{scroll-left}) scrolls text in the selected window
326to the left by the full width of the window, less two columns. (In
327other words, the text in the window moves left relative to the
328window.) With a numeric argument @var{n}, it scrolls by @var{n}
329columns.
330
331 If the text is scrolled to the left, and point moves off the left
332edge of the window, the cursor will freeze at the left edge of the
333window, until point moves back to the displayed portion of the text.
334This is independent of the current setting of
335@code{auto-hscroll-mode}, which, for text scrolled to the left, only
336affects the behavior at the right edge of the window.
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337
338 @kbd{C-x >} (@code{scroll-right}) scrolls similarly to the right.
339The window cannot be scrolled any farther to the right once it is
340displayed normally, with each line starting at the window's left
341margin; attempting to do so has no effect. This means that you don't
342have to calculate the argument precisely for @w{@kbd{C-x >}}; any
343sufficiently large argument will restore the normal display.
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344
345 If you use those commands to scroll a window horizontally, that sets
346a lower bound for automatic horizontal scrolling. Automatic scrolling
347will continue to scroll the window, but never farther to the right
348than the amount you previously set by @code{scroll-left}.
349
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350@node Narrowing
351@section Narrowing
352@cindex widening
353@cindex restriction
354@cindex narrowing
355@cindex accessible portion
356
357 @dfn{Narrowing} means focusing in on some portion of the buffer,
358making the rest temporarily inaccessible. The portion which you can
359still get to is called the @dfn{accessible portion}. Canceling the
360narrowing, which makes the entire buffer once again accessible, is
361called @dfn{widening}. The bounds of narrowing in effect in a buffer
362are called the buffer's @dfn{restriction}.
363
364 Narrowing can make it easier to concentrate on a single subroutine or
365paragraph by eliminating clutter. It can also be used to limit the
366range of operation of a replace command or repeating keyboard macro.
367
368@table @kbd
369@item C-x n n
370Narrow down to between point and mark (@code{narrow-to-region}).
371@item C-x n w
372Widen to make the entire buffer accessible again (@code{widen}).
373@item C-x n p
374Narrow down to the current page (@code{narrow-to-page}).
375@item C-x n d
376Narrow down to the current defun (@code{narrow-to-defun}).
377@end table
378
379 When you have narrowed down to a part of the buffer, that part appears
380to be all there is. You can't see the rest, you can't move into it
381(motion commands won't go outside the accessible part), you can't change
382it in any way. However, it is not gone, and if you save the file all
383the inaccessible text will be saved. The word @samp{Narrow} appears in
384the mode line whenever narrowing is in effect.
385
386@kindex C-x n n
387@findex narrow-to-region
388 The primary narrowing command is @kbd{C-x n n} (@code{narrow-to-region}).
389It sets the current buffer's restrictions so that the text in the current
390region remains accessible, but all text before the region or after the
391region is inaccessible. Point and mark do not change.
392
393@kindex C-x n p
394@findex narrow-to-page
395@kindex C-x n d
396@findex narrow-to-defun
397 Alternatively, use @kbd{C-x n p} (@code{narrow-to-page}) to narrow
398down to the current page. @xref{Pages}, for the definition of a page.
399@kbd{C-x n d} (@code{narrow-to-defun}) narrows down to the defun
400containing point (@pxref{Defuns}).
401
402@kindex C-x n w
403@findex widen
404 The way to cancel narrowing is to widen with @kbd{C-x n w}
405(@code{widen}). This makes all text in the buffer accessible again.
406
407 You can get information on what part of the buffer you are narrowed down
408to using the @kbd{C-x =} command. @xref{Position Info}.
409
410 Because narrowing can easily confuse users who do not understand it,
411@code{narrow-to-region} is normally a disabled command. Attempting to use
412this command asks for confirmation and gives you the option of enabling it;
413if you enable the command, confirmation will no longer be required for
414it. @xref{Disabling}.
415
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416@node View Mode
417@section View Mode
418@cindex View mode
419@cindex mode, View
420
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421@kindex s @r{(View mode)}
422@kindex SPC @r{(View mode)}
423@kindex DEL @r{(View mode)}
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424 View mode is a minor mode that lets you scan a buffer by sequential
425screenfuls. It provides commands for scrolling through the buffer
426conveniently but not for changing it. Apart from the usual Emacs
427cursor motion commands, you can type @key{SPC} to scroll forward one
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428windowful, @key{DEL} to scroll backward, and @kbd{s} to start an
429incremental search.
a6326082 430
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431@kindex q @r{(View mode)}
432@kindex e @r{(View mode)}
433@findex View-quit
434@findex View-exit
435 Typing @kbd{q} (@code{View-quit}) disables View mode, and switches
436back to the buffer and position before View mode was enabled. Typing
437@kbd{e} (@code{View-exit}) disables View mode, keeping the current
438buffer and position.
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439
440@findex view-buffer
441@findex view-file
442 @kbd{M-x view-buffer} prompts for an existing Emacs buffer, switches
443to it, and enables View mode. @kbd{M-x view-file} prompts for a file
444and visits it with View mode enabled.
445
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446@node Follow Mode
447@section Follow Mode
448@cindex Follow mode
449@cindex mode, Follow
450@findex follow-mode
451@cindex windows, synchronizing
452@cindex synchronizing windows
453
454 @dfn{Follow mode} is a minor mode that makes two windows, both
16152b76 455showing the same buffer, scroll as a single tall ``virtual window''.
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456To use Follow mode, go to a frame with just one window, split it into
457two side-by-side windows using @kbd{C-x 3}, and then type @kbd{M-x
458follow-mode}. From then on, you can edit the buffer in either of the
459two windows, or scroll either one; the other window follows it.
460
461 In Follow mode, if you move point outside the portion visible in one
462window and into the portion visible in the other window, that selects
463the other window---again, treating the two as if they were parts of
464one large window.
465
466 To turn off Follow mode, type @kbd{M-x follow-mode} a second time.
467
b8f3a9e3 468@node Faces
8863a584 469@section Text Faces
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470@cindex faces
471
d366bd53 472 Emacs can display text in several different styles, called
0015d677 473@dfn{faces}. Each face can specify various @dfn{face attributes},
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474such as the font, height, weight, slant, foreground and background
475color, and underlining or overlining. Most major modes assign faces
476to the text automatically, via Font Lock mode. @xref{Font Lock}, for
477more information about how these faces are assigned.
478
479@findex list-faces-display
480 To see what faces are currently defined, and what they look like,
481type @kbd{M-x list-faces-display}. With a prefix argument, this
482prompts for a regular expression, and displays only faces with names
483matching that regular expression (@pxref{Regexps}).
484
35b6586e 485@vindex frame-background-mode
d366bd53 486 It's possible for a given face to look different in different
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487frames. For instance, some text terminals do not support all face
488attributes, particularly font, height, and width, and some support a
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489limited range of colors. In addition, most Emacs faces are defined so
490that their attributes are different on light and dark frame
491backgrounds, for reasons of legibility. By default, Emacs
492automatically chooses which set of face attributes to display on each
493frame, based on the frame's current background color. However, you
494can override this by giving the variable @code{frame-background-mode}
495a non-@code{nil} value. A value of @code{dark} makes Emacs treat all
496frames as if they have a dark background, whereas a value of
497@code{light} makes it treat all frames as if they have a light
498background.
b8f3a9e3 499
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500@cindex background color
501@cindex default face
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502 You can customize a face to alter its attributes, and save those
503customizations for future Emacs sessions. @xref{Face Customization},
504for details.
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505
506 The @code{default} face is the default for displaying text, and all
507of its attributes are specified. Its background color is also used as
2680c309 508the frame's background color. @xref{Colors}.
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509
510@cindex cursor face
511 Another special face is the @code{cursor} face. On graphical
512displays, the background color of this face is used to draw the text
513cursor. None of the other attributes of this face have any effect;
514the foreground color for text under the cursor is taken from the
515background color of the underlying text. On text terminals, the
516appearance of the text cursor is determined by the terminal, not by
517the @code{cursor} face.
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518
519 You can also use X resources to specify attributes of any particular
520face. @xref{Resources}.
956c76ef 521
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522 Emacs can display variable-width fonts, but some Emacs commands,
523particularly indentation commands, do not account for variable
524character display widths. Therefore, we recommend not using
525variable-width fonts for most faces, particularly those assigned by
526Font Lock mode.
527
528@node Colors
529@section Colors for Faces
530@cindex color name
531@cindex RGB triplet
532
533 Faces can have various foreground and background colors. When you
534specify a color for a face---for instance, when customizing the face
535(@pxref{Face Customization})---you can use either a @dfn{color name}
536or an @dfn{RGB triplet}.
537
538@findex list-colors-display
b7314ef7 539@vindex list-colors-sort
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540 A color name is a pre-defined name, such as @samp{dark orange} or
541@samp{medium sea green}. To view a list of color names, type @kbd{M-x
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542list-colors-display}. To control the order in which colors are shown,
543customize @code{list-colors-sort}. If you run this command on a
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544graphical display, it shows the full range of color names known to
545Emacs (these are the standard X11 color names, defined in X's
546@file{rgb.txt} file). If you run the command on a text terminal, it
547shows only a small subset of colors that can be safely displayed on
548such terminals. However, Emacs understands X11 color names even on
549text terminals; if a face is given a color specified by an X11 color
550name, it is displayed using the closest-matching terminal color.
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551
552 An RGB triplet is a string of the form @samp{#RRGGBB}. Each of the
553R, G, and B components is a hexadecimal number specifying the
554component's relative intensity, one to four digits long (usually two
555digits are used). The components must have the same number of digits.
556For hexadecimal values A to F, either upper or lower case are
557acceptable.
558
559 The @kbd{M-x list-colors-display} command also shows the equivalent
560RGB triplet for each named color. For instance, @samp{medium sea
561green} is equivalent to @samp{#3CB371}.
562
563@cindex face colors, setting
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564@findex set-face-foreground
565@findex set-face-background
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566 You can change the foreground and background colors of a face with
567@kbd{M-x set-face-foreground} and @kbd{M-x set-face-background}.
568These commands prompt in the minibuffer for a face name and a color,
569with completion, and then set that face to use the specified color.
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570They affect the face colors on all frames, but their effects do not
571persist for future Emacs sessions, unlike using the customization
572buffer or X resources. You can also use frame parameters to set
8863a584 573foreground and background colors for a specific frame; @xref{Frame
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574Parameters}.
575
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576@node Standard Faces
577@section Standard Faces
578
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579 Here are the standard faces for specifying text appearance. You can
580apply them to specific text when you want the effects they produce.
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581
582@table @code
583@item default
54952612 584This face is used for ordinary text that doesn't specify any face.
d366bd53 585Its background color is used as the frame's background color.
43d08eb9 586@item bold
956c76ef 587This face uses a bold variant of the default font.
43d08eb9 588@item italic
956c76ef 589This face uses an italic variant of the default font.
43d08eb9 590@item bold-italic
956c76ef 591This face uses a bold italic variant of the default font.
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592@item underline
593This face underlines text.
594@item fixed-pitch
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595This face forces use of a fixed-width font. It's reasonable to
596customize this face to use a different fixed-width font, if you like,
597but you should not make it a variable-width font.
43d08eb9 598@item variable-pitch
956c76ef 599This face forces use of a variable-width font.
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600@item shadow
601This face is used for making the text less noticeable than the surrounding
602ordinary text. Usually this can be achieved by using shades of gray in
603contrast with either black or white default foreground color.
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604@end table
605
606 Here's an incomplete list of faces used to highlight parts of the
607text temporarily for specific purposes. (Many other modes define
608their own faces for this purpose.)
609
610@table @code
611@item highlight
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612This face is used for text highlighting in various contexts, such as
613when the mouse cursor is moved over a hyperlink.
43d08eb9 614@item isearch
d366bd53 615This face is used to highlight the current Isearch match
956c76ef 616(@pxref{Incremental Search}).
54952612 617@item query-replace
d366bd53 618This face is used to highlight the current Query Replace match
956c76ef 619(@pxref{Replace}).
43d08eb9 620@item lazy-highlight
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621This face is used to highlight ``lazy matches'' for Isearch and Query
622Replace (matches other than the current one).
43d08eb9 623@item region
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624This face is used for displaying an active region (@pxref{Mark}).
625When Emacs is built with GTK support, its colors are taken from the
626current GTK theme.
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627@item secondary-selection
628This face is used for displaying a secondary X selection (@pxref{Secondary
629Selection}).
630@item trailing-whitespace
3b91a16d 631The face for highlighting excess spaces and tabs at the end of a line
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632when @code{show-trailing-whitespace} is non-@code{nil} (@pxref{Useless
633Whitespace}).
43d08eb9 634@item escape-glyph
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635The face for displaying control characters and escape sequences
636(@pxref{Text Display}).
637@item nobreak-space
939db9ac 638The face for displaying ``no-break'' space characters (@pxref{Text
d366bd53 639Display}).
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640@end table
641
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642 The following faces control the appearance of parts of the Emacs
643frame:
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644
645@table @code
b8f3a9e3 646@item mode-line
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647This face is used for the mode line of the currently selected window,
648and for menu bars when toolkit menus are not used. By default, it's
54952612 649drawn with shadows for a ``raised'' effect on graphical displays, and
3b91a16d 650drawn as the inverse of the default face on non-windowed terminals.
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651@item mode-line-inactive
652Like @code{mode-line}, but used for mode lines of the windows other
653than the selected one (if @code{mode-line-in-non-selected-windows} is
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654non-@code{nil}). This face inherits from @code{mode-line}, so changes
655in that face affect mode lines in all windows.
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656@item mode-line-highlight
657Like @code{highlight}, but used for portions of text on mode lines.
658@item mode-line-buffer-id
659This face is used for buffer identification parts in the mode line.
b8f3a9e3 660@item header-line
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661Similar to @code{mode-line} for a window's header line, which appears
662at the top of a window just as the mode line appears at the bottom.
663Most windows do not have a header line---only some special modes, such
664Info mode, create one.
53abc3bf 665@item vertical-border
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666This face is used for the vertical divider between windows on text
667terminals.
3094ad7a 668@item minibuffer-prompt
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669@cindex @code{minibuffer-prompt} face
670@vindex minibuffer-prompt-properties
3094ad7a 671This face is used for the prompt strings displayed in the minibuffer.
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672By default, Emacs automatically adds this face to the value of
673@code{minibuffer-prompt-properties}, which is a list of text
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674properties used to display the prompt text. (This variable takes
675effect when you enter the minibuffer.)
b8f3a9e3 676@item fringe
3b91a16d 677@cindex @code{fringe} face
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678The face for the fringes to the left and right of windows on graphic
679displays. (The fringes are the narrow portions of the Emacs frame
940627fe 680between the text area and the window's right and left borders.)
43d08eb9 681@xref{Fringes}.
b8f3a9e3 682@item cursor
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683The @code{:background} attribute of this face specifies the color of
684the text cursor. @xref{Cursor Display}.
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685@item tooltip
686This face is used for tooltip text. By default, if Emacs is built
687with GTK support, tooltips are drawn via GTK and this face has no
688effect. @xref{Tooltips}.
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689@item mouse
690This face determines the color of the mouse pointer.
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691@end table
692
693 The following faces likewise control the appearance of parts of the
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694Emacs frame, but only on text terminals, or when Emacs is built on X
695with no toolkit support. (For all other cases, the appearance of the
696respective frame elements is determined by system-wide settings.)
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697
698@table @code
699@item scroll-bar
700This face determines the visual appearance of the scroll bar.
701@xref{Scroll Bars}.
b8f3a9e3 702@item tool-bar
54952612 703This face determines the color of tool bar icons. @xref{Tool Bars}.
b8f3a9e3 704@item menu
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705@cindex menu bar appearance
706@cindex @code{menu} face, no effect if customized
707@cindex customization of @code{menu} face
708This face determines the colors and font of Emacs's menus. @xref{Menu
d366bd53 709Bars}.
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710@end table
711
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712@node Text Scale
713@section Text Scale
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714
715@cindex adjust buffer face height
716@findex text-scale-adjust
717@kindex C-x C-+
718@kindex C-x C--
719@kindex C-x C-=
720@kindex C-x C-0
721 To increase the height of the default face in the current buffer,
722type @kbd{C-x C-+} or @kbd{C-x C-=}. To decrease it, type @kbd{C-x
723C--}. To restore the default (global) face height, type @kbd{C-x
724C-0}. These keys are all bound to the same command,
725@code{text-scale-adjust}, which looks at the last key typed to
726determine which action to take.
727
728 The final key of these commands may be repeated without the leading
729@kbd{C-x}. For instance, @kbd{C-x C-= C-= C-=} increases the face
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730height by three steps. Each step scales the text height by a factor
731of 1.2; to change this factor, customize the variable
732@code{text-scale-mode-step}. As an exception, a numeric argument of 0
733to the @code{text-scale-adjust} command restores the default height,
734similar to typing @kbd{C-x C-0}.
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735
736@cindex increase buffer face height
737@findex text-scale-increase
738@cindex decrease buffer face height
739@findex text-scale-decrease
740 The commands @code{text-scale-increase} and
741@code{text-scale-decrease} increase or decrease the height of the
742default face, just like @kbd{C-x C-+} and @kbd{C-x C--} respectively.
743You may find it convenient to bind to these commands, rather than
744@code{text-scale-adjust}.
745
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746@cindex set buffer face height
747@findex text-scale-set
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748 The command @code{text-scale-set} scales the height of the default
749face in the current buffer to an absolute level specified by its
750prefix argument.
05fbc4a9 751
956c76ef 752@findex text-scale-mode
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753 The above commands automatically enable the minor mode
754@code{text-scale-mode} if the current font scaling is other than 1,
755and disable it otherwise.
956c76ef 756
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757@node Font Lock
758@section Font Lock mode
759@cindex Font Lock mode
760@cindex mode, Font Lock
761@cindex syntax highlighting and coloring
762
8cc11660 763 Font Lock mode is a minor mode, always local to a particular buffer,
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764which assigns faces to (or @dfn{fontifies}) the text in the buffer.
765Each buffer's major mode tells Font Lock mode which text to fontify;
766for instance, programming language modes fontify syntactically
767relevant constructs like comments, strings, and function names.
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768
769@findex font-lock-mode
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770 Font Lock mode is enabled by default. To toggle it in the current
771buffer, type @kbd{M-x font-lock-mode}. A positive numeric argument
772unconditionally enables Font Lock mode, and a negative or zero
773argument disables it.
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774
775@findex global-font-lock-mode
776@vindex global-font-lock-mode
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777 Type @kbd{M-x global-font-lock-mode} to toggle Font Lock mode in all
778buffers. To impose this setting for future Emacs sessions, customize
779the variable @code{global-font-lock-mode} (@pxref{Easy
780Customization}), or add the following line to your init file:
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781
782@example
c4e8acbc 783(global-font-lock-mode 0)
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784@end example
785
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786@noindent
787If you have disabled Global Font Lock mode, you can still enable Font
54952612 788Lock for specific major modes by adding the function
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789@code{font-lock-mode} to the mode hooks (@pxref{Hooks}). For example,
790to enable Font Lock mode for editing C files, you can do this:
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791
792@example
6e317956 793(add-hook 'c-mode-hook 'font-lock-mode)
c4e8acbc 794@end example
0015d677 795
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796 Font Lock mode uses several specifically named faces to do its job,
797including @code{font-lock-string-face}, @code{font-lock-comment-face},
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798and others. The easiest way to find them all is to use @kbd{M-x
799customize-group @key{RET} font-lock-faces @key{RET}}. You can then
800use that customization buffer to customize the appearance of these
801faces. @xref{Face Customization}.
b8f3a9e3 802
b8f3a9e3 803@vindex font-lock-maximum-decoration
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804 You can customize the variable @code{font-lock-maximum-decoration}
805to alter the amount of fontification applied by Font Lock mode, for
806major modes that support this feature. The value should be a number
807(with 1 representing a minimal amount of fontification; some modes
808support levels as high as 3); or @code{t}, meaning ``as high as
809possible'' (the default). You can also specify different numbers for
810particular major modes; for example, to use level 1 for C/C++ modes,
811and the default level otherwise, use the value
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812
813@example
d366bd53 814'((c-mode . 1) (c++-mode . 1)))
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815@end example
816
b8f3a9e3 817@vindex font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function
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818@cindex incorrect fontification
819@cindex parenthesis in column zero and fontification
820@cindex brace in column zero and fontification
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821 Comment and string fontification (or ``syntactic'' fontification)
822relies on analysis of the syntactic structure of the buffer text. For
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823the sake of speed, some modes, including Lisp mode, rely on a special
824convention: an open-parenthesis or open-brace in the leftmost column
d366bd53 825always defines the beginning of a defun, and is thus always outside
20db1522 826any string or comment. Therefore, you should avoid placing an
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827open-parenthesis or open-brace in the leftmost column, if it is inside
828a string or comment. @xref{Left Margin Paren}, for details.
b8f3a9e3 829
6bb2ed9b 830@cindex slow display during scrolling
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831 The variable @code{font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function}, which is
832always buffer-local, specifies how Font Lock mode can find a position
833guaranteed to be outside any comment or string. In modes which use
834the leftmost column parenthesis convention, the default value of the
835variable is @code{beginning-of-defun}---that tells Font Lock mode to
836use the convention. If you set this variable to @code{nil}, Font Lock
837no longer relies on the convention. This avoids incorrect results,
838but the price is that, in some cases, fontification for a changed text
839must rescan buffer text from the beginning of the buffer. This can
840considerably slow down redisplay while scrolling, particularly if you
841are close to the end of a large buffer.
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842
843@findex font-lock-add-keywords
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844 Font Lock highlighting patterns already exist for most modes, but
845you may want to fontify additional patterns. You can use the function
846@code{font-lock-add-keywords}, to add your own highlighting patterns
847for a particular mode. For example, to highlight @samp{FIXME:} words
848in C comments, use this:
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849
850@example
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851(add-hook 'c-mode-hook
852 (lambda ()
853 (font-lock-add-keywords nil
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854 '(("\\<\\(FIXME\\):" 1
855 font-lock-warning-face t)))))
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856@end example
857
4063fff3 858@findex font-lock-remove-keywords
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859@noindent
860To remove keywords from the font-lock highlighting patterns, use the
cd77ce13 861function @code{font-lock-remove-keywords}. @xref{Search-based
956c76ef 862Fontification,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
4063fff3 863
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864@cindex just-in-time (JIT) font-lock
865@cindex background syntax highlighting
866 Fontifying large buffers can take a long time. To avoid large
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867delays when a file is visited, Emacs initially fontifies only the
868visible portion of a buffer. As you scroll through the buffer, each
869portion that becomes visible is fontified as soon as it is displayed;
870this type of Font Lock is called @dfn{Just-In-Time} (or @dfn{JIT})
871Lock. You can control how JIT Lock behaves, including telling it to
872perform fontification while idle, by customizing variables in the
956c76ef 873customization group @samp{jit-lock}. @xref{Specific Customization}.
3be9b0ca 874
b8f3a9e3 875@node Highlight Interactively
54952612 876@section Interactive Highlighting
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877@cindex highlighting by matching
878@cindex interactive highlighting
54952612 879@cindex Highlight Changes mode
b8f3a9e3 880
54952612 881@findex highlight-changes-mode
956c76ef 882Highlight Changes mode is a minor mode that @dfn{highlights} the parts
d366bd53 883of the buffer that were changed most recently, by giving that text a
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884different face. To enable or disable Highlight Changes mode, use
885@kbd{M-x highlight-changes-mode}.
b8f3a9e3 886
54952612 887@cindex Hi Lock mode
b8f3a9e3 888@findex hi-lock-mode
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889 Hi Lock mode is a minor mode that highlights text that matches
890regular expressions you specify. For example, you can use it to
891highlight all the references to a certain variable in a program source
892file, highlight certain parts in a voluminous output of some program,
893or highlight certain names in an article. To enable or disable Hi
894Lock mode, use the command @kbd{M-x hi-lock-mode}. To enable Hi Lock
895mode for all buffers, use @kbd{M-x global-hi-lock-mode} or place
896@code{(global-hi-lock-mode 1)} in your @file{.emacs} file.
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897
898 Hi Lock mode works like Font Lock mode (@pxref{Font Lock}), except
899that you specify explicitly the regular expressions to highlight. You
900control them with these commands:
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901
902@table @kbd
903@item C-x w h @var{regexp} @key{RET} @var{face} @key{RET}
904@kindex C-x w h
905@findex highlight-regexp
cedf175b 906Highlight text that matches @var{regexp} using face @var{face}
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907(@code{highlight-regexp}). The highlighting will remain as long as
908the buffer is loaded. For example, to highlight all occurrences of
909the word ``whim'' using the default face (a yellow background)
910@kbd{C-x w h whim @key{RET} @key{RET}}. Any face can be used for
911highlighting, Hi Lock provides several of its own and these are
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912pre-loaded into a list of default values. While being prompted
913for a face use @kbd{M-n} and @kbd{M-p} to cycle through them.
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914
915You can use this command multiple times, specifying various regular
916expressions to highlight in different ways.
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917
918@item C-x w r @var{regexp} @key{RET}
919@kindex C-x w r
920@findex unhighlight-regexp
630acdcc 921Unhighlight @var{regexp} (@code{unhighlight-regexp}).
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922
923If you invoke this from the menu, you select the expression to
924unhighlight from a list. If you invoke this from the keyboard, you
925use the minibuffer. It will show the most recently added regular
926expression; use @kbd{M-p} to show the next older expression and
927@kbd{M-n} to select the next newer expression. (You can also type the
928expression by hand, with completion.) When the expression you want to
929unhighlight appears in the minibuffer, press @kbd{@key{RET}} to exit
930the minibuffer and unhighlight it.
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931
932@item C-x w l @var{regexp} @key{RET} @var{face} @key{RET}
933@kindex C-x w l
934@findex highlight-lines-matching-regexp
935@cindex lines, highlighting
936@cindex highlighting lines of text
04d0b662 937Highlight entire lines containing a match for @var{regexp}, using face
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938@var{face} (@code{highlight-lines-matching-regexp}).
939
940@item C-x w b
941@kindex C-x w b
942@findex hi-lock-write-interactive-patterns
943Insert all the current highlighting regexp/face pairs into the buffer
944at point, with comment delimiters to prevent them from changing your
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945program. (This key binding runs the
946@code{hi-lock-write-interactive-patterns} command.)
b8f3a9e3 947
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948These patterns are extracted from the comments, if appropriate, if you
949invoke @kbd{M-x hi-lock-find-patterns}, or if you visit the file while
950Hi Lock mode is enabled (since that runs @code{hi-lock-find-patterns}).
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951
952@item C-x w i
953@kindex C-x w i
954@findex hi-lock-find-patterns
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955Extract regexp/face pairs from comments in the current buffer
956(@code{hi-lock-find-patterns}). Thus, you can enter patterns
957interactively with @code{highlight-regexp}, store them into the file
958with @code{hi-lock-write-interactive-patterns}, edit them (perhaps
cedf175b 959including different faces for different parenthesized parts of the
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960match), and finally use this command (@code{hi-lock-find-patterns}) to
961have Hi Lock highlight the edited patterns.
b8f3a9e3 962
3173ce7e 963@vindex hi-lock-file-patterns-policy
d439bcd8 964The variable @code{hi-lock-file-patterns-policy} controls whether Hi
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965Lock mode should automatically extract and highlight patterns found in a
966file when it is visited. Its value can be @code{nil} (never highlight),
967@code{ask} (query the user), or a function. If it is a function,
968@code{hi-lock-find-patterns} calls it with the patterns as argument; if
969the function returns non-@code{nil}, the patterns are used. The default
970is @code{ask}. Note that patterns are always highlighted if you call
971@code{hi-lock-find-patterns} directly, regardless of the value of this
972variable.
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973
974@vindex hi-lock-exclude-modes
975Also, @code{hi-lock-find-patterns} does nothing if the current major
976mode's symbol is a member of the list @code{hi-lock-exclude-modes}.
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977@end table
978
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979@node Fringes
980@section Window Fringes
981@cindex fringes
982
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983@findex set-fringe-style
984@findex fringe-mode
985 On graphical displays, each Emacs window normally has narrow
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986@dfn{fringes} on the left and right edges. The fringes are used to
987display symbols that provide information about the text in the window.
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988You can type @kbd{M-x fringe-mode} to disable the fringes, or modify
989their width. This command affects fringes in all frames; to modify
990fringes on the selected frame only, use @kbd{M-x set-fringe-style}.
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991
992 The most common use of the fringes is to indicate a continuation
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993line (@pxref{Continuation Lines}). When one line of text is split
994into multiple screen lines, the left fringe shows a curving arrow for
995each screen line except the first, indicating that ``this is not the
16152b76 996real beginning''. The right fringe shows a curving arrow for each
d366bd53 997screen line except the last, indicating that ``this is not the real
16152b76 998end''. If the line's direction is right-to-left (@pxref{Bidirectional
d366bd53 999Editing}), the meanings of the curving arrows in the fringes are
34313041 1000swapped.
fad78d58 1001
566da2e7 1002 The fringes indicate line truncation with short horizontal arrows
fad78d58 1003meaning ``there's more text on this line which is scrolled
16152b76 1004horizontally out of view''. Clicking the mouse on one of the arrows
d366bd53
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1005scrolls the display horizontally in the direction of the arrow.
1006
1007 The fringes can also indicate other things, such as buffer
1008boundaries (@pxref{Displaying Boundaries}), and where a program you
1009are debugging is executing (@pxref{Debuggers}).
fad78d58 1010
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1011@vindex overflow-newline-into-fringe
1012 The fringe is also used for drawing the cursor, if the current line
1013is exactly as wide as the window and point is at the end of the line.
1014To disable this, change the variable
1015@code{overflow-newline-into-fringe} to @code{nil}; this causes Emacs
1016to continue or truncate lines that are exactly as wide as the window.
fad78d58 1017
9d2908a6
RS
1018@node Displaying Boundaries
1019@section Displaying Boundaries
1020
1021@vindex indicate-buffer-boundaries
939db9ac 1022 On graphical displays, Emacs can indicate the buffer boundaries in
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1023the fringes. If you enable this feature, the first line and the last
1024line are marked with angle images in the fringes. This can be
1025combined with up and down arrow images which say whether it is
1026possible to scroll the window.
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RS
1027
1028 The buffer-local variable @code{indicate-buffer-boundaries} controls
1029how the buffer boundaries and window scrolling is indicated in the
1030fringes. If the value is @code{left} or @code{right}, both angle and
1031arrow bitmaps are displayed in the left or right fringe, respectively.
1032
1033 If value is an alist, each element @code{(@var{indicator} .
1034@var{position})} specifies the position of one of the indicators.
1035The @var{indicator} must be one of @code{top}, @code{bottom},
1036@code{up}, @code{down}, or @code{t} which specifies the default
1037position for the indicators not present in the alist.
1038The @var{position} is one of @code{left}, @code{right}, or @code{nil}
1039which specifies not to show this indicator.
1040
1041 For example, @code{((top . left) (t . right))} places the top angle
1042bitmap in left fringe, the bottom angle bitmap in right fringe, and
1043both arrow bitmaps in right fringe. To show just the angle bitmaps in
1044the left fringe, but no arrow bitmaps, use @code{((top . left)
1045(bottom . left))}.
1046
fad78d58
RS
1047@node Useless Whitespace
1048@section Useless Whitespace
1049
1050@cindex trailing whitespace
1051@cindex whitespace, trailing
1052@vindex show-trailing-whitespace
1053 It is easy to leave unnecessary spaces at the end of a line, or
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1054empty lines at the end of a buffer, without realizing it. In most
1055cases, this @dfn{trailing whitespace} has no effect, but sometimes it
1056can be a nuisance.
fad78d58 1057
956c76ef
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1058 You can make trailing whitespace at the end of a line visible by
1059setting the buffer-local variable @code{show-trailing-whitespace} to
1060@code{t}. Then Emacs displays trailing whitespace, using the face
1061@code{trailing-whitespace}.
fad78d58
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1062
1063 This feature does not apply when point is at the end of the line
1064containing the whitespace. Strictly speaking, that is ``trailing
1065whitespace'' nonetheless, but displaying it specially in that case
1066looks ugly while you are typing in new text. In this special case,
1067the location of point is enough to show you that the spaces are
1068present.
1069
1070@findex delete-trailing-whitespace
48de8b12 1071@vindex delete-trailing-lines
d366bd53 1072 Type @kbd{M-x delete-trailing-whitespace} to delete all trailing
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1073whitespace. This command deletes all extra spaces at the end of each
1074line in the buffer, and all empty lines at the end of the buffer; to
735135f9 1075ignore the latter, change the variable @code{delete-trailing-lines} to
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1076@code{nil}. If the region is active, the command instead deletes
1077extra spaces at the end of each line in the region.
fad78d58 1078
23e3383d 1079@vindex indicate-empty-lines
877db12e
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1080@cindex unused lines
1081@cindex fringes, and unused line indication
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1082 On graphical displays, Emacs can indicate unused lines at the end of
1083the window with a small image in the left fringe (@pxref{Fringes}).
8863a584
CY
1084The image appears for screen lines that do not correspond to any
1085buffer text, so blank lines at the end of the buffer stand out because
1086they lack this image. To enable this feature, set the buffer-local
1087variable @code{indicate-empty-lines} to a non-@code{nil} value. You
1088can enable or disable this feature for all new buffers by setting the
1089default value of this variable, e.g.@: @code{(setq-default
1090indicate-empty-lines t)}.
fad78d58 1091
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1092@cindex Whitespace mode
1093@cindex mode, Whitespace
1094@findex whitespace-mode
1095@vindex whitespace-style
1096 Whitespace mode is a buffer-local minor mode that lets you
1097``visualize'' many kinds of whitespace in the buffer, by either
1098drawing the whitespace characters with a special face or displaying
1099them as special glyphs. To toggle this mode, type @kbd{M-x
1100whitespace-mode}. The kinds of whitespace visualized are determined
1101by the list variable @code{whitespace-style}. Here is a partial list
1102of possible elements (see the variable's documentation for the full
1103list):
1104
1105@table @code
1106@item face
1107Enable all visualizations which use special faces. This element has a
27e428e7 1108special meaning: if it is absent from the list, none of the other
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1109visualizations take effect except @code{space-mark}, @code{tab-mark},
1110and @code{newline-mark}.
1111
1112@item trailing
1113Highlight trailing whitespace.
1114
1115@item tabs
1116Highlight tab characters.
1117
1118@item spaces
1119Highlight space and non-breaking space characters.
1120
1121@item lines
1122@vindex whitespace-line-column
1123Highlight lines longer than 80 lines. To change the column limit,
1124customize the variable @code{whitespace-line-column}.
1125
1126@item newline
1127Highlight newlines.
1128
1129@item empty
1130Highlight empty lines.
1131
1132@item space-mark
1133Draw space and non-breaking characters with a special glyph.
1134
1135@item tab-mark
1136Draw tab characters with a special glyph.
1137
1138@item newline-mark
1139Draw newline characters with a special glyph.
1140@end table
1141
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1142@node Selective Display
1143@section Selective Display
4946337d 1144@cindex selective display
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1145@findex set-selective-display
1146@kindex C-x $
1147
956c76ef
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1148 Emacs has the ability to hide lines indented more than a given
1149number of columns. You can use this to get an overview of a part of a
1150program.
6bf7aab6 1151
d239287a
LT
1152 To hide lines in the current buffer, type @kbd{C-x $}
1153(@code{set-selective-display}) with a numeric argument @var{n}. Then
1154lines with at least @var{n} columns of indentation disappear from the
1155screen. The only indication of their presence is that three dots
1156(@samp{@dots{}}) appear at the end of each visible line that is
1157followed by one or more hidden ones.
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DL
1158
1159 The commands @kbd{C-n} and @kbd{C-p} move across the hidden lines as
1160if they were not there.
1161
1162 The hidden lines are still present in the buffer, and most editing
1163commands see them as usual, so you may find point in the middle of the
1164hidden text. When this happens, the cursor appears at the end of the
1165previous line, after the three dots. If point is at the end of the
1166visible line, before the newline that ends it, the cursor appears before
1167the three dots.
1168
1169 To make all lines visible again, type @kbd{C-x $} with no argument.
1170
1171@vindex selective-display-ellipses
1172 If you set the variable @code{selective-display-ellipses} to
1173@code{nil}, the three dots do not appear at the end of a line that
1174precedes hidden lines. Then there is no visible indication of the
1175hidden lines. This variable becomes local automatically when set.
1176
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1177 See also @ref{Outline Mode} for another way to hide part of
1178the text in a buffer.
1179
6bf7aab6
DL
1180@node Optional Mode Line
1181@section Optional Mode Line Features
1182
b213b767
LK
1183@cindex buffer size display
1184@cindex display of buffer size
1185@findex size-indication-mode
1186 The buffer percentage @var{pos} indicates the percentage of the
1187buffer above the top of the window. You can additionally display the
1188size of the buffer by typing @kbd{M-x size-indication-mode} to turn on
1189Size Indication mode. The size will be displayed immediately
1190following the buffer percentage like this:
1191
1192@example
1193@var{POS} of @var{SIZE}
1194@end example
1195
1196@noindent
1197Here @var{SIZE} is the human readable representation of the number of
1198characters in the buffer, which means that @samp{k} for 10^3, @samp{M}
1199for 10^6, @samp{G} for 10^9, etc., are used to abbreviate.
1200
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RS
1201@cindex line number display
1202@cindex display of line number
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DL
1203@findex line-number-mode
1204 The current line number of point appears in the mode line when Line
1205Number mode is enabled. Use the command @kbd{M-x line-number-mode} to
1206turn this mode on and off; normally it is on. The line number appears
b213b767 1207after the buffer percentage @var{pos}, with the letter @samp{L} to
79199dd2
AM
1208indicate what it is.
1209
1210@cindex Column Number mode
1211@cindex mode, Column Number
1212@findex column-number-mode
1213 Similarly, you can display the current column number by turning on
1214Column number mode with @kbd{M-x column-number-mode}. The column
1215number is indicated by the letter @samp{C}. However, when both of
1216these modes are enabled, the line and column numbers are displayed in
1217parentheses, the line number first, rather than with @samp{L} and
1218@samp{C}. For example: @samp{(561,2)}. @xref{Minor Modes}, for more
1219information about minor modes and about how to use these commands.
6bf7aab6 1220
43f971ab
EZ
1221@cindex narrowing, and line number display
1222 If you have narrowed the buffer (@pxref{Narrowing}), the displayed
1223line number is relative to the accessible portion of the buffer.
54952612
RS
1224Thus, it isn't suitable as an argument to @code{goto-line}. (Use
1225@code{what-line} command to see the line number relative to the whole
1226file.)
43f971ab 1227
6bf7aab6
DL
1228@vindex line-number-display-limit
1229 If the buffer is very large (larger than the value of
956c76ef
CY
1230@code{line-number-display-limit}), Emacs won't compute the line
1231number, because that would be too slow; therefore, the line number
1232won't appear on the mode-line. To remove this limit, set
1233@code{line-number-display-limit} to @code{nil}.
43f971ab
EZ
1234
1235@vindex line-number-display-limit-width
1236 Line-number computation can also be slow if the lines in the buffer
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1237are too long. For this reason, Emacs doesn't display line numbers if
1238the average width, in characters, of lines near point is larger than
1239the value of @code{line-number-display-limit-width}. The default
1240value is 200 characters.
6bf7aab6 1241
6bf7aab6
DL
1242@findex display-time
1243@cindex time (on mode line)
1244 Emacs can optionally display the time and system load in all mode
4f00b8c1
DL
1245lines. To enable this feature, type @kbd{M-x display-time} or customize
1246the option @code{display-time-mode}. The information added to the mode
bb3865e8 1247line looks like this:
6bf7aab6
DL
1248
1249@example
1250@var{hh}:@var{mm}pm @var{l.ll}
1251@end example
1252
1253@noindent
1254@vindex display-time-24hr-format
1255Here @var{hh} and @var{mm} are the hour and minute, followed always by
4f1948eb
EZ
1256@samp{am} or @samp{pm}. @var{l.ll} is the average number, collected
1257for the last few minutes, of processes in the whole system that were
1258either running or ready to run (i.e.@: were waiting for an available
1259processor). (Some fields may be missing if your operating system
1260cannot support them.) If you prefer time display in 24-hour format,
1261set the variable @code{display-time-24hr-format} to @code{t}.
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DL
1262
1263@cindex mail (on mode line)
72bd7b7b
DL
1264@vindex display-time-use-mail-icon
1265@vindex display-time-mail-face
fad78d58
RS
1266@vindex display-time-mail-file
1267@vindex display-time-mail-directory
6bf7aab6 1268 The word @samp{Mail} appears after the load level if there is mail
939db9ac
CY
1269for you that you have not read yet. On graphical displays, you can
1270use an icon instead of @samp{Mail} by customizing
1271@code{display-time-use-mail-icon}; this may save some space on the
1272mode line. You can customize @code{display-time-mail-face} to make
1273the mail indicator prominent. Use @code{display-time-mail-file} to
1274specify the mail file to check, or set
1275@code{display-time-mail-directory} to specify the directory to check
1276for incoming mail (any nonempty regular file in the directory is
1277considered as ``newly arrived mail'').
6bf7aab6 1278
956c76ef
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1279@cindex mail (on mode line)
1280@findex display-battery-mode
1281@vindex display-battery-mode
1282@vindex battery-mode-line-format
1283 When running Emacs on a laptop computer, you can display the battery
1284charge on the mode-line, by using the command
1285@code{display-battery-mode} or customizing the variable
1286@code{display-battery-mode}. The variable
1287@code{battery-mode-line-format} determines the way the battery charge
1288is displayed; the exact mode-line message depends on the operating
1289system, and it usually shows the current battery charge as a
1290percentage of the total charge.
1291
47d7776c 1292@cindex mode line, 3D appearance
bd3ead08
EZ
1293@cindex attributes of mode line, changing
1294@cindex non-integral number of lines in a window
939db9ac 1295 On graphical displays, the mode line is drawn as a 3D box. If you
d366bd53
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1296don't like this effect, you can disable it by customizing the
1297@code{mode-line} face and setting its @code{box} attribute to
1298@code{nil}. @xref{Face Customization}.
bd3ead08 1299
b9e58bf2 1300@cindex non-selected windows, mode line appearance
ac6875fc 1301 By default, the mode line of nonselected windows is displayed in a
1c9f5f23 1302different face, called @code{mode-line-inactive}. Only the selected
ac6875fc
RS
1303window is displayed in the @code{mode-line} face. This helps show
1304which window is selected. When the minibuffer is selected, since
1305it has no mode line, the window from which you activated the minibuffer
1306has its mode line displayed using @code{mode-line}; as a result,
1307ordinary entry to the minibuffer does not change any mode lines.
1308
1309@vindex mode-line-in-non-selected-windows
1310 You can disable use of @code{mode-line-inactive} by setting variable
1c9f5f23
KS
1311@code{mode-line-in-non-selected-windows} to @code{nil}; then all mode
1312lines are displayed in the @code{mode-line} face.
b9e58bf2 1313
589a3f9f
RS
1314@vindex eol-mnemonic-unix
1315@vindex eol-mnemonic-dos
1316@vindex eol-mnemonic-mac
1317@vindex eol-mnemonic-undecided
1318 You can customize the mode line display for each of the end-of-line
1319formats by setting each of the variables @code{eol-mnemonic-unix},
1320@code{eol-mnemonic-dos}, @code{eol-mnemonic-mac}, and
54952612 1321@code{eol-mnemonic-undecided} to the strings you prefer.
589a3f9f 1322
6bf7aab6
DL
1323@node Text Display
1324@section How Text Is Displayed
1325@cindex characters (in text)
d366bd53 1326@cindex printing character
6bf7aab6 1327
d366bd53
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1328 Most characters are @dfn{printing characters}: when they appear in a
1329buffer, they are displayed literally on the screen. Printing
1330characters include @acronym{ASCII} numbers, letters, and punctuation
1331characters, as well as many non-@acronym{ASCII} characters.
6bf7aab6 1332
956c76ef 1333@vindex tab-width
a3dcc84e 1334@cindex control characters on display
d366bd53
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1335 The @acronym{ASCII} character set contains non-printing @dfn{control
1336characters}. Two of these are displayed specially: the newline
1337character (Unicode code point @code{U+000A}) is displayed by starting
1338a new line, while the tab character (@code{U+0009}) is displayed as a
1339space that extends to the next tab stop column (normally every 8
1340columns). The number of spaces per tab is controlled by the
1341buffer-local variable @code{tab-width}, which must have an integer
1342value between 1 and 1000, inclusive. Note that how the tab character
1343in the buffer is displayed has nothing to do with the definition of
1344@key{TAB} as a command.
1345
a3dcc84e
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1346 Other @acronym{ASCII} control characters, whose codes are below
1347@code{U+0020} (octal 40, decimal 32), are displayed as a caret
d366bd53
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1348(@samp{^}) followed by the non-control version of the character, with
1349the @code{escape-glyph} face. For instance, the @samp{control-A}
1350character, @code{U+0001}, is displayed as @samp{^A}.
54952612 1351
a3dcc84e 1352@cindex octal escapes
54952612 1353@vindex ctl-arrow
a3dcc84e
EZ
1354 The raw bytes with codes @code{U+0080} (octal 200) through
1355@code{U+009F} (octal 237) are displayed as @dfn{octal escape
1356sequences}, with the @code{escape-glyph} face. For instance,
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1357character code @code{U+0098} (octal 230) is displayed as @samp{\230}.
1358If you change the buffer-local variable @code{ctl-arrow} to
a3dcc84e
EZ
1359@code{nil}, the @acronym{ASCII} control characters are also displayed
1360as octal escape sequences instead of caret escape sequences.
6bf7aab6 1361
470a11a3 1362@vindex nobreak-char-display
939db9ac
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1363@cindex non-breaking space
1364@cindex non-breaking hyphen
1365@cindex soft hyphen
1366 Some non-@acronym{ASCII} characters have the same appearance as an
1367@acronym{ASCII} space or hyphen (minus) character. Such characters
1368can cause problems if they are entered into a buffer without your
8863a584 1369realization, e.g.@: by yanking; for instance, source code compilers
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1370typically do not treat non-@acronym{ASCII} spaces as whitespace
1371characters. To deal with this problem, Emacs displays such characters
1372specially: it displays @code{U+00A0} (no-break space) with the
1373@code{nobreak-space} face, and it displays @code{U+00AD} (soft
1374hyphen), @code{U+2010} (hyphen), and @code{U+2011} (non-breaking
1375hyphen) with the @code{escape-glyph} face. To disable this, change
1376the variable @code{nobreak-char-display} to @code{nil}. If you give
1377this variable a non-@code{nil} and non-@code{t} value, Emacs instead
1378displays such characters as a highlighted backslash followed by a
1379space or hyphen.
b5cced4b 1380
54952612
RS
1381 You can customize the way any particular character code is displayed
1382by means of a display table. @xref{Display Tables,, Display Tables,
1383elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
1384
0eb025fb
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1385@cindex glyphless characters
1386@cindex characters with no font glyphs
d366bd53
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1387 On graphical displays, some characters may have no glyphs in any of
1388the fonts available to Emacs. These @dfn{glyphless characters} are
1389normally displayed as boxes containing the hexadecimal character code.
a3dcc84e
EZ
1390Similarly, on text terminals, characters that cannot be displayed
1391using the terminal encoding (@pxref{Terminal Coding}) are normally
1392displayed as question signs. You can control the display method by
1393customizing the variable @code{glyphless-char-display-control}.
1394@xref{Glyphless Chars,, Glyphless Character Display, elisp, The Emacs
1395Lisp Reference Manual}, for details.
0eb025fb 1396
0015d677
RS
1397@node Cursor Display
1398@section Displaying the Cursor
939db9ac 1399@cindex text cursor
4cb4f3ba 1400
468160b7 1401@vindex visible-cursor
939db9ac
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1402 On a text terminal, the cursor's appearance is controlled by the
1403terminal, largely out of the control of Emacs. Some terminals offer
1404two different cursors: a ``visible'' static cursor, and a ``very
1405visible'' blinking cursor. By default, Emacs uses the very visible
1406cursor, and switches to it when you start or resume Emacs. If the
1407variable @code{visible-cursor} is @code{nil} when Emacs starts or
1408resumes, it uses the normal cursor.
1409
1410@cindex cursor face
1411@vindex cursor-type
1412 On a graphical display, many more properties of the text cursor can
1413be altered. To customize its color, change the @code{:background}
1414attribute of the face named @code{cursor} (@pxref{Face
1415Customization}). (The other attributes of this face have no effect;
1416the text shown under the cursor is drawn using the frame's background
1417color.) To change its shape, customize the buffer-local variable
1418@code{cursor-type}; possible values are @code{box} (the default),
1419@code{hollow} (a hollow box), @code{bar} (a vertical bar), @code{(bar
1420. @var{n})} (a vertical bar @var{n} pixels wide), @code{hbar} (a
1421horizontal bar), @code{(hbar . @var{n})} (a horizontal bar @var{n}
1422pixels tall), or @code{nil} (no cursor at all).
468160b7 1423
939db9ac
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1424@findex blink-cursor-mode
1425@cindex cursor, blinking
1426@cindex blinking cursor
1427@vindex blink-cursor-alist
1428 To disable cursor blinking, change the variable
1429@code{blink-cursor-mode} to @code{nil} (@pxref{Easy Customization}),
1430or add the line @code{(blink-cursor-mode 0)} to your init file.
1431Alternatively, you can change how the cursor looks when it ``blinks
1432off'' by customizing the list variable @code{blink-cursor-alist}.
1433Each element in the list should have the form @code{(@var{on-type}
1434. @var{off-type})}; this means that if the cursor is displayed as
1435@var{on-type} when it blinks on (where @var{on-type} is one of the
1436cursor types described above), then it is displayed as @var{off-type}
1437when it blinks off.
0015d677
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1438
1439@vindex x-stretch-cursor
1440@cindex wide block cursor
939db9ac
CY
1441 Some characters, such as tab characters, are ``extra wide''. When
1442the cursor is positioned over such a character, it is normally drawn
1443with the default character width. You can make the cursor stretch to
1444cover wide characters, by changing the variable
0015d677
RS
1445@code{x-stretch-cursor} to a non-@code{nil} value.
1446
939db9ac
CY
1447@cindex cursor in non-selected windows
1448@vindex cursor-in-non-selected-windows
1449 The cursor normally appears in non-selected windows as a
1450non-blinking hollow box. (For a bar cursor, it instead appears as a
1451thinner bar.) To turn off cursors in non-selected windows, change the
1452variable @code{cursor-in-non-selected-windows} to @code{nil}.
1453
0015d677
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1454@findex hl-line-mode
1455@findex global-hl-line-mode
1456@cindex highlight current line
54952612
RS
1457 To make the cursor even more visible, you can use HL Line mode, a
1458minor mode that highlights the line containing point. Use @kbd{M-x
0015d677
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1459hl-line-mode} to enable or disable it in the current buffer. @kbd{M-x
1460global-hl-line-mode} enables or disables the same mode globally.
1461
9d2908a6 1462@node Line Truncation
939db9ac 1463@section Line Truncation
0015d677
RS
1464
1465@cindex truncation
1466@cindex line truncation, and fringes
939db9ac
CY
1467 As an alternative to continuation (@pxref{Continuation Lines}),
1468Emacs can display long lines by @dfn{truncation}. This means that all
1469the characters that do not fit in the width of the screen or window do
1470not appear at all. On graphical displays, a small straight arrow in
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1471the fringe indicates truncation at either end of the line. On text
1472terminals, this is indicated with @samp{$} signs in the leftmost
1473and/or rightmost columns.
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1474
1475@vindex truncate-lines
1476@findex toggle-truncate-lines
1477 Horizontal scrolling automatically causes line truncation
1478(@pxref{Horizontal Scrolling}). You can explicitly enable line
1479truncation for a particular buffer with the command @kbd{M-x
1480toggle-truncate-lines}. This works by locally changing the variable
1481@code{truncate-lines}. If that variable is non-@code{nil}, long lines
1482are truncated; if it is @code{nil}, they are continued onto multiple
1483screen lines. Setting the variable @code{truncate-lines} in any way
1484makes it local to the current buffer; until that time, the default
939db9ac 1485value, which is normally @code{nil}, is in effect.
6bf7aab6 1486
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1487@vindex truncate-partial-width-windows
1488 If a split window becomes too narrow, Emacs may automatically enable
1489line truncation. @xref{Split Window}, for the variable
1490@code{truncate-partial-width-windows} which controls this.
80174a97 1491
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1492@node Visual Line Mode
1493@section Visual Line Mode
1494
1495@cindex word wrap
1496 Another alternative to ordinary line continuation is to use
1497@dfn{word wrap}. Here, each long logical line is divided into two or
1498more screen lines, like in ordinary line continuation. However, Emacs
1499attempts to wrap the line at word boundaries near the right window
1500edge. This makes the text easier to read, as wrapping does not occur
1501in the middle of words.
1502
7d806bfe 1503@cindex mode, Visual Line
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1504@cindex Visual Line mode
1505@findex visual-line-mode
1506@findex global-visual-line-mode
1507 Word wrap is enabled by Visual Line mode, an optional minor mode.
1508To turn on Visual Line mode in the current buffer, type @kbd{M-x
1509visual-line-mode}; repeating this command turns it off. You can also
1510turn on Visual Line mode using the menu bar: in the Options menu,
1511select the @samp{Line Wrapping in this Buffer} submenu, followed by
1512the @samp{Word Wrap (Visual Line Mode)} menu item. While Visual Line
1513mode is enabled, the mode-line shows the string @samp{wrap} in the
1514mode display. The command @kbd{M-x global-visual-line-mode} toggles
1515Visual Line mode in all buffers.
1516
1517@findex beginning-of-visual-line
1518@findex end-of-visual-line
1519@findex next-logical-line
1520@findex previous-logical-line
1521 In Visual Line mode, some editing commands work on screen lines
1522instead of logical lines: @kbd{C-a} (@code{beginning-of-visual-line})
1523moves to the beginning of the screen line, @kbd{C-e}
1524(@code{end-of-visual-line}) moves to the end of the screen line, and
1525@kbd{C-k} (@code{kill-visual-line}) kills text to the end of the
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1526screen line.
1527
1528 To move by logical lines, use the commands @kbd{M-x
1529next-logical-line} and @kbd{M-x previous-logical-line}. These move
1530point to the next logical line and the previous logical line
1531respectively, regardless of whether Visual Line mode is enabled. If
1532you use these commands frequently, it may be convenient to assign key
1533bindings to them. @xref{Init Rebinding}.
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1534
1535 By default, word-wrapped lines do not display fringe indicators.
1536Visual Line mode is often used to edit files that contain many long
1537logical lines, so having a fringe indicator for each wrapped line
1538would be visually distracting. You can change this by customizing the
1539variable @code{visual-line-fringe-indicators}.
1540
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1541@node Display Custom
1542@section Customization of Display
80174a97 1543
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1544 This section describes variables that control miscellaneous aspects
1545of the appearance of the Emacs screen. Beginning users can skip it.
62ea61af 1546
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1547@vindex visible-bell
1548 If the variable @code{visible-bell} is non-@code{nil}, Emacs attempts
1549to make the whole screen blink when it would normally make an audible bell
1550sound. This variable has no effect if your terminal does not have a way
1551to make the screen blink.
80174a97 1552
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1553@vindex echo-keystrokes
1554 The variable @code{echo-keystrokes} controls the echoing of multi-character
1555keys; its value is the number of seconds of pause required to cause echoing
1556to start, or zero, meaning don't echo at all. The value takes effect when
bfd779dd 1557there is something to echo. @xref{Echo Area}.
80174a97 1558
b4a1a8b2 1559@cindex mouse pointer
62095f01 1560@cindex hourglass pointer display
b4a1a8b2 1561@vindex display-hourglass
62095f01 1562@vindex hourglass-delay
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1563 On graphical displays, Emacs displays the mouse pointer as an
1564hourglass if Emacs is busy. To disable this feature, set the variable
1565@code{display-hourglass} to @code{nil}. The variable
1566@code{hourglass-delay} determines the number of seconds of ``busy
1567time'' before the hourglass is shown; the default is 1.
1568
1569@vindex make-pointer-invisible
1570 If the mouse pointer lies inside an Emacs frame, Emacs makes it
1571invisible each time you type a character to insert text, to prevent it
1572from obscuring the text. (To be precise, the hiding occurs when you
1573type a ``self-inserting'' character. @xref{Inserting Text}.) Moving
1574the mouse pointer makes it visible again. To disable this feature,
1575set the variable @code{make-pointer-invisible} to @code{nil}.
1576
1577@vindex underline-minimum-offset
1578@vindex x-underline-at-descent-line
1579 On graphical displays, the variable @code{underline-minimum-offset}
1580determines the minimum distance between the baseline and underline, in
1581pixels, for underlined text. By default, the value is 1; increasing
1582it may improve the legibility of underlined text for certain fonts.
1583(However, Emacs will never draw the underline below the current line
1584area.) The variable @code{x-underline-at-descent-line} determines how
1585to draw underlined text. The default is @code{nil}, which means to
1586draw it at the baseline level of the font; if you change it to
1587@code{nil}, Emacs draws the underline at the same height as the font's
1588descent line.
099bfef9 1589
9d2908a6 1590@vindex overline-margin
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1591 The variable @code{overline-margin} specifies the vertical position
1592of an overline above the text, including the height of the overline
1593itself, in pixels; the default is 2.
9d2908a6 1594
a66b12be 1595@findex tty-suppress-bold-inverse-default-colors
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1596 On some text terminals, bold face and inverse video together result
1597in text that is hard to read. Call the function
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1598@code{tty-suppress-bold-inverse-default-colors} with a non-@code{nil}
1599argument to suppress the effect of bold-face in this case.