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- GNU Emacs NEWS -- history of user-visible changes. 2006-05-31
- Copyright (C) 1999-2001, 2006-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
- See the end of the file for license conditions.
- Please send Emacs bug reports to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org.
- If possible, use M-x report-emacs-bug.
- This file is about changes in emacs version 20.
- * Emacs 20.7 is a bug-fix release with few user-visible changes
- ** It is now possible to use CCL-based coding systems for keyboard
- input.
- ** ange-ftp now handles FTP security extensions, like Kerberos.
- ** Rmail has been extended to recognize more forms of digest messages.
- ** Now, most coding systems set in keyboard coding system work not
- only for character input, but also in incremental search. The
- exceptions are such coding systems that handle 2-byte character sets
- (e.g euc-kr, euc-jp) and that use ISO's escape sequence
- (e.g. iso-2022-jp). They are ignored in incremental search.
- ** Support for Macintosh PowerPC-based machines running GNU/Linux has
- been added.
- * Emacs 20.6 is a bug-fix release with one user-visible change
- ** Support for ARM-based non-RISCiX machines has been added.
- * Emacs 20.5 is a bug-fix release with no user-visible changes.
- ** Not new, but not mentioned before:
- M-w when Transient Mark mode is enabled disables the mark.
- * Changes in Emacs 20.4
- ** Init file may be called .emacs.el.
- You can now call the Emacs init file `.emacs.el'.
- Formerly the name had to be `.emacs'. If you use the name
- `.emacs.el', you can byte-compile the file in the usual way.
- If both `.emacs' and `.emacs.el' exist, the latter file
- is the one that is used.
- ** shell-command, and shell-command-on-region, now return
- the exit code of the command (unless it is asynchronous).
- Also, you can specify a place to put the error output,
- separate from the command's regular output.
- Interactively, the variable shell-command-default-error-buffer
- says where to put error output; set it to a buffer name.
- In calls from Lisp, an optional argument ERROR-BUFFER specifies
- the buffer name.
- When you specify a non-nil error buffer (or buffer name), any error
- output is inserted before point in that buffer, with \f\n to separate
- it from the previous batch of error output. The error buffer is not
- cleared, so error output from successive commands accumulates there.
- ** Setting the default value of enable-multibyte-characters to nil in
- the .emacs file, either explicitly using setq-default, or via Custom,
- is now essentially equivalent to using --unibyte: all buffers
- created during startup will be made unibyte after loading .emacs.
- ** C-x C-f now handles the wildcards * and ? in file names. For
- example, typing C-x C-f c*.c RET visits all the files whose names
- match c*.c. To visit a file whose name contains * or ?, add the
- quoting sequence /: to the beginning of the file name.
- ** The M-x commands keep-lines, flush-lines and count-matches
- now have the same feature as occur and query-replace:
- if the pattern contains any upper case letters, then
- they never ignore case.
- ** The end-of-line format conversion feature previously mentioned
- under `* Emacs 20.1 changes for MS-DOS and MS-Windows' actually
- applies to all operating systems. Emacs recognizes from the contents
- of a file what convention it uses to separate lines--newline, CRLF, or
- just CR--and automatically converts the contents to the normal Emacs
- convention (using newline to separate lines) for editing. This is a
- part of the general feature of coding system conversion.
- If you subsequently save the buffer, Emacs converts the text back to
- the same format that was used in the file before.
- You can turn off end-of-line conversion by setting the variable
- `inhibit-eol-conversion' to non-nil, e.g. with Custom in the MULE group.
- ** The character set property `prefered-coding-system' has been
- renamed to `preferred-coding-system', for the sake of correct spelling.
- This is a fairly internal feature, so few programs should be affected.
- ** Mode-line display of end-of-line format is changed.
- The indication of the end-of-line format of the file visited by a
- buffer is now more explicit when that format is not the usual one for
- your operating system. For example, the DOS-style end-of-line format
- is displayed as "(DOS)" on Unix and GNU/Linux systems. The usual
- end-of-line format is still displayed as a single character (colon for
- Unix, backslash for DOS and Windows, and forward slash for the Mac).
- The values of the variables eol-mnemonic-unix, eol-mnemonic-dos,
- eol-mnemonic-mac, and eol-mnemonic-undecided, which are strings,
- control what is displayed in the mode line for each end-of-line
- format. You can now customize these variables.
- ** In the previous version of Emacs, tar-mode didn't work well if a
- filename contained non-ASCII characters. Now this is fixed. Such a
- filename is decoded by file-name-coding-system if the default value of
- enable-multibyte-characters is non-nil.
- ** The command temp-buffer-resize-mode toggles a minor mode
- in which temporary buffers (such as help buffers) are given
- windows just big enough to hold the whole contents.
- ** If you use completion.el, you must now run the function
- dynamic-completion-mode to enable it. Just loading the file
- doesn't have any effect.
- ** In Flyspell mode, the default is now to make just one Ispell process,
- not one per buffer.
- ** If you use iswitchb but do not call (iswitchb-default-keybindings) to
- use the default keybindings, you will need to add the following line:
- (add-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook 'iswitchb-minibuffer-setup)
- ** Auto-show mode is no longer enabled just by loading auto-show.el.
- To control it, set `auto-show-mode' via Custom or use the
- `auto-show-mode' command.
- ** Handling of X fonts' ascent/descent parameters has been changed to
- avoid redisplay problems. As a consequence, compared with previous
- versions the line spacing and frame size now differ with some font
- choices, typically increasing by a pixel per line. This change
- occurred in version 20.3 but was not documented then.
- ** If you select the bar cursor style, it uses the frame's
- cursor-color, rather than the cursor foreground pixel.
- ** In multibyte mode, Rmail decodes incoming MIME messages using the
- character set specified in the message. If you want to disable this
- feature, set the variable rmail-decode-mime-charset to nil.
- ** Not new, but not mentioned previously in NEWS: when you use #! at
- the beginning of a file to make it executable and specify an
- interpreter program, Emacs looks on the second line for the -*- mode
- and variable specification, as well as on the first line.
- ** Support for IBM codepage encoding of non-ASCII characters.
- The new command M-x codepage-setup creates a special coding system
- that can be used to convert text between a specific IBM codepage and
- one of the character sets built into Emacs which matches that
- codepage. For example, codepage 850 corresponds to Latin-1 character
- set, codepage 855 corresponds to Cyrillic-ISO character set, etc.
- Windows codepages 1250, 1251 and some others, where Windows deviates
- from the corresponding ISO character set, are also supported.
- IBM box-drawing characters and other glyphs which don't have
- equivalents in the corresponding ISO character set, are converted to
- a character defined by dos-unsupported-char-glyph on MS-DOS, and to
- `?' on other systems.
- IBM codepages are widely used on MS-DOS and MS-Windows, so this
- feature is most useful on those platforms, but it can also be used on
- Unix.
- Emacs compiled for MS-DOS automatically loads the support for the
- current codepage when it starts.
- ** Mail changes
- *** When mail is sent using compose-mail (C-x m), and if
- `mail-send-nonascii' is set to the new default value `mime',
- appropriate MIME headers are added. The headers are added only if
- non-ASCII characters are present in the body of the mail, and no other
- MIME headers are already present. For example, the following three
- headers are added if the coding system used in the *mail* buffer is
- latin-1:
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
- *** The new variable default-sendmail-coding-system specifies the
- default way to encode outgoing mail. This has higher priority than
- default-buffer-file-coding-system but has lower priority than
- sendmail-coding-system and the local value of
- buffer-file-coding-system.
- You should not set this variable manually. Instead, set
- sendmail-coding-system to specify a fixed encoding for all outgoing
- mail.
- *** When you try to send a message that contains non-ASCII characters,
- if the coding system specified by those variables doesn't handle them,
- Emacs will ask you to select a suitable coding system while showing a
- list of possible coding systems.
- ** CC Mode changes
- *** c-default-style can now take an association list that maps major
- modes to style names. When this variable is an alist, Java mode no
- longer hardcodes a setting to "java" style. See the variable's
- docstring for details.
- *** It's now possible to put a list as the offset on a syntactic
- symbol. The list is evaluated recursively until a non-nil offset is
- found. This is useful to combine several lineup functions to act in a
- prioritized order on a single line. However, none of the supplied
- lineup functions use this feature currently.
- *** New syntactic symbol catch-clause, which is used on the "catch" and
- "finally" lines in try-catch constructs in C++ and Java.
- *** New cleanup brace-catch-brace on c-cleanup-list, which does for
- "catch" lines what brace-elseif-brace does for "else if" lines.
- *** The braces of Java anonymous inner classes are treated separately
- from the braces of other classes in auto-newline mode. Two new
- symbols inexpr-class-open and inexpr-class-close may be used on
- c-hanging-braces-alist to control the automatic newlines used for
- anonymous classes.
- *** Support for the Pike language added, along with new Pike specific
- syntactic symbols: inlambda, lambda-intro-cont
- *** Support for Java anonymous classes via new syntactic symbol
- inexpr-class. New syntactic symbol inexpr-statement for Pike
- support and gcc-style statements inside expressions. New lineup
- function c-lineup-inexpr-block.
- *** New syntactic symbol brace-entry-open which is used in brace lists
- (i.e. static initializers) when a list entry starts with an open
- brace. These used to be recognized as brace-list-entry's.
- c-electric-brace also recognizes brace-entry-open braces
- (brace-list-entry's can no longer be electrified).
- *** New command c-indent-line-or-region, not bound by default.
- *** `#' is only electric when typed in the indentation of a line.
- *** Parentheses are now electric (via the new command c-electric-paren)
- for auto-reindenting lines when parens are typed.
- *** In "gnu" style, inline-open offset is now set to zero.
- *** Uniform handling of the inclass syntactic symbol. The indentation
- associated with it is now always relative to the class opening brace.
- This means that the indentation behavior has changed in some
- circumstances, but only if you've put anything besides 0 on the
- class-open syntactic symbol (none of the default styles do that).
- ** Gnus changes.
- *** New functionality for using Gnus as an offline newsreader has been
- added. A plethora of new commands and modes have been added. See the
- Gnus manual for the full story.
- *** The nndraft backend has returned, but works differently than
- before. All Message buffers are now also articles in the nndraft
- group, which is created automatically.
- *** `gnus-alter-header-function' can now be used to alter header
- values.
- *** `gnus-summary-goto-article' now accept Message-ID's.
- *** A new Message command for deleting text in the body of a message
- outside the region: `C-c C-v'.
- *** You can now post to component group in nnvirtual groups with
- `C-u C-c C-c'.
- *** `nntp-rlogin-program' -- new variable to ease customization.
- *** `C-u C-c C-c' in `gnus-article-edit-mode' will now inhibit
- re-highlighting of the article buffer.
- *** New element in `gnus-boring-article-headers' -- `long-to'.
- *** `M-i' symbolic prefix command. See the section "Symbolic
- Prefixes" in the Gnus manual for details.
- *** `L' and `I' in the summary buffer now take the symbolic prefix
- `a' to add the score rule to the "all.SCORE" file.
- *** `gnus-simplify-subject-functions' variable to allow greater
- control over simplification.
- *** `A T' -- new command for fetching the current thread.
- *** `/ T' -- new command for including the current thread in the
- limit.
- *** `M-RET' is a new Message command for breaking cited text.
- *** \\1-expressions are now valid in `nnmail-split-methods'.
- *** The `custom-face-lookup' function has been removed.
- If you used this function in your initialization files, you must
- rewrite them to use `face-spec-set' instead.
- *** Canceling now uses the current select method. Symbolic prefix
- `a' forces normal posting method.
- *** New command to translate M******** sm*rtq**t*s into proper text
- -- `W d'.
- *** For easier debugging of nntp, you can set `nntp-record-commands'
- to a non-nil value.
- *** nntp now uses ~/.authinfo, a .netrc-like file, for controlling
- where and how to send AUTHINFO to NNTP servers.
- *** A command for editing group parameters from the summary buffer
- has been added.
- *** A history of where mails have been split is available.
- *** A new article date command has been added -- `article-date-iso8601'.
- *** Subjects can be simplified when threading by setting
- `gnus-score-thread-simplify'.
- *** A new function for citing in Message has been added --
- `message-cite-original-without-signature'.
- *** `article-strip-all-blank-lines' -- new article command.
- *** A new Message command to kill to the end of the article has
- been added.
- *** A minimum adaptive score can be specified by using the
- `gnus-adaptive-word-minimum' variable.
- *** The "lapsed date" article header can be kept continually
- updated by the `gnus-start-date-timer' command.
- *** Web listserv archives can be read with the nnlistserv backend.
- *** Old dejanews archives can now be read by nnweb.
- *** `gnus-posting-styles' has been re-activated.
- ** Changes to TeX and LaTeX mode
- *** The new variable `tex-start-options-string' can be used to give
- options for the TeX run. The default value causes TeX to run in
- nonstopmode. For an interactive TeX run set it to nil or "".
- *** The command `tex-feed-input' sends input to the Tex Shell. In a
- TeX buffer it is bound to the keys C-RET, C-c RET, and C-c C-m (some
- of these keys may not work on all systems). For instance, if you run
- TeX interactively and if the TeX run stops because of an error, you
- can continue it without leaving the TeX buffer by typing C-RET.
- *** The Tex Shell Buffer is now in `compilation-shell-minor-mode'.
- All error-parsing commands of the Compilation major mode are available
- but bound to keys that don't collide with the shell. Thus you can use
- the Tex Shell for command line executions like a usual shell.
- *** The commands `tex-validate-region' and `tex-validate-buffer' check
- the matching of braces and $'s. The errors are listed in a *Occur*
- buffer and you can use C-c C-c or mouse-2 to go to a particular
- mismatch.
- ** Changes to RefTeX mode
- *** The table of contents buffer can now also display labels and
- file boundaries in addition to sections. Use `l', `i', and `c' keys.
- *** Labels derived from context (the section heading) are now
- lowercase by default. To make the label legal in LaTeX, latin-1
- characters will lose their accent. All Mule characters will be
- removed from the label.
- *** The automatic display of cross reference information can also use
- a window instead of the echo area. See variable `reftex-auto-view-crossref'.
- *** kpsewhich can be used by RefTeX to find TeX and BibTeX files. See the
- customization group `reftex-finding-files'.
- *** The option `reftex-bibfile-ignore-list' has been renamed to
- `reftex-bibfile-ignore-regexps' and indeed can be fed with regular
- expressions.
- *** Multiple Selection buffers are now hidden buffers.
- ** New/deleted modes and packages
- *** The package snmp-mode.el provides major modes for editing SNMP and
- SNMPv2 MIBs. It has entries on `auto-mode-alist'.
- *** The package sql.el provides a major mode, M-x sql-mode, for
- editing SQL files, and M-x sql-interactive-mode for interacting with
- SQL interpreters. It has an entry on `auto-mode-alist'.
- *** ispell4.el has been deleted. It got in the way of ispell.el and
- this was hard to fix reliably. It has long been obsolete -- use
- Ispell 3.1 and ispell.el.
- * MS-DOS changes in Emacs 20.4
- ** Emacs compiled for MS-DOS now supports MULE features better.
- This includes support for display of all ISO 8859-N character sets,
- conversion to and from IBM codepage encoding of non-ASCII characters,
- and automatic setup of the MULE environment at startup. For details,
- check out the section `MS-DOS and MULE' in the manual.
- The MS-DOS installation procedure automatically configures and builds
- Emacs with input method support if it finds an unpacked Leim
- distribution when the config.bat script is run.
- ** Formerly, the value of lpr-command did not affect printing on
- MS-DOS unless print-region-function was set to nil, but now it
- controls whether an external program is invoked or output is written
- directly to a printer port. Similarly, in the previous version of
- Emacs, the value of ps-lpr-command did not affect PostScript printing
- on MS-DOS unless ps-printer-name was set to something other than a
- string (eg. t or `pipe'), but now it controls whether an external
- program is used. (These changes were made so that configuration of
- printing variables would be almost identical across all platforms.)
- ** In the previous version of Emacs, PostScript and non-PostScript
- output was piped to external programs, but because most print programs
- available for MS-DOS and MS-Windows cannot read data from their standard
- input, on those systems the data to be output is now written to a
- temporary file whose name is passed as the last argument to the external
- program.
- An exception is made for `print', a standard program on Windows NT,
- and `nprint', a standard program on Novell Netware. For both of these
- programs, the command line is constructed in the appropriate syntax
- automatically, using only the value of printer-name or ps-printer-name
- as appropriate--the value of the relevant `-switches' variable is
- ignored, as both programs have no useful switches.
- ** The value of the variable dos-printer (cf. dos-ps-printer), if it has
- a value, overrides the value of printer-name (cf. ps-printer-name), on
- MS-DOS and MS-Windows only. This has been true since version 20.3, but
- was not documented clearly before.
- ** All the Emacs games now work on MS-DOS terminals.
- This includes Tetris and Snake.
- * Lisp changes in Emacs 20.4
- ** New functions line-beginning-position and line-end-position
- return the position of the beginning or end of the current line.
- They both accept an optional argument, which has the same
- meaning as the argument to beginning-of-line or end-of-line.
- ** find-file and allied functions now have an optional argument
- WILDCARD. If this is non-nil, they do wildcard processing,
- and visit all files that match the wildcard pattern.
- ** Changes in the file-attributes function.
- *** The file size returned by file-attributes may be an integer or a float.
- It is an integer if the size fits in a Lisp integer, float otherwise.
- *** The inode number returned by file-attributes may be an integer (if
- the number fits in a Lisp integer) or a cons cell containing two
- integers.
- ** The new function directory-files-and-attributes returns a list of
- files in a directory and their attributes. It accepts the same
- arguments as directory-files and has similar semantics, except that
- file names and attributes are returned.
- ** The new function file-attributes-lessp is a helper function for
- sorting the list generated by directory-files-and-attributes. It
- accepts two arguments, each a list of a file name and its attributes.
- It compares the file names of each according to string-lessp and
- returns the result.
- ** The new function file-expand-wildcards expands a wildcard-pattern
- to produce a list of existing files that match the pattern.
- ** New functions for base64 conversion:
- The function base64-encode-region converts a part of the buffer
- into the base64 code used in MIME. base64-decode-region
- performs the opposite conversion. Line-breaking is supported
- optionally.
- Functions base64-encode-string and base64-decode-string do a similar
- job on the text in a string. They return the value as a new string.
- **
- The new function process-running-child-p
- will tell you if a subprocess has given control of its
- terminal to its own child process.
- ** interrupt-process and such functions have a new feature:
- when the second argument is `lambda', they send a signal
- to the running child of the subshell, if any, but if the shell
- itself owns its terminal, no signal is sent.
- ** There are new widget types `plist' and `alist' which can
- be used for customizing variables whose values are plists or alists.
- ** easymenu.el now understands `:key-sequence' and `:style button'.
- :included is an alias for :visible.
- easy-menu-add-item now understands the values returned by
- easy-menu-remove-item and easy-menu-item-present-p. This can be used
- to move or copy menu entries.
- ** Multibyte editing changes
- *** The definitions of sref and char-bytes are changed. Now, sref is
- an alias of aref and char-bytes always returns 1. This change is to
- make some Emacs Lisp code which works on 20.2 and earlier also
- work on the latest Emacs. Such code uses a combination of sref and
- char-bytes in a loop typically as below:
- (setq char (sref str idx)
- idx (+ idx (char-bytes idx)))
- The byte-compiler now warns that this is obsolete.
- If you want to know how many bytes a specific multibyte character
- (say, CH) occupies in a multibyte buffer, use this code:
- (charset-bytes (char-charset ch))
- *** In multibyte mode, when you narrow a buffer to some region, and the
- region is preceded or followed by non-ASCII codes, inserting or
- deleting at the head or the end of the region may signal this error:
- Byte combining across boundary of accessible buffer text inhibited
- This is to avoid some bytes being combined together into a character
- across the boundary.
- *** The functions find-charset-region and find-charset-string include
- `unknown' in the returned list in the following cases:
- o The current buffer or the target string is unibyte and
- contains 8-bit characters.
- o The current buffer or the target string is multibyte and
- contains invalid characters.
- *** The functions decode-coding-region and encode-coding-region remove
- text properties of the target region. Ideally, they should correctly
- preserve text properties, but for the moment, it's hard. Removing
- text properties is better than preserving them in a less-than-correct
- way.
- *** prefer-coding-system sets EOL conversion of default coding systems.
- If the argument to prefer-coding-system specifies a certain type of
- end of line conversion, the default coding systems set by
- prefer-coding-system will specify that conversion type for end of line.
- *** The new function thai-compose-string can be used to properly
- compose Thai characters in a string.
- ** The primitive `define-prefix-command' now takes an optional third
- argument NAME, which should be a string. It supplies the menu name
- for the created keymap. Keymaps created in order to be displayed as
- menus should always use the third argument.
- ** The meanings of optional second arguments for read-char,
- read-event, and read-char-exclusive are flipped. Now the second
- arguments are INHERIT-INPUT-METHOD. These functions use the current
- input method (if any) if and only if INHERIT-INPUT-METHOD is non-nil.
- ** The new function clear-this-command-keys empties out the contents
- of the vector that (this-command-keys) returns. This is useful in
- programs that read passwords, to prevent the passwords from echoing
- inadvertently as part of the next command in certain cases.
- ** The new macro `with-temp-message' displays a temporary message in
- the echo area, while executing some Lisp code. Like `progn', it
- returns the value of the last form, but it also restores the previous
- echo area contents.
- (with-temp-message MESSAGE &rest BODY)
- ** The function `require' now takes an optional third argument
- NOERROR. If it is non-nil, then there is no error if the
- requested feature cannot be loaded.
- ** In the function modify-face, an argument of (nil) for the
- foreground color, background color or stipple pattern
- means to clear out that attribute.
- ** The `outer-window-id' frame property of an X frame
- gives the window number of the outermost X window for the frame.
- ** Temporary buffers made with with-output-to-temp-buffer are now
- read-only by default, and normally use the major mode Help mode
- unless you put them in some other non-Fundamental mode before the
- end of with-output-to-temp-buffer.
- ** The new functions gap-position and gap-size return information on
- the gap of the current buffer.
- ** The new functions position-bytes and byte-to-position provide a way
- to convert between character positions and byte positions in the
- current buffer.
- ** vc.el defines two new macros, `edit-vc-file' and `with-vc-file', to
- facilitate working with version-controlled files from Lisp programs.
- These macros check out a given file automatically if needed, and check
- it back in after any modifications have been made.
- * Installation Changes in Emacs 20.3
- ** The default value of load-path now includes most subdirectories of
- the site-specific directories /usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp and
- /usr/local/share/emacs/VERSION/site-lisp, in addition to those
- directories themselves. Both immediate subdirectories and
- subdirectories multiple levels down are added to load-path.
- Not all subdirectories are included, though. Subdirectories whose
- names do not start with a letter or digit are excluded.
- Subdirectories named RCS or CVS are excluded. Also, a subdirectory
- which contains a file named `.nosearch' is excluded. You can use
- these methods to prevent certain subdirectories from being searched.
- Emacs finds these subdirectories and adds them to load-path when it
- starts up. While it would be cleaner to find the subdirectories each
- time Emacs loads a file, that would be much slower.
- This feature is an incompatible change. If you have stored some Emacs
- Lisp files in a subdirectory of the site-lisp directory specifically
- to prevent them from being used, you will need to rename the
- subdirectory to start with a non-alphanumeric character, or create a
- `.nosearch' file in it, in order to continue to achieve the desired
- results.
- ** Emacs no longer includes an old version of the C preprocessor from
- GCC. This was formerly used to help compile Emacs with C compilers
- that had limits on the significant length of an identifier, but in
- fact we stopped supporting such compilers some time ago.
- * Changes in Emacs 20.3
- ** The new command C-x z (repeat) repeats the previous command
- including its argument. If you repeat the z afterward,
- it repeats the command additional times; thus, you can
- perform many repetitions with one keystroke per repetition.
- ** Emacs now supports "selective undo" which undoes only within a
- specified region. To do this, set point and mark around the desired
- region and type C-u C-x u (or C-u C-_). You can then continue undoing
- further, within the same region, by repeating the ordinary undo
- command C-x u or C-_. This will keep undoing changes that were made
- within the region you originally specified, until either all of them
- are undone, or it encounters a change which crosses the edge of that
- region.
- In Transient Mark mode, undoing when a region is active requests
- selective undo.
- ** If you specify --unibyte when starting Emacs, then all buffers are
- unibyte, except when a Lisp program specifically creates a multibyte
- buffer. Setting the environment variable EMACS_UNIBYTE has the same
- effect. The --no-unibyte option overrides EMACS_UNIBYTE and directs
- Emacs to run normally in multibyte mode.
- The option --unibyte does not affect the reading of Emacs Lisp files,
- though. If you want a Lisp file to be read in unibyte mode, use
- -*-unibyte: t;-*- on its first line. That will force Emacs to
- load that file in unibyte mode, regardless of how Emacs was started.
- ** toggle-enable-multibyte-characters no longer has a key binding and
- no longer appears in the menu bar. We've realized that changing the
- enable-multibyte-characters variable in an existing buffer is
- something that most users not do.
- ** You can specify a coding system to use for the next cut or paste
- operations through the window system with the command C-x RET X.
- The coding system can make a difference for communication with other
- applications.
- C-x RET x specifies a coding system for all subsequent cutting and
- pasting operations.
- ** You can specify the printer to use for commands that do printing by
- setting the variable `printer-name'. Just what a printer name looks
- like depends on your operating system. You can specify a different
- printer for the PostScript printing commands by setting
- `ps-printer-name'.
- ** Emacs now supports on-the-fly spell checking by the means of a
- minor mode. It is called M-x flyspell-mode. You don't have to remember
- any other special commands to use it, and you will hardly notice it
- except when you make a spelling error. Flyspell works by highlighting
- incorrect words as soon as they are completed or as soon as the cursor
- hits a new word.
- Flyspell mode works with whichever dictionary you have selected for
- Ispell in Emacs. In TeX mode, it understands TeX syntax so as not
- to be confused by TeX commands.
- You can correct a misspelled word by editing it into something
- correct. You can also correct it, or accept it as correct, by
- clicking on the word with Mouse-2; that gives you a pop-up menu
- of various alternative replacements and actions.
- Flyspell mode also proposes "automatic" corrections. M-TAB replaces
- the current misspelled word with a possible correction. If several
- corrections are made possible, M-TAB cycles through them in
- alphabetical order, or in order of decreasing likelihood if
- flyspell-sort-corrections is nil.
- Flyspell mode also flags an error when a word is repeated, if
- flyspell-mark-duplications-flag is non-nil.
- ** Changes in input method usage.
- Now you can use arrow keys (right, left, down, up) for selecting among
- the alternatives just the same way as you do by C-f, C-b, C-n, and C-p
- respectively.
- You can use the ENTER key to accept the current conversion.
- If you type TAB to display a list of alternatives, you can select one
- of the alternatives with Mouse-2.
- The meaning of the variable `input-method-verbose-flag' is changed so
- that you can set it to t, nil, `default', or `complex-only'.
- If the value is nil, extra guidance is never given.
- If the value is t, extra guidance is always given.
- If the value is `complex-only', extra guidance is always given only
- when you are using complex input methods such as chinese-py.
- If the value is `default' (this is the default), extra guidance is
- given in the following case:
- o When you are using a complex input method.
- o When you are using a simple input method but not in the minibuffer.
- If you are using Emacs through a very slow line, setting
- input-method-verbose-flag to nil or to complex-only is a good choice,
- and if you are using an input method you are not familiar with,
- setting it to t is helpful.
- The old command select-input-method is now called set-input-method.
- In the language environment "Korean", you can use the following
- keys:
- Shift-SPC toggle-korean-input-method
- C-F9 quail-hangul-switch-symbol-ksc
- F9 quail-hangul-switch-hanja
- These key bindings are canceled when you switch to another language
- environment.
- ** The minibuffer history of file names now records the specified file
- names, not the entire minibuffer input. For example, if the
- minibuffer starts out with /usr/foo/, you might type in /etc/passwd to
- get
- /usr/foo//etc/passwd
- which stands for the file /etc/passwd.
- Formerly, this used to put /usr/foo//etc/passwd in the history list.
- Now this puts just /etc/passwd in the history list.
- ** If you are root, Emacs sets backup-by-copying-when-mismatch to t
- at startup, so that saving a file will be sure to preserve
- its owner and group.
- ** find-func.el can now also find the place of definition of Emacs
- Lisp variables in user-loaded libraries.
- ** C-x r t (string-rectangle) now deletes the existing rectangle
- contents before inserting the specified string on each line.
- ** There is a new command delete-whitespace-rectangle
- which deletes whitespace starting from a particular column
- in all the lines on a rectangle. The column is specified
- by the left edge of the rectangle.
- ** You can now store a number into a register with C-u NUMBER C-x r n REG,
- increment it by INC with C-u INC C-x r + REG (to increment by one, omit
- C-u INC), and insert it in the buffer with C-x r g REG. This is useful
- for writing keyboard macros.
- ** The new command M-x speedbar displays a frame in which directories,
- files, and tags can be displayed, manipulated, and jumped to. The
- frame defaults to 20 characters in width, and is the same height as
- the frame that it was started from. Some major modes define
- additional commands for the speedbar, including Rmail, GUD/GDB, and
- info.
- ** query-replace-regexp is now bound to C-M-%.
- ** In Transient Mark mode, when the region is active, M-x
- query-replace and the other replace commands now operate on the region
- contents only.
- ** M-x write-region, when used interactively, now asks for
- confirmation before overwriting an existing file. When you call
- the function from a Lisp program, a new optional argument CONFIRM
- says whether to ask for confirmation in this case.
- ** If you use find-file-literally and the file is already visited
- non-literally, the command asks you whether to revisit the file
- literally. If you say no, it signals an error.
- ** Major modes defined with the "derived mode" feature
- now use the proper name for the mode hook: WHATEVER-mode-hook.
- Formerly they used the name WHATEVER-mode-hooks, but that is
- inconsistent with Emacs conventions.
- ** shell-command-on-region (and shell-command) reports success or
- failure if the command produces no output.
- ** Set focus-follows-mouse to nil if your window system or window
- manager does not transfer focus to another window when you just move
- the mouse.
- ** mouse-menu-buffer-maxlen has been renamed to
- mouse-buffer-menu-maxlen to be consistent with the other related
- function and variable names.
- ** The new variable auto-coding-alist specifies coding systems for
- reading specific files. This has higher priority than
- file-coding-system-alist.
- ** If you set the variable unibyte-display-via-language-environment to
- t, then Emacs displays non-ASCII characters are displayed by
- converting them to the equivalent multibyte characters according to
- the current language environment. As a result, they are displayed
- according to the current fontset.
- ** C-q's handling of codes in the range 0200 through 0377 is changed.
- The codes in the range 0200 through 0237 are inserted as one byte of
- that code regardless of the values of nonascii-translation-table and
- nonascii-insert-offset.
- For the codes in the range 0240 through 0377, if
- enable-multibyte-characters is non-nil and nonascii-translation-table
- nor nonascii-insert-offset can't convert them to valid multibyte
- characters, they are converted to Latin-1 characters.
- ** If you try to find a file that is not read-accessible, you now get
- an error, rather than an empty buffer and a warning.
- ** In the minibuffer history commands M-r and M-s, an upper case
- letter in the regular expression forces case-sensitive search.
- ** In the *Help* buffer, cross-references to commands and variables
- are inferred and hyperlinked. Use C-h m in Help mode for the relevant
- command keys.
- ** M-x apropos-command, with a prefix argument, no longer looks for
- user option variables--instead it looks for noninteractive functions.
- Meanwhile, the command apropos-variable normally searches for
- user option variables; with a prefix argument, it looks at
- all variables that have documentation.
- ** When you type a long line in the minibuffer, and the minibuffer
- shows just one line, automatically scrolling works in a special way
- that shows you overlap with the previous line of text. The variable
- minibuffer-scroll-overlap controls how many characters of overlap
- it should show; the default is 20.
- Meanwhile, Resize Minibuffer mode is still available; in that mode,
- the minibuffer grows taller (up to a point) as needed to show the whole
- of your input.
- ** The new command M-x customize-changed-options lets you customize
- all the options whose meanings or default values have changed in
- recent Emacs versions. You specify a previous Emacs version number as
- argument, and the command creates a customization buffer showing all
- the customizable options which were changed since that version.
- Newly added options are included as well.
- If you don't specify a particular version number argument,
- then the customization buffer shows all the customizable options
- for which Emacs versions of changes are recorded.
- This function is also bound to the Changed Options entry in the
- Customize menu.
- ** When you run M-x grep with a prefix argument, it figures out
- the tag around point and puts that into the default grep command.
- ** The new command M-* (pop-tag-mark) pops back through a history of
- buffer positions from which M-. or other tag-finding commands were
- invoked.
- ** The new variable comment-padding specifies the number of spaces
- that `comment-region' will insert before the actual text of the comment.
- The default is 1.
- ** In Fortran mode the characters `.', `_' and `$' now have symbol
- syntax, not word syntax. Fortran mode now supports `imenu' and has
- new commands fortran-join-line (M-^) and fortran-narrow-to-subprogram
- (C-x n d). M-q can be used to fill a statement or comment block
- sensibly.
- ** GUD now supports jdb, the Java debugger, and pdb, the Python debugger.
- ** If you set the variable add-log-keep-changes-together to a non-nil
- value, the command `C-x 4 a' will automatically notice when you make
- two entries in one day for one file, and combine them.
- ** You can use the command M-x diary-mail-entries to mail yourself a
- reminder about upcoming diary entries. See the documentation string
- for a sample shell script for calling this function automatically
- every night.
- ** Desktop changes
- *** All you need to do to enable use of the Desktop package, is to set
- the variable desktop-enable to t with Custom.
- *** Minor modes are now restored. Which minor modes are restored
- and how modes are restored is controlled by `desktop-minor-mode-table'.
- ** There is no need to do anything special, now, to enable Gnus to
- read and post multi-lingual articles.
- ** Outline mode has now support for showing hidden outlines when
- doing an isearch. In order for this to happen search-invisible should
- be set to open (the default). If an isearch match is inside a hidden
- outline the outline is made visible. If you continue pressing C-s and
- the match moves outside the formerly invisible outline, the outline is
- made invisible again.
- ** Mail reading and sending changes
- *** The Rmail e command now switches to displaying the whole header of
- the message before it lets you edit the message. This is so that any
- changes you make in the header will not be lost if you subsequently
- toggle.
- *** The w command in Rmail, which writes the message body into a file,
- now works in the summary buffer as well. (The command to delete the
- summary buffer is now Q.) The default file name for the w command, if
- the message has no subject, is stored in the variable
- rmail-default-body-file.
- *** Most of the commands and modes that operate on mail and netnews no
- longer depend on the value of mail-header-separator. Instead, they
- handle whatever separator the buffer happens to use.
- *** If you set mail-signature to a value which is not t, nil, or a string,
- it should be an expression. When you send a message, this expression
- is evaluated to insert the signature.
- *** The new Lisp library feedmail.el (version 8) enhances processing of
- outbound email messages. It works in coordination with other email
- handling packages (e.g., rmail, VM, gnus) and is responsible for
- putting final touches on messages and actually submitting them for
- transmission. Users of the emacs program "fakemail" might be
- especially interested in trying feedmail.
- feedmail is not enabled by default. See comments at the top of
- feedmail.el for set-up instructions. Among the bigger features
- provided by feedmail are:
- **** you can park outgoing messages into a disk-based queue and
- stimulate sending some or all of them later (handy for laptop users);
- there is also a queue for draft messages
- **** you can get one last look at the prepped outbound message and
- be prompted for confirmation
- **** does smart filling of address headers
- **** can generate a MESSAGE-ID: line and a DATE: line; the date can be
- the time the message was written or the time it is being sent; this
- can make FCC copies more closely resemble copies that recipients get
- **** you can specify an arbitrary function for actually transmitting
- the message; included in feedmail are interfaces for /bin/[r]mail,
- /usr/lib/sendmail, and Emacs Lisp smtpmail; it's easy to write a new
- function for something else (10-20 lines of Lisp code).
- ** Dired changes
- *** The Dired function dired-do-toggle, which toggles marked and unmarked
- files, is now bound to "t" instead of "T".
- *** dired-at-point has been added to ffap.el. It allows one to easily
- run Dired on the directory name at point.
- *** Dired has a new command: %g. It searches the contents of
- files in the directory and marks each file that contains a match
- for a specified regexp.
- ** VC Changes
- *** New option vc-ignore-vc-files lets you turn off version control
- conveniently.
- *** VC Dired has been completely rewritten. It is now much
- faster, especially for CVS, and works very similar to ordinary
- Dired.
- VC Dired is invoked by typing C-x v d and entering the name of the
- directory to display. By default, VC Dired gives you a recursive
- listing of all files at or below the given directory which are
- currently locked (for CVS, all files not up-to-date are shown).
- You can change the listing format by setting vc-dired-recurse to nil,
- then it shows only the given directory, and you may also set
- vc-dired-terse-display to nil, then it shows all files under version
- control plus the names of any subdirectories, so that you can type `i'
- on such lines to insert them manually, as in ordinary Dired.
- All Dired commands operate normally in VC Dired, except for `v', which
- is redefined as the version control prefix. That means you may type
- `v l', `v =' etc. to invoke `vc-print-log', `vc-diff' and the like on
- the file named in the current Dired buffer line. `v v' invokes
- `vc-next-action' on this file, or on all files currently marked.
- The new command `v t' (vc-dired-toggle-terse-mode) allows you to
- toggle between terse display (only locked files) and full display (all
- VC files plus subdirectories). There is also a special command,
- `* l', to mark all files currently locked.
- Giving a prefix argument to C-x v d now does the same thing as in
- ordinary Dired: it allows you to supply additional options for the ls
- command in the minibuffer, to fine-tune VC Dired's output.
- *** Under CVS, if you merge changes from the repository into a working
- file, and CVS detects conflicts, VC now offers to start an ediff
- session to resolve them.
- Alternatively, you can use the new command `vc-resolve-conflicts' to
- resolve conflicts in a file at any time. It works in any buffer that
- contains conflict markers as generated by rcsmerge (which is what CVS
- uses as well).
- *** You can now transfer changes between branches, using the new
- command vc-merge (C-x v m). It is implemented for RCS and CVS. When
- you invoke it in a buffer under version-control, you can specify
- either an entire branch or a pair of versions, and the changes on that
- branch or between the two versions are merged into the working file.
- If this results in any conflicts, they may be resolved interactively,
- using ediff.
- ** Changes in Font Lock
- *** The face and variable previously known as font-lock-reference-face
- are now called font-lock-constant-face to better reflect their typical
- use for highlighting constants and labels. (Its face properties are
- unchanged.) The variable font-lock-reference-face remains for now for
- compatibility reasons, but its value is font-lock-constant-face.
- ** Frame name display changes
- *** The command set-frame-name lets you set the name of the current
- frame. You can use the new command select-frame-by-name to select and
- raise a frame; this is mostly useful on character-only terminals, or
- when many frames are invisible or iconified.
- *** On character-only terminal (not a window system), changing the
- frame name is now reflected on the mode line and in the Buffers/Frames
- menu.
- ** Comint (subshell) changes
- *** In Comint modes, the commands to kill, stop or interrupt a
- subjob now also kill pending input. This is for compatibility
- with ordinary shells, where the signal characters do this.
- *** There are new commands in Comint mode.
- C-c C-x fetches the "next" line from the input history;
- that is, the line after the last line you got.
- You can use this command to fetch successive lines, one by one.
- C-c SPC accumulates lines of input. More precisely, it arranges to
- send the current line together with the following line, when you send
- the following line.
- C-c C-a if repeated twice consecutively now moves to the process mark,
- which separates the pending input from the subprocess output and the
- previously sent input.
- C-c M-r now runs comint-previous-matching-input-from-input;
- it searches for a previous command, using the current pending input
- as the search string.
- *** New option compilation-scroll-output can be set to scroll
- automatically in compilation-mode windows.
- ** C mode changes
- *** Multiline macros are now handled, both as they affect indentation,
- and as recognized syntax. New syntactic symbol cpp-macro-cont is
- assigned to second and subsequent lines of a multiline macro
- definition.
- *** A new style "user" which captures all non-hook-ified
- (i.e. top-level) .emacs file variable settings and customizations.
- Style "cc-mode" is an alias for "user" and is deprecated. "gnu"
- style is still the default however.
- *** "java" style now conforms to Sun's JDK coding style.
- *** There are new commands c-beginning-of-defun, c-end-of-defun which
- are alternatives which you could bind to C-M-a and C-M-e if you prefer
- them. They do not have key bindings by default.
- *** New and improved implementations of M-a (c-beginning-of-statement)
- and M-e (c-end-of-statement).
- *** C++ namespace blocks are supported, with new syntactic symbols
- namespace-open, namespace-close, and innamespace.
- *** File local variable settings of c-file-style and c-file-offsets
- makes the style variables local to that buffer only.
- *** New indentation functions c-lineup-close-paren,
- c-indent-one-line-block, c-lineup-dont-change.
- *** Improvements (hopefully!) to the way CC Mode is loaded. You
- should now be able to do a (require 'cc-mode) to get the entire
- package loaded properly for customization in your .emacs file. A new
- variable c-initialize-on-load controls this and is t by default.
- ** Changes to hippie-expand.
- *** New customization variable `hippie-expand-dabbrev-skip-space'. If
- non-nil, trailing spaces may be included in the abbreviation to search for,
- which then gives the same behavior as the original `dabbrev-expand'.
- *** New customization variable `hippie-expand-dabbrev-as-symbol'. If
- non-nil, characters of syntax '_' is considered part of the word when
- expanding dynamically.
- *** New customization variable `hippie-expand-no-restriction'. If
- non-nil, narrowed buffers are widened before they are searched.
- *** New customization variable `hippie-expand-only-buffers'. If
- non-empty, buffers searched are restricted to the types specified in
- this list. Useful for example when constructing new special-purpose
- expansion functions with `make-hippie-expand-function'.
- *** Text properties of the expansion are no longer copied.
- ** Changes in BibTeX mode.
- *** Any titleword matching a regexp in the new variable
- bibtex-autokey-titleword-ignore (case sensitive) is ignored during
- automatic key generation. This replaces variable
- bibtex-autokey-titleword-first-ignore, which only checked for matches
- against the first word in the title.
- *** Autokey generation now uses all words from the title, not just
- capitalized words. To avoid conflicts with existing customizations,
- bibtex-autokey-titleword-ignore is set up such that words starting with
- lowerkey characters will still be ignored. Thus, if you want to use
- lowercase words from the title, you will have to overwrite the
- bibtex-autokey-titleword-ignore standard setting.
- *** Case conversion of names and title words for automatic key
- generation is more flexible. Variable bibtex-autokey-preserve-case is
- replaced by bibtex-autokey-titleword-case-convert and
- bibtex-autokey-name-case-convert.
- ** Changes in vcursor.el.
- *** Support for character terminals is available: there is a new keymap
- and the vcursor will appear as an arrow between buffer text. A
- variable `vcursor-interpret-input' allows input from the vcursor to be
- entered exactly as if typed. Numerous functions, including
- `vcursor-compare-windows', have been rewritten to improve consistency
- in the selection of windows and corresponding keymaps.
- *** vcursor options can now be altered with M-x customize under the
- Editing group once the package is loaded.
- *** Loading vcursor now does not define keys by default, as this is
- generally a bad side effect. Use M-x customize to set
- vcursor-key-bindings to t to restore the old behavior.
- *** vcursor-auto-disable can be `copy', which turns off copying from the
- vcursor, but doesn't disable it, after any non-vcursor command.
- ** Ispell changes.
- *** You can now spell check comments and strings in the current
- buffer with M-x ispell-comments-and-strings. Comments and strings
- are identified by syntax tables in effect.
- *** Generic region skipping implemented.
- A single buffer can be broken into a number of regions where text will
- and will not be checked. The definitions of the regions can be user
- defined. New applications and improvements made available by this
- include:
- o URLs are automatically skipped
- o EMail message checking is vastly improved.
- *** Ispell can highlight the erroneous word even on non-window terminals.
- ** Changes to RefTeX mode
- RefTeX has been updated in order to make it more usable with very
- large projects (like a several volume math book). The parser has been
- re-written from scratch. To get maximum speed from RefTeX, check the
- section `Optimizations' in the manual.
- *** New recursive parser.
- The old version of RefTeX created a single large buffer containing the
- entire multifile document in order to parse the document. The new
- recursive parser scans the individual files.
- *** Parsing only part of a document.
- Reparsing of changed document parts can now be made faster by enabling
- partial scans. To use this feature, read the documentation string of
- the variable `reftex-enable-partial-scans' and set the variable to t.
- (setq reftex-enable-partial-scans t)
- *** Storing parsing information in a file.
- This can improve startup times considerably. To turn it on, use
- (setq reftex-save-parse-info t)
- *** Using multiple selection buffers
- If the creation of label selection buffers is too slow (this happens
- for large documents), you can reuse these buffers by setting
- (setq reftex-use-multiple-selection-buffers t)
- *** References to external documents.
- The LaTeX package `xr' allows to cross-reference labels in external
- documents. RefTeX can provide information about the external
- documents as well. To use this feature, set up the \externaldocument
- macros required by the `xr' package and rescan the document with
- RefTeX. The external labels can then be accessed with the `x' key in
- the selection buffer provided by `reftex-reference' (bound to `C-c )').
- The `x' key also works in the table of contents buffer.
- *** Many more labeled LaTeX environments are recognized by default.
- The built-in command list now covers all the standard LaTeX commands,
- and all of the major packages included in the LaTeX distribution.
- Also, RefTeX now understands the \appendix macro and changes
- the enumeration of sections in the *toc* buffer accordingly.
- *** Mouse support for selection and *toc* buffers
- The mouse can now be used to select items in the selection and *toc*
- buffers. See also the new option `reftex-highlight-selection'.
- *** New keymaps for selection and table of contents modes.
- The selection processes for labels and citation keys, and the table of
- contents buffer now have their own keymaps: `reftex-select-label-map',
- `reftex-select-bib-map', `reftex-toc-map'. The selection processes
- have a number of new keys predefined. In particular, TAB lets you
- enter a label with completion. Check the on-the-fly help (press `?'
- at the selection prompt) or read the Info documentation to find out
- more.
- *** Support for the varioref package
- The `v' key in the label selection buffer toggles \ref versus \vref.
- *** New hooks
- Three new hooks can be used to redefine the way labels, references,
- and citations are created. These hooks are
- `reftex-format-label-function', `reftex-format-ref-function',
- `reftex-format-cite-function'.
- *** Citations outside LaTeX
- The command `reftex-citation' may also be used outside LaTeX (e.g. in
- a mail buffer). See the Info documentation for details.
- *** Short context is no longer fontified.
- The short context in the label menu no longer copies the
- fontification from the text in the buffer. If you prefer it to be
- fontified, use
- (setq reftex-refontify-context t)
- ** file-cache-minibuffer-complete now accepts a prefix argument.
- With a prefix argument, it does not try to do completion of
- the file name within its directory; it only checks for other
- directories that contain the same file name.
- Thus, given the file name Makefile, and assuming that a file
- Makefile.in exists in the same directory, ordinary
- file-cache-minibuffer-complete will try to complete Makefile to
- Makefile.in and will therefore never look for other directories that
- have Makefile. A prefix argument tells it not to look for longer
- names such as Makefile.in, so that instead it will look for other
- directories--just as if the name were already complete in its present
- directory.
- ** New modes and packages
- *** There is a new alternative major mode for Perl, Cperl mode.
- It has many more features than Perl mode, and some people prefer
- it, but some do not.
- *** There is a new major mode, M-x vhdl-mode, for editing files of VHDL
- code.
- *** M-x which-function-mode enables a minor mode that displays the
- current function name continuously in the mode line, as you move
- around in a buffer.
- Which Function mode is effective in major modes which support Imenu.
- *** Gametree is a major mode for editing game analysis trees. The author
- uses it for keeping notes about his postal Chess games, but it should
- be helpful for other two-player games as well, as long as they have an
- established system of notation similar to Chess.
- *** The new minor mode checkdoc-minor-mode provides Emacs Lisp
- documentation string checking for style and spelling. The style
- guidelines are found in the Emacs Lisp programming manual.
- *** The net-utils package makes some common networking features
- available in Emacs. Some of these functions are wrappers around
- system utilities (ping, nslookup, etc.); others are implementations of
- simple protocols (finger, whois) in Emacs Lisp. There are also
- functions to make simple connections to TCP/IP ports for debugging and
- the like.
- *** highlight-changes-mode is a minor mode that uses colors to
- identify recently changed parts of the buffer text.
- *** The new package `midnight' lets you specify things to be done
- within Emacs at midnight--by default, kill buffers that you have not
- used in a considerable time. To use this feature, customize
- the user option `midnight-mode' to t.
- *** The file generic-x.el defines a number of simple major modes.
- apache-generic-mode: For Apache and NCSA httpd configuration files
- samba-generic-mode: Samba configuration files
- fvwm-generic-mode: For fvwm initialization files
- x-resource-generic-mode: For X resource files
- hosts-generic-mode: For hosts files (.rhosts, /etc/hosts, etc.)
- mailagent-rules-generic-mode: For mailagent .rules files
- javascript-generic-mode: For JavaScript files
- vrml-generic-mode: For VRML files
- java-manifest-generic-mode: For Java MANIFEST files
- java-properties-generic-mode: For Java property files
- mailrc-generic-mode: For .mailrc files
- Platform-specific modes:
- prototype-generic-mode: For Solaris/Sys V prototype files
- pkginfo-generic-mode: For Solaris/Sys V pkginfo files
- alias-generic-mode: For C shell alias files
- inf-generic-mode: For MS-Windows INF files
- ini-generic-mode: For MS-Windows INI files
- reg-generic-mode: For MS-Windows Registry files
- bat-generic-mode: For MS-Windows BAT scripts
- rc-generic-mode: For MS-Windows Resource files
- rul-generic-mode: For InstallShield scripts
- * Lisp changes in Emacs 20.3 since the Emacs Lisp Manual was published
- ** If you want a Lisp file to be read in unibyte mode,
- use -*-unibyte: t;-*- on its first line.
- That will force Emacs to read that file in unibyte mode.
- Otherwise, the file will be loaded and byte-compiled in multibyte mode.
- Thus, each lisp file is read in a consistent way regardless of whether
- you started Emacs with --unibyte, so that a Lisp program gives
- consistent results regardless of how Emacs was started.
- ** The new function assoc-default is useful for searching an alist,
- and using a default value if the key is not found there. You can
- specify a comparison predicate, so this function is useful for
- searching comparing a string against an alist of regular expressions.
- ** The functions unibyte-char-to-multibyte and
- multibyte-char-to-unibyte convert between unibyte and multibyte
- character codes, in a way that is appropriate for the current language
- environment.
- ** The functions read-event, read-char and read-char-exclusive now
- take two optional arguments. PROMPT, if non-nil, specifies a prompt
- string. SUPPRESS-INPUT-METHOD, if non-nil, says to disable the
- current input method for reading this one event.
- ** Two new variables print-escape-nonascii and print-escape-multibyte
- now control whether to output certain characters as
- backslash-sequences. print-escape-nonascii applies to single-byte
- non-ASCII characters; print-escape-multibyte applies to multibyte
- characters. Both of these variables are used only when printing
- in readable fashion (prin1 uses them, princ does not).
- * Lisp changes in Emacs 20.3 before the Emacs Lisp Manual was published
- ** Compiled Emacs Lisp files made with the modified "MBSK" version
- of Emacs 20.2 do not work in Emacs 20.3.
- ** Buffer positions are now measured in characters, as they were
- in Emacs 19 and before. This means that (forward-char 1)
- always increases point by 1.
- The function chars-in-region now just subtracts its arguments. It is
- considered obsolete. The function char-boundary-p has been deleted.
- See below for additional changes relating to multibyte characters.
- ** defcustom, defface and defgroup now accept the keyword `:version'.
- Use this to specify in which version of Emacs a certain variable's
- default value changed. For example,
- (defcustom foo-max 34 "*Maximum number of foo's allowed."
- :type 'integer
- :group 'foo
- :version "20.3")
- (defgroup foo-group nil "The foo group."
- :version "20.3")
- If an entire new group is added or the variables in it have the
- default values changed, then just add a `:version' to that group. It
- is recommended that new packages added to the distribution contain a
- `:version' in the top level group.
- This information is used to control the customize-changed-options command.
- ** It is now an error to change the value of a symbol whose name
- starts with a colon--if it is interned in the standard obarray.
- However, setting such a symbol to its proper value, which is that
- symbol itself, is not an error. This is for the sake of programs that
- support previous Emacs versions by explicitly setting these variables
- to themselves.
- If you set the variable keyword-symbols-constant-flag to nil,
- this error is suppressed, and you can set these symbols to any
- values whatever.
- ** There is a new debugger command, R.
- It evaluates an expression like e, but saves the result
- in the buffer *Debugger-record*.
- ** Frame-local variables.
- You can now make a variable local to various frames. To do this, call
- the function make-variable-frame-local; this enables frames to have
- local bindings for that variable.
- These frame-local bindings are actually frame parameters: you create a
- frame-local binding in a specific frame by calling
- modify-frame-parameters and specifying the variable name as the
- parameter name.
- Buffer-local bindings take precedence over frame-local bindings.
- Thus, if the current buffer has a buffer-local binding, that binding is
- active; otherwise, if the selected frame has a frame-local binding,
- that binding is active; otherwise, the default binding is active.
- It would not be hard to implement window-local bindings, but it is not
- clear that this would be very useful; windows tend to come and go in a
- very transitory fashion, so that trying to produce any specific effect
- through a window-local binding would not be very robust.
- ** `sregexq' and `sregex' are two new functions for constructing
- "symbolic regular expressions." These are Lisp expressions that, when
- evaluated, yield conventional string-based regexps. The symbolic form
- makes it easier to construct, read, and maintain complex patterns.
- See the documentation in sregex.el.
- ** parse-partial-sexp's return value has an additional element which
- is used to pass information along if you pass it to another call to
- parse-partial-sexp, starting its scan where the first call ended.
- The contents of this field are not yet finalized.
- ** eval-region now accepts a fourth optional argument READ-FUNCTION.
- If it is non-nil, that function is used instead of `read'.
- ** unload-feature by default removes the feature's functions from
- known hooks to avoid trouble, but a package providing FEATURE can
- define a hook FEATURE-unload-hook to be run by unload-feature instead.
- ** read-from-minibuffer no longer returns the argument DEFAULT-VALUE
- when the user enters empty input. It now returns the null string, as
- it did in Emacs 19. The default value is made available in the
- history via M-n, but it is not applied here as a default.
- The other, more specialized minibuffer-reading functions continue to
- return the default value (not the null string) when the user enters
- empty input.
- ** The new variable read-buffer-function controls which routine to use
- for selecting buffers. For example, if you set this variable to
- `iswitchb-read-buffer', iswitchb will be used to read buffer names.
- Other functions can also be used if they accept the same arguments as
- `read-buffer' and return the selected buffer name as a string.
- ** The new function read-passwd reads a password from the terminal,
- echoing a period for each character typed. It takes three arguments:
- a prompt string, a flag which says "read it twice to make sure", and a
- default password to use if the user enters nothing.
- ** The variable fill-nobreak-predicate gives major modes a way to
- specify not to break a line at certain places. Its value is a
- function which is called with no arguments, with point located at the
- place where a break is being considered. If the function returns
- non-nil, then the line won't be broken there.
- ** window-end now takes an optional second argument, UPDATE.
- If this is non-nil, then the function always returns an accurate
- up-to-date value for the buffer position corresponding to the
- end of the window, even if this requires computation.
- ** other-buffer now takes an optional argument FRAME
- which specifies which frame's buffer list to use.
- If it is nil, that means use the selected frame's buffer list.
- ** The new variable buffer-display-time, always local in every buffer,
- holds the value of (current-time) as of the last time that a window
- was directed to display this buffer.
- ** It is now meaningful to compare two window-configuration objects
- with `equal'. Two window-configuration objects are equal if they
- describe equivalent arrangements of windows, in the same frame--in
- other words, if they would give the same results if passed to
- set-window-configuration.
- ** compare-window-configurations is a new function that compares two
- window configurations loosely. It ignores differences in saved buffer
- positions and scrolling, and considers only the structure and sizes of
- windows and the choice of buffers to display.
- ** The variable minor-mode-overriding-map-alist allows major modes to
- override the key bindings of a minor mode. The elements of this alist
- look like the elements of minor-mode-map-alist: (VARIABLE . KEYMAP).
- If the VARIABLE in an element of minor-mode-overriding-map-alist has a
- non-nil value, the paired KEYMAP is active, and totally overrides the
- map (if any) specified for the same variable in minor-mode-map-alist.
- minor-mode-overriding-map-alist is automatically local in all buffers,
- and it is meant to be set by major modes.
- ** The function match-string-no-properties is like match-string
- except that it discards all text properties from the result.
- ** The function load-average now accepts an optional argument
- USE-FLOATS. If it is non-nil, the load average values are returned as
- floating point numbers, rather than as integers to be divided by 100.
- ** The new variable temporary-file-directory specifies the directory
- to use for creating temporary files. The default value is determined
- in a reasonable way for your operating system; on GNU and Unix systems
- it is based on the TMP and TMPDIR environment variables.
- ** Menu changes
- *** easymenu.el now uses the new menu item format and supports the
- keywords :visible and :filter. The existing keyword :keys is now
- better supported.
- The variable `easy-menu-precalculate-equivalent-keybindings' controls
- a new feature which calculates keyboard equivalents for the menu when
- you define the menu. The default is t. If you rarely use menus, you
- can set the variable to nil to disable this precalculation feature;
- then the calculation is done only if you use the menu bar.
- *** A new format for menu items is supported.
- In a keymap, a key binding that has the format
- (STRING . REAL-BINDING) or (STRING HELP-STRING . REAL-BINDING)
- defines a menu item. Now a menu item definition may also be a list that
- starts with the symbol `menu-item'.
- The format is:
- (menu-item ITEM-NAME) or
- (menu-item ITEM-NAME REAL-BINDING . ITEM-PROPERTY-LIST)
- where ITEM-NAME is an expression which evaluates to the menu item
- string, and ITEM-PROPERTY-LIST has the form of a property list.
- The supported properties include
- :enable FORM Evaluate FORM to determine whether the
- item is enabled.
- :visible FORM Evaluate FORM to determine whether the
- item should appear in the menu.
- :filter FILTER-FN
- FILTER-FN is a function of one argument,
- which will be REAL-BINDING.
- It should return a binding to use instead.
- :keys DESCRIPTION
- DESCRIPTION is a string that describes an equivalent keyboard
- binding for REAL-BINDING. DESCRIPTION is expanded with
- `substitute-command-keys' before it is used.
- :key-sequence KEY-SEQUENCE
- KEY-SEQUENCE is a key-sequence for an equivalent
- keyboard binding.
- :key-sequence nil
- This means that the command normally has no
- keyboard equivalent.
- :help HELP HELP is the extra help string (not currently used).
- :button (TYPE . SELECTED)
- TYPE is :toggle or :radio.
- SELECTED is a form, to be evaluated, and its
- value says whether this button is currently selected.
- Buttons are at the moment only simulated by prefixes in the menu.
- Eventually ordinary X-buttons may be supported.
- (menu-item ITEM-NAME) defines unselectable item.
- ** New event types
- *** The new event type `mouse-wheel' is generated by a wheel on a
- mouse (such as the MS Intellimouse). The event contains a delta that
- corresponds to the amount and direction that the wheel is rotated,
- which is typically used to implement a scroll or zoom. The format is:
- (mouse-wheel POSITION DELTA)
- where POSITION is a list describing the position of the event in the
- same format as a mouse-click event, and DELTA is a signed number
- indicating the number of increments by which the wheel was rotated. A
- negative DELTA indicates that the wheel was rotated backwards, towards
- the user, and a positive DELTA indicates that the wheel was rotated
- forward, away from the user.
- As of now, this event type is generated only on MS Windows.
- *** The new event type `drag-n-drop' is generated when a group of
- files is selected in an application outside of Emacs, and then dragged
- and dropped onto an Emacs frame. The event contains a list of
- filenames that were dragged and dropped, which are then typically
- loaded into Emacs. The format is:
- (drag-n-drop POSITION FILES)
- where POSITION is a list describing the position of the event in the
- same format as a mouse-click event, and FILES is the list of filenames
- that were dragged and dropped.
- As of now, this event type is generated only on MS Windows.
- ** Changes relating to multibyte characters.
- *** The variable enable-multibyte-characters is now read-only;
- any attempt to set it directly signals an error. The only way
- to change this value in an existing buffer is with set-buffer-multibyte.
- *** In a string constant, `\ ' now stands for "nothing at all". You
- can use it to terminate a hex escape which is followed by a character
- that could otherwise be read as part of the hex escape.
- *** String indices are now measured in characters, as they were
- in Emacs 19 and before.
- The function chars-in-string has been deleted.
- The function concat-chars has been renamed to `string'.
- *** The function set-buffer-multibyte sets the flag in the current
- buffer that says whether the buffer uses multibyte representation or
- unibyte representation. If the argument is nil, it selects unibyte
- representation. Otherwise it selects multibyte representation.
- This function does not change the contents of the buffer, viewed
- as a sequence of bytes. However, it does change the contents
- viewed as characters; a sequence of two bytes which is treated as
- one character when the buffer uses multibyte representation
- will count as two characters using unibyte representation.
- This function sets enable-multibyte-characters to record which
- representation is in use. It also adjusts various data in the buffer
- (including its markers, overlays and text properties) so that they are
- consistent with the new representation.
- *** string-make-multibyte takes a string and converts it to multibyte
- representation. Most of the time, you don't need to care
- about the representation, because Emacs converts when necessary;
- however, it makes a difference when you compare strings.
- The conversion of non-ASCII characters works by adding the value of
- nonascii-insert-offset to each character, or by translating them
- using the table nonascii-translation-table.
- *** string-make-unibyte takes a string and converts it to unibyte
- representation. Most of the time, you don't need to care about the
- representation, but it makes a difference when you compare strings.
- The conversion from multibyte to unibyte representation
- loses information; the only time Emacs performs it automatically
- is when inserting a multibyte string into a unibyte buffer.
- *** string-as-multibyte takes a string, and returns another string
- which contains the same bytes, but treats them as multibyte.
- *** string-as-unibyte takes a string, and returns another string
- which contains the same bytes, but treats them as unibyte.
- *** The new function compare-strings lets you compare
- portions of two strings. Unibyte strings are converted to multibyte,
- so that a unibyte string can match a multibyte string.
- You can specify whether to ignore case or not.
- *** assoc-ignore-case now uses compare-strings so that
- it can treat unibyte and multibyte strings as equal.
- *** Regular expression operations and buffer string searches now
- convert the search pattern to multibyte or unibyte to accord with the
- buffer or string being searched.
- One consequence is that you cannot always use \200-\377 inside of
- [...] to match all non-ASCII characters. This does still work when
- searching or matching a unibyte buffer or string, but not when
- searching or matching a multibyte string. Unfortunately, there is no
- obvious choice of syntax to use within [...] for that job. But, what
- you want is just to match all non-ASCII characters, the regular
- expression [^\0-\177] works for it.
- *** Structure of coding system changed.
- All coding systems (including aliases and subsidiaries) are named
- by symbols; the symbol's `coding-system' property is a vector
- which defines the coding system. Aliases share the same vector
- as the principal name, so that altering the contents of this
- vector affects the principal name and its aliases. You can define
- your own alias name of a coding system by the function
- define-coding-system-alias.
- The coding system definition includes a property list of its own. Use
- the new functions `coding-system-get' and `coding-system-put' to
- access such coding system properties as post-read-conversion,
- pre-write-conversion, character-translation-table-for-decode,
- character-translation-table-for-encode, mime-charset, and
- safe-charsets. For instance, (coding-system-get 'iso-latin-1
- 'mime-charset) gives the corresponding MIME-charset parameter
- `iso-8859-1'.
- Among the coding system properties listed above, safe-charsets is new.
- The value of this property is a list of character sets which this
- coding system can correctly encode and decode. For instance:
- (coding-system-get 'iso-latin-1 'safe-charsets) => (ascii latin-iso8859-1)
- Here, "correctly encode" means that the encoded character sets can
- also be handled safely by systems other than Emacs as far as they
- are capable of that coding system. Though, Emacs itself can encode
- the other character sets and read it back correctly.
- *** The new function select-safe-coding-system can be used to find a
- proper coding system for encoding the specified region or string.
- This function requires a user interaction.
- *** The new functions find-coding-systems-region and
- find-coding-systems-string are helper functions used by
- select-safe-coding-system. They return a list of all proper coding
- systems to encode a text in some region or string. If you don't want
- a user interaction, use one of these functions instead of
- select-safe-coding-system.
- *** The explicit encoding and decoding functions, such as
- decode-coding-region and encode-coding-string, now set
- last-coding-system-used to reflect the actual way encoding or decoding
- was done.
- *** The new function detect-coding-with-language-environment can be
- used to detect a coding system of text according to priorities of
- coding systems used by some specific language environment.
- *** The functions detect-coding-region and detect-coding-string always
- return a list if the arg HIGHEST is nil. Thus, if only ASCII
- characters are found, they now return a list of single element
- `undecided' or its subsidiaries.
- *** The new functions coding-system-change-eol-conversion and
- coding-system-change-text-conversion can be used to get a different
- coding system than what specified only in how end-of-line or text is
- converted.
- *** The new function set-selection-coding-system can be used to set a
- coding system for communicating with other X clients.
- *** The function `map-char-table' now passes as argument only valid
- character codes, plus generic characters that stand for entire
- character sets or entire subrows of a character set. In other words,
- each time `map-char-table' calls its FUNCTION argument, the key value
- either will be a valid individual character code, or will stand for a
- range of characters.
- *** The new function `char-valid-p' can be used for checking whether a
- Lisp object is a valid character code or not.
- *** The new function `charset-after' returns a charset of a character
- in the current buffer at position POS.
- *** Input methods are now implemented using the variable
- input-method-function. If this is non-nil, its value should be a
- function; then, whenever Emacs reads an input event that is a printing
- character with no modifier bits, it calls that function, passing the
- event as an argument. Often this function will read more input, first
- binding input-method-function to nil.
- The return value should be a list of the events resulting from input
- method processing. These events will be processed sequentially as
- input, before resorting to unread-command-events. Events returned by
- the input method function are not passed to the input method function,
- not even if they are printing characters with no modifier bits.
- The input method function is not called when reading the second and
- subsequent events of a key sequence.
- *** You can customize any language environment by using
- set-language-environment-hook and exit-language-environment-hook.
- The hook `exit-language-environment-hook' should be used to undo
- customizations that you made with set-language-environment-hook. For
- instance, if you set up a special key binding for a specific language
- environment by set-language-environment-hook, you should set up
- exit-language-environment-hook to restore the normal key binding.
- * Changes in Emacs 20.1
- ** Emacs has a new facility for customization of its many user
- options. It is called M-x customize. With this facility you can look
- at the many user options in an organized way; they are grouped into a
- tree structure.
- M-x customize also knows what sorts of values are legitimate for each
- user option and ensures that you don't use invalid values.
- With M-x customize, you can set options either for the present Emacs
- session or permanently. (Permanent settings are stored automatically
- in your .emacs file.)
- ** Scroll bars are now on the left side of the window.
- You can change this with M-x customize-option scroll-bar-mode.
- ** The mode line no longer includes the string `Emacs'.
- This makes more space in the mode line for other information.
- ** When you select a region with the mouse, it is highlighted
- immediately afterward. At that time, if you type the DELETE key, it
- kills the region.
- The BACKSPACE key, and the ASCII character DEL, do not do this; they
- delete the character before point, as usual.
- ** In an incremental search the whole current match is highlighted
- on terminals which support this. (You can disable this feature
- by setting search-highlight to nil.)
- ** In the minibuffer, in some cases, you can now use M-n to
- insert the default value into the minibuffer as text. In effect,
- the default value (if the minibuffer routines know it) is tacked
- onto the history "in the future". (The more normal use of the
- history list is to use M-p to insert minibuffer input used in the
- past.)
- ** In Text mode, now only blank lines separate paragraphs.
- This makes it possible to get the full benefit of Adaptive Fill mode
- in Text mode, and other modes derived from it (such as Mail mode).
- TAB in Text mode now runs the command indent-relative; this
- makes a practical difference only when you use indented paragraphs.
- As a result, the old Indented Text mode is now identical to Text mode,
- and is an alias for it.
- If you want spaces at the beginning of a line to start a paragraph,
- use the new mode, Paragraph Indent Text mode.
- ** Scrolling changes
- *** Scroll commands to scroll a whole screen now preserve the screen
- position of the cursor, if scroll-preserve-screen-position is non-nil.
- In this mode, if you scroll several screens back and forth, finishing
- on the same screen where you started, the cursor goes back to the line
- where it started.
- *** If you set scroll-conservatively to a small number, then when you
- move point a short distance off the screen, Emacs will scroll the
- screen just far enough to bring point back on screen, provided that
- does not exceed `scroll-conservatively' lines.
- *** The new variable scroll-margin says how close point can come to the
- top or bottom of a window. It is a number of screen lines; if point
- comes within that many lines of the top or bottom of the window, Emacs
- recenters the window.
- ** International character set support (MULE)
- Emacs now supports a wide variety of international character sets,
- including European variants of the Latin alphabet, as well as Chinese,
- Devanagari (Hindi and Marathi), Ethiopian, Greek, IPA, Japanese,
- Korean, Lao, Russian, Thai, Tibetan, and Vietnamese scripts. These
- features have been merged from the modified version of Emacs known as
- MULE (for "MULti-lingual Enhancement to GNU Emacs")
- Users of these scripts have established many more-or-less standard
- coding systems for storing files. Emacs uses a single multibyte
- character encoding within Emacs buffers; it can translate from a wide
- variety of coding systems when reading a file and can translate back
- into any of these coding systems when saving a file.
- Keyboards, even in the countries where these character sets are used,
- generally don't have keys for all the characters in them. So Emacs
- supports various "input methods", typically one for each script or
- language, to make it possible to type them.
- The Emacs internal multibyte encoding represents a non-ASCII
- character as a sequence of bytes in the range 0200 through 0377.
- The new prefix key C-x RET is used for commands that pertain
- to multibyte characters, coding systems, and input methods.
- You can disable multibyte character support as follows:
- (setq-default enable-multibyte-characters nil)
- Calling the function standard-display-european turns off multibyte
- characters, unless you specify a non-nil value for the second
- argument, AUTO. This provides compatibility for people who are
- already using standard-display-european to continue using unibyte
- characters for their work until they want to change.
- *** Input methods
- An input method is a kind of character conversion which is designed
- specifically for interactive input. In Emacs, typically each language
- has its own input method (though sometimes several languages which use
- the same characters can share one input method). Some languages
- support several input methods.
- The simplest kind of input method works by mapping ASCII letters into
- another alphabet. This is how the Greek and Russian input methods
- work.
- A more powerful technique is composition: converting sequences of
- characters into one letter. Many European input methods use
- composition to produce a single non-ASCII letter from a sequence which
- consists of a letter followed by diacritics. For example, a' is one
- sequence of two characters that might be converted into a single
- letter.
- The input methods for syllabic scripts typically use mapping followed
- by conversion. The input methods for Thai and Korean work this way.
- First, letters are mapped into symbols for particular sounds or tone
- marks; then, sequences of these which make up a whole syllable are
- mapped into one syllable sign--most often a "composite character".
- None of these methods works very well for Chinese and Japanese, so
- they are handled specially. First you input a whole word using
- phonetic spelling; then, after the word is in the buffer, Emacs
- converts it into one or more characters using a large dictionary.
- Since there is more than one way to represent a phonetically spelled
- word using Chinese characters, Emacs can only guess which one to use;
- typically these input methods give you a way to say "guess again" if
- the first guess is wrong.
- *** The command C-x RET m (toggle-enable-multibyte-characters)
- turns multibyte character support on or off for the current buffer.
- If multibyte character support is turned off in a buffer, then each
- byte is a single character, even codes 0200 through 0377--exactly as
- they did in Emacs 19.34. This includes the features for support for
- the European characters, ISO Latin-1 and ISO Latin-2.
- However, there is no need to turn off multibyte character support to
- use ISO Latin-1 or ISO Latin-2; the Emacs multibyte character set
- includes all the characters in these character sets, and Emacs can
- translate automatically to and from either one.
- *** Visiting a file in unibyte mode.
- Turning off multibyte character support in the buffer after visiting a
- file with multibyte code conversion will display the multibyte
- sequences already in the buffer, byte by byte. This is probably not
- what you want.
- If you want to edit a file of unibyte characters (Latin-1, for
- example), you can do it by specifying `no-conversion' as the coding
- system when reading the file. This coding system also turns off
- multibyte characters in that buffer.
- If you turn off multibyte character support entirely, this turns off
- character conversion as well.
- *** Displaying international characters on X Windows.
- A font for X typically displays just one alphabet or script.
- Therefore, displaying the entire range of characters Emacs supports
- requires using many fonts.
- Therefore, Emacs now supports "fontsets". Each fontset is a
- collection of fonts, each assigned to a range of character codes.
- A fontset has a name, like a font. Individual fonts are defined by
- the X server; fontsets are defined within Emacs itself. But once you
- have defined a fontset, you can use it in a face or a frame just as
- you would use a font.
- If a fontset specifies no font for a certain character, or if it
- specifies a font that does not exist on your system, then it cannot
- display that character. It will display an empty box instead.
- The fontset height and width are determined by the ASCII characters
- (that is, by the font in the fontset which is used for ASCII
- characters).
- *** Defining fontsets.
- Emacs does not use any fontset by default. Its default font is still
- chosen as in previous versions. You can tell Emacs to use a fontset
- with the `-fn' option or the `Font' X resource.
- Emacs creates a standard fontset automatically according to the value
- of standard-fontset-spec. This fontset's short name is
- `fontset-standard'. Bold, italic, and bold-italic variants of the
- standard fontset are created automatically.
- If you specify a default ASCII font with the `Font' resource or `-fn'
- argument, a fontset is generated from it. This works by replacing the
- FOUNDRY, FAMILY, ADD_STYLE, and AVERAGE_WIDTH fields of the font name
- with `*' then using this to specify a fontset. This fontset's short
- name is `fontset-startup'.
- Emacs checks resources of the form Fontset-N where N is 0, 1, 2...
- The resource value should have this form:
- FONTSET-NAME, [CHARSET-NAME:FONT-NAME]...
- FONTSET-NAME should have the form of a standard X font name, except:
- * most fields should be just the wild card "*".
- * the CHARSET_REGISTRY field should be "fontset"
- * the CHARSET_ENCODING field can be any nickname of the fontset.
- The construct CHARSET-NAME:FONT-NAME can be repeated any number
- of times; each time specifies the font for one character set.
- CHARSET-NAME should be the name of a character set, and FONT-NAME
- should specify an actual font to use for that character set.
- Each of these fontsets has an alias which is made from the
- last two font name fields, CHARSET_REGISTRY and CHARSET_ENCODING.
- You can refer to the fontset by that alias or by its full name.
- For any character sets that you don't mention, Emacs tries to choose a
- font by substituting into FONTSET-NAME. For instance, with the
- following resource,
- Emacs*Fontset-0: -*-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-24-*-*-*-*-*-fontset-24
- the font for ASCII is generated as below:
- -*-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-24-*-ISO8859-1
- Here is the substitution rule:
- Change CHARSET_REGISTRY and CHARSET_ENCODING to that of the charset
- defined in the variable x-charset-registries. For instance, ASCII has
- the entry (ascii . "ISO8859-1") in this variable. Then, reduce
- sequences of wild cards -*-...-*- with a single wildcard -*-.
- (This is to prevent use of auto-scaled fonts.)
- The function which processes the fontset resource value to create the
- fontset is called create-fontset-from-fontset-spec. You can also call
- that function explicitly to create a fontset.
- With the X resource Emacs.Font, you can specify a fontset name just
- like an actual font name. But be careful not to specify a fontset
- name in a wildcard resource like Emacs*Font--that tries to specify the
- fontset for other purposes including menus, and they cannot handle
- fontsets.
- *** The command M-x set-language-environment sets certain global Emacs
- defaults for a particular choice of language.
- Selecting a language environment typically specifies a default input
- method and which coding systems to recognize automatically when
- visiting files. However, it does not try to reread files you have
- already visited; the text in those buffers is not affected. The
- language environment may also specify a default choice of coding
- system for new files that you create.
- It makes no difference which buffer is current when you use
- set-language-environment, because these defaults apply globally to the
- whole Emacs session.
- For example, M-x set-language-environment RET Latin-1 RET
- chooses the Latin-1 character set. In the .emacs file, you can do this
- with (set-language-environment "Latin-1").
- *** The command C-x RET f (set-buffer-file-coding-system)
- specifies the file coding system for the current buffer. This
- specifies what sort of character code translation to do when saving
- the file. As an argument, you must specify the name of one of the
- coding systems that Emacs supports.
- *** The command C-x RET c (universal-coding-system-argument)
- lets you specify a coding system when you read or write a file.
- This command uses the minibuffer to read a coding system name.
- After you exit the minibuffer, the specified coding system
- is used for *the immediately following command*.
- So if the immediately following command is a command to read or
- write a file, it uses the specified coding system for that file.
- If the immediately following command does not use the coding system,
- then C-x RET c ultimately has no effect.
- For example, C-x RET c iso-8859-1 RET C-x C-f temp RET
- visits the file `temp' treating it as ISO Latin-1.
- *** You can specify the coding system for a file using the -*-
- construct. Include `coding: CODINGSYSTEM;' inside the -*-...-*-
- to specify use of coding system CODINGSYSTEM. You can also
- specify the coding system in a local variable list at the end
- of the file.
- *** The command C-x RET t (set-terminal-coding-system) specifies
- the coding system for terminal output. If you specify a character
- code for terminal output, all characters output to the terminal are
- translated into that character code.
- This feature is useful for certain character-only terminals built in
- various countries to support the languages of those countries.
- By default, output to the terminal is not translated at all.
- *** The command C-x RET k (set-keyboard-coding-system) specifies
- the coding system for keyboard input.
- Character code translation of keyboard input is useful for terminals
- with keys that send non-ASCII graphic characters--for example,
- some terminals designed for ISO Latin-1 or subsets of it.
- By default, keyboard input is not translated at all.
- Character code translation of keyboard input is similar to using an
- input method, in that both define sequences of keyboard input that
- translate into single characters. However, input methods are designed
- to be convenient for interactive use, while the code translations are
- designed to work with terminals.
- *** The command C-x RET p (set-buffer-process-coding-system)
- specifies the coding system for input and output to a subprocess.
- This command applies to the current buffer; normally, each subprocess
- has its own buffer, and thus you can use this command to specify
- translation to and from a particular subprocess by giving the command
- in the corresponding buffer.
- By default, process input and output are not translated at all.
- *** The variable file-name-coding-system specifies the coding system
- to use for encoding file names before operating on them.
- It is also used for decoding file names obtained from the system.
- *** The command C-\ (toggle-input-method) activates or deactivates
- an input method. If no input method has been selected before, the
- command prompts for you to specify the language and input method you
- want to use.
- C-u C-\ (select-input-method) lets you switch to a different input
- method. C-h C-\ (or C-h I) describes the current input method.
- *** Some input methods remap the keyboard to emulate various keyboard
- layouts commonly used for particular scripts. How to do this
- remapping properly depends on your actual keyboard layout. To specify
- which layout your keyboard has, use M-x quail-set-keyboard-layout.
- *** The command C-h C (describe-coding-system) displays
- the coding systems currently selected for various purposes, plus
- related information.
- *** The command C-h h (view-hello-file) displays a file called
- HELLO, which has examples of text in many languages, using various
- scripts.
- *** The command C-h L (describe-language-support) displays
- information about the support for a particular language.
- You specify the language as an argument.
- *** The mode line now contains a letter or character that identifies
- the coding system used in the visited file. It normally follows the
- first dash.
- A dash indicates the default state of affairs: no code conversion
- (except CRLF => newline if appropriate). `=' means no conversion
- whatsoever. The ISO 8859 coding systems are represented by digits
- 1 through 9. Other coding systems are represented by letters:
- A alternativnyj (Russian)
- B big5 (Chinese)
- C cn-gb-2312 (Chinese)
- C iso-2022-cn (Chinese)
- D in-is13194-devanagari (Indian languages)
- E euc-japan (Japanese)
- I iso-2022-cjk or iso-2022-ss2 (Chinese, Japanese, Korean)
- J junet (iso-2022-7) or old-jis (iso-2022-jp-1978-irv) (Japanese)
- K euc-korea (Korean)
- R koi8 (Russian)
- Q tibetan
- S shift_jis (Japanese)
- T lao
- T tis620 (Thai)
- V viscii or vscii (Vietnamese)
- i iso-2022-lock (Chinese, Japanese, Korean)
- k iso-2022-kr (Korean)
- v viqr (Vietnamese)
- z hz (Chinese)
- When you are using a character-only terminal (not a window system),
- two additional characters appear in between the dash and the file
- coding system. These two characters describe the coding system for
- keyboard input, and the coding system for terminal output.
- *** The new variable rmail-file-coding-system specifies the code
- conversion to use for RMAIL files. The default value is nil.
- When you read mail with Rmail, each message is decoded automatically
- into Emacs' internal format. This has nothing to do with
- rmail-file-coding-system. That variable controls reading and writing
- Rmail files themselves.
- *** The new variable sendmail-coding-system specifies the code
- conversion for outgoing mail. The default value is nil.
- Actually, there are three different ways of specifying the coding system
- for sending mail:
- - If you use C-x RET f in the mail buffer, that takes priority.
- - Otherwise, if you set sendmail-coding-system non-nil, that specifies it.
- - Otherwise, the default coding system for new files is used,
- if that is non-nil. That comes from your language environment.
- - Otherwise, Latin-1 is used.
- *** The command C-h t (help-with-tutorial) accepts a prefix argument
- to specify the language for the tutorial file. Currently, English,
- Japanese, Korean and Thai are supported. We welcome additional
- translations.
- ** An easy new way to visit a file with no code or format conversion
- of any kind: Use M-x find-file-literally. There is also a command
- insert-file-literally which inserts a file into the current buffer
- without any conversion.
- ** C-q's handling of octal character codes is changed.
- You can now specify any number of octal digits.
- RET terminates the digits and is discarded;
- any other non-digit terminates the digits and is then used as input.
- ** There are new commands for looking up Info documentation for
- functions, variables and file names used in your programs.
- Type M-x info-lookup-symbol to look up a symbol in the buffer at point.
- Type M-x info-lookup-file to look up a file in the buffer at point.
- Precisely which Info files are used to look it up depends on the major
- mode. For example, in C mode, the GNU libc manual is used.
- ** M-TAB in most programming language modes now runs the command
- complete-symbol. This command performs completion on the symbol name
- in the buffer before point.
- With a numeric argument, it performs completion based on the set of
- symbols documented in the Info files for the programming language that
- you are using.
- With no argument, it does completion based on the current tags tables,
- just like the old binding of M-TAB (complete-tag).
- ** File locking works with NFS now.
- The lock file for FILENAME is now a symbolic link named .#FILENAME,
- in the same directory as FILENAME.
- This means that collision detection between two different machines now
- works reasonably well; it also means that no file server or directory
- can become a bottleneck.
- The new method does have drawbacks. It means that collision detection
- does not operate when you edit a file in a directory where you cannot
- create new files. Collision detection also doesn't operate when the
- file server does not support symbolic links. But these conditions are
- rare, and the ability to have collision detection while using NFS is
- so useful that the change is worth while.
- When Emacs or a system crashes, this may leave behind lock files which
- are stale. So you may occasionally get warnings about spurious
- collisions. When you determine that the collision is spurious, just
- tell Emacs to go ahead anyway.
- ** If you wish to use Show Paren mode to display matching parentheses,
- it is no longer sufficient to load paren.el. Instead you must call
- show-paren-mode.
- ** If you wish to use Delete Selection mode to replace a highlighted
- selection when you insert new text, it is no longer sufficient to load
- delsel.el. Instead you must call the function delete-selection-mode.
- ** If you wish to use Partial Completion mode to complete partial words
- within symbols or filenames, it is no longer sufficient to load
- complete.el. Instead you must call the function partial-completion-mode.
- ** If you wish to use uniquify to rename buffers for you,
- it is no longer sufficient to load uniquify.el. You must also
- set uniquify-buffer-name-style to one of the non-nil legitimate values.
- ** Changes in View mode.
- *** Several new commands are available in View mode.
- Do H in view mode for a list of commands.
- *** There are two new commands for entering View mode:
- view-file-other-frame and view-buffer-other-frame.
- *** Exiting View mode does a better job of restoring windows to their
- previous state.
- *** New customization variable view-scroll-auto-exit. If non-nil,
- scrolling past end of buffer makes view mode exit.
- *** New customization variable view-exits-all-viewing-windows. If
- non-nil, view-mode will at exit restore all windows viewing buffer,
- not just the selected window.
- *** New customization variable view-read-only. If non-nil, visiting a
- read-only file automatically enters View mode, and toggle-read-only
- turns View mode on or off.
- *** New customization variable view-remove-frame-by-deleting controls
- how to remove a not needed frame at view mode exit. If non-nil,
- delete the frame, if nil make an icon of it.
- ** C-x v l, the command to print a file's version control log,
- now positions point at the entry for the file's current branch version.
- ** C-x v =, the command to compare a file with the last checked-in version,
- has a new feature. If the file is currently not locked, so that it is
- presumably identical to the last checked-in version, the command now asks
- which version to compare with.
- ** When using hideshow.el, incremental search can temporarily show hidden
- blocks if a match is inside the block.
- The block is hidden again if the search is continued and the next match
- is outside the block. By customizing the variable
- isearch-hide-immediately you can choose to hide all the temporarily
- shown blocks only when exiting from incremental search.
- By customizing the variable hs-isearch-open you can choose what kind
- of blocks to temporarily show during isearch: comment blocks, code
- blocks, all of them or none.
- ** The new command C-x 4 0 (kill-buffer-and-window) kills the
- current buffer and deletes the selected window. It asks for
- confirmation first.
- ** C-x C-w, which saves the buffer into a specified file name,
- now changes the major mode according to that file name.
- However, the mode will not be changed if
- (1) a local variables list or the `-*-' line specifies a major mode, or
- (2) the current major mode is a "special" mode,
- not suitable for ordinary files, or
- (3) the new file name does not particularly specify any mode.
- This applies to M-x set-visited-file-name as well.
- However, if you set change-major-mode-with-file-name to nil, then
- these commands do not change the major mode.
- ** M-x occur changes.
- *** If the argument to M-x occur contains upper case letters,
- it performs a case-sensitive search.
- *** In the *Occur* buffer made by M-x occur,
- if you type g or M-x revert-buffer, this repeats the search
- using the same regular expression and the same buffer as before.
- ** In Transient Mark mode, the region in any one buffer is highlighted
- in just one window at a time. At first, it is highlighted in the
- window where you set the mark. The buffer's highlighting remains in
- that window unless you select to another window which shows the same
- buffer--then the highlighting moves to that window.
- ** The feature to suggest key bindings when you use M-x now operates
- after the command finishes. The message suggesting key bindings
- appears temporarily in the echo area. The previous echo area contents
- come back after a few seconds, in case they contain useful information.
- ** Each frame now independently records the order for recently
- selected buffers, so that the default for C-x b is now based on the
- buffers recently selected in the selected frame.
- ** Outline mode changes.
- *** Outline mode now uses overlays (this is the former noutline.el).
- *** Incremental searches skip over invisible text in Outline mode.
- ** When a minibuffer window is active but not the selected window, if
- you try to use the minibuffer, you used to get a nested minibuffer.
- Now, this not only gives an error, it also cancels the minibuffer that
- was already active.
- The motive for this change is so that beginning users do not
- unknowingly move away from minibuffers, leaving them active, and then
- get confused by it.
- If you want to be able to have recursive minibuffers, you must
- set enable-recursive-minibuffers to non-nil.
- ** Changes in dynamic abbrevs.
- *** Expanding dynamic abbrevs with M-/ is now smarter about case
- conversion. If the expansion has mixed case not counting the first
- character, and the abbreviation matches the beginning of the expansion
- including case, then the expansion is copied verbatim.
- The expansion is also copied verbatim if the abbreviation itself has
- mixed case. And using SPC M-/ to copy an additional word always
- copies it verbatim except when the previous copied word is all caps.
- *** The values of `dabbrev-case-replace' and `dabbrev-case-fold-search'
- are no longer Lisp expressions. They have simply three possible
- values.
- `dabbrev-case-replace' has these three values: nil (don't preserve
- case), t (do), or `case-replace' (do like M-x query-replace).
- `dabbrev-case-fold-search' has these three values: nil (don't ignore
- case), t (do), or `case-fold-search' (do like search).
- ** Minibuffer history lists are truncated automatically now to a
- certain length. The variable history-length specifies how long they
- can be. The default value is 30.
- ** Changes in Mail mode.
- *** The key C-x m no longer runs the `mail' command directly.
- Instead, it runs the command `compose-mail', which invokes the mail
- composition mechanism you have selected with the variable
- `mail-user-agent'. The default choice of user agent is
- `sendmail-user-agent', which gives behavior compatible with the old
- behavior.
- C-x 4 m now runs compose-mail-other-window, and C-x 5 m runs
- compose-mail-other-frame.
- *** While composing a reply to a mail message, from Rmail, you can use
- the command C-c C-r to cite just the region from the message you are
- replying to. This copies the text which is the selected region in the
- buffer that shows the original message.
- *** The command C-c C-i inserts a file at the end of the message,
- with separator lines around the contents.
- *** The command M-x expand-mail-aliases expands all mail aliases
- in suitable mail headers. Emacs automatically extracts mail alias
- definitions from your mail alias file (e.g., ~/.mailrc). You do not
- need to expand mail aliases yourself before sending mail.
- *** New features in the mail-complete command.
- **** The mail-complete command now inserts the user's full name,
- for local users or if that is known. The variable mail-complete-style
- controls the style to use, and whether to do this at all.
- Its values are like those of mail-from-style.
- **** The variable mail-passwd-command lets you specify a shell command
- to run to fetch a set of password-entries that add to the ones in
- /etc/passwd.
- **** The variable mail-passwd-file now specifies a list of files to read
- to get the list of user ids. By default, one file is used:
- /etc/passwd.
- ** You can "quote" a file name to inhibit special significance of
- special syntax, by adding `/:' to the beginning. Thus, if you have a
- directory named `/foo:', you can prevent it from being treated as a
- reference to a remote host named `foo' by writing it as `/:/foo:'.
- Emacs uses this new construct automatically when necessary, such as
- when you start it with a working directory whose name might otherwise
- be taken to be magic.
- ** There is a new command M-x grep-find which uses find to select
- files to search through, and grep to scan them. The output is
- available in a Compile mode buffer, as with M-x grep.
- M-x grep now uses the -e option if the grep program supports that.
- (-e prevents problems if the search pattern starts with a dash.)
- ** In Dired, the & command now flags for deletion the files whose names
- suggest they are probably not needed in the long run.
- In Dired, * is now a prefix key for mark-related commands.
- new key dired.el binding old key
- ------- ---------------- -------
- * c dired-change-marks c
- * m dired-mark m
- * * dired-mark-executables * (binding deleted)
- * / dired-mark-directories / (binding deleted)
- * @ dired-mark-symlinks @ (binding deleted)
- * u dired-unmark u
- * DEL dired-unmark-backward DEL
- * ? dired-unmark-all-files C-M-?
- * ! dired-unmark-all-marks
- * % dired-mark-files-regexp % m
- * C-n dired-next-marked-file M-}
- * C-p dired-prev-marked-file M-{
- ** Rmail changes.
- *** When Rmail cannot convert your incoming mail into Babyl format, it
- saves the new mail in the file RMAILOSE.n, where n is an integer
- chosen to make a unique name. This way, Rmail will not keep crashing
- each time you run it.
- *** In Rmail, the variable rmail-summary-line-count-flag now controls
- whether to include the line count in the summary. Non-nil means yes.
- *** In Rmail summary buffers, d and C-d (the commands to delete
- messages) now take repeat counts as arguments. A negative argument
- means to move in the opposite direction.
- *** In Rmail, the t command now takes an optional argument which lets
- you specify whether to show the message headers in full or pruned.
- *** In Rmail, the new command w (rmail-output-body-to-file) writes
- just the body of the current message into a file, without the headers.
- It takes the file name from the message subject, by default, but you
- can edit that file name in the minibuffer before it is actually used
- for output.
- ** Gnus changes.
- *** nntp.el has been totally rewritten in an asynchronous fashion.
- *** Article prefetching functionality has been moved up into
- Gnus.
- *** Scoring can now be performed with logical operators like
- `and', `or', `not', and parent redirection.
- *** Article washing status can be displayed in the
- article mode line.
- *** gnus.el has been split into many smaller files.
- *** Suppression of duplicate articles based on Message-ID.
- (setq gnus-suppress-duplicates t)
- *** New variables for specifying what score and adapt files
- are to be considered home score and adapt files. See
- `gnus-home-score-file' and `gnus-home-adapt-files'.
- *** Groups can inherit group parameters from parent topics.
- *** Article editing has been revamped and is now usable.
- *** Signatures can be recognized in more intelligent fashions.
- See `gnus-signature-separator' and `gnus-signature-limit'.
- *** Summary pick mode has been made to look more nn-like.
- Line numbers are displayed and the `.' command can be
- used to pick articles.
- *** Commands for moving the .newsrc.eld from one server to
- another have been added.
- `M-x gnus-change-server'
- *** A way to specify that "uninteresting" fields be suppressed when
- generating lines in buffers.
- *** Several commands in the group buffer can be undone with
- `C-M-_'.
- *** Scoring can be done on words using the new score type `w'.
- *** Adaptive scoring can be done on a Subject word-by-word basis:
- (setq gnus-use-adaptive-scoring '(word))
- *** Scores can be decayed.
- (setq gnus-decay-scores t)
- *** Scoring can be performed using a regexp on the Date header. The
- Date is normalized to compact ISO 8601 format first.
- *** A new command has been added to remove all data on articles from
- the native server.
- `M-x gnus-group-clear-data-on-native-groups'
- *** A new command for reading collections of documents
- (nndoc with nnvirtual on top) has been added -- `C-M-d'.
- *** Process mark sets can be pushed and popped.
- *** A new mail-to-news backend makes it possible to post
- even when the NNTP server doesn't allow posting.
- *** A new backend for reading searches from Web search engines
- (DejaNews, Alta Vista, InReference) has been added.
- Use the `G w' command in the group buffer to create such
- a group.
- *** Groups inside topics can now be sorted using the standard
- sorting functions, and each topic can be sorted independently.
- See the commands under the `T S' submap.
- *** Subsets of the groups can be sorted independently.
- See the commands under the `G P' submap.
- *** Cached articles can be pulled into the groups.
- Use the `Y c' command.
- *** Score files are now applied in a more reliable order.
- *** Reports on where mail messages end up can be generated.
- `M-x nnmail-split-history'
- *** More hooks and functions have been added to remove junk
- from incoming mail before saving the mail.
- See `nnmail-prepare-incoming-header-hook'.
- *** The nnml mail backend now understands compressed article files.
- *** To enable Gnus to read/post multi-lingual articles, you must execute
- the following code, for instance, in your .emacs.
- (add-hook 'gnus-startup-hook 'gnus-mule-initialize)
- Then, when you start Gnus, it will decode non-ASCII text automatically
- and show appropriate characters. (Note: if you are using gnus-mime
- from the SEMI package, formerly known as TM, you should NOT add this
- hook to gnus-startup-hook; gnus-mime has its own method of handling
- this issue.)
- Since it is impossible to distinguish all coding systems
- automatically, you may need to specify a choice of coding system for a
- particular news group. This can be done by:
- (gnus-mule-add-group NEWSGROUP 'CODING-SYSTEM)
- Here NEWSGROUP should be a string which names a newsgroup or a tree
- of newsgroups. If NEWSGROUP is "XXX.YYY", all news groups under
- "XXX.YYY" (including "XXX.YYY.ZZZ") will use the specified coding
- system. CODING-SYSTEM specifies which coding system to use (for both
- for reading and posting).
- CODING-SYSTEM can also be a cons cell of the form
- (READ-CODING-SYSTEM . POST-CODING-SYSTEM)
- Then READ-CODING-SYSTEM is used when you read messages from the
- newsgroups, while POST-CODING-SYSTEM is used when you post messages
- there.
- Emacs knows the right coding systems for certain newsgroups by
- default. Here are some of these default settings:
- (gnus-mule-add-group "fj" 'iso-2022-7)
- (gnus-mule-add-group "alt.chinese.text" 'hz-gb-2312)
- (gnus-mule-add-group "alt.hk" 'hz-gb-2312)
- (gnus-mule-add-group "alt.chinese.text.big5" 'cn-big5)
- (gnus-mule-add-group "soc.culture.vietnamese" '(nil . viqr))
- When you reply by mail to an article, these settings are ignored;
- the mail is encoded according to sendmail-coding-system, as usual.
- ** CC mode changes.
- *** If you edit primarily one style of C (or C++, Objective-C, Java)
- code, you may want to make the CC Mode style variables have global
- values so that you can set them directly in your .emacs file. To do
- this, set c-style-variables-are-local-p to nil in your .emacs file.
- Note that this only takes effect if you do it *before* cc-mode.el is
- loaded.
- If you typically edit more than one style of C (or C++, Objective-C,
- Java) code in a single Emacs session, you may want to make the CC Mode
- style variables have buffer local values. By default, all buffers
- share the same style variable settings; to make them buffer local, set
- c-style-variables-are-local-p to t in your .emacs file. Note that you
- must do this *before* CC Mode is loaded.
- *** The new variable c-indentation-style holds the C style name
- of the current buffer.
- *** The variable c-block-comments-indent-p has been deleted, because
- it is no longer necessary. C mode now handles all the supported styles
- of block comments, with no need to say which one you will use.
- *** There is a new indentation style "python", which specifies the C
- style that the Python developers like.
- *** There is a new c-cleanup-list option: brace-elseif-brace.
- This says to put ...} else if (...) {... on one line,
- just as brace-else-brace says to put ...} else {... on one line.
- ** VC Changes [new]
- *** In vc-retrieve-snapshot (C-x v r), if you don't specify a snapshot
- name, it retrieves the *latest* versions of all files in the current
- directory and its subdirectories (aside from files already locked).
- This feature is useful if your RCS directory is a link to a common
- master directory, and you want to pick up changes made by other
- developers.
- You can do the same thing for an individual file by typing C-u C-x C-q
- RET in a buffer visiting that file.
- *** VC can now handle files under CVS that are being "watched" by
- other developers. Such files are made read-only by CVS. To get a
- writable copy, type C-x C-q in a buffer visiting such a file. VC then
- calls "cvs edit", which notifies the other developers of it.
- *** vc-version-diff (C-u C-x v =) now suggests reasonable defaults for
- version numbers, based on the current state of the file.
- ** Calendar changes.
- *** A new function, list-holidays, allows you list holidays or
- subclasses of holidays for ranges of years. Related menu items allow
- you do this for the year of the selected date, or the
- following/previous years.
- *** There is now support for the Baha'i calendar system. Use `pb' in
- the *Calendar* buffer to display the current Baha'i date. The Baha'i
- calendar, or "Badi calendar" is a system of 19 months with 19 days
- each, and 4 intercalary days (5 during a Gregorian leap year). The
- calendar begins May 23, 1844, with each of the months named after a
- supposed attribute of God.
- ** ps-print changes
- There are some new user variables and subgroups for customizing the page
- layout.
- *** Headers & Footers (subgroup)
- Some printer systems print a header page and force the first page to
- be printed on the back of the header page when using duplex. If your
- printer system has this behavior, set variable
- `ps-banner-page-when-duplexing' to t.
- If variable `ps-banner-page-when-duplexing' is non-nil, it prints a
- blank page as the very first printed page. So, it behaves as if the
- very first character of buffer (or region) were a form feed ^L (\014).
- The variable `ps-spool-config' specifies who is responsible for
- setting duplex mode and page size. Valid values are:
- lpr-switches duplex and page size are configured by `ps-lpr-switches'.
- Don't forget to set `ps-lpr-switches' to select duplex
- printing for your printer.
- setpagedevice duplex and page size are configured by ps-print using the
- setpagedevice PostScript operator.
- nil duplex and page size are configured by ps-print *not* using
- the setpagedevice PostScript operator.
- The variable `ps-spool-tumble' specifies how the page images on
- opposite sides of a sheet are oriented with respect to each other. If
- `ps-spool-tumble' is nil, ps-print produces output suitable for
- bindings on the left or right. If `ps-spool-tumble' is non-nil,
- ps-print produces output suitable for bindings at the top or bottom.
- This variable takes effect only if `ps-spool-duplex' is non-nil.
- The default value is nil.
- The variable `ps-header-frame-alist' specifies a header frame
- properties alist. Valid frame properties are:
- fore-color Specify the foreground frame color.
- Value should be a float number between 0.0 (black
- color) and 1.0 (white color), or a string which is a
- color name, or a list of 3 float numbers which
- correspond to the Red Green Blue color scale, each
- float number between 0.0 (dark color) and 1.0 (bright
- color). The default is 0 ("black").
- back-color Specify the background frame color (similar to fore-color).
- The default is 0.9 ("gray90").
- shadow-color Specify the shadow color (similar to fore-color).
- The default is 0 ("black").
- border-color Specify the border color (similar to fore-color).
- The default is 0 ("black").
- border-width Specify the border width.
- The default is 0.4.
- Any other property is ignored.
- Don't change this alist directly; instead use Custom, or the
- `ps-value', `ps-get', `ps-put' and `ps-del' functions (see there for
- documentation).
- Ps-print can also print footers. The footer variables are:
- `ps-print-footer', `ps-footer-offset', `ps-print-footer-frame',
- `ps-footer-font-family', `ps-footer-font-size', `ps-footer-line-pad',
- `ps-footer-lines', `ps-left-footer', `ps-right-footer' and
- `ps-footer-frame-alist'. These variables are similar to those
- controlling headers.
- *** Color management (subgroup)
- If `ps-print-color-p' is non-nil, the buffer's text will be printed in
- color.
- *** Face Management (subgroup)
- If you need to print without worrying about face background colors,
- set the variable `ps-use-face-background' which specifies if face
- background should be used. Valid values are:
- t always use face background color.
- nil never use face background color.
- (face...) list of faces whose background color will be used.
- *** N-up printing (subgroup)
- The variable `ps-n-up-printing' specifies the number of pages per
- sheet of paper.
- The variable `ps-n-up-margin' specifies the margin in points (pt)
- between the sheet border and the n-up printing.
- If variable `ps-n-up-border-p' is non-nil, a border is drawn around
- each page.
- The variable `ps-n-up-filling' specifies how the page matrix is filled
- on each sheet of paper. Following are the valid values for
- `ps-n-up-filling' with a filling example using a 3x4 page matrix:
- `left-top' 1 2 3 4 `left-bottom' 9 10 11 12
- 5 6 7 8 5 6 7 8
- 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4
- `right-top' 4 3 2 1 `right-bottom' 12 11 10 9
- 8 7 6 5 8 7 6 5
- 12 11 10 9 4 3 2 1
- `top-left' 1 4 7 10 `bottom-left' 3 6 9 12
- 2 5 8 11 2 5 8 11
- 3 6 9 12 1 4 7 10
- `top-right' 10 7 4 1 `bottom-right' 12 9 6 3
- 11 8 5 2 11 8 5 2
- 12 9 6 3 10 7 4 1
- Any other value is treated as `left-top'.
- *** Zebra stripes (subgroup)
- The variable `ps-zebra-color' controls the zebra stripes grayscale or
- RGB color.
- The variable `ps-zebra-stripe-follow' specifies how zebra stripes
- continue on next page. Visually, valid values are (the character `+'
- to the right of each column indicates that a line is printed):
- `nil' `follow' `full' `full-follow'
- Current Page -------- ----------- --------- ----------------
- 1 XXXXX + 1 XXXXXXXX + 1 XXXXXX + 1 XXXXXXXXXXXXX +
- 2 XXXXX + 2 XXXXXXXX + 2 XXXXXX + 2 XXXXXXXXXXXXX +
- 3 XXXXX + 3 XXXXXXXX + 3 XXXXXX + 3 XXXXXXXXXXXXX +
- 4 + 4 + 4 + 4 +
- 5 + 5 + 5 + 5 +
- 6 + 6 + 6 + 6 +
- 7 XXXXX + 7 XXXXXXXX + 7 XXXXXX + 7 XXXXXXXXXXXXX +
- 8 XXXXX + 8 XXXXXXXX + 8 XXXXXX + 8 XXXXXXXXXXXXX +
- 9 XXXXX + 9 XXXXXXXX + 9 XXXXXX + 9 XXXXXXXXXXXXX +
- 10 + 10 +
- 11 + 11 +
- -------- ----------- --------- ----------------
- Next Page -------- ----------- --------- ----------------
- 12 XXXXX + 12 + 10 XXXXXX + 10 +
- 13 XXXXX + 13 XXXXXXXX + 11 XXXXXX + 11 +
- 14 XXXXX + 14 XXXXXXXX + 12 XXXXXX + 12 +
- 15 + 15 XXXXXXXX + 13 + 13 XXXXXXXXXXXXX +
- 16 + 16 + 14 + 14 XXXXXXXXXXXXX +
- 17 + 17 + 15 + 15 XXXXXXXXXXXXX +
- 18 XXXXX + 18 + 16 XXXXXX + 16 +
- 19 XXXXX + 19 XXXXXXXX + 17 XXXXXX + 17 +
- 20 XXXXX + 20 XXXXXXXX + 18 XXXXXX + 18 +
- 21 + 21 XXXXXXXX +
- 22 + 22 +
- -------- ----------- --------- ----------------
- Any other value is treated as `nil'.
- *** Printer management (subgroup)
- The variable `ps-printer-name-option' determines the option used by
- some utilities to indicate the printer name; it's used only when
- `ps-printer-name' is a non-empty string. If you're using the lpr
- utility to print, for example, `ps-printer-name-option' should be set
- to "-P".
- The variable `ps-manual-feed' indicates if the printer requires manual
- paper feeding. If it's nil, automatic feeding takes place. If it's
- non-nil, manual feeding takes place.
- The variable `ps-end-with-control-d' specifies whether C-d (\x04)
- should be inserted at end of the generated PostScript. Non-nil means
- do so.
- *** Page settings (subgroup)
- If variable `ps-warn-paper-type' is nil, it's *not* treated as an
- error if the PostScript printer doesn't have a paper with the size
- indicated by `ps-paper-type'; the default paper size will be used
- instead. If `ps-warn-paper-type' is non-nil, an error is signaled if
- the PostScript printer doesn't support a paper with the size indicated
- by `ps-paper-type'. This is used when `ps-spool-config' is set to
- `setpagedevice'.
- The variable `ps-print-upside-down' determines the orientation for
- printing pages: nil means `normal' printing, non-nil means
- `upside-down' printing (that is, the page is rotated by 180 degrees).
- The variable `ps-selected-pages' specifies which pages to print. If
- it's nil, all pages are printed. If it's a list, list elements may be
- integers specifying a single page to print, or cons cells (FROM . TO)
- specifying to print from page FROM to TO. Invalid list elements, that
- is integers smaller than one, or elements whose FROM is greater than
- its TO, are ignored.
- The variable `ps-even-or-odd-pages' specifies how to print even/odd
- pages. Valid values are:
- nil print all pages.
- `even-page' print only even pages.
- `odd-page' print only odd pages.
- `even-sheet' print only even sheets.
- That is, if `ps-n-up-printing' is 1, it behaves like
- `even-page', but for values greater than 1, it'll
- print only the even sheet of paper.
- `odd-sheet' print only odd sheets.
- That is, if `ps-n-up-printing' is 1, it behaves like
- `odd-page'; but for values greater than 1, it'll print
- only the odd sheet of paper.
- Any other value is treated as nil.
- If you set `ps-selected-pages' (see there for documentation), pages
- are filtered by `ps-selected-pages', and then by
- `ps-even-or-odd-pages'. For example, if we have:
- (setq ps-selected-pages '(1 4 (6 . 10) (12 . 16) 20))
- and we combine this with `ps-even-or-odd-pages' and
- `ps-n-up-printing', we get:
- `ps-n-up-printing' = 1:
- `ps-even-or-odd-pages' PAGES PRINTED
- nil 1, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 20
- even-page 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 20
- odd-page 1, 7, 9, 13, 15
- even-sheet 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 20
- odd-sheet 1, 7, 9, 13, 15
- `ps-n-up-printing' = 2:
- `ps-even-or-odd-pages' PAGES PRINTED
- nil 1/4, 6/7, 8/9, 10/12, 13/14, 15/16, 20
- even-page 4/6, 8/10, 12/14, 16/20
- odd-page 1/7, 9/13, 15
- even-sheet 6/7, 10/12, 15/16
- odd-sheet 1/4, 8/9, 13/14, 20
- *** Miscellany (subgroup)
- The variable `ps-error-handler-message' specifies where error handler
- messages should be sent.
- It is also possible to add a user-defined PostScript prologue code in
- front of all generated prologue code by setting the variable
- `ps-user-defined-prologue'.
- The variable `ps-line-number-font' specifies the font for line numbers.
- The variable `ps-line-number-font-size' specifies the font size in
- points for line numbers.
- The variable `ps-line-number-color' specifies the color for line
- numbers. See `ps-zebra-color' for documentation.
- The variable `ps-line-number-step' specifies the interval in which
- line numbers are printed. For example, if `ps-line-number-step' is set
- to 2, the printing will look like:
- 1 one line
- one line
- 3 one line
- one line
- 5 one line
- one line
- ...
- Valid values are:
- integer an integer specifying the interval in which line numbers are
- printed. If it's smaller than or equal to zero, 1
- is used.
- `zebra' specifies that only the line number of the first line in a
- zebra stripe is to be printed.
- Any other value is treated as `zebra'.
- The variable `ps-line-number-start' specifies the starting point in
- the interval given by `ps-line-number-step'. For example, if
- `ps-line-number-step' is set to 3, and `ps-line-number-start' is set to
- 3, the output will look like:
- one line
- one line
- 3 one line
- one line
- one line
- 6 one line
- one line
- one line
- 9 one line
- one line
- ...
- The variable `ps-postscript-code-directory' specifies the directory
- where the PostScript prologue file used by ps-print is found.
- The variable `ps-line-spacing' determines the line spacing in points,
- for ordinary text, when generating PostScript (similar to
- `ps-font-size').
- The variable `ps-paragraph-spacing' determines the paragraph spacing,
- in points, for ordinary text, when generating PostScript (similar to
- `ps-font-size').
- The variable `ps-paragraph-regexp' specifies the paragraph delimiter.
- The variable `ps-begin-cut-regexp' and `ps-end-cut-regexp' specify the
- start and end of a region to cut out when printing.
- ** hideshow changes.
- *** now supports hiding of blocks of single line comments (like // for
- C++, ; for lisp).
- *** Support for java-mode added.
- *** When doing `hs-hide-all' it is now possible to also hide the comments
- in the file if `hs-hide-comments-when-hiding-all' is set.
- *** The new function `hs-hide-initial-comment' hides the comments at
- the beginning of the files. Finally those huge RCS logs don't stay in your
- way! This is run by default when entering the `hs-minor-mode'.
- *** Now uses overlays instead of `selective-display', so is more
- robust and a lot faster.
- *** A block beginning can span multiple lines.
- *** The new variable `hs-show-hidden-short-form' if t, directs hideshow
- to show only the beginning of a block when it is hidden. See the
- documentation for more details.
- ** Changes in Enriched mode.
- *** When you visit a file in enriched-mode, Emacs will make sure it is
- filled to the current fill-column. This behavior is now independent
- of the size of the window. When you save the file, the fill-column in
- use is stored as well, so that the whole buffer need not be refilled
- the next time unless the fill-column is different.
- *** use-hard-newlines is now a minor mode. When it is enabled, Emacs
- distinguishes between hard and soft newlines, and treats hard newlines
- as paragraph boundaries. Otherwise all newlines inserted are marked
- as soft, and paragraph boundaries are determined solely from the text.
- ** Font Lock mode
- *** Custom support
- The variables font-lock-face-attributes, font-lock-display-type and
- font-lock-background-mode are now obsolete; the recommended way to specify
- the faces to use for Font Lock mode is with M-x customize-group on the new
- custom group font-lock-faces. If you set font-lock-face-attributes in your
- ~/.emacs file, Font Lock mode will respect its value. However, you should
- consider converting from setting that variable to using M-x customize.
- You can still use X resources to specify Font Lock face appearances.
- *** Maximum decoration
- Fontification now uses the maximum level of decoration supported by
- default. Previously, fontification used a mode-specific default level
- of decoration, which is typically the minimum level of decoration
- supported. You can set font-lock-maximum-decoration to nil
- to get the old behavior.
- *** New support
- Support is now provided for Java, Objective-C, AWK and SIMULA modes.
- Note that Font Lock mode can be turned on without knowing exactly what modes
- support Font Lock mode, via the command global-font-lock-mode.
- *** Configurable support
- Support for C, C++, Objective-C and Java can be more easily configured for
- additional types and classes via the new variables c-font-lock-extra-types,
- c++-font-lock-extra-types, objc-font-lock-extra-types and, you guessed it,
- java-font-lock-extra-types. These value of each of these variables should be a
- list of regexps matching the extra type names. For example, the default value
- of c-font-lock-extra-types is ("\\sw+_t") which means fontification follows the
- convention that C type names end in _t. This results in slower fontification.
- Of course, you can change the variables that specify fontification in whatever
- way you wish, typically by adding regexps. However, these new variables make
- it easier to make specific and common changes for the fontification of types.
- *** Adding highlighting patterns to existing support
- You can use the new function font-lock-add-keywords to add your own
- highlighting patterns, such as for project-local or user-specific constructs,
- for any mode.
- For example, to highlight `FIXME:' words in C comments, put:
- (font-lock-add-keywords 'c-mode '(("\\<FIXME:" 0 font-lock-warning-face t)))
- in your ~/.emacs.
- *** New faces
- Font Lock now defines two new faces, font-lock-builtin-face and
- font-lock-warning-face. These are intended to highlight builtin keywords,
- distinct from a language's normal keywords, and objects that should be brought
- to user attention, respectively. Various modes now use these new faces.
- *** Changes to fast-lock support mode
- The fast-lock package, one of the two Font Lock support modes, can now process
- cache files silently. You can use the new variable fast-lock-verbose, in the
- same way as font-lock-verbose, to control this feature.
- *** Changes to lazy-lock support mode
- The lazy-lock package, one of the two Font Lock support modes, can now fontify
- according to the true syntactic context relative to other lines. You can use
- the new variable lazy-lock-defer-contextually to control this feature. If
- non-nil, changes to the buffer will cause subsequent lines in the buffer to be
- refontified after lazy-lock-defer-time seconds of idle time. If nil, then only
- the modified lines will be refontified; this is the same as the previous Lazy
- Lock mode behavior and the behavior of Font Lock mode.
- This feature is useful in modes where strings or comments can span lines.
- For example, if a string or comment terminating character is deleted, then if
- this feature is enabled subsequent lines in the buffer will be correctly
- refontified to reflect their new syntactic context. Previously, only the line
- containing the deleted character would be refontified and you would have to use
- the command M-o M-o (font-lock-fontify-block) to refontify some lines.
- As a consequence of this new feature, two other variables have changed:
- Variable `lazy-lock-defer-driven' is renamed `lazy-lock-defer-on-scrolling'.
- Variable `lazy-lock-defer-time' can now only be a time, i.e., a number.
- Buffer modes for which on-the-fly deferral applies can be specified via the
- new variable `lazy-lock-defer-on-the-fly'.
- If you set these variables in your ~/.emacs, then you may have to change those
- settings.
- ** Ada mode changes.
- *** There is now better support for using find-file.el with Ada mode.
- If you switch between spec and body, the cursor stays in the same
- procedure (modulo overloading). If a spec has no body file yet, but
- you try to switch to its body file, Ada mode now generates procedure
- stubs.
- *** There are two new commands:
- - `ada-make-local' : invokes gnatmake on the current buffer
- - `ada-check-syntax' : check syntax of current buffer.
- The user options `ada-compiler-make', `ada-make-options',
- `ada-language-version', `ada-compiler-syntax-check', and
- `ada-compile-options' are used within these commands.
- *** Ada mode can now work with Outline minor mode. The outline level
- is calculated from the indenting, not from syntactic constructs.
- Outlining does not work if your code is not correctly indented.
- *** The new function `ada-gnat-style' converts the buffer to the style of
- formatting used in GNAT. It places two blanks after a comment start,
- places one blank between a word end and an opening '(', and puts one
- space between a comma and the beginning of a word.
- ** Scheme mode changes.
- *** Scheme mode indentation now uses many of the facilities of Lisp
- mode; therefore, the variables to customize it are the variables used
- for Lisp mode which have names starting with `lisp-'. The variables
- with names starting with `scheme-' which used to do this no longer
- have any effect.
- If you want to use different indentation for Scheme and Lisp, this is
- still possible, but now you must do it by adding a hook to
- scheme-mode-hook, which could work by setting the `lisp-' indentation
- variables as buffer-local variables.
- *** DSSSL mode is a variant of Scheme mode, for editing DSSSL scripts.
- Use M-x dsssl-mode.
- ** Changes to the emacsclient program
- *** If a socket can't be found, and environment variables LOGNAME or
- USER are set, emacsclient now looks for a socket based on the UID
- associated with the name. That is an emacsclient running as root
- can connect to an Emacs server started by a non-root user.
- *** The emacsclient program now accepts an option --no-wait which tells
- it to return immediately without waiting for you to "finish" the
- buffer in Emacs.
- *** The new option --alternate-editor allows to specify an editor to
- use if Emacs is not running. The environment variable
- ALTERNATE_EDITOR can be used for the same effect; the command line
- option takes precedence.
- ** M-x eldoc-mode enables a minor mode in which the echo area
- constantly shows the parameter list for function being called at point
- (in Emacs Lisp and Lisp Interaction modes only).
- ** C-x n d now runs the new command narrow-to-defun,
- which narrows the accessible parts of the buffer to just
- the current defun.
- ** Emacs now handles the `--' argument in the standard way; all
- following arguments are treated as ordinary file names.
- ** On MSDOS and Windows, the bookmark file is now called _emacs.bmk,
- and the saved desktop file is now called _emacs.desktop (truncated if
- necessary).
- ** When you kill a buffer that visits a file,
- if there are any registers that save positions in the file,
- these register values no longer become completely useless.
- If you try to go to such a register with C-x j, then you are
- asked whether to visit the file again. If you say yes,
- it visits the file and then goes to the same position.
- ** When you visit a file that changes frequently outside Emacs--for
- example, a log of output from a process that continues to run--it may
- be useful for Emacs to revert the file without querying you whenever
- you visit the file afresh with C-x C-f.
- You can request this behavior for certain files by setting the
- variable revert-without-query to a list of regular expressions. If a
- file's name matches any of these regular expressions, find-file and
- revert-buffer revert the buffer without asking for permission--but
- only if you have not edited the buffer text yourself.
- ** set-default-font has been renamed to set-frame-font
- since it applies only to the current frame.
- ** In TeX mode, you can use the variable tex-main-file to specify the
- file for tex-file to run TeX on. (By default, tex-main-file is nil,
- and tex-file runs TeX on the current visited file.)
- This is useful when you are editing a document that consists of
- multiple files. In each of the included files, you can set up a local
- variable list which specifies the top-level file of your document for
- tex-main-file. Then tex-file will run TeX on the whole document
- instead of just the file you are editing.
- ** RefTeX mode
- RefTeX mode is a new minor mode with special support for \label, \ref
- and \cite macros in LaTeX documents. RefTeX distinguishes labels of
- different environments (equation, figure, ...) and has full support for
- multifile documents. To use it, select a buffer with a LaTeX document and
- turn the mode on with M-x reftex-mode. Here are the main user commands:
- C-c ( reftex-label
- Creates a label semi-automatically. RefTeX is context sensitive and
- knows which kind of label is needed.
- C-c ) reftex-reference
- Offers in a menu all labels in the document, along with context of the
- label definition. The selected label is referenced as \ref{LABEL}.
- C-c [ reftex-citation
- Prompts for a regular expression and displays a list of matching BibTeX
- database entries. The selected entry is cited with a \cite{KEY} macro.
- C-c & reftex-view-crossref
- Views the cross reference of a \ref or \cite command near point.
- C-c = reftex-toc
- Shows a table of contents of the (multifile) document. From there you
- can quickly jump to every section.
- Under X, RefTeX installs a "Ref" menu in the menu bar, with additional
- commands. Press `?' to get help when a prompt mentions this feature.
- Full documentation and customization examples are in the file
- reftex.el. You can use the finder to view the file documentation:
- C-h p --> tex --> reftex.el
- ** Changes in BibTeX mode.
- *** Info documentation is now available.
- *** Don't allow parentheses in string constants anymore. This confused
- both the BibTeX program and Emacs BibTeX mode.
- *** Renamed variable bibtex-mode-user-optional-fields to
- bibtex-user-optional-fields.
- *** Removed variable bibtex-include-OPTannote
- (use bibtex-user-optional-fields instead).
- *** New interactive functions to copy and kill fields and complete
- entries to the BibTeX kill ring, from where they can be yanked back by
- appropriate functions.
- *** New interactive functions for repositioning and marking of
- entries. They are bound by default to C-M-l and C-M-h.
- *** New hook bibtex-clean-entry-hook. It is called after entry has
- been cleaned.
- *** New variable bibtex-field-delimiters, which replaces variables
- bibtex-field-{left|right}-delimiter.
- *** New variable bibtex-entry-delimiters to determine how entries
- shall be delimited.
- *** Allow preinitialization of fields. See documentation of
- bibtex-user-optional-fields, bibtex-entry-field-alist, and
- bibtex-include-OPTkey for details.
- *** Book and InBook entries require either an author or an editor
- field. This is now supported by bibtex.el. Alternative fields are
- prefixed with `ALT'.
- *** New variable bibtex-entry-format, which replaces variable
- bibtex-clean-entry-zap-empty-opts and allows specification of many
- formatting options performed on cleaning an entry (see variable
- documentation).
- *** Even more control on how automatic keys are generated. See
- documentation of bibtex-generate-autokey for details. Transcriptions
- for foreign languages other than German are now handled, too.
- *** New boolean user option bibtex-comma-after-last-field to decide if
- comma should be inserted at end of last field.
- *** New boolean user option bibtex-align-at-equal-sign to determine if
- alignment should be made at left side of field contents or at equal
- signs. New user options to control entry layout (e.g. indentation).
- *** New function bibtex-fill-entry to realign entries.
- *** New function bibtex-reformat to reformat region or buffer.
- *** New function bibtex-convert-alien to convert a BibTeX database
- from alien sources.
- *** New function bibtex-complete-key (similar to bibtex-complete-string)
- to complete prefix to a key defined in buffer. Mainly useful in
- crossref entries.
- *** New function bibtex-count-entries to count entries in buffer or
- region.
- *** Added support for imenu.
- *** The function `bibtex-validate' now checks current region instead
- of buffer if mark is active. Now it shows all errors of buffer in a
- `compilation mode' buffer. You can use the normal commands (e.g.
- `next-error') for compilation modes to jump to errors.
- *** New variable `bibtex-string-file-path' to determine where the files
- from `bibtex-string-files' are searched.
- ** Iso Accents mode now supports Latin-3 as an alternative.
- ** The command next-error now opens blocks hidden by hideshow.
- ** The function using-unix-filesystems has been replaced by the
- functions add-untranslated-filesystem and remove-untranslated-filesystem.
- Each of these functions takes the name of a drive letter or directory
- as an argument.
- When a filesystem is added as untranslated, all files on it are read
- and written in binary mode (no cr/lf translation is performed).
- ** browse-url changes
- *** New methods for: Grail (browse-url-generic), MMM (browse-url-mmm),
- Lynx in a separate xterm (browse-url-lynx-xterm) or in an Emacs window
- (browse-url-lynx-emacs), remote W3 (browse-url-w3-gnudoit), generic
- non-remote-controlled browsers (browse-url-generic) and associated
- customization variables.
- *** New commands `browse-url-of-region' and `browse-url'.
- *** URLs marked up with <URL:...> (RFC1738) work if broken across
- lines. Browsing methods can be associated with URL regexps
- (e.g. mailto: URLs) via `browse-url-browser-function'.
- ** Changes in Ediff
- *** Clicking Mouse-2 on a brief command description in Ediff control panel
- pops up the Info file for this command.
- *** There is now a variable, ediff-autostore-merges, which controls whether
- the result of a merge is saved in a file. By default, this is done only when
- merge is done from a session group (eg, when merging files in two different
- directories).
- *** Since Emacs 19.31 (this hasn't been announced before), Ediff can compare
- and merge groups of files residing in different directories, or revisions of
- files in the same directory.
- *** Since Emacs 19.31, Ediff can apply multi-file patches interactively.
- The patches must be in the context format or GNU unified format. (The bug
- related to the GNU format has now been fixed.)
- ** Changes in Viper
- *** The startup file is now .viper instead of .vip
- *** All variable/function names have been changed to start with viper-
- instead of vip-.
- *** C-\ now simulates the meta-key in all Viper states.
- *** C-z in Insert state now escapes to Vi for the duration of the next
- Viper command. In Vi and Insert states, C-z behaves as before.
- *** C-c \ escapes to Vi for one command if Viper is in Insert or Emacs states.
- *** _ is no longer the meta-key in Vi state.
- *** The variable viper-insert-state-cursor-color can be used to change cursor
- color when Viper is in insert state.
- *** If search lands the cursor near the top or the bottom of the window,
- Viper pulls the window up or down to expose more context. The variable
- viper-adjust-window-after-search controls this behavior.
- ** Etags changes.
- *** In C, C++, Objective C and Java, Etags tags global variables by
- default. The resulting tags files are inflated by 30% on average.
- Use --no-globals to turn this feature off. Etags can also tag
- variables which are members of structure-like constructs, but it does
- not by default. Use --members to turn this feature on.
- *** C++ member functions are now recognized as tags.
- *** Java is tagged like C++. In addition, "extends" and "implements"
- constructs are tagged. Files are recognized by the extension .java.
- *** Etags can now handle programs written in PostScript. Files are
- recognized by the extensions .ps and .pdb (PostScript with C syntax).
- In PostScript, tags are lines that start with a slash.
- *** Etags now handles Objective C and Objective C++ code. The usual C and
- C++ tags are recognized in these languages; in addition, etags
- recognizes special Objective C syntax for classes, class categories,
- methods and protocols.
- *** Etags also handles Cobol. Files are recognized by the extension
- .cobol. The tagged lines are those containing a word that begins in
- column 8 and ends in a full stop, i.e. anything that could be a
- paragraph name.
- *** Regexps in Etags now support intervals, as in ed or grep. The syntax of
- an interval is \{M,N\}, and it means to match the preceding expression
- at least M times and as many as N times.
- ** The format for specifying a custom format for time-stamp to insert
- in files has changed slightly.
- With the new enhancements to the functionality of format-time-string,
- time-stamp-format will change to be eventually compatible with it.
- This conversion is being done in two steps to maintain compatibility
- with old time-stamp-format values.
- In the new scheme, alternate case is signified by the number-sign
- (`#') modifier, rather than changing the case of the format character.
- This feature is as yet incompletely implemented for compatibility
- reasons.
- In the old time-stamp-format, all numeric fields defaulted to their
- natural width. (With format-time-string, each format has a
- fixed-width default.) In this version, you can specify the colon
- (`:') modifier to a numeric conversion to mean "give me the historical
- time-stamp-format width default." Do not use colon if you are
- specifying an explicit width, as in "%02d".
- Numbers are no longer truncated to the requested width, except in the
- case of "%02y", which continues to give a two-digit year. Digit
- truncation probably wasn't being used for anything else anyway.
- The new formats will work with old versions of Emacs. New formats are
- being recommended now to allow time-stamp-format to change in the
- future to be compatible with format-time-string. The new forms being
- recommended now will continue to work then.
- See the documentation string for the variable time-stamp-format for
- details.
- ** There are some additional major modes:
- dcl-mode, for editing VMS DCL files.
- m4-mode, for editing files of m4 input.
- meta-mode, for editing MetaFont and MetaPost source files.
- ** In Shell mode, the command shell-copy-environment-variable lets you
- copy the value of a specified environment variable from the subshell
- into Emacs.
- ** New Lisp packages include:
- *** battery.el displays battery status for laptops.
- *** M-x bruce (named after Lenny Bruce) is a program that might
- be used for adding some indecent words to your email.
- *** M-x crisp-mode enables an emulation for the CRiSP editor.
- *** M-x dirtrack arranges for better tracking of directory changes
- in shell buffers.
- *** The new library elint.el provides for linting of Emacs Lisp code.
- See the documentation for `elint-initialize', `elint-current-buffer'
- and `elint-defun'.
- *** M-x expand-add-abbrevs defines a special kind of abbrev which is
- meant for programming constructs. These abbrevs expand like ordinary
- ones, when you type SPC, but only at the end of a line and not within
- strings or comments.
- These abbrevs can act as templates: you can define places within an
- abbrev for insertion of additional text. Once you expand the abbrev,
- you can then use C-x a p and C-x a n to move back and forth to these
- insertion points. Thus you can conveniently insert additional text
- at these points.
- *** filecache.el remembers the location of files so that you
- can visit them by short forms of their names.
- *** find-func.el lets you find the definition of the user-loaded
- Emacs Lisp function at point.
- *** M-x handwrite converts text to a "handwritten" picture.
- *** M-x iswitchb-buffer is a command for switching to a buffer, much like
- switch-buffer, but it reads the argument in a more helpful way.
- *** M-x landmark implements a neural network for landmark learning.
- *** M-x locate provides a convenient interface to the `locate' program.
- *** M4 mode is a new mode for editing files of m4 input.
- *** mantemp.el creates C++ manual template instantiations
- from the GCC error messages which indicate which instantiations are needed.
- *** mouse-copy.el provides a one-click copy and move feature.
- You can drag a region with M-mouse-1, and it is automatically
- inserted at point. M-Shift-mouse-1 deletes the text from its
- original place after inserting the copy.
- *** mouse-drag.el lets you do scrolling by dragging Mouse-2
- on the buffer.
- You click the mouse and move; that distance either translates into the
- velocity to scroll (with mouse-drag-throw) or the distance to scroll
- (with mouse-drag-drag). Horizontal scrolling is enabled when needed.
- Enable mouse-drag with:
- (global-set-key [down-mouse-2] 'mouse-drag-throw)
- -or-
- (global-set-key [down-mouse-2] 'mouse-drag-drag)
- *** mspools.el is useful for determining which mail folders have
- mail waiting to be read in them. It works with procmail.
- *** Octave mode is a major mode for editing files of input for Octave.
- It comes with a facility for communicating with an Octave subprocess.
- *** ogonek
- The ogonek package provides functions for changing the coding of
- Polish diacritic characters in buffers. Codings known from various
- platforms are supported such as ISO8859-2, Mazovia, IBM Latin2, and
- TeX. For example, you can change the coding from Mazovia to
- ISO8859-2. Another example is a change of coding from ISO8859-2 to
- prefix notation (in which `/a' stands for the aogonek character, for
- instance) and vice versa.
- To use this package load it using
- M-x load-library [enter] ogonek
- Then, you may get an explanation by calling one of
- M-x ogonek-jak -- in Polish
- M-x ogonek-how -- in English
- The info specifies the commands and variables provided as well as the
- ways of customization in `.emacs'.
- *** Interface to ph.
- Emacs provides a client interface to CCSO Nameservers (ph/qi)
- The CCSO nameserver is used in many universities to provide directory
- services about people. ph.el provides a convenient Emacs interface to
- these servers.
- *** uce.el is useful for replying to unsolicited commercial email.
- *** vcursor.el implements a "virtual cursor" feature.
- You can move the virtual cursor with special commands
- while the real cursor does not move.
- *** webjump.el is a "hot list" package which you can set up
- for visiting your favorite web sites.
- *** M-x winner-mode is a minor mode which saves window configurations,
- so you can move back to other configurations that you have recently used.
- ** movemail change
- Movemail no longer needs to be installed setuid root in order for POP
- mail retrieval to function properly. This is because it no longer
- supports the RPOP (reserved-port POP) protocol; instead, it uses the
- user's POP password to authenticate to the mail server.
- This change was made earlier, but not reported in NEWS before.
- * Emacs 20.1 changes for MS-DOS and MS-Windows.
- ** Changes in handling MS-DOS/MS-Windows text files.
- Emacs handles three different conventions for representing
- end-of-line: CRLF for MSDOS, LF for Unix and GNU, and CR (used on the
- Macintosh). Emacs determines which convention is used in a specific
- file based on the contents of that file (except for certain special
- file names), and when it saves the file, it uses the same convention.
- To save the file and change the end-of-line convention, you can use
- C-x RET f (set-buffer-file-coding-system) to specify a different
- coding system for the buffer. Then, when you save the file, the newly
- specified coding system will take effect. For example, to save with
- LF, specify undecided-unix (or some other ...-unix coding system); to
- save with CRLF, specify undecided-dos.
- * Lisp Changes in Emacs 20.1
- ** Byte-compiled files made with Emacs 20 will, in general, work in
- Emacs 19 as well, as long as the source code runs in Emacs 19. And
- vice versa: byte-compiled files made with Emacs 19 should also run in
- Emacs 20, as long as the program itself works in Emacs 20.
- ** Windows-specific functions and variables have been renamed
- to start with w32- instead of win32-.
- In hacker language, calling something a "win" is a form of praise. We
- don't want to praise a non-free Microsoft system, so we don't call it
- "win".
- ** Basic Lisp changes
- *** A symbol whose name starts with a colon now automatically
- evaluates to itself. Therefore such a symbol can be used as a constant.
- *** The defined purpose of `defconst' has been changed. It should now
- be used only for values that should not be changed whether by a program
- or by the user.
- The actual behavior of defconst has not been changed.
- *** There are new macros `when' and `unless'
- (when CONDITION BODY...) is short for (if CONDITION (progn BODY...))
- (unless CONDITION BODY...) is short for (if CONDITION nil BODY...)
- *** Emacs now defines functions caar, cadr, cdar and cddr with their
- usual Lisp meanings. For example, caar returns the car of the car of
- its argument.
- *** equal, when comparing strings, now ignores their text properties.
- *** The new function `functionp' tests whether an object is a function.
- *** arrayp now returns t for char-tables and bool-vectors.
- *** Certain primitives which use characters (as integers) now get an
- error if the integer is not a valid character code. These primitives
- include insert-char, char-to-string, and the %c construct in the
- `format' function.
- *** The `require' function now insists on adding a suffix, either .el
- or .elc, to the file name. Thus, (require 'foo) will not use a file
- whose name is just foo. It insists on foo.el or foo.elc.
- *** The `autoload' function, when the file name does not contain
- either a directory name or the suffix .el or .elc, insists on
- adding one of these suffixes.
- *** string-to-number now takes an optional second argument BASE
- which specifies the base to use when converting an integer.
- If BASE is omitted, base 10 is used.
- We have not implemented other radices for floating point numbers,
- because that would be much more work and does not seem useful.
- *** substring now handles vectors as well as strings.
- *** The Common Lisp function eql is no longer defined normally.
- You must load the `cl' library to define it.
- *** The new macro `with-current-buffer' lets you evaluate an expression
- conveniently with a different current buffer. It looks like this:
- (with-current-buffer BUFFER BODY-FORMS...)
- BUFFER is the expression that says which buffer to use.
- BODY-FORMS say what to do in that buffer.
- *** The new primitive `save-current-buffer' saves and restores the
- choice of current buffer, like `save-excursion', but without saving or
- restoring the value of point or the mark. `with-current-buffer'
- works using `save-current-buffer'.
- *** The new macro `with-temp-file' lets you do some work in a new buffer and
- write the output to a specified file. Like `progn', it returns the value
- of the last form.
- *** The new macro `with-temp-buffer' lets you do some work in a new buffer,
- which is discarded after use. Like `progn', it returns the value of the
- last form. If you wish to return the buffer contents, use (buffer-string)
- as the last form.
- *** The new function split-string takes a string, splits it at certain
- characters, and returns a list of the substrings in between the
- matches.
- For example, (split-string "foo bar lose" " +") returns ("foo" "bar" "lose").
- *** The new macro with-output-to-string executes some Lisp expressions
- with standard-output set up so that all output feeds into a string.
- Then it returns that string.
- For example, if the current buffer name is `foo',
- (with-output-to-string
- (princ "The buffer is ")
- (princ (buffer-name)))
- returns "The buffer is foo".
- ** Non-ASCII characters are now supported, if enable-multibyte-characters
- is non-nil.
- These characters have character codes above 256. When inserted in the
- buffer or stored in a string, they are represented as multibyte
- characters that occupy several buffer positions each.
- *** When enable-multibyte-characters is non-nil, a single character in
- a buffer or string can be two or more bytes (as many as four).
- Buffers and strings are still made up of unibyte elements;
- character positions and string indices are always measured in bytes.
- Therefore, moving forward one character can increase the buffer
- position by 2, 3 or 4. The function forward-char moves by whole
- characters, and therefore is no longer equivalent to
- (lambda (n) (goto-char (+ (point) n))).
- ASCII characters (codes 0 through 127) are still single bytes, always.
- Sequences of byte values 128 through 255 are used to represent
- non-ASCII characters. These sequences are called "multibyte
- characters".
- The first byte of a multibyte character is always in the range 128
- through 159 (octal 0200 through 0237). These values are called
- "leading codes". The second and subsequent bytes are always in the
- range 160 through 255 (octal 0240 through 0377). The first byte, the
- leading code, determines how many bytes long the sequence is.
- *** The function forward-char moves over characters, and therefore
- (forward-char 1) may increase point by more than 1 if it moves over a
- multibyte character. Likewise, delete-char always deletes a
- character, which may be more than one buffer position.
- This means that some Lisp programs, which assume that a character is
- always one buffer position, need to be changed.
- However, all ASCII characters are always one buffer position.
- *** The regexp [\200-\377] no longer matches all non-ASCII characters,
- because when enable-multibyte-characters is non-nil, these characters
- have codes that are not in the range octal 200 to octal 377. However,
- the regexp [^\000-\177] does match all non-ASCII characters,
- guaranteed.
- *** The function char-boundary-p returns non-nil if position POS is
- between two characters in the buffer (not in the middle of a
- character).
- When the value is non-nil, it says what kind of character follows POS:
- 0 if POS is at an ASCII character or at the end of range,
- 1 if POS is before a 2-byte length multi-byte form,
- 2 if POS is at a head of 3-byte length multi-byte form,
- 3 if POS is at a head of 4-byte length multi-byte form,
- 4 if POS is at a head of multi-byte form of a composite character.
- *** The function char-bytes returns how many bytes the character CHAR uses.
- *** Strings can contain multibyte characters. The function
- `length' returns the string length counting bytes, which may be
- more than the number of characters.
- You can include a multibyte character in a string constant by writing
- it literally. You can also represent it with a hex escape,
- \xNNNNNNN..., using as many digits as necessary. Any character which
- is not a valid hex digit terminates this construct. If you want to
- follow it with a character that is a hex digit, write backslash and
- newline in between; that will terminate the hex escape.
- *** The function concat-chars takes arguments which are characters
- and returns a string containing those characters.
- *** The function sref access a multibyte character in a string.
- (sref STRING INDX) returns the character in STRING at INDEX. INDEX
- counts from zero. If INDEX is at a position in the middle of a
- character, sref signals an error.
- *** The function chars-in-string returns the number of characters
- in a string. This is less than the length of the string, if the
- string contains multibyte characters (the length counts bytes).
- *** The function chars-in-region returns the number of characters
- in a region from BEG to END. This is less than (- END BEG) if the
- region contains multibyte characters (the length counts bytes).
- *** The function string-to-list converts a string to a list of
- the characters in it. string-to-vector converts a string
- to a vector of the characters in it.
- *** The function store-substring alters part of the contents
- of a string. You call it as follows:
- (store-substring STRING IDX OBJ)
- This says to alter STRING, by storing OBJ starting at index IDX in
- STRING. OBJ may be either a character or a (smaller) string.
- This function really does alter the contents of STRING.
- Since it is impossible to change the length of an existing string,
- it is an error if OBJ doesn't fit within STRING's actual length.
- *** char-width returns the width (in columns) of the character CHAR,
- if it were displayed in the current buffer and the selected window.
- *** string-width returns the width (in columns) of the text in STRING,
- if it were displayed in the current buffer and the selected window.
- *** truncate-string-to-width shortens a string, if necessary,
- to fit within a certain number of columns. (Of course, it does
- not alter the string that you give it; it returns a new string
- which contains all or just part of the existing string.)
- (truncate-string-to-width STR END-COLUMN &optional START-COLUMN PADDING)
- This returns the part of STR up to column END-COLUMN.
- The optional argument START-COLUMN specifies the starting column.
- If this is non-nil, then the first START-COLUMN columns of the string
- are not included in the resulting value.
- The optional argument PADDING, if non-nil, is a padding character to be added
- at the beginning and end the resulting string, to extend it to exactly
- WIDTH columns. If PADDING is nil, that means do not pad; then, if STRING
- is narrower than WIDTH, the value is equal to STRING.
- If PADDING and START-COLUMN are both non-nil, and if there is no clean
- place in STRING that corresponds to START-COLUMN (because one
- character extends across that column), then the padding character
- PADDING is added one or more times at the beginning of the result
- string, so that its columns line up as if it really did start at
- column START-COLUMN.
- *** When the functions in the list after-change-functions are called,
- the third argument is the number of bytes in the pre-change text, not
- necessarily the number of characters. It is, in effect, the
- difference in buffer position between the beginning and the end of the
- changed text, before the change.
- *** The characters Emacs uses are classified in various character
- sets, each of which has a name which is a symbol. In general there is
- one character set for each script, not for each language.
- **** The function charsetp tests whether an object is a character set name.
- **** The variable charset-list holds a list of character set names.
- **** char-charset, given a character code, returns the name of the character
- set that the character belongs to. (The value is a symbol.)
- **** split-char, given a character code, returns a list containing the
- name of the character set, followed by one or two byte-values
- which identify the character within that character set.
- **** make-char, given a character set name and one or two subsequent
- byte-values, constructs a character code. This is roughly the
- opposite of split-char.
- **** find-charset-region returns a list of the character sets
- of all the characters between BEG and END.
- **** find-charset-string returns a list of the character sets
- of all the characters in a string.
- *** Here are the Lisp facilities for working with coding systems
- and specifying coding systems.
- **** The function coding-system-list returns a list of all coding
- system names (symbols). With optional argument t, it returns a list
- of all distinct base coding systems, not including variants.
- (Variant coding systems are those like latin-1-dos, latin-1-unix
- and latin-1-mac which specify the end-of-line conversion as well
- as what to do about code conversion.)
- **** coding-system-p tests a symbol to see if it is a coding system
- name. It returns t if so, nil if not.
- **** file-coding-system-alist specifies which coding systems to use
- for certain file names. It works like network-coding-system-alist,
- except that the PATTERN is matched against the file name.
- Each element has the format (PATTERN . VAL), where PATTERN determines
- which file names the element applies to. PATTERN should be a regexp
- to match against a file name.
- VAL is a coding system, a cons cell containing two coding systems, or
- a function symbol. If VAL is a coding system, it is used for both
- decoding what received from the network stream and encoding what sent
- to the network stream. If VAL is a cons cell containing two coding
- systems, the car specifies the coding system for decoding, and the cdr
- specifies the coding system for encoding.
- If VAL is a function symbol, the function must return a coding system
- or a cons cell containing two coding systems, which is used as above.
- **** The variable network-coding-system-alist specifies
- the coding system to use for network sockets.
- Each element has the format (PATTERN . VAL), where PATTERN determines
- which network sockets the element applies to. PATTERN should be
- either a port number or a regular expression matching some network
- service names.
- VAL is a coding system, a cons cell containing two coding systems, or
- a function symbol. If VAL is a coding system, it is used for both
- decoding what received from the network stream and encoding what sent
- to the network stream. If VAL is a cons cell containing two coding
- systems, the car specifies the coding system for decoding, and the cdr
- specifies the coding system for encoding.
- If VAL is a function symbol, the function must return a coding system
- or a cons cell containing two coding systems, which is used as above.
- **** process-coding-system-alist specifies which coding systems to use
- for certain subprocess. It works like network-coding-system-alist,
- except that the PATTERN is matched against the program name used to
- start the subprocess.
- **** The variable default-process-coding-system specifies the coding
- systems to use for subprocess (and net connection) input and output,
- when nothing else specifies what to do. The value is a cons cell
- (OUTPUT-CODING . INPUT-CODING). OUTPUT-CODING applies to output
- to the subprocess, and INPUT-CODING applies to input from it.
- **** The variable coding-system-for-write, if non-nil, specifies the
- coding system to use for writing a file, or for output to a synchronous
- subprocess.
- It also applies to any asynchronous subprocess or network connection,
- but in a different way: the value of coding-system-for-write when you
- start the subprocess or connection affects that subprocess or
- connection permanently or until overridden.
- The variable coding-system-for-write takes precedence over
- file-coding-system-alist, process-coding-system-alist and
- network-coding-system-alist, and all other methods of specifying a
- coding system for output. But most of the time this variable is nil.
- It exists so that Lisp programs can bind it to a specific coding
- system for one operation at a time.
- **** coding-system-for-read applies similarly to input from
- files, subprocesses or network connections.
- **** The function process-coding-system tells you what
- coding systems(s) an existing subprocess is using.
- The value is a cons cell,
- (DECODING-CODING-SYSTEM . ENCODING-CODING-SYSTEM)
- where DECODING-CODING-SYSTEM is used for decoding output from
- the subprocess, and ENCODING-CODING-SYSTEM is used for encoding
- input to the subprocess.
- **** The function set-process-coding-system can be used to
- change the coding systems in use for an existing subprocess.
- ** Emacs has a new facility to help users manage the many
- customization options. To make a Lisp program work with this facility,
- you need to use the new macros defgroup and defcustom.
- You use defcustom instead of defvar, for defining a user option
- variable. The difference is that you specify two additional pieces of
- information (usually): the "type" which says what values are
- legitimate, and the "group" which specifies the hierarchy for
- customization.
- Thus, instead of writing
- (defvar foo-blurgoze nil
- "*Non-nil means that foo will act very blurgozely.")
- you would now write this:
- (defcustom foo-blurgoze nil
- "*Non-nil means that foo will act very blurgozely."
- :type 'boolean
- :group foo)
- The type `boolean' means that this variable has only
- two meaningful states: nil and non-nil. Other type values
- describe other possibilities; see the manual for Custom
- for a description of them.
- The "group" argument is used to specify a group which the option
- should belong to. You define a new group like this:
- (defgroup ispell nil
- "Spell checking using Ispell."
- :group 'processes)
- The "group" argument in defgroup specifies the parent group. The root
- group is called `emacs'; it should not contain any variables itself,
- but only other groups. The immediate subgroups of `emacs' correspond
- to the keywords used by C-h p. Under these subgroups come
- second-level subgroups that belong to individual packages.
- Each Emacs package should have its own set of groups. A simple
- package should have just one group; a more complex package should
- have a hierarchy of its own groups. The sole or root group of a
- package should be a subgroup of one or more of the "keyword"
- first-level subgroups.
- ** New `widget' library for inserting UI components in buffers.
- This library, used by the new custom library, is documented in a
- separate manual that accompanies Emacs.
- ** easy-mmode
- The easy-mmode package provides macros and functions that make
- developing minor modes easier. Roughly, the programmer has to code
- only the functionality of the minor mode. All the rest--toggles,
- predicate, and documentation--can be done in one call to the macro
- `easy-mmode-define-minor-mode' (see the documentation). See also
- `easy-mmode-define-keymap'.
- ** Text property changes
- *** The `intangible' property now works on overlays as well as on a
- text property.
- *** The new functions next-char-property-change and
- previous-char-property-change scan through the buffer looking for a
- place where either a text property or an overlay might change. The
- functions take two arguments, POSITION and LIMIT. POSITION is the
- starting position for the scan. LIMIT says where to stop the scan.
- If no property change is found before LIMIT, the value is LIMIT. If
- LIMIT is nil, scan goes to the beginning or end of the accessible part
- of the buffer. If no property change is found, the value is the
- position of the beginning or end of the buffer.
- *** In the `local-map' text property or overlay property, the property
- value can now be a symbol whose function definition is a keymap. This
- is an alternative to using the keymap itself.
- ** Changes in invisibility features
- *** Isearch can now temporarily show parts of the buffer which are
- hidden by an overlay with a invisible property, when the search match
- is inside that portion of the buffer. To enable this the overlay
- should have a isearch-open-invisible property which is a function that
- would be called having the overlay as an argument, the function should
- make the overlay visible.
- During incremental search the overlays are shown by modifying the
- invisible and intangible properties, if beside this more actions are
- needed the overlay should have a isearch-open-invisible-temporary
- which is a function. The function is called with 2 arguments: one is
- the overlay and the second is nil when it should show the overlay and
- t when it should hide it.
- *** add-to-invisibility-spec, remove-from-invisibility-spec
- Modes that use overlays to hide portions of a buffer should set the
- invisible property of the overlay to the mode's name (or another symbol)
- and modify the `buffer-invisibility-spec' to include that symbol.
- Use `add-to-invisibility-spec' and `remove-from-invisibility-spec' to
- manipulate the `buffer-invisibility-spec'.
- Here is an example of how to do this:
- ;; If we want to display an ellipsis:
- (add-to-invisibility-spec '(my-symbol . t))
- ;; If you don't want ellipsis:
- (add-to-invisibility-spec 'my-symbol)
- ...
- (overlay-put (make-overlay beginning end) 'invisible 'my-symbol)
- ...
- ;; When done with the overlays:
- (remove-from-invisibility-spec '(my-symbol . t))
- ;; Or respectively:
- (remove-from-invisibility-spec 'my-symbol)
- ** Changes in syntax parsing.
- *** The syntax-directed buffer-scan functions (such as
- `parse-partial-sexp', `forward-word' and similar functions) can now
- obey syntax information specified by text properties, if the variable
- `parse-sexp-lookup-properties' is non-nil.
- If the value of `parse-sexp-lookup-properties' is nil, the behavior
- is as before: the syntax-table of the current buffer is always
- used to determine the syntax of the character at the position.
- When `parse-sexp-lookup-properties' is non-nil, the syntax of a
- character in the buffer is calculated thus:
- a) if the `syntax-table' text-property of that character
- is a cons, this cons becomes the syntax-type;
- Valid values of `syntax-table' text-property are: nil, a valid
- syntax-table, and a valid syntax-table element, i.e.,
- a cons cell of the form (SYNTAX-CODE . MATCHING-CHAR).
- b) if the character's `syntax-table' text-property
- is a syntax table, this syntax table is used
- (instead of the syntax-table of the current buffer) to
- determine the syntax type of the character.
- c) otherwise the syntax-type is determined by the syntax-table
- of the current buffer.
- *** The meaning of \s in regular expressions is also affected by the
- value of `parse-sexp-lookup-properties'. The details are the same as
- for the syntax-directed buffer-scan functions.
- *** There are two new syntax-codes, `!' and `|' (numeric values 14
- and 15). A character with a code `!' starts a comment which is ended
- only by another character with the same code (unless quoted). A
- character with a code `|' starts a string which is ended only by
- another character with the same code (unless quoted).
- These codes are mainly meant for use as values of the `syntax-table'
- text property.
- *** The function `parse-partial-sexp' has new semantics for the sixth
- arg COMMENTSTOP. If it is `syntax-table', parse stops after the start
- of a comment or a string, or after end of a comment or a string.
- *** The state-list which the return value from `parse-partial-sexp'
- (and can also be used as an argument) now has an optional ninth
- element: the character address of the start of last comment or string;
- nil if none. The fourth and eighth elements have special values if the
- string/comment is started by a "!" or "|" syntax-code.
- *** Since new features of `parse-partial-sexp' allow a complete
- syntactic parsing, `font-lock' no longer supports
- `font-lock-comment-start-regexp'.
- ** Changes in face features
- *** The face functions are now unconditionally defined in Emacs, even
- if it does not support displaying on a device that supports faces.
- *** The function face-documentation returns the documentation string
- of a face (or nil if it doesn't have one).
- *** The function face-bold-p returns t if a face should be bold.
- set-face-bold-p sets that flag.
- *** The function face-italic-p returns t if a face should be italic.
- set-face-italic-p sets that flag.
- *** You can now specify foreground and background colors for text
- by adding elements of the form (foreground-color . COLOR-NAME)
- and (background-color . COLOR-NAME) to the list of faces in
- the `face' property (either the character's text property or an
- overlay property).
- This means that you no longer need to create named faces to use
- arbitrary colors in a Lisp package.
- ** Changes in file-handling functions
- *** File-access primitive functions no longer discard an extra redundant
- directory name from the beginning of the file name. In other words,
- they no longer do anything special with // or /~. That conversion
- is now done only in substitute-in-file-name.
- This makes it possible for a Lisp program to open a file whose name
- begins with ~.
- *** If copy-file is unable to set the date of the output file,
- it now signals an error with the condition file-date-error.
- *** The inode number returned by file-attributes may be an integer (if
- the number fits in a Lisp integer) or a list of integers.
- *** insert-file-contents can now read from a special file,
- as long as the arguments VISIT and REPLACE are nil.
- *** The RAWFILE arg to find-file-noselect, if non-nil, now suppresses
- character code conversion as well as other things.
- Meanwhile, this feature does work with remote file names
- (formerly it did not).
- *** Lisp packages which create temporary files should use the TMPDIR
- environment variable to decide which directory to put them in.
- *** interpreter-mode-alist elements now specify regexps
- instead of constant strings.
- *** expand-file-name no longer treats `//' or `/~' specially. It used
- to delete all the text of a file name up through the first slash of
- any `//' or `/~' sequence. Now it passes them straight through.
- substitute-in-file-name continues to treat those sequences specially,
- in the same way as before.
- *** The variable `format-alist' is more general now.
- The FROM-FN and TO-FN in a format definition can now be strings
- which specify shell commands to use as filters to perform conversion.
- *** The new function access-file tries to open a file, and signals an
- error if that fails. If the open succeeds, access-file does nothing
- else, and returns nil.
- *** The function insert-directory now signals an error if the specified
- directory cannot be listed.
- ** Changes in minibuffer input
- *** The functions read-buffer, read-variable, read-command, read-string
- read-file-name, read-from-minibuffer and completing-read now take an
- additional argument which specifies the default value. If this
- argument is non-nil, it should be a string; that string is used in two
- ways:
- It is returned if the user enters empty input.
- It is available through the history command M-n.
- *** The functions read-string, read-from-minibuffer,
- read-no-blanks-input and completing-read now take an additional
- argument INHERIT-INPUT-METHOD. If this is non-nil, then the
- minibuffer inherits the current input method and the setting of
- enable-multibyte-characters from the previously current buffer.
- In an interactive spec, you can use M instead of s to read an
- argument in this way.
- *** All minibuffer input functions discard text properties
- from the text you enter in the minibuffer, unless the variable
- minibuffer-allow-text-properties is non-nil.
- ** Echo area features
- *** Clearing the echo area now runs the normal hook
- echo-area-clear-hook. Note that the echo area can be used while the
- minibuffer is active; in that case, the minibuffer is still active
- after the echo area is cleared.
- *** The function current-message returns the message currently displayed
- in the echo area, or nil if there is none.
- ** Keyboard input features
- *** tty-erase-char is a new variable that reports which character was
- set up as the terminal's erase character when time Emacs was started.
- *** num-nonmacro-input-events is the total number of input events
- received so far from the terminal. It does not count those generated
- by keyboard macros.
- ** Frame-related changes
- *** make-frame runs the normal hook before-make-frame-hook just before
- creating a frame, and just after creating a frame it runs the abnormal
- hook after-make-frame-functions with the new frame as arg.
- *** The new hook window-configuration-change-hook is now run every time
- the window configuration has changed. The frame whose configuration
- has changed is the selected frame when the hook is run.
- *** Each frame now independently records the order for recently
- selected buffers, in its buffer-list frame parameter, so that the
- value of other-buffer is now based on the buffers recently displayed
- in the selected frame.
- *** The value of the frame parameter vertical-scroll-bars
- is now `left', `right' or nil. A non-nil value specifies
- which side of the window to put the scroll bars on.
- ** X Windows features
- *** You can examine X resources for other applications by binding
- x-resource-class around a call to x-get-resource. The usual value of
- x-resource-class is "Emacs", which is the correct value for Emacs.
- *** In menus, checkboxes and radio buttons now actually work.
- The menu displays the current status of the box or button.
- *** The function x-list-fonts now takes an optional fourth argument
- MAXIMUM which sets a limit on how many matching fonts to return.
- A smaller value of MAXIMUM makes the function faster.
- If the only question is whether *any* font matches the pattern,
- it is good to supply 1 for this argument.
- ** Subprocess features
- *** A reminder: it is no longer necessary for subprocess filter
- functions and sentinels to do save-match-data, because Emacs does this
- automatically.
- *** The new function shell-command-to-string executes a shell command
- and returns the output from the command as a string.
- *** The new function process-contact returns t for a child process,
- and (HOSTNAME SERVICE) for a net connection.
- ** An error in running pre-command-hook or post-command-hook
- does clear the variable to nil. The documentation was wrong before.
- ** In define-key-after, if AFTER is t, the new binding now always goes
- at the end of the keymap. If the keymap is a menu, this means it
- goes after the other menu items.
- ** If you have a program that makes several changes in the same area
- of the buffer, you can use the macro combine-after-change-calls
- around that Lisp code to make it faster when after-change hooks
- are in use.
- The macro arranges to call the after-change functions just once for a
- series of several changes--if that seems safe.
- Don't alter the variables after-change-functions and
- after-change-function within the body of a combine-after-change-calls
- form.
- ** If you define an abbrev (with define-abbrev) whose EXPANSION
- is not a string, then the abbrev does not expand in the usual sense,
- but its hook is still run.
- ** Normally, the Lisp debugger is not used (even if you have enabled it)
- for errors that are handled by condition-case.
- If you set debug-on-signal to a non-nil value, then the debugger is called
- regardless of whether there is a handler for the condition. This is
- useful for debugging problems that happen inside of a condition-case.
- This mode of operation seems to be unreliable in other ways. Errors that
- are normal and ought to be handled, perhaps in timers or process
- filters, will instead invoke the debugger. So don't say you weren't
- warned.
- ** The new variable ring-bell-function lets you specify your own
- way for Emacs to "ring the bell".
- ** If run-at-time's TIME argument is t, the action is repeated at
- integral multiples of REPEAT from the epoch; this is useful for
- functions like display-time.
- ** You can use the function locate-library to find the precise file
- name of a Lisp library. This isn't new, but wasn't documented before.
- ** Commands for entering view mode have new optional arguments that
- can be used from Lisp. Low-level entrance to and exit from view mode
- is done by functions view-mode-enter and view-mode-exit.
- ** batch-byte-compile-file now makes Emacs return a nonzero status code
- if there is an error in compilation.
- ** pop-to-buffer, switch-to-buffer-other-window and
- switch-to-buffer-other-frame now accept an additional optional
- argument NORECORD, much like switch-to-buffer. If it is non-nil,
- they don't put the buffer at the front of the buffer list.
- ** If your .emacs file leaves the *scratch* buffer non-empty,
- Emacs does not display the startup message, so as to avoid changing
- the *scratch* buffer.
- ** The new function regexp-opt returns an efficient regexp to match a string.
- The arguments are STRINGS and (optionally) PAREN. This function can be used
- where regexp matching or searching is intensively used and speed is important,
- e.g., in Font Lock mode.
- ** The variable buffer-display-count is local to each buffer,
- and is incremented each time the buffer is displayed in a window.
- It starts at 0 when the buffer is created.
- ** The new function compose-mail starts composing a mail message
- using the user's chosen mail composition agent (specified with the
- variable mail-user-agent). It has variants compose-mail-other-window
- and compose-mail-other-frame.
- ** The `user-full-name' function now takes an optional parameter which
- can either be a number (the UID) or a string (the login name). The
- full name of the specified user will be returned.
- ** Lisp packages that load files of customizations, or any other sort
- of user profile, should obey the variable init-file-user in deciding
- where to find it. They should load the profile of the user name found
- in that variable. If init-file-user is nil, meaning that the -q
- option was used, then Lisp packages should not load the customization
- files at all.
- ** format-time-string now allows you to specify the field width
- and type of padding. This works as in printf: you write the field
- width as digits in the middle of a %-construct. If you start
- the field width with 0, it means to pad with zeros.
- For example, %S normally specifies the number of seconds since the
- minute; %03S means to pad this with zeros to 3 positions, %_3S to pad
- with spaces to 3 positions. Plain %3S pads with zeros, because that
- is how %S normally pads to two positions.
- ** thing-at-point now supports a new kind of "thing": url.
- ** imenu.el changes.
- You can now specify a function to be run when selecting an
- item from menu created by imenu.
- An example of using this feature: if we define imenu items for the
- #include directives in a C file, we can open the included file when we
- select one of those items.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- This file is part of GNU Emacs.
- GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
- (at your option) any later version.
- GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- GNU General Public License for more details.
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
- Local variables:
- mode: outline
- paragraph-separate: "[ ]*$"
- end:
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