(net-utils-run-program): Changed backquotes to new style
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1GNU Emacs NEWS -- history of user-visible changes. 23 Jan 1999
2Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3See the end for copying conditions.
4
5Please send Emacs bug reports to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org.
6For older news, see the file ONEWS.
7
8\f
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9* Installation Changes in Emacs 21.1
10
11** `movemail' defaults to supporting POP. You can turn this off using
12the --without-pop configure option, should that be necessary.
13\f
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14* Changes in Emacs 21.1
15
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16** Listing buffers with M-x list-buffers (C-x C-b) now shows
17abbreviated file names. Abbreviations can be customized by changing
18`directory-abbrev-alist'.
19
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20** Reading from the mini-buffer now reads from standard input if Emacs
21is running in batch mode. For example,
22
23 (message "%s" (read t))
24
25will read a Lisp expression from standard input and print the result
26to standard output.
27
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28** Faces and frame parameters.
29
30There are four new faces `scroll-bar', `border', `cursor' and `mouse'.
31Setting the frame parameters `scroll-bar-foreground' and
32`scroll-bar-background' sets foreground and background color of face
33`scroll-bar' and vice versa. Setting frame parameter `border-color'
34sets the background color of face `border' and vice versa. Likewise
35for frame parameters `cursor-color' and face `cursor', and frame
36parameter `mouse-color' and face `mouse'.
37
38Changing frame parameter `font' sets font-related attributes of the
39`default' face and vice versa. Setting frame parameters
79214ddf 40`foreground-color' or `background-color' sets the colors of the
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41`default' face and vice versa.
42
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43** New face `menu'.
44
45The face `menu' can be used to change colors and font of Emacs' menus.
46Setting the font of LessTif/Motif menus is currently not supported;
47attempts to set the font are ignored in this case.
48
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49** New frame parameter `screen-gamma' for gamma correction.
50
51The new frame parameter `screen-gamma' specifies gamma-correction for
52colors. Its value may be nil, the default, in which case no gamma
53correction occurs, or a number > 0, usually a float, that specifies
54the screen gamma of a frame's display.
55
56PC monitors usually have a screen gamma of 2.2. smaller values result
57in darker colors. You might want to try a screen gamma of 1.5 for LCD
58color displays. The viewing gamma Emacs uses is 0.4545. (1/2.2).
59
60The X resource name of this parameter is `screenGamma', class
61`ScreenGamma'.
62
63** Emacs has a new redisplay engine.
64
65The new redisplay handles characters of variable width and height.
66Italic text can be used without redisplay problems. Fonts containing
67oversized characters, i.e. characters larger than the logical height
68of a font can be used. Images of various formats can be displayed in
69the text.
70
71** Emacs has a new face implementation.
72
73The new faces no longer fundamentally use X font names to specify the
74font. Instead, each face has several independent attributes--family,
75height, width, weight and slant--that it may or may not specify.
76These attributes can be merged from various faces, and then together
77specify a font.
78
79Faces are supported on terminals that can display color or fonts.
80These terminal capabilities are auto-detected. Details can be found
81under Lisp changes, below.
82
83** New default font is Courier 12pt.
84
85** When using a windowing terminal, Emacs window now has a cursor of
86its own. When the window is selected, the cursor is solid; otherwise,
87it is hollow.
88
89** Bitmap areas to the left and right of windows are used to display
90truncation marks, continuation marks, overlay arrows and alike. The
91foreground, background, and stipple of these areas can be changed by
92customizing face `fringe'.
93
94** The mode line under X is now drawn with shadows by default. You
95can change its appearance by modifying the face `modeline'.
96
97** LessTif support.
98
99Emacs now runs with LessTif (see <http://www.lesstif.org>). You will
100need a version 0.88.1 or later.
101
102** Toolkit scroll bars.
103
104Emacs now uses toolkit scrollbars if available. When configured for
105LessTif/Motif, it will use that toolkit's scrollbar. Otherwise, when
106configured for Lucid and Athena widgets, it will use the Xaw3d scroll
107bar if Xaw3d is available. You can turn off the use of toolkit scroll
108bars by specifying `--with-toolkit-scroll-bars=no' when configuring
109Emacs.
110
111When you encounter problems with the Xaw3d scroll bar, watch out how
112Xaw3d is compiled on your system. If the Makefile generated from
113Xaw3d's Imakefile contains a `-DNARROWPROTO' compiler option, and your
114Emacs system configuration file `s/your-system.h' does not contain a
115define for NARROWPROTO, you might consider adding it. Take
116`s/freebsd.h' as an example.
117
118Alternatively, if you don't have access to the Xaw3d source code, take
119a look at your system's imake configuration file, for example in the
120directory `/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/config' (paths are different on
121different systems). You will find files `*.cf' there. If your
122system's cf-file contains a line like `#define NeedWidePrototypes NO',
123add a `#define NARROWPROTO' to your Emacs system configuration file.
124
125The reason for this is that one Xaw3d function uses `double' or
126`float' function parameters depending on the setting of NARROWPROTO.
127This is not a problem when Imakefiles are used because each system's
128image configuration file contains the necessary information. Since
129Emacs doesn't use imake, this has do be done manually.
130
131** Toggle buttons and radio buttons in menus.
132
133When compiled with LessTif (or Motif) support, Emacs uses toolkit
134widgets for radio and toggle buttons in menus. When configured for
135Lucid, Emacs draws radio buttons and toggle buttons similar to Motif.
136
137** Highlighting of trailing whitespace.
138
139When `show-trailing-whitespace' is non-nil, Emacs displays trailing
140whitespace in the face `trailing-whitespace'. Trailing whitespace is
141defined as spaces or tabs at the end of a line. To avoid busy
142highlighting when entering new text, trailing whitespace is not
143displayed if point is at the end of the line containing the
144whitespace.
145
146** Busy-cursor.
147
148Emacs can optionally display a busy-cursor under X. You can turn the
149display on or off by customizing group `cursor'.
150
151** Blinking cursor
152
153M-x blink-cursor-mode toggles a blinking cursor under X and on
154terminals having terminal capabilities `vi', `vs', and `ve'. Blinking
155and related parameters like frequency and delay can be customized in
156the group `cursor'.
157
158** New font-lock support mode `jit-lock-mode'.
159
160This support mode is roughly equivalent to `lazy-lock' but is
161generally faster. It supports stealth and deferred fontification.
162See the documentation of the function `jit-lock-mode' for more
163details.
164
165Font-lock uses jit-lock-mode as default support mode, so you don't
166have to do anything to activate it.
167
168** Tabs and variable-width text.
169
170Tabs are now displayed with stretch properties; the width of a tab is
171defined as a multiple of the normal character width of a frame, and is
172independent of the fonts used in the text where the tab appears.
173Thus, tabs can be used to line up text in different fonts.
174
175** Enhancements of the Lucid menu bar
176
177*** The Lucid menu bar now supports the resource "margin".
178
179 emacs.pane.menubar.margin: 5
180
181The default margin is 4 which makes the menu bar appear like the Motif
182one.
183
184*** Arrows that indicate sub-menus are now drawn with shadows, like in
185Motif.
186
187** Hscrolling in C code.
188
189Horizontal scrolling now happens automatically.
190
191** Tool bar support.
192
193Emacs supports a tool bar at the top of a frame under X. For details
194how to define a tool bar, see the page describing Lisp-level changes.
195
196** Mouse-sensitive mode line.
197
198Different parts of the mode line under X have been made
199mouse-sensitive. Moving the mouse to a mouse-sensitive part in the mode
200line changes the appearance of the mouse pointer to an arrow, and help
201about available mouse actions is displayed either in the echo area, or
202in the tooltip window if you have enabled one.
203
204Currently, the following actions have been defined:
205
206- Mouse-1 on the buffer name in the mode line switches between two
207buffers.
208
209- Mouse-2 on the buffer-name switches to the next buffer, and
210M-mouse-2 switches to the previous buffer in the buffer list.
211
212- Mouse-3 on the buffer-name displays a buffer menu.
213
214- Mouse-1 on the read-only status in the mode line (`%' or `*')
215toggles the read-only status.
216
217- Mouse-3 on the mode name display a minor-mode menu.
218
219** LessTif/Motif file selection dialog.
220
221When Emacs is configured to use LessTif or Motif, reading a file name
222from a menu will pop up a file selection dialog if `use-dialogs' is
223non-nil.
224
225** Emacs can display faces on TTY frames.
226
227Emacs automatically detects terminals that are able to display colors.
228Faces with a weight greater than normal are displayed extra-bright, if
229the terminal supports it. Faces with a weight less than normal and
230italic faces are displayed dimmed, if the terminal supports it.
231Underlined faces are displayed underlined if possible. Other face
232attributes like overlines, strike-throught, box are ignored.
233
234** Sound support
235
236Emacs supports playing sound files on GNU/Linux and the free BSDs
237(Voxware driver and native BSD driver, aka as Luigi's driver).
238Currently supported file formats are RIFF-WAVE (*.wav) and Sun Audio
239(*.au). You must configure Emacs with the option `--with-sound=yes'
240to enable sound support.
241
242** A new variable, backup-by-copying-when-privileged-mismatch, gives
243the highest file uid for which backup-by-copying-when-mismatch will be
244forced on. The assumption is that uids less than or equal to this
245value are special uids (root, bin, daemon, etc.--not real system
246users) and that files owned by these users should not change ownership,
247even if your system policy allows users other than root to edit them.
248
249The default is 200; set the variable to nil to disable the feature.
250
251** A block cursor can be drawn as wide as the glyph under it under X.
252
253As an example: if a block cursor is over a tab character, it will be
254drawn as wide as that tab on the display. To do this, set
255`x-stretch-cursor' to a non-nil value.
256
257** Empty display lines at the end of a buffer may be marked with a
258bitmap (this is similar to the tilde displayed by vi).
259
260This behavior is activated by setting the buffer-local variable
261`indicate-empty-lines' to a non-nil value. The default value of this
262variable is found in `default-indicate-empty-lines'.
263
264** There is a new "aggressive" scrolling method.
265
266When scrolling up because point is above the window start, if the
267value of the buffer-local variable `scroll-up-aggessively' is a
268number, Emacs chooses a new window start so that point ends up that
269fraction of the window's height from the bottom of the window.
270
271When scrolling down because point is below the window end, if the
272value of the buffer-local variable `scroll-down-aggessively' is a
273number, Emacs chooses a new window start so that point ends up that
274fraction of the window's height from the top of the window.
275
276** The rectangle commands now avoid inserting undesirable spaces,
277notably at the end of lines.
278
279All these functions have been rewritten to avoid inserting unwanted
280spaces, and an optional prefix now allows them to behave the old way.
281
282** The new command M-x query-replace-regexp-eval acts like
283query-replace-regexp, but takes a Lisp expression which is evaluated
284after each match to get the replacement text.
285
286** Emacs now resizes mini-windows if appropriate.
287
288If a message is longer than one line, or mini-buffer contents are
289longer than one line, Emacs now resizes the mini-window unless it is
290on a frame of its own. You can control the maximum mini-window size
291by setting the following variable:
292
293- User option: max-mini-window-height
294
295Maximum height for resizing mini-windows. If a float, it specifies a
296fraction of the mini-window frame's height. If an integer, it
297specifies a number of lines. If nil, don't resize.
298
299Default is 0.25.
300
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301** Changes to TeX mode
302
303The default mode has been changed from `plain-tex-mode' to
304`latex-mode'.
305
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306** Changes to RefTeX mode
307
308*** RefTeX has new support for index generation. Index entries can be
309 created with `C-c <', with completion available on index keys.
310 Pressing `C-c /' indexes the word at the cursor with a default
311 macro. `C-c >' compiles all index entries into an alphabetically
312 sorted *Index* buffer which looks like the final index. Entries
313 can be edited from that buffer.
314
315*** Label and citation key selection now allow to select several
316 items and reference them together (use `m' to mark items, `a' or
317 `A' to use all marked entries).
318
319*** reftex.el has been split into a number of smaller files to reduce
320 memory use when only a part of RefTeX is being used.
321
322*** a new command `reftex-view-crossref-from-bibtex' (bound to `C-c &'
323 in BibTeX-mode) can be called in a BibTeX database buffer in order
324 to show locations in LaTeX documents where a particular entry has
325 been cited.
326
327** The M-x time-stamp command (most commonly used on write-file-hooks)
328has the following new features:
329
330*** The patterns for finding the time stamp and for updating a pattern
331may match text spanning multiple lines. For example, some people like
332to have the filename and date on separate lines. The new variable
333time-stamp-inserts-lines controls the matching for multi-line patterns.
334
335*** More than one time stamp can be updated in the same file. This
336feature is useful if you need separate time stamps in a program source
337file to both include in formatted documentation and insert in the
338compiled binary. The same time-stamp will be written at each matching
339pattern. The variable time-stamp-count enables this new feature; it
340defaults to 1.
341
342** Tooltips.
343
344Tooltips are small X windows displaying a help string at the current
345mouse position. To use them, use the Lisp package `tooltip' which you
346can access via the user option `tooltip-mode'.
347
348Tooltips also provides support for GUD debugging. If activated,
349variable values can be displayed in tooltips by pointing at them with
350the mouse in source buffers. You can customize various aspects of the
351tooltip display in the group `tooltip'.
352
353** Customize changes
354
355*** Customize now supports comments about customized items. Use the
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356`State' menu to add comments. Note that customization comments will
357cause the customizations to fail in earlier versions of Emacs.
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358
359*** The new option `custom-buffer-done-function' says whether to kill
360Custom buffers when you've done with them or just bury them (the
361default).
362
363** New features in evaluation commands
364
365The commands to evaluate Lisp expressions, such as C-M-x in Lisp
366modes, C-j in Lisp Interaction mode, and M-:, now bind the variables
367print-level, print-length, and debug-on-error based on the
368customizable variables eval-expression-print-level,
369eval-expression-print-length, and eval-expression-debug-on-error.
370
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371** Dired changes
372
373*** New variable `dired-recursive-deletes' determines if the delete
374command will delete non-empty directories recursively. The default
375is, delete only empty directories.
376
377*** New variable `dired-recursive-copies' determines if the copy
378command will copy directories recursively. The default is, do not
379copy directories recursively.
380
381** The variable mail-specify-envelope-from controls whether to
382use the -f option when sending mail.
383
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384** Isearch changes
385
386*** In Isearch mode, mouse-2 in the echo area now yanks the current
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387selection into the search string rather than giving an error.
388
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389*** There is a new lazy highlighting feature in incremental search.
390
d35fce81 391Lazy highlighting is switched on/off by customizing variable
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392`isearch-lazy-highlight'. When active, all matches for the current
393search string are highlighted. The current match is highlighted as
394before using face `isearch' or `region'. All other matches are
395highlighted using face `isearch-lazy-highlight-face' which defaults to
396`secondary-selection'.
397
398The extra highlighting makes it easier to anticipate where the cursor
399will end up each time you press C-s or C-r to repeat a pending search.
400Highlighting of these additional matches happens in a deferred fashion
401using "idle timers," so the cycles needed do not rob isearch of its
402usual snappy response.
403
404If `isearch-lazy-highlight-cleanup' is set to t, highlights for
405matches are automatically cleared when you end the search. If it is
406set to nil, you can remove the highlights manually with `M-x
407isearch-lazy-highlight-cleanup'.
408
409
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410** Ange-ftp allows you to specify of a port number in remote file
411names cleanly. It is appended to the host name, separated by a hash
412sign, e.g. `/foo@bar.org#666:mumble'. (This syntax comes from EFS.)
413
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414** Shell script mode changes.
415
416Shell script mode (sh-script) can now indent scripts for shells
417derived from sh and rc. The indentation style is customizeable, and
418sh-script can attempt to "learn" the current buffer's style.
419
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420** Etags changes.
421
422*** In DOS, etags looks for file.cgz if it cannot find file.c.
423
aca0be23 424*** New option --ignore-case-regex is an alternative to --regex. It is now
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425possible to bind a regexp to a language, by prepending the regexp with
426{lang}, where lang is one of the languages that `etags --help' prints out.
427This feature is useful especially for regex files, where each line contains
428a regular expression. The manual contains details.
aca0be23 429
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430*** In C and derived languages, etags creates tags for function
431declarations when given the --declarations option.
432
433*** In C++, tags are created for "operator". The tags have the form
aca0be23 434"operator+", without spaces between the keyword and the operator.
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435
436*** New language Ada: tags are functions, procedures, packages, tasks, and
437types.
438
439*** In Fortran, procedure is no more tagged.
440
441*** In Java, tags are created for "interface".
442
443*** In Lisp, "(defstruct (foo", "(defun (operator" and similar constructs
444are now tagged.
445
446*** In Perl, the --globals option tags global variables. my and local
447variables are tagged.
448
449*** New language Python: def and class at the beginning of a line are tags.
450
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451*** .ss files are Scheme files, .pdb is Postscript with C syntax, .psw is
452for PSWrap.
79214ddf 453
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454** Emacs now attempts to determine the initial language environment
455and preferred and locale coding systems systematically from the
456LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, and LANG environment variables during startup.
457
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458** New language environments `Latin-8' and `Latin-9'.
459These correspond respectively to the ISO character sets 8859-14
460(Celtic) and 8859-15 (updated Latin-1, with the Euro sign). There is
461currently no specific input method support for them.
462
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463** New modes and packages
464
465*** 5x5.el is a simple puzzle game.
466
467*** hl-line.el provides a minor mode to highlight the current line.
468
469*** ansi-color.el translates ANSI terminal escapes into text-properties.
470
471*** delphi.el provides a major mode for editing the Delphi (Object
472Pascal) language.
473
474*** quickurl.el provides a simple method of inserting a URL based on
475the text at point.
476
477*** sql.el provides an interface to SQL data bases.
478
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479*** fortune.el uses the fortune program to create mail/news signatures.
480
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481*** whitespace.el ???
482
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483*** PostScript mode (ps-mode) is a new major mode for editing PostScript
484files. It offers: interaction with a PostScript interpreter, including
485(very basic) error handling; fontification, easily customizable for
486interpreter messages; auto-indentation; insertion of EPSF templates and
487often used code snippets; viewing of BoundingBox; commenting out /
488uncommenting regions; conversion of 8bit characters to PostScript octal
489codes. All functionality is accessible through a menu.
490
491*** delim-col helps to prettify columns in a text region or rectangle.
492
493Here is an example of columns:
494
495horse apple bus
496dog pineapple car EXTRA
497porcupine strawberry airplane
498
499Doing the following settings:
500
501 (setq delimit-columns-str-before "[ ")
502 (setq delimit-columns-str-after " ]")
503 (setq delimit-columns-str-separator ", ")
504 (setq delimit-columns-separator "\t")
505
506
507Selecting the lines above and typing:
508
509 M-x delimit-columns-region
510
511It results:
512
513[ horse , apple , bus , ]
514[ dog , pineapple , car , EXTRA ]
515[ porcupine, strawberry, airplane, ]
516
517delim-col has the following options:
518
519 delimit-columns-str-before Specify a string to be inserted
520 before all columns.
521
522 delimit-columns-str-separator Specify a string to be inserted
523 between each column.
524
525 delimit-columns-str-after Specify a string to be inserted
526 after all columns.
527
528 delimit-columns-separator Specify a regexp which separates
529 each column.
530
531delim-col has the following commands:
532
533 delimit-columns-region Prettify all columns in a text region.
534 delimit-columns-rectangle Prettify all columns in a text rectangle.
535
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536*** The package recentf.el maintains a menu for visiting files that
537were operated on recently. When enabled, a new "Open Recent" submenu
538is displayed in the "Files" menu.
539
540The recent files list is automatically saved across Emacs sessions.
541
542To enable/disable recentf use M-x recentf-mode.
543
544To enable recentf at Emacs startup use
545M-x customize-variable RET recentf-mode RET.
546
547To change the number of recent files displayed and others options use
548M-x customize-group RET recentf RET.
549
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550*** elide-head.el provides a mechanism for eliding boilerplate header
551text.
552
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553** Withdrawn packages
554
555*** mldrag.el has been removed. mouse.el provides the same
556functionality with aliases for the mldrag functions.
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557
558*** eval-reg.el has been obsoleted by changes to edebug.el.
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559
560** Not new, but not mentioned before:
561M-w when Transient Mark mode is enabled disables the mark.
562
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563\f
564* Lisp changes in Emacs 21.1 (see following page for display-related features)
565
566Note that +++ before an item means the Lisp manual has been updated.
567--- means that I have decided it does not need to be in the Lisp manual.
568When you add a new item, please add it without either +++ or ---
569so I will know I still need to look at it -- rms.
570
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571** The optional argument BUFFER of function file-local-copy has been
572removed since it wasn't used by anything.
573
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574** The file name argument of function `file-locked-p' is now required
575instead of being optional.
576
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577** The new built-in error `text-read-only' is signaled when trying to
578modify read-only text.
579
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580** New functions and variables for locales.
581
582The new variable `locale-coding-system' specifies how to encode and
583decode strings passed to low-level message functions like strerror and
584time functions like strftime. The new variables `messages-locale' and
585`time-locale' give the system locales to be used during the next
586invocations of these two types of functions; the new variables
587`previous-messages-locale' and `previous-time-locale' give the locales
588most recently used.
589
590The new function `set-locale-environment' sets the language
591environment, preferred coding system, and locale coding system from
592the system locale as specified by the LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, and LANG
593environment variables. It is normally invoked during startup. It
594uses the new variables `locale-language-names',
595`locale-charset-language-names', and `locale-preferred-coding-systems'
596to make its decisions.
597
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598** syntax tables now understand nested comments.
599To declare a comment syntax as allowing nesting, just add an `n'
600modifier to either of the characters of the comment end and the comment
601start sequences.
602
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603** The function `pixmap-spec-p' has been renamed `bitmap-spec-p'
604because `bitmap' is more in line with the usual X terminology.
605
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606** New function `propertize'
607
608The new function `propertize' can be used to conveniently construct
609strings with text properties.
610
611- Function: propertize STRING &rest PROPERTIES
612
613Value is a copy of STRING with text properties assigned as specified
614by PROPERTIES. PROPERTIES is a sequence of pairs PROPERTY VALUE, with
615PROPERTY being the name of a text property and VALUE being the
616specified value of that property. Example:
617
618 (propertize "foo" 'face 'bold 'read-only t)
619
620+++
621** push and pop macros.
622
623A simple version of the push and pop macros of Common Lisp
624is now defined in Emacs Lisp. These macros allow only symbols
625as the place that holds the list to be changed.
626
627(push NEWELT LISTNAME) add NEWELT to the front of LISTNAME's value.
628(pop LISTNAME) return first elt of LISTNAME, and remove it
629 (thus altering the value of LISTNAME).
630
631+++
632** Regular expressions now support Posix character classes such
633as [:alpha:], [:space:] and so on.
634
635[:digit:] matches 0 through 9
636[:cntrl:] matches ASCII control characters
637[:xdigit:] matches 0 through 9, a through f and A through F.
638[:blank:] matches space and tab only
639[:graph:] matches graphic characters--everything except ASCII control chars,
640 space, and DEL.
641[:print:] matches printing characters--everything except ASCII control chars
642 and DEL.
643[:alnum:] matches letters and digits.
644 (But at present, for multibyte characters,
645 it matches anything that has word syntax.)
646[:alpha:] matches letters.
647 (But at present, for multibyte characters,
648 it matches anything that has word syntax.)
649[:ascii:] matches ASCII (unibyte) characters.
650[:nonascii:] matches non-ASCII (multibyte) characters.
651[:lower:] matches anything lower-case.
652[:punct:] matches punctuation.
653 (But at present, for multibyte characters,
654 it matches anything that has non-word syntax.)
655[:space:] matches anything that has whitespace syntax.
656[:upper:] matches anything upper-case.
657[:word:] matches anything that has word syntax.
658
659+++
660** Emacs now has built-in hash tables.
661
662The following functions are defined for hash tables:
663
664- Function: make-hash-table ARGS
665
666The argument list ARGS consists of keyword/argument pairs. All arguments
667are optional. The following arguments are defined:
668
669:test TEST
670
671TEST must be a symbol specifying how to compare keys. Default is `eql'.
672Predefined are `eq', `eql' and `equal'. If TEST is not predefined,
673it must have been defined with `define-hash-table-test'.
674
675:size SIZE
676
677SIZE must be an integer > 0 giving a hint to the implementation how
678many elements will be put in the hash table. Default size is 65.
679
680:rehash-size REHASH-SIZE
681
682REHASH-SIZE specifies by how much to grow a hash table once it becomes
683full. If REHASH-SIZE is an integer, add that to the hash table's old
684size to get the new size. Otherwise, REHASH-SIZE must be a float >
6851.0, and the new size is computed by multiplying REHASH-SIZE with the
686old size. Default rehash size is 1.5.
687
688:rehash-threshold THRESHOLD
689
690THRESHOLD must be a float > 0 and <= 1.0 specifying when to resize the
691hash table. It is resized when the ratio of (number of entries) /
692(size of hash table) is >= THRESHOLD. Default threshold is 0.8.
693
694:weakness WEAK
695
696WEAK must be either nil, one of the symbols `key, `value', or t.
697Entries are removed from weak tables during garbage collection if
698their key and/or value are not referenced elsewhere outside of the
699hash table. Default are non-weak hash tables.
700
701- Function: makehash &optional TEST
702
703Similar to make-hash-table, but only TEST can be specified.
704
705- Function: hash-table-p TABLE
706
707Returns non-nil if TABLE is a hash table object.
708
709- Function: copy-hash-table TABLE
710
711Returns a copy of TABLE. Only the table itself is copied, keys and
712values are shared.
713
714- Function: hash-table-count TABLE
715
716Returns the number of entries in TABLE.
717
718- Function: hash-table-rehash-size TABLE
719
720Returns the rehash size of TABLE.
721
722- Function: hash-table-rehash-threshold TABLE
723
724Returns the rehash threshold of TABLE.
725
726- Function: hash-table-rehash-size TABLE
727
728Returns the size of TABLE.
729
730- Function: hash-table-rehash-test TABLE
731
732Returns the test TABLE uses to compare keys.
733
734- Function: hash-table-weakness TABLE
735
736Returns the weakness specified for TABLE.
737
738- Function: clrhash TABLE
739
740Clear TABLE.
741
742- Function: gethash KEY TABLE &optional DEFAULT
743
744Look up KEY in TABLE and return its associated VALUE or DEFAULT if
745not found.
746
79214ddf 747- Function: puthash KEY VALUE TABLE
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748
749Associate KEY with VALUE in TABLE. If KEY is already associated with
750another value, replace the old value with VALUE.
751
752- Function: remhash KEY TABLE
753
754Remove KEY from TABLE if it is there.
755
756- Function: maphash FUNCTION TABLE
757
758Call FUNCTION for all elements in TABLE. FUNCTION must take two
759arguments KEY and VALUE.
760
761- Function: sxhash OBJ
762
763Return a hash code for Lisp object OBJ.
764
765- Function: define-hash-table-test NAME TEST-FN HASH-FN
766
767Define a new hash table test named NAME. If NAME is specified as
768a test in `make-hash-table', the table created will use TEST-FN for
79214ddf 769comparing keys, and HASH-FN to compute hash codes for keys. Test
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770and hash function are stored as symbol property `hash-table-test'
771of NAME with a value of (TEST-FN HASH-FN).
772
773TEST-FN must take two arguments and return non-nil if they are the same.
774
775HASH-FN must take one argument and return an integer that is the hash
776code of the argument. The function should use the whole range of
777integer values for hash code computation, including negative integers.
778
779Example: The following creates a hash table whose keys are supposed to
780be strings that are compared case-insensitively.
781
782 (defun case-fold-string= (a b)
783 (compare-strings a nil nil b nil nil t))
784
785 (defun case-fold-string-hash (a)
786 (sxhash (upcase a)))
787
79214ddf 788 (define-hash-table-test 'case-fold 'case-fold-string=
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789 'case-fold-string-hash))
790
791 (make-hash-table :test 'case-fold)
792
793+++
794** The Lisp reader handles circular structure.
795
796It now works to use the #N= and #N# constructs to represent
797circular structures. For example, #1=(a . #1#) represents
798a cons cell which is its own cdr.
799
800+++
801** The Lisp printer handles circular structure.
802
803If you bind print-circle to a non-nil value, the Lisp printer outputs
804#N= and #N# constructs to represent circular and shared structure.
805
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806+++
807** If the second argument to `move-to-column' is anything but nil or
808t, that means replace a tab with spaces if necessary to reach the
809specified column, but do not add spaces at the end of the line if it
810is too short to reach that column.
811
812+++
813** perform-replace has a new feature: the REPLACEMENTS argument may
814now be a cons cell (FUNCTION . DATA). This means to call FUNCTION
815after each match to get the replacement text. FUNCTION is called with
816two arguments: DATA, and the number of replacements already made.
817
818If the FROM-STRING contains any upper-case letters,
819perform-replace also turns off `case-fold-search' temporarily
820and inserts the replacement text without altering case in it.
821
822+++
823** The function buffer-size now accepts an optional argument
824to specify which buffer to return the size of.
825
826+++
827** The calendar motion commands now run the normal hook
828calendar-move-hook after moving point.
829
830+++
831** The new variable small-temporary-file-directory specifies a
832directory to use for creating temporary files that are likely to be
833small. (Certain Emacs features use this directory.) If
834small-temporary-file-directory is nil, they use
835temporary-file-directory instead.
836
837+++
838** The variable `inhibit-modification-hooks', if non-nil, inhibits all
839the hooks that track changes in the buffer. This affects
840`before-change-functions' and `after-change-functions', as well as
841hooks attached to text properties and overlay properties.
842
843+++
844** assoc-delete-all is a new function that deletes all the
845elements of an alist which have a particular value as the car.
846
847+++
848** make-temp-file provides a more reliable way to create a temporary file.
849
850make-temp-file is used like make-temp-name, except that it actually
851creates the file before it returns. This prevents a timing error,
852ensuring that no other job can use the same name for a temporary file.
853
854+++
855** New exclusive-open feature in `write-region'
856
857The optional seventh arg is now called MUSTBENEW. If non-nil, it insists
858on a check for an existing file with the same name. If MUSTBENEW
859is `excl', that means to get an error if the file already exists;
860never overwrite. If MUSTBENEW is neither nil nor `excl', that means
861ask for confirmation before overwriting, but do go ahead and
862overwrite the file if the user gives confirmation.
863
864If the MUSTBENEW argument in `write-region' is `excl',
865that means to use a special feature in the `open' system call
866to get an error if the file exists at that time.
867The error reported is `file-already-exists'.
868
869+++
870** Function `format' now handles text properties.
871
872Text properties of the format string are applied to the result string.
873If the result string is longer than the format string, text properties
874ending at the end of the format string are extended to the end of the
875result string.
876
877Text properties from string arguments are applied to the result
878string where arguments appear in the result string.
879
880Example:
881
882 (let ((s1 "hello, %s")
883 (s2 "world"))
884 (put-text-property 0 (length s1) 'face 'bold s1)
885 (put-text-property 0 (length s2) 'face 'italic s2)
b246b1f6 886 (format s1 s2))
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887
888results in a bold-face string with an italic `world' at the end.
889
890+++
891** Messages can now be displayed with text properties.
892
893Text properties are handled as described above for function `format'.
894The following example displays a bold-face message with an italic
895argument in it.
896
897 (let ((msg "hello, %s!")
898 (arg "world"))
899 (put-text-property 0 (length msg) 'face 'bold msg)
900 (put-text-property 0 (length arg) 'face 'italic arg)
901 (message msg arg))
902
903+++
904** Sound support
905
906Emacs supports playing sound files on GNU/Linux and the free BSDs
907(Voxware driver and native BSD driver, aka as Luigi's driver).
908
909Currently supported file formats are RIFF-WAVE (*.wav) and Sun Audio
910(*.au). You must configure Emacs with the option `--with-sound=yes'
911to enable sound support.
912
913Sound files can be played by calling (play-sound SOUND). SOUND is a
914list of the form `(sound PROPERTY...)'. The function is only defined
915when sound support is present for the system on which Emacs runs. The
916functions runs `play-sound-functions' with one argument which is the
917sound to play, before playing the sound.
918
919The following sound properties are supported:
920
921- `:file FILE'
922
923FILE is a file name. If FILE isn't an absolute name, it will be
924searched relative to `data-directory'.
925
926- `:volume VOLUME'
927
928VOLUME must be an integer in the range 0..100 or a float in the range
9290..1. This property is optional.
930
931Other properties are ignored.
932
933** `multimedia' is a new Finder keyword and Custom group.
934\f
935* New Lisp-level Display features in Emacs 21.1
936
937Note that +++ before an item means the Lisp manual has been updated.
938--- means that I have decided it does not need to be in the Lisp manual.
939When you add a new item, please add it without either +++ or ---
940so I will know I still need to look at it -- rms.
941
942** New face implementation.
943
944Emacs faces have been reimplemented from scratch. They don't use XLFD
945font names anymore and face merging now works as expected.
946
947+++
948*** New faces.
949
950Each face can specify the following display attributes:
951
952 1. Font family or fontset alias name.
79214ddf 953
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954 2. Relative proportionate width, aka character set width or set
955 width (swidth), e.g. `semi-compressed'.
79214ddf 956
a933dad1 957 3. Font height in 1/10pt
79214ddf 958
a933dad1 959 4. Font weight, e.g. `bold'.
79214ddf 960
a933dad1 961 5. Font slant, e.g. `italic'.
79214ddf 962
a933dad1 963 6. Foreground color.
79214ddf 964
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DL
965 7. Background color.
966
967 8. Whether or not characters should be underlined, and in what color.
968
969 9. Whether or not characters should be displayed in inverse video.
970
971 10. A background stipple, a bitmap.
972
973 11. Whether or not characters should be overlined, and in what color.
974
975 12. Whether or not characters should be strike-through, and in what
976 color.
977
978 13. Whether or not a box should be drawn around characters, its
979 color, the width of the box lines, and 3D appearance.
980
981Faces are frame-local by nature because Emacs allows to define the
982same named face (face names are symbols) differently for different
983frames. Each frame has an alist of face definitions for all named
984faces. The value of a named face in such an alist is a Lisp vector
985with the symbol `face' in slot 0, and a slot for each each of the face
986attributes mentioned above.
987
988There is also a global face alist `face-new-frame-defaults'. Face
989definitions from this list are used to initialize faces of newly
990created frames.
79214ddf 991
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992A face doesn't have to specify all attributes. Those not specified
993have a nil value. Faces specifying all attributes are called
994`fully-specified'.
995
996+++
997*** Face merging.
998
999The display style of a given character in the text is determined by
1000combining several faces. This process is called `face merging'. Any
1001aspect of the display style that isn't specified by overlays or text
1002properties is taken from the `default' face. Since it is made sure
1003that the default face is always fully-specified, face merging always
1004results in a fully-specified face.
1005
1006+++
1007*** Face realization.
1008
1009After all face attributes for a character have been determined by
1010merging faces of that character, that face is `realized'. The
1011realization process maps face attributes to what is physically
1012available on the system where Emacs runs. The result is a `realized
1013face' in form of an internal structure which is stored in the face
1014cache of the frame on which it was realized.
1015
1016Face realization is done in the context of the charset of the
1017character to display because different fonts and encodings are used
1018for different charsets. In other words, for characters of different
1019charsets, different realized faces are needed to display them.
1020
1021Except for composite characters, faces are always realized for a
1022specific character set and contain a specific font, even if the face
1023being realized specifies a fontset. The reason is that the result of
1024the new font selection stage is better than what can be done with
1025statically defined font name patterns in fontsets.
1026
1027In unibyte text, Emacs' charsets aren't applicable; function
1028`char-charset' reports ASCII for all characters, including those >
10290x7f. The X registry and encoding of fonts to use is determined from
1030the variable `face-default-registry' in this case. The variable is
1031initialized at Emacs startup time from the font the user specified for
1032Emacs.
1033
1034Currently all unibyte text, i.e. all buffers with
1035`enable-multibyte-characters' nil are displayed with fonts of the same
1036registry and encoding `face-default-registry'. This is consistent
1037with the fact that languages can also be set globally, only.
1038
1039++++
1040**** Clearing face caches.
1041
1042The Lisp function `clear-face-cache' can be called to clear face caches
1043on all frames. If called with a non-nil argument, it will also unload
1044unused fonts.
1045
1046+++
1047*** Font selection.
79214ddf 1048
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1049Font selection tries to find the best available matching font for a
1050given (charset, face) combination. This is done slightly differently
1051for faces specifying a fontset, or a font family name.
1052
1053If the face specifies a fontset name, that fontset determines a
1054pattern for fonts of the given charset. If the face specifies a font
1055family, a font pattern is constructed. Charset symbols have a
1056property `x-charset-registry' for that purpose that maps a charset to
1057an XLFD registry and encoding in the font pattern constructed.
1058
1059Available fonts on the system on which Emacs runs are then matched
1060against the font pattern. The result of font selection is the best
1061match for the given face attributes in this font list.
1062
1063Font selection can be influenced by the user.
1064
1065The user can specify the relative importance he gives the face
1066attributes width, height, weight, and slant by setting
1067face-font-selection-order (faces.el) to a list of face attribute
1068names. The default is (:width :height :weight :slant), and means
1069that font selection first tries to find a good match for the font
1070width specified by a face, then---within fonts with that width---tries
1071to find a best match for the specified font height, etc.
1072
1073Setting `face-alternative-font-family-alist' allows the user to
1074specify alternative font families to try if a family specified by a
1075face doesn't exist.
1076
1077+++
1078**** Scalable fonts
1079
1080Emacs can make use of scalable fonts but doesn't do so by default,
1081since the use of too many or too big scalable fonts may crash XFree86
1082servers.
1083
1084To enable scalable font use, set the variable
b246b1f6 1085`scalable-fonts-allowed'. A value of nil, the default, means never use
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1086scalable fonts. A value of t means any scalable font may be used.
1087Otherwise, the value must be a list of regular expressions. A
1088scalable font may then be used if it matches a regular expression from
1089that list. Example:
1090
1091 (setq scalable-fonts-allowed '("muleindian-2$"))
1092
1093allows the use of scalable fonts with registry `muleindian-2'.
1094
1095+++
1096*** Functions and variables related to font selection.
1097
1098- Function: x-family-fonts &optional FAMILY FRAME
1099
1100Return a list of available fonts of family FAMILY on FRAME. If FAMILY
1101is omitted or nil, list all families. Otherwise, FAMILY must be a
1102string, possibly containing wildcards `?' and `*'.
1103
1104If FRAME is omitted or nil, use the selected frame. Each element of
1105the result is a vector [FAMILY WIDTH POINT-SIZE WEIGHT SLANT FIXED-P
1106FULL REGISTRY-AND-ENCODING]. FAMILY is the font family name.
1107POINT-SIZE is the size of the font in 1/10 pt. WIDTH, WEIGHT, and
1108SLANT are symbols describing the width, weight and slant of the font.
1109These symbols are the same as for face attributes. FIXED-P is non-nil
1110if the font is fixed-pitch. FULL is the full name of the font, and
1111REGISTRY-AND-ENCODING is a string giving the registry and encoding of
1112the font. The result list is sorted according to the current setting
1113of the face font sort order.
1114
79214ddf 1115- Function: x-font-family-list
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1116
1117Return a list of available font families on FRAME. If FRAME is
1118omitted or nil, use the selected frame. Value is a list of conses
1119(FAMILY . FIXED-P) where FAMILY is a font family, and FIXED-P is
1120non-nil if fonts of that family are fixed-pitch.
1121
1122- Variable: font-list-limit
1123
1124Limit for font matching. If an integer > 0, font matching functions
1125won't load more than that number of fonts when searching for a
1126matching font. The default is currently 100.
1127
1128+++
1129*** Setting face attributes.
1130
1131For the most part, the new face implementation is interface-compatible
1132with the old one. Old face attribute related functions are now
1133implemented in terms of the new functions `set-face-attribute' and
1134`face-attribute'.
1135
1136Face attributes are identified by their names which are keyword
1137symbols. All attributes can be set to `unspecified'.
1138
1139The following attributes are recognized:
1140
1141`:family'
1142
1143VALUE must be a string specifying the font family, e.g. ``courier'',
1144or a fontset alias name. If a font family is specified, wild-cards `*'
1145and `?' are allowed.
1146
1147`:width'
1148
1149VALUE specifies the relative proportionate width of the font to use.
1150It must be one of the symbols `ultra-condensed', `extra-condensed',
1151`condensed', `semi-condensed', `normal', `semi-expanded', `expanded',
1152`extra-expanded', or `ultra-expanded'.
1153
1154`:height'
1155
1156VALUE must be an integer specifying the height of the font to use in
11571/10 pt.
1158
1159`:weight'
1160
1161VALUE specifies the weight of the font to use. It must be one of the
1162symbols `ultra-bold', `extra-bold', `bold', `semi-bold', `normal',
1163`semi-light', `light', `extra-light', `ultra-light'.
1164
1165`:slant'
1166
1167VALUE specifies the slant of the font to use. It must be one of the
1168symbols `italic', `oblique', `normal', `reverse-italic', or
1169`reverse-oblique'.
1170
1171`:foreground', `:background'
1172
1173VALUE must be a color name, a string.
1174
1175`:underline'
1176
1177VALUE specifies whether characters in FACE should be underlined. If
1178VALUE is t, underline with foreground color of the face. If VALUE is
1179a string, underline with that color. If VALUE is nil, explicitly
1180don't underline.
1181
1182`:overline'
1183
1184VALUE specifies whether characters in FACE should be overlined. If
1185VALUE is t, overline with foreground color of the face. If VALUE is a
1186string, overline with that color. If VALUE is nil, explicitly don't
1187overline.
1188
1189`:strike-through'
1190
1191VALUE specifies whether characters in FACE should be drawn with a line
1192striking through them. If VALUE is t, use the foreground color of the
1193face. If VALUE is a string, strike-through with that color. If VALUE
1194is nil, explicitly don't strike through.
1195
1196`:box'
1197
1198VALUE specifies whether characters in FACE should have a box drawn
1199around them. If VALUE is nil, explicitly don't draw boxes. If
1200VALUE is t, draw a box with lines of width 1 in the foreground color
1201of the face. If VALUE is a string, the string must be a color name,
1202and the box is drawn in that color with a line width of 1. Otherwise,
1203VALUE must be a property list of the form `(:line-width WIDTH
1204:color COLOR :style STYLE)'. If a keyword/value pair is missing from
1205the property list, a default value will be used for the value, as
1206specified below. WIDTH specifies the width of the lines to draw; it
1207defaults to 1. COLOR is the name of the color to draw in, default is
1208the foreground color of the face for simple boxes, and the background
1209color of the face for 3D boxes. STYLE specifies whether a 3D box
1210should be draw. If STYLE is `released-button', draw a box looking
1211like a released 3D button. If STYLE is `pressed-button' draw a box
1212that appears like a pressed button. If STYLE is nil, the default if
1213the property list doesn't contain a style specification, draw a 2D
1214box.
1215
1216`:inverse-video'
1217
1218VALUE specifies whether characters in FACE should be displayed in
1219inverse video. VALUE must be one of t or nil.
1220
1221`:stipple'
1222
1223If VALUE is a string, it must be the name of a file of pixmap data.
1224The directories listed in the `x-bitmap-file-path' variable are
1225searched. Alternatively, VALUE may be a list of the form (WIDTH
1226HEIGHT DATA) where WIDTH and HEIGHT are the size in pixels, and DATA
1227is a string containing the raw bits of the bitmap. VALUE nil means
1228explicitly don't use a stipple pattern.
1229
1230For convenience, attributes `:family', `:width', `:height', `:weight',
1231and `:slant' may also be set in one step from an X font name:
1232
1233`:font'
1234
1235Set font-related face attributes from VALUE. VALUE must be a valid
1236XLFD font name. If it is a font name pattern, the first matching font
1237is used--this is for compatibility with the behavior of previous
1238versions of Emacs.
1239
1240For compatibility with Emacs 20, keywords `:bold' and `:italic' can
1241be used to specify that a bold or italic font should be used. VALUE
1242must be t or nil in that case. A value of `unspecified' is not allowed."
1243
1244Please see also the documentation of `set-face-attribute' and
1245`defface'.
1246
1247*** Face attributes and X resources
1248
1249The following X resource names can be used to set face attributes
1250from X resources:
1251
1252 Face attribute X resource class
1253-----------------------------------------------------------------------
1254 :family attributeFamily . Face.AttributeFamily
1255 :width attributeWidth Face.AttributeWidth
1256 :height attributeHeight Face.AttributeHeight
1257 :weight attributeWeight Face.AttributeWeight
1258 :slant attributeSlant Face.AttributeSlant
1259 foreground attributeForeground Face.AttributeForeground
1260 :background attributeBackground . Face.AttributeBackground
1261 :overline attributeOverline Face.AttributeOverline
1262 :strike-through attributeStrikeThrough Face.AttributeStrikeThrough
1263 :box attributeBox Face.AttributeBox
1264 :underline attributeUnderline Face.AttributeUnderline
1265 :inverse-video attributeInverse Face.AttributeInverse
1266 :stipple attributeStipple Face.AttributeStipple
79214ddf 1267 or attributeBackgroundPixmap
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1268 Face.AttributeBackgroundPixmap
1269 :font attributeFont Face.AttributeFont
1270 :bold attributeBold Face.AttributeBold
1271 :italic attributeItalic . Face.AttributeItalic
1272 :font attributeFont Face.AttributeFont
1273
1274+++
1275*** Text property `face'.
1276
1277The value of the `face' text property can now be a single face
1278specification or a list of such specifications. Each face
1279specification can be
1280
12811. A symbol or string naming a Lisp face.
1282
12832. A property list of the form (KEYWORD VALUE ...) where each
1284 KEYWORD is a face attribute name, and VALUE is an appropriate value
1285 for that attribute. Please see the doc string of `set-face-attribute'
1286 for face attribute names.
1287
12883. Conses of the form (FOREGROUND-COLOR . COLOR) or
1289 (BACKGROUND-COLOR . COLOR) where COLOR is a color name. This is
1290 for compatibility with previous Emacs versions.
1291
1292+++
1293** Support functions for colors on text-only terminals.
1294
1295The function `face-register-tty-color' can be used to define colors
1296for use on TTY frames. It maps a color name to a color number on the
1297terminal. Emacs defines a couple of default color mappings by
1298default. You can get defined colors with a call to
1299`tty-defined-colors'. The function `face-clear-tty-colors' can be
1300used to clear the mapping table.
1301
1302+++
1303** The minibuffer prompt is now actually inserted in the minibuffer.
a933dad1 1304
463cac2d 1305This makes it possible to scroll through the prompt, if you want to.
a933dad1
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1306
1307The function minubuffer-prompt-end returns the current position of the
1308end of the minibuffer prompt, if the minibuffer is current.
1309Otherwise, it returns zero.
1310
463cac2d
GM
1311** New `field' abstraction in buffers.
1312
1313There is now code to support an abstraction called `fields' in emacs
1314buffers. A field is a contiguous region of text with the same `field'
1315text-property.
1316
9a9dfda8 1317Many emacs functions, such as forward-word, forward-sentence,
463cac2d 1318forward-paragraph, beginning-of-line, etc., stop moving when they come
9a9dfda8 1319to the boundary between fields; beginning-of-line and end-of-line will
463cac2d 1320not let the point move past the field boundary, but other movement
9a9dfda8 1321commands continue into the next field if repeated.
463cac2d
GM
1322
1323Now that the minibuffer prompt is inserted into the minibuffer, it is in
9a9dfda8 1324a separate field from the user-input part of the buffer, so that common
463cac2d 1325editing commands treat the user's text separately from the prompt.
a933dad1 1326
9a9dfda8
GM
1327The following functions are defined for operating on fields:
1328
1329- Function: constrain-to-field NEW-POS OLD-POS &optional ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE ONLY-IN-LINE
1330
1331Return the position closest to NEW-POS that is in the same field as OLD-POS.
1332A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
1333If NEW-POS is nil, then the current point is used instead, and set to the
1334constrained position if that is is different.
1335
1336If OLD-POS is at the boundary of two fields, then the allowable
1337positions for NEW-POS depends on the value of the optional argument
1338ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE: If ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE is nil, then NEW-POS is
1339constrained to the field that has the same `field' text-property
1340as any new characters inserted at OLD-POS, whereas if ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE
1341is non-nil, NEW-POS is constrained to the union of the two adjacent
1342fields.
1343
1344If the optional argument ONLY-IN-LINE is non-nil and constraining
1345NEW-POS would move it to a different line, NEW-POS is returned
1346unconstrained. This useful for commands that move by line, like
1347C-n or C-a, which should generally respect field boundaries
1348only in the case where they can still move to the right line.
1349
1350- Function: erase-field &optional POS
1351
1352Erases the field surrounding POS.
1353A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
1354If POS is nil, the position of the current buffer's point is used.
1355
1356- Function: field-beginning &optional POS ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE
1357
1358Return the beginning of the field surrounding POS.
1359A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
1360If POS is nil, the position of the current buffer's point is used.
1361If ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE is non-nil and POS is already at beginning of an
1362field, then the beginning of the *previous* field is returned.
1363
1364- Function: field-end &optional POS ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE
1365
1366Return the end of the field surrounding POS.
1367A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
1368If POS is nil, the position of the current buffer's point is used.
1369If ESCAPE-FROM-EDGE is non-nil and POS is already at end of a field,
1370then the end of the *following* field is returned.
1371
1372- Function: field-string &optional POS
1373
1374Return the contents of the field surrounding POS as a string.
1375A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
1376If POS is nil, the position of the current buffer's point is used.
1377
1378- Function: field-string-no-properties &optional POS
1379
1380Return the contents of the field around POS, without text-properties.
1381A field is a region of text with the same `field' property.
1382If POS is nil, the position of the current buffer's point is used.
1383
a933dad1
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1384+++
1385** Image support.
1386
1387Emacs can now display images. Images are inserted into text by giving
1388strings or buffer text a `display' text property containing one of
1389(AREA IMAGE) or IMAGE. The display of the `display' property value
1390replaces the display of the characters having that property.
1391
1392If the property value has the form (AREA IMAGE), AREA must be one of
1393`(margin left-margin)', `(margin right-margin)' or `(margin nil)'. If
1394AREA is `(margin nil)', IMAGE will be displayed in the text area of a
1395window, otherwise it will be displayed in the left or right marginal
1396area.
1397
1398IMAGE is an image specification.
1399
1400*** Image specifications
1401
1402Image specifications are lists of the form `(image PROPS)' where PROPS
1403is a property list whose keys are keyword symbols. Each
1404specifications must contain a property `:type TYPE' with TYPE being a
35a5514b
GM
1405symbol specifying the image type, e.g. `xbm'. Properties not
1406described below are ignored.
a933dad1
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1407
1408The following is a list of properties all image types share.
1409
1410`:ascent ASCENT'
1411
1412ASCENT must be a number in the range 0..100, and specifies the percentage
1413of the image's height to use for its ascent. Default is 50.
1414
1415`:margin MARGIN'
1416
79214ddf 1417MARGIN must be a number >= 0 specifying how many pixels to put as
a933dad1
DL
1418margin around the image. Default is 0.
1419
1420`:relief RELIEF'
1421
1422RELIEF is analogous to the `:relief' attribute of faces. Puts a relief
1423around an image.
1424
1425`:algorithm ALGO'
1426
1427Apply an image algorithm to the image before displaying it. ALGO must
1428be a symbol specifying the algorithm. Currently only `laplace' is
1429supported which applies a Laplace edge detection algorithm to an image
1430which is intended to display images "disabled."
1431
1432`:heuristic-mask BG'
1433
1434If BG is not nil, build a clipping mask for the image, so that the
1435background of a frame is visible behind the image. If BG is t,
1436determine the background color of the image by looking at the 4
1437corners of the image, assuming the most frequently occuring color from
1438the corners is the background color of the image. Otherwise, BG must
1439be a list `(RED GREEN BLUE)' specifying the color to assume for the
1440background of the image.
1441
1442`:file FILE'
1443
1444Load image from FILE. If FILE is not absolute after expanding it,
1445search for the image in `data-directory'. Some image types support
1446building images from data. When this is done, no `:file' property
1447may be present in the image specification.
1448
a933dad1
DL
1449*** Supported image types
1450
b246b1f6 1451**** XBM, image type `xbm'.
a933dad1
DL
1452
1453XBM images don't require an external library. Additional image
1454properties supported are
1455
1456`:foreground FG'
1457
1458FG must be a string specifying the image foreground color. Default
1459is the frame's foreground.
1460
1461`:background FG'
1462
1463BG must be a string specifying the image foreground color. Default is
1464the frame's background color.
1465
1466XBM images can be constructed from data instead of file. In this
1467case, the image specification must contain the following properties
1468instead of a `:file' property.
1469
1470`:width WIDTH'
1471
1472WIDTH specifies the width of the image in pixels.
1473
1474`:height HEIGHT'
1475
1476HEIGHT specifies the height of the image in pixels.
1477
1478`:data DATA'
1479
1480DATA must be either
1481
1482 1. a string large enough to hold the bitmap data, i.e. it must
1483 have a size >= (WIDTH + 7) / 8 * HEIGHT
1484
1485 2. a bool-vector of size >= WIDTH * HEIGHT
1486
1487 3. a vector of strings or bool-vectors, one for each line of the
1488 bitmap.
1489
1490**** XPM, image type `xpm'
1491
1492XPM images require the external library `libXpm', package
1493`xpm-3.4k.tar.gz', version 3.4k or later. Make sure the library is
1494found when Emacs is configured by supplying appropriate paths via
1495`--x-includes' and `--x-libraries'.
1496
1497Additional image properties supported are:
1498
1499`:color-symbols SYMBOLS'
1500
1501SYMBOLS must be a list of pairs (NAME . COLOR), with NAME being the
1502name of color as it appears in an XPM file, and COLOR being an X color
1503name.
1504
1505XPM images can be built from memory instead of files. In that case,
1506add a `:data' property instead of a `:file' property.
1507
1508`:data DATA'
1509
79214ddf 1510DATA must be a string containing an XPM image. The contents of the
a933dad1
DL
1511string are of the same format as that of XPM files.
1512
1513The XPM library uses libz in its implementation so that it is able
1514to display compressed images.
1515
1516**** PBM, image type `pbm'
1517
1518PBM images don't require an external library. Color, gray-scale and
1519mono images are supported. There are no additional image properties
1520defined.
1521
1522**** JPEG, image type `jpeg'
1523
1524Support for JPEG images requires the external library `libjpeg',
1525package `jpegsrc.v6a.tar.gz', or later. There are no additional image
1526properties defined.
1527
1528**** TIFF, image type `tiff'
1529
1530Support for TIFF images requires the external library `libtiff',
1531package `tiff-v3.4-tar.gz', or later. There are no additional image
1532properties defined.
1533
1534**** GIF, image type `gif'
1535
1536Support for GIF images requires the external library `libungif', package
1537`libungif-4.1.0', or later.
1538
1539Additional image properties supported are:
1540
1541`:index INDEX'
1542
1543INDEX must be an integer >= 0. Load image number INDEX from a
1544multi-image GIF file. An error is signalled if INDEX is too large.
1545
1546This could be used to implement limited support for animated GIFs.
1547For example, the following function displays a multi-image GIF file
1548at point-min in the current buffer, switching between sub-images
1549every 0.1 seconds.
1550
1551(defun show-anim (file max)
1552 "Display multi-image GIF file FILE which contains MAX subimages."
1553 (display-anim (current-buffer) file 0 max t))
1554
1555(defun display-anim (buffer file idx max first-time)
1556 (when (= idx max)
1557 (setq idx 0))
1558 (let ((img (create-image file nil :index idx)))
1559 (save-excursion
1560 (set-buffer buffer)
1561 (goto-char (point-min))
1562 (unless first-time (delete-char 1))
1563 (insert-image img "x"))
1564 (run-with-timer 0.1 nil 'display-anim buffer file (1+ idx) max nil)))
1565
1566**** PNG, image type `png'
1567
1568Support for PNG images requires the external library `libpng',
1569package `libpng-1.0.2.tar.gz', or later. There are no additional image
1570properties defined.
1571
1572**** Ghostscript, image type `postscript'.
1573
1574Additional image properties supported are:
1575
1576`:pt-width WIDTH'
1577
1578WIDTH is width of the image in pt (1/72 inch). WIDTH must be an
b246b1f6 1579integer. This is a required property.
a933dad1
DL
1580
1581`:pt-height HEIGHT'
1582
1583HEIGHT specifies the height of the image in pt (1/72 inch). HEIGHT
b246b1f6 1584must be a integer. This is an required property.
a933dad1
DL
1585
1586`:bounding-box BOX'
1587
1588BOX must be a list or vector of 4 integers giving the bounding box of
1589the PS image, analogous to the `BoundingBox' comment found in PS
1590files. This is an required property.
1591
1592Part of the Ghostscript interface is implemented in Lisp. See
1593lisp/gs.el.
1594
1595*** Lisp interface.
1596
79214ddf
FP
1597The variable `image-types' contains a list of those image types
1598which are supported in the current configuration.
a933dad1
DL
1599
1600Images are stored in an image cache and removed from the cache when
1601they haven't been displayed for `image-cache-eviction-delay seconds.
1602The function `clear-image-cache' can be used to clear the image cache
1603manually.
1604
1605*** Simplified image API, image.el
1606
1607The new Lisp package image.el contains functions that simplify image
1608creation and putting images into text. The function `create-image'
1609can be used to create images. The macro `defimage' can be used to
1610define an image based on available image types. The functions
1611`put-image' and `insert-image' can be used to insert an image into a
1612buffer.
1613
1614+++
1615** Display margins.
1616
1617Windows can now have margins which are used for special text
1618and images.
1619
1620To give a window margins, either set the buffer-local variables
1621`left-margin-width' and `right-margin-width', or call
1622`set-window-margins'. The function `window-margins' can be used to
1623obtain the current settings. To make `left-margin-width' and
1624`right-margin-width' take effect, you must set them before displaying
1625the buffer in a window, or use `set-window-buffer' to force an update
1626of the display margins.
1627
1628You can put text in margins by giving it a `display' text property
1629containing a pair of the form `(LOCATION . VALUE)', where LOCATION is
1630one of `left-margin' or `right-margin' or nil. VALUE can be either a
1631string, an image specification or a stretch specification (see later
1632in this file).
1633
1634+++
1635** Help display
1636
1637Emacs displays short help messages in the echo area, when the mouse
1638moves over a tool-bar item or a piece of text that has a text property
1639`help-echo'. This feature also applies to strings in the mode line
1640that have a `help-echo' property.
1641
1642The value of the `help-echo' property must be a string. For tool-bar
1643items, their key definition is used to determine the help to display.
1644If their definition contains a property `:help FORM', FORM is
1645evaluated to determine the help string. Otherwise, the caption of the
1646tool-bar item is used.
1647
1648The hook `show-help-function' can be set to a function that displays
1649help differently. For example, enabling a tooltip window causes the
1650help display to appear there instead of in the echo area.
1651
1652+++
1653** Vertical fractional scrolling.
1654
1655The display of text in windows can be scrolled smoothly in pixels.
1656This is useful, for example, for making parts of large images visible.
1657
1658The function `window-vscroll' returns the current value of vertical
1659scrolling, a non-negative fraction of the canonical character height.
1660The function `set-window-vscroll' can be used to set the vertical
1661scrolling value. Here is an example of how these function might be
1662used.
1663
79214ddf
FP
1664 (global-set-key [A-down]
1665 #'(lambda ()
a933dad1 1666 (interactive)
79214ddf 1667 (set-window-vscroll (selected-window)
a933dad1 1668 (+ 0.5 (window-vscroll)))))
79214ddf 1669 (global-set-key [A-up]
a933dad1
DL
1670 #'(lambda ()
1671 (interactive)
79214ddf 1672 (set-window-vscroll (selected-window)
a933dad1
DL
1673 (- (window-vscroll) 0.5)))))
1674
1675+++
1676** New hook `fontification-functions'.
1677
1678Functions from `fontification-functions' are called from redisplay
1679when it encounters a region of text that is not yet fontified. This
1680variable automatically becomes buffer-local when set. Each function
1681is called with one argument, POS.
1682
1683At least one of the hook functions should fontify one or more
1684characters starting at POS in the current buffer. It should mark them
1685as fontified by giving them a non-nil value of the `fontified' text
1686property. It may be reasonable for these functions to check for the
1687`fontified' property and not put it back on, but they do not have to.
1688
1689+++
1690** Tool bar support.
1691
1692Emacs supports a tool bar at the top of a frame under X. The frame
1693parameter `tool-bar-lines' (X resource "toolBar", class "ToolBar")
1694controls how may lines to reserve for the tool bar. A zero value
1695suppresses the tool bar. If the value is non-zero and
1696`auto-resize-tool-bars' is non-nil the tool bar's size will be changed
1697automatically so that all tool bar items are visible.
1698
1699*** Tool bar item definitions
1700
1701Tool bar items are defined using `define-key' with a prefix-key
1702`tool-bar'. For example `(define-key global-map [tool-bar item1] ITEM)'
1703where ITEM is a list `(menu-item CAPTION BINDING PROPS...)'.
79214ddf 1704
a933dad1
DL
1705CAPTION is the caption of the item, If it's not a string, it is
1706evaluated to get a string. The caption is currently not displayed in
1707the tool bar, but it is displayed if the item doesn't have a `:help'
1708property (see below).
79214ddf 1709
a933dad1
DL
1710BINDING is the tool bar item's binding. Tool bar items with keymaps as
1711binding are currently ignored.
1712
1713The following properties are recognized:
1714
1715`:enable FORM'.
79214ddf 1716
a933dad1
DL
1717FORM is evaluated and specifies whether the tool bar item is enabled
1718or disabled.
79214ddf 1719
a933dad1 1720`:visible FORM'
79214ddf 1721
a933dad1 1722FORM is evaluated and specifies whether the tool bar item is displayed.
79214ddf 1723
a933dad1
DL
1724`:filter FUNCTION'
1725
1726FUNCTION is called with one parameter, the same list BINDING in which
1727FUNCTION is specified as the filter. The value FUNCTION returns is
1728used instead of BINDING to display this item.
79214ddf 1729
a933dad1
DL
1730`:button (TYPE SELECTED)'
1731
1732TYPE must be one of `:radio' or `:toggle'. SELECTED is evaluated
1733and specifies whether the button is selected (pressed) or not.
79214ddf 1734
a933dad1
DL
1735`:image IMAGES'
1736
1737IMAGES is either a single image specification or a vector of four
1738image specifications. If it is a vector, this table lists the
1739meaning of each of the four elements:
1740
1741 Index Use when item is
1742 ----------------------------------------
1743 0 enabled and selected
1744 1 enabled and deselected
1745 2 disabled and selected
1746 3 disabled and deselected
79214ddf 1747
a933dad1 1748`:help HELP-STRING'.
79214ddf 1749
a933dad1
DL
1750Gives a help string to display for the tool bar item. This help
1751is displayed when the mouse is moved over the item.
1752
1753*** Tool-bar-related variables.
1754
1755If `auto-resize-tool-bar' is non-nil, the tool bar will automatically
1756resize to show all defined tool bar items. It will never grow larger
1757than 1/4 of the frame's size.
1758
79214ddf 1759If `auto-raise-tool-bar-buttons' is non-nil, tool bar buttons will be
a933dad1
DL
1760raised when the mouse moves over them.
1761
1762You can add extra space between tool bar items by setting
1763`tool-bar-button-margin' to a positive integer specifying a number of
1764pixels. Default is 1.
1765
1766You can change the shadow thickness of tool bar buttons by setting
1767`tool-bar-button-relief' to an integer. Default is 3.
1768
1769*** Tool-bar clicks with modifiers.
1770
1771You can bind commands to clicks with control, shift, meta etc. on
79214ddf 1772a tool bar item. If
a933dad1
DL
1773
1774 (define-key global-map [tool-bar shell]
1775 '(menu-item "Shell" shell
1776 :image (image :type xpm :file "shell.xpm")))
1777
1778is the original tool bar item definition, then
1779
1780 (define-key global-map [tool-bar S-shell] 'some-command)
1781
1782makes a binding to run `some-command' for a shifted click on the same
1783item.
1784
1785** Mode line changes.
1786
1787+++
1788*** Mouse-sensitive mode line.
1789
1790The mode line can be made mouse-sensitive by displaying strings there
1791that have a `local-map' text property. There are three ways to display
1792a string with a `local-map' property in the mode line.
1793
17941. The mode line spec contains a variable whose string value has
1795a `local-map' text property.
1796
17972. The mode line spec contains a format specifier (e.g. `%12b'), and
1798that format specifier has a `local-map' property.
1799
18003. The mode line spec contains a list containing `:eval FORM'. FORM
1801is evaluated. If the result is a string, and that string has a
1802`local-map' property.
1803
1804The same mechanism is used to determine the `face' and `help-echo'
1805properties of strings in the mode line. See `bindings.el' for an
1806example.
1807
54522c9f
GM
1808*** If a mode line element has the form `(:eval FORM)', FORM is
1809evaluated and the result is used as mode line element.
1810
a933dad1
DL
1811+++
1812*** You can suppress mode-line display by setting the buffer-local
1813variable mode-line-format to nil.
1814
1815+++
1816*** A headerline can now be displayed at the top of a window.
1817
1818This mode line's contents are controlled by the new variable
1819`header-line-format' and `default-header-line-format' which are
1820completely analogous to `mode-line-format' and
1821`default-mode-line-format'. A value of nil means don't display a top
1822line.
1823
1824The appearance of top mode lines is controlled by the face
1825`header-line'.
1826
1827The function `coordinates-in-window-p' returns `header-line' for a
1828position in the header-line.
1829
1830+++
1831** Text property `display'
1832
1833The `display' text property is used to insert images into text, and
1834also control other aspects of how text displays. The value of the
1835`display' property should be a display specification, as described
1836below, or a list or vector containing display specifications.
1837
1838*** Variable width and height spaces
1839
1840To display a space of fractional width or height, use a display
1841specification of the form `(LOCATION STRECH)'. If LOCATION is
1842`(margin left-margin)', the space is displayed in the left marginal
1843area, if it is `(margin right-margin)', it is displayed in the right
1844marginal area, and if LOCATION is `(margin nil)' the space is
1845displayed in the text. In the latter case you can also use the
1846simpler form STRETCH as property value.
1847
1848The stretch specification STRETCH itself is a list of the form `(space
1849PROPS)', where PROPS is a property list which can contain the
1850properties described below.
1851
1852The display of the fractional space replaces the display of the
1853characters having the `display' property.
1854
1855- :width WIDTH
1856
1857Specifies that the space width should be WIDTH times the normal
1858character width. WIDTH can be an integer or floating point number.
1859
1860- :relative-width FACTOR
1861
1862Specifies that the width of the stretch should be computed from the
1863first character in a group of consecutive characters that have the
1864same `display' property. The computation is done by multiplying the
1865width of that character by FACTOR.
1866
1867- :align-to HPOS
1868
1869Specifies that the space should be wide enough to reach HPOS. The
1870value HPOS is measured in units of the normal character width.
1871
1872Exactly one of the above properties should be used.
1873
1874- :height HEIGHT
1875
1876Specifies the height of the space, as HEIGHT, measured in terms of the
1877normal line height.
1878
1879- :relative-height FACTOR
1880
1881The height of the space is computed as the product of the height
1882of the text having the `display' property and FACTOR.
1883
1884- :ascent ASCENT
1885
1886Specifies that ASCENT percent of the height of the stretch should be
1887used for the ascent of the stretch, i.e. for the part above the
1888baseline. The value of ASCENT must be a non-negative number less or
1889equal to 100.
1890
1891You should not use both `:height' and `:relative-height' together.
1892
1893*** Images
1894
1895A display specification for an image has the form `(LOCATION
1896. IMAGE)', where IMAGE is an image specification. The image replaces,
1897in the display, the characters having this display specification in
1898their `display' text property. If LOCATION is `(margin left-margin)',
1899the image will be displayed in the left marginal area, if it is
1900`(margin right-margin)' it will be displayed in the right marginal
1901area, and if LOCATION is `(margin nil)' the image will be displayed in
1902the text. In the latter case you can also use the simpler form IMAGE
1903as display specification.
1904
1905*** Other display properties
1906
1907- :space-width FACTOR
1908
1909Specifies that space characters in the text having that property
1910should be displayed FACTOR times as wide as normal; FACTOR must be an
1911integer or float.
1912
1913- :height HEIGHT
1914
1915Display text having this property in a font that is smaller or larger.
1916
1917If HEIGHT is a list of the form `(+ N)', where N is an integer, that
1918means to use a font that is N steps larger. If HEIGHT is a list of
1919the form `(- N)', that means to use a font that is N steps smaller. A
1920``step'' is defined by the set of available fonts; each size for which
1921a font is available counts as a step.
1922
1923If HEIGHT is a number, that means to use a font that is HEIGHT times
1924as tall as the frame's default font.
1925
1926If HEIGHT is a symbol, it is called as a function with the current
1927height as argument. The function should return the new height to use.
1928
1929Otherwise, HEIGHT is evaluated to get the new height, with the symbol
1930`height' bound to the current specified font height.
1931
1932- :raise FACTOR
1933
1934FACTOR must be a number, specifying a multiple of the current
1935font's height. If it is positive, that means to display the characters
1936raised. If it is negative, that means to display them lower down. The
1937amount of raising or lowering is computed without taking account of the
1938`:height' subproperty.
1939
1940*** Conditional display properties
1941
1942All display specifications can be conditionalized. If a specification
1943has the form `(:when CONDITION . SPEC)', the specification SPEC
1944applies only when CONDITION yields a non-nil value when evaluated.
1945During evaluattion, point is temporarily set to the end position of
1946the text having the `display' property.
1947
1948The normal specification consisting of SPEC only is equivalent to
1949`(:when t SPEC)'.
1950
1951+++
1952** New menu separator types.
1953
1954Emacs now supports more than one menu separator type. Menu items with
1955item names consisting of dashes only (including zero dashes) are
1956treated like before. In addition, the following item names are used
1957to specify other menu separator types.
1958
1959- `--no-line' or `--space', or `--:space', or `--:noLine'
1960
1961No separator lines are drawn, but a small space is inserted where the
1962separator occurs.
1963
1964- `--single-line' or `--:singleLine'
1965
1966A single line in the menu's foreground color.
1967
1968- `--double-line' or `--:doubleLine'
1969
1970A double line in the menu's foreground color.
1971
1972- `--single-dashed-line' or `--:singleDashedLine'
1973
1974A single dashed line in the menu's foreground color.
1975
1976- `--double-dashed-line' or `--:doubleDashedLine'
1977
1978A double dashed line in the menu's foreground color.
1979
1980- `--shadow-etched-in' or `--:shadowEtchedIn'
1981
1982A single line with 3D sunken appearance. This is the the form
1983displayed for item names consisting of dashes only.
1984
1985- `--shadow-etched-out' or `--:shadowEtchedOut'
1986
1987A single line with 3D raised appearance.
1988
1989- `--shadow-etched-in-dash' or `--:shadowEtchedInDash'
1990
1991A single dashed line with 3D sunken appearance.
1992
1993- `--shadow-etched-out-dash' or `--:shadowEtchedOutDash'
1994
1995A single dashed line with 3D raise appearance.
1996
1997- `--shadow-double-etched-in' or `--:shadowDoubleEtchedIn'
1998
1999Two lines with 3D sunken appearance.
2000
2001- `--shadow-double-etched-out' or `--:shadowDoubleEtchedOut'
2002
2003Two lines with 3D raised appearance.
2004
2005- `--shadow-double-etched-in-dash' or `--:shadowDoubleEtchedInDash'
2006
2007Two dashed lines with 3D sunken appearance.
2008
2009- `--shadow-double-etched-out-dash' or `--:shadowDoubleEtchedOutDash'
2010
2011Two dashed lines with 3D raised appearance.
2012
2013Under LessTif/Motif, the last four separator types are displayed like
2014the corresponding single-line separators.
2015
2016+++
2017** New frame parameters for scroll bar colors.
2018
2019The new frame parameters `scroll-bar-foreground' and
2020`scroll-bar-background' can be used to change scroll bar colors.
2021Their value must be either a color name, a string, or nil to specify
2022that scroll bars should use a default color. For toolkit scroll bars,
2023default colors are toolkit specific. For non-toolkit scroll bars, the
2024default background is the background color of the frame, and the
2025default foreground is black.
2026
2027The X resource name of these parameters are `scrollBarForeground'
2028(class ScrollBarForeground) and `scrollBarBackground' (class
2029`ScrollBarBackground').
2030
2031Setting these parameters overrides toolkit specific X resource
2032settings for scroll bar colors.
2033
2034+++
2035** You can set `redisplay-dont-pause' to a non-nil value to prevent
2036display updates from being interrupted when input is pending.
2037
2038---
2039** Changing a window's width may now change its window start if it
2040starts on a continuation line. The new window start is computed based
2041on the window's new width, starting from the start of the continued
2042line as the start of the screen line with the minimum distance from
2043the original window start.
2044
2045---
2046** The variable `hscroll-step' and the functions
2047`hscroll-point-visible' and `hscroll-window-column' have been removed
2048now that proper horizontal scrolling is implemented.
2049
2050+++
2051** Windows can now be made fixed-width and/or fixed-height.
2052
2053A window is fixed-size if its buffer has a buffer-local variable
2054`window-size-fixed' whose value is not nil. A value of `height' makes
2055windows fixed-height, a value of `width' makes them fixed-width, any
2056other non-nil value makes them both fixed-width and fixed-height.
2057
2058The following code makes all windows displaying the current buffer
2059fixed-width and fixed-height.
2060
2061 (set (make-local-variable 'window-size-fixed) t)
2062
2063A call to enlarge-window on a window gives an error if that window is
2064fixed-width and it is tried to change the window's width, or if the
2065window is fixed-height, and it is tried to change its height. To
2066change the size of a fixed-size window, bind `window-size-fixed'
2067temporarily to nil, for example
2068
2069 (let ((window-size-fixed nil))
2070 (enlarge-window 10))
2071
79214ddf 2072Likewise, an attempt to split a fixed-height window vertically,
a933dad1
DL
2073or a fixed-width window horizontally results in a error.
2074\f
2075* Changes in Emacs 20.4
2076
2077** Init file may be called .emacs.el.
2078
2079You can now call the Emacs init file `.emacs.el'.
2080Formerly the name had to be `.emacs'. If you use the name
2081`.emacs.el', you can byte-compile the file in the usual way.
2082
2083If both `.emacs' and `.emacs.el' exist, the latter file
2084is the one that is used.
2085
2086** shell-command, and shell-command-on-region, now return
2087the exit code of the command (unless it is asynchronous).
2088Also, you can specify a place to put the error output,
2089separate from the command's regular output.
2090Interactively, the variable shell-command-default-error-buffer
2091says where to put error output; set it to a buffer name.
2092In calls from Lisp, an optional argument ERROR-BUFFER specifies
2093the buffer name.
2094
2095When you specify a non-nil error buffer (or buffer name), any error
2096output is inserted before point in that buffer, with \f\n to separate
2097it from the previous batch of error output. The error buffer is not
2098cleared, so error output from successive commands accumulates there.
2099
2100** Setting the default value of enable-multibyte-characters to nil in
2101the .emacs file, either explicitly using setq-default, or via Custom,
2102is now essentially equivalent to using --unibyte: all buffers
2103created during startup will be made unibyte after loading .emacs.
2104
2105** C-x C-f now handles the wildcards * and ? in file names. For
2106example, typing C-x C-f c*.c RET visits all the files whose names
2107match c*.c. To visit a file whose name contains * or ?, add the
2108quoting sequence /: to the beginning of the file name.
2109
2110** The M-x commands keep-lines, flush-lines and count-matches
2111now have the same feature as occur and query-replace:
2112if the pattern contains any upper case letters, then
2113they never ignore case.
2114
2115** The end-of-line format conversion feature previously mentioned
2116under `* Emacs 20.1 changes for MS-DOS and MS-Windows' actually
2117applies to all operating systems. Emacs recognizes from the contents
2118of a file what convention it uses to separate lines--newline, CRLF, or
2119just CR--and automatically converts the contents to the normal Emacs
2120convention (using newline to separate lines) for editing. This is a
2121part of the general feature of coding system conversion.
2122
2123If you subsequently save the buffer, Emacs converts the text back to
2124the same format that was used in the file before.
2125
2126You can turn off end-of-line conversion by setting the variable
2127`inhibit-eol-conversion' to non-nil, e.g. with Custom in the MULE group.
2128
2129** The character set property `prefered-coding-system' has been
2130renamed to `preferred-coding-system', for the sake of correct spelling.
2131This is a fairly internal feature, so few programs should be affected.
2132
2133** Mode-line display of end-of-line format is changed.
2134The indication of the end-of-line format of the file visited by a
2135buffer is now more explicit when that format is not the usual one for
2136your operating system. For example, the DOS-style end-of-line format
2137is displayed as "(DOS)" on Unix and GNU/Linux systems. The usual
2138end-of-line format is still displayed as a single character (colon for
2139Unix, backslash for DOS and Windows, and forward slash for the Mac).
2140
2141The values of the variables eol-mnemonic-unix, eol-mnemonic-dos,
2142eol-mnemonic-mac, and eol-mnemonic-undecided, which are strings,
2143control what is displayed in the mode line for each end-of-line
2144format. You can now customize these variables.
2145
2146** In the previous version of Emacs, tar-mode didn't work well if a
2147filename contained non-ASCII characters. Now this is fixed. Such a
2148filename is decoded by file-name-coding-system if the default value of
2149enable-multibyte-characters is non-nil.
2150
2151** The command temp-buffer-resize-mode toggles a minor mode
2152in which temporary buffers (such as help buffers) are given
2153windows just big enough to hold the whole contents.
2154
2155** If you use completion.el, you must now run the function
2156dynamic-completion-mode to enable it. Just loading the file
2157doesn't have any effect.
2158
2159** In Flyspell mode, the default is now to make just one Ispell process,
2160not one per buffer.
2161
2162** If you use iswitchb but do not call (iswitchb-default-keybindings) to
2163use the default keybindings, you will need to add the following line:
2164 (add-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook 'iswitchb-minibuffer-setup)
2165
2166** Auto-show mode is no longer enabled just by loading auto-show.el.
2167To control it, set `auto-show-mode' via Custom or use the
2168`auto-show-mode' command.
2169
2170** Handling of X fonts' ascent/descent parameters has been changed to
2171avoid redisplay problems. As a consequence, compared with previous
2172versions the line spacing and frame size now differ with some font
2173choices, typically increasing by a pixel per line. This change
2174occurred in version 20.3 but was not documented then.
2175
2176** If you select the bar cursor style, it uses the frame's
2177cursor-color, rather than the cursor foreground pixel.
2178
2179** In multibyte mode, Rmail decodes incoming MIME messages using the
2180character set specified in the message. If you want to disable this
2181feature, set the variable rmail-decode-mime-charset to nil.
2182
2183** Not new, but not mentioned previously in NEWS: when you use #! at
2184the beginning of a file to make it executable and specify an
2185interpreter program, Emacs looks on the second line for the -*- mode
2186and variable specification, as well as on the first line.
2187
2188** Support for IBM codepage encoding of non-ASCII characters.
2189
2190The new command M-x codepage-setup creates a special coding system
2191that can be used to convert text between a specific IBM codepage and
2192one of the character sets built into Emacs which matches that
2193codepage. For example, codepage 850 corresponds to Latin-1 character
2194set, codepage 855 corresponds to Cyrillic-ISO character set, etc.
2195
2196Windows codepages 1250, 1251 and some others, where Windows deviates
2197from the corresponding ISO character set, are also supported.
2198
2199IBM box-drawing characters and other glyphs which don't have
2200equivalents in the corresponding ISO character set, are converted to
2201a character defined by dos-unsupported-char-glyph on MS-DOS, and to
2202`?' on other systems.
2203
2204IBM codepages are widely used on MS-DOS and MS-Windows, so this
2205feature is most useful on those platforms, but it can also be used on
2206Unix.
2207
2208Emacs compiled for MS-DOS automatically loads the support for the
2209current codepage when it starts.
2210
2211** Mail changes
2212
2213*** The new variable default-sendmail-coding-system specifies the
2214default way to encode outgoing mail. This has higher priority than
2215default-buffer-file-coding-system but has lower priority than
2216sendmail-coding-system and the local value of
2217buffer-file-coding-system.
2218
2219You should not set this variable manually. Instead, set
2220sendmail-coding-system to specify a fixed encoding for all outgoing
2221mail.
2222
2223*** When you try to send a message that contains non-ASCII characters,
2224if the coding system specified by those variables doesn't handle them,
2225Emacs will ask you to select a suitable coding system while showing a
2226list of possible coding systems.
2227
2228** CC Mode changes
2229
2230*** c-default-style can now take an association list that maps major
2231modes to style names. When this variable is an alist, Java mode no
2232longer hardcodes a setting to "java" style. See the variable's
2233docstring for details.
2234
2235*** It's now possible to put a list as the offset on a syntactic
2236symbol. The list is evaluated recursively until a non-nil offset is
2237found. This is useful to combine several lineup functions to act in a
2238prioritized order on a single line. However, none of the supplied
2239lineup functions use this feature currently.
2240
2241*** New syntactic symbol catch-clause, which is used on the "catch" and
2242"finally" lines in try-catch constructs in C++ and Java.
2243
2244*** New cleanup brace-catch-brace on c-cleanup-list, which does for
2245"catch" lines what brace-elseif-brace does for "else if" lines.
2246
2247*** The braces of Java anonymous inner classes are treated separately
2248from the braces of other classes in auto-newline mode. Two new
2249symbols inexpr-class-open and inexpr-class-close may be used on
2250c-hanging-braces-alist to control the automatic newlines used for
2251anonymous classes.
2252
2253*** Support for the Pike language added, along with new Pike specific
2254syntactic symbols: inlambda, lambda-intro-cont
2255
2256*** Support for Java anonymous classes via new syntactic symbol
2257inexpr-class. New syntactic symbol inexpr-statement for Pike
2258support and gcc-style statements inside expressions. New lineup
2259function c-lineup-inexpr-block.
2260
2261*** New syntactic symbol brace-entry-open which is used in brace lists
2262(i.e. static initializers) when a list entry starts with an open
2263brace. These used to be recognized as brace-list-entry's.
2264c-electric-brace also recognizes brace-entry-open braces
2265(brace-list-entry's can no longer be electrified).
2266
2267*** New command c-indent-line-or-region, not bound by default.
2268
2269*** `#' is only electric when typed in the indentation of a line.
2270
2271*** Parentheses are now electric (via the new command c-electric-paren)
2272for auto-reindenting lines when parens are typed.
2273
2274*** In "gnu" style, inline-open offset is now set to zero.
2275
2276*** Uniform handling of the inclass syntactic symbol. The indentation
2277associated with it is now always relative to the class opening brace.
2278This means that the indentation behavior has changed in some
2279circumstances, but only if you've put anything besides 0 on the
2280class-open syntactic symbol (none of the default styles do that).
2281
2282** Gnus changes.
2283
2284*** New functionality for using Gnus as an offline newsreader has been
2285added. A plethora of new commands and modes have been added. See the
2286Gnus manual for the full story.
2287
2288*** The nndraft backend has returned, but works differently than
2289before. All Message buffers are now also articles in the nndraft
2290group, which is created automatically.
2291
2292*** `gnus-alter-header-function' can now be used to alter header
2293values.
2294
2295*** `gnus-summary-goto-article' now accept Message-ID's.
2296
2297*** A new Message command for deleting text in the body of a message
2298outside the region: `C-c C-v'.
2299
2300*** You can now post to component group in nnvirtual groups with
2301`C-u C-c C-c'.
2302
2303*** `nntp-rlogin-program' -- new variable to ease customization.
2304
2305*** `C-u C-c C-c' in `gnus-article-edit-mode' will now inhibit
2306re-highlighting of the article buffer.
2307
2308*** New element in `gnus-boring-article-headers' -- `long-to'.
2309
2310*** `M-i' symbolic prefix command. See the section "Symbolic
2311Prefixes" in the Gnus manual for details.
2312
2313*** `L' and `I' in the summary buffer now take the symbolic prefix
2314`a' to add the score rule to the "all.SCORE" file.
2315
2316*** `gnus-simplify-subject-functions' variable to allow greater
2317control over simplification.
2318
2319*** `A T' -- new command for fetching the current thread.
2320
2321*** `/ T' -- new command for including the current thread in the
2322limit.
2323
2324*** `M-RET' is a new Message command for breaking cited text.
2325
2326*** \\1-expressions are now valid in `nnmail-split-methods'.
2327
79214ddf 2328*** The `custom-face-lookup' function has been removed.
a933dad1
DL
2329If you used this function in your initialization files, you must
2330rewrite them to use `face-spec-set' instead.
2331
2332*** Cancelling now uses the current select method. Symbolic prefix
2333`a' forces normal posting method.
2334
2335*** New command to translate M******** sm*rtq**t*s into proper text
2336-- `W d'.
2337
2338*** For easier debugging of nntp, you can set `nntp-record-commands'
2339to a non-nil value.
2340
2341*** nntp now uses ~/.authinfo, a .netrc-like file, for controlling
2342where and how to send AUTHINFO to NNTP servers.
2343
2344*** A command for editing group parameters from the summary buffer
2345has been added.
2346
2347*** A history of where mails have been split is available.
2348
2349*** A new article date command has been added -- `article-date-iso8601'.
2350
2351*** Subjects can be simplified when threading by setting
2352`gnus-score-thread-simplify'.
2353
2354*** A new function for citing in Message has been added --
2355`message-cite-original-without-signature'.
2356
2357*** `article-strip-all-blank-lines' -- new article command.
2358
2359*** A new Message command to kill to the end of the article has
2360been added.
2361
2362*** A minimum adaptive score can be specified by using the
2363`gnus-adaptive-word-minimum' variable.
2364
2365*** The "lapsed date" article header can be kept continually
2366updated by the `gnus-start-date-timer' command.
2367
2368*** Web listserv archives can be read with the nnlistserv backend.
2369
2370*** Old dejanews archives can now be read by nnweb.
2371
2372*** `gnus-posting-styles' has been re-activated.
2373
2374** Changes to TeX and LaTeX mode
2375
2376*** The new variable `tex-start-options-string' can be used to give
2377options for the TeX run. The default value causes TeX to run in
2378nonstopmode. For an interactive TeX run set it to nil or "".
2379
2380*** The command `tex-feed-input' sends input to the Tex Shell. In a
2381TeX buffer it is bound to the keys C-RET, C-c RET, and C-c C-m (some
2382of these keys may not work on all systems). For instance, if you run
2383TeX interactively and if the TeX run stops because of an error, you
2384can continue it without leaving the TeX buffer by typing C-RET.
2385
2386*** The Tex Shell Buffer is now in `compilation-shell-minor-mode'.
2387All error-parsing commands of the Compilation major mode are available
2388but bound to keys that don't collide with the shell. Thus you can use
2389the Tex Shell for command line executions like a usual shell.
2390
2391*** The commands `tex-validate-region' and `tex-validate-buffer' check
2392the matching of braces and $'s. The errors are listed in a *Occur*
2393buffer and you can use C-c C-c or mouse-2 to go to a particular
2394mismatch.
2395
2396** Changes to RefTeX mode
2397
2398*** The table of contents buffer can now also display labels and
2399file boundaries in addition to sections. Use `l', `i', and `c' keys.
2400
2401*** Labels derived from context (the section heading) are now
2402lowercase by default. To make the label legal in LaTeX, latin-1
2403characters will lose their accent. All Mule characters will be
2404removed from the label.
2405
2406*** The automatic display of cross reference information can also use
2407a window instead of the echo area. See variable `reftex-auto-view-crossref'.
2408
2409*** kpsewhich can be used by RefTeX to find TeX and BibTeX files. See the
2410customization group `reftex-finding-files'.
2411
2412*** The option `reftex-bibfile-ignore-list' has been renamed to
2413`reftex-bibfile-ignore-regexps' and indeed can be fed with regular
79214ddf 2414expressions.
a933dad1
DL
2415
2416*** Multiple Selection buffers are now hidden buffers.
2417
2418** New/deleted modes and packages
2419
2420*** The package snmp-mode.el provides major modes for editing SNMP and
2421SNMPv2 MIBs. It has entries on `auto-mode-alist'.
2422
2423*** The package sql.el provides a major mode, M-x sql-mode, for
2424editing SQL files, and M-x sql-interactive-mode for interacting with
2425SQL interpreters. It has an entry on `auto-mode-alist'.
2426
2427*** M-x highlight-changes-mode provides a minor mode displaying buffer
2428changes with a special face.
2429
2430*** ispell4.el has been deleted. It got in the way of ispell.el and
2431this was hard to fix reliably. It has long been obsolete -- use
2432Ispell 3.1 and ispell.el.
2433\f
2434* MS-DOS changes in Emacs 20.4
2435
2436** Emacs compiled for MS-DOS now supports MULE features better.
2437This includes support for display of all ISO 8859-N character sets,
2438conversion to and from IBM codepage encoding of non-ASCII characters,
2439and automatic setup of the MULE environment at startup. For details,
2440check out the section `MS-DOS and MULE' in the manual.
2441
2442The MS-DOS installation procedure automatically configures and builds
2443Emacs with input method support if it finds an unpacked Leim
2444distribution when the config.bat script is run.
2445
2446** Formerly, the value of lpr-command did not affect printing on
2447MS-DOS unless print-region-function was set to nil, but now it
2448controls whether an external program is invoked or output is written
2449directly to a printer port. Similarly, in the previous version of
2450Emacs, the value of ps-lpr-command did not affect PostScript printing
2451on MS-DOS unless ps-printer-name was set to something other than a
2452string (eg. t or `pipe'), but now it controls whether an external
2453program is used. (These changes were made so that configuration of
2454printing variables would be almost identical across all platforms.)
2455
2456** In the previous version of Emacs, PostScript and non-PostScript
2457output was piped to external programs, but because most print programs
2458available for MS-DOS and MS-Windows cannot read data from their standard
2459input, on those systems the data to be output is now written to a
2460temporary file whose name is passed as the last argument to the external
2461program.
2462
2463An exception is made for `print', a standard program on Windows NT,
2464and `nprint', a standard program on Novell Netware. For both of these
2465programs, the command line is constructed in the appropriate syntax
2466automatically, using only the value of printer-name or ps-printer-name
2467as appropriate--the value of the relevant `-switches' variable is
2468ignored, as both programs have no useful switches.
2469
2470** The value of the variable dos-printer (cf. dos-ps-printer), if it has
2471a value, overrides the value of printer-name (cf. ps-printer-name), on
2472MS-DOS and MS-Windows only. This has been true since version 20.3, but
2473was not documented clearly before.
2474
2475** All the Emacs games now work on MS-DOS terminals.
2476This includes Tetris and Snake.
2477\f
2478* Lisp changes in Emacs 20.4
2479
2480** New functions line-beginning-position and line-end-position
2481return the position of the beginning or end of the current line.
2482They both accept an optional argument, which has the same
2483meaning as the argument to beginning-of-line or end-of-line.
2484
2485** find-file and allied functions now have an optional argument
2486WILDCARD. If this is non-nil, they do wildcard processing,
2487and visit all files that match the wildcard pattern.
2488
2489** Changes in the file-attributes function.
2490
2491*** The file size returned by file-attributes may be an integer or a float.
2492It is an integer if the size fits in a Lisp integer, float otherwise.
2493
2494*** The inode number returned by file-attributes may be an integer (if
2495the number fits in a Lisp integer) or a cons cell containing two
2496integers.
2497
2498** The new function directory-files-and-attributes returns a list of
2499files in a directory and their attributes. It accepts the same
2500arguments as directory-files and has similar semantics, except that
2501file names and attributes are returned.
2502
2503** The new function file-attributes-lessp is a helper function for
2504sorting the list generated by directory-files-and-attributes. It
2505accepts two arguments, each a list of a file name and its atttributes.
2506It compares the file names of each according to string-lessp and
2507returns the result.
2508
2509** The new function file-expand-wildcards expands a wildcard-pattern
2510to produce a list of existing files that match the pattern.
2511
2512** New functions for base64 conversion:
2513
2514The function base64-encode-region converts a part of the buffer
2515into the base64 code used in MIME. base64-decode-region
2516performs the opposite conversion. Line-breaking is supported
2517optionally.
2518
2519Functions base64-encode-string and base64-decode-string do a similar
2520job on the text in a string. They return the value as a new string.
2521
2522**
2523The new function process-running-child-p
2524will tell you if a subprocess has given control of its
2525terminal to its own child process.
2526
2527** interrupt-process and such functions have a new feature:
2528when the second argument is `lambda', they send a signal
2529to the running child of the subshell, if any, but if the shell
2530itself owns its terminal, no signal is sent.
2531
2532** There are new widget types `plist' and `alist' which can
2533be used for customizing variables whose values are plists or alists.
2534
2535** easymenu.el Now understands `:key-sequence' and `:style button'.
2536:included is an alias for :visible.
2537
2538easy-menu-add-item now understands the values returned by
2539easy-menu-remove-item and easy-menu-item-present-p. This can be used
2540to move or copy menu entries.
2541
2542** Multibyte editing changes
2543
2544*** The definitions of sref and char-bytes are changed. Now, sref is
2545an alias of aref and char-bytes always returns 1. This change is to
2546make some Emacs Lisp code which works on 20.2 and earlier also
2547work on the latest Emacs. Such code uses a combination of sref and
2548char-bytes in a loop typically as below:
2549 (setq char (sref str idx)
2550 idx (+ idx (char-bytes idx)))
2551The byte-compiler now warns that this is obsolete.
2552
2553If you want to know how many bytes a specific multibyte character
2554(say, CH) occupies in a multibyte buffer, use this code:
2555 (charset-bytes (char-charset ch))
2556
2557*** In multibyte mode, when you narrow a buffer to some region, and the
2558region is preceded or followed by non-ASCII codes, inserting or
2559deleting at the head or the end of the region may signal this error:
2560
2561 Byte combining across boundary of accessible buffer text inhibitted
2562
2563This is to avoid some bytes being combined together into a character
2564across the boundary.
2565
2566*** The functions find-charset-region and find-charset-string include
2567`unknown' in the returned list in the following cases:
2568 o The current buffer or the target string is unibyte and
2569 contains 8-bit characters.
2570 o The current buffer or the target string is multibyte and
2571 contains invalid characters.
2572
2573*** The functions decode-coding-region and encode-coding-region remove
2574text properties of the target region. Ideally, they should correctly
2575preserve text properties, but for the moment, it's hard. Removing
2576text properties is better than preserving them in a less-than-correct
2577way.
2578
2579*** prefer-coding-system sets EOL conversion of default coding systems.
2580If the argument to prefer-coding-system specifies a certain type of
2581end of line conversion, the default coding systems set by
2582prefer-coding-system will specify that conversion type for end of line.
2583
2584*** The new function thai-compose-string can be used to properly
2585compose Thai characters in a string.
2586
2587** The primitive `define-prefix-command' now takes an optional third
2588argument NAME, which should be a string. It supplies the menu name
2589for the created keymap. Keymaps created in order to be displayed as
2590menus should always use the third argument.
2591
2592** The meanings of optional second arguments for read-char,
2593read-event, and read-char-exclusive are flipped. Now the second
2594arguments are INHERIT-INPUT-METHOD. These functions use the current
2595input method (if any) if and only if INHERIT-INPUT-METHOD is non-nil.
2596
2597** The new function clear-this-command-keys empties out the contents
2598of the vector that (this-command-keys) returns. This is useful in
2599programs that read passwords, to prevent the passwords from echoing
2600inadvertently as part of the next command in certain cases.
2601
2602** The new macro `with-temp-message' displays a temporary message in
2603the echo area, while executing some Lisp code. Like `progn', it
2604returns the value of the last form, but it also restores the previous
2605echo area contents.
2606
2607 (with-temp-message MESSAGE &rest BODY)
2608
2609** The function `require' now takes an optional third argument
2610NOERROR. If it is non-nil, then there is no error if the
2611requested feature cannot be loaded.
2612
2613** In the function modify-face, an argument of (nil) for the
2614foreground color, background color or stipple pattern
79214ddf 2615means to clear out that attribute.
a933dad1
DL
2616
2617** The `outer-window-id' frame property of an X frame
2618gives the window number of the outermost X window for the frame.
2619
2620** Temporary buffers made with with-output-to-temp-buffer are now
2621read-only by default, and normally use the major mode Help mode
2622unless you put them in some other non-Fundamental mode before the
2623end of with-output-to-temp-buffer.
2624
2625** The new functions gap-position and gap-size return information on
2626the gap of the current buffer.
2627
2628** The new functions position-bytes and byte-to-position provide a way
2629to convert between character positions and byte positions in the
2630current buffer.
2631
2632** vc.el defines two new macros, `edit-vc-file' and `with-vc-file', to
2633facilitate working with version-controlled files from Lisp programs.
2634These macros check out a given file automatically if needed, and check
2635it back in after any modifications have been made.
2636\f
2637* Installation Changes in Emacs 20.3
2638
2639** The default value of load-path now includes most subdirectories of
2640the site-specific directories /usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp and
2641/usr/local/share/emacs/VERSION/site-lisp, in addition to those
2642directories themselves. Both immediate subdirectories and
2643subdirectories multiple levels down are added to load-path.
2644
2645Not all subdirectories are included, though. Subdirectories whose
2646names do not start with a letter or digit are excluded.
2647Subdirectories named RCS or CVS are excluded. Also, a subdirectory
2648which contains a file named `.nosearch' is excluded. You can use
2649these methods to prevent certain subdirectories from being searched.
2650
2651Emacs finds these subdirectories and adds them to load-path when it
2652starts up. While it would be cleaner to find the subdirectories each
2653time Emacs loads a file, that would be much slower.
2654
2655This feature is an incompatible change. If you have stored some Emacs
2656Lisp files in a subdirectory of the site-lisp directory specifically
2657to prevent them from being used, you will need to rename the
2658subdirectory to start with a non-alphanumeric character, or create a
2659`.nosearch' file in it, in order to continue to achieve the desired
2660results.
2661
2662** Emacs no longer includes an old version of the C preprocessor from
2663GCC. This was formerly used to help compile Emacs with C compilers
2664that had limits on the significant length of an identifier, but in
2665fact we stopped supporting such compilers some time ago.
2666\f
2667* Changes in Emacs 20.3
2668
2669** The new command C-x z (repeat) repeats the previous command
2670including its argument. If you repeat the z afterward,
2671it repeats the command additional times; thus, you can
2672perform many repetitions with one keystroke per repetition.
2673
2674** Emacs now supports "selective undo" which undoes only within a
2675specified region. To do this, set point and mark around the desired
2676region and type C-u C-x u (or C-u C-_). You can then continue undoing
2677further, within the same region, by repeating the ordinary undo
2678command C-x u or C-_. This will keep undoing changes that were made
2679within the region you originally specified, until either all of them
2680are undone, or it encounters a change which crosses the edge of that
2681region.
2682
2683In Transient Mark mode, undoing when a region is active requests
2684selective undo.
2685
2686** If you specify --unibyte when starting Emacs, then all buffers are
2687unibyte, except when a Lisp program specifically creates a multibyte
2688buffer. Setting the environment variable EMACS_UNIBYTE has the same
2689effect. The --no-unibyte option overrides EMACS_UNIBYTE and directs
2690Emacs to run normally in multibyte mode.
2691
2692The option --unibyte does not affect the reading of Emacs Lisp files,
2693though. If you want a Lisp file to be read in unibyte mode, use
2694-*-unibyte: t;-*- on its first line. That will force Emacs to
2695load that file in unibyte mode, regardless of how Emacs was started.
2696
2697** toggle-enable-multibyte-characters no longer has a key binding and
2698no longer appears in the menu bar. We've realized that changing the
2699enable-multibyte-characters variable in an existing buffer is
2700something that most users not do.
2701
2702** You can specify a coding system to use for the next cut or paste
2703operations through the window system with the command C-x RET X.
2704The coding system can make a difference for communication with other
2705applications.
2706
2707C-x RET x specifies a coding system for all subsequent cutting and
2708pasting operations.
2709
2710** You can specify the printer to use for commands that do printing by
2711setting the variable `printer-name'. Just what a printer name looks
2712like depends on your operating system. You can specify a different
2713printer for the Postscript printing commands by setting
2714`ps-printer-name'.
2715
2716** Emacs now supports on-the-fly spell checking by the means of a
2717minor mode. It is called M-x flyspell-mode. You don't have to remember
2718any other special commands to use it, and you will hardly notice it
2719except when you make a spelling error. Flyspell works by highlighting
2720incorrect words as soon as they are completed or as soon as the cursor
2721hits a new word.
2722
2723Flyspell mode works with whichever dictionary you have selected for
2724Ispell in Emacs. In TeX mode, it understands TeX syntax so as not
2725to be confused by TeX commands.
2726
2727You can correct a misspelled word by editing it into something
2728correct. You can also correct it, or accept it as correct, by
2729clicking on the word with Mouse-2; that gives you a pop-up menu
2730of various alternative replacements and actions.
2731
2732Flyspell mode also proposes "automatic" corrections. M-TAB replaces
2733the current misspelled word with a possible correction. If several
2734corrections are made possible, M-TAB cycles through them in
2735alphabetical order, or in order of decreasing likelihood if
2736flyspell-sort-corrections is nil.
2737
2738Flyspell mode also flags an error when a word is repeated, if
2739flyspell-mark-duplications-flag is non-nil.
2740
2741** Changes in input method usage.
2742
2743Now you can use arrow keys (right, left, down, up) for selecting among
2744the alternatives just the same way as you do by C-f, C-b, C-n, and C-p
2745respectively.
2746
2747You can use the ENTER key to accept the current conversion.
2748
2749If you type TAB to display a list of alternatives, you can select one
2750of the alternatives with Mouse-2.
2751
2752The meaning of the variable `input-method-verbose-flag' is changed so
2753that you can set it to t, nil, `default', or `complex-only'.
2754
2755 If the value is nil, extra guidance is never given.
2756
2757 If the value is t, extra guidance is always given.
2758
2759 If the value is `complex-only', extra guidance is always given only
2760 when you are using complex input methods such as chinese-py.
2761
2762 If the value is `default' (this is the default), extra guidance is
79214ddf 2763 given in the following case:
a933dad1
DL
2764 o When you are using a complex input method.
2765 o When you are using a simple input method but not in the minibuffer.
2766
2767If you are using Emacs through a very slow line, setting
2768input-method-verbose-flag to nil or to complex-only is a good choice,
2769and if you are using an input method you are not familiar with,
2770setting it to t is helpful.
2771
2772The old command select-input-method is now called set-input-method.
2773
2774In the language environment "Korean", you can use the following
2775keys:
2776 Shift-SPC toggle-korean-input-method
2777 C-F9 quail-hangul-switch-symbol-ksc
2778 F9 quail-hangul-switch-hanja
2779These key bindings are canceled when you switch to another language
2780environment.
2781
2782** The minibuffer history of file names now records the specified file
2783names, not the entire minibuffer input. For example, if the
2784minibuffer starts out with /usr/foo/, you might type in /etc/passwd to
2785get
2786
2787 /usr/foo//etc/passwd
2788
2789which stands for the file /etc/passwd.
2790
2791Formerly, this used to put /usr/foo//etc/passwd in the history list.
2792Now this puts just /etc/passwd in the history list.
2793
2794** If you are root, Emacs sets backup-by-copying-when-mismatch to t
2795at startup, so that saving a file will be sure to preserve
2796its owner and group.
2797
2798** find-func.el can now also find the place of definition of Emacs
2799Lisp variables in user-loaded libraries.
2800
2801** C-x r t (string-rectangle) now deletes the existing rectangle
2802contents before inserting the specified string on each line.
2803
2804** There is a new command delete-whitespace-rectangle
2805which deletes whitespace starting from a particular column
2806in all the lines on a rectangle. The column is specified
2807by the left edge of the rectangle.
2808
2809** You can now store a number into a register with C-u NUMBER C-x r n REG,
2810increment it by INC with C-u INC C-x r + REG (to increment by one, omit
2811C-u INC), and insert it in the buffer with C-x r g REG. This is useful
2812for writing keyboard macros.
2813
2814** The new command M-x speedbar displays a frame in which directories,
2815files, and tags can be displayed, manipulated, and jumped to. The
2816frame defaults to 20 characters in width, and is the same height as
2817the frame that it was started from. Some major modes define
2818additional commands for the speedbar, including Rmail, GUD/GDB, and
2819info.
2820
2821** query-replace-regexp is now bound to C-M-%.
2822
2823** In Transient Mark mode, when the region is active, M-x
2824query-replace and the other replace commands now operate on the region
2825contents only.
2826
2827** M-x write-region, when used interactively, now asks for
2828confirmation before overwriting an existing file. When you call
2829the function from a Lisp program, a new optional argument CONFIRM
2830says whether to ask for confirmation in this case.
2831
2832** If you use find-file-literally and the file is already visited
2833non-literally, the command asks you whether to revisit the file
2834literally. If you say no, it signals an error.
2835
2836** Major modes defined with the "derived mode" feature
2837now use the proper name for the mode hook: WHATEVER-mode-hook.
2838Formerly they used the name WHATEVER-mode-hooks, but that is
2839inconsistent with Emacs conventions.
2840
2841** shell-command-on-region (and shell-command) reports success or
2842failure if the command produces no output.
2843
2844** Set focus-follows-mouse to nil if your window system or window
2845manager does not transfer focus to another window when you just move
2846the mouse.
2847
2848** mouse-menu-buffer-maxlen has been renamed to
2849mouse-buffer-menu-maxlen to be consistent with the other related
2850function and variable names.
2851
2852** The new variable auto-coding-alist specifies coding systems for
2853reading specific files. This has higher priority than
2854file-coding-system-alist.
2855
2856** If you set the variable unibyte-display-via-language-environment to
2857t, then Emacs displays non-ASCII characters are displayed by
2858converting them to the equivalent multibyte characters according to
2859the current language environment. As a result, they are displayed
2860according to the current fontset.
2861
2862** C-q's handling of codes in the range 0200 through 0377 is changed.
2863
2864The codes in the range 0200 through 0237 are inserted as one byte of
2865that code regardless of the values of nonascii-translation-table and
2866nonascii-insert-offset.
2867
2868For the codes in the range 0240 through 0377, if
2869enable-multibyte-characters is non-nil and nonascii-translation-table
2870nor nonascii-insert-offset can't convert them to valid multibyte
2871characters, they are converted to Latin-1 characters.
2872
2873** If you try to find a file that is not read-accessible, you now get
2874an error, rather than an empty buffer and a warning.
2875
2876** In the minibuffer history commands M-r and M-s, an upper case
2877letter in the regular expression forces case-sensitive search.
2878
2879** In the *Help* buffer, cross-references to commands and variables
2880are inferred and hyperlinked. Use C-h m in Help mode for the relevant
2881command keys.
2882
2883** M-x apropos-command, with a prefix argument, no longer looks for
2884user option variables--instead it looks for noninteractive functions.
2885
2886Meanwhile, the command apropos-variable normally searches for
2887user option variables; with a prefix argument, it looks at
2888all variables that have documentation.
2889
2890** When you type a long line in the minibuffer, and the minibuffer
2891shows just one line, automatically scrolling works in a special way
2892that shows you overlap with the previous line of text. The variable
2893minibuffer-scroll-overlap controls how many characters of overlap
2894it should show; the default is 20.
2895
2896Meanwhile, Resize Minibuffer mode is still available; in that mode,
2897the minibuffer grows taller (up to a point) as needed to show the whole
2898of your input.
2899
2900** The new command M-x customize-changed-options lets you customize
2901all the options whose meanings or default values have changed in
2902recent Emacs versions. You specify a previous Emacs version number as
2903argument, and the command creates a customization buffer showing all
2904the customizable options which were changed since that version.
2905Newly added options are included as well.
2906
2907If you don't specify a particular version number argument,
2908then the customization buffer shows all the customizable options
2909for which Emacs versions of changes are recorded.
2910
2911This function is also bound to the Changed Options entry in the
2912Customize menu.
2913
2914** When you run M-x grep with a prefix argument, it figures out
2915the tag around point and puts that into the default grep command.
2916
2917** The new command M-* (pop-tag-mark) pops back through a history of
2918buffer positions from which M-. or other tag-finding commands were
2919invoked.
2920
2921** The new variable comment-padding specifies the number of spaces
2922that `comment-region' will insert before the actual text of the comment.
2923The default is 1.
2924
2925** In Fortran mode the characters `.', `_' and `$' now have symbol
2926syntax, not word syntax. Fortran mode now supports `imenu' and has
2927new commands fortran-join-line (M-^) and fortran-narrow-to-subprogram
2928(C-x n d). M-q can be used to fill a statement or comment block
2929sensibly.
2930
2931** GUD now supports jdb, the Java debugger, and pdb, the Python debugger.
2932
2933** If you set the variable add-log-keep-changes-together to a non-nil
2934value, the command `C-x 4 a' will automatically notice when you make
2935two entries in one day for one file, and combine them.
2936
2937** You can use the command M-x diary-mail-entries to mail yourself a
2938reminder about upcoming diary entries. See the documentation string
2939for a sample shell script for calling this function automatically
2940every night.
2941
2942** All you need to do, to enable use of the Desktop package, is to set
2943the variable desktop-enable to t with Custom.
2944
2945** There is no need to do anything special, now, to enable Gnus to
2946read and post multi-lingual articles.
2947
2948** Outline mode has now support for showing hidden outlines when
2949doing an isearch. In order for this to happen search-invisible should
2950be set to open (the default). If an isearch match is inside a hidden
2951outline the outline is made visible. If you continue pressing C-s and
2952the match moves outside the formerly invisible outline, the outline is
79214ddf 2953made invisible again.
a933dad1
DL
2954
2955** Mail reading and sending changes
2956
2957*** The Rmail e command now switches to displaying the whole header of
2958the message before it lets you edit the message. This is so that any
2959changes you make in the header will not be lost if you subsequently
2960toggle.
2961
2962*** The w command in Rmail, which writes the message body into a file,
2963now works in the summary buffer as well. (The command to delete the
2964summary buffer is now Q.) The default file name for the w command, if
2965the message has no subject, is stored in the variable
2966rmail-default-body-file.
2967
2968*** Most of the commands and modes that operate on mail and netnews no
2969longer depend on the value of mail-header-separator. Instead, they
2970handle whatever separator the buffer happens to use.
2971
2972*** If you set mail-signature to a value which is not t, nil, or a string,
2973it should be an expression. When you send a message, this expression
2974is evaluated to insert the signature.
2975
2976*** The new Lisp library feedmail.el (version 8) enhances processing of
2977outbound email messages. It works in coordination with other email
2978handling packages (e.g., rmail, VM, gnus) and is responsible for
2979putting final touches on messages and actually submitting them for
2980transmission. Users of the emacs program "fakemail" might be
2981especially interested in trying feedmail.
2982
2983feedmail is not enabled by default. See comments at the top of
2984feedmail.el for set-up instructions. Among the bigger features
2985provided by feedmail are:
2986
2987**** you can park outgoing messages into a disk-based queue and
2988stimulate sending some or all of them later (handy for laptop users);
2989there is also a queue for draft messages
2990
2991**** you can get one last look at the prepped outbound message and
2992be prompted for confirmation
2993
2994**** does smart filling of address headers
2995
2996**** can generate a MESSAGE-ID: line and a DATE: line; the date can be
2997the time the message was written or the time it is being sent; this
2998can make FCC copies more closely resemble copies that recipients get
2999
3000**** you can specify an arbitrary function for actually transmitting
3001the message; included in feedmail are interfaces for /bin/[r]mail,
3002/usr/lib/sendmail, and elisp smtpmail; it's easy to write a new
3003function for something else (10-20 lines of elisp)
3004
3005** Dired changes
3006
3007*** The Dired function dired-do-toggle, which toggles marked and unmarked
3008files, is now bound to "t" instead of "T".
3009
3010*** dired-at-point has been added to ffap.el. It allows one to easily
3011run Dired on the directory name at point.
3012
3013*** Dired has a new command: %g. It searches the contents of
3014files in the directory and marks each file that contains a match
3015for a specified regexp.
3016
3017** VC Changes
3018
3019*** New option vc-ignore-vc-files lets you turn off version control
3020conveniently.
3021
3022*** VC Dired has been completely rewritten. It is now much
3023faster, especially for CVS, and works very similar to ordinary
3024Dired.
3025
3026VC Dired is invoked by typing C-x v d and entering the name of the
3027directory to display. By default, VC Dired gives you a recursive
3028listing of all files at or below the given directory which are
3029currently locked (for CVS, all files not up-to-date are shown).
3030
3031You can change the listing format by setting vc-dired-recurse to nil,
3032then it shows only the given directory, and you may also set
3033vc-dired-terse-display to nil, then it shows all files under version
3034control plus the names of any subdirectories, so that you can type `i'
3035on such lines to insert them manually, as in ordinary Dired.
3036
3037All Dired commands operate normally in VC Dired, except for `v', which
3038is redefined as the version control prefix. That means you may type
3039`v l', `v =' etc. to invoke `vc-print-log', `vc-diff' and the like on
3040the file named in the current Dired buffer line. `v v' invokes
3041`vc-next-action' on this file, or on all files currently marked.
3042
3043The new command `v t' (vc-dired-toggle-terse-mode) allows you to
3044toggle between terse display (only locked files) and full display (all
79214ddf 3045VC files plus subdirectories). There is also a special command,
a933dad1
DL
3046`* l', to mark all files currently locked.
3047
3048Giving a prefix argument to C-x v d now does the same thing as in
3049ordinary Dired: it allows you to supply additional options for the ls
3050command in the minibuffer, to fine-tune VC Dired's output.
3051
3052*** Under CVS, if you merge changes from the repository into a working
3053file, and CVS detects conflicts, VC now offers to start an ediff
3054session to resolve them.
3055
3056Alternatively, you can use the new command `vc-resolve-conflicts' to
3057resolve conflicts in a file at any time. It works in any buffer that
3058contains conflict markers as generated by rcsmerge (which is what CVS
3059uses as well).
3060
3061*** You can now transfer changes between branches, using the new
3062command vc-merge (C-x v m). It is implemented for RCS and CVS. When
3063you invoke it in a buffer under version-control, you can specify
3064either an entire branch or a pair of versions, and the changes on that
3065branch or between the two versions are merged into the working file.
3066If this results in any conflicts, they may be resolved interactively,
3067using ediff.
3068
3069** Changes in Font Lock
3070
3071*** The face and variable previously known as font-lock-reference-face
3072are now called font-lock-constant-face to better reflect their typical
3073use for highlighting constants and labels. (Its face properties are
3074unchanged.) The variable font-lock-reference-face remains for now for
3075compatibility reasons, but its value is font-lock-constant-face.
3076
3077** Frame name display changes
3078
3079*** The command set-frame-name lets you set the name of the current
3080frame. You can use the new command select-frame-by-name to select and
3081raise a frame; this is mostly useful on character-only terminals, or
3082when many frames are invisible or iconified.
3083
3084*** On character-only terminal (not a window system), changing the
3085frame name is now reflected on the mode line and in the Buffers/Frames
3086menu.
3087
3088** Comint (subshell) changes
3089
3090*** In Comint modes, the commands to kill, stop or interrupt a
3091subjob now also kill pending input. This is for compatibility
3092with ordinary shells, where the signal characters do this.
3093
3094*** There are new commands in Comint mode.
3095
3096C-c C-x fetches the "next" line from the input history;
3097that is, the line after the last line you got.
3098You can use this command to fetch successive lines, one by one.
3099
3100C-c SPC accumulates lines of input. More precisely, it arranges to
3101send the current line together with the following line, when you send
3102the following line.
3103
3104C-c C-a if repeated twice consecutively now moves to the process mark,
3105which separates the pending input from the subprocess output and the
3106previously sent input.
3107
3108C-c M-r now runs comint-previous-matching-input-from-input;
3109it searches for a previous command, using the current pending input
3110as the search string.
3111
3112*** New option compilation-scroll-output can be set to scroll
3113automatically in compilation-mode windows.
3114
3115** C mode changes
3116
3117*** Multiline macros are now handled, both as they affect indentation,
3118and as recognized syntax. New syntactic symbol cpp-macro-cont is
3119assigned to second and subsequent lines of a multiline macro
79214ddf 3120definition.
a933dad1
DL
3121
3122*** A new style "user" which captures all non-hook-ified
3123(i.e. top-level) .emacs file variable settings and customizations.
3124Style "cc-mode" is an alias for "user" and is deprecated. "gnu"
3125style is still the default however.
3126
3127*** "java" style now conforms to Sun's JDK coding style.
3128
3129*** There are new commands c-beginning-of-defun, c-end-of-defun which
3130are alternatives which you could bind to C-M-a and C-M-e if you prefer
3131them. They do not have key bindings by default.
3132
3133*** New and improved implementations of M-a (c-beginning-of-statement)
3134and M-e (c-end-of-statement).
3135
3136*** C++ namespace blocks are supported, with new syntactic symbols
3137namespace-open, namespace-close, and innamespace.
3138
3139*** File local variable settings of c-file-style and c-file-offsets
3140makes the style variables local to that buffer only.
3141
3142*** New indentation functions c-lineup-close-paren,
3143c-indent-one-line-block, c-lineup-dont-change.
3144
3145*** Improvements (hopefully!) to the way CC Mode is loaded. You
3146should now be able to do a (require 'cc-mode) to get the entire
3147package loaded properly for customization in your .emacs file. A new
3148variable c-initialize-on-load controls this and is t by default.
3149
3150** Changes to hippie-expand.
3151
79214ddf 3152*** New customization variable `hippie-expand-dabbrev-skip-space'. If
a933dad1
DL
3153non-nil, trailing spaces may be included in the abbreviation to search for,
3154which then gives the same behavior as the original `dabbrev-expand'.
3155
3156*** New customization variable `hippie-expand-dabbrev-as-symbol'. If
3157non-nil, characters of syntax '_' is considered part of the word when
3158expanding dynamically.
3159
3160*** New customization variable `hippie-expand-no-restriction'. If
3161non-nil, narrowed buffers are widened before they are searched.
3162
3163*** New customization variable `hippie-expand-only-buffers'. If
3164non-empty, buffers searched are restricted to the types specified in
3165this list. Useful for example when constructing new special-purpose
3166expansion functions with `make-hippie-expand-function'.
3167
3168*** Text properties of the expansion are no longer copied.
3169
3170** Changes in BibTeX mode.
3171
3172*** Any titleword matching a regexp in the new variable
3173bibtex-autokey-titleword-ignore (case sensitive) is ignored during
3174automatic key generation. This replaces variable
3175bibtex-autokey-titleword-first-ignore, which only checked for matches
3176against the first word in the title.
3177
3178*** Autokey generation now uses all words from the title, not just
3179capitalized words. To avoid conflicts with existing customizations,
3180bibtex-autokey-titleword-ignore is set up such that words starting with
79214ddf 3181lowerkey characters will still be ignored. Thus, if you want to use
a933dad1 3182lowercase words from the title, you will have to overwrite the
79214ddf 3183bibtex-autokey-titleword-ignore standard setting.
a933dad1
DL
3184
3185*** Case conversion of names and title words for automatic key
3186generation is more flexible. Variable bibtex-autokey-preserve-case is
3187replaced by bibtex-autokey-titleword-case-convert and
3188bibtex-autokey-name-case-convert.
3189
3190** Changes in vcursor.el.
3191
3192*** Support for character terminals is available: there is a new keymap
3193and the vcursor will appear as an arrow between buffer text. A
3194variable `vcursor-interpret-input' allows input from the vcursor to be
3195entered exactly as if typed. Numerous functions, including
3196`vcursor-compare-windows', have been rewritten to improve consistency
3197in the selection of windows and corresponding keymaps.
3198
3199*** vcursor options can now be altered with M-x customize under the
3200Editing group once the package is loaded.
3201
3202*** Loading vcursor now does not define keys by default, as this is
3203generally a bad side effect. Use M-x customize to set
3204vcursor-key-bindings to t to restore the old behaviour.
3205
3206*** vcursor-auto-disable can be `copy', which turns off copying from the
3207vcursor, but doesn't disable it, after any non-vcursor command.
3208
3209** Ispell changes.
3210
79214ddf
FP
3211*** You can now spell check comments and strings in the current
3212buffer with M-x ispell-comments-and-strings. Comments and strings
a933dad1
DL
3213are identified by syntax tables in effect.
3214
3215*** Generic region skipping implemented.
3216A single buffer can be broken into a number of regions where text will
3217and will not be checked. The definitions of the regions can be user
3218defined. New applications and improvements made available by this
79214ddf 3219include:
a933dad1
DL
3220
3221 o URLs are automatically skipped
3222 o EMail message checking is vastly improved.
3223
3224*** Ispell can highlight the erroneous word even on non-window terminals.
3225
3226** Changes to RefTeX mode
3227
3228RefTeX has been updated in order to make it more usable with very
3229large projects (like a several volume math book). The parser has been
3230re-written from scratch. To get maximum speed from RefTeX, check the
3231section `Optimizations' in the manual.
3232
3233*** New recursive parser.
3234
3235The old version of RefTeX created a single large buffer containing the
3236entire multifile document in order to parse the document. The new
3237recursive parser scans the individual files.
3238
3239*** Parsing only part of a document.
79214ddf 3240
a933dad1
DL
3241Reparsing of changed document parts can now be made faster by enabling
3242partial scans. To use this feature, read the documentation string of
3243the variable `reftex-enable-partial-scans' and set the variable to t.
3244
3245 (setq reftex-enable-partial-scans t)
3246
3247*** Storing parsing information in a file.
3248
3249This can improve startup times considerably. To turn it on, use
3250
3251 (setq reftex-save-parse-info t)
3252
3253*** Using multiple selection buffers
3254
3255If the creation of label selection buffers is too slow (this happens
3256for large documents), you can reuse these buffers by setting
3257
3258 (setq reftex-use-multiple-selection-buffers t)
3259
3260*** References to external documents.
3261
3262The LaTeX package `xr' allows to cross-reference labels in external
3263documents. RefTeX can provide information about the external
3264documents as well. To use this feature, set up the \externaldocument
3265macros required by the `xr' package and rescan the document with
3266RefTeX. The external labels can then be accessed with the `x' key in
3267the selection buffer provided by `reftex-reference' (bound to `C-c )').
3268The `x' key also works in the table of contents buffer.
3269
3270*** Many more labeled LaTeX environments are recognized by default.
3271
3272The builtin command list now covers all the standard LaTeX commands,
3273and all of the major packages included in the LaTeX distribution.
3274
3275Also, RefTeX now understands the \appendix macro and changes
3276the enumeration of sections in the *toc* buffer accordingly.
3277
3278*** Mouse support for selection and *toc* buffers
3279
3280The mouse can now be used to select items in the selection and *toc*
3281buffers. See also the new option `reftex-highlight-selection'.
3282
3283*** New keymaps for selection and table of contents modes.
3284
3285The selection processes for labels and citation keys, and the table of
3286contents buffer now have their own keymaps: `reftex-select-label-map',
3287`reftex-select-bib-map', `reftex-toc-map'. The selection processes
3288have a number of new keys predefined. In particular, TAB lets you
3289enter a label with completion. Check the on-the-fly help (press `?'
3290at the selection prompt) or read the Info documentation to find out
3291more.
3292
3293*** Support for the varioref package
3294
3295The `v' key in the label selection buffer toggles \ref versus \vref.
3296
3297*** New hooks
3298
3299Three new hooks can be used to redefine the way labels, references,
3300and citations are created. These hooks are
3301`reftex-format-label-function', `reftex-format-ref-function',
3302`reftex-format-cite-function'.
3303
3304*** Citations outside LaTeX
3305
3306The command `reftex-citation' may also be used outside LaTeX (e.g. in
3307a mail buffer). See the Info documentation for details.
3308
3309*** Short context is no longer fontified.
3310
3311The short context in the label menu no longer copies the
3312fontification from the text in the buffer. If you prefer it to be
3313fontified, use
3314
3315 (setq reftex-refontify-context t)
3316
3317** file-cache-minibuffer-complete now accepts a prefix argument.
3318With a prefix argument, it does not try to do completion of
3319the file name within its directory; it only checks for other
3320directories that contain the same file name.
3321
3322Thus, given the file name Makefile, and assuming that a file
3323Makefile.in exists in the same directory, ordinary
3324file-cache-minibuffer-complete will try to complete Makefile to
3325Makefile.in and will therefore never look for other directories that
3326have Makefile. A prefix argument tells it not to look for longer
3327names such as Makefile.in, so that instead it will look for other
3328directories--just as if the name were already complete in its present
3329directory.
3330
3331** New modes and packages
3332
3333*** There is a new alternative major mode for Perl, Cperl mode.
3334It has many more features than Perl mode, and some people prefer
3335it, but some do not.
3336
3337*** There is a new major mode, M-x vhdl-mode, for editing files of VHDL
3338code.
3339
3340*** M-x which-function-mode enables a minor mode that displays the
3341current function name continuously in the mode line, as you move
3342around in a buffer.
3343
3344Which Function mode is effective in major modes which support Imenu.
3345
3346*** Gametree is a major mode for editing game analysis trees. The author
3347uses it for keeping notes about his postal Chess games, but it should
3348be helpful for other two-player games as well, as long as they have an
3349established system of notation similar to Chess.
3350
3351*** The new minor mode checkdoc-minor-mode provides Emacs Lisp
3352documentation string checking for style and spelling. The style
3353guidelines are found in the Emacs Lisp programming manual.
3354
3355*** The net-utils package makes some common networking features
3356available in Emacs. Some of these functions are wrappers around
3357system utilities (ping, nslookup, etc); others are implementations of
3358simple protocols (finger, whois) in Emacs Lisp. There are also
3359functions to make simple connections to TCP/IP ports for debugging and
3360the like.
3361
3362*** highlight-changes-mode is a minor mode that uses colors to
3363identify recently changed parts of the buffer text.
3364
3365*** The new package `midnight' lets you specify things to be done
3366within Emacs at midnight--by default, kill buffers that you have not
3367used in a considerable time. To use this feature, customize
3368the user option `midnight-mode' to t.
3369
3370*** The file generic-x.el defines a number of simple major modes.
3371
3372 apache-generic-mode: For Apache and NCSA httpd configuration files
3373 samba-generic-mode: Samba configuration files
3374 fvwm-generic-mode: For fvwm initialization files
3375 x-resource-generic-mode: For X resource files
3376 hosts-generic-mode: For hosts files (.rhosts, /etc/hosts, etc)
3377 mailagent-rules-generic-mode: For mailagent .rules files
3378 javascript-generic-mode: For JavaScript files
3379 vrml-generic-mode: For VRML files
3380 java-manifest-generic-mode: For Java MANIFEST files
3381 java-properties-generic-mode: For Java property files
3382 mailrc-generic-mode: For .mailrc files
3383
3384 Platform-specific modes:
3385
3386 prototype-generic-mode: For Solaris/Sys V prototype files
3387 pkginfo-generic-mode: For Solaris/Sys V pkginfo files
3388 alias-generic-mode: For C shell alias files
3389 inf-generic-mode: For MS-Windows INF files
3390 ini-generic-mode: For MS-Windows INI files
3391 reg-generic-mode: For MS-Windows Registry files
3392 bat-generic-mode: For MS-Windows BAT scripts
3393 rc-generic-mode: For MS-Windows Resource files
3394 rul-generic-mode: For InstallShield scripts
3395\f
3396* Lisp changes in Emacs 20.3 since the Emacs Lisp Manual was published
3397
3398** If you want a Lisp file to be read in unibyte mode,
3399use -*-unibyte: t;-*- on its first line.
3400That will force Emacs to read that file in unibyte mode.
3401Otherwise, the file will be loaded and byte-compiled in multibyte mode.
3402
3403Thus, each lisp file is read in a consistent way regardless of whether
3404you started Emacs with --unibyte, so that a Lisp program gives
3405consistent results regardless of how Emacs was started.
3406
3407** The new function assoc-default is useful for searching an alist,
3408and using a default value if the key is not found there. You can
3409specify a comparison predicate, so this function is useful for
3410searching comparing a string against an alist of regular expressions.
3411
3412** The functions unibyte-char-to-multibyte and
3413multibyte-char-to-unibyte convert between unibyte and multibyte
3414character codes, in a way that is appropriate for the current language
3415environment.
3416
3417** The functions read-event, read-char and read-char-exclusive now
3418take two optional arguments. PROMPT, if non-nil, specifies a prompt
3419string. SUPPRESS-INPUT-METHOD, if non-nil, says to disable the
3420current input method for reading this one event.
3421
3422** Two new variables print-escape-nonascii and print-escape-multibyte
3423now control whether to output certain characters as
3424backslash-sequences. print-escape-nonascii applies to single-byte
3425non-ASCII characters; print-escape-multibyte applies to multibyte
3426characters. Both of these variables are used only when printing
3427in readable fashion (prin1 uses them, princ does not).
3428\f
3429* Lisp changes in Emacs 20.3 before the Emacs Lisp Manual was published
3430
3431** Compiled Emacs Lisp files made with the modified "MBSK" version
3432of Emacs 20.2 do not work in Emacs 20.3.
3433
3434** Buffer positions are now measured in characters, as they were
3435in Emacs 19 and before. This means that (forward-char 1)
3436always increases point by 1.
3437
3438The function chars-in-region now just subtracts its arguments. It is
3439considered obsolete. The function char-boundary-p has been deleted.
3440
3441See below for additional changes relating to multibyte characters.
3442
3443** defcustom, defface and defgroup now accept the keyword `:version'.
3444Use this to specify in which version of Emacs a certain variable's
3445default value changed. For example,
3446
3447 (defcustom foo-max 34 "*Maximum number of foo's allowed."
3448 :type 'integer
3449 :group 'foo
3450 :version "20.3")
3451
79214ddf 3452 (defgroup foo-group nil "The foo group."
a933dad1
DL
3453 :version "20.3")
3454
3455If an entire new group is added or the variables in it have the
3456default values changed, then just add a `:version' to that group. It
3457is recommended that new packages added to the distribution contain a
3458`:version' in the top level group.
3459
3460This information is used to control the customize-changed-options command.
3461
3462** It is now an error to change the value of a symbol whose name
3463starts with a colon--if it is interned in the standard obarray.
3464
3465However, setting such a symbol to its proper value, which is that
3466symbol itself, is not an error. This is for the sake of programs that
3467support previous Emacs versions by explicitly setting these variables
3468to themselves.
3469
3470If you set the variable keyword-symbols-constant-flag to nil,
3471this error is suppressed, and you can set these symbols to any
3472values whatever.
3473
3474** There is a new debugger command, R.
3475It evaluates an expression like e, but saves the result
3476in the buffer *Debugger-record*.
3477
3478** Frame-local variables.
3479
3480You can now make a variable local to various frames. To do this, call
3481the function make-variable-frame-local; this enables frames to have
3482local bindings for that variable.
3483
3484These frame-local bindings are actually frame parameters: you create a
3485frame-local binding in a specific frame by calling
3486modify-frame-parameters and specifying the variable name as the
3487parameter name.
3488
3489Buffer-local bindings take precedence over frame-local bindings.
3490Thus, if the current buffer has a buffer-local binding, that binding is
3491active; otherwise, if the selected frame has a frame-local binding,
3492that binding is active; otherwise, the default binding is active.
3493
3494It would not be hard to implement window-local bindings, but it is not
3495clear that this would be very useful; windows tend to come and go in a
3496very transitory fashion, so that trying to produce any specific effect
3497through a window-local binding would not be very robust.
3498
3499** `sregexq' and `sregex' are two new functions for constructing
3500"symbolic regular expressions." These are Lisp expressions that, when
3501evaluated, yield conventional string-based regexps. The symbolic form
3502makes it easier to construct, read, and maintain complex patterns.
3503See the documentation in sregex.el.
3504
3505** parse-partial-sexp's return value has an additional element which
3506is used to pass information along if you pass it to another call to
3507parse-partial-sexp, starting its scan where the first call ended.
3508The contents of this field are not yet finalized.
3509
3510** eval-region now accepts a fourth optional argument READ-FUNCTION.
3511If it is non-nil, that function is used instead of `read'.
3512
3513** unload-feature by default removes the feature's functions from
3514known hooks to avoid trouble, but a package providing FEATURE can
3515define a hook FEATURE-unload-hook to be run by unload-feature instead.
3516
3517** read-from-minibuffer no longer returns the argument DEFAULT-VALUE
3518when the user enters empty input. It now returns the null string, as
3519it did in Emacs 19. The default value is made available in the
3520history via M-n, but it is not applied here as a default.
3521
3522The other, more specialized minibuffer-reading functions continue to
3523return the default value (not the null string) when the user enters
3524empty input.
3525
3526** The new variable read-buffer-function controls which routine to use
3527for selecting buffers. For example, if you set this variable to
3528`iswitchb-read-buffer', iswitchb will be used to read buffer names.
3529Other functions can also be used if they accept the same arguments as
3530`read-buffer' and return the selected buffer name as a string.
3531
3532** The new function read-passwd reads a password from the terminal,
3533echoing a period for each character typed. It takes three arguments:
3534a prompt string, a flag which says "read it twice to make sure", and a
3535default password to use if the user enters nothing.
3536
3537** The variable fill-nobreak-predicate gives major modes a way to
3538specify not to break a line at certain places. Its value is a
3539function which is called with no arguments, with point located at the
3540place where a break is being considered. If the function returns
3541non-nil, then the line won't be broken there.
3542
3543** window-end now takes an optional second argument, UPDATE.
3544If this is non-nil, then the function always returns an accurate
3545up-to-date value for the buffer position corresponding to the
3546end of the window, even if this requires computation.
3547
3548** other-buffer now takes an optional argument FRAME
3549which specifies which frame's buffer list to use.
3550If it is nil, that means use the selected frame's buffer list.
3551
3552** The new variable buffer-display-time, always local in every buffer,
3553holds the value of (current-time) as of the last time that a window
3554was directed to display this buffer.
3555
3556** It is now meaningful to compare two window-configuration objects
3557with `equal'. Two window-configuration objects are equal if they
3558describe equivalent arrangements of windows, in the same frame--in
3559other words, if they would give the same results if passed to
3560set-window-configuration.
3561
3562** compare-window-configurations is a new function that compares two
3563window configurations loosely. It ignores differences in saved buffer
3564positions and scrolling, and considers only the structure and sizes of
3565windows and the choice of buffers to display.
3566
3567** The variable minor-mode-overriding-map-alist allows major modes to
3568override the key bindings of a minor mode. The elements of this alist
3569look like the elements of minor-mode-map-alist: (VARIABLE . KEYMAP).
3570
3571If the VARIABLE in an element of minor-mode-overriding-map-alist has a
3572non-nil value, the paired KEYMAP is active, and totally overrides the
3573map (if any) specified for the same variable in minor-mode-map-alist.
3574
3575minor-mode-overriding-map-alist is automatically local in all buffers,
3576and it is meant to be set by major modes.
3577
3578** The function match-string-no-properties is like match-string
3579except that it discards all text properties from the result.
3580
3581** The function load-average now accepts an optional argument
3582USE-FLOATS. If it is non-nil, the load average values are returned as
3583floating point numbers, rather than as integers to be divided by 100.
3584
3585** The new variable temporary-file-directory specifies the directory
3586to use for creating temporary files. The default value is determined
3587in a reasonable way for your operating system; on GNU and Unix systems
3588it is based on the TMP and TMPDIR environment variables.
3589
3590** Menu changes
3591
3592*** easymenu.el now uses the new menu item format and supports the
3593keywords :visible and :filter. The existing keyword :keys is now
3594better supported.
3595
3596The variable `easy-menu-precalculate-equivalent-keybindings' controls
3597a new feature which calculates keyboard equivalents for the menu when
3598you define the menu. The default is t. If you rarely use menus, you
3599can set the variable to nil to disable this precalculation feature;
3600then the calculation is done only if you use the menu bar.
3601
3602*** A new format for menu items is supported.
3603
3604In a keymap, a key binding that has the format
3605 (STRING . REAL-BINDING) or (STRING HELP-STRING . REAL-BINDING)
3606defines a menu item. Now a menu item definition may also be a list that
3607starts with the symbol `menu-item'.
3608
3609The format is:
3610 (menu-item ITEM-NAME) or
3611 (menu-item ITEM-NAME REAL-BINDING . ITEM-PROPERTY-LIST)
3612where ITEM-NAME is an expression which evaluates to the menu item
3613string, and ITEM-PROPERTY-LIST has the form of a property list.
3614The supported properties include
3615
3616:enable FORM Evaluate FORM to determine whether the
3617 item is enabled.
3618:visible FORM Evaluate FORM to determine whether the
3619 item should appear in the menu.
79214ddf 3620:filter FILTER-FN
a933dad1
DL
3621 FILTER-FN is a function of one argument,
3622 which will be REAL-BINDING.
3623 It should return a binding to use instead.
3624:keys DESCRIPTION
3625 DESCRIPTION is a string that describes an equivalent keyboard
3626 binding for for REAL-BINDING. DESCRIPTION is expanded with
3627 `substitute-command-keys' before it is used.
3628:key-sequence KEY-SEQUENCE
3629 KEY-SEQUENCE is a key-sequence for an equivalent
3630 keyboard binding.
3631:key-sequence nil
3632 This means that the command normally has no
3633 keyboard equivalent.
3634:help HELP HELP is the extra help string (not currently used).
3635:button (TYPE . SELECTED)
3636 TYPE is :toggle or :radio.
3637 SELECTED is a form, to be evaluated, and its
3638 value says whether this button is currently selected.
3639
3640Buttons are at the moment only simulated by prefixes in the menu.
3641Eventually ordinary X-buttons may be supported.
3642
3643(menu-item ITEM-NAME) defines unselectable item.
3644
3645** New event types
3646
3647*** The new event type `mouse-wheel' is generated by a wheel on a
3648mouse (such as the MS Intellimouse). The event contains a delta that
3649corresponds to the amount and direction that the wheel is rotated,
3650which is typically used to implement a scroll or zoom. The format is:
3651
3652 (mouse-wheel POSITION DELTA)
3653
3654where POSITION is a list describing the position of the event in the
3655same format as a mouse-click event, and DELTA is a signed number
3656indicating the number of increments by which the wheel was rotated. A
3657negative DELTA indicates that the wheel was rotated backwards, towards
3658the user, and a positive DELTA indicates that the wheel was rotated
3659forward, away from the user.
3660
3661As of now, this event type is generated only on MS Windows.
3662
3663*** The new event type `drag-n-drop' is generated when a group of
3664files is selected in an application outside of Emacs, and then dragged
3665and dropped onto an Emacs frame. The event contains a list of
3666filenames that were dragged and dropped, which are then typically
3667loaded into Emacs. The format is:
3668
3669 (drag-n-drop POSITION FILES)
3670
3671where POSITION is a list describing the position of the event in the
3672same format as a mouse-click event, and FILES is the list of filenames
3673that were dragged and dropped.
3674
3675As of now, this event type is generated only on MS Windows.
3676
3677** Changes relating to multibyte characters.
3678
3679*** The variable enable-multibyte-characters is now read-only;
3680any attempt to set it directly signals an error. The only way
3681to change this value in an existing buffer is with set-buffer-multibyte.
3682
3683*** In a string constant, `\ ' now stands for "nothing at all". You
3684can use it to terminate a hex escape which is followed by a character
3685that could otherwise be read as part of the hex escape.
3686
3687*** String indices are now measured in characters, as they were
3688in Emacs 19 and before.
3689
3690The function chars-in-string has been deleted.
3691The function concat-chars has been renamed to `string'.
3692
3693*** The function set-buffer-multibyte sets the flag in the current
3694buffer that says whether the buffer uses multibyte representation or
3695unibyte representation. If the argument is nil, it selects unibyte
3696representation. Otherwise it selects multibyte representation.
3697
3698This function does not change the contents of the buffer, viewed
3699as a sequence of bytes. However, it does change the contents
3700viewed as characters; a sequence of two bytes which is treated as
3701one character when the buffer uses multibyte representation
3702will count as two characters using unibyte representation.
3703
3704This function sets enable-multibyte-characters to record which
3705representation is in use. It also adjusts various data in the buffer
3706(including its markers, overlays and text properties) so that they are
3707consistent with the new representation.
3708
3709*** string-make-multibyte takes a string and converts it to multibyte
3710representation. Most of the time, you don't need to care
3711about the representation, because Emacs converts when necessary;
3712however, it makes a difference when you compare strings.
3713
3714The conversion of non-ASCII characters works by adding the value of
3715nonascii-insert-offset to each character, or by translating them
3716using the table nonascii-translation-table.
3717
3718*** string-make-unibyte takes a string and converts it to unibyte
3719representation. Most of the time, you don't need to care about the
3720representation, but it makes a difference when you compare strings.
3721
3722The conversion from multibyte to unibyte representation
3723loses information; the only time Emacs performs it automatically
3724is when inserting a multibyte string into a unibyte buffer.
3725
3726*** string-as-multibyte takes a string, and returns another string
3727which contains the same bytes, but treats them as multibyte.
3728
3729*** string-as-unibyte takes a string, and returns another string
3730which contains the same bytes, but treats them as unibyte.
3731
3732*** The new function compare-strings lets you compare
3733portions of two strings. Unibyte strings are converted to multibyte,
3734so that a unibyte string can match a multibyte string.
3735You can specify whether to ignore case or not.
3736
3737*** assoc-ignore-case now uses compare-strings so that
3738it can treat unibyte and multibyte strings as equal.
3739
3740*** Regular expression operations and buffer string searches now
3741convert the search pattern to multibyte or unibyte to accord with the
3742buffer or string being searched.
3743
3744One consequence is that you cannot always use \200-\377 inside of
3745[...] to match all non-ASCII characters. This does still work when
3746searching or matching a unibyte buffer or string, but not when
3747searching or matching a multibyte string. Unfortunately, there is no
3748obvious choice of syntax to use within [...] for that job. But, what
3749you want is just to match all non-ASCII characters, the regular
3750expression [^\0-\177] works for it.
3751
3752*** Structure of coding system changed.
3753
3754All coding systems (including aliases and subsidiaries) are named
3755by symbols; the symbol's `coding-system' property is a vector
3756which defines the coding system. Aliases share the same vector
3757as the principal name, so that altering the contents of this
3758vector affects the principal name and its aliases. You can define
3759your own alias name of a coding system by the function
3760define-coding-system-alias.
3761
3762The coding system definition includes a property list of its own. Use
3763the new functions `coding-system-get' and `coding-system-put' to
3764access such coding system properties as post-read-conversion,
3765pre-write-conversion, character-translation-table-for-decode,
3766character-translation-table-for-encode, mime-charset, and
3767safe-charsets. For instance, (coding-system-get 'iso-latin-1
3768'mime-charset) gives the corresponding MIME-charset parameter
3769`iso-8859-1'.
3770
3771Among the coding system properties listed above, safe-charsets is new.
3772The value of this property is a list of character sets which this
3773coding system can correctly encode and decode. For instance:
3774(coding-system-get 'iso-latin-1 'safe-charsets) => (ascii latin-iso8859-1)
3775
3776Here, "correctly encode" means that the encoded character sets can
3777also be handled safely by systems other than Emacs as far as they
3778are capable of that coding system. Though, Emacs itself can encode
3779the other character sets and read it back correctly.
3780
3781*** The new function select-safe-coding-system can be used to find a
3782proper coding system for encoding the specified region or string.
3783This function requires a user interaction.
3784
3785*** The new functions find-coding-systems-region and
3786find-coding-systems-string are helper functions used by
3787select-safe-coding-system. They return a list of all proper coding
3788systems to encode a text in some region or string. If you don't want
3789a user interaction, use one of these functions instead of
3790select-safe-coding-system.
3791
3792*** The explicit encoding and decoding functions, such as
3793decode-coding-region and encode-coding-string, now set
3794last-coding-system-used to reflect the actual way encoding or decoding
3795was done.
3796
3797*** The new function detect-coding-with-language-environment can be
3798used to detect a coding system of text according to priorities of
3799coding systems used by some specific language environment.
3800
3801*** The functions detect-coding-region and detect-coding-string always
3802return a list if the arg HIGHEST is nil. Thus, if only ASCII
3803characters are found, they now return a list of single element
3804`undecided' or its subsidiaries.
3805
3806*** The new functions coding-system-change-eol-conversion and
3807coding-system-change-text-conversion can be used to get a different
3808coding system than what specified only in how end-of-line or text is
3809converted.
3810
3811*** The new function set-selection-coding-system can be used to set a
3812coding system for communicating with other X clients.
3813
3814*** The function `map-char-table' now passes as argument only valid
3815character codes, plus generic characters that stand for entire
3816character sets or entire subrows of a character set. In other words,
3817each time `map-char-table' calls its FUNCTION argument, the key value
3818either will be a valid individual character code, or will stand for a
3819range of characters.
3820
3821*** The new function `char-valid-p' can be used for checking whether a
3822Lisp object is a valid character code or not.
3823
3824*** The new function `charset-after' returns a charset of a character
3825in the current buffer at position POS.
3826
3827*** Input methods are now implemented using the variable
3828input-method-function. If this is non-nil, its value should be a
3829function; then, whenever Emacs reads an input event that is a printing
3830character with no modifier bits, it calls that function, passing the
3831event as an argument. Often this function will read more input, first
3832binding input-method-function to nil.
3833
3834The return value should be a list of the events resulting from input
3835method processing. These events will be processed sequentially as
3836input, before resorting to unread-command-events. Events returned by
3837the input method function are not passed to the input method function,
3838not even if they are printing characters with no modifier bits.
3839
3840The input method function is not called when reading the second and
3841subsequent events of a key sequence.
3842
3843*** You can customize any language environment by using
3844set-language-environment-hook and exit-language-environment-hook.
3845
3846The hook `exit-language-environment-hook' should be used to undo
3847customizations that you made with set-language-environment-hook. For
3848instance, if you set up a special key binding for a specific language
3849environment by set-language-environment-hook, you should set up
3850exit-language-environment-hook to restore the normal key binding.
3851\f
3852* Changes in Emacs 20.1
3853
3854** Emacs has a new facility for customization of its many user
3855options. It is called M-x customize. With this facility you can look
3856at the many user options in an organized way; they are grouped into a
3857tree structure.
3858
3859M-x customize also knows what sorts of values are legitimate for each
3860user option and ensures that you don't use invalid values.
3861
3862With M-x customize, you can set options either for the present Emacs
3863session or permanently. (Permanent settings are stored automatically
3864in your .emacs file.)
3865
3866** Scroll bars are now on the left side of the window.
3867You can change this with M-x customize-option scroll-bar-mode.
3868
3869** The mode line no longer includes the string `Emacs'.
3870This makes more space in the mode line for other information.
3871
3872** When you select a region with the mouse, it is highlighted
3873immediately afterward. At that time, if you type the DELETE key, it
3874kills the region.
3875
3876The BACKSPACE key, and the ASCII character DEL, do not do this; they
3877delete the character before point, as usual.
3878
3879** In an incremental search the whole current match is highlighted
3880on terminals which support this. (You can disable this feature
3881by setting search-highlight to nil.)
3882
3883** In the minibuffer, in some cases, you can now use M-n to
3884insert the default value into the minibuffer as text. In effect,
3885the default value (if the minibuffer routines know it) is tacked
3886onto the history "in the future". (The more normal use of the
3887history list is to use M-p to insert minibuffer input used in the
3888past.)
3889
3890** In Text mode, now only blank lines separate paragraphs.
3891This makes it possible to get the full benefit of Adaptive Fill mode
3892in Text mode, and other modes derived from it (such as Mail mode).
3893TAB in Text mode now runs the command indent-relative; this
3894makes a practical difference only when you use indented paragraphs.
3895
3896As a result, the old Indented Text mode is now identical to Text mode,
3897and is an alias for it.
3898
3899If you want spaces at the beginning of a line to start a paragraph,
3900use the new mode, Paragraph Indent Text mode.
3901
3902** Scrolling changes
3903
3904*** Scroll commands to scroll a whole screen now preserve the screen
3905position of the cursor, if scroll-preserve-screen-position is non-nil.
3906
3907In this mode, if you scroll several screens back and forth, finishing
3908on the same screen where you started, the cursor goes back to the line
3909where it started.
3910
3911*** If you set scroll-conservatively to a small number, then when you
3912move point a short distance off the screen, Emacs will scroll the
3913screen just far enough to bring point back on screen, provided that
3914does not exceed `scroll-conservatively' lines.
3915
3916*** The new variable scroll-margin says how close point can come to the
3917top or bottom of a window. It is a number of screen lines; if point
3918comes within that many lines of the top or bottom of the window, Emacs
3919recenters the window.
3920
3921** International character set support (MULE)
3922
3923Emacs now supports a wide variety of international character sets,
3924including European variants of the Latin alphabet, as well as Chinese,
3925Devanagari (Hindi and Marathi), Ethiopian, Greek, IPA, Japanese,
3926Korean, Lao, Russian, Thai, Tibetan, and Vietnamese scripts. These
3927features have been merged from the modified version of Emacs known as
3928MULE (for "MULti-lingual Enhancement to GNU Emacs")
3929
3930Users of these scripts have established many more-or-less standard
3931coding systems for storing files. Emacs uses a single multibyte
3932character encoding within Emacs buffers; it can translate from a wide
3933variety of coding systems when reading a file and can translate back
3934into any of these coding systems when saving a file.
3935
3936Keyboards, even in the countries where these character sets are used,
3937generally don't have keys for all the characters in them. So Emacs
3938supports various "input methods", typically one for each script or
3939language, to make it possible to type them.
3940
3941The Emacs internal multibyte encoding represents a non-ASCII
3942character as a sequence of bytes in the range 0200 through 0377.
3943
3944The new prefix key C-x RET is used for commands that pertain
3945to multibyte characters, coding systems, and input methods.
3946
3947You can disable multibyte character support as follows:
3948
3949 (setq-default enable-multibyte-characters nil)
3950
3951Calling the function standard-display-european turns off multibyte
3952characters, unless you specify a non-nil value for the second
3953argument, AUTO. This provides compatibility for people who are
3954already using standard-display-european to continue using unibyte
3955characters for their work until they want to change.
3956
3957*** Input methods
3958
3959An input method is a kind of character conversion which is designed
3960specifically for interactive input. In Emacs, typically each language
3961has its own input method (though sometimes several languages which use
3962the same characters can share one input method). Some languages
3963support several input methods.
3964
3965The simplest kind of input method works by mapping ASCII letters into
3966another alphabet. This is how the Greek and Russian input methods
3967work.
3968
3969A more powerful technique is composition: converting sequences of
3970characters into one letter. Many European input methods use
3971composition to produce a single non-ASCII letter from a sequence which
3972consists of a letter followed by diacritics. For example, a' is one
3973sequence of two characters that might be converted into a single
3974letter.
3975
3976The input methods for syllabic scripts typically use mapping followed
3977by conversion. The input methods for Thai and Korean work this way.
3978First, letters are mapped into symbols for particular sounds or tone
3979marks; then, sequences of these which make up a whole syllable are
3980mapped into one syllable sign--most often a "composite character".
3981
3982None of these methods works very well for Chinese and Japanese, so
3983they are handled specially. First you input a whole word using
3984phonetic spelling; then, after the word is in the buffer, Emacs
3985converts it into one or more characters using a large dictionary.
3986
3987Since there is more than one way to represent a phonetically spelled
3988word using Chinese characters, Emacs can only guess which one to use;
3989typically these input methods give you a way to say "guess again" if
3990the first guess is wrong.
3991
3992*** The command C-x RET m (toggle-enable-multibyte-characters)
3993turns multibyte character support on or off for the current buffer.
3994
3995If multibyte character support is turned off in a buffer, then each
3996byte is a single character, even codes 0200 through 0377--exactly as
3997they did in Emacs 19.34. This includes the features for support for
3998the European characters, ISO Latin-1 and ISO Latin-2.
3999
4000However, there is no need to turn off multibyte character support to
4001use ISO Latin-1 or ISO Latin-2; the Emacs multibyte character set
4002includes all the characters in these character sets, and Emacs can
4003translate automatically to and from either one.
4004
4005*** Visiting a file in unibyte mode.
4006
4007Turning off multibyte character support in the buffer after visiting a
4008file with multibyte code conversion will display the multibyte
4009sequences already in the buffer, byte by byte. This is probably not
4010what you want.
4011
4012If you want to edit a file of unibyte characters (Latin-1, for
4013example), you can do it by specifying `no-conversion' as the coding
4014system when reading the file. This coding system also turns off
4015multibyte characters in that buffer.
4016
4017If you turn off multibyte character support entirely, this turns off
4018character conversion as well.
4019
4020*** Displaying international characters on X Windows.
4021
4022A font for X typically displays just one alphabet or script.
4023Therefore, displaying the entire range of characters Emacs supports
4024requires using many fonts.
4025
4026Therefore, Emacs now supports "fontsets". Each fontset is a
4027collection of fonts, each assigned to a range of character codes.
4028
4029A fontset has a name, like a font. Individual fonts are defined by
4030the X server; fontsets are defined within Emacs itself. But once you
4031have defined a fontset, you can use it in a face or a frame just as
4032you would use a font.
4033
4034If a fontset specifies no font for a certain character, or if it
4035specifies a font that does not exist on your system, then it cannot
4036display that character. It will display an empty box instead.
4037
4038The fontset height and width are determined by the ASCII characters
4039(that is, by the font in the fontset which is used for ASCII
4040characters). If another font in the fontset has a different height,
4041or the wrong width, then characters assigned to that font are clipped,
4042and displayed within a box if highlight-wrong-size-font is non-nil.
4043
4044*** Defining fontsets.
4045
4046Emacs does not use any fontset by default. Its default font is still
4047chosen as in previous versions. You can tell Emacs to use a fontset
4048with the `-fn' option or the `Font' X resource.
4049
4050Emacs creates a standard fontset automatically according to the value
4051of standard-fontset-spec. This fontset's short name is
4052`fontset-standard'. Bold, italic, and bold-italic variants of the
4053standard fontset are created automatically.
4054
4055If you specify a default ASCII font with the `Font' resource or `-fn'
4056argument, a fontset is generated from it. This works by replacing the
4057FOUNDARY, FAMILY, ADD_STYLE, and AVERAGE_WIDTH fields of the font name
4058with `*' then using this to specify a fontset. This fontset's short
4059name is `fontset-startup'.
4060
4061Emacs checks resources of the form Fontset-N where N is 0, 1, 2...
4062The resource value should have this form:
4063 FONTSET-NAME, [CHARSET-NAME:FONT-NAME]...
4064FONTSET-NAME should have the form of a standard X font name, except:
4065 * most fields should be just the wild card "*".
4066 * the CHARSET_REGISTRY field should be "fontset"
4067 * the CHARSET_ENCODING field can be any nickname of the fontset.
4068The construct CHARSET-NAME:FONT-NAME can be repeated any number
4069of times; each time specifies the font for one character set.
4070CHARSET-NAME should be the name name of a character set, and
4071FONT-NAME should specify an actual font to use for that character set.
4072
4073Each of these fontsets has an alias which is made from the
4074last two font name fields, CHARSET_REGISTRY and CHARSET_ENCODING.
4075You can refer to the fontset by that alias or by its full name.
4076
4077For any character sets that you don't mention, Emacs tries to choose a
4078font by substituting into FONTSET-NAME. For instance, with the
4079following resource,
4080 Emacs*Fontset-0: -*-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-24-*-*-*-*-*-fontset-24
4081the font for ASCII is generated as below:
4082 -*-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-24-*-ISO8859-1
4083Here is the substitution rule:
4084 Change CHARSET_REGISTRY and CHARSET_ENCODING to that of the charset
4085 defined in the variable x-charset-registries. For instance, ASCII has
4086 the entry (ascii . "ISO8859-1") in this variable. Then, reduce
4087 sequences of wild cards -*-...-*- with a single wildcard -*-.
4088 (This is to prevent use of auto-scaled fonts.)
4089
4090The function which processes the fontset resource value to create the
4091fontset is called create-fontset-from-fontset-spec. You can also call
4092that function explicitly to create a fontset.
4093
4094With the X resource Emacs.Font, you can specify a fontset name just
4095like an actual font name. But be careful not to specify a fontset
4096name in a wildcard resource like Emacs*Font--that tries to specify the
4097fontset for other purposes including menus, and they cannot handle
4098fontsets.
4099
4100*** The command M-x set-language-environment sets certain global Emacs
4101defaults for a particular choice of language.
4102
4103Selecting a language environment typically specifies a default input
4104method and which coding systems to recognize automatically when
4105visiting files. However, it does not try to reread files you have
4106already visited; the text in those buffers is not affected. The
4107language environment may also specify a default choice of coding
4108system for new files that you create.
4109
4110It makes no difference which buffer is current when you use
4111set-language-environment, because these defaults apply globally to the
4112whole Emacs session.
4113
4114For example, M-x set-language-environment RET Latin-1 RET
4115chooses the Latin-1 character set. In the .emacs file, you can do this
4116with (set-language-environment "Latin-1").
4117
4118*** The command C-x RET f (set-buffer-file-coding-system)
4119specifies the file coding system for the current buffer. This
4120specifies what sort of character code translation to do when saving
4121the file. As an argument, you must specify the name of one of the
4122coding systems that Emacs supports.
4123
4124*** The command C-x RET c (universal-coding-system-argument)
4125lets you specify a coding system when you read or write a file.
4126This command uses the minibuffer to read a coding system name.
4127After you exit the minibuffer, the specified coding system
4128is used for *the immediately following command*.
4129
4130So if the immediately following command is a command to read or
4131write a file, it uses the specified coding system for that file.
4132
4133If the immediately following command does not use the coding system,
4134then C-x RET c ultimately has no effect.
4135
4136For example, C-x RET c iso-8859-1 RET C-x C-f temp RET
4137visits the file `temp' treating it as ISO Latin-1.
4138
4139*** You can specify the coding system for a file using the -*-
4140construct. Include `coding: CODINGSYSTEM;' inside the -*-...-*-
4141to specify use of coding system CODINGSYSTEM. You can also
4142specify the coding system in a local variable list at the end
4143of the file.
4144
4145*** The command C-x RET t (set-terminal-coding-system) specifies
4146the coding system for terminal output. If you specify a character
4147code for terminal output, all characters output to the terminal are
4148translated into that character code.
4149
4150This feature is useful for certain character-only terminals built in
4151various countries to support the languages of those countries.
4152
4153By default, output to the terminal is not translated at all.
4154
4155*** The command C-x RET k (set-keyboard-coding-system) specifies
4156the coding system for keyboard input.
4157
4158Character code translation of keyboard input is useful for terminals
4159with keys that send non-ASCII graphic characters--for example,
4160some terminals designed for ISO Latin-1 or subsets of it.
4161
4162By default, keyboard input is not translated at all.
4163
4164Character code translation of keyboard input is similar to using an
4165input method, in that both define sequences of keyboard input that
4166translate into single characters. However, input methods are designed
4167to be convenient for interactive use, while the code translations are
4168designed to work with terminals.
4169
4170*** The command C-x RET p (set-buffer-process-coding-system)
4171specifies the coding system for input and output to a subprocess.
4172This command applies to the current buffer; normally, each subprocess
4173has its own buffer, and thus you can use this command to specify
4174translation to and from a particular subprocess by giving the command
4175in the corresponding buffer.
4176
4177By default, process input and output are not translated at all.
4178
4179*** The variable file-name-coding-system specifies the coding system
4180to use for encoding file names before operating on them.
4181It is also used for decoding file names obtained from the system.
4182
4183*** The command C-\ (toggle-input-method) activates or deactivates
4184an input method. If no input method has been selected before, the
4185command prompts for you to specify the language and input method you
4186want to use.
4187
4188C-u C-\ (select-input-method) lets you switch to a different input
4189method. C-h C-\ (or C-h I) describes the current input method.
4190
4191*** Some input methods remap the keyboard to emulate various keyboard
4192layouts commonly used for particular scripts. How to do this
4193remapping properly depends on your actual keyboard layout. To specify
4194which layout your keyboard has, use M-x quail-set-keyboard-layout.
4195
4196*** The command C-h C (describe-coding-system) displays
4197the coding systems currently selected for various purposes, plus
4198related information.
4199
4200*** The command C-h h (view-hello-file) displays a file called
4201HELLO, which has examples of text in many languages, using various
4202scripts.
4203
4204*** The command C-h L (describe-language-support) displays
4205information about the support for a particular language.
4206You specify the language as an argument.
4207
4208*** The mode line now contains a letter or character that identifies
4209the coding system used in the visited file. It normally follows the
4210first dash.
4211
4212A dash indicates the default state of affairs: no code conversion
4213(except CRLF => newline if appropriate). `=' means no conversion
4214whatsoever. The ISO 8859 coding systems are represented by digits
42151 through 9. Other coding systems are represented by letters:
4216
4217 A alternativnyj (Russian)
4218 B big5 (Chinese)
4219 C cn-gb-2312 (Chinese)
4220 C iso-2022-cn (Chinese)
4221 D in-is13194-devanagari (Indian languages)
4222 E euc-japan (Japanese)
4223 I iso-2022-cjk or iso-2022-ss2 (Chinese, Japanese, Korean)
4224 J junet (iso-2022-7) or old-jis (iso-2022-jp-1978-irv) (Japanese)
4225 K euc-korea (Korean)
4226 R koi8 (Russian)
4227 Q tibetan
4228 S shift_jis (Japanese)
4229 T lao
4230 T tis620 (Thai)
4231 V viscii or vscii (Vietnamese)
4232 i iso-2022-lock (Chinese, Japanese, Korean)
4233 k iso-2022-kr (Korean)
4234 v viqr (Vietnamese)
4235 z hz (Chinese)
4236
4237When you are using a character-only terminal (not a window system),
4238two additional characters appear in between the dash and the file
4239coding system. These two characters describe the coding system for
4240keyboard input, and the coding system for terminal output.
4241
4242*** The new variable rmail-file-coding-system specifies the code
4243conversion to use for RMAIL files. The default value is nil.
4244
4245When you read mail with Rmail, each message is decoded automatically
4246into Emacs' internal format. This has nothing to do with
4247rmail-file-coding-system. That variable controls reading and writing
4248Rmail files themselves.
4249
4250*** The new variable sendmail-coding-system specifies the code
4251conversion for outgoing mail. The default value is nil.
4252
4253Actually, there are three different ways of specifying the coding system
4254for sending mail:
4255
4256- If you use C-x RET f in the mail buffer, that takes priority.
4257- Otherwise, if you set sendmail-coding-system non-nil, that specifies it.
4258- Otherwise, the default coding system for new files is used,
4259 if that is non-nil. That comes from your language environment.
4260- Otherwise, Latin-1 is used.
4261
4262*** The command C-h t (help-with-tutorial) accepts a prefix argument
4263to specify the language for the tutorial file. Currently, English,
4264Japanese, Korean and Thai are supported. We welcome additional
4265translations.
4266
4267** An easy new way to visit a file with no code or format conversion
4268of any kind: Use M-x find-file-literally. There is also a command
4269insert-file-literally which inserts a file into the current buffer
4270without any conversion.
4271
4272** C-q's handling of octal character codes is changed.
4273You can now specify any number of octal digits.
4274RET terminates the digits and is discarded;
4275any other non-digit terminates the digits and is then used as input.
4276
4277** There are new commands for looking up Info documentation for
4278functions, variables and file names used in your programs.
4279
4280Type M-x info-lookup-symbol to look up a symbol in the buffer at point.
4281Type M-x info-lookup-file to look up a file in the buffer at point.
4282
4283Precisely which Info files are used to look it up depends on the major
4284mode. For example, in C mode, the GNU libc manual is used.
4285
4286** M-TAB in most programming language modes now runs the command
4287complete-symbol. This command performs completion on the symbol name
4288in the buffer before point.
4289
4290With a numeric argument, it performs completion based on the set of
4291symbols documented in the Info files for the programming language that
4292you are using.
4293
4294With no argument, it does completion based on the current tags tables,
4295just like the old binding of M-TAB (complete-tag).
4296
4297** File locking works with NFS now.
4298
4299The lock file for FILENAME is now a symbolic link named .#FILENAME,
4300in the same directory as FILENAME.
4301
4302This means that collision detection between two different machines now
4303works reasonably well; it also means that no file server or directory
4304can become a bottleneck.
4305
4306The new method does have drawbacks. It means that collision detection
4307does not operate when you edit a file in a directory where you cannot
4308create new files. Collision detection also doesn't operate when the
4309file server does not support symbolic links. But these conditions are
4310rare, and the ability to have collision detection while using NFS is
4311so useful that the change is worth while.
4312
4313When Emacs or a system crashes, this may leave behind lock files which
4314are stale. So you may occasionally get warnings about spurious
4315collisions. When you determine that the collision is spurious, just
4316tell Emacs to go ahead anyway.
4317
4318** If you wish to use Show Paren mode to display matching parentheses,
4319it is no longer sufficient to load paren.el. Instead you must call
4320show-paren-mode.
4321
4322** If you wish to use Delete Selection mode to replace a highlighted
4323selection when you insert new text, it is no longer sufficient to load
4324delsel.el. Instead you must call the function delete-selection-mode.
4325
4326** If you wish to use Partial Completion mode to complete partial words
4327within symbols or filenames, it is no longer sufficient to load
4328complete.el. Instead you must call the function partial-completion-mode.
4329
4330** If you wish to use uniquify to rename buffers for you,
4331it is no longer sufficient to load uniquify.el. You must also
4332set uniquify-buffer-name-style to one of the non-nil legitimate values.
4333
4334** Changes in View mode.
4335
4336*** Several new commands are available in View mode.
4337Do H in view mode for a list of commands.
4338
4339*** There are two new commands for entering View mode:
4340view-file-other-frame and view-buffer-other-frame.
4341
4342*** Exiting View mode does a better job of restoring windows to their
4343previous state.
4344
4345*** New customization variable view-scroll-auto-exit. If non-nil,
4346scrolling past end of buffer makes view mode exit.
4347
4348*** New customization variable view-exits-all-viewing-windows. If
4349non-nil, view-mode will at exit restore all windows viewing buffer,
4350not just the selected window.
4351
4352*** New customization variable view-read-only. If non-nil, visiting a
4353read-only file automatically enters View mode, and toggle-read-only
4354turns View mode on or off.
4355
4356*** New customization variable view-remove-frame-by-deleting controls
4357how to remove a not needed frame at view mode exit. If non-nil,
4358delete the frame, if nil make an icon of it.
4359
4360** C-x v l, the command to print a file's version control log,
4361now positions point at the entry for the file's current branch version.
4362
4363** C-x v =, the command to compare a file with the last checked-in version,
4364has a new feature. If the file is currently not locked, so that it is
4365presumably identical to the last checked-in version, the command now asks
4366which version to compare with.
4367
4368** When using hideshow.el, incremental search can temporarily show hidden
79214ddf 4369blocks if a match is inside the block.
a933dad1
DL
4370
4371The block is hidden again if the search is continued and the next match
4372is outside the block. By customizing the variable
4373isearch-hide-immediately you can choose to hide all the temporarily
4374shown blocks only when exiting from incremental search.
4375
4376By customizing the variable hs-isearch-open you can choose what kind
4377of blocks to temporarily show during isearch: comment blocks, code
4378blocks, all of them or none.
4379
4380** The new command C-x 4 0 (kill-buffer-and-window) kills the
4381current buffer and deletes the selected window. It asks for
4382confirmation first.
4383
4384** C-x C-w, which saves the buffer into a specified file name,
4385now changes the major mode according to that file name.
4386However, the mode will not be changed if
4387(1) a local variables list or the `-*-' line specifies a major mode, or
4388(2) the current major mode is a "special" mode,
4389 not suitable for ordinary files, or
4390(3) the new file name does not particularly specify any mode.
4391
4392This applies to M-x set-visited-file-name as well.
4393
4394However, if you set change-major-mode-with-file-name to nil, then
4395these commands do not change the major mode.
4396
4397** M-x occur changes.
4398
4399*** If the argument to M-x occur contains upper case letters,
4400it performs a case-sensitive search.
4401
4402*** In the *Occur* buffer made by M-x occur,
4403if you type g or M-x revert-buffer, this repeats the search
4404using the same regular expression and the same buffer as before.
4405
4406** In Transient Mark mode, the region in any one buffer is highlighted
4407in just one window at a time. At first, it is highlighted in the
4408window where you set the mark. The buffer's highlighting remains in
4409that window unless you select to another window which shows the same
4410buffer--then the highlighting moves to that window.
4411
4412** The feature to suggest key bindings when you use M-x now operates
4413after the command finishes. The message suggesting key bindings
4414appears temporarily in the echo area. The previous echo area contents
4415come back after a few seconds, in case they contain useful information.
4416
4417** Each frame now independently records the order for recently
4418selected buffers, so that the default for C-x b is now based on the
4419buffers recently selected in the selected frame.
4420
4421** Outline mode changes.
4422
4423*** Outline mode now uses overlays (this is the former noutline.el).
4424
4425*** Incremental searches skip over invisible text in Outline mode.
4426
4427** When a minibuffer window is active but not the selected window, if
4428you try to use the minibuffer, you used to get a nested minibuffer.
4429Now, this not only gives an error, it also cancels the minibuffer that
4430was already active.
4431
4432The motive for this change is so that beginning users do not
4433unknowingly move away from minibuffers, leaving them active, and then
4434get confused by it.
4435
4436If you want to be able to have recursive minibuffers, you must
4437set enable-recursive-minibuffers to non-nil.
4438
4439** Changes in dynamic abbrevs.
4440
4441*** Expanding dynamic abbrevs with M-/ is now smarter about case
4442conversion. If the expansion has mixed case not counting the first
4443character, and the abbreviation matches the beginning of the expansion
4444including case, then the expansion is copied verbatim.
4445
4446The expansion is also copied verbatim if the abbreviation itself has
4447mixed case. And using SPC M-/ to copy an additional word always
4448copies it verbatim except when the previous copied word is all caps.
4449
4450*** The values of `dabbrev-case-replace' and `dabbrev-case-fold-search'
4451are no longer Lisp expressions. They have simply three possible
4452values.
4453
4454`dabbrev-case-replace' has these three values: nil (don't preserve
4455case), t (do), or `case-replace' (do like M-x query-replace).
4456`dabbrev-case-fold-search' has these three values: nil (don't ignore
4457case), t (do), or `case-fold-search' (do like search).
4458
4459** Minibuffer history lists are truncated automatically now to a
4460certain length. The variable history-length specifies how long they
4461can be. The default value is 30.
4462
4463** Changes in Mail mode.
4464
4465*** The key C-x m no longer runs the `mail' command directly.
4466Instead, it runs the command `compose-mail', which invokes the mail
4467composition mechanism you have selected with the variable
4468`mail-user-agent'. The default choice of user agent is
4469`sendmail-user-agent', which gives behavior compatible with the old
4470behavior.
4471
4472C-x 4 m now runs compose-mail-other-window, and C-x 5 m runs
4473compose-mail-other-frame.
4474
4475*** While composing a reply to a mail message, from Rmail, you can use
4476the command C-c C-r to cite just the region from the message you are
4477replying to. This copies the text which is the selected region in the
4478buffer that shows the original message.
4479
4480*** The command C-c C-i inserts a file at the end of the message,
4481with separator lines around the contents.
4482
4483*** The command M-x expand-mail-aliases expands all mail aliases
4484in suitable mail headers. Emacs automatically extracts mail alias
4485definitions from your mail alias file (e.g., ~/.mailrc). You do not
4486need to expand mail aliases yourself before sending mail.
4487
4488*** New features in the mail-complete command.
4489
4490**** The mail-complete command now inserts the user's full name,
4491for local users or if that is known. The variable mail-complete-style
4492controls the style to use, and whether to do this at all.
4493Its values are like those of mail-from-style.
4494
4495**** The variable mail-passwd-command lets you specify a shell command
4496to run to fetch a set of password-entries that add to the ones in
4497/etc/passwd.
4498
4499**** The variable mail-passwd-file now specifies a list of files to read
4500to get the list of user ids. By default, one file is used:
4501/etc/passwd.
4502
4503** You can "quote" a file name to inhibit special significance of
4504special syntax, by adding `/:' to the beginning. Thus, if you have a
4505directory named `/foo:', you can prevent it from being treated as a
4506reference to a remote host named `foo' by writing it as `/:/foo:'.
4507
4508Emacs uses this new construct automatically when necessary, such as
4509when you start it with a working directory whose name might otherwise
4510be taken to be magic.
4511
4512** There is a new command M-x grep-find which uses find to select
4513files to search through, and grep to scan them. The output is
4514available in a Compile mode buffer, as with M-x grep.
4515
4516M-x grep now uses the -e option if the grep program supports that.
4517(-e prevents problems if the search pattern starts with a dash.)
4518
4519** In Dired, the & command now flags for deletion the files whose names
4520suggest they are probably not needed in the long run.
4521
4522In Dired, * is now a prefix key for mark-related commands.
4523
4524new key dired.el binding old key
4525------- ---------------- -------
4526 * c dired-change-marks c
4527 * m dired-mark m
4528 * * dired-mark-executables * (binding deleted)
4529 * / dired-mark-directories / (binding deleted)
4530 * @ dired-mark-symlinks @ (binding deleted)
4531 * u dired-unmark u
4532 * DEL dired-unmark-backward DEL
4533 * ? dired-unmark-all-files M-C-?
4534 * ! dired-unmark-all-marks
4535 * % dired-mark-files-regexp % m
4536 * C-n dired-next-marked-file M-}
4537 * C-p dired-prev-marked-file M-{
4538
4539** Rmail changes.
4540
4541*** When Rmail cannot convert your incoming mail into Babyl format, it
4542saves the new mail in the file RMAILOSE.n, where n is an integer
4543chosen to make a unique name. This way, Rmail will not keep crashing
4544each time you run it.
4545
4546*** In Rmail, the variable rmail-summary-line-count-flag now controls
4547whether to include the line count in the summary. Non-nil means yes.
4548
4549*** In Rmail summary buffers, d and C-d (the commands to delete
4550messages) now take repeat counts as arguments. A negative argument
4551means to move in the opposite direction.
4552
4553*** In Rmail, the t command now takes an optional argument which lets
4554you specify whether to show the message headers in full or pruned.
4555
4556*** In Rmail, the new command w (rmail-output-body-to-file) writes
4557just the body of the current message into a file, without the headers.
4558It takes the file name from the message subject, by default, but you
4559can edit that file name in the minibuffer before it is actually used
4560for output.
4561
4562** Gnus changes.
4563
4564*** nntp.el has been totally rewritten in an asynchronous fashion.
4565
79214ddf
FP
4566*** Article prefetching functionality has been moved up into
4567Gnus.
a933dad1 4568
79214ddf 4569*** Scoring can now be performed with logical operators like
a933dad1
DL
4570`and', `or', `not', and parent redirection.
4571
4572*** Article washing status can be displayed in the
4573article mode line.
4574
4575*** gnus.el has been split into many smaller files.
4576
4577*** Suppression of duplicate articles based on Message-ID.
4578
4579(setq gnus-suppress-duplicates t)
4580
4581*** New variables for specifying what score and adapt files
4582are to be considered home score and adapt files. See
4583`gnus-home-score-file' and `gnus-home-adapt-files'.
4584
4585*** Groups can inherit group parameters from parent topics.
4586
4587*** Article editing has been revamped and is now usable.
4588
4589*** Signatures can be recognized in more intelligent fashions.
4590See `gnus-signature-separator' and `gnus-signature-limit'.
4591
4592*** Summary pick mode has been made to look more nn-like.
4593Line numbers are displayed and the `.' command can be
4594used to pick articles.
4595
4596*** Commands for moving the .newsrc.eld from one server to
4597another have been added.
4598
4599 `M-x gnus-change-server'
4600
4601*** A way to specify that "uninteresting" fields be suppressed when
4602generating lines in buffers.
4603
4604*** Several commands in the group buffer can be undone with
4605`M-C-_'.
4606
4607*** Scoring can be done on words using the new score type `w'.
4608
4609*** Adaptive scoring can be done on a Subject word-by-word basis:
4610
4611 (setq gnus-use-adaptive-scoring '(word))
4612
4613*** Scores can be decayed.
79214ddf 4614
a933dad1
DL
4615 (setq gnus-decay-scores t)
4616
4617*** Scoring can be performed using a regexp on the Date header. The
4618Date is normalized to compact ISO 8601 format first.
4619
4620*** A new command has been added to remove all data on articles from
4621the native server.
4622
4623 `M-x gnus-group-clear-data-on-native-groups'
4624
4625*** A new command for reading collections of documents
4626(nndoc with nnvirtual on top) has been added -- `M-C-d'.
4627
4628*** Process mark sets can be pushed and popped.
4629
4630*** A new mail-to-news backend makes it possible to post
4631even when the NNTP server doesn't allow posting.
4632
4633*** A new backend for reading searches from Web search engines
4634(DejaNews, Alta Vista, InReference) has been added.
4635
4636 Use the `G w' command in the group buffer to create such
4637 a group.
4638
4639*** Groups inside topics can now be sorted using the standard
4640sorting functions, and each topic can be sorted independently.
4641
4642 See the commands under the `T S' submap.
4643
4644*** Subsets of the groups can be sorted independently.
4645
4646 See the commands under the `G P' submap.
4647
4648*** Cached articles can be pulled into the groups.
79214ddf 4649
a933dad1
DL
4650 Use the `Y c' command.
4651
4652*** Score files are now applied in a more reliable order.
4653
4654*** Reports on where mail messages end up can be generated.
4655
4656 `M-x nnmail-split-history'
4657
4658*** More hooks and functions have been added to remove junk
4659from incoming mail before saving the mail.
79214ddf 4660
a933dad1
DL
4661 See `nnmail-prepare-incoming-header-hook'.
4662
4663*** The nnml mail backend now understands compressed article files.
4664
4665*** To enable Gnus to read/post multi-lingual articles, you must execute
4666the following code, for instance, in your .emacs.
4667
4668 (add-hook 'gnus-startup-hook 'gnus-mule-initialize)
4669
4670Then, when you start Gnus, it will decode non-ASCII text automatically
4671and show appropriate characters. (Note: if you are using gnus-mime
4672from the SEMI package, formerly known as TM, you should NOT add this
4673hook to gnus-startup-hook; gnus-mime has its own method of handling
4674this issue.)
4675
4676Since it is impossible to distinguish all coding systems
4677automatically, you may need to specify a choice of coding system for a
4678particular news group. This can be done by:
4679
4680 (gnus-mule-add-group NEWSGROUP 'CODING-SYSTEM)
4681
4682Here NEWSGROUP should be a string which names a newsgroup or a tree
4683of newsgroups. If NEWSGROUP is "XXX.YYY", all news groups under
4684"XXX.YYY" (including "XXX.YYY.ZZZ") will use the specified coding
4685system. CODING-SYSTEM specifies which coding system to use (for both
4686for reading and posting).
4687
4688CODING-SYSTEM can also be a cons cell of the form
4689 (READ-CODING-SYSTEM . POST-CODING-SYSTEM)
4690Then READ-CODING-SYSTEM is used when you read messages from the
4691newsgroups, while POST-CODING-SYSTEM is used when you post messages
4692there.
4693
4694Emacs knows the right coding systems for certain newsgroups by
4695default. Here are some of these default settings:
4696
4697 (gnus-mule-add-group "fj" 'iso-2022-7)
4698 (gnus-mule-add-group "alt.chinese.text" 'hz-gb-2312)
4699 (gnus-mule-add-group "alt.hk" 'hz-gb-2312)
4700 (gnus-mule-add-group "alt.chinese.text.big5" 'cn-big5)
4701 (gnus-mule-add-group "soc.culture.vietnamese" '(nil . viqr))
4702
4703When you reply by mail to an article, these settings are ignored;
4704the mail is encoded according to sendmail-coding-system, as usual.
4705
4706** CC mode changes.
4707
4708*** If you edit primarily one style of C (or C++, Objective-C, Java)
4709code, you may want to make the CC Mode style variables have global
4710values so that you can set them directly in your .emacs file. To do
4711this, set c-style-variables-are-local-p to nil in your .emacs file.
4712Note that this only takes effect if you do it *before* cc-mode.el is
4713loaded.
4714
4715If you typically edit more than one style of C (or C++, Objective-C,
79214ddf 4716Java) code in a single Emacs session, you may want to make the CC Mode
a933dad1 4717style variables have buffer local values. By default, all buffers
79214ddf
FP
4718share the same style variable settings; to make them buffer local, set
4719c-style-variables-are-local-p to t in your .emacs file. Note that you
a933dad1
DL
4720must do this *before* CC Mode is loaded.
4721
4722*** The new variable c-indentation-style holds the C style name
4723of the current buffer.
4724
4725*** The variable c-block-comments-indent-p has been deleted, because
4726it is no longer necessary. C mode now handles all the supported styles
4727of block comments, with no need to say which one you will use.
4728
4729*** There is a new indentation style "python", which specifies the C
4730style that the Python developers like.
4731
4732*** There is a new c-cleanup-list option: brace-elseif-brace.
4733This says to put ...} else if (...) {... on one line,
4734just as brace-else-brace says to put ...} else {... on one line.
4735
4736** VC Changes [new]
4737
4738** In vc-retrieve-snapshot (C-x v r), if you don't specify a snapshot
4739name, it retrieves the *latest* versions of all files in the current
4740directory and its subdirectories (aside from files already locked).
4741
4742This feature is useful if your RCS directory is a link to a common
4743master directory, and you want to pick up changes made by other
4744developers.
4745
4746You can do the same thing for an individual file by typing C-u C-x C-q
4747RET in a buffer visiting that file.
4748
4749*** VC can now handle files under CVS that are being "watched" by
4750other developers. Such files are made read-only by CVS. To get a
4751writable copy, type C-x C-q in a buffer visiting such a file. VC then
4752calls "cvs edit", which notifies the other developers of it.
4753
4754*** vc-version-diff (C-u C-x v =) now suggests reasonable defaults for
4755version numbers, based on the current state of the file.
4756
4757** Calendar changes.
4758
4759A new function, list-holidays, allows you list holidays or subclasses
4760of holidays for ranges of years. Related menu items allow you do this
4761for the year of the selected date, or the following/previous years.
4762
4763** ps-print changes
4764
79214ddf 4765There are some new user variables for customizing the page layout.
a933dad1
DL
4766
4767*** Paper size, paper orientation, columns
4768
4769The variable `ps-paper-type' determines the size of paper ps-print
4770formats for; it should contain one of the symbols:
4771`a4' `a3' `letter' `legal' `letter-small' `tabloid'
4772`ledger' `statement' `executive' `a4small' `b4' `b5'
4773It defaults to `letter'.
4774If you need other sizes, see the variable `ps-page-dimensions-database'.
4775
4776The variable `ps-landscape-mode' determines the orientation
79214ddf 4777of the printing on the page. nil, the default, means "portrait" mode,
a933dad1
DL
4778non-nil means "landscape" mode.
4779
4780The variable `ps-number-of-columns' must be a positive integer.
4781It determines the number of columns both in landscape and portrait mode.
79214ddf 4782It defaults to 1.
a933dad1
DL
4783
4784*** Horizontal layout
4785
4786The horizontal layout is determined by the variables
4787`ps-left-margin', `ps-inter-column', and `ps-right-margin'.
4788All are measured in points.
4789
4790*** Vertical layout
4791
4792The vertical layout is determined by the variables
4793`ps-bottom-margin', `ps-top-margin', and `ps-header-offset'.
4794All are measured in points.
4795
4796*** Headers
4797
4798If the variable `ps-print-header' is nil, no header is printed. Then
4799`ps-header-offset' is not relevant and `ps-top-margin' represents the
4800margin above the text.
4801
79214ddf 4802If the variable `ps-print-header-frame' is non-nil, a gaudy
a933dad1
DL
4803framing box is printed around the header.
4804
4805The contents of the header are determined by `ps-header-lines',
4806`ps-show-n-of-n', `ps-left-header' and `ps-right-header'.
4807
79214ddf
FP
4808The height of the header is determined by `ps-header-line-pad',
4809`ps-header-font-family', `ps-header-title-font-size' and
a933dad1
DL
4810`ps-header-font-size'.
4811
4812*** Font managing
4813
4814The variable `ps-font-family' determines which font family is to be
4815used for ordinary text. Its value must be a key symbol in the alist
4816`ps-font-info-database'. You can add other font families by adding
4817elements to this alist.
4818
79214ddf 4819The variable `ps-font-size' determines the size of the font
a933dad1
DL
4820for ordinary text. It defaults to 8.5 points.
4821
4822** hideshow changes.
4823
4824*** now supports hiding of blocks of single line comments (like // for
79214ddf 4825C++, ; for lisp).
a933dad1
DL
4826
4827*** Support for java-mode added.
4828
4829*** When doing `hs-hide-all' it is now possible to also hide the comments
4830in the file if `hs-hide-comments-when-hiding-all' is set.
4831
4832*** The new function `hs-hide-initial-comment' hides the the comments at
4833the beginning of the files. Finally those huge RCS logs don't stay in your
4834way! This is run by default when entering the `hs-minor-mode'.
4835
4836*** Now uses overlays instead of `selective-display', so is more
4837robust and a lot faster.
4838
79214ddf 4839*** A block beginning can span multiple lines.
a933dad1
DL
4840
4841*** The new variable `hs-show-hidden-short-form' if t, directs hideshow
4842to show only the beginning of a block when it is hidden. See the
4843documentation for more details.
4844
4845** Changes in Enriched mode.
4846
4847*** When you visit a file in enriched-mode, Emacs will make sure it is
4848filled to the current fill-column. This behavior is now independent
4849of the size of the window. When you save the file, the fill-column in
4850use is stored as well, so that the whole buffer need not be refilled
4851the next time unless the fill-column is different.
4852
4853*** use-hard-newlines is now a minor mode. When it is enabled, Emacs
4854distinguishes between hard and soft newlines, and treats hard newlines
4855as paragraph boundaries. Otherwise all newlines inserted are marked
4856as soft, and paragraph boundaries are determined solely from the text.
4857
4858** Font Lock mode
4859
4860*** Custom support
4861
4862The variables font-lock-face-attributes, font-lock-display-type and
4863font-lock-background-mode are now obsolete; the recommended way to specify the
4864faces to use for Font Lock mode is with M-x customize-group on the new custom
4865group font-lock-highlighting-faces. If you set font-lock-face-attributes in
4866your ~/.emacs file, Font Lock mode will respect its value. However, you should
4867consider converting from setting that variable to using M-x customize.
4868
4869You can still use X resources to specify Font Lock face appearances.
4870
4871*** Maximum decoration
4872
4873Fontification now uses the maximum level of decoration supported by
4874default. Previously, fontification used a mode-specific default level
4875of decoration, which is typically the minimum level of decoration
4876supported. You can set font-lock-maximum-decoration to nil
4877to get the old behavior.
4878
4879*** New support
4880
4881Support is now provided for Java, Objective-C, AWK and SIMULA modes.
4882
4883Note that Font Lock mode can be turned on without knowing exactly what modes
4884support Font Lock mode, via the command global-font-lock-mode.
4885
4886*** Configurable support
4887
4888Support for C, C++, Objective-C and Java can be more easily configured for
4889additional types and classes via the new variables c-font-lock-extra-types,
4890c++-font-lock-extra-types, objc-font-lock-extra-types and, you guessed it,
4891java-font-lock-extra-types. These value of each of these variables should be a
4892list of regexps matching the extra type names. For example, the default value
4893of c-font-lock-extra-types is ("\\sw+_t") which means fontification follows the
4894convention that C type names end in _t. This results in slower fontification.
4895
4896Of course, you can change the variables that specify fontification in whatever
4897way you wish, typically by adding regexps. However, these new variables make
4898it easier to make specific and common changes for the fontification of types.
4899
4900*** Adding highlighting patterns to existing support
4901
4902You can use the new function font-lock-add-keywords to add your own
4903highlighting patterns, such as for project-local or user-specific constructs,
4904for any mode.
4905
4906For example, to highlight `FIXME:' words in C comments, put:
4907
4908 (font-lock-add-keywords 'c-mode '(("\\<FIXME:" 0 font-lock-warning-face t)))
4909
4910in your ~/.emacs.
4911
4912*** New faces
4913
4914Font Lock now defines two new faces, font-lock-builtin-face and
4915font-lock-warning-face. These are intended to highlight builtin keywords,
4916distinct from a language's normal keywords, and objects that should be brought
4917to user attention, respectively. Various modes now use these new faces.
4918
4919*** Changes to fast-lock support mode
4920
4921The fast-lock package, one of the two Font Lock support modes, can now process
4922cache files silently. You can use the new variable fast-lock-verbose, in the
4923same way as font-lock-verbose, to control this feature.
4924
4925*** Changes to lazy-lock support mode
4926
4927The lazy-lock package, one of the two Font Lock support modes, can now fontify
4928according to the true syntactic context relative to other lines. You can use
4929the new variable lazy-lock-defer-contextually to control this feature. If
4930non-nil, changes to the buffer will cause subsequent lines in the buffer to be
4931refontified after lazy-lock-defer-time seconds of idle time. If nil, then only
4932the modified lines will be refontified; this is the same as the previous Lazy
4933Lock mode behaviour and the behaviour of Font Lock mode.
4934
4935This feature is useful in modes where strings or comments can span lines.
4936For example, if a string or comment terminating character is deleted, then if
4937this feature is enabled subsequent lines in the buffer will be correctly
4938refontified to reflect their new syntactic context. Previously, only the line
4939containing the deleted character would be refontified and you would have to use
4940the command M-g M-g (font-lock-fontify-block) to refontify some lines.
4941
4942As a consequence of this new feature, two other variables have changed:
4943
4944Variable `lazy-lock-defer-driven' is renamed `lazy-lock-defer-on-scrolling'.
4945Variable `lazy-lock-defer-time' can now only be a time, i.e., a number.
4946Buffer modes for which on-the-fly deferral applies can be specified via the
4947new variable `lazy-lock-defer-on-the-fly'.
4948
4949If you set these variables in your ~/.emacs, then you may have to change those
4950settings.
4951
4952** Ada mode changes.
4953
4954*** There is now better support for using find-file.el with Ada mode.
4955If you switch between spec and body, the cursor stays in the same
4956procedure (modulo overloading). If a spec has no body file yet, but
4957you try to switch to its body file, Ada mode now generates procedure
4958stubs.
4959
4960*** There are two new commands:
4961 - `ada-make-local' : invokes gnatmake on the current buffer
4962 - `ada-check-syntax' : check syntax of current buffer.
4963
4964The user options `ada-compiler-make', `ada-make-options',
4965`ada-language-version', `ada-compiler-syntax-check', and
79214ddf 4966`ada-compile-options' are used within these commands.
a933dad1
DL
4967
4968*** Ada mode can now work with Outline minor mode. The outline level
4969is calculated from the indenting, not from syntactic constructs.
4970Outlining does not work if your code is not correctly indented.
4971
4972*** The new function `ada-gnat-style' converts the buffer to the style of
4973formatting used in GNAT. It places two blanks after a comment start,
4974places one blank between a word end and an opening '(', and puts one
4975space between a comma and the beginning of a word.
4976
4977** Scheme mode changes.
4978
4979*** Scheme mode indentation now uses many of the facilities of Lisp
4980mode; therefore, the variables to customize it are the variables used
4981for Lisp mode which have names starting with `lisp-'. The variables
4982with names starting with `scheme-' which used to do this no longer
4983have any effect.
4984
4985If you want to use different indentation for Scheme and Lisp, this is
4986still possible, but now you must do it by adding a hook to
4987scheme-mode-hook, which could work by setting the `lisp-' indentation
4988variables as buffer-local variables.
4989
4990*** DSSSL mode is a variant of Scheme mode, for editing DSSSL scripts.
4991Use M-x dsssl-mode.
4992
4993** The emacsclient program now accepts an option --no-wait which tells
4994it to return immediately without waiting for you to "finish" the
4995buffer in Emacs.
4996
4997** M-x eldoc-mode enables a minor mode in which the echo area
4998constantly shows the parameter list for function being called at point
4999(in Emacs Lisp and Lisp Interaction modes only).
5000
5001** C-x n d now runs the new command narrow-to-defun,
5002which narrows the accessible parts of the buffer to just
5003the current defun.
5004
5005** Emacs now handles the `--' argument in the standard way; all
5006following arguments are treated as ordinary file names.
5007
5008** On MSDOS and Windows, the bookmark file is now called _emacs.bmk,
5009and the saved desktop file is now called _emacs.desktop (truncated if
5010necessary).
5011
5012** When you kill a buffer that visits a file,
5013if there are any registers that save positions in the file,
5014these register values no longer become completely useless.
5015If you try to go to such a register with C-x j, then you are
5016asked whether to visit the file again. If you say yes,
5017it visits the file and then goes to the same position.
5018
5019** When you visit a file that changes frequently outside Emacs--for
5020example, a log of output from a process that continues to run--it may
5021be useful for Emacs to revert the file without querying you whenever
5022you visit the file afresh with C-x C-f.
5023
5024You can request this behavior for certain files by setting the
5025variable revert-without-query to a list of regular expressions. If a
5026file's name matches any of these regular expressions, find-file and
5027revert-buffer revert the buffer without asking for permission--but
5028only if you have not edited the buffer text yourself.
5029
5030** set-default-font has been renamed to set-frame-font
5031since it applies only to the current frame.
5032
5033** In TeX mode, you can use the variable tex-main-file to specify the
5034file for tex-file to run TeX on. (By default, tex-main-file is nil,
5035and tex-file runs TeX on the current visited file.)
5036
5037This is useful when you are editing a document that consists of
5038multiple files. In each of the included files, you can set up a local
5039variable list which specifies the top-level file of your document for
5040tex-main-file. Then tex-file will run TeX on the whole document
5041instead of just the file you are editing.
5042
5043** RefTeX mode
5044
5045RefTeX mode is a new minor mode with special support for \label, \ref
5046and \cite macros in LaTeX documents. RefTeX distinguishes labels of
5047different environments (equation, figure, ...) and has full support for
5048multifile documents. To use it, select a buffer with a LaTeX document and
5049turn the mode on with M-x reftex-mode. Here are the main user commands:
5050
79214ddf 5051C-c ( reftex-label
a933dad1
DL
5052 Creates a label semi-automatically. RefTeX is context sensitive and
5053 knows which kind of label is needed.
5054
5055C-c ) reftex-reference
5056 Offers in a menu all labels in the document, along with context of the
5057 label definition. The selected label is referenced as \ref{LABEL}.
5058
5059C-c [ reftex-citation
5060 Prompts for a regular expression and displays a list of matching BibTeX
5061 database entries. The selected entry is cited with a \cite{KEY} macro.
5062
5063C-c & reftex-view-crossref
5064 Views the cross reference of a \ref or \cite command near point.
5065
5066C-c = reftex-toc
5067 Shows a table of contents of the (multifile) document. From there you
5068 can quickly jump to every section.
79214ddf 5069
a933dad1
DL
5070Under X, RefTeX installs a "Ref" menu in the menu bar, with additional
5071commands. Press `?' to get help when a prompt mentions this feature.
5072Full documentation and customization examples are in the file
5073reftex.el. You can use the finder to view the file documentation:
5074C-h p --> tex --> reftex.el
5075
5076** Changes in BibTeX mode.
5077
5078*** Info documentation is now available.
5079
5080*** Don't allow parentheses in string constants anymore. This confused
5081both the BibTeX program and Emacs BibTeX mode.
5082
5083*** Renamed variable bibtex-mode-user-optional-fields to
5084bibtex-user-optional-fields.
5085
5086*** Removed variable bibtex-include-OPTannote
5087(use bibtex-user-optional-fields instead).
5088
5089*** New interactive functions to copy and kill fields and complete
5090entries to the BibTeX kill ring, from where they can be yanked back by
5091appropriate functions.
5092
5093*** New interactive functions for repositioning and marking of
5094entries. They are bound by default to M-C-l and M-C-h.
5095
5096*** New hook bibtex-clean-entry-hook. It is called after entry has
5097been cleaned.
5098
5099*** New variable bibtex-field-delimiters, which replaces variables
5100bibtex-field-{left|right}-delimiter.
5101
5102*** New variable bibtex-entry-delimiters to determine how entries
5103shall be delimited.
5104
5105*** Allow preinitialization of fields. See documentation of
5106bibtex-user-optional-fields, bibtex-entry-field-alist, and
5107bibtex-include-OPTkey for details.
5108
5109*** Book and InBook entries require either an author or an editor
5110field. This is now supported by bibtex.el. Alternative fields are
5111prefixed with `ALT'.
5112
5113*** New variable bibtex-entry-format, which replaces variable
5114bibtex-clean-entry-zap-empty-opts and allows specification of many
5115formatting options performed on cleaning an entry (see variable
5116documentation).
5117
5118*** Even more control on how automatic keys are generated. See
5119documentation of bibtex-generate-autokey for details. Transcriptions
5120for foreign languages other than German are now handled, too.
5121
5122*** New boolean user option bibtex-comma-after-last-field to decide if
5123comma should be inserted at end of last field.
5124
5125*** New boolean user option bibtex-align-at-equal-sign to determine if
5126alignment should be made at left side of field contents or at equal
5127signs. New user options to control entry layout (e.g. indentation).
5128
5129*** New function bibtex-fill-entry to realign entries.
5130
5131*** New function bibtex-reformat to reformat region or buffer.
5132
5133*** New function bibtex-convert-alien to convert a BibTeX database
5134from alien sources.
5135
5136*** New function bibtex-complete-key (similar to bibtex-complete-string)
5137to complete prefix to a key defined in buffer. Mainly useful in
5138crossref entries.
5139
5140*** New function bibtex-count-entries to count entries in buffer or
5141region.
5142
5143*** Added support for imenu.
5144
5145*** The function `bibtex-validate' now checks current region instead
5146of buffer if mark is active. Now it shows all errors of buffer in a
5147`compilation mode' buffer. You can use the normal commands (e.g.
5148`next-error') for compilation modes to jump to errors.
5149
5150*** New variable `bibtex-string-file-path' to determine where the files
5151from `bibtex-string-files' are searched.
5152
5153** Iso Accents mode now supports Latin-3 as an alternative.
5154
5155** The function using-unix-filesystems has been replaced by the
5156functions add-untranslated-filesystem and remove-untranslated-filesystem.
5157Each of these functions takes the name of a drive letter or directory
5158as an argument.
5159
5160When a filesystem is added as untranslated, all files on it are read
5161and written in binary mode (no cr/lf translation is performed).
5162
5163** browse-url changes
5164
5165*** New methods for: Grail (browse-url-generic), MMM (browse-url-mmm),
5166Lynx in a separate xterm (browse-url-lynx-xterm) or in an Emacs window
5167(browse-url-lynx-emacs), remote W3 (browse-url-w3-gnudoit), generic
5168non-remote-controlled browsers (browse-url-generic) and associated
5169customization variables.
5170
5171*** New commands `browse-url-of-region' and `browse-url'.
5172
5173*** URLs marked up with <URL:...> (RFC1738) work if broken across
5174lines. Browsing methods can be associated with URL regexps
5175(e.g. mailto: URLs) via `browse-url-browser-function'.
5176
5177** Changes in Ediff
5178
5179*** Clicking Mouse-2 on a brief command description in Ediff control panel
5180pops up the Info file for this command.
5181
5182*** There is now a variable, ediff-autostore-merges, which controls whether
5183the result of a merge is saved in a file. By default, this is done only when
5184merge is done from a session group (eg, when merging files in two different
5185directories).
5186
5187*** Since Emacs 19.31 (this hasn't been announced before), Ediff can compare
5188and merge groups of files residing in different directories, or revisions of
5189files in the same directory.
5190
5191*** Since Emacs 19.31, Ediff can apply multi-file patches interactively.
5192The patches must be in the context format or GNU unified format. (The bug
5193related to the GNU format has now been fixed.)
5194
5195** Changes in Viper
5196
5197*** The startup file is now .viper instead of .vip
79214ddf 5198*** All variable/function names have been changed to start with viper-
a933dad1
DL
5199 instead of vip-.
5200*** C-\ now simulates the meta-key in all Viper states.
79214ddf 5201*** C-z in Insert state now escapes to Vi for the duration of the next
a933dad1
DL
5202Viper command. In Vi and Insert states, C-z behaves as before.
5203*** C-c \ escapes to Vi for one command if Viper is in Insert or Emacs states.
5204*** _ is no longer the meta-key in Vi state.
5205*** The variable viper-insert-state-cursor-color can be used to change cursor
5206color when Viper is in insert state.
5207*** If search lands the cursor near the top or the bottom of the window,
5208Viper pulls the window up or down to expose more context. The variable
5209viper-adjust-window-after-search controls this behavior.
5210
5211** Etags changes.
5212
5213*** In C, C++, Objective C and Java, Etags tags global variables by
5214default. The resulting tags files are inflated by 30% on average.
5215Use --no-globals to turn this feature off. Etags can also tag
5216variables which are members of structure-like constructs, but it does
5217not by default. Use --members to turn this feature on.
5218
5219*** C++ member functions are now recognized as tags.
5220
5221*** Java is tagged like C++. In addition, "extends" and "implements"
5222constructs are tagged. Files are recognised by the extension .java.
5223
5224*** Etags can now handle programs written in Postscript. Files are
5225recognised by the extensions .ps and .pdb (Postscript with C syntax).
5226In Postscript, tags are lines that start with a slash.
5227
5228*** Etags now handles Objective C and Objective C++ code. The usual C and
5229C++ tags are recognized in these languages; in addition, etags
5230recognizes special Objective C syntax for classes, class categories,
5231methods and protocols.
5232
5233*** Etags also handles Cobol. Files are recognised by the extension
5234.cobol. The tagged lines are those containing a word that begins in
5235column 8 and ends in a full stop, i.e. anything that could be a
5236paragraph name.
5237
5238*** Regexps in Etags now support intervals, as in ed or grep. The syntax of
5239an interval is \{M,N\}, and it means to match the preceding expression
5240at least M times and as many as N times.
5241
5242** The format for specifying a custom format for time-stamp to insert
5243in files has changed slightly.
5244
5245With the new enhancements to the functionality of format-time-string,
5246time-stamp-format will change to be eventually compatible with it.
5247This conversion is being done in two steps to maintain compatibility
5248with old time-stamp-format values.
5249
5250In the new scheme, alternate case is signified by the number-sign
5251(`#') modifier, rather than changing the case of the format character.
5252This feature is as yet incompletely implemented for compatibility
5253reasons.
5254
5255In the old time-stamp-format, all numeric fields defaulted to their
5256natural width. (With format-time-string, each format has a
5257fixed-width default.) In this version, you can specify the colon
5258(`:') modifier to a numeric conversion to mean "give me the historical
5259time-stamp-format width default." Do not use colon if you are
5260specifying an explicit width, as in "%02d".
5261
5262Numbers are no longer truncated to the requested width, except in the
5263case of "%02y", which continues to give a two-digit year. Digit
5264truncation probably wasn't being used for anything else anyway.
5265
5266The new formats will work with old versions of Emacs. New formats are
5267being recommended now to allow time-stamp-format to change in the
5268future to be compatible with format-time-string. The new forms being
5269recommended now will continue to work then.
5270
5271See the documentation string for the variable time-stamp-format for
5272details.
5273
5274** There are some additional major modes:
5275
5276dcl-mode, for editing VMS DCL files.
5277m4-mode, for editing files of m4 input.
5278meta-mode, for editing MetaFont and MetaPost source files.
5279
5280** In Shell mode, the command shell-copy-environment-variable lets you
5281copy the value of a specified environment variable from the subshell
5282into Emacs.
5283
5284** New Lisp packages include:
5285
5286*** battery.el displays battery status for laptops.
5287
5288*** M-x bruce (named after Lenny Bruce) is a program that might
5289be used for adding some indecent words to your email.
5290
5291*** M-x crisp-mode enables an emulation for the CRiSP editor.
5292
5293*** M-x dirtrack arranges for better tracking of directory changes
5294in shell buffers.
5295
5296*** The new library elint.el provides for linting of Emacs Lisp code.
5297See the documentation for `elint-initialize', `elint-current-buffer'
5298and `elint-defun'.
5299
5300*** M-x expand-add-abbrevs defines a special kind of abbrev which is
5301meant for programming constructs. These abbrevs expand like ordinary
5302ones, when you type SPC, but only at the end of a line and not within
5303strings or comments.
5304
5305These abbrevs can act as templates: you can define places within an
5306abbrev for insertion of additional text. Once you expand the abbrev,
5307you can then use C-x a p and C-x a n to move back and forth to these
5308insertion points. Thus you can conveniently insert additional text
5309at these points.
5310
5311*** filecache.el remembers the location of files so that you
5312can visit them by short forms of their names.
5313
5314*** find-func.el lets you find the definition of the user-loaded
5315Emacs Lisp function at point.
5316
5317*** M-x handwrite converts text to a "handwritten" picture.
5318
5319*** M-x iswitchb-buffer is a command for switching to a buffer, much like
5320switch-buffer, but it reads the argument in a more helpful way.
5321
5322*** M-x landmark implements a neural network for landmark learning.
5323
5324*** M-x locate provides a convenient interface to the `locate' program.
5325
5326*** M4 mode is a new mode for editing files of m4 input.
5327
5328*** mantemp.el creates C++ manual template instantiations
5329from the GCC error messages which indicate which instantiations are needed.
5330
5331*** mouse-copy.el provides a one-click copy and move feature.
5332You can drag a region with M-mouse-1, and it is automatically
5333inserted at point. M-Shift-mouse-1 deletes the text from its
5334original place after inserting the copy.
5335
5336*** mouse-drag.el lets you do scrolling by dragging Mouse-2
5337on the buffer.
5338
5339You click the mouse and move; that distance either translates into the
5340velocity to scroll (with mouse-drag-throw) or the distance to scroll
5341(with mouse-drag-drag). Horizontal scrolling is enabled when needed.
5342
5343Enable mouse-drag with:
5344 (global-set-key [down-mouse-2] 'mouse-drag-throw)
5345-or-
5346 (global-set-key [down-mouse-2] 'mouse-drag-drag)
5347
5348*** mspools.el is useful for determining which mail folders have
5349mail waiting to be read in them. It works with procmail.
5350
5351*** Octave mode is a major mode for editing files of input for Octave.
5352It comes with a facility for communicating with an Octave subprocess.
5353
5354*** ogonek
5355
5356The ogonek package provides functions for changing the coding of
5357Polish diacritic characters in buffers. Codings known from various
5358platforms are supported such as ISO8859-2, Mazovia, IBM Latin2, and
5359TeX. For example, you can change the coding from Mazovia to
5360ISO8859-2. Another example is a change of coding from ISO8859-2 to
5361prefix notation (in which `/a' stands for the aogonek character, for
5362instance) and vice versa.
5363
5364To use this package load it using
5365 M-x load-library [enter] ogonek
5366Then, you may get an explanation by calling one of
79214ddf 5367 M-x ogonek-jak -- in Polish
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DL
5368 M-x ogonek-how -- in English
5369The info specifies the commands and variables provided as well as the
5370ways of customization in `.emacs'.
5371
5372*** Interface to ph.
5373
5374Emacs provides a client interface to CCSO Nameservers (ph/qi)
5375
5376The CCSO nameserver is used in many universities to provide directory
5377services about people. ph.el provides a convenient Emacs interface to
5378these servers.
5379
5380*** uce.el is useful for replying to unsolicited commercial email.
5381
5382*** vcursor.el implements a "virtual cursor" feature.
5383You can move the virtual cursor with special commands
5384while the real cursor does not move.
5385
5386*** webjump.el is a "hot list" package which you can set up
5387for visiting your favorite web sites.
5388
5389*** M-x winner-mode is a minor mode which saves window configurations,
5390so you can move back to other configurations that you have recently used.
5391
5392** movemail change
5393
5394Movemail no longer needs to be installed setuid root in order for POP
5395mail retrieval to function properly. This is because it no longer
5396supports the RPOP (reserved-port POP) protocol; instead, it uses the
5397user's POP password to authenticate to the mail server.
5398
5399This change was made earlier, but not reported in NEWS before.
5400\f
5401* Emacs 20.1 changes for MS-DOS and MS-Windows.
5402
5403** Changes in handling MS-DOS/MS-Windows text files.
5404
5405Emacs handles three different conventions for representing
5406end-of-line: CRLF for MSDOS, LF for Unix and GNU, and CR (used on the
5407Macintosh). Emacs determines which convention is used in a specific
5408file based on the contents of that file (except for certain special
5409file names), and when it saves the file, it uses the same convention.
5410
5411To save the file and change the end-of-line convention, you can use
5412C-x RET f (set-buffer-file-coding-system) to specify a different
5413coding system for the buffer. Then, when you save the file, the newly
5414specified coding system will take effect. For example, to save with
5415LF, specify undecided-unix (or some other ...-unix coding system); to
5416save with CRLF, specify undecided-dos.
5417\f
5418* Lisp Changes in Emacs 20.1
5419
5420** Byte-compiled files made with Emacs 20 will, in general, work in
5421Emacs 19 as well, as long as the source code runs in Emacs 19. And
5422vice versa: byte-compiled files made with Emacs 19 should also run in
5423Emacs 20, as long as the program itself works in Emacs 20.
5424
5425** Windows-specific functions and variables have been renamed
5426to start with w32- instead of win32-.
5427
5428In hacker language, calling something a "win" is a form of praise. We
5429don't want to praise a non-free Microsoft system, so we don't call it
5430"win".
5431
5432** Basic Lisp changes
5433
5434*** A symbol whose name starts with a colon now automatically
5435evaluates to itself. Therefore such a symbol can be used as a constant.
5436
5437*** The defined purpose of `defconst' has been changed. It should now
5438be used only for values that should not be changed whether by a program
5439or by the user.
5440
5441The actual behavior of defconst has not been changed.
5442
5443*** There are new macros `when' and `unless'
5444
5445(when CONDITION BODY...) is short for (if CONDITION (progn BODY...))
5446(unless CONDITION BODY...) is short for (if CONDITION nil BODY...)
5447
5448*** Emacs now defines functions caar, cadr, cdar and cddr with their
5449usual Lisp meanings. For example, caar returns the car of the car of
5450its argument.
5451
5452*** equal, when comparing strings, now ignores their text properties.
5453
5454*** The new function `functionp' tests whether an object is a function.
5455
5456*** arrayp now returns t for char-tables and bool-vectors.
5457
5458*** Certain primitives which use characters (as integers) now get an
5459error if the integer is not a valid character code. These primitives
5460include insert-char, char-to-string, and the %c construct in the
5461`format' function.
5462
5463*** The `require' function now insists on adding a suffix, either .el
5464or .elc, to the file name. Thus, (require 'foo) will not use a file
5465whose name is just foo. It insists on foo.el or foo.elc.
5466
5467*** The `autoload' function, when the file name does not contain
5468either a directory name or the suffix .el or .elc, insists on
5469adding one of these suffixes.
5470
5471*** string-to-number now takes an optional second argument BASE
5472which specifies the base to use when converting an integer.
79214ddf 5473If BASE is omitted, base 10 is used.
a933dad1
DL
5474
5475We have not implemented other radices for floating point numbers,
5476because that would be much more work and does not seem useful.
5477
5478*** substring now handles vectors as well as strings.
5479
5480*** The Common Lisp function eql is no longer defined normally.
5481You must load the `cl' library to define it.
5482
5483*** The new macro `with-current-buffer' lets you evaluate an expression
5484conveniently with a different current buffer. It looks like this:
5485
5486 (with-current-buffer BUFFER BODY-FORMS...)
5487
5488BUFFER is the expression that says which buffer to use.
5489BODY-FORMS say what to do in that buffer.
5490
5491*** The new primitive `save-current-buffer' saves and restores the
5492choice of current buffer, like `save-excursion', but without saving or
5493restoring the value of point or the mark. `with-current-buffer'
5494works using `save-current-buffer'.
5495
5496*** The new macro `with-temp-file' lets you do some work in a new buffer and
5497write the output to a specified file. Like `progn', it returns the value
5498of the last form.
5499
5500*** The new macro `with-temp-buffer' lets you do some work in a new buffer,
5501which is discarded after use. Like `progn', it returns the value of the
5502last form. If you wish to return the buffer contents, use (buffer-string)
5503as the last form.
5504
5505*** The new function split-string takes a string, splits it at certain
5506characters, and returns a list of the substrings in between the
5507matches.
5508
5509For example, (split-string "foo bar lose" " +") returns ("foo" "bar" "lose").
5510
5511*** The new macro with-output-to-string executes some Lisp expressions
5512with standard-output set up so that all output feeds into a string.
5513Then it returns that string.
5514
5515For example, if the current buffer name is `foo',
5516
5517(with-output-to-string
5518 (princ "The buffer is ")
5519 (princ (buffer-name)))
5520
5521returns "The buffer is foo".
5522
5523** Non-ASCII characters are now supported, if enable-multibyte-characters
5524is non-nil.
5525
5526These characters have character codes above 256. When inserted in the
5527buffer or stored in a string, they are represented as multibyte
5528characters that occupy several buffer positions each.
5529
5530*** When enable-multibyte-characters is non-nil, a single character in
5531a buffer or string can be two or more bytes (as many as four).
5532
5533Buffers and strings are still made up of unibyte elements;
5534character positions and string indices are always measured in bytes.
5535Therefore, moving forward one character can increase the buffer
5536position by 2, 3 or 4. The function forward-char moves by whole
5537characters, and therefore is no longer equivalent to
5538 (lambda (n) (goto-char (+ (point) n))).
5539
5540ASCII characters (codes 0 through 127) are still single bytes, always.
5541Sequences of byte values 128 through 255 are used to represent
5542non-ASCII characters. These sequences are called "multibyte
5543characters".
5544
5545The first byte of a multibyte character is always in the range 128
5546through 159 (octal 0200 through 0237). These values are called
5547"leading codes". The second and subsequent bytes are always in the
5548range 160 through 255 (octal 0240 through 0377). The first byte, the
5549leading code, determines how many bytes long the sequence is.
5550
5551*** The function forward-char moves over characters, and therefore
5552(forward-char 1) may increase point by more than 1 if it moves over a
5553multibyte character. Likewise, delete-char always deletes a
5554character, which may be more than one buffer position.
5555
5556This means that some Lisp programs, which assume that a character is
5557always one buffer position, need to be changed.
5558
5559However, all ASCII characters are always one buffer position.
79214ddf 5560
a933dad1
DL
5561*** The regexp [\200-\377] no longer matches all non-ASCII characters,
5562because when enable-multibyte-characters is non-nil, these characters
5563have codes that are not in the range octal 200 to octal 377. However,
5564the regexp [^\000-\177] does match all non-ASCII characters,
5565guaranteed.
5566
5567*** The function char-boundary-p returns non-nil if position POS is
5568between two characters in the buffer (not in the middle of a
5569character).
5570
5571When the value is non-nil, it says what kind of character follows POS:
5572
5573 0 if POS is at an ASCII character or at the end of range,
5574 1 if POS is before a 2-byte length multi-byte form,
5575 2 if POS is at a head of 3-byte length multi-byte form,
5576 3 if POS is at a head of 4-byte length multi-byte form,
5577 4 if POS is at a head of multi-byte form of a composite character.
5578
5579*** The function char-bytes returns how many bytes the character CHAR uses.
5580
5581*** Strings can contain multibyte characters. The function
5582`length' returns the string length counting bytes, which may be
5583more than the number of characters.
5584
5585You can include a multibyte character in a string constant by writing
5586it literally. You can also represent it with a hex escape,
5587\xNNNNNNN..., using as many digits as necessary. Any character which
5588is not a valid hex digit terminates this construct. If you want to
5589follow it with a character that is a hex digit, write backslash and
5590newline in between; that will terminate the hex escape.
5591
5592*** The function concat-chars takes arguments which are characters
5593and returns a string containing those characters.
5594
5595*** The function sref access a multibyte character in a string.
5596(sref STRING INDX) returns the character in STRING at INDEX. INDEX
5597counts from zero. If INDEX is at a position in the middle of a
5598character, sref signals an error.
5599
5600*** The function chars-in-string returns the number of characters
5601in a string. This is less than the length of the string, if the
5602string contains multibyte characters (the length counts bytes).
5603
5604*** The function chars-in-region returns the number of characters
5605in a region from BEG to END. This is less than (- END BEG) if the
5606region contains multibyte characters (the length counts bytes).
5607
5608*** The function string-to-list converts a string to a list of
5609the characters in it. string-to-vector converts a string
5610to a vector of the characters in it.
5611
5612*** The function store-substring alters part of the contents
5613of a string. You call it as follows:
5614
5615 (store-substring STRING IDX OBJ)
5616
5617This says to alter STRING, by storing OBJ starting at index IDX in
5618STRING. OBJ may be either a character or a (smaller) string.
5619This function really does alter the contents of STRING.
5620Since it is impossible to change the length of an existing string,
5621it is an error if OBJ doesn't fit within STRING's actual length.
5622
5623*** char-width returns the width (in columns) of the character CHAR,
5624if it were displayed in the current buffer and the selected window.
5625
5626*** string-width returns the width (in columns) of the text in STRING,
5627if it were displayed in the current buffer and the selected window.
5628
5629*** truncate-string-to-width shortens a string, if necessary,
5630to fit within a certain number of columns. (Of course, it does
5631not alter the string that you give it; it returns a new string
5632which contains all or just part of the existing string.)
5633
5634(truncate-string-to-width STR END-COLUMN &optional START-COLUMN PADDING)
5635
5636This returns the part of STR up to column END-COLUMN.
5637
5638The optional argument START-COLUMN specifies the starting column.
5639If this is non-nil, then the first START-COLUMN columns of the string
5640are not included in the resulting value.
5641
5642The optional argument PADDING, if non-nil, is a padding character to be added
5643at the beginning and end the resulting string, to extend it to exactly
5644WIDTH columns. If PADDING is nil, that means do not pad; then, if STRING
5645is narrower than WIDTH, the value is equal to STRING.
5646
5647If PADDING and START-COLUMN are both non-nil, and if there is no clean
5648place in STRING that corresponds to START-COLUMN (because one
5649character extends across that column), then the padding character
5650PADDING is added one or more times at the beginning of the result
5651string, so that its columns line up as if it really did start at
5652column START-COLUMN.
5653
5654*** When the functions in the list after-change-functions are called,
5655the third argument is the number of bytes in the pre-change text, not
5656necessarily the number of characters. It is, in effect, the
5657difference in buffer position between the beginning and the end of the
5658changed text, before the change.
5659
5660*** The characters Emacs uses are classified in various character
5661sets, each of which has a name which is a symbol. In general there is
5662one character set for each script, not for each language.
5663
5664**** The function charsetp tests whether an object is a character set name.
5665
5666**** The variable charset-list holds a list of character set names.
5667
5668**** char-charset, given a character code, returns the name of the character
5669set that the character belongs to. (The value is a symbol.)
5670
5671**** split-char, given a character code, returns a list containing the
5672name of the character set, followed by one or two byte-values
5673which identify the character within that character set.
5674
5675**** make-char, given a character set name and one or two subsequent
5676byte-values, constructs a character code. This is roughly the
5677opposite of split-char.
5678
5679**** find-charset-region returns a list of the character sets
5680of all the characters between BEG and END.
5681
5682**** find-charset-string returns a list of the character sets
5683of all the characters in a string.
5684
5685*** Here are the Lisp facilities for working with coding systems
5686and specifying coding systems.
5687
5688**** The function coding-system-list returns a list of all coding
5689system names (symbols). With optional argument t, it returns a list
5690of all distinct base coding systems, not including variants.
5691(Variant coding systems are those like latin-1-dos, latin-1-unix
5692and latin-1-mac which specify the end-of-line conversion as well
5693as what to do about code conversion.)
5694
5695**** coding-system-p tests a symbol to see if it is a coding system
5696name. It returns t if so, nil if not.
5697
5698**** file-coding-system-alist specifies which coding systems to use
5699for certain file names. It works like network-coding-system-alist,
5700except that the PATTERN is matched against the file name.
5701
5702Each element has the format (PATTERN . VAL), where PATTERN determines
5703which file names the element applies to. PATTERN should be a regexp
5704to match against a file name.
5705
5706VAL is a coding system, a cons cell containing two coding systems, or
5707a function symbol. If VAL is a coding system, it is used for both
5708decoding what received from the network stream and encoding what sent
5709to the network stream. If VAL is a cons cell containing two coding
5710systems, the car specifies the coding system for decoding, and the cdr
5711specifies the coding system for encoding.
5712
5713If VAL is a function symbol, the function must return a coding system
5714or a cons cell containing two coding systems, which is used as above.
5715
5716**** The variable network-coding-system-alist specifies
5717the coding system to use for network sockets.
5718
5719Each element has the format (PATTERN . VAL), where PATTERN determines
5720which network sockets the element applies to. PATTERN should be
5721either a port number or a regular expression matching some network
5722service names.
5723
5724VAL is a coding system, a cons cell containing two coding systems, or
5725a function symbol. If VAL is a coding system, it is used for both
5726decoding what received from the network stream and encoding what sent
5727to the network stream. If VAL is a cons cell containing two coding
5728systems, the car specifies the coding system for decoding, and the cdr
5729specifies the coding system for encoding.
5730
5731If VAL is a function symbol, the function must return a coding system
5732or a cons cell containing two coding systems, which is used as above.
5733
5734**** process-coding-system-alist specifies which coding systems to use
5735for certain subprocess. It works like network-coding-system-alist,
5736except that the PATTERN is matched against the program name used to
5737start the subprocess.
5738
5739**** The variable default-process-coding-system specifies the coding
5740systems to use for subprocess (and net connection) input and output,
5741when nothing else specifies what to do. The value is a cons cell
5742(OUTPUT-CODING . INPUT-CODING). OUTPUT-CODING applies to output
5743to the subprocess, and INPUT-CODING applies to input from it.
5744
5745**** The variable coding-system-for-write, if non-nil, specifies the
5746coding system to use for writing a file, or for output to a synchronous
5747subprocess.
5748
5749It also applies to any asynchronous subprocess or network connection,
5750but in a different way: the value of coding-system-for-write when you
5751start the subprocess or connection affects that subprocess or
5752connection permanently or until overridden.
5753
5754The variable coding-system-for-write takes precedence over
5755file-coding-system-alist, process-coding-system-alist and
5756network-coding-system-alist, and all other methods of specifying a
5757coding system for output. But most of the time this variable is nil.
5758It exists so that Lisp programs can bind it to a specific coding
5759system for one operation at a time.
5760
5761**** coding-system-for-read applies similarly to input from
5762files, subprocesses or network connections.
5763
5764**** The function process-coding-system tells you what
5765coding systems(s) an existing subprocess is using.
5766The value is a cons cell,
5767 (DECODING-CODING-SYSTEM . ENCODING-CODING-SYSTEM)
5768where DECODING-CODING-SYSTEM is used for decoding output from
5769the subprocess, and ENCODING-CODING-SYSTEM is used for encoding
5770input to the subprocess.
5771
5772**** The function set-process-coding-system can be used to
5773change the coding systems in use for an existing subprocess.
5774
5775** Emacs has a new facility to help users manage the many
5776customization options. To make a Lisp program work with this facility,
5777you need to use the new macros defgroup and defcustom.
5778
5779You use defcustom instead of defvar, for defining a user option
5780variable. The difference is that you specify two additional pieces of
5781information (usually): the "type" which says what values are
5782legitimate, and the "group" which specifies the hierarchy for
5783customization.
5784
5785Thus, instead of writing
5786
5787 (defvar foo-blurgoze nil
5788 "*Non-nil means that foo will act very blurgozely.")
5789
5790you would now write this:
5791
5792 (defcustom foo-blurgoze nil
5793 "*Non-nil means that foo will act very blurgozely."
5794 :type 'boolean
5795 :group foo)
5796
5797The type `boolean' means that this variable has only
5798two meaningful states: nil and non-nil. Other type values
5799describe other possibilities; see the manual for Custom
5800for a description of them.
5801
5802The "group" argument is used to specify a group which the option
5803should belong to. You define a new group like this:
5804
5805 (defgroup ispell nil
5806 "Spell checking using Ispell."
5807 :group 'processes)
5808
5809The "group" argument in defgroup specifies the parent group. The root
5810group is called `emacs'; it should not contain any variables itself,
5811but only other groups. The immediate subgroups of `emacs' correspond
5812to the keywords used by C-h p. Under these subgroups come
5813second-level subgroups that belong to individual packages.
5814
5815Each Emacs package should have its own set of groups. A simple
5816package should have just one group; a more complex package should
5817have a hierarchy of its own groups. The sole or root group of a
5818package should be a subgroup of one or more of the "keyword"
5819first-level subgroups.
5820
5821** New `widget' library for inserting UI components in buffers.
5822
5823This library, used by the new custom library, is documented in a
5824separate manual that accompanies Emacs.
5825
5826** easy-mmode
5827
5828The easy-mmode package provides macros and functions that make
5829developing minor modes easier. Roughly, the programmer has to code
5830only the functionality of the minor mode. All the rest--toggles,
5831predicate, and documentation--can be done in one call to the macro
5832`easy-mmode-define-minor-mode' (see the documentation). See also
5833`easy-mmode-define-keymap'.
5834
5835** Text property changes
5836
5837*** The `intangible' property now works on overlays as well as on a
5838text property.
5839
5840*** The new functions next-char-property-change and
5841previous-char-property-change scan through the buffer looking for a
5842place where either a text property or an overlay might change. The
5843functions take two arguments, POSITION and LIMIT. POSITION is the
5844starting position for the scan. LIMIT says where to stop the scan.
5845
5846If no property change is found before LIMIT, the value is LIMIT. If
5847LIMIT is nil, scan goes to the beginning or end of the accessible part
5848of the buffer. If no property change is found, the value is the
5849position of the beginning or end of the buffer.
5850
5851*** In the `local-map' text property or overlay property, the property
5852value can now be a symbol whose function definition is a keymap. This
5853is an alternative to using the keymap itself.
5854
5855** Changes in invisibility features
5856
5857*** Isearch can now temporarily show parts of the buffer which are
5858hidden by an overlay with a invisible property, when the search match
5859is inside that portion of the buffer. To enable this the overlay
5860should have a isearch-open-invisible property which is a function that
5861would be called having the overlay as an argument, the function should
5862make the overlay visible.
5863
5864During incremental search the overlays are shown by modifying the
5865invisible and intangible properties, if beside this more actions are
5866needed the overlay should have a isearch-open-invisible-temporary
5867which is a function. The function is called with 2 arguments: one is
5868the overlay and the second is nil when it should show the overlay and
5869t when it should hide it.
5870
5871*** add-to-invisibility-spec, remove-from-invisibility-spec
5872
5873Modes that use overlays to hide portions of a buffer should set the
79214ddf
FP
5874invisible property of the overlay to the mode's name (or another symbol)
5875and modify the `buffer-invisibility-spec' to include that symbol.
a933dad1 5876Use `add-to-invisibility-spec' and `remove-from-invisibility-spec' to
79214ddf 5877manipulate the `buffer-invisibility-spec'.
a933dad1
DL
5878Here is an example of how to do this:
5879
5880 ;; If we want to display an ellipsis:
79214ddf 5881 (add-to-invisibility-spec '(my-symbol . t))
a933dad1 5882 ;; If you don't want ellipsis:
79214ddf 5883 (add-to-invisibility-spec 'my-symbol)
a933dad1
DL
5884
5885 ...
5886 (overlay-put (make-overlay beginning end) 'invisible 'my-symbol)
5887
5888 ...
5889 ;; When done with the overlays:
5890 (remove-from-invisibility-spec '(my-symbol . t))
5891 ;; Or respectively:
5892 (remove-from-invisibility-spec 'my-symbol)
5893
5894** Changes in syntax parsing.
5895
5896*** The syntax-directed buffer-scan functions (such as
5897`parse-partial-sexp', `forward-word' and similar functions) can now
5898obey syntax information specified by text properties, if the variable
5899`parse-sexp-lookup-properties' is non-nil.
5900
5901If the value of `parse-sexp-lookup-properties' is nil, the behavior
5902is as before: the syntax-table of the current buffer is always
5903used to determine the syntax of the character at the position.
5904
5905When `parse-sexp-lookup-properties' is non-nil, the syntax of a
5906character in the buffer is calculated thus:
5907
5908 a) if the `syntax-table' text-property of that character
5909 is a cons, this cons becomes the syntax-type;
5910
5911 Valid values of `syntax-table' text-property are: nil, a valid
5912 syntax-table, and a valid syntax-table element, i.e.,
5913 a cons cell of the form (SYNTAX-CODE . MATCHING-CHAR).
5914
5915 b) if the character's `syntax-table' text-property
5916 is a syntax table, this syntax table is used
5917 (instead of the syntax-table of the current buffer) to
5918 determine the syntax type of the character.
5919
5920 c) otherwise the syntax-type is determined by the syntax-table
5921 of the current buffer.
5922
5923*** The meaning of \s in regular expressions is also affected by the
5924value of `parse-sexp-lookup-properties'. The details are the same as
5925for the syntax-directed buffer-scan functions.
5926
5927*** There are two new syntax-codes, `!' and `|' (numeric values 14
5928and 15). A character with a code `!' starts a comment which is ended
5929only by another character with the same code (unless quoted). A
5930character with a code `|' starts a string which is ended only by
5931another character with the same code (unless quoted).
5932
5933These codes are mainly meant for use as values of the `syntax-table'
5934text property.
5935
5936*** The function `parse-partial-sexp' has new semantics for the sixth
5937arg COMMENTSTOP. If it is `syntax-table', parse stops after the start
5938of a comment or a string, or after end of a comment or a string.
5939
5940*** The state-list which the return value from `parse-partial-sexp'
5941(and can also be used as an argument) now has an optional ninth
5942element: the character address of the start of last comment or string;
5943nil if none. The fourth and eighth elements have special values if the
5944string/comment is started by a "!" or "|" syntax-code.
5945
5946*** Since new features of `parse-partial-sexp' allow a complete
5947syntactic parsing, `font-lock' no longer supports
5948`font-lock-comment-start-regexp'.
5949
5950** Changes in face features
5951
5952*** The face functions are now unconditionally defined in Emacs, even
5953if it does not support displaying on a device that supports faces.
5954
5955*** The function face-documentation returns the documentation string
5956of a face (or nil if it doesn't have one).
5957
5958*** The function face-bold-p returns t if a face should be bold.
5959set-face-bold-p sets that flag.
5960
5961*** The function face-italic-p returns t if a face should be italic.
5962set-face-italic-p sets that flag.
5963
5964*** You can now specify foreground and background colors for text
5965by adding elements of the form (foreground-color . COLOR-NAME)
5966and (background-color . COLOR-NAME) to the list of faces in
5967the `face' property (either the character's text property or an
5968overlay property).
5969
5970This means that you no longer need to create named faces to use
5971arbitrary colors in a Lisp package.
5972
5973** Changes in file-handling functions
5974
5975*** File-access primitive functions no longer discard an extra redundant
5976directory name from the beginning of the file name. In other words,
5977they no longer do anything special with // or /~. That conversion
5978is now done only in substitute-in-file-name.
5979
5980This makes it possible for a Lisp program to open a file whose name
5981begins with ~.
5982
5983*** If copy-file is unable to set the date of the output file,
5984it now signals an error with the condition file-date-error.
5985
5986*** The inode number returned by file-attributes may be an integer (if
5987the number fits in a Lisp integer) or a list of integers.
5988
5989*** insert-file-contents can now read from a special file,
5990as long as the arguments VISIT and REPLACE are nil.
5991
5992*** The RAWFILE arg to find-file-noselect, if non-nil, now suppresses
5993character code conversion as well as other things.
5994
5995Meanwhile, this feature does work with remote file names
5996(formerly it did not).
5997
5998*** Lisp packages which create temporary files should use the TMPDIR
5999environment variable to decide which directory to put them in.
6000
6001*** interpreter-mode-alist elements now specify regexps
6002instead of constant strings.
6003
6004*** expand-file-name no longer treats `//' or `/~' specially. It used
6005to delete all the text of a file name up through the first slash of
6006any `//' or `/~' sequence. Now it passes them straight through.
6007
6008substitute-in-file-name continues to treat those sequences specially,
6009in the same way as before.
6010
6011*** The variable `format-alist' is more general now.
6012The FROM-FN and TO-FN in a format definition can now be strings
6013which specify shell commands to use as filters to perform conversion.
6014
6015*** The new function access-file tries to open a file, and signals an
6016error if that fails. If the open succeeds, access-file does nothing
6017else, and returns nil.
6018
6019*** The function insert-directory now signals an error if the specified
6020directory cannot be listed.
6021
6022** Changes in minibuffer input
6023
6024*** The functions read-buffer, read-variable, read-command, read-string
6025read-file-name, read-from-minibuffer and completing-read now take an
6026additional argument which specifies the default value. If this
6027argument is non-nil, it should be a string; that string is used in two
6028ways:
6029
6030 It is returned if the user enters empty input.
6031 It is available through the history command M-n.
6032
6033*** The functions read-string, read-from-minibuffer,
6034read-no-blanks-input and completing-read now take an additional
6035argument INHERIT-INPUT-METHOD. If this is non-nil, then the
6036minibuffer inherits the current input method and the setting of
6037enable-multibyte-characters from the previously current buffer.
6038
6039In an interactive spec, you can use M instead of s to read an
6040argument in this way.
6041
6042*** All minibuffer input functions discard text properties
6043from the text you enter in the minibuffer, unless the variable
6044minibuffer-allow-text-properties is non-nil.
6045
6046** Echo area features
6047
6048*** Clearing the echo area now runs the normal hook
6049echo-area-clear-hook. Note that the echo area can be used while the
6050minibuffer is active; in that case, the minibuffer is still active
6051after the echo area is cleared.
6052
6053*** The function current-message returns the message currently displayed
6054in the echo area, or nil if there is none.
6055
6056** Keyboard input features
6057
6058*** tty-erase-char is a new variable that reports which character was
6059set up as the terminal's erase character when time Emacs was started.
6060
6061*** num-nonmacro-input-events is the total number of input events
6062received so far from the terminal. It does not count those generated
6063by keyboard macros.
6064
6065** Frame-related changes
6066
6067*** make-frame runs the normal hook before-make-frame-hook just before
6068creating a frame, and just after creating a frame it runs the abnormal
6069hook after-make-frame-functions with the new frame as arg.
6070
6071*** The new hook window-configuration-change-hook is now run every time
6072the window configuration has changed. The frame whose configuration
6073has changed is the selected frame when the hook is run.
6074
6075*** Each frame now independently records the order for recently
6076selected buffers, in its buffer-list frame parameter, so that the
6077value of other-buffer is now based on the buffers recently displayed
6078in the selected frame.
6079
6080*** The value of the frame parameter vertical-scroll-bars
6081is now `left', `right' or nil. A non-nil value specifies
6082which side of the window to put the scroll bars on.
6083
6084** X Windows features
6085
6086*** You can examine X resources for other applications by binding
6087x-resource-class around a call to x-get-resource. The usual value of
6088x-resource-class is "Emacs", which is the correct value for Emacs.
6089
6090*** In menus, checkboxes and radio buttons now actually work.
6091The menu displays the current status of the box or button.
6092
6093*** The function x-list-fonts now takes an optional fourth argument
6094MAXIMUM which sets a limit on how many matching fonts to return.
6095A smaller value of MAXIMUM makes the function faster.
6096
6097If the only question is whether *any* font matches the pattern,
6098it is good to supply 1 for this argument.
6099
6100** Subprocess features
6101
6102*** A reminder: it is no longer necessary for subprocess filter
6103functions and sentinels to do save-match-data, because Emacs does this
6104automatically.
6105
6106*** The new function shell-command-to-string executes a shell command
6107and returns the output from the command as a string.
6108
6109*** The new function process-contact returns t for a child process,
6110and (HOSTNAME SERVICE) for a net connection.
6111
6112** An error in running pre-command-hook or post-command-hook
6113does clear the variable to nil. The documentation was wrong before.
6114
6115** In define-key-after, if AFTER is t, the new binding now always goes
6116at the end of the keymap. If the keymap is a menu, this means it
6117goes after the other menu items.
6118
6119** If you have a program that makes several changes in the same area
79214ddf 6120of the buffer, you can use the macro combine-after-change-calls
a933dad1
DL
6121around that Lisp code to make it faster when after-change hooks
6122are in use.
6123
6124The macro arranges to call the after-change functions just once for a
6125series of several changes--if that seems safe.
6126
6127Don't alter the variables after-change-functions and
6128after-change-function within the body of a combine-after-change-calls
6129form.
6130
6131** If you define an abbrev (with define-abbrev) whose EXPANSION
6132is not a string, then the abbrev does not expand in the usual sense,
6133but its hook is still run.
6134
6135** Normally, the Lisp debugger is not used (even if you have enabled it)
6136for errors that are handled by condition-case.
6137
6138If you set debug-on-signal to a non-nil value, then the debugger is called
6139regardless of whether there is a handler for the condition. This is
6140useful for debugging problems that happen inside of a condition-case.
6141
6142This mode of operation seems to be unreliable in other ways. Errors that
6143are normal and ought to be handled, perhaps in timers or process
6144filters, will instead invoke the debugger. So don't say you weren't
6145warned.
6146
6147** The new variable ring-bell-function lets you specify your own
6148way for Emacs to "ring the bell".
6149
6150** If run-at-time's TIME argument is t, the action is repeated at
6151integral multiples of REPEAT from the epoch; this is useful for
6152functions like display-time.
6153
6154** You can use the function locate-library to find the precise file
6155name of a Lisp library. This isn't new, but wasn't documented before.
6156
6157** Commands for entering view mode have new optional arguments that
6158can be used from Lisp. Low-level entrance to and exit from view mode
6159is done by functions view-mode-enter and view-mode-exit.
6160
6161** batch-byte-compile-file now makes Emacs return a nonzero status code
6162if there is an error in compilation.
6163
6164** pop-to-buffer, switch-to-buffer-other-window and
6165switch-to-buffer-other-frame now accept an additional optional
6166argument NORECORD, much like switch-to-buffer. If it is non-nil,
6167they don't put the buffer at the front of the buffer list.
6168
6169** If your .emacs file leaves the *scratch* buffer non-empty,
6170Emacs does not display the startup message, so as to avoid changing
6171the *scratch* buffer.
6172
6173** The new function regexp-opt returns an efficient regexp to match a string.
6174The arguments are STRINGS and (optionally) PAREN. This function can be used
6175where regexp matching or searching is intensively used and speed is important,
6176e.g., in Font Lock mode.
6177
6178** The variable buffer-display-count is local to each buffer,
6179and is incremented each time the buffer is displayed in a window.
6180It starts at 0 when the buffer is created.
6181
6182** The new function compose-mail starts composing a mail message
6183using the user's chosen mail composition agent (specified with the
6184variable mail-user-agent). It has variants compose-mail-other-window
6185and compose-mail-other-frame.
6186
6187** The `user-full-name' function now takes an optional parameter which
6188can either be a number (the UID) or a string (the login name). The
6189full name of the specified user will be returned.
6190
6191** Lisp packages that load files of customizations, or any other sort
6192of user profile, should obey the variable init-file-user in deciding
6193where to find it. They should load the profile of the user name found
6194in that variable. If init-file-user is nil, meaning that the -q
6195option was used, then Lisp packages should not load the customization
6196files at all.
6197
6198** format-time-string now allows you to specify the field width
6199and type of padding. This works as in printf: you write the field
6200width as digits in the middle of a %-construct. If you start
6201the field width with 0, it means to pad with zeros.
6202
6203For example, %S normally specifies the number of seconds since the
6204minute; %03S means to pad this with zeros to 3 positions, %_3S to pad
6205with spaces to 3 positions. Plain %3S pads with zeros, because that
6206is how %S normally pads to two positions.
6207
6208** thing-at-point now supports a new kind of "thing": url.
6209
6210** imenu.el changes.
6211
6212You can now specify a function to be run when selecting an
79214ddf 6213item from menu created by imenu.
a933dad1
DL
6214
6215An example of using this feature: if we define imenu items for the
6216#include directives in a C file, we can open the included file when we
6217select one of those items.
6218\f
6219* Emacs 19.34 is a bug-fix release with no user-visible changes.
6220\f
6221* Changes in Emacs 19.33.
6222
6223** Bibtex mode no longer turns on Auto Fill automatically. (No major
6224mode should do that--it is the user's choice.)
6225
6226** The variable normal-auto-fill-function specifies the function to
6227use for auto-fill-function, if and when Auto Fill is turned on.
6228Major modes can set this locally to alter how Auto Fill works.
6229\f
6230* Editing Changes in Emacs 19.32
6231
6232** C-x f with no argument now signals an error.
6233To set the fill column at the current column, use C-u C-x f.
6234
6235** Expanding dynamic abbrevs with M-/ is now smarter about case
6236conversion. If you type the abbreviation with mixed case, and it
6237matches the beginning of the expansion including case, then the
6238expansion is copied verbatim. Using SPC M-/ to copy an additional
6239word always copies it verbatim except when the previous copied word is
6240all caps.
6241
6242** On a non-windowing terminal, which can display only one Emacs frame
6243at a time, creating a new frame with C-x 5 2 also selects that frame.
6244
6245When using a display that can show multiple frames at once, C-x 5 2
6246does make the frame visible, but does not select it. This is the same
6247as in previous Emacs versions.
6248
6249** You can use C-x 5 2 to create multiple frames on MSDOS, just as on a
6250non-X terminal on Unix. Of course, only one frame is visible at any
6251time, since your terminal doesn't have the ability to display multiple
6252frames.
6253
6254** On Windows, set win32-pass-alt-to-system to a non-nil value
6255if you would like tapping the Alt key to invoke the Windows menu.
6256This feature is not enabled by default; since the Alt key is also the
6257Meta key, it is too easy and painful to activate this feature by
6258accident.
6259
6260** The command apply-macro-to-region-lines repeats the last defined
6261keyboard macro once for each complete line within the current region.
6262It does this line by line, by moving point to the beginning of that
6263line and then executing the macro.
6264
6265This command is not new, but was never documented before.
6266
6267** You can now use Mouse-1 to place the region around a string constant
6268(something surrounded by doublequote characters or other delimiter
6269characters of like syntax) by double-clicking on one of the delimiting
6270characters.
6271
6272** Font Lock mode
6273
6274*** Font Lock support modes
6275
6276Font Lock can be configured to use Fast Lock mode and Lazy Lock mode (see
6277below) in a flexible way. Rather than adding the appropriate function to the
6278hook font-lock-mode-hook, you can use the new variable font-lock-support-mode
6279to control which modes have Fast Lock mode or Lazy Lock mode turned on when
6280Font Lock mode is enabled.
6281
6282For example, to use Fast Lock mode when Font Lock mode is turned on, put:
6283
6284 (setq font-lock-support-mode 'fast-lock-mode)
6285
6286in your ~/.emacs.
6287
6288*** lazy-lock
6289
6290The lazy-lock package speeds up Font Lock mode by making fontification occur
6291only when necessary, such as when a previously unfontified part of the buffer
6292becomes visible in a window. When you create a buffer with Font Lock mode and
6293Lazy Lock mode turned on, the buffer is not fontified. When certain events
6294occur (such as scrolling), Lazy Lock makes sure that the visible parts of the
6295buffer are fontified. Lazy Lock also defers on-the-fly fontification until
6296Emacs has been idle for a given amount of time.
6297
6298To use this package, put in your ~/.emacs:
6299
6300 (setq font-lock-support-mode 'lazy-lock-mode)
6301
6302To control the package behaviour, see the documentation for `lazy-lock-mode'.
6303
6304** Changes in BibTeX mode.
6305
6306*** For all entries allow spaces and tabs between opening brace or
6307paren and key.
6308
6309*** Non-escaped double-quoted characters (as in `Sch"of') are now
6310supported.
6311
6312** Gnus changes.
6313
6314Gnus, the Emacs news reader, has undergone further rewriting. Many new
6315commands and variables have been added. There should be no
6316significant incompatibilities between this Gnus version and the
6317previously released version, except in the message composition area.
6318
6319Below is a list of the more user-visible changes. Coding changes
6320between Gnus 5.1 and 5.2 are more extensive.
6321
79214ddf 6322*** A new message composition mode is used. All old customization
a933dad1
DL
6323variables for mail-mode, rnews-reply-mode and gnus-msg are now
6324obsolete.
6325
6326*** Gnus is now able to generate "sparse" threads -- threads where
6327missing articles are represented by empty nodes.
6328
6329 (setq gnus-build-sparse-threads 'some)
6330
6331*** Outgoing articles are stored on a special archive server.
6332
6333 To disable this: (setq gnus-message-archive-group nil)
6334
6335*** Partial thread regeneration now happens when articles are
79214ddf 6336referred.
a933dad1
DL
6337
6338*** Gnus can make use of GroupLens predictions:
6339
6340 (setq gnus-use-grouplens t)
6341
6342*** A trn-line tree buffer can be displayed.
6343
6344 (setq gnus-use-trees t)
6345
6346*** An nn-like pick-and-read minor mode is available for the summary
79214ddf 6347buffers.
a933dad1
DL
6348
6349 (add-hook 'gnus-summary-mode-hook 'gnus-pick-mode)
6350
6351*** In binary groups you can use a special binary minor mode:
6352
6353 `M-x gnus-binary-mode'
6354
6355*** Groups can be grouped in a folding topic hierarchy.
6356
6357 (add-hook 'gnus-group-mode-hook 'gnus-topic-mode)
6358
6359*** Gnus can re-send and bounce mail.
6360
6361 Use the `S D r' and `S D b'.
6362
6363*** Groups can now have a score, and bubbling based on entry frequency
6364is possible.
6365
6366 (add-hook 'gnus-summary-exit-hook 'gnus-summary-bubble-group)
6367
6368*** Groups can be process-marked, and commands can be performed on
6369groups of groups.
6370
6371*** Caching is possible in virtual groups.
6372
6373*** nndoc now understands all kinds of digests, mail boxes, rnews news
79214ddf 6374batches, ClariNet briefs collections, and just about everything else.
a933dad1
DL
6375
6376*** Gnus has a new backend (nnsoup) to create/read SOUP packets.
6377
6378*** The Gnus cache is much faster.
6379
6380*** Groups can be sorted according to many criteria.
6381
6382 For instance: (setq gnus-group-sort-function 'gnus-group-sort-by-rank)
6383
6384*** New group parameters have been introduced to set list-address and
6385expiration times.
6386
6387*** All formatting specs allow specifying faces to be used.
6388
6389*** There are several more commands for setting/removing/acting on
6390process marked articles on the `M P' submap.
6391
6392*** The summary buffer can be limited to show parts of the available
6393articles based on a wide range of criteria. These commands have been
6394bound to keys on the `/' submap.
6395
6396*** Articles can be made persistent -- as an alternative to saving
6397articles with the `*' command.
6398
6399*** All functions for hiding article elements are now toggles.
6400
6401*** Article headers can be buttonized.
6402
6403 (add-hook 'gnus-article-display-hook 'gnus-article-add-buttons-to-head)
6404
6405*** All mail backends support fetching articles by Message-ID.
6406
79214ddf 6407*** Duplicate mail can now be treated properly. See the
a933dad1
DL
6408`nnmail-treat-duplicates' variable.
6409
6410*** All summary mode commands are available directly from the article
79214ddf 6411buffer.
a933dad1
DL
6412
6413*** Frames can be part of `gnus-buffer-configuration'.
6414
6415*** Mail can be re-scanned by a daemonic process.
6416
6417*** Gnus can make use of NoCeM files to filter spam.
6418
6419 (setq gnus-use-nocem t)
6420
79214ddf 6421*** Groups can be made permanently visible.
a933dad1
DL
6422
6423 (setq gnus-permanently-visible-groups "^nnml:")
6424
79214ddf 6425*** Many new hooks have been introduced to make customizing easier.
a933dad1
DL
6426
6427*** Gnus respects the Mail-Copies-To header.
6428
79214ddf 6429*** Threads can be gathered by looking at the References header.
a933dad1 6430
79214ddf 6431 (setq gnus-summary-thread-gathering-function
a933dad1
DL
6432 'gnus-gather-threads-by-references)
6433
6434*** Read articles can be stored in a special backlog buffer to avoid
79214ddf 6435refetching.
a933dad1
DL
6436
6437 (setq gnus-keep-backlog 50)
6438
6439*** A clean copy of the current article is always stored in a separate
6440buffer to allow easier treatment.
6441
6442*** Gnus can suggest where to save articles. See `gnus-split-methods'.
6443
6444*** Gnus doesn't have to do as much prompting when saving.
6445
6446 (setq gnus-prompt-before-saving t)
6447
6448*** gnus-uu can view decoded files asynchronously while fetching
79214ddf 6449articles.
a933dad1
DL
6450
6451 (setq gnus-uu-grabbed-file-functions 'gnus-uu-grab-view)
6452
79214ddf 6453*** Filling in the article buffer now works properly on cited text.
a933dad1
DL
6454
6455*** Hiding cited text adds buttons to toggle hiding, and how much
6456cited text to hide is now customizable.
6457
6458 (setq gnus-cited-lines-visible 2)
6459
6460*** Boring headers can be hidden.
6461
6462 (add-hook 'gnus-article-display-hook 'gnus-article-hide-boring-headers)
6463
6464*** Default scoring values can now be set from the menu bar.
6465
6466*** Further syntax checking of outgoing articles have been added.
6467
6468The Gnus manual has been expanded. It explains all these new features
6469in greater detail.
6470\f
6471* Lisp Changes in Emacs 19.32
6472
6473** The function set-visited-file-name now accepts an optional
6474second argument NO-QUERY. If it is non-nil, then the user is not
6475asked for confirmation in the case where the specified file already
6476exists.
6477
6478** The variable print-length applies to printing vectors and bitvectors,
6479as well as lists.
6480
6481** The new function keymap-parent returns the parent keymap
6482of a given keymap.
6483
6484** The new function set-keymap-parent specifies a new parent for a
6485given keymap. The arguments are KEYMAP and PARENT. PARENT must be a
6486keymap or nil.
6487
6488** Sometimes menu keymaps use a command name, a symbol, which is really
6489an automatically generated alias for some other command, the "real"
6490name. In such a case, you should give that alias symbol a non-nil
6491menu-alias property. That property tells the menu system to look for
6492equivalent keys for the real name instead of equivalent keys for the
6493alias.
6494\f
6495* Editing Changes in Emacs 19.31
6496
6497** Freedom of the press restricted in the United States.
6498
6499Emacs has been censored in accord with the Communications Decency Act.
6500This includes removing some features of the doctor program. That law
6501was described by its supporters as a ban on pornography, but it bans
6502far more than that. The Emacs distribution has never contained any
6503pornography, but parts of it were nonetheless prohibited.
6504
6505For information on US government censorship of the Internet, and what
6506you can do to bring back freedom of the press, see the web site
6507`http://www.vtw.org/'.
6508
6509** A note about C mode indentation customization.
6510
6511The old (Emacs 19.29) ways of specifying a C indentation style
6512do not normally work in the new implementation of C mode.
6513It has its own methods of customizing indentation, which are
6514much more powerful than the old C mode. See the Editing Programs
6515chapter of the manual for details.
6516
6517However, you can load the library cc-compat to make the old
6518customization variables take effect.
6519
6520** Marking with the mouse.
6521
6522When you mark a region with the mouse, the region now remains
6523highlighted until the next input event, regardless of whether you are
6524using M-x transient-mark-mode.
6525
6526** Improved Windows NT/95 support.
6527
6528*** Emacs now supports scroll bars on Windows NT and Windows 95.
6529
6530*** Emacs now supports subprocesses on Windows 95. (Subprocesses used
6531to work on NT only and not on 95.)
6532
6533*** There are difficulties with subprocesses, though, due to problems
6534in Windows, beyond the control of Emacs. They work fine as long as
6535you run Windows applications. The problems arise when you run a DOS
6536application in a subprocesses. Since current shells run as DOS
6537applications, these problems are significant.
6538
6539If you run a DOS application in a subprocess, then the application is
6540likely to busy-wait, which means that your machine will be 100% busy.
6541However, if you don't mind the temporary heavy load, the subprocess
6542will work OK as long as you tell it to terminate before you start any
6543other DOS application as a subprocess.
6544
6545Emacs is unable to terminate or interrupt a DOS subprocess.
6546You have to do this by providing input directly to the subprocess.
6547
6548If you run two DOS applications at the same time in two separate
6549subprocesses, even if one of them is asynchronous, you will probably
6550have to reboot your machine--until then, it will remain 100% busy.
6551Windows simply does not cope when one Windows process tries to run two
6552separate DOS subprocesses. Typing CTL-ALT-DEL and then choosing
6553Shutdown seems to work although it may take a few minutes.
6554
6555** M-x resize-minibuffer-mode.
6556
6557This command, not previously mentioned in NEWS, toggles a mode in
6558which the minibuffer window expands to show as many lines as the
6559minibuffer contains.
6560
6561** `title' frame parameter and resource.
6562
6563The `title' X resource now specifies just the frame title, nothing else.
6564It does not affect the name used for looking up other X resources.
6565It works by setting the new `title' frame parameter, which likewise
6566affects just the displayed title of the frame.
6567
6568The `name' parameter continues to do what it used to do:
6569it specifies the frame name for looking up X resources,
6570and also serves as the default for the displayed title
6571when the `title' parameter is unspecified or nil.
6572
6573** Emacs now uses the X toolkit by default, if you have a new
6574enough version of X installed (X11R5 or newer).
6575
6576** When you compile Emacs with the Motif widget set, Motif handles the
6577F10 key by activating the menu bar. To avoid confusion, the usual
6578Emacs binding of F10 is replaced with a no-op when using Motif.
6579
6580If you want to be able to use F10 in Emacs, you can rebind the Motif
6581menubar to some other key which you don't use. To do so, add
6582something like this to your X resources file. This example rebinds
6583the Motif menu bar activation key to S-F12:
6584
6585 Emacs*defaultVirtualBindings: osfMenuBar : Shift<Key>F12
6586
6587** In overwrite mode, DEL now inserts spaces in most cases
6588to replace the characters it "deletes".
6589
6590** The Rmail summary now shows the number of lines in each message.
6591
6592** Rmail has a new command M-x unforward-rmail-message, which extracts
6593a forwarded message from the message that forwarded it. To use it,
6594select a message which contains a forwarded message and then type the command.
6595It inserts the forwarded message as a separate Rmail message
6596immediately after the selected one.
6597
6598This command also undoes the textual modifications that are standardly
6599made, as part of forwarding, by Rmail and other mail reader programs.
6600
6601** Turning off saving of .saves-... files in your home directory.
6602
6603Each Emacs session writes a file named .saves-... in your home
6604directory to record which files M-x recover-session should recover.
6605If you exit Emacs normally with C-x C-c, it deletes that file. If
6606Emacs or the operating system crashes, the file remains for M-x
6607recover-session.
6608
6609You can turn off the writing of these files by setting
6610auto-save-list-file-name to nil. If you do this, M-x recover-session
6611will not work.
6612
6613Some previous Emacs versions failed to delete these files even on
6614normal exit. This is fixed now. If you are thinking of turning off
6615this feature because of past experiences with versions that had this
6616bug, it would make sense to check whether you still want to do so
6617now that the bug is fixed.
6618
6619** Changes to Version Control (VC)
6620
6621There is a new variable, vc-follow-symlinks. It indicates what to do
6622when you visit a link to a file that is under version control.
6623Editing the file through the link bypasses the version control system,
6624which is dangerous and probably not what you want.
6625
6626If this variable is t, VC follows the link and visits the real file,
6627telling you about it in the echo area. If it is `ask' (the default),
6628VC asks for confirmation whether it should follow the link. If nil,
6629the link is visited and a warning displayed.
6630
6631** iso-acc.el now lets you specify a choice of language.
6632Languages include "latin-1" (the default) and "latin-2" (which
6633is designed for entering ISO Latin-2 characters).
6634
6635There are also choices for specific human languages such as French and
6636Portuguese. These are subsets of Latin-1, which differ in that they
6637enable only the accent characters needed for particular language.
6638The other accent characters, not needed for the chosen language,
6639remain normal.
6640
6641** Posting articles and sending mail now has M-TAB completion on various
6642header fields (Newsgroups, To, CC, ...).
6643
6644Completion in the Newsgroups header depends on the list of groups
6645known to your news reader. Completion in the Followup-To header
6646offers those groups which are in the Newsgroups header, since
6647Followup-To usually just holds one of those.
6648
6649Completion in fields that hold mail addresses works based on the list
6650of local users plus your aliases. Additionally, if your site provides
6651a mail directory or a specific host to use for any unrecognized user
6652name, you can arrange to query that host for completion also. (See the
6653documentation of variables `mail-directory-process' and
6654`mail-directory-stream'.)
6655
6656** A greatly extended sgml-mode offers new features such as (to be configured)
6657skeletons with completing read for tags and attributes, typing named
6658characters including optionally all 8bit characters, making tags invisible
6659with optional alternate display text, skipping and deleting tag(pair)s.
6660
6661Note: since Emacs' syntax feature cannot limit the special meaning of ', " and
6662- to inside <>, for some texts the result, especially of font locking, may be
6663wrong (see `sgml-specials' if you get wrong results).
6664
6665The derived html-mode configures this with tags and attributes more or
6666less HTML3ish. It also offers optional quick keys like C-c 1 for
6667headline or C-c u for unordered list (see `html-quick-keys'). Edit /
6668Text Properties / Face or M-g combinations create tags as applicable.
6669Outline minor mode is supported and level 1 font-locking tries to
6670fontify tag contents (which only works when they fit on one line, due
6671to a limitation in font-lock).
6672
6673External viewing via browse-url can occur automatically upon saving.
6674
6675** M-x imenu-add-to-menubar now adds to the menu bar for the current
6676buffer only. If you want to put an Imenu item in the menu bar for all
6677buffers that use a particular major mode, use the mode hook, as in
6678this example:
6679
6680 (add-hook 'emacs-lisp-mode-hook
6681 '(lambda () (imenu-add-to-menubar "Index")))
6682
6683** Changes in BibTeX mode.
6684
6685*** Field names may now contain digits, hyphens, and underscores.
6686
6687*** Font Lock mode is now supported.
6688
6689*** bibtex-make-optional-field is no longer interactive.
6690
6691*** If bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries is non-nil, inserting new
6692entries is now done with a faster algorithm. However, inserting
6693will fail in this case if the buffer contains invalid entries or
6694isn't in sorted order, so you should finish each entry with C-c C-c
6695(bibtex-close-entry) after you have inserted or modified it.
6696The default value of bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries is nil.
6697
6698*** Function `show-all' is no longer bound to a key, since C-u C-c C-q
6699does the same job.
6700
6701*** Entries with quotes inside quote-delimited fields (as `author =
6702"Stefan Sch{\"o}f"') are now supported.
6703
6704*** Case in field names doesn't matter anymore when searching for help
6705text.
6706
6707** Font Lock mode
6708
6709*** Global Font Lock mode
6710
6711Font Lock mode can be turned on globally, in buffers that support it, by the
6712new command global-font-lock-mode. You can use the new variable
6713font-lock-global-modes to control which modes have Font Lock mode automagically
6714turned on. By default, this variable is set so that Font Lock mode is turned
6715on globally where the buffer mode supports it.
6716
6717For example, to automagically turn on Font Lock mode where supported, put:
6718
6719 (global-font-lock-mode t)
6720
6721in your ~/.emacs.
6722
6723*** Local Refontification
6724
6725In Font Lock mode, editing a line automatically refontifies that line only.
6726However, if your change alters the syntactic context for following lines,
6727those lines remain incorrectly fontified. To refontify them, use the new
6728command M-g M-g (font-lock-fontify-block).
6729
6730In certain major modes, M-g M-g refontifies the entire current function.
6731(The variable font-lock-mark-block-function controls how to find the
6732current function.) In other major modes, M-g M-g refontifies 16 lines
6733above and below point.
6734
6735With a prefix argument N, M-g M-g refontifies N lines above and below point.
6736
6737** Follow mode
6738
6739Follow mode is a new minor mode combining windows showing the same
6740buffer into one tall "virtual window". The windows are typically two
6741side-by-side windows. Follow mode makes them scroll together as if
6742they were a unit. To use it, go to a frame with just one window,
6743split it into two side-by-side windows using C-x 3, and then type M-x
6744follow-mode.
6745
6746M-x follow-mode turns off Follow mode if it is already enabled.
6747
6748To display two side-by-side windows and activate Follow mode, use the
6749command M-x follow-delete-other-windows-and-split.
6750
6751** hide-show changes.
6752
6753The hooks hs-hide-hooks and hs-show-hooks have been renamed
6754to hs-hide-hook and hs-show-hook, to follow the convention for
6755normal hooks.
6756
6757** Simula mode now has a menu containing the most important commands.
6758The new command simula-indent-exp is bound to C-M-q.
6759
6760** etags can now handle programs written in Erlang. Files are
6761recognised by the extensions .erl and .hrl. The tagged lines are
6762those that begin a function, record, or macro.
6763
6764** MSDOS Changes
6765
6766*** It is now possible to compile Emacs with the version 2 of DJGPP.
6767Compilation with DJGPP version 1 also still works.
6768
6769*** The documentation of DOS-specific aspects of Emacs was rewritten
6770and expanded; see the ``MS-DOS'' node in the on-line docs.
6771
6772*** Emacs now uses ~ for backup file names, not .bak.
6773
6774*** You can simulate mouse-3 on two-button mice by simultaneously
6775pressing both mouse buttons.
6776
6777*** A number of packages and commands which previously failed or had
6778restricted functionality on MS-DOS, now work. The most important ones
79214ddf 6779are:
a933dad1
DL
6780
6781**** Printing (both with `M-x lpr-buffer' and with `ps-print' package)
6782now works.
6783
6784**** `Ediff' works (in a single-frame mode).
6785
6786**** `M-x display-time' can be used on MS-DOS (due to the new
6787implementation of Emacs timers, see below).
6788
6789**** `Dired' supports Unix-style shell wildcards.
6790
6791**** The `c-macro-expand' command now works as on other platforms.
6792
6793**** `M-x recover-session' works.
6794
6795**** `M-x list-colors-display' displays all the available colors.
6796
6797**** The `TPU-EDT' package works.
6798\f
6799* Lisp changes in Emacs 19.31.
6800
6801** The function using-unix-filesystems on Windows NT and Windows 95
6802tells Emacs to read and write files assuming that they reside on a
6803remote Unix filesystem. No CR/LF translation is done on any files in
6804this case. Invoking using-unix-filesystems with t activates this
6805behavior, and invoking it with any other value deactivates it.
6806
6807** Change in system-type and system-configuration values.
6808
6809The value of system-type on a Linux-based GNU system is now `lignux',
6810not `linux'. This means that some programs which use `system-type'
6811need to be changed. The value of `system-configuration' will also
6812be different.
6813
6814It is generally recommended to use `system-configuration' rather
6815than `system-type'.
6816
6817See the file LINUX-GNU in this directory for more about this.
6818
6819** The functions shell-command and dired-call-process
6820now run file name handlers for default-directory, if it has them.
6821
6822** Undoing the deletion of text now restores the positions of markers
6823that pointed into or next to the deleted text.
6824
6825** Timers created with run-at-time now work internally to Emacs, and
6826no longer use a separate process. Therefore, they now work more
6827reliably and can be used for shorter time delays.
6828
6829The new function run-with-timer is a convenient way to set up a timer
6830to run a specified amount of time after the present. A call looks
6831like this:
6832
6833 (run-with-timer SECS REPEAT FUNCTION ARGS...)
6834
6835SECS says how many seconds should elapse before the timer happens.
6836It may be an integer or a floating point number. When the timer
6837becomes ripe, the action is to call FUNCTION with arguments ARGS.
6838
6839REPEAT gives the interval for repeating the timer (measured in
6840seconds). It may be an integer or a floating point number. nil or 0
6841means don't repeat at all--call FUNCTION just once.
6842
6843*** with-timeout provides an easy way to do something but give
6844up if too much time passes.
6845
6846 (with-timeout (SECONDS TIMEOUT-FORMS...) BODY...)
6847
6848This executes BODY, but gives up after SECONDS seconds.
6849If it gives up, it runs the TIMEOUT-FORMS and returns the value
6850of the last one of them. Normally it returns the value of the last
6851form in BODY.
6852
6853*** You can now arrange to call a function whenever Emacs is idle for
6854a certain length of time. To do this, call run-with-idle-timer. A
6855call looks like this:
6856
6857 (run-with-idle-timer SECS REPEAT FUNCTION ARGS...)
6858
6859SECS says how many seconds of idleness should elapse before the timer
6860runs. It may be an integer or a floating point number. When the
6861timer becomes ripe, the action is to call FUNCTION with arguments
6862ARGS.
6863
6864Emacs becomes idle whenever it finishes executing a keyboard or mouse
6865command. It remains idle until it receives another keyboard or mouse
6866command.
6867
6868REPEAT, if non-nil, means this timer should be activated again each
6869time Emacs becomes idle and remains idle for SECS seconds The timer
6870does not repeat if Emacs *remains* idle; it runs at most once after
6871each time Emacs becomes idle.
6872
6873If REPEAT is nil, the timer runs just once, the first time Emacs is
6874idle for SECS seconds.
6875
6876*** post-command-idle-hook is now obsolete; you shouldn't use it at
6877all, because it interferes with the idle timer mechanism. If your
6878programs use post-command-idle-hook, convert them to use idle timers
6879instead.
6880
6881*** y-or-n-p-with-timeout lets you ask a question but give up if
6882there is no answer within a certain time.
6883
6884 (y-or-n-p-with-timeout PROMPT SECONDS DEFAULT-VALUE)
6885
6886asks the question PROMPT (just like y-or-n-p). If the user answers
6887within SECONDS seconds, it returns the answer that the user gave.
6888Otherwise it gives up after SECONDS seconds, and returns DEFAULT-VALUE.
6889
6890** Minor change to `encode-time': you can now pass more than seven
6891arguments. If you do that, the first six arguments have the usual
6892meaning, the last argument is interpreted as the time zone, and the
6893arguments in between are ignored.
6894
6895This means that it works to use the list returned by `decode-time' as
6896the list of arguments for `encode-time'.
6897
6898** The default value of load-path now includes the directory
6899/usr/local/share/emacs/VERSION/site-lisp In addition to
6900/usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp. You can use this new directory for
6901site-specific Lisp packages that belong with a particular Emacs
6902version.
6903
6904It is not unusual for a Lisp package that works well in one Emacs
6905version to cause trouble in another. Sometimes packages need updating
6906for incompatible changes; sometimes they look at internal data that
6907has changed; sometimes the package has been installed in Emacs itself
6908and the installed version should be used. Whatever the reason for the
6909problem, this new feature makes it easier to solve.
6910
6911** When your program contains a fixed file name (like .completions or
6912.abbrev.defs), the file name usually needs to be different on operating
6913systems with limited file name syntax.
6914
6915Now you can avoid ad-hoc conditionals by using the function
6916convert-standard-filename to convert the file name to a proper form
6917for each operating system. Here is an example of use, from the file
6918completions.el:
6919
6920(defvar save-completions-file-name
6921 (convert-standard-filename "~/.completions")
6922 "*The filename to save completions to.")
6923
6924This sets the variable save-completions-file-name to a value that
6925depends on the operating system, because the definition of
6926convert-standard-filename depends on the operating system. On
6927Unix-like systems, it returns the specified file name unchanged. On
6928MS-DOS, it adapts the name to fit the limitations of that system.
6929
6930** The interactive spec N now returns the numeric prefix argument
6931rather than the raw prefix argument. (It still reads a number using the
6932minibuffer if there is no prefix argument at all.)
6933
6934** When a process is deleted, this no longer disconnects the process
6935marker from its buffer position.
6936
6937** The variable garbage-collection-messages now controls whether
6938Emacs displays a message at the beginning and end of garbage collection.
6939The default is nil, meaning there are no messages.
6940
6941** The variable debug-ignored-errors specifies certain kinds of errors
6942that should not enter the debugger. Its value is a list of error
6943condition symbols and/or regular expressions. If the error has any
6944of the condition symbols listed, or if any of the regular expressions
6945matches the error message, then that error does not enter the debugger,
6946regardless of the value of debug-on-error.
6947
6948This variable is initialized to match certain common but uninteresting
6949errors that happen often during editing.
6950
6951** The new function error-message-string converts an error datum
6952into its error message. The error datum is what condition-case
6953puts into the variable, to describe the error that happened.
6954
6955** Anything that changes which buffer appears in a given window
6956now runs the window-scroll-functions for that window.
6957
6958** The new function get-buffer-window-list returns a list of windows displaying
6959a buffer. The function is called with the buffer (a buffer object or a buffer
6960name) and two optional arguments specifying the minibuffer windows and frames
6961to search. Therefore this function takes optional args like next-window etc.,
6962and not get-buffer-window.
6963
6964** buffer-substring now runs the hook buffer-access-fontify-functions,
6965calling each function with two arguments--the range of the buffer
6966being accessed. buffer-substring-no-properties does not call them.
6967
6968If you use this feature, you should set the variable
6969buffer-access-fontified-property to a non-nil symbol, which is a
6970property name. Then, if all the characters in the buffer range have a
6971non-nil value for that property, the buffer-access-fontify-functions
6972are not called. When called, these functions should put a non-nil
6973property on the text that they fontify, so that they won't get called
6974over and over for the same text.
6975
6976** Changes in lisp-mnt.el
6977
6978*** The lisp-mnt package can now recognize file headers that are written
6979in the formats used by the `what' command and the RCS `ident' command:
6980
6981;; @(#) HEADER: text
6982;; $HEADER: text $
6983
6984in addition to the normal
6985
6986;; HEADER: text
6987
6988*** The commands lm-verify and lm-synopsis are now interactive. lm-verify
6989checks that the library file has proper sections and headers, and
6990lm-synopsis extracts first line "synopsis'"information.
6991\f
6992* For older news, see the file ONEWS.
6993
6994----------------------------------------------------------------------
6995Copyright information:
6996
6997Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6998
6999 Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies
7000 of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the
7001 copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved,
7002 thus giving the recipient permission to redistribute in turn.
7003
7004 Permission is granted to distribute modified versions
7005 of this document, or of portions of it,
7006 under the above conditions, provided also that they
7007 carry prominent notices stating who last changed them.
7008\f
7009Local variables:
7010mode: outline
7011paragraph-separate: "[ \f]*$"
7012end: