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8cf51b2c 1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
acaf905b 2@c Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1993-1995, 1997, 1999-2012
8838673e 3@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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4@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5@node Frames, International, Windows, Top
6@chapter Frames and Graphical Displays
7@cindex frames
8
8863a584 9 When Emacs is started on a graphical display, e.g.@: on the X Window
4ad3bc2a 10System, it occupies a graphical system-level ``window''. In this
b63a8e8e 11manual, we call this a @dfn{frame}, reserving the word ``window'' for
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12the part of the frame used for displaying a buffer. A frame initially
13contains one window, but it can be subdivided into multiple windows
14(@pxref{Windows}). A frame normally also contains a menu bar, tool
15bar, and echo area.
16
17 You can also create additional frames (@pxref{Creating Frames}).
18All frames created in the same Emacs session have access to the same
19underlying buffers and other data. For instance, if a buffer is being
20shown in more than one frame, any changes made to it in one frame show
21up immediately in the other frames too.
22
23 Typing @kbd{C-x C-c} closes all the frames on the current display,
24and ends the Emacs session if it has no frames open on any other
25displays (@pxref{Exiting}). To close just the selected frame, type
2aee6012 26@kbd{C-x 5 0} (that is zero, not @kbd{o}).
8cf51b2c 27
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28 This chapter describes Emacs features specific to graphical displays
29(particularly mouse commands), and features for managing multiple
30frames. On text-only terminals, many of these features are
31unavailable. However, it is still possible to create multiple
32``frames'' on text-only terminals; such frames are displayed one at a
33time, filling the entire terminal screen (@pxref{Non-Window
34Terminals}). It is also possible to use the mouse on some text-only
ec7ae032 35terminals (@pxref{Text-Only Mouse}, for doing so on GNU and Unix
4ad3bc2a 36systems; and
8cf51b2c 37@iftex
4ad3bc2a 38@pxref{MS-DOS Mouse,,,emacs-xtra,Specialized Emacs Features},
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39@end iftex
40@ifnottex
4ad3bc2a 41@pxref{MS-DOS Mouse},
8cf51b2c 42@end ifnottex
4ad3bc2a 43for doing so on MS-DOS).
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44
45@menu
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46* Mouse Commands:: Moving, cutting, and pasting, with the mouse.
47* Word and Line Mouse:: Mouse commands for selecting whole words or lines.
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48* Mouse References:: Using the mouse to select an item from a list.
49* Menu Mouse Clicks:: Mouse clicks that bring up menus.
50* Mode Line Mouse:: Mouse clicks on the mode line.
51* Creating Frames:: Creating additional Emacs frames with various contents.
52* Frame Commands:: Iconifying, deleting, and switching frames.
d68eb23c 53* Fonts:: Changing the frame font.
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54* Speedbar:: How to make and use a speedbar frame.
55* Multiple Displays:: How one Emacs job can talk to several displays.
8cf51b2c 56* Frame Parameters:: Changing the colors and other modes of frames.
8838673e 57* Scroll Bars:: How to enable and disable scroll bars; how to use them.
8cf51b2c 58* Drag and Drop:: Using drag and drop to open files and insert text.
8838673e 59* Menu Bars:: Enabling and disabling the menu bar.
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60* Tool Bars:: Enabling and disabling the tool bar.
61* Dialog Boxes:: Controlling use of dialog boxes.
62* Tooltips:: Displaying information at the current mouse position.
b4a1a8b2 63* Mouse Avoidance:: Preventing the mouse pointer from obscuring text.
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64* Non-Window Terminals:: Multiple frames on terminals that show only one.
65* Text-Only Mouse:: Using the mouse in text-only terminals.
66@end menu
67
8cf51b2c 68@node Mouse Commands
4d45a8b7 69@section Mouse Commands for Editing
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70@cindex mouse buttons (what they do)
71
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72@kindex Mouse-1
73@kindex Mouse-2
74@kindex Mouse-3
dc103cdc 75@table @kbd
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76@item Mouse-1
77Move point to where you click (@code{mouse-set-point}).
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78
79@item Drag-Mouse-1
80Activate the region around the text selected by dragging, and copy it
81to the kill ring (@code{mouse-set-region}).
82
83@item Mouse-2
84Yank the last killed text at the click position
85(@code{mouse-yank-at-click}).
86
87@item Mouse-3
88If the region is active, move the nearer end of the region to the
89click position; otherwise, set mark at the current value of point and
90point at the click position. Save the resulting region in the kill
91ring; on a second click, kill it (@code{mouse-save-then-kill}).
92@end table
93
94@findex mouse-set-point
95 The most basic mouse command is @code{mouse-set-point}, which is
b63a8e8e 96invoked by clicking with the left mouse button, @kbd{Mouse-1}, in the
2aee6012 97text area of a window. This moves point to the position where you
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98clicked. If that window was not the selected window, it becomes the
99selected window.
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100
101@vindex x-mouse-click-focus-ignore-position
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102 Normally, if the frame you clicked in was not the selected frame, it
103is made the selected frame, in addition to selecting the window and
104setting the cursor. On the X Window System, you can change this by
105setting the variable @code{x-mouse-click-focus-ignore-position} to
106@code{t}. In that case, the initial click on an unselected frame just
107selects the frame, without doing anything else; clicking again selects
108the window and sets the cursor position.
8cf51b2c 109
2aee6012 110@findex mouse-set-region
dc103cdc 111 Holding down @kbd{Mouse-1} and ``dragging'' the mouse over a stretch
2aee6012 112of text activates the region around that text
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113(@code{mouse-set-region}), placing the mark where you started holding
114down the mouse button, and point where you release it (@pxref{Mark}).
115In addition, the text in the region becomes the primary selection
116(@pxref{Primary Selection}).
117
118@vindex mouse-drag-copy-region
119 If you change the variable @code{mouse-drag-copy-region} to a
120non-@code{nil} value, dragging the mouse over a stretch of text also
121adds the text to the kill ring. The default is @code{nil}.
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122
123@vindex mouse-scroll-min-lines
2aee6012 124 If you move the mouse off the top or bottom of the window while
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125dragging, the window scrolls at a steady rate until you move the mouse
126back into the window. This way, you can select regions that don't fit
127entirely on the screen. The number of lines scrolled per step depends
128on how far away from the window edge the mouse has gone; the variable
129@code{mouse-scroll-min-lines} specifies a minimum step size.
130
963578d3 131@findex mouse-yank-primary
2aee6012 132@findex mouse-yank-at-click
dc103cdc 133 Clicking with the middle mouse button, @kbd{Mouse-2}, moves point to
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134the position where you clicked and inserts the contents of the primary
135selection (@code{mouse-yank-primary}). @xref{Primary Selection}.
4ad3bc2a 136This behavior is consistent with other X applications. Alternatively,
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137you can rebind @kbd{Mouse-2} to @code{mouse-yank-at-click}, which
138performs a yank at point.
139
140@vindex mouse-yank-at-point
141 If you change the variable @code{mouse-yank-at-point} to a
142non-@code{nil} value, @kbd{Mouse-2} does not move point; it inserts
143the text at point, regardless of where you clicked or even which of
144the frame's windows you clicked on. This variable affects both
145@code{mouse-yank-primary} and @code{mouse-yank-at-click}.
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146
147@findex mouse-save-then-kill
dc103cdc 148 Clicking with the right mouse button, @kbd{Mouse-3}, runs the
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149command @code{mouse-save-then-kill}. This performs several actions
150depending on where you click and the status of the region:
151
152@itemize @bullet
153@item
dc103cdc 154If no region is active, clicking @kbd{Mouse-3} activates the region,
2aee6012 155placing the mark where point was and point at the clicked position.
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156
157@item
dc103cdc 158If a region is active, clicking @kbd{Mouse-3} adjusts the nearer end
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159of the region by moving it to the clicked position. The adjusted
160region's text is copied to the kill ring; if the text in the original
161region was already on the kill ring, it replaces it there.
162
163@item
164If you originally specified the region using a double or triple
dc103cdc 165@kbd{Mouse-1}, so that the region is defined to consist of entire
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166words or lines (@pxref{Word and Line Mouse}), then adjusting the
167region with @kbd{Mouse-3} also proceeds by entire words or lines.
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168
169@item
dc103cdc 170If you use @kbd{Mouse-3} a second time consecutively, at the same
2aee6012 171place, that kills the region already selected. Thus, the simplest way
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172to kill text with the mouse is to click @kbd{Mouse-1} at one end, then
173click @kbd{Mouse-3} twice at the other end. To copy the text into the
174kill ring without deleting it from the buffer, press @kbd{Mouse-3}
175just once---or just drag across the text with @kbd{Mouse-1}. Then you
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176can copy it elsewhere by yanking it.
177@end itemize
178
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179 The @code{mouse-save-then-kill} command also obeys the variable
180@code{mouse-drag-copy-region} (described above). If the value is
181non-@code{nil}, then whenever the command sets or adjusts the active
182region, the text in the region is also added to the kill ring. If the
183latest kill ring entry had been added the same way, that entry is
184replaced rather than making a new entry.
185
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186 Whenever you set the region using any of the mouse commands
187described above, the mark will be deactivated by any subsequent
188unshifted cursor motion command, in addition to the usual ways of
4ad3bc2a 189deactivating the mark. @xref{Shift Selection}.
8cf51b2c 190
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191@cindex mouse wheel
192@findex mouse-wheel-mode
193@cindex Mouse Wheel minor mode
194@cindex mode, Mouse Wheel
195@vindex mouse-wheel-follow-mouse
196@vindex mouse-wheel-scroll-amount
197@vindex mouse-wheel-progressive-speed
198 Some mice have a ``wheel'' which can be used for scrolling. Emacs
199supports scrolling windows with the mouse wheel, by default, on most
200graphical displays. To toggle this feature, use @kbd{M-x
201mouse-wheel-mode}. The variables @code{mouse-wheel-follow-mouse} and
202@code{mouse-wheel-scroll-amount} determine where and by how much
203buffers are scrolled. The variable
204@code{mouse-wheel-progressive-speed} determines whether the scroll
205speed is linked to how fast you move the wheel.
206
8cf51b2c 207@node Word and Line Mouse
4d45a8b7 208@section Mouse Commands for Words and Lines
8cf51b2c 209
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210 These variants of @kbd{Mouse-1} select entire words or lines at a
211time. Emacs activates the region around the selected text, which is
212also copied to the kill ring.
8cf51b2c 213
dc103cdc 214@table @kbd
8cf51b2c 215@item Double-Mouse-1
2aee6012 216Select the text around the word which you click on.
8cf51b2c 217
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218Double-clicking on a character with ``symbol'' syntax (such as
219underscore, in C mode) selects the symbol surrounding that character.
220Double-clicking on a character with open- or close-parenthesis syntax
221selects the parenthetical grouping which that character starts or
222ends. Double-clicking on a character with string-delimiter syntax
4ad3bc2a 223(such as a single-quote or double-quote in C) selects the string
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224constant (Emacs uses heuristics to figure out whether that character
225is the beginning or the end of it).
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226
227@item Double-Drag-Mouse-1
2aee6012 228Select the text you drag across, in the form of whole words.
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229
230@item Triple-Mouse-1
2aee6012 231Select the line you click on.
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232
233@item Triple-Drag-Mouse-1
2aee6012 234Select the text you drag across, in the form of whole lines.
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235@end table
236
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237@node Mouse References
238@section Following References with the Mouse
239@kindex Mouse-1 @r{(selection)}
240@kindex Mouse-2 @r{(selection)}
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241@cindex hyperlinks
242@cindex links
243@cindex text buttons
244@cindex buttons
8cf51b2c 245
4fc2e5bf 246@vindex mouse-highlight
4ad3bc2a 247 Some Emacs buffers include @dfn{buttons}, or @dfn{hyperlinks}:
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248pieces of text that perform some action (e.g.@: following a reference)
249when activated (e.g.@: by clicking on them). Usually, a button's text
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250is visually highlighted: it is underlined, or a box is drawn around
251it. If you move the mouse over a button, the shape of the mouse
252cursor changes and the button lights up. If you change the variable
253@code{mouse-highlight} to @code{nil}, Emacs disables this
254highlighting.
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255
256 You can activate a button by moving point to it and typing
257@key{RET}, or by clicking either @kbd{Mouse-1} or @kbd{Mouse-2} on the
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258button. For example, in a Dired buffer, each file name is a button;
259activating it causes Emacs to visit that file (@pxref{Dired}). In a
260@samp{*Compilation*} buffer, each error message is a button, and
261activating it visits the source code for that error
262(@pxref{Compilation}).
263
264 Although clicking @kbd{Mouse-1} on a button usually activates the
265button, if you hold the mouse button down for a period of time before
266releasing it (specifically, for more than 450 milliseconds), then
267Emacs moves point where you clicked, without activating the button.
268In this way, you can use the mouse to move point over a button without
269activating it. Dragging the mouse over or onto a button has its usual
270behavior of setting the region, and does not activate the button.
271
272 You can change how @kbd{Mouse-1} applies to buttons by customizing
273the variable @code{mouse-1-click-follows-link}. If the value is a
274positive integer, that determines how long you need to hold the mouse
275button down for, in milliseconds, to cancel button activation; the
276default is 450, as described in the previous paragraph. If the value
277is @code{nil}, @kbd{Mouse-1} just sets point where you clicked, and
278does not activate buttons. If the value is @code{double}, double
279clicks activate buttons but single clicks just set point.
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280
281@vindex mouse-1-click-in-non-selected-windows
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282 Normally, @kbd{Mouse-1} on a button activates the button even if it
283is in a non-selected window. If you change the variable
284@code{mouse-1-click-in-non-selected-windows} to @code{nil},
285@kbd{Mouse-1} on a button in an unselected window moves point to the
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286clicked position and selects that window, without activating the
287button.
8cf51b2c 288
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289@node Menu Mouse Clicks
290@section Mouse Clicks for Menus
291
292 Several mouse clicks with the @key{CTRL} and @key{SHIFT} modifiers
293bring up menus.
294
dc103cdc 295@table @kbd
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296@item C-Mouse-1
297@kindex C-Mouse-1
298This menu is for selecting a buffer.
299
300The MSB (``mouse select buffer'') global minor mode makes this
301menu smarter and more customizable. @xref{Buffer Menus}.
302
303@item C-Mouse-2
304@kindex C-Mouse-2
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305This menu contains entries for examining faces and other text
306properties, and well as for setting them (the latter is mainly useful
307when editing enriched text; @pxref{Enriched Text}).
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308
309@item C-Mouse-3
310@kindex C-Mouse-3
311This menu is mode-specific. For most modes if Menu-bar mode is on,
312this menu has the same items as all the mode-specific menu-bar menus
313put together. Some modes may specify a different menu for this
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314button. If Menu Bar mode is off, this menu contains all the items
315which would be present in the menu bar---not just the mode-specific
316ones---so that you can access them without having to display the menu
317bar.
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318
319@item S-Mouse-1
4fc2e5bf 320This menu is for changing the default face within the window's buffer.
d366bd53 321@xref{Text Scale}.
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322@end table
323
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324 Some graphical applications use @kbd{Mouse-3} for a mode-specific
325menu. If you prefer @kbd{Mouse-3} in Emacs to bring up such a menu
326instead of running the @code{mouse-save-then-kill} command, rebind
327@kbd{Mouse-3} by adding the following line to your init file
328(@pxref{Init Rebinding}):
329
330@smallexample
331(global-set-key [mouse-3] 'mouse-popup-menubar-stuff)
332@end smallexample
333
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334@node Mode Line Mouse
335@section Mode Line Mouse Commands
336@cindex mode line, mouse
337@cindex mouse on mode line
338
339 You can use mouse clicks on window mode lines to select and manipulate
340windows.
341
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342 Some areas of the mode line, such as the buffer name, and major and minor
343mode names, have their own special mouse bindings. These areas are
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344highlighted when you hold the mouse over them, and information about
345the special bindings will be displayed (@pxref{Tooltips}). This
346section's commands do not apply in those areas.
347
348@table @kbd
349@item Mouse-1
350@kindex Mouse-1 @r{(mode line)}
351@kbd{Mouse-1} on a mode line selects the window it belongs to. By
352dragging @kbd{Mouse-1} on the mode line, you can move it, thus
353changing the height of the windows above and below. Changing heights
354with the mouse in this way never deletes windows, it just refuses to
355make any window smaller than the minimum height.
356
357@item Mouse-2
358@kindex Mouse-2 @r{(mode line)}
359@kbd{Mouse-2} on a mode line expands that window to fill its frame.
360
361@item Mouse-3
362@kindex Mouse-3 @r{(mode line)}
363@kbd{Mouse-3} on a mode line deletes the window it belongs to. If the
4ad3bc2a 364frame has only one window, it does nothing.
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365
366@item C-Mouse-2
367@kindex C-mouse-2 @r{(mode line)}
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368@kbd{C-Mouse-2} on a mode line splits that window, producing two
369side-by-side windows with the boundary running through the click
370position (@pxref{Split Window}).
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371@end table
372
373@kindex C-Mouse-2 @r{(scroll bar)}
374@kindex Mouse-1 @r{(scroll bar)}
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375 Furthermore, by clicking and dragging @kbd{Mouse-1} on the divider
376between two side-by-side mode lines, you can move the vertical
377boundary to the left or right.
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378
379@node Creating Frames
380@section Creating Frames
381@cindex creating frames
382
383@kindex C-x 5
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384 The prefix key @kbd{C-x 5} is analogous to @kbd{C-x 4}. Whereas
385each @kbd{C-x 4} command pops up a buffer in a different window in the
386selected frame (@pxref{Pop Up Window}), the @kbd{C-x 5} commands use a
387different frame. If an existing visible or iconified (``minimized'')
388frame already displays the requested buffer, that frame is raised and
389deiconified (``un-minimized''); otherwise, a new frame is created on
390the current display terminal.
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391
392 The various @kbd{C-x 5} commands differ in how they find or create the
393buffer to select:
394
395@table @kbd
396@item C-x 5 2
397@kindex C-x 5 2
398@findex make-frame-command
399Create a new frame (@code{make-frame-command}).
400@item C-x 5 b @var{bufname} @key{RET}
401Select buffer @var{bufname} in another frame. This runs
402@code{switch-to-buffer-other-frame}.
403@item C-x 5 f @var{filename} @key{RET}
404Visit file @var{filename} and select its buffer in another frame. This
405runs @code{find-file-other-frame}. @xref{Visiting}.
406@item C-x 5 d @var{directory} @key{RET}
407Select a Dired buffer for directory @var{directory} in another frame.
408This runs @code{dired-other-frame}. @xref{Dired}.
409@item C-x 5 m
410Start composing a mail message in another frame. This runs
411@code{mail-other-frame}. It is the other-frame variant of @kbd{C-x m}.
412@xref{Sending Mail}.
413@item C-x 5 .
414Find a tag in the current tag table in another frame. This runs
415@code{find-tag-other-frame}, the multiple-frame variant of @kbd{M-.}.
416@xref{Tags}.
417@item C-x 5 r @var{filename} @key{RET}
418@kindex C-x 5 r
419@findex find-file-read-only-other-frame
420Visit file @var{filename} read-only, and select its buffer in another
421frame. This runs @code{find-file-read-only-other-frame}.
422@xref{Visiting}.
423@end table
424
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425 You can control the appearance and behavior of the newly-created
426frames by specifying @dfn{frame parameters}. @xref{Frame Parameters}.
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427
428@node Frame Commands
429@section Frame Commands
430
b63a8e8e 431 The following commands are used to delete and operate on frames:
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432
433@table @kbd
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434@item C-x 5 0
435@kindex C-x 5 0
436@findex delete-frame
437Delete the selected frame (@code{delete-frame}). This signals an
438error if there is only one frame.
439
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440@item C-z
441@kindex C-z @r{(X windows)}
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442@findex suspend-frame
443Minimize (or ``iconify) the selected Emacs frame
444(@code{suspend-frame}). @xref{Exiting}.
8cf51b2c 445
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446@item C-x 5 o
447@kindex C-x 5 o
448@findex other-frame
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449Select another frame, and raise it. If you repeat this command, it
450cycles through all the frames on your terminal.
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451
452@item C-x 5 1
453@kindex C-x 5 1
454@findex delete-other-frames
16254627 455Delete all frames on the current terminal, except the selected one.
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456@end table
457
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458 The @kbd{C-x 5 0} (@code{delete-frame}) command deletes the selected
459frame. However, it will refuse to delete the last frame in an Emacs
460session, to prevent you from losing the ability to interact with the
461Emacs session. Note that when Emacs is run as a daemon (@pxref{Emacs
462Server}), there is always a ``virtual frame'' that remains after all
463the ordinary, interactive frames are deleted. In this case, @kbd{C-x
4645 0} can delete the last interactive frame; you can use
465@command{emacsclient} to reconnect to the Emacs session.
466
467 The @kbd{C-x 5 1} (@code{delete-other-frames}) command deletes all
468other frames on the current terminal (this terminal refers to either a
469graphical display, or a text-only terminal; @pxref{Non-Window
470Terminals}). If the Emacs session has frames open on other graphical
471displays or text terminals, those are not deleted.
16254627 472
8cf51b2c 473@vindex focus-follows-mouse
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474 The @kbd{C-x 5 o} (@code{other-frame}) command selects the next
475frame on the current terminal. If you are using Emacs on the X Window
476System with a window manager that selects (or @dfn{gives focus to})
477whatever frame the mouse cursor is over, you have to change the
478variable @code{focus-follows-mouse} to @code{t} in order for this
479command to work properly. Then invoking @kbd{C-x 5 o} will also warp
480the mouse cursor to the chosen frame.
8cf51b2c 481
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482@node Fonts
483@section Fonts
484@cindex fonts
485
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486 By default, Emacs displays text on graphical displays using a
48712-point monospace font. There are several different ways to specify
488a different font:
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489
490@itemize
491@item
492Click on @samp{Set Default Font} in the @samp{Options} menu. To save
493this for future sessions, click on @samp{Save Options} in the
494@samp{Options} menu.
495
496@item
497Add a line to your init file (@pxref{Init File}), modifying the
498variable @code{default-frame-alist} to specify the @code{font}
499parameter (@pxref{Creating Frames}), like this:
500
501@smallexample
b63a8e8e 502(add-to-list 'default-frame-alist '(font . "DejaVu Sans Mono-10"))
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503@end smallexample
504
505@cindex X defaults file
506@cindex X resources file
507@item
508Add an @samp{emacs.font} X resource setting to your X resource file,
509like this:
510
511@smallexample
512emacs.font: DejaVu Sans Mono-12
513@end smallexample
514
515@noindent
516You must restart X, or use the @command{xrdb} command, for the X
517resources file to take effect. @xref{Resources}. When specifying a
518font in your X resources file, you should not quote it.
519
520@item
521If you are running Emacs on the GNOME desktop, you can tell Emacs to
522use the default system font by setting the variable
523@code{font-use-system-font} to @code{t} (the default is @code{nil}).
b63a8e8e 524For this to work, Emacs must have been compiled with Gconf support.
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525
526@item
527Use the command line option @samp{-fn} (or @samp{--font}). @xref{Font
528X}.
529@end itemize
530
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531 To check what font you're currently using, the @kbd{C-u C-x =}
532command can be helpful. It describes the character at point, and
533names the font that it's rendered in.
6e560c71 534
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535@cindex fontconfig
536 On X, there are four different ways to express a ``font name''. The
537first is to use a @dfn{Fontconfig pattern}. Fontconfig patterns have
538the following form:
539
540@smallexample
541@var{fontname}[-@var{fontsize}][:@var{name1}=@var{values1}][:@var{name2}=@var{values2}]...
542@end smallexample
543
544@noindent
545Within this format, any of the elements in braces may be omitted.
546Here, @var{fontname} is the @dfn{family name} of the font, such as
b63a8e8e 547@samp{Monospace} or @samp{DejaVu Sans Mono}; @var{fontsize} is the
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548@dfn{point size} of the font (one @dfn{printer's point} is about 1/72
549of an inch); and the @samp{@var{name}=@var{values}} entries specify
550settings such as the slant and weight of the font. Each @var{values}
551may be a single value, or a list of values separated by commas. In
552addition, some property values are valid with only one kind of
553property name, in which case the @samp{@var{name}=} part may be
554omitted.
555
556Here is a list of common font properties:
557
558@table @samp
559@item slant
b63a8e8e 560One of @samp{italic}, @samp{oblique}, or @samp{roman}.
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561
562@item weight
563One of @samp{light}, @samp{medium}, @samp{demibold}, @samp{bold} or
564@samp{black}.
565
566@item style
567Some fonts define special styles which are a combination of slant and
568weight. For instance, @samp{Dejavu Sans} defines the @samp{book}
569style, which overrides the slant and weight properties.
570
571@item width
572One of @samp{condensed}, @samp{normal}, or @samp{expanded}.
573
574@item spacing
575One of @samp{monospace}, @samp{proportional}, @samp{dual-width}, or
576@samp{charcell}.
577@end table
578
579@noindent
580Here are some examples of Fontconfig patterns:
581
582@smallexample
583Monospace
584Monospace-12
585Monospace-12:bold
586DejaVu Sans Mono:bold:italic
587Monospace-12:weight=bold:slant=italic
588@end smallexample
589
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590For a more detailed description of Fontconfig patterns, see the
591Fontconfig manual, which is distributed with Fontconfig and available
592online at @url{http://fontconfig.org/fontconfig-user.html}.
d68eb23c 593
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594@cindex GTK font pattern
595 The second way to specify a font is to use a @dfn{GTK font pattern}.
596These have the syntax
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597
598@smallexample
599@var{fontname} [@var{properties}] [@var{fontsize}]
600@end smallexample
601
602@noindent
603where @var{fontname} is the family name, @var{properties} is a list of
604property values separated by spaces, and @var{fontsize} is the point
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605size. The properties that you may specify for GTK font patterns are
606as follows:
d68eb23c 607
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608@itemize
609@item
610Slant properties: @samp{Italic} or @samp{Oblique}. If omitted, the
611default (roman) slant is implied.
612@item
613Weight properties: @samp{Bold}, @samp{Book}, @samp{Light},
614@samp{Medium}, @samp{Semi-bold}, or @samp{Ultra-light}. If omitted,
615@samp{Medium} weight is implied.
616@item
617Width properties: @samp{Semi-Condensed} or @samp{Condensed}. If
618omitted, a default width is used.
619@end itemize
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620
621@noindent
b63a8e8e 622Here are some examples of GTK font patterns:
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623
624@smallexample
625Monospace 12
626Monospace Bold Italic 12
627@end smallexample
628
629@cindex XLFD
630@cindex X Logical Font Description
631 The third way to specify a font is to use an @dfn{XLFD} (@dfn{X
632Logical Font Description}). This is the traditional method for
633specifying fonts under X. Each XLFD consists of fourteen words or
634numbers, separated by dashes, like this:
635
636@smallexample
637-misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed--13-*-*-*-c-60-iso8859-1
638@end smallexample
639
640@noindent
641A wildcard character (@samp{*}) in an XLFD matches any sequence of
642characters (including none), and @samp{?} matches any single
643character. However, matching is implementation-dependent, and can be
644inaccurate when wildcards match dashes in a long name. For reliable
645results, supply all 14 dashes and use wildcards only within a field.
646Case is insignificant in an XLFD. The syntax for an XLFD is as
647follows:
648
649@smallexample
650-@var{maker}-@var{family}-@var{weight}-@var{slant}-@var{widthtype}-@var{style}@dots{}
651@dots{}-@var{pixels}-@var{height}-@var{horiz}-@var{vert}-@var{spacing}-@var{width}-@var{registry}-@var{encoding}
652@end smallexample
653
654@noindent
655The entries have the following meanings:
656
657@table @var
658@item maker
659The name of the font manufacturer.
660@item family
8863a584 661The name of the font family (e.g.@: @samp{courier}).
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662@item weight
663The font weight---normally either @samp{bold}, @samp{medium} or
664@samp{light}. Some font names support other values.
665@item slant
666The font slant---normally @samp{r} (roman), @samp{i} (italic),
667@samp{o} (oblique), @samp{ri} (reverse italic), or @samp{ot} (other).
668Some font names support other values.
669@item widthtype
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670The font width---normally @samp{normal}, @samp{condensed},
671@samp{extended}, or @samp{semicondensed} (some font names support
672other values).
d68eb23c 673@item style
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674An optional additional style name. Usually it is empty---most XLFDs
675have two hyphens in a row at this point.
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676@item pixels
677The font height, in pixels.
678@item height
679The font height on the screen, measured in tenths of a printer's
680point. This is the point size of the font, times ten. For a given
681vertical resolution, @var{height} and @var{pixels} are proportional;
682therefore, it is common to specify just one of them and use @samp{*}
683for the other.
684@item horiz
685The horizontal resolution, in pixels per inch, of the screen for which
686the font is intended.
687@item vert
688The vertical resolution, in pixels per inch, of the screen for which
689the font is intended. Normally the resolution of the fonts on your
690system is the right value for your screen; therefore, you normally
691specify @samp{*} for this and @var{horiz}.
692@item spacing
693This is @samp{m} (monospace), @samp{p} (proportional) or @samp{c}
694(character cell).
695@item width
696The average character width, in pixels, multiplied by ten.
697@item registry
698@itemx encoding
699The X font character set that the font depicts. (X font character
700sets are not the same as Emacs character sets, but they are similar.)
701You can use the @command{xfontsel} program to check which choices you
702have. Normally you should use @samp{iso8859} for @var{registry} and
703@samp{1} for @var{encoding}.
704@end table
705
706 The fourth and final method of specifying a font is to use a ``font
707nickname''. Certain fonts have shorter nicknames, which you can use
708instead of a normal font specification. For instance, @samp{6x13} is
709equivalent to
710
711@smallexample
712-misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed--13-*-*-*-c-60-iso8859-1
713@end smallexample
714
715@cindex client-side fonts
716@cindex server-side fonts
717 On X, Emacs recognizes two types of fonts: @dfn{client-side} fonts,
718which are provided by the Xft and Fontconfig libraries, and
719@dfn{server-side} fonts, which are provided by the X server itself.
720Most client-side fonts support advanced font features such as
721antialiasing and subpixel hinting, while server-side fonts do not.
722Fontconfig and GTK patterns match only client-side fonts.
723
724@cindex listing system fonts
725 You will probably want to use a fixed-width default font---that is,
726a font in which all characters have the same width. For Xft and
727Fontconfig fonts, you can use the @command{fc-list} command to list
728the available fixed-width fonts, like this:
729
730@example
731fc-list :spacing=mono fc-list :spacing=charcell
732@end example
733
734@noindent
735For server-side X fonts, you can use the @command{xlsfonts} program to
736list the available fixed-width fonts, like this:
737
738@example
739xlsfonts -fn '*x*' | egrep "^[0-9]+x[0-9]+"
740xlsfonts -fn '*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-m*'
741xlsfonts -fn '*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-c*'
742@end example
743
744@noindent
745Any font with @samp{m} or @samp{c} in the @var{spacing} field of the
746XLFD is a fixed-width font. To see what a particular font looks like,
747use the @command{xfd} command. For example:
748
749@example
750xfd -fn 6x13
751@end example
752
753@noindent
754displays the entire font @samp{6x13}.
755
756 While running Emacs, you can also set the font of a specific kind of
757text (@pxref{Faces}), or a particular frame (@pxref{Frame
758Parameters}).
759
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760@node Speedbar
761@section Speedbar Frames
762@cindex speedbar
763
764@cindex attached frame (of speedbar)
765 The @dfn{speedbar} is a special frame for conveniently navigating in
766or operating on another frame. The speedbar, when it exists, is
767always associated with a specific frame, called its @dfn{attached
768frame}; all speedbar operations act on that frame.
769
770 Type @kbd{M-x speedbar} to create the speedbar and associate it with
771the current frame. To dismiss the speedbar, type @kbd{M-x speedbar}
772again, or select the speedbar and type @kbd{q}. (You can also delete
773the speedbar frame like any other Emacs frame.) If you wish to
774associate the speedbar with a different frame, dismiss it and call
775@kbd{M-x speedbar} from that frame.
776
777 The speedbar can operate in various modes. Its default mode is
778@dfn{File Display} mode, which shows the files in the current
779directory of the selected window of the attached frame, one file per
780line. Clicking on a file name visits that file in the selected window
781of the attached frame, and clicking on a directory name shows that
782directory in the speedbar (@pxref{Mouse References}). Each line also
783has a box, @samp{[+]} or @samp{<+>}, that you can click on to
784@dfn{expand} the contents of that item. Expanding a directory adds
785the contents of that directory to the speedbar display, underneath the
786directory's own line. Expanding an ordinary file adds a list of the
787tags in that file to the speedbar display; you can click on a tag name
788to jump to that tag in the selected window of the attached frame.
789When a file or directory is expanded, the @samp{[+]} changes to
790@samp{[-]}; you can click on that box to @dfn{contract} the item,
791hiding its contents.
792
793 You navigate through the speedbar using the keyboard, too. Typing
794@kbd{RET} while point is on a line in the speedbar is equivalent to
795clicking the item on the current line, and @kbd{SPC} expands or
796contracts the item. @kbd{U} displays the parent directory of the
797current directory. To copy, delete, or rename the file on the current
798line, type @kbd{C}, @kbd{D}, and @kbd{R} respectively. To create a
799new directory, type @kbd{M}.
800
801 Another general-purpose speedbar mode is @dfn{Buffer Display} mode;
802in this mode, the speedbar displays a list of Emacs buffers. To
803switch to this mode, type @kbd{b} in the speedbar. To return to File
804Display mode, type @kbd{f}. You can also change the display mode by
805clicking @kbd{mouse-3} anywhere in the speedbar window (or
806@kbd{mouse-1} on the mode-line) and selecting @samp{Displays} in the
807pop-up menu.
808
809 Some major modes, including Rmail mode, Info, and GUD, have
810specialized ways of putting useful items into the speedbar for you to
811select. For example, in Rmail mode, the speedbar shows a list of Rmail
812files, and lets you move the current message to another Rmail file by
813clicking on its @samp{<M>} box.
814
815 For more details on using and programming the speedbar, @xref{Top,
816Speedbar,,speedbar, Speedbar Manual}.
817
818@node Multiple Displays
819@section Multiple Displays
820@cindex multiple displays
821
822 A single Emacs can talk to more than one X display. Initially, Emacs
823uses just one display---the one specified with the @env{DISPLAY}
824environment variable or with the @samp{--display} option (@pxref{Initial
825Options}). To connect to another display, use the command
826@code{make-frame-on-display}:
827
828@findex make-frame-on-display
829@table @kbd
830@item M-x make-frame-on-display @key{RET} @var{display} @key{RET}
831Create a new frame on display @var{display}.
832@end table
833
834 A single X server can handle more than one screen. When you open
835frames on two screens belonging to one server, Emacs knows they share a
836single keyboard, and it treats all the commands arriving from these
837screens as a single stream of input.
838
839 When you open frames on different X servers, Emacs makes a separate
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840input stream for each server. Each server also has its own selected
841frame. The commands you enter with a particular X server apply to
842that server's selected frame.
8cf51b2c 843
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844@node Frame Parameters
845@section Frame Parameters
846@cindex default-frame-alist
8cf51b2c 847
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848 You can control the default appearance and behavior of all frames by
849specifying a default list of @dfn{frame parameters} in the variable
850@code{default-frame-alist}. Its value should be a list of entries,
851each specifying a parameter name and a value for that parameter.
852These entries take effect whenever Emacs creates a new frame,
853including the initial frame.
8cf51b2c 854
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855@cindex frame size, specifying default
856 For example, you can add the following lines to your init file
857(@pxref{Init File}) to set the default frame width to 90 character
858columns, the default frame height to 40 character rows, and the
859default font to @samp{Monospace-10}:
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860
861@example
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862(add-to-list 'default-frame-alist '(width . 90))
863(add-to-list 'default-frame-alist '(height . 40))
864(add-to-list 'default-frame-alist '(font . "Monospace-10"))
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865@end example
866
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867 For a list of frame parameters and their effects, see @ref{Frame
868Parameters,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
8cf51b2c 869
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870@cindex initial-frame-alist
871 You can also specify a list of frame parameters which apply to just
872the initial frame, by customizing the variable
873@code{initial-frame-alist}.
8cf51b2c 874
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875 If Emacs is compiled to use an X toolkit, frame parameters that
876specify colors and fonts don't affect menus and the menu bar, since
877those are drawn by the toolkit and not directly by Emacs.
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878
879@node Scroll Bars
880@section Scroll Bars
881@cindex Scroll Bar mode
882@cindex mode, Scroll Bar
883
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884 On graphical displays, there is a @dfn{scroll bar} on the side of
885each Emacs window. Clicking @kbd{Mouse-1} on the scroll bar's up and
886down buttons scrolls the window by one line at a time. Clicking
887@kbd{Mouse-1} above or below the scroll bar's inner box scrolls the
888window by nearly the entire height of the window, like @kbd{M-v} and
889@kbd{C-v} respectively (@pxref{Moving Point}). Dragging the inner box
890scrolls continuously.
891
892 If Emacs is compiled on the X Window System without X toolkit
893support, the scroll bar behaves differently. Clicking @kbd{Mouse-1}
894anywhere on the scroll bar scrolls forward like @kbd{C-v}, while
895@kbd{Mouse-3} scrolls backward like @kbd{M-v}. Clicking @kbd{Mouse-2}
896in the scroll bar lets you drag the inner box up and down.
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897
898@findex scroll-bar-mode
8cf51b2c 899@findex toggle-scroll-bar
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900 To toggle the use of scroll bars, type @kbd{M-x scroll-bar-mode}.
901This command applies to all frames, including frames yet to be
902created. To toggle scroll bars for just the selected frame, use the
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903command @kbd{M-x toggle-scroll-bar}.
904
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905@vindex scroll-bar-mode
906 To control the use of scroll bars at startup, customize the variable
907@code{scroll-bar-mode}. Its value should be either @code{right} (put
908scroll bars on the right side of windows), @code{left} (put them on
909the left), or @code{nil} (disable scroll bars). By default, Emacs
910puts scroll bars on the right if it was compiled with GTK+ support on
911the X Window System, and on MS-Windows or Mac OS; Emacs puts scroll
912bars on the left if compiled on the X Window system without GTK+
913support (following the old convention for X applications).
914
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915@vindex scroll-bar-width
916@cindex width of the scroll bar
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917 You can also use the X resource @samp{verticalScrollBars} to enable
918or disable the scroll bars (@pxref{Resources}). To control the scroll
919bar width, change the @code{scroll-bar-width} frame parameter
920(@pxref{Frame Parameters,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}).
8cf51b2c 921
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922@node Drag and Drop
923@section Drag and Drop
924@cindex drag and drop
925
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926 In most graphical desktop environments, Emacs has basic support for
927@dfn{drag and drop} operations. For instance, dropping text onto an
928Emacs frame inserts the text where it is dropped. Dropping a file
929onto an Emacs frame visits that file. As a special case, dropping the
930file on a Dired buffer moves or copies the file (according to the
931conventions of the application it came from) into the directory
932displayed in that buffer.
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933
934@vindex dnd-open-file-other-window
935 Dropping a file normally visits it in the window you drop it on. If
936you prefer to visit the file in a new window in such cases, customize
937the variable @code{dnd-open-file-other-window}.
938
939 The XDND and Motif drag and drop protocols, and the old KDE 1.x
940protocol, are currently supported.
941
942@node Menu Bars
943@section Menu Bars
944@cindex Menu Bar mode
945@cindex mode, Menu Bar
946@findex menu-bar-mode
947@vindex menu-bar-mode
948
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949 You can toggle the use of menu bars with @kbd{M-x menu-bar-mode}.
950With no argument, this command toggles Menu Bar mode, a global minor
951mode. With an argument, the command turns Menu Bar mode on if the
952argument is positive, off if the argument is not positive. To control
953the use of menu bars at startup, customize the variable
954@code{menu-bar-mode}.
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955
956@kindex C-Mouse-3 @r{(when menu bar is disabled)}
957 Expert users often turn off the menu bar, especially on text-only
958terminals, where this makes one additional line available for text.
959If the menu bar is off, you can still pop up a menu of its contents
960with @kbd{C-Mouse-3} on a display which supports pop-up menus.
961@xref{Menu Mouse Clicks}.
962
963 @xref{Menu Bar}, for information on how to invoke commands with the
964menu bar. @xref{X Resources}, for how to customize the menu bar
965menus' visual appearance.
966
967@node Tool Bars
968@section Tool Bars
969@cindex Tool Bar mode
970@cindex mode, Tool Bar
971@cindex icons, toolbar
972
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973 On graphical displays, Emacs puts a @dfn{tool bar} at the top of
974each frame, just below the menu bar. This is a row of icons which you
975can click on with the mouse to invoke various commands.
8cf51b2c 976
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977 The global (default) tool bar contains general commands. Some major
978modes define their own tool bars; whenever a buffer with such a major
979mode is current, the mode's tool bar replaces the global tool bar.
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980
981@findex tool-bar-mode
982@vindex tool-bar-mode
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983 To toggle the use of tool bars, type @kbd{M-x tool-bar-mode}. This
984command applies to all frames, including frames yet to be created. To
985control the use of tool bars at startup, customize the variable
986@code{tool-bar-mode}.
8cf51b2c 987
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988@vindex tool-bar-style
989@cindex Tool Bar style
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990 When Emacs is compiled with GTK+ support, each tool bar item can
991consist of an image, or a text label, or both. By default, Emacs
992follows the Gnome desktop's tool bar style setting; if none is
993defined, it displays tool bar items as just images. To impose a
994specific tool bar style, customize the variable @code{tool-bar-style}.
20fe03ad 995
8b2dd508 996@cindex Tool Bar position
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997 You can also control the placement of the tool bar for the GTK+ tool
998bar with the frame parameter @code{tool-bar-position}. @xref{Frame
999Parameters,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
8b2dd508 1000
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1001@node Dialog Boxes
1002@section Using Dialog Boxes
1003@cindex dialog boxes
1004
1005@vindex use-dialog-box
1006 A dialog box is a special kind of menu for asking you a yes-or-no
1007question or some other special question. Many Emacs commands use a
1008dialog box to ask a yes-or-no question, if you used the mouse to
c5c040a7 1009invoke the command that led to the question.
8cf51b2c 1010
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1011 To disable the use of dialog boxes, change the variable
1012@code{use-dialog-box} to @code{nil}. In that case, Emacs always
1013performs yes-or-no prompts using the echo area and keyboard input.
1014This variable also controls whether to use file selection windows (but
1015those are not supported on all platforms).
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1016
1017@vindex use-file-dialog
9c5e9396 1018@cindex file selection dialog, how to disable
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1019 A file selection window is a special kind of dialog box for asking
1020for file names. You can customize the variable @code{use-file-dialog}
1021to suppress the use of file selection windows, even if you still want
1022other kinds of dialogs. This variable has no effect if you have
1023suppressed all dialog boxes with the variable @code{use-dialog-box}.
1024
1025@vindex x-gtk-show-hidden-files
8cf51b2c 1026@vindex x-gtk-file-dialog-help-text
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1027@cindex hidden files, in GTK+ file chooser
1028@cindex help text, in GTK+ file chooser
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1029 When Emacs is compiled with GTK+ support, it uses the GTK+ ``file
1030chooser'' dialog. Emacs adds an additional toggle button to this
1031dialog, which you can use to enable or disable the display of hidden
1032files (files starting with a dot) in that dialog. If you want this
1033toggle to be activated by default, change the variable
1034@code{x-gtk-show-hidden-files} to @code{t}. In addition, Emacs adds
1035help text to the GTK+ file chooser dialog; to disable this help text,
1036change the variable @code{x-gtk-file-dialog-help-text} to @code{nil}.
1037
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1038@node Tooltips
1039@section Tooltips
1040@cindex tooltips
1041
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1042 @dfn{Tooltips} are small windows that display text information at
1043the current mouse position. They activate when there is a pause in
1044mouse movement over some significant piece of text in a window, or the
1045mode line, or some other part of the Emacs frame such as a tool bar
1046button or menu item.
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1047
1048@findex tooltip-mode
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1049 You can toggle the use of tooltips with the command @kbd{M-x
1050tooltip-mode}. When Tooltip mode is disabled, the help text is
1051displayed in the echo area instead. To control the use of tooltips at
1052startup, customize the variable @code{tooltip-mode}.
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1053
1054@vindex tooltip-delay
1055 The variables @code{tooltip-delay} specifies how long Emacs should
1056wait before displaying a tooltip. For additional customization
1057options for displaying tooltips, use @kbd{M-x customize-group
b63a8e8e 1058@key{RET} tooltip @key{RET}}.
8cf51b2c 1059
d366bd53 1060@vindex x-gtk-use-system-tooltips
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1061 If Emacs is built with GTK+ support, it displays tooltips via GTK+,
1062using the default appearance of GTK+ tooltips. To disable this,
1063change the variable @code{x-gtk-use-system-tooltips} to @code{nil}.
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1064If you do this, or if Emacs is built without GTK+ support, most
1065attributes of the tooltip text are specified by the @code{tooltip}
1066face, and by X resources (@pxref{X Resources}).
1067
1068 @dfn{GUD tooltips} are special tooltips that show the values of
1069variables when debugging a program with GUD. @xref{Debugger
1070Operation}.
d366bd53 1071
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1072@node Mouse Avoidance
1073@section Mouse Avoidance
1074@cindex avoiding mouse in the way of your typing
1075@cindex mouse avoidance
1076
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1077 On graphical terminals, the mouse pointer may obscure the text in
1078the Emacs frame. Emacs provides two methods to avoid this problem.
1079
1080@vindex make-pointer-invisible
1081 Firstly, Emacs hides the mouse pointer each time you type a
1082self-inserting character, if the pointer lies inside an Emacs frame;
1083moving the mouse pointer makes it visible again. To disable this
1084feature, set the variable @code{make-pointer-invisible} to @code{nil}.
1085
8cf51b2c 1086@vindex mouse-avoidance-mode
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1087 Secondly, you can use Mouse Avoidance mode, a minor mode, to keep
1088the mouse pointer away from point. To use Mouse Avoidance mode,
1089customize the variable @code{mouse-avoidance-mode}. You can set this
1090to various values to move the mouse in several ways:
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1091
1092@table @code
1093@item banish
1094Move the mouse to the upper-right corner on any key-press;
1095@item exile
1096Move the mouse to the corner only if the cursor gets too close,
1097and allow it to return once the cursor is out of the way;
1098@item jump
1099If the cursor gets too close to the mouse, displace the mouse
1100a random distance & direction;
1101@item animate
1102As @code{jump}, but shows steps along the way for illusion of motion;
1103@item cat-and-mouse
1104The same as @code{animate};
1105@item proteus
1106As @code{animate}, but changes the shape of the mouse pointer too.
1107@end table
1108
1109@findex mouse-avoidance-mode
1110You can also use the command @kbd{M-x mouse-avoidance-mode} to enable
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1111the mode. Whenever Mouse Avoidance mode moves the mouse, it also
1112raises the frame.
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1113
1114@node Non-Window Terminals
1115@section Non-Window Terminals
de0bde62 1116@cindex text-only terminal
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1117
1118 On a text-only terminal, Emacs can display only one Emacs frame at a
1119time. However, you can still create multiple Emacs frames, and switch
1120between them. Switching frames on these terminals is much like
1121switching between different window configurations.
1122
1123 Use @kbd{C-x 5 2} to create a new frame and switch to it; use @kbd{C-x
11245 o} to cycle through the existing frames; use @kbd{C-x 5 0} to delete
1125the current frame.
1126
1127 Each frame has a number to distinguish it. If your terminal can
1128display only one frame at a time, the selected frame's number @var{n}
1129appears near the beginning of the mode line, in the form
1130@samp{F@var{n}}.
1131
1132@findex set-frame-name
1133@findex select-frame-by-name
1134 @samp{F@var{n}} is in fact the frame's initial name. You can give
1135frames more meaningful names if you wish, and you can select a frame
1136by its name. Use the command @kbd{M-x set-frame-name @key{RET}
1137@var{name} @key{RET}} to specify a new name for the selected frame,
1138and use @kbd{M-x select-frame-by-name @key{RET} @var{name} @key{RET}}
1139to select a frame according to its name. The name you specify appears
1140in the mode line when the frame is selected.
1141
1142@node Text-Only Mouse
b63a8e8e 1143@section Using a Mouse in Text-only Terminals
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1144@cindex mouse support
1145@cindex terminal emulators, mouse support
1146
c5c040a7 1147Some text-only terminals support mouse clicks in the terminal window.
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1148
1149@cindex xterm
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1150 In a terminal emulator which is compatible with @command{xterm}, you
1151can use @kbd{M-x xterm-mouse-mode} to give Emacs control over simple
1152uses of the mouse---basically, only non-modified single clicks are
1153supported. The normal @command{xterm} mouse functionality for such
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1154clicks is still available by holding down the @kbd{SHIFT} key when you
1155press the mouse button. Xterm Mouse mode is a global minor mode
1156(@pxref{Minor Modes}). Repeating the command turns the mode off
1157again.
1158
bc36ad1c 1159@findex gpm-mouse-mode
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1160 In the console on GNU/Linux, you can use @kbd{M-x gpm-mouse-mode} to
1161enable mouse support. You must have the gpm server installed and
1162running on your system in order for this to work.
1163
1164@iftex
1165@pxref{MS-DOS Mouse,,,emacs-xtra,Specialized Emacs Features},
1166@end iftex
1167@ifnottex
1168@pxref{MS-DOS Mouse},
1169@end ifnottex
1170for information about mouse support on MS-DOS.