77ba82c15ad43346709c8b8fbdd17ed1612292a1
[bpt/emacs.git] / etc / NEWS.23
1 GNU Emacs NEWS -- history of user-visible changes.
2
3 Copyright (C) 2007-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 See the end of the file for license conditions.
5
6 Please send Emacs bug reports to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org.
7 If possible, use M-x report-emacs-bug.
8
9 This file is about changes in Emacs version 23.
10
11 See files NEWS.22, NEWS.21, NEWS.20, NEWS.19, NEWS.18, and NEWS.1-17
12 for changes in older Emacs versions.
13
14 You can narrow news to a specific version by calling `view-emacs-news'
15 with a prefix argument or by typing C-u C-h C-n.
16
17 \f
18 * Installation Changes in Emacs 23.4
19
20 ** The MS-Windows build prefers libpng version 1.14 or later.
21 Versions of libpng before 1.14 had security issues, so we now
22 recommend to use version 1.14 or later. Precompiled Windows binaries
23 require version 1.14 or later. See README.W32 and nt/INSTALL for
24 details and pointers to URLs where the latest libpng can be
25 downloaded.
26
27 * Changes in Specialized Modes and Packages in Emacs 23.4
28
29 ** EDE
30
31 *** New variable `ede-project-directories'.
32 EDE now refuses to automatically load a project file (Project.ede)
33 unless the file is in one of the directories specified by this
34 variable. This reduces the risk of inadvertently loading malicious
35 project files. The commands `M-x ede-new' and `M-x ede' now offer to
36 save directories to `ede-project-directories'.
37
38 * Changes in Emacs 23.4 on non-free operating systems
39
40 ** The MS-Windows port can now use more than 500MB of heap.
41 Depending on the available virtual memory, Emacs on Windows can now
42 have up to 2GB of heap space. This allows, e.g., visiting several
43 large (> 256MB) files in the same session.
44
45 \f
46 * Installation Changes in Emacs 23.3
47
48 ** New configure option --with-crt-dir specifies the location of your
49 crt*.o files, if they are in a non-standard location. This is only
50 used on x86-64 and s390x GNU/Linux architectures.
51
52 * Changes in Emacs 23.3
53
54 ** The last-resort backup file `%backup%~' is now written to
55 `user-emacs-directory', instead of the user's home directory.
56
57 ** If Emacs creates `user-emacs-directory', that directory's
58 permissions are now set to rwx------, ignoring the umask.
59
60 \f
61 * Changes in Specialized Modes and Packages in Emacs 23.3
62
63 ** Calendar and diary
64
65 *** The appt-add command takes an optional argument, the warning time.
66 This can be used in place of the default appt-message-warning-time.
67
68 ** Python mode
69
70 *** You can allow inferior Python processes to load modules from the
71 current directory by setting `python-remove-cwd-from-path' to nil.
72
73 ** Rmail
74
75 *** The default value of `rmail-enable-mime' is now t. Rmail decodes
76 MIME contents automatically. You can customize the variable
77 `rmail-enable-mime' back to `nil' to disable this automatic MIME
78 decoding.
79
80 *** The command `rmail-mime' change the displaying of a MIME message
81 between decoded presentation form and raw data if `rmail-enable-mime'
82 is non-nil. And, with prefix argument, it change only the displaying
83 of the MIME entity at point.
84
85 *** The new command `rmail-mime-next-item' (bound to TAB) moves point
86 to the next item of MIME message.
87
88 *** The new command `rmail-mime-previous-item' (bound to backtab) moves
89 point to the previous item of MIME message.
90
91 *** The new command `rmail-mime-toggle-hidden' (RET) hide or show the
92 body of the MIME entity at point.
93
94 ** VC and related modes
95
96 *** New VC command `vc-log-incoming', bound to `C-x v I'.
97 This shows a log of changes to be received with a pull operation.
98 For Git, this runs "git fetch" to make the necessary data available
99 locally; this requires version 1.7 or newer.
100
101 *** New VC command `vc-log-outgoing', bound to `C-x v O'.
102 This shows a log of changes to be sent in the next commit.
103
104 *** New VC command vc-find-conflicted-file.
105
106 *** The 'g' key in VC diff, log, log-incoming and log-outgoing buffers
107 reruns the corresponding VC command to compute an up to date version
108 of the buffer.
109
110 *** vc-dir for Bzr supports viewing shelve contents and shelving snapshots.
111
112 *** Special markup can be added to log-edit buffers.
113 You can add headers specifying additional information to be supplied
114 to the version control system. For example:
115
116 Author: J. R. Hacker <jrh@example.com>
117 Fixes: 4204
118 Actual text of log entry...
119
120 Bazaar recognizes the headers "Author", "Date" and "Fixes".
121 Git, Mercurial, and Monotone recognize "Author" and "Date".
122 Any unknown header is left as is in the message, so it is not lost.
123
124 ** Obsolete packages
125
126 *** lmenu.el and cl-compat.el are now obsolete.
127
128 \f
129 * New Modes and Packages in Emacs 23.3
130
131 ** smie.el is a generic navigation and indentation engine.
132 It takes a simple BNF description of the grammar, and provides both
133 sexp-style navigation (jumping over begin..end pairs) as well as
134 indentation, which can be adjusted via ad-hoc indentation rules.
135
136 \f
137 * Incompatible Lisp Changes in Emacs 23.3
138
139 ** posn-col-row now excludes the header line from the row count
140 If the frame has a header line, posn-col-row will count row numbers
141 starting from the first line of text below the header line.
142
143 \f
144 * Lisp changes in Emacs 23.3
145
146 ** `e' and `pi' are now called `float-e' and `float-pi'.
147 The old names are obsolete.
148
149 ** The use of unintern without an obarray arg is now obsolete.
150
151 ** The function `princ-list' is now obsolete.
152
153 ** The yank-handler argument to kill-region and friends is now obsolete.
154
155 ** New function byte-to-string, like char-to-string but for bytes.
156
157 \f
158 * Changes in Emacs 23.3 on non-free operating systems
159
160 ** The NeXTstep port can have different modifiers for the left and right
161 alt/option key by customizing the value for ns-right-alternate-modifier.
162
163 \f
164 * Installation Changes in Emacs 23.2
165
166 ** New configure options for Emacs developers.
167 These are not new features; only the configure flags are new.
168
169 *** --enable-profiling builds Emacs with profiling enabled.
170 This might not work on all platforms.
171
172 *** --enable-checking[=OPTIONS] builds emacs with extra runtime checks.
173
174 ** `make install' now consistently ignores umask, creating a
175 world-readable install.
176
177 ** Emacs compiles with Gconf support, if it is detected.
178 Use the configure option --without-gconf to disable this.
179 This is used by the `font-use-system-font' feature (see below).
180
181 * Startup Changes in Emacs 23.2
182
183 ** The command-line option -Q (--quick) also inhibits loading X resources.
184 However, if Emacs is compiled with the Lucid or Motif toolkit, X
185 resource settings for the graphical widgets are still applied.
186 On Windows, the -Q option causes Emacs to ignore Registry settings,
187 but environment variables set on the Registry are still honored.
188
189 *** The new variable `inhibit-x-resources' shows whether X resources
190 were loaded.
191
192 ** New command-line option -mm (--maximized) maximizes the initial frame.
193
194 * Changes in Emacs 23.2
195
196 ** The maximum size of buffers (and the largest fixnum) is doubled.
197 On typical 32bit systems, buffers can now be up to 512MB.
198
199 ** The default value of `trash-directory' is now nil.
200 This means that `move-file-to-trash' trashes files according to
201 freedesktop.org specifications, the same method used by the Gnome,
202 KDE, and XFCE desktops. (This change has no effect on Windows, which
203 uses `system-move-file-to-trash' for trashing.)
204
205 ** The pointer now becomes invisible when typing.
206 Customize `make-pointer-invisible' to disable this feature.
207
208 ** Font changes
209
210 *** Emacs can use the system default monospaced font in Gnome.
211 To enable this feature, set `font-use-system-font' to non-nil (it is
212 nil by default). If the system default changes, Emacs changes also.
213 This feature requires Gconf support, which is automatically included
214 at compile-time if configure detects the gconf libraries (you can
215 disable this with the configure option --without-gconf).
216
217 *** On X11, Emacs reacts to Xft changes made by configuration tools,
218 via the XSETTINGS mechanism. This includes antialias, hinting,
219 hintstyle, RGBA, DPI and lcdfilter changes.
220
221 ** Killing a buffer with a running process now asks for confirmation.
222 To remove this query, remove `process-kill-buffer-query-function' from
223 `kill-buffer-query-functions', or set the appropriate process flag
224 with `set-process-query-on-exit-flag'.
225
226 ** File-local variable changes
227
228 *** Specifying a minor mode as a local variables enables that mode,
229 unconditionally. The previous behavior, toggling the mode, was
230 neither reliable nor generally desirable.
231
232 *** There are new commands for adding and removing file-local variables:
233 `add-file-local-variable', `delete-file-local-variable',
234 `add-file-local-variable-prop-line', and
235 `delete-file-local-variable-prop-line'.
236
237 *** There are new commands for adding and removing directory-local variables,
238 and copying them to and from file-local variable lists:
239 `add-dir-local-variable', `delete-dir-local-variable',
240 `copy-dir-locals-to-file-locals',
241 `copy-dir-locals-to-file-locals-prop-line' and
242 `copy-file-locals-to-dir-locals'.
243
244 ** Internationalization changes
245
246 *** Unibyte sessions are now considered obsolete.
247 This refers to the EMACS_UNIBYTE environment variable as well as the
248 --unibyte, --multibyte, --no-multibyte, and --no-unibyte command line
249 arguments. Customizing enable-multibyte-characters and setting
250 default-enable-multibyte-characters are also deprecated.
251
252 *** New coding system `utf-8-hfs'.
253 This is suitable for default-file-name-coding-system on Mac OS X; see
254 international/ucs-normalize.el.
255
256 ** Function arguments in *Help* buffers are now shown in upper-case.
257 Customize `help-downcase-arguments' to t to show them in lower-case.
258
259 ** New command `async-shell-command', bound globally to `M-&'.
260 This executes the command asynchronously, similar to calling `M-!' and
261 manually adding an ampersand to the end of the command. With `M-&',
262 you don't need the ampersand. The output appears in the buffer
263 `*Async Shell Command*'.
264
265 ** When running in a new enough xterm (newer than version 242), Emacs
266 asks xterm what the background color is and it sets up faces
267 accordingly for a dark background if needed (the current default is to
268 consider the background light).
269
270 \f
271 * Editing Changes in Emacs 23.2
272
273 ** Kill-ring and selection changes
274
275 *** If `select-active-regions' is t, any active region automatically
276 becomes the primary selection (for interaction with other window
277 applications). If you enable this, you might want to bind
278 `mouse-yank-primary' to Mouse-2.
279
280 *** When `save-interprogram-paste-before-kill' is non-nil, the kill
281 commands save the interprogram-paste selection into the kill ring
282 before doing anything else. This avoids losing the selection.
283
284 *** When `kill-do-not-save-duplicates' is non-nil, identical
285 subsequent kills are not duplicated in the `kill-ring'.
286
287 ** Completion changes
288
289 *** The new command `completion-at-point' provides mode-sensitive completion.
290
291 *** tab-always-indent set to `complete' lets TAB do completion as well.
292
293 *** The new completion-style `initials' is available.
294 For instance, this can complete M-x lch to list-command-history.
295
296 *** The new variable `completions-format' determines how completions
297 are displayed in the *Completions* buffer. If you set it to
298 `vertical', completions are sorted vertically in columns.
299
300 ** The default value of `blink-matching-paren-distance' is increased.
301
302 ** M-n provides more default values in the minibuffer for commands
303 that read file names. These include the file name at point (when ffap
304 is loaded without ffap-bindings), the file name on the current line
305 (in Dired buffers), and the directory names of adjacent Dired windows
306 (for Dired commands that operate on several directories, such as copy,
307 rename, or diff).
308
309 ** M-r is bound to the new `move-to-window-line-top-bottom'.
310 This moves point to the window center, top and bottom on successive
311 invocations, in the same spirit as the C-l (recenter-top-bottom)
312 command.
313
314 ** The new variable `recenter-positions' determines the default
315 cycling order of C-l (`recenter-top-bottom').
316
317 ** The abbrevs file is now a file named abbrev_defs in
318 user-emacs-directory; but the old location, ~/.abbrev_defs, is used if
319 that file exists.
320
321 \f
322 * Changes in Specialized Modes and Packages in Emacs 23.2
323
324 ** The bookmark menu has a narrowing search via bookmark-bmenu-search.
325
326 ** Calc
327
328 *** The Calc settings file is now a file named calc.el in
329 user-emacs-directory; but the old location, ~/.calc.el, is used if
330 that file exists.
331
332 *** Graphing commands (`g f' etc.) now work on MS-Windows, if you have
333 the native Windows port of Gnuplot version 3.8 or later installed.
334
335 ** Calendar and diary
336
337 *** Fancy diary display is now the default.
338 If you prefer the simple display, customize `diary-display-function'.
339
340 *** The diary's fancy display now enables view-mode.
341
342 *** The command `calendar-current-date' accepts an optional argument
343 giving an offset from today.
344
345 ** Desktop
346
347 *** The default value for `desktop-buffers-not-to-save' is nil.
348 This means Desktop will try restoring all buffers, when you restart
349 your Emacs session. Also, `desktop-buffers-not-to-save' is only
350 effective for buffers that have no associated file. If you want to
351 exempt buffers that do correspond to files, customize the value of
352 `desktop-files-not-to-save' instead.
353
354 ** Dired
355
356 *** The new variable `dired-auto-revert-buffer', if non-nil, causes
357 Dired buffers to be reverted automatically on revisiting them.
358
359 ** DocView
360
361 *** When `doc-view-continuous' is non-nil, scrolling a line
362 on the page edge advances to the next/previous page.
363
364 ** Elint
365
366 *** Elint now uses compilation-mode.
367
368 *** Elint can now scan individual files and whole directories,
369 and can be run in batch mode.
370
371 *** Elint does a more thorough initialization, and recognizes more built-in
372 functions and variables. Customize `elint-scan-preloaded' if you want
373 to sacrifice some accuracy for a faster startup.
374
375 *** Elint attempts some basic understanding of featurep and (f)boundp tests.
376
377 *** Customize `elint-ignored-warnings' to suppress some warnings.
378
379 ** GDB-UI
380
381 *** Toolbar functionality for reverse debugging. Display of STL
382 collections as watch expressions. These features require GDB 7.0 or later.
383
384 ** Grep
385
386 *** A new command `zrgrep' searches recursively in gzipped files.
387
388 ** Info
389
390 *** The new command `Info-virtual-index' bound to "I" displays a menu of
391 matched topics found in the index.
392
393 *** The new command `info-finder' replaces finder.el with a virtual Info
394 manual that generates an Info file which gives the same information
395 through a menu structure.
396
397 ** LaTeX mode now provides completion (via completion-at-point).
398
399 ** Message mode is now the default mode for composing mail.
400
401 The default for `mail-user-agent' is now message-user-agent, so the
402 C-x m (`compose-mail') command uses Message mode instead of Mail mode.
403
404 Message mode has been included in Emacs, as part of the Gnus package,
405 for several years. It provides several features that are absent in
406 Mail mode, such as MIME handling.
407
408 *** If the user has not customized mail-user-agent, `compose-mail'
409 checks for Mail mode customizations, and issues a warning if these
410 customizations are found. This alerts users who may otherwise be
411 unaware that their mail configuration has changed.
412
413 To disable this check, set compose-mail-user-agent-warnings to nil.
414
415 ** The default value of mail-interactive is t, since Emacs 23.1.
416 (This was not announced at the time.) It means that when sending mail,
417 Emacs will wait for the process sending mail to return. If you
418 experience delays when sending mail, you may wish to set this to nil.
419
420 ** nXML mode is now the default for editing XML files.
421
422 ** pcomplete provides a new command `pcomplete-std-completion' which
423 is similar to `pcomplete' but using the standard completion UI code.
424
425 ** Shell (and other comint modes)
426
427 *** M-s is no longer bound to `comint-next-matching-input'.
428
429 *** M-r is now bound to `comint-history-isearch-backward-regexp'.
430 This starts an incremental search of the comint/shell input history.
431
432 *** ansi-color is now enabled by default in Shell mode.
433 To disable it, set ansi-color-for-comint-mode to nil.
434
435 ** Tramp
436
437 *** New connection methods "rsyncc", "imap" and "imaps".
438 On systems which support GVFS-Fuse, Tramp offers also the new
439 connection methods "dav", "davs", "obex" and "synce".
440
441 ** VC and related modes
442
443 *** When using C-x v v or C-x v i on a unregistered file that is in a
444 directory not controlled by any VCS, ask the user what VC backend to
445 use to create a repository, create a new repository and register the
446 file.
447
448 *** New command `vc-root-print-log', bound to `C-x v L'.
449 This displays a `*vc-change-log*' buffer showing the history of the
450 version-controlled directory tree as a whole.
451
452 *** New command `vc-root-diff', bound to `C-x v D'.
453 This is similar to `vc-diff', but compares the entire directory tree
454 of the current VC directory with its working revision.
455
456 *** `C-x v l' and `C-x v L' do not show the full log by default.
457 The number of entries shown can be chosen interactively with a prefix
458 argument, or by customizing vc-log-show-limit. The `*vc-change-log*'
459 buffer now contains buttons at the end of the buffer, which can be
460 used to increase the number of entries shown. RCS, SCCS, and CVS do
461 not support this feature.
462
463 *** vc-annotate supports annotations through file copies and renames,
464 it displays the old names for the files and it can show logs/diffs for
465 the corresponding lines. Currently only Git and Mercurial take
466 advantage of this feature.
467
468 *** The log command in vc-annotate can display a single log entry
469 instead of redisplaying the full log. The RCS, CVS and SCCS VC
470 backends do not support this.
471
472 *** When a file is not found, VC will not try to check it out of RCS anymore.
473
474 *** Diff and log operations can be used from Dired buffers.
475
476 *** vc-git changes
477
478 **** The short log format for git makes use of the graph display,
479 so it's not supported on git versions earlier than 1.5.6.
480
481 **** vc-dir uses the --relative option of git, and so requires at least
482 git version 1.5.5.
483
484 **** Support for operating with stashes has been added to vc-dir:
485 the stash list is displayed in the *vc-dir* header, stashes can be
486 created, removed, applied and their content displayed.
487
488 *** vc-bzr supports operating with shelves: the shelve list is
489 displayed in the *vc-dir* header, shelves can be created, removed and applied.
490
491 *** log-edit-strip-single-file-name controls whether or not single filenames
492 are stripped when copying text from the ChangeLog to the *VC-Log* buffer.
493
494 ** Miscellaneous
495
496 *** Interactively `multi-isearch-buffers' and `multi-isearch-buffers-regexp'
497 read buffer names to search, one by one, ended with RET. With a prefix
498 argument, they ask for a regexp, and search in buffers whose names match
499 the specified regexp. Interactively `multi-isearch-files' and
500 `multi-isearch-files-regexp' read file names to search, one by one,
501 ended with RET. With a prefix argument, they ask for a wildcard, and
502 search in file buffers whose file names match the specified wildcard.
503
504 *** Autorevert Tail mode now works also for remote files.
505
506 *** The new eshell built-in commands `su' and `sudo' support Tramp.
507 Thus, they change `default-directory' to reflect the new user id, and
508 let commands run under that user's permissions. This works even when
509 `default-directory' is already remote. Calling the external commands
510 is possible via `*su' or `*sudo', respectively.
511
512 ** Obsolete packages
513
514 *** sym-comp.el is now obsolete, superseded by completion-at-point.
515
516 *** lucid.el and levents.el are now obsolete.
517
518 \f
519 * New Modes and Packages in Emacs 23.2
520
521 ** CEDET (the Collection of Emacs Development Tools) is now in Emacs.
522 This is a collection of packages to aid with using Emacs as an IDE
523 (integrated development environment):
524
525 *** The Semantic package allows the use of parsers to intelligently
526 edit and navigate source code. Parsers for C/C++, Java, Javascript,
527 and several other languages are included by default, and Semantic can
528 also interface with external tools such as GNU Global and GNU Idutils.
529
530 To enable Semantic, use the global minor mode `semantic-mode'.
531 See the Semantic manual for details.
532
533 *** EDE (Emacs Development Environment) is a package for managing code
534 projects, including features such as automatic Makefile generation.
535
536 To enable EDE, use the minor mode `global-ede-mode'.
537 See the EDE manual for details.
538
539 *** SRecode is a library for recoding Semantic tags back into source
540 code. It is currently used by some parts of Semantic and EDE; in the
541 future, it may be used for code generation features.
542
543 *** The EIEIO library implements a subset of the Common Lisp Object
544 System (CLOS). It is used by the other CEDET packages.
545
546 ** mpc.el is a front end for the Music Player Daemon. Run it with M-x mpc.
547
548 ** htmlfontify.el turns a fontified Emacs buffer into an HTML page.
549
550 ** js.el is a new major mode for JavaScript files.
551
552 ** imap-hash.el is a new library to address IMAP mailboxes as hashtables.
553
554 \f
555 * Incompatible Lisp Changes in Emacs 23.2
556
557 ** The Lisp reader turns integers that are too large/small into floats.
558 For instance, on machines where `536870911' is the largest integer,
559 reading `536870912' gives the floating-point object `536870912.0'.
560
561 This change only concerns the Lisp reader; it does not affect how
562 actual integer objects overflow.
563
564 ** Several obsolete functions removed.
565 The functions have been obsolete since Emacs 19, and are unlikely to
566 be in use:
567
568 time-stamp-month-dd-yyyy, time-stamp-dd/mm/yyyy, time-stamp-mon-dd-yyyy
569 time-stamp-dd-mon-yy, time-stamp-yy/mm/dd, time-stamp-yyyy/mm/dd,
570 time-stamp-yyyy-mm-dd, time-stamp-yymmdd, time-stamp-hh:mm:ss,
571 time-stamp-hhmm, baud-rate
572
573 ** Support for generating Emacs 18 compatible bytecode (by setting
574 the variable `byte-compile-compatibility') has been removed.
575
576 ** In image-mode.el `image-mode-maybe' is obsolete.
577 Instead, you can either use `image-mode' (which displays an image file
578 as the actual image initially), or `image-mode-as-text' (when you want
579 to display an image file as text initially). `image-mode-as-text' is a
580 combination of a non-image mode from `auto-mode-alist' (or Fundamental
581 mode) and `image-minor-mode'. `image-minor-mode' provides a `C-c C-c'
582 key binding to toggle image display.
583 `image-toggle-display-text' removes image properties.
584 `image-toggle-display-image' adds image properties.
585 `image-toggle-display' toggles between `image-mode-as-text' and `image-mode'.
586
587 \f
588 * Lisp changes in Emacs 23.2
589
590 ** All the default-FOO variables that hold the default value of the FOO
591 variable, are now declared obsolete.
592
593 ** read-key is a function halfway between read-event and read-key-sequence.
594 It reads a single key, but obeys input and escape sequence decoding.
595
596 ** Frame parameter changes
597
598 *** You can give the `fullscreen' frame parameter the value `maximized'.
599 This maximizes the frame.
600
601 *** The new frame parameter `sticky' makes Emacs frames sticky in
602 virtual desktops.
603
604 ** Completion changes
605
606 *** completion-base-size is obsoleted by completion-base-position.
607 This change causes a few backward incompatibilities, mostly with
608 choose-completion-string-functions where the `mini-p' argument has
609 been replaced by a `base-position' argument, and where the `base-size'
610 argument is now always nil.
611
612 *** New function `completion-in-region' to use the standard completion
613 facilities on a particular region of text.
614
615 *** The 4th arg to all-completions (aka hide-spaces) is declared obsolete.
616
617 *** completion-annotate-function specifies how to compute annotations
618 for completions displayed in *Completions*.
619
620 ** Minibuffer changes
621
622 *** read-file-name-predicate is obsolete. It was used to pass the predicate
623 to read-file-name-internal because read-file-name-internal abused its `pred'
624 argument to pass the current directory, but this hack is not needed
625 any more.
626
627 ** Changes to file-manipulation functions
628
629 *** `delete-directory' has an optional parameter RECURSIVE.
630
631 *** New function `copy-directory', which copies a directory recursively.
632
633 ** called-interactively-p now takes one argument and replaces interactive-p
634 which is now marked obsolete.
635
636 ** New function set-advertised-calling-convention makes it possible
637 to obsolete arguments as well as make some arguments mandatory.
638
639 ** You can control which binding is preferentially shown in menus and
640 docstrings by adding a `:advertised-binding' property to the corresponding
641 command's symbol. That property can hold a single binding or a list
642 of bindings.
643
644 ** Network and process changes
645
646 *** start-process-shell-command and start-file-process-shell-command
647 now only take a single `command' argument.
648
649 *** The new variable `process-file-side-effects' should be set to nil
650 if a `process-file' call does not change a remote file. This allows
651 file name handlers such as Tramp to optimizations.
652
653 *** make-network-process can now also create `seqpacket' Unix sockets.
654
655 ** Loading changes
656
657 *** eval-next-after-load is obsolete.
658
659 *** New hook `after-load-functions' run after loading an Elisp file.
660
661 ** Byte compilation changes
662
663 *** Changing the file-names generated by byte-compilation by redefining
664 the function `byte-compile-dest-file' before loading bytecomp.el is obsolete.
665 Instead, customize byte-compile-dest-file-function.
666
667 *** `byte-compile-warnings' has new members, `constants' and `suspicious'.
668
669 ** New macro with-silent-modifications to tweak text properties without
670 affecting the buffer's modification state.
671
672 ** Hash tables have a new printed representation that is readable.
673 The feature `hashtable-print-readable' identifies this new
674 functionality.
675
676 ** New functions for performing Unicode normalization:
677 ucs-normalize-NFD-region, ucs-normalize-NFD-string,
678 ucs-normalize-NFC-region, ucs-normalize-NFC-string,
679 ucs-normalize-NFKD-region, ucs-normalize-NFKD-string,
680 ucs-normalize-NFKC-region, ucs-normalize-NFKC-string,
681 ucs-normalize-HFS-NFD-region, ucs-normalize-HFS-NFD-string,
682 ucs-normalize-HFS-NFC-region, ucs-normalize-HFS-NFC-string.
683
684 ** Face aliases can now be marked as obsolete, using the macro
685 `define-obsolete-face-alias'.
686
687 ** New function `window-full-height-p', analogous to the full-width version.
688
689 \f
690 * Changes in Emacs 23.2 on non-free operating systems
691
692 ** On MS-Windows, `display-time' now displays the system load average
693 as well as the time, as it does on GNU and Unix.
694
695 \f
696 * Installation Changes in Emacs 23.1
697
698 ** The default X toolkit is now Gtk+, rather than Lucid.
699 The configure option `--with-gtk' has been removed. Gtk is now the
700 default toolkit, but you can use --with-x-toolkit=gtk if necessary.
701
702 ** New font code.
703 Fonts are handled by new code capable of dealing with multiple font
704 backends. This uses the freetype and fontconfig libraries.
705
706 *** Emacs now accepts font names supplied in the fontconfig format
707 (e.g. "monospace-12:bold") and GTK format (e.g. "Monospace Bold 12").
708
709 *** Added support for local fonts (fonts installed on the machine
710 where Emacs is running).
711
712 *** Added support for the Xft library for antialiasing.
713
714 *** Added support for the otf library for complex text layout by
715 OpenType fonts.
716
717 *** Added support for the m17n library for text shaping.
718
719 ** Changes to image support
720
721 *** configure now checks for libgif before libungif when searching for
722 a GIF library.
723
724 *** Emacs now supports the SVG image format through librsvg2.
725
726 *** Emacs now supports multi-page TIFF images.
727
728 ** New NeXTstep-based port.
729 This provides support for GNUstep (via the GNUstep libraries) and Mac
730 OS X (via the Cocoa libraries).
731
732 Specify --with-ns to configure for this. By default, a self-contained
733 app will be built (containing all lisp). To install/share lisp with
734 other emacsen (e.g. X11 build) use --disable-ns-self-contained. See
735 nextstep/README and nextstep/INSTALL in the Emacs source directory.
736
737 ** Mac OS X is no longer supported via Carbon.
738 Use the NeXTstep port, described above.
739
740 ** The new configuration option "--with-dbus" enables D-Bus language
741 bindings for Emacs.
742
743 ** Support for many obsolete platforms has been removed.
744 See the list at the end of etc/MACHINES for details.
745
746 *** Support for systems without alloca has been removed.
747
748 *** Support for Sun windows has been removed.
749
750 *** The `emacstool' utility has been removed.
751
752 ** The following platforms will be removed in a future Emacs version:
753 If you are still using Emacs on one of these platforms, please email
754 emacs-devel@gnu.org to inform the Emacs developers.
755
756 *** Old GNU/Linux systems based on libc version 5.
757
758 *** Old FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD systems based on the COFF
759 executable format.
760
761 *** Solaris versions 2.6 and below.
762
763 *** Solaris on IBM RS6000 machines.
764
765 *** UNIX System V (the original SysV, not later platforms based on it).
766
767 *** Unixware on non-x86 machines.
768
769 *** Platforms not supporting shared libraries (i.e., requiring the
770 NO_SHARED_LIBS compilation flag).
771
772 ** The configure options `--with-gcc', `--without-gcc' have been removed.
773 Configure will use gcc by default. Set the CC environment variable if
774 you need control over which C compiler is used.
775
776 ** The refcards are now shipped as PDF files.
777
778 ** The manuals are now licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License v1.3,
779 or any later version.
780
781 ** Emacs 23 comes with a new set of default icons.
782 Various resolutions are available as etc/images/icons/hicolor/*/apps/emacs.png.
783 The Emacs 22 icon is available as `emacs22.png' in the same location.
784 \f
785 * Changes in Emacs 23.1
786
787 ** Improved X Window System support
788
789 *** Emacs now supports using both X displays and ttys in one session.
790 With an Emacs server active (M-x server-start), `emacsclient -t'
791 creates a tty frame connected to the running emacs server. You can
792 use any number of different ttys. `emacsclient -c' creates a new X11
793 frame on the current $DISPLAY (or a tty frame if $DISPLAY is not set).
794 There may be problems if a display exits unexpectedly and Emacs is compiled
795 with Gtk+, see etc/PROBLEMS.
796
797 You can test for the presence of this feature in your Lisp code by
798 testing for the `multi-tty' feature.
799
800 *** Emacs starts in the background, as a daemon, when given the
801 --daemon command line argument. It disconnects from the terminal and
802 starts the server. Clients can connect and create graphical or
803 terminal frames using emacsclient.
804
805 **** emacsclient starts emacs in daemon mode and connects to it when
806 --alternate-editor="" is used (or when the environment variable
807 ALTERNATE_EDITOR is set to "") and emacsclient cannot connect to an
808 emacs server.
809
810 *** The new command close-display-connection closes a connection to a
811 remote display. There are some bugs for Gtk+. See etc/PROBLEMS.
812
813 *** Emacs now supports the XEmbed specification.
814 You can embed Emacs in another application on X11. The new command line
815 option --parent-id is used to pass the parent window id to Emacs. See
816 http://standards.freedesktop.org/xembed-spec/xembed-spec-latest.html
817 for details about XEmbed.
818
819 *** Emacs can now set the frame opacity.
820 The opacity of a frame can be controlled by setting the `alpha' frame
821 parameter. This only takes effect on a compositing window manager for
822 the X Window System, such as Compiz, Beryl and Compiz Fusion, on Mac
823 OS X, or on Windows 2000 and later versions of Windows.
824
825 The alpha parameter should be an integer between 0 (transparent) and
826 100 (opaque), or a float number between 0.0 and 1.0. It can also be a
827 cons cell (ACTIVE . INACTIVE), where ACTIVE is the opacity of an
828 active frame and INACTIVE is the opacity of non-active frames.
829
830 The variable `frame-alpha-lower-limit' defines a lower bound for the
831 opacity; the default is 20.
832
833 ** Internationalization changes
834
835 *** The Emacs character set is now a superset of Unicode.
836 (It has about four times the code space, which should be plenty).
837
838 The internal encoding used for buffers and strings is now
839 Unicode-based and called `utf-8-emacs' (`emacs-internal' is an alias
840 for this). This encoding is backward-compatible with Unicode's UTF-8
841 encoding. The internal encoding previously used by Emacs,
842 `emacs-mule', is still available for reading and writing files.
843
844 During byte-compilation, Emacs 23 uses `utf-8-emacs' to write files.
845 As a result, byte-compiled files containing non-ASCII characters can't
846 be read by earlier versions of Emacs. Files compiled by Emacs 20, 21,
847 or 22 are loaded correctly as `emacs-mule' (whether or not they
848 contain multibyte characters). This takes somewhat more time, so it
849 may be worth recompiling existing .elc files which don't need to be
850 shared with older Emacsen.
851
852 *** There are new coding systems/aliases; see M-x list-coding-systems.
853
854 *** There is a new charset implementation with many new charsets.
855 See M-x list-character-sets. New charsets can be defined conveniently
856 as tables of Unicode code points.
857
858 *** There are new language environments for Chinese-GBK,
859 Chinese-GB18030, Khmer, Bengali, Punjabi, Gujarati, Oriya, Telugu,
860 Sinhala, and TaiViet.
861
862 *** The minor modes unify-8859-on-encoding-mode and
863 unify-8859-on-decoding-mode are obsolete.
864
865 *** `ucs-insert' is bound to `C-x 8 RET' and in addition to hex numbers
866 accepts numbers in hash notation (e.g. #o21430 for octal, or #10r8984 for
867 decimal). It also accepts Unicode character names with completion.
868
869 *** The `cyrillic-translit' input method supports many new characters.
870 Common typographical characters available from Unicode were added to
871 `cyrillic-translit': punctuation marks, accented characters, fractions,
872 and others.
873
874 ** Emacs now supports serial port access on GNU/Linux, Unix, and
875 Windows. The new command `serial-term' starts an interactive terminal
876 on a serial port. The serial port can be configured at runtime with
877 the mode-line mouse menu.
878
879 ** Menu Bar changes
880
881 *** In the Options menu, the "Set Default Font" item applies the
882 selected font to the `default' face on all frames, not just the
883 current frame. Furthermore, if Emacs is compiled with both GTK and
884 Fontconfig support, the "Set Default Font" item uses the GTK font
885 selection dialog instead of an Emacs pop-up menu.
886
887 *** The font setting chosen by "Set Default Font" is saved if the
888 "Save Options" item is used.
889
890 *** The Tools menu contains a new Encryption/Decryption submenu.
891 This contains commands provided by EasyPG, the newly-included
892 interface to GnuPG (see New Modes and Packages).
893
894 *** In the Options menu, the "Truncate Long Lines in the Buffer" entry
895 has been replaced with a submenu offering three different ways to
896 handle long lines: truncation, continuation at the window edge, and
897 the new word wrapping behavior (see Editing Changes, below).
898
899 *** Improvements to menus for major and minor modes
900 More major and minor modes now have a mode specific menu, and existing
901 mode menus have been improved to include more functionality.
902
903 ** Mode-line changes
904
905 *** The mode-line displays a `@', instead of `-', if the
906 default-directory for the current buffer is on a remote machine.
907
908 *** The mode-line displays a mode menu when mouse-1 is clicked on a
909 minor mode, in the same way as it already did for major modes.
910
911 *** The `mode-line-emphasis' face is used to highlight certain
912 mode-line information (e.g. waiting for a VC command to finish).
913
914 *** The mode-line tooltips have been improved to provide more details.
915
916 *** The VC, line/column number and minor mode indicators on the mode
917 line are now interactive: mouse-1 can be used on them to pop up a menu.
918
919 ** File deletion can make use of the Recycle Bin or system Trash folder.
920 Set `delete-by-moving-to-trash' non-nil to use this. Deleted files
921 and directories will then be sent to the Recycle Bin on Windows, and
922 to `trash-directory' on other systems.
923
924 ** Directory-local variables can now be defined.
925 By default, Emacs looks in .dir-locals.el for directory-local
926 variables. For more information, see `dir-locals-set-directory-class'
927 and `dir-locals-set-class-variables'.
928
929 ** Emacs can now use `auth-source' for authentication.
930 `smtpmail' and `url' (Tramp and Gnus also) use `auth-source' to obtain
931 login names and passwords. The match, if found, is reported
932 in *Messages* with the password blanked out.
933
934 ** `where-is-preferred-modifier' can specify your favorite modifier.
935
936 \f
937 * Startup Changes in Emacs 23.1
938
939 ** The option `inhibit-startup-screen' (with aliases to old names
940 `inhibit-splash-screen' and `inhibit-startup-message') doesn't inhibit
941 display of the initial message in the *scratch* buffer. If you don't
942 want to display the initial message in the *scratch* buffer at startup,
943 you can set the option `initial-scratch-message' to nil.
944
945 ** New user option `initial-buffer-choice' specifies what to display
946 after starting Emacs: startup screen, *scratch* buffer, visiting a
947 file or directory.
948
949 ** New alias `argv' for `command-line-args-left'
950 This is a convenience alias, so that one can write `(pop argv)'
951 inside of --eval command line arguments in order to access
952 following arguments.
953
954 ** The abbrev file is no longer read at startup in batch mode.
955
956 ** Emacs now supports invocation by an X session manager.
957 It can save a session and restore it later. See the documentation of
958 the functions `emacs-session-save' and `emacs-session-restore'.
959 (Actually, this feature was introduced with Emacs 22, but it was not
960 documented.)
961 \f
962 * Incompatible Editing Changes in Emacs 23.1
963
964 ** In Dired, `dired-flag-garbage-files' is rebound from `&' to `%&'
965 on the regexp command prefix map.
966
967 ** In Dired-x, all command guesses for ! are now added to the default
968 list accessible by M-n instead of pushing all guesses temporarily into
969 the history list.
970
971 ** In Isearch mode, a special case of typing `C-w' at the beginning of
972 the minibuffer that toggles word search (i.e. using key sequences
973 `C-s RET C-w' or `C-s M-e C-w') is obsolete. You can use the global key
974 `M-s w' to start word search, or type `M-s w' in Isearch mode to
975 toggle word search. To start nonincremental word search you can now use
976 `M-s w RET' and `M-s w C-r RET' instead of `C-s RET C-w' and `C-r RET C-w'.
977
978 ** In Info, `Info-search' is unbound from `M-s' to allow using `M-s w'
979 for word search as well as other search commands from the global prefix
980 key `M-s'. `Info-search' is still bound to `s', and also incremental
981 search commands `C-s', `C-M-s', `C-r', `C-M-r' are available for searching
982 through multiple Info nodes, together with their nonincremental versions
983 `C-s RET', `C-r RET', `C-M-s RET', `C-M-r RET', `M-s w RET'.
984
985 ** In Text mode, `center-line' and `center-paragraph' are rebound from
986 `M-s' and `M-S' to global keys `M-o M-s' and `M-o M-S' on the global
987 prefix map `M-o', which is intended for such formatting commands.
988
989 ** The following input methods were removed in Emacs 22.2, but this was
990 not advertised: danish-alt-postfix, esperanto-alt-postfix,
991 finnish-alt-postfix, german-alt-postfix, icelandic-alt-postfix,
992 norwegian-alt-postfix, scandinavian-alt-postfix, spanish-alt-postfix,
993 and swedish-alt-postfix. Use the versions without "alt-", which are
994 identical.
995
996 \f
997 * Editing Changes in Emacs 23.1
998
999 ** The C-n and C-p line-motion commands now move by screen lines,
1000 taking continued lines and variable-width characters into account.
1001 Setting `line-move-visual' to nil reverts this to the previous
1002 behavior (i.e., motion by logical lines based on buffer contents
1003 alone).
1004
1005 ** C-x C-c now invokes `save-buffers-kill-terminal', and C-z now
1006 invokes `suspend-frame'. These changes are for compatibility with the
1007 new multi-tty support (see `Improved X Window System support' above).
1008
1009 ** Mark changes
1010
1011 *** Transient Mark mode is now on by default.
1012
1013 *** mark-even-if-inactive now defaults to t
1014
1015 *** When Transient Mark mode is on, C-SPC C-SPC pushes a mark without
1016 activating it.
1017
1018 *** When Transient Mark mode is on, M-q now fills the region if the
1019 region is active. Otherwise, it fills the current paragraph.
1020
1021 *** When Transient Mark mode is on, M-$ now checks spelling of the
1022 region if the region is active. Otherwise, it checks spelling of the
1023 word at point.
1024
1025 *** When Transient Mark mode is on, TAB now indents the region if the
1026 region is active.
1027
1028 *** The variable `use-empty-active-region' controls whether an empty
1029 active region in Transient Mark mode should make commands operate on
1030 that empty region.
1031
1032 ** Temporarily active regions
1033
1034 *** The new variable shift-select-mode, non-nil by default, controls
1035 shift-selection. When Shift Select mode is on, shift-translated
1036 motion keys (e.g. S-left and S-down) activate and extend a temporary
1037 region, similar to mouse-selection.
1038
1039 *** Temporarily active regions, created using shift-selection or
1040 mouse-selection, are not necessarily deactivated after the next command.
1041 They are deactivated only after point motion commands that are not
1042 shift-translated, or after commands that would ordinarily deactivate
1043 the mark in Transient Mark mode (e.g., any command that modifies the
1044 buffer).
1045
1046 ** Minibuffer and completion changes
1047
1048 *** Emacs may ask for confirmation before opening a non-existent file
1049 or buffer. By default, Emacs requests confirmation if you type RET
1050 immediately after TAB, and the resulting input is not an existing file
1051 or buffer; this usually happens when the minibuffer input did not
1052 complete far enough and you entered RET by mistake. In that case,
1053 Emacs puts the message "[Confirm]" in the minibuffer; type RET again
1054 to create the file or buffer.
1055
1056 The new variable confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer determines whether
1057 Emacs asks for confirmation. The default value is `after-completion'.
1058 If you change it to t, Emacs always asks for confirmation; if you
1059 change it to nil, Emacs never asks for confirmation.
1060
1061 *** The rules for performing completion have been changed.
1062 When generating completion alternatives, Emacs now takes the
1063 minibuffer text after point, if any, into account: this text is
1064 treated as a substring of the remaining part of the completion
1065 alternative (i.e., the part not matched by the minibuffer text before
1066 point). If no completion alternatives are found this way, Emacs
1067 attempts to perform partial-completion. If still no completion
1068 alternatives are found, we fall back on the Emacs 22 rules for
1069 performing completion.
1070
1071 The new variable `completion-styles' can be customized to choose your
1072 favorite completion style.
1073
1074 *** When M-n in the minibuffer reaches the end of the list of defaults,
1075 it adds the completion list to the end, so next M-n continues putting
1076 completion items to the minibuffer. The same principle applies to
1077 incremental search commands as well: C-s or C-M-s starts searching
1078 the default values and after the end of defaults they continue
1079 searching minibuffer completion items.
1080
1081 *** Minibuffer input of shell commands now comes with completion.
1082
1083 *** In the `C-x d' (Dired) prompt, typing M-n gives the visited file
1084 name of the current buffer.
1085
1086 *** In the M-! (shell-command) prompt, M-n provides some default commands.
1087 These are guessed using the file extension of the current file, based
1088 on the file-handlers specified in the operating system's `mailcap'
1089 file. The ! command in Dired (dired-do-shell-command) works
1090 similarly, using the file displayed on the current line.
1091
1092 *** A list of regexp default values is available via M-n for `occur',
1093 `keep-lines', `flush-lines' and `how-many'. This list includes the active
1094 region in transient-mark-mode, the word under the cursor, the last Isearch
1095 regexp, the last Isearch string and the last replacement regexp.
1096
1097 *** When enable-recursive-minibuffers is non-nil, operations which use
1098 switch-to-buffer (such as C-x b and C-x C-f) do not fail any more when
1099 used in a minibuffer or a dedicated window. Instead, they fallback on
1100 using pop-to-buffer, which will use some other window. This change
1101 has no effect when enable-recursive-minibuffers is nil (the default).
1102
1103 *** Isearch started in the minibuffer searches in the minibuffer history.
1104 Reverse Isearch commands (C-r, C-M-r) search in previous minibuffer
1105 history elements, and forward Isearch commands (C-s, C-M-s) search in
1106 next history elements. When the reverse search reaches the first history
1107 element, it wraps to the last history element, and the forward search
1108 wraps to the first history element. When the search is terminated, the
1109 history element containing the search string becomes the current.
1110
1111 *** The variable read-file-name-completion-ignore-case overrides
1112 completion-ignore-case for file name completion.
1113
1114 *** The variable read-buffer-completion-ignore-case overrides
1115 completion-ignore-case for buffer name completion.
1116
1117 *** The new command `minibuffer-force-complete' chooses one of the
1118 possible completions, rather than stopping at the common prefix.
1119
1120 *** If `completion-auto-help' is `lazy', Emacs shows the completions
1121 buffer only on the second attempt to complete. This was already
1122 supported in `partial-completion-mode'.
1123
1124 ** Face changes
1125
1126 *** S-down-mouse-1 now pops up a menu for changing the font and text
1127 size of the default face in the current buffer. The face is changed
1128 via face remapping (see Lisp changes, below).
1129
1130 *** New commands to change the default face size in the current buffer.
1131 To increase it, type `C-x C-+' or `C-x C-='. To decrease it, type
1132 `C-x C--'. To restore the default (global) face size, type `C-x C-0'.
1133 These work via Text Scale mode, a new minor mode.
1134
1135 The final key in the above commands may be repeated without the
1136 leading `C-x', e.g. `C-x C-= C-= C-=' increases the face height by
1137 three steps. Each step scales the height of the default face by the
1138 value of the variable `text-scale-mode-step'.
1139
1140 *** The commands buffer-face-mode and buffer-face-set can be used to
1141 remap the default face in the current buffer. See "Buffer Face mode",
1142 under New Modes and Packages.
1143
1144 ** Primary selection changes
1145
1146 *** You can disable kill ring commands from accessing the primary
1147 selection by setting `x-select-enable-primary' to nil.
1148
1149 ** Continuation lines can now be wrapped at word boundaries
1150 (word-wrapping). This is controlled by the new per-buffer variable
1151 `word-wrap'. Word wrapping does not take place if continuation lines
1152 are not shown, e.g. if truncate-lines is non-nil. The most convenient
1153 way to enable word-wrapping is using the new minor mode Visual Line
1154 mode; in addition to setting `word-wrap' to t, this rebinds some
1155 editing commands to work on screen lines rather than text lines. See
1156 New Modes and Packages, below.
1157
1158 ** Window management changes
1159
1160 *** truncate-partial-width-windows now accepts integer values, which
1161 specify a minimum window width for partial-width windows, below which
1162 lines are truncated. The default has been changed to 50.
1163
1164 *** The new command balance-windows-area balances windows both
1165 vertically and horizontally.
1166
1167 *** pop-to-buffer now always sets input focus when the popped-to window
1168 is on a different frame.
1169
1170 ** Miscellaneous changes:
1171
1172 *** C-l is bound to the new command recenter-top-bottom, rather than recenter.
1173 This moves the current line to window center, top and bottom on
1174 successive invocations.
1175
1176 *** scroll-preserve-screen-position also preserves the column position.
1177
1178 *** If `yank-pop-change-selection' is t, rotating the kill ring also
1179 updates the selection or clipboard to the current yank, just as M-w
1180 would do so with the text it copies to the kill ring.
1181
1182 *** C-M-% now shows replacement as it would look in the buffer, with
1183 `\N' and `\&' substituted according to the match. Old behavior can be
1184 restored by customizing `query-replace-show-replacement'.
1185
1186 *** The command shell prompts for the default directory, when it is
1187 called with a prefix and the default directory is a remote file name.
1188 This is because some file name handlers (like ange-ftp) are not able to
1189 run processes remotely.
1190
1191 *** The new command kill-matching-buffers kills buffers whose name
1192 matches a regexp.
1193
1194 *** The value of comment-style now defaults to `indent'.
1195 Therefore, comment-start markers are inserted at the current indentation
1196 of the region to comment, rather than the leftmost column.
1197
1198 *** The new commands `pp-macroexpand-expression' and
1199 `pp-macroexpand-last-sexp' pretty-print macro expansions.
1200
1201 *** The new command `set-file-modes' allows to set file's mode bits.
1202 The mode bits can be specified in symbolic notation, like with GNU
1203 Coreutils, in addition to an octal number. `chmod' is a new
1204 convenience alias for this function.
1205
1206 *** `next-error-recenter' specifies how next-error should recenter the
1207 visited source file. Its value can be a number (for example, 0 for
1208 top line, -1 for bottom line), or nil for no recentering.
1209
1210 *** When typing in a password in the echo area, C-y yanks the current
1211 kill into the password.
1212
1213 *** Tooltip frame parameters `font' and `color' in `tooltip-frame-parameters'
1214 are ignored. Customize the `tooltip' face instead.
1215
1216 *** `mkdir' is a new convenience alias for `make-directory'.
1217 \f
1218 * New Modes and Packages in Emacs 23.1
1219
1220 ** Auto Composition Mode is a minor mode that composes characters
1221 automatically when they are displayed. It is globally on by default.
1222 It uses `auto-composition-function' (default `auto-compose-chars').
1223
1224 ** Bubbles, a new game, is similar to SameGame.
1225
1226 ** Buffer Face mode is a minor mode for remapping the default face in
1227 the current buffer. The variable `buffer-face-mode-face' specifies
1228 the face to remap to. The command `buffer-face-set' prompts for a
1229 face name, sets `buffer-face-mode-face' to it, and enables
1230 buffer-face-mode. See "Face changes", under Editing Changes, for a
1231 description of face remapping.
1232
1233 ** butterfly flips the desired bit on the drive platter.
1234 See http://xkcd.com/378/
1235
1236 ** bug-reference.el provides clickable links to bug reports.
1237
1238 ** dbus.el provides D-Bus language bindings.
1239 D-Bus is an inter-process communication mechanism for applications
1240 residing on the same host. See the manual for details.
1241
1242 ** DocView mode allows viewing of PDF, PostScript and DVI documents.
1243 One can also search for a regular expression in the document. For
1244 details, see the commentary in doc-view.el.
1245
1246 PDF and DVI files are now opened in Doc View mode by default.
1247
1248 In PostScript mode, C-c C-c launches Doc View minor mode for viewing
1249 the PostScript file.
1250
1251 ** EasyPG provides an interface to the GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG).
1252 It includes a GnuPG keyring browser, cryptographic operations on
1253 regions and files, and automatic encryption of *.gpg files. For
1254 details, see the EasyPG Assistant User's Manual.
1255
1256 ** json.el is a library for parsing and generating JSON
1257 (JavaScript Object Notation), a lightweight data-interchange format.
1258
1259 ** linum.el is a new minor mode to display line numbers for the
1260 current buffer.
1261
1262 ** mairix.el is an interface to mairix, a free tool for indexing and
1263 searching locally stored mail. It allows you to query mairix and
1264 display the search results with Rmail, Gnus and VM. Note that there
1265 is an existing Gnus back end, nnmairix.el, which should be used with
1266 Maildir/MH setups.
1267
1268 ** minibuffer-depth-indicate-mode shows the minibuffer depth in the prompt.
1269
1270 ** nXML Mode
1271 This is a new mode for editing XML documents. It allows a schema to
1272 be associated with the XML document being edited, using Relax NG as
1273 the schema language. The schema is used to provide two key features:
1274
1275 *** Continuous validation. nXML validates as you type, highlighting
1276 any invalid parts of your document.
1277
1278 *** Completion. nXML can assist you in entering an element name,
1279 attribute name or data value by using information about what is
1280 allowed by the schema in that context.
1281
1282 ** proced.el provides a Dired-like interface for operating on
1283 processes. Proced makes an Emacs buffer containing a listing of the
1284 current processes. You can use the normal Emacs commands to move
1285 around in this buffer, and special Proced commands to operate on the
1286 processes listed. It is currently only functional on GNU/Linux,
1287 MS-Windows and Solaris.
1288
1289 ** Remember Mode is a mode for jotting down things to remember.
1290 Notes can be saved to a Diary file. For details, see the Remember
1291 Manual.
1292
1293 ** RST mode is a major mode for editing reStructuredText files.
1294
1295 ** Ruby mode is a major mode for Ruby files.
1296
1297 ** Visual Line mode provides support for editing by visual lines.
1298 It turns on word-wrapping in the current buffer, and rebinds C-a, C-e,
1299 and C-k to commands that operate by visual lines instead of logical
1300 lines. This is a more reliable replacement for longlines-mode.
1301 This can also be turned on using the menu bar, via
1302 Options -> Line Wrapping in this Buffer -> Word Wrap
1303
1304 ** xesam.el is an implementation of Xesam, an interface to (desktop)
1305 search engines like Beagle, Strigi, and Tracker. The Xesam API
1306 requires D-Bus for communication.
1307
1308 ** zeroconf.el offers service discovery and service publishing
1309 interfaces according to the zeroconf specification. It communicates
1310 with Avahi, a zeroconf implementation, via D-Bus messages on systems
1311 which have installed this software.
1312
1313 ** There is a new `whitespace' package.
1314 (The pre-existing one has been renamed to `old-whitespace'.)
1315 Now, besides reporting bogus blanks, the whitespace package has a
1316 minor mode and a global minor mode to visualize blanks (TAB, (HARD)
1317 SPACE and NEWLINE). The visualization is made via faces and/or display
1318 table. It can also indicate lines that extend beyond a given column,
1319 trailing blanks, and empty lines at the start or end of a buffer.
1320 See `whitespace-style' for more details. The `whitespace-action' option
1321 specifies what to do when a buffer is visited, killed, or written.
1322
1323 \f
1324 * Changes in Specialized Modes and Packages in Emacs 23.1
1325
1326 ** Abbrev has been rewritten in Elisp and extended with more flexibility.
1327
1328 *** New functions: abbrev-get, abbrev-put, abbrev-table-get, abbrev-table-put,
1329 abbrev-table-p, abbrev-insert, abbrev-table-menu.
1330
1331 *** Special hook `abbrev-expand-functions' obsoletes `pre-abbrev-expand-hook'.
1332
1333 *** `make-abbrev-table', `define-abbrev', `define-abbrev-table' all take
1334 extra arguments for arbitrary properties.
1335
1336 *** New variable `abbrev-minor-mode-table-alist'.
1337
1338 *** `local-abbrev-table' can hold a list of abbrev-tables.
1339
1340 *** Abbrevs have now the following special properties:
1341 `:count', `:system', `:enable-function', `:case-fixed'.
1342
1343 *** Abbrev-tables have now the following special properties:
1344 `:parents', `:case-fixed', `:enable-function', `:regexp',
1345 `abbrev-table-modiff'.
1346
1347 ** Apropos
1348
1349 *** `apropos-library' describes the elements defined in a given library.
1350
1351 *** Set `apropos-compact-layout' is you want a more compact (but wider) layout.
1352
1353 ** Archive Mode has basic support to browse Rar archives.
1354 Note, however, that the free version of the unrar command only handles
1355 versions 1 and 2 of the Rar format.
1356
1357 ** BibTeX mode
1358
1359 *** New command `bibtex-initialize' (re)initializes BibTeX buffers.
1360
1361 *** New `bibtex-entry-format' options `whitespace', `braces', and
1362 `string', disabled by default.
1363
1364 *** New variable `bibtex-cite-matcher-alist' contains rules to
1365 identify cited keys in BibTeX entries, used by `bibtex-find-crossref'.
1366
1367 *** Command `bibtex-url' allows multiple URLs per entry.
1368
1369 ** Bookmarks
1370
1371 *** bookmark.el saves bookmarks in a pre-Emacs-23-incompatible file format
1372 bookmark.el can read a .emacs.bmk file saved by an older Emacs, but an
1373 older Emacs cannot read one saved by Emacs 23.
1374
1375 ** Calendar and diary
1376
1377 *** There is a new date style, `iso', essentially year/month/day.
1378 The variable `european-calendar-style' is obsolete - use `calendar-date-style'.
1379 Similarly, the commands `american-calendar' and `european-calendar'
1380 should be replaced by `calendar-set-date-style'.
1381
1382 *** The calendar namespace has been rationalized.
1383 All functions and variables now begin with a `calendar-', `diary-', or
1384 `holiday-' prefix. The various calendar systems have secondary
1385 prefixes, eg `calendar-french-'. The old names you are likely to use
1386 directly still exist, for the time being, as aliases, but please start
1387 using the new names.
1388
1389 *** The whitespace in the calendar layout can be customized.
1390 See the variables:
1391 calendar-left-margin, calendar-intermonth-spacing, calendar-column-width,
1392 calendar-day-header-width, and calendar-day-digit-width.
1393
1394 *** Text (e.g. ISO weeks) can be displayed between the calendar months.
1395 See the variables calendar-intermonth-header and calendar-intermonth-text.
1396
1397 *** The function `holiday-chinese' computes holidays on the Chinese calendar.
1398 It has been used to add items to the list `holiday-oriental-holidays'.
1399
1400 *** `diary-remind' accepts a negative number -DAYS as a shorthand for
1401 the list (1 2 ... DAYS).
1402
1403 ** Change Log mode
1404
1405 *** The new command C-c C-f (change-log-find-file) finds the file
1406 associated with the current log entry.
1407
1408 *** The new command C-c C-c (change-log-goto-source) goes to the
1409 source code associated with a log entry.
1410
1411 ** Compile and grep modes
1412
1413 *** The mode-line entry for the *compilation* and *grep* buffer is color coded.
1414 It has different colors for to show that: (a) the command is still
1415 running, (b) successful completion, (c) error.
1416
1417 *** compilation-auto-jump-to-first-error tells `compile' to jump to
1418 the first error encountered during compilations.
1419
1420 *** compilation-scroll-output accepts a new value, `first-error', which
1421 says to stop auto scrolling at the first error that occurs.
1422
1423 *** The `cc' alias for C++ files in `grep-file-aliases' has been
1424 improved. `hh' can be used to match C++ header files and `cchh' both
1425 C++ sources and headers.
1426
1427 ** Copyright
1428
1429 *** You can specify your copyright holders' names.
1430 Only copyright lines with holders matching `copyright-names-regexp' are
1431 considered for update.
1432
1433 *** Copyrights can be at the end of the buffer.
1434 This is controlled by `copyright-at-end-flag' (used by, e.g., change-log-mode).
1435
1436 ** Custom
1437
1438 *** defcustom accepts new keyword arguments, `:safe' and `:risky', which
1439 set a variable's `safe-local-variable' and `risky-local-variable' property.
1440
1441 ** Diff mode
1442
1443 *** diff-refine-hunk highlights word-level details of changes in a diff hunk.
1444 It's used automatically as you move through hunks, see
1445 diff-auto-refine-mode. It is bound to `C-c C-b'.
1446
1447 *** diff-add-change-log-entries-other-window iterates through the diff
1448 buffer and tries to create ChangeLog entries for each change.
1449 It is bound to `C-x 4 A'.
1450
1451 *** Turning on `whitespace-mode' in a diff buffer will show trailing
1452 whitespace problems in the modified lines.
1453
1454 ** Dired
1455
1456 *** In Dired, C-x C-q now runs the command wdired-change-to-wdired-mode,
1457 and C-x C-q in wdired-mode exits it with asking a question about
1458 saving changes.
1459
1460 *** `&' runs the command `dired-do-async-shell-command' that executes
1461 the command asynchronously without the need to manually add ampersand
1462 to the end of the command. Its output appears in the buffer `*Async Shell
1463 Command*'.
1464
1465 *** `M-s f C-s' and `M-s f M-C-s' run Isearch that matches only at file names.
1466 When a new user option `dired-isearch-filenames' is t, then even ordinary
1467 Isearch started with `C-s' and `C-M-s' matches only at file names in the
1468 Dired buffer. When `dired-isearch-filenames' is `dwim' then activation of
1469 file name Isearch depends on the position of point - if point is on a file
1470 name initially, then Isearch matches only file names, otherwise it matches
1471 everywhere in the Dired buffer. You can toggle file names matching on or
1472 off by typing `M-s f' in Isearch mode.
1473
1474 *** `M-s a C-s' and `M-s a M-C-s' run multi-file Isearch on the marked files.
1475 They visit the first marked file in the sequence and display the usual Isearch
1476 prompt for a string or a regexp where all Isearch commands are available.
1477
1478 *** `Q' in Dired provides two new keys for multi-file replacement.
1479 The upper case key `Y' replaces all remaining matches in all remaining files
1480 with no more questions. The upper case key `N' stops doing replacements
1481 in the current file and skips to the next file. These multi-file keys
1482 are available for all commands that use `tags-query-replace'
1483 including `dired-do-query-replace-regexp', `vc-dir-query-replace-regexp',
1484 `reftex-query-replace-document'.
1485
1486 ** Fortran
1487
1488 *** The line length of fixed-form Fortran is not fixed at 72 any more.
1489 Customize the variable `fortran-line-length' to change it.
1490
1491 *** In Fortran mode, M-; is now bound to the standard comment-dwim,
1492 rather than fortran-indent-comment.
1493
1494 *** (The increasingly misnamed) F90 mode supports Fortran 2003 syntax.
1495
1496 ** Gnus
1497
1498 *** The Gnus package has been updated
1499 There are many new features, bug fixes and improvements; see the file
1500 GNUS-NEWS or the node "No Gnus" in the Gnus manual for details.
1501
1502 *** In Emacs 23, Gnus uses Emacs' new internal coding system `utf-8-emacs' for
1503 saving articles, drafts, and ~/.newsrc.eld. These file may not be read
1504 correctly in Emacs 22 and below. If you want to Gnus across different Emacs
1505 versions, you may set `mm-auto-save-coding-system' to `emacs-mule'.
1506
1507 *** Passwords are consistently loaded through `auth-source'
1508 Gnus can use `auth-source' for POP and IMAP passwords. Also see that
1509 `smtpmail' and `url' support `auth-source' for SMTP and HTTP/HTTPS/RSS
1510 authentication respectively.
1511
1512 ** Help mode
1513
1514 *** New macro `with-help-window' should set up help windows better
1515 than `with-output-to-temp-buffer' with `print-help-return-message'.
1516
1517 *** New option `help-window-select' permits to customize whether help
1518 window shall be automatically selected when invoking help.
1519
1520 *** New variable `help-window-point-marker' permits one to specify a new
1521 position for point in help window (for example in `view-lossage').
1522
1523 ** Isearch
1524
1525 *** New command `isearch-forward-word' bound globally to `M-s w' starts
1526 incremental word search. New command `isearch-toggle-word' bound to the
1527 same key `M-s w' in Isearch mode toggles word searching on or off
1528 while Isearch is active.
1529
1530 *** New command `isearch-highlight-regexp' bound to `M-s h r' in Isearch
1531 mode runs `highlight-regexp' (`hi-lock-face-buffer') with the current
1532 search string as its regexp argument. The same key `M-s h r' and
1533 other keys on the `M-s h' prefix are bound globally to the command
1534 `highlight-regexp' and other hi-lock commands.
1535
1536 *** New command `isearch-occur' bound to `M-s o' in Isearch mode
1537 runs `occur' with the current search string. The same key `M-s o'
1538 is bound globally to the command `occur'.
1539
1540 *** Isearch can now search through multiple ChangeLog files.
1541 When running Isearch in a ChangeLog file, if the search fails,
1542 then another C-s tries searching the previous ChangeLog,
1543 if there is one (e.g. going from ChangeLog to ChangeLog.12).
1544 This is enabled if multi-isearch-search is non-nil.
1545
1546 *** Two new commands to start Isearch on a list of marked buffers
1547 for buff-menu.el and ibuffer.el are bound to the keys `M-s a C-s' and
1548 `M-s a M-C-s'.
1549
1550 *** The part of an Isearch that failed to match is highlighted in
1551 `isearch-fail' face.
1552
1553 *** `C-h C-h' in Isearch mode displays isearch-specific Help screen,
1554 `C-h b' displays all Isearch key bindings, `C-h k' displays the full
1555 documentation of the given Isearch key sequence, `C-h m' displays
1556 documentation for Isearch mode. All the other Help commands exit
1557 Isearch mode and execute their global definitions.
1558
1559 *** When started in the minibuffer, Isearch searches in the minibuffer
1560 history. See `Minibuffer changes', above.
1561
1562 ** MH-E
1563
1564 *** Upgraded to MH-E version 8.2. See MH-E-NEWS for details.
1565
1566 ** Python
1567 *** The file etc/emacs.py now supports both Python 2 and 3, meaning
1568 that either version can be used as inferior Python by python.el.
1569
1570 *** Python mode now has `pdbtrack' functionality. When using pdb to
1571 debug a Python program, pdbtrack notices the pdb prompt and displays
1572 the source file and line that the program is stopped at, much the same
1573 way as gud-mode does for debugging C programs with gdb.
1574
1575 ** Recentf
1576
1577 *** The default value of `recentf-keep' prevents from checking of
1578 remote files, if there is no established connection to the
1579 corresponding remote host.
1580
1581 ** Rmail
1582
1583 *** Rmail no longer converts the messages to Babyl format.
1584 Instead, it uses UNIX mbox format, both on disk and in Rmail buffers,
1585 and does conversion and decoding when a message is displayed.
1586
1587 The first time you visit an Rmail file in Babyl format, Rmail
1588 automatically converts it to mbox format. This is a one-time
1589 conversion, but it can take a few minutes, depending on how fast is
1590 your machine and on the size of the file. You should find the rest of
1591 Rmail usage unaltered.
1592
1593 However, M-x set-rmail-inbox-list now lasts only for one session
1594 because there is no way to save the list of inbox files in an
1595 mbox-format file.
1596
1597 Also, whereas with Babyl format M-x find-file would switch to Rmail
1598 mode, with mbox format this is no longer the case (there being no way
1599 to add an "-*- rmail-*-" cookie to an mbox file). Use C-u M-x rmail
1600 instead.
1601
1602 If you have written any extensions to Rmail, they are likely to need
1603 updating. Conceptually, the Rmail buffer that you see is no longer
1604 just a narrowed portion of the whole. So you cannot access the whole
1605 of a message (or message collection) by a simple save-restriction and
1606 widen. Instead, there are two buffers: the rmail-buffer, and the
1607 rmail-view-buffer. The former is the buffer that you see, the latter
1608 is invisible. Most of the time, the invisible `view' buffer contains
1609 the full contents of the Rmail file, and the Rmail buffer contains a
1610 decoded copy of the current message (with only a subset of the
1611 headers). In this state, Rmail is said to be `swapped'.
1612
1613 You may find the following functions useful:
1614
1615 `rmail-get-header' and `rmail-set-header' get or set the value of a
1616 message header, whether or not it is currently visible.
1617
1618 `rmail-apply-in-message' is a general purpose function that calls a
1619 function (with arguments) which you specify on the full text of a given
1620 message. To further narrow to just the headers, search forward for "\n\n".
1621
1622 *** The new command `rmail-mime' displays MIME messages.
1623 It is bound to `v' in Rmail buffers and summaries. It displays plain
1624 text and multipart messages in a temporary buffer, and offers buttons
1625 to save attachments.
1626
1627 *** The command `rmail-redecode-body' no longer accepts the optional arg RAW.
1628 Since Rmail now holds messages in their original undecoded form in a
1629 separate buffer, `rmail-redecode-body' no longer encodes the original
1630 message, and therefore there should be no need to avoid encoding it.
1631
1632 *** The o command is now `rmail-output'. It is an all-purpose command
1633 for copying messages from Rmail and appending them to files. It
1634 handles Babyl-format files as well as mbox-format files, and it
1635 handles both kinds properly when they are visited in Emacs. It always
1636 copies the full headers of the message.
1637
1638 *** The C-o command is now `rmail-output-as-seen'. It uses
1639 the message as displayed, appending it to an mbox file.
1640
1641 *** The modified status of the Rmail buffer is reported in the mode-line.
1642 Previously, this information was hidden.
1643
1644 ** TeX modes
1645
1646 *** New option latex-indent-within-escaped-parens
1647 permits to customize indentation of LaTeX environments delimited
1648 by escaped parens.
1649
1650 ** T-mouse Mode
1651
1652 *** If the gpm mouse server is running and t-mouse-mode is enabled,
1653 Emacs uses a Unix socket in a GNU/Linux console to talk to server,
1654 rather than faking events using the client program mev. This C level
1655 approach provides mouse highlighting and help echoing in the
1656 minibuffer.
1657
1658 ** Tramp
1659
1660 *** New connection methods.
1661 The new methods "plinkx", "plink2", "psftp", "sftp" and "fish" have
1662 been introduced. There are also new so-called gateway methods
1663 "tunnel" and "socks".
1664
1665 *** IPv6 addresses.
1666 IPv6 addresses are supported now as host names. They must be embedded
1667 in square brackets, like in "/ssh:[::1]:".
1668
1669 *** Multihop syntax has been removed.
1670 The pseudo-method "multi" has been removed. Instead, multi hops
1671 can be specified by the new variable `tramp-default-proxies-alist'.
1672
1673 *** More default settings.
1674 Default values can be set via the variables `tramp-default-user',
1675 `tramp-default-user-alist' and `tramp-default-host'.
1676
1677 *** Connection information is cached.
1678 In order to reduce connection setup, information about used
1679 connections is kept persistently in a file. The name of this file is
1680 defined in the variable `tramp-persistency-file-name'.
1681
1682 *** Control of remote processes.
1683 Running processes on a remote host can be controlled by settings in
1684 `tramp-remote-path' and `tramp-remote-process-environment'.
1685
1686 *** Success of remote copy is checked.
1687 When the variable `file-precious-flag' is set, the success of a remote
1688 file copy is checked via the file's checksum.
1689
1690 *** Passwords can be read from an authentication file.
1691 Tramp uses the package `auth-source' to read passwords from a file, if
1692 necessary.
1693
1694 ** VC and related modes
1695
1696 *** VC now supports applying VC operations to a set of files at a time.
1697 This enables VC to work much more effectively with changeset-oriented
1698 version-control systems such as Subversion, GNU Arch, Mercurial, Git
1699 and Bzr. VC will now pass a multiple-file commit to these systems as
1700 a single changeset.
1701
1702 *** vc-dir is a new command that displays file names and their VC
1703 status. It allows to apply various VC operations to a file, a
1704 directory or a set of files/directories.
1705
1706 *** VC switches are no longer appended, rather the first non-nil value is used.
1707 (This was for the most part true in Emacs 22, but was not advertised).
1708 This is because there is an increasing variety of VC systems, and they
1709 do not all accept the same "common" options. For example, a CVS diff
1710 command used to append the values of `vc-cvs-diff-switches',
1711 `vc-diff-switches', and `diff-switches'. Now the first non-nil value
1712 from that sequence is used. The special value `t' means "no switches".
1713
1714 *** Clicking on the VC mode-line entry now pops the VC menu.
1715
1716 *** The VC mode-line entry now has a tooltip that explains the VC file status.
1717
1718 *** In VC Annotate mode, the key bindings have changed to use lower
1719 case keys instead of the upper case keys used in the past.
1720
1721 *** In VC Annotate mode, for VC systems that support changesets, you can
1722 see the diff for the whole changeset (not only for the current file)
1723 by typing the D key. Using the "Show changeset diff of revision at
1724 line" menu entry does the same thing.
1725
1726 *** In VC Annotate mode, you can type v to toggle the annotation visibility.
1727
1728 *** In VC Annotate mode, you can type f to show the file revision on
1729 the current line.
1730
1731 *** Asynchronous VC commands display [Waiting...] in the mode-line
1732 of the corresponding buffer as long as the asynchronous process is
1733 active.
1734
1735 *** Log entries can be modified using the key "e" in log-view.
1736 For now only CVS, RCS, SCCS and SVN support this functionality.
1737 This is done by the `modify-change-comment' backend function.
1738
1739 *** In log-view-mode, for VC systems that support changesets, you can
1740 see the diff for the whole changeset (not only for the current file)
1741 by typing the D key or using the "Changeset Diff" menu entry.
1742
1743 *** In Log Edit mode, C-c C-d now shows the diff for the files involved.
1744
1745 *** vc-git supports the "git grep" command.
1746
1747 *** VC Support for Meta-CVS has been removed for lack of a maintainer able
1748 to update it to the new VC.
1749
1750 ** Miscellaneous
1751
1752 *** comint-mode uses `start-file-process' now (see Lisp Changes).
1753 If `default-directory' is a remote file name, subprocesses are started
1754 on the corresponding remote system.
1755
1756 *** Eldoc highlights the function argument under point
1757 with the face `eldoc-highlight-function-argument'.
1758
1759 *** In Etags, the --members option is now the default.
1760 Use --no-members if you want the old default behavior of not tagging
1761 struct members in C, members variables in C++ and variables in PHP.
1762
1763 *** The `gdb' command only works with the graphical interface now.
1764 Use `gud-gdb' if you want the (old) text command mode.
1765
1766 *** goto-address.el provides two new minor modes, goto-address-mode and
1767 goto-address-prog-mode, which buttonize URLS and email addresses.
1768
1769 *** The new command `eshell/info' runs info in an eshell buffer.
1770
1771 *** The new variable `ffap-rfc-directories' specifies a list of local
1772 directories in which `ffap-rfc' will first search for RFCs.
1773
1774 *** hide-ifdef-mode allows shadowing ifdef-blocks instead of hiding them.
1775 See option `hide-ifdef-shadow' and function `hide-ifdef-toggle-shadowing'.
1776
1777 *** `icomplete-prospects-height' now supersedes `icomplete-prospects-length'.
1778
1779 *** Info displays breadcrumbs in the header of the page.
1780 See Info-breadcrumbs-depth to control it.
1781
1782 *** net-utils has an `iwconfig' command, similar to the existing `ifconfig'.
1783 It is used to configure wireless interfaces.
1784
1785 *** The pcmpl-unix package supports hostname completion for ssh and scp.
1786
1787 *** sgml-electric-tag-pair-mode lets you simultaneously edit matched tag pairs.
1788
1789 *** smerge-refine highlights word-level details of changes in conflict.
1790 It's used automatically as you move through conflicts, see
1791 smerge-auto-refine-mode.
1792
1793 *** talk.el has been extended for multiple tty support.
1794
1795 *** A new command `display-time-world' has been added to the Time
1796 package. It creates a buffer with an updating time display using
1797 several time zones.
1798
1799 *** The appearance of superscript and subscript in TeX is more customizable.
1800 See the documentation of the variables: tex-fontify-script,
1801 tex-font-script-display, tex-suscript-height-ratio, and
1802 tex-suscript-height-minimum.
1803
1804 *** view-remove-frame-by-deleting is now by default t
1805 since users found iconification of view-mode frames distracting.
1806
1807 *** WoMan tries to add locale-specific manual page directories to the
1808 search path. This can be disabled by setting `woman-locale' to nil.
1809
1810 \f
1811 * Changes in Emacs 23.1 on non-free operating systems
1812
1813 ** Case is now considered significant in completion on MS-Windows.
1814 The default value of `completion-ignore-case' is now nil on
1815 MS-Windows, the same as it is for other operating systems. The
1816 variable doesn't apply to reading a file name -- in that case Emacs
1817 heeds `read-file-name-completion-ignore-case' instead.
1818
1819 ** IPv6 is supported on MS-Windows.
1820 Emacs now supports IPv6 on Windows XP and later, and earlier versions
1821 of Windows with third party IPv6 stacks installed. In Emacs 22, IPv6 was
1822 supported on other platforms, but not on Windows due to using the winsock
1823 1.1 header file, even though Emacs was linking to the winsock 2 library.
1824
1825 ** Busy cursor (hourglass) now displays on MS-Windows.
1826 When Emacs is busy, an hourglass mouse cursor is displayed on Windows.
1827 In Emacs 22 only X supported the busy cursor.
1828
1829 ** Battery status is available on MS-Windows
1830 Emacs can now display the battery status in the mode-line when enabled with
1831 display-battery-mode or from the Options menu. More verbose battery
1832 information is also available with the command `battery'. In Emacs 22
1833 battery status was supported only on GNU/Linux and Mac.
1834
1835 ** More keys available on MS-Windows.
1836 Keys normally associated with IMEs, and some exotic keys not normally found
1837 on standard keyboards have been given names so they can be bound to functions
1838 inside Emacs. If there are keys on your keyboard that have not been exposed
1839 to Emacs in the past, try C-h k to see if they are available now.
1840
1841 Emacs can now bind functions to the extra buttons for media player and
1842 browser control present on some keyboards. These buttons are disabled
1843 by default, since enabling them prevents their system-wide use when
1844 Emacs has focus. To enable them, set the variable
1845 w32-pass-multimedia-buttons to nil. See the doc string of that variable
1846 for the list of extra keys that are available.
1847
1848 ** BDF fonts no longer supported on MS-Windows.
1849 The font backend was completely rewritten for this release. The focus
1850 on Windows has been getting acceptable performance and full Unicode
1851 support, including complex script shaping for native Windows fonts. A
1852 rewrite of the BDF font support has not happened due to lack of time
1853 and developers. If demand still exists for such a backend even with
1854 the improved language support for native Windows fonts, future
1855 development in this direction will most likely be based on the
1856 freetype library, giving access to a wider range of font formats.
1857
1858 \f
1859 * Incompatible Lisp Changes in Emacs 23.1
1860
1861 ** Variables cannot be both buffer-local and frame-local any more.
1862
1863 ** `functionp' returns nil for special forms.
1864 I.e., it only returns t for objects that can be passed to `funcall'.
1865
1866 ** The behavior of map-char-table has changed. It may call the
1867 specified function with a cons (FROM . TO) as a key if characters in
1868 that range have the same value.
1869
1870 ** Process changes
1871
1872 *** The function `dired-call-process' has been removed.
1873
1874 *** The multibyteness of process filters is now determined by the
1875 coding-system used for decoding. The functions
1876 `process-filter-multibyte-p' and `set-process-filter-multibyte' are
1877 obsolete.
1878
1879 ** The variable `byte-compile-warnings' can now be a list starting with `not',
1880 meaning to disable the specified warnings. The meaning of this list
1881 may therefore be the reverse of what you expect (of course, this is
1882 only an issue if you make use of the new `not' syntax). Rather than
1883 checking/manipulating elements directly, use the new functions
1884 `byte-compile-warning-enabled-p', `byte-compile-disable-warning', and
1885 `byte-compile-enable-warning.'
1886
1887 ** `mode-name' is no longer guaranteed to be a string.
1888 Use `(format-mode-line mode-name)' to ensure a string value.
1889
1890 ** The function x-font-family-list has been removed.
1891 Use the new function font-family-list (see Lisp Changes, below).
1892
1893 ** Internationalization changes
1894
1895 *** The value of the function `charset-id' is now always 0.
1896
1897 *** The functions `register-char-codings' and `coding-system-spec'
1898 have been removed.
1899
1900 *** The cpXXX coding systems are now supported automatically.
1901 The functions cp-...-codepage, which you had to use in Emacs 22 to
1902 enable support for these coding systems, have been deleted.
1903
1904 *** The following features have been removed. They were used for
1905 displaying various scripts with specific fonts, and are no longer
1906 needed now that OpenType font support is available:
1907
1908 **** `devanagari' and `devan-util', and all associated devanagari-* and
1909 dev-* functions and variables (formerly used for Devanagari script).
1910
1911 **** `kannada' and `knd-util', and all associated kannada-* and knd-*
1912 functions and variables (formerly used for Kannada script).
1913
1914 **** `malayalam' and `mlm-util', and all associated malayalam-* and
1915 mlm-* functions and variables (formerly used for Malayalam script).
1916
1917 **** `tamil' and `tml-util, and all associated tamil-* and tml-*
1918 functions and variables (formerly used for Tamil script).
1919
1920 *** The meaning of NAME argument of `set-fontset-font' is changed.
1921 Previously nil is accepted as the default fontset. Now, nil is for
1922 the fontset of the selected frame and t is for the default fontset.
1923
1924 *** The meaning of FONTSET argument of `print-fontset' is changed.
1925 Now, nil is for the fontset of the selected frame and t is for the
1926 default fontset.
1927
1928 ** If a function in write-region-annotate-functions returns with a
1929 different buffer current, Emacs no longer kills that buffer
1930 automatically. This behavior existed in previous versions of Emacs,
1931 but was undocumented. To kill a buffer after write-region, give the
1932 variable `write-region-post-annotation-function' a buffer-local value
1933 of `kill-buffer'.
1934
1935 ** The variable temp-file-name-pattern has been removed.
1936 This variable was only used by call-process-region, which now uses
1937 temporary-file-directory instead.
1938
1939 ** The COUNT and SYSTEM-FLAG arguments to define-abbrev have been
1940 removed. The function now takes extra arguments for specifying
1941 arbitrary abbrev properties.
1942
1943 ** end-of-defun-function is now guaranteed to work only when called
1944 from the start of a defun. It must now leave point exactly at the end
1945 of defun, since `end-of-defun' now itself moves forward over
1946 whitespace after calling it.
1947
1948 \f
1949 * Lisp Changes in Emacs 23.1
1950
1951 ** The new variable `generate-autoload-cookie' controls the magic comment
1952 string used by `update-file-autoloads' to find autoloaded forms. The
1953 variable `generated-autoload-file' similarly controls the name of the
1954 file where `update-file-autoloads' writes the calls to `autoload'.
1955 The default values are ";;;###autoload" and `loaddefs.el',
1956 respectively.
1957
1958 ** New primitives `list-system-processes' and `process-attributes'
1959 let Lisp programs access the processes that are running on the local
1960 machine. See the doc strings of these functions for more details.
1961 Not all platforms support accessing this information; on those that
1962 don't, these primitives will return nil.
1963
1964 ** New variable `user-emacs-directory'.
1965 Use this instead of "~/.emacs.d".
1966
1967 ** If a local hook function has a non-nil `permanent-local-hook'
1968 property, `kill-all-local-variables' does not remove it from the local
1969 value of the hook variable; it remains even if you change major modes.
1970
1971 ** `frame-inherited-parameters' lets new frames inherit parameters from
1972 the selected frame.
1973
1974 ** New keymap `input-decode-map' overrides like key-translation-map, but
1975 applies before function-key-map. Also it is terminal-local contrary to
1976 key-translation-map. Terminal-specific key-sequences are generally added to
1977 this map rather than to function-key-map now.
1978
1979 ** `ignore-errors' is now a standard macro (does not require the CL package).
1980
1981 ** `interprogram-paste-function' can now return one string or a list
1982 of strings. In the latter case, Emacs puts the second and following
1983 strings on the kill ring.
1984
1985 ** In `condition-case', a handler can specify "let the debugger run first".
1986 You do this by writing `debug' in the list of conditions to be handled,
1987 like this:
1988
1989 (condition-case nil
1990 (foo bar)
1991 ((debug error) nil))
1992
1993 ** clone-indirect-buffer now runs the clone-indirect-buffer-hook.
1994
1995 ** `beginning-of-defun-function' now takes one argument, the count given to
1996 `beginning-of-defun'. (N.B. `end-of-defun-function' doesn't take any
1997 arguments.)
1998
1999 ** `file-remote-p' has new optional parameters IDENTIFICATION and CONNECTED.
2000 IDENTIFICATION specifies which part of the remote identifier has to be
2001 returned. With CONNECTED passed non-nil, it is checked whether a
2002 remote connection has been established already.
2003
2004 ** The new macro `declare-function' suppresses compiler warnings about
2005 undefined functions.
2006
2007 ** Changes to interactive function handling
2008
2009 *** The new interactive spec code ^ says to first call
2010 handle-shift-selection if shift-select-mode is non-nil, before reading
2011 the command arguments. This is used for shift-selection (see above).
2012
2013 *** Built-in functions can now have an interactive specification that
2014 is not a prompt string. If the `intspec' parameter of a `DEFUN'
2015 starts with a `(', the string is evaluated as a Lisp form.
2016
2017 *** The interactive-form of a function can be added post-facto via the
2018 `interactive-form' symbol property. Mostly useful to add complex
2019 interactive forms to subroutines.
2020
2021 ** Region changes
2022
2023 *** Commands should use `use-region-p' to test whether there is
2024 an active region that they should operate on.
2025
2026 *** `region-active-p' returns non-nil when Transient Mark mode is
2027 enabled and the mark is active. Most commands that act specially on
2028 the active region in Transient Mark mode should use `use-region-p'
2029 instead of `region-active-p', because `use-region-p' obeys the new
2030 user option `use-empty-active-region' (see Editing Changes, above).
2031
2032 *** If a command sets `transient-mark-mode' to (only . OLDVAL), that
2033 means to activate transient-mark-mode temporarily, until the next
2034 unshifted point motion command or mark deactivation. Afterwards,
2035 reset transient-mark-mode to the value OLDVAL. The values `only' and
2036 `identity', introduced in Emacs 22, are now deprecated.
2037
2038 ** Emacs session information
2039
2040 *** The new variables `before-init-time' and `after-init-time' record the
2041 value of `current-time' before and after Emacs loads the init files.
2042
2043 *** The new function `emacs-uptime' returns the uptime of an Emacs instance.
2044
2045 *** The new function `emacs-init-time' returns the duration of the
2046 Emacs initialization.
2047
2048 ** Changes affecting display-buffer
2049
2050 *** display-buffer tries to be smarter when splitting windows.
2051 The new option split-window-preferred-function lets you specify your own
2052 function to pop up new windows. Its default value split-window-sensibly
2053 can split a window either vertically or horizontally, whichever seems
2054 more suitable in the current configuration. You can tune the behavior
2055 of split-window-sensibly by customizing split-height-threshold and the
2056 new option split-width-threshold. Both options now take the value nil
2057 to inhibit splitting in one direction. Setting split-width-threshold to
2058 nil inhibits horizontal splitting and gets you the behavior of Emacs 22
2059 in this respect. In any case, display-buffer may now split the largest
2060 window vertically even when it is not as wide as the containing frame.
2061
2062 *** If pop-up-frames has the value `graphic-only', display-buffer only
2063 makes a separate frame on graphic displays.
2064
2065 *** select-frame and set-frame-selected-window have a new optional
2066 argument NORECORD. If non-nil, this will avoid messing with the order
2067 of recently selected windows and the buffer list.
2068
2069 ** Window parameters can now be defined.
2070 These are analogous to frame parameters, but are associated with
2071 individual windows.
2072
2073 *** The new functions window-parameters, window-parameter, and
2074 set-window-parameter are used to query and set window parameters.
2075
2076 ** Minibuffer and completion changes
2077
2078 *** A list of default values can be specified for the DEFAULT argument of
2079 functions `read-from-minibuffer', `read-string', `read-command',
2080 `read-variable', `read-buffer', `completing-read'. Elements of this list
2081 are available for inserting into the minibuffer by typing `M-n'.
2082 For empty input these functions return the first element of this list.
2083
2084 *** New function `read-regexp' uses the regexp history and some useful
2085 regexp defaults (string at point, last Isearch/replacement regexp/string)
2086 via M-n when reading a regexp in the minibuffer.
2087
2088 *** minibuffer-local-must-match-filename-map is now named
2089 minibuffer-local-filename-must-match-map.
2090
2091 *** The `require-match' argument to `completing-read' accepts the new
2092 values `confirm-only' and `confirm-after-completion'.
2093
2094 ** Search and replacement changes
2095
2096 *** The regexp form \(?<num>:<regexp>\) specifies the group number explicitly.
2097
2098 *** New function `match-substitute-replacement' returns the result of
2099 `replace-match' without actually using it in the buffer.
2100
2101 *** The new variable `replace-search-function' determines the function
2102 to use for searching in query-replace and replace-string. The
2103 function it specifies is called by `perform-replace' when its 4th
2104 argument is nil.
2105
2106 *** The new variable `replace-re-search-function' determines the
2107 function to use for searching in `query-replace-regexp',
2108 `replace-regexp', `query-replace-regexp-eval', and
2109 `map-query-replace-regexp'. The function it specifies is called by
2110 `perform-replace' when its 4th argument is non-nil.
2111
2112 *** New keymap `search-map' bound to `M-s' provides global bindings
2113 for search related commands.
2114
2115 *** New keymap `multi-query-replace-map' contains additional keys bound
2116 to `automatic-all' and `exit-current' for multi-buffer interactive replacement.
2117
2118 *** The variable `inhibit-changing-match-data', if non-nil, prevents
2119 the search and match primitives from changing the match data.
2120
2121 *** New functions `word-search-forward-lax' and `word-search-backward-lax'.
2122 These are like `word-search-forward and `word-search-backward', except
2123 that the end of the search string need not match a word boundary,
2124 unless it ends in whitespace.
2125
2126 ** File handling changes
2127
2128 *** set-file-modes is now interactive and can take the mode value in
2129 symbolic notation thanks to auxiliary functions.
2130
2131 *** file-local-variables-alist stores an alist of file-local
2132 variables defined in the current buffer.
2133
2134 ** Face-remapping
2135
2136 *** Each face can be remapped to a different face definition using the
2137 variable `face-remapping-alist'. This is an alist that maps faces to
2138 replacement definitions (which can be face names, lists of face names,
2139 or attribute/value plists. If this variable is buffer-local, the
2140 remapping occurs only in that buffer.
2141
2142 *** text-scale-mode remaps the default face to a larger or smaller
2143 size in the current buffer. This feature is used by the Buffer Face
2144 menu and the new `C-x C-+', `C-x C--', and `C-x C-0' commands (see
2145 Editing Changes, above).
2146
2147 *** New functions:
2148
2149 **** `face-remap-add-relative' adds a face remapping entry to the
2150 current buffer.
2151
2152 **** ``face-remap-remove-relative' removes a face remapping entry from
2153 the current buffer.
2154
2155 **** `face-remap-reset-base' restores a face to its global definition.
2156
2157 **** `face-remap-set-base' sets the base remapping of a face.
2158
2159 ** Process changes
2160
2161 *** The new function `start-file-process' is similar to `start-process',
2162 but obeys file handlers. The file handler is chosen based on
2163 `default-directory'. The functions `start-file-process-shell-command'
2164 and `process-file-shell-command' are also new; they call internally
2165 `start-file-process' and `process-file', respectively.
2166
2167 *** The new function `process-lines' executes an external program and
2168 returns its output as a list of lines.
2169
2170 ** Character code, representation, and charset changes.
2171
2172 *** In multibyte buffers and strings, characters are represented by
2173 UTF-8 byte sequences. The character code space is now 0x0..0x3FFFFF
2174 with no gap; code points 0x0..0x10FFFF are Unicode characters of the
2175 same code points, while code points 0x3FFF80..0x3FFFFF are raw 8-bit
2176 bytes.
2177
2178 *** Generic characters no longer exist.
2179
2180 *** The concept of a charset has changed. A single character may
2181 belong to multiple charsets (e.g. a-grave, U+00E0, belongs to charsets
2182 unicode, iso-8859-1, iso-8859-3, etc).
2183
2184 **** The dimension of a charset is now 1, 2, 3, or 4, and the size of
2185 each dimension is no longer limited to 94 or 96.
2186
2187 **** A dynamic charset priority list is used to infer the charset of
2188 characters for display.
2189
2190 *** The functions `split-char' and `make-char' now accept up to 4
2191 positional codes instead of just 2.
2192
2193 *** The functions `encode-char' and `decode-char' now accept any character sets.
2194
2195 *** The function `define-charset' now accepts a completely different
2196 form of arguments (old-style arguments still work).
2197
2198 *** The value of the function `char-charset' depends on the current
2199 priorities of charsets.
2200
2201 *** The function get-char-code-property now accepts many Unicode base
2202 character properties. They are `name', `general-category',
2203 `canonical-combining-class', `bidi-class', `decomposition',
2204 `decimal-digit-value', `digit-value', `numeric-value', `mirrored',
2205 `old-name', `iso-10646-comment', `uppercase', `lowercase', and
2206 `titlecase'.
2207
2208 *** The functions `modify-syntax-entry' and `modify-category-entry' now
2209 accept a cons of characters as the first argument, and modify all
2210 entries in that range of characters.
2211
2212 *** Use of `translation-table-for-input' for character code unification
2213 is now obsolete, since Emacs 23.1 and later uses Unicode as basis for
2214 internal representation of characters.
2215
2216 *** New functions:
2217
2218 **** `characterp' returns t if and only if the argument is a character.
2219 This replaces `char-valid-p', which is now obsolete.
2220
2221 **** `max-char' returns the maximum character code (currently #x3FFFFF).
2222
2223 **** `define-charset-alias' defines an alias of a charset.
2224
2225 **** `set-charset-priority' sets priorities of charsets.
2226
2227 **** `charset-priority-list' returns a prioritized list of charsets.
2228
2229 **** `unibyte-string' makes a unibyte string from bytes.
2230
2231 **** `define-char-code-property' defines a character code property.
2232
2233 **** `char-code-property-description' returns the description string of
2234 a character code property.
2235
2236 *** New variables:
2237
2238 **** `find-word-boundary-function-table' is a char-table of functions to
2239 search for a word boundary.
2240
2241 **** `char-script-table' is a char-table of script names.
2242
2243 **** `char-width-table' is a char-table of character widths.
2244
2245 **** `print-charset-text-property' controls how to handle `charset' text
2246 property on printing a string.
2247
2248 **** `printable-chars' is a char-table of printable characters.
2249
2250 ** Code conversion changes
2251
2252 *** The new function `define-coding-system' should be used to define a
2253 coding system instead of `make-coding-system' (which is now obsolete).
2254
2255 *** The functions `encode-coding-region' and `decode-coding-region'
2256 have an optional 4th argument to specify where the result of
2257 conversion should go.
2258
2259 *** The functions `encode-coding-string' and `decode-coding-string'
2260 have an optional 4th argument specifying a buffer to store the result
2261 of conversion.
2262
2263 *** The new variable `inhibit-null-byte-detection' controls whether to
2264 consider text with null bytes as binary data. By default, it is
2265 `nil', and Emacs uses `no-conversion' for any text containing null
2266 bytes.
2267
2268 *** The functions `set-coding-priority' and `make-coding-system' are obsolete.
2269
2270 *** New functions:
2271
2272 **** `with-coding-priority' executes Lisp code using the specified
2273 coding system priority order.
2274
2275 **** `check-coding-systems-region' checks if the text in the region is
2276 encodable by the specified coding systems.
2277
2278 **** `coding-system-aliases' returns a list of aliases of a coding system.
2279
2280 **** `coding-system-charset-list' returns a list of charsets supported
2281 by a coding system.
2282
2283 **** `coding-system-priority-list' returns a list of coding systems
2284 ordered by their priorities.
2285
2286 **** `set-coding-system-priority' sets priorities of coding systems.
2287
2288 **** `coding-system-from-name' returns a coding system matching with
2289 the argument name.
2290
2291 ** There is a new input method, Robin, different from Quail.
2292 It has three functionalities:
2293 i) a simple input method (converts an ASCII sequence into a string).
2294 ii) converts an existing buffer substring into another string
2295 iii) reverse conversion (each character produced by a
2296 robin rule can hold the original ASCII sequence as a char-code-property)
2297
2298 *** The new function `robin-define-package' defines a Robin package.
2299
2300 *** The new function `robin-modify-package' modifies an existing Robin package.
2301
2302 *** The new function `robin-use-package' starts using a Robin package
2303 as an input method.
2304
2305 *** The new function `string-to-unibyte' is like `string-as-unibyte'
2306 but signals an error if STRING contains a non-ASCII, non-eight-bit
2307 character.
2308
2309 ** Changes related to the new font backend
2310
2311 *** Which font backends to use can be specified by the X resource
2312 "FontBackend". For instance, to use both X core fonts and Xft fonts:
2313
2314 Emacs.FontBackend: x,xft
2315
2316 If this resource is not set, Emacs tries to use all font backends
2317 available on your graphic device.
2318
2319 *** New frame parameter `font-backend' specifies a list of
2320 font-backends supported by the frame's graphic device. On X, they are
2321 currently `x' and `xft'.
2322
2323 *** The function `set-fontset-font' now accepts a script name as the
2324 second argument, and has an optional 5th argument to control how to
2325 set the font.
2326
2327 *** New functions:
2328
2329 **** `fontp' checks if the argument is a font-spec or font-entity.
2330
2331 **** `font-spec' creates a new font-spec object.
2332
2333 **** `font-get' returns a font property value.
2334
2335 **** `font-put' sets a font property value.
2336
2337 **** `font-face-attributes' returns a plist of face attributes set by a font.
2338
2339 **** `list-fonts' returns a list of font-entities matching a font spec.
2340
2341 **** `find-font' returns the font-entity best matching the given font spec.
2342
2343 **** `font-family-list' returns a list of family names of available fonts.
2344
2345 **** `font-xlfd-name' returns an XLFD name of a given font spec, font
2346 entity, or font object.
2347
2348 **** `clear-font-cache' clears all font caches.
2349
2350 ** Changes related to multiple-terminal (multi-tty) support
2351
2352 *** $TERM is now set to `dumb' for subprocesses. If you want to know the
2353 $TERM inherited by Emacs you will have to look inside initial-environment.
2354
2355 *** $DISPLAY is now dynamically inherited from the frame's `display'.
2356
2357 *** The `window-system' variable is now frame-local. The new
2358 `initial-window-system' variable contains the `window-system' value
2359 for the first frame. `window-system' is also now a function that
2360 takes a frame argument.
2361
2362 *** The `keyboard-translate-table' variable and the terminal and
2363 keyboard coding systems are now terminal-local.
2364
2365 *** You can specify a terminal device (`tty' parameter) and a terminal
2366 type (`tty-type' parameter) to `make-terminal-frame'.
2367
2368 *** The function `make-frame-on-display' now works during a tty
2369 session.
2370
2371 *** A new `terminal' data type.
2372 The functions `get-device-terminal', `terminal-parameters',
2373 `terminal-parameter', `set-terminal-parameter' use this data type.
2374
2375 *** Function key sequences are now mapped using `local-function-key-map',
2376 a new variable. This inherits from the global variable function-key-map,
2377 which is not used directly any more.
2378
2379 *** New hooks:
2380
2381 **** before-hack-local-variables-hook is called after setting new
2382 variable file-local-variables-alist, and before actually applying the
2383 file-local variables.
2384
2385 **** `suspend-tty-functions' and `resume-tty-functions' are called
2386 after a tty frame has been suspended or resumed, respectively. The
2387 functions are called with the terminal id of the frame being
2388 suspended/resumed as a parameter.
2389
2390 **** The special hook `delete-terminal-functions' is called before
2391 deleting a terminal.
2392
2393 *** New functions:
2394
2395 **** `delete-terminal'
2396
2397 **** `suspend-tty'
2398
2399 **** `resume-tty'.
2400
2401 *** `initial-environment' holds the environment inherited from Emacs's parent.
2402
2403 ** Redisplay changes
2404
2405 *** For underlined characters, the distance between the underline and
2406 the baseline is controlled by a new variable, `underline-minimum-offset'.
2407
2408 *** You can now pass the value of the `invisible' property to
2409 invisible-p to check whether it would cause the text to be invisible.
2410 This is convenient when checking invisibility of text with no buffer
2411 position (e.g. in before/after-strings).
2412
2413 *** `clear-image-cache' can be told to flush only images of a specific file.
2414
2415 *** `vertical-motion' can now be given a goal column.
2416 It now accepts a cons cell (COLS . LINES) in its first argument, which
2417 says to stop, where possible, at a pixel x-position equal to COLS
2418 times the default column width.
2419
2420 *** redisplay-end-trigger-functions, set-window-redisplay-end-trigger,
2421 and window-redisplay-end-trigger are obsolete. Use `jit-lock-register'
2422 instead.
2423
2424 *** The new variables `wrap-prefix' and `line-prefix' specify display
2425 specs which are appended at display-time to every continuation line
2426 and non-continuation line, respectively. In addition, Emacs
2427 recognizes the `wrap-prefix' and `line-prefix' text or overlay
2428 properties; these have the same effects as the variables of the same
2429 name, but take precedence.
2430
2431 ** The Lisp interpreter now treats non-breaking space as whitespace.
2432
2433 ** Miscellaneous new functions
2434
2435 *** `apply-partially' performs a "curried" application of a function.
2436
2437 *** `buffer-swap-text' swaps text between two buffers. This can be
2438 useful for modes such as tar-mode, archive-mode, RMAIL.
2439
2440 *** `combine-and-quote-strings' produces a single string from a list of strings
2441 sticking a separator string in between each pair, and quoting those
2442 strings that include the separator as their substring. Useful for
2443 consing shell command lines from the individual arguments.
2444
2445 *** `custom-note-var-changed' tells Custom to treat the change in a
2446 certain variable as having been made within Custom.
2447
2448 *** `face-all-attributes' returns an alist describing all the basic
2449 attributes of a given face.
2450
2451 *** `format-seconds' converts a number of seconds into a readable
2452 string of days, hours, etc.
2453
2454 *** `image-refresh' refreshes all images associated with a given image
2455 specification.
2456
2457 *** `locate-user-emacs-file' helps packages to select the appropriate
2458 place to save user-specific files. It defaults to `user-emacs-directory'
2459 unless the file already exists at $HOME.
2460
2461 *** `read-color' reads a color name using the minibuffer.
2462
2463 *** `read-shell-command' does what its name says, with completion. It
2464 uses the minibuffer-local-shell-command-map for that.
2465
2466 *** `split-string-and-unquote' splits a string into a list of substrings
2467 on the boundaries of a given delimiter, and unquotes the substrings that
2468 are quoted. Useful for taking apart shell commands.
2469
2470 *** The two new functions `looking-at-p' and `string-match-p' can do
2471 the same matching as `looking-at' and `string-match' without changing
2472 the match data.
2473
2474 *** The two new functions `make-serial-process' and
2475 `serial-process-configure' provide a Lisp interface to the new serial
2476 port support (see Emacs changes, above).
2477
2478 ** Miscellaneous new variables
2479
2480 *** `auto-save-include-big-deletions', if non-nil, means auto-save is
2481 not turned off automatically after a big deletion.
2482
2483 *** `read-circle', if nil, disables the reading of recursive Lisp
2484 structures using the #N= and #N# syntax.
2485
2486 *** `this-command-keys-shift-translated' is non-nil if the key
2487 sequence invoking the current command was found by shift-translation.
2488
2489 *** `window-point-insertion-type' determines the insertion-type of the
2490 marker used for window-point.
2491
2492 *** bookmark provides `bookmark-make-record-function' so special major
2493 modes like Info can teach bookmark.el how to save and restore the
2494 relevant data.
2495
2496 *** `fill-forward-paragraph-function' specifies which function the
2497 filling code should use to find paragraph boundaries.
2498
2499 \f
2500 * New Packages for Lisp Programming in Emacs 23.1
2501
2502 ** The new package avl-tree.el deals with the AVL tree data structure.
2503
2504 ** The new package check-declare.el verifies the accuracy of
2505 declare-function macros (see Lisp Changes, above).
2506
2507 ** find-cmd.el can build `find' commands using lisp syntax.
2508
2509 ** The package misearch.el has been added. It allows Isearch to search
2510 through multiple buffers. A variable `multi-isearch-next-buffer-function'
2511 defines the function to call to get the next buffer to search in the series
2512 of multiple buffers. Top-level functions `multi-isearch-buffers',
2513 `multi-isearch-buffers-regexp', `multi-isearch-files' and
2514 `multi-isearch-files-regexp' accept a single argument that specifies
2515 a list of buffers/files to search for a string/regexp.
2516
2517 ** The new major mode `special-mode' is intended as a parent for
2518 major modes such as those that set the "'mode-class 'special" property.
2519
2520 \f
2521 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
2522 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
2523
2524 GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
2525 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
2526 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
2527 (at your option) any later version.
2528
2529 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
2530 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
2531 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
2532 GNU General Public License for more details.
2533
2534 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
2535 along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
2536
2537 \f
2538 Local variables:
2539 mode: outline
2540 paragraph-separate: "[ \f]*$"
2541 end: