ldefs-boot.el 1.2 MB

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  1. ;;; loaddefs.el --- automatically extracted autoloads
  2. ;;
  3. ;;; Code:
  4. ;;;### (autoloads (5x5-crack 5x5-crack-xor-mutate 5x5-crack-mutating-best
  5. ;;;;;; 5x5-crack-mutating-current 5x5-crack-randomly 5x5) "5x5"
  6. ;;;;;; "play/5x5.el" (20352 65510))
  7. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/5x5.el
  8. (autoload '5x5 "5x5" "\
  9. Play 5x5.
  10. The object of 5x5 is very simple, by moving around the grid and flipping
  11. squares you must fill the grid.
  12. 5x5 keyboard bindings are:
  13. \\<5x5-mode-map>
  14. Flip \\[5x5-flip-current]
  15. Move up \\[5x5-up]
  16. Move down \\[5x5-down]
  17. Move left \\[5x5-left]
  18. Move right \\[5x5-right]
  19. Start new game \\[5x5-new-game]
  20. New game with random grid \\[5x5-randomize]
  21. Random cracker \\[5x5-crack-randomly]
  22. Mutate current cracker \\[5x5-crack-mutating-current]
  23. Mutate best cracker \\[5x5-crack-mutating-best]
  24. Mutate xor cracker \\[5x5-crack-xor-mutate]
  25. Solve with Calc \\[5x5-solve-suggest]
  26. Rotate left Calc Solutions \\[5x5-solve-rotate-left]
  27. Rotate right Calc Solutions \\[5x5-solve-rotate-right]
  28. Quit current game \\[5x5-quit-game]
  29. \(fn &optional SIZE)" t nil)
  30. (autoload '5x5-crack-randomly "5x5" "\
  31. Attempt to crack 5x5 using random solutions.
  32. \(fn)" t nil)
  33. (autoload '5x5-crack-mutating-current "5x5" "\
  34. Attempt to crack 5x5 by mutating the current solution.
  35. \(fn)" t nil)
  36. (autoload '5x5-crack-mutating-best "5x5" "\
  37. Attempt to crack 5x5 by mutating the best solution.
  38. \(fn)" t nil)
  39. (autoload '5x5-crack-xor-mutate "5x5" "\
  40. Attempt to crack 5x5 by xoring the current and best solution.
  41. Mutate the result.
  42. \(fn)" t nil)
  43. (autoload '5x5-crack "5x5" "\
  44. Attempt to find a solution for 5x5.
  45. 5x5-crack takes the argument BREEDER which should be a function that takes
  46. two parameters, the first will be a grid vector array that is the current
  47. solution and the second will be the best solution so far. The function
  48. should return a grid vector array that is the new solution.
  49. \(fn BREEDER)" t nil)
  50. ;;;***
  51. ;;;### (autoloads (ada-mode ada-add-extensions) "ada-mode" "progmodes/ada-mode.el"
  52. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  53. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ada-mode.el
  54. (autoload 'ada-add-extensions "ada-mode" "\
  55. Define SPEC and BODY as being valid extensions for Ada files.
  56. Going from body to spec with `ff-find-other-file' used these
  57. extensions.
  58. SPEC and BODY are two regular expressions that must match against
  59. the file name.
  60. \(fn SPEC BODY)" nil nil)
  61. (autoload 'ada-mode "ada-mode" "\
  62. Ada mode is the major mode for editing Ada code.
  63. \(fn)" t nil)
  64. ;;;***
  65. ;;;### (autoloads (ada-header) "ada-stmt" "progmodes/ada-stmt.el"
  66. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  67. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ada-stmt.el
  68. (autoload 'ada-header "ada-stmt" "\
  69. Insert a descriptive header at the top of the file.
  70. \(fn)" t nil)
  71. ;;;***
  72. ;;;### (autoloads (ada-find-file) "ada-xref" "progmodes/ada-xref.el"
  73. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  74. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ada-xref.el
  75. (autoload 'ada-find-file "ada-xref" "\
  76. Open FILENAME, from anywhere in the source path.
  77. Completion is available.
  78. \(fn FILENAME)" t nil)
  79. ;;;***
  80. ;;;### (autoloads (change-log-merge add-log-current-defun change-log-mode
  81. ;;;;;; add-change-log-entry-other-window add-change-log-entry find-change-log
  82. ;;;;;; prompt-for-change-log-name add-log-mailing-address add-log-full-name
  83. ;;;;;; add-log-current-defun-function) "add-log" "vc/add-log.el"
  84. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  85. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/add-log.el
  86. (put 'change-log-default-name 'safe-local-variable 'string-or-null-p)
  87. (defvar add-log-current-defun-function nil "\
  88. If non-nil, function to guess name of surrounding function.
  89. It is used by `add-log-current-defun' in preference to built-in rules.
  90. Returns function's name as a string, or nil if outside a function.")
  91. (custom-autoload 'add-log-current-defun-function "add-log" t)
  92. (defvar add-log-full-name nil "\
  93. Full name of user, for inclusion in ChangeLog daily headers.
  94. This defaults to the value returned by the function `user-full-name'.")
  95. (custom-autoload 'add-log-full-name "add-log" t)
  96. (defvar add-log-mailing-address nil "\
  97. Email addresses of user, for inclusion in ChangeLog headers.
  98. This defaults to the value of `user-mail-address'. In addition to
  99. being a simple string, this value can also be a list. All elements
  100. will be recognized as referring to the same user; when creating a new
  101. ChangeLog entry, one element will be chosen at random.")
  102. (custom-autoload 'add-log-mailing-address "add-log" t)
  103. (autoload 'prompt-for-change-log-name "add-log" "\
  104. Prompt for a change log name.
  105. \(fn)" nil nil)
  106. (autoload 'find-change-log "add-log" "\
  107. Find a change log file for \\[add-change-log-entry] and return the name.
  108. Optional arg FILE-NAME specifies the file to use.
  109. If FILE-NAME is nil, use the value of `change-log-default-name'.
  110. If `change-log-default-name' is nil, behave as though it were 'ChangeLog'
  111. \(or whatever we use on this operating system).
  112. If `change-log-default-name' contains a leading directory component, then
  113. simply find it in the current directory. Otherwise, search in the current
  114. directory and its successive parents for a file so named.
  115. Once a file is found, `change-log-default-name' is set locally in the
  116. current buffer to the complete file name.
  117. Optional arg BUFFER-FILE overrides `buffer-file-name'.
  118. \(fn &optional FILE-NAME BUFFER-FILE)" nil nil)
  119. (autoload 'add-change-log-entry "add-log" "\
  120. Find change log file, and add an entry for today and an item for this file.
  121. Optional arg WHOAMI (interactive prefix) non-nil means prompt for user
  122. name and email (stored in `add-log-full-name' and `add-log-mailing-address').
  123. Second arg FILE-NAME is file name of the change log.
  124. If nil, use the value of `change-log-default-name'.
  125. Third arg OTHER-WINDOW non-nil means visit in other window.
  126. Fourth arg NEW-ENTRY non-nil means always create a new entry at the front;
  127. never append to an existing entry. Option `add-log-keep-changes-together'
  128. otherwise affects whether a new entry is created.
  129. Fifth arg PUT-NEW-ENTRY-ON-NEW-LINE non-nil means that if a new
  130. entry is created, put it on a new line by itself, do not put it
  131. after a comma on an existing line.
  132. Option `add-log-always-start-new-record' non-nil means always create a
  133. new record, even when the last record was made on the same date and by
  134. the same person.
  135. The change log file can start with a copyright notice and a copying
  136. permission notice. The first blank line indicates the end of these
  137. notices.
  138. Today's date is calculated according to `add-log-time-zone-rule' if
  139. non-nil, otherwise in local time.
  140. \(fn &optional WHOAMI FILE-NAME OTHER-WINDOW NEW-ENTRY PUT-NEW-ENTRY-ON-NEW-LINE)" t nil)
  141. (autoload 'add-change-log-entry-other-window "add-log" "\
  142. Find change log file in other window and add entry and item.
  143. This is just like `add-change-log-entry' except that it displays
  144. the change log file in another window.
  145. \(fn &optional WHOAMI FILE-NAME)" t nil)
  146. (autoload 'change-log-mode "add-log" "\
  147. Major mode for editing change logs; like Indented Text mode.
  148. Prevents numeric backups and sets `left-margin' to 8 and `fill-column' to 74.
  149. New log entries are usually made with \\[add-change-log-entry] or \\[add-change-log-entry-other-window].
  150. Each entry behaves as a paragraph, and the entries for one day as a page.
  151. Runs `change-log-mode-hook'.
  152. \\{change-log-mode-map}
  153. \(fn)" t nil)
  154. (defvar add-log-lisp-like-modes '(emacs-lisp-mode lisp-mode scheme-mode dsssl-mode lisp-interaction-mode) "\
  155. *Modes that look like Lisp to `add-log-current-defun'.")
  156. (defvar add-log-c-like-modes '(c-mode c++-mode c++-c-mode objc-mode) "\
  157. *Modes that look like C to `add-log-current-defun'.")
  158. (defvar add-log-tex-like-modes '(TeX-mode plain-TeX-mode LaTeX-mode tex-mode) "\
  159. *Modes that look like TeX to `add-log-current-defun'.")
  160. (autoload 'add-log-current-defun "add-log" "\
  161. Return name of function definition point is in, or nil.
  162. Understands C, Lisp, LaTeX (\"functions\" are chapters, sections, ...),
  163. Texinfo (@node titles) and Perl.
  164. Other modes are handled by a heuristic that looks in the 10K before
  165. point for uppercase headings starting in the first column or
  166. identifiers followed by `:' or `='. See variables
  167. `add-log-current-defun-header-regexp' and
  168. `add-log-current-defun-function'.
  169. Has a preference of looking backwards.
  170. \(fn)" nil nil)
  171. (autoload 'change-log-merge "add-log" "\
  172. Merge the contents of change log file OTHER-LOG with this buffer.
  173. Both must be found in Change Log mode (since the merging depends on
  174. the appropriate motion commands). OTHER-LOG can be either a file name
  175. or a buffer.
  176. Entries are inserted in chronological order. Both the current and
  177. old-style time formats for entries are supported.
  178. \(fn OTHER-LOG)" t nil)
  179. ;;;***
  180. ;;;### (autoloads (defadvice ad-activate ad-add-advice ad-disable-advice
  181. ;;;;;; ad-enable-advice ad-default-compilation-action ad-redefinition-action)
  182. ;;;;;; "advice" "emacs-lisp/advice.el" (20352 65510))
  183. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/advice.el
  184. (defvar ad-redefinition-action 'warn "\
  185. Defines what to do with redefinitions during Advice de/activation.
  186. Redefinition occurs if a previously activated function that already has an
  187. original definition associated with it gets redefined and then de/activated.
  188. In such a case we can either accept the current definition as the new
  189. original definition, discard the current definition and replace it with the
  190. old original, or keep it and raise an error. The values `accept', `discard',
  191. `error' or `warn' govern what will be done. `warn' is just like `accept' but
  192. it additionally prints a warning message. All other values will be
  193. interpreted as `error'.")
  194. (custom-autoload 'ad-redefinition-action "advice" t)
  195. (defvar ad-default-compilation-action 'maybe "\
  196. Defines whether to compile advised definitions during activation.
  197. A value of `always' will result in unconditional compilation, `never' will
  198. always avoid compilation, `maybe' will compile if the byte-compiler is already
  199. loaded, and `like-original' will compile if the original definition of the
  200. advised function is compiled or a built-in function. Every other value will
  201. be interpreted as `maybe'. This variable will only be considered if the
  202. COMPILE argument of `ad-activate' was supplied as nil.")
  203. (custom-autoload 'ad-default-compilation-action "advice" t)
  204. (autoload 'ad-enable-advice "advice" "\
  205. Enables the advice of FUNCTION with CLASS and NAME.
  206. \(fn FUNCTION CLASS NAME)" t nil)
  207. (autoload 'ad-disable-advice "advice" "\
  208. Disable the advice of FUNCTION with CLASS and NAME.
  209. \(fn FUNCTION CLASS NAME)" t nil)
  210. (autoload 'ad-add-advice "advice" "\
  211. Add a piece of ADVICE to FUNCTION's list of advices in CLASS.
  212. ADVICE has the form (NAME PROTECTED ENABLED DEFINITION), where
  213. NAME is the advice name; PROTECTED is a flag specifying whether
  214. to protect against non-local exits; ENABLED is a flag specifying
  215. whether to initially enable the advice; and DEFINITION has the
  216. form (advice . LAMBDA), where LAMBDA is a lambda expression.
  217. If FUNCTION already has a piece of advice with the same name,
  218. then POSITION is ignored, and the old advice is overwritten with
  219. the new one.
  220. If FUNCTION already has one or more pieces of advice of the
  221. specified CLASS, then POSITION determines where the new piece
  222. goes. POSITION can either be `first', `last' or a number (where
  223. 0 corresponds to `first', and numbers outside the valid range are
  224. mapped to the closest extremal position).
  225. If FUNCTION was not advised already, its advice info will be
  226. initialized. Redefining a piece of advice whose name is part of
  227. the cache-id will clear the cache.
  228. See Info node `(elisp)Computed Advice' for detailed documentation.
  229. \(fn FUNCTION ADVICE CLASS POSITION)" nil nil)
  230. (autoload 'ad-activate "advice" "\
  231. Activate all the advice information of an advised FUNCTION.
  232. If FUNCTION has a proper original definition then an advised
  233. definition will be generated from FUNCTION's advice info and the
  234. definition of FUNCTION will be replaced with it. If a previously
  235. cached advised definition was available, it will be used.
  236. The optional COMPILE argument determines whether the resulting function
  237. or a compilable cached definition will be compiled. If it is negative
  238. no compilation will be performed, if it is positive or otherwise non-nil
  239. the resulting function will be compiled, if it is nil the behavior depends
  240. on the value of `ad-default-compilation-action' (which see).
  241. Activation of an advised function that has an advice info but no actual
  242. pieces of advice is equivalent to a call to `ad-unadvise'. Activation of
  243. an advised function that has actual pieces of advice but none of them are
  244. enabled is equivalent to a call to `ad-deactivate'. The current advised
  245. definition will always be cached for later usage.
  246. \(fn FUNCTION &optional COMPILE)" t nil)
  247. (autoload 'defadvice "advice" "\
  248. Define a piece of advice for FUNCTION (a symbol).
  249. The syntax of `defadvice' is as follows:
  250. (defadvice FUNCTION (CLASS NAME [POSITION] [ARGLIST] FLAG...)
  251. [DOCSTRING] [INTERACTIVE-FORM]
  252. BODY...)
  253. FUNCTION ::= Name of the function to be advised.
  254. CLASS ::= `before' | `around' | `after' | `activation' | `deactivation'.
  255. NAME ::= Non-nil symbol that names this piece of advice.
  256. POSITION ::= `first' | `last' | NUMBER. Optional, defaults to `first',
  257. see also `ad-add-advice'.
  258. ARGLIST ::= An optional argument list to be used for the advised function
  259. instead of the argument list of the original. The first one found in
  260. before/around/after-advices will be used.
  261. FLAG ::= `protect'|`disable'|`activate'|`compile'|`preactivate'|`freeze'.
  262. All flags can be specified with unambiguous initial substrings.
  263. DOCSTRING ::= Optional documentation for this piece of advice.
  264. INTERACTIVE-FORM ::= Optional interactive form to be used for the advised
  265. function. The first one found in before/around/after-advices will be used.
  266. BODY ::= Any s-expression.
  267. Semantics of the various flags:
  268. `protect': The piece of advice will be protected against non-local exits in
  269. any code that precedes it. If any around-advice of a function is protected
  270. then automatically all around-advices will be protected (the complete onion).
  271. `activate': All advice of FUNCTION will be activated immediately if
  272. FUNCTION has been properly defined prior to this application of `defadvice'.
  273. `compile': In conjunction with `activate' specifies that the resulting
  274. advised function should be compiled.
  275. `disable': The defined advice will be disabled, hence, it will not be used
  276. during activation until somebody enables it.
  277. `preactivate': Preactivates the advised FUNCTION at macro-expansion/compile
  278. time. This generates a compiled advised definition according to the current
  279. advice state that will be used during activation if appropriate. Only use
  280. this if the `defadvice' gets actually compiled.
  281. `freeze': Expands the `defadvice' into a redefining `defun/defmacro' according
  282. to this particular single advice. No other advice information will be saved.
  283. Frozen advices cannot be undone, they behave like a hard redefinition of
  284. the advised function. `freeze' implies `activate' and `preactivate'. The
  285. documentation of the advised function can be dumped onto the `DOC' file
  286. during preloading.
  287. See Info node `(elisp)Advising Functions' for comprehensive documentation.
  288. usage: (defadvice FUNCTION (CLASS NAME [POSITION] [ARGLIST] FLAG...)
  289. [DOCSTRING] [INTERACTIVE-FORM]
  290. BODY...)
  291. \(fn FUNCTION ARGS &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  292. (put 'defadvice 'doc-string-elt '3)
  293. ;;;***
  294. ;;;### (autoloads (align-newline-and-indent align-unhighlight-rule
  295. ;;;;;; align-highlight-rule align-current align-entire align-regexp
  296. ;;;;;; align) "align" "align.el" (20352 65510))
  297. ;;; Generated autoloads from align.el
  298. (autoload 'align "align" "\
  299. Attempt to align a region based on a set of alignment rules.
  300. BEG and END mark the region. If BEG and END are specifically set to
  301. nil (this can only be done programmatically), the beginning and end of
  302. the current alignment section will be calculated based on the location
  303. of point, and the value of `align-region-separate' (or possibly each
  304. rule's `separate' attribute).
  305. If SEPARATE is non-nil, it overrides the value of
  306. `align-region-separate' for all rules, except those that have their
  307. `separate' attribute set.
  308. RULES and EXCLUDE-RULES, if either is non-nil, will replace the
  309. default rule lists defined in `align-rules-list' and
  310. `align-exclude-rules-list'. See `align-rules-list' for more details
  311. on the format of these lists.
  312. \(fn BEG END &optional SEPARATE RULES EXCLUDE-RULES)" t nil)
  313. (autoload 'align-regexp "align" "\
  314. Align the current region using an ad-hoc rule read from the minibuffer.
  315. BEG and END mark the limits of the region. This function will prompt
  316. for the REGEXP to align with. If no prefix arg was specified, you
  317. only need to supply the characters to be lined up and any preceding
  318. whitespace is replaced. If a prefix arg was specified, the full
  319. regexp with parenthesized whitespace should be supplied; it will also
  320. prompt for which parenthesis GROUP within REGEXP to modify, the amount
  321. of SPACING to use, and whether or not to REPEAT the rule throughout
  322. the line. See `align-rules-list' for more information about these
  323. options.
  324. For example, let's say you had a list of phone numbers, and wanted to
  325. align them so that the opening parentheses would line up:
  326. Fred (123) 456-7890
  327. Alice (123) 456-7890
  328. Mary-Anne (123) 456-7890
  329. Joe (123) 456-7890
  330. There is no predefined rule to handle this, but you could easily do it
  331. using a REGEXP like \"(\". All you would have to do is to mark the
  332. region, call `align-regexp' and type in that regular expression.
  333. \(fn BEG END REGEXP &optional GROUP SPACING REPEAT)" t nil)
  334. (autoload 'align-entire "align" "\
  335. Align the selected region as if it were one alignment section.
  336. BEG and END mark the extent of the region. If RULES or EXCLUDE-RULES
  337. is set to a list of rules (see `align-rules-list'), it can be used to
  338. override the default alignment rules that would have been used to
  339. align that section.
  340. \(fn BEG END &optional RULES EXCLUDE-RULES)" t nil)
  341. (autoload 'align-current "align" "\
  342. Call `align' on the current alignment section.
  343. This function assumes you want to align only the current section, and
  344. so saves you from having to specify the region. If RULES or
  345. EXCLUDE-RULES is set to a list of rules (see `align-rules-list'), it
  346. can be used to override the default alignment rules that would have
  347. been used to align that section.
  348. \(fn &optional RULES EXCLUDE-RULES)" t nil)
  349. (autoload 'align-highlight-rule "align" "\
  350. Highlight the whitespace which a given rule would have modified.
  351. BEG and END mark the extent of the region. TITLE identifies the rule
  352. that should be highlighted. If RULES or EXCLUDE-RULES is set to a
  353. list of rules (see `align-rules-list'), it can be used to override the
  354. default alignment rules that would have been used to identify the text
  355. to be colored.
  356. \(fn BEG END TITLE &optional RULES EXCLUDE-RULES)" t nil)
  357. (autoload 'align-unhighlight-rule "align" "\
  358. Remove any highlighting that was added by `align-highlight-rule'.
  359. \(fn)" t nil)
  360. (autoload 'align-newline-and-indent "align" "\
  361. A replacement function for `newline-and-indent', aligning as it goes.
  362. \(fn)" t nil)
  363. ;;;***
  364. ;;;### (autoloads (outlineify-sticky allout-mode allout-mode-p allout-auto-activation
  365. ;;;;;; allout-setup allout-auto-activation-helper) "allout" "allout.el"
  366. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  367. ;;; Generated autoloads from allout.el
  368. (autoload 'allout-auto-activation-helper "allout" "\
  369. Institute `allout-auto-activation'.
  370. Intended to be used as the `allout-auto-activation' :set function.
  371. \(fn VAR VALUE)" nil nil)
  372. (autoload 'allout-setup "allout" "\
  373. Do fundamental Emacs session for allout auto-activation.
  374. Establishes allout processing as part of visiting a file if
  375. `allout-auto-activation' is non-nil, or removes it otherwise.
  376. The proper way to use this is through customizing the setting of
  377. `allout-auto-activation'.
  378. \(fn)" nil nil)
  379. (defvar allout-auto-activation nil "\
  380. Configure allout outline mode auto-activation.
  381. Control whether and how allout outline mode is automatically
  382. activated when files are visited with non-nil buffer-specific
  383. file variable `allout-layout'.
  384. When allout-auto-activation is \"On\" (t), allout mode is
  385. activated in buffers with non-nil `allout-layout', and the
  386. specified layout is applied.
  387. With value \"ask\", auto-mode-activation is enabled, and endorsement for
  388. performing auto-layout is asked of the user each time.
  389. With value \"activate\", only auto-mode-activation is enabled.
  390. Auto-layout is not.
  391. With value nil, inhibit any automatic allout-mode activation.")
  392. (custom-autoload 'allout-auto-activation "allout" nil)
  393. (put 'allout-use-hanging-indents 'safe-local-variable (if (fboundp 'booleanp) 'booleanp (lambda (x) (member x '(t nil)))))
  394. (put 'allout-reindent-bodies 'safe-local-variable (lambda (x) (memq x '(nil t text force))))
  395. (put 'allout-show-bodies 'safe-local-variable (if (fboundp 'booleanp) 'booleanp (lambda (x) (member x '(t nil)))))
  396. (put 'allout-header-prefix 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  397. (put 'allout-primary-bullet 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  398. (put 'allout-plain-bullets-string 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  399. (put 'allout-distinctive-bullets-string 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  400. (put 'allout-use-mode-specific-leader 'safe-local-variable (lambda (x) (or (memq x '(t nil allout-mode-leaders comment-start)) (stringp x))))
  401. (put 'allout-old-style-prefixes 'safe-local-variable (if (fboundp 'booleanp) 'booleanp (lambda (x) (member x '(t nil)))))
  402. (put 'allout-stylish-prefixes 'safe-local-variable (if (fboundp 'booleanp) 'booleanp (lambda (x) (member x '(t nil)))))
  403. (put 'allout-numbered-bullet 'safe-local-variable (if (fboundp 'string-or-null-p) 'string-or-null-p (lambda (x) (or (stringp x) (null x)))))
  404. (put 'allout-file-xref-bullet 'safe-local-variable (if (fboundp 'string-or-null-p) 'string-or-null-p (lambda (x) (or (stringp x) (null x)))))
  405. (put 'allout-presentation-padding 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  406. (put 'allout-layout 'safe-local-variable (lambda (x) (or (numberp x) (listp x) (memq x '(: * + -)))))
  407. (put 'allout-passphrase-verifier-string 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  408. (put 'allout-passphrase-hint-string 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  409. (autoload 'allout-mode-p "allout" "\
  410. Return t if `allout-mode' is active in current buffer.
  411. \(fn)" nil (quote macro))
  412. (autoload 'allout-mode "allout" "\
  413. Toggle Allout outline mode.
  414. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Allout outline mode if ARG is
  415. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  416. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  417. \\<allout-mode-map-value>
  418. Allout outline mode is a minor mode that provides extensive
  419. outline oriented formatting and manipulation. It enables
  420. structural editing of outlines, as well as navigation and
  421. exposure. It also is specifically aimed at accommodating
  422. syntax-sensitive text like programming languages. (For example,
  423. see the allout code itself, which is organized as an allout
  424. outline.)
  425. In addition to typical outline navigation and exposure, allout includes:
  426. - topic-oriented authoring, including keystroke-based topic creation,
  427. repositioning, promotion/demotion, cut, and paste
  428. - incremental search with dynamic exposure and reconcealment of hidden text
  429. - adjustable format, so programming code can be developed in outline-structure
  430. - easy topic encryption and decryption, symmetric or key-pair
  431. - \"Hot-spot\" operation, for single-keystroke maneuvering and exposure control
  432. - integral outline layout, for automatic initial exposure when visiting a file
  433. - independent extensibility, using comprehensive exposure and authoring hooks
  434. and many other features.
  435. Below is a description of the key bindings, and then description
  436. of special `allout-mode' features and terminology. See also the
  437. outline menubar additions for quick reference to many of the
  438. features. Customize `allout-auto-activation' to prepare your
  439. Emacs session for automatic activation of `allout-mode'.
  440. The bindings are those listed in `allout-prefixed-keybindings'
  441. and `allout-unprefixed-keybindings'. We recommend customizing
  442. `allout-command-prefix' to use just `\\C-c' as the command
  443. prefix, if the allout bindings don't conflict with any personal
  444. bindings you have on \\C-c. In any case, outline structure
  445. navigation and authoring is simplified by positioning the cursor
  446. on an item's bullet character, the \"hot-spot\" -- then you can
  447. invoke allout commands with just the un-prefixed,
  448. un-control-shifted command letters. This is described further in
  449. the HOT-SPOT Operation section.
  450. Exposure Control:
  451. ----------------
  452. \\[allout-hide-current-subtree] `allout-hide-current-subtree'
  453. \\[allout-show-children] `allout-show-children'
  454. \\[allout-show-current-subtree] `allout-show-current-subtree'
  455. \\[allout-show-current-entry] `allout-show-current-entry'
  456. \\[allout-show-all] `allout-show-all'
  457. Navigation:
  458. ----------
  459. \\[allout-next-visible-heading] `allout-next-visible-heading'
  460. \\[allout-previous-visible-heading] `allout-previous-visible-heading'
  461. \\[allout-up-current-level] `allout-up-current-level'
  462. \\[allout-forward-current-level] `allout-forward-current-level'
  463. \\[allout-backward-current-level] `allout-backward-current-level'
  464. \\[allout-end-of-entry] `allout-end-of-entry'
  465. \\[allout-beginning-of-current-entry] `allout-beginning-of-current-entry' (alternately, goes to hot-spot)
  466. \\[allout-beginning-of-line] `allout-beginning-of-line' -- like regular beginning-of-line, but
  467. if immediately repeated cycles to the beginning of the current item
  468. and then to the hot-spot (if `allout-beginning-of-line-cycles' is set).
  469. Topic Header Production:
  470. -----------------------
  471. \\[allout-open-sibtopic] `allout-open-sibtopic' Create a new sibling after current topic.
  472. \\[allout-open-subtopic] `allout-open-subtopic' ... an offspring of current topic.
  473. \\[allout-open-supertopic] `allout-open-supertopic' ... a sibling of the current topic's parent.
  474. Topic Level and Prefix Adjustment:
  475. ---------------------------------
  476. \\[allout-shift-in] `allout-shift-in' Shift current topic and all offspring deeper
  477. \\[allout-shift-out] `allout-shift-out' ... less deep
  478. \\[allout-rebullet-current-heading] `allout-rebullet-current-heading' Prompt for alternate bullet for
  479. current topic
  480. \\[allout-rebullet-topic] `allout-rebullet-topic' Reconcile bullets of topic and
  481. its offspring -- distinctive bullets are not changed, others
  482. are alternated according to nesting depth.
  483. \\[allout-number-siblings] `allout-number-siblings' Number bullets of topic and siblings --
  484. the offspring are not affected.
  485. With repeat count, revoke numbering.
  486. Topic-oriented Killing and Yanking:
  487. ----------------------------------
  488. \\[allout-kill-topic] `allout-kill-topic' Kill current topic, including offspring.
  489. \\[allout-copy-topic-as-kill] `allout-copy-topic-as-kill' Copy current topic, including offspring.
  490. \\[allout-kill-line] `allout-kill-line' Kill line, attending to outline structure.
  491. \\[allout-copy-line-as-kill] `allout-copy-line-as-kill' Copy line but don't delete it.
  492. \\[allout-yank] `allout-yank' Yank, adjusting depth of yanked topic to
  493. depth of heading if yanking into bare topic
  494. heading (ie, prefix sans text).
  495. \\[allout-yank-pop] `allout-yank-pop' Is to `allout-yank' as `yank-pop' is to `yank'.
  496. Topic-oriented Encryption:
  497. -------------------------
  498. \\[allout-toggle-current-subtree-encryption] `allout-toggle-current-subtree-encryption'
  499. Encrypt/Decrypt topic content
  500. Misc commands:
  501. -------------
  502. M-x outlineify-sticky Activate outline mode for current buffer,
  503. and establish a default file-var setting
  504. for `allout-layout'.
  505. \\[allout-mark-topic] `allout-mark-topic'
  506. \\[allout-copy-exposed-to-buffer] `allout-copy-exposed-to-buffer'
  507. Duplicate outline, sans concealed text, to
  508. buffer with name derived from derived from that
  509. of current buffer -- \"*BUFFERNAME exposed*\".
  510. \\[allout-flatten-exposed-to-buffer] `allout-flatten-exposed-to-buffer'
  511. Like above 'copy-exposed', but convert topic
  512. prefixes to section.subsection... numeric
  513. format.
  514. \\[customize-variable] allout-auto-activation
  515. Prepare Emacs session for allout outline mode
  516. auto-activation.
  517. Topic Encryption
  518. Outline mode supports gpg encryption of topics, with support for
  519. symmetric and key-pair modes, and auto-encryption of topics
  520. pending encryption on save.
  521. Topics pending encryption are, by default, automatically
  522. encrypted during file saves, including checkpoint saves, to avoid
  523. exposing the plain text of encrypted topics in the file system.
  524. If the content of the topic containing the cursor was encrypted
  525. for a save, it is automatically decrypted for continued editing.
  526. NOTE: A few GnuPG v2 versions improperly preserve incorrect
  527. symmetric decryption keys, preventing entry of the correct key on
  528. subsequent decryption attempts until the cache times-out. That
  529. can take several minutes. (Decryption of other entries is not
  530. affected.) Upgrade your EasyPG version, if you can, and you can
  531. deliberately clear your gpg-agent's cache by sending it a '-HUP'
  532. signal.
  533. See `allout-toggle-current-subtree-encryption' function docstring
  534. and `allout-encrypt-unencrypted-on-saves' customization variable
  535. for details.
  536. HOT-SPOT Operation
  537. Hot-spot operation provides a means for easy, single-keystroke outline
  538. navigation and exposure control.
  539. When the text cursor is positioned directly on the bullet character of
  540. a topic, regular characters (a to z) invoke the commands of the
  541. corresponding allout-mode keymap control chars. For example, \"f\"
  542. would invoke the command typically bound to \"C-c<space>C-f\"
  543. \(\\[allout-forward-current-level] `allout-forward-current-level').
  544. Thus, by positioning the cursor on a topic bullet, you can
  545. execute the outline navigation and manipulation commands with a
  546. single keystroke. Regular navigation keys (eg, \\[forward-char], \\[next-line]) don't get
  547. this special translation, so you can use them to get out of the
  548. hot-spot and back to normal editing operation.
  549. In allout-mode, the normal beginning-of-line command (\\[allout-beginning-of-line]) is
  550. replaced with one that makes it easy to get to the hot-spot. If you
  551. repeat it immediately it cycles (if `allout-beginning-of-line-cycles'
  552. is set) to the beginning of the item and then, if you hit it again
  553. immediately, to the hot-spot. Similarly, `allout-beginning-of-current-entry'
  554. \(\\[allout-beginning-of-current-entry]) moves to the hot-spot when the cursor is already located
  555. at the beginning of the current entry.
  556. Extending Allout
  557. Allout exposure and authoring activities all have associated
  558. hooks, by which independent code can cooperate with allout
  559. without changes to the allout core. Here are key ones:
  560. `allout-mode-hook'
  561. `allout-mode-deactivate-hook' (deprecated)
  562. `allout-mode-off-hook'
  563. `allout-exposure-change-hook'
  564. `allout-structure-added-hook'
  565. `allout-structure-deleted-hook'
  566. `allout-structure-shifted-hook'
  567. `allout-after-copy-or-kill-hook'
  568. `allout-post-undo-hook'
  569. Terminology
  570. Topic hierarchy constituents -- TOPICS and SUBTOPICS:
  571. ITEM: A unitary outline element, including the HEADER and ENTRY text.
  572. TOPIC: An ITEM and any ITEMs contained within it, ie having greater DEPTH
  573. and with no intervening items of lower DEPTH than the container.
  574. CURRENT ITEM:
  575. The visible ITEM most immediately containing the cursor.
  576. DEPTH: The degree of nesting of an ITEM; it increases with containment.
  577. The DEPTH is determined by the HEADER PREFIX. The DEPTH is also
  578. called the:
  579. LEVEL: The same as DEPTH.
  580. ANCESTORS:
  581. Those ITEMs whose TOPICs contain an ITEM.
  582. PARENT: An ITEM's immediate ANCESTOR. It has a DEPTH one less than that
  583. of the ITEM.
  584. OFFSPRING:
  585. The ITEMs contained within an ITEM's TOPIC.
  586. SUBTOPIC:
  587. An OFFSPRING of its ANCESTOR TOPICs.
  588. CHILD:
  589. An immediate SUBTOPIC of its PARENT.
  590. SIBLINGS:
  591. TOPICs having the same PARENT and DEPTH.
  592. Topic text constituents:
  593. HEADER: The first line of an ITEM, include the ITEM PREFIX and HEADER
  594. text.
  595. ENTRY: The text content of an ITEM, before any OFFSPRING, but including
  596. the HEADER text and distinct from the ITEM PREFIX.
  597. BODY: Same as ENTRY.
  598. PREFIX: The leading text of an ITEM which distinguishes it from normal
  599. ENTRY text. Allout recognizes the outline structure according
  600. to the strict PREFIX format. It consists of a PREFIX-LEAD string,
  601. PREFIX-PADDING, and a BULLET. The BULLET might be followed by a
  602. number, indicating the ordinal number of the topic among its
  603. siblings, or an asterisk indicating encryption, plus an optional
  604. space. After that is the ITEM HEADER text, which is not part of
  605. the PREFIX.
  606. The relative length of the PREFIX determines the nesting DEPTH
  607. of the ITEM.
  608. PREFIX-LEAD:
  609. The string at the beginning of a HEADER PREFIX, by default a `.'.
  610. It can be customized by changing the setting of
  611. `allout-header-prefix' and then reinitializing `allout-mode'.
  612. When the PREFIX-LEAD is set to the comment-string of a
  613. programming language, outline structuring can be embedded in
  614. program code without interfering with processing of the text
  615. (by Emacs or the language processor) as program code. This
  616. setting happens automatically when allout mode is used in
  617. programming-mode buffers. See `allout-use-mode-specific-leader'
  618. docstring for more detail.
  619. PREFIX-PADDING:
  620. Spaces or asterisks which separate the PREFIX-LEAD and the
  621. bullet, determining the ITEM's DEPTH.
  622. BULLET: A character at the end of the ITEM PREFIX, it must be one of
  623. the characters listed on `allout-plain-bullets-string' or
  624. `allout-distinctive-bullets-string'. When creating a TOPIC,
  625. plain BULLETs are by default used, according to the DEPTH of the
  626. TOPIC. Choice among the distinctive BULLETs is offered when you
  627. provide a universal argument (\\[universal-argument]) to the
  628. TOPIC creation command, or when explicitly rebulleting a TOPIC. The
  629. significance of the various distinctive bullets is purely by
  630. convention. See the documentation for the above bullet strings for
  631. more details.
  632. EXPOSURE:
  633. The state of a TOPIC which determines the on-screen visibility
  634. of its OFFSPRING and contained ENTRY text.
  635. CONCEALED:
  636. TOPICs and ENTRY text whose EXPOSURE is inhibited. Concealed
  637. text is represented by \"...\" ellipses.
  638. CONCEALED TOPICs are effectively collapsed within an ANCESTOR.
  639. CLOSED: A TOPIC whose immediate OFFSPRING and body-text is CONCEALED.
  640. OPEN: A TOPIC that is not CLOSED, though its OFFSPRING or BODY may be.
  641. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  642. (defalias 'outlinify-sticky 'outlineify-sticky)
  643. (autoload 'outlineify-sticky "allout" "\
  644. Activate outline mode and establish file var so it is started subsequently.
  645. See `allout-layout' and customization of `allout-auto-activation'
  646. for details on preparing Emacs for automatic allout activation.
  647. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  648. ;;;***
  649. ;;;### (autoloads (allout-widgets-mode allout-widgets-auto-activation
  650. ;;;;;; allout-widgets-setup allout-widgets) "allout-widgets" "allout-widgets.el"
  651. ;;;;;; (20432 47835))
  652. ;;; Generated autoloads from allout-widgets.el
  653. (let ((loads (get 'allout-widgets 'custom-loads))) (if (member '"allout-widgets" loads) nil (put 'allout-widgets 'custom-loads (cons '"allout-widgets" loads))))
  654. (autoload 'allout-widgets-setup "allout-widgets" "\
  655. Commission or decommission allout-widgets-mode along with allout-mode.
  656. Meant to be used by customization of `allout-widgets-auto-activation'.
  657. \(fn VARNAME VALUE)" nil nil)
  658. (defvar allout-widgets-auto-activation nil "\
  659. Activate to enable allout icon graphics wherever allout mode is active.
  660. Also enable `allout-auto-activation' for this to take effect upon
  661. visiting an outline.
  662. When this is set you can disable allout widgets in select files
  663. by setting `allout-widgets-mode-inhibit'
  664. Instead of setting `allout-widgets-auto-activation' you can
  665. explicitly invoke `allout-widgets-mode' in allout buffers where
  666. you want allout widgets operation.
  667. See `allout-widgets-mode' for allout widgets mode features.")
  668. (custom-autoload 'allout-widgets-auto-activation "allout-widgets" nil)
  669. (put 'allout-widgets-mode-inhibit 'safe-local-variable (if (fboundp 'booleanp) 'booleanp (lambda (x) (member x '(t nil)))))
  670. (autoload 'allout-widgets-mode "allout-widgets" "\
  671. Toggle Allout Widgets mode.
  672. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Allout Widgets mode if ARG is
  673. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  674. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  675. Allout Widgets mode is an extension of Allout mode that provides
  676. graphical decoration of outline structure. It is meant to
  677. operate along with `allout-mode', via `allout-mode-hook'.
  678. The graphics include:
  679. - guide lines connecting item bullet-icons with those of their subitems.
  680. - icons for item bullets, varying to indicate whether or not the item
  681. has subitems, and if so, whether or not the item is expanded.
  682. - cue area between the bullet-icon and the start of the body headline,
  683. for item numbering, encryption indicator, and distinctive bullets.
  684. The bullet-icon and guide line graphics provide keybindings and mouse
  685. bindings for easy outline navigation and exposure control, extending
  686. outline hot-spot navigation (see `allout-mode').
  687. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  688. ;;;***
  689. ;;;### (autoloads (ange-ftp-hook-function ange-ftp-reread-dir) "ange-ftp"
  690. ;;;;;; "net/ange-ftp.el" (20400 62402))
  691. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/ange-ftp.el
  692. (defalias 'ange-ftp-re-read-dir 'ange-ftp-reread-dir)
  693. (autoload 'ange-ftp-reread-dir "ange-ftp" "\
  694. Reread remote directory DIR to update the directory cache.
  695. The implementation of remote FTP file names caches directory contents
  696. for speed. Therefore, when new remote files are created, Emacs
  697. may not know they exist. You can use this command to reread a specific
  698. directory, so that Emacs will know its current contents.
  699. \(fn &optional DIR)" t nil)
  700. (autoload 'ange-ftp-hook-function "ange-ftp" "\
  701. \(fn OPERATION &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  702. ;;;***
  703. ;;;### (autoloads (animate-birthday-present animate-sequence animate-string)
  704. ;;;;;; "animate" "play/animate.el" (20400 62402))
  705. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/animate.el
  706. (autoload 'animate-string "animate" "\
  707. Display STRING animations starting at position VPOS, HPOS.
  708. The characters start at randomly chosen places,
  709. and all slide in parallel to their final positions,
  710. passing through `animate-n-steps' positions before the final ones.
  711. If HPOS is nil (or omitted), center the string horizontally
  712. in the current window.
  713. \(fn STRING VPOS &optional HPOS)" nil nil)
  714. (autoload 'animate-sequence "animate" "\
  715. Display animation strings from LIST-OF-STRING with buffer *Animation*.
  716. Strings will be separated from each other by SPACE lines.
  717. When the variable `animation-buffer-name' is non-nil display
  718. animation in the buffer named by variable's value, creating the
  719. buffer if one does not exist.
  720. \(fn LIST-OF-STRINGS SPACE)" nil nil)
  721. (autoload 'animate-birthday-present "animate" "\
  722. Return a birthday present in the buffer *Birthday-Present*.
  723. When optional arg NAME is non-nil or called-interactively, prompt for
  724. NAME of birthday present receiver and return a birthday present in
  725. the buffer *Birthday-Present-for-Name*.
  726. \(fn &optional NAME)" t nil)
  727. ;;;***
  728. ;;;### (autoloads (ansi-color-process-output ansi-color-for-comint-mode-on)
  729. ;;;;;; "ansi-color" "ansi-color.el" (20391 15703))
  730. ;;; Generated autoloads from ansi-color.el
  731. (autoload 'ansi-color-for-comint-mode-on "ansi-color" "\
  732. Set `ansi-color-for-comint-mode' to t.
  733. \(fn)" t nil)
  734. (autoload 'ansi-color-process-output "ansi-color" "\
  735. Maybe translate SGR control sequences of comint output into text properties.
  736. Depending on variable `ansi-color-for-comint-mode' the comint output is
  737. either not processed, SGR control sequences are filtered using
  738. `ansi-color-filter-region', or SGR control sequences are translated into
  739. text properties using `ansi-color-apply-on-region'.
  740. The comint output is assumed to lie between the marker
  741. `comint-last-output-start' and the process-mark.
  742. This is a good function to put in `comint-output-filter-functions'.
  743. \(fn IGNORED)" nil nil)
  744. ;;;***
  745. ;;;### (autoloads (antlr-set-tabs antlr-mode antlr-show-makefile-rules)
  746. ;;;;;; "antlr-mode" "progmodes/antlr-mode.el" (20400 62402))
  747. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/antlr-mode.el
  748. (autoload 'antlr-show-makefile-rules "antlr-mode" "\
  749. Show Makefile rules for all grammar files in the current directory.
  750. If the `major-mode' of the current buffer has the value `makefile-mode',
  751. the rules are directory inserted at point. Otherwise, a *Help* buffer
  752. is shown with the rules which are also put into the `kill-ring' for
  753. \\[yank].
  754. This command considers import/export vocabularies and grammar
  755. inheritance and provides a value for the \"-glib\" option if necessary.
  756. Customize variable `antlr-makefile-specification' for the appearance of
  757. the rules.
  758. If the file for a super-grammar cannot be determined, special file names
  759. are used according to variable `antlr-unknown-file-formats' and a
  760. commentary with value `antlr-help-unknown-file-text' is added. The
  761. *Help* buffer always starts with the text in `antlr-help-rules-intro'.
  762. \(fn)" t nil)
  763. (autoload 'antlr-mode "antlr-mode" "\
  764. Major mode for editing ANTLR grammar files.
  765. \(fn)" t nil)
  766. (autoload 'antlr-set-tabs "antlr-mode" "\
  767. Use ANTLR's convention for TABs according to `antlr-tab-offset-alist'.
  768. Used in `antlr-mode'. Also a useful function in `java-mode-hook'.
  769. \(fn)" nil nil)
  770. ;;;***
  771. ;;;### (autoloads (appt-activate appt-add) "appt" "calendar/appt.el"
  772. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  773. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/appt.el
  774. (autoload 'appt-add "appt" "\
  775. Add an appointment for today at TIME with message MSG.
  776. The time should be in either 24 hour format or am/pm format.
  777. Optional argument WARNTIME is an integer (or string) giving the number
  778. of minutes before the appointment at which to start warning.
  779. The default is `appt-message-warning-time'.
  780. \(fn TIME MSG &optional WARNTIME)" t nil)
  781. (autoload 'appt-activate "appt" "\
  782. Toggle checking of appointments.
  783. With optional numeric argument ARG, turn appointment checking on if
  784. ARG is positive, otherwise off.
  785. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  786. ;;;***
  787. ;;;### (autoloads (apropos-documentation apropos-value apropos-library
  788. ;;;;;; apropos apropos-documentation-property apropos-command apropos-variable
  789. ;;;;;; apropos-read-pattern) "apropos" "apropos.el" (20400 62402))
  790. ;;; Generated autoloads from apropos.el
  791. (autoload 'apropos-read-pattern "apropos" "\
  792. Read an apropos pattern, either a word list or a regexp.
  793. Returns the user pattern, either a list of words which are matched
  794. literally, or a string which is used as a regexp to search for.
  795. SUBJECT is a string that is included in the prompt to identify what
  796. kind of objects to search.
  797. \(fn SUBJECT)" nil nil)
  798. (autoload 'apropos-variable "apropos" "\
  799. Show user variables that match PATTERN.
  800. PATTERN can be a word, a list of words (separated by spaces),
  801. or a regexp (using some regexp special characters). If it is a word,
  802. search for matches for that word as a substring. If it is a list of words,
  803. search for matches for any two (or more) of those words.
  804. With \\[universal-argument] prefix, or if `apropos-do-all' is non-nil, also show
  805. normal variables.
  806. \(fn PATTERN &optional DO-ALL)" t nil)
  807. (defalias 'command-apropos 'apropos-command)
  808. (autoload 'apropos-command "apropos" "\
  809. Show commands (interactively callable functions) that match PATTERN.
  810. PATTERN can be a word, a list of words (separated by spaces),
  811. or a regexp (using some regexp special characters). If it is a word,
  812. search for matches for that word as a substring. If it is a list of words,
  813. search for matches for any two (or more) of those words.
  814. With \\[universal-argument] prefix, or if `apropos-do-all' is non-nil, also show
  815. noninteractive functions.
  816. If VAR-PREDICATE is non-nil, show only variables, and only those that
  817. satisfy the predicate VAR-PREDICATE.
  818. When called from a Lisp program, a string PATTERN is used as a regexp,
  819. while a list of strings is used as a word list.
  820. \(fn PATTERN &optional DO-ALL VAR-PREDICATE)" t nil)
  821. (autoload 'apropos-documentation-property "apropos" "\
  822. Like (documentation-property SYMBOL PROPERTY RAW) but handle errors.
  823. \(fn SYMBOL PROPERTY RAW)" nil nil)
  824. (autoload 'apropos "apropos" "\
  825. Show all meaningful Lisp symbols whose names match PATTERN.
  826. Symbols are shown if they are defined as functions, variables, or
  827. faces, or if they have nonempty property lists.
  828. PATTERN can be a word, a list of words (separated by spaces),
  829. or a regexp (using some regexp special characters). If it is a word,
  830. search for matches for that word as a substring. If it is a list of words,
  831. search for matches for any two (or more) of those words.
  832. With \\[universal-argument] prefix, or if `apropos-do-all' is non-nil,
  833. consider all symbols (if they match PATTERN).
  834. Returns list of symbols and documentation found.
  835. \(fn PATTERN &optional DO-ALL)" t nil)
  836. (autoload 'apropos-library "apropos" "\
  837. List the variables and functions defined by library FILE.
  838. FILE should be one of the libraries currently loaded and should
  839. thus be found in `load-history'. If `apropos-do-all' is non-nil,
  840. the output includes key-bindings of commands.
  841. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  842. (autoload 'apropos-value "apropos" "\
  843. Show all symbols whose value's printed representation matches PATTERN.
  844. PATTERN can be a word, a list of words (separated by spaces),
  845. or a regexp (using some regexp special characters). If it is a word,
  846. search for matches for that word as a substring. If it is a list of words,
  847. search for matches for any two (or more) of those words.
  848. With \\[universal-argument] prefix, or if `apropos-do-all' is non-nil, also looks
  849. at function definitions (arguments, documentation and body) and at the
  850. names and values of properties.
  851. Returns list of symbols and values found.
  852. \(fn PATTERN &optional DO-ALL)" t nil)
  853. (autoload 'apropos-documentation "apropos" "\
  854. Show symbols whose documentation contains matches for PATTERN.
  855. PATTERN can be a word, a list of words (separated by spaces),
  856. or a regexp (using some regexp special characters). If it is a word,
  857. search for matches for that word as a substring. If it is a list of words,
  858. search for matches for any two (or more) of those words.
  859. Note that by default this command only searches in the file specified by
  860. `internal-doc-file-name'; i.e., the etc/DOC file. With \\[universal-argument] prefix,
  861. or if `apropos-do-all' is non-nil, it searches all currently defined
  862. documentation strings.
  863. Returns list of symbols and documentation found.
  864. \(fn PATTERN &optional DO-ALL)" t nil)
  865. ;;;***
  866. ;;;### (autoloads (archive-mode) "arc-mode" "arc-mode.el" (20400
  867. ;;;;;; 62402))
  868. ;;; Generated autoloads from arc-mode.el
  869. (autoload 'archive-mode "arc-mode" "\
  870. Major mode for viewing an archive file in a dired-like way.
  871. You can move around using the usual cursor motion commands.
  872. Letters no longer insert themselves.
  873. Type `e' to pull a file out of the archive and into its own buffer;
  874. or click mouse-2 on the file's line in the archive mode buffer.
  875. If you edit a sub-file of this archive (as with the `e' command) and
  876. save it, the contents of that buffer will be saved back into the
  877. archive.
  878. \\{archive-mode-map}
  879. \(fn &optional FORCE)" nil nil)
  880. ;;;***
  881. ;;;### (autoloads (array-mode) "array" "array.el" (20352 65510))
  882. ;;; Generated autoloads from array.el
  883. (autoload 'array-mode "array" "\
  884. Major mode for editing arrays.
  885. Array mode is a specialized mode for editing arrays. An array is
  886. considered to be a two-dimensional set of strings. The strings are
  887. NOT recognized as integers or real numbers.
  888. The array MUST reside at the top of the buffer.
  889. TABs are not respected, and may be converted into spaces at any time.
  890. Setting the variable `array-respect-tabs' to non-nil will prevent TAB conversion,
  891. but will cause many functions to give errors if they encounter one.
  892. Upon entering array mode, you will be prompted for the values of
  893. several variables. Others will be calculated based on the values you
  894. supply. These variables are all local to the buffer. Other buffer
  895. in array mode may have different values assigned to the variables.
  896. The variables are:
  897. Variables you assign:
  898. array-max-row: The number of rows in the array.
  899. array-max-column: The number of columns in the array.
  900. array-columns-per-line: The number of columns in the array per line of buffer.
  901. array-field-width: The width of each field, in characters.
  902. array-rows-numbered: A logical variable describing whether to ignore
  903. row numbers in the buffer.
  904. Variables which are calculated:
  905. array-line-length: The number of characters in a buffer line.
  906. array-lines-per-row: The number of buffer lines used to display each row.
  907. The following commands are available (an asterisk indicates it may
  908. take a numeric prefix argument):
  909. * \\<array-mode-map>\\[array-forward-column] Move forward one column.
  910. * \\[array-backward-column] Move backward one column.
  911. * \\[array-next-row] Move down one row.
  912. * \\[array-previous-row] Move up one row.
  913. * \\[array-copy-forward] Copy the current field into the column to the right.
  914. * \\[array-copy-backward] Copy the current field into the column to the left.
  915. * \\[array-copy-down] Copy the current field into the row below.
  916. * \\[array-copy-up] Copy the current field into the row above.
  917. * \\[array-copy-column-forward] Copy the current column into the column to the right.
  918. * \\[array-copy-column-backward] Copy the current column into the column to the left.
  919. * \\[array-copy-row-down] Copy the current row into the row below.
  920. * \\[array-copy-row-up] Copy the current row into the row above.
  921. \\[array-fill-rectangle] Copy the field at mark into every cell with row and column
  922. between that of point and mark.
  923. \\[array-what-position] Display the current array row and column.
  924. \\[array-goto-cell] Go to a particular array cell.
  925. \\[array-make-template] Make a template for a new array.
  926. \\[array-reconfigure-rows] Reconfigure the array.
  927. \\[array-expand-rows] Expand the array (remove row numbers and
  928. newlines inside rows)
  929. \\[array-display-local-variables] Display the current values of local variables.
  930. Entering array mode calls the function `array-mode-hook'.
  931. \(fn)" t nil)
  932. ;;;***
  933. ;;;### (autoloads (artist-mode) "artist" "textmodes/artist.el" (20400
  934. ;;;;;; 62402))
  935. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/artist.el
  936. (autoload 'artist-mode "artist" "\
  937. Toggle Artist mode.
  938. With argument STATE, turn Artist mode on if STATE is positive.
  939. Artist lets you draw lines, squares, rectangles and poly-lines,
  940. ellipses and circles with your mouse and/or keyboard.
  941. How to quit Artist mode
  942. Type \\[artist-mode-off] to quit artist-mode.
  943. How to submit a bug report
  944. Type \\[artist-submit-bug-report] to submit a bug report.
  945. Drawing with the mouse:
  946. mouse-2
  947. shift mouse-2 Pops up a menu where you can select what to draw with
  948. mouse-1, and where you can do some settings (described
  949. below).
  950. mouse-1
  951. shift mouse-1 Draws lines, rectangles or poly-lines, erases, cuts, copies
  952. or pastes:
  953. Operation Not shifted Shifted
  954. --------------------------------------------------------------
  955. Pen fill-char at point line from last point
  956. to new point
  957. --------------------------------------------------------------
  958. Line Line in any direction Straight line
  959. --------------------------------------------------------------
  960. Rectangle Rectangle Square
  961. --------------------------------------------------------------
  962. Poly-line Poly-line in any dir Straight poly-lines
  963. --------------------------------------------------------------
  964. Ellipses Ellipses Circles
  965. --------------------------------------------------------------
  966. Text Text (see thru) Text (overwrite)
  967. --------------------------------------------------------------
  968. Spray-can Spray-can Set size for spray
  969. --------------------------------------------------------------
  970. Erase Erase character Erase rectangle
  971. --------------------------------------------------------------
  972. Vaporize Erase single line Erase connected
  973. lines
  974. --------------------------------------------------------------
  975. Cut Cut rectangle Cut square
  976. --------------------------------------------------------------
  977. Copy Copy rectangle Copy square
  978. --------------------------------------------------------------
  979. Paste Paste Paste
  980. --------------------------------------------------------------
  981. Flood-fill Flood-fill Flood-fill
  982. --------------------------------------------------------------
  983. * Straight lines can only go horizontally, vertically
  984. or diagonally.
  985. * Poly-lines are drawn while holding mouse-1 down. When you
  986. release the button, the point is set. If you want a segment
  987. to be straight, hold down shift before pressing the
  988. mouse-1 button. Click mouse-2 or mouse-3 to stop drawing
  989. poly-lines.
  990. * See thru for text means that text already in the buffer
  991. will be visible through blanks in the text rendered, while
  992. overwrite means the opposite.
  993. * Vaporizing connected lines only vaporizes lines whose
  994. _endpoints_ are connected. See also the variable
  995. `artist-vaporize-fuzziness'.
  996. * Cut copies, then clears the rectangle/square.
  997. * When drawing lines or poly-lines, you can set arrows.
  998. See below under ``Arrows'' for more info.
  999. * The mode line shows the currently selected drawing operation.
  1000. In addition, if it has an asterisk (*) at the end, you
  1001. are currently drawing something.
  1002. * Be patient when flood-filling -- large areas take quite
  1003. some time to fill.
  1004. mouse-3 Erases character under pointer
  1005. shift mouse-3 Erases rectangle
  1006. Settings
  1007. Set fill Sets the character used when filling rectangles/squares
  1008. Set line Sets the character used when drawing lines
  1009. Erase char Sets the character used when erasing
  1010. Rubber-banding Toggles rubber-banding
  1011. Trimming Toggles trimming of line-endings (that is: when the shape
  1012. is drawn, extraneous white-space at end of lines is removed)
  1013. Borders Toggles the drawing of line borders around filled shapes
  1014. Drawing with keys
  1015. \\[artist-key-set-point] Does one of the following:
  1016. For lines/rectangles/squares: sets the first/second endpoint
  1017. For poly-lines: sets a point (use C-u \\[artist-key-set-point] to set last point)
  1018. When erase characters: toggles erasing
  1019. When cutting/copying: Sets first/last endpoint of rect/square
  1020. When pasting: Pastes
  1021. \\[artist-select-operation] Selects what to draw
  1022. Move around with \\[artist-next-line], \\[artist-previous-line], \\[artist-forward-char] and \\[artist-backward-char].
  1023. \\[artist-select-fill-char] Sets the character to use when filling
  1024. \\[artist-select-line-char] Sets the character to use when drawing
  1025. \\[artist-select-erase-char] Sets the character to use when erasing
  1026. \\[artist-toggle-rubber-banding] Toggles rubber-banding
  1027. \\[artist-toggle-trim-line-endings] Toggles trimming of line-endings
  1028. \\[artist-toggle-borderless-shapes] Toggles borders on drawn shapes
  1029. Arrows
  1030. \\[artist-toggle-first-arrow] Sets/unsets an arrow at the beginning
  1031. of the line/poly-line
  1032. \\[artist-toggle-second-arrow] Sets/unsets an arrow at the end
  1033. of the line/poly-line
  1034. Selecting operation
  1035. There are some keys for quickly selecting drawing operations:
  1036. \\[artist-select-op-line] Selects drawing lines
  1037. \\[artist-select-op-straight-line] Selects drawing straight lines
  1038. \\[artist-select-op-rectangle] Selects drawing rectangles
  1039. \\[artist-select-op-square] Selects drawing squares
  1040. \\[artist-select-op-poly-line] Selects drawing poly-lines
  1041. \\[artist-select-op-straight-poly-line] Selects drawing straight poly-lines
  1042. \\[artist-select-op-ellipse] Selects drawing ellipses
  1043. \\[artist-select-op-circle] Selects drawing circles
  1044. \\[artist-select-op-text-see-thru] Selects rendering text (see thru)
  1045. \\[artist-select-op-text-overwrite] Selects rendering text (overwrite)
  1046. \\[artist-select-op-spray-can] Spray with spray-can
  1047. \\[artist-select-op-spray-set-size] Set size for the spray-can
  1048. \\[artist-select-op-erase-char] Selects erasing characters
  1049. \\[artist-select-op-erase-rectangle] Selects erasing rectangles
  1050. \\[artist-select-op-vaporize-line] Selects vaporizing single lines
  1051. \\[artist-select-op-vaporize-lines] Selects vaporizing connected lines
  1052. \\[artist-select-op-cut-rectangle] Selects cutting rectangles
  1053. \\[artist-select-op-copy-rectangle] Selects copying rectangles
  1054. \\[artist-select-op-paste] Selects pasting
  1055. \\[artist-select-op-flood-fill] Selects flood-filling
  1056. Variables
  1057. This is a brief overview of the different variables. For more info,
  1058. see the documentation for the variables (type \\[describe-variable] <variable> RET).
  1059. artist-rubber-banding Interactively do rubber-banding or not
  1060. artist-first-char What to set at first/second point...
  1061. artist-second-char ...when not rubber-banding
  1062. artist-interface-with-rect If cut/copy/paste should interface with rect
  1063. artist-arrows The arrows to use when drawing arrows
  1064. artist-aspect-ratio Character height-to-width for squares
  1065. artist-trim-line-endings Trimming of line endings
  1066. artist-flood-fill-right-border Right border when flood-filling
  1067. artist-flood-fill-show-incrementally Update display while filling
  1068. artist-pointer-shape Pointer shape to use while drawing
  1069. artist-ellipse-left-char Character to use for narrow ellipses
  1070. artist-ellipse-right-char Character to use for narrow ellipses
  1071. artist-borderless-shapes If shapes should have borders
  1072. artist-picture-compatibility Whether or not to be picture mode compatible
  1073. artist-vaporize-fuzziness Tolerance when recognizing lines
  1074. artist-spray-interval Seconds between repeated sprayings
  1075. artist-spray-radius Size of the spray-area
  1076. artist-spray-chars The spray-``color''
  1077. artist-spray-new-chars Initial spray-``color''
  1078. Hooks
  1079. When entering artist-mode, the hook `artist-mode-init-hook' is called.
  1080. When quitting artist-mode, the hook `artist-mode-exit-hook' is called.
  1081. Keymap summary
  1082. \\{artist-mode-map}
  1083. \(fn &optional STATE)" t nil)
  1084. ;;;***
  1085. ;;;### (autoloads (asm-mode) "asm-mode" "progmodes/asm-mode.el" (20400
  1086. ;;;;;; 62402))
  1087. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/asm-mode.el
  1088. (autoload 'asm-mode "asm-mode" "\
  1089. Major mode for editing typical assembler code.
  1090. Features a private abbrev table and the following bindings:
  1091. \\[asm-colon] outdent a preceding label, tab to next tab stop.
  1092. \\[tab-to-tab-stop] tab to next tab stop.
  1093. \\[asm-newline] newline, then tab to next tab stop.
  1094. \\[asm-comment] smart placement of assembler comments.
  1095. The character used for making comments is set by the variable
  1096. `asm-comment-char' (which defaults to `?\\;').
  1097. Alternatively, you may set this variable in `asm-mode-set-comment-hook',
  1098. which is called near the beginning of mode initialization.
  1099. Turning on Asm mode runs the hook `asm-mode-hook' at the end of initialization.
  1100. Special commands:
  1101. \\{asm-mode-map}
  1102. \(fn)" t nil)
  1103. ;;;***
  1104. ;;;### (autoloads (auth-source-cache-expiry) "auth-source" "gnus/auth-source.el"
  1105. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  1106. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/auth-source.el
  1107. (defvar auth-source-cache-expiry 7200 "\
  1108. How many seconds passwords are cached, or nil to disable
  1109. expiring. Overrides `password-cache-expiry' through a
  1110. let-binding.")
  1111. (custom-autoload 'auth-source-cache-expiry "auth-source" t)
  1112. ;;;***
  1113. ;;;### (autoloads (autoarg-kp-mode autoarg-mode) "autoarg" "autoarg.el"
  1114. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  1115. ;;; Generated autoloads from autoarg.el
  1116. (defvar autoarg-mode nil "\
  1117. Non-nil if Autoarg mode is enabled.
  1118. See the command `autoarg-mode' for a description of this minor mode.")
  1119. (custom-autoload 'autoarg-mode "autoarg" nil)
  1120. (autoload 'autoarg-mode "autoarg" "\
  1121. Toggle Autoarg mode, a global minor mode.
  1122. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Autoarg mode if ARG is
  1123. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  1124. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  1125. \\<autoarg-mode-map>
  1126. In Autoarg mode, digits are bound to `digit-argument', i.e. they
  1127. supply prefix arguments as C-DIGIT and M-DIGIT normally do.
  1128. Furthermore, C-DIGIT inserts DIGIT.
  1129. \\[autoarg-terminate] terminates the prefix sequence and inserts
  1130. the digits of the autoarg sequence into the buffer.
  1131. Without a numeric prefix arg, the normal binding of \\[autoarg-terminate]
  1132. is invoked, i.e. what it would be with Autoarg mode off.
  1133. For example:
  1134. `6 9 \\[autoarg-terminate]' inserts `69' into the buffer, as does `C-6 C-9'.
  1135. `6 9 a' inserts 69 `a's into the buffer.
  1136. `6 9 \\[autoarg-terminate] \\[autoarg-terminate]' inserts `69' into the buffer and
  1137. then invokes the normal binding of \\[autoarg-terminate].
  1138. `C-u \\[autoarg-terminate]' invokes the normal binding of \\[autoarg-terminate] four times.
  1139. \\{autoarg-mode-map}
  1140. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  1141. (defvar autoarg-kp-mode nil "\
  1142. Non-nil if Autoarg-Kp mode is enabled.
  1143. See the command `autoarg-kp-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  1144. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  1145. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  1146. or call the function `autoarg-kp-mode'.")
  1147. (custom-autoload 'autoarg-kp-mode "autoarg" nil)
  1148. (autoload 'autoarg-kp-mode "autoarg" "\
  1149. Toggle Autoarg-KP mode, a global minor mode.
  1150. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Autoarg-KP mode if ARG is
  1151. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  1152. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  1153. \\<autoarg-kp-mode-map>
  1154. This is similar to `autoarg-mode' but rebinds the keypad keys
  1155. `kp-1' etc. to supply digit arguments.
  1156. \\{autoarg-kp-mode-map}
  1157. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  1158. ;;;***
  1159. ;;;### (autoloads (autoconf-mode) "autoconf" "progmodes/autoconf.el"
  1160. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  1161. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/autoconf.el
  1162. (autoload 'autoconf-mode "autoconf" "\
  1163. Major mode for editing Autoconf configure.in files.
  1164. \(fn)" t nil)
  1165. ;;;***
  1166. ;;;### (autoloads (auto-insert-mode define-auto-insert auto-insert)
  1167. ;;;;;; "autoinsert" "autoinsert.el" (20400 62402))
  1168. ;;; Generated autoloads from autoinsert.el
  1169. (autoload 'auto-insert "autoinsert" "\
  1170. Insert default contents into new files if variable `auto-insert' is non-nil.
  1171. Matches the visited file name against the elements of `auto-insert-alist'.
  1172. \(fn)" t nil)
  1173. (autoload 'define-auto-insert "autoinsert" "\
  1174. Associate CONDITION with (additional) ACTION in `auto-insert-alist'.
  1175. Optional AFTER means to insert action after all existing actions for CONDITION,
  1176. or if CONDITION had no actions, after all other CONDITIONs.
  1177. \(fn CONDITION ACTION &optional AFTER)" nil nil)
  1178. (defvar auto-insert-mode nil "\
  1179. Non-nil if Auto-Insert mode is enabled.
  1180. See the command `auto-insert-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  1181. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  1182. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  1183. or call the function `auto-insert-mode'.")
  1184. (custom-autoload 'auto-insert-mode "autoinsert" nil)
  1185. (autoload 'auto-insert-mode "autoinsert" "\
  1186. Toggle Auto-insert mode, a global minor mode.
  1187. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Auto-insert mode if ARG is
  1188. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  1189. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  1190. When Auto-insert mode is enabled, when new files are created you can
  1191. insert a template for the file depending on the mode of the buffer.
  1192. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  1193. ;;;***
  1194. ;;;### (autoloads (batch-update-autoloads update-directory-autoloads
  1195. ;;;;;; update-file-autoloads) "autoload" "emacs-lisp/autoload.el"
  1196. ;;;;;; (20517 48515))
  1197. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/autoload.el
  1198. (put 'generated-autoload-file 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  1199. (put 'generated-autoload-load-name 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  1200. (autoload 'update-file-autoloads "autoload" "\
  1201. Update the autoloads for FILE.
  1202. If prefix arg SAVE-AFTER is non-nil, save the buffer too.
  1203. If FILE binds `generated-autoload-file' as a file-local variable,
  1204. autoloads are written into that file. Otherwise, the autoloads
  1205. file is determined by OUTFILE. If called interactively, prompt
  1206. for OUTFILE; if called from Lisp with OUTFILE nil, use the
  1207. existing value of `generated-autoload-file'.
  1208. Return FILE if there was no autoload cookie in it, else nil.
  1209. \(fn FILE &optional SAVE-AFTER OUTFILE)" t nil)
  1210. (autoload 'update-directory-autoloads "autoload" "\
  1211. Update autoload definitions for Lisp files in the directories DIRS.
  1212. In an interactive call, you must give one argument, the name of a
  1213. single directory. In a call from Lisp, you can supply multiple
  1214. directories as separate arguments, but this usage is discouraged.
  1215. The function does NOT recursively descend into subdirectories of the
  1216. directory or directories specified.
  1217. In an interactive call, prompt for a default output file for the
  1218. autoload definitions, and temporarily bind the variable
  1219. `generated-autoload-file' to this value. When called from Lisp,
  1220. use the existing value of `generated-autoload-file'. If any Lisp
  1221. file binds `generated-autoload-file' as a file-local variable,
  1222. write its autoloads into the specified file instead.
  1223. \(fn &rest DIRS)" t nil)
  1224. (autoload 'batch-update-autoloads "autoload" "\
  1225. Update loaddefs.el autoloads in batch mode.
  1226. Calls `update-directory-autoloads' on the command line arguments.
  1227. Definitions are written to `generated-autoload-file' (which
  1228. should be non-nil).
  1229. \(fn)" nil nil)
  1230. ;;;***
  1231. ;;;### (autoloads (global-auto-revert-mode turn-on-auto-revert-tail-mode
  1232. ;;;;;; auto-revert-tail-mode turn-on-auto-revert-mode auto-revert-mode)
  1233. ;;;;;; "autorevert" "autorevert.el" (20400 62402))
  1234. ;;; Generated autoloads from autorevert.el
  1235. (autoload 'auto-revert-mode "autorevert" "\
  1236. Toggle reverting buffer when the file changes (Auto Revert mode).
  1237. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Auto Revert mode if ARG is
  1238. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  1239. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  1240. Auto Revert mode is a minor mode that affects only the current
  1241. buffer. When enabled, it reverts the buffer when the file on
  1242. disk changes.
  1243. Use `global-auto-revert-mode' to automatically revert all buffers.
  1244. Use `auto-revert-tail-mode' if you know that the file will only grow
  1245. without being changed in the part that is already in the buffer.
  1246. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  1247. (autoload 'turn-on-auto-revert-mode "autorevert" "\
  1248. Turn on Auto-Revert Mode.
  1249. This function is designed to be added to hooks, for example:
  1250. (add-hook 'c-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-revert-mode)
  1251. \(fn)" nil nil)
  1252. (autoload 'auto-revert-tail-mode "autorevert" "\
  1253. Toggle reverting tail of buffer when the file grows.
  1254. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Auto-Revert Tail mode if ARG
  1255. is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp,
  1256. enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  1257. When Auto Revert Tail mode is enabled, the tail of the file is
  1258. constantly followed, as with the shell command `tail -f'. This
  1259. means that whenever the file grows on disk (presumably because
  1260. some background process is appending to it from time to time),
  1261. this is reflected in the current buffer.
  1262. You can edit the buffer and turn this mode off and on again as
  1263. you please. But make sure the background process has stopped
  1264. writing before you save the file!
  1265. Use `auto-revert-mode' for changes other than appends!
  1266. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  1267. (autoload 'turn-on-auto-revert-tail-mode "autorevert" "\
  1268. Turn on Auto-Revert Tail mode.
  1269. This function is designed to be added to hooks, for example:
  1270. (add-hook 'my-logfile-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-revert-tail-mode)
  1271. \(fn)" nil nil)
  1272. (defvar global-auto-revert-mode nil "\
  1273. Non-nil if Global-Auto-Revert mode is enabled.
  1274. See the command `global-auto-revert-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  1275. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  1276. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  1277. or call the function `global-auto-revert-mode'.")
  1278. (custom-autoload 'global-auto-revert-mode "autorevert" nil)
  1279. (autoload 'global-auto-revert-mode "autorevert" "\
  1280. Toggle Global Auto Revert mode.
  1281. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Global Auto Revert mode if ARG
  1282. is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp,
  1283. enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  1284. Global Auto Revert mode is a global minor mode that reverts any
  1285. buffer associated with a file when the file changes on disk. Use
  1286. `auto-revert-mode' to revert a particular buffer.
  1287. If `global-auto-revert-non-file-buffers' is non-nil, this mode
  1288. may also revert some non-file buffers, as described in the
  1289. documentation of that variable. It ignores buffers with modes
  1290. matching `global-auto-revert-ignore-modes', and buffers with a
  1291. non-nil vale of `global-auto-revert-ignore-buffer'.
  1292. This function calls the hook `global-auto-revert-mode-hook'.
  1293. It displays the text that `global-auto-revert-mode-text'
  1294. specifies in the mode line.
  1295. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  1296. ;;;***
  1297. ;;;### (autoloads (mouse-avoidance-mode mouse-avoidance-mode) "avoid"
  1298. ;;;;;; "avoid.el" (20400 62402))
  1299. ;;; Generated autoloads from avoid.el
  1300. (defvar mouse-avoidance-mode nil "\
  1301. Activate Mouse Avoidance mode.
  1302. See function `mouse-avoidance-mode' for possible values.
  1303. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  1304. use either \\[customize] or the function `mouse-avoidance-mode'.")
  1305. (custom-autoload 'mouse-avoidance-mode "avoid" nil)
  1306. (autoload 'mouse-avoidance-mode "avoid" "\
  1307. Set Mouse Avoidance mode to MODE.
  1308. MODE should be one of the symbols `banish', `exile', `jump', `animate',
  1309. `cat-and-mouse', `proteus', or `none'.
  1310. If MODE is nil, toggle mouse avoidance between `none' and `banish'
  1311. modes. Positive numbers and symbols other than the above are treated
  1312. as equivalent to `banish'; negative numbers and `-' are equivalent to `none'.
  1313. Effects of the different modes:
  1314. * banish: Move the mouse to the upper-right corner on any keypress.
  1315. * exile: Move the mouse to the corner only if the cursor gets too close,
  1316. and allow it to return once the cursor is out of the way.
  1317. * jump: If the cursor gets too close to the mouse, displace the mouse
  1318. a random distance & direction.
  1319. * animate: As `jump', but shows steps along the way for illusion of motion.
  1320. * cat-and-mouse: Same as `animate'.
  1321. * proteus: As `animate', but changes the shape of the mouse pointer too.
  1322. Whenever the mouse is moved, the frame is also raised.
  1323. \(See `mouse-avoidance-threshold' for definition of \"too close\",
  1324. and `mouse-avoidance-nudge-dist' and `mouse-avoidance-nudge-var' for
  1325. definition of \"random distance\".)
  1326. \(fn &optional MODE)" t nil)
  1327. ;;;***
  1328. ;;;### (autoloads (display-battery-mode battery) "battery" "battery.el"
  1329. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  1330. ;;; Generated autoloads from battery.el
  1331. (put 'battery-mode-line-string 'risky-local-variable t)
  1332. (autoload 'battery "battery" "\
  1333. Display battery status information in the echo area.
  1334. The text being displayed in the echo area is controlled by the variables
  1335. `battery-echo-area-format' and `battery-status-function'.
  1336. \(fn)" t nil)
  1337. (defvar display-battery-mode nil "\
  1338. Non-nil if Display-Battery mode is enabled.
  1339. See the command `display-battery-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  1340. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  1341. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  1342. or call the function `display-battery-mode'.")
  1343. (custom-autoload 'display-battery-mode "battery" nil)
  1344. (autoload 'display-battery-mode "battery" "\
  1345. Toggle battery status display in mode line (Display Battery mode).
  1346. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Display Battery mode if ARG is
  1347. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  1348. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  1349. The text displayed in the mode line is controlled by
  1350. `battery-mode-line-format' and `battery-status-function'.
  1351. The mode line is be updated every `battery-update-interval'
  1352. seconds.
  1353. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  1354. ;;;***
  1355. ;;;### (autoloads (benchmark benchmark-run-compiled benchmark-run)
  1356. ;;;;;; "benchmark" "emacs-lisp/benchmark.el" (20352 65510))
  1357. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/benchmark.el
  1358. (autoload 'benchmark-run "benchmark" "\
  1359. Time execution of FORMS.
  1360. If REPETITIONS is supplied as a number, run forms that many times,
  1361. accounting for the overhead of the resulting loop. Otherwise run
  1362. FORMS once.
  1363. Return a list of the total elapsed time for execution, the number of
  1364. garbage collections that ran, and the time taken by garbage collection.
  1365. See also `benchmark-run-compiled'.
  1366. \(fn &optional REPETITIONS &rest FORMS)" nil (quote macro))
  1367. (autoload 'benchmark-run-compiled "benchmark" "\
  1368. Time execution of compiled version of FORMS.
  1369. This is like `benchmark-run', but what is timed is a funcall of the
  1370. byte code obtained by wrapping FORMS in a `lambda' and compiling the
  1371. result. The overhead of the `lambda's is accounted for.
  1372. \(fn &optional REPETITIONS &rest FORMS)" nil (quote macro))
  1373. (autoload 'benchmark "benchmark" "\
  1374. Print the time taken for REPETITIONS executions of FORM.
  1375. Interactively, REPETITIONS is taken from the prefix arg.
  1376. For non-interactive use see also `benchmark-run' and
  1377. `benchmark-run-compiled'.
  1378. \(fn REPETITIONS FORM)" t nil)
  1379. ;;;***
  1380. ;;;### (autoloads (bibtex-search-entry bibtex-mode bibtex-initialize)
  1381. ;;;;;; "bibtex" "textmodes/bibtex.el" (20400 62402))
  1382. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/bibtex.el
  1383. (autoload 'bibtex-initialize "bibtex" "\
  1384. (Re)Initialize BibTeX buffers.
  1385. Visit the BibTeX files defined by `bibtex-files' and return a list
  1386. of corresponding buffers.
  1387. Initialize in these buffers `bibtex-reference-keys' if not yet set.
  1388. List of BibTeX buffers includes current buffer if CURRENT is non-nil.
  1389. If FORCE is non-nil, (re)initialize `bibtex-reference-keys' even if
  1390. already set. If SELECT is non-nil interactively select a BibTeX buffer.
  1391. When called interactively, FORCE is t, CURRENT is t if current buffer uses
  1392. `bibtex-mode', and SELECT is t if current buffer does not use `bibtex-mode',
  1393. \(fn &optional CURRENT FORCE SELECT)" t nil)
  1394. (autoload 'bibtex-mode "bibtex" "\
  1395. Major mode for editing BibTeX files.
  1396. General information on working with BibTeX mode:
  1397. Use commands such as \\<bibtex-mode-map>\\[bibtex-Book] to get a template for a specific entry.
  1398. Then fill in all desired fields using \\[bibtex-next-field] to jump from field
  1399. to field. After having filled in all desired fields in the entry, clean the
  1400. new entry with the command \\[bibtex-clean-entry].
  1401. Some features of BibTeX mode are available only by setting the variable
  1402. `bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries' to non-nil. However, then BibTeX mode
  1403. works only with buffers containing valid (syntactically correct) and sorted
  1404. entries. This is usually the case, if you have created a buffer completely
  1405. with BibTeX mode and finished every new entry with \\[bibtex-clean-entry].
  1406. For third party BibTeX files, call the command \\[bibtex-convert-alien]
  1407. to fully take advantage of all features of BibTeX mode.
  1408. Special information:
  1409. A command such as \\[bibtex-Book] outlines the fields for a BibTeX book entry.
  1410. The names of optional fields start with the string OPT, and are thus ignored
  1411. by BibTeX. The names of alternative fields from which only one is required
  1412. start with the string ALT. The OPT or ALT string may be removed from
  1413. the name of a field with \\[bibtex-remove-OPT-or-ALT].
  1414. \\[bibtex-make-field] inserts a new field after the current one.
  1415. \\[bibtex-kill-field] kills the current field entirely.
  1416. \\[bibtex-yank] yanks the last recently killed field after the current field.
  1417. \\[bibtex-remove-delimiters] removes the double-quotes or braces around the text of the current field.
  1418. \\[bibtex-empty-field] replaces the text of the current field with the default \"\" or {}.
  1419. \\[bibtex-find-text] moves point to the end of the current field.
  1420. \\[completion-at-point] completes word fragment before point according to context.
  1421. The command \\[bibtex-clean-entry] cleans the current entry, i.e. it removes OPT/ALT
  1422. from the names of all non-empty optional or alternative fields, checks that
  1423. no required fields are empty, and does some formatting dependent on the value
  1424. of `bibtex-entry-format'. Furthermore, it can automatically generate a key
  1425. for the BibTeX entry, see `bibtex-generate-autokey'.
  1426. Note: some functions in BibTeX mode depend on entries being in a special
  1427. format (all fields beginning on separate lines), so it is usually a bad
  1428. idea to remove `realign' from `bibtex-entry-format'.
  1429. BibTeX mode supports Imenu and hideshow minor mode (`hs-minor-mode').
  1430. ----------------------------------------------------------
  1431. Entry to BibTeX mode calls the value of `bibtex-mode-hook'
  1432. if that value is non-nil.
  1433. \\{bibtex-mode-map}
  1434. \(fn)" t nil)
  1435. (autoload 'bibtex-search-entry "bibtex" "\
  1436. Move point to the beginning of BibTeX entry named KEY.
  1437. Return position of entry if KEY is found or nil if not found.
  1438. With GLOBAL non-nil, search KEY in `bibtex-files'. Otherwise the search
  1439. is limited to the current buffer. Optional arg START is buffer position
  1440. where the search starts. If it is nil, start search at beginning of buffer.
  1441. If DISPLAY is non-nil, display the buffer containing KEY.
  1442. Otherwise, use `set-buffer'.
  1443. When called interactively, START is nil, DISPLAY is t.
  1444. Also, GLOBAL is t if the current mode is not `bibtex-mode'
  1445. or `bibtex-search-entry-globally' is non-nil.
  1446. A prefix arg negates the value of `bibtex-search-entry-globally'.
  1447. \(fn KEY &optional GLOBAL START DISPLAY)" t nil)
  1448. ;;;***
  1449. ;;;### (autoloads (bibtex-style-mode) "bibtex-style" "textmodes/bibtex-style.el"
  1450. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  1451. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/bibtex-style.el
  1452. (autoload 'bibtex-style-mode "bibtex-style" "\
  1453. Major mode for editing BibTeX style files.
  1454. \(fn)" t nil)
  1455. ;;;***
  1456. ;;;### (autoloads (binhex-decode-region binhex-decode-region-external
  1457. ;;;;;; binhex-decode-region-internal) "binhex" "mail/binhex.el"
  1458. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  1459. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/binhex.el
  1460. (defconst binhex-begin-line "^:...............................................................$" "\
  1461. Regular expression matching the start of a BinHex encoded region.")
  1462. (autoload 'binhex-decode-region-internal "binhex" "\
  1463. Binhex decode region between START and END without using an external program.
  1464. If HEADER-ONLY is non-nil only decode header and return filename.
  1465. \(fn START END &optional HEADER-ONLY)" t nil)
  1466. (autoload 'binhex-decode-region-external "binhex" "\
  1467. Binhex decode region between START and END using external decoder.
  1468. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  1469. (autoload 'binhex-decode-region "binhex" "\
  1470. Binhex decode region between START and END.
  1471. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  1472. ;;;***
  1473. ;;;### (autoloads (blackbox) "blackbox" "play/blackbox.el" (20352
  1474. ;;;;;; 65510))
  1475. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/blackbox.el
  1476. (autoload 'blackbox "blackbox" "\
  1477. Play blackbox.
  1478. Optional prefix argument is the number of balls; the default is 4.
  1479. What is blackbox?
  1480. Blackbox is a game of hide and seek played on an 8 by 8 grid (the
  1481. Blackbox). Your opponent (Emacs, in this case) has hidden several
  1482. balls (usually 4) within this box. By shooting rays into the box and
  1483. observing where they emerge it is possible to deduce the positions of
  1484. the hidden balls. The fewer rays you use to find the balls, the lower
  1485. your score.
  1486. Overview of play:
  1487. \\<blackbox-mode-map>To play blackbox, type \\[blackbox]. An optional prefix argument
  1488. specifies the number of balls to be hidden in the box; the default is
  1489. four.
  1490. The cursor can be moved around the box with the standard cursor
  1491. movement keys.
  1492. To shoot a ray, move the cursor to the edge of the box and press SPC.
  1493. The result will be determined and the playfield updated.
  1494. You may place or remove balls in the box by moving the cursor into the
  1495. box and pressing \\[bb-romp].
  1496. When you think the configuration of balls you have placed is correct,
  1497. press \\[bb-done]. You will be informed whether you are correct or
  1498. not, and be given your score. Your score is the number of letters and
  1499. numbers around the outside of the box plus five for each incorrectly
  1500. placed ball. If you placed any balls incorrectly, they will be
  1501. indicated with `x', and their actual positions indicated with `o'.
  1502. Details:
  1503. There are three possible outcomes for each ray you send into the box:
  1504. Detour: the ray is deflected and emerges somewhere other than
  1505. where you sent it in. On the playfield, detours are
  1506. denoted by matching pairs of numbers -- one where the
  1507. ray went in, and the other where it came out.
  1508. Reflection: the ray is reflected and emerges in the same place
  1509. it was sent in. On the playfield, reflections are
  1510. denoted by the letter `R'.
  1511. Hit: the ray strikes a ball directly and is absorbed. It does
  1512. not emerge from the box. On the playfield, hits are
  1513. denoted by the letter `H'.
  1514. The rules for how balls deflect rays are simple and are best shown by
  1515. example.
  1516. As a ray approaches a ball it is deflected ninety degrees. Rays can
  1517. be deflected multiple times. In the diagrams below, the dashes
  1518. represent empty box locations and the letter `O' represents a ball.
  1519. The entrance and exit points of each ray are marked with numbers as
  1520. described under \"Detour\" above. Note that the entrance and exit
  1521. points are always interchangeable. `*' denotes the path taken by the
  1522. ray.
  1523. Note carefully the relative positions of the ball and the ninety
  1524. degree deflection it causes.
  1525. 1
  1526. - * - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  1527. - * - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  1528. 1 * * - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - O - - - - O -
  1529. - - O - - - - - - - O - - - - - - - * * * * - -
  1530. - - - - - - - - - - - * * * * * 2 3 * * * - - * - -
  1531. - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - O - * - -
  1532. - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - - * * - -
  1533. - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - - * - O -
  1534. 2 3
  1535. As mentioned above, a reflection occurs when a ray emerges from the same point
  1536. it was sent in. This can happen in several ways:
  1537. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  1538. - - - - O - - - - - O - O - - - - - - - - - - -
  1539. R * * * * - - - - - - - * - - - - O - - - - - - -
  1540. - - - - O - - - - - - * - - - - R - - - - - - - -
  1541. - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - - - - - -
  1542. - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - - - - - -
  1543. - - - - - - - - R * * * * - - - - - - - - - - - -
  1544. - - - - - - - - - - - - O - - - - - - - - - - -
  1545. In the first example, the ray is deflected downwards by the upper
  1546. ball, then left by the lower ball, and finally retraces its path to
  1547. its point of origin. The second example is similar. The third
  1548. example is a bit anomalous but can be rationalized by realizing the
  1549. ray never gets a chance to get into the box. Alternatively, the ray
  1550. can be thought of as being deflected downwards and immediately
  1551. emerging from the box.
  1552. A hit occurs when a ray runs straight into a ball:
  1553. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  1554. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - O - - -
  1555. - - - - - - - - - - - - O - - - H * * * * - - - -
  1556. - - - - - - - - H * * * * O - - - - - - * - - - -
  1557. - - - - - - - - - - - - O - - - - - - O - - - -
  1558. H * * * O - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  1559. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  1560. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  1561. Be sure to compare the second example of a hit with the first example of
  1562. a reflection.
  1563. \(fn NUM)" t nil)
  1564. ;;;***
  1565. ;;;### (autoloads (bookmark-bmenu-search bookmark-bmenu-list bookmark-load
  1566. ;;;;;; bookmark-save bookmark-write bookmark-delete bookmark-insert
  1567. ;;;;;; bookmark-rename bookmark-insert-location bookmark-relocate
  1568. ;;;;;; bookmark-jump-other-window bookmark-jump bookmark-set) "bookmark"
  1569. ;;;;;; "bookmark.el" (20400 62402))
  1570. ;;; Generated autoloads from bookmark.el
  1571. (define-key ctl-x-r-map "b" 'bookmark-jump)
  1572. (define-key ctl-x-r-map "m" 'bookmark-set)
  1573. (define-key ctl-x-r-map "l" 'bookmark-bmenu-list)
  1574. (defvar bookmark-map (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap))) (define-key map "x" 'bookmark-set) (define-key map "m" 'bookmark-set) (define-key map "j" 'bookmark-jump) (define-key map "g" 'bookmark-jump) (define-key map "o" 'bookmark-jump-other-window) (define-key map "i" 'bookmark-insert) (define-key map "e" 'edit-bookmarks) (define-key map "f" 'bookmark-insert-location) (define-key map "r" 'bookmark-rename) (define-key map "d" 'bookmark-delete) (define-key map "l" 'bookmark-load) (define-key map "w" 'bookmark-write) (define-key map "s" 'bookmark-save) map) "\
  1575. Keymap containing bindings to bookmark functions.
  1576. It is not bound to any key by default: to bind it
  1577. so that you have a bookmark prefix, just use `global-set-key' and bind a
  1578. key of your choice to `bookmark-map'. All interactive bookmark
  1579. functions have a binding in this keymap.")
  1580. (fset 'bookmark-map bookmark-map)
  1581. (autoload 'bookmark-set "bookmark" "\
  1582. Set a bookmark named NAME at the current location.
  1583. If name is nil, then prompt the user.
  1584. With a prefix arg (non-nil NO-OVERWRITE), do not overwrite any
  1585. existing bookmark that has the same name as NAME, but instead push the
  1586. new bookmark onto the bookmark alist. The most recently set bookmark
  1587. with name NAME is thus the one in effect at any given time, but the
  1588. others are still there, should the user decide to delete the most
  1589. recent one.
  1590. To yank words from the text of the buffer and use them as part of the
  1591. bookmark name, type C-w while setting a bookmark. Successive C-w's
  1592. yank successive words.
  1593. Typing C-u inserts (at the bookmark name prompt) the name of the last
  1594. bookmark used in the document where the new bookmark is being set;
  1595. this helps you use a single bookmark name to track progress through a
  1596. large document. If there is no prior bookmark for this document, then
  1597. C-u inserts an appropriate name based on the buffer or file.
  1598. Use \\[bookmark-delete] to remove bookmarks (you give it a name and
  1599. it removes only the first instance of a bookmark with that name from
  1600. the list of bookmarks.)
  1601. \(fn &optional NAME NO-OVERWRITE)" t nil)
  1602. (autoload 'bookmark-jump "bookmark" "\
  1603. Jump to bookmark BOOKMARK (a point in some file).
  1604. You may have a problem using this function if the value of variable
  1605. `bookmark-alist' is nil. If that happens, you need to load in some
  1606. bookmarks. See help on function `bookmark-load' for more about
  1607. this.
  1608. If the file pointed to by BOOKMARK no longer exists, you will be asked
  1609. if you wish to give the bookmark a new location, and `bookmark-jump'
  1610. will then jump to the new location, as well as recording it in place
  1611. of the old one in the permanent bookmark record.
  1612. BOOKMARK is usually a bookmark name (a string). It can also be a
  1613. bookmark record, but this is usually only done by programmatic callers.
  1614. If DISPLAY-FUNC is non-nil, it is a function to invoke to display the
  1615. bookmark. It defaults to `switch-to-buffer'. A typical value for
  1616. DISPLAY-FUNC would be `switch-to-buffer-other-window'.
  1617. \(fn BOOKMARK &optional DISPLAY-FUNC)" t nil)
  1618. (autoload 'bookmark-jump-other-window "bookmark" "\
  1619. Jump to BOOKMARK in another window. See `bookmark-jump' for more.
  1620. \(fn BOOKMARK)" t nil)
  1621. (autoload 'bookmark-relocate "bookmark" "\
  1622. Relocate BOOKMARK-NAME to another file, reading file name with minibuffer.
  1623. This makes an already existing bookmark point to that file, instead of
  1624. the one it used to point at. Useful when a file has been renamed
  1625. after a bookmark was set in it.
  1626. \(fn BOOKMARK-NAME)" t nil)
  1627. (autoload 'bookmark-insert-location "bookmark" "\
  1628. Insert the name of the file associated with BOOKMARK-NAME.
  1629. Optional second arg NO-HISTORY means don't record this in the
  1630. minibuffer history list `bookmark-history'.
  1631. \(fn BOOKMARK-NAME &optional NO-HISTORY)" t nil)
  1632. (defalias 'bookmark-locate 'bookmark-insert-location)
  1633. (autoload 'bookmark-rename "bookmark" "\
  1634. Change the name of OLD-NAME bookmark to NEW-NAME name.
  1635. If called from keyboard, prompt for OLD-NAME and NEW-NAME.
  1636. If called from menubar, select OLD-NAME from a menu and prompt for NEW-NAME.
  1637. If called from Lisp, prompt for NEW-NAME if only OLD-NAME was passed
  1638. as an argument. If called with two strings, then no prompting is done.
  1639. You must pass at least OLD-NAME when calling from Lisp.
  1640. While you are entering the new name, consecutive C-w's insert
  1641. consecutive words from the text of the buffer into the new bookmark
  1642. name.
  1643. \(fn OLD-NAME &optional NEW-NAME)" t nil)
  1644. (autoload 'bookmark-insert "bookmark" "\
  1645. Insert the text of the file pointed to by bookmark BOOKMARK-NAME.
  1646. BOOKMARK-NAME is a bookmark name (a string), not a bookmark record.
  1647. You may have a problem using this function if the value of variable
  1648. `bookmark-alist' is nil. If that happens, you need to load in some
  1649. bookmarks. See help on function `bookmark-load' for more about
  1650. this.
  1651. \(fn BOOKMARK-NAME)" t nil)
  1652. (autoload 'bookmark-delete "bookmark" "\
  1653. Delete BOOKMARK-NAME from the bookmark list.
  1654. Removes only the first instance of a bookmark with that name. If
  1655. there are one or more other bookmarks with the same name, they will
  1656. not be deleted. Defaults to the \"current\" bookmark (that is, the
  1657. one most recently used in this file, if any).
  1658. Optional second arg BATCH means don't update the bookmark list buffer,
  1659. probably because we were called from there.
  1660. \(fn BOOKMARK-NAME &optional BATCH)" t nil)
  1661. (autoload 'bookmark-write "bookmark" "\
  1662. Write bookmarks to a file (reading the file name with the minibuffer).
  1663. Don't use this in Lisp programs; use `bookmark-save' instead.
  1664. \(fn)" t nil)
  1665. (autoload 'bookmark-save "bookmark" "\
  1666. Save currently defined bookmarks.
  1667. Saves by default in the file defined by the variable
  1668. `bookmark-default-file'. With a prefix arg, save it in file FILE
  1669. \(second argument).
  1670. If you are calling this from Lisp, the two arguments are PARG and
  1671. FILE, and if you just want it to write to the default file, then
  1672. pass no arguments. Or pass in nil and FILE, and it will save in FILE
  1673. instead. If you pass in one argument, and it is non-nil, then the
  1674. user will be interactively queried for a file to save in.
  1675. When you want to load in the bookmarks from a file, use
  1676. `bookmark-load', \\[bookmark-load]. That function will prompt you
  1677. for a file, defaulting to the file defined by variable
  1678. `bookmark-default-file'.
  1679. \(fn &optional PARG FILE)" t nil)
  1680. (autoload 'bookmark-load "bookmark" "\
  1681. Load bookmarks from FILE (which must be in bookmark format).
  1682. Appends loaded bookmarks to the front of the list of bookmarks. If
  1683. optional second argument OVERWRITE is non-nil, existing bookmarks are
  1684. destroyed. Optional third arg NO-MSG means don't display any messages
  1685. while loading.
  1686. If you load a file that doesn't contain a proper bookmark alist, you
  1687. will corrupt Emacs's bookmark list. Generally, you should only load
  1688. in files that were created with the bookmark functions in the first
  1689. place. Your own personal bookmark file, `~/.emacs.bmk', is
  1690. maintained automatically by Emacs; you shouldn't need to load it
  1691. explicitly.
  1692. If you load a file containing bookmarks with the same names as
  1693. bookmarks already present in your Emacs, the new bookmarks will get
  1694. unique numeric suffixes \"<2>\", \"<3>\", ... following the same
  1695. method buffers use to resolve name collisions.
  1696. \(fn FILE &optional OVERWRITE NO-MSG)" t nil)
  1697. (autoload 'bookmark-bmenu-list "bookmark" "\
  1698. Display a list of existing bookmarks.
  1699. The list is displayed in a buffer named `*Bookmark List*'.
  1700. The leftmost column displays a D if the bookmark is flagged for
  1701. deletion, or > if it is flagged for displaying.
  1702. \(fn)" t nil)
  1703. (defalias 'list-bookmarks 'bookmark-bmenu-list)
  1704. (defalias 'edit-bookmarks 'bookmark-bmenu-list)
  1705. (autoload 'bookmark-bmenu-search "bookmark" "\
  1706. Incremental search of bookmarks, hiding the non-matches as we go.
  1707. \(fn)" t nil)
  1708. (defvar menu-bar-bookmark-map (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Bookmark functions"))) (define-key map [load] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Load a Bookmark File...") bookmark-load :help ,(purecopy "Load bookmarks from a bookmark file)"))) (define-key map [write] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Save Bookmarks As...") bookmark-write :help ,(purecopy "Write bookmarks to a file (reading the file name with the minibuffer)"))) (define-key map [save] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Save Bookmarks") bookmark-save :help ,(purecopy "Save currently defined bookmarks"))) (define-key map [edit] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Edit Bookmark List") bookmark-bmenu-list :help ,(purecopy "Display a list of existing bookmarks"))) (define-key map [delete] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Delete Bookmark...") bookmark-delete :help ,(purecopy "Delete a bookmark from the bookmark list"))) (define-key map [rename] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Rename Bookmark...") bookmark-rename :help ,(purecopy "Change the name of a bookmark"))) (define-key map [locate] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Insert Location...") bookmark-locate :help ,(purecopy "Insert the name of the file associated with a bookmark"))) (define-key map [insert] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Insert Contents...") bookmark-insert :help ,(purecopy "Insert the text of the file pointed to by a bookmark"))) (define-key map [set] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Set Bookmark...") bookmark-set :help ,(purecopy "Set a bookmark named inside a file."))) (define-key map [jump] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Jump to Bookmark...") bookmark-jump :help ,(purecopy "Jump to a bookmark (a point in some file)"))) map))
  1709. (defalias 'menu-bar-bookmark-map menu-bar-bookmark-map)
  1710. ;;;***
  1711. ;;;### (autoloads (browse-url-elinks browse-url-kde browse-url-generic
  1712. ;;;;;; browse-url-mail browse-url-text-emacs browse-url-text-xterm
  1713. ;;;;;; browse-url-w3-gnudoit browse-url-w3 browse-url-cci browse-url-mosaic
  1714. ;;;;;; browse-url-gnome-moz browse-url-emacs browse-url-galeon browse-url-chromium
  1715. ;;;;;; browse-url-firefox browse-url-mozilla browse-url-netscape
  1716. ;;;;;; browse-url-xdg-open browse-url-at-mouse browse-url-at-point
  1717. ;;;;;; browse-url browse-url-of-region browse-url-of-dired-file
  1718. ;;;;;; browse-url-of-buffer browse-url-of-file browse-url-browser-function)
  1719. ;;;;;; "browse-url" "net/browse-url.el" (20400 62402))
  1720. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/browse-url.el
  1721. (defvar browse-url-browser-function 'browse-url-default-browser "\
  1722. Function to display the current buffer in a WWW browser.
  1723. This is used by the `browse-url-at-point', `browse-url-at-mouse', and
  1724. `browse-url-of-file' commands.
  1725. If the value is not a function it should be a list of pairs
  1726. \(REGEXP . FUNCTION). In this case the function called will be the one
  1727. associated with the first REGEXP which matches the current URL. The
  1728. function is passed the URL and any other args of `browse-url'. The last
  1729. regexp should probably be \".\" to specify a default browser.")
  1730. (custom-autoload 'browse-url-browser-function "browse-url" t)
  1731. (autoload 'browse-url-of-file "browse-url" "\
  1732. Ask a WWW browser to display FILE.
  1733. Display the current buffer's file if FILE is nil or if called
  1734. interactively. Turn the filename into a URL with function
  1735. `browse-url-file-url'. Pass the URL to a browser using the
  1736. `browse-url' function then run `browse-url-of-file-hook'.
  1737. \(fn &optional FILE)" t nil)
  1738. (autoload 'browse-url-of-buffer "browse-url" "\
  1739. Ask a WWW browser to display BUFFER.
  1740. Display the current buffer if BUFFER is nil. Display only the
  1741. currently visible part of BUFFER (from a temporary file) if buffer is
  1742. narrowed.
  1743. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  1744. (autoload 'browse-url-of-dired-file "browse-url" "\
  1745. In Dired, ask a WWW browser to display the file named on this line.
  1746. \(fn)" t nil)
  1747. (autoload 'browse-url-of-region "browse-url" "\
  1748. Ask a WWW browser to display the current region.
  1749. \(fn MIN MAX)" t nil)
  1750. (autoload 'browse-url "browse-url" "\
  1751. Ask a WWW browser to load URL.
  1752. Prompts for a URL, defaulting to the URL at or before point. Variable
  1753. `browse-url-browser-function' says which browser to use.
  1754. If the URL is a mailto: URL, consult `browse-url-mailto-function'
  1755. first, if that exists.
  1756. \(fn URL &rest ARGS)" t nil)
  1757. (autoload 'browse-url-at-point "browse-url" "\
  1758. Ask a WWW browser to load the URL at or before point.
  1759. Doesn't let you edit the URL like `browse-url'. Variable
  1760. `browse-url-browser-function' says which browser to use.
  1761. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  1762. (autoload 'browse-url-at-mouse "browse-url" "\
  1763. Ask a WWW browser to load a URL clicked with the mouse.
  1764. The URL is the one around or before the position of the mouse click
  1765. but point is not changed. Doesn't let you edit the URL like
  1766. `browse-url'. Variable `browse-url-browser-function' says which browser
  1767. to use.
  1768. \(fn EVENT)" t nil)
  1769. (autoload 'browse-url-xdg-open "browse-url" "\
  1770. Pass the specified URL to the \"xdg-open\" command.
  1771. xdg-open is a desktop utility that calls your preferred web browser.
  1772. The optional argument IGNORED is not used.
  1773. \(fn URL &optional IGNORED)" t nil)
  1774. (autoload 'browse-url-netscape "browse-url" "\
  1775. Ask the Netscape WWW browser to load URL.
  1776. Default to the URL around or before point. The strings in variable
  1777. `browse-url-netscape-arguments' are also passed to Netscape.
  1778. When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-flag' is
  1779. non-nil, load the document in a new Netscape window, otherwise use a
  1780. random existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses
  1781. the effect of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1782. If `browse-url-netscape-new-window-is-tab' is non-nil, then
  1783. whenever a document would otherwise be loaded in a new window, it
  1784. is loaded in a new tab in an existing window instead.
  1785. When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
  1786. used instead of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1787. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1788. (autoload 'browse-url-mozilla "browse-url" "\
  1789. Ask the Mozilla WWW browser to load URL.
  1790. Default to the URL around or before point. The strings in variable
  1791. `browse-url-mozilla-arguments' are also passed to Mozilla.
  1792. When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-flag' is
  1793. non-nil, load the document in a new Mozilla window, otherwise use a
  1794. random existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses
  1795. the effect of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1796. If `browse-url-mozilla-new-window-is-tab' is non-nil, then whenever a
  1797. document would otherwise be loaded in a new window, it is loaded in a
  1798. new tab in an existing window instead.
  1799. When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
  1800. used instead of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1801. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1802. (autoload 'browse-url-firefox "browse-url" "\
  1803. Ask the Firefox WWW browser to load URL.
  1804. Default to the URL around or before point. The strings in
  1805. variable `browse-url-firefox-arguments' are also passed to
  1806. Firefox.
  1807. When called interactively, if variable
  1808. `browse-url-new-window-flag' is non-nil, load the document in a
  1809. new Firefox window, otherwise use a random existing one. A
  1810. non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses the effect of
  1811. `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1812. If `browse-url-firefox-new-window-is-tab' is non-nil, then
  1813. whenever a document would otherwise be loaded in a new window, it
  1814. is loaded in a new tab in an existing window instead.
  1815. When called non-interactively, optional second argument
  1816. NEW-WINDOW is used instead of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1817. On MS-Windows systems the optional `new-window' parameter is
  1818. ignored. Firefox for Windows does not support the \"-remote\"
  1819. command line parameter. Therefore, the
  1820. `browse-url-new-window-flag' and `browse-url-firefox-new-window-is-tab'
  1821. are ignored as well. Firefox on Windows will always open the requested
  1822. URL in a new window.
  1823. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1824. (autoload 'browse-url-chromium "browse-url" "\
  1825. Ask the Chromium WWW browser to load URL.
  1826. Default to the URL around or before point. The strings in
  1827. variable `browse-url-chromium-arguments' are also passed to
  1828. Chromium.
  1829. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1830. (autoload 'browse-url-galeon "browse-url" "\
  1831. Ask the Galeon WWW browser to load URL.
  1832. Default to the URL around or before point. The strings in variable
  1833. `browse-url-galeon-arguments' are also passed to Galeon.
  1834. When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-flag' is
  1835. non-nil, load the document in a new Galeon window, otherwise use a
  1836. random existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses
  1837. the effect of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1838. If `browse-url-galeon-new-window-is-tab' is non-nil, then whenever a
  1839. document would otherwise be loaded in a new window, it is loaded in a
  1840. new tab in an existing window instead.
  1841. When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
  1842. used instead of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1843. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1844. (autoload 'browse-url-emacs "browse-url" "\
  1845. Ask Emacs to load URL into a buffer and show it in another window.
  1846. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1847. (autoload 'browse-url-gnome-moz "browse-url" "\
  1848. Ask Mozilla/Netscape to load URL via the GNOME program `gnome-moz-remote'.
  1849. Default to the URL around or before point. The strings in variable
  1850. `browse-url-gnome-moz-arguments' are also passed.
  1851. When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-flag' is
  1852. non-nil, load the document in a new browser window, otherwise use an
  1853. existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses the
  1854. effect of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1855. When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
  1856. used instead of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1857. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1858. (autoload 'browse-url-mosaic "browse-url" "\
  1859. Ask the XMosaic WWW browser to load URL.
  1860. Default to the URL around or before point. The strings in variable
  1861. `browse-url-mosaic-arguments' are also passed to Mosaic and the
  1862. program is invoked according to the variable
  1863. `browse-url-mosaic-program'.
  1864. When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-flag' is
  1865. non-nil, load the document in a new Mosaic window, otherwise use a
  1866. random existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses
  1867. the effect of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1868. When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
  1869. used instead of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1870. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1871. (autoload 'browse-url-cci "browse-url" "\
  1872. Ask the XMosaic WWW browser to load URL.
  1873. Default to the URL around or before point.
  1874. This function only works for XMosaic version 2.5 or later. You must
  1875. select `CCI' from XMosaic's File menu, set the CCI Port Address to the
  1876. value of variable `browse-url-CCI-port', and enable `Accept requests'.
  1877. When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-flag' is
  1878. non-nil, load the document in a new browser window, otherwise use a
  1879. random existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses
  1880. the effect of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1881. When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
  1882. used instead of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1883. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1884. (autoload 'browse-url-w3 "browse-url" "\
  1885. Ask the w3 WWW browser to load URL.
  1886. Default to the URL around or before point.
  1887. When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-flag' is
  1888. non-nil, load the document in a new window. A non-nil interactive
  1889. prefix argument reverses the effect of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1890. When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
  1891. used instead of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1892. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1893. (autoload 'browse-url-w3-gnudoit "browse-url" "\
  1894. Ask another Emacs running gnuserv to load the URL using the W3 browser.
  1895. The `browse-url-gnudoit-program' program is used with options given by
  1896. `browse-url-gnudoit-args'. Default to the URL around or before point.
  1897. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1898. (autoload 'browse-url-text-xterm "browse-url" "\
  1899. Ask a text browser to load URL.
  1900. URL defaults to the URL around or before point.
  1901. This runs the text browser specified by `browse-url-text-browser'.
  1902. in an Xterm window using the Xterm program named by `browse-url-xterm-program'
  1903. with possible additional arguments `browse-url-xterm-args'.
  1904. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1905. (autoload 'browse-url-text-emacs "browse-url" "\
  1906. Ask a text browser to load URL.
  1907. URL defaults to the URL around or before point.
  1908. This runs the text browser specified by `browse-url-text-browser'.
  1909. With a prefix argument, it runs a new browser process in a new buffer.
  1910. When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-flag' is
  1911. non-nil, load the document in a new browser process in a new term window,
  1912. otherwise use any existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument
  1913. reverses the effect of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1914. When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
  1915. used instead of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1916. \(fn URL &optional NEW-BUFFER)" t nil)
  1917. (autoload 'browse-url-mail "browse-url" "\
  1918. Open a new mail message buffer within Emacs for the RFC 2368 URL.
  1919. Default to using the mailto: URL around or before point as the
  1920. recipient's address. Supplying a non-nil interactive prefix argument
  1921. will cause the mail to be composed in another window rather than the
  1922. current one.
  1923. When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-flag' is
  1924. non-nil use `compose-mail-other-window', otherwise `compose-mail'. A
  1925. non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses the effect of
  1926. `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1927. When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
  1928. used instead of `browse-url-new-window-flag'.
  1929. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1930. (autoload 'browse-url-generic "browse-url" "\
  1931. Ask the WWW browser defined by `browse-url-generic-program' to load URL.
  1932. Default to the URL around or before point. A fresh copy of the
  1933. browser is started up in a new process with possible additional arguments
  1934. `browse-url-generic-args'. This is appropriate for browsers which
  1935. don't offer a form of remote control.
  1936. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1937. (autoload 'browse-url-kde "browse-url" "\
  1938. Ask the KDE WWW browser to load URL.
  1939. Default to the URL around or before point.
  1940. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1941. (autoload 'browse-url-elinks "browse-url" "\
  1942. Ask the Elinks WWW browser to load URL.
  1943. Default to the URL around the point.
  1944. The document is loaded in a new tab of a running Elinks or, if
  1945. none yet running, a newly started instance.
  1946. The Elinks command will be prepended by the program+arguments
  1947. from `browse-url-elinks-wrapper'.
  1948. \(fn URL &optional NEW-WINDOW)" t nil)
  1949. ;;;***
  1950. ;;;### (autoloads (snarf-bruces bruce) "bruce" "play/bruce.el" (20400
  1951. ;;;;;; 62402))
  1952. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/bruce.el
  1953. (autoload 'bruce "bruce" "\
  1954. Adds that special touch of class to your outgoing mail.
  1955. \(fn)" t nil)
  1956. (autoload 'snarf-bruces "bruce" "\
  1957. Return a vector containing the lines from `bruce-phrases-file'.
  1958. \(fn)" nil nil)
  1959. ;;;***
  1960. ;;;### (autoloads (bs-show bs-customize bs-cycle-previous bs-cycle-next)
  1961. ;;;;;; "bs" "bs.el" (20400 62402))
  1962. ;;; Generated autoloads from bs.el
  1963. (autoload 'bs-cycle-next "bs" "\
  1964. Select next buffer defined by buffer cycling.
  1965. The buffers taking part in buffer cycling are defined
  1966. by buffer configuration `bs-cycle-configuration-name'.
  1967. \(fn)" t nil)
  1968. (autoload 'bs-cycle-previous "bs" "\
  1969. Select previous buffer defined by buffer cycling.
  1970. The buffers taking part in buffer cycling are defined
  1971. by buffer configuration `bs-cycle-configuration-name'.
  1972. \(fn)" t nil)
  1973. (autoload 'bs-customize "bs" "\
  1974. Customization of group bs for Buffer Selection Menu.
  1975. \(fn)" t nil)
  1976. (autoload 'bs-show "bs" "\
  1977. Make a menu of buffers so you can manipulate buffers or the buffer list.
  1978. \\<bs-mode-map>
  1979. There are many key commands similar to `Buffer-menu-mode' for
  1980. manipulating the buffer list and the buffers themselves.
  1981. User can move with [up] or [down], select a buffer
  1982. by \\[bs-select] or [SPC]
  1983. Type \\[bs-kill] to leave Buffer Selection Menu without a selection.
  1984. Type \\[bs-help] after invocation to get help on commands available.
  1985. With prefix argument ARG show a different buffer list. Function
  1986. `bs--configuration-name-for-prefix-arg' determine accordingly
  1987. name of buffer configuration.
  1988. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  1989. ;;;***
  1990. ;;;### (autoloads (bubbles) "bubbles" "play/bubbles.el" (20352 65510))
  1991. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/bubbles.el
  1992. (autoload 'bubbles "bubbles" "\
  1993. Play Bubbles game.
  1994. \\<bubbles-mode-map>
  1995. The goal is to remove all bubbles with as few moves as possible.
  1996. \\[bubbles-plop] on a bubble removes that bubble and all
  1997. connected bubbles of the same color. Unsupported bubbles fall
  1998. down, and columns that do not contain any bubbles suck the
  1999. columns on its right towards the left.
  2000. \\[bubbles-set-game-easy] sets the difficulty to easy.
  2001. \\[bubbles-set-game-medium] sets the difficulty to medium.
  2002. \\[bubbles-set-game-difficult] sets the difficulty to difficult.
  2003. \\[bubbles-set-game-hard] sets the difficulty to hard.
  2004. \(fn)" t nil)
  2005. ;;;***
  2006. ;;;### (autoloads (bug-reference-prog-mode bug-reference-mode) "bug-reference"
  2007. ;;;;;; "progmodes/bug-reference.el" (20487 24216))
  2008. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/bug-reference.el
  2009. (put 'bug-reference-url-format 'safe-local-variable (lambda (s) (or (stringp s) (and (symbolp s) (get s 'bug-reference-url-format)))))
  2010. (autoload 'bug-reference-mode "bug-reference" "\
  2011. Toggle hyperlinking bug references in the buffer (Bug Reference mode).
  2012. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Bug Reference mode if ARG is
  2013. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  2014. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  2015. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  2016. (autoload 'bug-reference-prog-mode "bug-reference" "\
  2017. Like `bug-reference-mode', but only buttonize in comments and strings.
  2018. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  2019. ;;;***
  2020. ;;;### (autoloads (batch-byte-recompile-directory batch-byte-compile
  2021. ;;;;;; batch-byte-compile-if-not-done display-call-tree byte-compile
  2022. ;;;;;; compile-defun byte-compile-file byte-recompile-directory
  2023. ;;;;;; byte-force-recompile byte-compile-enable-warning byte-compile-disable-warning)
  2024. ;;;;;; "bytecomp" "emacs-lisp/bytecomp.el" (20423 1775))
  2025. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/bytecomp.el
  2026. (put 'byte-compile-dynamic 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  2027. (put 'byte-compile-disable-print-circle 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  2028. (put 'byte-compile-dynamic-docstrings 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  2029. (put 'byte-compile-warnings 'safe-local-variable (lambda (v) (or (symbolp v) (null (delq nil (mapcar (lambda (x) (not (symbolp x))) v))))))
  2030. (autoload 'byte-compile-disable-warning "bytecomp" "\
  2031. Change `byte-compile-warnings' to disable WARNING.
  2032. If `byte-compile-warnings' is t, set it to `(not WARNING)'.
  2033. Otherwise, if the first element is `not', add WARNING, else remove it.
  2034. Normally you should let-bind `byte-compile-warnings' before calling this,
  2035. else the global value will be modified.
  2036. \(fn WARNING)" nil nil)
  2037. (autoload 'byte-compile-enable-warning "bytecomp" "\
  2038. Change `byte-compile-warnings' to enable WARNING.
  2039. If `byte-compile-warnings' is `t', do nothing. Otherwise, if the
  2040. first element is `not', remove WARNING, else add it.
  2041. Normally you should let-bind `byte-compile-warnings' before calling this,
  2042. else the global value will be modified.
  2043. \(fn WARNING)" nil nil)
  2044. (autoload 'byte-force-recompile "bytecomp" "\
  2045. Recompile every `.el' file in DIRECTORY that already has a `.elc' file.
  2046. Files in subdirectories of DIRECTORY are processed also.
  2047. \(fn DIRECTORY)" t nil)
  2048. (autoload 'byte-recompile-directory "bytecomp" "\
  2049. Recompile every `.el' file in DIRECTORY that needs recompilation.
  2050. This happens when a `.elc' file exists but is older than the `.el' file.
  2051. Files in subdirectories of DIRECTORY are processed also.
  2052. If the `.elc' file does not exist, normally this function *does not*
  2053. compile the corresponding `.el' file. However, if the prefix argument
  2054. ARG is 0, that means do compile all those files. A nonzero
  2055. ARG means ask the user, for each such `.el' file, whether to
  2056. compile it. A nonzero ARG also means ask about each subdirectory
  2057. before scanning it.
  2058. If the third argument FORCE is non-nil, recompile every `.el' file
  2059. that already has a `.elc' file.
  2060. \(fn DIRECTORY &optional ARG FORCE)" t nil)
  2061. (put 'no-byte-compile 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  2062. (autoload 'byte-compile-file "bytecomp" "\
  2063. Compile a file of Lisp code named FILENAME into a file of byte code.
  2064. The output file's name is generated by passing FILENAME to the
  2065. function `byte-compile-dest-file' (which see).
  2066. With prefix arg (noninteractively: 2nd arg), LOAD the file after compiling.
  2067. The value is non-nil if there were no errors, nil if errors.
  2068. \(fn FILENAME &optional LOAD)" t nil)
  2069. (autoload 'compile-defun "bytecomp" "\
  2070. Compile and evaluate the current top-level form.
  2071. Print the result in the echo area.
  2072. With argument ARG, insert value in current buffer after the form.
  2073. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  2074. (autoload 'byte-compile "bytecomp" "\
  2075. If FORM is a symbol, byte-compile its function definition.
  2076. If FORM is a lambda or a macro, byte-compile it as a function.
  2077. \(fn FORM)" nil nil)
  2078. (autoload 'display-call-tree "bytecomp" "\
  2079. Display a call graph of a specified file.
  2080. This lists which functions have been called, what functions called
  2081. them, and what functions they call. The list includes all functions
  2082. whose definitions have been compiled in this Emacs session, as well as
  2083. all functions called by those functions.
  2084. The call graph does not include macros, inline functions, or
  2085. primitives that the byte-code interpreter knows about directly (eq,
  2086. cons, etc.).
  2087. The call tree also lists those functions which are not known to be called
  2088. \(that is, to which no calls have been compiled), and which cannot be
  2089. invoked interactively.
  2090. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  2091. (autoload 'batch-byte-compile-if-not-done "bytecomp" "\
  2092. Like `byte-compile-file' but doesn't recompile if already up to date.
  2093. Use this from the command line, with `-batch';
  2094. it won't work in an interactive Emacs.
  2095. \(fn)" nil nil)
  2096. (autoload 'batch-byte-compile "bytecomp" "\
  2097. Run `byte-compile-file' on the files remaining on the command line.
  2098. Use this from the command line, with `-batch';
  2099. it won't work in an interactive Emacs.
  2100. Each file is processed even if an error occurred previously.
  2101. For example, invoke \"emacs -batch -f batch-byte-compile $emacs/ ~/*.el\".
  2102. If NOFORCE is non-nil, don't recompile a file that seems to be
  2103. already up-to-date.
  2104. \(fn &optional NOFORCE)" nil nil)
  2105. (autoload 'batch-byte-recompile-directory "bytecomp" "\
  2106. Run `byte-recompile-directory' on the dirs remaining on the command line.
  2107. Must be used only with `-batch', and kills Emacs on completion.
  2108. For example, invoke `emacs -batch -f batch-byte-recompile-directory .'.
  2109. Optional argument ARG is passed as second argument ARG to
  2110. `byte-recompile-directory'; see there for its possible values
  2111. and corresponding effects.
  2112. \(fn &optional ARG)" nil nil)
  2113. ;;;***
  2114. ;;;### (autoloads nil "cal-china" "calendar/cal-china.el" (20352
  2115. ;;;;;; 65510))
  2116. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/cal-china.el
  2117. (put 'calendar-chinese-time-zone 'risky-local-variable t)
  2118. (put 'chinese-calendar-time-zone 'risky-local-variable t)
  2119. ;;;***
  2120. ;;;### (autoloads nil "cal-dst" "calendar/cal-dst.el" (20461 49352))
  2121. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/cal-dst.el
  2122. (put 'calendar-daylight-savings-starts 'risky-local-variable t)
  2123. (put 'calendar-daylight-savings-ends 'risky-local-variable t)
  2124. (put 'calendar-current-time-zone-cache 'risky-local-variable t)
  2125. ;;;***
  2126. ;;;### (autoloads (calendar-hebrew-list-yahrzeits) "cal-hebrew" "calendar/cal-hebrew.el"
  2127. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  2128. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/cal-hebrew.el
  2129. (autoload 'calendar-hebrew-list-yahrzeits "cal-hebrew" "\
  2130. List Yahrzeit dates for *Gregorian* DEATH-DATE from START-YEAR to END-YEAR.
  2131. When called interactively from the calendar window, the date of death is taken
  2132. from the cursor position.
  2133. \(fn DEATH-DATE START-YEAR END-YEAR)" t nil)
  2134. (define-obsolete-function-alias 'list-yahrzeit-dates 'calendar-hebrew-list-yahrzeits "23.1")
  2135. ;;;***
  2136. ;;;### (autoloads (defmath calc-embedded-activate calc-embedded calc-grab-rectangle
  2137. ;;;;;; calc-grab-region full-calc-keypad calc-keypad calc-eval quick-calc
  2138. ;;;;;; full-calc calc calc-dispatch) "calc" "calc/calc.el" (20400
  2139. ;;;;;; 62402))
  2140. ;;; Generated autoloads from calc/calc.el
  2141. (define-key ctl-x-map "*" 'calc-dispatch)
  2142. (autoload 'calc-dispatch "calc" "\
  2143. Invoke the GNU Emacs Calculator. See `calc-dispatch-help' for details.
  2144. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  2145. (autoload 'calc "calc" "\
  2146. The Emacs Calculator. Full documentation is listed under \"calc-mode\".
  2147. \(fn &optional ARG FULL-DISPLAY INTERACTIVE)" t nil)
  2148. (autoload 'full-calc "calc" "\
  2149. Invoke the Calculator and give it a full-sized window.
  2150. \(fn &optional INTERACTIVE)" t nil)
  2151. (autoload 'quick-calc "calc" "\
  2152. Do a quick calculation in the minibuffer without invoking full Calculator.
  2153. \(fn)" t nil)
  2154. (autoload 'calc-eval "calc" "\
  2155. Do a quick calculation and return the result as a string.
  2156. Return value will either be the formatted result in string form,
  2157. or a list containing a character position and an error message in string form.
  2158. \(fn STR &optional SEPARATOR &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  2159. (autoload 'calc-keypad "calc" "\
  2160. Invoke the Calculator in \"visual keypad\" mode.
  2161. This is most useful in the X window system.
  2162. In this mode, click on the Calc \"buttons\" using the left mouse button.
  2163. Or, position the cursor manually and do M-x calc-keypad-press.
  2164. \(fn &optional INTERACTIVE)" t nil)
  2165. (autoload 'full-calc-keypad "calc" "\
  2166. Invoke the Calculator in full-screen \"visual keypad\" mode.
  2167. See calc-keypad for details.
  2168. \(fn &optional INTERACTIVE)" t nil)
  2169. (autoload 'calc-grab-region "calc" "\
  2170. Parse the region as a vector of numbers and push it on the Calculator stack.
  2171. \(fn TOP BOT ARG)" t nil)
  2172. (autoload 'calc-grab-rectangle "calc" "\
  2173. Parse a rectangle as a matrix of numbers and push it on the Calculator stack.
  2174. \(fn TOP BOT ARG)" t nil)
  2175. (autoload 'calc-embedded "calc" "\
  2176. Start Calc Embedded mode on the formula surrounding point.
  2177. \(fn ARG &optional END OBEG OEND)" t nil)
  2178. (autoload 'calc-embedded-activate "calc" "\
  2179. Scan the current editing buffer for all embedded := and => formulas.
  2180. Also looks for the equivalent TeX words, \\gets and \\evalto.
  2181. \(fn &optional ARG CBUF)" t nil)
  2182. (autoload 'defmath "calc" "\
  2183. Define Calc function.
  2184. Like `defun' except that code in the body of the definition can
  2185. make use of the full range of Calc data types and the usual
  2186. arithmetic operations are converted to their Calc equivalents.
  2187. The prefix `calcFunc-' is added to the specified name to get the
  2188. actual Lisp function name.
  2189. See Info node `(calc)Defining Functions'.
  2190. \(fn FUNC ARGS &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  2191. (put 'defmath 'doc-string-elt '3)
  2192. ;;;***
  2193. ;;;### (autoloads (calc-undo) "calc-undo" "calc/calc-undo.el" (20352
  2194. ;;;;;; 65510))
  2195. ;;; Generated autoloads from calc/calc-undo.el
  2196. (autoload 'calc-undo "calc-undo" "\
  2197. \(fn N)" t nil)
  2198. ;;;***
  2199. ;;;### (autoloads (calculator) "calculator" "calculator.el" (20352
  2200. ;;;;;; 65510))
  2201. ;;; Generated autoloads from calculator.el
  2202. (autoload 'calculator "calculator" "\
  2203. Run the Emacs calculator.
  2204. See the documentation for `calculator-mode' for more information.
  2205. \(fn)" t nil)
  2206. ;;;***
  2207. ;;;### (autoloads (calendar) "calendar" "calendar/calendar.el" (20400
  2208. ;;;;;; 62402))
  2209. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/calendar.el
  2210. (autoload 'calendar "calendar" "\
  2211. Display a three-month Gregorian calendar.
  2212. The three months appear side by side, with the current month in
  2213. the middle surrounded by the previous and next months. The
  2214. cursor is put on today's date. If optional prefix argument ARG
  2215. is non-nil, prompts for the central month and year.
  2216. Once in the calendar window, future or past months can be moved
  2217. into view. Arbitrary months can be displayed, or the calendar
  2218. can be scrolled forward or backward. The cursor can be moved
  2219. forward or backward by one day, one week, one month, or one year.
  2220. All of these commands take prefix arguments which, when negative,
  2221. cause movement in the opposite direction. For convenience, the
  2222. digit keys and the minus sign are automatically prefixes. Use
  2223. \\[describe-mode] for details of the key bindings in the calendar
  2224. window.
  2225. Displays the calendar in a separate window, or optionally in a
  2226. separate frame, depending on the value of `calendar-setup'.
  2227. If `calendar-view-diary-initially-flag' is non-nil, also displays the
  2228. diary entries for the current date (or however many days
  2229. `diary-number-of-entries' specifies). This variable can be
  2230. overridden by `calendar-setup'. As well as being displayed,
  2231. diary entries can also be marked on the calendar (see
  2232. `calendar-mark-diary-entries-flag').
  2233. Runs the following hooks:
  2234. `calendar-load-hook' - after loading calendar.el
  2235. `calendar-today-visible-hook', `calendar-today-invisible-hook' - after
  2236. generating a calendar, if today's date is visible or not, respectively
  2237. `calendar-initial-window-hook' - after first creating a calendar
  2238. This function is suitable for execution in a .emacs file.
  2239. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  2240. ;;;***
  2241. ;;;### (autoloads (canlock-verify canlock-insert-header) "canlock"
  2242. ;;;;;; "gnus/canlock.el" (20352 65510))
  2243. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/canlock.el
  2244. (autoload 'canlock-insert-header "canlock" "\
  2245. Insert a Cancel-Key and/or a Cancel-Lock header if possible.
  2246. \(fn &optional ID-FOR-KEY ID-FOR-LOCK PASSWORD)" nil nil)
  2247. (autoload 'canlock-verify "canlock" "\
  2248. Verify Cancel-Lock or Cancel-Key in BUFFER.
  2249. If BUFFER is nil, the current buffer is assumed. Signal an error if
  2250. it fails.
  2251. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  2252. ;;;***
  2253. ;;;### (autoloads (capitalized-words-mode) "cap-words" "progmodes/cap-words.el"
  2254. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  2255. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cap-words.el
  2256. (autoload 'capitalized-words-mode "cap-words" "\
  2257. Toggle Capitalized Words mode.
  2258. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Capitalized Words mode if ARG
  2259. is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp,
  2260. enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  2261. Capitalized Words mode is a buffer-local minor mode. When
  2262. enabled, a word boundary occurs immediately before an uppercase
  2263. letter in a symbol. This is in addition to all the normal
  2264. boundaries given by the syntax and category tables. There is no
  2265. restriction to ASCII.
  2266. E.g. the beginning of words in the following identifier are as marked:
  2267. capitalizedWorDD
  2268. ^ ^ ^^
  2269. Note that these word boundaries only apply for word motion and
  2270. marking commands such as \\[forward-word]. This mode does not affect word
  2271. boundaries found by regexp matching (`\\>', `\\w' &c).
  2272. This style of identifiers is common in environments like Java ones,
  2273. where underscores aren't trendy enough. Capitalization rules are
  2274. sometimes part of the language, e.g. Haskell, which may thus encourage
  2275. such a style. It is appropriate to add `capitalized-words-mode' to
  2276. the mode hook for programming language modes in which you encounter
  2277. variables like this, e.g. `java-mode-hook'. It's unlikely to cause
  2278. trouble if such identifiers aren't used.
  2279. See also `glasses-mode' and `studlify-word'.
  2280. Obsoletes `c-forward-into-nomenclature'.
  2281. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  2282. ;;;***
  2283. ;;;### (autoloads nil "cc-compat" "progmodes/cc-compat.el" (20352
  2284. ;;;;;; 65510))
  2285. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cc-compat.el
  2286. (put 'c-indent-level 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  2287. ;;;***
  2288. ;;;### (autoloads (c-guess-basic-syntax) "cc-engine" "progmodes/cc-engine.el"
  2289. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  2290. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cc-engine.el
  2291. (autoload 'c-guess-basic-syntax "cc-engine" "\
  2292. Return the syntactic context of the current line.
  2293. \(fn)" nil nil)
  2294. ;;;***
  2295. ;;;### (autoloads (c-guess-install c-guess-region-no-install c-guess-region
  2296. ;;;;;; c-guess-buffer-no-install c-guess-buffer c-guess-no-install
  2297. ;;;;;; c-guess) "cc-guess" "progmodes/cc-guess.el" (20352 65510))
  2298. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cc-guess.el
  2299. (defvar c-guess-guessed-offsets-alist nil "\
  2300. Currently guessed offsets-alist.")
  2301. (defvar c-guess-guessed-basic-offset nil "\
  2302. Currently guessed basic-offset.")
  2303. (autoload 'c-guess "cc-guess" "\
  2304. Guess the style in the region up to `c-guess-region-max', and install it.
  2305. The style is given a name based on the file's absolute file name.
  2306. If given a prefix argument (or if the optional argument ACCUMULATE is
  2307. non-nil) then the previous guess is extended, otherwise a new guess is
  2308. made from scratch.
  2309. \(fn &optional ACCUMULATE)" t nil)
  2310. (autoload 'c-guess-no-install "cc-guess" "\
  2311. Guess the style in the region up to `c-guess-region-max'; don't install it.
  2312. If given a prefix argument (or if the optional argument ACCUMULATE is
  2313. non-nil) then the previous guess is extended, otherwise a new guess is
  2314. made from scratch.
  2315. \(fn &optional ACCUMULATE)" t nil)
  2316. (autoload 'c-guess-buffer "cc-guess" "\
  2317. Guess the style on the whole current buffer, and install it.
  2318. The style is given a name based on the file's absolute file name.
  2319. If given a prefix argument (or if the optional argument ACCUMULATE is
  2320. non-nil) then the previous guess is extended, otherwise a new guess is
  2321. made from scratch.
  2322. \(fn &optional ACCUMULATE)" t nil)
  2323. (autoload 'c-guess-buffer-no-install "cc-guess" "\
  2324. Guess the style on the whole current buffer; don't install it.
  2325. If given a prefix argument (or if the optional argument ACCUMULATE is
  2326. non-nil) then the previous guess is extended, otherwise a new guess is
  2327. made from scratch.
  2328. \(fn &optional ACCUMULATE)" t nil)
  2329. (autoload 'c-guess-region "cc-guess" "\
  2330. Guess the style on the region and install it.
  2331. The style is given a name based on the file's absolute file name.
  2332. If given a prefix argument (or if the optional argument ACCUMULATE is
  2333. non-nil) then the previous guess is extended, otherwise a new guess is
  2334. made from scratch.
  2335. \(fn START END &optional ACCUMULATE)" t nil)
  2336. (autoload 'c-guess-region-no-install "cc-guess" "\
  2337. Guess the style on the region; don't install it.
  2338. Every line of code in the region is examined and values for the following two
  2339. variables are guessed:
  2340. * `c-basic-offset', and
  2341. * the indentation values of the various syntactic symbols in
  2342. `c-offsets-alist'.
  2343. The guessed values are put into `c-guess-guessed-basic-offset' and
  2344. `c-guess-guessed-offsets-alist'.
  2345. Frequencies of use are taken into account when guessing, so minor
  2346. inconsistencies in the indentation style shouldn't produce wrong guesses.
  2347. If given a prefix argument (or if the optional argument ACCUMULATE is
  2348. non-nil) then the previous examination is extended, otherwise a new
  2349. guess is made from scratch.
  2350. Note that the larger the region to guess in, the slower the guessing.
  2351. So you can limit the region with `c-guess-region-max'.
  2352. \(fn START END &optional ACCUMULATE)" t nil)
  2353. (autoload 'c-guess-install "cc-guess" "\
  2354. Install the latest guessed style into the current buffer.
  2355. \(This guessed style is a combination of `c-guess-guessed-basic-offset',
  2356. `c-guess-guessed-offsets-alist' and `c-offsets-alist'.)
  2357. The style is entered into CC Mode's style system by
  2358. `c-add-style'. Its name is either STYLE-NAME, or a name based on
  2359. the absolute file name of the file if STYLE-NAME is nil.
  2360. \(fn &optional STYLE-NAME)" t nil)
  2361. ;;;***
  2362. ;;;### (autoloads (awk-mode pike-mode idl-mode java-mode objc-mode
  2363. ;;;;;; c++-mode c-mode c-initialize-cc-mode) "cc-mode" "progmodes/cc-mode.el"
  2364. ;;;;;; (20365 1028))
  2365. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cc-mode.el
  2366. (autoload 'c-initialize-cc-mode "cc-mode" "\
  2367. Initialize CC Mode for use in the current buffer.
  2368. If the optional NEW-STYLE-INIT is nil or left out then all necessary
  2369. initialization to run CC Mode for the C language is done. Otherwise
  2370. only some basic setup is done, and a call to `c-init-language-vars' or
  2371. `c-init-language-vars-for' is necessary too (which gives more
  2372. control). See \"cc-mode.el\" for more info.
  2373. \(fn &optional NEW-STYLE-INIT)" nil nil)
  2374. (defvar c-mode-syntax-table nil "\
  2375. Syntax table used in c-mode buffers.")
  2376. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.\\(cc\\|hh\\)\\'" . c++-mode))
  2377. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.[ch]\\(pp\\|xx\\|\\+\\+\\)\\'" . c++-mode))
  2378. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.\\(CC?\\|HH?\\)\\'" . c++-mode))
  2379. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.[ch]\\'" . c-mode))
  2380. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.y\\(acc\\)?\\'" . c-mode))
  2381. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.lex\\'" . c-mode))
  2382. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.i\\'" . c-mode))
  2383. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.ii\\'" . c++-mode))
  2384. (autoload 'c-mode "cc-mode" "\
  2385. Major mode for editing K&R and ANSI C code.
  2386. To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from a
  2387. c-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with version
  2388. information already added. You just need to add a description of the
  2389. problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the message.
  2390. To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
  2391. The hook `c-mode-common-hook' is run with no args at mode
  2392. initialization, then `c-mode-hook'.
  2393. Key bindings:
  2394. \\{c-mode-map}
  2395. \(fn)" t nil)
  2396. (defvar c++-mode-syntax-table nil "\
  2397. Syntax table used in c++-mode buffers.")
  2398. (autoload 'c++-mode "cc-mode" "\
  2399. Major mode for editing C++ code.
  2400. To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from a
  2401. c++-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
  2402. version information already added. You just need to add a description
  2403. of the problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the
  2404. message.
  2405. To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
  2406. The hook `c-mode-common-hook' is run with no args at mode
  2407. initialization, then `c++-mode-hook'.
  2408. Key bindings:
  2409. \\{c++-mode-map}
  2410. \(fn)" t nil)
  2411. (defvar objc-mode-syntax-table nil "\
  2412. Syntax table used in objc-mode buffers.")
  2413. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.m\\'" . objc-mode))
  2414. (autoload 'objc-mode "cc-mode" "\
  2415. Major mode for editing Objective C code.
  2416. To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from an
  2417. objc-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
  2418. version information already added. You just need to add a description
  2419. of the problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the
  2420. message.
  2421. To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
  2422. The hook `c-mode-common-hook' is run with no args at mode
  2423. initialization, then `objc-mode-hook'.
  2424. Key bindings:
  2425. \\{objc-mode-map}
  2426. \(fn)" t nil)
  2427. (defvar java-mode-syntax-table nil "\
  2428. Syntax table used in java-mode buffers.")
  2429. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.java\\'" . java-mode))
  2430. (autoload 'java-mode "cc-mode" "\
  2431. Major mode for editing Java code.
  2432. To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from a
  2433. java-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
  2434. version information already added. You just need to add a description
  2435. of the problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the
  2436. message.
  2437. To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
  2438. The hook `c-mode-common-hook' is run with no args at mode
  2439. initialization, then `java-mode-hook'.
  2440. Key bindings:
  2441. \\{java-mode-map}
  2442. \(fn)" t nil)
  2443. (defvar idl-mode-syntax-table nil "\
  2444. Syntax table used in idl-mode buffers.")
  2445. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.idl\\'" . idl-mode))
  2446. (autoload 'idl-mode "cc-mode" "\
  2447. Major mode for editing CORBA's IDL, PSDL and CIDL code.
  2448. To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from an
  2449. idl-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
  2450. version information already added. You just need to add a description
  2451. of the problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the
  2452. message.
  2453. To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
  2454. The hook `c-mode-common-hook' is run with no args at mode
  2455. initialization, then `idl-mode-hook'.
  2456. Key bindings:
  2457. \\{idl-mode-map}
  2458. \(fn)" t nil)
  2459. (defvar pike-mode-syntax-table nil "\
  2460. Syntax table used in pike-mode buffers.")
  2461. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.\\(u?lpc\\|pike\\|pmod\\(.in\\)?\\)\\'" . pike-mode))
  2462. (add-to-list 'interpreter-mode-alist '("pike" . pike-mode))
  2463. (autoload 'pike-mode "cc-mode" "\
  2464. Major mode for editing Pike code.
  2465. To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from a
  2466. pike-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
  2467. version information already added. You just need to add a description
  2468. of the problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the
  2469. message.
  2470. To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
  2471. The hook `c-mode-common-hook' is run with no args at mode
  2472. initialization, then `pike-mode-hook'.
  2473. Key bindings:
  2474. \\{pike-mode-map}
  2475. \(fn)" t nil)
  2476. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.awk\\'" . awk-mode))
  2477. (add-to-list 'interpreter-mode-alist '("awk" . awk-mode))
  2478. (add-to-list 'interpreter-mode-alist '("mawk" . awk-mode))
  2479. (add-to-list 'interpreter-mode-alist '("nawk" . awk-mode))
  2480. (add-to-list 'interpreter-mode-alist '("gawk" . awk-mode))
  2481. (autoload 'awk-mode "cc-mode" "Major mode for editing AWK code." t)
  2482. (autoload 'awk-mode "cc-mode" "\
  2483. Major mode for editing AWK code.
  2484. To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from an
  2485. awk-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with version
  2486. information already added. You just need to add a description of the
  2487. problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the message.
  2488. To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
  2489. The hook `c-mode-common-hook' is run with no args at mode
  2490. initialization, then `awk-mode-hook'.
  2491. Key bindings:
  2492. \\{awk-mode-map}
  2493. \(fn)" t nil)
  2494. ;;;***
  2495. ;;;### (autoloads (c-set-offset c-add-style c-set-style) "cc-styles"
  2496. ;;;;;; "progmodes/cc-styles.el" (20352 65510))
  2497. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cc-styles.el
  2498. (autoload 'c-set-style "cc-styles" "\
  2499. Set the current buffer to use the style STYLENAME.
  2500. STYLENAME, a string, must be an existing CC Mode style - These are contained
  2501. in the variable `c-style-alist'.
  2502. The variable `c-indentation-style' will get set to STYLENAME.
  2503. \"Setting the style\" is done by setting CC Mode's \"style variables\" to the
  2504. values indicated by the pertinent entry in `c-style-alist'. Other variables
  2505. might get set too.
  2506. If DONT-OVERRIDE is neither nil nor t, style variables whose default values
  2507. have been set (more precisely, whose default values are not the symbol
  2508. `set-from-style') will not be changed. This avoids overriding global settings
  2509. done in ~/.emacs. It is useful to call c-set-style from a mode hook in this
  2510. way.
  2511. If DONT-OVERRIDE is t, style variables that already have values (i.e., whose
  2512. values are not the symbol `set-from-style') will not be overridden. CC Mode
  2513. calls c-set-style internally in this way whilst initializing a buffer; if
  2514. cc-set-style is called like this from anywhere else, it will usually behave as
  2515. a null operation.
  2516. \(fn STYLENAME &optional DONT-OVERRIDE)" t nil)
  2517. (autoload 'c-add-style "cc-styles" "\
  2518. Adds a style to `c-style-alist', or updates an existing one.
  2519. STYLE is a string identifying the style to add or update. DESCRIPTION
  2520. is an association list describing the style and must be of the form:
  2521. ([BASESTYLE] (VARIABLE . VALUE) [(VARIABLE . VALUE) ...])
  2522. See the variable `c-style-alist' for the semantics of BASESTYLE,
  2523. VARIABLE and VALUE. This function also sets the current style to
  2524. STYLE using `c-set-style' if the optional SET-P flag is non-nil.
  2525. \(fn STYLE DESCRIPTION &optional SET-P)" t nil)
  2526. (autoload 'c-set-offset "cc-styles" "\
  2527. Change the value of a syntactic element symbol in `c-offsets-alist'.
  2528. SYMBOL is the syntactic element symbol to change and OFFSET is the new
  2529. offset for that syntactic element. The optional argument is not used
  2530. and exists only for compatibility reasons.
  2531. \(fn SYMBOL OFFSET &optional IGNORED)" t nil)
  2532. ;;;***
  2533. ;;;### (autoloads nil "cc-vars" "progmodes/cc-vars.el" (20352 65510))
  2534. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cc-vars.el
  2535. (put 'c-basic-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  2536. (put 'c-backslash-column 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  2537. (put 'c-file-style 'safe-local-variable 'string-or-null-p)
  2538. ;;;***
  2539. ;;;### (autoloads (ccl-execute-with-args check-ccl-program define-ccl-program
  2540. ;;;;;; declare-ccl-program ccl-dump ccl-compile) "ccl" "international/ccl.el"
  2541. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  2542. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/ccl.el
  2543. (autoload 'ccl-compile "ccl" "\
  2544. Return the compiled code of CCL-PROGRAM as a vector of integers.
  2545. \(fn CCL-PROGRAM)" nil nil)
  2546. (autoload 'ccl-dump "ccl" "\
  2547. Disassemble compiled CCL-CODE.
  2548. \(fn CCL-CODE)" nil nil)
  2549. (autoload 'declare-ccl-program "ccl" "\
  2550. Declare NAME as a name of CCL program.
  2551. This macro exists for backward compatibility. In the old version of
  2552. Emacs, to compile a CCL program which calls another CCL program not
  2553. yet defined, it must be declared as a CCL program in advance. But,
  2554. now CCL program names are resolved not at compile time but before
  2555. execution.
  2556. Optional arg VECTOR is a compiled CCL code of the CCL program.
  2557. \(fn NAME &optional VECTOR)" nil (quote macro))
  2558. (autoload 'define-ccl-program "ccl" "\
  2559. Set NAME the compiled code of CCL-PROGRAM.
  2560. CCL-PROGRAM has this form:
  2561. (BUFFER_MAGNIFICATION
  2562. CCL_MAIN_CODE
  2563. [ CCL_EOF_CODE ])
  2564. BUFFER_MAGNIFICATION is an integer value specifying the approximate
  2565. output buffer magnification size compared with the bytes of input data
  2566. text. It is assured that the actual output buffer has 256 bytes
  2567. more than the size calculated by BUFFER_MAGNIFICATION.
  2568. If the value is zero, the CCL program can't execute `read' and
  2569. `write' commands.
  2570. CCL_MAIN_CODE and CCL_EOF_CODE are CCL program codes. CCL_MAIN_CODE
  2571. executed at first. If there's no more input data when `read' command
  2572. is executed in CCL_MAIN_CODE, CCL_EOF_CODE is executed. If
  2573. CCL_MAIN_CODE is terminated, CCL_EOF_CODE is not executed.
  2574. Here's the syntax of CCL program code in BNF notation. The lines
  2575. starting by two semicolons (and optional leading spaces) describe the
  2576. semantics.
  2577. CCL_MAIN_CODE := CCL_BLOCK
  2578. CCL_EOF_CODE := CCL_BLOCK
  2579. CCL_BLOCK := STATEMENT | (STATEMENT [STATEMENT ...])
  2580. STATEMENT :=
  2581. SET | IF | BRANCH | LOOP | REPEAT | BREAK | READ | WRITE | CALL
  2582. | TRANSLATE | MAP | LOOKUP | END
  2583. SET := (REG = EXPRESSION)
  2584. | (REG ASSIGNMENT_OPERATOR EXPRESSION)
  2585. ;; The following form is the same as (r0 = integer).
  2586. | integer
  2587. EXPRESSION := ARG | (EXPRESSION OPERATOR ARG)
  2588. ;; Evaluate EXPRESSION. If the result is nonzero, execute
  2589. ;; CCL_BLOCK_0. Otherwise, execute CCL_BLOCK_1.
  2590. IF := (if EXPRESSION CCL_BLOCK_0 CCL_BLOCK_1)
  2591. ;; Evaluate EXPRESSION. Provided that the result is N, execute
  2592. ;; CCL_BLOCK_N.
  2593. BRANCH := (branch EXPRESSION CCL_BLOCK_0 [CCL_BLOCK_1 ...])
  2594. ;; Execute STATEMENTs until (break) or (end) is executed.
  2595. LOOP := (loop STATEMENT [STATEMENT ...])
  2596. ;; Terminate the most inner loop.
  2597. BREAK := (break)
  2598. REPEAT :=
  2599. ;; Jump to the head of the most inner loop.
  2600. (repeat)
  2601. ;; Same as: ((write [REG | integer | string])
  2602. ;; (repeat))
  2603. | (write-repeat [REG | integer | string])
  2604. ;; Same as: ((write REG [ARRAY])
  2605. ;; (read REG)
  2606. ;; (repeat))
  2607. | (write-read-repeat REG [ARRAY])
  2608. ;; Same as: ((write integer)
  2609. ;; (read REG)
  2610. ;; (repeat))
  2611. | (write-read-repeat REG integer)
  2612. READ := ;; Set REG_0 to a byte read from the input text, set REG_1
  2613. ;; to the next byte read, and so on.
  2614. (read REG_0 [REG_1 ...])
  2615. ;; Same as: ((read REG)
  2616. ;; (if (REG OPERATOR ARG) CCL_BLOCK_0 CCL_BLOCK_1))
  2617. | (read-if (REG OPERATOR ARG) CCL_BLOCK_0 CCL_BLOCK_1)
  2618. ;; Same as: ((read REG)
  2619. ;; (branch REG CCL_BLOCK_0 [CCL_BLOCK_1 ...]))
  2620. | (read-branch REG CCL_BLOCK_0 [CCL_BLOCK_1 ...])
  2621. ;; Read a character from the input text while parsing
  2622. ;; multibyte representation, set REG_0 to the charset ID of
  2623. ;; the character, set REG_1 to the code point of the
  2624. ;; character. If the dimension of charset is two, set REG_1
  2625. ;; to ((CODE0 << 7) | CODE1), where CODE0 is the first code
  2626. ;; point and CODE1 is the second code point.
  2627. | (read-multibyte-character REG_0 REG_1)
  2628. WRITE :=
  2629. ;; Write REG_0, REG_1, ... to the output buffer. If REG_N is
  2630. ;; a multibyte character, write the corresponding multibyte
  2631. ;; representation.
  2632. (write REG_0 [REG_1 ...])
  2633. ;; Same as: ((r7 = EXPRESSION)
  2634. ;; (write r7))
  2635. | (write EXPRESSION)
  2636. ;; Write the value of `integer' to the output buffer. If it
  2637. ;; is a multibyte character, write the corresponding multibyte
  2638. ;; representation.
  2639. | (write integer)
  2640. ;; Write the byte sequence of `string' as is to the output
  2641. ;; buffer.
  2642. | (write string)
  2643. ;; Same as: (write string)
  2644. | string
  2645. ;; Provided that the value of REG is N, write Nth element of
  2646. ;; ARRAY to the output buffer. If it is a multibyte
  2647. ;; character, write the corresponding multibyte
  2648. ;; representation.
  2649. | (write REG ARRAY)
  2650. ;; Write a multibyte representation of a character whose
  2651. ;; charset ID is REG_0 and code point is REG_1. If the
  2652. ;; dimension of the charset is two, REG_1 should be ((CODE0 <<
  2653. ;; 7) | CODE1), where CODE0 is the first code point and CODE1
  2654. ;; is the second code point of the character.
  2655. | (write-multibyte-character REG_0 REG_1)
  2656. ;; Call CCL program whose name is ccl-program-name.
  2657. CALL := (call ccl-program-name)
  2658. ;; Terminate the CCL program.
  2659. END := (end)
  2660. ;; CCL registers that can contain any integer value. As r7 is also
  2661. ;; used by CCL interpreter, its value is changed unexpectedly.
  2662. REG := r0 | r1 | r2 | r3 | r4 | r5 | r6 | r7
  2663. ARG := REG | integer
  2664. OPERATOR :=
  2665. ;; Normal arithmetic operators (same meaning as C code).
  2666. + | - | * | / | %
  2667. ;; Bitwise operators (same meaning as C code)
  2668. | & | `|' | ^
  2669. ;; Shifting operators (same meaning as C code)
  2670. | << | >>
  2671. ;; (REG = ARG_0 <8 ARG_1) means:
  2672. ;; (REG = ((ARG_0 << 8) | ARG_1))
  2673. | <8
  2674. ;; (REG = ARG_0 >8 ARG_1) means:
  2675. ;; ((REG = (ARG_0 >> 8))
  2676. ;; (r7 = (ARG_0 & 255)))
  2677. | >8
  2678. ;; (REG = ARG_0 // ARG_1) means:
  2679. ;; ((REG = (ARG_0 / ARG_1))
  2680. ;; (r7 = (ARG_0 % ARG_1)))
  2681. | //
  2682. ;; Normal comparing operators (same meaning as C code)
  2683. | < | > | == | <= | >= | !=
  2684. ;; If ARG_0 and ARG_1 are higher and lower byte of Shift-JIS
  2685. ;; code, and CHAR is the corresponding JISX0208 character,
  2686. ;; (REG = ARG_0 de-sjis ARG_1) means:
  2687. ;; ((REG = CODE0)
  2688. ;; (r7 = CODE1))
  2689. ;; where CODE0 is the first code point of CHAR, CODE1 is the
  2690. ;; second code point of CHAR.
  2691. | de-sjis
  2692. ;; If ARG_0 and ARG_1 are the first and second code point of
  2693. ;; JISX0208 character CHAR, and SJIS is the corresponding
  2694. ;; Shift-JIS code,
  2695. ;; (REG = ARG_0 en-sjis ARG_1) means:
  2696. ;; ((REG = HIGH)
  2697. ;; (r7 = LOW))
  2698. ;; where HIGH is the higher byte of SJIS, LOW is the lower
  2699. ;; byte of SJIS.
  2700. | en-sjis
  2701. ASSIGNMENT_OPERATOR :=
  2702. ;; Same meaning as C code
  2703. += | -= | *= | /= | %= | &= | `|=' | ^= | <<= | >>=
  2704. ;; (REG <8= ARG) is the same as:
  2705. ;; ((REG <<= 8)
  2706. ;; (REG |= ARG))
  2707. | <8=
  2708. ;; (REG >8= ARG) is the same as:
  2709. ;; ((r7 = (REG & 255))
  2710. ;; (REG >>= 8))
  2711. ;; (REG //= ARG) is the same as:
  2712. ;; ((r7 = (REG % ARG))
  2713. ;; (REG /= ARG))
  2714. | //=
  2715. ARRAY := `[' integer ... `]'
  2716. TRANSLATE :=
  2717. (translate-character REG(table) REG(charset) REG(codepoint))
  2718. | (translate-character SYMBOL REG(charset) REG(codepoint))
  2719. ;; SYMBOL must refer to a table defined by `define-translation-table'.
  2720. LOOKUP :=
  2721. (lookup-character SYMBOL REG(charset) REG(codepoint))
  2722. | (lookup-integer SYMBOL REG(integer))
  2723. ;; SYMBOL refers to a table defined by `define-translation-hash-table'.
  2724. MAP :=
  2725. (iterate-multiple-map REG REG MAP-IDs)
  2726. | (map-multiple REG REG (MAP-SET))
  2727. | (map-single REG REG MAP-ID)
  2728. MAP-IDs := MAP-ID ...
  2729. MAP-SET := MAP-IDs | (MAP-IDs) MAP-SET
  2730. MAP-ID := integer
  2731. \(fn NAME CCL-PROGRAM &optional DOC)" nil (quote macro))
  2732. (put 'define-ccl-program 'doc-string-elt '3)
  2733. (autoload 'check-ccl-program "ccl" "\
  2734. Check validity of CCL-PROGRAM.
  2735. If CCL-PROGRAM is a symbol denoting a CCL program, return
  2736. CCL-PROGRAM, else return nil.
  2737. If CCL-PROGRAM is a vector and optional arg NAME (symbol) is supplied,
  2738. register CCL-PROGRAM by name NAME, and return NAME.
  2739. \(fn CCL-PROGRAM &optional NAME)" nil (quote macro))
  2740. (autoload 'ccl-execute-with-args "ccl" "\
  2741. Execute CCL-PROGRAM with registers initialized by the remaining args.
  2742. The return value is a vector of resulting CCL registers.
  2743. See the documentation of `define-ccl-program' for the detail of CCL program.
  2744. \(fn CCL-PROG &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  2745. ;;;***
  2746. ;;;### (autoloads (cconv-closure-convert) "cconv" "emacs-lisp/cconv.el"
  2747. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  2748. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/cconv.el
  2749. (autoload 'cconv-closure-convert "cconv" "\
  2750. Main entry point for closure conversion.
  2751. -- FORM is a piece of Elisp code after macroexpansion.
  2752. -- TOPLEVEL(optional) is a boolean variable, true if we are at the root of AST
  2753. Returns a form where all lambdas don't have any free variables.
  2754. \(fn FORM)" nil nil)
  2755. ;;;***
  2756. ;;;### (autoloads (cfengine-auto-mode cfengine2-mode cfengine3-mode)
  2757. ;;;;;; "cfengine" "progmodes/cfengine.el" (20400 62402))
  2758. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cfengine.el
  2759. (autoload 'cfengine3-mode "cfengine" "\
  2760. Major mode for editing CFEngine3 input.
  2761. There are no special keybindings by default.
  2762. Action blocks are treated as defuns, i.e. \\[beginning-of-defun] moves
  2763. to the action header.
  2764. \(fn)" t nil)
  2765. (autoload 'cfengine2-mode "cfengine" "\
  2766. Major mode for editing CFEngine2 input.
  2767. There are no special keybindings by default.
  2768. Action blocks are treated as defuns, i.e. \\[beginning-of-defun] moves
  2769. to the action header.
  2770. \(fn)" t nil)
  2771. (autoload 'cfengine-auto-mode "cfengine" "\
  2772. Choose between `cfengine2-mode' and `cfengine3-mode' depending
  2773. on the buffer contents
  2774. \(fn)" nil nil)
  2775. ;;;***
  2776. ;;;### (autoloads (check-declare-directory check-declare-file) "check-declare"
  2777. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/check-declare.el" (20370 20099))
  2778. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/check-declare.el
  2779. (autoload 'check-declare-file "check-declare" "\
  2780. Check veracity of all `declare-function' statements in FILE.
  2781. See `check-declare-directory' for more information.
  2782. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  2783. (autoload 'check-declare-directory "check-declare" "\
  2784. Check veracity of all `declare-function' statements under directory ROOT.
  2785. Returns non-nil if any false statements are found.
  2786. \(fn ROOT)" t nil)
  2787. ;;;***
  2788. ;;;### (autoloads (checkdoc-minor-mode checkdoc-ispell-defun checkdoc-ispell-comments
  2789. ;;;;;; checkdoc-ispell-continue checkdoc-ispell-start checkdoc-ispell-message-text
  2790. ;;;;;; checkdoc-ispell-message-interactive checkdoc-ispell-interactive
  2791. ;;;;;; checkdoc-ispell-current-buffer checkdoc-ispell checkdoc-defun
  2792. ;;;;;; checkdoc-eval-defun checkdoc-message-text checkdoc-rogue-spaces
  2793. ;;;;;; checkdoc-comments checkdoc-continue checkdoc-start checkdoc-current-buffer
  2794. ;;;;;; checkdoc-eval-current-buffer checkdoc-message-interactive
  2795. ;;;;;; checkdoc-interactive checkdoc checkdoc-list-of-strings-p)
  2796. ;;;;;; "checkdoc" "emacs-lisp/checkdoc.el" (20400 62402))
  2797. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/checkdoc.el
  2798. (put 'checkdoc-force-docstrings-flag 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  2799. (put 'checkdoc-force-history-flag 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  2800. (put 'checkdoc-permit-comma-termination-flag 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  2801. (put 'checkdoc-arguments-in-order-flag 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  2802. (put 'checkdoc-symbol-words 'safe-local-variable 'checkdoc-list-of-strings-p)
  2803. (autoload 'checkdoc-list-of-strings-p "checkdoc" "\
  2804. \(fn OBJ)" nil nil)
  2805. (autoload 'checkdoc "checkdoc" "\
  2806. Interactively check the entire buffer for style errors.
  2807. The current status of the check will be displayed in a buffer which
  2808. the users will view as each check is completed.
  2809. \(fn)" t nil)
  2810. (autoload 'checkdoc-interactive "checkdoc" "\
  2811. Interactively check the current buffer for doc string errors.
  2812. Prefix argument START-HERE will start the checking from the current
  2813. point, otherwise the check starts at the beginning of the current
  2814. buffer. Allows navigation forward and backwards through document
  2815. errors. Does not check for comment or space warnings.
  2816. Optional argument SHOWSTATUS indicates that we should update the
  2817. checkdoc status window instead of the usual behavior.
  2818. \(fn &optional START-HERE SHOWSTATUS)" t nil)
  2819. (autoload 'checkdoc-message-interactive "checkdoc" "\
  2820. Interactively check the current buffer for message string errors.
  2821. Prefix argument START-HERE will start the checking from the current
  2822. point, otherwise the check starts at the beginning of the current
  2823. buffer. Allows navigation forward and backwards through document
  2824. errors. Does not check for comment or space warnings.
  2825. Optional argument SHOWSTATUS indicates that we should update the
  2826. checkdoc status window instead of the usual behavior.
  2827. \(fn &optional START-HERE SHOWSTATUS)" t nil)
  2828. (autoload 'checkdoc-eval-current-buffer "checkdoc" "\
  2829. Evaluate and check documentation for the current buffer.
  2830. Evaluation is done first because good documentation for something that
  2831. doesn't work is just not useful. Comments, doc strings, and rogue
  2832. spacing are all verified.
  2833. \(fn)" t nil)
  2834. (autoload 'checkdoc-current-buffer "checkdoc" "\
  2835. Check current buffer for document, comment, error style, and rogue spaces.
  2836. With a prefix argument (in Lisp, the argument TAKE-NOTES),
  2837. store all errors found in a warnings buffer,
  2838. otherwise stop after the first error.
  2839. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2840. (autoload 'checkdoc-start "checkdoc" "\
  2841. Start scanning the current buffer for documentation string style errors.
  2842. Only documentation strings are checked.
  2843. Use `checkdoc-continue' to continue checking if an error cannot be fixed.
  2844. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES means to collect all the warning messages into
  2845. a separate buffer.
  2846. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2847. (autoload 'checkdoc-continue "checkdoc" "\
  2848. Find the next doc string in the current buffer which has a style error.
  2849. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES means to continue through the whole buffer and
  2850. save warnings in a separate buffer. Second optional argument START-POINT
  2851. is the starting location. If this is nil, `point-min' is used instead.
  2852. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2853. (autoload 'checkdoc-comments "checkdoc" "\
  2854. Find missing comment sections in the current Emacs Lisp file.
  2855. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES non-nil means to save warnings in a
  2856. separate buffer. Otherwise print a message. This returns the error
  2857. if there is one.
  2858. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2859. (autoload 'checkdoc-rogue-spaces "checkdoc" "\
  2860. Find extra spaces at the end of lines in the current file.
  2861. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES non-nil means to save warnings in a
  2862. separate buffer. Otherwise print a message. This returns the error
  2863. if there is one.
  2864. Optional argument INTERACT permits more interactive fixing.
  2865. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES INTERACT)" t nil)
  2866. (autoload 'checkdoc-message-text "checkdoc" "\
  2867. Scan the buffer for occurrences of the error function, and verify text.
  2868. Optional argument TAKE-NOTES causes all errors to be logged.
  2869. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2870. (autoload 'checkdoc-eval-defun "checkdoc" "\
  2871. Evaluate the current form with `eval-defun' and check its documentation.
  2872. Evaluation is done first so the form will be read before the
  2873. documentation is checked. If there is a documentation error, then the display
  2874. of what was evaluated will be overwritten by the diagnostic message.
  2875. \(fn)" t nil)
  2876. (autoload 'checkdoc-defun "checkdoc" "\
  2877. Examine the doc string of the function or variable under point.
  2878. Call `error' if the doc string has problems. If NO-ERROR is
  2879. non-nil, then do not call error, but call `message' instead.
  2880. If the doc string passes the test, then check the function for rogue white
  2881. space at the end of each line.
  2882. \(fn &optional NO-ERROR)" t nil)
  2883. (autoload 'checkdoc-ispell "checkdoc" "\
  2884. Check the style and spelling of everything interactively.
  2885. Calls `checkdoc' with spell-checking turned on.
  2886. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc'
  2887. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2888. (autoload 'checkdoc-ispell-current-buffer "checkdoc" "\
  2889. Check the style and spelling of the current buffer.
  2890. Calls `checkdoc-current-buffer' with spell-checking turned on.
  2891. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-current-buffer'
  2892. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2893. (autoload 'checkdoc-ispell-interactive "checkdoc" "\
  2894. Check the style and spelling of the current buffer interactively.
  2895. Calls `checkdoc-interactive' with spell-checking turned on.
  2896. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-interactive'
  2897. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2898. (autoload 'checkdoc-ispell-message-interactive "checkdoc" "\
  2899. Check the style and spelling of message text interactively.
  2900. Calls `checkdoc-message-interactive' with spell-checking turned on.
  2901. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-message-interactive'
  2902. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2903. (autoload 'checkdoc-ispell-message-text "checkdoc" "\
  2904. Check the style and spelling of message text interactively.
  2905. Calls `checkdoc-message-text' with spell-checking turned on.
  2906. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-message-text'
  2907. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2908. (autoload 'checkdoc-ispell-start "checkdoc" "\
  2909. Check the style and spelling of the current buffer.
  2910. Calls `checkdoc-start' with spell-checking turned on.
  2911. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-start'
  2912. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2913. (autoload 'checkdoc-ispell-continue "checkdoc" "\
  2914. Check the style and spelling of the current buffer after point.
  2915. Calls `checkdoc-continue' with spell-checking turned on.
  2916. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-continue'
  2917. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2918. (autoload 'checkdoc-ispell-comments "checkdoc" "\
  2919. Check the style and spelling of the current buffer's comments.
  2920. Calls `checkdoc-comments' with spell-checking turned on.
  2921. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-comments'
  2922. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2923. (autoload 'checkdoc-ispell-defun "checkdoc" "\
  2924. Check the style and spelling of the current defun with Ispell.
  2925. Calls `checkdoc-defun' with spell-checking turned on.
  2926. Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-defun'
  2927. \(fn &optional TAKE-NOTES)" t nil)
  2928. (autoload 'checkdoc-minor-mode "checkdoc" "\
  2929. Toggle automatic docstring checking (Checkdoc minor mode).
  2930. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Checkdoc minor mode if ARG is
  2931. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  2932. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  2933. In Checkdoc minor mode, the usual bindings for `eval-defun' which is
  2934. bound to \\<checkdoc-minor-mode-map>\\[checkdoc-eval-defun] and `checkdoc-eval-current-buffer' are overridden to include
  2935. checking of documentation strings.
  2936. \\{checkdoc-minor-mode-map}
  2937. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  2938. ;;;***
  2939. ;;;### (autoloads (pre-write-encode-hz post-read-decode-hz encode-hz-buffer
  2940. ;;;;;; encode-hz-region decode-hz-buffer decode-hz-region) "china-util"
  2941. ;;;;;; "language/china-util.el" (20352 65510))
  2942. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/china-util.el
  2943. (autoload 'decode-hz-region "china-util" "\
  2944. Decode HZ/ZW encoded text in the current region.
  2945. Return the length of resulting text.
  2946. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  2947. (autoload 'decode-hz-buffer "china-util" "\
  2948. Decode HZ/ZW encoded text in the current buffer.
  2949. \(fn)" t nil)
  2950. (autoload 'encode-hz-region "china-util" "\
  2951. Encode the text in the current region to HZ.
  2952. Return the length of resulting text.
  2953. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  2954. (autoload 'encode-hz-buffer "china-util" "\
  2955. Encode the text in the current buffer to HZ.
  2956. \(fn)" t nil)
  2957. (autoload 'post-read-decode-hz "china-util" "\
  2958. \(fn LEN)" nil nil)
  2959. (autoload 'pre-write-encode-hz "china-util" "\
  2960. \(fn FROM TO)" nil nil)
  2961. ;;;***
  2962. ;;;### (autoloads (command-history list-command-history repeat-matching-complex-command)
  2963. ;;;;;; "chistory" "chistory.el" (20352 65510))
  2964. ;;; Generated autoloads from chistory.el
  2965. (autoload 'repeat-matching-complex-command "chistory" "\
  2966. Edit and re-evaluate complex command with name matching PATTERN.
  2967. Matching occurrences are displayed, most recent first, until you select
  2968. a form for evaluation. If PATTERN is empty (or nil), every form in the
  2969. command history is offered. The form is placed in the minibuffer for
  2970. editing and the result is evaluated.
  2971. \(fn &optional PATTERN)" t nil)
  2972. (autoload 'list-command-history "chistory" "\
  2973. List history of commands typed to minibuffer.
  2974. The number of commands listed is controlled by `list-command-history-max'.
  2975. Calls value of `list-command-history-filter' (if non-nil) on each history
  2976. element to judge if that element should be excluded from the list.
  2977. The buffer is left in Command History mode.
  2978. \(fn)" t nil)
  2979. (autoload 'command-history "chistory" "\
  2980. Examine commands from `command-history' in a buffer.
  2981. The number of commands listed is controlled by `list-command-history-max'.
  2982. The command history is filtered by `list-command-history-filter' if non-nil.
  2983. Use \\<command-history-map>\\[command-history-repeat] to repeat the command on the current line.
  2984. Otherwise much like Emacs-Lisp Mode except that there is no self-insertion
  2985. and digits provide prefix arguments. Tab does not indent.
  2986. \\{command-history-map}
  2987. This command always recompiles the Command History listing
  2988. and runs the normal hook `command-history-hook'.
  2989. \(fn)" t nil)
  2990. ;;;***
  2991. ;;;### (autoloads nil "cl" "emacs-lisp/cl.el" (20352 65510))
  2992. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/cl.el
  2993. (defvar custom-print-functions nil "\
  2994. This is a list of functions that format user objects for printing.
  2995. Each function is called in turn with three arguments: the object, the
  2996. stream, and the print level (currently ignored). If it is able to
  2997. print the object it returns true; otherwise it returns nil and the
  2998. printer proceeds to the next function on the list.
  2999. This variable is not used at present, but it is defined in hopes that
  3000. a future Emacs interpreter will be able to use it.")
  3001. ;;;***
  3002. ;;;### (autoloads (common-lisp-indent-function) "cl-indent" "emacs-lisp/cl-indent.el"
  3003. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  3004. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/cl-indent.el
  3005. (autoload 'common-lisp-indent-function "cl-indent" "\
  3006. Function to indent the arguments of a Lisp function call.
  3007. This is suitable for use as the value of the variable
  3008. `lisp-indent-function'. INDENT-POINT is the point at which the
  3009. indentation function is called, and STATE is the
  3010. `parse-partial-sexp' state at that position. Browse the
  3011. `lisp-indent' customize group for options affecting the behavior
  3012. of this function.
  3013. If the indentation point is in a call to a Lisp function, that
  3014. function's `common-lisp-indent-function' property specifies how
  3015. this function should indent it. Possible values for this
  3016. property are:
  3017. * defun, meaning indent according to `lisp-indent-defun-method';
  3018. i.e., like (4 &lambda &body), as explained below.
  3019. * any other symbol, meaning a function to call. The function should
  3020. take the arguments: PATH STATE INDENT-POINT SEXP-COLUMN NORMAL-INDENT.
  3021. PATH is a list of integers describing the position of point in terms of
  3022. list-structure with respect to the containing lists. For example, in
  3023. ((a b c (d foo) f) g), foo has a path of (0 3 1). In other words,
  3024. to reach foo take the 0th element of the outermost list, then
  3025. the 3rd element of the next list, and finally the 1st element.
  3026. STATE and INDENT-POINT are as in the arguments to
  3027. `common-lisp-indent-function'. SEXP-COLUMN is the column of
  3028. the open parenthesis of the innermost containing list.
  3029. NORMAL-INDENT is the column the indentation point was
  3030. originally in. This function should behave like `lisp-indent-259'.
  3031. * an integer N, meaning indent the first N arguments like
  3032. function arguments, and any further arguments like a body.
  3033. This is equivalent to (4 4 ... &body).
  3034. * a list. The list element in position M specifies how to indent the Mth
  3035. function argument. If there are fewer elements than function arguments,
  3036. the last list element applies to all remaining arguments. The accepted
  3037. list elements are:
  3038. * nil, meaning the default indentation.
  3039. * an integer, specifying an explicit indentation.
  3040. * &lambda. Indent the argument (which may be a list) by 4.
  3041. * &rest. When used, this must be the penultimate element. The
  3042. element after this one applies to all remaining arguments.
  3043. * &body. This is equivalent to &rest lisp-body-indent, i.e., indent
  3044. all remaining elements by `lisp-body-indent'.
  3045. * &whole. This must be followed by nil, an integer, or a
  3046. function symbol. This indentation is applied to the
  3047. associated argument, and as a base indent for all remaining
  3048. arguments. For example, an integer P means indent this
  3049. argument by P, and all remaining arguments by P, plus the
  3050. value specified by their associated list element.
  3051. * a symbol. A function to call, with the 6 arguments specified above.
  3052. * a list, with elements as described above. This applies when the
  3053. associated function argument is itself a list. Each element of the list
  3054. specifies how to indent the associated argument.
  3055. For example, the function `case' has an indent property
  3056. \(4 &rest (&whole 2 &rest 1)), meaning:
  3057. * indent the first argument by 4.
  3058. * arguments after the first should be lists, and there may be any number
  3059. of them. The first list element has an offset of 2, all the rest
  3060. have an offset of 2+1=3.
  3061. \(fn INDENT-POINT STATE)" nil nil)
  3062. ;;;***
  3063. ;;;### (autoloads (c-macro-expand) "cmacexp" "progmodes/cmacexp.el"
  3064. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  3065. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cmacexp.el
  3066. (autoload 'c-macro-expand "cmacexp" "\
  3067. Expand C macros in the region, using the C preprocessor.
  3068. Normally display output in temp buffer, but
  3069. prefix arg means replace the region with it.
  3070. `c-macro-preprocessor' specifies the preprocessor to use.
  3071. Tf the user option `c-macro-prompt-flag' is non-nil
  3072. prompt for arguments to the preprocessor (e.g. `-DDEBUG -I ./include'),
  3073. otherwise use `c-macro-cppflags'.
  3074. Noninteractive args are START, END, SUBST.
  3075. For use inside Lisp programs, see also `c-macro-expansion'.
  3076. \(fn START END SUBST)" t nil)
  3077. ;;;***
  3078. ;;;### (autoloads (run-scheme) "cmuscheme" "cmuscheme.el" (20352
  3079. ;;;;;; 65510))
  3080. ;;; Generated autoloads from cmuscheme.el
  3081. (autoload 'run-scheme "cmuscheme" "\
  3082. Run an inferior Scheme process, input and output via buffer `*scheme*'.
  3083. If there is a process already running in `*scheme*', switch to that buffer.
  3084. With argument, allows you to edit the command line (default is value
  3085. of `scheme-program-name').
  3086. If the file `~/.emacs_SCHEMENAME' or `~/.emacs.d/init_SCHEMENAME.scm' exists,
  3087. it is given as initial input.
  3088. Note that this may lose due to a timing error if the Scheme processor
  3089. discards input when it starts up.
  3090. Runs the hook `inferior-scheme-mode-hook' (after the `comint-mode-hook'
  3091. is run).
  3092. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the process buffer for a list of commands.)
  3093. \(fn CMD)" t nil)
  3094. ;;;***
  3095. ;;;### (autoloads (color-name-to-rgb) "color" "color.el" (20352 65510))
  3096. ;;; Generated autoloads from color.el
  3097. (autoload 'color-name-to-rgb "color" "\
  3098. Convert COLOR string to a list of normalized RGB components.
  3099. COLOR should be a color name (e.g. \"white\") or an RGB triplet
  3100. string (e.g. \"#ff12ec\").
  3101. Normally the return value is a list of three floating-point
  3102. numbers, (RED GREEN BLUE), each between 0.0 and 1.0 inclusive.
  3103. Optional arg FRAME specifies the frame where the color is to be
  3104. displayed. If FRAME is omitted or nil, use the selected frame.
  3105. If FRAME cannot display COLOR, return nil.
  3106. \(fn COLOR &optional FRAME)" nil nil)
  3107. ;;;***
  3108. ;;;### (autoloads (comint-redirect-results-list-from-process comint-redirect-results-list
  3109. ;;;;;; comint-redirect-send-command-to-process comint-redirect-send-command
  3110. ;;;;;; comint-run make-comint make-comint-in-buffer) "comint" "comint.el"
  3111. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  3112. ;;; Generated autoloads from comint.el
  3113. (defvar comint-output-filter-functions '(ansi-color-process-output comint-postoutput-scroll-to-bottom comint-watch-for-password-prompt) "\
  3114. Functions to call after output is inserted into the buffer.
  3115. One possible function is `comint-postoutput-scroll-to-bottom'.
  3116. These functions get one argument, a string containing the text as originally
  3117. inserted. Note that this might not be the same as the buffer contents between
  3118. `comint-last-output-start' and the buffer's `process-mark', if other filter
  3119. functions have already modified the buffer.
  3120. See also `comint-preoutput-filter-functions'.
  3121. You can use `add-hook' to add functions to this list
  3122. either globally or locally.")
  3123. (autoload 'make-comint-in-buffer "comint" "\
  3124. Make a Comint process NAME in BUFFER, running PROGRAM.
  3125. If BUFFER is nil, it defaults to NAME surrounded by `*'s.
  3126. If there is a running process in BUFFER, it is not restarted.
  3127. PROGRAM should be one of the following:
  3128. - a string, denoting an executable program to create via
  3129. `start-file-process'
  3130. - a cons pair of the form (HOST . SERVICE), denoting a TCP
  3131. connection to be opened via `open-network-stream'
  3132. - nil, denoting a newly-allocated pty.
  3133. Optional fourth arg STARTFILE is the name of a file, whose
  3134. contents are sent to the process as its initial input.
  3135. If PROGRAM is a string, any more args are arguments to PROGRAM.
  3136. Return the (possibly newly created) process buffer.
  3137. \(fn NAME BUFFER PROGRAM &optional STARTFILE &rest SWITCHES)" nil nil)
  3138. (autoload 'make-comint "comint" "\
  3139. Make a Comint process NAME in a buffer, running PROGRAM.
  3140. The name of the buffer is made by surrounding NAME with `*'s.
  3141. PROGRAM should be either a string denoting an executable program to create
  3142. via `start-file-process', or a cons pair of the form (HOST . SERVICE) denoting
  3143. a TCP connection to be opened via `open-network-stream'. If there is already
  3144. a running process in that buffer, it is not restarted. Optional third arg
  3145. STARTFILE is the name of a file, whose contents are sent to the
  3146. process as its initial input.
  3147. If PROGRAM is a string, any more args are arguments to PROGRAM.
  3148. Returns the (possibly newly created) process buffer.
  3149. \(fn NAME PROGRAM &optional STARTFILE &rest SWITCHES)" nil nil)
  3150. (autoload 'comint-run "comint" "\
  3151. Run PROGRAM in a Comint buffer and switch to it.
  3152. The buffer name is made by surrounding the file name of PROGRAM with `*'s.
  3153. The file name is used to make a symbol name, such as `comint-sh-hook', and any
  3154. hooks on this symbol are run in the buffer.
  3155. See `make-comint' and `comint-exec'.
  3156. \(fn PROGRAM)" t nil)
  3157. (defvar comint-file-name-prefix (purecopy "") "\
  3158. Prefix prepended to absolute file names taken from process input.
  3159. This is used by Comint's and shell's completion functions, and by shell's
  3160. directory tracking functions.")
  3161. (autoload 'comint-redirect-send-command "comint" "\
  3162. Send COMMAND to process in current buffer, with output to OUTPUT-BUFFER.
  3163. With prefix arg ECHO, echo output in process buffer.
  3164. If NO-DISPLAY is non-nil, do not show the output buffer.
  3165. \(fn COMMAND OUTPUT-BUFFER ECHO &optional NO-DISPLAY)" t nil)
  3166. (autoload 'comint-redirect-send-command-to-process "comint" "\
  3167. Send COMMAND to PROCESS, with output to OUTPUT-BUFFER.
  3168. With prefix arg, echo output in process buffer.
  3169. If NO-DISPLAY is non-nil, do not show the output buffer.
  3170. \(fn COMMAND OUTPUT-BUFFER PROCESS ECHO &optional NO-DISPLAY)" t nil)
  3171. (autoload 'comint-redirect-results-list "comint" "\
  3172. Send COMMAND to current process.
  3173. Return a list of expressions in the output which match REGEXP.
  3174. REGEXP-GROUP is the regular expression group in REGEXP to use.
  3175. \(fn COMMAND REGEXP REGEXP-GROUP)" nil nil)
  3176. (autoload 'comint-redirect-results-list-from-process "comint" "\
  3177. Send COMMAND to PROCESS.
  3178. Return a list of expressions in the output which match REGEXP.
  3179. REGEXP-GROUP is the regular expression group in REGEXP to use.
  3180. \(fn PROCESS COMMAND REGEXP REGEXP-GROUP)" nil nil)
  3181. ;;;***
  3182. ;;;### (autoloads (compare-windows) "compare-w" "vc/compare-w.el"
  3183. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  3184. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/compare-w.el
  3185. (autoload 'compare-windows "compare-w" "\
  3186. Compare text in current window with text in next window.
  3187. Compares the text starting at point in each window,
  3188. moving over text in each one as far as they match.
  3189. This command pushes the mark in each window
  3190. at the prior location of point in that window.
  3191. If both windows display the same buffer,
  3192. the mark is pushed twice in that buffer:
  3193. first in the other window, then in the selected window.
  3194. A prefix arg means reverse the value of variable
  3195. `compare-ignore-whitespace'. If `compare-ignore-whitespace' is
  3196. nil, then a prefix arg means ignore changes in whitespace. If
  3197. `compare-ignore-whitespace' is non-nil, then a prefix arg means
  3198. don't ignore changes in whitespace. The variable
  3199. `compare-windows-whitespace' controls how whitespace is skipped.
  3200. If `compare-ignore-case' is non-nil, changes in case are also
  3201. ignored.
  3202. If `compare-windows-sync' is non-nil, then successive calls of
  3203. this command work in interlaced mode:
  3204. on first call it advances points to the next difference,
  3205. on second call it synchronizes points by skipping the difference,
  3206. on third call it again advances points to the next difference and so on.
  3207. \(fn IGNORE-WHITESPACE)" t nil)
  3208. ;;;***
  3209. ;;;### (autoloads (compilation-next-error-function compilation-minor-mode
  3210. ;;;;;; compilation-shell-minor-mode compilation-mode compilation-start
  3211. ;;;;;; compile compilation-disable-input compile-command compilation-search-path
  3212. ;;;;;; compilation-ask-about-save compilation-window-height compilation-start-hook
  3213. ;;;;;; compilation-mode-hook) "compile" "progmodes/compile.el" (20400
  3214. ;;;;;; 62402))
  3215. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/compile.el
  3216. (defvar compilation-mode-hook nil "\
  3217. List of hook functions run by `compilation-mode' (see `run-mode-hooks').")
  3218. (custom-autoload 'compilation-mode-hook "compile" t)
  3219. (defvar compilation-start-hook nil "\
  3220. List of hook functions run by `compilation-start' on the compilation process.
  3221. \(See `run-hook-with-args').
  3222. If you use \"omake -P\" and do not want \\[save-buffers-kill-terminal] to ask whether you want
  3223. the compilation to be killed, you can use this hook:
  3224. (add-hook 'compilation-start-hook
  3225. (lambda (process) (set-process-query-on-exit-flag process nil)) nil t)")
  3226. (custom-autoload 'compilation-start-hook "compile" t)
  3227. (defvar compilation-window-height nil "\
  3228. Number of lines in a compilation window. If nil, use Emacs default.")
  3229. (custom-autoload 'compilation-window-height "compile" t)
  3230. (defvar compilation-process-setup-function nil "\
  3231. *Function to call to customize the compilation process.
  3232. This function is called immediately before the compilation process is
  3233. started. It can be used to set any variables or functions that are used
  3234. while processing the output of the compilation process.")
  3235. (defvar compilation-buffer-name-function nil "\
  3236. Function to compute the name of a compilation buffer.
  3237. The function receives one argument, the name of the major mode of the
  3238. compilation buffer. It should return a string.
  3239. If nil, compute the name with `(concat \"*\" (downcase major-mode) \"*\")'.")
  3240. (defvar compilation-finish-function nil "\
  3241. Function to call when a compilation process finishes.
  3242. It is called with two arguments: the compilation buffer, and a string
  3243. describing how the process finished.")
  3244. (defvar compilation-finish-functions nil "\
  3245. Functions to call when a compilation process finishes.
  3246. Each function is called with two arguments: the compilation buffer,
  3247. and a string describing how the process finished.")
  3248. (put 'compilation-directory 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  3249. (defvar compilation-ask-about-save t "\
  3250. Non-nil means \\[compile] asks which buffers to save before compiling.
  3251. Otherwise, it saves all modified buffers without asking.")
  3252. (custom-autoload 'compilation-ask-about-save "compile" t)
  3253. (defvar compilation-search-path '(nil) "\
  3254. List of directories to search for source files named in error messages.
  3255. Elements should be directory names, not file names of directories.
  3256. The value nil as an element means to try the default directory.")
  3257. (custom-autoload 'compilation-search-path "compile" t)
  3258. (defvar compile-command (purecopy "make -k ") "\
  3259. Last shell command used to do a compilation; default for next compilation.
  3260. Sometimes it is useful for files to supply local values for this variable.
  3261. You might also use mode hooks to specify it in certain modes, like this:
  3262. (add-hook 'c-mode-hook
  3263. (lambda ()
  3264. (unless (or (file-exists-p \"makefile\")
  3265. (file-exists-p \"Makefile\"))
  3266. (set (make-local-variable 'compile-command)
  3267. (concat \"make -k \"
  3268. (file-name-sans-extension buffer-file-name))))))")
  3269. (custom-autoload 'compile-command "compile" t)
  3270. (put 'compile-command 'safe-local-variable (lambda (a) (and (stringp a) (or (not (boundp 'compilation-read-command)) compilation-read-command))))
  3271. (defvar compilation-disable-input nil "\
  3272. If non-nil, send end-of-file as compilation process input.
  3273. This only affects platforms that support asynchronous processes (see
  3274. `start-process'); synchronous compilation processes never accept input.")
  3275. (custom-autoload 'compilation-disable-input "compile" t)
  3276. (autoload 'compile "compile" "\
  3277. Compile the program including the current buffer. Default: run `make'.
  3278. Runs COMMAND, a shell command, in a separate process asynchronously
  3279. with output going to the buffer `*compilation*'.
  3280. You can then use the command \\[next-error] to find the next error message
  3281. and move to the source code that caused it.
  3282. If optional second arg COMINT is t the buffer will be in Comint mode with
  3283. `compilation-shell-minor-mode'.
  3284. Interactively, prompts for the command if `compilation-read-command' is
  3285. non-nil; otherwise uses `compile-command'. With prefix arg, always prompts.
  3286. Additionally, with universal prefix arg, compilation buffer will be in
  3287. comint mode, i.e. interactive.
  3288. To run more than one compilation at once, start one then rename
  3289. the `*compilation*' buffer to some other name with
  3290. \\[rename-buffer]. Then _switch buffers_ and start the new compilation.
  3291. It will create a new `*compilation*' buffer.
  3292. On most systems, termination of the main compilation process
  3293. kills its subprocesses.
  3294. The name used for the buffer is actually whatever is returned by
  3295. the function in `compilation-buffer-name-function', so you can set that
  3296. to a function that generates a unique name.
  3297. \(fn COMMAND &optional COMINT)" t nil)
  3298. (autoload 'compilation-start "compile" "\
  3299. Run compilation command COMMAND (low level interface).
  3300. If COMMAND starts with a cd command, that becomes the `default-directory'.
  3301. The rest of the arguments are optional; for them, nil means use the default.
  3302. MODE is the major mode to set in the compilation buffer. Mode
  3303. may also be t meaning use `compilation-shell-minor-mode' under `comint-mode'.
  3304. If NAME-FUNCTION is non-nil, call it with one argument (the mode name)
  3305. to determine the buffer name. Otherwise, the default is to
  3306. reuses the current buffer if it has the proper major mode,
  3307. else use or create a buffer with name based on the major mode.
  3308. If HIGHLIGHT-REGEXP is non-nil, `next-error' will temporarily highlight
  3309. the matching section of the visited source line; the default is to use the
  3310. global value of `compilation-highlight-regexp'.
  3311. Returns the compilation buffer created.
  3312. \(fn COMMAND &optional MODE NAME-FUNCTION HIGHLIGHT-REGEXP)" nil nil)
  3313. (autoload 'compilation-mode "compile" "\
  3314. Major mode for compilation log buffers.
  3315. \\<compilation-mode-map>To visit the source for a line-numbered error,
  3316. move point to the error message line and type \\[compile-goto-error].
  3317. To kill the compilation, type \\[kill-compilation].
  3318. Runs `compilation-mode-hook' with `run-mode-hooks' (which see).
  3319. \\{compilation-mode-map}
  3320. \(fn &optional NAME-OF-MODE)" t nil)
  3321. (autoload 'compilation-shell-minor-mode "compile" "\
  3322. Toggle Compilation Shell minor mode.
  3323. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Compilation Shell minor mode
  3324. if ARG is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from
  3325. Lisp, enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  3326. When Compilation Shell minor mode is enabled, all the
  3327. error-parsing commands of the Compilation major mode are
  3328. available but bound to keys that don't collide with Shell mode.
  3329. See `compilation-mode'.
  3330. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  3331. (autoload 'compilation-minor-mode "compile" "\
  3332. Toggle Compilation minor mode.
  3333. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Compilation minor mode if ARG
  3334. is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp,
  3335. enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  3336. When Compilation minor mode is enabled, all the error-parsing
  3337. commands of Compilation major mode are available. See
  3338. `compilation-mode'.
  3339. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  3340. (autoload 'compilation-next-error-function "compile" "\
  3341. Advance to the next error message and visit the file where the error was.
  3342. This is the value of `next-error-function' in Compilation buffers.
  3343. \(fn N &optional RESET)" t nil)
  3344. ;;;***
  3345. ;;;### (autoloads (dynamic-completion-mode) "completion" "completion.el"
  3346. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  3347. ;;; Generated autoloads from completion.el
  3348. (defvar dynamic-completion-mode nil "\
  3349. Non-nil if Dynamic-Completion mode is enabled.
  3350. See the command `dynamic-completion-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  3351. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  3352. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  3353. or call the function `dynamic-completion-mode'.")
  3354. (custom-autoload 'dynamic-completion-mode "completion" nil)
  3355. (autoload 'dynamic-completion-mode "completion" "\
  3356. Toggle dynamic word-completion on or off.
  3357. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  3358. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  3359. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  3360. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  3361. ;;;***
  3362. ;;;### (autoloads (conf-xdefaults-mode conf-ppd-mode conf-colon-mode
  3363. ;;;;;; conf-space-keywords conf-space-mode conf-javaprop-mode conf-windows-mode
  3364. ;;;;;; conf-unix-mode conf-mode) "conf-mode" "textmodes/conf-mode.el"
  3365. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  3366. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/conf-mode.el
  3367. (autoload 'conf-mode "conf-mode" "\
  3368. Mode for Unix and Windows Conf files and Java properties.
  3369. Most conf files know only three kinds of constructs: parameter
  3370. assignments optionally grouped into sections and comments. Yet
  3371. there is a great range of variation in the exact syntax of conf
  3372. files. See below for various wrapper commands that set up the
  3373. details for some of the most widespread variants.
  3374. This mode sets up font locking, outline, imenu and it provides
  3375. alignment support through `conf-align-assignments'. If strings
  3376. come out wrong, try `conf-quote-normal'.
  3377. Some files allow continuation lines, either with a backslash at
  3378. the end of line, or by indenting the next line (further). These
  3379. constructs cannot currently be recognized.
  3380. Because of this great variety of nuances, which are often not
  3381. even clearly specified, please don't expect it to get every file
  3382. quite right. Patches that clearly identify some special case,
  3383. without breaking the general ones, are welcome.
  3384. If instead you start this mode with the generic `conf-mode'
  3385. command, it will parse the buffer. It will generally well
  3386. identify the first four cases listed below. If the buffer
  3387. doesn't have enough contents to decide, this is identical to
  3388. `conf-windows-mode' on Windows, elsewhere to `conf-unix-mode'.
  3389. See also `conf-space-mode', `conf-colon-mode', `conf-javaprop-mode',
  3390. `conf-ppd-mode' and `conf-xdefaults-mode'.
  3391. \\{conf-mode-map}
  3392. \(fn)" t nil)
  3393. (autoload 'conf-unix-mode "conf-mode" "\
  3394. Conf Mode starter for Unix style Conf files.
  3395. Comments start with `#'.
  3396. For details see `conf-mode'. Example:
  3397. # Conf mode font-locks this right on Unix and with \\[conf-unix-mode]
  3398. \[Desktop Entry]
  3399. Encoding=UTF-8
  3400. Name=The GIMP
  3401. Name[ca]=El GIMP
  3402. Name[cs]=GIMP
  3403. \(fn)" t nil)
  3404. (autoload 'conf-windows-mode "conf-mode" "\
  3405. Conf Mode starter for Windows style Conf files.
  3406. Comments start with `;'.
  3407. For details see `conf-mode'. Example:
  3408. ; Conf mode font-locks this right on Windows and with \\[conf-windows-mode]
  3409. \[ExtShellFolderViews]
  3410. Default={5984FFE0-28D4-11CF-AE66-08002B2E1262}
  3411. {5984FFE0-28D4-11CF-AE66-08002B2E1262}={5984FFE0-28D4-11CF-AE66-08002B2E1262}
  3412. \[{5984FFE0-28D4-11CF-AE66-08002B2E1262}]
  3413. PersistMoniker=file://Folder.htt
  3414. \(fn)" t nil)
  3415. (autoload 'conf-javaprop-mode "conf-mode" "\
  3416. Conf Mode starter for Java properties files.
  3417. Comments start with `#' but are also recognized with `//' or
  3418. between `/*' and `*/'.
  3419. For details see `conf-mode'. Example:
  3420. # Conf mode font-locks this right with \\[conf-javaprop-mode] (Java properties)
  3421. // another kind of comment
  3422. /* yet another */
  3423. name:value
  3424. name=value
  3425. name value
  3426. x.1 =
  3427. x.2.y.1.z.1 =
  3428. x.2.y.1.z.2.zz =
  3429. \(fn)" t nil)
  3430. (autoload 'conf-space-mode "conf-mode" "\
  3431. Conf Mode starter for space separated conf files.
  3432. \"Assignments\" are with ` '. Keywords before the parameters are
  3433. recognized according to the variable `conf-space-keywords-alist'.
  3434. Alternatively, you can specify a value for the file local variable
  3435. `conf-space-keywords'.
  3436. Use the function `conf-space-keywords' if you want to specify keywords
  3437. in an interactive fashion instead.
  3438. For details see `conf-mode'. Example:
  3439. # Conf mode font-locks this right with \\[conf-space-mode] (space separated)
  3440. image/jpeg jpeg jpg jpe
  3441. image/png png
  3442. image/tiff tiff tif
  3443. # Or with keywords (from a recognized file name):
  3444. class desktop
  3445. # Standard multimedia devices
  3446. add /dev/audio desktop
  3447. add /dev/mixer desktop
  3448. \(fn)" t nil)
  3449. (autoload 'conf-space-keywords "conf-mode" "\
  3450. Enter Conf Space mode using regexp KEYWORDS to match the keywords.
  3451. See `conf-space-mode'.
  3452. \(fn KEYWORDS)" t nil)
  3453. (autoload 'conf-colon-mode "conf-mode" "\
  3454. Conf Mode starter for Colon files.
  3455. \"Assignments\" are with `:'.
  3456. For details see `conf-mode'. Example:
  3457. # Conf mode font-locks this right with \\[conf-colon-mode] (colon)
  3458. <Multi_key> <exclam> <exclam> : \"\\241\" exclamdown
  3459. <Multi_key> <c> <slash> : \"\\242\" cent
  3460. \(fn)" t nil)
  3461. (autoload 'conf-ppd-mode "conf-mode" "\
  3462. Conf Mode starter for Adobe/CUPS PPD files.
  3463. Comments start with `*%' and \"assignments\" are with `:'.
  3464. For details see `conf-mode'. Example:
  3465. *% Conf mode font-locks this right with \\[conf-ppd-mode] (PPD)
  3466. *DefaultTransfer: Null
  3467. *Transfer Null.Inverse: \"{ 1 exch sub }\"
  3468. \(fn)" t nil)
  3469. (autoload 'conf-xdefaults-mode "conf-mode" "\
  3470. Conf Mode starter for Xdefaults files.
  3471. Comments start with `!' and \"assignments\" are with `:'.
  3472. For details see `conf-mode'. Example:
  3473. ! Conf mode font-locks this right with \\[conf-xdefaults-mode] (.Xdefaults)
  3474. *background: gray99
  3475. *foreground: black
  3476. \(fn)" t nil)
  3477. ;;;***
  3478. ;;;### (autoloads (shuffle-vector cookie-snarf cookie-insert cookie)
  3479. ;;;;;; "cookie1" "play/cookie1.el" (20400 62402))
  3480. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/cookie1.el
  3481. (autoload 'cookie "cookie1" "\
  3482. Return a random phrase from PHRASE-FILE.
  3483. When the phrase file is read in, display STARTMSG at the beginning
  3484. of load, ENDMSG at the end.
  3485. \(fn PHRASE-FILE STARTMSG ENDMSG)" nil nil)
  3486. (autoload 'cookie-insert "cookie1" "\
  3487. Insert random phrases from PHRASE-FILE; COUNT of them.
  3488. When the phrase file is read in, display STARTMSG at the beginning
  3489. of load, ENDMSG at the end.
  3490. \(fn PHRASE-FILE &optional COUNT STARTMSG ENDMSG)" nil nil)
  3491. (autoload 'cookie-snarf "cookie1" "\
  3492. Reads in the PHRASE-FILE, returns it as a vector of strings.
  3493. Emit STARTMSG and ENDMSG before and after. Caches the result; second
  3494. and subsequent calls on the same file won't go to disk.
  3495. \(fn PHRASE-FILE STARTMSG ENDMSG)" nil nil)
  3496. (autoload 'shuffle-vector "cookie1" "\
  3497. Randomly permute the elements of VECTOR (all permutations equally likely).
  3498. \(fn VECTOR)" nil nil)
  3499. ;;;***
  3500. ;;;### (autoloads (copyright-update-directory copyright copyright-fix-years
  3501. ;;;;;; copyright-update) "copyright" "emacs-lisp/copyright.el" (20517
  3502. ;;;;;; 48515))
  3503. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/copyright.el
  3504. (put 'copyright-at-end-flag 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  3505. (put 'copyright-names-regexp 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  3506. (put 'copyright-year-ranges 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  3507. (autoload 'copyright-update "copyright" "\
  3508. Update copyright notice to indicate the current year.
  3509. With prefix ARG, replace the years in the notice rather than adding
  3510. the current year after them. If necessary, and
  3511. `copyright-current-gpl-version' is set, any copying permissions
  3512. following the copyright are updated as well.
  3513. If non-nil, INTERACTIVEP tells the function to behave as when it's called
  3514. interactively.
  3515. \(fn &optional ARG INTERACTIVEP)" t nil)
  3516. (autoload 'copyright-fix-years "copyright" "\
  3517. Convert 2 digit years to 4 digit years.
  3518. Uses heuristic: year >= 50 means 19xx, < 50 means 20xx.
  3519. If `copyright-year-ranges' (which see) is non-nil, also
  3520. independently replaces consecutive years with a range.
  3521. \(fn)" t nil)
  3522. (autoload 'copyright "copyright" "\
  3523. Insert a copyright by $ORGANIZATION notice at cursor.
  3524. \(fn &optional STR ARG)" t nil)
  3525. (autoload 'copyright-update-directory "copyright" "\
  3526. Update copyright notice for all files in DIRECTORY matching MATCH.
  3527. If FIX is non-nil, run `copyright-fix-years' instead.
  3528. \(fn DIRECTORY MATCH &optional FIX)" t nil)
  3529. ;;;***
  3530. ;;;### (autoloads (cperl-perldoc-at-point cperl-perldoc cperl-mode)
  3531. ;;;;;; "cperl-mode" "progmodes/cperl-mode.el" (20512 35261))
  3532. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cperl-mode.el
  3533. (put 'cperl-indent-level 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  3534. (put 'cperl-brace-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  3535. (put 'cperl-continued-brace-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  3536. (put 'cperl-label-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  3537. (put 'cperl-continued-statement-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  3538. (put 'cperl-extra-newline-before-brace 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  3539. (put 'cperl-merge-trailing-else 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  3540. (autoload 'cperl-mode "cperl-mode" "\
  3541. Major mode for editing Perl code.
  3542. Expression and list commands understand all C brackets.
  3543. Tab indents for Perl code.
  3544. Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
  3545. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  3546. Various characters in Perl almost always come in pairs: {}, (), [],
  3547. sometimes <>. When the user types the first, she gets the second as
  3548. well, with optional special formatting done on {}. (Disabled by
  3549. default.) You can always quote (with \\[quoted-insert]) the left
  3550. \"paren\" to avoid the expansion. The processing of < is special,
  3551. since most the time you mean \"less\". CPerl mode tries to guess
  3552. whether you want to type pair <>, and inserts is if it
  3553. appropriate. You can set `cperl-electric-parens-string' to the string that
  3554. contains the parens from the above list you want to be electrical.
  3555. Electricity of parens is controlled by `cperl-electric-parens'.
  3556. You may also set `cperl-electric-parens-mark' to have electric parens
  3557. look for active mark and \"embrace\" a region if possible.'
  3558. CPerl mode provides expansion of the Perl control constructs:
  3559. if, else, elsif, unless, while, until, continue, do,
  3560. for, foreach, formy and foreachmy.
  3561. and POD directives (Disabled by default, see `cperl-electric-keywords'.)
  3562. The user types the keyword immediately followed by a space, which
  3563. causes the construct to be expanded, and the point is positioned where
  3564. she is most likely to want to be. eg. when the user types a space
  3565. following \"if\" the following appears in the buffer: if () { or if ()
  3566. } { } and the cursor is between the parentheses. The user can then
  3567. type some boolean expression within the parens. Having done that,
  3568. typing \\[cperl-linefeed] places you - appropriately indented - on a
  3569. new line between the braces (if you typed \\[cperl-linefeed] in a POD
  3570. directive line, then appropriate number of new lines is inserted).
  3571. If CPerl decides that you want to insert \"English\" style construct like
  3572. bite if angry;
  3573. it will not do any expansion. See also help on variable
  3574. `cperl-extra-newline-before-brace'. (Note that one can switch the
  3575. help message on expansion by setting `cperl-message-electric-keyword'
  3576. to nil.)
  3577. \\[cperl-linefeed] is a convenience replacement for typing carriage
  3578. return. It places you in the next line with proper indentation, or if
  3579. you type it inside the inline block of control construct, like
  3580. foreach (@lines) {print; print}
  3581. and you are on a boundary of a statement inside braces, it will
  3582. transform the construct into a multiline and will place you into an
  3583. appropriately indented blank line. If you need a usual
  3584. `newline-and-indent' behavior, it is on \\[newline-and-indent],
  3585. see documentation on `cperl-electric-linefeed'.
  3586. Use \\[cperl-invert-if-unless] to change a construction of the form
  3587. if (A) { B }
  3588. into
  3589. B if A;
  3590. \\{cperl-mode-map}
  3591. Setting the variable `cperl-font-lock' to t switches on font-lock-mode
  3592. \(even with older Emacsen), `cperl-electric-lbrace-space' to t switches
  3593. on electric space between $ and {, `cperl-electric-parens-string' is
  3594. the string that contains parentheses that should be electric in CPerl
  3595. \(see also `cperl-electric-parens-mark' and `cperl-electric-parens'),
  3596. setting `cperl-electric-keywords' enables electric expansion of
  3597. control structures in CPerl. `cperl-electric-linefeed' governs which
  3598. one of two linefeed behavior is preferable. You can enable all these
  3599. options simultaneously (recommended mode of use) by setting
  3600. `cperl-hairy' to t. In this case you can switch separate options off
  3601. by setting them to `null'. Note that one may undo the extra
  3602. whitespace inserted by semis and braces in `auto-newline'-mode by
  3603. consequent \\[cperl-electric-backspace].
  3604. If your site has perl5 documentation in info format, you can use commands
  3605. \\[cperl-info-on-current-command] and \\[cperl-info-on-command] to access it.
  3606. These keys run commands `cperl-info-on-current-command' and
  3607. `cperl-info-on-command', which one is which is controlled by variable
  3608. `cperl-info-on-command-no-prompt' and `cperl-clobber-lisp-bindings'
  3609. \(in turn affected by `cperl-hairy').
  3610. Even if you have no info-format documentation, short one-liner-style
  3611. help is available on \\[cperl-get-help], and one can run perldoc or
  3612. man via menu.
  3613. It is possible to show this help automatically after some idle time.
  3614. This is regulated by variable `cperl-lazy-help-time'. Default with
  3615. `cperl-hairy' (if the value of `cperl-lazy-help-time' is nil) is 5
  3616. secs idle time . It is also possible to switch this on/off from the
  3617. menu, or via \\[cperl-toggle-autohelp]. Requires `run-with-idle-timer'.
  3618. Use \\[cperl-lineup] to vertically lineup some construction - put the
  3619. beginning of the region at the start of construction, and make region
  3620. span the needed amount of lines.
  3621. Variables `cperl-pod-here-scan', `cperl-pod-here-fontify',
  3622. `cperl-pod-face', `cperl-pod-head-face' control processing of POD and
  3623. here-docs sections. With capable Emaxen results of scan are used
  3624. for indentation too, otherwise they are used for highlighting only.
  3625. Variables controlling indentation style:
  3626. `cperl-tab-always-indent'
  3627. Non-nil means TAB in CPerl mode should always reindent the current line,
  3628. regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
  3629. `cperl-indent-left-aligned-comments'
  3630. Non-nil means that the comment starting in leftmost column should indent.
  3631. `cperl-auto-newline'
  3632. Non-nil means automatically newline before and after braces,
  3633. and after colons and semicolons, inserted in Perl code. The following
  3634. \\[cperl-electric-backspace] will remove the inserted whitespace.
  3635. Insertion after colons requires both this variable and
  3636. `cperl-auto-newline-after-colon' set.
  3637. `cperl-auto-newline-after-colon'
  3638. Non-nil means automatically newline even after colons.
  3639. Subject to `cperl-auto-newline' setting.
  3640. `cperl-indent-level'
  3641. Indentation of Perl statements within surrounding block.
  3642. The surrounding block's indentation is the indentation
  3643. of the line on which the open-brace appears.
  3644. `cperl-continued-statement-offset'
  3645. Extra indentation given to a substatement, such as the
  3646. then-clause of an if, or body of a while, or just a statement continuation.
  3647. `cperl-continued-brace-offset'
  3648. Extra indentation given to a brace that starts a substatement.
  3649. This is in addition to `cperl-continued-statement-offset'.
  3650. `cperl-brace-offset'
  3651. Extra indentation for line if it starts with an open brace.
  3652. `cperl-brace-imaginary-offset'
  3653. An open brace following other text is treated as if it the line started
  3654. this far to the right of the actual line indentation.
  3655. `cperl-label-offset'
  3656. Extra indentation for line that is a label.
  3657. `cperl-min-label-indent'
  3658. Minimal indentation for line that is a label.
  3659. Settings for classic indent-styles: K&R BSD=C++ GNU PerlStyle=Whitesmith
  3660. `cperl-indent-level' 5 4 2 4
  3661. `cperl-brace-offset' 0 0 0 0
  3662. `cperl-continued-brace-offset' -5 -4 0 0
  3663. `cperl-label-offset' -5 -4 -2 -4
  3664. `cperl-continued-statement-offset' 5 4 2 4
  3665. CPerl knows several indentation styles, and may bulk set the
  3666. corresponding variables. Use \\[cperl-set-style] to do this. Use
  3667. \\[cperl-set-style-back] to restore the memorized preexisting values
  3668. \(both available from menu). See examples in `cperl-style-examples'.
  3669. Part of the indentation style is how different parts of if/elsif/else
  3670. statements are broken into lines; in CPerl, this is reflected on how
  3671. templates for these constructs are created (controlled by
  3672. `cperl-extra-newline-before-brace'), and how reflow-logic should treat
  3673. \"continuation\" blocks of else/elsif/continue, controlled by the same
  3674. variable, and by `cperl-extra-newline-before-brace-multiline',
  3675. `cperl-merge-trailing-else', `cperl-indent-region-fix-constructs'.
  3676. If `cperl-indent-level' is 0, the statement after opening brace in
  3677. column 0 is indented on
  3678. `cperl-brace-offset'+`cperl-continued-statement-offset'.
  3679. Turning on CPerl mode calls the hooks in the variable `cperl-mode-hook'
  3680. with no args.
  3681. DO NOT FORGET to read micro-docs (available from `Perl' menu)
  3682. or as help on variables `cperl-tips', `cperl-problems',
  3683. `cperl-praise', `cperl-speed'.
  3684. \(fn)" t nil)
  3685. (autoload 'cperl-perldoc "cperl-mode" "\
  3686. Run `perldoc' on WORD.
  3687. \(fn WORD)" t nil)
  3688. (autoload 'cperl-perldoc-at-point "cperl-mode" "\
  3689. Run a `perldoc' on the word around point.
  3690. \(fn)" t nil)
  3691. ;;;***
  3692. ;;;### (autoloads (cpp-parse-edit cpp-highlight-buffer) "cpp" "progmodes/cpp.el"
  3693. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  3694. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cpp.el
  3695. (autoload 'cpp-highlight-buffer "cpp" "\
  3696. Highlight C code according to preprocessor conditionals.
  3697. This command pops up a buffer which you should edit to specify
  3698. what kind of highlighting to use, and the criteria for highlighting.
  3699. A prefix arg suppresses display of that buffer.
  3700. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  3701. (autoload 'cpp-parse-edit "cpp" "\
  3702. Edit display information for cpp conditionals.
  3703. \(fn)" t nil)
  3704. ;;;***
  3705. ;;;### (autoloads (crisp-mode crisp-mode) "crisp" "emulation/crisp.el"
  3706. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  3707. ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/crisp.el
  3708. (defvar crisp-mode nil "\
  3709. Track status of CRiSP emulation mode.
  3710. A value of nil means CRiSP mode is not enabled. A value of t
  3711. indicates CRiSP mode is enabled.
  3712. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  3713. use either M-x customize or the function `crisp-mode'.")
  3714. (custom-autoload 'crisp-mode "crisp" nil)
  3715. (autoload 'crisp-mode "crisp" "\
  3716. Toggle CRiSP/Brief emulation (CRiSP mode).
  3717. With a prefix argument ARG, enable CRiSP mode if ARG is positive,
  3718. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  3719. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  3720. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  3721. (defalias 'brief-mode 'crisp-mode)
  3722. ;;;***
  3723. ;;;### (autoloads (completing-read-multiple) "crm" "emacs-lisp/crm.el"
  3724. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  3725. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/crm.el
  3726. (autoload 'completing-read-multiple "crm" "\
  3727. Read multiple strings in the minibuffer, with completion.
  3728. By using this functionality, a user may specify multiple strings at a
  3729. single prompt, optionally using completion.
  3730. Multiple strings are specified by separating each of the strings with
  3731. a prespecified separator character. For example, if the separator
  3732. character is a comma, the strings 'alice', 'bob', and 'eve' would be
  3733. specified as 'alice,bob,eve'.
  3734. The default value for the separator character is the value of
  3735. `crm-default-separator' (comma). The separator character may be
  3736. changed by modifying the value of `crm-separator'.
  3737. Contiguous strings of non-separator-characters are referred to as
  3738. 'elements'. In the aforementioned example, the elements are: 'alice',
  3739. 'bob', and 'eve'.
  3740. Completion is available on a per-element basis. For example, if the
  3741. contents of the minibuffer are 'alice,bob,eve' and point is between
  3742. 'l' and 'i', pressing TAB operates on the element 'alice'.
  3743. The return value of this function is a list of the read strings.
  3744. See the documentation for `completing-read' for details on the arguments:
  3745. PROMPT, TABLE, PREDICATE, REQUIRE-MATCH, INITIAL-INPUT, HIST, DEF, and
  3746. INHERIT-INPUT-METHOD.
  3747. \(fn PROMPT TABLE &optional PREDICATE REQUIRE-MATCH INITIAL-INPUT HIST DEF INHERIT-INPUT-METHOD)" nil nil)
  3748. ;;;***
  3749. ;;;### (autoloads (css-mode) "css-mode" "textmodes/css-mode.el" (20352
  3750. ;;;;;; 65510))
  3751. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/css-mode.el
  3752. (autoload 'css-mode "css-mode" "\
  3753. Major mode to edit Cascading Style Sheets.
  3754. \(fn)" t nil)
  3755. ;;;***
  3756. ;;;### (autoloads (cua-selection-mode cua-mode) "cua-base" "emulation/cua-base.el"
  3757. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  3758. ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/cua-base.el
  3759. (defvar cua-mode nil "\
  3760. Non-nil if Cua mode is enabled.
  3761. See the command `cua-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  3762. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  3763. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  3764. or call the function `cua-mode'.")
  3765. (custom-autoload 'cua-mode "cua-base" nil)
  3766. (autoload 'cua-mode "cua-base" "\
  3767. Toggle Common User Access style editing (CUA mode).
  3768. With a prefix argument ARG, enable CUA mode if ARG is positive,
  3769. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  3770. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  3771. CUA mode is a global minor mode. When enabled, typed text
  3772. replaces the active selection, and you can use C-z, C-x, C-c, and
  3773. C-v to undo, cut, copy, and paste in addition to the normal Emacs
  3774. bindings. The C-x and C-c keys only do cut and copy when the
  3775. region is active, so in most cases, they do not conflict with the
  3776. normal function of these prefix keys.
  3777. If you really need to perform a command which starts with one of
  3778. the prefix keys even when the region is active, you have three
  3779. options:
  3780. - press the prefix key twice very quickly (within 0.2 seconds),
  3781. - press the prefix key and the following key within 0.2 seconds, or
  3782. - use the SHIFT key with the prefix key, i.e. C-S-x or C-S-c.
  3783. You can customize `cua-enable-cua-keys' to completely disable the
  3784. CUA bindings, or `cua-prefix-override-inhibit-delay' to change
  3785. the prefix fallback behavior.
  3786. CUA mode manages Transient Mark mode internally. Trying to disable
  3787. Transient Mark mode while CUA mode is enabled does not work; if you
  3788. only want to highlight the region when it is selected using a
  3789. shifted movement key, set `cua-highlight-region-shift-only'.
  3790. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  3791. (autoload 'cua-selection-mode "cua-base" "\
  3792. Enable CUA selection mode without the C-z/C-x/C-c/C-v bindings.
  3793. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  3794. ;;;***
  3795. ;;;### (autoloads (customize-menu-create custom-menu-create customize-save-customized
  3796. ;;;;;; custom-save-all custom-file customize-browse custom-buffer-create-other-window
  3797. ;;;;;; custom-buffer-create customize-apropos-groups customize-apropos-faces
  3798. ;;;;;; customize-apropos-options customize-apropos customize-saved
  3799. ;;;;;; customize-rogue customize-unsaved customize-face-other-window
  3800. ;;;;;; customize-face customize-changed-options customize-option-other-window
  3801. ;;;;;; customize-option customize-group-other-window customize-group
  3802. ;;;;;; customize-mode customize customize-push-and-save customize-save-variable
  3803. ;;;;;; customize-set-variable customize-set-value custom-menu-sort-alphabetically
  3804. ;;;;;; custom-buffer-sort-alphabetically custom-browse-sort-alphabetically)
  3805. ;;;;;; "cus-edit" "cus-edit.el" (20424 24226))
  3806. ;;; Generated autoloads from cus-edit.el
  3807. (defvar custom-browse-sort-alphabetically nil "\
  3808. If non-nil, sort customization group alphabetically in `custom-browse'.")
  3809. (custom-autoload 'custom-browse-sort-alphabetically "cus-edit" t)
  3810. (defvar custom-buffer-sort-alphabetically t "\
  3811. Whether to sort customization groups alphabetically in Custom buffer.")
  3812. (custom-autoload 'custom-buffer-sort-alphabetically "cus-edit" t)
  3813. (defvar custom-menu-sort-alphabetically nil "\
  3814. If non-nil, sort each customization group alphabetically in menus.")
  3815. (custom-autoload 'custom-menu-sort-alphabetically "cus-edit" t)
  3816. (autoload 'customize-set-value "cus-edit" "\
  3817. Set VARIABLE to VALUE, and return VALUE. VALUE is a Lisp object.
  3818. If VARIABLE has a `variable-interactive' property, that is used as if
  3819. it were the arg to `interactive' (which see) to interactively read the value.
  3820. If VARIABLE has a `custom-type' property, it must be a widget and the
  3821. `:prompt-value' property of that widget will be used for reading the value.
  3822. If given a prefix (or a COMMENT argument), also prompt for a comment.
  3823. \(fn VARIABLE VALUE &optional COMMENT)" t nil)
  3824. (autoload 'customize-set-variable "cus-edit" "\
  3825. Set the default for VARIABLE to VALUE, and return VALUE.
  3826. VALUE is a Lisp object.
  3827. If VARIABLE has a `custom-set' property, that is used for setting
  3828. VARIABLE, otherwise `set-default' is used.
  3829. If VARIABLE has a `variable-interactive' property, that is used as if
  3830. it were the arg to `interactive' (which see) to interactively read the value.
  3831. If VARIABLE has a `custom-type' property, it must be a widget and the
  3832. `:prompt-value' property of that widget will be used for reading the value.
  3833. If given a prefix (or a COMMENT argument), also prompt for a comment.
  3834. \(fn VARIABLE VALUE &optional COMMENT)" t nil)
  3835. (autoload 'customize-save-variable "cus-edit" "\
  3836. Set the default for VARIABLE to VALUE, and save it for future sessions.
  3837. Return VALUE.
  3838. If VARIABLE has a `custom-set' property, that is used for setting
  3839. VARIABLE, otherwise `set-default' is used.
  3840. If VARIABLE has a `variable-interactive' property, that is used as if
  3841. it were the arg to `interactive' (which see) to interactively read the value.
  3842. If VARIABLE has a `custom-type' property, it must be a widget and the
  3843. `:prompt-value' property of that widget will be used for reading the value.
  3844. If given a prefix (or a COMMENT argument), also prompt for a comment.
  3845. \(fn VARIABLE VALUE &optional COMMENT)" t nil)
  3846. (autoload 'customize-push-and-save "cus-edit" "\
  3847. Add ELTS to LIST-VAR and save for future sessions, safely.
  3848. ELTS should be a list. This function adds each entry to the
  3849. value of LIST-VAR using `add-to-list'.
  3850. If Emacs is initialized, call `customize-save-variable' to save
  3851. the resulting list value now. Otherwise, add an entry to
  3852. `after-init-hook' to save it after initialization.
  3853. \(fn LIST-VAR ELTS)" nil nil)
  3854. (autoload 'customize "cus-edit" "\
  3855. Select a customization buffer which you can use to set user options.
  3856. User options are structured into \"groups\".
  3857. Initially the top-level group `Emacs' and its immediate subgroups
  3858. are shown; the contents of those subgroups are initially hidden.
  3859. \(fn)" t nil)
  3860. (autoload 'customize-mode "cus-edit" "\
  3861. Customize options related to the current major mode.
  3862. If a prefix \\[universal-argument] was given (or if the current major mode has no known group),
  3863. then prompt for the MODE to customize.
  3864. \(fn MODE)" t nil)
  3865. (autoload 'customize-group "cus-edit" "\
  3866. Customize GROUP, which must be a customization group.
  3867. If OTHER-WINDOW is non-nil, display in another window.
  3868. \(fn &optional GROUP OTHER-WINDOW)" t nil)
  3869. (autoload 'customize-group-other-window "cus-edit" "\
  3870. Customize GROUP, which must be a customization group, in another window.
  3871. \(fn &optional GROUP)" t nil)
  3872. (defalias 'customize-variable 'customize-option)
  3873. (autoload 'customize-option "cus-edit" "\
  3874. Customize SYMBOL, which must be a user option variable.
  3875. \(fn SYMBOL)" t nil)
  3876. (defalias 'customize-variable-other-window 'customize-option-other-window)
  3877. (autoload 'customize-option-other-window "cus-edit" "\
  3878. Customize SYMBOL, which must be a user option variable.
  3879. Show the buffer in another window, but don't select it.
  3880. \(fn SYMBOL)" t nil)
  3881. (defvar customize-package-emacs-version-alist nil "\
  3882. Alist mapping versions of a package to Emacs versions.
  3883. We use this for packages that have their own names, but are released
  3884. as part of Emacs itself.
  3885. Each elements looks like this:
  3886. (PACKAGE (PVERSION . EVERSION)...)
  3887. Here PACKAGE is the name of a package, as a symbol. After
  3888. PACKAGE come one or more elements, each associating a
  3889. package version PVERSION with the first Emacs version
  3890. EVERSION in which it (or a subsequent version of PACKAGE)
  3891. was first released. Both PVERSION and EVERSION are strings.
  3892. PVERSION should be a string that this package used in
  3893. the :package-version keyword for `defcustom', `defgroup',
  3894. and `defface'.
  3895. For example, the MH-E package updates this alist as follows:
  3896. (add-to-list 'customize-package-emacs-version-alist
  3897. '(MH-E (\"6.0\" . \"22.1\") (\"6.1\" . \"22.1\")
  3898. (\"7.0\" . \"22.1\") (\"7.1\" . \"22.1\")
  3899. (\"7.2\" . \"22.1\") (\"7.3\" . \"22.1\")
  3900. (\"7.4\" . \"22.1\") (\"8.0\" . \"22.1\")))
  3901. The value of PACKAGE needs to be unique and it needs to match the
  3902. PACKAGE value appearing in the :package-version keyword. Since
  3903. the user might see the value in a error message, a good choice is
  3904. the official name of the package, such as MH-E or Gnus.")
  3905. (defalias 'customize-changed 'customize-changed-options)
  3906. (autoload 'customize-changed-options "cus-edit" "\
  3907. Customize all settings whose meanings have changed in Emacs itself.
  3908. This includes new user option variables and faces, and new
  3909. customization groups, as well as older options and faces whose meanings
  3910. or default values have changed since the previous major Emacs release.
  3911. With argument SINCE-VERSION (a string), customize all settings
  3912. that were added or redefined since that version.
  3913. \(fn &optional SINCE-VERSION)" t nil)
  3914. (autoload 'customize-face "cus-edit" "\
  3915. Customize FACE, which should be a face name or nil.
  3916. If FACE is nil, customize all faces. If FACE is actually a
  3917. face-alias, customize the face it is aliased to.
  3918. If OTHER-WINDOW is non-nil, display in another window.
  3919. Interactively, when point is on text which has a face specified,
  3920. suggest to customize that face, if it's customizable.
  3921. \(fn &optional FACE OTHER-WINDOW)" t nil)
  3922. (autoload 'customize-face-other-window "cus-edit" "\
  3923. Show customization buffer for face FACE in other window.
  3924. If FACE is actually a face-alias, customize the face it is aliased to.
  3925. Interactively, when point is on text which has a face specified,
  3926. suggest to customize that face, if it's customizable.
  3927. \(fn &optional FACE)" t nil)
  3928. (autoload 'customize-unsaved "cus-edit" "\
  3929. Customize all options and faces set in this session but not saved.
  3930. \(fn)" t nil)
  3931. (autoload 'customize-rogue "cus-edit" "\
  3932. Customize all user variables modified outside customize.
  3933. \(fn)" t nil)
  3934. (autoload 'customize-saved "cus-edit" "\
  3935. Customize all saved options and faces.
  3936. \(fn)" t nil)
  3937. (autoload 'customize-apropos "cus-edit" "\
  3938. Customize all loaded options, faces and groups matching PATTERN.
  3939. PATTERN can be a word, a list of words (separated by spaces),
  3940. or a regexp (using some regexp special characters). If it is a word,
  3941. search for matches for that word as a substring. If it is a list of words,
  3942. search for matches for any two (or more) of those words.
  3943. If TYPE is `options', include only options.
  3944. If TYPE is `faces', include only faces.
  3945. If TYPE is `groups', include only groups.
  3946. If TYPE is t (interactively, with prefix arg), include variables
  3947. that are not customizable options, as well as faces and groups
  3948. \(but we recommend using `apropos-variable' instead).
  3949. \(fn PATTERN &optional TYPE)" t nil)
  3950. (autoload 'customize-apropos-options "cus-edit" "\
  3951. Customize all loaded customizable options matching REGEXP.
  3952. With prefix ARG, include variables that are not customizable options
  3953. \(but it is better to use `apropos-variable' if you want to find those).
  3954. \(fn REGEXP &optional ARG)" t nil)
  3955. (autoload 'customize-apropos-faces "cus-edit" "\
  3956. Customize all loaded faces matching REGEXP.
  3957. \(fn REGEXP)" t nil)
  3958. (autoload 'customize-apropos-groups "cus-edit" "\
  3959. Customize all loaded groups matching REGEXP.
  3960. \(fn REGEXP)" t nil)
  3961. (autoload 'custom-buffer-create "cus-edit" "\
  3962. Create a buffer containing OPTIONS.
  3963. Optional NAME is the name of the buffer.
  3964. OPTIONS should be an alist of the form ((SYMBOL WIDGET)...), where
  3965. SYMBOL is a customization option, and WIDGET is a widget for editing
  3966. that option.
  3967. \(fn OPTIONS &optional NAME DESCRIPTION)" nil nil)
  3968. (autoload 'custom-buffer-create-other-window "cus-edit" "\
  3969. Create a buffer containing OPTIONS, and display it in another window.
  3970. The result includes selecting that window.
  3971. Optional NAME is the name of the buffer.
  3972. OPTIONS should be an alist of the form ((SYMBOL WIDGET)...), where
  3973. SYMBOL is a customization option, and WIDGET is a widget for editing
  3974. that option.
  3975. \(fn OPTIONS &optional NAME DESCRIPTION)" nil nil)
  3976. (autoload 'customize-browse "cus-edit" "\
  3977. Create a tree browser for the customize hierarchy.
  3978. \(fn &optional GROUP)" t nil)
  3979. (defvar custom-file nil "\
  3980. File used for storing customization information.
  3981. The default is nil, which means to use your init file
  3982. as specified by `user-init-file'. If the value is not nil,
  3983. it should be an absolute file name.
  3984. You can set this option through Custom, if you carefully read the
  3985. last paragraph below. However, usually it is simpler to write
  3986. something like the following in your init file:
  3987. \(setq custom-file \"~/.emacs-custom.el\")
  3988. \(load custom-file)
  3989. Note that both lines are necessary: the first line tells Custom to
  3990. save all customizations in this file, but does not load it.
  3991. When you change this variable outside Custom, look in the
  3992. previous custom file (usually your init file) for the
  3993. forms `(custom-set-variables ...)' and `(custom-set-faces ...)',
  3994. and copy them (whichever ones you find) to the new custom file.
  3995. This will preserve your existing customizations.
  3996. If you save this option using Custom, Custom will write all
  3997. currently saved customizations, including the new one for this
  3998. option itself, into the file you specify, overwriting any
  3999. `custom-set-variables' and `custom-set-faces' forms already
  4000. present in that file. It will not delete any customizations from
  4001. the old custom file. You should do that manually if that is what you
  4002. want. You also have to put something like `(load \"CUSTOM-FILE\")
  4003. in your init file, where CUSTOM-FILE is the actual name of the
  4004. file. Otherwise, Emacs will not load the file when it starts up,
  4005. and hence will not set `custom-file' to that file either.")
  4006. (custom-autoload 'custom-file "cus-edit" t)
  4007. (autoload 'custom-save-all "cus-edit" "\
  4008. Save all customizations in `custom-file'.
  4009. \(fn)" nil nil)
  4010. (autoload 'customize-save-customized "cus-edit" "\
  4011. Save all user options which have been set in this session.
  4012. \(fn)" t nil)
  4013. (autoload 'custom-menu-create "cus-edit" "\
  4014. Create menu for customization group SYMBOL.
  4015. The menu is in a format applicable to `easy-menu-define'.
  4016. \(fn SYMBOL)" nil nil)
  4017. (autoload 'customize-menu-create "cus-edit" "\
  4018. Return a customize menu for customization group SYMBOL.
  4019. If optional NAME is given, use that as the name of the menu.
  4020. Otherwise the menu will be named `Customize'.
  4021. The format is suitable for use with `easy-menu-define'.
  4022. \(fn SYMBOL &optional NAME)" nil nil)
  4023. ;;;***
  4024. ;;;### (autoloads (customize-themes describe-theme custom-theme-visit-theme
  4025. ;;;;;; customize-create-theme) "cus-theme" "cus-theme.el" (20352
  4026. ;;;;;; 65510))
  4027. ;;; Generated autoloads from cus-theme.el
  4028. (autoload 'customize-create-theme "cus-theme" "\
  4029. Create or edit a custom theme.
  4030. THEME, if non-nil, should be an existing theme to edit. If THEME
  4031. is `user', the resulting *Custom Theme* buffer also contains a
  4032. checkbox for removing the theme settings specified in the buffer
  4033. from the Custom save file.
  4034. BUFFER, if non-nil, should be a buffer to use; the default is
  4035. named *Custom Theme*.
  4036. \(fn &optional THEME BUFFER)" t nil)
  4037. (autoload 'custom-theme-visit-theme "cus-theme" "\
  4038. Set up a Custom buffer to edit custom theme THEME.
  4039. \(fn THEME)" t nil)
  4040. (autoload 'describe-theme "cus-theme" "\
  4041. Display a description of the Custom theme THEME (a symbol).
  4042. \(fn THEME)" t nil)
  4043. (autoload 'customize-themes "cus-theme" "\
  4044. Display a selectable list of Custom themes.
  4045. When called from Lisp, BUFFER should be the buffer to use; if
  4046. omitted, a buffer named *Custom Themes* is used.
  4047. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  4048. ;;;***
  4049. ;;;### (autoloads (cvs-status-mode) "cvs-status" "vc/cvs-status.el"
  4050. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  4051. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/cvs-status.el
  4052. (autoload 'cvs-status-mode "cvs-status" "\
  4053. Mode used for cvs status output.
  4054. \(fn)" t nil)
  4055. ;;;***
  4056. ;;;### (autoloads (global-cwarn-mode turn-on-cwarn-mode cwarn-mode)
  4057. ;;;;;; "cwarn" "progmodes/cwarn.el" (20400 62402))
  4058. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cwarn.el
  4059. (autoload 'cwarn-mode "cwarn" "\
  4060. Minor mode that highlights suspicious C and C++ constructions.
  4061. Suspicious constructs are highlighted using `font-lock-warning-face'.
  4062. Note, in addition to enabling this minor mode, the major mode must
  4063. be included in the variable `cwarn-configuration'. By default C and
  4064. C++ modes are included.
  4065. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  4066. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  4067. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  4068. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  4069. (autoload 'turn-on-cwarn-mode "cwarn" "\
  4070. Turn on CWarn mode.
  4071. This function is designed to be added to hooks, for example:
  4072. (add-hook 'c-mode-hook 'turn-on-cwarn-mode)
  4073. \(fn)" nil nil)
  4074. (defvar global-cwarn-mode nil "\
  4075. Non-nil if Global-Cwarn mode is enabled.
  4076. See the command `global-cwarn-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  4077. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  4078. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  4079. or call the function `global-cwarn-mode'.")
  4080. (custom-autoload 'global-cwarn-mode "cwarn" nil)
  4081. (autoload 'global-cwarn-mode "cwarn" "\
  4082. Toggle Cwarn mode in all buffers.
  4083. With prefix ARG, enable Global-Cwarn mode if ARG is positive;
  4084. otherwise, disable it. If called from Lisp, enable the mode if
  4085. ARG is omitted or nil.
  4086. Cwarn mode is enabled in all buffers where
  4087. `turn-on-cwarn-mode-if-enabled' would do it.
  4088. See `cwarn-mode' for more information on Cwarn mode.
  4089. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  4090. ;;;***
  4091. ;;;### (autoloads (standard-display-cyrillic-translit cyrillic-encode-alternativnyj-char
  4092. ;;;;;; cyrillic-encode-koi8-r-char) "cyril-util" "language/cyril-util.el"
  4093. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  4094. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/cyril-util.el
  4095. (autoload 'cyrillic-encode-koi8-r-char "cyril-util" "\
  4096. Return KOI8-R external character code of CHAR if appropriate.
  4097. \(fn CHAR)" nil nil)
  4098. (autoload 'cyrillic-encode-alternativnyj-char "cyril-util" "\
  4099. Return ALTERNATIVNYJ external character code of CHAR if appropriate.
  4100. \(fn CHAR)" nil nil)
  4101. (autoload 'standard-display-cyrillic-translit "cyril-util" "\
  4102. Display a cyrillic buffer using a transliteration.
  4103. For readability, the table is slightly
  4104. different from the one used for the input method `cyrillic-translit'.
  4105. The argument is a string which specifies which language you are using;
  4106. that affects the choice of transliterations slightly.
  4107. Possible values are listed in `cyrillic-language-alist'.
  4108. If the argument is t, we use the default cyrillic transliteration.
  4109. If the argument is nil, we return the display table to its standard state.
  4110. \(fn &optional CYRILLIC-LANGUAGE)" t nil)
  4111. ;;;***
  4112. ;;;### (autoloads (dabbrev-expand dabbrev-completion) "dabbrev" "dabbrev.el"
  4113. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  4114. ;;; Generated autoloads from dabbrev.el
  4115. (put 'dabbrev-case-fold-search 'risky-local-variable t)
  4116. (put 'dabbrev-case-replace 'risky-local-variable t)
  4117. (define-key esc-map "/" 'dabbrev-expand)
  4118. (define-key esc-map [?\C-/] 'dabbrev-completion)
  4119. (autoload 'dabbrev-completion "dabbrev" "\
  4120. Completion on current word.
  4121. Like \\[dabbrev-expand] but finds all expansions in the current buffer
  4122. and presents suggestions for completion.
  4123. With a prefix argument ARG, it searches all buffers accepted by the
  4124. function pointed out by `dabbrev-friend-buffer-function' to find the
  4125. completions.
  4126. If the prefix argument is 16 (which comes from \\[universal-argument] \\[universal-argument]),
  4127. then it searches *all* buffers.
  4128. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  4129. (autoload 'dabbrev-expand "dabbrev" "\
  4130. Expand previous word \"dynamically\".
  4131. Expands to the most recent, preceding word for which this is a prefix.
  4132. If no suitable preceding word is found, words following point are
  4133. considered. If still no suitable word is found, then look in the
  4134. buffers accepted by the function pointed out by variable
  4135. `dabbrev-friend-buffer-function'.
  4136. A positive prefix argument, N, says to take the Nth backward *distinct*
  4137. possibility. A negative argument says search forward.
  4138. If the cursor has not moved from the end of the previous expansion and
  4139. no argument is given, replace the previously-made expansion
  4140. with the next possible expansion not yet tried.
  4141. The variable `dabbrev-backward-only' may be used to limit the
  4142. direction of search to backward if set non-nil.
  4143. See also `dabbrev-abbrev-char-regexp' and \\[dabbrev-completion].
  4144. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  4145. ;;;***
  4146. ;;;### (autoloads (data-debug-new-buffer) "data-debug" "cedet/data-debug.el"
  4147. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  4148. ;;; Generated autoloads from cedet/data-debug.el
  4149. (autoload 'data-debug-new-buffer "data-debug" "\
  4150. Create a new data-debug buffer with NAME.
  4151. \(fn NAME)" nil nil)
  4152. ;;;***
  4153. ;;;### (autoloads (dbus-handle-event) "dbus" "net/dbus.el" (20400
  4154. ;;;;;; 62402))
  4155. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/dbus.el
  4156. (autoload 'dbus-handle-event "dbus" "\
  4157. Handle events from the D-Bus.
  4158. EVENT is a D-Bus event, see `dbus-check-event'. HANDLER, being
  4159. part of the event, is called with arguments ARGS.
  4160. If the HANDLER returns a `dbus-error', it is propagated as return message.
  4161. \(fn EVENT)" t nil)
  4162. ;;;***
  4163. ;;;### (autoloads (dcl-mode) "dcl-mode" "progmodes/dcl-mode.el" (20400
  4164. ;;;;;; 62402))
  4165. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/dcl-mode.el
  4166. (autoload 'dcl-mode "dcl-mode" "\
  4167. Major mode for editing DCL-files.
  4168. This mode indents command lines in blocks. (A block is commands between
  4169. THEN-ELSE-ENDIF and between lines matching dcl-block-begin-regexp and
  4170. dcl-block-end-regexp.)
  4171. Labels are indented to a fixed position unless they begin or end a block.
  4172. Whole-line comments (matching dcl-comment-line-regexp) are not indented.
  4173. Data lines are not indented.
  4174. Key bindings:
  4175. \\{dcl-mode-map}
  4176. Commands not usually bound to keys:
  4177. \\[dcl-save-nondefault-options] Save changed options
  4178. \\[dcl-save-all-options] Save all options
  4179. \\[dcl-save-option] Save any option
  4180. \\[dcl-save-mode] Save buffer mode
  4181. Variables controlling indentation style and extra features:
  4182. dcl-basic-offset
  4183. Extra indentation within blocks.
  4184. dcl-continuation-offset
  4185. Extra indentation for continued lines.
  4186. dcl-margin-offset
  4187. Indentation for the first command line in a file or SUBROUTINE.
  4188. dcl-margin-label-offset
  4189. Indentation for a label.
  4190. dcl-comment-line-regexp
  4191. Lines matching this regexp will not be indented.
  4192. dcl-block-begin-regexp
  4193. dcl-block-end-regexp
  4194. Regexps that match command lines that begin and end, respectively,
  4195. a block of command lines that will be given extra indentation.
  4196. Command lines between THEN-ELSE-ENDIF are always indented; these variables
  4197. make it possible to define other places to indent.
  4198. Set to nil to disable this feature.
  4199. dcl-calc-command-indent-function
  4200. Can be set to a function that customizes indentation for command lines.
  4201. Two such functions are included in the package:
  4202. dcl-calc-command-indent-multiple
  4203. dcl-calc-command-indent-hang
  4204. dcl-calc-cont-indent-function
  4205. Can be set to a function that customizes indentation for continued lines.
  4206. One such function is included in the package:
  4207. dcl-calc-cont-indent-relative (set by default)
  4208. dcl-tab-always-indent
  4209. If t, pressing TAB always indents the current line.
  4210. If nil, pressing TAB indents the current line if point is at the left
  4211. margin.
  4212. dcl-electric-characters
  4213. Non-nil causes lines to be indented at once when a label, ELSE or ENDIF is
  4214. typed.
  4215. dcl-electric-reindent-regexps
  4216. Use this variable and function dcl-electric-character to customize
  4217. which words trigger electric indentation.
  4218. dcl-tempo-comma
  4219. dcl-tempo-left-paren
  4220. dcl-tempo-right-paren
  4221. These variables control the look of expanded templates.
  4222. dcl-imenu-generic-expression
  4223. Default value for imenu-generic-expression. The default includes
  4224. SUBROUTINE labels in the main listing and sub-listings for
  4225. other labels, CALL, GOTO and GOSUB statements.
  4226. dcl-imenu-label-labels
  4227. dcl-imenu-label-goto
  4228. dcl-imenu-label-gosub
  4229. dcl-imenu-label-call
  4230. Change the text that is used as sub-listing labels in imenu.
  4231. Loading this package calls the value of the variable
  4232. `dcl-mode-load-hook' with no args, if that value is non-nil.
  4233. Turning on DCL mode calls the value of the variable `dcl-mode-hook'
  4234. with no args, if that value is non-nil.
  4235. The following example uses the default values for all variables:
  4236. $! This is a comment line that is not indented (it matches
  4237. $! dcl-comment-line-regexp)
  4238. $! Next follows the first command line. It is indented dcl-margin-offset.
  4239. $ i = 1
  4240. $ ! Other comments are indented like command lines.
  4241. $ ! A margin label indented dcl-margin-label-offset:
  4242. $ label:
  4243. $ if i.eq.1
  4244. $ then
  4245. $ ! Lines between THEN-ELSE and ELSE-ENDIF are
  4246. $ ! indented dcl-basic-offset
  4247. $ loop1: ! This matches dcl-block-begin-regexp...
  4248. $ ! ...so this line is indented dcl-basic-offset
  4249. $ text = \"This \" + - ! is a continued line
  4250. \"lined up with the command line\"
  4251. $ type sys$input
  4252. Data lines are not indented at all.
  4253. $ endloop1: ! This matches dcl-block-end-regexp
  4254. $ endif
  4255. $
  4256. There is some minimal font-lock support (see vars
  4257. `dcl-font-lock-defaults' and `dcl-font-lock-keywords').
  4258. \(fn)" t nil)
  4259. ;;;***
  4260. ;;;### (autoloads (cancel-debug-on-entry debug-on-entry debug) "debug"
  4261. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/debug.el" (20352 65510))
  4262. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/debug.el
  4263. (setq debugger 'debug)
  4264. (autoload 'debug "debug" "\
  4265. Enter debugger. \\<debugger-mode-map>`\\[debugger-continue]' returns from the debugger.
  4266. Arguments are mainly for use when this is called from the internals
  4267. of the evaluator.
  4268. You may call with no args, or you may pass nil as the first arg and
  4269. any other args you like. In that case, the list of args after the
  4270. first will be printed into the backtrace buffer.
  4271. \(fn &rest DEBUGGER-ARGS)" t nil)
  4272. (autoload 'debug-on-entry "debug" "\
  4273. Request FUNCTION to invoke debugger each time it is called.
  4274. When called interactively, prompt for FUNCTION in the minibuffer.
  4275. This works by modifying the definition of FUNCTION. If you tell the
  4276. debugger to continue, FUNCTION's execution proceeds. If FUNCTION is a
  4277. normal function or a macro written in Lisp, you can also step through
  4278. its execution. FUNCTION can also be a primitive that is not a special
  4279. form, in which case stepping is not possible. Break-on-entry for
  4280. primitive functions only works when that function is called from Lisp.
  4281. Use \\[cancel-debug-on-entry] to cancel the effect of this command.
  4282. Redefining FUNCTION also cancels it.
  4283. \(fn FUNCTION)" t nil)
  4284. (autoload 'cancel-debug-on-entry "debug" "\
  4285. Undo effect of \\[debug-on-entry] on FUNCTION.
  4286. If FUNCTION is nil, cancel debug-on-entry for all functions.
  4287. When called interactively, prompt for FUNCTION in the minibuffer.
  4288. To specify a nil argument interactively, exit with an empty minibuffer.
  4289. \(fn &optional FUNCTION)" t nil)
  4290. ;;;***
  4291. ;;;### (autoloads (decipher-mode decipher) "decipher" "play/decipher.el"
  4292. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  4293. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/decipher.el
  4294. (autoload 'decipher "decipher" "\
  4295. Format a buffer of ciphertext for cryptanalysis and enter Decipher mode.
  4296. \(fn)" t nil)
  4297. (autoload 'decipher-mode "decipher" "\
  4298. Major mode for decrypting monoalphabetic substitution ciphers.
  4299. Lower-case letters enter plaintext.
  4300. Upper-case letters are commands.
  4301. The buffer is made read-only so that normal Emacs commands cannot
  4302. modify it.
  4303. The most useful commands are:
  4304. \\<decipher-mode-map>
  4305. \\[decipher-digram-list] Display a list of all digrams & their frequency
  4306. \\[decipher-frequency-count] Display the frequency of each ciphertext letter
  4307. \\[decipher-adjacency-list] Show adjacency list for current letter (lists letters appearing next to it)
  4308. \\[decipher-make-checkpoint] Save the current cipher alphabet (checkpoint)
  4309. \\[decipher-restore-checkpoint] Restore a saved cipher alphabet (checkpoint)
  4310. \(fn)" t nil)
  4311. ;;;***
  4312. ;;;### (autoloads (delimit-columns-rectangle delimit-columns-region
  4313. ;;;;;; delimit-columns-customize) "delim-col" "delim-col.el" (20352
  4314. ;;;;;; 65510))
  4315. ;;; Generated autoloads from delim-col.el
  4316. (autoload 'delimit-columns-customize "delim-col" "\
  4317. Customization of `columns' group.
  4318. \(fn)" t nil)
  4319. (autoload 'delimit-columns-region "delim-col" "\
  4320. Prettify all columns in a text region.
  4321. START and END delimits the text region.
  4322. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  4323. (autoload 'delimit-columns-rectangle "delim-col" "\
  4324. Prettify all columns in a text rectangle.
  4325. START and END delimits the corners of text rectangle.
  4326. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  4327. ;;;***
  4328. ;;;### (autoloads (delphi-mode) "delphi" "progmodes/delphi.el" (20400
  4329. ;;;;;; 62402))
  4330. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/delphi.el
  4331. (autoload 'delphi-mode "delphi" "\
  4332. Major mode for editing Delphi code. \\<delphi-mode-map>
  4333. \\[delphi-tab] - Indents the current line (or region, if Transient Mark mode
  4334. is enabled and the region is active) of Delphi code.
  4335. \\[delphi-find-unit] - Search for a Delphi source file.
  4336. \\[delphi-fill-comment] - Fill the current comment.
  4337. \\[delphi-new-comment-line] - If in a // comment, do a new comment line.
  4338. \\[indent-region] also works for indenting a whole region.
  4339. Customization:
  4340. `delphi-indent-level' (default 3)
  4341. Indentation of Delphi statements with respect to containing block.
  4342. `delphi-compound-block-indent' (default 0)
  4343. Extra indentation for blocks in compound statements.
  4344. `delphi-case-label-indent' (default 0)
  4345. Extra indentation for case statement labels.
  4346. `delphi-tab-always-indents' (default t)
  4347. Non-nil means TAB in Delphi mode should always reindent the current line,
  4348. regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
  4349. `delphi-newline-always-indents' (default t)
  4350. Non-nil means NEWLINE in Delphi mode should always reindent the current
  4351. line, insert a blank line and move to the default indent column of the
  4352. blank line.
  4353. `delphi-search-path' (default .)
  4354. Directories to search when finding external units.
  4355. `delphi-verbose' (default nil)
  4356. If true then Delphi token processing progress is reported to the user.
  4357. Coloring:
  4358. `delphi-comment-face' (default font-lock-comment-face)
  4359. Face used to color Delphi comments.
  4360. `delphi-string-face' (default font-lock-string-face)
  4361. Face used to color Delphi strings.
  4362. `delphi-keyword-face' (default font-lock-keyword-face)
  4363. Face used to color Delphi keywords.
  4364. `delphi-other-face' (default nil)
  4365. Face used to color everything else.
  4366. Turning on Delphi mode calls the value of the variable `delphi-mode-hook'
  4367. with no args, if that value is non-nil.
  4368. \(fn)" t nil)
  4369. ;;;***
  4370. ;;;### (autoloads (delete-selection-mode) "delsel" "delsel.el" (20352
  4371. ;;;;;; 65510))
  4372. ;;; Generated autoloads from delsel.el
  4373. (defalias 'pending-delete-mode 'delete-selection-mode)
  4374. (defvar delete-selection-mode nil "\
  4375. Non-nil if Delete-Selection mode is enabled.
  4376. See the command `delete-selection-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  4377. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  4378. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  4379. or call the function `delete-selection-mode'.")
  4380. (custom-autoload 'delete-selection-mode "delsel" nil)
  4381. (autoload 'delete-selection-mode "delsel" "\
  4382. Toggle Delete Selection mode.
  4383. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Delete Selection mode if ARG
  4384. is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp,
  4385. enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  4386. When Delete Selection mode is enabled, Transient Mark mode is also
  4387. enabled and typed text replaces the selection if the selection is
  4388. active. Otherwise, typed text is just inserted at point regardless of
  4389. any selection.
  4390. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  4391. ;;;***
  4392. ;;;### (autoloads (derived-mode-init-mode-variables define-derived-mode)
  4393. ;;;;;; "derived" "emacs-lisp/derived.el" (20352 65510))
  4394. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/derived.el
  4395. (autoload 'define-derived-mode "derived" "\
  4396. Create a new mode as a variant of an existing mode.
  4397. The arguments to this command are as follow:
  4398. CHILD: the name of the command for the derived mode.
  4399. PARENT: the name of the command for the parent mode (e.g. `text-mode')
  4400. or nil if there is no parent.
  4401. NAME: a string which will appear in the status line (e.g. \"Hypertext\")
  4402. DOCSTRING: an optional documentation string--if you do not supply one,
  4403. the function will attempt to invent something useful.
  4404. BODY: forms to execute just before running the
  4405. hooks for the new mode. Do not use `interactive' here.
  4406. BODY can start with a bunch of keyword arguments. The following keyword
  4407. arguments are currently understood:
  4408. :group GROUP
  4409. Declare the customization group that corresponds to this mode.
  4410. The command `customize-mode' uses this.
  4411. :syntax-table TABLE
  4412. Use TABLE instead of the default (CHILD-syntax-table).
  4413. A nil value means to simply use the same syntax-table as the parent.
  4414. :abbrev-table TABLE
  4415. Use TABLE instead of the default (CHILD-abbrev-table).
  4416. A nil value means to simply use the same abbrev-table as the parent.
  4417. Here is how you could define LaTeX-Thesis mode as a variant of LaTeX mode:
  4418. (define-derived-mode LaTeX-thesis-mode LaTeX-mode \"LaTeX-Thesis\")
  4419. You could then make new key bindings for `LaTeX-thesis-mode-map'
  4420. without changing regular LaTeX mode. In this example, BODY is empty,
  4421. and DOCSTRING is generated by default.
  4422. On a more complicated level, the following command uses `sgml-mode' as
  4423. the parent, and then sets the variable `case-fold-search' to nil:
  4424. (define-derived-mode article-mode sgml-mode \"Article\"
  4425. \"Major mode for editing technical articles.\"
  4426. (setq case-fold-search nil))
  4427. Note that if the documentation string had been left out, it would have
  4428. been generated automatically, with a reference to the keymap.
  4429. The new mode runs the hook constructed by the function
  4430. `derived-mode-hook-name'.
  4431. See Info node `(elisp)Derived Modes' for more details.
  4432. \(fn CHILD PARENT NAME &optional DOCSTRING &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  4433. (put 'define-derived-mode 'doc-string-elt '4)
  4434. (autoload 'derived-mode-init-mode-variables "derived" "\
  4435. Initialize variables for a new MODE.
  4436. Right now, if they don't already exist, set up a blank keymap, an
  4437. empty syntax table, and an empty abbrev table -- these will be merged
  4438. the first time the mode is used.
  4439. \(fn MODE)" nil nil)
  4440. ;;;***
  4441. ;;;### (autoloads (describe-char describe-text-properties) "descr-text"
  4442. ;;;;;; "descr-text.el" (20400 62402))
  4443. ;;; Generated autoloads from descr-text.el
  4444. (autoload 'describe-text-properties "descr-text" "\
  4445. Describe widgets, buttons, overlays, and text properties at POS.
  4446. POS is taken to be in BUFFER or in current buffer if nil.
  4447. Interactively, describe them for the character after point.
  4448. If optional second argument OUTPUT-BUFFER is non-nil,
  4449. insert the output into that buffer, and don't initialize or clear it
  4450. otherwise.
  4451. \(fn POS &optional OUTPUT-BUFFER BUFFER)" t nil)
  4452. (autoload 'describe-char "descr-text" "\
  4453. Describe position POS (interactively, point) and the char after POS.
  4454. POS is taken to be in BUFFER, or the current buffer if BUFFER is nil.
  4455. The information is displayed in buffer `*Help*'.
  4456. The position information includes POS; the total size of BUFFER; the
  4457. region limits, if narrowed; the column number; and the horizontal
  4458. scroll amount, if the buffer is horizontally scrolled.
  4459. The character information includes the character code; charset and
  4460. code points in it; syntax; category; how the character is encoded in
  4461. BUFFER and in BUFFER's file; character composition information (if
  4462. relevant); the font and font glyphs used to display the character;
  4463. the character's canonical name and other properties defined by the
  4464. Unicode Data Base; and widgets, buttons, overlays, and text properties
  4465. relevant to POS.
  4466. \(fn POS &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  4467. ;;;***
  4468. ;;;### (autoloads (desktop-revert desktop-save-in-desktop-dir desktop-change-dir
  4469. ;;;;;; desktop-load-default desktop-read desktop-remove desktop-save
  4470. ;;;;;; desktop-clear desktop-locals-to-save desktop-save-mode) "desktop"
  4471. ;;;;;; "desktop.el" (20420 42151))
  4472. ;;; Generated autoloads from desktop.el
  4473. (defvar desktop-save-mode nil "\
  4474. Non-nil if Desktop-Save mode is enabled.
  4475. See the command `desktop-save-mode' for a description of this minor mode.")
  4476. (custom-autoload 'desktop-save-mode "desktop" nil)
  4477. (autoload 'desktop-save-mode "desktop" "\
  4478. Toggle desktop saving (Desktop Save mode).
  4479. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Desktop Save mode if ARG is
  4480. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  4481. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  4482. If Desktop Save mode is enabled, the state of Emacs is saved from
  4483. one session to another. See variable `desktop-save' and function
  4484. `desktop-read' for details.
  4485. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  4486. (defvar desktop-locals-to-save '(desktop-locals-to-save truncate-lines case-fold-search case-replace fill-column overwrite-mode change-log-default-name line-number-mode column-number-mode size-indication-mode buffer-file-coding-system indent-tabs-mode tab-width indicate-buffer-boundaries indicate-empty-lines show-trailing-whitespace) "\
  4487. List of local variables to save for each buffer.
  4488. The variables are saved only when they really are local. Conventional minor
  4489. modes are restored automatically; they should not be listed here.")
  4490. (custom-autoload 'desktop-locals-to-save "desktop" t)
  4491. (defvar desktop-save-buffer nil "\
  4492. When non-nil, save buffer status in desktop file.
  4493. This variable becomes buffer local when set.
  4494. If the value is a function, it is called by `desktop-save' with argument
  4495. DESKTOP-DIRNAME to obtain auxiliary information to save in the desktop
  4496. file along with the state of the buffer for which it was called.
  4497. When file names are returned, they should be formatted using the call
  4498. \"(desktop-file-name FILE-NAME DESKTOP-DIRNAME)\".
  4499. Later, when `desktop-read' evaluates the desktop file, auxiliary information
  4500. is passed as the argument DESKTOP-BUFFER-MISC to functions in
  4501. `desktop-buffer-mode-handlers'.")
  4502. (defvar desktop-buffer-mode-handlers nil "\
  4503. Alist of major mode specific functions to restore a desktop buffer.
  4504. Functions listed are called by `desktop-create-buffer' when `desktop-read'
  4505. evaluates the desktop file. List elements must have the form
  4506. (MAJOR-MODE . RESTORE-BUFFER-FUNCTION).
  4507. Buffers with a major mode not specified here, are restored by the default
  4508. handler `desktop-restore-file-buffer'.
  4509. Handlers are called with argument list
  4510. (DESKTOP-BUFFER-FILE-NAME DESKTOP-BUFFER-NAME DESKTOP-BUFFER-MISC)
  4511. Furthermore, they may use the following variables:
  4512. desktop-file-version
  4513. desktop-buffer-major-mode
  4514. desktop-buffer-minor-modes
  4515. desktop-buffer-point
  4516. desktop-buffer-mark
  4517. desktop-buffer-read-only
  4518. desktop-buffer-locals
  4519. If a handler returns a buffer, then the saved mode settings
  4520. and variable values for that buffer are copied into it.
  4521. Modules that define a major mode that needs a special handler should contain
  4522. code like
  4523. (defun foo-restore-desktop-buffer
  4524. ...
  4525. (add-to-list 'desktop-buffer-mode-handlers
  4526. '(foo-mode . foo-restore-desktop-buffer))
  4527. Furthermore the major mode function must be autoloaded.")
  4528. (put 'desktop-buffer-mode-handlers 'risky-local-variable t)
  4529. (defvar desktop-minor-mode-handlers nil "\
  4530. Alist of functions to restore non-standard minor modes.
  4531. Functions are called by `desktop-create-buffer' to restore minor modes.
  4532. List elements must have the form
  4533. (MINOR-MODE . RESTORE-FUNCTION).
  4534. Minor modes not specified here, are restored by the standard minor mode
  4535. function.
  4536. Handlers are called with argument list
  4537. (DESKTOP-BUFFER-LOCALS)
  4538. Furthermore, they may use the following variables:
  4539. desktop-file-version
  4540. desktop-buffer-file-name
  4541. desktop-buffer-name
  4542. desktop-buffer-major-mode
  4543. desktop-buffer-minor-modes
  4544. desktop-buffer-point
  4545. desktop-buffer-mark
  4546. desktop-buffer-read-only
  4547. desktop-buffer-misc
  4548. When a handler is called, the buffer has been created and the major mode has
  4549. been set, but local variables listed in desktop-buffer-locals has not yet been
  4550. created and set.
  4551. Modules that define a minor mode that needs a special handler should contain
  4552. code like
  4553. (defun foo-desktop-restore
  4554. ...
  4555. (add-to-list 'desktop-minor-mode-handlers
  4556. '(foo-mode . foo-desktop-restore))
  4557. Furthermore the minor mode function must be autoloaded.
  4558. See also `desktop-minor-mode-table'.")
  4559. (put 'desktop-minor-mode-handlers 'risky-local-variable t)
  4560. (autoload 'desktop-clear "desktop" "\
  4561. Empty the Desktop.
  4562. This kills all buffers except for internal ones and those with names matched by
  4563. a regular expression in the list `desktop-clear-preserve-buffers'.
  4564. Furthermore, it clears the variables listed in `desktop-globals-to-clear'.
  4565. \(fn)" t nil)
  4566. (autoload 'desktop-save "desktop" "\
  4567. Save the desktop in a desktop file.
  4568. Parameter DIRNAME specifies where to save the desktop file.
  4569. Optional parameter RELEASE says whether we're done with this desktop.
  4570. See also `desktop-base-file-name'.
  4571. \(fn DIRNAME &optional RELEASE)" t nil)
  4572. (autoload 'desktop-remove "desktop" "\
  4573. Delete desktop file in `desktop-dirname'.
  4574. This function also sets `desktop-dirname' to nil.
  4575. \(fn)" t nil)
  4576. (autoload 'desktop-read "desktop" "\
  4577. Read and process the desktop file in directory DIRNAME.
  4578. Look for a desktop file in DIRNAME, or if DIRNAME is omitted, look in
  4579. directories listed in `desktop-path'. If a desktop file is found, it
  4580. is processed and `desktop-after-read-hook' is run. If no desktop file
  4581. is found, clear the desktop and run `desktop-no-desktop-file-hook'.
  4582. This function is a no-op when Emacs is running in batch mode.
  4583. It returns t if a desktop file was loaded, nil otherwise.
  4584. \(fn &optional DIRNAME)" t nil)
  4585. (autoload 'desktop-load-default "desktop" "\
  4586. Load the `default' start-up library manually.
  4587. Also inhibit further loading of it.
  4588. \(fn)" nil nil)
  4589. (autoload 'desktop-change-dir "desktop" "\
  4590. Change to desktop saved in DIRNAME.
  4591. Kill the desktop as specified by variables `desktop-save-mode' and
  4592. `desktop-save', then clear the desktop and load the desktop file in
  4593. directory DIRNAME.
  4594. \(fn DIRNAME)" t nil)
  4595. (autoload 'desktop-save-in-desktop-dir "desktop" "\
  4596. Save the desktop in directory `desktop-dirname'.
  4597. \(fn)" t nil)
  4598. (autoload 'desktop-revert "desktop" "\
  4599. Revert to the last loaded desktop.
  4600. \(fn)" t nil)
  4601. ;;;***
  4602. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-article-outlook-deuglify-article gnus-outlook-deuglify-article
  4603. ;;;;;; gnus-article-outlook-repair-attribution gnus-article-outlook-unwrap-lines)
  4604. ;;;;;; "deuglify" "gnus/deuglify.el" (20352 65510))
  4605. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/deuglify.el
  4606. (autoload 'gnus-article-outlook-unwrap-lines "deuglify" "\
  4607. Unwrap lines that appear to be wrapped citation lines.
  4608. You can control what lines will be unwrapped by frobbing
  4609. `gnus-outlook-deuglify-unwrap-min' and `gnus-outlook-deuglify-unwrap-max',
  4610. indicating the minimum and maximum length of an unwrapped citation line. If
  4611. NODISPLAY is non-nil, don't redisplay the article buffer.
  4612. \(fn &optional NODISPLAY)" t nil)
  4613. (autoload 'gnus-article-outlook-repair-attribution "deuglify" "\
  4614. Repair a broken attribution line.
  4615. If NODISPLAY is non-nil, don't redisplay the article buffer.
  4616. \(fn &optional NODISPLAY)" t nil)
  4617. (autoload 'gnus-outlook-deuglify-article "deuglify" "\
  4618. Full deuglify of broken Outlook (Express) articles.
  4619. Treat dumbquotes, unwrap lines, repair attribution and rearrange citation. If
  4620. NODISPLAY is non-nil, don't redisplay the article buffer.
  4621. \(fn &optional NODISPLAY)" t nil)
  4622. (autoload 'gnus-article-outlook-deuglify-article "deuglify" "\
  4623. Deuglify broken Outlook (Express) articles and redisplay.
  4624. \(fn)" t nil)
  4625. ;;;***
  4626. ;;;### (autoloads (diary-mode diary-mail-entries diary) "diary-lib"
  4627. ;;;;;; "calendar/diary-lib.el" (20352 65510))
  4628. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/diary-lib.el
  4629. (autoload 'diary "diary-lib" "\
  4630. Generate the diary window for ARG days starting with the current date.
  4631. If no argument is provided, the number of days of diary entries is governed
  4632. by the variable `diary-number-of-entries'. A value of ARG less than 1
  4633. does nothing. This function is suitable for execution in a `.emacs' file.
  4634. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  4635. (autoload 'diary-mail-entries "diary-lib" "\
  4636. Send a mail message showing diary entries for next NDAYS days.
  4637. If no prefix argument is given, NDAYS is set to `diary-mail-days'.
  4638. Mail is sent to the address specified by `diary-mail-addr'.
  4639. Here is an example of a script to call `diary-mail-entries',
  4640. suitable for regular scheduling using cron (or at). Note that
  4641. since `emacs -script' does not load your `.emacs' file, you
  4642. should ensure that all relevant variables are set.
  4643. #!/usr/bin/emacs -script
  4644. ;; diary-rem.el - run the Emacs diary-reminder
  4645. \(setq diary-mail-days 3
  4646. diary-file \"/path/to/diary.file\"
  4647. calendar-date-style 'european
  4648. diary-mail-addr \"user@host.name\")
  4649. \(diary-mail-entries)
  4650. # diary-rem.el ends here
  4651. \(fn &optional NDAYS)" t nil)
  4652. (autoload 'diary-mode "diary-lib" "\
  4653. Major mode for editing the diary file.
  4654. \(fn)" t nil)
  4655. ;;;***
  4656. ;;;### (autoloads (diff-buffer-with-file diff-backup diff diff-command
  4657. ;;;;;; diff-switches) "diff" "vc/diff.el" (20400 62402))
  4658. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/diff.el
  4659. (defvar diff-switches (purecopy "-c") "\
  4660. A string or list of strings specifying switches to be passed to diff.")
  4661. (custom-autoload 'diff-switches "diff" t)
  4662. (defvar diff-command (purecopy "diff") "\
  4663. The command to use to run diff.")
  4664. (custom-autoload 'diff-command "diff" t)
  4665. (autoload 'diff "diff" "\
  4666. Find and display the differences between OLD and NEW files.
  4667. When called interactively, read NEW, then OLD, using the
  4668. minibuffer. The default for NEW is the current buffer's file
  4669. name, and the default for OLD is a backup file for NEW, if one
  4670. exists. If NO-ASYNC is non-nil, call diff synchronously.
  4671. When called interactively with a prefix argument, prompt
  4672. interactively for diff switches. Otherwise, the switches
  4673. specified in `diff-switches' are passed to the diff command.
  4674. \(fn OLD NEW &optional SWITCHES NO-ASYNC)" t nil)
  4675. (autoload 'diff-backup "diff" "\
  4676. Diff this file with its backup file or vice versa.
  4677. Uses the latest backup, if there are several numerical backups.
  4678. If this file is a backup, diff it with its original.
  4679. The backup file is the first file given to `diff'.
  4680. With prefix arg, prompt for diff switches.
  4681. \(fn FILE &optional SWITCHES)" t nil)
  4682. (autoload 'diff-buffer-with-file "diff" "\
  4683. View the differences between BUFFER and its associated file.
  4684. This requires the external program `diff' to be in your `exec-path'.
  4685. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  4686. ;;;***
  4687. ;;;### (autoloads (diff-minor-mode diff-mode) "diff-mode" "vc/diff-mode.el"
  4688. ;;;;;; (20461 49352))
  4689. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/diff-mode.el
  4690. (autoload 'diff-mode "diff-mode" "\
  4691. Major mode for viewing/editing context diffs.
  4692. Supports unified and context diffs as well as (to a lesser extent)
  4693. normal diffs.
  4694. When the buffer is read-only, the ESC prefix is not necessary.
  4695. If you edit the buffer manually, diff-mode will try to update the hunk
  4696. headers for you on-the-fly.
  4697. You can also switch between context diff and unified diff with \\[diff-context->unified],
  4698. or vice versa with \\[diff-unified->context] and you can also reverse the direction of
  4699. a diff with \\[diff-reverse-direction].
  4700. \\{diff-mode-map}
  4701. \(fn)" t nil)
  4702. (autoload 'diff-minor-mode "diff-mode" "\
  4703. Toggle Diff minor mode.
  4704. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Diff minor mode if ARG is
  4705. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  4706. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  4707. \\{diff-minor-mode-map}
  4708. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  4709. ;;;***
  4710. ;;;### (autoloads (dig) "dig" "net/dig.el" (20352 65510))
  4711. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/dig.el
  4712. (autoload 'dig "dig" "\
  4713. Query addresses of a DOMAIN using dig, by calling `dig-invoke'.
  4714. Optional arguments are passed to `dig-invoke'.
  4715. \(fn DOMAIN &optional QUERY-TYPE QUERY-CLASS QUERY-OPTION DIG-OPTION SERVER)" t nil)
  4716. ;;;***
  4717. ;;;### (autoloads (dired-mode dired-noselect dired-other-frame dired-other-window
  4718. ;;;;;; dired dired-listing-switches) "dired" "dired.el" (20400 62402))
  4719. ;;; Generated autoloads from dired.el
  4720. (defvar dired-listing-switches (purecopy "-al") "\
  4721. Switches passed to `ls' for Dired. MUST contain the `l' option.
  4722. May contain all other options that don't contradict `-l';
  4723. may contain even `F', `b', `i' and `s'. See also the variable
  4724. `dired-ls-F-marks-symlinks' concerning the `F' switch.
  4725. On systems such as MS-DOS and MS-Windows, which use `ls' emulation in Lisp,
  4726. some of the `ls' switches are not supported; see the doc string of
  4727. `insert-directory' in `ls-lisp.el' for more details.")
  4728. (custom-autoload 'dired-listing-switches "dired" t)
  4729. (defvar dired-directory nil "\
  4730. The directory name or wildcard spec that this dired directory lists.
  4731. Local to each dired buffer. May be a list, in which case the car is the
  4732. directory name and the cdr is the list of files to mention.
  4733. The directory name must be absolute, but need not be fully expanded.")
  4734. (define-key ctl-x-map "d" 'dired)
  4735. (autoload 'dired "dired" "\
  4736. \"Edit\" directory DIRNAME--delete, rename, print, etc. some files in it.
  4737. Optional second argument SWITCHES specifies the `ls' options used.
  4738. \(Interactively, use a prefix argument to be able to specify SWITCHES.)
  4739. Dired displays a list of files in DIRNAME (which may also have
  4740. shell wildcards appended to select certain files). If DIRNAME is a cons,
  4741. its first element is taken as the directory name and the rest as an explicit
  4742. list of files to make directory entries for.
  4743. \\<dired-mode-map>You can flag files for deletion with \\[dired-flag-file-deletion] and then
  4744. delete them by typing \\[dired-do-flagged-delete].
  4745. Type \\[describe-mode] after entering Dired for more info.
  4746. If DIRNAME is already in a dired buffer, that buffer is used without refresh.
  4747. \(fn DIRNAME &optional SWITCHES)" t nil)
  4748. (define-key ctl-x-4-map "d" 'dired-other-window)
  4749. (autoload 'dired-other-window "dired" "\
  4750. \"Edit\" directory DIRNAME. Like `dired' but selects in another window.
  4751. \(fn DIRNAME &optional SWITCHES)" t nil)
  4752. (define-key ctl-x-5-map "d" 'dired-other-frame)
  4753. (autoload 'dired-other-frame "dired" "\
  4754. \"Edit\" directory DIRNAME. Like `dired' but makes a new frame.
  4755. \(fn DIRNAME &optional SWITCHES)" t nil)
  4756. (autoload 'dired-noselect "dired" "\
  4757. Like `dired' but returns the dired buffer as value, does not select it.
  4758. \(fn DIR-OR-LIST &optional SWITCHES)" nil nil)
  4759. (autoload 'dired-mode "dired" "\
  4760. Mode for \"editing\" directory listings.
  4761. In Dired, you are \"editing\" a list of the files in a directory and
  4762. (optionally) its subdirectories, in the format of `ls -lR'.
  4763. Each directory is a page: use \\[backward-page] and \\[forward-page] to move pagewise.
  4764. \"Editing\" means that you can run shell commands on files, visit,
  4765. compress, load or byte-compile them, change their file attributes
  4766. and insert subdirectories into the same buffer. You can \"mark\"
  4767. files for later commands or \"flag\" them for deletion, either file
  4768. by file or all files matching certain criteria.
  4769. You can move using the usual cursor motion commands.\\<dired-mode-map>
  4770. The buffer is read-only. Digits are prefix arguments.
  4771. Type \\[dired-flag-file-deletion] to flag a file `D' for deletion.
  4772. Type \\[dired-mark] to Mark a file or subdirectory for later commands.
  4773. Most commands operate on the marked files and use the current file
  4774. if no files are marked. Use a numeric prefix argument to operate on
  4775. the next ARG (or previous -ARG if ARG<0) files, or just `1'
  4776. to operate on the current file only. Prefix arguments override marks.
  4777. Mark-using commands display a list of failures afterwards. Type \\[dired-summary]
  4778. to see why something went wrong.
  4779. Type \\[dired-unmark] to Unmark a file or all files of an inserted subdirectory.
  4780. Type \\[dired-unmark-backward] to back up one line and unmark or unflag.
  4781. Type \\[dired-do-flagged-delete] to delete (eXecute) the files flagged `D'.
  4782. Type \\[dired-find-file] to Find the current line's file
  4783. (or dired it in another buffer, if it is a directory).
  4784. Type \\[dired-find-file-other-window] to find file or dired directory in Other window.
  4785. Type \\[dired-maybe-insert-subdir] to Insert a subdirectory in this buffer.
  4786. Type \\[dired-do-rename] to Rename a file or move the marked files to another directory.
  4787. Type \\[dired-do-copy] to Copy files.
  4788. Type \\[dired-sort-toggle-or-edit] to toggle Sorting by name/date or change the `ls' switches.
  4789. Type \\[revert-buffer] to read all currently expanded directories aGain.
  4790. This retains all marks and hides subdirs again that were hidden before.
  4791. Use `SPC' and `DEL' to move down and up by lines.
  4792. If Dired ever gets confused, you can either type \\[revert-buffer] to read the
  4793. directories again, type \\[dired-do-redisplay] to relist the file at point or the marked files or a
  4794. subdirectory, or type \\[dired-build-subdir-alist] to parse the buffer
  4795. again for the directory tree.
  4796. Customization variables (rename this buffer and type \\[describe-variable] on each line
  4797. for more info):
  4798. `dired-listing-switches'
  4799. `dired-trivial-filenames'
  4800. `dired-shrink-to-fit'
  4801. `dired-marker-char'
  4802. `dired-del-marker'
  4803. `dired-keep-marker-rename'
  4804. `dired-keep-marker-copy'
  4805. `dired-keep-marker-hardlink'
  4806. `dired-keep-marker-symlink'
  4807. Hooks (use \\[describe-variable] to see their documentation):
  4808. `dired-before-readin-hook'
  4809. `dired-after-readin-hook'
  4810. `dired-mode-hook'
  4811. `dired-load-hook'
  4812. Keybindings:
  4813. \\{dired-mode-map}
  4814. \(fn &optional DIRNAME SWITCHES)" nil nil)
  4815. (put 'dired-find-alternate-file 'disabled t)
  4816. ;;;***
  4817. ;;;### (autoloads (dirtrack dirtrack-mode) "dirtrack" "dirtrack.el"
  4818. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  4819. ;;; Generated autoloads from dirtrack.el
  4820. (autoload 'dirtrack-mode "dirtrack" "\
  4821. Toggle directory tracking in shell buffers (Dirtrack mode).
  4822. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Dirtrack mode if ARG is
  4823. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  4824. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  4825. This method requires that your shell prompt contain the current
  4826. working directory at all times, and that you set the variable
  4827. `dirtrack-list' to match the prompt.
  4828. This is an alternative to `shell-dirtrack-mode', which works by
  4829. tracking `cd' and similar commands which change the shell working
  4830. directory.
  4831. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  4832. (autoload 'dirtrack "dirtrack" "\
  4833. Determine the current directory from the process output for a prompt.
  4834. This filter function is used by `dirtrack-mode'. It looks for
  4835. the prompt specified by `dirtrack-list', and calls
  4836. `shell-process-cd' if the directory seems to have changed away
  4837. from `default-directory'.
  4838. \(fn INPUT)" nil nil)
  4839. ;;;***
  4840. ;;;### (autoloads (disassemble) "disass" "emacs-lisp/disass.el" (20352
  4841. ;;;;;; 65510))
  4842. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/disass.el
  4843. (autoload 'disassemble "disass" "\
  4844. Print disassembled code for OBJECT in (optional) BUFFER.
  4845. OBJECT can be a symbol defined as a function, or a function itself
  4846. \(a lambda expression or a compiled-function object).
  4847. If OBJECT is not already compiled, we compile it, but do not
  4848. redefine OBJECT if it is a symbol.
  4849. \(fn OBJECT &optional BUFFER INDENT INTERACTIVE-P)" t nil)
  4850. ;;;***
  4851. ;;;### (autoloads (standard-display-european glyph-face glyph-char
  4852. ;;;;;; make-glyph-code create-glyph standard-display-underline standard-display-graphic
  4853. ;;;;;; standard-display-g1 standard-display-ascii standard-display-default
  4854. ;;;;;; standard-display-8bit describe-current-display-table describe-display-table
  4855. ;;;;;; set-display-table-slot display-table-slot make-display-table)
  4856. ;;;;;; "disp-table" "disp-table.el" (20352 65510))
  4857. ;;; Generated autoloads from disp-table.el
  4858. (autoload 'make-display-table "disp-table" "\
  4859. Return a new, empty display table.
  4860. \(fn)" nil nil)
  4861. (autoload 'display-table-slot "disp-table" "\
  4862. Return the value of the extra slot in DISPLAY-TABLE named SLOT.
  4863. SLOT may be a number from 0 to 5 inclusive, or a slot name (symbol).
  4864. Valid symbols are `truncation', `wrap', `escape', `control',
  4865. `selective-display', and `vertical-border'.
  4866. \(fn DISPLAY-TABLE SLOT)" nil nil)
  4867. (autoload 'set-display-table-slot "disp-table" "\
  4868. Set the value of the extra slot in DISPLAY-TABLE named SLOT to VALUE.
  4869. SLOT may be a number from 0 to 5 inclusive, or a name (symbol).
  4870. Valid symbols are `truncation', `wrap', `escape', `control',
  4871. `selective-display', and `vertical-border'.
  4872. \(fn DISPLAY-TABLE SLOT VALUE)" nil nil)
  4873. (autoload 'describe-display-table "disp-table" "\
  4874. Describe the display table DT in a help buffer.
  4875. \(fn DT)" nil nil)
  4876. (autoload 'describe-current-display-table "disp-table" "\
  4877. Describe the display table in use in the selected window and buffer.
  4878. \(fn)" t nil)
  4879. (autoload 'standard-display-8bit "disp-table" "\
  4880. Display characters representing raw bytes in the range L to H literally.
  4881. On a terminal display, each character in the range is displayed
  4882. by sending the corresponding byte directly to the terminal.
  4883. On a graphic display, each character in the range is displayed
  4884. using the default font by a glyph whose code is the corresponding
  4885. byte.
  4886. Note that ASCII printable characters (SPC to TILDA) are displayed
  4887. in the default way after this call.
  4888. \(fn L H)" nil nil)
  4889. (autoload 'standard-display-default "disp-table" "\
  4890. Display characters in the range L to H using the default notation.
  4891. \(fn L H)" nil nil)
  4892. (autoload 'standard-display-ascii "disp-table" "\
  4893. Display character C using printable string S.
  4894. \(fn C S)" nil nil)
  4895. (autoload 'standard-display-g1 "disp-table" "\
  4896. Display character C as character SC in the g1 character set.
  4897. This function assumes that your terminal uses the SO/SI characters;
  4898. it is meaningless for an X frame.
  4899. \(fn C SC)" nil nil)
  4900. (autoload 'standard-display-graphic "disp-table" "\
  4901. Display character C as character GC in graphics character set.
  4902. This function assumes VT100-compatible escapes; it is meaningless for an
  4903. X frame.
  4904. \(fn C GC)" nil nil)
  4905. (autoload 'standard-display-underline "disp-table" "\
  4906. Display character C as character UC plus underlining.
  4907. \(fn C UC)" nil nil)
  4908. (autoload 'create-glyph "disp-table" "\
  4909. Allocate a glyph code to display by sending STRING to the terminal.
  4910. \(fn STRING)" nil nil)
  4911. (autoload 'make-glyph-code "disp-table" "\
  4912. Return a glyph code representing char CHAR with face FACE.
  4913. \(fn CHAR &optional FACE)" nil nil)
  4914. (autoload 'glyph-char "disp-table" "\
  4915. Return the character of glyph code GLYPH.
  4916. \(fn GLYPH)" nil nil)
  4917. (autoload 'glyph-face "disp-table" "\
  4918. Return the face of glyph code GLYPH, or nil if glyph has default face.
  4919. \(fn GLYPH)" nil nil)
  4920. (autoload 'standard-display-european "disp-table" "\
  4921. Semi-obsolete way to toggle display of ISO 8859 European characters.
  4922. This function is semi-obsolete; you probably don't need it, or else you
  4923. probably should use `set-language-environment' or `set-locale-environment'.
  4924. This function enables European character display if ARG is positive,
  4925. disables it if negative. Otherwise, it toggles European character display.
  4926. When this mode is enabled, characters in the range of 160 to 255
  4927. display not as octal escapes, but as accented characters. Codes 146
  4928. and 160 display as apostrophe and space, even though they are not the
  4929. ASCII codes for apostrophe and space.
  4930. Enabling European character display with this command noninteractively
  4931. from Lisp code also selects Latin-1 as the language environment.
  4932. This provides increased compatibility for users who call this function
  4933. in `.emacs'.
  4934. \(fn ARG)" nil nil)
  4935. ;;;***
  4936. ;;;### (autoloads (dissociated-press) "dissociate" "play/dissociate.el"
  4937. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  4938. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/dissociate.el
  4939. (autoload 'dissociated-press "dissociate" "\
  4940. Dissociate the text of the current buffer.
  4941. Output goes in buffer named *Dissociation*,
  4942. which is redisplayed each time text is added to it.
  4943. Every so often the user must say whether to continue.
  4944. If ARG is positive, require ARG chars of continuity.
  4945. If ARG is negative, require -ARG words of continuity.
  4946. Default is 2.
  4947. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  4948. ;;;***
  4949. ;;;### (autoloads (dnd-protocol-alist) "dnd" "dnd.el" (20352 65510))
  4950. ;;; Generated autoloads from dnd.el
  4951. (defvar dnd-protocol-alist `((,(purecopy "^file:///") . dnd-open-local-file) (,(purecopy "^file://") . dnd-open-file) (,(purecopy "^file:") . dnd-open-local-file) (,(purecopy "^\\(https?\\|ftp\\|file\\|nfs\\)://") . dnd-open-file)) "\
  4952. The functions to call for different protocols when a drop is made.
  4953. This variable is used by `dnd-handle-one-url' and `dnd-handle-file-name'.
  4954. The list contains of (REGEXP . FUNCTION) pairs.
  4955. The functions shall take two arguments, URL, which is the URL dropped and
  4956. ACTION which is the action to be performed for the drop (move, copy, link,
  4957. private or ask).
  4958. If no match is found here, and the value of `browse-url-browser-function'
  4959. is a pair of (REGEXP . FUNCTION), those regexps are tried for a match.
  4960. If no match is found, the URL is inserted as text by calling `dnd-insert-text'.
  4961. The function shall return the action done (move, copy, link or private)
  4962. if some action was made, or nil if the URL is ignored.")
  4963. (custom-autoload 'dnd-protocol-alist "dnd" t)
  4964. ;;;***
  4965. ;;;### (autoloads (dns-mode-soa-increment-serial dns-mode) "dns-mode"
  4966. ;;;;;; "textmodes/dns-mode.el" (20352 65510))
  4967. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/dns-mode.el
  4968. (autoload 'dns-mode "dns-mode" "\
  4969. Major mode for viewing and editing DNS master files.
  4970. This mode is inherited from text mode. It add syntax
  4971. highlighting, and some commands for handling DNS master files.
  4972. Its keymap inherits from `text-mode' and it has the same
  4973. variables for customizing indentation. It has its own abbrev
  4974. table and its own syntax table.
  4975. Turning on DNS mode runs `dns-mode-hook'.
  4976. \(fn)" t nil)
  4977. (defalias 'zone-mode 'dns-mode)
  4978. (autoload 'dns-mode-soa-increment-serial "dns-mode" "\
  4979. Locate SOA record and increment the serial field.
  4980. \(fn)" t nil)
  4981. ;;;***
  4982. ;;;### (autoloads (doc-view-bookmark-jump doc-view-minor-mode doc-view-mode-maybe
  4983. ;;;;;; doc-view-mode doc-view-mode-p) "doc-view" "doc-view.el" (20400
  4984. ;;;;;; 62402))
  4985. ;;; Generated autoloads from doc-view.el
  4986. (autoload 'doc-view-mode-p "doc-view" "\
  4987. Return non-nil if document type TYPE is available for `doc-view'.
  4988. Document types are symbols like `dvi', `ps', `pdf', or `odf' (any
  4989. OpenDocument format).
  4990. \(fn TYPE)" nil nil)
  4991. (autoload 'doc-view-mode "doc-view" "\
  4992. Major mode in DocView buffers.
  4993. DocView Mode is an Emacs document viewer. It displays PDF, PS
  4994. and DVI files (as PNG images) in Emacs buffers.
  4995. You can use \\<doc-view-mode-map>\\[doc-view-toggle-display] to
  4996. toggle between displaying the document or editing it as text.
  4997. \\{doc-view-mode-map}
  4998. \(fn)" t nil)
  4999. (autoload 'doc-view-mode-maybe "doc-view" "\
  5000. Switch to `doc-view-mode' if possible.
  5001. If the required external tools are not available, then fallback
  5002. to the next best mode.
  5003. \(fn)" nil nil)
  5004. (autoload 'doc-view-minor-mode "doc-view" "\
  5005. Toggle displaying buffer via Doc View (Doc View minor mode).
  5006. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Doc View minor mode if ARG is
  5007. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  5008. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  5009. See the command `doc-view-mode' for more information on this mode.
  5010. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  5011. (autoload 'doc-view-bookmark-jump "doc-view" "\
  5012. \(fn BMK)" nil nil)
  5013. ;;;***
  5014. ;;;### (autoloads (doctor) "doctor" "play/doctor.el" (20352 65510))
  5015. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/doctor.el
  5016. (autoload 'doctor "doctor" "\
  5017. Switch to *doctor* buffer and start giving psychotherapy.
  5018. \(fn)" t nil)
  5019. ;;;***
  5020. ;;;### (autoloads (double-mode) "double" "double.el" (20352 65510))
  5021. ;;; Generated autoloads from double.el
  5022. (autoload 'double-mode "double" "\
  5023. Toggle special insertion on double keypresses (Double mode).
  5024. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Double mode if ARG is
  5025. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  5026. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  5027. When Double mode is enabled, some keys will insert different
  5028. strings when pressed twice. See `double-map' for details.
  5029. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  5030. ;;;***
  5031. ;;;### (autoloads (dunnet) "dunnet" "play/dunnet.el" (20352 65510))
  5032. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/dunnet.el
  5033. (autoload 'dunnet "dunnet" "\
  5034. Switch to *dungeon* buffer and start game.
  5035. \(fn)" t nil)
  5036. ;;;***
  5037. ;;;### (autoloads (easy-mmode-defsyntax easy-mmode-defmap easy-mmode-define-keymap
  5038. ;;;;;; define-globalized-minor-mode define-minor-mode) "easy-mmode"
  5039. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/easy-mmode.el" (20400 62402))
  5040. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/easy-mmode.el
  5041. (defalias 'easy-mmode-define-minor-mode 'define-minor-mode)
  5042. (autoload 'define-minor-mode "easy-mmode" "\
  5043. Define a new minor mode MODE.
  5044. This defines the toggle command MODE and (by default) a control variable
  5045. MODE (you can override this with the :variable keyword, see below).
  5046. DOC is the documentation for the mode toggle command.
  5047. The defined mode command takes one optional (prefix) argument.
  5048. Interactively with no prefix argument it toggles the mode.
  5049. With a prefix argument, it enables the mode if the argument is
  5050. positive and otherwise disables it. When called from Lisp, it
  5051. enables the mode if the argument is omitted or nil, and toggles
  5052. the mode if the argument is `toggle'. If DOC is nil this
  5053. function adds a basic doc-string stating these facts.
  5054. Optional INIT-VALUE is the initial value of the mode's variable.
  5055. Optional LIGHTER is displayed in the modeline when the mode is on.
  5056. Optional KEYMAP is the default keymap bound to the mode keymap.
  5057. If non-nil, it should be a variable name (whose value is a keymap),
  5058. or an expression that returns either a keymap or a list of
  5059. arguments for `easy-mmode-define-keymap'. If you supply a KEYMAP
  5060. argument that is not a symbol, this macro defines the variable
  5061. MODE-map and gives it the value that KEYMAP specifies.
  5062. BODY contains code to execute each time the mode is enabled or disabled.
  5063. It is executed after toggling the mode, and before running MODE-hook.
  5064. Before the actual body code, you can write keyword arguments, i.e.
  5065. alternating keywords and values. These following special keywords
  5066. are supported (other keywords are passed to `defcustom' if the minor
  5067. mode is global):
  5068. :group GROUP Custom group name to use in all generated `defcustom' forms.
  5069. Defaults to MODE without the possible trailing \"-mode\".
  5070. Don't use this default group name unless you have written a
  5071. `defgroup' to define that group properly.
  5072. :global GLOBAL If non-nil specifies that the minor mode is not meant to be
  5073. buffer-local, so don't make the variable MODE buffer-local.
  5074. By default, the mode is buffer-local.
  5075. :init-value VAL Same as the INIT-VALUE argument.
  5076. Not used if you also specify :variable.
  5077. :lighter SPEC Same as the LIGHTER argument.
  5078. :keymap MAP Same as the KEYMAP argument.
  5079. :require SYM Same as in `defcustom'.
  5080. :variable PLACE The location to use instead of the variable MODE to store
  5081. the state of the mode. This can be simply a different
  5082. named variable, or more generally anything that can be used
  5083. with the CL macro `setf'. PLACE can also be of the form
  5084. (GET . SET), where GET is an expression that returns the
  5085. current state, and SET is a function that takes one argument,
  5086. the new state, and sets it. If you specify a :variable,
  5087. this function does not define a MODE variable (nor any of
  5088. the terms used in :variable).
  5089. :after-hook A single lisp form which is evaluated after the mode hooks
  5090. have been run. It should not be quoted.
  5091. For example, you could write
  5092. (define-minor-mode foo-mode \"If enabled, foo on you!\"
  5093. :lighter \" Foo\" :require 'foo :global t :group 'hassle :version \"27.5\"
  5094. ...BODY CODE...)
  5095. \(fn MODE DOC &optional INIT-VALUE LIGHTER KEYMAP &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  5096. (defalias 'easy-mmode-define-global-mode 'define-globalized-minor-mode)
  5097. (defalias 'define-global-minor-mode 'define-globalized-minor-mode)
  5098. (autoload 'define-globalized-minor-mode "easy-mmode" "\
  5099. Make a global mode GLOBAL-MODE corresponding to buffer-local minor MODE.
  5100. TURN-ON is a function that will be called with no args in every buffer
  5101. and that should try to turn MODE on if applicable for that buffer.
  5102. KEYS is a list of CL-style keyword arguments. As the minor mode
  5103. defined by this function is always global, any :global keyword is
  5104. ignored. Other keywords have the same meaning as in `define-minor-mode',
  5105. which see. In particular, :group specifies the custom group.
  5106. The most useful keywords are those that are passed on to the
  5107. `defcustom'. It normally makes no sense to pass the :lighter
  5108. or :keymap keywords to `define-globalized-minor-mode', since these
  5109. are usually passed to the buffer-local version of the minor mode.
  5110. If MODE's set-up depends on the major mode in effect when it was
  5111. enabled, then disabling and reenabling MODE should make MODE work
  5112. correctly with the current major mode. This is important to
  5113. prevent problems with derived modes, that is, major modes that
  5114. call another major mode in their body.
  5115. \(fn GLOBAL-MODE MODE TURN-ON &rest KEYS)" nil (quote macro))
  5116. (autoload 'easy-mmode-define-keymap "easy-mmode" "\
  5117. Return a keymap built from bindings BS.
  5118. BS must be a list of (KEY . BINDING) where
  5119. KEY and BINDINGS are suitable for `define-key'.
  5120. Optional NAME is passed to `make-sparse-keymap'.
  5121. Optional map M can be used to modify an existing map.
  5122. ARGS is a list of additional keyword arguments.
  5123. Valid keywords and arguments are:
  5124. :name Name of the keymap; overrides NAME argument.
  5125. :dense Non-nil for a dense keymap.
  5126. :inherit Parent keymap.
  5127. :group Ignored.
  5128. :suppress Non-nil to call `suppress-keymap' on keymap,
  5129. 'nodigits to suppress digits as prefix arguments.
  5130. \(fn BS &optional NAME M ARGS)" nil nil)
  5131. (autoload 'easy-mmode-defmap "easy-mmode" "\
  5132. Define a constant M whose value is the result of `easy-mmode-define-keymap'.
  5133. The M, BS, and ARGS arguments are as per that function. DOC is
  5134. the constant's documentation.
  5135. \(fn M BS DOC &rest ARGS)" nil (quote macro))
  5136. (autoload 'easy-mmode-defsyntax "easy-mmode" "\
  5137. Define variable ST as a syntax-table.
  5138. CSS contains a list of syntax specifications of the form (CHAR . SYNTAX).
  5139. \(fn ST CSS DOC &rest ARGS)" nil (quote macro))
  5140. ;;;***
  5141. ;;;### (autoloads (easy-menu-change easy-menu-create-menu easy-menu-do-define
  5142. ;;;;;; easy-menu-define) "easymenu" "emacs-lisp/easymenu.el" (20352
  5143. ;;;;;; 65510))
  5144. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/easymenu.el
  5145. (autoload 'easy-menu-define "easymenu" "\
  5146. Define a menu bar submenu in maps MAPS, according to MENU.
  5147. If SYMBOL is non-nil, store the menu keymap in the value of SYMBOL,
  5148. and define SYMBOL as a function to pop up the menu, with DOC as its doc string.
  5149. If SYMBOL is nil, just store the menu keymap into MAPS.
  5150. The first element of MENU must be a string. It is the menu bar item name.
  5151. It may be followed by the following keyword argument pairs
  5152. :filter FUNCTION
  5153. FUNCTION is a function with one argument, the rest of menu items.
  5154. It returns the remaining items of the displayed menu.
  5155. :visible INCLUDE
  5156. INCLUDE is an expression; this menu is only visible if this
  5157. expression has a non-nil value. `:included' is an alias for `:visible'.
  5158. :active ENABLE
  5159. ENABLE is an expression; the menu is enabled for selection whenever
  5160. this expression's value is non-nil. `:enable' is an alias for `:active'.
  5161. The rest of the elements in MENU, are menu items.
  5162. A menu item is usually a vector of three elements: [NAME CALLBACK ENABLE]
  5163. NAME is a string--the menu item name.
  5164. CALLBACK is a command to run when the item is chosen,
  5165. or a list to evaluate when the item is chosen.
  5166. ENABLE is an expression; the item is enabled for selection
  5167. whenever this expression's value is non-nil.
  5168. Alternatively, a menu item may have the form:
  5169. [ NAME CALLBACK [ KEYWORD ARG ] ... ]
  5170. Where KEYWORD is one of the symbols defined below.
  5171. :keys KEYS
  5172. KEYS is a string; a complex keyboard equivalent to this menu item.
  5173. This is normally not needed because keyboard equivalents are usually
  5174. computed automatically.
  5175. KEYS is expanded with `substitute-command-keys' before it is used.
  5176. :key-sequence KEYS
  5177. KEYS is nil, a string or a vector; nil or a keyboard equivalent to this
  5178. menu item.
  5179. This is a hint that will considerably speed up Emacs's first display of
  5180. a menu. Use `:key-sequence nil' when you know that this menu item has no
  5181. keyboard equivalent.
  5182. :active ENABLE
  5183. ENABLE is an expression; the item is enabled for selection whenever
  5184. this expression's value is non-nil. `:enable' is an alias for `:active'.
  5185. :visible INCLUDE
  5186. INCLUDE is an expression; this item is only visible if this
  5187. expression has a non-nil value. `:included' is an alias for `:visible'.
  5188. :label FORM
  5189. FORM is an expression that will be dynamically evaluated and whose
  5190. value will be used for the menu entry's text label (the default is NAME).
  5191. :suffix FORM
  5192. FORM is an expression that will be dynamically evaluated and whose
  5193. value will be concatenated to the menu entry's label.
  5194. :style STYLE
  5195. STYLE is a symbol describing the type of menu item. The following are
  5196. defined:
  5197. toggle: A checkbox.
  5198. Prepend the name with `(*) ' or `( ) ' depending on if selected or not.
  5199. radio: A radio button.
  5200. Prepend the name with `[X] ' or `[ ] ' depending on if selected or not.
  5201. button: Surround the name with `[' and `]'. Use this for an item in the
  5202. menu bar itself.
  5203. anything else means an ordinary menu item.
  5204. :selected SELECTED
  5205. SELECTED is an expression; the checkbox or radio button is selected
  5206. whenever this expression's value is non-nil.
  5207. :help HELP
  5208. HELP is a string, the help to display for the menu item.
  5209. A menu item can be a string. Then that string appears in the menu as
  5210. unselectable text. A string consisting solely of hyphens is displayed
  5211. as a solid horizontal line.
  5212. A menu item can be a list with the same format as MENU. This is a submenu.
  5213. \(fn SYMBOL MAPS DOC MENU)" nil (quote macro))
  5214. (put 'easy-menu-define 'lisp-indent-function 'defun)
  5215. (autoload 'easy-menu-do-define "easymenu" "\
  5216. \(fn SYMBOL MAPS DOC MENU)" nil nil)
  5217. (autoload 'easy-menu-create-menu "easymenu" "\
  5218. Create a menu called MENU-NAME with items described in MENU-ITEMS.
  5219. MENU-NAME is a string, the name of the menu. MENU-ITEMS is a list of items
  5220. possibly preceded by keyword pairs as described in `easy-menu-define'.
  5221. \(fn MENU-NAME MENU-ITEMS)" nil nil)
  5222. (autoload 'easy-menu-change "easymenu" "\
  5223. Change menu found at PATH as item NAME to contain ITEMS.
  5224. PATH is a list of strings for locating the menu that
  5225. should contain a submenu named NAME.
  5226. ITEMS is a list of menu items, as in `easy-menu-define'.
  5227. These items entirely replace the previous items in that submenu.
  5228. If MAP is specified, it should normally be a keymap; nil stands for the local
  5229. menu-bar keymap. It can also be a symbol, which has earlier been used as the
  5230. first argument in a call to `easy-menu-define', or the value of such a symbol.
  5231. If the menu located by PATH has no submenu named NAME, add one.
  5232. If the optional argument BEFORE is present, add it just before
  5233. the submenu named BEFORE, otherwise add it at the end of the menu.
  5234. To implement dynamic menus, either call this from
  5235. `menu-bar-update-hook' or use a menu filter.
  5236. \(fn PATH NAME ITEMS &optional BEFORE MAP)" nil nil)
  5237. ;;;***
  5238. ;;;### (autoloads (ebnf-pop-style ebnf-push-style ebnf-reset-style
  5239. ;;;;;; ebnf-apply-style ebnf-merge-style ebnf-delete-style ebnf-insert-style
  5240. ;;;;;; ebnf-find-style ebnf-setup ebnf-syntax-region ebnf-syntax-buffer
  5241. ;;;;;; ebnf-syntax-file ebnf-syntax-directory ebnf-eps-region ebnf-eps-buffer
  5242. ;;;;;; ebnf-eps-file ebnf-eps-directory ebnf-spool-region ebnf-spool-buffer
  5243. ;;;;;; ebnf-spool-file ebnf-spool-directory ebnf-print-region ebnf-print-buffer
  5244. ;;;;;; ebnf-print-file ebnf-print-directory ebnf-customize) "ebnf2ps"
  5245. ;;;;;; "progmodes/ebnf2ps.el" (20400 62402))
  5246. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ebnf2ps.el
  5247. (autoload 'ebnf-customize "ebnf2ps" "\
  5248. Customization for ebnf group.
  5249. \(fn)" t nil)
  5250. (autoload 'ebnf-print-directory "ebnf2ps" "\
  5251. Generate and print a PostScript syntactic chart image of DIRECTORY.
  5252. If DIRECTORY is nil, it's used `default-directory'.
  5253. The files in DIRECTORY that matches `ebnf-file-suffix-regexp' (which see) are
  5254. processed.
  5255. See also `ebnf-print-buffer'.
  5256. \(fn &optional DIRECTORY)" t nil)
  5257. (autoload 'ebnf-print-file "ebnf2ps" "\
  5258. Generate and print a PostScript syntactic chart image of the file FILE.
  5259. If optional arg DO-NOT-KILL-BUFFER-WHEN-DONE is non-nil, the buffer isn't
  5260. killed after process termination.
  5261. See also `ebnf-print-buffer'.
  5262. \(fn FILE &optional DO-NOT-KILL-BUFFER-WHEN-DONE)" t nil)
  5263. (autoload 'ebnf-print-buffer "ebnf2ps" "\
  5264. Generate and print a PostScript syntactic chart image of the buffer.
  5265. When called with a numeric prefix argument (C-u), prompts the user for
  5266. the name of a file to save the PostScript image in, instead of sending
  5267. it to the printer.
  5268. More specifically, the FILENAME argument is treated as follows: if it
  5269. is nil, send the image to the printer. If FILENAME is a string, save
  5270. the PostScript image in a file with that name. If FILENAME is a
  5271. number, prompt the user for the name of the file to save in.
  5272. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  5273. (autoload 'ebnf-print-region "ebnf2ps" "\
  5274. Generate and print a PostScript syntactic chart image of the region.
  5275. Like `ebnf-print-buffer', but prints just the current region.
  5276. \(fn FROM TO &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  5277. (autoload 'ebnf-spool-directory "ebnf2ps" "\
  5278. Generate and spool a PostScript syntactic chart image of DIRECTORY.
  5279. If DIRECTORY is nil, it's used `default-directory'.
  5280. The files in DIRECTORY that matches `ebnf-file-suffix-regexp' (which see) are
  5281. processed.
  5282. See also `ebnf-spool-buffer'.
  5283. \(fn &optional DIRECTORY)" t nil)
  5284. (autoload 'ebnf-spool-file "ebnf2ps" "\
  5285. Generate and spool a PostScript syntactic chart image of the file FILE.
  5286. If optional arg DO-NOT-KILL-BUFFER-WHEN-DONE is non-nil, the buffer isn't
  5287. killed after process termination.
  5288. See also `ebnf-spool-buffer'.
  5289. \(fn FILE &optional DO-NOT-KILL-BUFFER-WHEN-DONE)" t nil)
  5290. (autoload 'ebnf-spool-buffer "ebnf2ps" "\
  5291. Generate and spool a PostScript syntactic chart image of the buffer.
  5292. Like `ebnf-print-buffer' except that the PostScript image is saved in a
  5293. local buffer to be sent to the printer later.
  5294. Use the command `ebnf-despool' to send the spooled images to the printer.
  5295. \(fn)" t nil)
  5296. (autoload 'ebnf-spool-region "ebnf2ps" "\
  5297. Generate a PostScript syntactic chart image of the region and spool locally.
  5298. Like `ebnf-spool-buffer', but spools just the current region.
  5299. Use the command `ebnf-despool' to send the spooled images to the printer.
  5300. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  5301. (autoload 'ebnf-eps-directory "ebnf2ps" "\
  5302. Generate EPS files from EBNF files in DIRECTORY.
  5303. If DIRECTORY is nil, it's used `default-directory'.
  5304. The files in DIRECTORY that matches `ebnf-file-suffix-regexp' (which see) are
  5305. processed.
  5306. See also `ebnf-eps-buffer'.
  5307. \(fn &optional DIRECTORY)" t nil)
  5308. (autoload 'ebnf-eps-file "ebnf2ps" "\
  5309. Generate an EPS file from EBNF file FILE.
  5310. If optional arg DO-NOT-KILL-BUFFER-WHEN-DONE is non-nil, the buffer isn't
  5311. killed after EPS generation.
  5312. See also `ebnf-eps-buffer'.
  5313. \(fn FILE &optional DO-NOT-KILL-BUFFER-WHEN-DONE)" t nil)
  5314. (autoload 'ebnf-eps-buffer "ebnf2ps" "\
  5315. Generate a PostScript syntactic chart image of the buffer in an EPS file.
  5316. Generate an EPS file for each production in the buffer.
  5317. The EPS file name has the following form:
  5318. <PREFIX><PRODUCTION>.eps
  5319. <PREFIX> is given by variable `ebnf-eps-prefix'.
  5320. The default value is \"ebnf--\".
  5321. <PRODUCTION> is the production name.
  5322. Some characters in the production file name are replaced to
  5323. produce a valid file name. For example, the production name
  5324. \"A/B + C\" is modified to produce \"A_B_+_C\", and the EPS
  5325. file name used in this case will be \"ebnf--A_B_+_C.eps\".
  5326. WARNING: This function does *NOT* ask any confirmation to override existing
  5327. files.
  5328. \(fn)" t nil)
  5329. (autoload 'ebnf-eps-region "ebnf2ps" "\
  5330. Generate a PostScript syntactic chart image of the region in an EPS file.
  5331. Generate an EPS file for each production in the region.
  5332. The EPS file name has the following form:
  5333. <PREFIX><PRODUCTION>.eps
  5334. <PREFIX> is given by variable `ebnf-eps-prefix'.
  5335. The default value is \"ebnf--\".
  5336. <PRODUCTION> is the production name.
  5337. Some characters in the production file name are replaced to
  5338. produce a valid file name. For example, the production name
  5339. \"A/B + C\" is modified to produce \"A_B_+_C\", and the EPS
  5340. file name used in this case will be \"ebnf--A_B_+_C.eps\".
  5341. WARNING: This function does *NOT* ask any confirmation to override existing
  5342. files.
  5343. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  5344. (defalias 'ebnf-despool 'ps-despool)
  5345. (autoload 'ebnf-syntax-directory "ebnf2ps" "\
  5346. Do a syntactic analysis of the files in DIRECTORY.
  5347. If DIRECTORY is nil, use `default-directory'.
  5348. Only the files in DIRECTORY that match `ebnf-file-suffix-regexp' (which see)
  5349. are processed.
  5350. See also `ebnf-syntax-buffer'.
  5351. \(fn &optional DIRECTORY)" t nil)
  5352. (autoload 'ebnf-syntax-file "ebnf2ps" "\
  5353. Do a syntactic analysis of the named FILE.
  5354. If optional arg DO-NOT-KILL-BUFFER-WHEN-DONE is non-nil, the buffer isn't
  5355. killed after syntax checking.
  5356. See also `ebnf-syntax-buffer'.
  5357. \(fn FILE &optional DO-NOT-KILL-BUFFER-WHEN-DONE)" t nil)
  5358. (autoload 'ebnf-syntax-buffer "ebnf2ps" "\
  5359. Do a syntactic analysis of the current buffer.
  5360. \(fn)" t nil)
  5361. (autoload 'ebnf-syntax-region "ebnf2ps" "\
  5362. Do a syntactic analysis of a region.
  5363. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  5364. (autoload 'ebnf-setup "ebnf2ps" "\
  5365. Return the current ebnf2ps setup.
  5366. \(fn)" nil nil)
  5367. (autoload 'ebnf-find-style "ebnf2ps" "\
  5368. Return style definition if NAME is already defined; otherwise, return nil.
  5369. See `ebnf-style-database' documentation.
  5370. \(fn NAME)" t nil)
  5371. (autoload 'ebnf-insert-style "ebnf2ps" "\
  5372. Insert a new style NAME with inheritance INHERITS and values VALUES.
  5373. See `ebnf-style-database' documentation.
  5374. \(fn NAME INHERITS &rest VALUES)" t nil)
  5375. (autoload 'ebnf-delete-style "ebnf2ps" "\
  5376. Delete style NAME.
  5377. See `ebnf-style-database' documentation.
  5378. \(fn NAME)" t nil)
  5379. (autoload 'ebnf-merge-style "ebnf2ps" "\
  5380. Merge values of style NAME with style VALUES.
  5381. See `ebnf-style-database' documentation.
  5382. \(fn NAME &rest VALUES)" t nil)
  5383. (autoload 'ebnf-apply-style "ebnf2ps" "\
  5384. Set STYLE as the current style.
  5385. Returns the old style symbol.
  5386. See `ebnf-style-database' documentation.
  5387. \(fn STYLE)" t nil)
  5388. (autoload 'ebnf-reset-style "ebnf2ps" "\
  5389. Reset current style.
  5390. Returns the old style symbol.
  5391. See `ebnf-style-database' documentation.
  5392. \(fn &optional STYLE)" t nil)
  5393. (autoload 'ebnf-push-style "ebnf2ps" "\
  5394. Push the current style onto a stack and set STYLE as the current style.
  5395. Returns the old style symbol.
  5396. See also `ebnf-pop-style'.
  5397. See `ebnf-style-database' documentation.
  5398. \(fn &optional STYLE)" t nil)
  5399. (autoload 'ebnf-pop-style "ebnf2ps" "\
  5400. Pop a style from the stack of pushed styles and set it as the current style.
  5401. Returns the old style symbol.
  5402. See also `ebnf-push-style'.
  5403. See `ebnf-style-database' documentation.
  5404. \(fn)" t nil)
  5405. ;;;***
  5406. ;;;### (autoloads (ebrowse-statistics ebrowse-save-tree-as ebrowse-save-tree
  5407. ;;;;;; ebrowse-electric-position-menu ebrowse-forward-in-position-stack
  5408. ;;;;;; ebrowse-back-in-position-stack ebrowse-tags-search-member-use
  5409. ;;;;;; ebrowse-tags-query-replace ebrowse-tags-search ebrowse-tags-loop-continue
  5410. ;;;;;; ebrowse-tags-complete-symbol ebrowse-tags-find-definition-other-frame
  5411. ;;;;;; ebrowse-tags-view-definition-other-frame ebrowse-tags-find-declaration-other-frame
  5412. ;;;;;; ebrowse-tags-find-definition-other-window ebrowse-tags-view-definition-other-window
  5413. ;;;;;; ebrowse-tags-find-declaration-other-window ebrowse-tags-find-definition
  5414. ;;;;;; ebrowse-tags-view-definition ebrowse-tags-find-declaration
  5415. ;;;;;; ebrowse-tags-view-declaration ebrowse-member-mode ebrowse-electric-choose-tree
  5416. ;;;;;; ebrowse-tree-mode) "ebrowse" "progmodes/ebrowse.el" (20400
  5417. ;;;;;; 62402))
  5418. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ebrowse.el
  5419. (autoload 'ebrowse-tree-mode "ebrowse" "\
  5420. Major mode for Ebrowse class tree buffers.
  5421. Each line corresponds to a class in a class tree.
  5422. Letters do not insert themselves, they are commands.
  5423. File operations in the tree buffer work on class tree data structures.
  5424. E.g.\\[save-buffer] writes the tree to the file it was loaded from.
  5425. Tree mode key bindings:
  5426. \\{ebrowse-tree-mode-map}
  5427. \(fn)" t nil)
  5428. (autoload 'ebrowse-electric-choose-tree "ebrowse" "\
  5429. Return a buffer containing a tree or nil if no tree found or canceled.
  5430. \(fn)" t nil)
  5431. (autoload 'ebrowse-member-mode "ebrowse" "\
  5432. Major mode for Ebrowse member buffers.
  5433. \(fn)" t nil)
  5434. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-view-declaration "ebrowse" "\
  5435. View declaration of member at point.
  5436. \(fn)" t nil)
  5437. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-find-declaration "ebrowse" "\
  5438. Find declaration of member at point.
  5439. \(fn)" t nil)
  5440. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-view-definition "ebrowse" "\
  5441. View definition of member at point.
  5442. \(fn)" t nil)
  5443. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-find-definition "ebrowse" "\
  5444. Find definition of member at point.
  5445. \(fn)" t nil)
  5446. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-find-declaration-other-window "ebrowse" "\
  5447. Find declaration of member at point in other window.
  5448. \(fn)" t nil)
  5449. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-view-definition-other-window "ebrowse" "\
  5450. View definition of member at point in other window.
  5451. \(fn)" t nil)
  5452. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-find-definition-other-window "ebrowse" "\
  5453. Find definition of member at point in other window.
  5454. \(fn)" t nil)
  5455. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-find-declaration-other-frame "ebrowse" "\
  5456. Find definition of member at point in other frame.
  5457. \(fn)" t nil)
  5458. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-view-definition-other-frame "ebrowse" "\
  5459. View definition of member at point in other frame.
  5460. \(fn)" t nil)
  5461. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-find-definition-other-frame "ebrowse" "\
  5462. Find definition of member at point in other frame.
  5463. \(fn)" t nil)
  5464. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-complete-symbol "ebrowse" "\
  5465. Perform completion on the C++ symbol preceding point.
  5466. A second call of this function without changing point inserts the next match.
  5467. A call with prefix PREFIX reads the symbol to insert from the minibuffer with
  5468. completion.
  5469. \(fn PREFIX)" t nil)
  5470. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-loop-continue "ebrowse" "\
  5471. Repeat last operation on files in tree.
  5472. FIRST-TIME non-nil means this is not a repetition, but the first time.
  5473. TREE-BUFFER if indirectly specifies which files to loop over.
  5474. \(fn &optional FIRST-TIME TREE-BUFFER)" t nil)
  5475. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-search "ebrowse" "\
  5476. Search for REGEXP in all files in a tree.
  5477. If marked classes exist, process marked classes, only.
  5478. If regular expression is nil, repeat last search.
  5479. \(fn REGEXP)" t nil)
  5480. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-query-replace "ebrowse" "\
  5481. Query replace FROM with TO in all files of a class tree.
  5482. With prefix arg, process files of marked classes only.
  5483. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  5484. (autoload 'ebrowse-tags-search-member-use "ebrowse" "\
  5485. Search for call sites of a member.
  5486. If FIX-NAME is specified, search uses of that member.
  5487. Otherwise, read a member name from the minibuffer.
  5488. Searches in all files mentioned in a class tree for something that
  5489. looks like a function call to the member.
  5490. \(fn &optional FIX-NAME)" t nil)
  5491. (autoload 'ebrowse-back-in-position-stack "ebrowse" "\
  5492. Move backward in the position stack.
  5493. Prefix arg ARG says how much.
  5494. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  5495. (autoload 'ebrowse-forward-in-position-stack "ebrowse" "\
  5496. Move forward in the position stack.
  5497. Prefix arg ARG says how much.
  5498. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  5499. (autoload 'ebrowse-electric-position-menu "ebrowse" "\
  5500. List positions in the position stack in an electric buffer.
  5501. \(fn)" t nil)
  5502. (autoload 'ebrowse-save-tree "ebrowse" "\
  5503. Save current tree in same file it was loaded from.
  5504. \(fn)" t nil)
  5505. (autoload 'ebrowse-save-tree-as "ebrowse" "\
  5506. Write the current tree data structure to a file.
  5507. Read the file name from the minibuffer if interactive.
  5508. Otherwise, FILE-NAME specifies the file to save the tree in.
  5509. \(fn &optional FILE-NAME)" t nil)
  5510. (autoload 'ebrowse-statistics "ebrowse" "\
  5511. Display statistics for a class tree.
  5512. \(fn)" t nil)
  5513. ;;;***
  5514. ;;;### (autoloads (electric-buffer-list) "ebuff-menu" "ebuff-menu.el"
  5515. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  5516. ;;; Generated autoloads from ebuff-menu.el
  5517. (autoload 'electric-buffer-list "ebuff-menu" "\
  5518. Pop up a buffer describing the set of Emacs buffers.
  5519. Vaguely like ITS lunar select buffer; combining typeoutoid buffer
  5520. listing with menuoid buffer selection.
  5521. If the very next character typed is a space then the buffer list
  5522. window disappears. Otherwise, one may move around in the buffer list
  5523. window, marking buffers to be selected, saved or deleted.
  5524. To exit and select a new buffer, type a space when the cursor is on
  5525. the appropriate line of the buffer-list window. Other commands are
  5526. much like those of `Buffer-menu-mode'.
  5527. Run hooks in `electric-buffer-menu-mode-hook' on entry.
  5528. \\{electric-buffer-menu-mode-map}
  5529. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  5530. ;;;***
  5531. ;;;### (autoloads (Electric-command-history-redo-expression) "echistory"
  5532. ;;;;;; "echistory.el" (20352 65510))
  5533. ;;; Generated autoloads from echistory.el
  5534. (autoload 'Electric-command-history-redo-expression "echistory" "\
  5535. Edit current history line in minibuffer and execute result.
  5536. With prefix arg NOCONFIRM, execute current line as-is without editing.
  5537. \(fn &optional NOCONFIRM)" t nil)
  5538. ;;;***
  5539. ;;;### (autoloads (ecomplete-setup) "ecomplete" "gnus/ecomplete.el"
  5540. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  5541. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/ecomplete.el
  5542. (autoload 'ecomplete-setup "ecomplete" "\
  5543. \(fn)" nil nil)
  5544. ;;;***
  5545. ;;;### (autoloads (global-ede-mode) "ede" "cedet/ede.el" (20352 65510))
  5546. ;;; Generated autoloads from cedet/ede.el
  5547. (defvar global-ede-mode nil "\
  5548. Non-nil if Global-Ede mode is enabled.
  5549. See the command `global-ede-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  5550. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  5551. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  5552. or call the function `global-ede-mode'.")
  5553. (custom-autoload 'global-ede-mode "ede" nil)
  5554. (autoload 'global-ede-mode "ede" "\
  5555. Toggle global EDE (Emacs Development Environment) mode.
  5556. With a prefix argument ARG, enable global EDE mode if ARG is
  5557. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  5558. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  5559. This global minor mode enables `ede-minor-mode' in all buffers in
  5560. an EDE controlled project.
  5561. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  5562. ;;;***
  5563. ;;;### (autoloads (edebug-all-forms edebug-all-defs edebug-eval-top-level-form
  5564. ;;;;;; edebug-basic-spec edebug-all-forms edebug-all-defs) "edebug"
  5565. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/edebug.el" (20400 62402))
  5566. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/edebug.el
  5567. (defvar edebug-all-defs nil "\
  5568. If non-nil, evaluating defining forms instruments for Edebug.
  5569. This applies to `eval-defun', `eval-region', `eval-buffer', and
  5570. `eval-current-buffer'. `eval-region' is also called by
  5571. `eval-last-sexp', and `eval-print-last-sexp'.
  5572. You can use the command `edebug-all-defs' to toggle the value of this
  5573. variable. You may wish to make it local to each buffer with
  5574. \(make-local-variable 'edebug-all-defs) in your
  5575. `emacs-lisp-mode-hook'.")
  5576. (custom-autoload 'edebug-all-defs "edebug" t)
  5577. (defvar edebug-all-forms nil "\
  5578. Non-nil means evaluation of all forms will instrument for Edebug.
  5579. This doesn't apply to loading or evaluations in the minibuffer.
  5580. Use the command `edebug-all-forms' to toggle the value of this option.")
  5581. (custom-autoload 'edebug-all-forms "edebug" t)
  5582. (autoload 'edebug-basic-spec "edebug" "\
  5583. Return t if SPEC uses only extant spec symbols.
  5584. An extant spec symbol is a symbol that is not a function and has a
  5585. `edebug-form-spec' property.
  5586. \(fn SPEC)" nil nil)
  5587. (defalias 'edebug-defun 'edebug-eval-top-level-form)
  5588. (autoload 'edebug-eval-top-level-form "edebug" "\
  5589. Evaluate the top level form point is in, stepping through with Edebug.
  5590. This is like `eval-defun' except that it steps the code for Edebug
  5591. before evaluating it. It displays the value in the echo area
  5592. using `eval-expression' (which see).
  5593. If you do this on a function definition such as a defun or defmacro,
  5594. it defines the function and instruments its definition for Edebug,
  5595. so it will do Edebug stepping when called later. It displays
  5596. `Edebug: FUNCTION' in the echo area to indicate that FUNCTION is now
  5597. instrumented for Edebug.
  5598. If the current defun is actually a call to `defvar' or `defcustom',
  5599. evaluating it this way resets the variable using its initial value
  5600. expression even if the variable already has some other value.
  5601. \(Normally `defvar' and `defcustom' do not alter the value if there
  5602. already is one.)
  5603. \(fn)" t nil)
  5604. (autoload 'edebug-all-defs "edebug" "\
  5605. Toggle edebugging of all definitions.
  5606. \(fn)" t nil)
  5607. (autoload 'edebug-all-forms "edebug" "\
  5608. Toggle edebugging of all forms.
  5609. \(fn)" t nil)
  5610. ;;;***
  5611. ;;;### (autoloads (ediff-documentation ediff-version ediff-revision
  5612. ;;;;;; ediff-patch-buffer ediff-patch-file ediff-merge-revisions-with-ancestor
  5613. ;;;;;; ediff-merge-revisions ediff-merge-buffers-with-ancestor ediff-merge-buffers
  5614. ;;;;;; ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor ediff-merge-files ediff-regions-linewise
  5615. ;;;;;; ediff-regions-wordwise ediff-windows-linewise ediff-windows-wordwise
  5616. ;;;;;; ediff-merge-directory-revisions-with-ancestor ediff-merge-directory-revisions
  5617. ;;;;;; ediff-merge-directories-with-ancestor ediff-merge-directories
  5618. ;;;;;; ediff-directories3 ediff-directory-revisions ediff-directories
  5619. ;;;;;; ediff-buffers3 ediff-buffers ediff-backup ediff-current-file
  5620. ;;;;;; ediff-files3 ediff-files) "ediff" "vc/ediff.el" (20400 62402))
  5621. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/ediff.el
  5622. (autoload 'ediff-files "ediff" "\
  5623. Run Ediff on a pair of files, FILE-A and FILE-B.
  5624. \(fn FILE-A FILE-B &optional STARTUP-HOOKS)" t nil)
  5625. (autoload 'ediff-files3 "ediff" "\
  5626. Run Ediff on three files, FILE-A, FILE-B, and FILE-C.
  5627. \(fn FILE-A FILE-B FILE-C &optional STARTUP-HOOKS)" t nil)
  5628. (defalias 'ediff3 'ediff-files3)
  5629. (defalias 'ediff 'ediff-files)
  5630. (autoload 'ediff-current-file "ediff" "\
  5631. Start ediff between current buffer and its file on disk.
  5632. This command can be used instead of `revert-buffer'. If there is
  5633. nothing to revert then this command fails.
  5634. \(fn)" t nil)
  5635. (autoload 'ediff-backup "ediff" "\
  5636. Run Ediff on FILE and its backup file.
  5637. Uses the latest backup, if there are several numerical backups.
  5638. If this file is a backup, `ediff' it with its original.
  5639. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  5640. (autoload 'ediff-buffers "ediff" "\
  5641. Run Ediff on a pair of buffers, BUFFER-A and BUFFER-B.
  5642. \(fn BUFFER-A BUFFER-B &optional STARTUP-HOOKS JOB-NAME)" t nil)
  5643. (defalias 'ebuffers 'ediff-buffers)
  5644. (autoload 'ediff-buffers3 "ediff" "\
  5645. Run Ediff on three buffers, BUFFER-A, BUFFER-B, and BUFFER-C.
  5646. \(fn BUFFER-A BUFFER-B BUFFER-C &optional STARTUP-HOOKS JOB-NAME)" t nil)
  5647. (defalias 'ebuffers3 'ediff-buffers3)
  5648. (autoload 'ediff-directories "ediff" "\
  5649. Run Ediff on a pair of directories, DIR1 and DIR2, comparing files that have
  5650. the same name in both. The third argument, REGEXP, is nil or a regular
  5651. expression; only file names that match the regexp are considered.
  5652. \(fn DIR1 DIR2 REGEXP)" t nil)
  5653. (defalias 'edirs 'ediff-directories)
  5654. (autoload 'ediff-directory-revisions "ediff" "\
  5655. Run Ediff on a directory, DIR1, comparing its files with their revisions.
  5656. The second argument, REGEXP, is a regular expression that filters the file
  5657. names. Only the files that are under revision control are taken into account.
  5658. \(fn DIR1 REGEXP)" t nil)
  5659. (defalias 'edir-revisions 'ediff-directory-revisions)
  5660. (autoload 'ediff-directories3 "ediff" "\
  5661. Run Ediff on three directories, DIR1, DIR2, and DIR3, comparing files that
  5662. have the same name in all three. The last argument, REGEXP, is nil or a
  5663. regular expression; only file names that match the regexp are considered.
  5664. \(fn DIR1 DIR2 DIR3 REGEXP)" t nil)
  5665. (defalias 'edirs3 'ediff-directories3)
  5666. (autoload 'ediff-merge-directories "ediff" "\
  5667. Run Ediff on a pair of directories, DIR1 and DIR2, merging files that have
  5668. the same name in both. The third argument, REGEXP, is nil or a regular
  5669. expression; only file names that match the regexp are considered.
  5670. \(fn DIR1 DIR2 REGEXP &optional MERGE-AUTOSTORE-DIR)" t nil)
  5671. (defalias 'edirs-merge 'ediff-merge-directories)
  5672. (autoload 'ediff-merge-directories-with-ancestor "ediff" "\
  5673. Merge files in directories DIR1 and DIR2 using files in ANCESTOR-DIR as ancestors.
  5674. Ediff merges files that have identical names in DIR1, DIR2. If a pair of files
  5675. in DIR1 and DIR2 doesn't have an ancestor in ANCESTOR-DIR, Ediff will merge
  5676. without ancestor. The fourth argument, REGEXP, is nil or a regular expression;
  5677. only file names that match the regexp are considered.
  5678. \(fn DIR1 DIR2 ANCESTOR-DIR REGEXP &optional MERGE-AUTOSTORE-DIR)" t nil)
  5679. (autoload 'ediff-merge-directory-revisions "ediff" "\
  5680. Run Ediff on a directory, DIR1, merging its files with their revisions.
  5681. The second argument, REGEXP, is a regular expression that filters the file
  5682. names. Only the files that are under revision control are taken into account.
  5683. \(fn DIR1 REGEXP &optional MERGE-AUTOSTORE-DIR)" t nil)
  5684. (defalias 'edir-merge-revisions 'ediff-merge-directory-revisions)
  5685. (autoload 'ediff-merge-directory-revisions-with-ancestor "ediff" "\
  5686. Run Ediff on a directory, DIR1, merging its files with their revisions and ancestors.
  5687. The second argument, REGEXP, is a regular expression that filters the file
  5688. names. Only the files that are under revision control are taken into account.
  5689. \(fn DIR1 REGEXP &optional MERGE-AUTOSTORE-DIR)" t nil)
  5690. (defalias 'edir-merge-revisions-with-ancestor 'ediff-merge-directory-revisions-with-ancestor)
  5691. (defalias 'edirs-merge-with-ancestor 'ediff-merge-directories-with-ancestor)
  5692. (autoload 'ediff-windows-wordwise "ediff" "\
  5693. Compare WIND-A and WIND-B, which are selected by clicking, wordwise.
  5694. With prefix argument, DUMB-MODE, or on a non-windowing display, works as
  5695. follows:
  5696. If WIND-A is nil, use selected window.
  5697. If WIND-B is nil, use window next to WIND-A.
  5698. \(fn DUMB-MODE &optional WIND-A WIND-B STARTUP-HOOKS)" t nil)
  5699. (autoload 'ediff-windows-linewise "ediff" "\
  5700. Compare WIND-A and WIND-B, which are selected by clicking, linewise.
  5701. With prefix argument, DUMB-MODE, or on a non-windowing display, works as
  5702. follows:
  5703. If WIND-A is nil, use selected window.
  5704. If WIND-B is nil, use window next to WIND-A.
  5705. \(fn DUMB-MODE &optional WIND-A WIND-B STARTUP-HOOKS)" t nil)
  5706. (autoload 'ediff-regions-wordwise "ediff" "\
  5707. Run Ediff on a pair of regions in specified buffers.
  5708. Regions (i.e., point and mark) can be set in advance or marked interactively.
  5709. This function is effective only for relatively small regions, up to 200
  5710. lines. For large regions, use `ediff-regions-linewise'.
  5711. \(fn BUFFER-A BUFFER-B &optional STARTUP-HOOKS)" t nil)
  5712. (autoload 'ediff-regions-linewise "ediff" "\
  5713. Run Ediff on a pair of regions in specified buffers.
  5714. Regions (i.e., point and mark) can be set in advance or marked interactively.
  5715. Each region is enlarged to contain full lines.
  5716. This function is effective for large regions, over 100-200
  5717. lines. For small regions, use `ediff-regions-wordwise'.
  5718. \(fn BUFFER-A BUFFER-B &optional STARTUP-HOOKS)" t nil)
  5719. (defalias 'ediff-merge 'ediff-merge-files)
  5720. (autoload 'ediff-merge-files "ediff" "\
  5721. Merge two files without ancestor.
  5722. \(fn FILE-A FILE-B &optional STARTUP-HOOKS MERGE-BUFFER-FILE)" t nil)
  5723. (autoload 'ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor "ediff" "\
  5724. Merge two files with ancestor.
  5725. \(fn FILE-A FILE-B FILE-ANCESTOR &optional STARTUP-HOOKS MERGE-BUFFER-FILE)" t nil)
  5726. (defalias 'ediff-merge-with-ancestor 'ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor)
  5727. (autoload 'ediff-merge-buffers "ediff" "\
  5728. Merge buffers without ancestor.
  5729. \(fn BUFFER-A BUFFER-B &optional STARTUP-HOOKS JOB-NAME MERGE-BUFFER-FILE)" t nil)
  5730. (autoload 'ediff-merge-buffers-with-ancestor "ediff" "\
  5731. Merge buffers with ancestor.
  5732. \(fn BUFFER-A BUFFER-B BUFFER-ANCESTOR &optional STARTUP-HOOKS JOB-NAME MERGE-BUFFER-FILE)" t nil)
  5733. (autoload 'ediff-merge-revisions "ediff" "\
  5734. Run Ediff by merging two revisions of a file.
  5735. The file is the optional FILE argument or the file visited by the current
  5736. buffer.
  5737. \(fn &optional FILE STARTUP-HOOKS MERGE-BUFFER-FILE)" t nil)
  5738. (autoload 'ediff-merge-revisions-with-ancestor "ediff" "\
  5739. Run Ediff by merging two revisions of a file with a common ancestor.
  5740. The file is the optional FILE argument or the file visited by the current
  5741. buffer.
  5742. \(fn &optional FILE STARTUP-HOOKS MERGE-BUFFER-FILE)" t nil)
  5743. (autoload 'ediff-patch-file "ediff" "\
  5744. Query for a file name, and then run Ediff by patching that file.
  5745. If optional PATCH-BUF is given, use the patch in that buffer
  5746. and don't ask the user.
  5747. If prefix argument, then: if even argument, assume that the patch is in a
  5748. buffer. If odd -- assume it is in a file.
  5749. \(fn &optional ARG PATCH-BUF)" t nil)
  5750. (autoload 'ediff-patch-buffer "ediff" "\
  5751. Run Ediff by patching the buffer specified at prompt.
  5752. Without the optional prefix ARG, asks if the patch is in some buffer and
  5753. prompts for the buffer or a file, depending on the answer.
  5754. With ARG=1, assumes the patch is in a file and prompts for the file.
  5755. With ARG=2, assumes the patch is in a buffer and prompts for the buffer.
  5756. PATCH-BUF is an optional argument, which specifies the buffer that contains the
  5757. patch. If not given, the user is prompted according to the prefix argument.
  5758. \(fn &optional ARG PATCH-BUF)" t nil)
  5759. (defalias 'epatch 'ediff-patch-file)
  5760. (defalias 'epatch-buffer 'ediff-patch-buffer)
  5761. (autoload 'ediff-revision "ediff" "\
  5762. Run Ediff by comparing versions of a file.
  5763. The file is an optional FILE argument or the file entered at the prompt.
  5764. Default: the file visited by the current buffer.
  5765. Uses `vc.el' or `rcs.el' depending on `ediff-version-control-package'.
  5766. \(fn &optional FILE STARTUP-HOOKS)" t nil)
  5767. (defalias 'erevision 'ediff-revision)
  5768. (autoload 'ediff-version "ediff" "\
  5769. Return string describing the version of Ediff.
  5770. When called interactively, displays the version.
  5771. \(fn)" t nil)
  5772. (autoload 'ediff-documentation "ediff" "\
  5773. Display Ediff's manual.
  5774. With optional NODE, goes to that node.
  5775. \(fn &optional NODE)" t nil)
  5776. ;;;***
  5777. ;;;### (autoloads (ediff-customize) "ediff-help" "vc/ediff-help.el"
  5778. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  5779. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/ediff-help.el
  5780. (autoload 'ediff-customize "ediff-help" "\
  5781. \(fn)" t nil)
  5782. ;;;***
  5783. ;;;### (autoloads (ediff-show-registry) "ediff-mult" "vc/ediff-mult.el"
  5784. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  5785. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/ediff-mult.el
  5786. (autoload 'ediff-show-registry "ediff-mult" "\
  5787. Display Ediff's registry.
  5788. \(fn)" t nil)
  5789. (defalias 'eregistry 'ediff-show-registry)
  5790. ;;;***
  5791. ;;;### (autoloads (ediff-toggle-use-toolbar ediff-toggle-multiframe)
  5792. ;;;;;; "ediff-util" "vc/ediff-util.el" (20352 65510))
  5793. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/ediff-util.el
  5794. (autoload 'ediff-toggle-multiframe "ediff-util" "\
  5795. Switch from multiframe display to single-frame display and back.
  5796. To change the default, set the variable `ediff-window-setup-function',
  5797. which see.
  5798. \(fn)" t nil)
  5799. (autoload 'ediff-toggle-use-toolbar "ediff-util" "\
  5800. Enable or disable Ediff toolbar.
  5801. Works only in versions of Emacs that support toolbars.
  5802. To change the default, set the variable `ediff-use-toolbar-p', which see.
  5803. \(fn)" t nil)
  5804. ;;;***
  5805. ;;;### (autoloads (format-kbd-macro read-kbd-macro edit-named-kbd-macro
  5806. ;;;;;; edit-last-kbd-macro edit-kbd-macro) "edmacro" "edmacro.el"
  5807. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  5808. ;;; Generated autoloads from edmacro.el
  5809. (autoload 'edit-kbd-macro "edmacro" "\
  5810. Edit a keyboard macro.
  5811. At the prompt, type any key sequence which is bound to a keyboard macro.
  5812. Or, type `C-x e' or RET to edit the last keyboard macro, `C-h l' to edit
  5813. the last 300 keystrokes as a keyboard macro, or `M-x' to edit a macro by
  5814. its command name.
  5815. With a prefix argument, format the macro in a more concise way.
  5816. \(fn KEYS &optional PREFIX FINISH-HOOK STORE-HOOK)" t nil)
  5817. (autoload 'edit-last-kbd-macro "edmacro" "\
  5818. Edit the most recently defined keyboard macro.
  5819. \(fn &optional PREFIX)" t nil)
  5820. (autoload 'edit-named-kbd-macro "edmacro" "\
  5821. Edit a keyboard macro which has been given a name by `name-last-kbd-macro'.
  5822. \(fn &optional PREFIX)" t nil)
  5823. (autoload 'read-kbd-macro "edmacro" "\
  5824. Read the region as a keyboard macro definition.
  5825. The region is interpreted as spelled-out keystrokes, e.g., \"M-x abc RET\".
  5826. See documentation for `edmacro-mode' for details.
  5827. Leading/trailing \"C-x (\" and \"C-x )\" in the text are allowed and ignored.
  5828. The resulting macro is installed as the \"current\" keyboard macro.
  5829. In Lisp, may also be called with a single STRING argument in which case
  5830. the result is returned rather than being installed as the current macro.
  5831. The result will be a string if possible, otherwise an event vector.
  5832. Second argument NEED-VECTOR means to return an event vector always.
  5833. \(fn START &optional END)" t nil)
  5834. (autoload 'format-kbd-macro "edmacro" "\
  5835. Return the keyboard macro MACRO as a human-readable string.
  5836. This string is suitable for passing to `read-kbd-macro'.
  5837. Second argument VERBOSE means to put one command per line with comments.
  5838. If VERBOSE is `1', put everything on one line. If VERBOSE is omitted
  5839. or nil, use a compact 80-column format.
  5840. \(fn &optional MACRO VERBOSE)" nil nil)
  5841. ;;;***
  5842. ;;;### (autoloads (edt-emulation-on edt-set-scroll-margins) "edt"
  5843. ;;;;;; "emulation/edt.el" (20352 65510))
  5844. ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/edt.el
  5845. (autoload 'edt-set-scroll-margins "edt" "\
  5846. Set scroll margins.
  5847. Argument TOP is the top margin in number of lines or percent of window.
  5848. Argument BOTTOM is the bottom margin in number of lines or percent of window.
  5849. \(fn TOP BOTTOM)" t nil)
  5850. (autoload 'edt-emulation-on "edt" "\
  5851. Turn on EDT Emulation.
  5852. \(fn)" t nil)
  5853. ;;;***
  5854. ;;;### (autoloads (electric-helpify with-electric-help) "ehelp" "ehelp.el"
  5855. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  5856. ;;; Generated autoloads from ehelp.el
  5857. (autoload 'with-electric-help "ehelp" "\
  5858. Pop up an \"electric\" help buffer.
  5859. THUNK is a function of no arguments which is called to initialize the
  5860. contents of BUFFER. BUFFER defaults to `*Help*'. BUFFER will be
  5861. erased before THUNK is called unless NOERASE is non-nil. THUNK will
  5862. be called while BUFFER is current and with `standard-output' bound to
  5863. the buffer specified by BUFFER.
  5864. If THUNK returns nil, we display BUFFER starting at the top, and shrink
  5865. the window to fit. If THUNK returns non-nil, we don't do those things.
  5866. After THUNK has been called, this function \"electrically\" pops up a
  5867. window in which BUFFER is displayed and allows the user to scroll
  5868. through that buffer in `electric-help-mode'. The window's height will
  5869. be at least MINHEIGHT if this value is non-nil.
  5870. If THUNK returns nil, we display BUFFER starting at the top, and
  5871. shrink the window to fit if `electric-help-shrink-window' is non-nil.
  5872. If THUNK returns non-nil, we don't do those things.
  5873. When the user exits (with `electric-help-exit', or otherwise), the help
  5874. buffer's window disappears (i.e., we use `save-window-excursion'), and
  5875. BUFFER is put back into its original major mode.
  5876. \(fn THUNK &optional BUFFER NOERASE MINHEIGHT)" nil nil)
  5877. (autoload 'electric-helpify "ehelp" "\
  5878. \(fn FUN &optional NAME)" nil nil)
  5879. ;;;***
  5880. ;;;### (autoloads (turn-on-eldoc-mode eldoc-mode eldoc-minor-mode-string)
  5881. ;;;;;; "eldoc" "emacs-lisp/eldoc.el" (20352 65510))
  5882. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/eldoc.el
  5883. (defvar eldoc-minor-mode-string (purecopy " ElDoc") "\
  5884. String to display in mode line when ElDoc Mode is enabled; nil for none.")
  5885. (custom-autoload 'eldoc-minor-mode-string "eldoc" t)
  5886. (autoload 'eldoc-mode "eldoc" "\
  5887. Toggle echo area display of Lisp objects at point (ElDoc mode).
  5888. With a prefix argument ARG, enable ElDoc mode if ARG is positive,
  5889. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable ElDoc mode
  5890. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  5891. ElDoc mode is a buffer-local minor mode. When enabled, the echo
  5892. area displays information about a function or variable in the
  5893. text where point is. If point is on a documented variable, it
  5894. displays the first line of that variable's doc string. Otherwise
  5895. it displays the argument list of the function called in the
  5896. expression point is on.
  5897. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  5898. (autoload 'turn-on-eldoc-mode "eldoc" "\
  5899. Unequivocally turn on ElDoc mode (see command `eldoc-mode').
  5900. \(fn)" t nil)
  5901. (defvar eldoc-documentation-function nil "\
  5902. If non-nil, function to call to return doc string.
  5903. The function of no args should return a one-line string for displaying
  5904. doc about a function etc. appropriate to the context around point.
  5905. It should return nil if there's no doc appropriate for the context.
  5906. Typically doc is returned if point is on a function-like name or in its
  5907. arg list.
  5908. The result is used as is, so the function must explicitly handle
  5909. the variables `eldoc-argument-case' and `eldoc-echo-area-use-multiline-p',
  5910. and the face `eldoc-highlight-function-argument', if they are to have any
  5911. effect.
  5912. This variable is expected to be made buffer-local by modes (other than
  5913. Emacs Lisp mode) that support ElDoc.")
  5914. ;;;***
  5915. ;;;### (autoloads (electric-layout-mode electric-pair-mode electric-indent-mode)
  5916. ;;;;;; "electric" "electric.el" (20400 62402))
  5917. ;;; Generated autoloads from electric.el
  5918. (defvar electric-indent-chars '(10) "\
  5919. Characters that should cause automatic reindentation.")
  5920. (defvar electric-indent-mode nil "\
  5921. Non-nil if Electric-Indent mode is enabled.
  5922. See the command `electric-indent-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  5923. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  5924. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  5925. or call the function `electric-indent-mode'.")
  5926. (custom-autoload 'electric-indent-mode "electric" nil)
  5927. (autoload 'electric-indent-mode "electric" "\
  5928. Toggle on-the-fly reindentation (Electric Indent mode).
  5929. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Electric Indent mode if ARG is
  5930. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  5931. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  5932. This is a global minor mode. When enabled, it reindents whenever
  5933. the hook `electric-indent-functions' returns non-nil, or you
  5934. insert a character from `electric-indent-chars'.
  5935. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  5936. (defvar electric-pair-mode nil "\
  5937. Non-nil if Electric-Pair mode is enabled.
  5938. See the command `electric-pair-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  5939. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  5940. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  5941. or call the function `electric-pair-mode'.")
  5942. (custom-autoload 'electric-pair-mode "electric" nil)
  5943. (autoload 'electric-pair-mode "electric" "\
  5944. Toggle automatic parens pairing (Electric Pair mode).
  5945. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Electric Pair mode if ARG is
  5946. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  5947. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  5948. Electric Pair mode is a global minor mode. When enabled, typing
  5949. an open parenthesis automatically inserts the corresponding
  5950. closing parenthesis. (Likewise for brackets, etc.)
  5951. See options `electric-pair-pairs' and `electric-pair-skip-self'.
  5952. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  5953. (defvar electric-layout-mode nil "\
  5954. Non-nil if Electric-Layout mode is enabled.
  5955. See the command `electric-layout-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  5956. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  5957. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  5958. or call the function `electric-layout-mode'.")
  5959. (custom-autoload 'electric-layout-mode "electric" nil)
  5960. (autoload 'electric-layout-mode "electric" "\
  5961. Automatically insert newlines around some chars.
  5962. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Electric Layout mode if ARG is
  5963. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  5964. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  5965. The variable `electric-layout-rules' says when and how to insert newlines.
  5966. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  5967. ;;;***
  5968. ;;;### (autoloads (elide-head) "elide-head" "elide-head.el" (20352
  5969. ;;;;;; 65510))
  5970. ;;; Generated autoloads from elide-head.el
  5971. (autoload 'elide-head "elide-head" "\
  5972. Hide header material in buffer according to `elide-head-headers-to-hide'.
  5973. The header is made invisible with an overlay. With a prefix arg, show
  5974. an elided material again.
  5975. This is suitable as an entry on `find-file-hook' or appropriate mode hooks.
  5976. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  5977. ;;;***
  5978. ;;;### (autoloads (elint-initialize elint-defun elint-current-buffer
  5979. ;;;;;; elint-directory elint-file) "elint" "emacs-lisp/elint.el"
  5980. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  5981. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/elint.el
  5982. (autoload 'elint-file "elint" "\
  5983. Lint the file FILE.
  5984. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  5985. (autoload 'elint-directory "elint" "\
  5986. Lint all the .el files in DIRECTORY.
  5987. A complicated directory may require a lot of memory.
  5988. \(fn DIRECTORY)" t nil)
  5989. (autoload 'elint-current-buffer "elint" "\
  5990. Lint the current buffer.
  5991. If necessary, this first calls `elint-initialize'.
  5992. \(fn)" t nil)
  5993. (autoload 'elint-defun "elint" "\
  5994. Lint the function at point.
  5995. If necessary, this first calls `elint-initialize'.
  5996. \(fn)" t nil)
  5997. (autoload 'elint-initialize "elint" "\
  5998. Initialize elint.
  5999. If elint is already initialized, this does nothing, unless
  6000. optional prefix argument REINIT is non-nil.
  6001. \(fn &optional REINIT)" t nil)
  6002. ;;;***
  6003. ;;;### (autoloads (elp-results elp-instrument-package elp-instrument-list
  6004. ;;;;;; elp-instrument-function) "elp" "emacs-lisp/elp.el" (20352
  6005. ;;;;;; 65510))
  6006. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/elp.el
  6007. (autoload 'elp-instrument-function "elp" "\
  6008. Instrument FUNSYM for profiling.
  6009. FUNSYM must be a symbol of a defined function.
  6010. \(fn FUNSYM)" t nil)
  6011. (autoload 'elp-instrument-list "elp" "\
  6012. Instrument, for profiling, all functions in `elp-function-list'.
  6013. Use optional LIST if provided instead.
  6014. If called interactively, read LIST using the minibuffer.
  6015. \(fn &optional LIST)" t nil)
  6016. (autoload 'elp-instrument-package "elp" "\
  6017. Instrument for profiling, all functions which start with PREFIX.
  6018. For example, to instrument all ELP functions, do the following:
  6019. \\[elp-instrument-package] RET elp- RET
  6020. \(fn PREFIX)" t nil)
  6021. (autoload 'elp-results "elp" "\
  6022. Display current profiling results.
  6023. If `elp-reset-after-results' is non-nil, then current profiling
  6024. information for all instrumented functions is reset after results are
  6025. displayed.
  6026. \(fn)" t nil)
  6027. ;;;***
  6028. ;;;### (autoloads (emacs-lock-mode) "emacs-lock" "emacs-lock.el"
  6029. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  6030. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lock.el
  6031. (autoload 'emacs-lock-mode "emacs-lock" "\
  6032. Toggle Emacs Lock mode in the current buffer.
  6033. If called with a plain prefix argument, ask for the locking mode
  6034. to be used. With any other prefix ARG, turn mode on if ARG is
  6035. positive, off otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode if
  6036. ARG is omitted or nil.
  6037. Initially, if the user does not pass an explicit locking mode, it
  6038. defaults to `emacs-lock-default-locking-mode' (which see);
  6039. afterwards, the locking mode most recently set on the buffer is
  6040. used instead.
  6041. When called from Elisp code, ARG can be any locking mode:
  6042. exit -- Emacs cannot exit while the buffer is locked
  6043. kill -- the buffer cannot be killed, but Emacs can exit as usual
  6044. all -- the buffer is locked against both actions
  6045. Other values are interpreted as usual.
  6046. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  6047. ;;;***
  6048. ;;;### (autoloads (report-emacs-bug-query-existing-bugs report-emacs-bug)
  6049. ;;;;;; "emacsbug" "mail/emacsbug.el" (20400 62402))
  6050. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/emacsbug.el
  6051. (autoload 'report-emacs-bug "emacsbug" "\
  6052. Report a bug in GNU Emacs.
  6053. Prompts for bug subject. Leaves you in a mail buffer.
  6054. \(fn TOPIC &optional RECENT-KEYS)" t nil)
  6055. (autoload 'report-emacs-bug-query-existing-bugs "emacsbug" "\
  6056. Query for KEYWORDS at `report-emacs-bug-tracker-url', and return the result.
  6057. The result is an alist with items of the form (URL SUBJECT NO).
  6058. \(fn KEYWORDS)" t nil)
  6059. ;;;***
  6060. ;;;### (autoloads (emerge-merge-directories emerge-revisions-with-ancestor
  6061. ;;;;;; emerge-revisions emerge-files-with-ancestor-remote emerge-files-remote
  6062. ;;;;;; emerge-files-with-ancestor-command emerge-files-command emerge-buffers-with-ancestor
  6063. ;;;;;; emerge-buffers emerge-files-with-ancestor emerge-files) "emerge"
  6064. ;;;;;; "vc/emerge.el" (20400 62402))
  6065. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/emerge.el
  6066. (autoload 'emerge-files "emerge" "\
  6067. Run Emerge on two files.
  6068. \(fn ARG FILE-A FILE-B FILE-OUT &optional STARTUP-HOOKS QUIT-HOOKS)" t nil)
  6069. (autoload 'emerge-files-with-ancestor "emerge" "\
  6070. Run Emerge on two files, giving another file as the ancestor.
  6071. \(fn ARG FILE-A FILE-B FILE-ANCESTOR FILE-OUT &optional STARTUP-HOOKS QUIT-HOOKS)" t nil)
  6072. (autoload 'emerge-buffers "emerge" "\
  6073. Run Emerge on two buffers.
  6074. \(fn BUFFER-A BUFFER-B &optional STARTUP-HOOKS QUIT-HOOKS)" t nil)
  6075. (autoload 'emerge-buffers-with-ancestor "emerge" "\
  6076. Run Emerge on two buffers, giving another buffer as the ancestor.
  6077. \(fn BUFFER-A BUFFER-B BUFFER-ANCESTOR &optional STARTUP-HOOKS QUIT-HOOKS)" t nil)
  6078. (autoload 'emerge-files-command "emerge" "\
  6079. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6080. (autoload 'emerge-files-with-ancestor-command "emerge" "\
  6081. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6082. (autoload 'emerge-files-remote "emerge" "\
  6083. \(fn FILE-A FILE-B FILE-OUT)" nil nil)
  6084. (autoload 'emerge-files-with-ancestor-remote "emerge" "\
  6085. \(fn FILE-A FILE-B FILE-ANC FILE-OUT)" nil nil)
  6086. (autoload 'emerge-revisions "emerge" "\
  6087. Emerge two RCS revisions of a file.
  6088. \(fn ARG FILE REVISION-A REVISION-B &optional STARTUP-HOOKS QUIT-HOOKS)" t nil)
  6089. (autoload 'emerge-revisions-with-ancestor "emerge" "\
  6090. Emerge two RCS revisions of a file, with another revision as ancestor.
  6091. \(fn ARG FILE REVISION-A REVISION-B ANCESTOR &optional STARTUP-HOOKS QUIT-HOOKS)" t nil)
  6092. (autoload 'emerge-merge-directories "emerge" "\
  6093. \(fn A-DIR B-DIR ANCESTOR-DIR OUTPUT-DIR)" t nil)
  6094. ;;;***
  6095. ;;;### (autoloads (enriched-decode enriched-encode enriched-mode)
  6096. ;;;;;; "enriched" "textmodes/enriched.el" (20461 49352))
  6097. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/enriched.el
  6098. (autoload 'enriched-mode "enriched" "\
  6099. Minor mode for editing text/enriched files.
  6100. These are files with embedded formatting information in the MIME standard
  6101. text/enriched format.
  6102. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  6103. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  6104. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  6105. Turning the mode on or off runs `enriched-mode-hook'.
  6106. More information about Enriched mode is available in the file
  6107. etc/enriched.doc in the Emacs distribution directory.
  6108. Commands:
  6109. \\{enriched-mode-map}
  6110. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  6111. (autoload 'enriched-encode "enriched" "\
  6112. \(fn FROM TO ORIG-BUF)" nil nil)
  6113. (autoload 'enriched-decode "enriched" "\
  6114. \(fn FROM TO)" nil nil)
  6115. ;;;***
  6116. ;;;### (autoloads (epa-insert-keys epa-export-keys epa-import-armor-in-region
  6117. ;;;;;; epa-import-keys-region epa-import-keys epa-delete-keys epa-encrypt-region
  6118. ;;;;;; epa-sign-region epa-verify-cleartext-in-region epa-verify-region
  6119. ;;;;;; epa-decrypt-armor-in-region epa-decrypt-region epa-encrypt-file
  6120. ;;;;;; epa-sign-file epa-verify-file epa-decrypt-file epa-select-keys
  6121. ;;;;;; epa-list-secret-keys epa-list-keys) "epa" "epa.el" (20400
  6122. ;;;;;; 62402))
  6123. ;;; Generated autoloads from epa.el
  6124. (autoload 'epa-list-keys "epa" "\
  6125. List all keys matched with NAME from the public keyring.
  6126. \(fn &optional NAME)" t nil)
  6127. (autoload 'epa-list-secret-keys "epa" "\
  6128. List all keys matched with NAME from the private keyring.
  6129. \(fn &optional NAME)" t nil)
  6130. (autoload 'epa-select-keys "epa" "\
  6131. Display a user's keyring and ask him to select keys.
  6132. CONTEXT is an epg-context.
  6133. PROMPT is a string to prompt with.
  6134. NAMES is a list of strings to be matched with keys. If it is nil, all
  6135. the keys are listed.
  6136. If SECRET is non-nil, list secret keys instead of public keys.
  6137. \(fn CONTEXT PROMPT &optional NAMES SECRET)" nil nil)
  6138. (autoload 'epa-decrypt-file "epa" "\
  6139. Decrypt FILE.
  6140. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  6141. (autoload 'epa-verify-file "epa" "\
  6142. Verify FILE.
  6143. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  6144. (autoload 'epa-sign-file "epa" "\
  6145. Sign FILE by SIGNERS keys selected.
  6146. \(fn FILE SIGNERS MODE)" t nil)
  6147. (autoload 'epa-encrypt-file "epa" "\
  6148. Encrypt FILE for RECIPIENTS.
  6149. \(fn FILE RECIPIENTS)" t nil)
  6150. (autoload 'epa-decrypt-region "epa" "\
  6151. Decrypt the current region between START and END.
  6152. If MAKE-BUFFER-FUNCTION is non-nil, call it to prepare an output buffer.
  6153. It should return that buffer. If it copies the input, it should
  6154. delete the text now being decrypted. It should leave point at the
  6155. proper place to insert the plaintext.
  6156. Be careful about using this command in Lisp programs!
  6157. Since this function operates on regions, it does some tricks such
  6158. as coding-system detection and unibyte/multibyte conversion. If
  6159. you are sure how the data in the region should be treated, you
  6160. should consider using the string based counterpart
  6161. `epg-decrypt-string', or the file based counterpart
  6162. `epg-decrypt-file' instead.
  6163. For example:
  6164. \(let ((context (epg-make-context 'OpenPGP)))
  6165. (decode-coding-string
  6166. (epg-decrypt-string context (buffer-substring start end))
  6167. 'utf-8))
  6168. \(fn START END &optional MAKE-BUFFER-FUNCTION)" t nil)
  6169. (autoload 'epa-decrypt-armor-in-region "epa" "\
  6170. Decrypt OpenPGP armors in the current region between START and END.
  6171. Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
  6172. See the reason described in the `epa-decrypt-region' documentation.
  6173. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  6174. (autoload 'epa-verify-region "epa" "\
  6175. Verify the current region between START and END.
  6176. Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
  6177. Since this function operates on regions, it does some tricks such
  6178. as coding-system detection and unibyte/multibyte conversion. If
  6179. you are sure how the data in the region should be treated, you
  6180. should consider using the string based counterpart
  6181. `epg-verify-string', or the file based counterpart
  6182. `epg-verify-file' instead.
  6183. For example:
  6184. \(let ((context (epg-make-context 'OpenPGP)))
  6185. (decode-coding-string
  6186. (epg-verify-string context (buffer-substring start end))
  6187. 'utf-8))
  6188. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  6189. (autoload 'epa-verify-cleartext-in-region "epa" "\
  6190. Verify OpenPGP cleartext signed messages in the current region
  6191. between START and END.
  6192. Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
  6193. See the reason described in the `epa-verify-region' documentation.
  6194. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  6195. (autoload 'epa-sign-region "epa" "\
  6196. Sign the current region between START and END by SIGNERS keys selected.
  6197. Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
  6198. Since this function operates on regions, it does some tricks such
  6199. as coding-system detection and unibyte/multibyte conversion. If
  6200. you are sure how the data should be treated, you should consider
  6201. using the string based counterpart `epg-sign-string', or the file
  6202. based counterpart `epg-sign-file' instead.
  6203. For example:
  6204. \(let ((context (epg-make-context 'OpenPGP)))
  6205. (epg-sign-string
  6206. context
  6207. (encode-coding-string (buffer-substring start end) 'utf-8)))
  6208. \(fn START END SIGNERS MODE)" t nil)
  6209. (autoload 'epa-encrypt-region "epa" "\
  6210. Encrypt the current region between START and END for RECIPIENTS.
  6211. Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
  6212. Since this function operates on regions, it does some tricks such
  6213. as coding-system detection and unibyte/multibyte conversion. If
  6214. you are sure how the data should be treated, you should consider
  6215. using the string based counterpart `epg-encrypt-string', or the
  6216. file based counterpart `epg-encrypt-file' instead.
  6217. For example:
  6218. \(let ((context (epg-make-context 'OpenPGP)))
  6219. (epg-encrypt-string
  6220. context
  6221. (encode-coding-string (buffer-substring start end) 'utf-8)
  6222. nil))
  6223. \(fn START END RECIPIENTS SIGN SIGNERS)" t nil)
  6224. (autoload 'epa-delete-keys "epa" "\
  6225. Delete selected KEYS.
  6226. \(fn KEYS &optional ALLOW-SECRET)" t nil)
  6227. (autoload 'epa-import-keys "epa" "\
  6228. Import keys from FILE.
  6229. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  6230. (autoload 'epa-import-keys-region "epa" "\
  6231. Import keys from the region.
  6232. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  6233. (autoload 'epa-import-armor-in-region "epa" "\
  6234. Import keys in the OpenPGP armor format in the current region
  6235. between START and END.
  6236. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  6237. (autoload 'epa-export-keys "epa" "\
  6238. Export selected KEYS to FILE.
  6239. \(fn KEYS FILE)" t nil)
  6240. (autoload 'epa-insert-keys "epa" "\
  6241. Insert selected KEYS after the point.
  6242. \(fn KEYS)" t nil)
  6243. ;;;***
  6244. ;;;### (autoloads (epa-dired-do-encrypt epa-dired-do-sign epa-dired-do-verify
  6245. ;;;;;; epa-dired-do-decrypt) "epa-dired" "epa-dired.el" (20352 65510))
  6246. ;;; Generated autoloads from epa-dired.el
  6247. (autoload 'epa-dired-do-decrypt "epa-dired" "\
  6248. Decrypt marked files.
  6249. \(fn)" t nil)
  6250. (autoload 'epa-dired-do-verify "epa-dired" "\
  6251. Verify marked files.
  6252. \(fn)" t nil)
  6253. (autoload 'epa-dired-do-sign "epa-dired" "\
  6254. Sign marked files.
  6255. \(fn)" t nil)
  6256. (autoload 'epa-dired-do-encrypt "epa-dired" "\
  6257. Encrypt marked files.
  6258. \(fn)" t nil)
  6259. ;;;***
  6260. ;;;### (autoloads (epa-file-disable epa-file-enable epa-file-handler)
  6261. ;;;;;; "epa-file" "epa-file.el" (20352 65510))
  6262. ;;; Generated autoloads from epa-file.el
  6263. (autoload 'epa-file-handler "epa-file" "\
  6264. \(fn OPERATION &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  6265. (autoload 'epa-file-enable "epa-file" "\
  6266. \(fn)" t nil)
  6267. (autoload 'epa-file-disable "epa-file" "\
  6268. \(fn)" t nil)
  6269. ;;;***
  6270. ;;;### (autoloads (epa-global-mail-mode epa-mail-import-keys epa-mail-encrypt
  6271. ;;;;;; epa-mail-sign epa-mail-verify epa-mail-decrypt epa-mail-mode)
  6272. ;;;;;; "epa-mail" "epa-mail.el" (20352 65510))
  6273. ;;; Generated autoloads from epa-mail.el
  6274. (autoload 'epa-mail-mode "epa-mail" "\
  6275. A minor-mode for composing encrypted/clearsigned mails.
  6276. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  6277. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  6278. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  6279. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  6280. (autoload 'epa-mail-decrypt "epa-mail" "\
  6281. Decrypt OpenPGP armors in the current buffer.
  6282. The buffer is expected to contain a mail message.
  6283. Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
  6284. \(fn)" t nil)
  6285. (autoload 'epa-mail-verify "epa-mail" "\
  6286. Verify OpenPGP cleartext signed messages in the current buffer.
  6287. The buffer is expected to contain a mail message.
  6288. Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
  6289. \(fn)" t nil)
  6290. (autoload 'epa-mail-sign "epa-mail" "\
  6291. Sign the current buffer.
  6292. The buffer is expected to contain a mail message.
  6293. Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
  6294. \(fn START END SIGNERS MODE)" t nil)
  6295. (autoload 'epa-mail-encrypt "epa-mail" "\
  6296. Encrypt the current buffer.
  6297. The buffer is expected to contain a mail message.
  6298. Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
  6299. \(fn START END RECIPIENTS SIGN SIGNERS)" t nil)
  6300. (autoload 'epa-mail-import-keys "epa-mail" "\
  6301. Import keys in the OpenPGP armor format in the current buffer.
  6302. The buffer is expected to contain a mail message.
  6303. Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
  6304. \(fn)" t nil)
  6305. (defvar epa-global-mail-mode nil "\
  6306. Non-nil if Epa-Global-Mail mode is enabled.
  6307. See the command `epa-global-mail-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  6308. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  6309. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  6310. or call the function `epa-global-mail-mode'.")
  6311. (custom-autoload 'epa-global-mail-mode "epa-mail" nil)
  6312. (autoload 'epa-global-mail-mode "epa-mail" "\
  6313. Minor mode to hook EasyPG into Mail mode.
  6314. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  6315. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  6316. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  6317. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  6318. ;;;***
  6319. ;;;### (autoloads (epg-make-context) "epg" "epg.el" (20352 65510))
  6320. ;;; Generated autoloads from epg.el
  6321. (autoload 'epg-make-context "epg" "\
  6322. Return a context object.
  6323. \(fn &optional PROTOCOL ARMOR TEXTMODE INCLUDE-CERTS CIPHER-ALGORITHM DIGEST-ALGORITHM COMPRESS-ALGORITHM)" nil nil)
  6324. ;;;***
  6325. ;;;### (autoloads (epg-expand-group epg-check-configuration epg-configuration)
  6326. ;;;;;; "epg-config" "epg-config.el" (20400 62402))
  6327. ;;; Generated autoloads from epg-config.el
  6328. (autoload 'epg-configuration "epg-config" "\
  6329. Return a list of internal configuration parameters of `epg-gpg-program'.
  6330. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6331. (autoload 'epg-check-configuration "epg-config" "\
  6332. Verify that a sufficient version of GnuPG is installed.
  6333. \(fn CONFIG &optional MINIMUM-VERSION)" nil nil)
  6334. (autoload 'epg-expand-group "epg-config" "\
  6335. Look at CONFIG and try to expand GROUP.
  6336. \(fn CONFIG GROUP)" nil nil)
  6337. ;;;***
  6338. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-handle-irc-url erc-tls erc erc-select-read-args)
  6339. ;;;;;; "erc" "erc/erc.el" (20400 62402))
  6340. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc.el
  6341. (autoload 'erc-select-read-args "erc" "\
  6342. Prompt the user for values of nick, server, port, and password.
  6343. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6344. (autoload 'erc "erc" "\
  6345. ERC is a powerful, modular, and extensible IRC client.
  6346. This function is the main entry point for ERC.
  6347. It permits you to select connection parameters, and then starts ERC.
  6348. Non-interactively, it takes the keyword arguments
  6349. (server (erc-compute-server))
  6350. (port (erc-compute-port))
  6351. (nick (erc-compute-nick))
  6352. password
  6353. (full-name (erc-compute-full-name)))
  6354. That is, if called with
  6355. (erc :server \"irc.freenode.net\" :full-name \"Harry S Truman\")
  6356. then the server and full-name will be set to those values, whereas
  6357. `erc-compute-port', `erc-compute-nick' and `erc-compute-full-name' will
  6358. be invoked for the values of the other parameters.
  6359. \(fn &key (server (erc-compute-server)) (port (erc-compute-port)) (nick (erc-compute-nick)) PASSWORD (full-name (erc-compute-full-name)))" t nil)
  6360. (defalias 'erc-select 'erc)
  6361. (autoload 'erc-tls "erc" "\
  6362. Interactively select TLS connection parameters and run ERC.
  6363. Arguments are the same as for `erc'.
  6364. \(fn &rest R)" t nil)
  6365. (autoload 'erc-handle-irc-url "erc" "\
  6366. Use ERC to IRC on HOST:PORT in CHANNEL as USER with PASSWORD.
  6367. If ERC is already connected to HOST:PORT, simply /join CHANNEL.
  6368. Otherwise, connect to HOST:PORT as USER and /join CHANNEL.
  6369. \(fn HOST PORT CHANNEL USER PASSWORD)" nil nil)
  6370. ;;;***
  6371. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-autoaway" "erc/erc-autoaway.el" (20400
  6372. ;;;;;; 62402))
  6373. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-autoaway.el
  6374. (autoload 'erc-autoaway-mode "erc-autoaway")
  6375. ;;;***
  6376. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-button" "erc/erc-button.el" (20400 62402))
  6377. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-button.el
  6378. (autoload 'erc-button-mode "erc-button" nil t)
  6379. ;;;***
  6380. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-capab" "erc/erc-capab.el" (20352 65510))
  6381. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-capab.el
  6382. (autoload 'erc-capab-identify-mode "erc-capab" nil t)
  6383. ;;;***
  6384. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-compat" "erc/erc-compat.el" (20352 65510))
  6385. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-compat.el
  6386. (autoload 'erc-define-minor-mode "erc-compat")
  6387. ;;;***
  6388. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-ctcp-query-DCC pcomplete/erc-mode/DCC erc-cmd-DCC)
  6389. ;;;;;; "erc-dcc" "erc/erc-dcc.el" (20400 62402))
  6390. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-dcc.el
  6391. (autoload 'erc-dcc-mode "erc-dcc")
  6392. (autoload 'erc-cmd-DCC "erc-dcc" "\
  6393. Parser for /dcc command.
  6394. This figures out the dcc subcommand and calls the appropriate routine to
  6395. handle it. The function dispatched should be named \"erc-dcc-do-FOO-command\",
  6396. where FOO is one of CLOSE, GET, SEND, LIST, CHAT, etc.
  6397. \(fn CMD &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  6398. (autoload 'pcomplete/erc-mode/DCC "erc-dcc" "\
  6399. Provides completion for the /DCC command.
  6400. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6401. (defvar erc-ctcp-query-DCC-hook '(erc-ctcp-query-DCC) "\
  6402. Hook variable for CTCP DCC queries")
  6403. (autoload 'erc-ctcp-query-DCC "erc-dcc" "\
  6404. The function called when a CTCP DCC request is detected by the client.
  6405. It examines the DCC subcommand, and calls the appropriate routine for
  6406. that subcommand.
  6407. \(fn PROC NICK LOGIN HOST TO QUERY)" nil nil)
  6408. ;;;***
  6409. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-ezb-initialize erc-ezb-select-session erc-ezb-select
  6410. ;;;;;; erc-ezb-add-session erc-ezb-end-of-session-list erc-ezb-init-session-list
  6411. ;;;;;; erc-ezb-identify erc-ezb-notice-autodetect erc-ezb-lookup-action
  6412. ;;;;;; erc-ezb-get-login erc-cmd-ezb) "erc-ezbounce" "erc/erc-ezbounce.el"
  6413. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  6414. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-ezbounce.el
  6415. (autoload 'erc-cmd-ezb "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6416. Send EZB commands to the EZBouncer verbatim.
  6417. \(fn LINE &optional FORCE)" nil nil)
  6418. (autoload 'erc-ezb-get-login "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6419. Return an appropriate EZBounce login for SERVER and PORT.
  6420. Look up entries in `erc-ezb-login-alist'. If the username or password
  6421. in the alist is `nil', prompt for the appropriate values.
  6422. \(fn SERVER PORT)" nil nil)
  6423. (autoload 'erc-ezb-lookup-action "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6424. \(fn MESSAGE)" nil nil)
  6425. (autoload 'erc-ezb-notice-autodetect "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6426. React on an EZBounce NOTICE request.
  6427. \(fn PROC PARSED)" nil nil)
  6428. (autoload 'erc-ezb-identify "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6429. Identify to the EZBouncer server.
  6430. \(fn MESSAGE)" nil nil)
  6431. (autoload 'erc-ezb-init-session-list "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6432. Reset the EZBounce session list to nil.
  6433. \(fn MESSAGE)" nil nil)
  6434. (autoload 'erc-ezb-end-of-session-list "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6435. Indicate the end of the EZBounce session listing.
  6436. \(fn MESSAGE)" nil nil)
  6437. (autoload 'erc-ezb-add-session "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6438. Add an EZBounce session to the session list.
  6439. \(fn MESSAGE)" nil nil)
  6440. (autoload 'erc-ezb-select "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6441. Select an IRC server to use by EZBounce, in ERC style.
  6442. \(fn MESSAGE)" nil nil)
  6443. (autoload 'erc-ezb-select-session "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6444. Select a detached EZBounce session.
  6445. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6446. (autoload 'erc-ezb-initialize "erc-ezbounce" "\
  6447. Add EZBouncer convenience functions to ERC.
  6448. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6449. ;;;***
  6450. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-fill) "erc-fill" "erc/erc-fill.el" (20352
  6451. ;;;;;; 65510))
  6452. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-fill.el
  6453. (autoload 'erc-fill-mode "erc-fill" nil t)
  6454. (autoload 'erc-fill "erc-fill" "\
  6455. Fill a region using the function referenced in `erc-fill-function'.
  6456. You can put this on `erc-insert-modify-hook' and/or `erc-send-modify-hook'.
  6457. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6458. ;;;***
  6459. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-identd-stop erc-identd-start) "erc-identd"
  6460. ;;;;;; "erc/erc-identd.el" (20352 65510))
  6461. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-identd.el
  6462. (autoload 'erc-identd-mode "erc-identd")
  6463. (autoload 'erc-identd-start "erc-identd" "\
  6464. Start an identd server listening to port 8113.
  6465. Port 113 (auth) will need to be redirected to port 8113 on your
  6466. machine -- using iptables, or a program like redir which can be
  6467. run from inetd. The idea is to provide a simple identd server
  6468. when you need one, without having to install one globally on your
  6469. system.
  6470. \(fn &optional PORT)" t nil)
  6471. (autoload 'erc-identd-stop "erc-identd" "\
  6472. \(fn &rest IGNORE)" t nil)
  6473. ;;;***
  6474. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-create-imenu-index) "erc-imenu" "erc/erc-imenu.el"
  6475. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  6476. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-imenu.el
  6477. (autoload 'erc-create-imenu-index "erc-imenu" "\
  6478. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6479. ;;;***
  6480. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-join" "erc/erc-join.el" (20400 62402))
  6481. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-join.el
  6482. (autoload 'erc-autojoin-mode "erc-join" nil t)
  6483. ;;;***
  6484. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-list" "erc/erc-list.el" (20352 65510))
  6485. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-list.el
  6486. (autoload 'erc-list-mode "erc-list")
  6487. ;;;***
  6488. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-save-buffer-in-logs erc-logging-enabled) "erc-log"
  6489. ;;;;;; "erc/erc-log.el" (20400 62402))
  6490. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-log.el
  6491. (autoload 'erc-log-mode "erc-log" nil t)
  6492. (autoload 'erc-logging-enabled "erc-log" "\
  6493. Return non-nil if logging is enabled for BUFFER.
  6494. If BUFFER is nil, the value of `current-buffer' is used.
  6495. Logging is enabled if `erc-log-channels-directory' is non-nil, the directory
  6496. is writable (it will be created as necessary) and
  6497. `erc-enable-logging' returns a non-nil value.
  6498. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" nil nil)
  6499. (autoload 'erc-save-buffer-in-logs "erc-log" "\
  6500. Append BUFFER contents to the log file, if logging is enabled.
  6501. If BUFFER is not provided, current buffer is used.
  6502. Logging is enabled if `erc-logging-enabled' returns non-nil.
  6503. This is normally done on exit, to save the unsaved portion of the
  6504. buffer, since only the text that runs off the buffer limit is logged
  6505. automatically.
  6506. You can save every individual message by putting this function on
  6507. `erc-insert-post-hook'.
  6508. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  6509. ;;;***
  6510. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-delete-dangerous-host erc-add-dangerous-host
  6511. ;;;;;; erc-delete-keyword erc-add-keyword erc-delete-fool erc-add-fool
  6512. ;;;;;; erc-delete-pal erc-add-pal) "erc-match" "erc/erc-match.el"
  6513. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  6514. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-match.el
  6515. (autoload 'erc-match-mode "erc-match")
  6516. (autoload 'erc-add-pal "erc-match" "\
  6517. Add pal interactively to `erc-pals'.
  6518. \(fn)" t nil)
  6519. (autoload 'erc-delete-pal "erc-match" "\
  6520. Delete pal interactively to `erc-pals'.
  6521. \(fn)" t nil)
  6522. (autoload 'erc-add-fool "erc-match" "\
  6523. Add fool interactively to `erc-fools'.
  6524. \(fn)" t nil)
  6525. (autoload 'erc-delete-fool "erc-match" "\
  6526. Delete fool interactively to `erc-fools'.
  6527. \(fn)" t nil)
  6528. (autoload 'erc-add-keyword "erc-match" "\
  6529. Add keyword interactively to `erc-keywords'.
  6530. \(fn)" t nil)
  6531. (autoload 'erc-delete-keyword "erc-match" "\
  6532. Delete keyword interactively to `erc-keywords'.
  6533. \(fn)" t nil)
  6534. (autoload 'erc-add-dangerous-host "erc-match" "\
  6535. Add dangerous-host interactively to `erc-dangerous-hosts'.
  6536. \(fn)" t nil)
  6537. (autoload 'erc-delete-dangerous-host "erc-match" "\
  6538. Delete dangerous-host interactively to `erc-dangerous-hosts'.
  6539. \(fn)" t nil)
  6540. ;;;***
  6541. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-menu" "erc/erc-menu.el" (20352 65510))
  6542. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-menu.el
  6543. (autoload 'erc-menu-mode "erc-menu" nil t)
  6544. ;;;***
  6545. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-cmd-WHOLEFT) "erc-netsplit" "erc/erc-netsplit.el"
  6546. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  6547. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-netsplit.el
  6548. (autoload 'erc-netsplit-mode "erc-netsplit")
  6549. (autoload 'erc-cmd-WHOLEFT "erc-netsplit" "\
  6550. Show who's gone.
  6551. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6552. ;;;***
  6553. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-server-select erc-determine-network) "erc-networks"
  6554. ;;;;;; "erc/erc-networks.el" (20352 65510))
  6555. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-networks.el
  6556. (autoload 'erc-determine-network "erc-networks" "\
  6557. Return the name of the network or \"Unknown\" as a symbol. Use the
  6558. server parameter NETWORK if provided, otherwise parse the server name and
  6559. search for a match in `erc-networks-alist'.
  6560. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6561. (autoload 'erc-server-select "erc-networks" "\
  6562. Interactively select a server to connect to using `erc-server-alist'.
  6563. \(fn)" t nil)
  6564. ;;;***
  6565. ;;;### (autoloads (pcomplete/erc-mode/NOTIFY erc-cmd-NOTIFY) "erc-notify"
  6566. ;;;;;; "erc/erc-notify.el" (20400 62402))
  6567. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-notify.el
  6568. (autoload 'erc-notify-mode "erc-notify" nil t)
  6569. (autoload 'erc-cmd-NOTIFY "erc-notify" "\
  6570. Change `erc-notify-list' or list current notify-list members online.
  6571. Without args, list the current list of notified people online,
  6572. with args, toggle notify status of people.
  6573. \(fn &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  6574. (autoload 'pcomplete/erc-mode/NOTIFY "erc-notify" "\
  6575. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6576. ;;;***
  6577. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-page" "erc/erc-page.el" (20352 65510))
  6578. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-page.el
  6579. (autoload 'erc-page-mode "erc-page")
  6580. ;;;***
  6581. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-pcomplete" "erc/erc-pcomplete.el" (20400
  6582. ;;;;;; 62402))
  6583. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-pcomplete.el
  6584. (autoload 'erc-completion-mode "erc-pcomplete" nil t)
  6585. ;;;***
  6586. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-replace" "erc/erc-replace.el" (20352 65510))
  6587. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-replace.el
  6588. (autoload 'erc-replace-mode "erc-replace")
  6589. ;;;***
  6590. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-ring" "erc/erc-ring.el" (20352 65510))
  6591. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-ring.el
  6592. (autoload 'erc-ring-mode "erc-ring" nil t)
  6593. ;;;***
  6594. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-nickserv-identify erc-nickserv-identify-mode)
  6595. ;;;;;; "erc-services" "erc/erc-services.el" (20400 62402))
  6596. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-services.el
  6597. (autoload 'erc-services-mode "erc-services" nil t)
  6598. (autoload 'erc-nickserv-identify-mode "erc-services" "\
  6599. Set up hooks according to which MODE the user has chosen.
  6600. \(fn MODE)" t nil)
  6601. (autoload 'erc-nickserv-identify "erc-services" "\
  6602. Send an \"identify <PASSWORD>\" message to NickServ.
  6603. When called interactively, read the password using `read-passwd'.
  6604. \(fn PASSWORD)" t nil)
  6605. ;;;***
  6606. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-sound" "erc/erc-sound.el" (20400 62402))
  6607. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-sound.el
  6608. (autoload 'erc-sound-mode "erc-sound")
  6609. ;;;***
  6610. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-speedbar-browser) "erc-speedbar" "erc/erc-speedbar.el"
  6611. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  6612. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-speedbar.el
  6613. (autoload 'erc-speedbar-browser "erc-speedbar" "\
  6614. Initialize speedbar to display an ERC browser.
  6615. This will add a speedbar major display mode.
  6616. \(fn)" t nil)
  6617. ;;;***
  6618. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-spelling" "erc/erc-spelling.el" (20352
  6619. ;;;;;; 65510))
  6620. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-spelling.el
  6621. (autoload 'erc-spelling-mode "erc-spelling" nil t)
  6622. ;;;***
  6623. ;;;### (autoloads nil "erc-stamp" "erc/erc-stamp.el" (20400 62402))
  6624. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-stamp.el
  6625. (autoload 'erc-timestamp-mode "erc-stamp" nil t)
  6626. ;;;***
  6627. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-track-minor-mode) "erc-track" "erc/erc-track.el"
  6628. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  6629. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-track.el
  6630. (defvar erc-track-minor-mode nil "\
  6631. Non-nil if Erc-Track minor mode is enabled.
  6632. See the command `erc-track-minor-mode' for a description of this minor mode.")
  6633. (custom-autoload 'erc-track-minor-mode "erc-track" nil)
  6634. (autoload 'erc-track-minor-mode "erc-track" "\
  6635. Toggle mode line display of ERC activity (ERC Track minor mode).
  6636. With a prefix argument ARG, enable ERC Track minor mode if ARG is
  6637. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  6638. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  6639. ERC Track minor mode is a global minor mode. It exists for the
  6640. sole purpose of providing the C-c C-SPC and C-c C-@ keybindings.
  6641. Make sure that you have enabled the track module, otherwise the
  6642. keybindings will not do anything useful.
  6643. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  6644. (autoload 'erc-track-mode "erc-track" nil t)
  6645. ;;;***
  6646. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-truncate-buffer erc-truncate-buffer-to-size)
  6647. ;;;;;; "erc-truncate" "erc/erc-truncate.el" (20400 62402))
  6648. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-truncate.el
  6649. (autoload 'erc-truncate-mode "erc-truncate" nil t)
  6650. (autoload 'erc-truncate-buffer-to-size "erc-truncate" "\
  6651. Truncates the buffer to the size SIZE.
  6652. If BUFFER is not provided, the current buffer is assumed. The deleted
  6653. region is logged if `erc-logging-enabled' returns non-nil.
  6654. \(fn SIZE &optional BUFFER)" nil nil)
  6655. (autoload 'erc-truncate-buffer "erc-truncate" "\
  6656. Truncates the current buffer to `erc-max-buffer-size'.
  6657. Meant to be used in hooks, like `erc-insert-post-hook'.
  6658. \(fn)" t nil)
  6659. ;;;***
  6660. ;;;### (autoloads (erc-xdcc-add-file) "erc-xdcc" "erc/erc-xdcc.el"
  6661. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  6662. ;;; Generated autoloads from erc/erc-xdcc.el
  6663. (autoload 'erc-xdcc-mode "erc-xdcc")
  6664. (autoload 'erc-xdcc-add-file "erc-xdcc" "\
  6665. Add a file to `erc-xdcc-files'.
  6666. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  6667. ;;;***
  6668. ;;;### (autoloads (ert-describe-test ert-run-tests-interactively
  6669. ;;;;;; ert-run-tests-batch-and-exit ert-run-tests-batch ert-deftest)
  6670. ;;;;;; "ert" "emacs-lisp/ert.el" (20400 62402))
  6671. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/ert.el
  6672. (autoload 'ert-deftest "ert" "\
  6673. Define NAME (a symbol) as a test.
  6674. BODY is evaluated as a `progn' when the test is run. It should
  6675. signal a condition on failure or just return if the test passes.
  6676. `should', `should-not' and `should-error' are useful for
  6677. assertions in BODY.
  6678. Use `ert' to run tests interactively.
  6679. Tests that are expected to fail can be marked as such
  6680. using :expected-result. See `ert-test-result-type-p' for a
  6681. description of valid values for RESULT-TYPE.
  6682. \(fn NAME () [DOCSTRING] [:expected-result RESULT-TYPE] [:tags '(TAG...)] BODY...)" nil (quote macro))
  6683. (put 'ert-deftest 'lisp-indent-function '2)
  6684. (put 'ert-deftest 'doc-string-elt '3)
  6685. (put 'ert-deftest 'lisp-indent-function 2)
  6686. (put 'ert-info 'lisp-indent-function 1)
  6687. (autoload 'ert-run-tests-batch "ert" "\
  6688. Run the tests specified by SELECTOR, printing results to the terminal.
  6689. SELECTOR works as described in `ert-select-tests', except if
  6690. SELECTOR is nil, in which case all tests rather than none will be
  6691. run; this makes the command line \"emacs -batch -l my-tests.el -f
  6692. ert-run-tests-batch-and-exit\" useful.
  6693. Returns the stats object.
  6694. \(fn &optional SELECTOR)" nil nil)
  6695. (autoload 'ert-run-tests-batch-and-exit "ert" "\
  6696. Like `ert-run-tests-batch', but exits Emacs when done.
  6697. The exit status will be 0 if all test results were as expected, 1
  6698. on unexpected results, or 2 if the tool detected an error outside
  6699. of the tests (e.g. invalid SELECTOR or bug in the code that runs
  6700. the tests).
  6701. \(fn &optional SELECTOR)" nil nil)
  6702. (autoload 'ert-run-tests-interactively "ert" "\
  6703. Run the tests specified by SELECTOR and display the results in a buffer.
  6704. SELECTOR works as described in `ert-select-tests'.
  6705. OUTPUT-BUFFER-NAME and MESSAGE-FN should normally be nil; they
  6706. are used for automated self-tests and specify which buffer to use
  6707. and how to display message.
  6708. \(fn SELECTOR &optional OUTPUT-BUFFER-NAME MESSAGE-FN)" t nil)
  6709. (defalias 'ert 'ert-run-tests-interactively)
  6710. (autoload 'ert-describe-test "ert" "\
  6711. Display the documentation for TEST-OR-TEST-NAME (a symbol or ert-test).
  6712. \(fn TEST-OR-TEST-NAME)" t nil)
  6713. ;;;***
  6714. ;;;### (autoloads (ert-kill-all-test-buffers) "ert-x" "emacs-lisp/ert-x.el"
  6715. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  6716. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/ert-x.el
  6717. (put 'ert-with-test-buffer 'lisp-indent-function 1)
  6718. (autoload 'ert-kill-all-test-buffers "ert-x" "\
  6719. Kill all test buffers that are still live.
  6720. \(fn)" t nil)
  6721. ;;;***
  6722. ;;;### (autoloads (eshell-mode) "esh-mode" "eshell/esh-mode.el" (20352
  6723. ;;;;;; 65510))
  6724. ;;; Generated autoloads from eshell/esh-mode.el
  6725. (autoload 'eshell-mode "esh-mode" "\
  6726. Emacs shell interactive mode.
  6727. \\{eshell-mode-map}
  6728. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6729. ;;;***
  6730. ;;;### (autoloads (eshell-command-result eshell-command eshell) "eshell"
  6731. ;;;;;; "eshell/eshell.el" (20400 62402))
  6732. ;;; Generated autoloads from eshell/eshell.el
  6733. (autoload 'eshell "eshell" "\
  6734. Create an interactive Eshell buffer.
  6735. The buffer used for Eshell sessions is determined by the value of
  6736. `eshell-buffer-name'. If there is already an Eshell session active in
  6737. that buffer, Emacs will simply switch to it. Otherwise, a new session
  6738. will begin. A numeric prefix arg (as in `C-u 42 M-x eshell RET')
  6739. switches to the session with that number, creating it if necessary. A
  6740. nonnumeric prefix arg means to create a new session. Returns the
  6741. buffer selected (or created).
  6742. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  6743. (autoload 'eshell-command "eshell" "\
  6744. Execute the Eshell command string COMMAND.
  6745. With prefix ARG, insert output into the current buffer at point.
  6746. \(fn &optional COMMAND ARG)" t nil)
  6747. (autoload 'eshell-command-result "eshell" "\
  6748. Execute the given Eshell COMMAND, and return the result.
  6749. The result might be any Lisp object.
  6750. If STATUS-VAR is a symbol, it will be set to the exit status of the
  6751. command. This is the only way to determine whether the value returned
  6752. corresponding to a successful execution.
  6753. \(fn COMMAND &optional STATUS-VAR)" nil nil)
  6754. (define-obsolete-function-alias 'eshell-report-bug 'report-emacs-bug "23.1")
  6755. ;;;***
  6756. ;;;### (autoloads (complete-tag select-tags-table tags-apropos list-tags
  6757. ;;;;;; tags-query-replace tags-search tags-loop-continue next-file
  6758. ;;;;;; pop-tag-mark find-tag-regexp find-tag-other-frame find-tag-other-window
  6759. ;;;;;; find-tag find-tag-noselect tags-table-files visit-tags-table-buffer
  6760. ;;;;;; visit-tags-table tags-table-mode find-tag-default-function
  6761. ;;;;;; find-tag-hook tags-add-tables tags-compression-info-list
  6762. ;;;;;; tags-table-list tags-case-fold-search) "etags" "progmodes/etags.el"
  6763. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  6764. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/etags.el
  6765. (defvar tags-file-name nil "\
  6766. *File name of tags table.
  6767. To switch to a new tags table, setting this variable is sufficient.
  6768. If you set this variable, do not also set `tags-table-list'.
  6769. Use the `etags' program to make a tags table file.")
  6770. (put 'tags-file-name 'variable-interactive (purecopy "fVisit tags table: "))
  6771. (put 'tags-file-name 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  6772. (defvar tags-case-fold-search 'default "\
  6773. *Whether tags operations should be case-sensitive.
  6774. A value of t means case-insensitive, a value of nil means case-sensitive.
  6775. Any other value means use the setting of `case-fold-search'.")
  6776. (custom-autoload 'tags-case-fold-search "etags" t)
  6777. (defvar tags-table-list nil "\
  6778. *List of file names of tags tables to search.
  6779. An element that is a directory means the file \"TAGS\" in that directory.
  6780. To switch to a new list of tags tables, setting this variable is sufficient.
  6781. If you set this variable, do not also set `tags-file-name'.
  6782. Use the `etags' program to make a tags table file.")
  6783. (custom-autoload 'tags-table-list "etags" t)
  6784. (defvar tags-compression-info-list (purecopy '("" ".Z" ".bz2" ".gz" ".xz" ".tgz")) "\
  6785. *List of extensions tried by etags when jka-compr is used.
  6786. An empty string means search the non-compressed file.
  6787. These extensions will be tried only if jka-compr was activated
  6788. \(i.e. via customize of `auto-compression-mode' or by calling the function
  6789. `auto-compression-mode').")
  6790. (custom-autoload 'tags-compression-info-list "etags" t)
  6791. (defvar tags-add-tables 'ask-user "\
  6792. *Control whether to add a new tags table to the current list.
  6793. t means do; nil means don't (always start a new list).
  6794. Any other value means ask the user whether to add a new tags table
  6795. to the current list (as opposed to starting a new list).")
  6796. (custom-autoload 'tags-add-tables "etags" t)
  6797. (defvar find-tag-hook nil "\
  6798. *Hook to be run by \\[find-tag] after finding a tag. See `run-hooks'.
  6799. The value in the buffer in which \\[find-tag] is done is used,
  6800. not the value in the buffer \\[find-tag] goes to.")
  6801. (custom-autoload 'find-tag-hook "etags" t)
  6802. (defvar find-tag-default-function nil "\
  6803. *A function of no arguments used by \\[find-tag] to pick a default tag.
  6804. If nil, and the symbol that is the value of `major-mode'
  6805. has a `find-tag-default-function' property (see `put'), that is used.
  6806. Otherwise, `find-tag-default' is used.")
  6807. (custom-autoload 'find-tag-default-function "etags" t)
  6808. (autoload 'tags-table-mode "etags" "\
  6809. Major mode for tags table file buffers.
  6810. \(fn)" t nil)
  6811. (autoload 'visit-tags-table "etags" "\
  6812. Tell tags commands to use tags table file FILE.
  6813. FILE should be the name of a file created with the `etags' program.
  6814. A directory name is ok too; it means file TAGS in that directory.
  6815. Normally \\[visit-tags-table] sets the global value of `tags-file-name'.
  6816. With a prefix arg, set the buffer-local value instead.
  6817. When you find a tag with \\[find-tag], the buffer it finds the tag
  6818. in is given a local value of this variable which is the name of the tags
  6819. file the tag was in.
  6820. \(fn FILE &optional LOCAL)" t nil)
  6821. (autoload 'visit-tags-table-buffer "etags" "\
  6822. Select the buffer containing the current tags table.
  6823. If optional arg is a string, visit that file as a tags table.
  6824. If optional arg is t, visit the next table in `tags-table-list'.
  6825. If optional arg is the atom `same', don't look for a new table;
  6826. just select the buffer visiting `tags-file-name'.
  6827. If arg is nil or absent, choose a first buffer from information in
  6828. `tags-file-name', `tags-table-list', `tags-table-list-pointer'.
  6829. Returns t if it visits a tags table, or nil if there are no more in the list.
  6830. \(fn &optional CONT)" nil nil)
  6831. (autoload 'tags-table-files "etags" "\
  6832. Return a list of files in the current tags table.
  6833. Assumes the tags table is the current buffer. The file names are returned
  6834. as they appeared in the `etags' command that created the table, usually
  6835. without directory names.
  6836. \(fn)" nil nil)
  6837. (defun tags-completion-at-point-function ()
  6838. (if (or tags-table-list tags-file-name)
  6839. (progn
  6840. (load "etags")
  6841. (tags-completion-at-point-function))))
  6842. (autoload 'find-tag-noselect "etags" "\
  6843. Find tag (in current tags table) whose name contains TAGNAME.
  6844. Returns the buffer containing the tag's definition and moves its point there,
  6845. but does not select the buffer.
  6846. The default for TAGNAME is the expression in the buffer near point.
  6847. If second arg NEXT-P is t (interactively, with prefix arg), search for
  6848. another tag that matches the last tagname or regexp used. When there are
  6849. multiple matches for a tag, more exact matches are found first. If NEXT-P
  6850. is the atom `-' (interactively, with prefix arg that is a negative number
  6851. or just \\[negative-argument]), pop back to the previous tag gone to.
  6852. If third arg REGEXP-P is non-nil, treat TAGNAME as a regexp.
  6853. A marker representing the point when this command is invoked is pushed
  6854. onto a ring and may be popped back to with \\[pop-tag-mark].
  6855. Contrast this with the ring of marks gone to by the command.
  6856. See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'.
  6857. \(fn TAGNAME &optional NEXT-P REGEXP-P)" t nil)
  6858. (autoload 'find-tag "etags" "\
  6859. Find tag (in current tags table) whose name contains TAGNAME.
  6860. Select the buffer containing the tag's definition, and move point there.
  6861. The default for TAGNAME is the expression in the buffer around or before point.
  6862. If second arg NEXT-P is t (interactively, with prefix arg), search for
  6863. another tag that matches the last tagname or regexp used. When there are
  6864. multiple matches for a tag, more exact matches are found first. If NEXT-P
  6865. is the atom `-' (interactively, with prefix arg that is a negative number
  6866. or just \\[negative-argument]), pop back to the previous tag gone to.
  6867. If third arg REGEXP-P is non-nil, treat TAGNAME as a regexp.
  6868. A marker representing the point when this command is invoked is pushed
  6869. onto a ring and may be popped back to with \\[pop-tag-mark].
  6870. Contrast this with the ring of marks gone to by the command.
  6871. See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'.
  6872. \(fn TAGNAME &optional NEXT-P REGEXP-P)" t nil)
  6873. (define-key esc-map "." 'find-tag)
  6874. (autoload 'find-tag-other-window "etags" "\
  6875. Find tag (in current tags table) whose name contains TAGNAME.
  6876. Select the buffer containing the tag's definition in another window, and
  6877. move point there. The default for TAGNAME is the expression in the buffer
  6878. around or before point.
  6879. If second arg NEXT-P is t (interactively, with prefix arg), search for
  6880. another tag that matches the last tagname or regexp used. When there are
  6881. multiple matches for a tag, more exact matches are found first. If NEXT-P
  6882. is negative (interactively, with prefix arg that is a negative number or
  6883. just \\[negative-argument]), pop back to the previous tag gone to.
  6884. If third arg REGEXP-P is non-nil, treat TAGNAME as a regexp.
  6885. A marker representing the point when this command is invoked is pushed
  6886. onto a ring and may be popped back to with \\[pop-tag-mark].
  6887. Contrast this with the ring of marks gone to by the command.
  6888. See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'.
  6889. \(fn TAGNAME &optional NEXT-P REGEXP-P)" t nil)
  6890. (define-key ctl-x-4-map "." 'find-tag-other-window)
  6891. (autoload 'find-tag-other-frame "etags" "\
  6892. Find tag (in current tags table) whose name contains TAGNAME.
  6893. Select the buffer containing the tag's definition in another frame, and
  6894. move point there. The default for TAGNAME is the expression in the buffer
  6895. around or before point.
  6896. If second arg NEXT-P is t (interactively, with prefix arg), search for
  6897. another tag that matches the last tagname or regexp used. When there are
  6898. multiple matches for a tag, more exact matches are found first. If NEXT-P
  6899. is negative (interactively, with prefix arg that is a negative number or
  6900. just \\[negative-argument]), pop back to the previous tag gone to.
  6901. If third arg REGEXP-P is non-nil, treat TAGNAME as a regexp.
  6902. A marker representing the point when this command is invoked is pushed
  6903. onto a ring and may be popped back to with \\[pop-tag-mark].
  6904. Contrast this with the ring of marks gone to by the command.
  6905. See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'.
  6906. \(fn TAGNAME &optional NEXT-P)" t nil)
  6907. (define-key ctl-x-5-map "." 'find-tag-other-frame)
  6908. (autoload 'find-tag-regexp "etags" "\
  6909. Find tag (in current tags table) whose name matches REGEXP.
  6910. Select the buffer containing the tag's definition and move point there.
  6911. If second arg NEXT-P is t (interactively, with prefix arg), search for
  6912. another tag that matches the last tagname or regexp used. When there are
  6913. multiple matches for a tag, more exact matches are found first. If NEXT-P
  6914. is negative (interactively, with prefix arg that is a negative number or
  6915. just \\[negative-argument]), pop back to the previous tag gone to.
  6916. If third arg OTHER-WINDOW is non-nil, select the buffer in another window.
  6917. A marker representing the point when this command is invoked is pushed
  6918. onto a ring and may be popped back to with \\[pop-tag-mark].
  6919. Contrast this with the ring of marks gone to by the command.
  6920. See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'.
  6921. \(fn REGEXP &optional NEXT-P OTHER-WINDOW)" t nil)
  6922. (define-key esc-map [?\C-.] 'find-tag-regexp)
  6923. (define-key esc-map "*" 'pop-tag-mark)
  6924. (autoload 'pop-tag-mark "etags" "\
  6925. Pop back to where \\[find-tag] was last invoked.
  6926. This is distinct from invoking \\[find-tag] with a negative argument
  6927. since that pops a stack of markers at which tags were found, not from
  6928. where they were found.
  6929. \(fn)" t nil)
  6930. (autoload 'next-file "etags" "\
  6931. Select next file among files in current tags table.
  6932. A first argument of t (prefix arg, if interactive) initializes to the
  6933. beginning of the list of files in the tags table. If the argument is
  6934. neither nil nor t, it is evalled to initialize the list of files.
  6935. Non-nil second argument NOVISIT means use a temporary buffer
  6936. to save time and avoid uninteresting warnings.
  6937. Value is nil if the file was already visited;
  6938. if the file was newly read in, the value is the filename.
  6939. \(fn &optional INITIALIZE NOVISIT)" t nil)
  6940. (autoload 'tags-loop-continue "etags" "\
  6941. Continue last \\[tags-search] or \\[tags-query-replace] command.
  6942. Used noninteractively with non-nil argument to begin such a command (the
  6943. argument is passed to `next-file', which see).
  6944. Two variables control the processing we do on each file: the value of
  6945. `tags-loop-scan' is a form to be executed on each file to see if it is
  6946. interesting (it returns non-nil if so) and `tags-loop-operate' is a form to
  6947. evaluate to operate on an interesting file. If the latter evaluates to
  6948. nil, we exit; otherwise we scan the next file.
  6949. \(fn &optional FIRST-TIME)" t nil)
  6950. (define-key esc-map "," 'tags-loop-continue)
  6951. (autoload 'tags-search "etags" "\
  6952. Search through all files listed in tags table for match for REGEXP.
  6953. Stops when a match is found.
  6954. To continue searching for next match, use command \\[tags-loop-continue].
  6955. If FILE-LIST-FORM is non-nil, it should be a form that, when
  6956. evaluated, will return a list of file names. The search will be
  6957. restricted to these files.
  6958. Aleso see the documentation of the `tags-file-name' variable.
  6959. \(fn REGEXP &optional FILE-LIST-FORM)" t nil)
  6960. (autoload 'tags-query-replace "etags" "\
  6961. Do `query-replace-regexp' of FROM with TO on all files listed in tags table.
  6962. Third arg DELIMITED (prefix arg) means replace only word-delimited matches.
  6963. If you exit (\\[keyboard-quit], RET or q), you can resume the query replace
  6964. with the command \\[tags-loop-continue].
  6965. Fourth arg FILE-LIST-FORM non-nil means initialize the replacement loop.
  6966. Fifth and sixth arguments START and END are accepted, for compatibility
  6967. with `query-replace-regexp', and ignored.
  6968. If FILE-LIST-FORM is non-nil, it is a form to evaluate to
  6969. produce the list of files to search.
  6970. See also the documentation of the variable `tags-file-name'.
  6971. \(fn FROM TO &optional DELIMITED FILE-LIST-FORM)" t nil)
  6972. (autoload 'list-tags "etags" "\
  6973. Display list of tags in file FILE.
  6974. This searches only the first table in the list, and no included tables.
  6975. FILE should be as it appeared in the `etags' command, usually without a
  6976. directory specification.
  6977. \(fn FILE &optional NEXT-MATCH)" t nil)
  6978. (autoload 'tags-apropos "etags" "\
  6979. Display list of all tags in tags table REGEXP matches.
  6980. \(fn REGEXP)" t nil)
  6981. (autoload 'select-tags-table "etags" "\
  6982. Select a tags table file from a menu of those you have already used.
  6983. The list of tags tables to select from is stored in `tags-table-set-list';
  6984. see the doc of that variable if you want to add names to the list.
  6985. \(fn)" t nil)
  6986. (autoload 'complete-tag "etags" "\
  6987. Perform tags completion on the text around point.
  6988. Completes to the set of names listed in the current tags table.
  6989. The string to complete is chosen in the same way as the default
  6990. for \\[find-tag] (which see).
  6991. \(fn)" t nil)
  6992. ;;;***
  6993. ;;;### (autoloads (ethio-composition-function ethio-insert-ethio-space
  6994. ;;;;;; ethio-write-file ethio-find-file ethio-java-to-fidel-buffer
  6995. ;;;;;; ethio-fidel-to-java-buffer ethio-tex-to-fidel-buffer ethio-fidel-to-tex-buffer
  6996. ;;;;;; ethio-input-special-character ethio-replace-space ethio-modify-vowel
  6997. ;;;;;; ethio-fidel-to-sera-marker ethio-fidel-to-sera-region ethio-fidel-to-sera-buffer
  6998. ;;;;;; ethio-sera-to-fidel-marker ethio-sera-to-fidel-region ethio-sera-to-fidel-buffer
  6999. ;;;;;; setup-ethiopic-environment-internal) "ethio-util" "language/ethio-util.el"
  7000. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  7001. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/ethio-util.el
  7002. (autoload 'setup-ethiopic-environment-internal "ethio-util" "\
  7003. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7004. (autoload 'ethio-sera-to-fidel-buffer "ethio-util" "\
  7005. Convert the current buffer from SERA to FIDEL.
  7006. The variable `ethio-primary-language' specifies the primary
  7007. language and `ethio-secondary-language' specifies the secondary.
  7008. If the 1st optional argument SECONDARY is non-nil, assume the
  7009. buffer begins with the secondary language; otherwise with the
  7010. primary language.
  7011. If the 2nd optional argument FORCE is non-nil, perform conversion
  7012. even if the buffer is read-only.
  7013. See also the descriptions of the variables
  7014. `ethio-use-colon-for-colon' and `ethio-use-three-dot-question'.
  7015. \(fn &optional SECONDARY FORCE)" t nil)
  7016. (autoload 'ethio-sera-to-fidel-region "ethio-util" "\
  7017. Convert the characters in region from SERA to FIDEL.
  7018. The variable `ethio-primary-language' specifies the primary
  7019. language and `ethio-secondary-language' specifies the secondary.
  7020. If the 3rd argument SECONDARY is given and non-nil, assume the
  7021. region begins with the secondary language; otherwise with the
  7022. primary language.
  7023. If the 4th argument FORCE is given and non-nil, perform
  7024. conversion even if the buffer is read-only.
  7025. See also the descriptions of the variables
  7026. `ethio-use-colon-for-colon' and `ethio-use-three-dot-question'.
  7027. \(fn BEGIN END &optional SECONDARY FORCE)" t nil)
  7028. (autoload 'ethio-sera-to-fidel-marker "ethio-util" "\
  7029. Convert the regions surrounded by \"<sera>\" and \"</sera>\" from SERA to FIDEL.
  7030. Assume that each region begins with `ethio-primary-language'.
  7031. The markers \"<sera>\" and \"</sera>\" themselves are not deleted.
  7032. \(fn &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  7033. (autoload 'ethio-fidel-to-sera-buffer "ethio-util" "\
  7034. Replace all the FIDEL characters in the current buffer to the SERA format.
  7035. The variable `ethio-primary-language' specifies the primary
  7036. language and `ethio-secondary-language' specifies the secondary.
  7037. If the 1st optional argument SECONDARY is non-nil, try to convert the
  7038. region so that it begins with the secondary language; otherwise with the
  7039. primary language.
  7040. If the 2nd optional argument FORCE is non-nil, convert even if the
  7041. buffer is read-only.
  7042. See also the descriptions of the variables
  7043. `ethio-use-colon-for-colon', `ethio-use-three-dot-question',
  7044. `ethio-quote-vowel-always' and `ethio-numeric-reduction'.
  7045. \(fn &optional SECONDARY FORCE)" t nil)
  7046. (autoload 'ethio-fidel-to-sera-region "ethio-util" "\
  7047. Replace all the FIDEL characters in the region to the SERA format.
  7048. The variable `ethio-primary-language' specifies the primary
  7049. language and `ethio-secondary-language' specifies the secondary.
  7050. If the 3rd argument SECONDARY is given and non-nil, convert
  7051. the region so that it begins with the secondary language; otherwise with
  7052. the primary language.
  7053. If the 4th argument FORCE is given and non-nil, convert even if the
  7054. buffer is read-only.
  7055. See also the descriptions of the variables
  7056. `ethio-use-colon-for-colon', `ethio-use-three-dot-question',
  7057. `ethio-quote-vowel-always' and `ethio-numeric-reduction'.
  7058. \(fn BEGIN END &optional SECONDARY FORCE)" t nil)
  7059. (autoload 'ethio-fidel-to-sera-marker "ethio-util" "\
  7060. Convert the regions surrounded by \"<sera>\" and \"</sera>\" from FIDEL to SERA.
  7061. The markers \"<sera>\" and \"</sera>\" themselves are not deleted.
  7062. \(fn &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  7063. (autoload 'ethio-modify-vowel "ethio-util" "\
  7064. Modify the vowel of the FIDEL that is under the cursor.
  7065. \(fn)" t nil)
  7066. (autoload 'ethio-replace-space "ethio-util" "\
  7067. Replace ASCII spaces with Ethiopic word separators in the region.
  7068. In the specified region, replace word separators surrounded by two
  7069. Ethiopic characters, depending on the first argument CH, which should
  7070. be 1, 2, or 3.
  7071. If CH = 1, word separator will be replaced with an ASCII space.
  7072. If CH = 2, with two ASCII spaces.
  7073. If CH = 3, with the Ethiopic colon-like word separator.
  7074. The 2nd and 3rd arguments BEGIN and END specify the region.
  7075. \(fn CH BEGIN END)" t nil)
  7076. (autoload 'ethio-input-special-character "ethio-util" "\
  7077. This function is deprecated.
  7078. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  7079. (autoload 'ethio-fidel-to-tex-buffer "ethio-util" "\
  7080. Convert each fidel characters in the current buffer into a fidel-tex command.
  7081. \(fn)" t nil)
  7082. (autoload 'ethio-tex-to-fidel-buffer "ethio-util" "\
  7083. Convert fidel-tex commands in the current buffer into fidel chars.
  7084. \(fn)" t nil)
  7085. (autoload 'ethio-fidel-to-java-buffer "ethio-util" "\
  7086. Convert Ethiopic characters into the Java escape sequences.
  7087. Each escape sequence is of the form \\uXXXX, where XXXX is the
  7088. character's codepoint (in hex) in Unicode.
  7089. If `ethio-java-save-lowercase' is non-nil, use [0-9a-f].
  7090. Otherwise, [0-9A-F].
  7091. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7092. (autoload 'ethio-java-to-fidel-buffer "ethio-util" "\
  7093. Convert the Java escape sequences into corresponding Ethiopic characters.
  7094. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7095. (autoload 'ethio-find-file "ethio-util" "\
  7096. Transliterate file content into Ethiopic depending on filename suffix.
  7097. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7098. (autoload 'ethio-write-file "ethio-util" "\
  7099. Transliterate Ethiopic characters in ASCII depending on the file extension.
  7100. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7101. (autoload 'ethio-insert-ethio-space "ethio-util" "\
  7102. Insert the Ethiopic word delimiter (the colon-like character).
  7103. With ARG, insert that many delimiters.
  7104. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  7105. (autoload 'ethio-composition-function "ethio-util" "\
  7106. \(fn POS TO FONT-OBJECT STRING)" nil nil)
  7107. ;;;***
  7108. ;;;### (autoloads (eudc-load-eudc eudc-query-form eudc-expand-inline
  7109. ;;;;;; eudc-get-phone eudc-get-email eudc-set-server) "eudc" "net/eudc.el"
  7110. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  7111. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/eudc.el
  7112. (autoload 'eudc-set-server "eudc" "\
  7113. Set the directory server to SERVER using PROTOCOL.
  7114. Unless NO-SAVE is non-nil, the server is saved as the default
  7115. server for future sessions.
  7116. \(fn SERVER PROTOCOL &optional NO-SAVE)" t nil)
  7117. (autoload 'eudc-get-email "eudc" "\
  7118. Get the email field of NAME from the directory server.
  7119. If ERROR is non-nil, report an error if there is none.
  7120. \(fn NAME &optional ERROR)" t nil)
  7121. (autoload 'eudc-get-phone "eudc" "\
  7122. Get the phone field of NAME from the directory server.
  7123. If ERROR is non-nil, report an error if there is none.
  7124. \(fn NAME &optional ERROR)" t nil)
  7125. (autoload 'eudc-expand-inline "eudc" "\
  7126. Query the directory server, and expand the query string before point.
  7127. The query string consists of the buffer substring from the point back to
  7128. the preceding comma, colon or beginning of line.
  7129. The variable `eudc-inline-query-format' controls how to associate the
  7130. individual inline query words with directory attribute names.
  7131. After querying the server for the given string, the expansion specified by
  7132. `eudc-inline-expansion-format' is inserted in the buffer at point.
  7133. If REPLACE is non-nil, then this expansion replaces the name in the buffer.
  7134. `eudc-expansion-overwrites-query' being non-nil inverts the meaning of REPLACE.
  7135. Multiple servers can be tried with the same query until one finds a match,
  7136. see `eudc-inline-expansion-servers'
  7137. \(fn &optional REPLACE)" t nil)
  7138. (autoload 'eudc-query-form "eudc" "\
  7139. Display a form to query the directory server.
  7140. If given a non-nil argument GET-FIELDS-FROM-SERVER, the function first
  7141. queries the server for the existing fields and displays a corresponding form.
  7142. \(fn &optional GET-FIELDS-FROM-SERVER)" t nil)
  7143. (autoload 'eudc-load-eudc "eudc" "\
  7144. Load the Emacs Unified Directory Client.
  7145. This does nothing except loading eudc by autoload side-effect.
  7146. \(fn)" t nil)
  7147. (cond ((not (featurep 'xemacs)) (defvar eudc-tools-menu (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Directory Search"))) (define-key map [phone] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Get Phone") eudc-get-phone :help ,(purecopy "Get the phone field of name from the directory server"))) (define-key map [email] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Get Email") eudc-get-email :help ,(purecopy "Get the email field of NAME from the directory server"))) (define-key map [separator-eudc-email] menu-bar-separator) (define-key map [expand-inline] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Expand Inline Query") eudc-expand-inline :help ,(purecopy "Query the directory server, and expand the query string before point"))) (define-key map [query] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Query with Form") eudc-query-form :help ,(purecopy "Display a form to query the directory server"))) (define-key map [separator-eudc-query] menu-bar-separator) (define-key map [new] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "New Server") eudc-set-server :help ,(purecopy "Set the directory server to SERVER using PROTOCOL"))) (define-key map [load] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Load Hotlist of Servers") eudc-load-eudc :help ,(purecopy "Load the Emacs Unified Directory Client"))) map)) (fset 'eudc-tools-menu (symbol-value 'eudc-tools-menu))) (t (let ((menu '("Directory Search" ["Load Hotlist of Servers" eudc-load-eudc t] ["New Server" eudc-set-server t] ["---" nil nil] ["Query with Form" eudc-query-form t] ["Expand Inline Query" eudc-expand-inline t] ["---" nil nil] ["Get Email" eudc-get-email t] ["Get Phone" eudc-get-phone t]))) (if (not (featurep 'eudc-autoloads)) (if (featurep 'xemacs) (if (and (featurep 'menubar) (not (featurep 'infodock))) (add-submenu '("Tools") menu)) (require 'easymenu) (cond ((fboundp 'easy-menu-add-item) (easy-menu-add-item nil '("tools") (easy-menu-create-menu (car menu) (cdr menu)))) ((fboundp 'easy-menu-create-keymaps) (define-key global-map [menu-bar tools eudc] (cons "Directory Search" (easy-menu-create-keymaps "Directory Search" (cdr menu)))))))))))
  7148. ;;;***
  7149. ;;;### (autoloads (eudc-display-jpeg-as-button eudc-display-jpeg-inline
  7150. ;;;;;; eudc-display-sound eudc-display-mail eudc-display-url eudc-display-generic-binary)
  7151. ;;;;;; "eudc-bob" "net/eudc-bob.el" (20352 65510))
  7152. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/eudc-bob.el
  7153. (autoload 'eudc-display-generic-binary "eudc-bob" "\
  7154. Display a button for unidentified binary DATA.
  7155. \(fn DATA)" nil nil)
  7156. (autoload 'eudc-display-url "eudc-bob" "\
  7157. Display URL and make it clickable.
  7158. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  7159. (autoload 'eudc-display-mail "eudc-bob" "\
  7160. Display e-mail address and make it clickable.
  7161. \(fn MAIL)" nil nil)
  7162. (autoload 'eudc-display-sound "eudc-bob" "\
  7163. Display a button to play the sound DATA.
  7164. \(fn DATA)" nil nil)
  7165. (autoload 'eudc-display-jpeg-inline "eudc-bob" "\
  7166. Display the JPEG DATA inline at point if possible.
  7167. \(fn DATA)" nil nil)
  7168. (autoload 'eudc-display-jpeg-as-button "eudc-bob" "\
  7169. Display a button for the JPEG DATA.
  7170. \(fn DATA)" nil nil)
  7171. ;;;***
  7172. ;;;### (autoloads (eudc-try-bbdb-insert eudc-insert-record-at-point-into-bbdb)
  7173. ;;;;;; "eudc-export" "net/eudc-export.el" (20352 65510))
  7174. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/eudc-export.el
  7175. (autoload 'eudc-insert-record-at-point-into-bbdb "eudc-export" "\
  7176. Insert record at point into the BBDB database.
  7177. This function can only be called from a directory query result buffer.
  7178. \(fn)" t nil)
  7179. (autoload 'eudc-try-bbdb-insert "eudc-export" "\
  7180. Call `eudc-insert-record-at-point-into-bbdb' if on a record.
  7181. \(fn)" t nil)
  7182. ;;;***
  7183. ;;;### (autoloads (eudc-edit-hotlist) "eudc-hotlist" "net/eudc-hotlist.el"
  7184. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  7185. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/eudc-hotlist.el
  7186. (autoload 'eudc-edit-hotlist "eudc-hotlist" "\
  7187. Edit the hotlist of directory servers in a specialized buffer.
  7188. \(fn)" t nil)
  7189. ;;;***
  7190. ;;;### (autoloads (ewoc-create) "ewoc" "emacs-lisp/ewoc.el" (20400
  7191. ;;;;;; 62402))
  7192. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/ewoc.el
  7193. (autoload 'ewoc-create "ewoc" "\
  7194. Create an empty ewoc.
  7195. The ewoc will be inserted in the current buffer at the current position.
  7196. PRETTY-PRINTER should be a function that takes one argument, an
  7197. element, and inserts a string representing it in the buffer (at
  7198. point). The string PRETTY-PRINTER inserts may be empty or span
  7199. several lines. The PRETTY-PRINTER should use `insert', and not
  7200. `insert-before-markers'.
  7201. Optional second and third arguments HEADER and FOOTER are strings,
  7202. possibly empty, that will always be present at the top and bottom,
  7203. respectively, of the ewoc.
  7204. Normally, a newline is automatically inserted after the header,
  7205. the footer and every node's printed representation. Optional
  7206. fourth arg NOSEP non-nil inhibits this.
  7207. \(fn PRETTY-PRINTER &optional HEADER FOOTER NOSEP)" nil nil)
  7208. ;;;***
  7209. ;;;### (autoloads (executable-make-buffer-file-executable-if-script-p
  7210. ;;;;;; executable-self-display executable-set-magic executable-interpret
  7211. ;;;;;; executable-command-find-posix-p) "executable" "progmodes/executable.el"
  7212. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  7213. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/executable.el
  7214. (autoload 'executable-command-find-posix-p "executable" "\
  7215. Check if PROGRAM handles arguments Posix-style.
  7216. If PROGRAM is non-nil, use that instead of \"find\".
  7217. \(fn &optional PROGRAM)" nil nil)
  7218. (autoload 'executable-interpret "executable" "\
  7219. Run script with user-specified args, and collect output in a buffer.
  7220. While script runs asynchronously, you can use the \\[next-error]
  7221. command to find the next error. The buffer is also in `comint-mode' and
  7222. `compilation-shell-minor-mode', so that you can answer any prompts.
  7223. \(fn COMMAND)" t nil)
  7224. (autoload 'executable-set-magic "executable" "\
  7225. Set this buffer's interpreter to INTERPRETER with optional ARGUMENT.
  7226. The variables `executable-magicless-file-regexp', `executable-prefix',
  7227. `executable-insert', `executable-query' and `executable-chmod' control
  7228. when and how magic numbers are inserted or replaced and scripts made
  7229. executable.
  7230. \(fn INTERPRETER &optional ARGUMENT NO-QUERY-FLAG INSERT-FLAG)" t nil)
  7231. (autoload 'executable-self-display "executable" "\
  7232. Turn a text file into a self-displaying Un*x command.
  7233. The magic number of such a command displays all lines but itself.
  7234. \(fn)" t nil)
  7235. (autoload 'executable-make-buffer-file-executable-if-script-p "executable" "\
  7236. Make file executable according to umask if not already executable.
  7237. If file already has any execute bits set at all, do not change existing
  7238. file modes.
  7239. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7240. ;;;***
  7241. ;;;### (autoloads (expand-jump-to-next-slot expand-jump-to-previous-slot
  7242. ;;;;;; expand-abbrev-hook expand-add-abbrevs) "expand" "expand.el"
  7243. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  7244. ;;; Generated autoloads from expand.el
  7245. (autoload 'expand-add-abbrevs "expand" "\
  7246. Add a list of abbreviations to abbrev table TABLE.
  7247. ABBREVS is a list of abbrev definitions; each abbrev description entry
  7248. has the form (ABBREV EXPANSION ARG).
  7249. ABBREV is the abbreviation to replace.
  7250. EXPANSION is the replacement string or a function which will make the
  7251. expansion. For example, you could use the DMacros or skeleton packages
  7252. to generate such functions.
  7253. ARG is an optional argument which can be a number or a list of
  7254. numbers. If ARG is a number, point is placed ARG chars from the
  7255. beginning of the expanded text.
  7256. If ARG is a list of numbers, point is placed according to the first
  7257. member of the list, but you can visit the other specified positions
  7258. cyclically with the functions `expand-jump-to-previous-slot' and
  7259. `expand-jump-to-next-slot'.
  7260. If ARG is omitted, point is placed at the end of the expanded text.
  7261. \(fn TABLE ABBREVS)" nil nil)
  7262. (autoload 'expand-abbrev-hook "expand" "\
  7263. Abbrev hook used to do the expansion job of expand abbrevs.
  7264. See `expand-add-abbrevs'. Value is non-nil if expansion was done.
  7265. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7266. (autoload 'expand-jump-to-previous-slot "expand" "\
  7267. Move the cursor to the previous slot in the last abbrev expansion.
  7268. This is used only in conjunction with `expand-add-abbrevs'.
  7269. \(fn)" t nil)
  7270. (autoload 'expand-jump-to-next-slot "expand" "\
  7271. Move the cursor to the next slot in the last abbrev expansion.
  7272. This is used only in conjunction with `expand-add-abbrevs'.
  7273. \(fn)" t nil)
  7274. (define-key abbrev-map "p" 'expand-jump-to-previous-slot)
  7275. (define-key abbrev-map "n" 'expand-jump-to-next-slot)
  7276. ;;;***
  7277. ;;;### (autoloads (f90-mode) "f90" "progmodes/f90.el" (20461 49352))
  7278. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/f90.el
  7279. (autoload 'f90-mode "f90" "\
  7280. Major mode for editing Fortran 90,95 code in free format.
  7281. For fixed format code, use `fortran-mode'.
  7282. \\[f90-indent-line] indents the current line.
  7283. \\[f90-indent-new-line] indents current line and creates a new indented line.
  7284. \\[f90-indent-subprogram] indents the current subprogram.
  7285. Type `? or `\\[help-command] to display a list of built-in abbrevs for F90 keywords.
  7286. Key definitions:
  7287. \\{f90-mode-map}
  7288. Variables controlling indentation style and extra features:
  7289. `f90-do-indent'
  7290. Extra indentation within do blocks (default 3).
  7291. `f90-if-indent'
  7292. Extra indentation within if/select/where/forall blocks (default 3).
  7293. `f90-type-indent'
  7294. Extra indentation within type/enum/interface/block-data blocks (default 3).
  7295. `f90-program-indent'
  7296. Extra indentation within program/module/subroutine/function blocks
  7297. (default 2).
  7298. `f90-associate-indent'
  7299. Extra indentation within associate blocks (default 2).
  7300. `f90-critical-indent'
  7301. Extra indentation within critical/block blocks (default 2).
  7302. `f90-continuation-indent'
  7303. Extra indentation applied to continuation lines (default 5).
  7304. `f90-comment-region'
  7305. String inserted by function \\[f90-comment-region] at start of each
  7306. line in region (default \"!!!$\").
  7307. `f90-indented-comment-re'
  7308. Regexp determining the type of comment to be intended like code
  7309. (default \"!\").
  7310. `f90-directive-comment-re'
  7311. Regexp of comment-like directive like \"!HPF\\\\$\", not to be indented
  7312. (default \"!hpf\\\\$\").
  7313. `f90-break-delimiters'
  7314. Regexp holding list of delimiters at which lines may be broken
  7315. (default \"[-+*/><=,% \\t]\").
  7316. `f90-break-before-delimiters'
  7317. Non-nil causes `f90-do-auto-fill' to break lines before delimiters
  7318. (default t).
  7319. `f90-beginning-ampersand'
  7320. Automatic insertion of & at beginning of continuation lines (default t).
  7321. `f90-smart-end'
  7322. From an END statement, check and fill the end using matching block start.
  7323. Allowed values are 'blink, 'no-blink, and nil, which determine
  7324. whether to blink the matching beginning (default 'blink).
  7325. `f90-auto-keyword-case'
  7326. Automatic change of case of keywords (default nil).
  7327. The possibilities are 'downcase-word, 'upcase-word, 'capitalize-word.
  7328. `f90-leave-line-no'
  7329. Do not left-justify line numbers (default nil).
  7330. Turning on F90 mode calls the value of the variable `f90-mode-hook'
  7331. with no args, if that value is non-nil.
  7332. \(fn)" t nil)
  7333. ;;;***
  7334. ;;;### (autoloads (variable-pitch-mode buffer-face-toggle buffer-face-set
  7335. ;;;;;; buffer-face-mode text-scale-adjust text-scale-decrease text-scale-increase
  7336. ;;;;;; text-scale-set face-remap-set-base face-remap-reset-base
  7337. ;;;;;; face-remap-add-relative) "face-remap" "face-remap.el" (20400
  7338. ;;;;;; 62402))
  7339. ;;; Generated autoloads from face-remap.el
  7340. (autoload 'face-remap-add-relative "face-remap" "\
  7341. Add a face remapping entry of FACE to SPECS in the current buffer.
  7342. Return a cookie which can be used to delete this remapping with
  7343. `face-remap-remove-relative'.
  7344. The remaining arguments, SPECS, should be either a list of face
  7345. names, or a property list of face attribute/value pairs. The
  7346. remapping specified by SPECS takes effect alongside the
  7347. remappings from other calls to `face-remap-add-relative', as well
  7348. as the normal definition of FACE (at lowest priority). This
  7349. function tries to sort multiple remappings for the same face, so
  7350. that remappings specifying relative face attributes are applied
  7351. after remappings specifying absolute face attributes.
  7352. The base (lowest priority) remapping may be set to something
  7353. other than the normal definition of FACE via `face-remap-set-base'.
  7354. \(fn FACE &rest SPECS)" nil nil)
  7355. (autoload 'face-remap-reset-base "face-remap" "\
  7356. Set the base remapping of FACE to the normal definition of FACE.
  7357. This causes the remappings specified by `face-remap-add-relative'
  7358. to apply on top of the normal definition of FACE.
  7359. \(fn FACE)" nil nil)
  7360. (autoload 'face-remap-set-base "face-remap" "\
  7361. Set the base remapping of FACE in the current buffer to SPECS.
  7362. This causes the remappings specified by `face-remap-add-relative'
  7363. to apply on top of the face specification given by SPECS. SPECS
  7364. should be either a list of face names, or a property list of face
  7365. attribute/value pairs.
  7366. If SPECS is empty, call `face-remap-reset-base' to use the normal
  7367. definition of FACE as the base remapping; note that this is
  7368. different from SPECS containing a single value `nil', which means
  7369. not to inherit from the global definition of FACE at all.
  7370. \(fn FACE &rest SPECS)" nil nil)
  7371. (autoload 'text-scale-set "face-remap" "\
  7372. Set the scale factor of the default face in the current buffer to LEVEL.
  7373. If LEVEL is non-zero, `text-scale-mode' is enabled, otherwise it is disabled.
  7374. LEVEL is a number of steps, with 0 representing the default size.
  7375. Each step scales the height of the default face by the variable
  7376. `text-scale-mode-step' (a negative number decreases the height by
  7377. the same amount).
  7378. \(fn LEVEL)" t nil)
  7379. (autoload 'text-scale-increase "face-remap" "\
  7380. Increase the height of the default face in the current buffer by INC steps.
  7381. If the new height is other than the default, `text-scale-mode' is enabled.
  7382. Each step scales the height of the default face by the variable
  7383. `text-scale-mode-step' (a negative number of steps decreases the
  7384. height by the same amount). As a special case, an argument of 0
  7385. will remove any scaling currently active.
  7386. \(fn INC)" t nil)
  7387. (autoload 'text-scale-decrease "face-remap" "\
  7388. Decrease the height of the default face in the current buffer by DEC steps.
  7389. See `text-scale-increase' for more details.
  7390. \(fn DEC)" t nil)
  7391. (define-key ctl-x-map [(control ?+)] 'text-scale-adjust)
  7392. (define-key ctl-x-map [(control ?-)] 'text-scale-adjust)
  7393. (define-key ctl-x-map [(control ?=)] 'text-scale-adjust)
  7394. (define-key ctl-x-map [(control ?0)] 'text-scale-adjust)
  7395. (autoload 'text-scale-adjust "face-remap" "\
  7396. Increase or decrease the height of the default face in the current buffer.
  7397. The actual adjustment made depends on the final component of the
  7398. key-binding used to invoke the command, with all modifiers removed:
  7399. +, = Increase the default face height by one step
  7400. - Decrease the default face height by one step
  7401. 0 Reset the default face height to the global default
  7402. Then, continue to read input events and further adjust the face
  7403. height as long as the input event read (with all modifiers removed)
  7404. is one of the above.
  7405. Each step scales the height of the default face by the variable
  7406. `text-scale-mode-step' (a negative number of steps decreases the
  7407. height by the same amount). As a special case, an argument of 0
  7408. will remove any scaling currently active.
  7409. This command is a special-purpose wrapper around the
  7410. `text-scale-increase' command which makes repetition convenient
  7411. even when it is bound in a non-top-level keymap. For binding in
  7412. a top-level keymap, `text-scale-increase' or
  7413. `text-scale-decrease' may be more appropriate.
  7414. \(fn INC)" t nil)
  7415. (autoload 'buffer-face-mode "face-remap" "\
  7416. Minor mode for a buffer-specific default face.
  7417. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  7418. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  7419. if ARG is omitted or nil. When enabled, the face specified by the
  7420. variable `buffer-face-mode-face' is used to display the buffer text.
  7421. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  7422. (autoload 'buffer-face-set "face-remap" "\
  7423. Enable `buffer-face-mode', using face specs SPECS.
  7424. SPECS can be any value suitable for the `face' text property,
  7425. including a face name, a list of face names, or a face-attribute
  7426. If SPECS is nil, then `buffer-face-mode' is disabled.
  7427. This function will make the variable `buffer-face-mode-face'
  7428. buffer local, and set it to FACE.
  7429. \(fn &rest SPECS)" t nil)
  7430. (autoload 'buffer-face-toggle "face-remap" "\
  7431. Toggle `buffer-face-mode', using face specs SPECS.
  7432. SPECS can be any value suitable for the `face' text property,
  7433. including a face name, a list of face names, or a face-attribute
  7434. If `buffer-face-mode' is already enabled, and is currently using
  7435. the face specs SPECS, then it is disabled; if buffer-face-mode is
  7436. disabled, or is enabled and currently displaying some other face,
  7437. then is left enabled, but the face changed to reflect SPECS.
  7438. This function will make the variable `buffer-face-mode-face'
  7439. buffer local, and set it to SPECS.
  7440. \(fn &rest SPECS)" t nil)
  7441. (autoload 'variable-pitch-mode "face-remap" "\
  7442. Variable-pitch default-face mode.
  7443. An interface to `buffer-face-mode' which uses the `variable-pitch' face.
  7444. Besides the choice of face, it is the same as `buffer-face-mode'.
  7445. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  7446. ;;;***
  7447. ;;;### (autoloads (feedmail-queue-reminder feedmail-run-the-queue
  7448. ;;;;;; feedmail-run-the-queue-global-prompt feedmail-run-the-queue-no-prompts
  7449. ;;;;;; feedmail-send-it) "feedmail" "mail/feedmail.el" (20400 62402))
  7450. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/feedmail.el
  7451. (autoload 'feedmail-send-it "feedmail" "\
  7452. Send the current mail buffer using the Feedmail package.
  7453. This is a suitable value for `send-mail-function'. It can be used
  7454. with various lower-level mechanisms to provide features such as queueing.
  7455. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7456. (autoload 'feedmail-run-the-queue-no-prompts "feedmail" "\
  7457. Like `feedmail-run-the-queue', but suppress confirmation prompts.
  7458. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  7459. (autoload 'feedmail-run-the-queue-global-prompt "feedmail" "\
  7460. Like `feedmail-run-the-queue', but with a global confirmation prompt.
  7461. This is generally most useful if run non-interactively, since you can
  7462. bail out with an appropriate answer to the global confirmation prompt.
  7463. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  7464. (autoload 'feedmail-run-the-queue "feedmail" "\
  7465. Visit each message in the feedmail queue directory and send it out.
  7466. Return value is a list of three things: number of messages sent, number of
  7467. messages skipped, and number of non-message things in the queue (commonly
  7468. backup file names and the like).
  7469. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  7470. (autoload 'feedmail-queue-reminder "feedmail" "\
  7471. Perform some kind of reminder activity about queued and draft messages.
  7472. Called with an optional symbol argument which says what kind of event
  7473. is triggering the reminder activity. The default is 'on-demand, which
  7474. is what you typically would use if you were putting this in your Emacs start-up
  7475. or mail hook code. Other recognized values for WHAT-EVENT (these are passed
  7476. internally by feedmail):
  7477. after-immediate (a message has just been sent in immediate mode)
  7478. after-queue (a message has just been queued)
  7479. after-draft (a message has just been placed in the draft directory)
  7480. after-run (the queue has just been run, possibly sending messages)
  7481. WHAT-EVENT is used as a key into the table `feedmail-queue-reminder-alist'. If
  7482. the associated value is a function, it is called without arguments and is expected
  7483. to perform the reminder activity. You can supply your own reminder functions
  7484. by redefining `feedmail-queue-reminder-alist'. If you don't want any reminders,
  7485. you can set `feedmail-queue-reminder-alist' to nil.
  7486. \(fn &optional WHAT-EVENT)" t nil)
  7487. ;;;***
  7488. ;;;### (autoloads (ffap-bindings dired-at-point ffap-at-mouse ffap-menu
  7489. ;;;;;; find-file-at-point ffap-next) "ffap" "ffap.el" (20400 62402))
  7490. ;;; Generated autoloads from ffap.el
  7491. (autoload 'ffap-next "ffap" "\
  7492. Search buffer for next file or URL, and run ffap.
  7493. Optional argument BACK says to search backwards.
  7494. Optional argument WRAP says to try wrapping around if necessary.
  7495. Interactively: use a single prefix to search backwards,
  7496. double prefix to wrap forward, triple to wrap backwards.
  7497. Actual search is done by `ffap-next-guess'.
  7498. \(fn &optional BACK WRAP)" t nil)
  7499. (autoload 'find-file-at-point "ffap" "\
  7500. Find FILENAME, guessing a default from text around point.
  7501. If `ffap-url-regexp' is not nil, the FILENAME may also be an URL.
  7502. With a prefix, this command behaves exactly like `ffap-file-finder'.
  7503. If `ffap-require-prefix' is set, the prefix meaning is reversed.
  7504. See also the variables `ffap-dired-wildcards', `ffap-newfile-prompt',
  7505. and the functions `ffap-file-at-point' and `ffap-url-at-point'.
  7506. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  7507. (defalias 'ffap 'find-file-at-point)
  7508. (autoload 'ffap-menu "ffap" "\
  7509. Put up a menu of files and URLs mentioned in this buffer.
  7510. Then set mark, jump to choice, and try to fetch it. The menu is
  7511. cached in `ffap-menu-alist', and rebuilt by `ffap-menu-rescan'.
  7512. The optional RESCAN argument (a prefix, interactively) forces
  7513. a rebuild. Searches with `ffap-menu-regexp'.
  7514. \(fn &optional RESCAN)" t nil)
  7515. (autoload 'ffap-at-mouse "ffap" "\
  7516. Find file or URL guessed from text around mouse click.
  7517. Interactively, calls `ffap-at-mouse-fallback' if no guess is found.
  7518. Return value:
  7519. * if a guess string is found, return it (after finding it)
  7520. * if the fallback is called, return whatever it returns
  7521. * otherwise, nil
  7522. \(fn E)" t nil)
  7523. (autoload 'dired-at-point "ffap" "\
  7524. Start Dired, defaulting to file at point. See `ffap'.
  7525. If `dired-at-point-require-prefix' is set, the prefix meaning is reversed.
  7526. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  7527. (defun ffap-guess-file-name-at-point nil "\
  7528. Try to get a file name at point.
  7529. This hook is intended to be put in `file-name-at-point-functions'." (when (fboundp (quote ffap-guesser)) (let ((guess (ffap-guesser))) (setq guess (if (or (not guess) (and (fboundp (quote ffap-url-p)) (ffap-url-p guess)) (and (fboundp (quote ffap-file-remote-p)) (ffap-file-remote-p guess))) guess (abbreviate-file-name (expand-file-name guess)))) (when guess (if (file-directory-p guess) (file-name-as-directory guess) guess)))))
  7530. (autoload 'ffap-bindings "ffap" "\
  7531. Evaluate the forms in variable `ffap-bindings'.
  7532. \(fn)" t nil)
  7533. ;;;***
  7534. ;;;### (autoloads (file-cache-minibuffer-complete file-cache-add-directory-recursively
  7535. ;;;;;; file-cache-add-directory-using-locate file-cache-add-directory-using-find
  7536. ;;;;;; file-cache-add-file file-cache-add-directory-list file-cache-add-directory)
  7537. ;;;;;; "filecache" "filecache.el" (20352 65510))
  7538. ;;; Generated autoloads from filecache.el
  7539. (autoload 'file-cache-add-directory "filecache" "\
  7540. Add DIRECTORY to the file cache.
  7541. If the optional REGEXP argument is non-nil, only files which match it will
  7542. be added to the cache.
  7543. \(fn DIRECTORY &optional REGEXP)" t nil)
  7544. (autoload 'file-cache-add-directory-list "filecache" "\
  7545. Add DIRECTORY-LIST (a list of directory names) to the file cache.
  7546. If the optional REGEXP argument is non-nil, only files which match it
  7547. will be added to the cache. Note that the REGEXP is applied to the
  7548. files in each directory, not to the directory list itself.
  7549. \(fn DIRECTORY-LIST &optional REGEXP)" t nil)
  7550. (autoload 'file-cache-add-file "filecache" "\
  7551. Add FILE to the file cache.
  7552. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  7553. (autoload 'file-cache-add-directory-using-find "filecache" "\
  7554. Use the `find' command to add files to the file cache.
  7555. Find is run in DIRECTORY.
  7556. \(fn DIRECTORY)" t nil)
  7557. (autoload 'file-cache-add-directory-using-locate "filecache" "\
  7558. Use the `locate' command to add files to the file cache.
  7559. STRING is passed as an argument to the locate command.
  7560. \(fn STRING)" t nil)
  7561. (autoload 'file-cache-add-directory-recursively "filecache" "\
  7562. Adds DIR and any subdirectories to the file-cache.
  7563. This function does not use any external programs.
  7564. If the optional REGEXP argument is non-nil, only files which match it
  7565. will be added to the cache. Note that the REGEXP is applied to the
  7566. files in each directory, not to the directory list itself.
  7567. \(fn DIR &optional REGEXP)" t nil)
  7568. (autoload 'file-cache-minibuffer-complete "filecache" "\
  7569. Complete a filename in the minibuffer using a preloaded cache.
  7570. Filecache does two kinds of substitution: it completes on names in
  7571. the cache, and, once it has found a unique name, it cycles through
  7572. the directories that the name is available in. With a prefix argument,
  7573. the name is considered already unique; only the second substitution
  7574. \(directories) is done.
  7575. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  7576. ;;;***
  7577. ;;;### (autoloads (copy-dir-locals-to-file-locals-prop-line copy-dir-locals-to-file-locals
  7578. ;;;;;; copy-file-locals-to-dir-locals delete-dir-local-variable
  7579. ;;;;;; add-dir-local-variable delete-file-local-variable-prop-line
  7580. ;;;;;; add-file-local-variable-prop-line delete-file-local-variable
  7581. ;;;;;; add-file-local-variable) "files-x" "files-x.el" (20400 62402))
  7582. ;;; Generated autoloads from files-x.el
  7583. (autoload 'add-file-local-variable "files-x" "\
  7584. Add file-local VARIABLE with its VALUE to the Local Variables list.
  7585. This command deletes all existing settings of VARIABLE (except `mode'
  7586. and `eval') and adds a new file-local VARIABLE with VALUE to the
  7587. Local Variables list.
  7588. If there is no Local Variables list in the current file buffer
  7589. then this function adds the first line containing the string
  7590. `Local Variables:' and the last line containing the string `End:'.
  7591. \(fn VARIABLE VALUE)" t nil)
  7592. (autoload 'delete-file-local-variable "files-x" "\
  7593. Delete all settings of file-local VARIABLE from the Local Variables list.
  7594. \(fn VARIABLE)" t nil)
  7595. (autoload 'add-file-local-variable-prop-line "files-x" "\
  7596. Add file-local VARIABLE with its VALUE to the -*- line.
  7597. This command deletes all existing settings of VARIABLE (except `mode'
  7598. and `eval') and adds a new file-local VARIABLE with VALUE to
  7599. the -*- line.
  7600. If there is no -*- line at the beginning of the current file buffer
  7601. then this function adds it.
  7602. \(fn VARIABLE VALUE)" t nil)
  7603. (autoload 'delete-file-local-variable-prop-line "files-x" "\
  7604. Delete all settings of file-local VARIABLE from the -*- line.
  7605. \(fn VARIABLE)" t nil)
  7606. (autoload 'add-dir-local-variable "files-x" "\
  7607. Add directory-local VARIABLE with its VALUE and MODE to .dir-locals.el.
  7608. \(fn MODE VARIABLE VALUE)" t nil)
  7609. (autoload 'delete-dir-local-variable "files-x" "\
  7610. Delete all MODE settings of file-local VARIABLE from .dir-locals.el.
  7611. \(fn MODE VARIABLE)" t nil)
  7612. (autoload 'copy-file-locals-to-dir-locals "files-x" "\
  7613. Copy file-local variables to .dir-locals.el.
  7614. \(fn)" t nil)
  7615. (autoload 'copy-dir-locals-to-file-locals "files-x" "\
  7616. Copy directory-local variables to the Local Variables list.
  7617. \(fn)" t nil)
  7618. (autoload 'copy-dir-locals-to-file-locals-prop-line "files-x" "\
  7619. Copy directory-local variables to the -*- line.
  7620. \(fn)" t nil)
  7621. ;;;***
  7622. ;;;### (autoloads (filesets-init) "filesets" "filesets.el" (20352
  7623. ;;;;;; 65510))
  7624. ;;; Generated autoloads from filesets.el
  7625. (autoload 'filesets-init "filesets" "\
  7626. Filesets initialization.
  7627. Set up hooks, load the cache file -- if existing -- and build the menu.
  7628. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7629. ;;;***
  7630. ;;;### (autoloads (find-cmd) "find-cmd" "find-cmd.el" (20352 65510))
  7631. ;;; Generated autoloads from find-cmd.el
  7632. (autoload 'find-cmd "find-cmd" "\
  7633. Initiate the building of a find command.
  7634. For example:
  7635. \(find-cmd '(prune (name \".svn\" \".git\" \".CVS\"))
  7636. '(and (or (name \"*.pl\" \"*.pm\" \"*.t\")
  7637. (mtime \"+1\"))
  7638. (fstype \"nfs\" \"ufs\"))))
  7639. `default-directory' is used as the initial search path. The
  7640. result is a string that should be ready for the command line.
  7641. \(fn &rest SUBFINDS)" nil nil)
  7642. ;;;***
  7643. ;;;### (autoloads (find-grep-dired find-name-dired find-dired) "find-dired"
  7644. ;;;;;; "find-dired.el" (20352 65510))
  7645. ;;; Generated autoloads from find-dired.el
  7646. (autoload 'find-dired "find-dired" "\
  7647. Run `find' and go into Dired mode on a buffer of the output.
  7648. The command run (after changing into DIR) is essentially
  7649. find . \\( ARGS \\) -ls
  7650. except that the car of the variable `find-ls-option' specifies what to
  7651. use in place of \"-ls\" as the final argument.
  7652. \(fn DIR ARGS)" t nil)
  7653. (autoload 'find-name-dired "find-dired" "\
  7654. Search DIR recursively for files matching the globbing pattern PATTERN,
  7655. and run dired on those files.
  7656. PATTERN is a shell wildcard (not an Emacs regexp) and need not be quoted.
  7657. The command run (after changing into DIR) is
  7658. find . -name 'PATTERN' -ls
  7659. \(fn DIR PATTERN)" t nil)
  7660. (autoload 'find-grep-dired "find-dired" "\
  7661. Find files in DIR containing a regexp REGEXP and start Dired on output.
  7662. The command run (after changing into DIR) is
  7663. find . \\( -type f -exec `grep-program' `find-grep-options' \\
  7664. -e REGEXP {} \\; \\) -ls
  7665. where the car of the variable `find-ls-option' specifies what to
  7666. use in place of \"-ls\" as the final argument.
  7667. \(fn DIR REGEXP)" t nil)
  7668. ;;;***
  7669. ;;;### (autoloads (ff-mouse-find-other-file-other-window ff-mouse-find-other-file
  7670. ;;;;;; ff-find-other-file ff-get-other-file) "find-file" "find-file.el"
  7671. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  7672. ;;; Generated autoloads from find-file.el
  7673. (defvar ff-special-constructs `((,(purecopy "^#\\s *\\(include\\|import\\)\\s +[<\"]\\(.*\\)[>\"]") lambda nil (buffer-substring (match-beginning 2) (match-end 2)))) "\
  7674. *List of special constructs for `ff-treat-as-special' to recognize.
  7675. Each element, tried in order, has the form (REGEXP . EXTRACT).
  7676. If REGEXP matches the current line (from the beginning of the line),
  7677. `ff-treat-as-special' calls function EXTRACT with no args.
  7678. If EXTRACT returns nil, keep trying. Otherwise, return the
  7679. filename that EXTRACT returned.")
  7680. (autoload 'ff-get-other-file "find-file" "\
  7681. Find the header or source file corresponding to this file.
  7682. See also the documentation for `ff-find-other-file'.
  7683. If optional IN-OTHER-WINDOW is non-nil, find the file in another window.
  7684. \(fn &optional IN-OTHER-WINDOW)" t nil)
  7685. (defalias 'ff-find-related-file 'ff-find-other-file)
  7686. (autoload 'ff-find-other-file "find-file" "\
  7687. Find the header or source file corresponding to this file.
  7688. Being on a `#include' line pulls in that file.
  7689. If optional IN-OTHER-WINDOW is non-nil, find the file in the other window.
  7690. If optional IGNORE-INCLUDE is non-nil, ignore being on `#include' lines.
  7691. Variables of interest include:
  7692. - `ff-case-fold-search'
  7693. Non-nil means ignore cases in matches (see `case-fold-search').
  7694. If you have extensions in different cases, you will want this to be nil.
  7695. - `ff-always-in-other-window'
  7696. If non-nil, always open the other file in another window, unless an
  7697. argument is given to `ff-find-other-file'.
  7698. - `ff-ignore-include'
  7699. If non-nil, ignores #include lines.
  7700. - `ff-always-try-to-create'
  7701. If non-nil, always attempt to create the other file if it was not found.
  7702. - `ff-quiet-mode'
  7703. If non-nil, traces which directories are being searched.
  7704. - `ff-special-constructs'
  7705. A list of regular expressions specifying how to recognize special
  7706. constructs such as include files etc, and an associated method for
  7707. extracting the filename from that construct.
  7708. - `ff-other-file-alist'
  7709. Alist of extensions to find given the current file's extension.
  7710. - `ff-search-directories'
  7711. List of directories searched through with each extension specified in
  7712. `ff-other-file-alist' that matches this file's extension.
  7713. - `ff-pre-find-hook'
  7714. List of functions to be called before the search for the file starts.
  7715. - `ff-pre-load-hook'
  7716. List of functions to be called before the other file is loaded.
  7717. - `ff-post-load-hook'
  7718. List of functions to be called after the other file is loaded.
  7719. - `ff-not-found-hook'
  7720. List of functions to be called if the other file could not be found.
  7721. - `ff-file-created-hook'
  7722. List of functions to be called if the other file has been created.
  7723. \(fn &optional IN-OTHER-WINDOW IGNORE-INCLUDE)" t nil)
  7724. (autoload 'ff-mouse-find-other-file "find-file" "\
  7725. Visit the file you click on.
  7726. \(fn EVENT)" t nil)
  7727. (autoload 'ff-mouse-find-other-file-other-window "find-file" "\
  7728. Visit the file you click on in another window.
  7729. \(fn EVENT)" t nil)
  7730. ;;;***
  7731. ;;;### (autoloads (find-function-setup-keys find-variable-at-point
  7732. ;;;;;; find-function-at-point find-function-on-key find-face-definition
  7733. ;;;;;; find-definition-noselect find-variable-other-frame find-variable-other-window
  7734. ;;;;;; find-variable find-variable-noselect find-function-other-frame
  7735. ;;;;;; find-function-other-window find-function find-function-noselect
  7736. ;;;;;; find-function-search-for-symbol find-library) "find-func"
  7737. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/find-func.el" (20352 65510))
  7738. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/find-func.el
  7739. (autoload 'find-library "find-func" "\
  7740. Find the Emacs Lisp source of LIBRARY.
  7741. LIBRARY should be a string (the name of the library).
  7742. \(fn LIBRARY)" t nil)
  7743. (autoload 'find-function-search-for-symbol "find-func" "\
  7744. Search for SYMBOL's definition of type TYPE in LIBRARY.
  7745. Visit the library in a buffer, and return a cons cell (BUFFER . POSITION),
  7746. or just (BUFFER . nil) if the definition can't be found in the file.
  7747. If TYPE is nil, look for a function definition.
  7748. Otherwise, TYPE specifies the kind of definition,
  7749. and it is interpreted via `find-function-regexp-alist'.
  7750. The search is done in the source for library LIBRARY.
  7751. \(fn SYMBOL TYPE LIBRARY)" nil nil)
  7752. (autoload 'find-function-noselect "find-func" "\
  7753. Return a pair (BUFFER . POINT) pointing to the definition of FUNCTION.
  7754. Finds the source file containing the definition of FUNCTION
  7755. in a buffer and the point of the definition. The buffer is
  7756. not selected. If the function definition can't be found in
  7757. the buffer, returns (BUFFER).
  7758. If FUNCTION is a built-in function, this function normally
  7759. attempts to find it in the Emacs C sources; however, if LISP-ONLY
  7760. is non-nil, signal an error instead.
  7761. If the file where FUNCTION is defined is not known, then it is
  7762. searched for in `find-function-source-path' if non-nil, otherwise
  7763. in `load-path'.
  7764. \(fn FUNCTION &optional LISP-ONLY)" nil nil)
  7765. (autoload 'find-function "find-func" "\
  7766. Find the definition of the FUNCTION near point.
  7767. Finds the source file containing the definition of the function
  7768. near point (selected by `function-called-at-point') in a buffer and
  7769. places point before the definition.
  7770. Set mark before moving, if the buffer already existed.
  7771. The library where FUNCTION is defined is searched for in
  7772. `find-function-source-path', if non-nil, otherwise in `load-path'.
  7773. See also `find-function-recenter-line' and `find-function-after-hook'.
  7774. \(fn FUNCTION)" t nil)
  7775. (autoload 'find-function-other-window "find-func" "\
  7776. Find, in another window, the definition of FUNCTION near point.
  7777. See `find-function' for more details.
  7778. \(fn FUNCTION)" t nil)
  7779. (autoload 'find-function-other-frame "find-func" "\
  7780. Find, in another frame, the definition of FUNCTION near point.
  7781. See `find-function' for more details.
  7782. \(fn FUNCTION)" t nil)
  7783. (autoload 'find-variable-noselect "find-func" "\
  7784. Return a pair `(BUFFER . POINT)' pointing to the definition of VARIABLE.
  7785. Finds the library containing the definition of VARIABLE in a buffer and
  7786. the point of the definition. The buffer is not selected.
  7787. If the variable's definition can't be found in the buffer, return (BUFFER).
  7788. The library where VARIABLE is defined is searched for in FILE or
  7789. `find-function-source-path', if non-nil, otherwise in `load-path'.
  7790. \(fn VARIABLE &optional FILE)" nil nil)
  7791. (autoload 'find-variable "find-func" "\
  7792. Find the definition of the VARIABLE at or before point.
  7793. Finds the library containing the definition of the variable
  7794. near point (selected by `variable-at-point') in a buffer and
  7795. places point before the definition.
  7796. Set mark before moving, if the buffer already existed.
  7797. The library where VARIABLE is defined is searched for in
  7798. `find-function-source-path', if non-nil, otherwise in `load-path'.
  7799. See also `find-function-recenter-line' and `find-function-after-hook'.
  7800. \(fn VARIABLE)" t nil)
  7801. (autoload 'find-variable-other-window "find-func" "\
  7802. Find, in another window, the definition of VARIABLE near point.
  7803. See `find-variable' for more details.
  7804. \(fn VARIABLE)" t nil)
  7805. (autoload 'find-variable-other-frame "find-func" "\
  7806. Find, in another frame, the definition of VARIABLE near point.
  7807. See `find-variable' for more details.
  7808. \(fn VARIABLE)" t nil)
  7809. (autoload 'find-definition-noselect "find-func" "\
  7810. Return a pair `(BUFFER . POINT)' pointing to the definition of SYMBOL.
  7811. If the definition can't be found in the buffer, return (BUFFER).
  7812. TYPE says what type of definition: nil for a function, `defvar' for a
  7813. variable, `defface' for a face. This function does not switch to the
  7814. buffer nor display it.
  7815. The library where SYMBOL is defined is searched for in FILE or
  7816. `find-function-source-path', if non-nil, otherwise in `load-path'.
  7817. \(fn SYMBOL TYPE &optional FILE)" nil nil)
  7818. (autoload 'find-face-definition "find-func" "\
  7819. Find the definition of FACE. FACE defaults to the name near point.
  7820. Finds the Emacs Lisp library containing the definition of the face
  7821. near point (selected by `variable-at-point') in a buffer and
  7822. places point before the definition.
  7823. Set mark before moving, if the buffer already existed.
  7824. The library where FACE is defined is searched for in
  7825. `find-function-source-path', if non-nil, otherwise in `load-path'.
  7826. See also `find-function-recenter-line' and `find-function-after-hook'.
  7827. \(fn FACE)" t nil)
  7828. (autoload 'find-function-on-key "find-func" "\
  7829. Find the function that KEY invokes. KEY is a string.
  7830. Set mark before moving, if the buffer already existed.
  7831. \(fn KEY)" t nil)
  7832. (autoload 'find-function-at-point "find-func" "\
  7833. Find directly the function at point in the other window.
  7834. \(fn)" t nil)
  7835. (autoload 'find-variable-at-point "find-func" "\
  7836. Find directly the variable at point in the other window.
  7837. \(fn)" t nil)
  7838. (autoload 'find-function-setup-keys "find-func" "\
  7839. Define some key bindings for the find-function family of functions.
  7840. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7841. ;;;***
  7842. ;;;### (autoloads (find-lisp-find-dired-filter find-lisp-find-dired-subdirectories
  7843. ;;;;;; find-lisp-find-dired) "find-lisp" "find-lisp.el" (20352 65510))
  7844. ;;; Generated autoloads from find-lisp.el
  7845. (autoload 'find-lisp-find-dired "find-lisp" "\
  7846. Find files in DIR, matching REGEXP.
  7847. \(fn DIR REGEXP)" t nil)
  7848. (autoload 'find-lisp-find-dired-subdirectories "find-lisp" "\
  7849. Find all subdirectories of DIR.
  7850. \(fn DIR)" t nil)
  7851. (autoload 'find-lisp-find-dired-filter "find-lisp" "\
  7852. Change the filter on a find-lisp-find-dired buffer to REGEXP.
  7853. \(fn REGEXP)" t nil)
  7854. ;;;***
  7855. ;;;### (autoloads (finder-by-keyword finder-commentary finder-list-keywords)
  7856. ;;;;;; "finder" "finder.el" (20352 65510))
  7857. ;;; Generated autoloads from finder.el
  7858. (autoload 'finder-list-keywords "finder" "\
  7859. Display descriptions of the keywords in the Finder buffer.
  7860. \(fn)" t nil)
  7861. (autoload 'finder-commentary "finder" "\
  7862. Display FILE's commentary section.
  7863. FILE should be in a form suitable for passing to `locate-library'.
  7864. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  7865. (autoload 'finder-by-keyword "finder" "\
  7866. Find packages matching a given keyword.
  7867. \(fn)" t nil)
  7868. ;;;***
  7869. ;;;### (autoloads (enable-flow-control-on enable-flow-control) "flow-ctrl"
  7870. ;;;;;; "flow-ctrl.el" (20352 65510))
  7871. ;;; Generated autoloads from flow-ctrl.el
  7872. (autoload 'enable-flow-control "flow-ctrl" "\
  7873. Toggle flow control handling.
  7874. When handling is enabled, user can type C-s as C-\\, and C-q as C-^.
  7875. With arg, enable flow control mode if arg is positive, otherwise disable.
  7876. \(fn &optional ARGUMENT)" t nil)
  7877. (autoload 'enable-flow-control-on "flow-ctrl" "\
  7878. Enable flow control if using one of a specified set of terminal types.
  7879. Use `(enable-flow-control-on \"vt100\" \"h19\")' to enable flow control
  7880. on VT-100 and H19 terminals. When flow control is enabled,
  7881. you must type C-\\ to get the effect of a C-s, and type C-^
  7882. to get the effect of a C-q.
  7883. \(fn &rest LOSING-TERMINAL-TYPES)" nil nil)
  7884. ;;;***
  7885. ;;;### (autoloads (fill-flowed fill-flowed-encode) "flow-fill" "gnus/flow-fill.el"
  7886. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  7887. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/flow-fill.el
  7888. (autoload 'fill-flowed-encode "flow-fill" "\
  7889. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" nil nil)
  7890. (autoload 'fill-flowed "flow-fill" "\
  7891. \(fn &optional BUFFER DELETE-SPACE)" nil nil)
  7892. ;;;***
  7893. ;;;### (autoloads (flymake-find-file-hook flymake-mode-off flymake-mode-on
  7894. ;;;;;; flymake-mode) "flymake" "progmodes/flymake.el" (20400 62402))
  7895. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/flymake.el
  7896. (autoload 'flymake-mode "flymake" "\
  7897. Toggle on-the-fly syntax checking.
  7898. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  7899. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  7900. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  7901. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  7902. (autoload 'flymake-mode-on "flymake" "\
  7903. Turn flymake mode on.
  7904. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7905. (autoload 'flymake-mode-off "flymake" "\
  7906. Turn flymake mode off.
  7907. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7908. (autoload 'flymake-find-file-hook "flymake" "\
  7909. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7910. ;;;***
  7911. ;;;### (autoloads (flyspell-buffer flyspell-region flyspell-mode-off
  7912. ;;;;;; turn-off-flyspell turn-on-flyspell flyspell-mode flyspell-prog-mode)
  7913. ;;;;;; "flyspell" "textmodes/flyspell.el" (20400 62402))
  7914. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/flyspell.el
  7915. (autoload 'flyspell-prog-mode "flyspell" "\
  7916. Turn on `flyspell-mode' for comments and strings.
  7917. \(fn)" t nil)
  7918. (defvar flyspell-mode nil "Non-nil if Flyspell mode is enabled.")
  7919. (autoload 'flyspell-mode "flyspell" "\
  7920. Toggle on-the-fly spell checking (Flyspell mode).
  7921. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Flyspell mode if ARG is
  7922. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  7923. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  7924. Flyspell mode is a buffer-local minor mode. When enabled, it
  7925. spawns a single Ispell process and checks each word. The default
  7926. flyspell behavior is to highlight incorrect words.
  7927. Bindings:
  7928. \\[ispell-word]: correct words (using Ispell).
  7929. \\[flyspell-auto-correct-word]: automatically correct word.
  7930. \\[flyspell-auto-correct-previous-word]: automatically correct the last misspelled word.
  7931. \\[flyspell-correct-word] (or down-mouse-2): popup correct words.
  7932. Hooks:
  7933. This runs `flyspell-mode-hook' after flyspell mode is entered or exit.
  7934. Remark:
  7935. `flyspell-mode' uses `ispell-mode'. Thus all Ispell options are
  7936. valid. For instance, a different dictionary can be used by
  7937. invoking `ispell-change-dictionary'.
  7938. Consider using the `ispell-parser' to check your text. For instance
  7939. consider adding:
  7940. \(add-hook 'tex-mode-hook (function (lambda () (setq ispell-parser 'tex))))
  7941. in your .emacs file.
  7942. \\[flyspell-region] checks all words inside a region.
  7943. \\[flyspell-buffer] checks the whole buffer.
  7944. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  7945. (autoload 'turn-on-flyspell "flyspell" "\
  7946. Unconditionally turn on Flyspell mode.
  7947. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7948. (autoload 'turn-off-flyspell "flyspell" "\
  7949. Unconditionally turn off Flyspell mode.
  7950. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7951. (autoload 'flyspell-mode-off "flyspell" "\
  7952. Turn Flyspell mode off.
  7953. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7954. (autoload 'flyspell-region "flyspell" "\
  7955. Flyspell text between BEG and END.
  7956. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  7957. (autoload 'flyspell-buffer "flyspell" "\
  7958. Flyspell whole buffer.
  7959. \(fn)" t nil)
  7960. ;;;***
  7961. ;;;### (autoloads (follow-delete-other-windows-and-split follow-mode
  7962. ;;;;;; turn-off-follow-mode turn-on-follow-mode) "follow" "follow.el"
  7963. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  7964. ;;; Generated autoloads from follow.el
  7965. (autoload 'turn-on-follow-mode "follow" "\
  7966. Turn on Follow mode. Please see the function `follow-mode'.
  7967. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7968. (autoload 'turn-off-follow-mode "follow" "\
  7969. Turn off Follow mode. Please see the function `follow-mode'.
  7970. \(fn)" nil nil)
  7971. (autoload 'follow-mode "follow" "\
  7972. Toggle Follow mode.
  7973. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Follow mode if ARG is
  7974. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  7975. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  7976. Follow mode is a minor mode that combines windows into one tall
  7977. virtual window. This is accomplished by two main techniques:
  7978. * The windows always displays adjacent sections of the buffer.
  7979. This means that whenever one window is moved, all the
  7980. others will follow. (Hence the name Follow mode.)
  7981. * Should the point (cursor) end up outside a window, another
  7982. window displaying that point is selected, if possible. This
  7983. makes it possible to walk between windows using normal cursor
  7984. movement commands.
  7985. Follow mode comes to its prime when used on a large screen and two
  7986. side-by-side windows are used. The user can, with the help of Follow
  7987. mode, use two full-height windows as though they would have been
  7988. one. Imagine yourself editing a large function, or section of text,
  7989. and being able to use 144 lines instead of the normal 72... (your
  7990. mileage may vary).
  7991. To split one large window into two side-by-side windows, the commands
  7992. `\\[split-window-right]' or `M-x follow-delete-other-windows-and-split' can be used.
  7993. Only windows displayed in the same frame follow each other.
  7994. If the variable `follow-intercept-processes' is non-nil, Follow mode
  7995. will listen to the output of processes and redisplay accordingly.
  7996. \(This is the default.)
  7997. This command runs the normal hook `follow-mode-hook'.
  7998. Keys specific to Follow mode:
  7999. \\{follow-mode-map}
  8000. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  8001. (autoload 'follow-delete-other-windows-and-split "follow" "\
  8002. Create two side by side windows and enter Follow mode.
  8003. Execute this command to display as much as possible of the text
  8004. in the selected window. All other windows, in the current
  8005. frame, are deleted and the selected window is split in two
  8006. side-by-side windows. Follow mode is activated, hence the
  8007. two windows always will display two successive pages.
  8008. \(If one window is moved, the other one will follow.)
  8009. If ARG is positive, the leftmost window is selected. If negative,
  8010. the rightmost is selected. If ARG is nil, the leftmost window is
  8011. selected if the original window is the first one in the frame.
  8012. To bind this command to a hotkey, place the following line
  8013. in your `~/.emacs' file, replacing [f7] by your favorite key:
  8014. (global-set-key [f7] 'follow-delete-other-windows-and-split)
  8015. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  8016. ;;;***
  8017. ;;;### (autoloads (footnote-mode) "footnote" "mail/footnote.el" (20400
  8018. ;;;;;; 62402))
  8019. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/footnote.el
  8020. (autoload 'footnote-mode "footnote" "\
  8021. Toggle Footnote mode.
  8022. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Footnote mode if ARG is
  8023. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  8024. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  8025. Footnode mode is a buffer-local minor mode. If enabled, it
  8026. provides footnote support for `message-mode'. To get started,
  8027. play around with the following keys:
  8028. \\{footnote-minor-mode-map}
  8029. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  8030. ;;;***
  8031. ;;;### (autoloads (forms-find-file-other-window forms-find-file forms-mode)
  8032. ;;;;;; "forms" "forms.el" (20400 62402))
  8033. ;;; Generated autoloads from forms.el
  8034. (autoload 'forms-mode "forms" "\
  8035. Major mode to visit files in a field-structured manner using a form.
  8036. Commands: Equivalent keys in read-only mode:
  8037. TAB forms-next-field TAB
  8038. C-c TAB forms-next-field
  8039. C-c < forms-first-record <
  8040. C-c > forms-last-record >
  8041. C-c ? describe-mode ?
  8042. C-c C-k forms-delete-record
  8043. C-c C-q forms-toggle-read-only q
  8044. C-c C-o forms-insert-record
  8045. C-c C-l forms-jump-record l
  8046. C-c C-n forms-next-record n
  8047. C-c C-p forms-prev-record p
  8048. C-c C-r forms-search-reverse r
  8049. C-c C-s forms-search-forward s
  8050. C-c C-x forms-exit x
  8051. \(fn &optional PRIMARY)" t nil)
  8052. (autoload 'forms-find-file "forms" "\
  8053. Visit a file in Forms mode.
  8054. \(fn FN)" t nil)
  8055. (autoload 'forms-find-file-other-window "forms" "\
  8056. Visit a file in Forms mode in other window.
  8057. \(fn FN)" t nil)
  8058. ;;;***
  8059. ;;;### (autoloads (fortran-mode) "fortran" "progmodes/fortran.el"
  8060. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8061. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/fortran.el
  8062. (autoload 'fortran-mode "fortran" "\
  8063. Major mode for editing Fortran code in fixed format.
  8064. For free format code, use `f90-mode'.
  8065. \\[fortran-indent-line] indents the current Fortran line correctly.
  8066. Note that DO statements must not share a common CONTINUE.
  8067. Type ;? or ;\\[help-command] to display a list of built-in abbrevs for Fortran keywords.
  8068. Key definitions:
  8069. \\{fortran-mode-map}
  8070. Variables controlling indentation style and extra features:
  8071. `fortran-comment-line-start'
  8072. To use comments starting with `!', set this to the string \"!\".
  8073. `fortran-do-indent'
  8074. Extra indentation within DO blocks (default 3).
  8075. `fortran-if-indent'
  8076. Extra indentation within IF blocks (default 3).
  8077. `fortran-structure-indent'
  8078. Extra indentation within STRUCTURE, UNION, MAP and INTERFACE blocks.
  8079. (default 3)
  8080. `fortran-continuation-indent'
  8081. Extra indentation applied to continuation statements (default 5).
  8082. `fortran-comment-line-extra-indent'
  8083. Amount of extra indentation for text in full-line comments (default 0).
  8084. `fortran-comment-indent-style'
  8085. How to indent the text in full-line comments. Allowed values are:
  8086. nil don't change the indentation
  8087. fixed indent to `fortran-comment-line-extra-indent' beyond the
  8088. value of either
  8089. `fortran-minimum-statement-indent-fixed' (fixed format) or
  8090. `fortran-minimum-statement-indent-tab' (TAB format),
  8091. depending on the continuation format in use.
  8092. relative indent to `fortran-comment-line-extra-indent' beyond the
  8093. indentation for a line of code.
  8094. (default 'fixed)
  8095. `fortran-comment-indent-char'
  8096. Single-character string to be inserted instead of space for
  8097. full-line comment indentation (default \" \").
  8098. `fortran-minimum-statement-indent-fixed'
  8099. Minimum indentation for statements in fixed format mode (default 6).
  8100. `fortran-minimum-statement-indent-tab'
  8101. Minimum indentation for statements in TAB format mode (default 9).
  8102. `fortran-line-number-indent'
  8103. Maximum indentation for line numbers (default 1). A line number will
  8104. get less than this much indentation if necessary to avoid reaching
  8105. column 5.
  8106. `fortran-check-all-num-for-matching-do'
  8107. Non-nil causes all numbered lines to be treated as possible \"continue\"
  8108. statements (default nil).
  8109. `fortran-blink-matching-if'
  8110. Non-nil causes \\[fortran-indent-line] on an ENDIF (or ENDDO) statement
  8111. to blink on the matching IF (or DO [WHILE]). (default nil)
  8112. `fortran-continuation-string'
  8113. Single-character string to be inserted in column 5 of a continuation
  8114. line (default \"$\").
  8115. `fortran-comment-region'
  8116. String inserted by \\[fortran-comment-region] at start of each line in
  8117. the region (default \"c$$$\").
  8118. `fortran-electric-line-number'
  8119. Non-nil causes line number digits to be moved to the correct column
  8120. as typed (default t).
  8121. `fortran-break-before-delimiters'
  8122. Non-nil causes lines to be broken before delimiters (default t).
  8123. Turning on Fortran mode calls the value of the variable `fortran-mode-hook'
  8124. with no args, if that value is non-nil.
  8125. \(fn)" t nil)
  8126. ;;;***
  8127. ;;;### (autoloads (fortune fortune-to-signature fortune-compile fortune-from-region
  8128. ;;;;;; fortune-add-fortune) "fortune" "play/fortune.el" (20352 65510))
  8129. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/fortune.el
  8130. (autoload 'fortune-add-fortune "fortune" "\
  8131. Add STRING to a fortune file FILE.
  8132. Interactively, if called with a prefix argument,
  8133. read the file name to use. Otherwise use the value of `fortune-file'.
  8134. \(fn STRING FILE)" t nil)
  8135. (autoload 'fortune-from-region "fortune" "\
  8136. Append the current region to a local fortune-like data file.
  8137. Interactively, if called with a prefix argument,
  8138. read the file name to use. Otherwise use the value of `fortune-file'.
  8139. \(fn BEG END FILE)" t nil)
  8140. (autoload 'fortune-compile "fortune" "\
  8141. Compile fortune file.
  8142. If called with a prefix asks for the FILE to compile, otherwise uses
  8143. the value of `fortune-file'. This currently cannot handle directories.
  8144. \(fn &optional FILE)" t nil)
  8145. (autoload 'fortune-to-signature "fortune" "\
  8146. Create signature from output of the fortune program.
  8147. If called with a prefix asks for the FILE to choose the fortune from,
  8148. otherwise uses the value of `fortune-file'. If you want to have fortune
  8149. choose from a set of files in a directory, call interactively with prefix
  8150. and choose the directory as the fortune-file.
  8151. \(fn &optional FILE)" t nil)
  8152. (autoload 'fortune "fortune" "\
  8153. Display a fortune cookie.
  8154. If called with a prefix asks for the FILE to choose the fortune from,
  8155. otherwise uses the value of `fortune-file'. If you want to have fortune
  8156. choose from a set of files in a directory, call interactively with prefix
  8157. and choose the directory as the fortune-file.
  8158. \(fn &optional FILE)" t nil)
  8159. ;;;***
  8160. ;;;### (autoloads (gdb gdb-enable-debug) "gdb-mi" "progmodes/gdb-mi.el"
  8161. ;;;;;; (20500 124))
  8162. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/gdb-mi.el
  8163. (defvar gdb-enable-debug nil "\
  8164. Non-nil means record the process input and output in `gdb-debug-log'.")
  8165. (custom-autoload 'gdb-enable-debug "gdb-mi" t)
  8166. (autoload 'gdb "gdb-mi" "\
  8167. Run gdb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
  8168. The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
  8169. and source-file directory for your debugger.
  8170. COMMAND-LINE is the shell command for starting the gdb session.
  8171. It should be a string consisting of the name of the gdb
  8172. executable followed by command-line options. The command-line
  8173. options should include \"-i=mi\" to use gdb's MI text interface.
  8174. Note that the old \"--annotate\" option is no longer supported.
  8175. If `gdb-many-windows' is nil (the default value) then gdb just
  8176. pops up the GUD buffer unless `gdb-show-main' is t. In this case
  8177. it starts with two windows: one displaying the GUD buffer and the
  8178. other with the source file with the main routine of the inferior.
  8179. If `gdb-many-windows' is t, regardless of the value of
  8180. `gdb-show-main', the layout below will appear. Keybindings are
  8181. shown in some of the buffers.
  8182. Watch expressions appear in the speedbar/slowbar.
  8183. The following commands help control operation :
  8184. `gdb-many-windows' - Toggle the number of windows gdb uses.
  8185. `gdb-restore-windows' - To restore the window layout.
  8186. See Info node `(emacs)GDB Graphical Interface' for a more
  8187. detailed description of this mode.
  8188. +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
  8189. | GDB Toolbar |
  8190. +-----------------------------------+----------------------------------+
  8191. | GUD buffer (I/O of GDB) | Locals buffer |
  8192. | | |
  8193. | | |
  8194. | | |
  8195. +-----------------------------------+----------------------------------+
  8196. | Source buffer | I/O buffer (of debugged program) |
  8197. | | (comint-mode) |
  8198. | | |
  8199. | | |
  8200. | | |
  8201. | | |
  8202. | | |
  8203. | | |
  8204. +-----------------------------------+----------------------------------+
  8205. | Stack buffer | Breakpoints buffer |
  8206. | RET gdb-select-frame | SPC gdb-toggle-breakpoint |
  8207. | | RET gdb-goto-breakpoint |
  8208. | | D gdb-delete-breakpoint |
  8209. +-----------------------------------+----------------------------------+
  8210. \(fn COMMAND-LINE)" t nil)
  8211. ;;;***
  8212. ;;;### (autoloads (generic-make-keywords-list generic-mode generic-mode-internal
  8213. ;;;;;; define-generic-mode) "generic" "emacs-lisp/generic.el" (20400
  8214. ;;;;;; 62402))
  8215. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/generic.el
  8216. (defvar generic-mode-list nil "\
  8217. A list of mode names for `generic-mode'.
  8218. Do not add entries to this list directly; use `define-generic-mode'
  8219. instead (which see).")
  8220. (autoload 'define-generic-mode "generic" "\
  8221. Create a new generic mode MODE.
  8222. MODE is the name of the command for the generic mode; don't quote it.
  8223. The optional DOCSTRING is the documentation for the mode command. If
  8224. you do not supply it, `define-generic-mode' uses a default
  8225. documentation string instead.
  8226. COMMENT-LIST is a list in which each element is either a character, a
  8227. string of one or two characters, or a cons cell. A character or a
  8228. string is set up in the mode's syntax table as a \"comment starter\".
  8229. If the entry is a cons cell, the `car' is set up as a \"comment
  8230. starter\" and the `cdr' as a \"comment ender\". (Use nil for the
  8231. latter if you want comments to end at the end of the line.) Note that
  8232. the syntax table has limitations about what comment starters and
  8233. enders are actually possible.
  8234. KEYWORD-LIST is a list of keywords to highlight with
  8235. `font-lock-keyword-face'. Each keyword should be a string.
  8236. FONT-LOCK-LIST is a list of additional expressions to highlight. Each
  8237. element of this list should have the same form as an element of
  8238. `font-lock-keywords'.
  8239. AUTO-MODE-LIST is a list of regular expressions to add to
  8240. `auto-mode-alist'. These regular expressions are added when Emacs
  8241. runs the macro expansion.
  8242. FUNCTION-LIST is a list of functions to call to do some additional
  8243. setup. The mode command calls these functions just before it runs the
  8244. mode hook `MODE-hook'.
  8245. See the file generic-x.el for some examples of `define-generic-mode'.
  8246. \(fn MODE COMMENT-LIST KEYWORD-LIST FONT-LOCK-LIST AUTO-MODE-LIST FUNCTION-LIST &optional DOCSTRING)" nil (quote macro))
  8247. (put 'define-generic-mode 'lisp-indent-function '1)
  8248. (autoload 'generic-mode-internal "generic" "\
  8249. Go into the generic mode MODE.
  8250. \(fn MODE COMMENT-LIST KEYWORD-LIST FONT-LOCK-LIST FUNCTION-LIST)" nil nil)
  8251. (autoload 'generic-mode "generic" "\
  8252. Enter generic mode MODE.
  8253. Generic modes provide basic comment and font-lock functionality
  8254. for \"generic\" files. (Files which are too small to warrant their
  8255. own mode, but have comment characters, keywords, and the like.)
  8256. To define a generic-mode, use the function `define-generic-mode'.
  8257. Some generic modes are defined in `generic-x.el'.
  8258. \(fn MODE)" t nil)
  8259. (autoload 'generic-make-keywords-list "generic" "\
  8260. Return a `font-lock-keywords' construct that highlights KEYWORD-LIST.
  8261. KEYWORD-LIST is a list of keyword strings that should be
  8262. highlighted with face FACE. This function calculates a regular
  8263. expression that matches these keywords and concatenates it with
  8264. PREFIX and SUFFIX. Then it returns a construct based on this
  8265. regular expression that can be used as an element of
  8266. `font-lock-keywords'.
  8267. \(fn KEYWORD-LIST FACE &optional PREFIX SUFFIX)" nil nil)
  8268. ;;;***
  8269. ;;;### (autoloads (glasses-mode) "glasses" "progmodes/glasses.el"
  8270. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  8271. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/glasses.el
  8272. (autoload 'glasses-mode "glasses" "\
  8273. Minor mode for making identifiers likeThis readable.
  8274. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  8275. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  8276. if ARG is omitted or nil. When this mode is active, it tries to
  8277. add virtual separators (like underscores) at places they belong to.
  8278. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  8279. ;;;***
  8280. ;;;### (autoloads (gmm-tool-bar-from-list gmm-widget-p gmm-error
  8281. ;;;;;; gmm-message gmm-regexp-concat) "gmm-utils" "gnus/gmm-utils.el"
  8282. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8283. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gmm-utils.el
  8284. (autoload 'gmm-regexp-concat "gmm-utils" "\
  8285. Potentially concat a list of regexps into a single one.
  8286. The concatenation is done with logical ORs.
  8287. \(fn REGEXP)" nil nil)
  8288. (autoload 'gmm-message "gmm-utils" "\
  8289. If LEVEL is lower than `gmm-verbose' print ARGS using `message'.
  8290. Guideline for numbers:
  8291. 1 - error messages
  8292. 3 - non-serious error messages
  8293. 5 - messages for things that take a long time
  8294. 7 - not very important messages on stuff
  8295. 9 - messages inside loops.
  8296. \(fn LEVEL &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  8297. (autoload 'gmm-error "gmm-utils" "\
  8298. Beep an error if LEVEL is equal to or less than `gmm-verbose'.
  8299. ARGS are passed to `message'.
  8300. \(fn LEVEL &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  8301. (autoload 'gmm-widget-p "gmm-utils" "\
  8302. Non-nil if SYMBOL is a widget.
  8303. \(fn SYMBOL)" nil nil)
  8304. (autoload 'gmm-tool-bar-from-list "gmm-utils" "\
  8305. Make a tool bar from ICON-LIST.
  8306. Within each entry of ICON-LIST, the first element is a menu
  8307. command, the second element is an icon file name and the third
  8308. element is a test function. You can use \\[describe-key]
  8309. <menu-entry> to find out the name of a menu command. The fourth
  8310. and all following elements are passed as the PROPS argument to the
  8311. function `tool-bar-local-item'.
  8312. If ZAP-LIST is a list, remove those item from the default
  8313. `tool-bar-map'. If it is t, start with a new sparse map. You
  8314. can use \\[describe-key] <icon> to find out the name of an icon
  8315. item. When \\[describe-key] <icon> shows \"<tool-bar> <new-file>
  8316. runs the command find-file\", then use `new-file' in ZAP-LIST.
  8317. DEFAULT-MAP specifies the default key map for ICON-LIST.
  8318. \(fn ICON-LIST ZAP-LIST DEFAULT-MAP)" nil nil)
  8319. ;;;***
  8320. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus gnus-other-frame gnus-slave gnus-no-server
  8321. ;;;;;; gnus-slave-no-server) "gnus" "gnus/gnus.el" (20370 31722))
  8322. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus.el
  8323. (when (fboundp 'custom-autoload)
  8324. (custom-autoload 'gnus-select-method "gnus"))
  8325. (autoload 'gnus-slave-no-server "gnus" "\
  8326. Read network news as a slave, without connecting to the local server.
  8327. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  8328. (autoload 'gnus-no-server "gnus" "\
  8329. Read network news.
  8330. If ARG is a positive number, Gnus will use that as the startup
  8331. level. If ARG is nil, Gnus will be started at level 2. If ARG is
  8332. non-nil and not a positive number, Gnus will prompt the user for the
  8333. name of an NNTP server to use.
  8334. As opposed to `gnus', this command will not connect to the local
  8335. server.
  8336. \(fn &optional ARG SLAVE)" t nil)
  8337. (autoload 'gnus-slave "gnus" "\
  8338. Read news as a slave.
  8339. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  8340. (autoload 'gnus-other-frame "gnus" "\
  8341. Pop up a frame to read news.
  8342. This will call one of the Gnus commands which is specified by the user
  8343. option `gnus-other-frame-function' (default `gnus') with the argument
  8344. ARG if Gnus is not running, otherwise just pop up a Gnus frame. The
  8345. optional second argument DISPLAY should be a standard display string
  8346. such as \"unix:0\" to specify where to pop up a frame. If DISPLAY is
  8347. omitted or the function `make-frame-on-display' is not available, the
  8348. current display is used.
  8349. \(fn &optional ARG DISPLAY)" t nil)
  8350. (autoload 'gnus "gnus" "\
  8351. Read network news.
  8352. If ARG is non-nil and a positive number, Gnus will use that as the
  8353. startup level. If ARG is non-nil and not a positive number, Gnus will
  8354. prompt the user for the name of an NNTP server to use.
  8355. \(fn &optional ARG DONT-CONNECT SLAVE)" t nil)
  8356. ;;;***
  8357. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-agent-regenerate gnus-agent-batch gnus-agent-batch-fetch
  8358. ;;;;;; gnus-agent-find-parameter gnus-agent-possibly-alter-active
  8359. ;;;;;; gnus-agent-get-undownloaded-list gnus-agent-delete-group
  8360. ;;;;;; gnus-agent-rename-group gnus-agent-possibly-save-gcc gnus-agentize
  8361. ;;;;;; gnus-slave-unplugged gnus-plugged gnus-unplugged) "gnus-agent"
  8362. ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-agent.el" (20352 65510))
  8363. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-agent.el
  8364. (autoload 'gnus-unplugged "gnus-agent" "\
  8365. Start Gnus unplugged.
  8366. \(fn)" t nil)
  8367. (autoload 'gnus-plugged "gnus-agent" "\
  8368. Start Gnus plugged.
  8369. \(fn)" t nil)
  8370. (autoload 'gnus-slave-unplugged "gnus-agent" "\
  8371. Read news as a slave unplugged.
  8372. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  8373. (autoload 'gnus-agentize "gnus-agent" "\
  8374. Allow Gnus to be an offline newsreader.
  8375. The gnus-agentize function is now called internally by gnus when
  8376. gnus-agent is set. If you wish to avoid calling gnus-agentize,
  8377. customize gnus-agent to nil.
  8378. This will modify the `gnus-setup-news-hook', and
  8379. `message-send-mail-real-function' variables, and install the Gnus agent
  8380. minor mode in all Gnus buffers.
  8381. \(fn)" t nil)
  8382. (autoload 'gnus-agent-possibly-save-gcc "gnus-agent" "\
  8383. Save GCC if Gnus is unplugged.
  8384. \(fn)" nil nil)
  8385. (autoload 'gnus-agent-rename-group "gnus-agent" "\
  8386. Rename fully-qualified OLD-GROUP as NEW-GROUP.
  8387. Always updates the agent, even when disabled, as the old agent
  8388. files would corrupt gnus when the agent was next enabled.
  8389. Depends upon the caller to determine whether group renaming is
  8390. supported.
  8391. \(fn OLD-GROUP NEW-GROUP)" nil nil)
  8392. (autoload 'gnus-agent-delete-group "gnus-agent" "\
  8393. Delete fully-qualified GROUP.
  8394. Always updates the agent, even when disabled, as the old agent
  8395. files would corrupt gnus when the agent was next enabled.
  8396. Depends upon the caller to determine whether group deletion is
  8397. supported.
  8398. \(fn GROUP)" nil nil)
  8399. (autoload 'gnus-agent-get-undownloaded-list "gnus-agent" "\
  8400. Construct list of articles that have not been downloaded.
  8401. \(fn)" nil nil)
  8402. (autoload 'gnus-agent-possibly-alter-active "gnus-agent" "\
  8403. Possibly expand a group's active range to include articles
  8404. downloaded into the agent.
  8405. \(fn GROUP ACTIVE &optional INFO)" nil nil)
  8406. (autoload 'gnus-agent-find-parameter "gnus-agent" "\
  8407. Search for GROUPs SYMBOL in the group's parameters, the group's
  8408. topic parameters, the group's category, or the customizable
  8409. variables. Returns the first non-nil value found.
  8410. \(fn GROUP SYMBOL)" nil nil)
  8411. (autoload 'gnus-agent-batch-fetch "gnus-agent" "\
  8412. Start Gnus and fetch session.
  8413. \(fn)" t nil)
  8414. (autoload 'gnus-agent-batch "gnus-agent" "\
  8415. Start Gnus, send queue and fetch session.
  8416. \(fn)" t nil)
  8417. (autoload 'gnus-agent-regenerate "gnus-agent" "\
  8418. Regenerate all agent covered files.
  8419. If CLEAN, obsolete (ignore).
  8420. \(fn &optional CLEAN REREAD)" t nil)
  8421. ;;;***
  8422. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-article-prepare-display) "gnus-art" "gnus/gnus-art.el"
  8423. ;;;;;; (20358 29669))
  8424. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-art.el
  8425. (autoload 'gnus-article-prepare-display "gnus-art" "\
  8426. Make the current buffer look like a nice article.
  8427. \(fn)" nil nil)
  8428. ;;;***
  8429. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-bookmark-bmenu-list gnus-bookmark-jump gnus-bookmark-set)
  8430. ;;;;;; "gnus-bookmark" "gnus/gnus-bookmark.el" (20352 65510))
  8431. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-bookmark.el
  8432. (autoload 'gnus-bookmark-set "gnus-bookmark" "\
  8433. Set a bookmark for this article.
  8434. \(fn)" t nil)
  8435. (autoload 'gnus-bookmark-jump "gnus-bookmark" "\
  8436. Jump to a Gnus bookmark (BMK-NAME).
  8437. \(fn &optional BMK-NAME)" t nil)
  8438. (autoload 'gnus-bookmark-bmenu-list "gnus-bookmark" "\
  8439. Display a list of existing Gnus bookmarks.
  8440. The list is displayed in a buffer named `*Gnus Bookmark List*'.
  8441. The leftmost column displays a D if the bookmark is flagged for
  8442. deletion, or > if it is flagged for displaying.
  8443. \(fn)" t nil)
  8444. ;;;***
  8445. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-cache-delete-group gnus-cache-rename-group
  8446. ;;;;;; gnus-cache-generate-nov-databases gnus-cache-generate-active
  8447. ;;;;;; gnus-jog-cache) "gnus-cache" "gnus/gnus-cache.el" (20352
  8448. ;;;;;; 65510))
  8449. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-cache.el
  8450. (autoload 'gnus-jog-cache "gnus-cache" "\
  8451. Go through all groups and put the articles into the cache.
  8452. Usage:
  8453. $ emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs -l gnus -f gnus-jog-cache
  8454. \(fn)" t nil)
  8455. (autoload 'gnus-cache-generate-active "gnus-cache" "\
  8456. Generate the cache active file.
  8457. \(fn &optional DIRECTORY)" t nil)
  8458. (autoload 'gnus-cache-generate-nov-databases "gnus-cache" "\
  8459. Generate NOV files recursively starting in DIR.
  8460. \(fn DIR)" t nil)
  8461. (autoload 'gnus-cache-rename-group "gnus-cache" "\
  8462. Rename OLD-GROUP as NEW-GROUP.
  8463. Always updates the cache, even when disabled, as the old cache
  8464. files would corrupt Gnus when the cache was next enabled. It
  8465. depends on the caller to determine whether group renaming is
  8466. supported.
  8467. \(fn OLD-GROUP NEW-GROUP)" nil nil)
  8468. (autoload 'gnus-cache-delete-group "gnus-cache" "\
  8469. Delete GROUP from the cache.
  8470. Always updates the cache, even when disabled, as the old cache
  8471. files would corrupt gnus when the cache was next enabled.
  8472. Depends upon the caller to determine whether group deletion is
  8473. supported.
  8474. \(fn GROUP)" nil nil)
  8475. ;;;***
  8476. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-delay-initialize gnus-delay-send-queue gnus-delay-article)
  8477. ;;;;;; "gnus-delay" "gnus/gnus-delay.el" (20352 65510))
  8478. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-delay.el
  8479. (autoload 'gnus-delay-article "gnus-delay" "\
  8480. Delay this article by some time.
  8481. DELAY is a string, giving the length of the time. Possible values are:
  8482. * <digits><units> for <units> in minutes (`m'), hours (`h'), days (`d'),
  8483. weeks (`w'), months (`M'), or years (`Y');
  8484. * YYYY-MM-DD for a specific date. The time of day is given by the
  8485. variable `gnus-delay-default-hour', minute and second are zero.
  8486. * hh:mm for a specific time. Use 24h format. If it is later than this
  8487. time, then the deadline is tomorrow, else today.
  8488. \(fn DELAY)" t nil)
  8489. (autoload 'gnus-delay-send-queue "gnus-delay" "\
  8490. Send all the delayed messages that are due now.
  8491. \(fn)" t nil)
  8492. (autoload 'gnus-delay-initialize "gnus-delay" "\
  8493. Initialize the gnus-delay package.
  8494. This sets up a key binding in `message-mode' to delay a message.
  8495. This tells Gnus to look for delayed messages after getting new news.
  8496. The optional arg NO-KEYMAP is ignored.
  8497. Checking delayed messages is skipped if optional arg NO-CHECK is non-nil.
  8498. \(fn &optional NO-KEYMAP NO-CHECK)" nil nil)
  8499. ;;;***
  8500. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-user-format-function-D gnus-user-format-function-d)
  8501. ;;;;;; "gnus-diary" "gnus/gnus-diary.el" (20352 65510))
  8502. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-diary.el
  8503. (autoload 'gnus-user-format-function-d "gnus-diary" "\
  8504. \(fn HEADER)" nil nil)
  8505. (autoload 'gnus-user-format-function-D "gnus-diary" "\
  8506. \(fn HEADER)" nil nil)
  8507. ;;;***
  8508. ;;;### (autoloads (turn-on-gnus-dired-mode) "gnus-dired" "gnus/gnus-dired.el"
  8509. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8510. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-dired.el
  8511. (autoload 'turn-on-gnus-dired-mode "gnus-dired" "\
  8512. Convenience method to turn on gnus-dired-mode.
  8513. \(fn)" t nil)
  8514. ;;;***
  8515. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-draft-reminder) "gnus-draft" "gnus/gnus-draft.el"
  8516. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8517. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-draft.el
  8518. (autoload 'gnus-draft-reminder "gnus-draft" "\
  8519. Reminder user if there are unsent drafts.
  8520. \(fn)" t nil)
  8521. ;;;***
  8522. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-convert-png-to-face gnus-convert-face-to-png
  8523. ;;;;;; gnus-face-from-file gnus-x-face-from-file gnus-insert-random-x-face-header
  8524. ;;;;;; gnus-random-x-face) "gnus-fun" "gnus/gnus-fun.el" (20352
  8525. ;;;;;; 65510))
  8526. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-fun.el
  8527. (autoload 'gnus-random-x-face "gnus-fun" "\
  8528. Return X-Face header data chosen randomly from `gnus-x-face-directory'.
  8529. \(fn)" t nil)
  8530. (autoload 'gnus-insert-random-x-face-header "gnus-fun" "\
  8531. Insert a random X-Face header from `gnus-x-face-directory'.
  8532. \(fn)" t nil)
  8533. (autoload 'gnus-x-face-from-file "gnus-fun" "\
  8534. Insert an X-Face header based on an image file.
  8535. Depending on `gnus-convert-image-to-x-face-command' it may accept
  8536. different input formats.
  8537. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  8538. (autoload 'gnus-face-from-file "gnus-fun" "\
  8539. Return a Face header based on an image file.
  8540. Depending on `gnus-convert-image-to-face-command' it may accept
  8541. different input formats.
  8542. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  8543. (autoload 'gnus-convert-face-to-png "gnus-fun" "\
  8544. Convert FACE (which is base64-encoded) to a PNG.
  8545. The PNG is returned as a string.
  8546. \(fn FACE)" nil nil)
  8547. (autoload 'gnus-convert-png-to-face "gnus-fun" "\
  8548. Convert FILE to a Face.
  8549. FILE should be a PNG file that's 48x48 and smaller than or equal to
  8550. 726 bytes.
  8551. \(fn FILE)" nil nil)
  8552. ;;;***
  8553. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-treat-mail-gravatar gnus-treat-from-gravatar)
  8554. ;;;;;; "gnus-gravatar" "gnus/gnus-gravatar.el" (20352 65510))
  8555. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-gravatar.el
  8556. (autoload 'gnus-treat-from-gravatar "gnus-gravatar" "\
  8557. Display gravatar in the From header.
  8558. If gravatar is already displayed, remove it.
  8559. \(fn &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  8560. (autoload 'gnus-treat-mail-gravatar "gnus-gravatar" "\
  8561. Display gravatars in the Cc and To headers.
  8562. If gravatars are already displayed, remove them.
  8563. \(fn &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  8564. ;;;***
  8565. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-fetch-group-other-frame gnus-fetch-group)
  8566. ;;;;;; "gnus-group" "gnus/gnus-group.el" (20352 65510))
  8567. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-group.el
  8568. (autoload 'gnus-fetch-group "gnus-group" "\
  8569. Start Gnus if necessary and enter GROUP.
  8570. If ARTICLES, display those articles.
  8571. Returns whether the fetching was successful or not.
  8572. \(fn GROUP &optional ARTICLES)" t nil)
  8573. (autoload 'gnus-fetch-group-other-frame "gnus-group" "\
  8574. Pop up a frame and enter GROUP.
  8575. \(fn GROUP)" t nil)
  8576. ;;;***
  8577. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-html-prefetch-images gnus-article-html) "gnus-html"
  8578. ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-html.el" (20352 65510))
  8579. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-html.el
  8580. (autoload 'gnus-article-html "gnus-html" "\
  8581. \(fn &optional HANDLE)" nil nil)
  8582. (autoload 'gnus-html-prefetch-images "gnus-html" "\
  8583. \(fn SUMMARY)" nil nil)
  8584. ;;;***
  8585. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-batch-score) "gnus-kill" "gnus/gnus-kill.el"
  8586. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8587. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-kill.el
  8588. (defalias 'gnus-batch-kill 'gnus-batch-score)
  8589. (autoload 'gnus-batch-score "gnus-kill" "\
  8590. Run batched scoring.
  8591. Usage: emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs -l gnus -f gnus-batch-score
  8592. \(fn)" t nil)
  8593. ;;;***
  8594. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-mailing-list-mode gnus-mailing-list-insinuate
  8595. ;;;;;; turn-on-gnus-mailing-list-mode) "gnus-ml" "gnus/gnus-ml.el"
  8596. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8597. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-ml.el
  8598. (autoload 'turn-on-gnus-mailing-list-mode "gnus-ml" "\
  8599. \(fn)" nil nil)
  8600. (autoload 'gnus-mailing-list-insinuate "gnus-ml" "\
  8601. Setup group parameters from List-Post header.
  8602. If FORCE is non-nil, replace the old ones.
  8603. \(fn &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  8604. (autoload 'gnus-mailing-list-mode "gnus-ml" "\
  8605. Minor mode for providing mailing-list commands.
  8606. \\{gnus-mailing-list-mode-map}
  8607. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  8608. ;;;***
  8609. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-group-split-fancy gnus-group-split gnus-group-split-update
  8610. ;;;;;; gnus-group-split-setup) "gnus-mlspl" "gnus/gnus-mlspl.el"
  8611. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8612. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-mlspl.el
  8613. (autoload 'gnus-group-split-setup "gnus-mlspl" "\
  8614. Set up the split for `nnmail-split-fancy'.
  8615. Sets things up so that nnmail-split-fancy is used for mail
  8616. splitting, and defines the variable nnmail-split-fancy according with
  8617. group parameters.
  8618. If AUTO-UPDATE is non-nil (prefix argument accepted, if called
  8619. interactively), it makes sure nnmail-split-fancy is re-computed before
  8620. getting new mail, by adding `gnus-group-split-update' to
  8621. `nnmail-pre-get-new-mail-hook'.
  8622. A non-nil CATCH-ALL replaces the current value of
  8623. `gnus-group-split-default-catch-all-group'. This variable is only used
  8624. by gnus-group-split-update, and only when its CATCH-ALL argument is
  8625. nil. This argument may contain any fancy split, that will be added as
  8626. the last split in a `|' split produced by `gnus-group-split-fancy',
  8627. unless overridden by any group marked as a catch-all group. Typical
  8628. uses are as simple as the name of a default mail group, but more
  8629. elaborate fancy splits may also be useful to split mail that doesn't
  8630. match any of the group-specified splitting rules. See
  8631. `gnus-group-split-fancy' for details.
  8632. \(fn &optional AUTO-UPDATE CATCH-ALL)" t nil)
  8633. (autoload 'gnus-group-split-update "gnus-mlspl" "\
  8634. Computes nnmail-split-fancy from group params and CATCH-ALL.
  8635. It does this by calling by calling (gnus-group-split-fancy nil
  8636. nil CATCH-ALL).
  8637. If CATCH-ALL is nil, `gnus-group-split-default-catch-all-group' is used
  8638. instead. This variable is set by `gnus-group-split-setup'.
  8639. \(fn &optional CATCH-ALL)" t nil)
  8640. (autoload 'gnus-group-split "gnus-mlspl" "\
  8641. Use information from group parameters in order to split mail.
  8642. See `gnus-group-split-fancy' for more information.
  8643. `gnus-group-split' is a valid value for `nnmail-split-methods'.
  8644. \(fn)" nil nil)
  8645. (autoload 'gnus-group-split-fancy "gnus-mlspl" "\
  8646. Uses information from group parameters in order to split mail.
  8647. It can be embedded into `nnmail-split-fancy' lists with the SPLIT
  8648. \(: gnus-group-split-fancy GROUPS NO-CROSSPOST CATCH-ALL)
  8649. GROUPS may be a regular expression or a list of group names, that will
  8650. be used to select candidate groups. If it is omitted or nil, all
  8651. existing groups are considered.
  8652. if NO-CROSSPOST is omitted or nil, a & split will be returned,
  8653. otherwise, a | split, that does not allow crossposting, will be
  8654. returned.
  8655. For each selected group, a SPLIT is composed like this: if SPLIT-SPEC
  8656. is specified, this split is returned as-is (unless it is nil: in this
  8657. case, the group is ignored). Otherwise, if TO-ADDRESS, TO-LIST and/or
  8658. EXTRA-ALIASES are specified, a regexp that matches any of them is
  8659. constructed (extra-aliases may be a list). Additionally, if
  8660. SPLIT-REGEXP is specified, the regexp will be extended so that it
  8661. matches this regexp too, and if SPLIT-EXCLUDE is specified, RESTRICT
  8662. clauses will be generated.
  8663. If CATCH-ALL is nil, no catch-all handling is performed, regardless of
  8664. catch-all marks in group parameters. Otherwise, if there is no
  8665. selected group whose SPLIT-REGEXP matches the empty string, nor is
  8666. there a selected group whose SPLIT-SPEC is 'catch-all, this fancy
  8667. split (say, a group name) will be appended to the returned SPLIT list,
  8668. as the last element of a '| SPLIT.
  8669. For example, given the following group parameters:
  8670. nnml:mail.bar:
  8671. \((to-address . \"bar@femail.com\")
  8672. (split-regexp . \".*@femail\\\\.com\"))
  8673. nnml:mail.foo:
  8674. \((to-list . \"foo@nowhere.gov\")
  8675. (extra-aliases \"foo@localhost\" \"foo-redist@home\")
  8676. (split-exclude \"bugs-foo\" \"rambling-foo\")
  8677. (admin-address . \"foo-request@nowhere.gov\"))
  8678. nnml:mail.others:
  8679. \((split-spec . catch-all))
  8680. Calling (gnus-group-split-fancy nil nil \"mail.others\") returns:
  8681. \(| (& (any \"\\\\(bar@femail\\\\.com\\\\|.*@femail\\\\.com\\\\)\"
  8682. \"mail.bar\")
  8683. (any \"\\\\(foo@nowhere\\\\.gov\\\\|foo@localhost\\\\|foo-redist@home\\\\)\"
  8684. - \"bugs-foo\" - \"rambling-foo\" \"mail.foo\"))
  8685. \"mail.others\")
  8686. \(fn &optional GROUPS NO-CROSSPOST CATCH-ALL)" nil nil)
  8687. ;;;***
  8688. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-button-reply gnus-button-mailto gnus-msg-mail)
  8689. ;;;;;; "gnus-msg" "gnus/gnus-msg.el" (20420 42151))
  8690. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-msg.el
  8691. (autoload 'gnus-msg-mail "gnus-msg" "\
  8692. Start editing a mail message to be sent.
  8693. Like `message-mail', but with Gnus paraphernalia, particularly the
  8694. Gcc: header for archiving purposes.
  8695. If Gnus isn't running, a plain `message-mail' setup is used
  8696. instead.
  8697. \(fn &optional TO SUBJECT OTHER-HEADERS CONTINUE SWITCH-ACTION YANK-ACTION SEND-ACTIONS RETURN-ACTION)" t nil)
  8698. (autoload 'gnus-button-mailto "gnus-msg" "\
  8699. Mail to ADDRESS.
  8700. \(fn ADDRESS)" nil nil)
  8701. (autoload 'gnus-button-reply "gnus-msg" "\
  8702. Like `message-reply'.
  8703. \(fn &optional TO-ADDRESS WIDE)" t nil)
  8704. (define-mail-user-agent 'gnus-user-agent 'gnus-msg-mail 'message-send-and-exit 'message-kill-buffer 'message-send-hook)
  8705. ;;;***
  8706. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-treat-newsgroups-picon gnus-treat-mail-picon
  8707. ;;;;;; gnus-treat-from-picon) "gnus-picon" "gnus/gnus-picon.el"
  8708. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8709. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-picon.el
  8710. (autoload 'gnus-treat-from-picon "gnus-picon" "\
  8711. Display picons in the From header.
  8712. If picons are already displayed, remove them.
  8713. \(fn)" t nil)
  8714. (autoload 'gnus-treat-mail-picon "gnus-picon" "\
  8715. Display picons in the Cc and To headers.
  8716. If picons are already displayed, remove them.
  8717. \(fn)" t nil)
  8718. (autoload 'gnus-treat-newsgroups-picon "gnus-picon" "\
  8719. Display picons in the Newsgroups and Followup-To headers.
  8720. If picons are already displayed, remove them.
  8721. \(fn)" t nil)
  8722. ;;;***
  8723. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-add-to-sorted-list gnus-sorted-nunion gnus-sorted-union
  8724. ;;;;;; gnus-sorted-nintersection gnus-sorted-range-intersection
  8725. ;;;;;; gnus-sorted-intersection gnus-intersection gnus-sorted-complement
  8726. ;;;;;; gnus-sorted-ndifference gnus-sorted-difference) "gnus-range"
  8727. ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-range.el" (20352 65510))
  8728. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-range.el
  8729. (autoload 'gnus-sorted-difference "gnus-range" "\
  8730. Return a list of elements of LIST1 that do not appear in LIST2.
  8731. Both lists have to be sorted over <.
  8732. The tail of LIST1 is not copied.
  8733. \(fn LIST1 LIST2)" nil nil)
  8734. (autoload 'gnus-sorted-ndifference "gnus-range" "\
  8735. Return a list of elements of LIST1 that do not appear in LIST2.
  8736. Both lists have to be sorted over <.
  8737. LIST1 is modified.
  8738. \(fn LIST1 LIST2)" nil nil)
  8739. (autoload 'gnus-sorted-complement "gnus-range" "\
  8740. Return a list of elements that are in LIST1 or LIST2 but not both.
  8741. Both lists have to be sorted over <.
  8742. \(fn LIST1 LIST2)" nil nil)
  8743. (autoload 'gnus-intersection "gnus-range" "\
  8744. \(fn LIST1 LIST2)" nil nil)
  8745. (autoload 'gnus-sorted-intersection "gnus-range" "\
  8746. Return intersection of LIST1 and LIST2.
  8747. LIST1 and LIST2 have to be sorted over <.
  8748. \(fn LIST1 LIST2)" nil nil)
  8749. (autoload 'gnus-sorted-range-intersection "gnus-range" "\
  8750. Return intersection of RANGE1 and RANGE2.
  8751. RANGE1 and RANGE2 have to be sorted over <.
  8752. \(fn RANGE1 RANGE2)" nil nil)
  8753. (defalias 'gnus-set-sorted-intersection 'gnus-sorted-nintersection)
  8754. (autoload 'gnus-sorted-nintersection "gnus-range" "\
  8755. Return intersection of LIST1 and LIST2 by modifying cdr pointers of LIST1.
  8756. LIST1 and LIST2 have to be sorted over <.
  8757. \(fn LIST1 LIST2)" nil nil)
  8758. (autoload 'gnus-sorted-union "gnus-range" "\
  8759. Return union of LIST1 and LIST2.
  8760. LIST1 and LIST2 have to be sorted over <.
  8761. \(fn LIST1 LIST2)" nil nil)
  8762. (autoload 'gnus-sorted-nunion "gnus-range" "\
  8763. Return union of LIST1 and LIST2 by modifying cdr pointers of LIST1.
  8764. LIST1 and LIST2 have to be sorted over <.
  8765. \(fn LIST1 LIST2)" nil nil)
  8766. (autoload 'gnus-add-to-sorted-list "gnus-range" "\
  8767. Add NUM into sorted LIST by side effect.
  8768. \(fn LIST NUM)" nil nil)
  8769. ;;;***
  8770. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-registry-install-hooks gnus-registry-initialize)
  8771. ;;;;;; "gnus-registry" "gnus/gnus-registry.el" (20352 65510))
  8772. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-registry.el
  8773. (autoload 'gnus-registry-initialize "gnus-registry" "\
  8774. Initialize the Gnus registry.
  8775. \(fn)" t nil)
  8776. (autoload 'gnus-registry-install-hooks "gnus-registry" "\
  8777. Install the registry hooks.
  8778. \(fn)" t nil)
  8779. ;;;***
  8780. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-sieve-article-add-rule gnus-sieve-generate
  8781. ;;;;;; gnus-sieve-update) "gnus-sieve" "gnus/gnus-sieve.el" (20352
  8782. ;;;;;; 65510))
  8783. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-sieve.el
  8784. (autoload 'gnus-sieve-update "gnus-sieve" "\
  8785. Update the Sieve script in gnus-sieve-file, by replacing the region
  8786. between gnus-sieve-region-start and gnus-sieve-region-end with
  8787. \(gnus-sieve-script gnus-sieve-select-method gnus-sieve-crosspost), then
  8788. execute gnus-sieve-update-shell-command.
  8789. See the documentation for these variables and functions for details.
  8790. \(fn)" t nil)
  8791. (autoload 'gnus-sieve-generate "gnus-sieve" "\
  8792. Generate the Sieve script in gnus-sieve-file, by replacing the region
  8793. between gnus-sieve-region-start and gnus-sieve-region-end with
  8794. \(gnus-sieve-script gnus-sieve-select-method gnus-sieve-crosspost).
  8795. See the documentation for these variables and functions for details.
  8796. \(fn)" t nil)
  8797. (autoload 'gnus-sieve-article-add-rule "gnus-sieve" "\
  8798. \(fn)" t nil)
  8799. ;;;***
  8800. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-update-format) "gnus-spec" "gnus/gnus-spec.el"
  8801. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8802. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-spec.el
  8803. (autoload 'gnus-update-format "gnus-spec" "\
  8804. Update the format specification near point.
  8805. \(fn VAR)" t nil)
  8806. ;;;***
  8807. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-declare-backend) "gnus-start" "gnus/gnus-start.el"
  8808. ;;;;;; (20358 29669))
  8809. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-start.el
  8810. (autoload 'gnus-declare-backend "gnus-start" "\
  8811. Declare back end NAME with ABILITIES as a Gnus back end.
  8812. \(fn NAME &rest ABILITIES)" nil nil)
  8813. ;;;***
  8814. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-summary-bookmark-jump) "gnus-sum" "gnus/gnus-sum.el"
  8815. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8816. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-sum.el
  8817. (autoload 'gnus-summary-bookmark-jump "gnus-sum" "\
  8818. Handler function for record returned by `gnus-summary-bookmark-make-record'.
  8819. BOOKMARK is a bookmark name or a bookmark record.
  8820. \(fn BOOKMARK)" nil nil)
  8821. ;;;***
  8822. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-sync-install-hooks gnus-sync-initialize)
  8823. ;;;;;; "gnus-sync" "gnus/gnus-sync.el" (20352 65510))
  8824. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-sync.el
  8825. (autoload 'gnus-sync-initialize "gnus-sync" "\
  8826. Initialize the Gnus sync facility.
  8827. \(fn)" t nil)
  8828. (autoload 'gnus-sync-install-hooks "gnus-sync" "\
  8829. Install the sync hooks.
  8830. \(fn)" t nil)
  8831. ;;;***
  8832. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-add-configuration) "gnus-win" "gnus/gnus-win.el"
  8833. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  8834. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-win.el
  8835. (autoload 'gnus-add-configuration "gnus-win" "\
  8836. Add the window configuration CONF to `gnus-buffer-configuration'.
  8837. \(fn CONF)" nil nil)
  8838. ;;;***
  8839. ;;;### (autoloads (gnutls-min-prime-bits) "gnutls" "net/gnutls.el"
  8840. ;;;;;; (20403 5511))
  8841. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/gnutls.el
  8842. (defvar gnutls-min-prime-bits 256 "\
  8843. Minimum number of prime bits accepted by GnuTLS for key exchange.
  8844. During a Diffie-Hellman handshake, if the server sends a prime
  8845. number with fewer than this number of bits, the handshake is
  8846. rejected. (The smaller the prime number, the less secure the
  8847. key exchange is against man-in-the-middle attacks.)
  8848. A value of nil says to use the default GnuTLS value.")
  8849. (custom-autoload 'gnutls-min-prime-bits "gnutls" t)
  8850. ;;;***
  8851. ;;;### (autoloads (gomoku) "gomoku" "play/gomoku.el" (20400 62402))
  8852. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/gomoku.el
  8853. (autoload 'gomoku "gomoku" "\
  8854. Start a Gomoku game between you and Emacs.
  8855. If a game is in progress, this command allows you to resume it.
  8856. If optional arguments N and M are given, an N by M board is used.
  8857. If prefix arg is given for N, M is prompted for.
  8858. You and Emacs play in turn by marking a free square. You mark it with X
  8859. and Emacs marks it with O. The winner is the first to get five contiguous
  8860. marks horizontally, vertically or in diagonal.
  8861. You play by moving the cursor over the square you choose and hitting
  8862. \\<gomoku-mode-map>\\[gomoku-human-plays].
  8863. This program actually plays a simplified or archaic version of the
  8864. Gomoku game, and ought to be upgraded to use the full modern rules.
  8865. Use \\[describe-mode] for more info.
  8866. \(fn &optional N M)" t nil)
  8867. ;;;***
  8868. ;;;### (autoloads (goto-address-prog-mode goto-address-mode goto-address
  8869. ;;;;;; goto-address-at-point) "goto-addr" "net/goto-addr.el" (20400
  8870. ;;;;;; 62402))
  8871. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/goto-addr.el
  8872. (define-obsolete-function-alias 'goto-address-at-mouse 'goto-address-at-point "22.1")
  8873. (autoload 'goto-address-at-point "goto-addr" "\
  8874. Send to the e-mail address or load the URL at point.
  8875. Send mail to address at point. See documentation for
  8876. `goto-address-find-address-at-point'. If no address is found
  8877. there, then load the URL at or before point.
  8878. \(fn &optional EVENT)" t nil)
  8879. (autoload 'goto-address "goto-addr" "\
  8880. Sets up goto-address functionality in the current buffer.
  8881. Allows user to use mouse/keyboard command to click to go to a URL
  8882. or to send e-mail.
  8883. By default, goto-address binds `goto-address-at-point' to mouse-2 and C-c RET
  8884. only on URLs and e-mail addresses.
  8885. Also fontifies the buffer appropriately (see `goto-address-fontify-p' and
  8886. `goto-address-highlight-p' for more information).
  8887. \(fn)" t nil)
  8888. (put 'goto-address 'safe-local-eval-function t)
  8889. (autoload 'goto-address-mode "goto-addr" "\
  8890. Minor mode to buttonize URLs and e-mail addresses in the current buffer.
  8891. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  8892. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  8893. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  8894. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  8895. (autoload 'goto-address-prog-mode "goto-addr" "\
  8896. Like `goto-address-mode', but only for comments and strings.
  8897. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  8898. ;;;***
  8899. ;;;### (autoloads (gravatar-retrieve-synchronously gravatar-retrieve)
  8900. ;;;;;; "gravatar" "gnus/gravatar.el" (20352 65510))
  8901. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gravatar.el
  8902. (autoload 'gravatar-retrieve "gravatar" "\
  8903. Retrieve MAIL-ADDRESS gravatar and call CB on retrieval.
  8904. You can provide a list of argument to pass to CB in CBARGS.
  8905. \(fn MAIL-ADDRESS CB &optional CBARGS)" nil nil)
  8906. (autoload 'gravatar-retrieve-synchronously "gravatar" "\
  8907. Retrieve MAIL-ADDRESS gravatar and returns it.
  8908. \(fn MAIL-ADDRESS)" nil nil)
  8909. ;;;***
  8910. ;;;### (autoloads (zrgrep rgrep lgrep grep-find grep grep-mode grep-compute-defaults
  8911. ;;;;;; grep-process-setup grep-setup-hook grep-find-command grep-command
  8912. ;;;;;; grep-window-height) "grep" "progmodes/grep.el" (20400 62402))
  8913. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/grep.el
  8914. (defvar grep-window-height nil "\
  8915. *Number of lines in a grep window. If nil, use `compilation-window-height'.")
  8916. (custom-autoload 'grep-window-height "grep" t)
  8917. (defvar grep-command nil "\
  8918. The default grep command for \\[grep].
  8919. If the grep program used supports an option to always include file names
  8920. in its output (such as the `-H' option to GNU grep), it's a good idea to
  8921. include it when specifying `grep-command'.
  8922. In interactive usage, the actual value of this variable is set up
  8923. by `grep-compute-defaults'; to change the default value, use
  8924. Customize or call the function `grep-apply-setting'.")
  8925. (custom-autoload 'grep-command "grep" nil)
  8926. (defvar grep-find-command nil "\
  8927. The default find command for \\[grep-find].
  8928. In interactive usage, the actual value of this variable is set up
  8929. by `grep-compute-defaults'; to change the default value, use
  8930. Customize or call the function `grep-apply-setting'.")
  8931. (custom-autoload 'grep-find-command "grep" nil)
  8932. (defvar grep-setup-hook nil "\
  8933. List of hook functions run by `grep-process-setup' (see `run-hooks').")
  8934. (custom-autoload 'grep-setup-hook "grep" t)
  8935. (defconst grep-regexp-alist '(("^\\(.+?\\)\\(:[ ]*\\)\\([1-9][0-9]*\\)\\2" 1 3 ((lambda nil (when grep-highlight-matches (let* ((beg (match-end 0)) (end (save-excursion (goto-char beg) (line-end-position))) (mbeg (text-property-any beg end 'font-lock-face 'match))) (when mbeg (- mbeg beg))))) lambda nil (when grep-highlight-matches (let* ((beg (match-end 0)) (end (save-excursion (goto-char beg) (line-end-position))) (mbeg (text-property-any beg end 'font-lock-face 'match)) (mend (and mbeg (next-single-property-change mbeg 'font-lock-face nil end)))) (when mend (- mend beg)))))) ("^Binary file \\(.+\\) matches$" 1 nil nil 0 1)) "\
  8936. Regexp used to match grep hits. See `compilation-error-regexp-alist'.")
  8937. (defvar grep-program (purecopy "grep") "\
  8938. The default grep program for `grep-command' and `grep-find-command'.
  8939. This variable's value takes effect when `grep-compute-defaults' is called.")
  8940. (defvar find-program (purecopy "find") "\
  8941. The default find program for `grep-find-command'.
  8942. This variable's value takes effect when `grep-compute-defaults' is called.")
  8943. (defvar xargs-program (purecopy "xargs") "\
  8944. The default xargs program for `grep-find-command'.
  8945. See `grep-find-use-xargs'.
  8946. This variable's value takes effect when `grep-compute-defaults' is called.")
  8947. (defvar grep-find-use-xargs nil "\
  8948. How to invoke find and grep.
  8949. If `exec', use `find -exec {} ;'.
  8950. If `exec-plus' use `find -exec {} +'.
  8951. If `gnu', use `find -print0' and `xargs -0'.
  8952. Any other value means to use `find -print' and `xargs'.
  8953. This variable's value takes effect when `grep-compute-defaults' is called.")
  8954. (defvar grep-history nil "\
  8955. History list for grep.")
  8956. (defvar grep-find-history nil "\
  8957. History list for grep-find.")
  8958. (autoload 'grep-process-setup "grep" "\
  8959. Setup compilation variables and buffer for `grep'.
  8960. Set up `compilation-exit-message-function' and run `grep-setup-hook'.
  8961. \(fn)" nil nil)
  8962. (autoload 'grep-compute-defaults "grep" "\
  8963. \(fn)" nil nil)
  8964. (autoload 'grep-mode "grep" "\
  8965. Sets `grep-last-buffer' and `compilation-window-height'.
  8966. \(fn)" nil nil)
  8967. (autoload 'grep "grep" "\
  8968. Run grep, with user-specified args, and collect output in a buffer.
  8969. While grep runs asynchronously, you can use \\[next-error] (M-x next-error),
  8970. or \\<grep-mode-map>\\[compile-goto-error] in the *grep* buffer, to go to the lines where grep found
  8971. matches. To kill the grep job before it finishes, type \\[kill-compilation].
  8972. For doing a recursive `grep', see the `rgrep' command. For running
  8973. `grep' in a specific directory, see `lgrep'.
  8974. This command uses a special history list for its COMMAND-ARGS, so you
  8975. can easily repeat a grep command.
  8976. A prefix argument says to default the argument based upon the current
  8977. tag the cursor is over, substituting it into the last grep command
  8978. in the grep command history (or into `grep-command' if that history
  8979. list is empty).
  8980. \(fn COMMAND-ARGS)" t nil)
  8981. (autoload 'grep-find "grep" "\
  8982. Run grep via find, with user-specified args COMMAND-ARGS.
  8983. Collect output in a buffer.
  8984. While find runs asynchronously, you can use the \\[next-error] command
  8985. to find the text that grep hits refer to.
  8986. This command uses a special history list for its arguments, so you can
  8987. easily repeat a find command.
  8988. \(fn COMMAND-ARGS)" t nil)
  8989. (defalias 'find-grep 'grep-find)
  8990. (autoload 'lgrep "grep" "\
  8991. Run grep, searching for REGEXP in FILES in directory DIR.
  8992. The search is limited to file names matching shell pattern FILES.
  8993. FILES may use abbreviations defined in `grep-files-aliases', e.g.
  8994. entering `ch' is equivalent to `*.[ch]'.
  8995. With \\[universal-argument] prefix, you can edit the constructed shell command line
  8996. before it is executed.
  8997. With two \\[universal-argument] prefixes, directly edit and run `grep-command'.
  8998. Collect output in a buffer. While grep runs asynchronously, you
  8999. can use \\[next-error] (M-x next-error), or \\<grep-mode-map>\\[compile-goto-error] in the grep output buffer,
  9000. to go to the lines where grep found matches.
  9001. This command shares argument histories with \\[rgrep] and \\[grep].
  9002. \(fn REGEXP &optional FILES DIR CONFIRM)" t nil)
  9003. (autoload 'rgrep "grep" "\
  9004. Recursively grep for REGEXP in FILES in directory tree rooted at DIR.
  9005. The search is limited to file names matching shell pattern FILES.
  9006. FILES may use abbreviations defined in `grep-files-aliases', e.g.
  9007. entering `ch' is equivalent to `*.[ch]'.
  9008. With \\[universal-argument] prefix, you can edit the constructed shell command line
  9009. before it is executed.
  9010. With two \\[universal-argument] prefixes, directly edit and run `grep-find-command'.
  9011. Collect output in a buffer. While the recursive grep is running,
  9012. you can use \\[next-error] (M-x next-error), or \\<grep-mode-map>\\[compile-goto-error] in the grep output buffer,
  9013. to visit the lines where matches were found. To kill the job
  9014. before it finishes, type \\[kill-compilation].
  9015. This command shares argument histories with \\[lgrep] and \\[grep-find].
  9016. When called programmatically and FILES is nil, REGEXP is expected
  9017. to specify a command to run.
  9018. \(fn REGEXP &optional FILES DIR CONFIRM)" t nil)
  9019. (autoload 'zrgrep "grep" "\
  9020. Recursively grep for REGEXP in gzipped FILES in tree rooted at DIR.
  9021. Like `rgrep' but uses `zgrep' for `grep-program', sets the default
  9022. file name to `*.gz', and sets `grep-highlight-matches' to `always'.
  9023. \(fn REGEXP &optional FILES DIR CONFIRM GREP-FIND-TEMPLATE)" t nil)
  9024. (defalias 'rzgrep 'zrgrep)
  9025. ;;;***
  9026. ;;;### (autoloads (gs-load-image) "gs" "gs.el" (20352 65510))
  9027. ;;; Generated autoloads from gs.el
  9028. (autoload 'gs-load-image "gs" "\
  9029. Load a PS image for display on FRAME.
  9030. SPEC is an image specification, IMG-HEIGHT and IMG-WIDTH are width
  9031. and height of the image in pixels. WINDOW-AND-PIXMAP-ID is a string of
  9032. the form \"WINDOW-ID PIXMAP-ID\". Value is non-nil if successful.
  9033. \(fn FRAME SPEC IMG-WIDTH IMG-HEIGHT WINDOW-AND-PIXMAP-ID PIXEL-COLORS)" nil nil)
  9034. ;;;***
  9035. ;;;### (autoloads (gud-tooltip-mode gdb-script-mode jdb pdb perldb
  9036. ;;;;;; xdb dbx sdb gud-gdb) "gud" "progmodes/gud.el" (20400 62402))
  9037. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/gud.el
  9038. (autoload 'gud-gdb "gud" "\
  9039. Run gdb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
  9040. The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working
  9041. directory and source-file directory for your debugger.
  9042. \(fn COMMAND-LINE)" t nil)
  9043. (autoload 'sdb "gud" "\
  9044. Run sdb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
  9045. The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
  9046. and source-file directory for your debugger.
  9047. \(fn COMMAND-LINE)" t nil)
  9048. (autoload 'dbx "gud" "\
  9049. Run dbx on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
  9050. The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
  9051. and source-file directory for your debugger.
  9052. \(fn COMMAND-LINE)" t nil)
  9053. (autoload 'xdb "gud" "\
  9054. Run xdb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
  9055. The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
  9056. and source-file directory for your debugger.
  9057. You can set the variable `gud-xdb-directories' to a list of program source
  9058. directories if your program contains sources from more than one directory.
  9059. \(fn COMMAND-LINE)" t nil)
  9060. (autoload 'perldb "gud" "\
  9061. Run perldb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
  9062. The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
  9063. and source-file directory for your debugger.
  9064. \(fn COMMAND-LINE)" t nil)
  9065. (autoload 'pdb "gud" "\
  9066. Run pdb on program FILE in buffer `*gud-FILE*'.
  9067. The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
  9068. and source-file directory for your debugger.
  9069. \(fn COMMAND-LINE)" t nil)
  9070. (autoload 'jdb "gud" "\
  9071. Run jdb with command line COMMAND-LINE in a buffer.
  9072. The buffer is named \"*gud*\" if no initial class is given or
  9073. \"*gud-<initial-class-basename>*\" if there is. If the \"-classpath\"
  9074. switch is given, omit all whitespace between it and its value.
  9075. See `gud-jdb-use-classpath' and `gud-jdb-classpath' documentation for
  9076. information on how jdb accesses source files. Alternatively (if
  9077. `gud-jdb-use-classpath' is nil), see `gud-jdb-directories' for the
  9078. original source file access method.
  9079. For general information about commands available to control jdb from
  9080. gud, see `gud-mode'.
  9081. \(fn COMMAND-LINE)" t nil)
  9082. (autoload 'gdb-script-mode "gud" "\
  9083. Major mode for editing GDB scripts.
  9084. \(fn)" t nil)
  9085. (defvar gud-tooltip-mode nil "\
  9086. Non-nil if Gud-Tooltip mode is enabled.
  9087. See the command `gud-tooltip-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  9088. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  9089. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  9090. or call the function `gud-tooltip-mode'.")
  9091. (custom-autoload 'gud-tooltip-mode "gud" nil)
  9092. (autoload 'gud-tooltip-mode "gud" "\
  9093. Toggle the display of GUD tooltips.
  9094. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the feature if ARG is
  9095. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  9096. it if ARG is omitted or nil.
  9097. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9098. ;;;***
  9099. ;;;### (autoloads (handwrite) "handwrite" "play/handwrite.el" (20352
  9100. ;;;;;; 65510))
  9101. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/handwrite.el
  9102. (autoload 'handwrite "handwrite" "\
  9103. Turns the buffer into a \"handwritten\" document.
  9104. The functions `handwrite-10pt', `handwrite-11pt', `handwrite-12pt'
  9105. and `handwrite-13pt' set up for various sizes of output.
  9106. Variables: `handwrite-linespace' (default 12)
  9107. `handwrite-fontsize' (default 11)
  9108. `handwrite-numlines' (default 60)
  9109. `handwrite-pagenumbering' (default nil)
  9110. \(fn)" t nil)
  9111. ;;;***
  9112. ;;;### (autoloads (hanoi-unix-64 hanoi-unix hanoi) "hanoi" "play/hanoi.el"
  9113. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  9114. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/hanoi.el
  9115. (autoload 'hanoi "hanoi" "\
  9116. Towers of Hanoi diversion. Use NRINGS rings.
  9117. \(fn NRINGS)" t nil)
  9118. (autoload 'hanoi-unix "hanoi" "\
  9119. Towers of Hanoi, UNIX doomsday version.
  9120. Displays 32-ring towers that have been progressing at one move per
  9121. second since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 GMT.
  9122. Repent before ring 31 moves.
  9123. \(fn)" t nil)
  9124. (autoload 'hanoi-unix-64 "hanoi" "\
  9125. Like hanoi-unix, but pretend to have a 64-bit clock.
  9126. This is, necessarily (as of Emacs 20.3), a crock. When the
  9127. current-time interface is made s2G-compliant, hanoi.el will need
  9128. to be updated.
  9129. \(fn)" t nil)
  9130. ;;;***
  9131. ;;;### (autoloads (mail-check-payment mail-add-payment-async mail-add-payment
  9132. ;;;;;; hashcash-verify-payment hashcash-insert-payment-async hashcash-insert-payment)
  9133. ;;;;;; "hashcash" "mail/hashcash.el" (20400 62402))
  9134. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/hashcash.el
  9135. (autoload 'hashcash-insert-payment "hashcash" "\
  9136. Insert X-Payment and X-Hashcash headers with a payment for ARG
  9137. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  9138. (autoload 'hashcash-insert-payment-async "hashcash" "\
  9139. Insert X-Payment and X-Hashcash headers with a payment for ARG
  9140. Only start calculation. Results are inserted when ready.
  9141. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  9142. (autoload 'hashcash-verify-payment "hashcash" "\
  9143. Verify a hashcash payment
  9144. \(fn TOKEN &optional RESOURCE AMOUNT)" nil nil)
  9145. (autoload 'mail-add-payment "hashcash" "\
  9146. Add X-Payment: and X-Hashcash: headers with a hashcash payment
  9147. for each recipient address. Prefix arg sets default payment temporarily.
  9148. Set ASYNC to t to start asynchronous calculation. (See
  9149. `mail-add-payment-async').
  9150. \(fn &optional ARG ASYNC)" t nil)
  9151. (autoload 'mail-add-payment-async "hashcash" "\
  9152. Add X-Payment: and X-Hashcash: headers with a hashcash payment
  9153. for each recipient address. Prefix arg sets default payment temporarily.
  9154. Calculation is asynchronous.
  9155. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9156. (autoload 'mail-check-payment "hashcash" "\
  9157. Look for a valid X-Payment: or X-Hashcash: header.
  9158. Prefix arg sets default accept amount temporarily.
  9159. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9160. ;;;***
  9161. ;;;### (autoloads (scan-buf-previous-region scan-buf-next-region
  9162. ;;;;;; scan-buf-move-to-region help-at-pt-display-when-idle help-at-pt-set-timer
  9163. ;;;;;; help-at-pt-cancel-timer display-local-help help-at-pt-kbd-string
  9164. ;;;;;; help-at-pt-string) "help-at-pt" "help-at-pt.el" (20352 65510))
  9165. ;;; Generated autoloads from help-at-pt.el
  9166. (autoload 'help-at-pt-string "help-at-pt" "\
  9167. Return the help-echo string at point.
  9168. Normally, the string produced by the `help-echo' text or overlay
  9169. property, or nil, is returned.
  9170. If KBD is non-nil, `kbd-help' is used instead, and any
  9171. `help-echo' property is ignored. In this case, the return value
  9172. can also be t, if that is the value of the `kbd-help' property.
  9173. \(fn &optional KBD)" nil nil)
  9174. (autoload 'help-at-pt-kbd-string "help-at-pt" "\
  9175. Return the keyboard help string at point.
  9176. If the `kbd-help' text or overlay property at point produces a
  9177. string, return it. Otherwise, use the `help-echo' property.
  9178. If this produces no string either, return nil.
  9179. \(fn)" nil nil)
  9180. (autoload 'display-local-help "help-at-pt" "\
  9181. Display local help in the echo area.
  9182. This displays a short help message, namely the string produced by
  9183. the `kbd-help' property at point. If `kbd-help' does not produce
  9184. a string, but the `help-echo' property does, then that string is
  9185. printed instead.
  9186. A numeric argument ARG prevents display of a message in case
  9187. there is no help. While ARG can be used interactively, it is
  9188. mainly meant for use from Lisp.
  9189. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9190. (autoload 'help-at-pt-cancel-timer "help-at-pt" "\
  9191. Cancel any timer set by `help-at-pt-set-timer'.
  9192. This disables `help-at-pt-display-when-idle'.
  9193. \(fn)" t nil)
  9194. (autoload 'help-at-pt-set-timer "help-at-pt" "\
  9195. Enable `help-at-pt-display-when-idle'.
  9196. This is done by setting a timer, if none is currently active.
  9197. \(fn)" t nil)
  9198. (defvar help-at-pt-display-when-idle 'never "\
  9199. Automatically show local help on point-over.
  9200. If the value is t, the string obtained from any `kbd-help' or
  9201. `help-echo' property at point is automatically printed in the
  9202. echo area, if nothing else is already displayed there, or after a
  9203. quit. If both `kbd-help' and `help-echo' produce help strings,
  9204. `kbd-help' is used. If the value is a list, the help only gets
  9205. printed if there is a text or overlay property at point that is
  9206. included in this list. Suggested properties are `keymap',
  9207. `local-map', `button' and `kbd-help'. Any value other than t or
  9208. a non-empty list disables the feature.
  9209. This variable only takes effect after a call to
  9210. `help-at-pt-set-timer'. The help gets printed after Emacs has
  9211. been idle for `help-at-pt-timer-delay' seconds. You can call
  9212. `help-at-pt-cancel-timer' to cancel the timer set by, and the
  9213. effect of, `help-at-pt-set-timer'.
  9214. When this variable is set through Custom, `help-at-pt-set-timer'
  9215. is called automatically, unless the value is `never', in which
  9216. case `help-at-pt-cancel-timer' is called. Specifying an empty
  9217. list of properties through Custom will set the timer, thus
  9218. enabling buffer local values. It sets the actual value to nil.
  9219. Thus, Custom distinguishes between a nil value and other values
  9220. that disable the feature, which Custom identifies with `never'.
  9221. The default is `never'.")
  9222. (custom-autoload 'help-at-pt-display-when-idle "help-at-pt" nil)
  9223. (autoload 'scan-buf-move-to-region "help-at-pt" "\
  9224. Go to the start of the next region with non-nil PROP property.
  9225. Then run HOOK, which should be a quoted symbol that is a normal
  9226. hook variable, or an expression evaluating to such a symbol.
  9227. Adjacent areas with different non-nil PROP properties are
  9228. considered different regions.
  9229. With numeric argument ARG, move to the start of the ARGth next
  9230. such region, then run HOOK. If ARG is negative, move backward.
  9231. If point is already in a region, then that region does not count
  9232. toward ARG. If ARG is 0 and point is inside a region, move to
  9233. the start of that region. If ARG is 0 and point is not in a
  9234. region, print a message to that effect, but do not move point and
  9235. do not run HOOK. If there are not enough regions to move over,
  9236. an error results and the number of available regions is mentioned
  9237. in the error message. Point is not moved and HOOK is not run.
  9238. \(fn PROP &optional ARG HOOK)" nil nil)
  9239. (autoload 'scan-buf-next-region "help-at-pt" "\
  9240. Go to the start of the next region with non-nil help-echo.
  9241. Print the help found there using `display-local-help'. Adjacent
  9242. areas with different non-nil help-echo properties are considered
  9243. different regions.
  9244. With numeric argument ARG, move to the start of the ARGth next
  9245. help-echo region. If ARG is negative, move backward. If point
  9246. is already in a help-echo region, then that region does not count
  9247. toward ARG. If ARG is 0 and point is inside a help-echo region,
  9248. move to the start of that region. If ARG is 0 and point is not
  9249. in such a region, just print a message to that effect. If there
  9250. are not enough regions to move over, an error results and the
  9251. number of available regions is mentioned in the error message.
  9252. A potentially confusing subtlety is that point can be in a
  9253. help-echo region without any local help being available. This is
  9254. because `help-echo' can be a function evaluating to nil. This
  9255. rarely happens in practice.
  9256. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9257. (autoload 'scan-buf-previous-region "help-at-pt" "\
  9258. Go to the start of the previous region with non-nil help-echo.
  9259. Print the help found there using `display-local-help'. Adjacent
  9260. areas with different non-nil help-echo properties are considered
  9261. different regions. With numeric argument ARG, behaves like
  9262. `scan-buf-next-region' with argument -ARG.
  9263. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9264. ;;;***
  9265. ;;;### (autoloads (doc-file-to-info doc-file-to-man describe-categories
  9266. ;;;;;; describe-syntax describe-variable variable-at-point describe-function-1
  9267. ;;;;;; find-lisp-object-file-name help-C-file-name describe-function)
  9268. ;;;;;; "help-fns" "help-fns.el" (20352 65510))
  9269. ;;; Generated autoloads from help-fns.el
  9270. (autoload 'describe-function "help-fns" "\
  9271. Display the full documentation of FUNCTION (a symbol).
  9272. \(fn FUNCTION)" t nil)
  9273. (autoload 'help-C-file-name "help-fns" "\
  9274. Return the name of the C file where SUBR-OR-VAR is defined.
  9275. KIND should be `var' for a variable or `subr' for a subroutine.
  9276. \(fn SUBR-OR-VAR KIND)" nil nil)
  9277. (autoload 'find-lisp-object-file-name "help-fns" "\
  9278. Guess the file that defined the Lisp object OBJECT, of type TYPE.
  9279. OBJECT should be a symbol associated with a function, variable, or face;
  9280. alternatively, it can be a function definition.
  9281. If TYPE is `defvar', search for a variable definition.
  9282. If TYPE is `defface', search for a face definition.
  9283. If TYPE is the value returned by `symbol-function' for a function symbol,
  9284. search for a function definition.
  9285. The return value is the absolute name of a readable file where OBJECT is
  9286. defined. If several such files exist, preference is given to a file
  9287. found via `load-path'. The return value can also be `C-source', which
  9288. means that OBJECT is a function or variable defined in C. If no
  9289. suitable file is found, return nil.
  9290. \(fn OBJECT TYPE)" nil nil)
  9291. (autoload 'describe-function-1 "help-fns" "\
  9292. \(fn FUNCTION)" nil nil)
  9293. (autoload 'variable-at-point "help-fns" "\
  9294. Return the bound variable symbol found at or before point.
  9295. Return 0 if there is no such symbol.
  9296. If ANY-SYMBOL is non-nil, don't insist the symbol be bound.
  9297. \(fn &optional ANY-SYMBOL)" nil nil)
  9298. (autoload 'describe-variable "help-fns" "\
  9299. Display the full documentation of VARIABLE (a symbol).
  9300. Returns the documentation as a string, also.
  9301. If VARIABLE has a buffer-local value in BUFFER or FRAME
  9302. \(default to the current buffer and current frame),
  9303. it is displayed along with the global value.
  9304. \(fn VARIABLE &optional BUFFER FRAME)" t nil)
  9305. (autoload 'describe-syntax "help-fns" "\
  9306. Describe the syntax specifications in the syntax table of BUFFER.
  9307. The descriptions are inserted in a help buffer, which is then displayed.
  9308. BUFFER defaults to the current buffer.
  9309. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  9310. (autoload 'describe-categories "help-fns" "\
  9311. Describe the category specifications in the current category table.
  9312. The descriptions are inserted in a buffer, which is then displayed.
  9313. If BUFFER is non-nil, then describe BUFFER's category table instead.
  9314. BUFFER should be a buffer or a buffer name.
  9315. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  9316. (autoload 'doc-file-to-man "help-fns" "\
  9317. Produce an nroff buffer containing the doc-strings from the DOC file.
  9318. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  9319. (autoload 'doc-file-to-info "help-fns" "\
  9320. Produce a texinfo buffer with sorted doc-strings from the DOC file.
  9321. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  9322. ;;;***
  9323. ;;;### (autoloads (three-step-help) "help-macro" "help-macro.el"
  9324. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  9325. ;;; Generated autoloads from help-macro.el
  9326. (defvar three-step-help nil "\
  9327. Non-nil means give more info about Help command in three steps.
  9328. The three steps are simple prompt, prompt with all options, and
  9329. window listing and describing the options.
  9330. A value of nil means skip the middle step, so that \\[help-command] \\[help-command]
  9331. gives the window that lists the options.")
  9332. (custom-autoload 'three-step-help "help-macro" t)
  9333. ;;;***
  9334. ;;;### (autoloads (help-xref-on-pp help-insert-xref-button help-xref-button
  9335. ;;;;;; help-make-xrefs help-buffer help-setup-xref help-mode-finish
  9336. ;;;;;; help-mode-setup help-mode) "help-mode" "help-mode.el" (20352
  9337. ;;;;;; 65510))
  9338. ;;; Generated autoloads from help-mode.el
  9339. (autoload 'help-mode "help-mode" "\
  9340. Major mode for viewing help text and navigating references in it.
  9341. Entry to this mode runs the normal hook `help-mode-hook'.
  9342. Commands:
  9343. \\{help-mode-map}
  9344. \(fn)" t nil)
  9345. (autoload 'help-mode-setup "help-mode" "\
  9346. \(fn)" nil nil)
  9347. (autoload 'help-mode-finish "help-mode" "\
  9348. \(fn)" nil nil)
  9349. (autoload 'help-setup-xref "help-mode" "\
  9350. Invoked from commands using the \"*Help*\" buffer to install some xref info.
  9351. ITEM is a (FUNCTION . ARGS) pair appropriate for recreating the help
  9352. buffer after following a reference. INTERACTIVE-P is non-nil if the
  9353. calling command was invoked interactively. In this case the stack of
  9354. items for help buffer \"back\" buttons is cleared.
  9355. This should be called very early, before the output buffer is cleared,
  9356. because we want to record the \"previous\" position of point so we can
  9357. restore it properly when going back.
  9358. \(fn ITEM INTERACTIVE-P)" nil nil)
  9359. (autoload 'help-buffer "help-mode" "\
  9360. Return the name of a buffer for inserting help.
  9361. If `help-xref-following' is non-nil, this is the name of the
  9362. current buffer. Signal an error if this buffer is not derived
  9363. from `help-mode'.
  9364. Otherwise, return \"*Help*\", creating a buffer with that name if
  9365. it does not already exist.
  9366. \(fn)" nil nil)
  9367. (autoload 'help-make-xrefs "help-mode" "\
  9368. Parse and hyperlink documentation cross-references in the given BUFFER.
  9369. Find cross-reference information in a buffer and activate such cross
  9370. references for selection with `help-follow'. Cross-references have
  9371. the canonical form `...' and the type of reference may be
  9372. disambiguated by the preceding word(s) used in
  9373. `help-xref-symbol-regexp'. Faces only get cross-referenced if
  9374. preceded or followed by the word `face'. Variables without
  9375. variable documentation do not get cross-referenced, unless
  9376. preceded by the word `variable' or `option'.
  9377. If the variable `help-xref-mule-regexp' is non-nil, find also
  9378. cross-reference information related to multilingual environment
  9379. \(e.g., coding-systems). This variable is also used to disambiguate
  9380. the type of reference as the same way as `help-xref-symbol-regexp'.
  9381. A special reference `back' is made to return back through a stack of
  9382. help buffers. Variable `help-back-label' specifies the text for
  9383. that.
  9384. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  9385. (autoload 'help-xref-button "help-mode" "\
  9386. Make a hyperlink for cross-reference text previously matched.
  9387. MATCH-NUMBER is the subexpression of interest in the last matched
  9388. regexp. TYPE is the type of button to use. Any remaining arguments are
  9389. passed to the button's help-function when it is invoked.
  9390. See `help-make-xrefs'.
  9391. \(fn MATCH-NUMBER TYPE &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  9392. (autoload 'help-insert-xref-button "help-mode" "\
  9393. Insert STRING and make a hyperlink from cross-reference text on it.
  9394. TYPE is the type of button to use. Any remaining arguments are passed
  9395. to the button's help-function when it is invoked.
  9396. See `help-make-xrefs'.
  9397. \(fn STRING TYPE &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  9398. (autoload 'help-xref-on-pp "help-mode" "\
  9399. Add xrefs for symbols in `pp's output between FROM and TO.
  9400. \(fn FROM TO)" nil nil)
  9401. ;;;***
  9402. ;;;### (autoloads (Helper-help Helper-describe-bindings) "helper"
  9403. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/helper.el" (20352 65510))
  9404. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/helper.el
  9405. (autoload 'Helper-describe-bindings "helper" "\
  9406. Describe local key bindings of current mode.
  9407. \(fn)" t nil)
  9408. (autoload 'Helper-help "helper" "\
  9409. Provide help for current mode.
  9410. \(fn)" t nil)
  9411. ;;;***
  9412. ;;;### (autoloads (hexlify-buffer hexl-find-file hexl-mode) "hexl"
  9413. ;;;;;; "hexl.el" (20400 62402))
  9414. ;;; Generated autoloads from hexl.el
  9415. (autoload 'hexl-mode "hexl" "\
  9416. \\<hexl-mode-map>A mode for editing binary files in hex dump format.
  9417. This is not an ordinary major mode; it alters some aspects
  9418. of the current mode's behavior, but not all; also, you can exit
  9419. Hexl mode and return to the previous mode using `hexl-mode-exit'.
  9420. This function automatically converts a buffer into the hexl format
  9421. using the function `hexlify-buffer'.
  9422. Each line in the buffer has an \"address\" (displayed in hexadecimal)
  9423. representing the offset into the file that the characters on this line
  9424. are at and 16 characters from the file (displayed as hexadecimal
  9425. values grouped every 16 bits) and as their ASCII values.
  9426. If any of the characters (displayed as ASCII characters) are
  9427. unprintable (control or meta characters) they will be replaced as
  9428. periods.
  9429. If `hexl-mode' is invoked with an argument the buffer is assumed to be
  9430. in hexl format.
  9431. A sample format:
  9432. HEX ADDR: 0001 0203 0405 0607 0809 0a0b 0c0d 0e0f ASCII-TEXT
  9433. -------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------
  9434. 00000000: 5468 6973 2069 7320 6865 786c 2d6d 6f64 This is hexl-mod
  9435. 00000010: 652e 2020 4561 6368 206c 696e 6520 7265 e. Each line re
  9436. 00000020: 7072 6573 656e 7473 2031 3620 6279 7465 presents 16 byte
  9437. 00000030: 7320 6173 2068 6578 6164 6563 696d 616c s as hexadecimal
  9438. 00000040: 2041 5343 4949 0a61 6e64 2070 7269 6e74 ASCII.and print
  9439. 00000050: 6162 6c65 2041 5343 4949 2063 6861 7261 able ASCII chara
  9440. 00000060: 6374 6572 732e 2020 416e 7920 636f 6e74 cters. Any cont
  9441. 00000070: 726f 6c20 6f72 206e 6f6e 2d41 5343 4949 rol or non-ASCII
  9442. 00000080: 2063 6861 7261 6374 6572 730a 6172 6520 characters.are
  9443. 00000090: 6469 7370 6c61 7965 6420 6173 2070 6572 displayed as per
  9444. 000000a0: 696f 6473 2069 6e20 7468 6520 7072 696e iods in the prin
  9445. 000000b0: 7461 626c 6520 6368 6172 6163 7465 7220 table character
  9446. 000000c0: 7265 6769 6f6e 2e0a region..
  9447. Movement is as simple as movement in a normal Emacs text buffer. Most
  9448. cursor movement bindings are the same (ie. Use \\[hexl-backward-char], \\[hexl-forward-char], \\[hexl-next-line], and \\[hexl-previous-line]
  9449. to move the cursor left, right, down, and up).
  9450. Advanced cursor movement commands (ala \\[hexl-beginning-of-line], \\[hexl-end-of-line], \\[hexl-beginning-of-buffer], and \\[hexl-end-of-buffer]) are
  9451. also supported.
  9452. There are several ways to change text in hexl mode:
  9453. ASCII characters (character between space (0x20) and tilde (0x7E)) are
  9454. bound to self-insert so you can simply type the character and it will
  9455. insert itself (actually overstrike) into the buffer.
  9456. \\[hexl-quoted-insert] followed by another keystroke allows you to insert the key even if
  9457. it isn't bound to self-insert. An octal number can be supplied in place
  9458. of another key to insert the octal number's ASCII representation.
  9459. \\[hexl-insert-hex-char] will insert a given hexadecimal value (if it is between 0 and 0xFF)
  9460. into the buffer at the current point.
  9461. \\[hexl-insert-octal-char] will insert a given octal value (if it is between 0 and 0377)
  9462. into the buffer at the current point.
  9463. \\[hexl-insert-decimal-char] will insert a given decimal value (if it is between 0 and 255)
  9464. into the buffer at the current point.
  9465. \\[hexl-mode-exit] will exit hexl-mode.
  9466. Note: saving the file with any of the usual Emacs commands
  9467. will actually convert it back to binary format while saving.
  9468. You can use \\[hexl-find-file] to visit a file in Hexl mode.
  9469. \\[describe-bindings] for advanced commands.
  9470. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9471. (autoload 'hexl-find-file "hexl" "\
  9472. Edit file FILENAME as a binary file in hex dump format.
  9473. Switch to a buffer visiting file FILENAME, creating one if none exists,
  9474. and edit the file in `hexl-mode'.
  9475. \(fn FILENAME)" t nil)
  9476. (autoload 'hexlify-buffer "hexl" "\
  9477. Convert a binary buffer to hexl format.
  9478. This discards the buffer's undo information.
  9479. \(fn)" t nil)
  9480. ;;;***
  9481. ;;;### (autoloads (hi-lock-write-interactive-patterns hi-lock-unface-buffer
  9482. ;;;;;; hi-lock-face-phrase-buffer hi-lock-face-buffer hi-lock-line-face-buffer
  9483. ;;;;;; global-hi-lock-mode hi-lock-mode) "hi-lock" "hi-lock.el"
  9484. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  9485. ;;; Generated autoloads from hi-lock.el
  9486. (autoload 'hi-lock-mode "hi-lock" "\
  9487. Toggle selective highlighting of patterns (Hi Lock mode).
  9488. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Hi Lock mode if ARG is
  9489. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  9490. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  9491. Issuing one the highlighting commands listed below will
  9492. automatically enable Hi Lock mode. To enable Hi Lock mode in all
  9493. buffers, use `global-hi-lock-mode' or add (global-hi-lock-mode 1)
  9494. to your init file. When Hi Lock mode is enabled, a \"Regexp
  9495. Highlighting\" submenu is added to the \"Edit\" menu. The
  9496. commands in the submenu, which can be called interactively, are:
  9497. \\[highlight-regexp] REGEXP FACE
  9498. Highlight matches of pattern REGEXP in current buffer with FACE.
  9499. \\[highlight-phrase] PHRASE FACE
  9500. Highlight matches of phrase PHRASE in current buffer with FACE.
  9501. (PHRASE can be any REGEXP, but spaces will be replaced by matches
  9502. to whitespace and initial lower-case letters will become case insensitive.)
  9503. \\[highlight-lines-matching-regexp] REGEXP FACE
  9504. Highlight lines containing matches of REGEXP in current buffer with FACE.
  9505. \\[unhighlight-regexp] REGEXP
  9506. Remove highlighting on matches of REGEXP in current buffer.
  9507. \\[hi-lock-write-interactive-patterns]
  9508. Write active REGEXPs into buffer as comments (if possible). They may
  9509. be read the next time file is loaded or when the \\[hi-lock-find-patterns] command
  9510. is issued. The inserted regexps are in the form of font lock keywords.
  9511. (See `font-lock-keywords'.) They may be edited and re-loaded with \\[hi-lock-find-patterns],
  9512. any valid `font-lock-keywords' form is acceptable. When a file is
  9513. loaded the patterns are read if `hi-lock-file-patterns-policy' is
  9514. 'ask and the user responds y to the prompt, or if
  9515. `hi-lock-file-patterns-policy' is bound to a function and that
  9516. function returns t.
  9517. \\[hi-lock-find-patterns]
  9518. Re-read patterns stored in buffer (in the format produced by \\[hi-lock-write-interactive-patterns]).
  9519. When hi-lock is started and if the mode is not excluded or patterns
  9520. rejected, the beginning of the buffer is searched for lines of the
  9521. form:
  9522. Hi-lock: FOO
  9523. where FOO is a list of patterns. These are added to the font lock
  9524. keywords already present. The patterns must start before position
  9525. \(number of characters into buffer) `hi-lock-file-patterns-range'.
  9526. Patterns will be read until
  9527. Hi-lock: end
  9528. is found. A mode is excluded if it's in the list `hi-lock-exclude-modes'.
  9529. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9530. (defvar global-hi-lock-mode nil "\
  9531. Non-nil if Global-Hi-Lock mode is enabled.
  9532. See the command `global-hi-lock-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  9533. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  9534. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  9535. or call the function `global-hi-lock-mode'.")
  9536. (custom-autoload 'global-hi-lock-mode "hi-lock" nil)
  9537. (autoload 'global-hi-lock-mode "hi-lock" "\
  9538. Toggle Hi-Lock mode in all buffers.
  9539. With prefix ARG, enable Global-Hi-Lock mode if ARG is positive;
  9540. otherwise, disable it. If called from Lisp, enable the mode if
  9541. ARG is omitted or nil.
  9542. Hi-Lock mode is enabled in all buffers where
  9543. `turn-on-hi-lock-if-enabled' would do it.
  9544. See `hi-lock-mode' for more information on Hi-Lock mode.
  9545. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9546. (defalias 'highlight-lines-matching-regexp 'hi-lock-line-face-buffer)
  9547. (autoload 'hi-lock-line-face-buffer "hi-lock" "\
  9548. Set face of all lines containing a match of REGEXP to FACE.
  9549. Interactively, prompt for REGEXP then FACE. Buffer-local history
  9550. list maintained for regexps, global history maintained for faces.
  9551. \\<minibuffer-local-map>Use \\[previous-history-element] to retrieve previous history items,
  9552. and \\[next-history-element] to retrieve default values.
  9553. \(See info node `Minibuffer History'.)
  9554. \(fn REGEXP &optional FACE)" t nil)
  9555. (defalias 'highlight-regexp 'hi-lock-face-buffer)
  9556. (autoload 'hi-lock-face-buffer "hi-lock" "\
  9557. Set face of each match of REGEXP to FACE.
  9558. Interactively, prompt for REGEXP then FACE. Buffer-local history
  9559. list maintained for regexps, global history maintained for faces.
  9560. \\<minibuffer-local-map>Use \\[previous-history-element] to retrieve previous history items,
  9561. and \\[next-history-element] to retrieve default values.
  9562. \(See info node `Minibuffer History'.)
  9563. \(fn REGEXP &optional FACE)" t nil)
  9564. (defalias 'highlight-phrase 'hi-lock-face-phrase-buffer)
  9565. (autoload 'hi-lock-face-phrase-buffer "hi-lock" "\
  9566. Set face of each match of phrase REGEXP to FACE.
  9567. Whitespace in REGEXP converted to arbitrary whitespace and initial
  9568. lower-case letters made case insensitive.
  9569. \(fn REGEXP &optional FACE)" t nil)
  9570. (defalias 'unhighlight-regexp 'hi-lock-unface-buffer)
  9571. (autoload 'hi-lock-unface-buffer "hi-lock" "\
  9572. Remove highlighting of each match to REGEXP set by hi-lock.
  9573. Interactively, prompt for REGEXP. Buffer-local history of inserted
  9574. regexp's maintained. Will accept only regexps inserted by hi-lock
  9575. interactive functions. (See `hi-lock-interactive-patterns'.)
  9576. \\<minibuffer-local-must-match-map>Use \\[minibuffer-complete] to complete a partially typed regexp.
  9577. \(See info node `Minibuffer History'.)
  9578. \(fn REGEXP)" t nil)
  9579. (autoload 'hi-lock-write-interactive-patterns "hi-lock" "\
  9580. Write interactively added patterns, if any, into buffer at point.
  9581. Interactively added patterns are those normally specified using
  9582. `highlight-regexp' and `highlight-lines-matching-regexp'; they can
  9583. be found in variable `hi-lock-interactive-patterns'.
  9584. \(fn)" t nil)
  9585. ;;;***
  9586. ;;;### (autoloads (hide-ifdef-mode) "hideif" "progmodes/hideif.el"
  9587. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  9588. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/hideif.el
  9589. (autoload 'hide-ifdef-mode "hideif" "\
  9590. Toggle features to hide/show #ifdef blocks (Hide-Ifdef mode).
  9591. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Hide-Ifdef mode if ARG is
  9592. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  9593. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  9594. Hide-Ifdef mode is a buffer-local minor mode for use with C and
  9595. C-like major modes. When enabled, code within #ifdef constructs
  9596. that the C preprocessor would eliminate may be hidden from view.
  9597. Several variables affect how the hiding is done:
  9598. `hide-ifdef-env'
  9599. An association list of defined and undefined symbols for the
  9600. current buffer. Initially, the global value of `hide-ifdef-env'
  9601. is used.
  9602. `hide-ifdef-define-alist'
  9603. An association list of defined symbol lists.
  9604. Use `hide-ifdef-set-define-alist' to save the current `hide-ifdef-env'
  9605. and `hide-ifdef-use-define-alist' to set the current `hide-ifdef-env'
  9606. from one of the lists in `hide-ifdef-define-alist'.
  9607. `hide-ifdef-lines'
  9608. Set to non-nil to not show #if, #ifdef, #ifndef, #else, and
  9609. #endif lines when hiding.
  9610. `hide-ifdef-initially'
  9611. Indicates whether `hide-ifdefs' should be called when Hide-Ifdef mode
  9612. is activated.
  9613. `hide-ifdef-read-only'
  9614. Set to non-nil if you want to make buffers read only while hiding.
  9615. After `show-ifdefs', read-only status is restored to previous value.
  9616. \\{hide-ifdef-mode-map}
  9617. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9618. ;;;***
  9619. ;;;### (autoloads (turn-off-hideshow hs-minor-mode) "hideshow" "progmodes/hideshow.el"
  9620. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  9621. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/hideshow.el
  9622. (defvar hs-special-modes-alist (mapcar 'purecopy '((c-mode "{" "}" "/[*/]" nil nil) (c++-mode "{" "}" "/[*/]" nil nil) (bibtex-mode ("@\\S(*\\(\\s(\\)" 1)) (java-mode "{" "}" "/[*/]" nil nil) (js-mode "{" "}" "/[*/]" nil))) "\
  9623. *Alist for initializing the hideshow variables for different modes.
  9624. Each element has the form
  9625. (MODE START END COMMENT-START FORWARD-SEXP-FUNC ADJUST-BEG-FUNC).
  9626. If non-nil, hideshow will use these values as regexps to define blocks
  9627. and comments, respectively for major mode MODE.
  9628. START, END and COMMENT-START are regular expressions. A block is
  9629. defined as text surrounded by START and END.
  9630. As a special case, START may be a list of the form (COMPLEX-START
  9631. MDATA-SELECTOR), where COMPLEX-START is a regexp w/ multiple parts and
  9632. MDATA-SELECTOR an integer that specifies which sub-match is the proper
  9633. place to adjust point, before calling `hs-forward-sexp-func'. Point
  9634. is adjusted to the beginning of the specified match. For example,
  9635. see the `hs-special-modes-alist' entry for `bibtex-mode'.
  9636. For some major modes, `forward-sexp' does not work properly. In those
  9637. cases, FORWARD-SEXP-FUNC specifies another function to use instead.
  9638. See the documentation for `hs-adjust-block-beginning' to see what is the
  9639. use of ADJUST-BEG-FUNC.
  9640. If any of the elements is left nil or omitted, hideshow tries to guess
  9641. appropriate values. The regexps should not contain leading or trailing
  9642. whitespace. Case does not matter.")
  9643. (autoload 'hs-minor-mode "hideshow" "\
  9644. Minor mode to selectively hide/show code and comment blocks.
  9645. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  9646. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  9647. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  9648. When hideshow minor mode is on, the menu bar is augmented with hideshow
  9649. commands and the hideshow commands are enabled.
  9650. The value '(hs . t) is added to `buffer-invisibility-spec'.
  9651. The main commands are: `hs-hide-all', `hs-show-all', `hs-hide-block',
  9652. `hs-show-block', `hs-hide-level' and `hs-toggle-hiding'. There is also
  9653. `hs-hide-initial-comment-block' and `hs-mouse-toggle-hiding'.
  9654. Turning hideshow minor mode off reverts the menu bar and the
  9655. variables to default values and disables the hideshow commands.
  9656. Lastly, the normal hook `hs-minor-mode-hook' is run using `run-hooks'.
  9657. Key bindings:
  9658. \\{hs-minor-mode-map}
  9659. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9660. (autoload 'turn-off-hideshow "hideshow" "\
  9661. Unconditionally turn off `hs-minor-mode'.
  9662. \(fn)" nil nil)
  9663. ;;;***
  9664. ;;;### (autoloads (global-highlight-changes-mode highlight-compare-with-file
  9665. ;;;;;; highlight-compare-buffers highlight-changes-rotate-faces
  9666. ;;;;;; highlight-changes-previous-change highlight-changes-next-change
  9667. ;;;;;; highlight-changes-remove-highlight highlight-changes-visible-mode
  9668. ;;;;;; highlight-changes-mode) "hilit-chg" "hilit-chg.el" (20352
  9669. ;;;;;; 65510))
  9670. ;;; Generated autoloads from hilit-chg.el
  9671. (autoload 'highlight-changes-mode "hilit-chg" "\
  9672. Toggle highlighting changes in this buffer (Highlight Changes mode).
  9673. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Highlight Changes mode if ARG
  9674. is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp,
  9675. enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  9676. When Highlight Changes is enabled, changes are marked with a text
  9677. property. Normally they are displayed in a distinctive face, but
  9678. command \\[highlight-changes-visible-mode] can be used to toggles
  9679. this on and off.
  9680. Other functions for buffers in this mode include:
  9681. \\[highlight-changes-next-change] - move point to beginning of next change
  9682. \\[highlight-changes-previous-change] - move to beginning of previous change
  9683. \\[highlight-changes-remove-highlight] - remove the change face from the region
  9684. \\[highlight-changes-rotate-faces] - rotate different \"ages\" of changes
  9685. through various faces.
  9686. \\[highlight-compare-with-file] - mark text as changed by comparing this
  9687. buffer with the contents of a file
  9688. \\[highlight-compare-buffers] highlights differences between two buffers.
  9689. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9690. (autoload 'highlight-changes-visible-mode "hilit-chg" "\
  9691. Toggle visibility of highlighting due to Highlight Changes mode.
  9692. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Highlight Changes Visible mode
  9693. if ARG is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from
  9694. Lisp, enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  9695. Highlight Changes Visible mode only has an effect when Highlight
  9696. Changes mode is on. When enabled, the changed text is displayed
  9697. in a distinctive face.
  9698. The default value can be customized with variable
  9699. `highlight-changes-visibility-initial-state'.
  9700. This command does not itself set highlight-changes mode.
  9701. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9702. (autoload 'highlight-changes-remove-highlight "hilit-chg" "\
  9703. Remove the change face from the region between BEG and END.
  9704. This allows you to manually remove highlighting from uninteresting changes.
  9705. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  9706. (autoload 'highlight-changes-next-change "hilit-chg" "\
  9707. Move to the beginning of the next change, if in Highlight Changes mode.
  9708. \(fn)" t nil)
  9709. (autoload 'highlight-changes-previous-change "hilit-chg" "\
  9710. Move to the beginning of the previous change, if in Highlight Changes mode.
  9711. \(fn)" t nil)
  9712. (autoload 'highlight-changes-rotate-faces "hilit-chg" "\
  9713. Rotate the faces if in Highlight Changes mode and the changes are visible.
  9714. Current changes are displayed in the face described by the first element
  9715. of `highlight-changes-face-list', one level older changes are shown in
  9716. face described by the second element, and so on. Very old changes remain
  9717. shown in the last face in the list.
  9718. You can automatically rotate colors when the buffer is saved by adding
  9719. this function to `write-file-functions' as a buffer-local value. To do
  9720. this, eval the following in the buffer to be saved:
  9721. (add-hook 'write-file-functions 'highlight-changes-rotate-faces nil t)
  9722. \(fn)" t nil)
  9723. (autoload 'highlight-compare-buffers "hilit-chg" "\
  9724. Compare two buffers and highlight the differences.
  9725. The default is the current buffer and the one in the next window.
  9726. If either buffer is modified and is visiting a file, you are prompted
  9727. to save the file.
  9728. Unless the buffer is unmodified and visiting a file, the buffer is
  9729. written to a temporary file for comparison.
  9730. If a buffer is read-only, differences will be highlighted but no property
  9731. changes are made, so \\[highlight-changes-next-change] and
  9732. \\[highlight-changes-previous-change] will not work.
  9733. \(fn BUF-A BUF-B)" t nil)
  9734. (autoload 'highlight-compare-with-file "hilit-chg" "\
  9735. Compare this buffer with a file, and highlight differences.
  9736. If the buffer has a backup filename, it is used as the default when
  9737. this function is called interactively.
  9738. If the current buffer is visiting the file being compared against, it
  9739. also will have its differences highlighted. Otherwise, the file is
  9740. read in temporarily but the buffer is deleted.
  9741. If the buffer is read-only, differences will be highlighted but no property
  9742. changes are made, so \\[highlight-changes-next-change] and
  9743. \\[highlight-changes-previous-change] will not work.
  9744. \(fn FILE-B)" t nil)
  9745. (defvar global-highlight-changes-mode nil "\
  9746. Non-nil if Global-Highlight-Changes mode is enabled.
  9747. See the command `global-highlight-changes-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  9748. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  9749. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  9750. or call the function `global-highlight-changes-mode'.")
  9751. (custom-autoload 'global-highlight-changes-mode "hilit-chg" nil)
  9752. (autoload 'global-highlight-changes-mode "hilit-chg" "\
  9753. Toggle Highlight-Changes mode in all buffers.
  9754. With prefix ARG, enable Global-Highlight-Changes mode if ARG is positive;
  9755. otherwise, disable it. If called from Lisp, enable the mode if
  9756. ARG is omitted or nil.
  9757. Highlight-Changes mode is enabled in all buffers where
  9758. `highlight-changes-mode-turn-on' would do it.
  9759. See `highlight-changes-mode' for more information on Highlight-Changes mode.
  9760. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9761. ;;;***
  9762. ;;;### (autoloads (make-hippie-expand-function hippie-expand hippie-expand-only-buffers
  9763. ;;;;;; hippie-expand-ignore-buffers hippie-expand-max-buffers hippie-expand-no-restriction
  9764. ;;;;;; hippie-expand-dabbrev-as-symbol hippie-expand-dabbrev-skip-space
  9765. ;;;;;; hippie-expand-verbose hippie-expand-try-functions-list) "hippie-exp"
  9766. ;;;;;; "hippie-exp.el" (20352 65510))
  9767. ;;; Generated autoloads from hippie-exp.el
  9768. (defvar hippie-expand-try-functions-list '(try-complete-file-name-partially try-complete-file-name try-expand-all-abbrevs try-expand-list try-expand-line try-expand-dabbrev try-expand-dabbrev-all-buffers try-expand-dabbrev-from-kill try-complete-lisp-symbol-partially try-complete-lisp-symbol) "\
  9769. The list of expansion functions tried in order by `hippie-expand'.
  9770. To change the behavior of `hippie-expand', remove, change the order of,
  9771. or insert functions in this list.")
  9772. (custom-autoload 'hippie-expand-try-functions-list "hippie-exp" t)
  9773. (defvar hippie-expand-verbose t "\
  9774. Non-nil makes `hippie-expand' output which function it is trying.")
  9775. (custom-autoload 'hippie-expand-verbose "hippie-exp" t)
  9776. (defvar hippie-expand-dabbrev-skip-space nil "\
  9777. Non-nil means tolerate trailing spaces in the abbreviation to expand.")
  9778. (custom-autoload 'hippie-expand-dabbrev-skip-space "hippie-exp" t)
  9779. (defvar hippie-expand-dabbrev-as-symbol t "\
  9780. Non-nil means expand as symbols, i.e. syntax `_' is considered a letter.")
  9781. (custom-autoload 'hippie-expand-dabbrev-as-symbol "hippie-exp" t)
  9782. (defvar hippie-expand-no-restriction t "\
  9783. Non-nil means that narrowed buffers are widened during search.")
  9784. (custom-autoload 'hippie-expand-no-restriction "hippie-exp" t)
  9785. (defvar hippie-expand-max-buffers nil "\
  9786. The maximum number of buffers (apart from the current) searched.
  9787. If nil, all buffers are searched.")
  9788. (custom-autoload 'hippie-expand-max-buffers "hippie-exp" t)
  9789. (defvar hippie-expand-ignore-buffers (list (purecopy "^ \\*.*\\*$") 'dired-mode) "\
  9790. A list specifying which buffers not to search (if not current).
  9791. Can contain both regexps matching buffer names (as strings) and major modes
  9792. \(as atoms)")
  9793. (custom-autoload 'hippie-expand-ignore-buffers "hippie-exp" t)
  9794. (defvar hippie-expand-only-buffers nil "\
  9795. A list specifying the only buffers to search (in addition to current).
  9796. Can contain both regexps matching buffer names (as strings) and major modes
  9797. \(as atoms). If non-nil, this variable overrides the variable
  9798. `hippie-expand-ignore-buffers'.")
  9799. (custom-autoload 'hippie-expand-only-buffers "hippie-exp" t)
  9800. (autoload 'hippie-expand "hippie-exp" "\
  9801. Try to expand text before point, using multiple methods.
  9802. The expansion functions in `hippie-expand-try-functions-list' are
  9803. tried in order, until a possible expansion is found. Repeated
  9804. application of `hippie-expand' inserts successively possible
  9805. expansions.
  9806. With a positive numeric argument, jumps directly to the ARG next
  9807. function in this list. With a negative argument or just \\[universal-argument],
  9808. undoes the expansion.
  9809. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  9810. (autoload 'make-hippie-expand-function "hippie-exp" "\
  9811. Construct a function similar to `hippie-expand'.
  9812. Make it use the expansion functions in TRY-LIST. An optional second
  9813. argument VERBOSE non-nil makes the function verbose.
  9814. \(fn TRY-LIST &optional VERBOSE)" nil (quote macro))
  9815. ;;;***
  9816. ;;;### (autoloads (global-hl-line-mode hl-line-mode) "hl-line" "hl-line.el"
  9817. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  9818. ;;; Generated autoloads from hl-line.el
  9819. (autoload 'hl-line-mode "hl-line" "\
  9820. Toggle highlighting of the current line (Hl-Line mode).
  9821. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Hl-Line mode if ARG is
  9822. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  9823. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  9824. Hl-Line mode is a buffer-local minor mode. If
  9825. `hl-line-sticky-flag' is non-nil, Hl-Line mode highlights the
  9826. line about the buffer's point in all windows. Caveat: the
  9827. buffer's point might be different from the point of a
  9828. non-selected window. Hl-Line mode uses the function
  9829. `hl-line-highlight' on `post-command-hook' in this case.
  9830. When `hl-line-sticky-flag' is nil, Hl-Line mode highlights the
  9831. line about point in the selected window only. In this case, it
  9832. uses the function `hl-line-unhighlight' on `pre-command-hook' in
  9833. addition to `hl-line-highlight' on `post-command-hook'.
  9834. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9835. (defvar global-hl-line-mode nil "\
  9836. Non-nil if Global-Hl-Line mode is enabled.
  9837. See the command `global-hl-line-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  9838. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  9839. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  9840. or call the function `global-hl-line-mode'.")
  9841. (custom-autoload 'global-hl-line-mode "hl-line" nil)
  9842. (autoload 'global-hl-line-mode "hl-line" "\
  9843. Toggle line highlighting in all buffers (Global Hl-Line mode).
  9844. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Global Hl-Line mode if ARG is
  9845. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  9846. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  9847. If `global-hl-line-sticky-flag' is non-nil, Global Hl-Line mode
  9848. highlights the line about the current buffer's point in all
  9849. windows.
  9850. Global-Hl-Line mode uses the functions `global-hl-line-unhighlight' and
  9851. `global-hl-line-highlight' on `pre-command-hook' and `post-command-hook'.
  9852. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9853. ;;;***
  9854. ;;;### (autoloads (list-holidays holidays holiday-solar-holidays
  9855. ;;;;;; holiday-bahai-holidays holiday-islamic-holidays holiday-christian-holidays
  9856. ;;;;;; holiday-hebrew-holidays holiday-other-holidays holiday-local-holidays
  9857. ;;;;;; holiday-oriental-holidays holiday-general-holidays) "holidays"
  9858. ;;;;;; "calendar/holidays.el" (20400 62402))
  9859. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/holidays.el
  9860. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'general-holidays 'holiday-general-holidays "23.1")
  9861. (defvar holiday-general-holidays (mapcar 'purecopy '((holiday-fixed 1 1 "New Year's Day") (holiday-float 1 1 3 "Martin Luther King Day") (holiday-fixed 2 2 "Groundhog Day") (holiday-fixed 2 14 "Valentine's Day") (holiday-float 2 1 3 "President's Day") (holiday-fixed 3 17 "St. Patrick's Day") (holiday-fixed 4 1 "April Fools' Day") (holiday-float 5 0 2 "Mother's Day") (holiday-float 5 1 -1 "Memorial Day") (holiday-fixed 6 14 "Flag Day") (holiday-float 6 0 3 "Father's Day") (holiday-fixed 7 4 "Independence Day") (holiday-float 9 1 1 "Labor Day") (holiday-float 10 1 2 "Columbus Day") (holiday-fixed 10 31 "Halloween") (holiday-fixed 11 11 "Veteran's Day") (holiday-float 11 4 4 "Thanksgiving"))) "\
  9862. General holidays. Default value is for the United States.
  9863. See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
  9864. (custom-autoload 'holiday-general-holidays "holidays" t)
  9865. (put 'holiday-general-holidays 'risky-local-variable t)
  9866. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'oriental-holidays 'holiday-oriental-holidays "23.1")
  9867. (defvar holiday-oriental-holidays (mapcar 'purecopy '((holiday-chinese-new-year) (if calendar-chinese-all-holidays-flag (append (holiday-chinese 1 15 "Lantern Festival") (holiday-chinese-qingming) (holiday-chinese 5 5 "Dragon Boat Festival") (holiday-chinese 7 7 "Double Seventh Festival") (holiday-chinese 8 15 "Mid-Autumn Festival") (holiday-chinese 9 9 "Double Ninth Festival") (holiday-chinese-winter-solstice))))) "\
  9868. Oriental holidays.
  9869. See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
  9870. (custom-autoload 'holiday-oriental-holidays "holidays" t)
  9871. (put 'holiday-oriental-holidays 'risky-local-variable t)
  9872. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'local-holidays 'holiday-local-holidays "23.1")
  9873. (defvar holiday-local-holidays nil "\
  9874. Local holidays.
  9875. See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
  9876. (custom-autoload 'holiday-local-holidays "holidays" t)
  9877. (put 'holiday-local-holidays 'risky-local-variable t)
  9878. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'other-holidays 'holiday-other-holidays "23.1")
  9879. (defvar holiday-other-holidays nil "\
  9880. User defined holidays.
  9881. See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
  9882. (custom-autoload 'holiday-other-holidays "holidays" t)
  9883. (put 'holiday-other-holidays 'risky-local-variable t)
  9884. (defvar hebrew-holidays-1 (mapcar 'purecopy '((holiday-hebrew-rosh-hashanah) (if calendar-hebrew-all-holidays-flag (holiday-julian 11 (let ((m displayed-month) (y displayed-year) year) (calendar-increment-month m y -1) (setq year (calendar-extract-year (calendar-julian-from-absolute (calendar-absolute-from-gregorian (list m 1 y))))) (if (zerop (% (1+ year) 4)) 22 21)) "\"Tal Umatar\" (evening)")))) "\
  9885. Component of the old default value of `holiday-hebrew-holidays'.")
  9886. (put 'hebrew-holidays-1 'risky-local-variable t)
  9887. (defvar hebrew-holidays-2 (mapcar 'purecopy '((holiday-hebrew-hanukkah) (if calendar-hebrew-all-holidays-flag (holiday-hebrew 10 (let ((h-year (calendar-extract-year (calendar-hebrew-from-absolute (calendar-absolute-from-gregorian (list displayed-month 28 displayed-year)))))) (if (= 6 (% (calendar-hebrew-to-absolute (list 10 10 h-year)) 7)) 11 10)) "Tzom Teveth")) (if calendar-hebrew-all-holidays-flag (holiday-hebrew 11 15 "Tu B'Shevat")))) "\
  9888. Component of the old default value of `holiday-hebrew-holidays'.")
  9889. (put 'hebrew-holidays-2 'risky-local-variable t)
  9890. (defvar hebrew-holidays-3 (mapcar 'purecopy '((if calendar-hebrew-all-holidays-flag (holiday-hebrew 11 (let* ((m displayed-month) (y displayed-year) (h-year (progn (calendar-increment-month m y 1) (calendar-extract-year (calendar-hebrew-from-absolute (calendar-absolute-from-gregorian (list m (calendar-last-day-of-month m y) y)))))) (s-s (calendar-hebrew-from-absolute (if (= 6 (% (calendar-hebrew-to-absolute (list 7 1 h-year)) 7)) (calendar-dayname-on-or-before 6 (calendar-hebrew-to-absolute (list 11 17 h-year))) (calendar-dayname-on-or-before 6 (calendar-hebrew-to-absolute (list 11 16 h-year)))))) (day (calendar-extract-day s-s))) day) "Shabbat Shirah")))) "\
  9891. Component of the old default value of `holiday-hebrew-holidays'.")
  9892. (put 'hebrew-holidays-3 'risky-local-variable t)
  9893. (defvar hebrew-holidays-4 (mapcar 'purecopy '((holiday-hebrew-passover) (and calendar-hebrew-all-holidays-flag (let* ((m displayed-month) (y displayed-year) (year (progn (calendar-increment-month m y -1) (calendar-extract-year (calendar-julian-from-absolute (calendar-absolute-from-gregorian (list m 1 y))))))) (= 21 (% year 28))) (holiday-julian 3 26 "Kiddush HaHamah")) (if calendar-hebrew-all-holidays-flag (holiday-hebrew-tisha-b-av)))) "\
  9894. Component of the old default value of `holiday-hebrew-holidays'.")
  9895. (put 'hebrew-holidays-4 'risky-local-variable t)
  9896. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'hebrew-holidays 'holiday-hebrew-holidays "23.1")
  9897. (defvar holiday-hebrew-holidays (mapcar 'purecopy '((holiday-hebrew-passover) (holiday-hebrew-rosh-hashanah) (holiday-hebrew-hanukkah) (if calendar-hebrew-all-holidays-flag (append (holiday-hebrew-tisha-b-av) (holiday-hebrew-misc))))) "\
  9898. Jewish holidays.
  9899. See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
  9900. (custom-autoload 'holiday-hebrew-holidays "holidays" t)
  9901. (put 'holiday-hebrew-holidays 'risky-local-variable t)
  9902. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'christian-holidays 'holiday-christian-holidays "23.1")
  9903. (defvar holiday-christian-holidays (mapcar 'purecopy '((holiday-easter-etc) (holiday-fixed 12 25 "Christmas") (if calendar-christian-all-holidays-flag (append (holiday-fixed 1 6 "Epiphany") (holiday-julian 12 25 "Eastern Orthodox Christmas") (holiday-greek-orthodox-easter) (holiday-fixed 8 15 "Assumption") (holiday-advent 0 "Advent"))))) "\
  9904. Christian holidays.
  9905. See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
  9906. (custom-autoload 'holiday-christian-holidays "holidays" t)
  9907. (put 'holiday-christian-holidays 'risky-local-variable t)
  9908. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'islamic-holidays 'holiday-islamic-holidays "23.1")
  9909. (defvar holiday-islamic-holidays (mapcar 'purecopy '((holiday-islamic-new-year) (holiday-islamic 9 1 "Ramadan Begins") (if calendar-islamic-all-holidays-flag (append (holiday-islamic 1 10 "Ashura") (holiday-islamic 3 12 "Mulad-al-Nabi") (holiday-islamic 7 26 "Shab-e-Mi'raj") (holiday-islamic 8 15 "Shab-e-Bara't") (holiday-islamic 9 27 "Shab-e Qadr") (holiday-islamic 10 1 "Id-al-Fitr") (holiday-islamic 12 10 "Id-al-Adha"))))) "\
  9910. Islamic holidays.
  9911. See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
  9912. (custom-autoload 'holiday-islamic-holidays "holidays" t)
  9913. (put 'holiday-islamic-holidays 'risky-local-variable t)
  9914. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'bahai-holidays 'holiday-bahai-holidays "23.1")
  9915. (defvar holiday-bahai-holidays (mapcar 'purecopy '((holiday-bahai-new-year) (holiday-bahai-ridvan) (holiday-fixed 5 23 "Declaration of the Báb") (holiday-fixed 5 29 "Ascension of Bahá'u'lláh") (holiday-fixed 7 9 "Martyrdom of the Báb") (holiday-fixed 10 20 "Birth of the Báb") (holiday-fixed 11 12 "Birth of Bahá'u'lláh") (if calendar-bahai-all-holidays-flag (append (holiday-fixed 11 26 "Day of the Covenant") (holiday-fixed 11 28 "Ascension of `Abdu'l-Bahá"))))) "\
  9916. Bahá'í holidays.
  9917. See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
  9918. (custom-autoload 'holiday-bahai-holidays "holidays" t)
  9919. (put 'holiday-bahai-holidays 'risky-local-variable t)
  9920. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'solar-holidays 'holiday-solar-holidays "23.1")
  9921. (defvar holiday-solar-holidays (mapcar 'purecopy '((solar-equinoxes-solstices) (holiday-sexp calendar-daylight-savings-starts (format "Daylight Saving Time Begins %s" (solar-time-string (/ calendar-daylight-savings-starts-time (float 60)) calendar-standard-time-zone-name))) (holiday-sexp calendar-daylight-savings-ends (format "Daylight Saving Time Ends %s" (solar-time-string (/ calendar-daylight-savings-ends-time (float 60)) calendar-daylight-time-zone-name))))) "\
  9922. Sun-related holidays.
  9923. See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
  9924. (custom-autoload 'holiday-solar-holidays "holidays" t)
  9925. (put 'holiday-solar-holidays 'risky-local-variable t)
  9926. (put 'calendar-holidays 'risky-local-variable t)
  9927. (autoload 'holidays "holidays" "\
  9928. Display the holidays for last month, this month, and next month.
  9929. If called with an optional prefix argument ARG, prompts for month and year.
  9930. This function is suitable for execution in a .emacs file.
  9931. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  9932. (autoload 'list-holidays "holidays" "\
  9933. Display holidays for years Y1 to Y2 (inclusive).
  9934. Y2 defaults to Y1. The optional list of holidays L defaults to
  9935. `calendar-holidays'. If you want to control what holidays are
  9936. displayed, use a different list. For example,
  9937. (list-holidays 2006 2006
  9938. (append holiday-general-holidays holiday-local-holidays))
  9939. will display holidays for the year 2006 defined in the two
  9940. mentioned lists, and nothing else.
  9941. When called interactively, this command offers a choice of
  9942. holidays, based on the variables `holiday-solar-holidays' etc. See the
  9943. documentation of `calendar-holidays' for a list of the variables
  9944. that control the choices, as well as a description of the format
  9945. of a holiday list.
  9946. The optional LABEL is used to label the buffer created.
  9947. \(fn Y1 &optional Y2 L LABEL)" t nil)
  9948. (defalias 'holiday-list 'list-holidays)
  9949. ;;;***
  9950. ;;;### (autoloads (html2text) "html2text" "gnus/html2text.el" (20352
  9951. ;;;;;; 65510))
  9952. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/html2text.el
  9953. (autoload 'html2text "html2text" "\
  9954. Convert HTML to plain text in the current buffer.
  9955. \(fn)" t nil)
  9956. ;;;***
  9957. ;;;### (autoloads (htmlfontify-copy-and-link-dir htmlfontify-buffer)
  9958. ;;;;;; "htmlfontify" "htmlfontify.el" (20352 65510))
  9959. ;;; Generated autoloads from htmlfontify.el
  9960. (autoload 'htmlfontify-buffer "htmlfontify" "\
  9961. Create a new buffer, named for the current buffer + a .html extension,
  9962. containing an inline CSS-stylesheet and formatted CSS-markup HTML
  9963. that reproduces the look of the current Emacs buffer as closely
  9964. as possible.
  9965. Dangerous characters in the existing buffer are turned into HTML
  9966. entities, so you should even be able to do HTML-within-HTML
  9967. fontified display.
  9968. You should, however, note that random control or eight-bit
  9969. characters such as ^L ( ) or ¤ (\244) won't get mapped yet.
  9970. If the SRCDIR and FILE arguments are set, lookup etags derived
  9971. entries in the `hfy-tags-cache' and add HTML anchors and
  9972. hyperlinks as appropriate.
  9973. \(fn &optional SRCDIR FILE)" t nil)
  9974. (autoload 'htmlfontify-copy-and-link-dir "htmlfontify" "\
  9975. Trawl SRCDIR and write fontified-and-hyperlinked output in DSTDIR.
  9976. F-EXT and L-EXT specify values for `hfy-extn' and `hfy-link-extn'.
  9977. You may also want to set `hfy-page-header' and `hfy-page-footer'.
  9978. \(fn SRCDIR DSTDIR &optional F-EXT L-EXT)" t nil)
  9979. ;;;***
  9980. ;;;### (autoloads (define-ibuffer-filter define-ibuffer-op define-ibuffer-sorter
  9981. ;;;;;; define-ibuffer-column) "ibuf-macs" "ibuf-macs.el" (20352
  9982. ;;;;;; 65510))
  9983. ;;; Generated autoloads from ibuf-macs.el
  9984. (autoload 'define-ibuffer-column "ibuf-macs" "\
  9985. Define a column SYMBOL for use with `ibuffer-formats'.
  9986. BODY will be called with `buffer' bound to the buffer object, and
  9987. `mark' bound to the current mark on the buffer. The original ibuffer
  9988. buffer will be bound to `ibuffer-buf'.
  9989. If NAME is given, it will be used as a title for the column.
  9990. Otherwise, the title will default to a capitalized version of the
  9991. SYMBOL's name. PROPS is a plist of additional properties to add to
  9992. the text, such as `mouse-face'. And SUMMARIZER, if given, is a
  9993. function which will be passed a list of all the strings in its column;
  9994. it should return a string to display at the bottom.
  9995. If HEADER-MOUSE-MAP is given, it will be used as a keymap for the
  9996. title of the column.
  9997. Note that this macro expands into a `defun' for a function named
  9998. ibuffer-make-column-NAME. If INLINE is non-nil, then the form will be
  9999. inlined into the compiled format versions. This means that if you
  10000. change its definition, you should explicitly call
  10001. `ibuffer-recompile-formats'.
  10002. \(fn SYMBOL (&key NAME INLINE PROPS SUMMARIZER) &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  10003. (put 'define-ibuffer-column 'lisp-indent-function 'defun)
  10004. (autoload 'define-ibuffer-sorter "ibuf-macs" "\
  10005. Define a method of sorting named NAME.
  10006. DOCUMENTATION is the documentation of the function, which will be called
  10007. `ibuffer-do-sort-by-NAME'.
  10008. DESCRIPTION is a short string describing the sorting method.
  10009. For sorting, the forms in BODY will be evaluated with `a' bound to one
  10010. buffer object, and `b' bound to another. BODY should return a non-nil
  10011. value if and only if `a' is \"less than\" `b'.
  10012. \(fn NAME DOCUMENTATION (&key DESCRIPTION) &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  10013. (put 'define-ibuffer-sorter 'lisp-indent-function '1)
  10014. (autoload 'define-ibuffer-op "ibuf-macs" "\
  10015. Generate a function which operates on a buffer.
  10016. OP becomes the name of the function; if it doesn't begin with
  10017. `ibuffer-do-', then that is prepended to it.
  10018. When an operation is performed, this function will be called once for
  10019. each marked buffer, with that buffer current.
  10020. ARGS becomes the formal parameters of the function.
  10021. DOCUMENTATION becomes the docstring of the function.
  10022. INTERACTIVE becomes the interactive specification of the function.
  10023. MARK describes which type of mark (:deletion, or nil) this operation
  10024. uses. :deletion means the function operates on buffers marked for
  10025. deletion, otherwise it acts on normally marked buffers.
  10026. MODIFIER-P describes how the function modifies buffers. This is used
  10027. to set the modification flag of the Ibuffer buffer itself. Valid
  10028. values are:
  10029. nil - the function never modifiers buffers
  10030. t - the function it always modifies buffers
  10031. :maybe - attempt to discover this information by comparing the
  10032. buffer's modification flag.
  10033. DANGEROUS is a boolean which should be set if the user should be
  10034. prompted before performing this operation.
  10035. OPSTRING is a string which will be displayed to the user after the
  10036. operation is complete, in the form:
  10037. \"Operation complete; OPSTRING x buffers\"
  10038. ACTIVE-OPSTRING is a string which will be displayed to the user in a
  10039. confirmation message, in the form:
  10040. \"Really ACTIVE-OPSTRING x buffers?\"
  10041. COMPLEX means this function is special; see the source code of this
  10042. macro for exactly what it does.
  10043. \(fn OP ARGS DOCUMENTATION (&key INTERACTIVE MARK MODIFIER-P DANGEROUS OPSTRING ACTIVE-OPSTRING COMPLEX) &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  10044. (put 'define-ibuffer-op 'lisp-indent-function '2)
  10045. (autoload 'define-ibuffer-filter "ibuf-macs" "\
  10046. Define a filter named NAME.
  10047. DOCUMENTATION is the documentation of the function.
  10048. READER is a form which should read a qualifier from the user.
  10049. DESCRIPTION is a short string describing the filter.
  10050. BODY should contain forms which will be evaluated to test whether or
  10051. not a particular buffer should be displayed or not. The forms in BODY
  10052. will be evaluated with BUF bound to the buffer object, and QUALIFIER
  10053. bound to the current value of the filter.
  10054. \(fn NAME DOCUMENTATION (&key READER DESCRIPTION) &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  10055. (put 'define-ibuffer-filter 'lisp-indent-function '2)
  10056. ;;;***
  10057. ;;;### (autoloads (ibuffer ibuffer-other-window ibuffer-list-buffers)
  10058. ;;;;;; "ibuffer" "ibuffer.el" (20461 49352))
  10059. ;;; Generated autoloads from ibuffer.el
  10060. (autoload 'ibuffer-list-buffers "ibuffer" "\
  10061. Display a list of buffers, in another window.
  10062. If optional argument FILES-ONLY is non-nil, then add a filter for
  10063. buffers which are visiting a file.
  10064. \(fn &optional FILES-ONLY)" t nil)
  10065. (autoload 'ibuffer-other-window "ibuffer" "\
  10066. Like `ibuffer', but displayed in another window by default.
  10067. If optional argument FILES-ONLY is non-nil, then add a filter for
  10068. buffers which are visiting a file.
  10069. \(fn &optional FILES-ONLY)" t nil)
  10070. (autoload 'ibuffer "ibuffer" "\
  10071. Begin using Ibuffer to edit a list of buffers.
  10072. Type 'h' after entering ibuffer for more information.
  10073. All arguments are optional.
  10074. OTHER-WINDOW-P says to use another window.
  10075. NAME specifies the name of the buffer (defaults to \"*Ibuffer*\").
  10076. QUALIFIERS is an initial set of filtering qualifiers to use;
  10077. see `ibuffer-filtering-qualifiers'.
  10078. NOSELECT means don't select the Ibuffer buffer.
  10079. SHRINK means shrink the buffer to minimal size. The special
  10080. value `onewindow' means always use another window.
  10081. FILTER-GROUPS is an initial set of filtering groups to use;
  10082. see `ibuffer-filter-groups'.
  10083. FORMATS is the value to use for `ibuffer-formats'.
  10084. If specified, then the variable `ibuffer-formats' will have
  10085. that value locally in this buffer.
  10086. \(fn &optional OTHER-WINDOW-P NAME QUALIFIERS NOSELECT SHRINK FILTER-GROUPS FORMATS)" t nil)
  10087. ;;;***
  10088. ;;;### (autoloads (icalendar-import-buffer icalendar-import-file
  10089. ;;;;;; icalendar-export-region icalendar-export-file) "icalendar"
  10090. ;;;;;; "calendar/icalendar.el" (20352 65510))
  10091. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/icalendar.el
  10092. (autoload 'icalendar-export-file "icalendar" "\
  10093. Export diary file to iCalendar format.
  10094. All diary entries in the file DIARY-FILENAME are converted to iCalendar
  10095. format. The result is appended to the file ICAL-FILENAME.
  10096. \(fn DIARY-FILENAME ICAL-FILENAME)" t nil)
  10097. (autoload 'icalendar-export-region "icalendar" "\
  10098. Export region in diary file to iCalendar format.
  10099. All diary entries in the region from MIN to MAX in the current buffer are
  10100. converted to iCalendar format. The result is appended to the file
  10101. ICAL-FILENAME.
  10102. This function attempts to return t if something goes wrong. In this
  10103. case an error string which describes all the errors and problems is
  10104. written into the buffer `*icalendar-errors*'.
  10105. \(fn MIN MAX ICAL-FILENAME)" t nil)
  10106. (autoload 'icalendar-import-file "icalendar" "\
  10107. Import an iCalendar file and append to a diary file.
  10108. Argument ICAL-FILENAME output iCalendar file.
  10109. Argument DIARY-FILENAME input `diary-file'.
  10110. Optional argument NON-MARKING determines whether events are created as
  10111. non-marking or not.
  10112. \(fn ICAL-FILENAME DIARY-FILENAME &optional NON-MARKING)" t nil)
  10113. (autoload 'icalendar-import-buffer "icalendar" "\
  10114. Extract iCalendar events from current buffer.
  10115. This function searches the current buffer for the first iCalendar
  10116. object, reads it and adds all VEVENT elements to the diary
  10117. DIARY-FILE.
  10118. It will ask for each appointment whether to add it to the diary
  10119. unless DO-NOT-ASK is non-nil. When called interactively,
  10120. DO-NOT-ASK is nil, so that you are asked for each event.
  10121. NON-MARKING determines whether diary events are created as
  10122. non-marking.
  10123. Return code t means that importing worked well, return code nil
  10124. means that an error has occurred. Error messages will be in the
  10125. buffer `*icalendar-errors*'.
  10126. \(fn &optional DIARY-FILE DO-NOT-ASK NON-MARKING)" t nil)
  10127. ;;;***
  10128. ;;;### (autoloads (icomplete-mode) "icomplete" "icomplete.el" (20352
  10129. ;;;;;; 65510))
  10130. ;;; Generated autoloads from icomplete.el
  10131. (defvar icomplete-mode nil "\
  10132. Non-nil if Icomplete mode is enabled.
  10133. See the command `icomplete-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  10134. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  10135. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  10136. or call the function `icomplete-mode'.")
  10137. (custom-autoload 'icomplete-mode "icomplete" nil)
  10138. (autoload 'icomplete-mode "icomplete" "\
  10139. Toggle incremental minibuffer completion (Icomplete mode).
  10140. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Icomplete mode if ARG is
  10141. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  10142. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  10143. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  10144. ;;;***
  10145. ;;;### (autoloads (icon-mode) "icon" "progmodes/icon.el" (20400 62402))
  10146. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/icon.el
  10147. (autoload 'icon-mode "icon" "\
  10148. Major mode for editing Icon code.
  10149. Expression and list commands understand all Icon brackets.
  10150. Tab indents for Icon code.
  10151. Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
  10152. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  10153. \\{icon-mode-map}
  10154. Variables controlling indentation style:
  10155. icon-tab-always-indent
  10156. Non-nil means TAB in Icon mode should always reindent the current line,
  10157. regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
  10158. icon-auto-newline
  10159. Non-nil means automatically newline before and after braces
  10160. inserted in Icon code.
  10161. icon-indent-level
  10162. Indentation of Icon statements within surrounding block.
  10163. The surrounding block's indentation is the indentation
  10164. of the line on which the open-brace appears.
  10165. icon-continued-statement-offset
  10166. Extra indentation given to a substatement, such as the
  10167. then-clause of an if or body of a while.
  10168. icon-continued-brace-offset
  10169. Extra indentation given to a brace that starts a substatement.
  10170. This is in addition to `icon-continued-statement-offset'.
  10171. icon-brace-offset
  10172. Extra indentation for line if it starts with an open brace.
  10173. icon-brace-imaginary-offset
  10174. An open brace following other text is treated as if it were
  10175. this far to the right of the start of its line.
  10176. Turning on Icon mode calls the value of the variable `icon-mode-hook'
  10177. with no args, if that value is non-nil.
  10178. \(fn)" t nil)
  10179. ;;;***
  10180. ;;;### (autoloads (idlwave-shell) "idlw-shell" "progmodes/idlw-shell.el"
  10181. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  10182. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/idlw-shell.el
  10183. (autoload 'idlwave-shell "idlw-shell" "\
  10184. Run an inferior IDL, with I/O through buffer `(idlwave-shell-buffer)'.
  10185. If buffer exists but shell process is not running, start new IDL.
  10186. If buffer exists and shell process is running, just switch to the buffer.
  10187. When called with a prefix ARG, or when `idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame'
  10188. is non-nil, the shell buffer and the source buffers will be in
  10189. separate frames.
  10190. The command to run comes from variable `idlwave-shell-explicit-file-name',
  10191. with options taken from `idlwave-shell-command-line-options'.
  10192. The buffer is put in `idlwave-shell-mode', providing commands for sending
  10193. input and controlling the IDL job. See help on `idlwave-shell-mode'.
  10194. See also the variable `idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern'.
  10195. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the shell buffer for a list of commands.)
  10196. \(fn &optional ARG QUICK)" t nil)
  10197. ;;;***
  10198. ;;;### (autoloads (idlwave-mode) "idlwave" "progmodes/idlwave.el"
  10199. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  10200. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/idlwave.el
  10201. (autoload 'idlwave-mode "idlwave" "\
  10202. Major mode for editing IDL source files (version 6.1_em22).
  10203. The main features of this mode are
  10204. 1. Indentation and Formatting
  10205. --------------------------
  10206. Like other Emacs programming modes, C-j inserts a newline and indents.
  10207. TAB is used for explicit indentation of the current line.
  10208. To start a continuation line, use \\[idlwave-split-line]. This
  10209. function can also be used in the middle of a line to split the line
  10210. at that point. When used inside a long constant string, the string
  10211. is split at that point with the `+' concatenation operator.
  10212. Comments are indented as follows:
  10213. `;;;' Indentation remains unchanged.
  10214. `;;' Indent like the surrounding code
  10215. `;' Indent to a minimum column.
  10216. The indentation of comments starting in column 0 is never changed.
  10217. Use \\[idlwave-fill-paragraph] to refill a paragraph inside a
  10218. comment. The indentation of the second line of the paragraph
  10219. relative to the first will be retained. Use
  10220. \\[idlwave-auto-fill-mode] to toggle auto-fill mode for these
  10221. comments. When the variable `idlwave-fill-comment-line-only' is
  10222. nil, code can also be auto-filled and auto-indented.
  10223. To convert pre-existing IDL code to your formatting style, mark the
  10224. entire buffer with \\[mark-whole-buffer] and execute
  10225. \\[idlwave-expand-region-abbrevs]. Then mark the entire buffer
  10226. again followed by \\[indent-region] (`indent-region').
  10227. 2. Routine Info
  10228. ------------
  10229. IDLWAVE displays information about the calling sequence and the
  10230. accepted keyword parameters of a procedure or function with
  10231. \\[idlwave-routine-info]. \\[idlwave-find-module] jumps to the
  10232. source file of a module. These commands know about system
  10233. routines, all routines in idlwave-mode buffers and (when the
  10234. idlwave-shell is active) about all modules currently compiled under
  10235. this shell. It also makes use of pre-compiled or custom-scanned
  10236. user and library catalogs many popular libraries ship with by
  10237. default. Use \\[idlwave-update-routine-info] to update this
  10238. information, which is also used for completion (see item 4).
  10239. 3. Online IDL Help
  10240. ---------------
  10241. \\[idlwave-context-help] displays the IDL documentation relevant
  10242. for the system variable, keyword, or routines at point. A single
  10243. key stroke gets you directly to the right place in the docs. See
  10244. the manual to configure where and how the HTML help is displayed.
  10245. 4. Completion
  10246. ----------
  10247. \\[idlwave-complete] completes the names of procedures, functions
  10248. class names, keyword parameters, system variables and tags, class
  10249. tags, structure tags, filenames and much more. It is context
  10250. sensitive and figures out what is expected at point. Lower case
  10251. strings are completed in lower case, other strings in mixed or
  10252. upper case.
  10253. 5. Code Templates and Abbreviations
  10254. --------------------------------
  10255. Many Abbreviations are predefined to expand to code fragments and templates.
  10256. The abbreviations start generally with a `\\`. Some examples:
  10257. \\pr PROCEDURE template
  10258. \\fu FUNCTION template
  10259. \\c CASE statement template
  10260. \\sw SWITCH statement template
  10261. \\f FOR loop template
  10262. \\r REPEAT Loop template
  10263. \\w WHILE loop template
  10264. \\i IF statement template
  10265. \\elif IF-ELSE statement template
  10266. \\b BEGIN
  10267. For a full list, use \\[idlwave-list-abbrevs]. Some templates also
  10268. have direct keybindings - see the list of keybindings below.
  10269. \\[idlwave-doc-header] inserts a documentation header at the
  10270. beginning of the current program unit (pro, function or main).
  10271. Change log entries can be added to the current program unit with
  10272. \\[idlwave-doc-modification].
  10273. 6. Automatic Case Conversion
  10274. -------------------------
  10275. The case of reserved words and some abbrevs is controlled by
  10276. `idlwave-reserved-word-upcase' and `idlwave-abbrev-change-case'.
  10277. 7. Automatic END completion
  10278. ------------------------
  10279. If the variable `idlwave-expand-generic-end' is non-nil, each END typed
  10280. will be converted to the specific version, like ENDIF, ENDFOR, etc.
  10281. 8. Hooks
  10282. -----
  10283. Loading idlwave.el runs `idlwave-load-hook'.
  10284. Turning on `idlwave-mode' runs `idlwave-mode-hook'.
  10285. 9. Documentation and Customization
  10286. -------------------------------
  10287. Info documentation for this package is available. Use
  10288. \\[idlwave-info] to display (complain to your sysadmin if that does
  10289. not work). For Postscript, PDF, and HTML versions of the
  10290. documentation, check IDLWAVE's homepage at URL `http://idlwave.org'.
  10291. IDLWAVE has customize support - see the group `idlwave'.
  10292. 10.Keybindings
  10293. -----------
  10294. Here is a list of all keybindings of this mode.
  10295. If some of the key bindings below show with ??, use \\[describe-key]
  10296. followed by the key sequence to see what the key sequence does.
  10297. \\{idlwave-mode-map}
  10298. \(fn)" t nil)
  10299. ;;;***
  10300. ;;;### (autoloads (ido-completing-read ido-read-directory-name ido-read-file-name
  10301. ;;;;;; ido-read-buffer ido-dired ido-insert-file ido-write-file
  10302. ;;;;;; ido-find-file-other-frame ido-display-file ido-find-file-read-only-other-frame
  10303. ;;;;;; ido-find-file-read-only-other-window ido-find-file-read-only
  10304. ;;;;;; ido-find-alternate-file ido-find-file-other-window ido-find-file
  10305. ;;;;;; ido-find-file-in-dir ido-switch-buffer-other-frame ido-insert-buffer
  10306. ;;;;;; ido-kill-buffer ido-display-buffer ido-switch-buffer-other-window
  10307. ;;;;;; ido-switch-buffer ido-mode ido-mode) "ido" "ido.el" (20400
  10308. ;;;;;; 62402))
  10309. ;;; Generated autoloads from ido.el
  10310. (defvar ido-mode nil "\
  10311. Determines for which functional group (buffer and files) ido behavior
  10312. should be enabled. The following values are possible:
  10313. - `buffer': Turn only on ido buffer behavior (switching, killing,
  10314. displaying...)
  10315. - `file': Turn only on ido file behavior (finding, writing, inserting...)
  10316. - `both': Turn on ido buffer and file behavior.
  10317. - `nil': Turn off any ido switching.
  10318. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  10319. use either \\[customize] or the function `ido-mode'.")
  10320. (custom-autoload 'ido-mode "ido" nil)
  10321. (autoload 'ido-mode "ido" "\
  10322. Toggle ido mode on or off.
  10323. With ARG, turn ido-mode on if arg is positive, off otherwise.
  10324. Turning on ido-mode will remap (via a minor-mode keymap) the default
  10325. keybindings for the `find-file' and `switch-to-buffer' families of
  10326. commands to the ido versions of these functions.
  10327. However, if ARG arg equals 'files, remap only commands for files, or
  10328. if it equals 'buffers, remap only commands for buffer switching.
  10329. This function also adds a hook to the minibuffer.
  10330. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  10331. (autoload 'ido-switch-buffer "ido" "\
  10332. Switch to another buffer.
  10333. The buffer is displayed according to `ido-default-buffer-method' -- the
  10334. default is to show it in the same window, unless it is already visible
  10335. in another frame.
  10336. As you type in a string, all of the buffers matching the string are
  10337. displayed if substring-matching is used (default). Look at
  10338. `ido-enable-prefix' and `ido-toggle-prefix'. When you have found the
  10339. buffer you want, it can then be selected. As you type, most keys have
  10340. their normal keybindings, except for the following: \\<ido-buffer-completion-map>
  10341. RET Select the buffer at the front of the list of matches. If the
  10342. list is empty, possibly prompt to create new buffer.
  10343. \\[ido-select-text] Select the current prompt as the buffer.
  10344. If no buffer is found, prompt for a new one.
  10345. \\[ido-next-match] Put the first element at the end of the list.
  10346. \\[ido-prev-match] Put the last element at the start of the list.
  10347. \\[ido-complete] Complete a common suffix to the current string that
  10348. matches all buffers. If there is only one match, select that buffer.
  10349. If there is no common suffix, show a list of all matching buffers
  10350. in a separate window.
  10351. \\[ido-edit-input] Edit input string.
  10352. \\[ido-fallback-command] Fallback to non-ido version of current command.
  10353. \\[ido-toggle-regexp] Toggle regexp searching.
  10354. \\[ido-toggle-prefix] Toggle between substring and prefix matching.
  10355. \\[ido-toggle-case] Toggle case-sensitive searching of buffer names.
  10356. \\[ido-completion-help] Show list of matching buffers in separate window.
  10357. \\[ido-enter-find-file] Drop into `ido-find-file'.
  10358. \\[ido-kill-buffer-at-head] Kill buffer at head of buffer list.
  10359. \\[ido-toggle-ignore] Toggle ignoring buffers listed in `ido-ignore-buffers'.
  10360. \(fn)" t nil)
  10361. (autoload 'ido-switch-buffer-other-window "ido" "\
  10362. Switch to another buffer and show it in another window.
  10363. The buffer name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10364. For details of keybindings, see `ido-switch-buffer'.
  10365. \(fn)" t nil)
  10366. (autoload 'ido-display-buffer "ido" "\
  10367. Display a buffer in another window but don't select it.
  10368. The buffer name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10369. For details of keybindings, see `ido-switch-buffer'.
  10370. \(fn)" t nil)
  10371. (autoload 'ido-kill-buffer "ido" "\
  10372. Kill a buffer.
  10373. The buffer name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10374. For details of keybindings, see `ido-switch-buffer'.
  10375. \(fn)" t nil)
  10376. (autoload 'ido-insert-buffer "ido" "\
  10377. Insert contents of a buffer in current buffer after point.
  10378. The buffer name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10379. For details of keybindings, see `ido-switch-buffer'.
  10380. \(fn)" t nil)
  10381. (autoload 'ido-switch-buffer-other-frame "ido" "\
  10382. Switch to another buffer and show it in another frame.
  10383. The buffer name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10384. For details of keybindings, see `ido-switch-buffer'.
  10385. \(fn)" t nil)
  10386. (autoload 'ido-find-file-in-dir "ido" "\
  10387. Switch to another file starting from DIR.
  10388. \(fn DIR)" t nil)
  10389. (autoload 'ido-find-file "ido" "\
  10390. Edit file with name obtained via minibuffer.
  10391. The file is displayed according to `ido-default-file-method' -- the
  10392. default is to show it in the same window, unless it is already
  10393. visible in another frame.
  10394. The file name is selected interactively by typing a substring. As you
  10395. type in a string, all of the filenames matching the string are displayed
  10396. if substring-matching is used (default). Look at `ido-enable-prefix' and
  10397. `ido-toggle-prefix'. When you have found the filename you want, it can
  10398. then be selected. As you type, most keys have their normal keybindings,
  10399. except for the following: \\<ido-file-completion-map>
  10400. RET Select the file at the front of the list of matches. If the
  10401. list is empty, possibly prompt to create new file.
  10402. \\[ido-select-text] Select the current prompt as the buffer or file.
  10403. If no buffer or file is found, prompt for a new one.
  10404. \\[ido-next-match] Put the first element at the end of the list.
  10405. \\[ido-prev-match] Put the last element at the start of the list.
  10406. \\[ido-complete] Complete a common suffix to the current string that
  10407. matches all files. If there is only one match, select that file.
  10408. If there is no common suffix, show a list of all matching files
  10409. in a separate window.
  10410. \\[ido-edit-input] Edit input string (including directory).
  10411. \\[ido-prev-work-directory] or \\[ido-next-work-directory] go to previous/next directory in work directory history.
  10412. \\[ido-merge-work-directories] search for file in the work directory history.
  10413. \\[ido-forget-work-directory] removes current directory from the work directory history.
  10414. \\[ido-prev-work-file] or \\[ido-next-work-file] cycle through the work file history.
  10415. \\[ido-wide-find-file-or-pop-dir] and \\[ido-wide-find-dir-or-delete-dir] prompts and uses find to locate files or directories.
  10416. \\[ido-make-directory] prompts for a directory to create in current directory.
  10417. \\[ido-fallback-command] Fallback to non-ido version of current command.
  10418. \\[ido-toggle-regexp] Toggle regexp searching.
  10419. \\[ido-toggle-prefix] Toggle between substring and prefix matching.
  10420. \\[ido-toggle-case] Toggle case-sensitive searching of file names.
  10421. \\[ido-toggle-literal] Toggle literal reading of this file.
  10422. \\[ido-completion-help] Show list of matching files in separate window.
  10423. \\[ido-toggle-ignore] Toggle ignoring files listed in `ido-ignore-files'.
  10424. \(fn)" t nil)
  10425. (autoload 'ido-find-file-other-window "ido" "\
  10426. Switch to another file and show it in another window.
  10427. The file name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10428. For details of keybindings, see `ido-find-file'.
  10429. \(fn)" t nil)
  10430. (autoload 'ido-find-alternate-file "ido" "\
  10431. Switch to another file and show it in another window.
  10432. The file name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10433. For details of keybindings, see `ido-find-file'.
  10434. \(fn)" t nil)
  10435. (autoload 'ido-find-file-read-only "ido" "\
  10436. Edit file read-only with name obtained via minibuffer.
  10437. The file name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10438. For details of keybindings, see `ido-find-file'.
  10439. \(fn)" t nil)
  10440. (autoload 'ido-find-file-read-only-other-window "ido" "\
  10441. Edit file read-only in other window with name obtained via minibuffer.
  10442. The file name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10443. For details of keybindings, see `ido-find-file'.
  10444. \(fn)" t nil)
  10445. (autoload 'ido-find-file-read-only-other-frame "ido" "\
  10446. Edit file read-only in other frame with name obtained via minibuffer.
  10447. The file name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10448. For details of keybindings, see `ido-find-file'.
  10449. \(fn)" t nil)
  10450. (autoload 'ido-display-file "ido" "\
  10451. Display a file in another window but don't select it.
  10452. The file name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10453. For details of keybindings, see `ido-find-file'.
  10454. \(fn)" t nil)
  10455. (autoload 'ido-find-file-other-frame "ido" "\
  10456. Switch to another file and show it in another frame.
  10457. The file name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10458. For details of keybindings, see `ido-find-file'.
  10459. \(fn)" t nil)
  10460. (autoload 'ido-write-file "ido" "\
  10461. Write current buffer to a file.
  10462. The file name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10463. For details of keybindings, see `ido-find-file'.
  10464. \(fn)" t nil)
  10465. (autoload 'ido-insert-file "ido" "\
  10466. Insert contents of file in current buffer.
  10467. The file name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10468. For details of keybindings, see `ido-find-file'.
  10469. \(fn)" t nil)
  10470. (autoload 'ido-dired "ido" "\
  10471. Call `dired' the ido way.
  10472. The directory is selected interactively by typing a substring.
  10473. For details of keybindings, see `ido-find-file'.
  10474. \(fn)" t nil)
  10475. (autoload 'ido-read-buffer "ido" "\
  10476. Ido replacement for the built-in `read-buffer'.
  10477. Return the name of a buffer selected.
  10478. PROMPT is the prompt to give to the user. DEFAULT if given is the default
  10479. buffer to be selected, which will go to the front of the list.
  10480. If REQUIRE-MATCH is non-nil, an existing buffer must be selected.
  10481. \(fn PROMPT &optional DEFAULT REQUIRE-MATCH)" nil nil)
  10482. (autoload 'ido-read-file-name "ido" "\
  10483. Ido replacement for the built-in `read-file-name'.
  10484. Read file name, prompting with PROMPT and completing in directory DIR.
  10485. See `read-file-name' for additional parameters.
  10486. \(fn PROMPT &optional DIR DEFAULT-FILENAME MUSTMATCH INITIAL PREDICATE)" nil nil)
  10487. (autoload 'ido-read-directory-name "ido" "\
  10488. Ido replacement for the built-in `read-directory-name'.
  10489. Read directory name, prompting with PROMPT and completing in directory DIR.
  10490. See `read-directory-name' for additional parameters.
  10491. \(fn PROMPT &optional DIR DEFAULT-DIRNAME MUSTMATCH INITIAL)" nil nil)
  10492. (autoload 'ido-completing-read "ido" "\
  10493. Ido replacement for the built-in `completing-read'.
  10494. Read a string in the minibuffer with ido-style completion.
  10495. PROMPT is a string to prompt with; normally it ends in a colon and a space.
  10496. CHOICES is a list of strings which are the possible completions.
  10497. PREDICATE and INHERIT-INPUT-METHOD is currently ignored; it is included
  10498. to be compatible with `completing-read'.
  10499. If REQUIRE-MATCH is non-nil, the user is not allowed to exit unless
  10500. the input is (or completes to) an element of CHOICES or is null.
  10501. If the input is null, `ido-completing-read' returns DEF, or an empty
  10502. string if DEF is nil, regardless of the value of REQUIRE-MATCH.
  10503. If INITIAL-INPUT is non-nil, insert it in the minibuffer initially,
  10504. with point positioned at the end.
  10505. HIST, if non-nil, specifies a history list.
  10506. DEF, if non-nil, is the default value.
  10507. \(fn PROMPT CHOICES &optional PREDICATE REQUIRE-MATCH INITIAL-INPUT HIST DEF INHERIT-INPUT-METHOD)" nil nil)
  10508. ;;;***
  10509. ;;;### (autoloads (ielm) "ielm" "ielm.el" (20352 65510))
  10510. ;;; Generated autoloads from ielm.el
  10511. (autoload 'ielm "ielm" "\
  10512. Interactively evaluate Emacs Lisp expressions.
  10513. Switches to the buffer `*ielm*', or creates it if it does not exist.
  10514. \(fn)" t nil)
  10515. ;;;***
  10516. ;;;### (autoloads (iimage-mode) "iimage" "iimage.el" (20352 65510))
  10517. ;;; Generated autoloads from iimage.el
  10518. (define-obsolete-function-alias 'turn-on-iimage-mode 'iimage-mode "24.1")
  10519. (autoload 'iimage-mode "iimage" "\
  10520. Toggle Iimage mode on or off.
  10521. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Iimage mode if ARG is
  10522. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  10523. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil, and toggle it if ARG is `toggle'.
  10524. \\{iimage-mode-map}
  10525. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  10526. ;;;***
  10527. ;;;### (autoloads (imagemagick-register-types defimage find-image
  10528. ;;;;;; remove-images insert-sliced-image insert-image put-image
  10529. ;;;;;; create-image image-type-auto-detected-p image-type-available-p
  10530. ;;;;;; image-type image-type-from-file-name image-type-from-file-header
  10531. ;;;;;; image-type-from-buffer image-type-from-data) "image" "image.el"
  10532. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  10533. ;;; Generated autoloads from image.el
  10534. (autoload 'image-type-from-data "image" "\
  10535. Determine the image type from image data DATA.
  10536. Value is a symbol specifying the image type or nil if type cannot
  10537. be determined.
  10538. \(fn DATA)" nil nil)
  10539. (autoload 'image-type-from-buffer "image" "\
  10540. Determine the image type from data in the current buffer.
  10541. Value is a symbol specifying the image type or nil if type cannot
  10542. be determined.
  10543. \(fn)" nil nil)
  10544. (autoload 'image-type-from-file-header "image" "\
  10545. Determine the type of image file FILE from its first few bytes.
  10546. Value is a symbol specifying the image type, or nil if type cannot
  10547. be determined.
  10548. \(fn FILE)" nil nil)
  10549. (autoload 'image-type-from-file-name "image" "\
  10550. Determine the type of image file FILE from its name.
  10551. Value is a symbol specifying the image type, or nil if type cannot
  10552. be determined.
  10553. \(fn FILE)" nil nil)
  10554. (autoload 'image-type "image" "\
  10555. Determine and return image type.
  10556. SOURCE is an image file name or image data.
  10557. Optional TYPE is a symbol describing the image type. If TYPE is omitted
  10558. or nil, try to determine the image type from its first few bytes
  10559. of image data. If that doesn't work, and SOURCE is a file name,
  10560. use its file extension as image type.
  10561. Optional DATA-P non-nil means SOURCE is a string containing image data.
  10562. \(fn SOURCE &optional TYPE DATA-P)" nil nil)
  10563. (autoload 'image-type-available-p "image" "\
  10564. Return non-nil if image type TYPE is available.
  10565. Image types are symbols like `xbm' or `jpeg'.
  10566. \(fn TYPE)" nil nil)
  10567. (autoload 'image-type-auto-detected-p "image" "\
  10568. Return t if the current buffer contains an auto-detectable image.
  10569. This function is intended to be used from `magic-fallback-mode-alist'.
  10570. The buffer is considered to contain an auto-detectable image if
  10571. its beginning matches an image type in `image-type-header-regexps',
  10572. and that image type is present in `image-type-auto-detectable' with a
  10573. non-nil value. If that value is non-nil, but not t, then the image type
  10574. must be available.
  10575. \(fn)" nil nil)
  10576. (autoload 'create-image "image" "\
  10577. Create an image.
  10578. FILE-OR-DATA is an image file name or image data.
  10579. Optional TYPE is a symbol describing the image type. If TYPE is omitted
  10580. or nil, try to determine the image type from its first few bytes
  10581. of image data. If that doesn't work, and FILE-OR-DATA is a file name,
  10582. use its file extension as image type.
  10583. Optional DATA-P non-nil means FILE-OR-DATA is a string containing image data.
  10584. Optional PROPS are additional image attributes to assign to the image,
  10585. like, e.g. `:mask MASK'.
  10586. Value is the image created, or nil if images of type TYPE are not supported.
  10587. Images should not be larger than specified by `max-image-size'.
  10588. Image file names that are not absolute are searched for in the
  10589. \"images\" sub-directory of `data-directory' and
  10590. `x-bitmap-file-path' (in that order).
  10591. \(fn FILE-OR-DATA &optional TYPE DATA-P &rest PROPS)" nil nil)
  10592. (autoload 'put-image "image" "\
  10593. Put image IMAGE in front of POS in the current buffer.
  10594. IMAGE must be an image created with `create-image' or `defimage'.
  10595. IMAGE is displayed by putting an overlay into the current buffer with a
  10596. `before-string' STRING that has a `display' property whose value is the
  10597. image. STRING is defaulted if you omit it.
  10598. The overlay created will have the `put-image' property set to t.
  10599. POS may be an integer or marker.
  10600. AREA is where to display the image. AREA nil or omitted means
  10601. display it in the text area, a value of `left-margin' means
  10602. display it in the left marginal area, a value of `right-margin'
  10603. means display it in the right marginal area.
  10604. \(fn IMAGE POS &optional STRING AREA)" nil nil)
  10605. (autoload 'insert-image "image" "\
  10606. Insert IMAGE into current buffer at point.
  10607. IMAGE is displayed by inserting STRING into the current buffer
  10608. with a `display' property whose value is the image. STRING
  10609. defaults to the empty string if you omit it.
  10610. AREA is where to display the image. AREA nil or omitted means
  10611. display it in the text area, a value of `left-margin' means
  10612. display it in the left marginal area, a value of `right-margin'
  10613. means display it in the right marginal area.
  10614. SLICE specifies slice of IMAGE to insert. SLICE nil or omitted
  10615. means insert whole image. SLICE is a list (X Y WIDTH HEIGHT)
  10616. specifying the X and Y positions and WIDTH and HEIGHT of image area
  10617. to insert. A float value 0.0 - 1.0 means relative to the width or
  10618. height of the image; integer values are taken as pixel values.
  10619. \(fn IMAGE &optional STRING AREA SLICE)" nil nil)
  10620. (autoload 'insert-sliced-image "image" "\
  10621. Insert IMAGE into current buffer at point.
  10622. IMAGE is displayed by inserting STRING into the current buffer
  10623. with a `display' property whose value is the image. STRING is
  10624. defaulted if you omit it.
  10625. AREA is where to display the image. AREA nil or omitted means
  10626. display it in the text area, a value of `left-margin' means
  10627. display it in the left marginal area, a value of `right-margin'
  10628. means display it in the right marginal area.
  10629. The image is automatically split into ROWS x COLS slices.
  10630. \(fn IMAGE &optional STRING AREA ROWS COLS)" nil nil)
  10631. (autoload 'remove-images "image" "\
  10632. Remove images between START and END in BUFFER.
  10633. Remove only images that were put in BUFFER with calls to `put-image'.
  10634. BUFFER nil or omitted means use the current buffer.
  10635. \(fn START END &optional BUFFER)" nil nil)
  10636. (autoload 'find-image "image" "\
  10637. Find an image, choosing one of a list of image specifications.
  10638. SPECS is a list of image specifications.
  10639. Each image specification in SPECS is a property list. The contents of
  10640. a specification are image type dependent. All specifications must at
  10641. least contain the properties `:type TYPE' and either `:file FILE' or
  10642. `:data DATA', where TYPE is a symbol specifying the image type,
  10643. e.g. `xbm', FILE is the file to load the image from, and DATA is a
  10644. string containing the actual image data. The specification whose TYPE
  10645. is supported, and FILE exists, is used to construct the image
  10646. specification to be returned. Return nil if no specification is
  10647. satisfied.
  10648. The image is looked for in `image-load-path'.
  10649. Image files should not be larger than specified by `max-image-size'.
  10650. \(fn SPECS)" nil nil)
  10651. (autoload 'defimage "image" "\
  10652. Define SYMBOL as an image.
  10653. SPECS is a list of image specifications. DOC is an optional
  10654. documentation string.
  10655. Each image specification in SPECS is a property list. The contents of
  10656. a specification are image type dependent. All specifications must at
  10657. least contain the properties `:type TYPE' and either `:file FILE' or
  10658. `:data DATA', where TYPE is a symbol specifying the image type,
  10659. e.g. `xbm', FILE is the file to load the image from, and DATA is a
  10660. string containing the actual image data. The first image
  10661. specification whose TYPE is supported, and FILE exists, is used to
  10662. define SYMBOL.
  10663. Example:
  10664. (defimage test-image ((:type xpm :file \"~/test1.xpm\")
  10665. (:type xbm :file \"~/test1.xbm\")))
  10666. \(fn SYMBOL SPECS &optional DOC)" nil (quote macro))
  10667. (put 'defimage 'doc-string-elt '3)
  10668. (autoload 'imagemagick-register-types "image" "\
  10669. Register file types that can be handled by ImageMagick.
  10670. This registers the ImageMagick types listed in `imagemagick-types',
  10671. excluding those listed in `imagemagick-types-inhibit'.
  10672. Registered image types are added to `auto-mode-alist', so that
  10673. Emacs visits them in Image mode. They are also added to
  10674. `image-type-file-name-regexps', so that the `image-type' function
  10675. recognizes these files as having image type `imagemagick'.
  10676. If Emacs is compiled without ImageMagick support, do nothing.
  10677. \(fn)" nil nil)
  10678. ;;;***
  10679. ;;;### (autoloads (image-dired-dired-edit-comment-and-tags image-dired-mark-tagged-files
  10680. ;;;;;; image-dired-dired-comment-files image-dired-dired-display-image
  10681. ;;;;;; image-dired-dired-display-external image-dired-display-thumb
  10682. ;;;;;; image-dired-display-thumbs-append image-dired-setup-dired-keybindings
  10683. ;;;;;; image-dired-jump-thumbnail-buffer image-dired-delete-tag
  10684. ;;;;;; image-dired-tag-files image-dired-show-all-from-dir image-dired-display-thumbs
  10685. ;;;;;; image-dired-dired-with-window-configuration image-dired-dired-toggle-marked-thumbs)
  10686. ;;;;;; "image-dired" "image-dired.el" (20352 65510))
  10687. ;;; Generated autoloads from image-dired.el
  10688. (autoload 'image-dired-dired-toggle-marked-thumbs "image-dired" "\
  10689. Toggle thumbnails in front of file names in the dired buffer.
  10690. If no marked file could be found, insert or hide thumbnails on the
  10691. current line. ARG, if non-nil, specifies the files to use instead
  10692. of the marked files. If ARG is an integer, use the next ARG (or
  10693. previous -ARG, if ARG<0) files.
  10694. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  10695. (autoload 'image-dired-dired-with-window-configuration "image-dired" "\
  10696. Open directory DIR and create a default window configuration.
  10697. Convenience command that:
  10698. - Opens dired in folder DIR
  10699. - Splits windows in most useful (?) way
  10700. - Set `truncate-lines' to t
  10701. After the command has finished, you would typically mark some
  10702. image files in dired and type
  10703. \\[image-dired-display-thumbs] (`image-dired-display-thumbs').
  10704. If called with prefix argument ARG, skip splitting of windows.
  10705. The current window configuration is saved and can be restored by
  10706. calling `image-dired-restore-window-configuration'.
  10707. \(fn DIR &optional ARG)" t nil)
  10708. (autoload 'image-dired-display-thumbs "image-dired" "\
  10709. Display thumbnails of all marked files, in `image-dired-thumbnail-buffer'.
  10710. If a thumbnail image does not exist for a file, it is created on the
  10711. fly. With prefix argument ARG, display only thumbnail for file at
  10712. point (this is useful if you have marked some files but want to show
  10713. another one).
  10714. Recommended usage is to split the current frame horizontally so that
  10715. you have the dired buffer in the left window and the
  10716. `image-dired-thumbnail-buffer' buffer in the right window.
  10717. With optional argument APPEND, append thumbnail to thumbnail buffer
  10718. instead of erasing it first.
  10719. Optional argument DO-NOT-POP controls if `pop-to-buffer' should be
  10720. used or not. If non-nil, use `display-buffer' instead of
  10721. `pop-to-buffer'. This is used from functions like
  10722. `image-dired-next-line-and-display' and
  10723. `image-dired-previous-line-and-display' where we do not want the
  10724. thumbnail buffer to be selected.
  10725. \(fn &optional ARG APPEND DO-NOT-POP)" t nil)
  10726. (autoload 'image-dired-show-all-from-dir "image-dired" "\
  10727. Make a preview buffer for all images in DIR and display it.
  10728. If the number of files in DIR matching `image-file-name-regexp'
  10729. exceeds `image-dired-show-all-from-dir-max-files', a warning will be
  10730. displayed.
  10731. \(fn DIR)" t nil)
  10732. (defalias 'image-dired 'image-dired-show-all-from-dir)
  10733. (defalias 'tumme 'image-dired-show-all-from-dir)
  10734. (autoload 'image-dired-tag-files "image-dired" "\
  10735. Tag marked file(s) in dired. With prefix ARG, tag file at point.
  10736. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  10737. (autoload 'image-dired-delete-tag "image-dired" "\
  10738. Remove tag for selected file(s).
  10739. With prefix argument ARG, remove tag from file at point.
  10740. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  10741. (autoload 'image-dired-jump-thumbnail-buffer "image-dired" "\
  10742. Jump to thumbnail buffer.
  10743. \(fn)" t nil)
  10744. (autoload 'image-dired-setup-dired-keybindings "image-dired" "\
  10745. Setup easy-to-use keybindings for the commands to be used in dired mode.
  10746. Note that n, p and <down> and <up> will be hijacked and bound to
  10747. `image-dired-dired-x-line'.
  10748. \(fn)" t nil)
  10749. (autoload 'image-dired-display-thumbs-append "image-dired" "\
  10750. Append thumbnails to `image-dired-thumbnail-buffer'.
  10751. \(fn)" t nil)
  10752. (autoload 'image-dired-display-thumb "image-dired" "\
  10753. Shorthand for `image-dired-display-thumbs' with prefix argument.
  10754. \(fn)" t nil)
  10755. (autoload 'image-dired-dired-display-external "image-dired" "\
  10756. Display file at point using an external viewer.
  10757. \(fn)" t nil)
  10758. (autoload 'image-dired-dired-display-image "image-dired" "\
  10759. Display current image file.
  10760. See documentation for `image-dired-display-image' for more information.
  10761. With prefix argument ARG, display image in its original size.
  10762. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  10763. (autoload 'image-dired-dired-comment-files "image-dired" "\
  10764. Add comment to current or marked files in dired.
  10765. \(fn)" t nil)
  10766. (autoload 'image-dired-mark-tagged-files "image-dired" "\
  10767. Use regexp to mark files with matching tag.
  10768. A `tag' is a keyword, a piece of meta data, associated with an
  10769. image file and stored in image-dired's database file. This command
  10770. lets you input a regexp and this will be matched against all tags
  10771. on all image files in the database file. The files that have a
  10772. matching tag will be marked in the dired buffer.
  10773. \(fn)" t nil)
  10774. (autoload 'image-dired-dired-edit-comment-and-tags "image-dired" "\
  10775. Edit comment and tags of current or marked image files.
  10776. Edit comment and tags for all marked image files in an
  10777. easy-to-use form.
  10778. \(fn)" t nil)
  10779. ;;;***
  10780. ;;;### (autoloads (auto-image-file-mode insert-image-file image-file-name-regexp
  10781. ;;;;;; image-file-name-regexps image-file-name-extensions) "image-file"
  10782. ;;;;;; "image-file.el" (20352 65510))
  10783. ;;; Generated autoloads from image-file.el
  10784. (defvar image-file-name-extensions (purecopy '("png" "jpeg" "jpg" "gif" "tiff" "tif" "xbm" "xpm" "pbm" "pgm" "ppm" "pnm" "svg")) "\
  10785. A list of image-file filename extensions.
  10786. Filenames having one of these extensions are considered image files,
  10787. in addition to those matching `image-file-name-regexps'.
  10788. See `auto-image-file-mode'; if `auto-image-file-mode' is enabled,
  10789. setting this variable directly does not take effect unless
  10790. `auto-image-file-mode' is re-enabled; this happens automatically when
  10791. the variable is set using \\[customize].")
  10792. (custom-autoload 'image-file-name-extensions "image-file" nil)
  10793. (defvar image-file-name-regexps nil "\
  10794. List of regexps matching image-file filenames.
  10795. Filenames matching one of these regexps are considered image files,
  10796. in addition to those with an extension in `image-file-name-extensions'.
  10797. See function `auto-image-file-mode'; if `auto-image-file-mode' is
  10798. enabled, setting this variable directly does not take effect unless
  10799. `auto-image-file-mode' is re-enabled; this happens automatically when
  10800. the variable is set using \\[customize].")
  10801. (custom-autoload 'image-file-name-regexps "image-file" nil)
  10802. (autoload 'image-file-name-regexp "image-file" "\
  10803. Return a regular expression matching image-file filenames.
  10804. \(fn)" nil nil)
  10805. (autoload 'insert-image-file "image-file" "\
  10806. Insert the image file FILE into the current buffer.
  10807. Optional arguments VISIT, BEG, END, and REPLACE are interpreted as for
  10808. the command `insert-file-contents'.
  10809. \(fn FILE &optional VISIT BEG END REPLACE)" nil nil)
  10810. (defvar auto-image-file-mode nil "\
  10811. Non-nil if Auto-Image-File mode is enabled.
  10812. See the command `auto-image-file-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  10813. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  10814. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  10815. or call the function `auto-image-file-mode'.")
  10816. (custom-autoload 'auto-image-file-mode "image-file" nil)
  10817. (autoload 'auto-image-file-mode "image-file" "\
  10818. Toggle visiting of image files as images (Auto Image File mode).
  10819. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Auto Image File mode if ARG is
  10820. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  10821. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  10822. An image file is one whose name has an extension in
  10823. `image-file-name-extensions', or matches a regexp in
  10824. `image-file-name-regexps'.
  10825. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  10826. ;;;***
  10827. ;;;### (autoloads (image-bookmark-jump image-mode-as-text image-minor-mode
  10828. ;;;;;; image-mode) "image-mode" "image-mode.el" (20400 62402))
  10829. ;;; Generated autoloads from image-mode.el
  10830. (autoload 'image-mode "image-mode" "\
  10831. Major mode for image files.
  10832. You can use \\<image-mode-map>\\[image-toggle-display]
  10833. to toggle between display as an image and display as text.
  10834. \(fn)" t nil)
  10835. (autoload 'image-minor-mode "image-mode" "\
  10836. Toggle Image minor mode in this buffer.
  10837. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Image minor mode if ARG is
  10838. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  10839. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  10840. Image minor mode provides the key \\<image-mode-map>\\[image-toggle-display],
  10841. to switch back to `image-mode' and display an image file as the
  10842. actual image.
  10843. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  10844. (autoload 'image-mode-as-text "image-mode" "\
  10845. Set a non-image mode as major mode in combination with image minor mode.
  10846. A non-image major mode found from `auto-mode-alist' or Fundamental mode
  10847. displays an image file as text. `image-minor-mode' provides the key
  10848. \\<image-mode-map>\\[image-toggle-display] to switch back to `image-mode'
  10849. to display an image file as the actual image.
  10850. You can use `image-mode-as-text' in `auto-mode-alist' when you want
  10851. to display an image file as text initially.
  10852. See commands `image-mode' and `image-minor-mode' for more information
  10853. on these modes.
  10854. \(fn)" t nil)
  10855. (autoload 'image-bookmark-jump "image-mode" "\
  10856. \(fn BMK)" nil nil)
  10857. ;;;***
  10858. ;;;### (autoloads (imenu imenu-add-menubar-index imenu-add-to-menubar
  10859. ;;;;;; imenu-sort-function) "imenu" "imenu.el" (20400 62402))
  10860. ;;; Generated autoloads from imenu.el
  10861. (defvar imenu-sort-function nil "\
  10862. The function to use for sorting the index mouse-menu.
  10863. Affects only the mouse index menu.
  10864. Set this to nil if you don't want any sorting (faster).
  10865. The items in the menu are then presented in the order they were found
  10866. in the buffer.
  10867. Set it to `imenu--sort-by-name' if you want alphabetic sorting.
  10868. The function should take two arguments and return t if the first
  10869. element should come before the second. The arguments are cons cells;
  10870. \(NAME . POSITION). Look at `imenu--sort-by-name' for an example.")
  10871. (custom-autoload 'imenu-sort-function "imenu" t)
  10872. (defvar imenu-generic-expression nil "\
  10873. The regex pattern to use for creating a buffer index.
  10874. If non-nil this pattern is passed to `imenu--generic-function' to
  10875. create a buffer index. Look there for the documentation of this
  10876. pattern's structure.
  10877. For example, see the value of `fortran-imenu-generic-expression' used by
  10878. `fortran-mode' with `imenu-syntax-alist' set locally to give the
  10879. characters which normally have \"symbol\" syntax \"word\" syntax
  10880. during matching.")
  10881. (put 'imenu-generic-expression 'risky-local-variable t)
  10882. (make-variable-buffer-local 'imenu-generic-expression)
  10883. (defvar imenu-create-index-function 'imenu-default-create-index-function "\
  10884. The function to use for creating an index alist of the current buffer.
  10885. It should be a function that takes no arguments and returns
  10886. an index alist of the current buffer. The function is
  10887. called within a `save-excursion'.
  10888. See `imenu--index-alist' for the format of the buffer index alist.")
  10889. (make-variable-buffer-local 'imenu-create-index-function)
  10890. (defvar imenu-prev-index-position-function 'beginning-of-defun "\
  10891. Function for finding the next index position.
  10892. If `imenu-create-index-function' is set to
  10893. `imenu-default-create-index-function', then you must set this variable
  10894. to a function that will find the next index, looking backwards in the
  10895. file.
  10896. The function should leave point at the place to be connected to the
  10897. index and it should return nil when it doesn't find another index.")
  10898. (make-variable-buffer-local 'imenu-prev-index-position-function)
  10899. (defvar imenu-extract-index-name-function nil "\
  10900. Function for extracting the index item name, given a position.
  10901. This function is called after `imenu-prev-index-position-function'
  10902. finds a position for an index item, with point at that position.
  10903. It should return the name for that index item.")
  10904. (make-variable-buffer-local 'imenu-extract-index-name-function)
  10905. (defvar imenu-name-lookup-function nil "\
  10906. Function to compare string with index item.
  10907. This function will be called with two strings, and should return
  10908. non-nil if they match.
  10909. If nil, comparison is done with `string='.
  10910. Set this to some other function for more advanced comparisons,
  10911. such as \"begins with\" or \"name matches and number of
  10912. arguments match\".")
  10913. (make-variable-buffer-local 'imenu-name-lookup-function)
  10914. (defvar imenu-default-goto-function 'imenu-default-goto-function "\
  10915. The default function called when selecting an Imenu item.
  10916. The function in this variable is called when selecting a normal index-item.")
  10917. (make-variable-buffer-local 'imenu-default-goto-function)
  10918. (put 'imenu--index-alist 'risky-local-variable t)
  10919. (make-variable-buffer-local 'imenu-syntax-alist)
  10920. (make-variable-buffer-local 'imenu-case-fold-search)
  10921. (autoload 'imenu-add-to-menubar "imenu" "\
  10922. Add an `imenu' entry to the menu bar for the current buffer.
  10923. NAME is a string used to name the menu bar item.
  10924. See the command `imenu' for more information.
  10925. \(fn NAME)" t nil)
  10926. (autoload 'imenu-add-menubar-index "imenu" "\
  10927. Add an Imenu \"Index\" entry on the menu bar for the current buffer.
  10928. A trivial interface to `imenu-add-to-menubar' suitable for use in a hook.
  10929. \(fn)" t nil)
  10930. (autoload 'imenu "imenu" "\
  10931. Jump to a place in the buffer chosen using a buffer menu or mouse menu.
  10932. INDEX-ITEM specifies the position. See `imenu-choose-buffer-index'
  10933. for more information.
  10934. \(fn INDEX-ITEM)" t nil)
  10935. ;;;***
  10936. ;;;### (autoloads (indian-2-column-to-ucs-region in-is13194-pre-write-conversion
  10937. ;;;;;; in-is13194-post-read-conversion indian-compose-string indian-compose-region)
  10938. ;;;;;; "ind-util" "language/ind-util.el" (20352 65510))
  10939. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/ind-util.el
  10940. (autoload 'indian-compose-region "ind-util" "\
  10941. Compose the region according to `composition-function-table'.
  10942. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  10943. (autoload 'indian-compose-string "ind-util" "\
  10944. \(fn STRING)" nil nil)
  10945. (autoload 'in-is13194-post-read-conversion "ind-util" "\
  10946. \(fn LEN)" nil nil)
  10947. (autoload 'in-is13194-pre-write-conversion "ind-util" "\
  10948. \(fn FROM TO)" nil nil)
  10949. (autoload 'indian-2-column-to-ucs-region "ind-util" "\
  10950. Convert old Emacs Devanagari characters to UCS.
  10951. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  10952. ;;;***
  10953. ;;;### (autoloads (inferior-lisp inferior-lisp-prompt inferior-lisp-load-command
  10954. ;;;;;; inferior-lisp-program inferior-lisp-filter-regexp) "inf-lisp"
  10955. ;;;;;; "progmodes/inf-lisp.el" (20400 62402))
  10956. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/inf-lisp.el
  10957. (defvar inferior-lisp-filter-regexp (purecopy "\\`\\s *\\(:\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)\\)?\\s *\\'") "\
  10958. *What not to save on inferior Lisp's input history.
  10959. Input matching this regexp is not saved on the input history in Inferior Lisp
  10960. mode. Default is whitespace followed by 0 or 1 single-letter colon-keyword
  10961. \(as in :a, :c, etc.)")
  10962. (custom-autoload 'inferior-lisp-filter-regexp "inf-lisp" t)
  10963. (defvar inferior-lisp-program (purecopy "lisp") "\
  10964. *Program name for invoking an inferior Lisp in Inferior Lisp mode.")
  10965. (custom-autoload 'inferior-lisp-program "inf-lisp" t)
  10966. (defvar inferior-lisp-load-command (purecopy "(load \"%s\")\n") "\
  10967. *Format-string for building a Lisp expression to load a file.
  10968. This format string should use `%s' to substitute a file name
  10969. and should result in a Lisp expression that will command the inferior Lisp
  10970. to load that file. The default works acceptably on most Lisps.
  10971. The string \"(progn (load \\\"%s\\\" :verbose nil :print t) (values))\\n\"
  10972. produces cosmetically superior output for this application,
  10973. but it works only in Common Lisp.")
  10974. (custom-autoload 'inferior-lisp-load-command "inf-lisp" t)
  10975. (defvar inferior-lisp-prompt (purecopy "^[^> \n]*>+:? *") "\
  10976. Regexp to recognize prompts in the Inferior Lisp mode.
  10977. Defaults to \"^[^> \\n]*>+:? *\", which works pretty good for Lucid, kcl,
  10978. and franz. This variable is used to initialize `comint-prompt-regexp' in the
  10979. Inferior Lisp buffer.
  10980. This variable is only used if the variable
  10981. `comint-use-prompt-regexp' is non-nil.
  10982. More precise choices:
  10983. Lucid Common Lisp: \"^\\\\(>\\\\|\\\\(->\\\\)+\\\\) *\"
  10984. franz: \"^\\\\(->\\\\|<[0-9]*>:\\\\) *\"
  10985. kcl: \"^>+ *\"
  10986. This is a fine thing to set in your .emacs file or through Custom.")
  10987. (custom-autoload 'inferior-lisp-prompt "inf-lisp" t)
  10988. (defvar inferior-lisp-mode-hook 'nil "\
  10989. *Hook for customizing Inferior Lisp mode.")
  10990. (autoload 'inferior-lisp "inf-lisp" "\
  10991. Run an inferior Lisp process, input and output via buffer `*inferior-lisp*'.
  10992. If there is a process already running in `*inferior-lisp*', just switch
  10993. to that buffer.
  10994. With argument, allows you to edit the command line (default is value
  10995. of `inferior-lisp-program'). Runs the hooks from
  10996. `inferior-lisp-mode-hook' (after the `comint-mode-hook' is run).
  10997. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the process buffer for a list of commands.)
  10998. \(fn CMD)" t nil)
  10999. (defalias 'run-lisp 'inferior-lisp)
  11000. ;;;***
  11001. ;;;### (autoloads (info-display-manual Info-bookmark-jump Info-speedbar-browser
  11002. ;;;;;; Info-goto-emacs-key-command-node Info-goto-emacs-command-node
  11003. ;;;;;; Info-mode info-finder info-apropos Info-index Info-directory
  11004. ;;;;;; Info-on-current-buffer info-standalone info-emacs-manual
  11005. ;;;;;; info info-other-window) "info" "info.el" (20400 62402))
  11006. ;;; Generated autoloads from info.el
  11007. (autoload 'info-other-window "info" "\
  11008. Like `info' but show the Info buffer in another window.
  11009. \(fn &optional FILE-OR-NODE)" t nil)
  11010. (put 'info 'info-file (purecopy "emacs"))
  11011. (autoload 'info "info" "\
  11012. Enter Info, the documentation browser.
  11013. Optional argument FILE-OR-NODE specifies the file to examine;
  11014. the default is the top-level directory of Info.
  11015. Called from a program, FILE-OR-NODE may specify an Info node of the form
  11016. \"(FILENAME)NODENAME\".
  11017. Optional argument BUFFER specifies the Info buffer name;
  11018. the default buffer name is *info*. If BUFFER exists,
  11019. just switch to BUFFER. Otherwise, create a new buffer
  11020. with the top-level Info directory.
  11021. In interactive use, a non-numeric prefix argument directs
  11022. this command to read a file name from the minibuffer.
  11023. A numeric prefix argument selects an Info buffer with the prefix number
  11024. appended to the Info buffer name.
  11025. The search path for Info files is in the variable `Info-directory-list'.
  11026. The top-level Info directory is made by combining all the files named `dir'
  11027. in all the directories in that path.
  11028. See a list of available Info commands in `Info-mode'.
  11029. \(fn &optional FILE-OR-NODE BUFFER)" t nil)
  11030. (autoload 'info-emacs-manual "info" "\
  11031. Display the Emacs manual in Info mode.
  11032. \(fn)" t nil)
  11033. (autoload 'info-standalone "info" "\
  11034. Run Emacs as a standalone Info reader.
  11035. Usage: emacs -f info-standalone [filename]
  11036. In standalone mode, \\<Info-mode-map>\\[Info-exit] exits Emacs itself.
  11037. \(fn)" nil nil)
  11038. (autoload 'Info-on-current-buffer "info" "\
  11039. Use Info mode to browse the current Info buffer.
  11040. With a prefix arg, this queries for the node name to visit first;
  11041. otherwise, that defaults to `Top'.
  11042. \(fn &optional NODENAME)" t nil)
  11043. (autoload 'Info-directory "info" "\
  11044. Go to the Info directory node.
  11045. \(fn)" t nil)
  11046. (autoload 'Info-index "info" "\
  11047. Look up a string TOPIC in the index for this manual and go to that entry.
  11048. If there are no exact matches to the specified topic, this chooses
  11049. the first match which is a case-insensitive substring of a topic.
  11050. Use the \\<Info-mode-map>\\[Info-index-next] command to see the other matches.
  11051. Give an empty topic name to go to the Index node itself.
  11052. \(fn TOPIC)" t nil)
  11053. (autoload 'info-apropos "info" "\
  11054. Grovel indices of all known Info files on your system for STRING.
  11055. Build a menu of the possible matches.
  11056. \(fn STRING)" t nil)
  11057. (autoload 'info-finder "info" "\
  11058. Display descriptions of the keywords in the Finder virtual manual.
  11059. In interactive use, a prefix argument directs this command to read
  11060. a list of keywords separated by comma. After that, it displays a node
  11061. with a list of packages that contain all specified keywords.
  11062. \(fn &optional KEYWORDS)" t nil)
  11063. (autoload 'Info-mode "info" "\
  11064. Info mode provides commands for browsing through the Info documentation tree.
  11065. Documentation in Info is divided into \"nodes\", each of which discusses
  11066. one topic and contains references to other nodes which discuss related
  11067. topics. Info has commands to follow the references and show you other nodes.
  11068. \\<Info-mode-map>\\[Info-help] Invoke the Info tutorial.
  11069. \\[Info-exit] Quit Info: reselect previously selected buffer.
  11070. Selecting other nodes:
  11071. \\[Info-mouse-follow-nearest-node]
  11072. Follow a node reference you click on.
  11073. This works with menu items, cross references, and
  11074. the \"next\", \"previous\" and \"up\", depending on where you click.
  11075. \\[Info-follow-nearest-node] Follow a node reference near point, like \\[Info-mouse-follow-nearest-node].
  11076. \\[Info-next] Move to the \"next\" node of this node.
  11077. \\[Info-prev] Move to the \"previous\" node of this node.
  11078. \\[Info-up] Move \"up\" from this node.
  11079. \\[Info-menu] Pick menu item specified by name (or abbreviation).
  11080. Picking a menu item causes another node to be selected.
  11081. \\[Info-directory] Go to the Info directory node.
  11082. \\[Info-top-node] Go to the Top node of this file.
  11083. \\[Info-final-node] Go to the final node in this file.
  11084. \\[Info-backward-node] Go backward one node, considering all nodes as forming one sequence.
  11085. \\[Info-forward-node] Go forward one node, considering all nodes as forming one sequence.
  11086. \\[Info-next-reference] Move cursor to next cross-reference or menu item.
  11087. \\[Info-prev-reference] Move cursor to previous cross-reference or menu item.
  11088. \\[Info-follow-reference] Follow a cross reference. Reads name of reference.
  11089. \\[Info-history-back] Move back in history to the last node you were at.
  11090. \\[Info-history-forward] Move forward in history to the node you returned from after using \\[Info-history-back].
  11091. \\[Info-history] Go to menu of visited nodes.
  11092. \\[Info-toc] Go to table of contents of the current Info file.
  11093. Moving within a node:
  11094. \\[Info-scroll-up] Normally, scroll forward a full screen.
  11095. Once you scroll far enough in a node that its menu appears on the
  11096. screen but after point, the next scroll moves into its first
  11097. subnode. When after all menu items (or if there is no menu),
  11098. move up to the parent node.
  11099. \\[Info-scroll-down] Normally, scroll backward. If the beginning of the buffer is
  11100. already visible, try to go to the previous menu entry, or up
  11101. if there is none.
  11102. \\[beginning-of-buffer] Go to beginning of node.
  11103. Advanced commands:
  11104. \\[Info-search] Search through this Info file for specified regexp,
  11105. and select the node in which the next occurrence is found.
  11106. \\[Info-search-case-sensitively] Search through this Info file for specified regexp case-sensitively.
  11107. \\[isearch-forward], \\[isearch-forward-regexp] Use Isearch to search through multiple Info nodes.
  11108. \\[Info-index] Search for a topic in this manual's Index and go to index entry.
  11109. \\[Info-index-next] (comma) Move to the next match from a previous \\<Info-mode-map>\\[Info-index] command.
  11110. \\[Info-virtual-index] Look for a string and display the index node with results.
  11111. \\[info-apropos] Look for a string in the indices of all manuals.
  11112. \\[Info-goto-node] Move to node specified by name.
  11113. You may include a filename as well, as (FILENAME)NODENAME.
  11114. 1 .. 9 Pick first ... ninth item in node's menu.
  11115. Every third `*' is highlighted to help pick the right number.
  11116. \\[Info-copy-current-node-name] Put name of current Info node in the kill ring.
  11117. \\[clone-buffer] Select a new cloned Info buffer in another window.
  11118. \\[universal-argument] \\[info] Move to new Info file with completion.
  11119. \\[universal-argument] N \\[info] Select Info buffer with prefix number in the name *info*<N>.
  11120. \(fn)" t nil)
  11121. (put 'Info-goto-emacs-command-node 'info-file (purecopy "emacs"))
  11122. (autoload 'Info-goto-emacs-command-node "info" "\
  11123. Go to the Info node in the Emacs manual for command COMMAND.
  11124. The command is found by looking up in Emacs manual's indices
  11125. or in another manual found via COMMAND's `info-file' property or
  11126. the variable `Info-file-list-for-emacs'.
  11127. COMMAND must be a symbol or string.
  11128. \(fn COMMAND)" t nil)
  11129. (put 'Info-goto-emacs-key-command-node 'info-file (purecopy "emacs"))
  11130. (autoload 'Info-goto-emacs-key-command-node "info" "\
  11131. Go to the node in the Emacs manual which describes the command bound to KEY.
  11132. KEY is a string.
  11133. Interactively, if the binding is `execute-extended-command', a command is read.
  11134. The command is found by looking up in Emacs manual's indices
  11135. or in another manual found via COMMAND's `info-file' property or
  11136. the variable `Info-file-list-for-emacs'.
  11137. \(fn KEY)" t nil)
  11138. (autoload 'Info-speedbar-browser "info" "\
  11139. Initialize speedbar to display an Info node browser.
  11140. This will add a speedbar major display mode.
  11141. \(fn)" t nil)
  11142. (autoload 'Info-bookmark-jump "info" "\
  11143. This implements the `handler' function interface for the record
  11144. type returned by `Info-bookmark-make-record', which see.
  11145. \(fn BMK)" nil nil)
  11146. (autoload 'info-display-manual "info" "\
  11147. Go to Info buffer that displays MANUAL, creating it if none already exists.
  11148. \(fn MANUAL)" t nil)
  11149. ;;;***
  11150. ;;;### (autoloads (info-complete-file info-complete-symbol info-lookup-file
  11151. ;;;;;; info-lookup-symbol info-lookup-reset) "info-look" "info-look.el"
  11152. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  11153. ;;; Generated autoloads from info-look.el
  11154. (autoload 'info-lookup-reset "info-look" "\
  11155. Throw away all cached data.
  11156. This command is useful if the user wants to start at the beginning without
  11157. quitting Emacs, for example, after some Info documents were updated on the
  11158. system.
  11159. \(fn)" t nil)
  11160. (put 'info-lookup-symbol 'info-file "emacs")
  11161. (autoload 'info-lookup-symbol "info-look" "\
  11162. Display the definition of SYMBOL, as found in the relevant manual.
  11163. When this command is called interactively, it reads SYMBOL from the
  11164. minibuffer. In the minibuffer, use M-n to yank the default argument
  11165. value into the minibuffer so you can edit it. The default symbol is the
  11166. one found at point.
  11167. With prefix arg a query for the symbol help mode is offered.
  11168. \(fn SYMBOL &optional MODE)" t nil)
  11169. (put 'info-lookup-file 'info-file "emacs")
  11170. (autoload 'info-lookup-file "info-look" "\
  11171. Display the documentation of a file.
  11172. When this command is called interactively, it reads FILE from the minibuffer.
  11173. In the minibuffer, use M-n to yank the default file name
  11174. into the minibuffer so you can edit it.
  11175. The default file name is the one found at point.
  11176. With prefix arg a query for the file help mode is offered.
  11177. \(fn FILE &optional MODE)" t nil)
  11178. (autoload 'info-complete-symbol "info-look" "\
  11179. Perform completion on symbol preceding point.
  11180. \(fn &optional MODE)" t nil)
  11181. (autoload 'info-complete-file "info-look" "\
  11182. Perform completion on file preceding point.
  11183. \(fn &optional MODE)" t nil)
  11184. ;;;***
  11185. ;;;### (autoloads (info-xref-docstrings info-xref-check-all-custom
  11186. ;;;;;; info-xref-check-all info-xref-check) "info-xref" "info-xref.el"
  11187. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  11188. ;;; Generated autoloads from info-xref.el
  11189. (autoload 'info-xref-check "info-xref" "\
  11190. Check external references in FILENAME, an info document.
  11191. Interactively from an `Info-mode' or `texinfo-mode' buffer the
  11192. current info file is the default.
  11193. Results are shown in a `compilation-mode' buffer. The format is
  11194. a bit rough, but there shouldn't be many problems normally. The
  11195. file:line:column: is the info document, but of course normally
  11196. any correction should be made in the original .texi file.
  11197. Finding the right place in the .texi is a manual process.
  11198. When a target info file doesn't exist there's obviously no way to
  11199. validate node references within it. A message is given for
  11200. missing target files once per source document. It could be
  11201. simply that you don't have the target installed, or it could be a
  11202. mistake in the reference.
  11203. Indirect info files are understood, just pass the top-level
  11204. foo.info to `info-xref-check' and it traverses all sub-files.
  11205. Compressed info files are accepted too as usual for `Info-mode'.
  11206. \"makeinfo\" checks references internal to an info document, but
  11207. not external references, which makes it rather easy for mistakes
  11208. to creep in or node name changes to go unnoticed.
  11209. `Info-validate' doesn't check external references either.
  11210. \(fn FILENAME)" t nil)
  11211. (autoload 'info-xref-check-all "info-xref" "\
  11212. Check external references in all info documents in the info path.
  11213. `Info-directory-list' and `Info-additional-directory-list' are
  11214. the info paths. See `info-xref-check' for how each file is
  11215. checked.
  11216. The search for \"all\" info files is rather permissive, since
  11217. info files don't necessarily have a \".info\" extension and in
  11218. particular the Emacs manuals normally don't. If you have a
  11219. source code directory in `Info-directory-list' then a lot of
  11220. extraneous files might be read. This will be time consuming but
  11221. should be harmless.
  11222. \(fn)" t nil)
  11223. (autoload 'info-xref-check-all-custom "info-xref" "\
  11224. Check info references in all customize groups and variables.
  11225. Info references can be in `custom-manual' or `info-link' entries
  11226. of the `custom-links' for a variable.
  11227. Any `custom-load' autoloads in variables are loaded in order to
  11228. get full link information. This will be a lot of Lisp packages
  11229. and can take a long time.
  11230. \(fn)" t nil)
  11231. (autoload 'info-xref-docstrings "info-xref" "\
  11232. Check docstring info node references in source files.
  11233. The given files are searched for docstring hyperlinks like
  11234. Info node `(elisp)Documentation Tips'
  11235. and those links checked by attempting to visit the target nodes
  11236. as per `info-xref-check' does.
  11237. Interactively filenames are read as a wildcard pattern like
  11238. \"foo*.el\", with the current file as a default. Usually this
  11239. will be lisp sources, but anything with such hyperlinks can be
  11240. checked, including the Emacs .c sources (or the etc/DOC file of
  11241. all builtins).
  11242. Because info node hyperlinks are found by a simple regexp search
  11243. in the files, the Lisp code checked doesn't have to be loaded,
  11244. and links can be in the file commentary or elsewhere too. Even
  11245. .elc files can usually be checked successfully if you don't have
  11246. the sources handy.
  11247. \(fn FILENAME-LIST)" t nil)
  11248. ;;;***
  11249. ;;;### (autoloads (batch-info-validate Info-validate Info-split Info-split-threshold
  11250. ;;;;;; Info-tagify) "informat" "informat.el" (20352 65510))
  11251. ;;; Generated autoloads from informat.el
  11252. (autoload 'Info-tagify "informat" "\
  11253. Create or update Info file tag table in current buffer or in a region.
  11254. \(fn &optional INPUT-BUFFER-NAME)" t nil)
  11255. (defvar Info-split-threshold 262144 "\
  11256. The number of characters by which `Info-split' splits an info file.")
  11257. (custom-autoload 'Info-split-threshold "informat" t)
  11258. (autoload 'Info-split "informat" "\
  11259. Split an info file into an indirect file plus bounded-size subfiles.
  11260. Each subfile will be up to the number of characters that
  11261. `Info-split-threshold' specifies, plus one node.
  11262. To use this command, first visit a large Info file that has a tag
  11263. table. The buffer is modified into a (small) indirect info file which
  11264. should be saved in place of the original visited file.
  11265. The subfiles are written in the same directory the original file is
  11266. in, with names generated by appending `-' and a number to the original
  11267. file name. The indirect file still functions as an Info file, but it
  11268. contains just the tag table and a directory of subfiles.
  11269. \(fn)" t nil)
  11270. (autoload 'Info-validate "informat" "\
  11271. Check current buffer for validity as an Info file.
  11272. Check that every node pointer points to an existing node.
  11273. \(fn)" t nil)
  11274. (autoload 'batch-info-validate "informat" "\
  11275. Runs `Info-validate' on the files remaining on the command line.
  11276. Must be used only with -batch, and kills Emacs on completion.
  11277. Each file will be processed even if an error occurred previously.
  11278. For example, invoke \"emacs -batch -f batch-info-validate $info/ ~/*.info\"
  11279. \(fn)" nil nil)
  11280. ;;;***
  11281. ;;;### (autoloads (isearch-process-search-multibyte-characters isearch-toggle-input-method
  11282. ;;;;;; isearch-toggle-specified-input-method) "isearch-x" "international/isearch-x.el"
  11283. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  11284. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/isearch-x.el
  11285. (autoload 'isearch-toggle-specified-input-method "isearch-x" "\
  11286. Select an input method and turn it on in interactive search.
  11287. \(fn)" t nil)
  11288. (autoload 'isearch-toggle-input-method "isearch-x" "\
  11289. Toggle input method in interactive search.
  11290. \(fn)" t nil)
  11291. (autoload 'isearch-process-search-multibyte-characters "isearch-x" "\
  11292. \(fn LAST-CHAR)" nil nil)
  11293. ;;;***
  11294. ;;;### (autoloads (isearchb-activate) "isearchb" "isearchb.el" (20352
  11295. ;;;;;; 65510))
  11296. ;;; Generated autoloads from isearchb.el
  11297. (autoload 'isearchb-activate "isearchb" "\
  11298. Active isearchb mode for subsequent alphanumeric keystrokes.
  11299. Executing this command again will terminate the search; or, if
  11300. the search has not yet begun, will toggle to the last buffer
  11301. accessed via isearchb.
  11302. \(fn)" t nil)
  11303. ;;;***
  11304. ;;;### (autoloads (iso-cvt-define-menu iso-cvt-write-only iso-cvt-read-only
  11305. ;;;;;; iso-sgml2iso iso-iso2sgml iso-iso2duden iso-iso2gtex iso-gtex2iso
  11306. ;;;;;; iso-tex2iso iso-iso2tex iso-german iso-spanish) "iso-cvt"
  11307. ;;;;;; "international/iso-cvt.el" (20352 65510))
  11308. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/iso-cvt.el
  11309. (autoload 'iso-spanish "iso-cvt" "\
  11310. Translate net conventions for Spanish to ISO 8859-1.
  11311. Translate the region between FROM and TO using the table
  11312. `iso-spanish-trans-tab'.
  11313. Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (for use in `format-alist').
  11314. \(fn FROM TO &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  11315. (autoload 'iso-german "iso-cvt" "\
  11316. Translate net conventions for German to ISO 8859-1.
  11317. Translate the region FROM and TO using the table
  11318. `iso-german-trans-tab'.
  11319. Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (for use in `format-alist').
  11320. \(fn FROM TO &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  11321. (autoload 'iso-iso2tex "iso-cvt" "\
  11322. Translate ISO 8859-1 characters to TeX sequences.
  11323. Translate the region between FROM and TO using the table
  11324. `iso-iso2tex-trans-tab'.
  11325. Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (for use in `format-alist').
  11326. \(fn FROM TO &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  11327. (autoload 'iso-tex2iso "iso-cvt" "\
  11328. Translate TeX sequences to ISO 8859-1 characters.
  11329. Translate the region between FROM and TO using the table
  11330. `iso-tex2iso-trans-tab'.
  11331. Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (for use in `format-alist').
  11332. \(fn FROM TO &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  11333. (autoload 'iso-gtex2iso "iso-cvt" "\
  11334. Translate German TeX sequences to ISO 8859-1 characters.
  11335. Translate the region between FROM and TO using the table
  11336. `iso-gtex2iso-trans-tab'.
  11337. Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (for use in `format-alist').
  11338. \(fn FROM TO &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  11339. (autoload 'iso-iso2gtex "iso-cvt" "\
  11340. Translate ISO 8859-1 characters to German TeX sequences.
  11341. Translate the region between FROM and TO using the table
  11342. `iso-iso2gtex-trans-tab'.
  11343. Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (for use in `format-alist').
  11344. \(fn FROM TO &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  11345. (autoload 'iso-iso2duden "iso-cvt" "\
  11346. Translate ISO 8859-1 characters to Duden sequences.
  11347. Translate the region between FROM and TO using the table
  11348. `iso-iso2duden-trans-tab'.
  11349. Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (for use in `format-alist').
  11350. \(fn FROM TO &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  11351. (autoload 'iso-iso2sgml "iso-cvt" "\
  11352. Translate ISO 8859-1 characters in the region to SGML entities.
  11353. Use entities from \"ISO 8879:1986//ENTITIES Added Latin 1//EN\".
  11354. Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (for use in `format-alist').
  11355. \(fn FROM TO &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  11356. (autoload 'iso-sgml2iso "iso-cvt" "\
  11357. Translate SGML entities in the region to ISO 8859-1 characters.
  11358. Use entities from \"ISO 8879:1986//ENTITIES Added Latin 1//EN\".
  11359. Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (for use in `format-alist').
  11360. \(fn FROM TO &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  11361. (autoload 'iso-cvt-read-only "iso-cvt" "\
  11362. Warn that format is read-only.
  11363. \(fn &rest IGNORE)" t nil)
  11364. (autoload 'iso-cvt-write-only "iso-cvt" "\
  11365. Warn that format is write-only.
  11366. \(fn &rest IGNORE)" t nil)
  11367. (autoload 'iso-cvt-define-menu "iso-cvt" "\
  11368. Add submenus to the File menu, to convert to and from various formats.
  11369. \(fn)" t nil)
  11370. ;;;***
  11371. ;;;### (autoloads nil "iso-transl" "international/iso-transl.el"
  11372. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  11373. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/iso-transl.el
  11374. (or key-translation-map (setq key-translation-map (make-sparse-keymap)))
  11375. (define-key key-translation-map "\C-x8" 'iso-transl-ctl-x-8-map)
  11376. (autoload 'iso-transl-ctl-x-8-map "iso-transl" "Keymap for C-x 8 prefix." t 'keymap)
  11377. ;;;***
  11378. ;;;### (autoloads (ispell-message ispell-minor-mode ispell ispell-complete-word-interior-frag
  11379. ;;;;;; ispell-complete-word ispell-continue ispell-buffer ispell-comments-and-strings
  11380. ;;;;;; ispell-region ispell-change-dictionary ispell-kill-ispell
  11381. ;;;;;; ispell-help ispell-pdict-save ispell-word ispell-personal-dictionary)
  11382. ;;;;;; "ispell" "textmodes/ispell.el" (20400 62402))
  11383. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/ispell.el
  11384. (put 'ispell-check-comments 'safe-local-variable (lambda (a) (memq a '(nil t exclusive))))
  11385. (defvar ispell-personal-dictionary nil "\
  11386. *File name of your personal spelling dictionary, or nil.
  11387. If nil, the default personal dictionary, (\"~/.ispell_DICTNAME\" for ispell or
  11388. \"~/.aspell.LANG.pws\" for aspell) is used, where DICTNAME is the name of your
  11389. default dictionary and LANG the two letter language code.")
  11390. (custom-autoload 'ispell-personal-dictionary "ispell" t)
  11391. (put 'ispell-local-dictionary 'safe-local-variable 'string-or-null-p)
  11392. (defvar ispell-menu-map nil "\
  11393. Key map for ispell menu.")
  11394. (defvar ispell-menu-xemacs nil "\
  11395. Spelling menu for XEmacs.
  11396. If nil when package is loaded, a standard menu will be set,
  11397. and added as a submenu of the \"Edit\" menu.")
  11398. (defvar ispell-menu-map-needed (and (not ispell-menu-map) (not (featurep 'xemacs)) 'reload))
  11399. (if ispell-menu-map-needed (progn (setq ispell-menu-map (make-sparse-keymap "Spell")) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-change-dictionary] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Change Dictionary...") ispell-change-dictionary :help ,(purecopy "Supply explicit dictionary file name"))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-kill-ispell] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Kill Process") ispell-kill-ispell :enable (and (boundp 'ispell-process) ispell-process (eq (ispell-process-status) 'run)) :help ,(purecopy "Terminate Ispell subprocess"))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-pdict-save] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Save Dictionary") (lambda nil (interactive) (ispell-pdict-save t t)) :help ,(purecopy "Save personal dictionary"))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-customize] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Customize...") (lambda nil (interactive) (customize-group 'ispell)) :help ,(purecopy "Customize spell checking options"))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-help] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Help") (lambda nil (interactive) (describe-function 'ispell-help)) :help ,(purecopy "Show standard Ispell keybindings and commands"))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [flyspell-mode] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Automatic spell checking (Flyspell)") flyspell-mode :help ,(purecopy "Check spelling while you edit the text") :button (:toggle bound-and-true-p flyspell-mode))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-complete-word] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Complete Word") ispell-complete-word :help ,(purecopy "Complete word at cursor using dictionary"))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-complete-word-interior-frag] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Complete Word Fragment") ispell-complete-word-interior-frag :help ,(purecopy "Complete word fragment at cursor")))))
  11400. (if ispell-menu-map-needed (progn (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-continue] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Continue Spell-Checking") ispell-continue :enable (and (boundp 'ispell-region-end) (marker-position ispell-region-end) (equal (marker-buffer ispell-region-end) (current-buffer))) :help ,(purecopy "Continue spell checking last region"))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-word] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Spell-Check Word") ispell-word :help ,(purecopy "Spell-check word at cursor"))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-comments-and-strings] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Spell-Check Comments") ispell-comments-and-strings :help ,(purecopy "Spell-check only comments and strings")))))
  11401. (if ispell-menu-map-needed (progn (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-region] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Spell-Check Region") ispell-region :enable mark-active :help ,(purecopy "Spell-check text in marked region"))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-message] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Spell-Check Message") ispell-message :visible (eq major-mode 'mail-mode) :help ,(purecopy "Skip headers and included message text"))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-buffer] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Spell-Check Buffer") ispell-buffer :help ,(purecopy "Check spelling of selected buffer"))) (fset 'ispell-menu-map (symbol-value 'ispell-menu-map))))
  11402. (defvar ispell-skip-region-alist `((ispell-words-keyword forward-line) (ispell-dictionary-keyword forward-line) (ispell-pdict-keyword forward-line) (ispell-parsing-keyword forward-line) (,(purecopy "^---*BEGIN PGP [A-Z ]*--*") \, (purecopy "^---*END PGP [A-Z ]*--*")) (,(purecopy "^begin [0-9][0-9][0-9] [^ ]+$") \, (purecopy "\nend\n")) (,(purecopy "^%!PS-Adobe-[123].0") \, (purecopy "\n%%EOF\n")) (,(purecopy "^---* \\(Start of \\)?[Ff]orwarded [Mm]essage") \, (purecopy "^---* End of [Ff]orwarded [Mm]essage")) (,(purecopy "\\(--+\\|_+\\|\\(/\\w\\|\\(\\(\\w\\|[-_]\\)+[.:@]\\)\\)\\(\\w\\|[-_]\\)*\\([.:/@]+\\(\\w\\|[-_~=?&]\\)+\\)+\\)"))) "\
  11403. Alist expressing beginning and end of regions not to spell check.
  11404. The alist key must be a regular expression.
  11405. Valid forms include:
  11406. (KEY) - just skip the key.
  11407. (KEY . REGEXP) - skip to the end of REGEXP. REGEXP may be string or symbol.
  11408. (KEY REGEXP) - skip to end of REGEXP. REGEXP must be a string.
  11409. (KEY FUNCTION ARGS) - FUNCTION called with ARGS returns end of region.")
  11410. (defvar ispell-tex-skip-alists (purecopy '((("\\\\addcontentsline" ispell-tex-arg-end 2) ("\\\\add\\(tocontents\\|vspace\\)" ispell-tex-arg-end) ("\\\\\\([aA]lph\\|arabic\\)" ispell-tex-arg-end) ("\\\\bibliographystyle" ispell-tex-arg-end) ("\\\\makebox" ispell-tex-arg-end 0) ("\\\\e?psfig" ispell-tex-arg-end) ("\\\\document\\(class\\|style\\)" . "\\\\begin[ \n]*{[ \n]*document[ \n]*}")) (("\\(figure\\|table\\)\\*?" ispell-tex-arg-end 0) ("list" ispell-tex-arg-end 2) ("program" . "\\\\end[ \n]*{[ \n]*program[ \n]*}") ("verbatim\\*?" . "\\\\end[ \n]*{[ \n]*verbatim\\*?[ \n]*}")))) "\
  11411. *Lists of regions to be skipped in TeX mode.
  11412. First list is used raw.
  11413. Second list has key placed inside \\begin{}.
  11414. Delete or add any regions you want to be automatically selected
  11415. for skipping in latex mode.")
  11416. (defconst ispell-html-skip-alists '(("<[cC][oO][dD][eE]\\>[^>]*>" "</[cC][oO][dD][eE]*>") ("<[sS][cC][rR][iI][pP][tT]\\>[^>]*>" "</[sS][cC][rR][iI][pP][tT]>") ("<[aA][pP][pP][lL][eE][tT]\\>[^>]*>" "</[aA][pP][pP][lL][eE][tT]>") ("<[vV][eE][rR][bB]\\>[^>]*>" "<[vV][eE][rR][bB]\\>[^>]*>") ("<[tT][tT]/" "/") ("<[^ \n>]" ">") ("&[^ \n;]" "[; \n]")) "\
  11417. *Lists of start and end keys to skip in HTML buffers.
  11418. Same format as `ispell-skip-region-alist'.
  11419. Note - substrings of other matches must come last
  11420. (e.g. \"<[tT][tT]/\" and \"<[^ \\t\\n>]\").")
  11421. (put 'ispell-local-pdict 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  11422. (define-key esc-map "$" 'ispell-word)
  11423. (autoload 'ispell-word "ispell" "\
  11424. Check spelling of word under or before the cursor.
  11425. If the word is not found in dictionary, display possible corrections
  11426. in a window allowing you to choose one.
  11427. If optional argument FOLLOWING is non-nil or if `ispell-following-word'
  11428. is non-nil when called interactively, then the following word
  11429. \(rather than preceding) is checked when the cursor is not over a word.
  11430. When the optional argument QUIETLY is non-nil or `ispell-quietly' is non-nil
  11431. when called interactively, non-corrective messages are suppressed.
  11432. With a prefix argument (or if CONTINUE is non-nil),
  11433. resume interrupted spell-checking of a buffer or region.
  11434. Interactively, in Transient Mark mode when the mark is active, call
  11435. `ispell-region' to check the active region for spelling errors.
  11436. Word syntax is controlled by the definition of the chosen dictionary,
  11437. which is in `ispell-local-dictionary-alist' or `ispell-dictionary-alist'.
  11438. This will check or reload the dictionary. Use \\[ispell-change-dictionary]
  11439. or \\[ispell-region] to update the Ispell process.
  11440. Return values:
  11441. nil word is correct or spelling is accepted.
  11442. 0 word is inserted into buffer-local definitions.
  11443. \"word\" word corrected from word list.
  11444. \(\"word\" arg) word is hand entered.
  11445. quit spell session exited.
  11446. \(fn &optional FOLLOWING QUIETLY CONTINUE REGION)" t nil)
  11447. (autoload 'ispell-pdict-save "ispell" "\
  11448. Check to see if the personal dictionary has been modified.
  11449. If so, ask if it needs to be saved.
  11450. \(fn &optional NO-QUERY FORCE-SAVE)" t nil)
  11451. (autoload 'ispell-help "ispell" "\
  11452. Display a list of the options available when a misspelling is encountered.
  11453. Selections are:
  11454. DIGIT: Replace the word with a digit offered in the *Choices* buffer.
  11455. SPC: Accept word this time.
  11456. `i': Accept word and insert into private dictionary.
  11457. `a': Accept word for this session.
  11458. `A': Accept word and place in `buffer-local dictionary'.
  11459. `r': Replace word with typed-in value. Rechecked.
  11460. `R': Replace word with typed-in value. Query-replaced in buffer. Rechecked.
  11461. `?': Show these commands.
  11462. `x': Exit spelling buffer. Move cursor to original point.
  11463. `X': Exit spelling buffer. Leaves cursor at the current point, and permits
  11464. the aborted check to be completed later.
  11465. `q': Quit spelling session (Kills ispell process).
  11466. `l': Look up typed-in replacement in alternate dictionary. Wildcards okay.
  11467. `u': Like `i', but the word is lower-cased first.
  11468. `m': Place typed-in value in personal dictionary, then recheck current word.
  11469. `C-l': Redraw screen.
  11470. `C-r': Recursive edit.
  11471. `C-z': Suspend Emacs or iconify frame.
  11472. \(fn)" nil nil)
  11473. (autoload 'ispell-kill-ispell "ispell" "\
  11474. Kill current Ispell process (so that you may start a fresh one).
  11475. With NO-ERROR, just return non-nil if there was no Ispell running.
  11476. \(fn &optional NO-ERROR)" t nil)
  11477. (autoload 'ispell-change-dictionary "ispell" "\
  11478. Change to dictionary DICT for Ispell.
  11479. With a prefix arg, set it \"globally\", for all buffers.
  11480. Without a prefix arg, set it \"locally\", just for this buffer.
  11481. By just answering RET you can find out what the current dictionary is.
  11482. \(fn DICT &optional ARG)" t nil)
  11483. (autoload 'ispell-region "ispell" "\
  11484. Interactively check a region for spelling errors.
  11485. Return nil if spell session was terminated, otherwise returns shift offset
  11486. amount for last line processed.
  11487. \(fn REG-START REG-END &optional RECHECKP SHIFT)" t nil)
  11488. (autoload 'ispell-comments-and-strings "ispell" "\
  11489. Check comments and strings in the current buffer for spelling errors.
  11490. \(fn)" t nil)
  11491. (autoload 'ispell-buffer "ispell" "\
  11492. Check the current buffer for spelling errors interactively.
  11493. \(fn)" t nil)
  11494. (autoload 'ispell-continue "ispell" "\
  11495. Continue a halted spelling session beginning with the current word.
  11496. \(fn)" t nil)
  11497. (autoload 'ispell-complete-word "ispell" "\
  11498. Try to complete the word before or under point (see `lookup-words').
  11499. If optional INTERIOR-FRAG is non-nil then the word may be a character
  11500. sequence inside of a word.
  11501. Standard ispell choices are then available.
  11502. \(fn &optional INTERIOR-FRAG)" t nil)
  11503. (autoload 'ispell-complete-word-interior-frag "ispell" "\
  11504. Completes word matching character sequence inside a word.
  11505. \(fn)" t nil)
  11506. (autoload 'ispell "ispell" "\
  11507. Interactively check a region or buffer for spelling errors.
  11508. If `transient-mark-mode' is on, and a region is active, spell-check
  11509. that region. Otherwise spell-check the buffer.
  11510. Ispell dictionaries are not distributed with Emacs. If you are
  11511. looking for a dictionary, please see the distribution of the GNU ispell
  11512. program, or do an Internet search; there are various dictionaries
  11513. available on the net.
  11514. \(fn)" t nil)
  11515. (autoload 'ispell-minor-mode "ispell" "\
  11516. Toggle last-word spell checking (Ispell minor mode).
  11517. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Ispell minor mode if ARG is
  11518. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  11519. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  11520. Ispell minor mode is a buffer-local minor mode. When enabled,
  11521. typing SPC or RET warns you if the previous word is incorrectly
  11522. spelled.
  11523. All the buffer-local variables and dictionaries are ignored. To
  11524. read them into the running ispell process, type \\[ispell-word]
  11525. SPC.
  11526. For spell-checking \"on the fly\", not just after typing SPC or
  11527. RET, use `flyspell-mode'.
  11528. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  11529. (autoload 'ispell-message "ispell" "\
  11530. Check the spelling of a mail message or news post.
  11531. Don't check spelling of message headers except the Subject field.
  11532. Don't check included messages.
  11533. To abort spell checking of a message region and send the message anyway,
  11534. use the `x' command. (Any subsequent regions will be checked.)
  11535. The `X' command aborts sending the message so that you can edit the buffer.
  11536. To spell-check whenever a message is sent, include the appropriate lines
  11537. in your .emacs file:
  11538. (add-hook 'message-send-hook 'ispell-message) ;; GNUS 5
  11539. (add-hook 'news-inews-hook 'ispell-message) ;; GNUS 4
  11540. (add-hook 'mail-send-hook 'ispell-message)
  11541. (add-hook 'mh-before-send-letter-hook 'ispell-message)
  11542. You can bind this to the key C-c i in GNUS or mail by adding to
  11543. `news-reply-mode-hook' or `mail-mode-hook' the following lambda expression:
  11544. (function (lambda () (local-set-key \"\\C-ci\" 'ispell-message)))
  11545. \(fn)" t nil)
  11546. ;;;***
  11547. ;;;### (autoloads (iswitchb-mode) "iswitchb" "iswitchb.el" (20400
  11548. ;;;;;; 62402))
  11549. ;;; Generated autoloads from iswitchb.el
  11550. (defvar iswitchb-mode nil "\
  11551. Non-nil if Iswitchb mode is enabled.
  11552. See the command `iswitchb-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  11553. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  11554. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  11555. or call the function `iswitchb-mode'.")
  11556. (custom-autoload 'iswitchb-mode "iswitchb" nil)
  11557. (autoload 'iswitchb-mode "iswitchb" "\
  11558. Toggle Iswitchb mode.
  11559. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Iswitchb mode if ARG is
  11560. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  11561. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  11562. Iswitchb mode is a global minor mode that enables switching
  11563. between buffers using substrings. See `iswitchb' for details.
  11564. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  11565. ;;;***
  11566. ;;;### (autoloads (read-hiragana-string japanese-zenkaku-region japanese-hankaku-region
  11567. ;;;;;; japanese-hiragana-region japanese-katakana-region japanese-zenkaku
  11568. ;;;;;; japanese-hankaku japanese-hiragana japanese-katakana setup-japanese-environment-internal)
  11569. ;;;;;; "japan-util" "language/japan-util.el" (20352 65510))
  11570. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/japan-util.el
  11571. (autoload 'setup-japanese-environment-internal "japan-util" "\
  11572. \(fn)" nil nil)
  11573. (autoload 'japanese-katakana "japan-util" "\
  11574. Convert argument to Katakana and return that.
  11575. The argument may be a character or string. The result has the same type.
  11576. The argument object is not altered--the value is a copy.
  11577. Optional argument HANKAKU t means to convert to `hankaku' Katakana
  11578. (`japanese-jisx0201-kana'), in which case return value
  11579. may be a string even if OBJ is a character if two Katakanas are
  11580. necessary to represent OBJ.
  11581. \(fn OBJ &optional HANKAKU)" nil nil)
  11582. (autoload 'japanese-hiragana "japan-util" "\
  11583. Convert argument to Hiragana and return that.
  11584. The argument may be a character or string. The result has the same type.
  11585. The argument object is not altered--the value is a copy.
  11586. \(fn OBJ)" nil nil)
  11587. (autoload 'japanese-hankaku "japan-util" "\
  11588. Convert argument to `hankaku' and return that.
  11589. The argument may be a character or string. The result has the same type.
  11590. The argument object is not altered--the value is a copy.
  11591. Optional argument ASCII-ONLY non-nil means to return only ASCII character.
  11592. \(fn OBJ &optional ASCII-ONLY)" nil nil)
  11593. (autoload 'japanese-zenkaku "japan-util" "\
  11594. Convert argument to `zenkaku' and return that.
  11595. The argument may be a character or string. The result has the same type.
  11596. The argument object is not altered--the value is a copy.
  11597. \(fn OBJ)" nil nil)
  11598. (autoload 'japanese-katakana-region "japan-util" "\
  11599. Convert Japanese `hiragana' chars in the region to `katakana' chars.
  11600. Optional argument HANKAKU t means to convert to `hankaku katakana' character
  11601. of which charset is `japanese-jisx0201-kana'.
  11602. \(fn FROM TO &optional HANKAKU)" t nil)
  11603. (autoload 'japanese-hiragana-region "japan-util" "\
  11604. Convert Japanese `katakana' chars in the region to `hiragana' chars.
  11605. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  11606. (autoload 'japanese-hankaku-region "japan-util" "\
  11607. Convert Japanese `zenkaku' chars in the region to `hankaku' chars.
  11608. `Zenkaku' chars belong to `japanese-jisx0208'
  11609. `Hankaku' chars belong to `ascii' or `japanese-jisx0201-kana'.
  11610. Optional argument ASCII-ONLY non-nil means to convert only to ASCII char.
  11611. \(fn FROM TO &optional ASCII-ONLY)" t nil)
  11612. (autoload 'japanese-zenkaku-region "japan-util" "\
  11613. Convert hankaku' chars in the region to Japanese `zenkaku' chars.
  11614. `Zenkaku' chars belong to `japanese-jisx0208'
  11615. `Hankaku' chars belong to `ascii' or `japanese-jisx0201-kana'.
  11616. Optional argument KATAKANA-ONLY non-nil means to convert only KATAKANA char.
  11617. \(fn FROM TO &optional KATAKANA-ONLY)" t nil)
  11618. (autoload 'read-hiragana-string "japan-util" "\
  11619. Read a Hiragana string from the minibuffer, prompting with string PROMPT.
  11620. If non-nil, second arg INITIAL-INPUT is a string to insert before reading.
  11621. \(fn PROMPT &optional INITIAL-INPUT)" nil nil)
  11622. ;;;***
  11623. ;;;### (autoloads (jka-compr-uninstall jka-compr-handler) "jka-compr"
  11624. ;;;;;; "jka-compr.el" (20352 65510))
  11625. ;;; Generated autoloads from jka-compr.el
  11626. (defvar jka-compr-inhibit nil "\
  11627. Non-nil means inhibit automatic uncompression temporarily.
  11628. Lisp programs can bind this to t to do that.
  11629. It is not recommended to set this variable permanently to anything but nil.")
  11630. (autoload 'jka-compr-handler "jka-compr" "\
  11631. \(fn OPERATION &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  11632. (autoload 'jka-compr-uninstall "jka-compr" "\
  11633. Uninstall jka-compr.
  11634. This removes the entries in `file-name-handler-alist' and `auto-mode-alist'
  11635. and `inhibit-local-variables-suffixes' that were added
  11636. by `jka-compr-installed'.
  11637. \(fn)" nil nil)
  11638. ;;;***
  11639. ;;;### (autoloads (js-mode) "js" "progmodes/js.el" (20400 62402))
  11640. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/js.el
  11641. (autoload 'js-mode "js" "\
  11642. Major mode for editing JavaScript.
  11643. \(fn)" t nil)
  11644. (defalias 'javascript-mode 'js-mode)
  11645. ;;;***
  11646. ;;;### (autoloads (keypad-setup keypad-numlock-shifted-setup keypad-shifted-setup
  11647. ;;;;;; keypad-numlock-setup keypad-setup) "keypad" "emulation/keypad.el"
  11648. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  11649. ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/keypad.el
  11650. (defvar keypad-setup nil "\
  11651. Specifies the keypad setup for unshifted keypad keys when NumLock is off.
  11652. When selecting the plain numeric keypad setup, the character returned by the
  11653. decimal key must be specified.")
  11654. (custom-autoload 'keypad-setup "keypad" nil)
  11655. (defvar keypad-numlock-setup nil "\
  11656. Specifies the keypad setup for unshifted keypad keys when NumLock is on.
  11657. When selecting the plain numeric keypad setup, the character returned by the
  11658. decimal key must be specified.")
  11659. (custom-autoload 'keypad-numlock-setup "keypad" nil)
  11660. (defvar keypad-shifted-setup nil "\
  11661. Specifies the keypad setup for shifted keypad keys when NumLock is off.
  11662. When selecting the plain numeric keypad setup, the character returned by the
  11663. decimal key must be specified.")
  11664. (custom-autoload 'keypad-shifted-setup "keypad" nil)
  11665. (defvar keypad-numlock-shifted-setup nil "\
  11666. Specifies the keypad setup for shifted keypad keys when NumLock is off.
  11667. When selecting the plain numeric keypad setup, the character returned by the
  11668. decimal key must be specified.")
  11669. (custom-autoload 'keypad-numlock-shifted-setup "keypad" nil)
  11670. (autoload 'keypad-setup "keypad" "\
  11671. Set keypad bindings in `function-key-map' according to SETUP.
  11672. If optional second argument NUMLOCK is non-nil, the NumLock On bindings
  11673. are changed. Otherwise, the NumLock Off bindings are changed.
  11674. If optional third argument SHIFT is non-nil, the shifted keypad
  11675. keys are bound.
  11676. Setup Binding
  11677. -------------------------------------------------------------
  11678. 'prefix Command prefix argument, i.e. M-0 .. M-9 and M--
  11679. 'S-cursor Bind shifted keypad keys to the shifted cursor movement keys.
  11680. 'cursor Bind keypad keys to the cursor movement keys.
  11681. 'numeric Plain numeric keypad, i.e. 0 .. 9 and . (or DECIMAL arg)
  11682. 'none Removes all bindings for keypad keys in function-key-map;
  11683. this enables any user-defined bindings for the keypad keys
  11684. in the global and local keymaps.
  11685. If SETUP is 'numeric and the optional fourth argument DECIMAL is non-nil,
  11686. the decimal key on the keypad is mapped to DECIMAL instead of `.'
  11687. \(fn SETUP &optional NUMLOCK SHIFT DECIMAL)" nil nil)
  11688. ;;;***
  11689. ;;;### (autoloads (kinsoku) "kinsoku" "international/kinsoku.el"
  11690. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  11691. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/kinsoku.el
  11692. (autoload 'kinsoku "kinsoku" "\
  11693. Go to a line breaking position near point by doing `kinsoku' processing.
  11694. LINEBEG is a buffer position we can't break a line before.
  11695. `Kinsoku' processing is to prohibit specific characters to be placed
  11696. at beginning of line or at end of line. Characters not to be placed
  11697. at beginning and end of line have character category `>' and `<'
  11698. respectively. This restriction is dissolved by making a line longer or
  11699. shorter.
  11700. `Kinsoku' is a Japanese word which originally means ordering to stay
  11701. in one place, and is used for the text processing described above in
  11702. the context of text formatting.
  11703. \(fn LINEBEG)" nil nil)
  11704. ;;;***
  11705. ;;;### (autoloads (kkc-region) "kkc" "international/kkc.el" (20352
  11706. ;;;;;; 65510))
  11707. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/kkc.el
  11708. (defvar kkc-after-update-conversion-functions nil "\
  11709. Functions to run after a conversion is selected in `japanese' input method.
  11710. With this input method, a user can select a proper conversion from
  11711. candidate list. Each time he changes the selection, functions in this
  11712. list are called with two arguments; starting and ending buffer
  11713. positions that contains the current selection.")
  11714. (autoload 'kkc-region "kkc" "\
  11715. Convert Kana string in the current region to Kanji-Kana mixed string.
  11716. Users can select a desirable conversion interactively.
  11717. When called from a program, expects two arguments,
  11718. positions FROM and TO (integers or markers) specifying the target region.
  11719. When it returns, the point is at the tail of the selected conversion,
  11720. and the return value is the length of the conversion.
  11721. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  11722. ;;;***
  11723. ;;;### (autoloads (kmacro-end-call-mouse kmacro-end-and-call-macro
  11724. ;;;;;; kmacro-end-or-call-macro kmacro-start-macro-or-insert-counter
  11725. ;;;;;; kmacro-call-macro kmacro-end-macro kmacro-start-macro kmacro-exec-ring-item)
  11726. ;;;;;; "kmacro" "kmacro.el" (20400 62402))
  11727. ;;; Generated autoloads from kmacro.el
  11728. (global-set-key "\C-x(" 'kmacro-start-macro)
  11729. (global-set-key "\C-x)" 'kmacro-end-macro)
  11730. (global-set-key "\C-xe" 'kmacro-end-and-call-macro)
  11731. (global-set-key [f3] 'kmacro-start-macro-or-insert-counter)
  11732. (global-set-key [f4] 'kmacro-end-or-call-macro)
  11733. (global-set-key "\C-x\C-k" 'kmacro-keymap)
  11734. (autoload 'kmacro-keymap "kmacro" "Keymap for keyboard macro commands." t 'keymap)
  11735. (autoload 'kmacro-exec-ring-item "kmacro" "\
  11736. Execute item ITEM from the macro ring.
  11737. \(fn ITEM ARG)" nil nil)
  11738. (autoload 'kmacro-start-macro "kmacro" "\
  11739. Record subsequent keyboard input, defining a keyboard macro.
  11740. The commands are recorded even as they are executed.
  11741. Use \\[kmacro-end-macro] to finish recording and make the macro available.
  11742. Use \\[kmacro-end-and-call-macro] to execute the macro.
  11743. Non-nil arg (prefix arg) means append to last macro defined.
  11744. With \\[universal-argument] prefix, append to last keyboard macro
  11745. defined. Depending on `kmacro-execute-before-append', this may begin
  11746. by re-executing the last macro as if you typed it again.
  11747. Otherwise, it sets `kmacro-counter' to ARG or 0 if missing before
  11748. defining the macro.
  11749. Use \\[kmacro-insert-counter] to insert (and increment) the macro counter.
  11750. The counter value can be set or modified via \\[kmacro-set-counter] and \\[kmacro-add-counter].
  11751. The format of the counter can be modified via \\[kmacro-set-format].
  11752. Use \\[kmacro-name-last-macro] to give it a permanent name.
  11753. Use \\[kmacro-bind-to-key] to bind it to a key sequence.
  11754. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  11755. (autoload 'kmacro-end-macro "kmacro" "\
  11756. Finish defining a keyboard macro.
  11757. The definition was started by \\[kmacro-start-macro].
  11758. The macro is now available for use via \\[kmacro-call-macro],
  11759. or it can be given a name with \\[kmacro-name-last-macro] and then invoked
  11760. under that name.
  11761. With numeric arg, repeat macro now that many times,
  11762. counting the definition just completed as the first repetition.
  11763. An argument of zero means repeat until error.
  11764. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  11765. (autoload 'kmacro-call-macro "kmacro" "\
  11766. Call the last keyboard macro that you defined with \\[kmacro-start-macro].
  11767. A prefix argument serves as a repeat count. Zero means repeat until error.
  11768. When you call the macro, you can call the macro again by repeating
  11769. just the last key in the key sequence that you used to call this
  11770. command. See `kmacro-call-repeat-key' and `kmacro-call-repeat-with-arg'
  11771. for details on how to adjust or disable this behavior.
  11772. To make a macro permanent so you can call it even after defining
  11773. others, use \\[kmacro-name-last-macro].
  11774. \(fn ARG &optional NO-REPEAT END-MACRO)" t nil)
  11775. (autoload 'kmacro-start-macro-or-insert-counter "kmacro" "\
  11776. Record subsequent keyboard input, defining a keyboard macro.
  11777. The commands are recorded even as they are executed.
  11778. Sets the `kmacro-counter' to ARG (or 0 if no prefix arg) before defining the
  11779. macro.
  11780. With \\[universal-argument], appends to current keyboard macro (keeping
  11781. the current value of `kmacro-counter').
  11782. When defining/executing macro, inserts macro counter and increments
  11783. the counter with ARG or 1 if missing. With \\[universal-argument],
  11784. inserts previous `kmacro-counter' (but do not modify counter).
  11785. The macro counter can be modified via \\[kmacro-set-counter] and \\[kmacro-add-counter].
  11786. The format of the counter can be modified via \\[kmacro-set-format].
  11787. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  11788. (autoload 'kmacro-end-or-call-macro "kmacro" "\
  11789. End kbd macro if currently being defined; else call last kbd macro.
  11790. With numeric prefix ARG, repeat macro that many times.
  11791. With \\[universal-argument], call second macro in macro ring.
  11792. \(fn ARG &optional NO-REPEAT)" t nil)
  11793. (autoload 'kmacro-end-and-call-macro "kmacro" "\
  11794. Call last keyboard macro, ending it first if currently being defined.
  11795. With numeric prefix ARG, repeat macro that many times.
  11796. Zero argument means repeat until there is an error.
  11797. To give a macro a permanent name, so you can call it
  11798. even after defining other macros, use \\[kmacro-name-last-macro].
  11799. \(fn ARG &optional NO-REPEAT)" t nil)
  11800. (autoload 'kmacro-end-call-mouse "kmacro" "\
  11801. Move point to the position clicked with the mouse and call last kbd macro.
  11802. If kbd macro currently being defined end it before activating it.
  11803. \(fn EVENT)" t nil)
  11804. ;;;***
  11805. ;;;### (autoloads (setup-korean-environment-internal) "korea-util"
  11806. ;;;;;; "language/korea-util.el" (20400 62402))
  11807. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/korea-util.el
  11808. (defvar default-korean-keyboard (purecopy (if (string-match "3" (or (getenv "HANGUL_KEYBOARD_TYPE") "")) "3" "")) "\
  11809. *The kind of Korean keyboard for Korean input method.
  11810. \"\" for 2, \"3\" for 3.")
  11811. (autoload 'setup-korean-environment-internal "korea-util" "\
  11812. \(fn)" nil nil)
  11813. ;;;***
  11814. ;;;### (autoloads (landmark landmark-test-run) "landmark" "play/landmark.el"
  11815. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  11816. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/landmark.el
  11817. (defalias 'landmark-repeat 'landmark-test-run)
  11818. (autoload 'landmark-test-run "landmark" "\
  11819. Run 100 Landmark games, each time saving the weights from the previous game.
  11820. \(fn)" t nil)
  11821. (autoload 'landmark "landmark" "\
  11822. Start or resume an Landmark game.
  11823. If a game is in progress, this command allows you to resume it.
  11824. Here is the relation between prefix args and game options:
  11825. prefix arg | robot is auto-started | weights are saved from last game
  11826. ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  11827. none / 1 | yes | no
  11828. 2 | yes | yes
  11829. 3 | no | yes
  11830. 4 | no | no
  11831. You start by moving to a square and typing \\[landmark-start-robot],
  11832. if you did not use a prefix arg to ask for automatic start.
  11833. Use \\[describe-mode] for more info.
  11834. \(fn PARG)" t nil)
  11835. ;;;***
  11836. ;;;### (autoloads (lao-compose-region lao-composition-function lao-transcribe-roman-to-lao-string
  11837. ;;;;;; lao-transcribe-single-roman-syllable-to-lao lao-compose-string)
  11838. ;;;;;; "lao-util" "language/lao-util.el" (20352 65510))
  11839. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/lao-util.el
  11840. (autoload 'lao-compose-string "lao-util" "\
  11841. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  11842. (autoload 'lao-transcribe-single-roman-syllable-to-lao "lao-util" "\
  11843. Transcribe a Romanized Lao syllable in the region FROM and TO to Lao string.
  11844. Only the first syllable is transcribed.
  11845. The value has the form: (START END LAO-STRING), where
  11846. START and END are the beginning and end positions of the Roman Lao syllable,
  11847. LAO-STRING is the Lao character transcription of it.
  11848. Optional 3rd arg STR, if non-nil, is a string to search for Roman Lao
  11849. syllable. In that case, FROM and TO are indexes to STR.
  11850. \(fn FROM TO &optional STR)" nil nil)
  11851. (autoload 'lao-transcribe-roman-to-lao-string "lao-util" "\
  11852. Transcribe Romanized Lao string STR to Lao character string.
  11853. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  11854. (autoload 'lao-composition-function "lao-util" "\
  11855. \(fn GSTRING)" nil nil)
  11856. (autoload 'lao-compose-region "lao-util" "\
  11857. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  11858. ;;;***
  11859. ;;;### (autoloads (latexenc-find-file-coding-system latexenc-coding-system-to-inputenc
  11860. ;;;;;; latexenc-inputenc-to-coding-system latex-inputenc-coding-alist)
  11861. ;;;;;; "latexenc" "international/latexenc.el" (20352 65510))
  11862. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/latexenc.el
  11863. (defvar latex-inputenc-coding-alist (purecopy '(("ansinew" . windows-1252) ("applemac" . mac-roman) ("ascii" . us-ascii) ("cp1250" . windows-1250) ("cp1252" . windows-1252) ("cp1257" . cp1257) ("cp437de" . cp437) ("cp437" . cp437) ("cp850" . cp850) ("cp852" . cp852) ("cp858" . cp858) ("cp865" . cp865) ("latin1" . iso-8859-1) ("latin2" . iso-8859-2) ("latin3" . iso-8859-3) ("latin4" . iso-8859-4) ("latin5" . iso-8859-5) ("latin9" . iso-8859-15) ("next" . next) ("utf8" . utf-8) ("utf8x" . utf-8))) "\
  11864. Mapping from LaTeX encodings in \"inputenc.sty\" to Emacs coding systems.
  11865. LaTeX encodings are specified with \"\\usepackage[encoding]{inputenc}\".
  11866. Used by the function `latexenc-find-file-coding-system'.")
  11867. (custom-autoload 'latex-inputenc-coding-alist "latexenc" t)
  11868. (autoload 'latexenc-inputenc-to-coding-system "latexenc" "\
  11869. Return the corresponding coding-system for the specified input encoding.
  11870. Return nil if no matching coding system can be found.
  11871. \(fn INPUTENC)" nil nil)
  11872. (autoload 'latexenc-coding-system-to-inputenc "latexenc" "\
  11873. Return the corresponding input encoding for the specified coding system.
  11874. Return nil if no matching input encoding can be found.
  11875. \(fn CS)" nil nil)
  11876. (autoload 'latexenc-find-file-coding-system "latexenc" "\
  11877. Determine the coding system of a LaTeX file if it uses \"inputenc.sty\".
  11878. The mapping from LaTeX's \"inputenc.sty\" encoding names to Emacs
  11879. coding system names is determined from `latex-inputenc-coding-alist'.
  11880. \(fn ARG-LIST)" nil nil)
  11881. ;;;***
  11882. ;;;### (autoloads (latin1-display-ucs-per-lynx latin1-display latin1-display)
  11883. ;;;;;; "latin1-disp" "international/latin1-disp.el" (20352 65510))
  11884. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/latin1-disp.el
  11885. (defvar latin1-display nil "\
  11886. Set up Latin-1/ASCII display for ISO8859 character sets.
  11887. This is done for each character set in the list `latin1-display-sets',
  11888. if no font is available to display it. Characters are displayed using
  11889. the corresponding Latin-1 characters where they match. Otherwise
  11890. ASCII sequences are used, mostly following the Latin prefix input
  11891. methods. Some different ASCII sequences are used if
  11892. `latin1-display-mnemonic' is non-nil.
  11893. This option also treats some characters in the `mule-unicode-...'
  11894. charsets if you don't have a Unicode font with which to display them.
  11895. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  11896. use either \\[customize] or the function `latin1-display'.")
  11897. (custom-autoload 'latin1-display "latin1-disp" nil)
  11898. (autoload 'latin1-display "latin1-disp" "\
  11899. Set up Latin-1/ASCII display for the arguments character SETS.
  11900. See option `latin1-display' for the method. The members of the list
  11901. must be in `latin1-display-sets'. With no arguments, reset the
  11902. display for all of `latin1-display-sets'. See also
  11903. `latin1-display-setup'.
  11904. \(fn &rest SETS)" nil nil)
  11905. (defvar latin1-display-ucs-per-lynx nil "\
  11906. Set up Latin-1/ASCII display for Unicode characters.
  11907. This uses the transliterations of the Lynx browser. The display isn't
  11908. changed if the display can render Unicode characters.
  11909. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  11910. use either \\[customize] or the function `latin1-display'.")
  11911. (custom-autoload 'latin1-display-ucs-per-lynx "latin1-disp" nil)
  11912. ;;;***
  11913. ;;;### (autoloads (ld-script-mode) "ld-script" "progmodes/ld-script.el"
  11914. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  11915. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ld-script.el
  11916. (autoload 'ld-script-mode "ld-script" "\
  11917. A major mode to edit GNU ld script files
  11918. \(fn)" t nil)
  11919. ;;;***
  11920. ;;;### (autoloads (ledit-from-lisp-mode ledit-mode) "ledit" "ledit.el"
  11921. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  11922. ;;; Generated autoloads from ledit.el
  11923. (defconst ledit-save-files t "\
  11924. *Non-nil means Ledit should save files before transferring to Lisp.")
  11925. (defconst ledit-go-to-lisp-string "%?lisp" "\
  11926. *Shell commands to execute to resume Lisp job.")
  11927. (defconst ledit-go-to-liszt-string "%?liszt" "\
  11928. *Shell commands to execute to resume Lisp compiler job.")
  11929. (autoload 'ledit-mode "ledit" "\
  11930. \\<ledit-mode-map>Major mode for editing text and stuffing it to a Lisp job.
  11931. Like Lisp mode, plus these special commands:
  11932. \\[ledit-save-defun] -- record defun at or after point
  11933. for later transmission to Lisp job.
  11934. \\[ledit-save-region] -- record region for later transmission to Lisp job.
  11935. \\[ledit-go-to-lisp] -- transfer to Lisp job and transmit saved text.
  11936. \\[ledit-go-to-liszt] -- transfer to Liszt (Lisp compiler) job
  11937. and transmit saved text.
  11938. \\{ledit-mode-map}
  11939. To make Lisp mode automatically change to Ledit mode,
  11940. do (setq lisp-mode-hook 'ledit-from-lisp-mode)
  11941. \(fn)" t nil)
  11942. (autoload 'ledit-from-lisp-mode "ledit" "\
  11943. \(fn)" nil nil)
  11944. ;;;***
  11945. ;;;### (autoloads (life) "life" "play/life.el" (20352 65510))
  11946. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/life.el
  11947. (autoload 'life "life" "\
  11948. Run Conway's Life simulation.
  11949. The starting pattern is randomly selected. Prefix arg (optional first
  11950. arg non-nil from a program) is the number of seconds to sleep between
  11951. generations (this defaults to 1).
  11952. \(fn &optional SLEEPTIME)" t nil)
  11953. ;;;***
  11954. ;;;### (autoloads (global-linum-mode linum-mode linum-format) "linum"
  11955. ;;;;;; "linum.el" (20352 65510))
  11956. ;;; Generated autoloads from linum.el
  11957. (defvar linum-format 'dynamic "\
  11958. Format used to display line numbers.
  11959. Either a format string like \"%7d\", `dynamic' to adapt the width
  11960. as needed, or a function that is called with a line number as its
  11961. argument and should evaluate to a string to be shown on that line.
  11962. See also `linum-before-numbering-hook'.")
  11963. (custom-autoload 'linum-format "linum" t)
  11964. (autoload 'linum-mode "linum" "\
  11965. Toggle display of line numbers in the left margin (Linum mode).
  11966. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Linum mode if ARG is positive,
  11967. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  11968. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  11969. Linum mode is a buffer-local minor mode.
  11970. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  11971. (defvar global-linum-mode nil "\
  11972. Non-nil if Global-Linum mode is enabled.
  11973. See the command `global-linum-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  11974. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  11975. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  11976. or call the function `global-linum-mode'.")
  11977. (custom-autoload 'global-linum-mode "linum" nil)
  11978. (autoload 'global-linum-mode "linum" "\
  11979. Toggle Linum mode in all buffers.
  11980. With prefix ARG, enable Global-Linum mode if ARG is positive;
  11981. otherwise, disable it. If called from Lisp, enable the mode if
  11982. ARG is omitted or nil.
  11983. Linum mode is enabled in all buffers where
  11984. `linum-on' would do it.
  11985. See `linum-mode' for more information on Linum mode.
  11986. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  11987. ;;;***
  11988. ;;;### (autoloads (unload-feature) "loadhist" "loadhist.el" (20400
  11989. ;;;;;; 62402))
  11990. ;;; Generated autoloads from loadhist.el
  11991. (autoload 'unload-feature "loadhist" "\
  11992. Unload the library that provided FEATURE.
  11993. If the feature is required by any other loaded code, and prefix arg FORCE
  11994. is nil, raise an error.
  11995. Standard unloading activities include restoring old autoloads for
  11996. functions defined by the library, undoing any additions that the
  11997. library has made to hook variables or to `auto-mode-alist', undoing
  11998. ELP profiling of functions in that library, unproviding any features
  11999. provided by the library, and canceling timers held in variables
  12000. defined by the library.
  12001. If a function `FEATURE-unload-function' is defined, this function
  12002. calls it with no arguments, before doing anything else. That function
  12003. can do whatever is appropriate to undo the loading of the library. If
  12004. `FEATURE-unload-function' returns non-nil, that suppresses the
  12005. standard unloading of the library. Otherwise the standard unloading
  12006. proceeds.
  12007. `FEATURE-unload-function' has access to the package's list of
  12008. definitions in the variable `unload-function-defs-list' and could
  12009. remove symbols from it in the event that the package has done
  12010. something strange, such as redefining an Emacs function.
  12011. \(fn FEATURE &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  12012. ;;;***
  12013. ;;;### (autoloads (locate-with-filter locate locate-ls-subdir-switches)
  12014. ;;;;;; "locate" "locate.el" (20352 65510))
  12015. ;;; Generated autoloads from locate.el
  12016. (defvar locate-ls-subdir-switches (purecopy "-al") "\
  12017. `ls' switches for inserting subdirectories in `*Locate*' buffers.
  12018. This should contain the \"-l\" switch, but not the \"-F\" or \"-b\" switches.")
  12019. (custom-autoload 'locate-ls-subdir-switches "locate" t)
  12020. (autoload 'locate "locate" "\
  12021. Run the program `locate', putting results in `*Locate*' buffer.
  12022. Pass it SEARCH-STRING as argument. Interactively, prompt for SEARCH-STRING.
  12023. With prefix arg ARG, prompt for the exact shell command to run instead.
  12024. This program searches for those file names in a database that match
  12025. SEARCH-STRING and normally outputs all matching absolute file names,
  12026. one per line. The database normally consists of all files on your
  12027. system, or of all files that you have access to. Consult the
  12028. documentation of the program for the details about how it determines
  12029. which file names match SEARCH-STRING. (Those details vary highly with
  12030. the version.)
  12031. You can specify another program for this command to run by customizing
  12032. the variables `locate-command' or `locate-make-command-line'.
  12033. The main use of FILTER is to implement `locate-with-filter'. See
  12034. the docstring of that function for its meaning.
  12035. After preparing the results buffer, this runs `dired-mode-hook' and
  12036. then `locate-post-command-hook'.
  12037. \(fn SEARCH-STRING &optional FILTER ARG)" t nil)
  12038. (autoload 'locate-with-filter "locate" "\
  12039. Run the executable program `locate' with a filter.
  12040. This function is similar to the function `locate', which see.
  12041. The difference is that, when invoked interactively, the present function
  12042. prompts for both SEARCH-STRING and FILTER. It passes SEARCH-STRING
  12043. to the locate executable program. It produces a `*Locate*' buffer
  12044. that lists only those lines in the output of the locate program that
  12045. contain a match for the regular expression FILTER; this is often useful
  12046. to constrain a big search.
  12047. ARG is the interactive prefix arg, which has the same effect as in `locate'.
  12048. When called from Lisp, this function is identical with `locate',
  12049. except that FILTER is not optional.
  12050. \(fn SEARCH-STRING FILTER &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12051. ;;;***
  12052. ;;;### (autoloads (log-edit) "log-edit" "vc/log-edit.el" (20400 62402))
  12053. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/log-edit.el
  12054. (autoload 'log-edit "log-edit" "\
  12055. Setup a buffer to enter a log message.
  12056. \\<log-edit-mode-map>The buffer will be put in mode MODE or `log-edit-mode'
  12057. if MODE is nil.
  12058. If SETUP is non-nil, the buffer is then erased and `log-edit-hook' is run.
  12059. Mark and point will be set around the entire contents of the buffer so
  12060. that it is easy to kill the contents of the buffer with \\[kill-region].
  12061. Once you're done editing the message, pressing \\[log-edit-done] will call
  12062. `log-edit-done' which will end up calling CALLBACK to do the actual commit.
  12063. PARAMS if non-nil is an alist. Possible keys and associated values:
  12064. `log-edit-listfun' -- function taking no arguments that returns the list of
  12065. files that are concerned by the current operation (using relative names);
  12066. `log-edit-diff-function' -- function taking no arguments that
  12067. displays a diff of the files concerned by the current operation.
  12068. If BUFFER is non-nil `log-edit' will jump to that buffer, use it to edit the
  12069. log message and go back to the current buffer when done. Otherwise, it
  12070. uses the current buffer.
  12071. \(fn CALLBACK &optional SETUP PARAMS BUFFER MODE &rest IGNORE)" nil nil)
  12072. ;;;***
  12073. ;;;### (autoloads (log-view-mode) "log-view" "vc/log-view.el" (20352
  12074. ;;;;;; 65510))
  12075. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/log-view.el
  12076. (autoload 'log-view-mode "log-view" "\
  12077. Major mode for browsing CVS log output.
  12078. \(fn)" t nil)
  12079. ;;;***
  12080. ;;;### (autoloads (longlines-mode) "longlines" "longlines.el" (20352
  12081. ;;;;;; 65510))
  12082. ;;; Generated autoloads from longlines.el
  12083. (autoload 'longlines-mode "longlines" "\
  12084. Toggle Long Lines mode in this buffer.
  12085. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Long Lines mode if ARG is
  12086. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  12087. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  12088. When Long Lines mode is enabled, long lines are wrapped if they
  12089. extend beyond `fill-column'. The soft newlines used for line
  12090. wrapping will not show up when the text is yanked or saved to
  12091. disk.
  12092. If the variable `longlines-auto-wrap' is non-nil, lines are
  12093. automatically wrapped whenever the buffer is changed. You can
  12094. always call `fill-paragraph' to fill individual paragraphs.
  12095. If the variable `longlines-show-hard-newlines' is non-nil, hard
  12096. newlines are indicated with a symbol.
  12097. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12098. ;;;***
  12099. ;;;### (autoloads (print-region lpr-region print-buffer lpr-buffer
  12100. ;;;;;; lpr-command lpr-switches printer-name) "lpr" "lpr.el" (20352
  12101. ;;;;;; 65510))
  12102. ;;; Generated autoloads from lpr.el
  12103. (defvar lpr-windows-system (memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt)) "\
  12104. Non-nil if running on MS-DOS or MS Windows.")
  12105. (defvar lpr-lp-system (memq system-type '(usg-unix-v hpux irix)) "\
  12106. Non-nil if running on a system type that uses the \"lp\" command.")
  12107. (defvar printer-name (and (eq system-type 'ms-dos) "PRN") "\
  12108. The name of a local printer to which data is sent for printing.
  12109. \(Note that PostScript files are sent to `ps-printer-name', which see.)
  12110. On Unix-like systems, a string value should be a name understood by
  12111. lpr's -P option; otherwise the value should be nil.
  12112. On MS-DOS and MS-Windows systems, a string value is taken as the name of
  12113. a printer device or port, provided `lpr-command' is set to \"\".
  12114. Typical non-default settings would be \"LPT1\" to \"LPT3\" for parallel
  12115. printers, or \"COM1\" to \"COM4\" or \"AUX\" for serial printers, or
  12116. \"//hostname/printer\" for a shared network printer. You can also set
  12117. it to the name of a file, in which case the output gets appended to that
  12118. file. If you want to discard the printed output, set this to \"NUL\".")
  12119. (custom-autoload 'printer-name "lpr" t)
  12120. (defvar lpr-switches nil "\
  12121. List of strings to pass as extra options for the printer program.
  12122. It is recommended to set `printer-name' instead of including an explicit
  12123. switch on this list.
  12124. See `lpr-command'.")
  12125. (custom-autoload 'lpr-switches "lpr" t)
  12126. (defvar lpr-command (purecopy (cond (lpr-windows-system "") (lpr-lp-system "lp") (t "lpr"))) "\
  12127. Name of program for printing a file.
  12128. On MS-DOS and MS-Windows systems, if the value is an empty string then
  12129. Emacs will write directly to the printer port named by `printer-name'.
  12130. The programs `print' and `nprint' (the standard print programs on
  12131. Windows NT and Novell Netware respectively) are handled specially, using
  12132. `printer-name' as the destination for output; any other program is
  12133. treated like `lpr' except that an explicit filename is given as the last
  12134. argument.")
  12135. (custom-autoload 'lpr-command "lpr" t)
  12136. (autoload 'lpr-buffer "lpr" "\
  12137. Print buffer contents without pagination or page headers.
  12138. See the variables `lpr-switches' and `lpr-command'
  12139. for customization of the printer command.
  12140. \(fn)" t nil)
  12141. (autoload 'print-buffer "lpr" "\
  12142. Paginate and print buffer contents.
  12143. The variable `lpr-headers-switches' controls how to paginate.
  12144. If it is nil (the default), we run the `pr' program (or whatever program
  12145. `lpr-page-header-program' specifies) to paginate.
  12146. `lpr-page-header-switches' specifies the switches for that program.
  12147. Otherwise, the switches in `lpr-headers-switches' are used
  12148. in the print command itself; we expect them to request pagination.
  12149. See the variables `lpr-switches' and `lpr-command'
  12150. for further customization of the printer command.
  12151. \(fn)" t nil)
  12152. (autoload 'lpr-region "lpr" "\
  12153. Print region contents without pagination or page headers.
  12154. See the variables `lpr-switches' and `lpr-command'
  12155. for customization of the printer command.
  12156. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  12157. (autoload 'print-region "lpr" "\
  12158. Paginate and print the region contents.
  12159. The variable `lpr-headers-switches' controls how to paginate.
  12160. If it is nil (the default), we run the `pr' program (or whatever program
  12161. `lpr-page-header-program' specifies) to paginate.
  12162. `lpr-page-header-switches' specifies the switches for that program.
  12163. Otherwise, the switches in `lpr-headers-switches' are used
  12164. in the print command itself; we expect them to request pagination.
  12165. See the variables `lpr-switches' and `lpr-command'
  12166. for further customization of the printer command.
  12167. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  12168. ;;;***
  12169. ;;;### (autoloads (ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards) "ls-lisp" "ls-lisp.el"
  12170. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  12171. ;;; Generated autoloads from ls-lisp.el
  12172. (defvar ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards t "\
  12173. Non-nil means ls-lisp treats file patterns as shell wildcards.
  12174. Otherwise they are treated as Emacs regexps (for backward compatibility).")
  12175. (custom-autoload 'ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards "ls-lisp" t)
  12176. ;;;***
  12177. ;;;### (autoloads (lunar-phases) "lunar" "calendar/lunar.el" (20352
  12178. ;;;;;; 65510))
  12179. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/lunar.el
  12180. (autoload 'lunar-phases "lunar" "\
  12181. Display the quarters of the moon for last month, this month, and next month.
  12182. If called with an optional prefix argument ARG, prompts for month and year.
  12183. This function is suitable for execution in a .emacs file.
  12184. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12185. (define-obsolete-function-alias 'phases-of-moon 'lunar-phases "23.1")
  12186. ;;;***
  12187. ;;;### (autoloads (m4-mode) "m4-mode" "progmodes/m4-mode.el" (20400
  12188. ;;;;;; 62402))
  12189. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/m4-mode.el
  12190. (autoload 'm4-mode "m4-mode" "\
  12191. A major mode to edit m4 macro files.
  12192. \(fn)" t nil)
  12193. ;;;***
  12194. ;;;### (autoloads (macroexpand-all) "macroexp" "emacs-lisp/macroexp.el"
  12195. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  12196. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/macroexp.el
  12197. (autoload 'macroexpand-all "macroexp" "\
  12198. Return result of expanding macros at all levels in FORM.
  12199. If no macros are expanded, FORM is returned unchanged.
  12200. The second optional arg ENVIRONMENT specifies an environment of macro
  12201. definitions to shadow the loaded ones for use in file byte-compilation.
  12202. \(fn FORM &optional ENVIRONMENT)" nil nil)
  12203. ;;;***
  12204. ;;;### (autoloads (apply-macro-to-region-lines kbd-macro-query insert-kbd-macro
  12205. ;;;;;; name-last-kbd-macro) "macros" "macros.el" (20352 65510))
  12206. ;;; Generated autoloads from macros.el
  12207. (autoload 'name-last-kbd-macro "macros" "\
  12208. Assign a name to the last keyboard macro defined.
  12209. Argument SYMBOL is the name to define.
  12210. The symbol's function definition becomes the keyboard macro string.
  12211. Such a \"function\" cannot be called from Lisp, but it is a valid editor command.
  12212. \(fn SYMBOL)" t nil)
  12213. (autoload 'insert-kbd-macro "macros" "\
  12214. Insert in buffer the definition of kbd macro NAME, as Lisp code.
  12215. Optional second arg KEYS means also record the keys it is on
  12216. \(this is the prefix argument, when calling interactively).
  12217. This Lisp code will, when executed, define the kbd macro with the same
  12218. definition it has now. If you say to record the keys, the Lisp code
  12219. will also rebind those keys to the macro. Only global key bindings
  12220. are recorded since executing this Lisp code always makes global
  12221. bindings.
  12222. To save a kbd macro, visit a file of Lisp code such as your `~/.emacs',
  12223. use this command, and then save the file.
  12224. \(fn MACRONAME &optional KEYS)" t nil)
  12225. (autoload 'kbd-macro-query "macros" "\
  12226. Query user during kbd macro execution.
  12227. With prefix argument, enters recursive edit, reading keyboard
  12228. commands even within a kbd macro. You can give different commands
  12229. each time the macro executes.
  12230. Without prefix argument, asks whether to continue running the macro.
  12231. Your options are: \\<query-replace-map>
  12232. \\[act] Finish this iteration normally and continue with the next.
  12233. \\[skip] Skip the rest of this iteration, and start the next.
  12234. \\[exit] Stop the macro entirely right now.
  12235. \\[recenter] Redisplay the screen, then ask again.
  12236. \\[edit] Enter recursive edit; ask again when you exit from that.
  12237. \(fn FLAG)" t nil)
  12238. (autoload 'apply-macro-to-region-lines "macros" "\
  12239. Apply last keyboard macro to all lines in the region.
  12240. For each line that begins in the region, move to the beginning of
  12241. the line, and run the last keyboard macro.
  12242. When called from lisp, this function takes two arguments TOP and
  12243. BOTTOM, describing the current region. TOP must be before BOTTOM.
  12244. The optional third argument MACRO specifies a keyboard macro to
  12245. execute.
  12246. This is useful for quoting or unquoting included text, adding and
  12247. removing comments, or producing tables where the entries are regular.
  12248. For example, in Usenet articles, sections of text quoted from another
  12249. author are indented, or have each line start with `>'. To quote a
  12250. section of text, define a keyboard macro which inserts `>', put point
  12251. and mark at opposite ends of the quoted section, and use
  12252. `\\[apply-macro-to-region-lines]' to mark the entire section.
  12253. Suppose you wanted to build a keyword table in C where each entry
  12254. looked like this:
  12255. { \"foo\", foo_data, foo_function },
  12256. { \"bar\", bar_data, bar_function },
  12257. { \"baz\", baz_data, baz_function },
  12258. You could enter the names in this format:
  12259. foo
  12260. bar
  12261. baz
  12262. and write a macro to massage a word into a table entry:
  12263. \\C-x (
  12264. \\M-d { \"\\C-y\", \\C-y_data, \\C-y_function },
  12265. \\C-x )
  12266. and then select the region of un-tablified names and use
  12267. `\\[apply-macro-to-region-lines]' to build the table from the names.
  12268. \(fn TOP BOTTOM &optional MACRO)" t nil)
  12269. (define-key ctl-x-map "q" 'kbd-macro-query)
  12270. ;;;***
  12271. ;;;### (autoloads (what-domain mail-extract-address-components) "mail-extr"
  12272. ;;;;;; "mail/mail-extr.el" (20400 62402))
  12273. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mail-extr.el
  12274. (autoload 'mail-extract-address-components "mail-extr" "\
  12275. Given an RFC-822 address ADDRESS, extract full name and canonical address.
  12276. Returns a list of the form (FULL-NAME CANONICAL-ADDRESS). If no
  12277. name can be extracted, FULL-NAME will be nil. Also see
  12278. `mail-extr-ignore-single-names' and
  12279. `mail-extr-ignore-realname-equals-mailbox-name'.
  12280. If the optional argument ALL is non-nil, then ADDRESS can contain zero
  12281. or more recipients, separated by commas, and we return a list of
  12282. the form ((FULL-NAME CANONICAL-ADDRESS) ...) with one element for
  12283. each recipient. If ALL is nil, then if ADDRESS contains more than
  12284. one recipients, all but the first is ignored.
  12285. ADDRESS may be a string or a buffer. If it is a buffer, the visible
  12286. \(narrowed) portion of the buffer will be interpreted as the address.
  12287. \(This feature exists so that the clever caller might be able to avoid
  12288. consing a string.)
  12289. \(fn ADDRESS &optional ALL)" nil nil)
  12290. (autoload 'what-domain "mail-extr" "\
  12291. Convert mail domain DOMAIN to the country it corresponds to.
  12292. \(fn DOMAIN)" t nil)
  12293. ;;;***
  12294. ;;;### (autoloads (mail-hist-put-headers-into-history mail-hist-keep-history
  12295. ;;;;;; mail-hist-enable mail-hist-define-keys) "mail-hist" "mail/mail-hist.el"
  12296. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  12297. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mail-hist.el
  12298. (autoload 'mail-hist-define-keys "mail-hist" "\
  12299. Define keys for accessing mail header history. For use in hooks.
  12300. \(fn)" nil nil)
  12301. (autoload 'mail-hist-enable "mail-hist" "\
  12302. \(fn)" nil nil)
  12303. (defvar mail-hist-keep-history t "\
  12304. *Non-nil means keep a history for headers and text of outgoing mail.")
  12305. (custom-autoload 'mail-hist-keep-history "mail-hist" t)
  12306. (autoload 'mail-hist-put-headers-into-history "mail-hist" "\
  12307. Put headers and contents of this message into mail header history.
  12308. Each header has its own independent history, as does the body of the
  12309. message.
  12310. This function normally would be called when the message is sent.
  12311. \(fn)" nil nil)
  12312. ;;;***
  12313. ;;;### (autoloads (mail-fetch-field mail-unquote-printable-region
  12314. ;;;;;; mail-unquote-printable mail-quote-printable-region mail-quote-printable
  12315. ;;;;;; mail-file-babyl-p mail-dont-reply-to-names mail-use-rfc822)
  12316. ;;;;;; "mail-utils" "mail/mail-utils.el" (20352 65510))
  12317. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mail-utils.el
  12318. (defvar mail-use-rfc822 nil "\
  12319. If non-nil, use a full, hairy RFC822 parser on mail addresses.
  12320. Otherwise, (the default) use a smaller, somewhat faster, and
  12321. often correct parser.")
  12322. (custom-autoload 'mail-use-rfc822 "mail-utils" t)
  12323. (defvar mail-dont-reply-to-names nil "\
  12324. Regexp specifying addresses to prune from a reply message.
  12325. If this is nil, it is set the first time you compose a reply, to
  12326. a value which excludes your own email address.
  12327. Matching addresses are excluded from the CC field in replies, and
  12328. also the To field, unless this would leave an empty To field.")
  12329. (custom-autoload 'mail-dont-reply-to-names "mail-utils" t)
  12330. (autoload 'mail-file-babyl-p "mail-utils" "\
  12331. Return non-nil if FILE is a Babyl file.
  12332. \(fn FILE)" nil nil)
  12333. (autoload 'mail-quote-printable "mail-utils" "\
  12334. Convert a string to the \"quoted printable\" Q encoding if necessary.
  12335. If the string contains only ASCII characters and no troublesome ones,
  12336. we return it unconverted.
  12337. If the optional argument WRAPPER is non-nil,
  12338. we add the wrapper characters =?ISO-8859-1?Q?....?=.
  12339. \(fn STRING &optional WRAPPER)" nil nil)
  12340. (autoload 'mail-quote-printable-region "mail-utils" "\
  12341. Convert the region to the \"quoted printable\" Q encoding.
  12342. If the optional argument WRAPPER is non-nil,
  12343. we add the wrapper characters =?ISO-8859-1?Q?....?=.
  12344. \(fn BEG END &optional WRAPPER)" t nil)
  12345. (autoload 'mail-unquote-printable "mail-utils" "\
  12346. Undo the \"quoted printable\" encoding.
  12347. If the optional argument WRAPPER is non-nil,
  12348. we expect to find and remove the wrapper characters =?ISO-8859-1?Q?....?=.
  12349. \(fn STRING &optional WRAPPER)" nil nil)
  12350. (autoload 'mail-unquote-printable-region "mail-utils" "\
  12351. Undo the \"quoted printable\" encoding in buffer from BEG to END.
  12352. If the optional argument WRAPPER is non-nil,
  12353. we expect to find and remove the wrapper characters =?ISO-8859-1?Q?....?=.
  12354. On encountering malformed quoted-printable text, exits with an error,
  12355. unless NOERROR is non-nil, in which case it continues, and returns nil
  12356. when finished. Returns non-nil on successful completion.
  12357. If UNIBYTE is non-nil, insert converted characters as unibyte.
  12358. That is useful if you are going to character code decoding afterward,
  12359. as Rmail does.
  12360. \(fn BEG END &optional WRAPPER NOERROR UNIBYTE)" t nil)
  12361. (autoload 'mail-fetch-field "mail-utils" "\
  12362. Return the value of the header field whose type is FIELD-NAME.
  12363. If second arg LAST is non-nil, use the last field of type FIELD-NAME.
  12364. If third arg ALL is non-nil, concatenate all such fields with commas between.
  12365. If 4th arg LIST is non-nil, return a list of all such fields.
  12366. The buffer should be narrowed to just the header, else false
  12367. matches may be returned from the message body.
  12368. \(fn FIELD-NAME &optional LAST ALL LIST)" nil nil)
  12369. ;;;***
  12370. ;;;### (autoloads (define-mail-abbrev build-mail-abbrevs mail-abbrevs-setup
  12371. ;;;;;; mail-abbrevs-mode) "mailabbrev" "mail/mailabbrev.el" (20400
  12372. ;;;;;; 62402))
  12373. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mailabbrev.el
  12374. (defvar mail-abbrevs-mode nil "\
  12375. Non-nil if Mail-Abbrevs mode is enabled.
  12376. See the command `mail-abbrevs-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  12377. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  12378. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  12379. or call the function `mail-abbrevs-mode'.")
  12380. (custom-autoload 'mail-abbrevs-mode "mailabbrev" nil)
  12381. (autoload 'mail-abbrevs-mode "mailabbrev" "\
  12382. Toggle abbrev expansion of mail aliases (Mail Abbrevs mode).
  12383. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Mail Abbrevs mode if ARG is
  12384. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  12385. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  12386. Mail Abbrevs mode is a global minor mode. When enabled,
  12387. abbrev-like expansion is performed when editing certain mail
  12388. headers (those specified by `mail-abbrev-mode-regexp'), based on
  12389. the entries in your `mail-personal-alias-file'.
  12390. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12391. (autoload 'mail-abbrevs-setup "mailabbrev" "\
  12392. Initialize use of the `mailabbrev' package.
  12393. \(fn)" nil nil)
  12394. (autoload 'build-mail-abbrevs "mailabbrev" "\
  12395. Read mail aliases from personal mail alias file and set `mail-abbrevs'.
  12396. By default this is the file specified by `mail-personal-alias-file'.
  12397. \(fn &optional FILE RECURSIVEP)" nil nil)
  12398. (autoload 'define-mail-abbrev "mailabbrev" "\
  12399. Define NAME as a mail alias abbrev that translates to DEFINITION.
  12400. If DEFINITION contains multiple addresses, separate them with commas.
  12401. Optional argument FROM-MAILRC-FILE means that DEFINITION comes
  12402. from a mailrc file. In that case, addresses are separated with
  12403. spaces and addresses with embedded spaces are surrounded by
  12404. double-quotes.
  12405. \(fn NAME DEFINITION &optional FROM-MAILRC-FILE)" t nil)
  12406. ;;;***
  12407. ;;;### (autoloads (mail-complete mail-completion-at-point-function
  12408. ;;;;;; define-mail-alias expand-mail-aliases mail-complete-style)
  12409. ;;;;;; "mailalias" "mail/mailalias.el" (20352 65510))
  12410. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mailalias.el
  12411. (defvar mail-complete-style 'angles "\
  12412. Specifies how \\[mail-complete] formats the full name when it completes.
  12413. If `nil', they contain just the return address like:
  12414. king@grassland.com
  12415. If `parens', they look like:
  12416. king@grassland.com (Elvis Parsley)
  12417. If `angles', they look like:
  12418. Elvis Parsley <king@grassland.com>")
  12419. (custom-autoload 'mail-complete-style "mailalias" t)
  12420. (autoload 'expand-mail-aliases "mailalias" "\
  12421. Expand all mail aliases in suitable header fields found between BEG and END.
  12422. If interactive, expand in header fields.
  12423. Suitable header fields are `To', `From', `CC' and `BCC', `Reply-to', and
  12424. their `Resent-' variants.
  12425. Optional second arg EXCLUDE may be a regular expression defining text to be
  12426. removed from alias expansions.
  12427. \(fn BEG END &optional EXCLUDE)" t nil)
  12428. (autoload 'define-mail-alias "mailalias" "\
  12429. Define NAME as a mail alias that translates to DEFINITION.
  12430. This means that sending a message to NAME will actually send to DEFINITION.
  12431. Normally, the addresses in DEFINITION must be separated by commas.
  12432. If FROM-MAILRC-FILE is non-nil, then addresses in DEFINITION
  12433. can be separated by spaces; an address can contain spaces
  12434. if it is quoted with double-quotes.
  12435. \(fn NAME DEFINITION &optional FROM-MAILRC-FILE)" t nil)
  12436. (autoload 'mail-completion-at-point-function "mailalias" "\
  12437. Compute completion data for mail aliases.
  12438. For use on `completion-at-point-functions'.
  12439. \(fn)" nil nil)
  12440. (autoload 'mail-complete "mailalias" "\
  12441. Perform completion on header field or word preceding point.
  12442. Completable headers are according to `mail-complete-alist'. If none matches
  12443. current header, calls `mail-complete-function' and passes prefix ARG if any.
  12444. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  12445. ;;;***
  12446. ;;;### (autoloads (mailclient-send-it) "mailclient" "mail/mailclient.el"
  12447. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  12448. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mailclient.el
  12449. (autoload 'mailclient-send-it "mailclient" "\
  12450. Pass current buffer on to the system's mail client.
  12451. Suitable value for `send-mail-function'.
  12452. The mail client is taken to be the handler of mailto URLs.
  12453. \(fn)" nil nil)
  12454. ;;;***
  12455. ;;;### (autoloads (makefile-imake-mode makefile-bsdmake-mode makefile-makepp-mode
  12456. ;;;;;; makefile-gmake-mode makefile-automake-mode makefile-mode)
  12457. ;;;;;; "make-mode" "progmodes/make-mode.el" (20400 62402))
  12458. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/make-mode.el
  12459. (autoload 'makefile-mode "make-mode" "\
  12460. Major mode for editing standard Makefiles.
  12461. If you are editing a file for a different make, try one of the
  12462. variants `makefile-automake-mode', `makefile-gmake-mode',
  12463. `makefile-makepp-mode', `makefile-bsdmake-mode' or,
  12464. `makefile-imake-mode'. All but the last should be correctly
  12465. chosen based on the file name, except if it is *.mk. This
  12466. function ends by invoking the function(s) `makefile-mode-hook'.
  12467. It is strongly recommended to use `font-lock-mode', because that
  12468. provides additional parsing information. This is used for
  12469. example to see that a rule action `echo foo: bar' is a not rule
  12470. dependency, despite the colon.
  12471. \\{makefile-mode-map}
  12472. In the browser, use the following keys:
  12473. \\{makefile-browser-map}
  12474. Makefile mode can be configured by modifying the following variables:
  12475. `makefile-browser-buffer-name':
  12476. Name of the macro- and target browser buffer.
  12477. `makefile-target-colon':
  12478. The string that gets appended to all target names
  12479. inserted by `makefile-insert-target'.
  12480. \":\" or \"::\" are quite common values.
  12481. `makefile-macro-assign':
  12482. The string that gets appended to all macro names
  12483. inserted by `makefile-insert-macro'.
  12484. The normal value should be \" = \", since this is what
  12485. standard make expects. However, newer makes such as dmake
  12486. allow a larger variety of different macro assignments, so you
  12487. might prefer to use \" += \" or \" := \" .
  12488. `makefile-tab-after-target-colon':
  12489. If you want a TAB (instead of a space) to be appended after the
  12490. target colon, then set this to a non-nil value.
  12491. `makefile-browser-leftmost-column':
  12492. Number of blanks to the left of the browser selection mark.
  12493. `makefile-browser-cursor-column':
  12494. Column in which the cursor is positioned when it moves
  12495. up or down in the browser.
  12496. `makefile-browser-selected-mark':
  12497. String used to mark selected entries in the browser.
  12498. `makefile-browser-unselected-mark':
  12499. String used to mark unselected entries in the browser.
  12500. `makefile-browser-auto-advance-after-selection-p':
  12501. If this variable is set to a non-nil value the cursor
  12502. will automagically advance to the next line after an item
  12503. has been selected in the browser.
  12504. `makefile-pickup-everything-picks-up-filenames-p':
  12505. If this variable is set to a non-nil value then
  12506. `makefile-pickup-everything' also picks up filenames as targets
  12507. (i.e. it calls `makefile-pickup-filenames-as-targets'), otherwise
  12508. filenames are omitted.
  12509. `makefile-cleanup-continuations':
  12510. If this variable is set to a non-nil value then Makefile mode
  12511. will assure that no line in the file ends with a backslash
  12512. (the continuation character) followed by any whitespace.
  12513. This is done by silently removing the trailing whitespace, leaving
  12514. the backslash itself intact.
  12515. IMPORTANT: Please note that enabling this option causes Makefile mode
  12516. to MODIFY A FILE WITHOUT YOUR CONFIRMATION when \"it seems necessary\".
  12517. `makefile-browser-hook':
  12518. A function or list of functions to be called just before the
  12519. browser is entered. This is executed in the makefile buffer.
  12520. `makefile-special-targets-list':
  12521. List of special targets. You will be offered to complete
  12522. on one of those in the minibuffer whenever you enter a `.'.
  12523. at the beginning of a line in Makefile mode.
  12524. \(fn)" t nil)
  12525. (autoload 'makefile-automake-mode "make-mode" "\
  12526. An adapted `makefile-mode' that knows about automake.
  12527. \(fn)" t nil)
  12528. (autoload 'makefile-gmake-mode "make-mode" "\
  12529. An adapted `makefile-mode' that knows about gmake.
  12530. \(fn)" t nil)
  12531. (autoload 'makefile-makepp-mode "make-mode" "\
  12532. An adapted `makefile-mode' that knows about makepp.
  12533. \(fn)" t nil)
  12534. (autoload 'makefile-bsdmake-mode "make-mode" "\
  12535. An adapted `makefile-mode' that knows about BSD make.
  12536. \(fn)" t nil)
  12537. (autoload 'makefile-imake-mode "make-mode" "\
  12538. An adapted `makefile-mode' that knows about imake.
  12539. \(fn)" t nil)
  12540. ;;;***
  12541. ;;;### (autoloads (make-command-summary) "makesum" "makesum.el" (20352
  12542. ;;;;;; 65510))
  12543. ;;; Generated autoloads from makesum.el
  12544. (autoload 'make-command-summary "makesum" "\
  12545. Make a summary of current key bindings in the buffer *Summary*.
  12546. Previous contents of that buffer are killed first.
  12547. \(fn)" t nil)
  12548. ;;;***
  12549. ;;;### (autoloads (Man-bookmark-jump man-follow man) "man" "man.el"
  12550. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  12551. ;;; Generated autoloads from man.el
  12552. (defalias 'manual-entry 'man)
  12553. (autoload 'man "man" "\
  12554. Get a Un*x manual page and put it in a buffer.
  12555. This command is the top-level command in the man package. It
  12556. runs a Un*x command to retrieve and clean a manpage in the
  12557. background and places the results in a `Man-mode' browsing
  12558. buffer. See variable `Man-notify-method' for what happens when
  12559. the buffer is ready. If a buffer already exists for this man
  12560. page, it will display immediately.
  12561. For a manpage from a particular section, use either of the
  12562. following. \"cat(1)\" is how cross-references appear and is
  12563. passed to man as \"1 cat\".
  12564. cat(1)
  12565. 1 cat
  12566. To see manpages from all sections related to a subject, use an
  12567. \"all pages\" option (which might be \"-a\" if it's not the
  12568. default), then step through with `Man-next-manpage' (\\<Man-mode-map>\\[Man-next-manpage]) etc.
  12569. Add to `Man-switches' to make this option permanent.
  12570. -a chmod
  12571. An explicit filename can be given too. Use -l if it might
  12572. otherwise look like a page name.
  12573. /my/file/name.1.gz
  12574. -l somefile.1
  12575. An \"apropos\" query with -k gives a buffer of matching page
  12576. names or descriptions. The pattern argument is usually an
  12577. \"egrep\" style regexp.
  12578. -k pattern
  12579. \(fn MAN-ARGS)" t nil)
  12580. (autoload 'man-follow "man" "\
  12581. Get a Un*x manual page of the item under point and put it in a buffer.
  12582. \(fn MAN-ARGS)" t nil)
  12583. (autoload 'Man-bookmark-jump "man" "\
  12584. Default bookmark handler for Man buffers.
  12585. \(fn BOOKMARK)" nil nil)
  12586. ;;;***
  12587. ;;;### (autoloads (master-mode) "master" "master.el" (20352 65510))
  12588. ;;; Generated autoloads from master.el
  12589. (autoload 'master-mode "master" "\
  12590. Toggle Master mode.
  12591. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Master mode if ARG is
  12592. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  12593. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  12594. When Master mode is enabled, you can scroll the slave buffer
  12595. using the following commands:
  12596. \\{master-mode-map}
  12597. The slave buffer is stored in the buffer-local variable `master-of'.
  12598. You can set this variable using `master-set-slave'. You can show
  12599. yourself the value of `master-of' by calling `master-show-slave'.
  12600. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12601. ;;;***
  12602. ;;;### (autoloads (minibuffer-depth-indicate-mode) "mb-depth" "mb-depth.el"
  12603. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  12604. ;;; Generated autoloads from mb-depth.el
  12605. (defvar minibuffer-depth-indicate-mode nil "\
  12606. Non-nil if Minibuffer-Depth-Indicate mode is enabled.
  12607. See the command `minibuffer-depth-indicate-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  12608. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  12609. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  12610. or call the function `minibuffer-depth-indicate-mode'.")
  12611. (custom-autoload 'minibuffer-depth-indicate-mode "mb-depth" nil)
  12612. (autoload 'minibuffer-depth-indicate-mode "mb-depth" "\
  12613. Toggle Minibuffer Depth Indication mode.
  12614. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Minibuffer Depth Indication
  12615. mode if ARG is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called
  12616. from Lisp, enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  12617. Minibuffer Depth Indication mode is a global minor mode. When
  12618. enabled, any recursive use of the minibuffer will show the
  12619. recursion depth in the minibuffer prompt. This is only useful if
  12620. `enable-recursive-minibuffers' is non-nil.
  12621. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12622. ;;;***
  12623. ;;;### (autoloads (message-unbold-region message-bold-region message-news-other-frame
  12624. ;;;;;; message-news-other-window message-mail-other-frame message-mail-other-window
  12625. ;;;;;; message-bounce message-resend message-insinuate-rmail message-forward-rmail-make-body
  12626. ;;;;;; message-forward-make-body message-forward message-recover
  12627. ;;;;;; message-supersede message-cancel-news message-followup message-wide-reply
  12628. ;;;;;; message-reply message-news message-mail message-mode) "message"
  12629. ;;;;;; "gnus/message.el" (20352 65510))
  12630. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/message.el
  12631. (define-mail-user-agent 'message-user-agent 'message-mail 'message-send-and-exit 'message-kill-buffer 'message-send-hook)
  12632. (autoload 'message-mode "message" "\
  12633. Major mode for editing mail and news to be sent.
  12634. Like Text Mode but with these additional commands:\\<message-mode-map>
  12635. C-c C-s `message-send' (send the message) C-c C-c `message-send-and-exit'
  12636. C-c C-d Postpone sending the message C-c C-k Kill the message
  12637. C-c C-f move to a header field (and create it if there isn't):
  12638. C-c C-f C-t move to To C-c C-f C-s move to Subject
  12639. C-c C-f C-c move to Cc C-c C-f C-b move to Bcc
  12640. C-c C-f C-w move to Fcc C-c C-f C-r move to Reply-To
  12641. C-c C-f C-u move to Summary C-c C-f C-n move to Newsgroups
  12642. C-c C-f C-k move to Keywords C-c C-f C-d move to Distribution
  12643. C-c C-f C-o move to From (\"Originator\")
  12644. C-c C-f C-f move to Followup-To
  12645. C-c C-f C-m move to Mail-Followup-To
  12646. C-c C-f C-e move to Expires
  12647. C-c C-f C-i cycle through Importance values
  12648. C-c C-f s change subject and append \"(was: <Old Subject>)\"
  12649. C-c C-f x crossposting with FollowUp-To header and note in body
  12650. C-c C-f t replace To: header with contents of Cc: or Bcc:
  12651. C-c C-f a Insert X-No-Archive: header and a note in the body
  12652. C-c C-t `message-insert-to' (add a To header to a news followup)
  12653. C-c C-l `message-to-list-only' (removes all but list address in to/cc)
  12654. C-c C-n `message-insert-newsgroups' (add a Newsgroup header to a news reply)
  12655. C-c C-b `message-goto-body' (move to beginning of message text).
  12656. C-c C-i `message-goto-signature' (move to the beginning of the signature).
  12657. C-c C-w `message-insert-signature' (insert `message-signature-file' file).
  12658. C-c C-y `message-yank-original' (insert current message, if any).
  12659. C-c C-q `message-fill-yanked-message' (fill what was yanked).
  12660. C-c C-e `message-elide-region' (elide the text between point and mark).
  12661. C-c C-v `message-delete-not-region' (remove the text outside the region).
  12662. C-c C-z `message-kill-to-signature' (kill the text up to the signature).
  12663. C-c C-r `message-caesar-buffer-body' (rot13 the message body).
  12664. C-c C-a `mml-attach-file' (attach a file as MIME).
  12665. C-c C-u `message-insert-or-toggle-importance' (insert or cycle importance).
  12666. C-c M-n `message-insert-disposition-notification-to' (request receipt).
  12667. C-c M-m `message-mark-inserted-region' (mark region with enclosing tags).
  12668. C-c M-f `message-mark-insert-file' (insert file marked with enclosing tags).
  12669. M-RET `message-newline-and-reformat' (break the line and reformat).
  12670. \(fn)" t nil)
  12671. (autoload 'message-mail "message" "\
  12672. Start editing a mail message to be sent.
  12673. OTHER-HEADERS is an alist of header/value pairs. CONTINUE says whether
  12674. to continue editing a message already being composed. SWITCH-FUNCTION
  12675. is a function used to switch to and display the mail buffer.
  12676. \(fn &optional TO SUBJECT OTHER-HEADERS CONTINUE SWITCH-FUNCTION YANK-ACTION SEND-ACTIONS RETURN-ACTION &rest IGNORED)" t nil)
  12677. (autoload 'message-news "message" "\
  12678. Start editing a news article to be sent.
  12679. \(fn &optional NEWSGROUPS SUBJECT)" t nil)
  12680. (autoload 'message-reply "message" "\
  12681. Start editing a reply to the article in the current buffer.
  12682. \(fn &optional TO-ADDRESS WIDE SWITCH-FUNCTION)" t nil)
  12683. (autoload 'message-wide-reply "message" "\
  12684. Make a \"wide\" reply to the message in the current buffer.
  12685. \(fn &optional TO-ADDRESS)" t nil)
  12686. (autoload 'message-followup "message" "\
  12687. Follow up to the message in the current buffer.
  12688. If TO-NEWSGROUPS, use that as the new Newsgroups line.
  12689. \(fn &optional TO-NEWSGROUPS)" t nil)
  12690. (autoload 'message-cancel-news "message" "\
  12691. Cancel an article you posted.
  12692. If ARG, allow editing of the cancellation message.
  12693. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12694. (autoload 'message-supersede "message" "\
  12695. Start composing a message to supersede the current message.
  12696. This is done simply by taking the old article and adding a Supersedes
  12697. header line with the old Message-ID.
  12698. \(fn)" t nil)
  12699. (autoload 'message-recover "message" "\
  12700. Reread contents of current buffer from its last auto-save file.
  12701. \(fn)" t nil)
  12702. (autoload 'message-forward "message" "\
  12703. Forward the current message via mail.
  12704. Optional NEWS will use news to forward instead of mail.
  12705. Optional DIGEST will use digest to forward.
  12706. \(fn &optional NEWS DIGEST)" t nil)
  12707. (autoload 'message-forward-make-body "message" "\
  12708. \(fn FORWARD-BUFFER &optional DIGEST)" nil nil)
  12709. (autoload 'message-forward-rmail-make-body "message" "\
  12710. \(fn FORWARD-BUFFER)" nil nil)
  12711. (autoload 'message-insinuate-rmail "message" "\
  12712. Let RMAIL use message to forward.
  12713. \(fn)" t nil)
  12714. (autoload 'message-resend "message" "\
  12715. Resend the current article to ADDRESS.
  12716. \(fn ADDRESS)" t nil)
  12717. (autoload 'message-bounce "message" "\
  12718. Re-mail the current message.
  12719. This only makes sense if the current message is a bounce message that
  12720. contains some mail you have written which has been bounced back to
  12721. you.
  12722. \(fn)" t nil)
  12723. (autoload 'message-mail-other-window "message" "\
  12724. Like `message-mail' command, but display mail buffer in another window.
  12725. \(fn &optional TO SUBJECT)" t nil)
  12726. (autoload 'message-mail-other-frame "message" "\
  12727. Like `message-mail' command, but display mail buffer in another frame.
  12728. \(fn &optional TO SUBJECT)" t nil)
  12729. (autoload 'message-news-other-window "message" "\
  12730. Start editing a news article to be sent.
  12731. \(fn &optional NEWSGROUPS SUBJECT)" t nil)
  12732. (autoload 'message-news-other-frame "message" "\
  12733. Start editing a news article to be sent.
  12734. \(fn &optional NEWSGROUPS SUBJECT)" t nil)
  12735. (autoload 'message-bold-region "message" "\
  12736. Bold all nonblank characters in the region.
  12737. Works by overstriking characters.
  12738. Called from program, takes two arguments START and END
  12739. which specify the range to operate on.
  12740. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  12741. (autoload 'message-unbold-region "message" "\
  12742. Remove all boldness (overstruck characters) in the region.
  12743. Called from program, takes two arguments START and END
  12744. which specify the range to operate on.
  12745. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  12746. ;;;***
  12747. ;;;### (autoloads (metapost-mode metafont-mode) "meta-mode" "progmodes/meta-mode.el"
  12748. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  12749. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/meta-mode.el
  12750. (autoload 'metafont-mode "meta-mode" "\
  12751. Major mode for editing Metafont sources.
  12752. \(fn)" t nil)
  12753. (autoload 'metapost-mode "meta-mode" "\
  12754. Major mode for editing MetaPost sources.
  12755. \(fn)" t nil)
  12756. ;;;***
  12757. ;;;### (autoloads (metamail-region metamail-buffer metamail-interpret-body
  12758. ;;;;;; metamail-interpret-header) "metamail" "mail/metamail.el"
  12759. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  12760. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/metamail.el
  12761. (autoload 'metamail-interpret-header "metamail" "\
  12762. Interpret a header part of a MIME message in current buffer.
  12763. Its body part is not interpreted at all.
  12764. \(fn)" t nil)
  12765. (autoload 'metamail-interpret-body "metamail" "\
  12766. Interpret a body part of a MIME message in current buffer.
  12767. Optional argument VIEWMODE specifies the value of the
  12768. EMACS_VIEW_MODE environment variable (defaulted to 1).
  12769. Optional argument NODISPLAY non-nil means buffer is not
  12770. redisplayed as output is inserted.
  12771. Its header part is not interpreted at all.
  12772. \(fn &optional VIEWMODE NODISPLAY)" t nil)
  12773. (autoload 'metamail-buffer "metamail" "\
  12774. Process current buffer through `metamail'.
  12775. Optional argument VIEWMODE specifies the value of the
  12776. EMACS_VIEW_MODE environment variable (defaulted to 1).
  12777. Optional argument BUFFER specifies a buffer to be filled (nil
  12778. means current).
  12779. Optional argument NODISPLAY non-nil means buffer is not
  12780. redisplayed as output is inserted.
  12781. \(fn &optional VIEWMODE BUFFER NODISPLAY)" t nil)
  12782. (autoload 'metamail-region "metamail" "\
  12783. Process current region through 'metamail'.
  12784. Optional argument VIEWMODE specifies the value of the
  12785. EMACS_VIEW_MODE environment variable (defaulted to 1).
  12786. Optional argument BUFFER specifies a buffer to be filled (nil
  12787. means current).
  12788. Optional argument NODISPLAY non-nil means buffer is not
  12789. redisplayed as output is inserted.
  12790. \(fn BEG END &optional VIEWMODE BUFFER NODISPLAY)" t nil)
  12791. ;;;***
  12792. ;;;### (autoloads (mh-fully-kill-draft mh-send-letter mh-user-agent-compose
  12793. ;;;;;; mh-smail-batch mh-smail-other-window mh-smail) "mh-comp"
  12794. ;;;;;; "mh-e/mh-comp.el" (20352 65510))
  12795. ;;; Generated autoloads from mh-e/mh-comp.el
  12796. (autoload 'mh-smail "mh-comp" "\
  12797. Compose a message with the MH mail system.
  12798. See `mh-send' for more details on composing mail.
  12799. \(fn)" t nil)
  12800. (autoload 'mh-smail-other-window "mh-comp" "\
  12801. Compose a message with the MH mail system in other window.
  12802. See `mh-send' for more details on composing mail.
  12803. \(fn)" t nil)
  12804. (autoload 'mh-smail-batch "mh-comp" "\
  12805. Compose a message with the MH mail system.
  12806. This function does not prompt the user for any header fields, and
  12807. thus is suitable for use by programs that want to create a mail
  12808. buffer. Users should use \\[mh-smail] to compose mail.
  12809. Optional arguments for setting certain fields include TO,
  12810. SUBJECT, and OTHER-HEADERS. Additional arguments are IGNORED.
  12811. This function remains for Emacs 21 compatibility. New
  12812. applications should use `mh-user-agent-compose'.
  12813. \(fn &optional TO SUBJECT OTHER-HEADERS &rest IGNORED)" nil nil)
  12814. (define-mail-user-agent 'mh-e-user-agent 'mh-user-agent-compose 'mh-send-letter 'mh-fully-kill-draft 'mh-before-send-letter-hook)
  12815. (autoload 'mh-user-agent-compose "mh-comp" "\
  12816. Set up mail composition draft with the MH mail system.
  12817. This is the `mail-user-agent' entry point to MH-E. This function
  12818. conforms to the contract specified by `define-mail-user-agent'
  12819. which means that this function should accept the same arguments
  12820. as `compose-mail'.
  12821. The optional arguments TO and SUBJECT specify recipients and the
  12822. initial Subject field, respectively.
  12823. OTHER-HEADERS is an alist specifying additional header fields.
  12824. Elements look like (HEADER . VALUE) where both HEADER and VALUE
  12825. are strings.
  12826. CONTINUE, SWITCH-FUNCTION, YANK-ACTION, SEND-ACTIONS, and
  12827. RETURN-ACTION and any additional arguments are IGNORED.
  12828. \(fn &optional TO SUBJECT OTHER-HEADERS CONTINUE SWITCH-FUNCTION YANK-ACTION SEND-ACTIONS RETURN-ACTION &rest IGNORED)" nil nil)
  12829. (autoload 'mh-send-letter "mh-comp" "\
  12830. Save draft and send message.
  12831. When you are all through editing a message, you send it with this
  12832. command. You can give a prefix argument ARG to monitor the first stage
  12833. of the delivery; this output can be found in a buffer called \"*MH-E
  12834. Mail Delivery*\".
  12835. The hook `mh-before-send-letter-hook' is run at the beginning of
  12836. this command. For example, if you want to check your spelling in
  12837. your message before sending, add the function `ispell-message'.
  12838. Unless `mh-insert-auto-fields' had previously been called
  12839. manually, the function `mh-insert-auto-fields' is called to
  12840. insert fields based upon the recipients. If fields are added, you
  12841. are given a chance to see and to confirm these fields before the
  12842. message is actually sent. You can do away with this confirmation
  12843. by turning off the option `mh-auto-fields-prompt-flag'.
  12844. In case the MH \"send\" program is installed under a different name,
  12845. use `mh-send-prog' to tell MH-E the name.
  12846. The hook `mh-annotate-msg-hook' is run after annotating the
  12847. message and scan line.
  12848. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12849. (autoload 'mh-fully-kill-draft "mh-comp" "\
  12850. Quit editing and delete draft message.
  12851. If for some reason you are not happy with the draft, you can use
  12852. this command to kill the draft buffer and delete the draft
  12853. message. Use the command \\[kill-buffer] if you don't want to
  12854. delete the draft message.
  12855. \(fn)" t nil)
  12856. ;;;***
  12857. ;;;### (autoloads (mh-version) "mh-e" "mh-e/mh-e.el" (20352 65510))
  12858. ;;; Generated autoloads from mh-e/mh-e.el
  12859. (put 'mh-progs 'risky-local-variable t)
  12860. (put 'mh-lib 'risky-local-variable t)
  12861. (put 'mh-lib-progs 'risky-local-variable t)
  12862. (autoload 'mh-version "mh-e" "\
  12863. Display version information about MH-E and the MH mail handling system.
  12864. \(fn)" t nil)
  12865. ;;;***
  12866. ;;;### (autoloads (mh-folder-mode mh-nmail mh-rmail) "mh-folder"
  12867. ;;;;;; "mh-e/mh-folder.el" (20400 62402))
  12868. ;;; Generated autoloads from mh-e/mh-folder.el
  12869. (autoload 'mh-rmail "mh-folder" "\
  12870. Incorporate new mail with MH.
  12871. Scan an MH folder if ARG is non-nil.
  12872. This function is an entry point to MH-E, the Emacs interface to
  12873. the MH mail system.
  12874. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12875. (autoload 'mh-nmail "mh-folder" "\
  12876. Check for new mail in inbox folder.
  12877. Scan an MH folder if ARG is non-nil.
  12878. This function is an entry point to MH-E, the Emacs interface to
  12879. the MH mail system.
  12880. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12881. (autoload 'mh-folder-mode "mh-folder" "\
  12882. Major MH-E mode for \"editing\" an MH folder scan listing.\\<mh-folder-mode-map>
  12883. You can show the message the cursor is pointing to, and step through
  12884. the messages. Messages can be marked for deletion or refiling into
  12885. another folder; these commands are executed all at once with a
  12886. separate command.
  12887. Options that control this mode can be changed with
  12888. \\[customize-group]; specify the \"mh\" group. In particular, please
  12889. see the `mh-scan-format-file' option if you wish to modify scan's
  12890. format.
  12891. When a folder is visited, the hook `mh-folder-mode-hook' is run.
  12892. Ranges
  12893. ======
  12894. Many commands that operate on individual messages, such as
  12895. `mh-forward' or `mh-refile-msg' take a RANGE argument. This argument
  12896. can be used in several ways.
  12897. If you provide the prefix argument (\\[universal-argument]) to
  12898. these commands, then you will be prompted for the message range.
  12899. This can be any valid MH range which can include messages,
  12900. sequences, and the abbreviations (described in the mh(1) man
  12901. page):
  12902. <num1>-<num2>
  12903. Indicates all messages in the range <num1> to <num2>, inclusive.
  12904. The range must be nonempty.
  12905. <num>:N
  12906. <num>:+N
  12907. <num>:-N
  12908. Up to N messages beginning with (or ending with) message num. Num
  12909. may be any of the predefined symbols: first, prev, cur, next or
  12910. last.
  12911. first:N
  12912. prev:N
  12913. next:N
  12914. last:N
  12915. The first, previous, next or last messages, if they exist.
  12916. all
  12917. All of the messages.
  12918. For example, a range that shows all of these things is `1 2 3
  12919. 5-10 last:5 unseen'.
  12920. If the option `transient-mark-mode' is set to t and you set a
  12921. region in the MH-Folder buffer, then the MH-E command will
  12922. perform the operation on all messages in that region.
  12923. \\{mh-folder-mode-map}
  12924. \(fn)" t nil)
  12925. ;;;***
  12926. ;;;### (autoloads (midnight-delay-set clean-buffer-list) "midnight"
  12927. ;;;;;; "midnight.el" (20352 65510))
  12928. ;;; Generated autoloads from midnight.el
  12929. (autoload 'clean-buffer-list "midnight" "\
  12930. Kill old buffers that have not been displayed recently.
  12931. The relevant variables are `clean-buffer-list-delay-general',
  12932. `clean-buffer-list-delay-special', `clean-buffer-list-kill-buffer-names',
  12933. `clean-buffer-list-kill-never-buffer-names',
  12934. `clean-buffer-list-kill-regexps' and
  12935. `clean-buffer-list-kill-never-regexps'.
  12936. While processing buffers, this procedure displays messages containing
  12937. the current date/time, buffer name, how many seconds ago it was
  12938. displayed (can be nil if the buffer was never displayed) and its
  12939. lifetime, i.e., its \"age\" when it will be purged.
  12940. \(fn)" t nil)
  12941. (autoload 'midnight-delay-set "midnight" "\
  12942. Modify `midnight-timer' according to `midnight-delay'.
  12943. Sets the first argument SYMB (which must be symbol `midnight-delay')
  12944. to its second argument TM.
  12945. \(fn SYMB TM)" nil nil)
  12946. ;;;***
  12947. ;;;### (autoloads (minibuffer-electric-default-mode) "minibuf-eldef"
  12948. ;;;;;; "minibuf-eldef.el" (20400 62402))
  12949. ;;; Generated autoloads from minibuf-eldef.el
  12950. (defvar minibuffer-electric-default-mode nil "\
  12951. Non-nil if Minibuffer-Electric-Default mode is enabled.
  12952. See the command `minibuffer-electric-default-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  12953. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  12954. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  12955. or call the function `minibuffer-electric-default-mode'.")
  12956. (custom-autoload 'minibuffer-electric-default-mode "minibuf-eldef" nil)
  12957. (autoload 'minibuffer-electric-default-mode "minibuf-eldef" "\
  12958. Toggle Minibuffer Electric Default mode.
  12959. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Minibuffer Electric Default
  12960. mode if ARG is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called
  12961. from Lisp, enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  12962. Minibuffer Electric Default mode is a global minor mode. When
  12963. enabled, minibuffer prompts that show a default value only show
  12964. the default when it's applicable -- that is, when hitting RET
  12965. would yield the default value. If the user modifies the input
  12966. such that hitting RET would enter a non-default value, the prompt
  12967. is modified to remove the default indication.
  12968. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  12969. ;;;***
  12970. ;;;### (autoloads (list-dynamic-libraries butterfly) "misc" "misc.el"
  12971. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  12972. ;;; Generated autoloads from misc.el
  12973. (autoload 'butterfly "misc" "\
  12974. Use butterflies to flip the desired bit on the drive platter.
  12975. Open hands and let the delicate wings flap once. The disturbance
  12976. ripples outward, changing the flow of the eddy currents in the
  12977. upper atmosphere. These cause momentary pockets of higher-pressure
  12978. air to form, which act as lenses that deflect incoming cosmic rays,
  12979. focusing them to strike the drive platter and flip the desired bit.
  12980. You can type `M-x butterfly C-M-c' to run it. This is a permuted
  12981. variation of `C-x M-c M-butterfly' from url `http://xkcd.com/378/'.
  12982. \(fn)" t nil)
  12983. (autoload 'list-dynamic-libraries "misc" "\
  12984. Display a list of all dynamic libraries known to Emacs.
  12985. \(These are the libraries listed in `dynamic-library-alist'.)
  12986. If optional argument LOADED-ONLY-P (interactively, prefix arg)
  12987. is non-nil, only libraries already loaded are listed.
  12988. Optional argument BUFFER specifies a buffer to use, instead of
  12989. \"*Dynamic Libraries*\".
  12990. The return value is always nil.
  12991. \(fn &optional LOADED-ONLY-P BUFFER)" t nil)
  12992. ;;;***
  12993. ;;;### (autoloads (multi-isearch-files-regexp multi-isearch-files
  12994. ;;;;;; multi-isearch-buffers-regexp multi-isearch-buffers multi-isearch-setup)
  12995. ;;;;;; "misearch" "misearch.el" (20487 24216))
  12996. ;;; Generated autoloads from misearch.el
  12997. (add-hook 'isearch-mode-hook 'multi-isearch-setup)
  12998. (defvar multi-isearch-next-buffer-function nil "\
  12999. Function to call to get the next buffer to search.
  13000. When this variable is set to a function that returns a buffer, then
  13001. after typing another \\[isearch-forward] or \\[isearch-backward] at a failing search, the search goes
  13002. to the next buffer in the series and continues searching for the
  13003. next occurrence.
  13004. This function should return the next buffer (it doesn't need to switch
  13005. to it), or nil if it can't find the next buffer (when it reaches the
  13006. end of the search space).
  13007. The first argument of this function is the current buffer where the
  13008. search is currently searching. It defines the base buffer relative to
  13009. which this function should find the next buffer. When the isearch
  13010. direction is backward (when `isearch-forward' is nil), this function
  13011. should return the previous buffer to search.
  13012. If the second argument of this function WRAP is non-nil, then it
  13013. should return the first buffer in the series; and for the backward
  13014. search, it should return the last buffer in the series.")
  13015. (defvar multi-isearch-next-buffer-current-function nil "\
  13016. The currently active function to get the next buffer to search.
  13017. Initialized from `multi-isearch-next-buffer-function' when
  13018. Isearch starts.")
  13019. (defvar multi-isearch-current-buffer nil "\
  13020. The buffer where the search is currently searching.
  13021. The value is nil when the search still is in the initial buffer.")
  13022. (autoload 'multi-isearch-setup "misearch" "\
  13023. Set up isearch to search multiple buffers.
  13024. Intended to be added to `isearch-mode-hook'.
  13025. \(fn)" nil nil)
  13026. (autoload 'multi-isearch-buffers "misearch" "\
  13027. Start multi-buffer Isearch on a list of BUFFERS.
  13028. This list can contain live buffers or their names.
  13029. Interactively read buffer names to search, one by one, ended with RET.
  13030. With a prefix argument, ask for a regexp, and search in buffers
  13031. whose names match the specified regexp.
  13032. \(fn BUFFERS)" t nil)
  13033. (autoload 'multi-isearch-buffers-regexp "misearch" "\
  13034. Start multi-buffer regexp Isearch on a list of BUFFERS.
  13035. This list can contain live buffers or their names.
  13036. Interactively read buffer names to search, one by one, ended with RET.
  13037. With a prefix argument, ask for a regexp, and search in buffers
  13038. whose names match the specified regexp.
  13039. \(fn BUFFERS)" t nil)
  13040. (autoload 'multi-isearch-files "misearch" "\
  13041. Start multi-buffer Isearch on a list of FILES.
  13042. Relative file names in this list are expanded to absolute
  13043. file names using the current buffer's value of `default-directory'.
  13044. Interactively read file names to search, one by one, ended with RET.
  13045. With a prefix argument, ask for a wildcard, and search in file buffers
  13046. whose file names match the specified wildcard.
  13047. \(fn FILES)" t nil)
  13048. (autoload 'multi-isearch-files-regexp "misearch" "\
  13049. Start multi-buffer regexp Isearch on a list of FILES.
  13050. Relative file names in this list are expanded to absolute
  13051. file names using the current buffer's value of `default-directory'.
  13052. Interactively read file names to search, one by one, ended with RET.
  13053. With a prefix argument, ask for a wildcard, and search in file buffers
  13054. whose file names match the specified wildcard.
  13055. \(fn FILES)" t nil)
  13056. ;;;***
  13057. ;;;### (autoloads (mixal-mode) "mixal-mode" "progmodes/mixal-mode.el"
  13058. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13059. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/mixal-mode.el
  13060. (autoload 'mixal-mode "mixal-mode" "\
  13061. Major mode for the mixal asm language.
  13062. \(fn)" t nil)
  13063. ;;;***
  13064. ;;;### (autoloads (mm-default-file-encoding) "mm-encode" "gnus/mm-encode.el"
  13065. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13066. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/mm-encode.el
  13067. (autoload 'mm-default-file-encoding "mm-encode" "\
  13068. Return a default encoding for FILE.
  13069. \(fn FILE)" nil nil)
  13070. ;;;***
  13071. ;;;### (autoloads (mm-inline-external-body mm-extern-cache-contents)
  13072. ;;;;;; "mm-extern" "gnus/mm-extern.el" (20352 65510))
  13073. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/mm-extern.el
  13074. (autoload 'mm-extern-cache-contents "mm-extern" "\
  13075. Put the external-body part of HANDLE into its cache.
  13076. \(fn HANDLE)" nil nil)
  13077. (autoload 'mm-inline-external-body "mm-extern" "\
  13078. Show the external-body part of HANDLE.
  13079. This function replaces the buffer of HANDLE with a buffer contains
  13080. the entire message.
  13081. If NO-DISPLAY is nil, display it. Otherwise, do nothing after replacing.
  13082. \(fn HANDLE &optional NO-DISPLAY)" nil nil)
  13083. ;;;***
  13084. ;;;### (autoloads (mm-inline-partial) "mm-partial" "gnus/mm-partial.el"
  13085. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13086. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/mm-partial.el
  13087. (autoload 'mm-inline-partial "mm-partial" "\
  13088. Show the partial part of HANDLE.
  13089. This function replaces the buffer of HANDLE with a buffer contains
  13090. the entire message.
  13091. If NO-DISPLAY is nil, display it. Otherwise, do nothing after replacing.
  13092. \(fn HANDLE &optional NO-DISPLAY)" nil nil)
  13093. ;;;***
  13094. ;;;### (autoloads (mm-url-insert-file-contents-external mm-url-insert-file-contents)
  13095. ;;;;;; "mm-url" "gnus/mm-url.el" (20352 65510))
  13096. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/mm-url.el
  13097. (autoload 'mm-url-insert-file-contents "mm-url" "\
  13098. Insert file contents of URL.
  13099. If `mm-url-use-external' is non-nil, use `mm-url-program'.
  13100. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  13101. (autoload 'mm-url-insert-file-contents-external "mm-url" "\
  13102. Insert file contents of URL using `mm-url-program'.
  13103. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  13104. ;;;***
  13105. ;;;### (autoloads (mm-uu-dissect-text-parts mm-uu-dissect) "mm-uu"
  13106. ;;;;;; "gnus/mm-uu.el" (20352 65510))
  13107. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/mm-uu.el
  13108. (autoload 'mm-uu-dissect "mm-uu" "\
  13109. Dissect the current buffer and return a list of uu handles.
  13110. The optional NOHEADER means there's no header in the buffer.
  13111. MIME-TYPE specifies a MIME type and parameters, which defaults to the
  13112. value of `mm-uu-text-plain-type'.
  13113. \(fn &optional NOHEADER MIME-TYPE)" nil nil)
  13114. (autoload 'mm-uu-dissect-text-parts "mm-uu" "\
  13115. Dissect text parts and put uu handles into HANDLE.
  13116. Assume text has been decoded if DECODED is non-nil.
  13117. \(fn HANDLE &optional DECODED)" nil nil)
  13118. ;;;***
  13119. ;;;### (autoloads (mml-attach-file mml-to-mime) "mml" "gnus/mml.el"
  13120. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13121. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/mml.el
  13122. (autoload 'mml-to-mime "mml" "\
  13123. Translate the current buffer from MML to MIME.
  13124. \(fn)" nil nil)
  13125. (autoload 'mml-attach-file "mml" "\
  13126. Attach a file to the outgoing MIME message.
  13127. The file is not inserted or encoded until you send the message with
  13128. `\\[message-send-and-exit]' or `\\[message-send]'.
  13129. FILE is the name of the file to attach. TYPE is its
  13130. content-type, a string of the form \"type/subtype\". DESCRIPTION
  13131. is a one-line description of the attachment. The DISPOSITION
  13132. specifies how the attachment is intended to be displayed. It can
  13133. be either \"inline\" (displayed automatically within the message
  13134. body) or \"attachment\" (separate from the body).
  13135. \(fn FILE &optional TYPE DESCRIPTION DISPOSITION)" t nil)
  13136. ;;;***
  13137. ;;;### (autoloads (mml1991-sign mml1991-encrypt) "mml1991" "gnus/mml1991.el"
  13138. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13139. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/mml1991.el
  13140. (autoload 'mml1991-encrypt "mml1991" "\
  13141. \(fn CONT &optional SIGN)" nil nil)
  13142. (autoload 'mml1991-sign "mml1991" "\
  13143. \(fn CONT)" nil nil)
  13144. ;;;***
  13145. ;;;### (autoloads (mml2015-self-encrypt mml2015-sign mml2015-encrypt
  13146. ;;;;;; mml2015-verify-test mml2015-verify mml2015-decrypt-test mml2015-decrypt)
  13147. ;;;;;; "mml2015" "gnus/mml2015.el" (20352 65510))
  13148. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/mml2015.el
  13149. (autoload 'mml2015-decrypt "mml2015" "\
  13150. \(fn HANDLE CTL)" nil nil)
  13151. (autoload 'mml2015-decrypt-test "mml2015" "\
  13152. \(fn HANDLE CTL)" nil nil)
  13153. (autoload 'mml2015-verify "mml2015" "\
  13154. \(fn HANDLE CTL)" nil nil)
  13155. (autoload 'mml2015-verify-test "mml2015" "\
  13156. \(fn HANDLE CTL)" nil nil)
  13157. (autoload 'mml2015-encrypt "mml2015" "\
  13158. \(fn CONT &optional SIGN)" nil nil)
  13159. (autoload 'mml2015-sign "mml2015" "\
  13160. \(fn CONT)" nil nil)
  13161. (autoload 'mml2015-self-encrypt "mml2015" "\
  13162. \(fn)" nil nil)
  13163. ;;;***
  13164. ;;;### (autoloads (m2-mode) "modula2" "progmodes/modula2.el" (20400
  13165. ;;;;;; 62402))
  13166. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/modula2.el
  13167. (defalias 'modula-2-mode 'm2-mode)
  13168. (autoload 'm2-mode "modula2" "\
  13169. This is a mode intended to support program development in Modula-2.
  13170. All control constructs of Modula-2 can be reached by typing C-c
  13171. followed by the first character of the construct.
  13172. \\<m2-mode-map>
  13173. \\[m2-begin] begin \\[m2-case] case
  13174. \\[m2-definition] definition \\[m2-else] else
  13175. \\[m2-for] for \\[m2-header] header
  13176. \\[m2-if] if \\[m2-module] module
  13177. \\[m2-loop] loop \\[m2-or] or
  13178. \\[m2-procedure] procedure Control-c Control-w with
  13179. \\[m2-record] record \\[m2-stdio] stdio
  13180. \\[m2-type] type \\[m2-until] until
  13181. \\[m2-var] var \\[m2-while] while
  13182. \\[m2-export] export \\[m2-import] import
  13183. \\[m2-begin-comment] begin-comment \\[m2-end-comment] end-comment
  13184. \\[suspend-emacs] suspend Emacs \\[m2-toggle] toggle
  13185. \\[m2-compile] compile \\[m2-next-error] next-error
  13186. \\[m2-link] link
  13187. `m2-indent' controls the number of spaces for each indentation.
  13188. `m2-compile-command' holds the command to compile a Modula-2 program.
  13189. `m2-link-command' holds the command to link a Modula-2 program.
  13190. \(fn)" t nil)
  13191. ;;;***
  13192. ;;;### (autoloads (denato-region nato-region unmorse-region morse-region)
  13193. ;;;;;; "morse" "play/morse.el" (20352 65510))
  13194. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/morse.el
  13195. (autoload 'morse-region "morse" "\
  13196. Convert all text in a given region to morse code.
  13197. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  13198. (autoload 'unmorse-region "morse" "\
  13199. Convert morse coded text in region to ordinary ASCII text.
  13200. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  13201. (autoload 'nato-region "morse" "\
  13202. Convert all text in a given region to NATO phonetic alphabet.
  13203. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  13204. (autoload 'denato-region "morse" "\
  13205. Convert NATO phonetic alphabet in region to ordinary ASCII text.
  13206. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  13207. ;;;***
  13208. ;;;### (autoloads (mouse-drag-drag mouse-drag-throw) "mouse-drag"
  13209. ;;;;;; "mouse-drag.el" (20400 62402))
  13210. ;;; Generated autoloads from mouse-drag.el
  13211. (autoload 'mouse-drag-throw "mouse-drag" "\
  13212. \"Throw\" the page according to a mouse drag.
  13213. A \"throw\" is scrolling the page at a speed relative to the distance
  13214. from the original mouse click to the current mouse location. Try it;
  13215. you'll like it. It's easier to observe than to explain.
  13216. If the mouse is clicked and released in the same place of time we
  13217. assume that the user didn't want to scroll but wanted to whatever
  13218. mouse-2 used to do, so we pass it through.
  13219. Throw scrolling was inspired (but is not identical to) the \"hand\"
  13220. option in MacPaint, or the middle button in Tk text widgets.
  13221. If `mouse-throw-with-scroll-bar' is non-nil, then this command scrolls
  13222. in the opposite direction. (Different people have different ideas
  13223. about which direction is natural. Perhaps it has to do with which
  13224. hemisphere you're in.)
  13225. To test this function, evaluate:
  13226. (global-set-key [down-mouse-2] 'mouse-drag-throw)
  13227. \(fn START-EVENT)" t nil)
  13228. (autoload 'mouse-drag-drag "mouse-drag" "\
  13229. \"Drag\" the page according to a mouse drag.
  13230. Drag scrolling moves the page according to the movement of the mouse.
  13231. You \"grab\" the character under the mouse and move it around.
  13232. If the mouse is clicked and released in the same place of time we
  13233. assume that the user didn't want to scroll but wanted to whatever
  13234. mouse-2 used to do, so we pass it through.
  13235. Drag scrolling is identical to the \"hand\" option in MacPaint, or the
  13236. middle button in Tk text widgets.
  13237. To test this function, evaluate:
  13238. (global-set-key [down-mouse-2] 'mouse-drag-drag)
  13239. \(fn START-EVENT)" t nil)
  13240. ;;;***
  13241. ;;;### (autoloads (mouse-sel-mode) "mouse-sel" "mouse-sel.el" (20400
  13242. ;;;;;; 62402))
  13243. ;;; Generated autoloads from mouse-sel.el
  13244. (defvar mouse-sel-mode nil "\
  13245. Non-nil if Mouse-Sel mode is enabled.
  13246. See the command `mouse-sel-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  13247. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  13248. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  13249. or call the function `mouse-sel-mode'.")
  13250. (custom-autoload 'mouse-sel-mode "mouse-sel" nil)
  13251. (autoload 'mouse-sel-mode "mouse-sel" "\
  13252. Toggle Mouse Sel mode.
  13253. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Mouse Sel mode if ARG is
  13254. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  13255. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  13256. Mouse Sel mode is a global minor mode. When enabled, mouse
  13257. selection is enhanced in various ways:
  13258. - Double-clicking on symbol constituents selects symbols.
  13259. Double-clicking on quotes or parentheses selects sexps.
  13260. Double-clicking on whitespace selects whitespace.
  13261. Triple-clicking selects lines.
  13262. Quad-clicking selects paragraphs.
  13263. - Selecting sets the region & X primary selection, but does NOT affect
  13264. the `kill-ring', nor do the kill-ring functions change the X selection.
  13265. Because the mouse handlers set the primary selection directly,
  13266. mouse-sel sets the variables `interprogram-cut-function' and
  13267. `interprogram-paste-function' to nil.
  13268. - Clicking mouse-2 inserts the contents of the primary selection at
  13269. the mouse position (or point, if `mouse-yank-at-point' is non-nil).
  13270. - mouse-2 while selecting or extending copies selection to the
  13271. kill ring; mouse-1 or mouse-3 kills it.
  13272. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  13273. ;;;***
  13274. ;;;### (autoloads (mpc) "mpc" "mpc.el" (20400 62402))
  13275. ;;; Generated autoloads from mpc.el
  13276. (autoload 'mpc "mpc" "\
  13277. Main entry point for MPC.
  13278. \(fn)" t nil)
  13279. ;;;***
  13280. ;;;### (autoloads (mpuz) "mpuz" "play/mpuz.el" (20352 65510))
  13281. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/mpuz.el
  13282. (autoload 'mpuz "mpuz" "\
  13283. Multiplication puzzle with GNU Emacs.
  13284. \(fn)" t nil)
  13285. ;;;***
  13286. ;;;### (autoloads (msb-mode) "msb" "msb.el" (20400 62402))
  13287. ;;; Generated autoloads from msb.el
  13288. (defvar msb-mode nil "\
  13289. Non-nil if Msb mode is enabled.
  13290. See the command `msb-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  13291. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  13292. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  13293. or call the function `msb-mode'.")
  13294. (custom-autoload 'msb-mode "msb" nil)
  13295. (autoload 'msb-mode "msb" "\
  13296. Toggle Msb mode.
  13297. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Msb mode if ARG is positive,
  13298. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  13299. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  13300. This mode overrides the binding(s) of `mouse-buffer-menu' to provide a
  13301. different buffer menu using the function `msb'.
  13302. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  13303. ;;;***
  13304. ;;;### (autoloads (font-show-log mule-diag list-input-methods list-fontsets
  13305. ;;;;;; describe-fontset describe-font list-coding-categories list-coding-systems
  13306. ;;;;;; describe-current-coding-system describe-current-coding-system-briefly
  13307. ;;;;;; describe-coding-system describe-character-set list-charset-chars
  13308. ;;;;;; read-charset list-character-sets) "mule-diag" "international/mule-diag.el"
  13309. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13310. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/mule-diag.el
  13311. (autoload 'list-character-sets "mule-diag" "\
  13312. Display a list of all character sets.
  13313. The D column contains the dimension of this character set. The CH
  13314. column contains the number of characters in a block of this character
  13315. set. The FINAL-BYTE column contains an ISO-2022 <final-byte> to use
  13316. in the designation escape sequence for this character set in
  13317. ISO-2022-based coding systems.
  13318. With prefix ARG, the output format gets more cryptic,
  13319. but still shows the full information.
  13320. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  13321. (autoload 'read-charset "mule-diag" "\
  13322. Read a character set from the minibuffer, prompting with string PROMPT.
  13323. It must be an Emacs character set listed in the variable `charset-list'.
  13324. Optional arguments are DEFAULT-VALUE and INITIAL-INPUT.
  13325. DEFAULT-VALUE, if non-nil, is the default value.
  13326. INITIAL-INPUT, if non-nil, is a string inserted in the minibuffer initially.
  13327. See the documentation of the function `completing-read' for the detailed
  13328. meanings of these arguments.
  13329. \(fn PROMPT &optional DEFAULT-VALUE INITIAL-INPUT)" nil nil)
  13330. (autoload 'list-charset-chars "mule-diag" "\
  13331. Display a list of characters in character set CHARSET.
  13332. \(fn CHARSET)" t nil)
  13333. (autoload 'describe-character-set "mule-diag" "\
  13334. Display information about built-in character set CHARSET.
  13335. \(fn CHARSET)" t nil)
  13336. (autoload 'describe-coding-system "mule-diag" "\
  13337. Display information about CODING-SYSTEM.
  13338. \(fn CODING-SYSTEM)" t nil)
  13339. (autoload 'describe-current-coding-system-briefly "mule-diag" "\
  13340. Display coding systems currently used in a brief format in echo area.
  13341. The format is \"F[..],K[..],T[..],P>[..],P<[..], default F[..],P<[..],P<[..]\",
  13342. where mnemonics of the following coding systems come in this order
  13343. in place of `..':
  13344. `buffer-file-coding-system' (of the current buffer)
  13345. eol-type of `buffer-file-coding-system' (of the current buffer)
  13346. Value returned by `keyboard-coding-system'
  13347. eol-type of `keyboard-coding-system'
  13348. Value returned by `terminal-coding-system'.
  13349. eol-type of `terminal-coding-system'
  13350. `process-coding-system' for read (of the current buffer, if any)
  13351. eol-type of `process-coding-system' for read (of the current buffer, if any)
  13352. `process-coding-system' for write (of the current buffer, if any)
  13353. eol-type of `process-coding-system' for write (of the current buffer, if any)
  13354. default `buffer-file-coding-system'
  13355. eol-type of default `buffer-file-coding-system'
  13356. `default-process-coding-system' for read
  13357. eol-type of `default-process-coding-system' for read
  13358. `default-process-coding-system' for write
  13359. eol-type of `default-process-coding-system'
  13360. \(fn)" t nil)
  13361. (autoload 'describe-current-coding-system "mule-diag" "\
  13362. Display coding systems currently used, in detail.
  13363. \(fn)" t nil)
  13364. (autoload 'list-coding-systems "mule-diag" "\
  13365. Display a list of all coding systems.
  13366. This shows the mnemonic letter, name, and description of each coding system.
  13367. With prefix ARG, the output format gets more cryptic,
  13368. but still contains full information about each coding system.
  13369. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  13370. (autoload 'list-coding-categories "mule-diag" "\
  13371. Display a list of all coding categories.
  13372. \(fn)" nil nil)
  13373. (autoload 'describe-font "mule-diag" "\
  13374. Display information about a font whose name is FONTNAME.
  13375. The font must be already used by Emacs.
  13376. \(fn FONTNAME)" t nil)
  13377. (autoload 'describe-fontset "mule-diag" "\
  13378. Display information about FONTSET.
  13379. This shows which font is used for which character(s).
  13380. \(fn FONTSET)" t nil)
  13381. (autoload 'list-fontsets "mule-diag" "\
  13382. Display a list of all fontsets.
  13383. This shows the name, size, and style of each fontset.
  13384. With prefix arg, also list the fonts contained in each fontset;
  13385. see the function `describe-fontset' for the format of the list.
  13386. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  13387. (autoload 'list-input-methods "mule-diag" "\
  13388. Display information about all input methods.
  13389. \(fn)" t nil)
  13390. (autoload 'mule-diag "mule-diag" "\
  13391. Display diagnosis of the multilingual environment (Mule).
  13392. This shows various information related to the current multilingual
  13393. environment, including lists of input methods, coding systems,
  13394. character sets, and fontsets (if Emacs is running under a window
  13395. system which uses fontsets).
  13396. \(fn)" t nil)
  13397. (autoload 'font-show-log "mule-diag" "\
  13398. Show log of font listing and opening.
  13399. Prefix arg LIMIT says how many fonts to show for each listing.
  13400. The default is 20. If LIMIT is negative, do not limit the listing.
  13401. \(fn &optional LIMIT)" t nil)
  13402. ;;;***
  13403. ;;;### (autoloads (char-displayable-p detect-coding-with-language-environment
  13404. ;;;;;; detect-coding-with-priority with-coding-priority coding-system-translation-table-for-encode
  13405. ;;;;;; coding-system-translation-table-for-decode coding-system-pre-write-conversion
  13406. ;;;;;; coding-system-post-read-conversion lookup-nested-alist set-nested-alist
  13407. ;;;;;; truncate-string-to-width store-substring string-to-sequence)
  13408. ;;;;;; "mule-util" "international/mule-util.el" (20352 65510))
  13409. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/mule-util.el
  13410. (autoload 'string-to-sequence "mule-util" "\
  13411. Convert STRING to a sequence of TYPE which contains characters in STRING.
  13412. TYPE should be `list' or `vector'.
  13413. \(fn STRING TYPE)" nil nil)
  13414. (make-obsolete 'string-to-sequence "use `string-to-list' or `string-to-vector'." "22.1")
  13415. (defsubst string-to-list (string) "\
  13416. Return a list of characters in STRING." (append string nil))
  13417. (defsubst string-to-vector (string) "\
  13418. Return a vector of characters in STRING." (vconcat string))
  13419. (autoload 'store-substring "mule-util" "\
  13420. Embed OBJ (string or character) at index IDX of STRING.
  13421. \(fn STRING IDX OBJ)" nil nil)
  13422. (autoload 'truncate-string-to-width "mule-util" "\
  13423. Truncate string STR to end at column END-COLUMN.
  13424. The optional 3rd arg START-COLUMN, if non-nil, specifies the starting
  13425. column; that means to return the characters occupying columns
  13426. START-COLUMN ... END-COLUMN of STR. Both END-COLUMN and START-COLUMN
  13427. are specified in terms of character display width in the current
  13428. buffer; see also `char-width'.
  13429. The optional 4th arg PADDING, if non-nil, specifies a padding
  13430. character (which should have a display width of 1) to add at the end
  13431. of the result if STR doesn't reach column END-COLUMN, or if END-COLUMN
  13432. comes in the middle of a character in STR. PADDING is also added at
  13433. the beginning of the result if column START-COLUMN appears in the
  13434. middle of a character in STR.
  13435. If PADDING is nil, no padding is added in these cases, so
  13436. the resulting string may be narrower than END-COLUMN.
  13437. If ELLIPSIS is non-nil, it should be a string which will replace the
  13438. end of STR (including any padding) if it extends beyond END-COLUMN,
  13439. unless the display width of STR is equal to or less than the display
  13440. width of ELLIPSIS. If it is non-nil and not a string, then ELLIPSIS
  13441. defaults to \"...\".
  13442. \(fn STR END-COLUMN &optional START-COLUMN PADDING ELLIPSIS)" nil nil)
  13443. (defsubst nested-alist-p (obj) "\
  13444. Return t if OBJ is a nested alist.
  13445. Nested alist is a list of the form (ENTRY . BRANCHES), where ENTRY is
  13446. any Lisp object, and BRANCHES is a list of cons cells of the form
  13447. \(KEY-ELEMENT . NESTED-ALIST).
  13448. You can use a nested alist to store any Lisp object (ENTRY) for a key
  13449. sequence KEYSEQ, where KEYSEQ is a sequence of KEY-ELEMENT. KEYSEQ
  13450. can be a string, a vector, or a list." (and obj (listp obj) (listp (cdr obj))))
  13451. (autoload 'set-nested-alist "mule-util" "\
  13452. Set ENTRY for KEYSEQ in a nested alist ALIST.
  13453. Optional 4th arg LEN non-nil means the first LEN elements in KEYSEQ
  13454. are considered.
  13455. Optional 5th argument BRANCHES if non-nil is branches for a keyseq
  13456. longer than KEYSEQ.
  13457. See the documentation of `nested-alist-p' for more detail.
  13458. \(fn KEYSEQ ENTRY ALIST &optional LEN BRANCHES)" nil nil)
  13459. (autoload 'lookup-nested-alist "mule-util" "\
  13460. Look up key sequence KEYSEQ in nested alist ALIST. Return the definition.
  13461. Optional 3rd argument LEN specifies the length of KEYSEQ.
  13462. Optional 4th argument START specifies index of the starting key.
  13463. The returned value is normally a nested alist of which
  13464. car part is the entry for KEYSEQ.
  13465. If ALIST is not deep enough for KEYSEQ, return number which is
  13466. how many key elements at the front of KEYSEQ it takes
  13467. to reach a leaf in ALIST.
  13468. Optional 5th argument NIL-FOR-TOO-LONG non-nil means return nil
  13469. even if ALIST is not deep enough.
  13470. \(fn KEYSEQ ALIST &optional LEN START NIL-FOR-TOO-LONG)" nil nil)
  13471. (autoload 'coding-system-post-read-conversion "mule-util" "\
  13472. Return the value of CODING-SYSTEM's `post-read-conversion' property.
  13473. \(fn CODING-SYSTEM)" nil nil)
  13474. (autoload 'coding-system-pre-write-conversion "mule-util" "\
  13475. Return the value of CODING-SYSTEM's `pre-write-conversion' property.
  13476. \(fn CODING-SYSTEM)" nil nil)
  13477. (autoload 'coding-system-translation-table-for-decode "mule-util" "\
  13478. Return the value of CODING-SYSTEM's `decode-translation-table' property.
  13479. \(fn CODING-SYSTEM)" nil nil)
  13480. (autoload 'coding-system-translation-table-for-encode "mule-util" "\
  13481. Return the value of CODING-SYSTEM's `encode-translation-table' property.
  13482. \(fn CODING-SYSTEM)" nil nil)
  13483. (autoload 'with-coding-priority "mule-util" "\
  13484. Execute BODY like `progn' with CODING-SYSTEMS at the front of priority list.
  13485. CODING-SYSTEMS is a list of coding systems. See `set-coding-system-priority'.
  13486. This affects the implicit sorting of lists of coding systems returned by
  13487. operations such as `find-coding-systems-region'.
  13488. \(fn CODING-SYSTEMS &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  13489. (put 'with-coding-priority 'lisp-indent-function 1)
  13490. (autoload 'detect-coding-with-priority "mule-util" "\
  13491. Detect a coding system of the text between FROM and TO with PRIORITY-LIST.
  13492. PRIORITY-LIST is an alist of coding categories vs the corresponding
  13493. coding systems ordered by priority.
  13494. \(fn FROM TO PRIORITY-LIST)" nil (quote macro))
  13495. (autoload 'detect-coding-with-language-environment "mule-util" "\
  13496. Detect a coding system for the text between FROM and TO with LANG-ENV.
  13497. The detection takes into account the coding system priorities for the
  13498. language environment LANG-ENV.
  13499. \(fn FROM TO LANG-ENV)" nil nil)
  13500. (autoload 'char-displayable-p "mule-util" "\
  13501. Return non-nil if we should be able to display CHAR.
  13502. On a multi-font display, the test is only whether there is an
  13503. appropriate font from the selected frame's fontset to display
  13504. CHAR's charset in general. Since fonts may be specified on a
  13505. per-character basis, this may not be accurate.
  13506. \(fn CHAR)" nil nil)
  13507. ;;;***
  13508. ;;;### (autoloads (network-connection network-connection-to-service
  13509. ;;;;;; whois-reverse-lookup whois finger ftp run-dig dns-lookup-host
  13510. ;;;;;; nslookup nslookup-host ping traceroute route arp netstat
  13511. ;;;;;; iwconfig ifconfig) "net-utils" "net/net-utils.el" (20352
  13512. ;;;;;; 65510))
  13513. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/net-utils.el
  13514. (autoload 'ifconfig "net-utils" "\
  13515. Run ifconfig and display diagnostic output.
  13516. \(fn)" t nil)
  13517. (autoload 'iwconfig "net-utils" "\
  13518. Run iwconfig and display diagnostic output.
  13519. \(fn)" t nil)
  13520. (autoload 'netstat "net-utils" "\
  13521. Run netstat and display diagnostic output.
  13522. \(fn)" t nil)
  13523. (autoload 'arp "net-utils" "\
  13524. Run arp and display diagnostic output.
  13525. \(fn)" t nil)
  13526. (autoload 'route "net-utils" "\
  13527. Run route and display diagnostic output.
  13528. \(fn)" t nil)
  13529. (autoload 'traceroute "net-utils" "\
  13530. Run traceroute program for TARGET.
  13531. \(fn TARGET)" t nil)
  13532. (autoload 'ping "net-utils" "\
  13533. Ping HOST.
  13534. If your system's ping continues until interrupted, you can try setting
  13535. `ping-program-options'.
  13536. \(fn HOST)" t nil)
  13537. (autoload 'nslookup-host "net-utils" "\
  13538. Lookup the DNS information for HOST.
  13539. \(fn HOST)" t nil)
  13540. (autoload 'nslookup "net-utils" "\
  13541. Run nslookup program.
  13542. \(fn)" t nil)
  13543. (autoload 'dns-lookup-host "net-utils" "\
  13544. Lookup the DNS information for HOST (name or IP address).
  13545. \(fn HOST)" t nil)
  13546. (autoload 'run-dig "net-utils" "\
  13547. Run dig program.
  13548. \(fn HOST)" t nil)
  13549. (autoload 'ftp "net-utils" "\
  13550. Run ftp program.
  13551. \(fn HOST)" t nil)
  13552. (autoload 'finger "net-utils" "\
  13553. Finger USER on HOST.
  13554. \(fn USER HOST)" t nil)
  13555. (autoload 'whois "net-utils" "\
  13556. Send SEARCH-STRING to server defined by the `whois-server-name' variable.
  13557. If `whois-guess-server' is non-nil, then try to deduce the correct server
  13558. from SEARCH-STRING. With argument, prompt for whois server.
  13559. \(fn ARG SEARCH-STRING)" t nil)
  13560. (autoload 'whois-reverse-lookup "net-utils" "\
  13561. \(fn)" t nil)
  13562. (autoload 'network-connection-to-service "net-utils" "\
  13563. Open a network connection to SERVICE on HOST.
  13564. \(fn HOST SERVICE)" t nil)
  13565. (autoload 'network-connection "net-utils" "\
  13566. Open a network connection to HOST on PORT.
  13567. \(fn HOST PORT)" t nil)
  13568. ;;;***
  13569. ;;;### (autoloads (netrc-credentials) "netrc" "net/netrc.el" (20352
  13570. ;;;;;; 65510))
  13571. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/netrc.el
  13572. (autoload 'netrc-credentials "netrc" "\
  13573. Return a user name/password pair.
  13574. Port specifications will be prioritized in the order they are
  13575. listed in the PORTS list.
  13576. \(fn MACHINE &rest PORTS)" nil nil)
  13577. ;;;***
  13578. ;;;### (autoloads (open-network-stream) "network-stream" "net/network-stream.el"
  13579. ;;;;;; (20366 22869))
  13580. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/network-stream.el
  13581. (autoload 'open-network-stream "network-stream" "\
  13582. Open a TCP connection to HOST, optionally with encryption.
  13583. Normally, return a network process object; with a non-nil
  13584. :return-list parameter, return a list instead (see below).
  13585. Input and output work as for subprocesses; `delete-process'
  13586. closes it.
  13587. NAME is the name for the process. It is modified if necessary to
  13588. make it unique.
  13589. BUFFER is a buffer or buffer name to associate with the process.
  13590. Process output goes at end of that buffer. BUFFER may be nil,
  13591. meaning that the process is not associated with any buffer.
  13592. HOST is the name or IP address of the host to connect to.
  13593. SERVICE is the name of the service desired, or an integer specifying
  13594. a port number to connect to.
  13595. The remaining PARAMETERS should be a sequence of keywords and
  13596. values:
  13597. :type specifies the connection type, one of the following:
  13598. nil or `network'
  13599. -- Begin with an ordinary network connection, and if
  13600. the parameters :success and :capability-command
  13601. are also supplied, try to upgrade to an encrypted
  13602. connection via STARTTLS. Even if that
  13603. fails (e.g. if HOST does not support TLS), retain
  13604. an unencrypted connection.
  13605. `plain' -- An ordinary, unencrypted network connection.
  13606. `starttls' -- Begin with an ordinary connection, and try
  13607. upgrading via STARTTLS. If that fails for any
  13608. reason, drop the connection; in that case the
  13609. returned object is a killed process.
  13610. `tls' -- A TLS connection.
  13611. `ssl' -- Equivalent to `tls'.
  13612. `shell' -- A shell connection.
  13613. :return-list specifies this function's return value.
  13614. If omitted or nil, return a process object. A non-nil means to
  13615. return (PROC . PROPS), where PROC is a process object and PROPS
  13616. is a plist of connection properties, with these keywords:
  13617. :greeting -- the greeting returned by HOST (a string), or nil.
  13618. :capabilities -- a string representing HOST's capabilities,
  13619. or nil if none could be found.
  13620. :type -- the resulting connection type; `plain' (unencrypted)
  13621. or `tls' (TLS-encrypted).
  13622. :end-of-command specifies a regexp matching the end of a command.
  13623. :end-of-capability specifies a regexp matching the end of the
  13624. response to the command specified for :capability-command.
  13625. It defaults to the regexp specified for :end-of-command.
  13626. :success specifies a regexp matching a message indicating a
  13627. successful STARTTLS negotiation. For instance, the default
  13628. should be \"^3\" for an NNTP connection.
  13629. :capability-command specifies a command used to query the HOST
  13630. for its capabilities. For instance, for IMAP this should be
  13631. \"1 CAPABILITY\\r\\n\".
  13632. :starttls-function specifies a function for handling STARTTLS.
  13633. This function should take one parameter, the response to the
  13634. capability command, and should return the command to switch on
  13635. STARTTLS if the server supports STARTTLS, and nil otherwise.
  13636. :always-query-capabilities says whether to query the server for
  13637. capabilities, even if we're doing a `plain' network connection.
  13638. :client-certificate should either be a list where the first
  13639. element is the certificate key file name, and the second
  13640. element is the certificate file name itself, or `t', which
  13641. means that `auth-source' will be queried for the key and the
  13642. certificate. This parameter will only be used when doing TLS
  13643. or STARTTLS connections.
  13644. :use-starttls-if-possible is a boolean that says to do opportunistic
  13645. STARTTLS upgrades even if Emacs doesn't have built-in TLS functionality.
  13646. :nowait is a boolean that says the connection should be made
  13647. asynchronously, if possible.
  13648. \(fn NAME BUFFER HOST SERVICE &rest PARAMETERS)" nil nil)
  13649. (defalias 'open-protocol-stream 'open-network-stream)
  13650. ;;;***
  13651. ;;;### (autoloads (comment-indent-new-line comment-auto-fill-only-comments
  13652. ;;;;;; comment-dwim comment-or-uncomment-region comment-box comment-region
  13653. ;;;;;; uncomment-region comment-kill comment-set-column comment-indent
  13654. ;;;;;; comment-indent-default comment-normalize-vars comment-multi-line
  13655. ;;;;;; comment-padding comment-style comment-column) "newcomment"
  13656. ;;;;;; "newcomment.el" (20400 62402))
  13657. ;;; Generated autoloads from newcomment.el
  13658. (defalias 'indent-for-comment 'comment-indent)
  13659. (defalias 'set-comment-column 'comment-set-column)
  13660. (defalias 'kill-comment 'comment-kill)
  13661. (defalias 'indent-new-comment-line 'comment-indent-new-line)
  13662. (defvar comment-use-syntax 'undecided "\
  13663. Non-nil if syntax-tables can be used instead of regexps.
  13664. Can also be `undecided' which means that a somewhat expensive test will
  13665. be used to try to determine whether syntax-tables should be trusted
  13666. to understand comments or not in the given buffer.
  13667. Major modes should set this variable.")
  13668. (defvar comment-column 32 "\
  13669. Column to indent right-margin comments to.
  13670. Each mode may establish a different default value for this variable; you
  13671. can set the value for a particular mode using that mode's hook.
  13672. Comments might be indented to a different value in order not to go beyond
  13673. `comment-fill-column' or in order to align them with surrounding comments.")
  13674. (custom-autoload 'comment-column "newcomment" t)
  13675. (put 'comment-column 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  13676. (defvar comment-start nil "\
  13677. *String to insert to start a new comment, or nil if no comment syntax.")
  13678. (put 'comment-start 'safe-local-variable 'string-or-null-p)
  13679. (defvar comment-start-skip nil "\
  13680. *Regexp to match the start of a comment plus everything up to its body.
  13681. If there are any \\(...\\) pairs, the comment delimiter text is held to begin
  13682. at the place matched by the close of the first pair.")
  13683. (put 'comment-start-skip 'safe-local-variable 'string-or-null-p)
  13684. (defvar comment-end-skip nil "\
  13685. Regexp to match the end of a comment plus everything back to its body.")
  13686. (put 'comment-end-skip 'safe-local-variable 'string-or-null-p)
  13687. (defvar comment-end (purecopy "") "\
  13688. *String to insert to end a new comment.
  13689. Should be an empty string if comments are terminated by end-of-line.")
  13690. (put 'comment-end 'safe-local-variable 'string-or-null-p)
  13691. (defvar comment-indent-function 'comment-indent-default "\
  13692. Function to compute desired indentation for a comment.
  13693. This function is called with no args with point at the beginning of
  13694. the comment's starting delimiter and should return either the desired
  13695. column indentation or nil.
  13696. If nil is returned, indentation is delegated to `indent-according-to-mode'.")
  13697. (defvar comment-insert-comment-function nil "\
  13698. Function to insert a comment when a line doesn't contain one.
  13699. The function has no args.
  13700. Applicable at least in modes for languages like fixed-format Fortran where
  13701. comments always start in column zero.")
  13702. (defconst comment-styles '((plain nil nil nil nil "Start in column 0 (do not indent), as in Emacs-20") (indent-or-triple nil nil nil multi-char "Start in column 0, but only for single-char starters") (indent nil nil nil t "Full comment per line, ends not aligned") (aligned nil t nil t "Full comment per line, ends aligned") (box nil t t t "Full comment per line, ends aligned, + top and bottom") (extra-line t nil t t "One comment for all lines, end on a line by itself") (multi-line t nil nil t "One comment for all lines, end on last commented line") (box-multi t t t t "One comment for all lines, + top and bottom")) "\
  13703. Comment region style definitions.
  13704. Each style is defined with a form (STYLE . (MULTI ALIGN EXTRA INDENT DOC)).
  13705. DOC should succinctly describe the style.
  13706. STYLE should be a mnemonic symbol.
  13707. MULTI specifies that comments are allowed to span multiple lines.
  13708. e.g. in C it comments regions as
  13709. /* blabla
  13710. * bli */
  13711. rather than
  13712. /* blabla */
  13713. /* bli */
  13714. if `comment-end' is empty, this has no effect.
  13715. ALIGN specifies that the `comment-end' markers should be aligned.
  13716. e.g. in C it comments regions as
  13717. /* blabla */
  13718. /* bli */
  13719. rather than
  13720. /* blabla */
  13721. /* bli */
  13722. if `comment-end' is empty, this has no effect, unless EXTRA is also set,
  13723. in which case the comment gets wrapped in a box.
  13724. EXTRA specifies that an extra line should be used before and after the
  13725. region to comment (to put the `comment-end' and `comment-start').
  13726. e.g. in C it comments regions as
  13727. /*
  13728. * blabla
  13729. * bli
  13730. */
  13731. rather than
  13732. /* blabla
  13733. * bli */
  13734. if the comment style is not multi line, this has no effect, unless ALIGN
  13735. is also set, in which case the comment gets wrapped in a box.
  13736. INDENT specifies that the `comment-start' markers should not be put at the
  13737. left margin but at the current indentation of the region to comment.
  13738. If INDENT is `multi-char', that means indent multi-character
  13739. comment starters, but not one-character comment starters.")
  13740. (defvar comment-style 'indent "\
  13741. Style to be used for `comment-region'.
  13742. See `comment-styles' for a list of available styles.")
  13743. (custom-autoload 'comment-style "newcomment" t)
  13744. (defvar comment-padding (purecopy " ") "\
  13745. Padding string that `comment-region' puts between comment chars and text.
  13746. Can also be an integer which will be automatically turned into a string
  13747. of the corresponding number of spaces.
  13748. Extra spacing between the comment characters and the comment text
  13749. makes the comment easier to read. Default is 1. nil means 0.")
  13750. (custom-autoload 'comment-padding "newcomment" t)
  13751. (defvar comment-multi-line nil "\
  13752. Non-nil means `comment-indent-new-line' continues comments.
  13753. That is, it inserts no new terminator or starter.
  13754. This affects `auto-fill-mode', which is the main reason to
  13755. customize this variable.
  13756. It also affects \\[indent-new-comment-line]. However, if you want this
  13757. behavior for explicit filling, you might as well use \\[newline-and-indent].")
  13758. (custom-autoload 'comment-multi-line "newcomment" t)
  13759. (autoload 'comment-normalize-vars "newcomment" "\
  13760. Check and setup the variables needed by other commenting functions.
  13761. Functions autoloaded from newcomment.el, being entry points, should call
  13762. this function before any other, so the rest of the code can assume that
  13763. the variables are properly set.
  13764. \(fn &optional NOERROR)" nil nil)
  13765. (autoload 'comment-indent-default "newcomment" "\
  13766. Default for `comment-indent-function'.
  13767. \(fn)" nil nil)
  13768. (autoload 'comment-indent "newcomment" "\
  13769. Indent this line's comment to `comment-column', or insert an empty comment.
  13770. If CONTINUE is non-nil, use the `comment-continue' markers if any.
  13771. \(fn &optional CONTINUE)" t nil)
  13772. (autoload 'comment-set-column "newcomment" "\
  13773. Set the comment column based on point.
  13774. With no ARG, set the comment column to the current column.
  13775. With just minus as arg, kill any comment on this line.
  13776. With any other arg, set comment column to indentation of the previous comment
  13777. and then align or create a comment on this line at that column.
  13778. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  13779. (autoload 'comment-kill "newcomment" "\
  13780. Kill the first comment on this line, if any.
  13781. With prefix ARG, kill comments on that many lines starting with this one.
  13782. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  13783. (autoload 'uncomment-region "newcomment" "\
  13784. Uncomment each line in the BEG .. END region.
  13785. The numeric prefix ARG can specify a number of chars to remove from the
  13786. comment markers.
  13787. \(fn BEG END &optional ARG)" t nil)
  13788. (autoload 'comment-region "newcomment" "\
  13789. Comment or uncomment each line in the region.
  13790. With just \\[universal-argument] prefix arg, uncomment each line in region BEG .. END.
  13791. Numeric prefix ARG means use ARG comment characters.
  13792. If ARG is negative, delete that many comment characters instead.
  13793. The strings used as comment starts are built from `comment-start'
  13794. and `comment-padding'; the strings used as comment ends are built
  13795. from `comment-end' and `comment-padding'.
  13796. By default, the `comment-start' markers are inserted at the
  13797. current indentation of the region, and comments are terminated on
  13798. each line (even for syntaxes in which newline does not end the
  13799. comment and blank lines do not get comments). This can be
  13800. changed with `comment-style'.
  13801. \(fn BEG END &optional ARG)" t nil)
  13802. (autoload 'comment-box "newcomment" "\
  13803. Comment out the BEG .. END region, putting it inside a box.
  13804. The numeric prefix ARG specifies how many characters to add to begin- and
  13805. end- comment markers additionally to what `comment-add' already specifies.
  13806. \(fn BEG END &optional ARG)" t nil)
  13807. (autoload 'comment-or-uncomment-region "newcomment" "\
  13808. Call `comment-region', unless the region only consists of comments,
  13809. in which case call `uncomment-region'. If a prefix arg is given, it
  13810. is passed on to the respective function.
  13811. \(fn BEG END &optional ARG)" t nil)
  13812. (autoload 'comment-dwim "newcomment" "\
  13813. Call the comment command you want (Do What I Mean).
  13814. If the region is active and `transient-mark-mode' is on, call
  13815. `comment-region' (unless it only consists of comments, in which
  13816. case it calls `uncomment-region').
  13817. Else, if the current line is empty, call `comment-insert-comment-function'
  13818. if it is defined, otherwise insert a comment and indent it.
  13819. Else if a prefix ARG is specified, call `comment-kill'.
  13820. Else, call `comment-indent'.
  13821. You can configure `comment-style' to change the way regions are commented.
  13822. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  13823. (defvar comment-auto-fill-only-comments nil "\
  13824. Non-nil means to only auto-fill inside comments.
  13825. This has no effect in modes that do not define a comment syntax.")
  13826. (custom-autoload 'comment-auto-fill-only-comments "newcomment" t)
  13827. (autoload 'comment-indent-new-line "newcomment" "\
  13828. Break line at point and indent, continuing comment if within one.
  13829. This indents the body of the continued comment
  13830. under the previous comment line.
  13831. This command is intended for styles where you write a comment per line,
  13832. starting a new comment (and terminating it if necessary) on each line.
  13833. If you want to continue one comment across several lines, use \\[newline-and-indent].
  13834. If a fill column is specified, it overrides the use of the comment column
  13835. or comment indentation.
  13836. The inserted newline is marked hard if variable `use-hard-newlines' is true,
  13837. unless optional argument SOFT is non-nil.
  13838. \(fn &optional SOFT)" t nil)
  13839. ;;;***
  13840. ;;;### (autoloads (newsticker-start newsticker-running-p) "newst-backend"
  13841. ;;;;;; "net/newst-backend.el" (20352 65510))
  13842. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/newst-backend.el
  13843. (autoload 'newsticker-running-p "newst-backend" "\
  13844. Check whether newsticker is running.
  13845. Return t if newsticker is running, nil otherwise. Newsticker is
  13846. considered to be running if the newsticker timer list is not empty.
  13847. \(fn)" nil nil)
  13848. (autoload 'newsticker-start "newst-backend" "\
  13849. Start the newsticker.
  13850. Start the timers for display and retrieval. If the newsticker, i.e. the
  13851. timers, are running already a warning message is printed unless
  13852. DO-NOT-COMPLAIN-IF-RUNNING is not nil.
  13853. Run `newsticker-start-hook' if newsticker was not running already.
  13854. \(fn &optional DO-NOT-COMPLAIN-IF-RUNNING)" t nil)
  13855. ;;;***
  13856. ;;;### (autoloads (newsticker-plainview) "newst-plainview" "net/newst-plainview.el"
  13857. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13858. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/newst-plainview.el
  13859. (autoload 'newsticker-plainview "newst-plainview" "\
  13860. Start newsticker plainview.
  13861. \(fn)" t nil)
  13862. ;;;***
  13863. ;;;### (autoloads (newsticker-show-news) "newst-reader" "net/newst-reader.el"
  13864. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13865. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/newst-reader.el
  13866. (autoload 'newsticker-show-news "newst-reader" "\
  13867. Start reading news. You may want to bind this to a key.
  13868. \(fn)" t nil)
  13869. ;;;***
  13870. ;;;### (autoloads (newsticker-start-ticker newsticker-ticker-running-p)
  13871. ;;;;;; "newst-ticker" "net/newst-ticker.el" (20352 65510))
  13872. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/newst-ticker.el
  13873. (autoload 'newsticker-ticker-running-p "newst-ticker" "\
  13874. Check whether newsticker's actual ticker is running.
  13875. Return t if ticker is running, nil otherwise. Newsticker is
  13876. considered to be running if the newsticker timer list is not
  13877. empty.
  13878. \(fn)" nil nil)
  13879. (autoload 'newsticker-start-ticker "newst-ticker" "\
  13880. Start newsticker's ticker (but not the news retrieval).
  13881. Start display timer for the actual ticker if wanted and not
  13882. running already.
  13883. \(fn)" t nil)
  13884. ;;;***
  13885. ;;;### (autoloads (newsticker-treeview) "newst-treeview" "net/newst-treeview.el"
  13886. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13887. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/newst-treeview.el
  13888. (autoload 'newsticker-treeview "newst-treeview" "\
  13889. Start newsticker treeview.
  13890. \(fn)" t nil)
  13891. ;;;***
  13892. ;;;### (autoloads (nndiary-generate-nov-databases) "nndiary" "gnus/nndiary.el"
  13893. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13894. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/nndiary.el
  13895. (autoload 'nndiary-generate-nov-databases "nndiary" "\
  13896. Generate NOV databases in all nndiary directories.
  13897. \(fn &optional SERVER)" t nil)
  13898. ;;;***
  13899. ;;;### (autoloads (nndoc-add-type) "nndoc" "gnus/nndoc.el" (20352
  13900. ;;;;;; 65510))
  13901. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/nndoc.el
  13902. (autoload 'nndoc-add-type "nndoc" "\
  13903. Add document DEFINITION to the list of nndoc document definitions.
  13904. If POSITION is nil or `last', the definition will be added
  13905. as the last checked definition, if t or `first', add as the
  13906. first definition, and if any other symbol, add after that
  13907. symbol in the alist.
  13908. \(fn DEFINITION &optional POSITION)" nil nil)
  13909. ;;;***
  13910. ;;;### (autoloads (nnfolder-generate-active-file) "nnfolder" "gnus/nnfolder.el"
  13911. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13912. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/nnfolder.el
  13913. (autoload 'nnfolder-generate-active-file "nnfolder" "\
  13914. Look for mbox folders in the nnfolder directory and make them into groups.
  13915. This command does not work if you use short group names.
  13916. \(fn)" t nil)
  13917. ;;;***
  13918. ;;;### (autoloads (nnml-generate-nov-databases) "nnml" "gnus/nnml.el"
  13919. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13920. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/nnml.el
  13921. (autoload 'nnml-generate-nov-databases "nnml" "\
  13922. Generate NOV databases in all nnml directories.
  13923. \(fn &optional SERVER)" t nil)
  13924. ;;;***
  13925. ;;;### (autoloads (disable-command enable-command disabled-command-function)
  13926. ;;;;;; "novice" "novice.el" (20400 62402))
  13927. ;;; Generated autoloads from novice.el
  13928. (defvar disabled-command-function 'disabled-command-function "\
  13929. Function to call to handle disabled commands.
  13930. If nil, the feature is disabled, i.e., all commands work normally.")
  13931. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'disabled-command-hook 'disabled-command-function "22.1")
  13932. (autoload 'disabled-command-function "novice" "\
  13933. \(fn &optional CMD KEYS)" nil nil)
  13934. (autoload 'enable-command "novice" "\
  13935. Allow COMMAND to be executed without special confirmation from now on.
  13936. COMMAND must be a symbol.
  13937. This command alters the user's .emacs file so that this will apply
  13938. to future sessions.
  13939. \(fn COMMAND)" t nil)
  13940. (autoload 'disable-command "novice" "\
  13941. Require special confirmation to execute COMMAND from now on.
  13942. COMMAND must be a symbol.
  13943. This command alters the user's .emacs file so that this will apply
  13944. to future sessions.
  13945. \(fn COMMAND)" t nil)
  13946. ;;;***
  13947. ;;;### (autoloads (nroff-mode) "nroff-mode" "textmodes/nroff-mode.el"
  13948. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  13949. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/nroff-mode.el
  13950. (autoload 'nroff-mode "nroff-mode" "\
  13951. Major mode for editing text intended for nroff to format.
  13952. \\{nroff-mode-map}
  13953. Turning on Nroff mode runs `text-mode-hook', then `nroff-mode-hook'.
  13954. Also, try `nroff-electric-mode', for automatically inserting
  13955. closing requests for requests that are used in matched pairs.
  13956. \(fn)" t nil)
  13957. ;;;***
  13958. ;;;### (autoloads (nxml-glyph-display-string) "nxml-glyph" "nxml/nxml-glyph.el"
  13959. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  13960. ;;; Generated autoloads from nxml/nxml-glyph.el
  13961. (autoload 'nxml-glyph-display-string "nxml-glyph" "\
  13962. Return a string that can display a glyph for Unicode code-point N.
  13963. FACE gives the face that will be used for displaying the string.
  13964. Return nil if the face cannot display a glyph for N.
  13965. \(fn N FACE)" nil nil)
  13966. ;;;***
  13967. ;;;### (autoloads (nxml-mode) "nxml-mode" "nxml/nxml-mode.el" (20400
  13968. ;;;;;; 62402))
  13969. ;;; Generated autoloads from nxml/nxml-mode.el
  13970. (autoload 'nxml-mode "nxml-mode" "\
  13971. Major mode for editing XML.
  13972. \\[nxml-finish-element] finishes the current element by inserting an end-tag.
  13973. C-c C-i closes a start-tag with `>' and then inserts a balancing end-tag
  13974. leaving point between the start-tag and end-tag.
  13975. \\[nxml-balanced-close-start-tag-block] is similar but for block rather than inline elements:
  13976. the start-tag, point, and end-tag are all left on separate lines.
  13977. If `nxml-slash-auto-complete-flag' is non-nil, then inserting a `</'
  13978. automatically inserts the rest of the end-tag.
  13979. \\[completion-at-point] performs completion on the symbol preceding point.
  13980. \\[nxml-dynamic-markup-word] uses the contents of the current buffer
  13981. to choose a tag to put around the word preceding point.
  13982. Sections of the document can be displayed in outline form. The
  13983. variable `nxml-section-element-name-regexp' controls when an element
  13984. is recognized as a section. The same key sequences that change
  13985. visibility in outline mode are used except that they start with C-c C-o
  13986. instead of C-c.
  13987. Validation is provided by the related minor-mode `rng-validate-mode'.
  13988. This also makes completion schema- and context- sensitive. Element
  13989. names, attribute names, attribute values and namespace URIs can all be
  13990. completed. By default, `rng-validate-mode' is automatically enabled.
  13991. You can toggle it using \\[rng-validate-mode] or change the default by
  13992. customizing `rng-nxml-auto-validate-flag'.
  13993. \\[indent-for-tab-command] indents the current line appropriately.
  13994. This can be customized using the variable `nxml-child-indent'
  13995. and the variable `nxml-attribute-indent'.
  13996. \\[nxml-insert-named-char] inserts a character reference using
  13997. the character's name (by default, the Unicode name).
  13998. \\[universal-argument] \\[nxml-insert-named-char] inserts the character directly.
  13999. The Emacs commands that normally operate on balanced expressions will
  14000. operate on XML markup items. Thus \\[forward-sexp] will move forward
  14001. across one markup item; \\[backward-sexp] will move backward across
  14002. one markup item; \\[kill-sexp] will kill the following markup item;
  14003. \\[mark-sexp] will mark the following markup item. By default, each
  14004. tag each treated as a single markup item; to make the complete element
  14005. be treated as a single markup item, set the variable
  14006. `nxml-sexp-element-flag' to t. For more details, see the function
  14007. `nxml-forward-balanced-item'.
  14008. \\[nxml-backward-up-element] and \\[nxml-down-element] move up and down the element structure.
  14009. Many aspects this mode can be customized using
  14010. \\[customize-group] nxml RET.
  14011. \(fn)" t nil)
  14012. (defalias 'xml-mode 'nxml-mode)
  14013. ;;;***
  14014. ;;;### (autoloads (nxml-enable-unicode-char-name-sets) "nxml-uchnm"
  14015. ;;;;;; "nxml/nxml-uchnm.el" (20352 65510))
  14016. ;;; Generated autoloads from nxml/nxml-uchnm.el
  14017. (autoload 'nxml-enable-unicode-char-name-sets "nxml-uchnm" "\
  14018. Enable the use of Unicode standard names for characters.
  14019. The Unicode blocks for which names are enabled is controlled by
  14020. the variable `nxml-enabled-unicode-blocks'.
  14021. \(fn)" t nil)
  14022. ;;;***
  14023. ;;;### (autoloads (org-babel-mark-block org-babel-previous-src-block
  14024. ;;;;;; org-babel-next-src-block org-babel-goto-named-result org-babel-goto-named-src-block
  14025. ;;;;;; org-babel-goto-src-block-head org-babel-hide-result-toggle-maybe
  14026. ;;;;;; org-babel-sha1-hash org-babel-execute-subtree org-babel-execute-buffer
  14027. ;;;;;; org-babel-map-executables org-babel-map-call-lines org-babel-map-inline-src-blocks
  14028. ;;;;;; org-babel-map-src-blocks org-babel-open-src-block-result
  14029. ;;;;;; org-babel-switch-to-session-with-code org-babel-switch-to-session
  14030. ;;;;;; org-babel-initiate-session org-babel-load-in-session org-babel-insert-header-arg
  14031. ;;;;;; org-babel-check-src-block org-babel-expand-src-block org-babel-execute-src-block
  14032. ;;;;;; org-babel-pop-to-session-maybe org-babel-load-in-session-maybe
  14033. ;;;;;; org-babel-expand-src-block-maybe org-babel-view-src-block-info
  14034. ;;;;;; org-babel-execute-maybe org-babel-execute-safely-maybe) "ob"
  14035. ;;;;;; "org/ob.el" (20420 42151))
  14036. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/ob.el
  14037. (autoload 'org-babel-execute-safely-maybe "ob" "\
  14038. \(fn)" nil nil)
  14039. (autoload 'org-babel-execute-maybe "ob" "\
  14040. \(fn)" t nil)
  14041. (autoload 'org-babel-view-src-block-info "ob" "\
  14042. Display information on the current source block.
  14043. This includes header arguments, language and name, and is largely
  14044. a window into the `org-babel-get-src-block-info' function.
  14045. \(fn)" t nil)
  14046. (autoload 'org-babel-expand-src-block-maybe "ob" "\
  14047. Conditionally expand a source block.
  14048. Detect if this is context for a org-babel src-block and if so
  14049. then run `org-babel-expand-src-block'.
  14050. \(fn)" t nil)
  14051. (autoload 'org-babel-load-in-session-maybe "ob" "\
  14052. Conditionally load a source block in a session.
  14053. Detect if this is context for a org-babel src-block and if so
  14054. then run `org-babel-load-in-session'.
  14055. \(fn)" t nil)
  14056. (autoload 'org-babel-pop-to-session-maybe "ob" "\
  14057. Conditionally pop to a session.
  14058. Detect if this is context for a org-babel src-block and if so
  14059. then run `org-babel-pop-to-session'.
  14060. \(fn)" t nil)
  14061. (autoload 'org-babel-execute-src-block "ob" "\
  14062. Execute the current source code block.
  14063. Insert the results of execution into the buffer. Source code
  14064. execution and the collection and formatting of results can be
  14065. controlled through a variety of header arguments.
  14066. With prefix argument ARG, force re-execution even if an existing
  14067. result cached in the buffer would otherwise have been returned.
  14068. Optionally supply a value for INFO in the form returned by
  14069. `org-babel-get-src-block-info'.
  14070. Optionally supply a value for PARAMS which will be merged with
  14071. the header arguments specified at the front of the source code
  14072. block.
  14073. \(fn &optional ARG INFO PARAMS)" t nil)
  14074. (autoload 'org-babel-expand-src-block "ob" "\
  14075. Expand the current source code block.
  14076. Expand according to the source code block's header
  14077. arguments and pop open the results in a preview buffer.
  14078. \(fn &optional ARG INFO PARAMS)" t nil)
  14079. (autoload 'org-babel-check-src-block "ob" "\
  14080. Check for misspelled header arguments in the current code block.
  14081. \(fn)" t nil)
  14082. (autoload 'org-babel-insert-header-arg "ob" "\
  14083. Insert a header argument selecting from lists of common args and values.
  14084. \(fn)" t nil)
  14085. (autoload 'org-babel-load-in-session "ob" "\
  14086. Load the body of the current source-code block.
  14087. Evaluate the header arguments for the source block before
  14088. entering the session. After loading the body this pops open the
  14089. session.
  14090. \(fn &optional ARG INFO)" t nil)
  14091. (autoload 'org-babel-initiate-session "ob" "\
  14092. Initiate session for current code block.
  14093. If called with a prefix argument then resolve any variable
  14094. references in the header arguments and assign these variables in
  14095. the session. Copy the body of the code block to the kill ring.
  14096. \(fn &optional ARG INFO)" t nil)
  14097. (autoload 'org-babel-switch-to-session "ob" "\
  14098. Switch to the session of the current code block.
  14099. Uses `org-babel-initiate-session' to start the session. If called
  14100. with a prefix argument then this is passed on to
  14101. `org-babel-initiate-session'.
  14102. \(fn &optional ARG INFO)" t nil)
  14103. (autoload 'org-babel-switch-to-session-with-code "ob" "\
  14104. Switch to code buffer and display session.
  14105. \(fn &optional ARG INFO)" t nil)
  14106. (autoload 'org-babel-open-src-block-result "ob" "\
  14107. If `point' is on a src block then open the results of the
  14108. source code block, otherwise return nil. With optional prefix
  14109. argument RE-RUN the source-code block is evaluated even if
  14110. results already exist.
  14111. \(fn &optional RE-RUN)" t nil)
  14112. (autoload 'org-babel-map-src-blocks "ob" "\
  14113. Evaluate BODY forms on each source-block in FILE.
  14114. If FILE is nil evaluate BODY forms on source blocks in current
  14115. buffer. During evaluation of BODY the following local variables
  14116. are set relative to the currently matched code block.
  14117. full-block ------- string holding the entirety of the code block
  14118. beg-block -------- point at the beginning of the code block
  14119. end-block -------- point at the end of the matched code block
  14120. lang ------------- string holding the language of the code block
  14121. beg-lang --------- point at the beginning of the lang
  14122. end-lang --------- point at the end of the lang
  14123. switches --------- string holding the switches
  14124. beg-switches ----- point at the beginning of the switches
  14125. end-switches ----- point at the end of the switches
  14126. header-args ------ string holding the header-args
  14127. beg-header-args -- point at the beginning of the header-args
  14128. end-header-args -- point at the end of the header-args
  14129. body ------------- string holding the body of the code block
  14130. beg-body --------- point at the beginning of the body
  14131. end-body --------- point at the end of the body
  14132. \(fn FILE &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  14133. (put 'org-babel-map-src-blocks 'lisp-indent-function '1)
  14134. (autoload 'org-babel-map-inline-src-blocks "ob" "\
  14135. Evaluate BODY forms on each inline source-block in FILE.
  14136. If FILE is nil evaluate BODY forms on source blocks in current
  14137. buffer.
  14138. \(fn FILE &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  14139. (put 'org-babel-map-inline-src-blocks 'lisp-indent-function '1)
  14140. (autoload 'org-babel-map-call-lines "ob" "\
  14141. Evaluate BODY forms on each call line in FILE.
  14142. If FILE is nil evaluate BODY forms on source blocks in current
  14143. buffer.
  14144. \(fn FILE &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  14145. (put 'org-babel-map-call-lines 'lisp-indent-function '1)
  14146. (autoload 'org-babel-map-executables "ob" "\
  14147. \(fn FILE &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  14148. (put 'org-babel-map-executables 'lisp-indent-function '1)
  14149. (autoload 'org-babel-execute-buffer "ob" "\
  14150. Execute source code blocks in a buffer.
  14151. Call `org-babel-execute-src-block' on every source block in
  14152. the current buffer.
  14153. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  14154. (autoload 'org-babel-execute-subtree "ob" "\
  14155. Execute source code blocks in a subtree.
  14156. Call `org-babel-execute-src-block' on every source block in
  14157. the current subtree.
  14158. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  14159. (autoload 'org-babel-sha1-hash "ob" "\
  14160. Generate an sha1 hash based on the value of info.
  14161. \(fn &optional INFO)" t nil)
  14162. (autoload 'org-babel-hide-result-toggle-maybe "ob" "\
  14163. Toggle visibility of result at point.
  14164. \(fn)" t nil)
  14165. (autoload 'org-babel-goto-src-block-head "ob" "\
  14166. Go to the beginning of the current code block.
  14167. \(fn)" t nil)
  14168. (autoload 'org-babel-goto-named-src-block "ob" "\
  14169. Go to a named source-code block.
  14170. \(fn NAME)" t nil)
  14171. (autoload 'org-babel-goto-named-result "ob" "\
  14172. Go to a named result.
  14173. \(fn NAME)" t nil)
  14174. (autoload 'org-babel-next-src-block "ob" "\
  14175. Jump to the next source block.
  14176. With optional prefix argument ARG, jump forward ARG many source blocks.
  14177. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  14178. (autoload 'org-babel-previous-src-block "ob" "\
  14179. Jump to the previous source block.
  14180. With optional prefix argument ARG, jump backward ARG many source blocks.
  14181. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  14182. (autoload 'org-babel-mark-block "ob" "\
  14183. Mark current src block
  14184. \(fn)" t nil)
  14185. ;;;***
  14186. ;;;### (autoloads (org-babel-describe-bindings) "ob-keys" "org/ob-keys.el"
  14187. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  14188. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/ob-keys.el
  14189. (autoload 'org-babel-describe-bindings "ob-keys" "\
  14190. Describe all keybindings behind `org-babel-key-prefix'.
  14191. \(fn)" t nil)
  14192. ;;;***
  14193. ;;;### (autoloads (org-babel-lob-get-info org-babel-lob-execute-maybe
  14194. ;;;;;; org-babel-lob-ingest) "ob-lob" "org/ob-lob.el" (20352 65510))
  14195. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/ob-lob.el
  14196. (autoload 'org-babel-lob-ingest "ob-lob" "\
  14197. Add all named source-blocks defined in FILE to
  14198. `org-babel-library-of-babel'.
  14199. \(fn &optional FILE)" t nil)
  14200. (autoload 'org-babel-lob-execute-maybe "ob-lob" "\
  14201. Execute a Library of Babel source block, if appropriate.
  14202. Detect if this is context for a Library Of Babel source block and
  14203. if so then run the appropriate source block from the Library.
  14204. \(fn)" t nil)
  14205. (autoload 'org-babel-lob-get-info "ob-lob" "\
  14206. Return a Library of Babel function call as a string.
  14207. \(fn)" nil nil)
  14208. ;;;***
  14209. ;;;### (autoloads (org-babel-tangle org-babel-tangle-file org-babel-load-file
  14210. ;;;;;; org-babel-tangle-lang-exts) "ob-tangle" "org/ob-tangle.el"
  14211. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  14212. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/ob-tangle.el
  14213. (defvar org-babel-tangle-lang-exts '(("emacs-lisp" . "el")) "\
  14214. Alist mapping languages to their file extensions.
  14215. The key is the language name, the value is the string that should
  14216. be inserted as the extension commonly used to identify files
  14217. written in this language. If no entry is found in this list,
  14218. then the name of the language is used.")
  14219. (custom-autoload 'org-babel-tangle-lang-exts "ob-tangle" t)
  14220. (autoload 'org-babel-load-file "ob-tangle" "\
  14221. Load Emacs Lisp source code blocks in the Org-mode FILE.
  14222. This function exports the source code using
  14223. `org-babel-tangle' and then loads the resulting file using
  14224. `load-file'.
  14225. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  14226. (autoload 'org-babel-tangle-file "ob-tangle" "\
  14227. Extract the bodies of source code blocks in FILE.
  14228. Source code blocks are extracted with `org-babel-tangle'.
  14229. Optional argument TARGET-FILE can be used to specify a default
  14230. export file for all source blocks. Optional argument LANG can be
  14231. used to limit the exported source code blocks by language.
  14232. \(fn FILE &optional TARGET-FILE LANG)" t nil)
  14233. (autoload 'org-babel-tangle "ob-tangle" "\
  14234. Write code blocks to source-specific files.
  14235. Extract the bodies of all source code blocks from the current
  14236. file into their own source-specific files. Optional argument
  14237. TARGET-FILE can be used to specify a default export file for all
  14238. source blocks. Optional argument LANG can be used to limit the
  14239. exported source code blocks by language.
  14240. \(fn &optional ONLY-THIS-BLOCK TARGET-FILE LANG)" t nil)
  14241. ;;;***
  14242. ;;;### (autoloads (inferior-octave) "octave-inf" "progmodes/octave-inf.el"
  14243. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  14244. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/octave-inf.el
  14245. (autoload 'inferior-octave "octave-inf" "\
  14246. Run an inferior Octave process, I/O via `inferior-octave-buffer'.
  14247. This buffer is put in Inferior Octave mode. See `inferior-octave-mode'.
  14248. Unless ARG is non-nil, switches to this buffer.
  14249. The elements of the list `inferior-octave-startup-args' are sent as
  14250. command line arguments to the inferior Octave process on startup.
  14251. Additional commands to be executed on startup can be provided either in
  14252. the file specified by `inferior-octave-startup-file' or by the default
  14253. startup file, `~/.emacs-octave'.
  14254. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  14255. (defalias 'run-octave 'inferior-octave)
  14256. ;;;***
  14257. ;;;### (autoloads (octave-mode) "octave-mod" "progmodes/octave-mod.el"
  14258. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  14259. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/octave-mod.el
  14260. (autoload 'octave-mode "octave-mod" "\
  14261. Major mode for editing Octave code.
  14262. This mode makes it easier to write Octave code by helping with
  14263. indentation, doing some of the typing for you (with Abbrev mode) and by
  14264. showing keywords, comments, strings, etc. in different faces (with
  14265. Font Lock mode on terminals that support it).
  14266. Octave itself is a high-level language, primarily intended for numerical
  14267. computations. It provides a convenient command line interface for
  14268. solving linear and nonlinear problems numerically. Function definitions
  14269. can also be stored in files, and it can be used in a batch mode (which
  14270. is why you need this mode!).
  14271. The latest released version of Octave is always available via anonymous
  14272. ftp from ftp.octave.org in the directory `/pub/octave'. Complete
  14273. source and binaries for several popular systems are available.
  14274. Type \\[list-abbrevs] to display the built-in abbrevs for Octave keywords.
  14275. Keybindings
  14276. ===========
  14277. \\{octave-mode-map}
  14278. Variables you can use to customize Octave mode
  14279. ==============================================
  14280. `octave-blink-matching-block'
  14281. Non-nil means show matching begin of block when inserting a space,
  14282. newline or semicolon after an else or end keyword. Default is t.
  14283. `octave-block-offset'
  14284. Extra indentation applied to statements in block structures.
  14285. Default is 2.
  14286. `octave-continuation-offset'
  14287. Extra indentation applied to Octave continuation lines.
  14288. Default is 4.
  14289. `octave-continuation-string'
  14290. String used for Octave continuation lines.
  14291. Default is a backslash.
  14292. `octave-send-echo-input'
  14293. Non-nil means always display `inferior-octave-buffer' after sending a
  14294. command to the inferior Octave process.
  14295. `octave-send-line-auto-forward'
  14296. Non-nil means always go to the next unsent line of Octave code after
  14297. sending a line to the inferior Octave process.
  14298. `octave-send-echo-input'
  14299. Non-nil means echo input sent to the inferior Octave process.
  14300. Turning on Octave mode runs the hook `octave-mode-hook'.
  14301. To begin using this mode for all `.m' files that you edit, add the
  14302. following lines to your `.emacs' file:
  14303. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '(\"\\\\.m\\\\'\" . octave-mode))
  14304. To automatically turn on the abbrev and auto-fill features,
  14305. add the following lines to your `.emacs' file as well:
  14306. (add-hook 'octave-mode-hook
  14307. (lambda ()
  14308. (abbrev-mode 1)
  14309. (auto-fill-mode 1)))
  14310. To submit a problem report, enter \\[octave-submit-bug-report] from an Octave mode buffer.
  14311. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with version information
  14312. already added. You just need to add a description of the problem,
  14313. including a reproducible test case and send the message.
  14314. \(fn)" t nil)
  14315. ;;;***
  14316. ;;;### (autoloads (org-customize org-reload org-require-autoloaded-modules
  14317. ;;;;;; org-submit-bug-report org-cycle-agenda-files org-switchb
  14318. ;;;;;; org-map-entries org-open-link-from-string org-open-at-point-global
  14319. ;;;;;; org-insert-link-global org-store-link org-run-like-in-org-mode
  14320. ;;;;;; turn-on-orgstruct++ turn-on-orgstruct orgstruct-mode org-global-cycle
  14321. ;;;;;; org-mode org-version org-babel-do-load-languages) "org" "org/org.el"
  14322. ;;;;;; (20420 42151))
  14323. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org.el
  14324. (autoload 'org-babel-do-load-languages "org" "\
  14325. Load the languages defined in `org-babel-load-languages'.
  14326. \(fn SYM VALUE)" nil nil)
  14327. (autoload 'org-version "org" "\
  14328. Show the org-mode version in the echo area.
  14329. With prefix arg HERE, insert it at point.
  14330. \(fn &optional HERE)" t nil)
  14331. (autoload 'org-mode "org" "\
  14332. Outline-based notes management and organizer, alias
  14333. \"Carsten's outline-mode for keeping track of everything.\"
  14334. Org-mode develops organizational tasks around a NOTES file which
  14335. contains information about projects as plain text. Org-mode is
  14336. implemented on top of outline-mode, which is ideal to keep the content
  14337. of large files well structured. It supports ToDo items, deadlines and
  14338. time stamps, which magically appear in the diary listing of the Emacs
  14339. calendar. Tables are easily created with a built-in table editor.
  14340. Plain text URL-like links connect to websites, emails (VM), Usenet
  14341. messages (Gnus), BBDB entries, and any files related to the project.
  14342. For printing and sharing of notes, an Org-mode file (or a part of it)
  14343. can be exported as a structured ASCII or HTML file.
  14344. The following commands are available:
  14345. \\{org-mode-map}
  14346. \(fn)" t nil)
  14347. (defvar org-inlinetask-min-level)
  14348. (autoload 'org-global-cycle "org" "\
  14349. Cycle the global visibility. For details see `org-cycle'.
  14350. With \\[universal-argument] prefix arg, switch to startup visibility.
  14351. With a numeric prefix, show all headlines up to that level.
  14352. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  14353. (autoload 'orgstruct-mode "org" "\
  14354. Toggle the minor mode `orgstruct-mode'.
  14355. This mode is for using Org-mode structure commands in other
  14356. modes. The following keys behave as if Org-mode were active, if
  14357. the cursor is on a headline, or on a plain list item (both as
  14358. defined by Org-mode).
  14359. M-up Move entry/item up
  14360. M-down Move entry/item down
  14361. M-left Promote
  14362. M-right Demote
  14363. M-S-up Move entry/item up
  14364. M-S-down Move entry/item down
  14365. M-S-left Promote subtree
  14366. M-S-right Demote subtree
  14367. M-q Fill paragraph and items like in Org-mode
  14368. C-c ^ Sort entries
  14369. C-c - Cycle list bullet
  14370. TAB Cycle item visibility
  14371. M-RET Insert new heading/item
  14372. S-M-RET Insert new TODO heading / Checkbox item
  14373. C-c C-c Set tags / toggle checkbox
  14374. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  14375. (autoload 'turn-on-orgstruct "org" "\
  14376. Unconditionally turn on `orgstruct-mode'.
  14377. \(fn)" nil nil)
  14378. (autoload 'turn-on-orgstruct++ "org" "\
  14379. Unconditionally turn on `orgstruct++-mode'.
  14380. \(fn)" nil nil)
  14381. (autoload 'org-run-like-in-org-mode "org" "\
  14382. Run a command, pretending that the current buffer is in Org-mode.
  14383. This will temporarily bind local variables that are typically bound in
  14384. Org-mode to the values they have in Org-mode, and then interactively
  14385. call CMD.
  14386. \(fn CMD)" nil nil)
  14387. (autoload 'org-store-link "org" "\
  14388. \\<org-mode-map>Store an org-link to the current location.
  14389. This link is added to `org-stored-links' and can later be inserted
  14390. into an org-buffer with \\[org-insert-link].
  14391. For some link types, a prefix arg is interpreted:
  14392. For links to usenet articles, arg negates `org-gnus-prefer-web-links'.
  14393. For file links, arg negates `org-context-in-file-links'.
  14394. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  14395. (autoload 'org-insert-link-global "org" "\
  14396. Insert a link like Org-mode does.
  14397. This command can be called in any mode to insert a link in Org-mode syntax.
  14398. \(fn)" t nil)
  14399. (autoload 'org-open-at-point-global "org" "\
  14400. Follow a link like Org-mode does.
  14401. This command can be called in any mode to follow a link that has
  14402. Org-mode syntax.
  14403. \(fn)" t nil)
  14404. (autoload 'org-open-link-from-string "org" "\
  14405. Open a link in the string S, as if it was in Org-mode.
  14406. \(fn S &optional ARG REFERENCE-BUFFER)" t nil)
  14407. (autoload 'org-map-entries "org" "\
  14408. Call FUNC at each headline selected by MATCH in SCOPE.
  14409. FUNC is a function or a lisp form. The function will be called without
  14410. arguments, with the cursor positioned at the beginning of the headline.
  14411. The return values of all calls to the function will be collected and
  14412. returned as a list.
  14413. The call to FUNC will be wrapped into a save-excursion form, so FUNC
  14414. does not need to preserve point. After evaluation, the cursor will be
  14415. moved to the end of the line (presumably of the headline of the
  14416. processed entry) and search continues from there. Under some
  14417. circumstances, this may not produce the wanted results. For example,
  14418. if you have removed (e.g. archived) the current (sub)tree it could
  14419. mean that the next entry will be skipped entirely. In such cases, you
  14420. can specify the position from where search should continue by making
  14421. FUNC set the variable `org-map-continue-from' to the desired buffer
  14422. position.
  14423. MATCH is a tags/property/todo match as it is used in the agenda tags view.
  14424. Only headlines that are matched by this query will be considered during
  14425. the iteration. When MATCH is nil or t, all headlines will be
  14426. visited by the iteration.
  14427. SCOPE determines the scope of this command. It can be any of:
  14428. nil The current buffer, respecting the restriction if any
  14429. tree The subtree started with the entry at point
  14430. region The entries within the active region, if any
  14431. region-start-level
  14432. The entries within the active region, but only those at
  14433. the same level than the first one.
  14434. file The current buffer, without restriction
  14435. file-with-archives
  14436. The current buffer, and any archives associated with it
  14437. agenda All agenda files
  14438. agenda-with-archives
  14439. All agenda files with any archive files associated with them
  14440. \(file1 file2 ...)
  14441. If this is a list, all files in the list will be scanned
  14442. The remaining args are treated as settings for the skipping facilities of
  14443. the scanner. The following items can be given here:
  14444. archive skip trees with the archive tag.
  14445. comment skip trees with the COMMENT keyword
  14446. function or Emacs Lisp form:
  14447. will be used as value for `org-agenda-skip-function', so whenever
  14448. the function returns t, FUNC will not be called for that
  14449. entry and search will continue from the point where the
  14450. function leaves it.
  14451. If your function needs to retrieve the tags including inherited tags
  14452. at the *current* entry, you can use the value of the variable
  14453. `org-scanner-tags' which will be much faster than getting the value
  14454. with `org-get-tags-at'. If your function gets properties with
  14455. `org-entry-properties' at the *current* entry, bind `org-trust-scanner-tags'
  14456. to t around the call to `org-entry-properties' to get the same speedup.
  14457. Note that if your function moves around to retrieve tags and properties at
  14458. a *different* entry, you cannot use these techniques.
  14459. \(fn FUNC &optional MATCH SCOPE &rest SKIP)" nil nil)
  14460. (autoload 'org-switchb "org" "\
  14461. Switch between Org buffers.
  14462. With one prefix argument, restrict available buffers to files.
  14463. With two prefix arguments, restrict available buffers to agenda files.
  14464. Defaults to `iswitchb' for buffer name completion.
  14465. Set `org-completion-use-ido' to make it use ido instead.
  14466. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  14467. (defalias 'org-ido-switchb 'org-switchb)
  14468. (defalias 'org-iswitchb 'org-switchb)
  14469. (autoload 'org-cycle-agenda-files "org" "\
  14470. Cycle through the files in `org-agenda-files'.
  14471. If the current buffer visits an agenda file, find the next one in the list.
  14472. If the current buffer does not, find the first agenda file.
  14473. \(fn)" t nil)
  14474. (autoload 'org-submit-bug-report "org" "\
  14475. Submit a bug report on Org-mode via mail.
  14476. Don't hesitate to report any problems or inaccurate documentation.
  14477. If you don't have setup sending mail from (X)Emacs, please copy the
  14478. output buffer into your mail program, as it gives us important
  14479. information about your Org-mode version and configuration.
  14480. \(fn)" t nil)
  14481. (autoload 'org-require-autoloaded-modules "org" "\
  14482. \(fn)" t nil)
  14483. (autoload 'org-reload "org" "\
  14484. Reload all org lisp files.
  14485. With prefix arg UNCOMPILED, load the uncompiled versions.
  14486. \(fn &optional UNCOMPILED)" t nil)
  14487. (autoload 'org-customize "org" "\
  14488. Call the customize function with org as argument.
  14489. \(fn)" t nil)
  14490. ;;;***
  14491. ;;;### (autoloads (org-agenda-to-appt org-calendar-goto-agenda org-agenda-check-for-timestamp-as-reason-to-ignore-todo-item
  14492. ;;;;;; org-diary org-agenda-list-stuck-projects org-tags-view org-todo-list
  14493. ;;;;;; org-search-view org-agenda-list org-batch-store-agenda-views
  14494. ;;;;;; org-store-agenda-views org-batch-agenda-csv org-batch-agenda
  14495. ;;;;;; org-agenda) "org-agenda" "org/org-agenda.el" (20404 23547))
  14496. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-agenda.el
  14497. (autoload 'org-agenda "org-agenda" "\
  14498. Dispatch agenda commands to collect entries to the agenda buffer.
  14499. Prompts for a command to execute. Any prefix arg will be passed
  14500. on to the selected command. The default selections are:
  14501. a Call `org-agenda-list' to display the agenda for current day or week.
  14502. t Call `org-todo-list' to display the global todo list.
  14503. T Call `org-todo-list' to display the global todo list, select only
  14504. entries with a specific TODO keyword (the user gets a prompt).
  14505. m Call `org-tags-view' to display headlines with tags matching
  14506. a condition (the user is prompted for the condition).
  14507. M Like `m', but select only TODO entries, no ordinary headlines.
  14508. L Create a timeline for the current buffer.
  14509. e Export views to associated files.
  14510. s Search entries for keywords.
  14511. / Multi occur across all agenda files and also files listed
  14512. in `org-agenda-text-search-extra-files'.
  14513. < Restrict agenda commands to buffer, subtree, or region.
  14514. Press several times to get the desired effect.
  14515. > Remove a previous restriction.
  14516. # List \"stuck\" projects.
  14517. ! Configure what \"stuck\" means.
  14518. C Configure custom agenda commands.
  14519. More commands can be added by configuring the variable
  14520. `org-agenda-custom-commands'. In particular, specific tags and TODO keyword
  14521. searches can be pre-defined in this way.
  14522. If the current buffer is in Org-mode and visiting a file, you can also
  14523. first press `<' once to indicate that the agenda should be temporarily
  14524. \(until the next use of \\[org-agenda]) restricted to the current file.
  14525. Pressing `<' twice means to restrict to the current subtree or region
  14526. \(if active).
  14527. \(fn &optional ARG KEYS RESTRICTION)" t nil)
  14528. (autoload 'org-batch-agenda "org-agenda" "\
  14529. Run an agenda command in batch mode and send the result to STDOUT.
  14530. If CMD-KEY is a string of length 1, it is used as a key in
  14531. `org-agenda-custom-commands' and triggers this command. If it is a
  14532. longer string it is used as a tags/todo match string.
  14533. Parameters are alternating variable names and values that will be bound
  14534. before running the agenda command.
  14535. \(fn CMD-KEY &rest PARAMETERS)" nil (quote macro))
  14536. (autoload 'org-batch-agenda-csv "org-agenda" "\
  14537. Run an agenda command in batch mode and send the result to STDOUT.
  14538. If CMD-KEY is a string of length 1, it is used as a key in
  14539. `org-agenda-custom-commands' and triggers this command. If it is a
  14540. longer string it is used as a tags/todo match string.
  14541. Parameters are alternating variable names and values that will be bound
  14542. before running the agenda command.
  14543. The output gives a line for each selected agenda item. Each
  14544. item is a list of comma-separated values, like this:
  14545. category,head,type,todo,tags,date,time,extra,priority-l,priority-n
  14546. category The category of the item
  14547. head The headline, without TODO kwd, TAGS and PRIORITY
  14548. type The type of the agenda entry, can be
  14549. todo selected in TODO match
  14550. tagsmatch selected in tags match
  14551. diary imported from diary
  14552. deadline a deadline on given date
  14553. scheduled scheduled on given date
  14554. timestamp entry has timestamp on given date
  14555. closed entry was closed on given date
  14556. upcoming-deadline warning about deadline
  14557. past-scheduled forwarded scheduled item
  14558. block entry has date block including g. date
  14559. todo The todo keyword, if any
  14560. tags All tags including inherited ones, separated by colons
  14561. date The relevant date, like 2007-2-14
  14562. time The time, like 15:00-16:50
  14563. extra Sting with extra planning info
  14564. priority-l The priority letter if any was given
  14565. priority-n The computed numerical priority
  14566. agenda-day The day in the agenda where this is listed
  14567. \(fn CMD-KEY &rest PARAMETERS)" nil (quote macro))
  14568. (autoload 'org-store-agenda-views "org-agenda" "\
  14569. \(fn &rest PARAMETERS)" t nil)
  14570. (autoload 'org-batch-store-agenda-views "org-agenda" "\
  14571. Run all custom agenda commands that have a file argument.
  14572. \(fn &rest PARAMETERS)" nil (quote macro))
  14573. (autoload 'org-agenda-list "org-agenda" "\
  14574. Produce a daily/weekly view from all files in variable `org-agenda-files'.
  14575. The view will be for the current day or week, but from the overview buffer
  14576. you will be able to go to other days/weeks.
  14577. With a numeric prefix argument in an interactive call, the agenda will
  14578. span ARG days. Lisp programs should instead specify SPAN to change
  14579. the number of days. SPAN defaults to `org-agenda-span'.
  14580. START-DAY defaults to TODAY, or to the most recent match for the weekday
  14581. given in `org-agenda-start-on-weekday'.
  14582. \(fn &optional ARG START-DAY SPAN)" t nil)
  14583. (autoload 'org-search-view "org-agenda" "\
  14584. Show all entries that contain a phrase or words or regular expressions.
  14585. With optional prefix argument TODO-ONLY, only consider entries that are
  14586. TODO entries. The argument STRING can be used to pass a default search
  14587. string into this function. If EDIT-AT is non-nil, it means that the
  14588. user should get a chance to edit this string, with cursor at position
  14589. EDIT-AT.
  14590. The search string can be viewed either as a phrase that should be found as
  14591. is, or it can be broken into a number of snippets, each of which must match
  14592. in a Boolean way to select an entry. The default depends on the variable
  14593. `org-agenda-search-view-always-boolean'.
  14594. Even if this is turned off (the default) you can always switch to
  14595. Boolean search dynamically by preceding the first word with \"+\" or \"-\".
  14596. The default is a direct search of the whole phrase, where each space in
  14597. the search string can expand to an arbitrary amount of whitespace,
  14598. including newlines.
  14599. If using a Boolean search, the search string is split on whitespace and
  14600. each snippet is searched separately, with logical AND to select an entry.
  14601. Words prefixed with a minus must *not* occur in the entry. Words without
  14602. a prefix or prefixed with a plus must occur in the entry. Matching is
  14603. case-insensitive. Words are enclosed by word delimiters (i.e. they must
  14604. match whole words, not parts of a word) if
  14605. `org-agenda-search-view-force-full-words' is set (default is nil).
  14606. Boolean search snippets enclosed by curly braces are interpreted as
  14607. regular expressions that must or (when preceded with \"-\") must not
  14608. match in the entry. Snippets enclosed into double quotes will be taken
  14609. as a whole, to include whitespace.
  14610. - If the search string starts with an asterisk, search only in headlines.
  14611. - If (possibly after the leading star) the search string starts with an
  14612. exclamation mark, this also means to look at TODO entries only, an effect
  14613. that can also be achieved with a prefix argument.
  14614. - If (possibly after star and exclamation mark) the search string starts
  14615. with a colon, this will mean that the (non-regexp) snippets of the
  14616. Boolean search must match as full words.
  14617. This command searches the agenda files, and in addition the files listed
  14618. in `org-agenda-text-search-extra-files'.
  14619. \(fn &optional TODO-ONLY STRING EDIT-AT)" t nil)
  14620. (autoload 'org-todo-list "org-agenda" "\
  14621. Show all (not done) TODO entries from all agenda file in a single list.
  14622. The prefix arg can be used to select a specific TODO keyword and limit
  14623. the list to these. When using \\[universal-argument], you will be prompted
  14624. for a keyword. A numeric prefix directly selects the Nth keyword in
  14625. `org-todo-keywords-1'.
  14626. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  14627. (autoload 'org-tags-view "org-agenda" "\
  14628. Show all headlines for all `org-agenda-files' matching a TAGS criterion.
  14629. The prefix arg TODO-ONLY limits the search to TODO entries.
  14630. \(fn &optional TODO-ONLY MATCH)" t nil)
  14631. (autoload 'org-agenda-list-stuck-projects "org-agenda" "\
  14632. Create agenda view for projects that are stuck.
  14633. Stuck projects are project that have no next actions. For the definitions
  14634. of what a project is and how to check if it stuck, customize the variable
  14635. `org-stuck-projects'.
  14636. \(fn &rest IGNORE)" t nil)
  14637. (autoload 'org-diary "org-agenda" "\
  14638. Return diary information from org-files.
  14639. This function can be used in a \"sexp\" diary entry in the Emacs calendar.
  14640. It accesses org files and extracts information from those files to be
  14641. listed in the diary. The function accepts arguments specifying what
  14642. items should be listed. For a list of arguments allowed here, see the
  14643. variable `org-agenda-entry-types'.
  14644. The call in the diary file should look like this:
  14645. &%%(org-diary) ~/path/to/some/orgfile.org
  14646. Use a separate line for each org file to check. Or, if you omit the file name,
  14647. all files listed in `org-agenda-files' will be checked automatically:
  14648. &%%(org-diary)
  14649. If you don't give any arguments (as in the example above), the default
  14650. arguments (:deadline :scheduled :timestamp :sexp) are used.
  14651. So the example above may also be written as
  14652. &%%(org-diary :deadline :timestamp :sexp :scheduled)
  14653. The function expects the lisp variables `entry' and `date' to be provided
  14654. by the caller, because this is how the calendar works. Don't use this
  14655. function from a program - use `org-agenda-get-day-entries' instead.
  14656. \(fn &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  14657. (autoload 'org-agenda-check-for-timestamp-as-reason-to-ignore-todo-item "org-agenda" "\
  14658. Do we have a reason to ignore this TODO entry because it has a time stamp?
  14659. \(fn &optional END)" nil nil)
  14660. (autoload 'org-calendar-goto-agenda "org-agenda" "\
  14661. Compute the Org-mode agenda for the calendar date displayed at the cursor.
  14662. This is a command that has to be installed in `calendar-mode-map'.
  14663. \(fn)" t nil)
  14664. (autoload 'org-agenda-to-appt "org-agenda" "\
  14665. Activate appointments found in `org-agenda-files'.
  14666. With a \\[universal-argument] prefix, refresh the list of
  14667. appointments.
  14668. If FILTER is t, interactively prompt the user for a regular
  14669. expression, and filter out entries that don't match it.
  14670. If FILTER is a string, use this string as a regular expression
  14671. for filtering entries out.
  14672. If FILTER is a function, filter out entries against which
  14673. calling the function returns nil. This function takes one
  14674. argument: an entry from `org-agenda-get-day-entries'.
  14675. FILTER can also be an alist with the car of each cell being
  14676. either 'headline or 'category. For example:
  14677. '((headline \"IMPORTANT\")
  14678. (category \"Work\"))
  14679. will only add headlines containing IMPORTANT or headlines
  14680. belonging to the \"Work\" category.
  14681. ARGS are symbols indicating what kind of entries to consider.
  14682. By default `org-agenda-to-appt' will use :deadline, :scheduled
  14683. and :timestamp entries. See the docstring of `org-diary' for
  14684. details and examples.
  14685. \(fn &optional REFRESH FILTER &rest ARGS)" t nil)
  14686. ;;;***
  14687. ;;;### (autoloads (org-archive-subtree-default-with-confirmation
  14688. ;;;;;; org-archive-subtree-default) "org-archive" "org/org-archive.el"
  14689. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  14690. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-archive.el
  14691. (autoload 'org-archive-subtree-default "org-archive" "\
  14692. Archive the current subtree with the default command.
  14693. This command is set with the variable `org-archive-default-command'.
  14694. \(fn)" t nil)
  14695. (autoload 'org-archive-subtree-default-with-confirmation "org-archive" "\
  14696. Archive the current subtree with the default command.
  14697. This command is set with the variable `org-archive-default-command'.
  14698. \(fn)" t nil)
  14699. ;;;***
  14700. ;;;### (autoloads (org-export-as-ascii org-export-region-as-ascii
  14701. ;;;;;; org-replace-region-by-ascii org-export-as-ascii-to-buffer
  14702. ;;;;;; org-export-as-utf8-to-buffer org-export-as-utf8 org-export-as-latin1-to-buffer
  14703. ;;;;;; org-export-as-latin1) "org-ascii" "org/org-ascii.el" (20352
  14704. ;;;;;; 65510))
  14705. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-ascii.el
  14706. (autoload 'org-export-as-latin1 "org-ascii" "\
  14707. Like `org-export-as-ascii', use latin1 encoding for special symbols.
  14708. \(fn &rest ARGS)" t nil)
  14709. (autoload 'org-export-as-latin1-to-buffer "org-ascii" "\
  14710. Like `org-export-as-ascii-to-buffer', use latin1 encoding for symbols.
  14711. \(fn &rest ARGS)" t nil)
  14712. (autoload 'org-export-as-utf8 "org-ascii" "\
  14713. Like `org-export-as-ascii', use encoding for special symbols.
  14714. \(fn &rest ARGS)" t nil)
  14715. (autoload 'org-export-as-utf8-to-buffer "org-ascii" "\
  14716. Like `org-export-as-ascii-to-buffer', use utf8 encoding for symbols.
  14717. \(fn &rest ARGS)" t nil)
  14718. (autoload 'org-export-as-ascii-to-buffer "org-ascii" "\
  14719. Call `org-export-as-ascii` with output to a temporary buffer.
  14720. No file is created. The prefix ARG is passed through to `org-export-as-ascii'.
  14721. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  14722. (autoload 'org-replace-region-by-ascii "org-ascii" "\
  14723. Assume the current region has org-mode syntax, and convert it to plain ASCII.
  14724. This can be used in any buffer. For example, you could write an
  14725. itemized list in org-mode syntax in a Mail buffer and then use this
  14726. command to convert it.
  14727. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  14728. (autoload 'org-export-region-as-ascii "org-ascii" "\
  14729. Convert region from BEG to END in org-mode buffer to plain ASCII.
  14730. If prefix arg BODY-ONLY is set, omit file header, footer, and table of
  14731. contents, and only produce the region of converted text, useful for
  14732. cut-and-paste operations.
  14733. If BUFFER is a buffer or a string, use/create that buffer as a target
  14734. of the converted ASCII. If BUFFER is the symbol `string', return the
  14735. produced ASCII as a string and leave not buffer behind. For example,
  14736. a Lisp program could call this function in the following way:
  14737. (setq ascii (org-export-region-as-ascii beg end t 'string))
  14738. When called interactively, the output buffer is selected, and shown
  14739. in a window. A non-interactive call will only return the buffer.
  14740. \(fn BEG END &optional BODY-ONLY BUFFER)" t nil)
  14741. (autoload 'org-export-as-ascii "org-ascii" "\
  14742. Export the outline as a pretty ASCII file.
  14743. If there is an active region, export only the region.
  14744. The prefix ARG specifies how many levels of the outline should become
  14745. underlined headlines, default is 3. Lower levels will become bulleted
  14746. lists. When HIDDEN is non-nil, don't display the ASCII buffer.
  14747. EXT-PLIST is a property list with external parameters overriding
  14748. org-mode's default settings, but still inferior to file-local
  14749. settings. When TO-BUFFER is non-nil, create a buffer with that
  14750. name and export to that buffer. If TO-BUFFER is the symbol
  14751. `string', don't leave any buffer behind but just return the
  14752. resulting ASCII as a string. When BODY-ONLY is set, don't produce
  14753. the file header and footer. When PUB-DIR is set, use this as the
  14754. publishing directory.
  14755. \(fn ARG &optional HIDDEN EXT-PLIST TO-BUFFER BODY-ONLY PUB-DIR)" t nil)
  14756. ;;;***
  14757. ;;;### (autoloads (org-attach) "org-attach" "org/org-attach.el" (20352
  14758. ;;;;;; 65510))
  14759. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-attach.el
  14760. (autoload 'org-attach "org-attach" "\
  14761. The dispatcher for attachment commands.
  14762. Shows a list of commands and prompts for another key to execute a command.
  14763. \(fn)" t nil)
  14764. ;;;***
  14765. ;;;### (autoloads (org-bbdb-anniversaries) "org-bbdb" "org/org-bbdb.el"
  14766. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  14767. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-bbdb.el
  14768. (autoload 'org-bbdb-anniversaries "org-bbdb" "\
  14769. Extract anniversaries from BBDB for display in the agenda.
  14770. \(fn)" nil nil)
  14771. ;;;***
  14772. ;;;### (autoloads (org-capture-import-remember-templates org-capture-insert-template-here
  14773. ;;;;;; org-capture) "org-capture" "org/org-capture.el" (20352 65510))
  14774. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-capture.el
  14775. (autoload 'org-capture "org-capture" "\
  14776. Capture something.
  14777. \\<org-capture-mode-map>
  14778. This will let you select a template from `org-capture-templates', and then
  14779. file the newly captured information. The text is immediately inserted
  14780. at the target location, and an indirect buffer is shown where you can
  14781. edit it. Pressing \\[org-capture-finalize] brings you back to the previous state
  14782. of Emacs, so that you can continue your work.
  14783. When called interactively with a \\[universal-argument] prefix argument GOTO, don't capture
  14784. anything, just go to the file/headline where the selected template
  14785. stores its notes. With a double prefix argument \\[universal-argument] \\[universal-argument], go to the last note
  14786. stored.
  14787. When called with a `C-0' (zero) prefix, insert a template at point.
  14788. Lisp programs can set KEYS to a string associated with a template in
  14789. `org-capture-templates'. In this case, interactive selection will be
  14790. bypassed.
  14791. \(fn &optional GOTO KEYS)" t nil)
  14792. (autoload 'org-capture-insert-template-here "org-capture" "\
  14793. \(fn)" nil nil)
  14794. (autoload 'org-capture-import-remember-templates "org-capture" "\
  14795. Set org-capture-templates to be similar to `org-remember-templates'.
  14796. \(fn)" t nil)
  14797. ;;;***
  14798. ;;;### (autoloads (org-clock-persistence-insinuate org-get-clocktable)
  14799. ;;;;;; "org-clock" "org/org-clock.el" (20377 65403))
  14800. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-clock.el
  14801. (autoload 'org-get-clocktable "org-clock" "\
  14802. Get a formatted clocktable with parameters according to PROPS.
  14803. The table is created in a temporary buffer, fully formatted and
  14804. fontified, and then returned.
  14805. \(fn &rest PROPS)" nil nil)
  14806. (autoload 'org-clock-persistence-insinuate "org-clock" "\
  14807. Set up hooks for clock persistence.
  14808. \(fn)" nil nil)
  14809. ;;;***
  14810. ;;;### (autoloads (org-datetree-find-date-create) "org-datetree"
  14811. ;;;;;; "org/org-datetree.el" (20352 65510))
  14812. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-datetree.el
  14813. (autoload 'org-datetree-find-date-create "org-datetree" "\
  14814. Find or create an entry for DATE.
  14815. If KEEP-RESTRICTION is non-nil, do not widen the buffer.
  14816. When it is nil, the buffer will be widened to make sure an existing date
  14817. tree can be found.
  14818. \(fn DATE &optional KEEP-RESTRICTION)" nil nil)
  14819. ;;;***
  14820. ;;;### (autoloads (org-export-as-docbook org-export-as-docbook-pdf-and-open
  14821. ;;;;;; org-export-as-docbook-pdf org-export-region-as-docbook org-replace-region-by-docbook
  14822. ;;;;;; org-export-as-docbook-to-buffer org-export-as-docbook-batch)
  14823. ;;;;;; "org-docbook" "org/org-docbook.el" (20352 65510))
  14824. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-docbook.el
  14825. (autoload 'org-export-as-docbook-batch "org-docbook" "\
  14826. Call `org-export-as-docbook' in batch style.
  14827. This function can be used in batch processing.
  14828. For example:
  14829. $ emacs --batch
  14830. --load=$HOME/lib/emacs/org.el
  14831. --visit=MyOrgFile.org --funcall org-export-as-docbook-batch
  14832. \(fn)" nil nil)
  14833. (autoload 'org-export-as-docbook-to-buffer "org-docbook" "\
  14834. Call `org-export-as-docbook' with output to a temporary buffer.
  14835. No file is created.
  14836. \(fn)" t nil)
  14837. (autoload 'org-replace-region-by-docbook "org-docbook" "\
  14838. Replace the region from BEG to END with its DocBook export.
  14839. It assumes the region has `org-mode' syntax, and then convert it to
  14840. DocBook. This can be used in any buffer. For example, you could
  14841. write an itemized list in `org-mode' syntax in an DocBook buffer and
  14842. then use this command to convert it.
  14843. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  14844. (autoload 'org-export-region-as-docbook "org-docbook" "\
  14845. Convert region from BEG to END in `org-mode' buffer to DocBook.
  14846. If prefix arg BODY-ONLY is set, omit file header and footer and
  14847. only produce the region of converted text, useful for
  14848. cut-and-paste operations. If BUFFER is a buffer or a string,
  14849. use/create that buffer as a target of the converted DocBook. If
  14850. BUFFER is the symbol `string', return the produced DocBook as a
  14851. string and leave not buffer behind. For example, a Lisp program
  14852. could call this function in the following way:
  14853. (setq docbook (org-export-region-as-docbook beg end t 'string))
  14854. When called interactively, the output buffer is selected, and shown
  14855. in a window. A non-interactive call will only return the buffer.
  14856. \(fn BEG END &optional BODY-ONLY BUFFER)" t nil)
  14857. (autoload 'org-export-as-docbook-pdf "org-docbook" "\
  14858. Export as DocBook XML file, and generate PDF file.
  14859. \(fn &optional HIDDEN EXT-PLIST TO-BUFFER BODY-ONLY PUB-DIR)" t nil)
  14860. (autoload 'org-export-as-docbook-pdf-and-open "org-docbook" "\
  14861. Export as DocBook XML file, generate PDF file, and open it.
  14862. \(fn)" t nil)
  14863. (autoload 'org-export-as-docbook "org-docbook" "\
  14864. Export the current buffer as a DocBook file.
  14865. If there is an active region, export only the region. When
  14866. HIDDEN is obsolete and does nothing. EXT-PLIST is a
  14867. property list with external parameters overriding org-mode's
  14868. default settings, but still inferior to file-local settings.
  14869. When TO-BUFFER is non-nil, create a buffer with that name and
  14870. export to that buffer. If TO-BUFFER is the symbol `string',
  14871. don't leave any buffer behind but just return the resulting HTML
  14872. as a string. When BODY-ONLY is set, don't produce the file
  14873. header and footer, simply return the content of the document (all
  14874. top-level sections). When PUB-DIR is set, use this as the
  14875. publishing directory.
  14876. \(fn &optional HIDDEN EXT-PLIST TO-BUFFER BODY-ONLY PUB-DIR)" t nil)
  14877. ;;;***
  14878. ;;;### (autoloads (org-insert-export-options-template org-export-as-org
  14879. ;;;;;; org-export-visible org-export) "org-exp" "org/org-exp.el"
  14880. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  14881. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-exp.el
  14882. (autoload 'org-export "org-exp" "\
  14883. Export dispatcher for Org-mode.
  14884. When `org-export-run-in-background' is non-nil, try to run the command
  14885. in the background. This will be done only for commands that write
  14886. to a file. For details see the docstring of `org-export-run-in-background'.
  14887. The prefix argument ARG will be passed to the exporter. However, if
  14888. ARG is a double universal prefix \\[universal-argument] \\[universal-argument], that means to inverse the
  14889. value of `org-export-run-in-background'.
  14890. If `org-export-initial-scope' is set to 'subtree, try to export
  14891. the current subtree, otherwise try to export the whole buffer.
  14892. Pressing `1' will switch between these two options.
  14893. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  14894. (autoload 'org-export-visible "org-exp" "\
  14895. Create a copy of the visible part of the current buffer, and export it.
  14896. The copy is created in a temporary buffer and removed after use.
  14897. TYPE is the final key (as a string) that also selects the export command in
  14898. the \\<org-mode-map>\\[org-export] export dispatcher.
  14899. As a special case, if the you type SPC at the prompt, the temporary
  14900. org-mode file will not be removed but presented to you so that you can
  14901. continue to use it. The prefix arg ARG is passed through to the exporting
  14902. command.
  14903. \(fn TYPE ARG)" t nil)
  14904. (autoload 'org-export-as-org "org-exp" "\
  14905. Make a copy with not-exporting stuff removed.
  14906. The purpose of this function is to provide a way to export the source
  14907. Org file of a webpage in Org format, but with sensitive and/or irrelevant
  14908. stuff removed. This command will remove the following:
  14909. - archived trees (if the variable `org-export-with-archived-trees' is nil)
  14910. - comment blocks and trees starting with the COMMENT keyword
  14911. - only trees that are consistent with `org-export-select-tags'
  14912. and `org-export-exclude-tags'.
  14913. The only arguments that will be used are EXT-PLIST and PUB-DIR,
  14914. all the others will be ignored (but are present so that the general
  14915. mechanism to call publishing functions will work).
  14916. EXT-PLIST is a property list with external parameters overriding
  14917. org-mode's default settings, but still inferior to file-local
  14918. settings. When PUB-DIR is set, use this as the publishing
  14919. directory.
  14920. \(fn ARG &optional HIDDEN EXT-PLIST TO-BUFFER BODY-ONLY PUB-DIR)" t nil)
  14921. (autoload 'org-insert-export-options-template "org-exp" "\
  14922. Insert into the buffer a template with information for exporting.
  14923. \(fn)" t nil)
  14924. ;;;***
  14925. ;;;### (autoloads (org-feed-show-raw-feed org-feed-goto-inbox org-feed-update
  14926. ;;;;;; org-feed-update-all) "org-feed" "org/org-feed.el" (20352
  14927. ;;;;;; 65510))
  14928. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-feed.el
  14929. (autoload 'org-feed-update-all "org-feed" "\
  14930. Get inbox items from all feeds in `org-feed-alist'.
  14931. \(fn)" t nil)
  14932. (autoload 'org-feed-update "org-feed" "\
  14933. Get inbox items from FEED.
  14934. FEED can be a string with an association in `org-feed-alist', or
  14935. it can be a list structured like an entry in `org-feed-alist'.
  14936. \(fn FEED &optional RETRIEVE-ONLY)" t nil)
  14937. (autoload 'org-feed-goto-inbox "org-feed" "\
  14938. Go to the inbox that captures the feed named FEED.
  14939. \(fn FEED)" t nil)
  14940. (autoload 'org-feed-show-raw-feed "org-feed" "\
  14941. Show the raw feed buffer of a feed.
  14942. \(fn FEED)" t nil)
  14943. ;;;***
  14944. ;;;### (autoloads (org-footnote-normalize org-footnote-action) "org-footnote"
  14945. ;;;;;; "org/org-footnote.el" (20377 65403))
  14946. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-footnote.el
  14947. (autoload 'org-footnote-action "org-footnote" "\
  14948. Do the right thing for footnotes.
  14949. When at a footnote reference, jump to the definition.
  14950. When at a definition, jump to the references if they exist, offer
  14951. to create them otherwise.
  14952. When neither at definition or reference, create a new footnote,
  14953. interactively.
  14954. With prefix arg SPECIAL, offer additional commands in a menu.
  14955. \(fn &optional SPECIAL)" t nil)
  14956. (autoload 'org-footnote-normalize "org-footnote" "\
  14957. Collect the footnotes in various formats and normalize them.
  14958. This finds the different sorts of footnotes allowed in Org, and
  14959. normalizes them to the usual [N] format that is understood by the
  14960. Org-mode exporters.
  14961. When SORT-ONLY is set, only sort the footnote definitions into the
  14962. referenced sequence.
  14963. If Org is amidst an export process, EXPORT-PROPS will hold the
  14964. export properties of the buffer.
  14965. When EXPORT-PROPS is non-nil, the default action is to insert
  14966. normalized footnotes towards the end of the pre-processing
  14967. buffer. Some exporters (docbook, odt...) expect footnote
  14968. definitions to be available before any references to them. Such
  14969. exporters can let bind `org-footnote-insert-pos-for-preprocessor'
  14970. to symbol `point-min' to achieve the desired behaviour.
  14971. Additional note on `org-footnote-insert-pos-for-preprocessor':
  14972. 1. This variable has not effect when FOR-PREPROCESSOR is nil.
  14973. 2. This variable (potentially) obviates the need for extra scan
  14974. of pre-processor buffer as witnessed in
  14975. `org-export-docbook-get-footnotes'.
  14976. \(fn &optional SORT-ONLY EXPORT-PROPS)" nil nil)
  14977. ;;;***
  14978. ;;;### (autoloads (org-freemind-to-org-mode org-freemind-from-org-sparse-tree
  14979. ;;;;;; org-freemind-from-org-mode org-freemind-from-org-mode-node
  14980. ;;;;;; org-freemind-show org-export-as-freemind) "org-freemind"
  14981. ;;;;;; "org/org-freemind.el" (20352 65510))
  14982. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-freemind.el
  14983. (autoload 'org-export-as-freemind "org-freemind" "\
  14984. Export the current buffer as a Freemind file.
  14985. If there is an active region, export only the region. HIDDEN is
  14986. obsolete and does nothing. EXT-PLIST is a property list with
  14987. external parameters overriding org-mode's default settings, but
  14988. still inferior to file-local settings. When TO-BUFFER is
  14989. non-nil, create a buffer with that name and export to that
  14990. buffer. If TO-BUFFER is the symbol `string', don't leave any
  14991. buffer behind but just return the resulting HTML as a string.
  14992. When BODY-ONLY is set, don't produce the file header and footer,
  14993. simply return the content of the document (all top level
  14994. sections). When PUB-DIR is set, use this as the publishing
  14995. directory.
  14996. See `org-freemind-from-org-mode' for more information.
  14997. \(fn &optional HIDDEN EXT-PLIST TO-BUFFER BODY-ONLY PUB-DIR)" t nil)
  14998. (autoload 'org-freemind-show "org-freemind" "\
  14999. Show file MM-FILE in Freemind.
  15000. \(fn MM-FILE)" t nil)
  15001. (autoload 'org-freemind-from-org-mode-node "org-freemind" "\
  15002. Convert node at line NODE-LINE to the FreeMind file MM-FILE.
  15003. See `org-freemind-from-org-mode' for more information.
  15004. \(fn NODE-LINE MM-FILE)" t nil)
  15005. (autoload 'org-freemind-from-org-mode "org-freemind" "\
  15006. Convert the `org-mode' file ORG-FILE to the FreeMind file MM-FILE.
  15007. All the nodes will be opened or closed in Freemind just as you
  15008. have them in `org-mode'.
  15009. Note that exporting to Freemind also gives you an alternative way
  15010. to export from `org-mode' to html. You can create a dynamic html
  15011. version of the your org file, by first exporting to Freemind and
  15012. then exporting from Freemind to html. The 'As
  15013. XHTML (JavaScript)' version in Freemind works very well (and you
  15014. can use a CSS stylesheet to style it).
  15015. \(fn ORG-FILE MM-FILE)" t nil)
  15016. (autoload 'org-freemind-from-org-sparse-tree "org-freemind" "\
  15017. Convert visible part of buffer ORG-BUFFER to FreeMind file MM-FILE.
  15018. \(fn ORG-BUFFER MM-FILE)" t nil)
  15019. (autoload 'org-freemind-to-org-mode "org-freemind" "\
  15020. Convert FreeMind file MM-FILE to `org-mode' file ORG-FILE.
  15021. \(fn MM-FILE ORG-FILE)" t nil)
  15022. ;;;***
  15023. ;;;### (autoloads (org-export-htmlize-generate-css org-export-as-html
  15024. ;;;;;; org-export-region-as-html org-replace-region-by-html org-export-as-html-to-buffer
  15025. ;;;;;; org-export-as-html-batch org-export-as-html-and-open) "org-html"
  15026. ;;;;;; "org/org-html.el" (20352 65510))
  15027. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-html.el
  15028. (put 'org-export-html-style-include-default 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  15029. (put 'org-export-html-style 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  15030. (put 'org-export-html-style-extra 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  15031. (autoload 'org-export-as-html-and-open "org-html" "\
  15032. Export the outline as HTML and immediately open it with a browser.
  15033. If there is an active region, export only the region.
  15034. The prefix ARG specifies how many levels of the outline should become
  15035. headlines. The default is 3. Lower levels will become bulleted lists.
  15036. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  15037. (autoload 'org-export-as-html-batch "org-html" "\
  15038. Call the function `org-export-as-html'.
  15039. This function can be used in batch processing as:
  15040. emacs --batch
  15041. --load=$HOME/lib/emacs/org.el
  15042. --eval \"(setq org-export-headline-levels 2)\"
  15043. --visit=MyFile --funcall org-export-as-html-batch
  15044. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15045. (autoload 'org-export-as-html-to-buffer "org-html" "\
  15046. Call `org-export-as-html` with output to a temporary buffer.
  15047. No file is created. The prefix ARG is passed through to `org-export-as-html'.
  15048. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  15049. (autoload 'org-replace-region-by-html "org-html" "\
  15050. Assume the current region has org-mode syntax, and convert it to HTML.
  15051. This can be used in any buffer. For example, you could write an
  15052. itemized list in org-mode syntax in an HTML buffer and then use this
  15053. command to convert it.
  15054. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  15055. (autoload 'org-export-region-as-html "org-html" "\
  15056. Convert region from BEG to END in org-mode buffer to HTML.
  15057. If prefix arg BODY-ONLY is set, omit file header, footer, and table of
  15058. contents, and only produce the region of converted text, useful for
  15059. cut-and-paste operations.
  15060. If BUFFER is a buffer or a string, use/create that buffer as a target
  15061. of the converted HTML. If BUFFER is the symbol `string', return the
  15062. produced HTML as a string and leave not buffer behind. For example,
  15063. a Lisp program could call this function in the following way:
  15064. (setq html (org-export-region-as-html beg end t 'string))
  15065. When called interactively, the output buffer is selected, and shown
  15066. in a window. A non-interactive call will only return the buffer.
  15067. \(fn BEG END &optional BODY-ONLY BUFFER)" t nil)
  15068. (autoload 'org-export-as-html "org-html" "\
  15069. Export the outline as a pretty HTML file.
  15070. If there is an active region, export only the region. The prefix
  15071. ARG specifies how many levels of the outline should become
  15072. headlines. The default is 3. Lower levels will become bulleted
  15073. lists. HIDDEN is obsolete and does nothing.
  15074. EXT-PLIST is a property list with external parameters overriding
  15075. org-mode's default settings, but still inferior to file-local
  15076. settings. When TO-BUFFER is non-nil, create a buffer with that
  15077. name and export to that buffer. If TO-BUFFER is the symbol
  15078. `string', don't leave any buffer behind but just return the
  15079. resulting HTML as a string. When BODY-ONLY is set, don't produce
  15080. the file header and footer, simply return the content of
  15081. <body>...</body>, without even the body tags themselves. When
  15082. PUB-DIR is set, use this as the publishing directory.
  15083. \(fn ARG &optional HIDDEN EXT-PLIST TO-BUFFER BODY-ONLY PUB-DIR)" t nil)
  15084. (autoload 'org-export-htmlize-generate-css "org-html" "\
  15085. Create the CSS for all font definitions in the current Emacs session.
  15086. Use this to create face definitions in your CSS style file that can then
  15087. be used by code snippets transformed by htmlize.
  15088. This command just produces a buffer that contains class definitions for all
  15089. faces used in the current Emacs session. You can copy and paste the ones you
  15090. need into your CSS file.
  15091. If you then set `org-export-htmlize-output-type' to `css', calls to
  15092. the function `org-export-htmlize-region-for-paste' will produce code
  15093. that uses these same face definitions.
  15094. \(fn)" t nil)
  15095. ;;;***
  15096. ;;;### (autoloads (org-export-icalendar-combine-agenda-files org-export-icalendar-all-agenda-files
  15097. ;;;;;; org-export-icalendar-this-file) "org-icalendar" "org/org-icalendar.el"
  15098. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  15099. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-icalendar.el
  15100. (autoload 'org-export-icalendar-this-file "org-icalendar" "\
  15101. Export current file as an iCalendar file.
  15102. The iCalendar file will be located in the same directory as the Org-mode
  15103. file, but with extension `.ics'.
  15104. \(fn)" t nil)
  15105. (autoload 'org-export-icalendar-all-agenda-files "org-icalendar" "\
  15106. Export all files in the variable `org-agenda-files' to iCalendar .ics files.
  15107. Each iCalendar file will be located in the same directory as the Org-mode
  15108. file, but with extension `.ics'.
  15109. \(fn)" t nil)
  15110. (autoload 'org-export-icalendar-combine-agenda-files "org-icalendar" "\
  15111. Export all files in `org-agenda-files' to a single combined iCalendar file.
  15112. The file is stored under the name `org-combined-agenda-icalendar-file'.
  15113. \(fn)" t nil)
  15114. ;;;***
  15115. ;;;### (autoloads (org-id-store-link org-id-find-id-file org-id-find
  15116. ;;;;;; org-id-goto org-id-get-with-outline-drilling org-id-get-with-outline-path-completion
  15117. ;;;;;; org-id-get org-id-copy org-id-get-create) "org-id" "org/org-id.el"
  15118. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  15119. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-id.el
  15120. (autoload 'org-id-get-create "org-id" "\
  15121. Create an ID for the current entry and return it.
  15122. If the entry already has an ID, just return it.
  15123. With optional argument FORCE, force the creation of a new ID.
  15124. \(fn &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  15125. (autoload 'org-id-copy "org-id" "\
  15126. Copy the ID of the entry at point to the kill ring.
  15127. Create an ID if necessary.
  15128. \(fn)" t nil)
  15129. (autoload 'org-id-get "org-id" "\
  15130. Get the ID property of the entry at point-or-marker POM.
  15131. If POM is nil, refer to the entry at point.
  15132. If the entry does not have an ID, the function returns nil.
  15133. However, when CREATE is non nil, create an ID if none is present already.
  15134. PREFIX will be passed through to `org-id-new'.
  15135. In any case, the ID of the entry is returned.
  15136. \(fn &optional POM CREATE PREFIX)" nil nil)
  15137. (autoload 'org-id-get-with-outline-path-completion "org-id" "\
  15138. Use outline-path-completion to retrieve the ID of an entry.
  15139. TARGETS may be a setting for `org-refile-targets' to define the eligible
  15140. headlines. When omitted, all headlines in all agenda files are
  15141. eligible.
  15142. It returns the ID of the entry. If necessary, the ID is created.
  15143. \(fn &optional TARGETS)" nil nil)
  15144. (autoload 'org-id-get-with-outline-drilling "org-id" "\
  15145. Use an outline-cycling interface to retrieve the ID of an entry.
  15146. This only finds entries in the current buffer, using `org-get-location'.
  15147. It returns the ID of the entry. If necessary, the ID is created.
  15148. \(fn &optional TARGETS)" nil nil)
  15149. (autoload 'org-id-goto "org-id" "\
  15150. Switch to the buffer containing the entry with id ID.
  15151. Move the cursor to that entry in that buffer.
  15152. \(fn ID)" t nil)
  15153. (autoload 'org-id-find "org-id" "\
  15154. Return the location of the entry with the id ID.
  15155. The return value is a cons cell (file-name . position), or nil
  15156. if there is no entry with that ID.
  15157. With optional argument MARKERP, return the position as a new marker.
  15158. \(fn ID &optional MARKERP)" nil nil)
  15159. (autoload 'org-id-find-id-file "org-id" "\
  15160. Query the id database for the file in which this ID is located.
  15161. \(fn ID)" nil nil)
  15162. (autoload 'org-id-store-link "org-id" "\
  15163. Store a link to the current entry, using its ID.
  15164. \(fn)" t nil)
  15165. ;;;***
  15166. ;;;### (autoloads (org-indent-mode) "org-indent" "org/org-indent.el"
  15167. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  15168. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-indent.el
  15169. (autoload 'org-indent-mode "org-indent" "\
  15170. When active, indent text according to outline structure.
  15171. Internally this works by adding `line-prefix' and `wrap-prefix'
  15172. properties, after each buffer modification, on the modified zone.
  15173. The process is synchronous. Though, initial indentation of
  15174. buffer, which can take a few seconds on large buffers, is done
  15175. during idle time.
  15176. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  15177. ;;;***
  15178. ;;;### (autoloads (org-irc-store-link) "org-irc" "org/org-irc.el"
  15179. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  15180. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-irc.el
  15181. (autoload 'org-irc-store-link "org-irc" "\
  15182. Dispatch to the appropriate function to store a link to an IRC session.
  15183. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15184. ;;;***
  15185. ;;;### (autoloads (org-export-as-pdf-and-open org-export-as-pdf org-export-as-latex
  15186. ;;;;;; org-export-region-as-latex org-replace-region-by-latex org-export-as-latex-to-buffer
  15187. ;;;;;; org-export-as-latex-batch) "org-latex" "org/org-latex.el"
  15188. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  15189. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-latex.el
  15190. (autoload 'org-export-as-latex-batch "org-latex" "\
  15191. Call `org-export-as-latex', may be used in batch processing.
  15192. For example:
  15193. emacs --batch
  15194. --load=$HOME/lib/emacs/org.el
  15195. --eval \"(setq org-export-headline-levels 2)\"
  15196. --visit=MyFile --funcall org-export-as-latex-batch
  15197. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15198. (autoload 'org-export-as-latex-to-buffer "org-latex" "\
  15199. Call `org-export-as-latex` with output to a temporary buffer.
  15200. No file is created. The prefix ARG is passed through to `org-export-as-latex'.
  15201. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  15202. (autoload 'org-replace-region-by-latex "org-latex" "\
  15203. Replace the region from BEG to END with its LaTeX export.
  15204. It assumes the region has `org-mode' syntax, and then convert it to
  15205. LaTeX. This can be used in any buffer. For example, you could
  15206. write an itemized list in `org-mode' syntax in an LaTeX buffer and
  15207. then use this command to convert it.
  15208. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  15209. (autoload 'org-export-region-as-latex "org-latex" "\
  15210. Convert region from BEG to END in `org-mode' buffer to LaTeX.
  15211. If prefix arg BODY-ONLY is set, omit file header, footer, and table of
  15212. contents, and only produce the region of converted text, useful for
  15213. cut-and-paste operations.
  15214. If BUFFER is a buffer or a string, use/create that buffer as a target
  15215. of the converted LaTeX. If BUFFER is the symbol `string', return the
  15216. produced LaTeX as a string and leave no buffer behind. For example,
  15217. a Lisp program could call this function in the following way:
  15218. (setq latex (org-export-region-as-latex beg end t 'string))
  15219. When called interactively, the output buffer is selected, and shown
  15220. in a window. A non-interactive call will only return the buffer.
  15221. \(fn BEG END &optional BODY-ONLY BUFFER)" t nil)
  15222. (autoload 'org-export-as-latex "org-latex" "\
  15223. Export current buffer to a LaTeX file.
  15224. If there is an active region, export only the region. The prefix
  15225. ARG specifies how many levels of the outline should become
  15226. headlines. The default is 3. Lower levels will be exported
  15227. depending on `org-export-latex-low-levels'. The default is to
  15228. convert them as description lists.
  15229. HIDDEN is obsolete and does nothing.
  15230. EXT-PLIST is a property list with
  15231. external parameters overriding org-mode's default settings, but
  15232. still inferior to file-local settings. When TO-BUFFER is
  15233. non-nil, create a buffer with that name and export to that
  15234. buffer. If TO-BUFFER is the symbol `string', don't leave any
  15235. buffer behind but just return the resulting LaTeX as a string.
  15236. When BODY-ONLY is set, don't produce the file header and footer,
  15237. simply return the content of \\begin{document}...\\end{document},
  15238. without even the \\begin{document} and \\end{document} commands.
  15239. when PUB-DIR is set, use this as the publishing directory.
  15240. \(fn ARG &optional HIDDEN EXT-PLIST TO-BUFFER BODY-ONLY PUB-DIR)" t nil)
  15241. (autoload 'org-export-as-pdf "org-latex" "\
  15242. Export as LaTeX, then process through to PDF.
  15243. \(fn ARG &optional HIDDEN EXT-PLIST TO-BUFFER BODY-ONLY PUB-DIR)" t nil)
  15244. (autoload 'org-export-as-pdf-and-open "org-latex" "\
  15245. Export as LaTeX, then process through to PDF, and open.
  15246. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  15247. ;;;***
  15248. ;;;### (autoloads (org-lparse-region org-replace-region-by org-lparse-to-buffer
  15249. ;;;;;; org-lparse-batch org-lparse-and-open) "org-lparse" "org/org-lparse.el"
  15250. ;;;;;; (20420 42151))
  15251. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-lparse.el
  15252. (autoload 'org-lparse-and-open "org-lparse" "\
  15253. Export outline to TARGET-BACKEND via NATIVE-BACKEND and open exported file.
  15254. If there is an active region, export only the region. The prefix
  15255. ARG specifies how many levels of the outline should become
  15256. headlines. The default is 3. Lower levels will become bulleted
  15257. lists.
  15258. \(fn TARGET-BACKEND NATIVE-BACKEND ARG &optional FILE-OR-BUF)" nil nil)
  15259. (autoload 'org-lparse-batch "org-lparse" "\
  15260. Call the function `org-lparse'.
  15261. This function can be used in batch processing as:
  15262. emacs --batch
  15263. --load=$HOME/lib/emacs/org.el
  15264. --eval \"(setq org-export-headline-levels 2)\"
  15265. --visit=MyFile --funcall org-lparse-batch
  15266. \(fn TARGET-BACKEND &optional NATIVE-BACKEND)" nil nil)
  15267. (autoload 'org-lparse-to-buffer "org-lparse" "\
  15268. Call `org-lparse' with output to a temporary buffer.
  15269. No file is created. The prefix ARG is passed through to
  15270. `org-lparse'.
  15271. \(fn BACKEND ARG)" nil nil)
  15272. (autoload 'org-replace-region-by "org-lparse" "\
  15273. Assume the current region has org-mode syntax, and convert it to HTML.
  15274. This can be used in any buffer. For example, you could write an
  15275. itemized list in org-mode syntax in an HTML buffer and then use
  15276. this command to convert it.
  15277. \(fn BACKEND BEG END)" nil nil)
  15278. (autoload 'org-lparse-region "org-lparse" "\
  15279. Convert region from BEG to END in org-mode buffer to HTML.
  15280. If prefix arg BODY-ONLY is set, omit file header, footer, and table of
  15281. contents, and only produce the region of converted text, useful for
  15282. cut-and-paste operations.
  15283. If BUFFER is a buffer or a string, use/create that buffer as a target
  15284. of the converted HTML. If BUFFER is the symbol `string', return the
  15285. produced HTML as a string and leave not buffer behind. For example,
  15286. a Lisp program could call this function in the following way:
  15287. (setq html (org-lparse-region \"html\" beg end t 'string))
  15288. When called interactively, the output buffer is selected, and shown
  15289. in a window. A non-interactive call will only return the buffer.
  15290. \(fn BACKEND BEG END &optional BODY-ONLY BUFFER)" nil nil)
  15291. ;;;***
  15292. ;;;### (autoloads (org-mobile-create-sumo-agenda org-mobile-pull
  15293. ;;;;;; org-mobile-push) "org-mobile" "org/org-mobile.el" (20352
  15294. ;;;;;; 65510))
  15295. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-mobile.el
  15296. (autoload 'org-mobile-push "org-mobile" "\
  15297. Push the current state of Org affairs to the WebDAV directory.
  15298. This will create the index file, copy all agenda files there, and also
  15299. create all custom agenda views, for upload to the mobile phone.
  15300. \(fn)" t nil)
  15301. (autoload 'org-mobile-pull "org-mobile" "\
  15302. Pull the contents of `org-mobile-capture-file' and integrate them.
  15303. Apply all flagged actions, flag entries to be flagged and then call an
  15304. agenda view showing the flagged items.
  15305. \(fn)" t nil)
  15306. (autoload 'org-mobile-create-sumo-agenda "org-mobile" "\
  15307. Create a file that contains all custom agenda views.
  15308. \(fn)" t nil)
  15309. ;;;***
  15310. ;;;### (autoloads (org-export-as-odf-and-open org-export-as-odf org-export-odt-convert
  15311. ;;;;;; org-export-as-odt org-export-as-odt-batch org-export-as-odt-and-open)
  15312. ;;;;;; "org-odt" "org/org-odt.el" (20420 42151))
  15313. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-odt.el
  15314. (autoload 'org-export-as-odt-and-open "org-odt" "\
  15315. Export the outline as ODT and immediately open it with a browser.
  15316. If there is an active region, export only the region.
  15317. The prefix ARG specifies how many levels of the outline should become
  15318. headlines. The default is 3. Lower levels will become bulleted lists.
  15319. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  15320. (autoload 'org-export-as-odt-batch "org-odt" "\
  15321. Call the function `org-lparse-batch'.
  15322. This function can be used in batch processing as:
  15323. emacs --batch
  15324. --load=$HOME/lib/emacs/org.el
  15325. --eval \"(setq org-export-headline-levels 2)\"
  15326. --visit=MyFile --funcall org-export-as-odt-batch
  15327. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15328. (autoload 'org-export-as-odt "org-odt" "\
  15329. Export the outline as a OpenDocumentText file.
  15330. If there is an active region, export only the region. The prefix
  15331. ARG specifies how many levels of the outline should become
  15332. headlines. The default is 3. Lower levels will become bulleted
  15333. lists. HIDDEN is obsolete and does nothing.
  15334. EXT-PLIST is a property list with external parameters overriding
  15335. org-mode's default settings, but still inferior to file-local
  15336. settings. When TO-BUFFER is non-nil, create a buffer with that
  15337. name and export to that buffer. If TO-BUFFER is the symbol
  15338. `string', don't leave any buffer behind but just return the
  15339. resulting XML as a string. When BODY-ONLY is set, don't produce
  15340. the file header and footer, simply return the content of
  15341. <body>...</body>, without even the body tags themselves. When
  15342. PUB-DIR is set, use this as the publishing directory.
  15343. \(fn ARG &optional HIDDEN EXT-PLIST TO-BUFFER BODY-ONLY PUB-DIR)" t nil)
  15344. (autoload 'org-export-odt-convert "org-odt" "\
  15345. Convert IN-FILE to format OUT-FMT using a command line converter.
  15346. IN-FILE is the file to be converted. If unspecified, it defaults
  15347. to variable `buffer-file-name'. OUT-FMT is the desired output
  15348. format. Use `org-export-odt-convert-process' as the converter.
  15349. If PREFIX-ARG is non-nil then the newly converted file is opened
  15350. using `org-open-file'.
  15351. \(fn &optional IN-FILE OUT-FMT PREFIX-ARG)" t nil)
  15352. (autoload 'org-export-as-odf "org-odt" "\
  15353. Export LATEX-FRAG as OpenDocument formula file ODF-FILE.
  15354. Use `org-create-math-formula' to convert LATEX-FRAG first to
  15355. MathML. When invoked as an interactive command, use
  15356. `org-latex-regexps' to infer LATEX-FRAG from currently active
  15357. region. If no LaTeX fragments are found, prompt for it. Push
  15358. MathML source to kill ring, if `org-export-copy-to-kill-ring' is
  15359. non-nil.
  15360. \(fn LATEX-FRAG &optional ODF-FILE)" t nil)
  15361. (autoload 'org-export-as-odf-and-open "org-odt" "\
  15362. Export LaTeX fragment as OpenDocument formula and immediately open it.
  15363. Use `org-export-as-odf' to read LaTeX fragment and OpenDocument
  15364. formula file.
  15365. \(fn)" t nil)
  15366. ;;;***
  15367. ;;;### (autoloads (org-plot/gnuplot) "org-plot" "org/org-plot.el"
  15368. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  15369. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-plot.el
  15370. (autoload 'org-plot/gnuplot "org-plot" "\
  15371. Plot table using gnuplot. Gnuplot options can be specified with PARAMS.
  15372. If not given options will be taken from the +PLOT
  15373. line directly before or after the table.
  15374. \(fn &optional PARAMS)" t nil)
  15375. ;;;***
  15376. ;;;### (autoloads (org-publish-current-project org-publish-current-file
  15377. ;;;;;; org-publish-all org-publish) "org-publish" "org/org-publish.el"
  15378. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  15379. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-publish.el
  15380. (defalias 'org-publish-project 'org-publish)
  15381. (autoload 'org-publish "org-publish" "\
  15382. Publish PROJECT.
  15383. \(fn PROJECT &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  15384. (autoload 'org-publish-all "org-publish" "\
  15385. Publish all projects.
  15386. With prefix argument, remove all files in the timestamp
  15387. directory and force publishing all files.
  15388. \(fn &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  15389. (autoload 'org-publish-current-file "org-publish" "\
  15390. Publish the current file.
  15391. With prefix argument, force publish the file.
  15392. \(fn &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  15393. (autoload 'org-publish-current-project "org-publish" "\
  15394. Publish the project associated with the current file.
  15395. With a prefix argument, force publishing of all files in
  15396. the project.
  15397. \(fn &optional FORCE)" t nil)
  15398. ;;;***
  15399. ;;;### (autoloads (org-remember-handler org-remember org-remember-apply-template
  15400. ;;;;;; org-remember-annotation org-remember-insinuate) "org-remember"
  15401. ;;;;;; "org/org-remember.el" (20352 65510))
  15402. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-remember.el
  15403. (autoload 'org-remember-insinuate "org-remember" "\
  15404. Setup remember.el for use with Org-mode.
  15405. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15406. (autoload 'org-remember-annotation "org-remember" "\
  15407. Return a link to the current location as an annotation for remember.el.
  15408. If you are using Org-mode files as target for data storage with
  15409. remember.el, then the annotations should include a link compatible with the
  15410. conventions in Org-mode. This function returns such a link.
  15411. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15412. (autoload 'org-remember-apply-template "org-remember" "\
  15413. Initialize *remember* buffer with template, invoke `org-mode'.
  15414. This function should be placed into `remember-mode-hook' and in fact requires
  15415. to be run from that hook to function properly.
  15416. \(fn &optional USE-CHAR SKIP-INTERACTIVE)" nil nil)
  15417. (autoload 'org-remember "org-remember" "\
  15418. Call `remember'. If this is already a remember buffer, re-apply template.
  15419. If there is an active region, make sure remember uses it as initial content
  15420. of the remember buffer.
  15421. When called interactively with a \\[universal-argument] prefix argument GOTO, don't remember
  15422. anything, just go to the file/headline where the selected template usually
  15423. stores its notes. With a double prefix argument \\[universal-argument] \\[universal-argument], go to the last
  15424. note stored by remember.
  15425. Lisp programs can set ORG-FORCE-REMEMBER-TEMPLATE-CHAR to a character
  15426. associated with a template in `org-remember-templates'.
  15427. \(fn &optional GOTO ORG-FORCE-REMEMBER-TEMPLATE-CHAR)" t nil)
  15428. (autoload 'org-remember-handler "org-remember" "\
  15429. Store stuff from remember.el into an org file.
  15430. When the template has specified a file and a headline, the entry is filed
  15431. there, or in the location defined by `org-default-notes-file' and
  15432. `org-remember-default-headline'.
  15433. \\<org-remember-mode-map>
  15434. If no defaults have been defined, or if the current prefix argument
  15435. is 1 (using C-1 \\[org-remember-finalize] to exit remember), an interactive
  15436. process is used to select the target location.
  15437. When the prefix is 0 (i.e. when remember is exited with C-0 \\[org-remember-finalize]),
  15438. the entry is filed to the same location as the previous note.
  15439. When the prefix is 2 (i.e. when remember is exited with C-2 \\[org-remember-finalize]),
  15440. the entry is filed as a subentry of the entry where the clock is
  15441. currently running.
  15442. When \\[universal-argument] has been used as prefix argument, the
  15443. note is stored and Emacs moves point to the new location of the
  15444. note, so that editing can be continued there (similar to
  15445. inserting \"%&\" into the template).
  15446. Before storing the note, the function ensures that the text has an
  15447. org-mode-style headline, i.e. a first line that starts with
  15448. a \"*\". If not, a headline is constructed from the current date and
  15449. some additional data.
  15450. If the variable `org-adapt-indentation' is non-nil, the entire text is
  15451. also indented so that it starts in the same column as the headline
  15452. \(i.e. after the stars).
  15453. See also the variable `org-reverse-note-order'.
  15454. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15455. ;;;***
  15456. ;;;### (autoloads (org-table-to-lisp orgtbl-mode turn-on-orgtbl)
  15457. ;;;;;; "org-table" "org/org-table.el" (20404 23547))
  15458. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-table.el
  15459. (autoload 'turn-on-orgtbl "org-table" "\
  15460. Unconditionally turn on `orgtbl-mode'.
  15461. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15462. (autoload 'orgtbl-mode "org-table" "\
  15463. The `org-mode' table editor as a minor mode for use in other modes.
  15464. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  15465. (autoload 'org-table-to-lisp "org-table" "\
  15466. Convert the table at point to a Lisp structure.
  15467. The structure will be a list. Each item is either the symbol `hline'
  15468. for a horizontal separator line, or a list of field values as strings.
  15469. The table is taken from the parameter TXT, or from the buffer at point.
  15470. \(fn &optional TXT)" nil nil)
  15471. ;;;***
  15472. ;;;### (autoloads (org-export-as-taskjuggler-and-open org-export-as-taskjuggler)
  15473. ;;;;;; "org-taskjuggler" "org/org-taskjuggler.el" (20352 65510))
  15474. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-taskjuggler.el
  15475. (autoload 'org-export-as-taskjuggler "org-taskjuggler" "\
  15476. Export parts of the current buffer as a TaskJuggler file.
  15477. The exporter looks for a tree with tag, property or todo that
  15478. matches `org-export-taskjuggler-project-tag' and takes this as
  15479. the tasks for this project. The first node of this tree defines
  15480. the project properties such as project name and project period.
  15481. If there is a tree with tag, property or todo that matches
  15482. `org-export-taskjuggler-resource-tag' this three is taken as
  15483. resources for the project. If no resources are specified, a
  15484. default resource is created and allocated to the project. Also
  15485. the taskjuggler project will be created with default reports as
  15486. defined in `org-export-taskjuggler-default-reports'.
  15487. \(fn)" t nil)
  15488. (autoload 'org-export-as-taskjuggler-and-open "org-taskjuggler" "\
  15489. Export the current buffer as a TaskJuggler file and open it
  15490. with the TaskJuggler GUI.
  15491. \(fn)" t nil)
  15492. ;;;***
  15493. ;;;### (autoloads (org-timer-set-timer org-timer-item org-timer-change-times-in-region
  15494. ;;;;;; org-timer org-timer-start) "org-timer" "org/org-timer.el"
  15495. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  15496. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-timer.el
  15497. (autoload 'org-timer-start "org-timer" "\
  15498. Set the starting time for the relative timer to now.
  15499. When called with prefix argument OFFSET, prompt the user for an offset time,
  15500. with the default taken from a timer stamp at point, if any.
  15501. If OFFSET is a string or an integer, it is directly taken to be the offset
  15502. without user interaction.
  15503. When called with a double prefix arg, all timer strings in the active
  15504. region will be shifted by a specific amount. You will be prompted for
  15505. the amount, with the default to make the first timer string in
  15506. the region 0:00:00.
  15507. \(fn &optional OFFSET)" t nil)
  15508. (autoload 'org-timer "org-timer" "\
  15509. Insert a H:MM:SS string from the timer into the buffer.
  15510. The first time this command is used, the timer is started. When used with
  15511. a \\[universal-argument] prefix, force restarting the timer.
  15512. When used with a double prefix argument \\[universal-argument], change all the timer string
  15513. in the region by a fixed amount. This can be used to recalibrate a timer
  15514. that was not started at the correct moment.
  15515. If NO-INSERT-P is non-nil, return the string instead of inserting
  15516. it in the buffer.
  15517. \(fn &optional RESTART NO-INSERT-P)" t nil)
  15518. (autoload 'org-timer-change-times-in-region "org-timer" "\
  15519. Change all h:mm:ss time in region by a DELTA.
  15520. \(fn BEG END DELTA)" t nil)
  15521. (autoload 'org-timer-item "org-timer" "\
  15522. Insert a description-type item with the current timer value.
  15523. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  15524. (autoload 'org-timer-set-timer "org-timer" "\
  15525. Prompt for a duration and set a timer.
  15526. If `org-timer-default-timer' is not zero, suggest this value as
  15527. the default duration for the timer. If a timer is already set,
  15528. prompt the user if she wants to replace it.
  15529. Called with a numeric prefix argument, use this numeric value as
  15530. the duration of the timer.
  15531. Called with a `C-u' prefix arguments, use `org-timer-default-timer'
  15532. without prompting the user for a duration.
  15533. With two `C-u' prefix arguments, use `org-timer-default-timer'
  15534. without prompting the user for a duration and automatically
  15535. replace any running timer.
  15536. \(fn &optional OPT)" t nil)
  15537. ;;;***
  15538. ;;;### (autoloads (org-export-as-xoxo) "org-xoxo" "org/org-xoxo.el"
  15539. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  15540. ;;; Generated autoloads from org/org-xoxo.el
  15541. (autoload 'org-export-as-xoxo "org-xoxo" "\
  15542. Export the org buffer as XOXO.
  15543. The XOXO buffer is named *xoxo-<source buffer name>*
  15544. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  15545. ;;;***
  15546. ;;;### (autoloads (outline-minor-mode outline-mode) "outline" "outline.el"
  15547. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  15548. ;;; Generated autoloads from outline.el
  15549. (put 'outline-regexp 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  15550. (put 'outline-heading-end-regexp 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  15551. (autoload 'outline-mode "outline" "\
  15552. Set major mode for editing outlines with selective display.
  15553. Headings are lines which start with asterisks: one for major headings,
  15554. two for subheadings, etc. Lines not starting with asterisks are body lines.
  15555. Body text or subheadings under a heading can be made temporarily
  15556. invisible, or visible again. Invisible lines are attached to the end
  15557. of the heading, so they move with it, if the line is killed and yanked
  15558. back. A heading with text hidden under it is marked with an ellipsis (...).
  15559. Commands:\\<outline-mode-map>
  15560. \\[outline-next-visible-heading] outline-next-visible-heading move by visible headings
  15561. \\[outline-previous-visible-heading] outline-previous-visible-heading
  15562. \\[outline-forward-same-level] outline-forward-same-level similar but skip subheadings
  15563. \\[outline-backward-same-level] outline-backward-same-level
  15564. \\[outline-up-heading] outline-up-heading move from subheading to heading
  15565. \\[hide-body] make all text invisible (not headings).
  15566. \\[show-all] make everything in buffer visible.
  15567. \\[hide-sublevels] make only the first N levels of headers visible.
  15568. The remaining commands are used when point is on a heading line.
  15569. They apply to some of the body or subheadings of that heading.
  15570. \\[hide-subtree] hide-subtree make body and subheadings invisible.
  15571. \\[show-subtree] show-subtree make body and subheadings visible.
  15572. \\[show-children] show-children make direct subheadings visible.
  15573. No effect on body, or subheadings 2 or more levels down.
  15574. With arg N, affects subheadings N levels down.
  15575. \\[hide-entry] make immediately following body invisible.
  15576. \\[show-entry] make it visible.
  15577. \\[hide-leaves] make body under heading and under its subheadings invisible.
  15578. The subheadings remain visible.
  15579. \\[show-branches] make all subheadings at all levels visible.
  15580. The variable `outline-regexp' can be changed to control what is a heading.
  15581. A line is a heading if `outline-regexp' matches something at the
  15582. beginning of the line. The longer the match, the deeper the level.
  15583. Turning on outline mode calls the value of `text-mode-hook' and then of
  15584. `outline-mode-hook', if they are non-nil.
  15585. \(fn)" t nil)
  15586. (autoload 'outline-minor-mode "outline" "\
  15587. Toggle Outline minor mode.
  15588. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Outline minor mode if ARG is
  15589. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  15590. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  15591. See the command `outline-mode' for more information on this mode.
  15592. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  15593. (put 'outline-level 'risky-local-variable t)
  15594. ;;;***
  15595. ;;;### (autoloads (list-packages describe-package package-initialize
  15596. ;;;;;; package-refresh-contents package-install-file package-install-from-buffer
  15597. ;;;;;; package-install package-enable-at-startup) "package" "emacs-lisp/package.el"
  15598. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  15599. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/package.el
  15600. (defvar package-enable-at-startup t "\
  15601. Whether to activate installed packages when Emacs starts.
  15602. If non-nil, packages are activated after reading the init file
  15603. and before `after-init-hook'. Activation is not done if
  15604. `user-init-file' is nil (e.g. Emacs was started with \"-q\").
  15605. Even if the value is nil, you can type \\[package-initialize] to
  15606. activate the package system at any time.")
  15607. (custom-autoload 'package-enable-at-startup "package" t)
  15608. (autoload 'package-install "package" "\
  15609. Install the package named NAME.
  15610. NAME should be the name of one of the available packages in an
  15611. archive in `package-archives'. Interactively, prompt for NAME.
  15612. \(fn NAME)" t nil)
  15613. (autoload 'package-install-from-buffer "package" "\
  15614. Install a package from the current buffer.
  15615. When called interactively, the current buffer is assumed to be a
  15616. single .el file that follows the packaging guidelines; see info
  15617. node `(elisp)Packaging'.
  15618. When called from Lisp, PKG-INFO is a vector describing the
  15619. information, of the type returned by `package-buffer-info'; and
  15620. TYPE is the package type (either `single' or `tar').
  15621. \(fn PKG-INFO TYPE)" t nil)
  15622. (autoload 'package-install-file "package" "\
  15623. Install a package from a file.
  15624. The file can either be a tar file or an Emacs Lisp file.
  15625. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  15626. (autoload 'package-refresh-contents "package" "\
  15627. Download the ELPA archive description if needed.
  15628. This informs Emacs about the latest versions of all packages, and
  15629. makes them available for download.
  15630. \(fn)" t nil)
  15631. (autoload 'package-initialize "package" "\
  15632. Load Emacs Lisp packages, and activate them.
  15633. The variable `package-load-list' controls which packages to load.
  15634. If optional arg NO-ACTIVATE is non-nil, don't activate packages.
  15635. \(fn &optional NO-ACTIVATE)" t nil)
  15636. (autoload 'describe-package "package" "\
  15637. Display the full documentation of PACKAGE (a symbol).
  15638. \(fn PACKAGE)" t nil)
  15639. (autoload 'list-packages "package" "\
  15640. Display a list of packages.
  15641. This first fetches the updated list of packages before
  15642. displaying, unless a prefix argument NO-FETCH is specified.
  15643. The list is displayed in a buffer named `*Packages*'.
  15644. \(fn &optional NO-FETCH)" t nil)
  15645. (defalias 'package-list-packages 'list-packages)
  15646. ;;;***
  15647. ;;;### (autoloads (show-paren-mode) "paren" "paren.el" (20400 62402))
  15648. ;;; Generated autoloads from paren.el
  15649. (defvar show-paren-mode nil "\
  15650. Non-nil if Show-Paren mode is enabled.
  15651. See the command `show-paren-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  15652. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  15653. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  15654. or call the function `show-paren-mode'.")
  15655. (custom-autoload 'show-paren-mode "paren" nil)
  15656. (autoload 'show-paren-mode "paren" "\
  15657. Toggle visualization of matching parens (Show Paren mode).
  15658. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Show Paren mode if ARG is
  15659. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  15660. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  15661. Show Paren mode is a global minor mode. When enabled, any
  15662. matching parenthesis is highlighted in `show-paren-style' after
  15663. `show-paren-delay' seconds of Emacs idle time.
  15664. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  15665. ;;;***
  15666. ;;;### (autoloads (parse-time-string) "parse-time" "calendar/parse-time.el"
  15667. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  15668. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/parse-time.el
  15669. (put 'parse-time-rules 'risky-local-variable t)
  15670. (autoload 'parse-time-string "parse-time" "\
  15671. Parse the time-string STRING into (SEC MIN HOUR DAY MON YEAR DOW DST TZ).
  15672. The values are identical to those of `decode-time', but any values that are
  15673. unknown are returned as nil.
  15674. \(fn STRING)" nil nil)
  15675. ;;;***
  15676. ;;;### (autoloads (pascal-mode) "pascal" "progmodes/pascal.el" (20400
  15677. ;;;;;; 62402))
  15678. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/pascal.el
  15679. (autoload 'pascal-mode "pascal" "\
  15680. Major mode for editing Pascal code. \\<pascal-mode-map>
  15681. TAB indents for Pascal code. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  15682. \\[completion-at-point] completes the word around current point with respect to position in code
  15683. \\[completion-help-at-point] shows all possible completions at this point.
  15684. Other useful functions are:
  15685. \\[pascal-mark-defun] - Mark function.
  15686. \\[pascal-insert-block] - insert begin ... end;
  15687. \\[pascal-star-comment] - insert (* ... *)
  15688. \\[pascal-comment-area] - Put marked area in a comment, fixing nested comments.
  15689. \\[pascal-uncomment-area] - Uncomment an area commented with \\[pascal-comment-area].
  15690. \\[pascal-beg-of-defun] - Move to beginning of current function.
  15691. \\[pascal-end-of-defun] - Move to end of current function.
  15692. \\[pascal-goto-defun] - Goto function prompted for in the minibuffer.
  15693. \\[pascal-outline-mode] - Enter `pascal-outline-mode'.
  15694. Variables controlling indentation/edit style:
  15695. `pascal-indent-level' (default 3)
  15696. Indentation of Pascal statements with respect to containing block.
  15697. `pascal-case-indent' (default 2)
  15698. Indentation for case statements.
  15699. `pascal-auto-newline' (default nil)
  15700. Non-nil means automatically newline after semicolons and the punctuation
  15701. mark after an end.
  15702. `pascal-indent-nested-functions' (default t)
  15703. Non-nil means nested functions are indented.
  15704. `pascal-tab-always-indent' (default t)
  15705. Non-nil means TAB in Pascal mode should always reindent the current line,
  15706. regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
  15707. `pascal-auto-endcomments' (default t)
  15708. Non-nil means a comment { ... } is set after the ends which ends cases and
  15709. functions. The name of the function or case will be set between the braces.
  15710. `pascal-auto-lineup' (default t)
  15711. List of contexts where auto lineup of :'s or ='s should be done.
  15712. See also the user variables `pascal-type-keywords', `pascal-start-keywords' and
  15713. `pascal-separator-keywords'.
  15714. Turning on Pascal mode calls the value of the variable pascal-mode-hook with
  15715. no args, if that value is non-nil.
  15716. \(fn)" t nil)
  15717. ;;;***
  15718. ;;;### (autoloads (password-in-cache-p password-cache-expiry password-cache)
  15719. ;;;;;; "password-cache" "password-cache.el" (20352 65510))
  15720. ;;; Generated autoloads from password-cache.el
  15721. (defvar password-cache t "\
  15722. Whether to cache passwords.")
  15723. (custom-autoload 'password-cache "password-cache" t)
  15724. (defvar password-cache-expiry 16 "\
  15725. How many seconds passwords are cached, or nil to disable expiring.
  15726. Whether passwords are cached at all is controlled by `password-cache'.")
  15727. (custom-autoload 'password-cache-expiry "password-cache" t)
  15728. (autoload 'password-in-cache-p "password-cache" "\
  15729. Check if KEY is in the cache.
  15730. \(fn KEY)" nil nil)
  15731. ;;;***
  15732. ;;;### (autoloads (pcase-let pcase-let* pcase) "pcase" "emacs-lisp/pcase.el"
  15733. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  15734. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/pcase.el
  15735. (autoload 'pcase "pcase" "\
  15736. Perform ML-style pattern matching on EXP.
  15737. CASES is a list of elements of the form (UPATTERN CODE...).
  15738. UPatterns can take the following forms:
  15739. _ matches anything.
  15740. SYMBOL matches anything and binds it to SYMBOL.
  15741. (or UPAT...) matches if any of the patterns matches.
  15742. (and UPAT...) matches if all the patterns match.
  15743. `QPAT matches if the QPattern QPAT matches.
  15744. (pred PRED) matches if PRED applied to the object returns non-nil.
  15745. (guard BOOLEXP) matches if BOOLEXP evaluates to non-nil.
  15746. (let UPAT EXP) matches if EXP matches UPAT.
  15747. If a SYMBOL is used twice in the same pattern (i.e. the pattern is
  15748. \"non-linear\"), then the second occurrence is turned into an `eq'uality test.
  15749. QPatterns can take the following forms:
  15750. (QPAT1 . QPAT2) matches if QPAT1 matches the car and QPAT2 the cdr.
  15751. ,UPAT matches if the UPattern UPAT matches.
  15752. STRING matches if the object is `equal' to STRING.
  15753. ATOM matches if the object is `eq' to ATOM.
  15754. QPatterns for vectors are not implemented yet.
  15755. PRED can take the form
  15756. FUNCTION in which case it gets called with one argument.
  15757. (FUN ARG1 .. ARGN) in which case it gets called with N+1 arguments.
  15758. A PRED of the form FUNCTION is equivalent to one of the form (FUNCTION).
  15759. PRED patterns can refer to variables bound earlier in the pattern.
  15760. E.g. you can match pairs where the cdr is larger than the car with a pattern
  15761. like `(,a . ,(pred (< a))) or, with more checks:
  15762. `(,(and a (pred numberp)) . ,(and (pred numberp) (pred (< a))))
  15763. \(fn EXP &rest CASES)" nil (quote macro))
  15764. (put 'pcase 'lisp-indent-function '1)
  15765. (autoload 'pcase-let* "pcase" "\
  15766. Like `let*' but where you can use `pcase' patterns for bindings.
  15767. BODY should be an expression, and BINDINGS should be a list of bindings
  15768. of the form (UPAT EXP).
  15769. \(fn BINDINGS &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  15770. (put 'pcase-let* 'lisp-indent-function '1)
  15771. (autoload 'pcase-let "pcase" "\
  15772. Like `let' but where you can use `pcase' patterns for bindings.
  15773. BODY should be a list of expressions, and BINDINGS should be a list of bindings
  15774. of the form (UPAT EXP).
  15775. \(fn BINDINGS &rest BODY)" nil (quote macro))
  15776. (put 'pcase-let 'lisp-indent-function '1)
  15777. ;;;***
  15778. ;;;### (autoloads (pcomplete/cvs) "pcmpl-cvs" "pcmpl-cvs.el" (20352
  15779. ;;;;;; 65510))
  15780. ;;; Generated autoloads from pcmpl-cvs.el
  15781. (autoload 'pcomplete/cvs "pcmpl-cvs" "\
  15782. Completion rules for the `cvs' command.
  15783. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15784. ;;;***
  15785. ;;;### (autoloads (pcomplete/tar pcomplete/make pcomplete/bzip2 pcomplete/gzip)
  15786. ;;;;;; "pcmpl-gnu" "pcmpl-gnu.el" (20352 65510))
  15787. ;;; Generated autoloads from pcmpl-gnu.el
  15788. (autoload 'pcomplete/gzip "pcmpl-gnu" "\
  15789. Completion for `gzip'.
  15790. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15791. (autoload 'pcomplete/bzip2 "pcmpl-gnu" "\
  15792. Completion for `bzip2'.
  15793. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15794. (autoload 'pcomplete/make "pcmpl-gnu" "\
  15795. Completion for GNU `make'.
  15796. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15797. (autoload 'pcomplete/tar "pcmpl-gnu" "\
  15798. Completion for the GNU tar utility.
  15799. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15800. (defalias 'pcomplete/gdb 'pcomplete/xargs)
  15801. ;;;***
  15802. ;;;### (autoloads (pcomplete/mount pcomplete/umount pcomplete/kill)
  15803. ;;;;;; "pcmpl-linux" "pcmpl-linux.el" (20352 65510))
  15804. ;;; Generated autoloads from pcmpl-linux.el
  15805. (autoload 'pcomplete/kill "pcmpl-linux" "\
  15806. Completion for GNU/Linux `kill', using /proc filesystem.
  15807. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15808. (autoload 'pcomplete/umount "pcmpl-linux" "\
  15809. Completion for GNU/Linux `umount'.
  15810. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15811. (autoload 'pcomplete/mount "pcmpl-linux" "\
  15812. Completion for GNU/Linux `mount'.
  15813. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15814. ;;;***
  15815. ;;;### (autoloads (pcomplete/rpm) "pcmpl-rpm" "pcmpl-rpm.el" (20352
  15816. ;;;;;; 65510))
  15817. ;;; Generated autoloads from pcmpl-rpm.el
  15818. (autoload 'pcomplete/rpm "pcmpl-rpm" "\
  15819. Completion for the `rpm' command.
  15820. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15821. ;;;***
  15822. ;;;### (autoloads (pcomplete/scp pcomplete/ssh pcomplete/chgrp pcomplete/chown
  15823. ;;;;;; pcomplete/which pcomplete/xargs pcomplete/rm pcomplete/rmdir
  15824. ;;;;;; pcomplete/cd) "pcmpl-unix" "pcmpl-unix.el" (20400 62402))
  15825. ;;; Generated autoloads from pcmpl-unix.el
  15826. (autoload 'pcomplete/cd "pcmpl-unix" "\
  15827. Completion for `cd'.
  15828. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15829. (defalias 'pcomplete/pushd 'pcomplete/cd)
  15830. (autoload 'pcomplete/rmdir "pcmpl-unix" "\
  15831. Completion for `rmdir'.
  15832. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15833. (autoload 'pcomplete/rm "pcmpl-unix" "\
  15834. Completion for `rm'.
  15835. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15836. (autoload 'pcomplete/xargs "pcmpl-unix" "\
  15837. Completion for `xargs'.
  15838. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15839. (defalias 'pcomplete/time 'pcomplete/xargs)
  15840. (autoload 'pcomplete/which "pcmpl-unix" "\
  15841. Completion for `which'.
  15842. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15843. (autoload 'pcomplete/chown "pcmpl-unix" "\
  15844. Completion for the `chown' command.
  15845. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15846. (autoload 'pcomplete/chgrp "pcmpl-unix" "\
  15847. Completion for the `chgrp' command.
  15848. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15849. (autoload 'pcomplete/ssh "pcmpl-unix" "\
  15850. Completion rules for the `ssh' command.
  15851. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15852. (autoload 'pcomplete/scp "pcmpl-unix" "\
  15853. Completion rules for the `scp' command.
  15854. Includes files as well as host names followed by a colon.
  15855. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15856. ;;;***
  15857. ;;;### (autoloads (pcomplete-shell-setup pcomplete-comint-setup pcomplete-list
  15858. ;;;;;; pcomplete-help pcomplete-expand pcomplete-continue pcomplete-expand-and-complete
  15859. ;;;;;; pcomplete-reverse pcomplete) "pcomplete" "pcomplete.el" (20400
  15860. ;;;;;; 62402))
  15861. ;;; Generated autoloads from pcomplete.el
  15862. (autoload 'pcomplete "pcomplete" "\
  15863. Support extensible programmable completion.
  15864. To use this function, just bind the TAB key to it, or add it to your
  15865. completion functions list (it should occur fairly early in the list).
  15866. \(fn &optional INTERACTIVELY)" t nil)
  15867. (autoload 'pcomplete-reverse "pcomplete" "\
  15868. If cycling completion is in use, cycle backwards.
  15869. \(fn)" t nil)
  15870. (autoload 'pcomplete-expand-and-complete "pcomplete" "\
  15871. Expand the textual value of the current argument.
  15872. This will modify the current buffer.
  15873. \(fn)" t nil)
  15874. (autoload 'pcomplete-continue "pcomplete" "\
  15875. Complete without reference to any cycling completions.
  15876. \(fn)" t nil)
  15877. (autoload 'pcomplete-expand "pcomplete" "\
  15878. Expand the textual value of the current argument.
  15879. This will modify the current buffer.
  15880. \(fn)" t nil)
  15881. (autoload 'pcomplete-help "pcomplete" "\
  15882. Display any help information relative to the current argument.
  15883. \(fn)" t nil)
  15884. (autoload 'pcomplete-list "pcomplete" "\
  15885. Show the list of possible completions for the current argument.
  15886. \(fn)" t nil)
  15887. (autoload 'pcomplete-comint-setup "pcomplete" "\
  15888. Setup a comint buffer to use pcomplete.
  15889. COMPLETEF-SYM should be the symbol where the
  15890. dynamic-complete-functions are kept. For comint mode itself,
  15891. this is `comint-dynamic-complete-functions'.
  15892. \(fn COMPLETEF-SYM)" nil nil)
  15893. (autoload 'pcomplete-shell-setup "pcomplete" "\
  15894. Setup `shell-mode' to use pcomplete.
  15895. \(fn)" nil nil)
  15896. ;;;***
  15897. ;;;### (autoloads (cvs-dired-use-hook cvs-dired-action cvs-status
  15898. ;;;;;; cvs-update cvs-examine cvs-quickdir cvs-checkout) "pcvs"
  15899. ;;;;;; "vc/pcvs.el" (20400 62402))
  15900. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/pcvs.el
  15901. (autoload 'cvs-checkout "pcvs" "\
  15902. Run a 'cvs checkout MODULES' in DIR.
  15903. Feed the output to a *cvs* buffer, display it in the current window,
  15904. and run `cvs-mode' on it.
  15905. With a prefix argument, prompt for cvs FLAGS to use.
  15906. \(fn MODULES DIR FLAGS &optional ROOT)" t nil)
  15907. (autoload 'cvs-quickdir "pcvs" "\
  15908. Open a *cvs* buffer on DIR without running cvs.
  15909. With a prefix argument, prompt for a directory to use.
  15910. A prefix arg >8 (ex: \\[universal-argument] \\[universal-argument]),
  15911. prevents reuse of an existing *cvs* buffer.
  15912. Optional argument NOSHOW if non-nil means not to display the buffer.
  15913. FLAGS is ignored.
  15914. \(fn DIR &optional FLAGS NOSHOW)" t nil)
  15915. (autoload 'cvs-examine "pcvs" "\
  15916. Run a `cvs -n update' in the specified DIRECTORY.
  15917. That is, check what needs to be done, but don't change the disc.
  15918. Feed the output to a *cvs* buffer and run `cvs-mode' on it.
  15919. With a prefix argument, prompt for a directory and cvs FLAGS to use.
  15920. A prefix arg >8 (ex: \\[universal-argument] \\[universal-argument]),
  15921. prevents reuse of an existing *cvs* buffer.
  15922. Optional argument NOSHOW if non-nil means not to display the buffer.
  15923. \(fn DIRECTORY FLAGS &optional NOSHOW)" t nil)
  15924. (autoload 'cvs-update "pcvs" "\
  15925. Run a `cvs update' in the current working DIRECTORY.
  15926. Feed the output to a *cvs* buffer and run `cvs-mode' on it.
  15927. With a \\[universal-argument] prefix argument, prompt for a directory to use.
  15928. A prefix arg >8 (ex: \\[universal-argument] \\[universal-argument]),
  15929. prevents reuse of an existing *cvs* buffer.
  15930. The prefix is also passed to `cvs-flags-query' to select the FLAGS
  15931. passed to cvs.
  15932. \(fn DIRECTORY FLAGS)" t nil)
  15933. (autoload 'cvs-status "pcvs" "\
  15934. Run a `cvs status' in the current working DIRECTORY.
  15935. Feed the output to a *cvs* buffer and run `cvs-mode' on it.
  15936. With a prefix argument, prompt for a directory and cvs FLAGS to use.
  15937. A prefix arg >8 (ex: \\[universal-argument] \\[universal-argument]),
  15938. prevents reuse of an existing *cvs* buffer.
  15939. Optional argument NOSHOW if non-nil means not to display the buffer.
  15940. \(fn DIRECTORY FLAGS &optional NOSHOW)" t nil)
  15941. (defvar cvs-dired-action 'cvs-quickdir "\
  15942. The action to be performed when opening a CVS directory.
  15943. Sensible values are `cvs-examine', `cvs-status' and `cvs-quickdir'.")
  15944. (custom-autoload 'cvs-dired-action "pcvs" t)
  15945. (defvar cvs-dired-use-hook '(4) "\
  15946. Whether or not opening a CVS directory should run PCL-CVS.
  15947. A value of nil means never do it.
  15948. ALWAYS means to always do it unless a prefix argument is given to the
  15949. command that prompted the opening of the directory.
  15950. Anything else means to do it only if the prefix arg is equal to this value.")
  15951. (custom-autoload 'cvs-dired-use-hook "pcvs" t)
  15952. (defun cvs-dired-noselect (dir) "\
  15953. Run `cvs-examine' if DIR is a CVS administrative directory.
  15954. The exact behavior is determined also by `cvs-dired-use-hook'." (when (stringp dir) (setq dir (directory-file-name dir)) (when (and (string= "CVS" (file-name-nondirectory dir)) (file-readable-p (expand-file-name "Entries" dir)) cvs-dired-use-hook (if (eq cvs-dired-use-hook (quote always)) (not current-prefix-arg) (equal current-prefix-arg cvs-dired-use-hook))) (save-excursion (funcall cvs-dired-action (file-name-directory dir) t t)))))
  15955. ;;;***
  15956. ;;;### (autoloads nil "pcvs-defs" "vc/pcvs-defs.el" (20400 62402))
  15957. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/pcvs-defs.el
  15958. (defvar cvs-global-menu (let ((m (make-sparse-keymap "PCL-CVS"))) (define-key m [status] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Directory Status") cvs-status :help ,(purecopy "A more verbose status of a workarea"))) (define-key m [checkout] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Checkout Module") cvs-checkout :help ,(purecopy "Check out a module from the repository"))) (define-key m [update] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Update Directory") cvs-update :help ,(purecopy "Fetch updates from the repository"))) (define-key m [examine] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Examine Directory") cvs-examine :help ,(purecopy "Examine the current state of a workarea"))) (fset 'cvs-global-menu m)) "\
  15959. Global menu used by PCL-CVS.")
  15960. ;;;***
  15961. ;;;### (autoloads (perl-mode) "perl-mode" "progmodes/perl-mode.el"
  15962. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  15963. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/perl-mode.el
  15964. (put 'perl-indent-level 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  15965. (put 'perl-continued-statement-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  15966. (put 'perl-continued-brace-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  15967. (put 'perl-brace-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  15968. (put 'perl-brace-imaginary-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  15969. (put 'perl-label-offset 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  15970. (autoload 'perl-mode "perl-mode" "\
  15971. Major mode for editing Perl code.
  15972. Expression and list commands understand all Perl brackets.
  15973. Tab indents for Perl code.
  15974. Comments are delimited with # ... \\n.
  15975. Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
  15976. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  15977. \\{perl-mode-map}
  15978. Variables controlling indentation style:
  15979. `perl-tab-always-indent'
  15980. Non-nil means TAB in Perl mode should always indent the current line,
  15981. regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
  15982. `perl-tab-to-comment'
  15983. Non-nil means that for lines which don't need indenting, TAB will
  15984. either delete an empty comment, indent an existing comment, move
  15985. to end-of-line, or if at end-of-line already, create a new comment.
  15986. `perl-nochange'
  15987. Lines starting with this regular expression are not auto-indented.
  15988. `perl-indent-level'
  15989. Indentation of Perl statements within surrounding block.
  15990. The surrounding block's indentation is the indentation
  15991. of the line on which the open-brace appears.
  15992. `perl-continued-statement-offset'
  15993. Extra indentation given to a substatement, such as the
  15994. then-clause of an if or body of a while.
  15995. `perl-continued-brace-offset'
  15996. Extra indentation given to a brace that starts a substatement.
  15997. This is in addition to `perl-continued-statement-offset'.
  15998. `perl-brace-offset'
  15999. Extra indentation for line if it starts with an open brace.
  16000. `perl-brace-imaginary-offset'
  16001. An open brace following other text is treated as if it were
  16002. this far to the right of the start of its line.
  16003. `perl-label-offset'
  16004. Extra indentation for line that is a label.
  16005. `perl-indent-continued-arguments'
  16006. Offset of argument lines relative to usual indentation.
  16007. Various indentation styles: K&R BSD BLK GNU LW
  16008. perl-indent-level 5 8 0 2 4
  16009. perl-continued-statement-offset 5 8 4 2 4
  16010. perl-continued-brace-offset 0 0 0 0 -4
  16011. perl-brace-offset -5 -8 0 0 0
  16012. perl-brace-imaginary-offset 0 0 4 0 0
  16013. perl-label-offset -5 -8 -2 -2 -2
  16014. Turning on Perl mode runs the normal hook `perl-mode-hook'.
  16015. \(fn)" t nil)
  16016. ;;;***
  16017. ;;;### (autoloads (picture-mode) "picture" "textmodes/picture.el"
  16018. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  16019. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/picture.el
  16020. (autoload 'picture-mode "picture" "\
  16021. Switch to Picture mode, in which a quarter-plane screen model is used.
  16022. \\<picture-mode-map>
  16023. Printing characters replace instead of inserting themselves with motion
  16024. afterwards settable by these commands:
  16025. Move left after insertion: \\[picture-movement-left]
  16026. Move right after insertion: \\[picture-movement-right]
  16027. Move up after insertion: \\[picture-movement-up]
  16028. Move down after insertion: \\[picture-movement-down]
  16029. Move northwest (nw) after insertion: \\[picture-movement-nw]
  16030. Move northeast (ne) after insertion: \\[picture-movement-ne]
  16031. Move southwest (sw) after insertion: \\[picture-movement-sw]
  16032. Move southeast (se) after insertion: \\[picture-movement-se]
  16033. Move westnorthwest (wnw) after insertion: C-u \\[picture-movement-nw]
  16034. Move eastnortheast (ene) after insertion: C-u \\[picture-movement-ne]
  16035. Move westsouthwest (wsw) after insertion: C-u \\[picture-movement-sw]
  16036. Move eastsoutheast (ese) after insertion: C-u \\[picture-movement-se]
  16037. The current direction is displayed in the mode line. The initial
  16038. direction is right. Whitespace is inserted and tabs are changed to
  16039. spaces when required by movement. You can move around in the buffer
  16040. with these commands:
  16041. Move vertically to SAME column in previous line: \\[picture-move-down]
  16042. Move vertically to SAME column in next line: \\[picture-move-up]
  16043. Move to column following last
  16044. non-whitespace character: \\[picture-end-of-line]
  16045. Move right, inserting spaces if required: \\[picture-forward-column]
  16046. Move left changing tabs to spaces if required: \\[picture-backward-column]
  16047. Move in direction of current picture motion: \\[picture-motion]
  16048. Move opposite to current picture motion: \\[picture-motion-reverse]
  16049. Move to beginning of next line: \\[next-line]
  16050. You can edit tabular text with these commands:
  16051. Move to column beneath (or at) next interesting
  16052. character (see variable `picture-tab-chars'): \\[picture-tab-search]
  16053. Move to next stop in tab stop list: \\[picture-tab]
  16054. Set tab stops according to context of this line: \\[picture-set-tab-stops]
  16055. (With ARG, resets tab stops to default value.)
  16056. Change the tab stop list: \\[edit-tab-stops]
  16057. You can manipulate text with these commands:
  16058. Clear ARG columns after point without moving: \\[picture-clear-column]
  16059. Delete char at point: \\[picture-delete-char]
  16060. Clear ARG columns backward: \\[picture-backward-clear-column]
  16061. Clear ARG lines, advancing over them: \\[picture-clear-line]
  16062. (the cleared text is saved in the kill ring)
  16063. Open blank line(s) beneath current line: \\[picture-open-line]
  16064. You can manipulate rectangles with these commands:
  16065. Clear a rectangle and save it: \\[picture-clear-rectangle]
  16066. Clear a rectangle, saving in a named register: \\[picture-clear-rectangle-to-register]
  16067. Insert currently saved rectangle at point: \\[picture-yank-rectangle]
  16068. Insert rectangle from named register: \\[picture-yank-rectangle-from-register]
  16069. Draw a rectangular box around mark and point: \\[picture-draw-rectangle]
  16070. Copies a rectangle to a register: \\[copy-rectangle-to-register]
  16071. Undo effects of rectangle overlay commands: \\[undo]
  16072. You can return to the previous mode with \\[picture-mode-exit], which
  16073. also strips trailing whitespace from every line. Stripping is suppressed
  16074. by supplying an argument.
  16075. Entry to this mode calls the value of `picture-mode-hook' if non-nil.
  16076. Note that Picture mode commands will work outside of Picture mode, but
  16077. they are not by default assigned to keys.
  16078. \(fn)" t nil)
  16079. (defalias 'edit-picture 'picture-mode)
  16080. ;;;***
  16081. ;;;### (autoloads (plstore-open) "plstore" "gnus/plstore.el" (20400
  16082. ;;;;;; 62402))
  16083. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/plstore.el
  16084. (autoload 'plstore-open "plstore" "\
  16085. Create a plstore instance associated with FILE.
  16086. \(fn FILE)" nil nil)
  16087. ;;;***
  16088. ;;;### (autoloads (po-find-file-coding-system) "po" "textmodes/po.el"
  16089. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  16090. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/po.el
  16091. (autoload 'po-find-file-coding-system "po" "\
  16092. Return a (DECODING . ENCODING) pair, according to PO file's charset.
  16093. Called through `file-coding-system-alist', before the file is visited for real.
  16094. \(fn ARG-LIST)" nil nil)
  16095. ;;;***
  16096. ;;;### (autoloads (pong) "pong" "play/pong.el" (20352 65510))
  16097. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/pong.el
  16098. (autoload 'pong "pong" "\
  16099. Play pong and waste time.
  16100. This is an implementation of the classical game pong.
  16101. Move left and right bats and try to bounce the ball to your opponent.
  16102. pong-mode keybindings:\\<pong-mode-map>
  16103. \\{pong-mode-map}
  16104. \(fn)" t nil)
  16105. ;;;***
  16106. ;;;### (autoloads (pop3-movemail) "pop3" "gnus/pop3.el" (20352 65510))
  16107. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/pop3.el
  16108. (autoload 'pop3-movemail "pop3" "\
  16109. Transfer contents of a maildrop to the specified FILE.
  16110. Use streaming commands.
  16111. \(fn FILE)" nil nil)
  16112. ;;;***
  16113. ;;;### (autoloads (pp-macroexpand-last-sexp pp-eval-last-sexp pp-macroexpand-expression
  16114. ;;;;;; pp-eval-expression pp pp-buffer pp-to-string) "pp" "emacs-lisp/pp.el"
  16115. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  16116. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/pp.el
  16117. (autoload 'pp-to-string "pp" "\
  16118. Return a string containing the pretty-printed representation of OBJECT.
  16119. OBJECT can be any Lisp object. Quoting characters are used as needed
  16120. to make output that `read' can handle, whenever this is possible.
  16121. \(fn OBJECT)" nil nil)
  16122. (autoload 'pp-buffer "pp" "\
  16123. Prettify the current buffer with printed representation of a Lisp object.
  16124. \(fn)" nil nil)
  16125. (autoload 'pp "pp" "\
  16126. Output the pretty-printed representation of OBJECT, any Lisp object.
  16127. Quoting characters are printed as needed to make output that `read'
  16128. can handle, whenever this is possible.
  16129. Output stream is STREAM, or value of `standard-output' (which see).
  16130. \(fn OBJECT &optional STREAM)" nil nil)
  16131. (autoload 'pp-eval-expression "pp" "\
  16132. Evaluate EXPRESSION and pretty-print its value.
  16133. Also add the value to the front of the list in the variable `values'.
  16134. \(fn EXPRESSION)" t nil)
  16135. (autoload 'pp-macroexpand-expression "pp" "\
  16136. Macroexpand EXPRESSION and pretty-print its value.
  16137. \(fn EXPRESSION)" t nil)
  16138. (autoload 'pp-eval-last-sexp "pp" "\
  16139. Run `pp-eval-expression' on sexp before point.
  16140. With argument, pretty-print output into current buffer.
  16141. Ignores leading comment characters.
  16142. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  16143. (autoload 'pp-macroexpand-last-sexp "pp" "\
  16144. Run `pp-macroexpand-expression' on sexp before point.
  16145. With argument, pretty-print output into current buffer.
  16146. Ignores leading comment characters.
  16147. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  16148. ;;;***
  16149. ;;;### (autoloads (pr-txt-fast-fire pr-ps-fast-fire pr-show-lpr-setup
  16150. ;;;;;; pr-show-pr-setup pr-show-ps-setup pr-ps-utility pr-txt-name
  16151. ;;;;;; pr-ps-name pr-help lpr-customize pr-customize pr-toggle-mode
  16152. ;;;;;; pr-toggle-region pr-toggle-lock pr-toggle-header-frame pr-toggle-header
  16153. ;;;;;; pr-toggle-zebra pr-toggle-line pr-toggle-upside-down pr-toggle-landscape
  16154. ;;;;;; pr-toggle-tumble pr-toggle-duplex pr-toggle-spool pr-toggle-faces
  16155. ;;;;;; pr-toggle-ghostscript pr-toggle-file-landscape pr-toggle-file-tumble
  16156. ;;;;;; pr-toggle-file-duplex pr-ps-file-up-ps-print pr-ps-file-ps-print
  16157. ;;;;;; pr-ps-file-print pr-ps-file-using-ghostscript pr-ps-file-up-preview
  16158. ;;;;;; pr-ps-file-preview pr-despool-ps-print pr-despool-print pr-despool-using-ghostscript
  16159. ;;;;;; pr-despool-preview pr-txt-mode pr-txt-region pr-txt-buffer
  16160. ;;;;;; pr-txt-directory pr-printify-region pr-printify-buffer pr-printify-directory
  16161. ;;;;;; pr-ps-mode-ps-print pr-ps-mode-print pr-ps-mode-using-ghostscript
  16162. ;;;;;; pr-ps-mode-preview pr-ps-region-ps-print pr-ps-region-print
  16163. ;;;;;; pr-ps-region-using-ghostscript pr-ps-region-preview pr-ps-buffer-ps-print
  16164. ;;;;;; pr-ps-buffer-print pr-ps-buffer-using-ghostscript pr-ps-buffer-preview
  16165. ;;;;;; pr-ps-directory-ps-print pr-ps-directory-print pr-ps-directory-using-ghostscript
  16166. ;;;;;; pr-ps-directory-preview pr-interface) "printing" "printing.el"
  16167. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  16168. ;;; Generated autoloads from printing.el
  16169. (autoload 'pr-interface "printing" "\
  16170. Activate the printing interface buffer.
  16171. If BUFFER is nil, the current buffer is used for printing.
  16172. For more information, type \\[pr-interface-help].
  16173. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  16174. (autoload 'pr-ps-directory-preview "printing" "\
  16175. Preview directory using ghostview.
  16176. Interactively, the command prompts for N-UP printing number, a directory, a
  16177. file name regexp for matching and, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the
  16178. command prompts the user for a file name, and saves the PostScript image in
  16179. that file instead of saving it in a temporary file.
  16180. Noninteractively, if N-UP is nil, prompts for N-UP printing number. If DIR is
  16181. nil, prompts for DIRectory. If FILE-REGEXP is nil, prompts for
  16182. FILE(name)-REGEXP. The argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it's nil,
  16183. save the image in a temporary file. If FILENAME is a string, save the
  16184. PostScript image in a file with that name. If FILENAME is t, prompts for a
  16185. file name.
  16186. See also documentation for `pr-list-directory'.
  16187. \(fn N-UP DIR FILE-REGEXP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16188. (autoload 'pr-ps-directory-using-ghostscript "printing" "\
  16189. Print directory using PostScript through ghostscript.
  16190. Interactively, the command prompts for N-UP printing number, a directory, a
  16191. file name regexp for matching and, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the
  16192. command prompts the user for a file name, and saves the PostScript image in
  16193. that file instead of saving it in a temporary file.
  16194. Noninteractively, if N-UP is nil, prompts for N-UP printing number. If DIR is
  16195. nil, prompts for DIRectory. If FILE-REGEXP is nil, prompts for
  16196. FILE(name)-REGEXP. The argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it's nil,
  16197. save the image in a temporary file. If FILENAME is a string, save the
  16198. PostScript image in a file with that name. If FILENAME is t, prompts for a
  16199. file name.
  16200. See also documentation for `pr-list-directory'.
  16201. \(fn N-UP DIR FILE-REGEXP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16202. (autoload 'pr-ps-directory-print "printing" "\
  16203. Print directory using PostScript printer.
  16204. Interactively, the command prompts for N-UP printing number, a directory, a
  16205. file name regexp for matching and, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the
  16206. command prompts the user for a file name, and saves the PostScript image in
  16207. that file instead of saving it in a temporary file.
  16208. Noninteractively, if N-UP is nil, prompts for N-UP printing number. If DIR is
  16209. nil, prompts for DIRectory. If FILE-REGEXP is nil, prompts for
  16210. FILE(name)-REGEXP. The argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it's nil,
  16211. save the image in a temporary file. If FILENAME is a string, save the
  16212. PostScript image in a file with that name. If FILENAME is t, prompts for a
  16213. file name.
  16214. See also documentation for `pr-list-directory'.
  16215. \(fn N-UP DIR FILE-REGEXP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16216. (autoload 'pr-ps-directory-ps-print "printing" "\
  16217. Print directory using PostScript printer or through ghostscript.
  16218. It depends on `pr-print-using-ghostscript'.
  16219. Interactively, the command prompts for N-UP printing number, a directory, a
  16220. file name regexp for matching and, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the
  16221. command prompts the user for a file name, and saves the PostScript image in
  16222. that file instead of saving it in a temporary file.
  16223. Noninteractively, if N-UP is nil, prompts for N-UP printing number. If DIR is
  16224. nil, prompts for DIRectory. If FILE-REGEXP is nil, prompts for
  16225. FILE(name)-REGEXP. The argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it's nil,
  16226. save the image in a temporary file. If FILENAME is a string, save the
  16227. PostScript image in a file with that name. If FILENAME is t, prompts for a
  16228. file name.
  16229. See also documentation for `pr-list-directory'.
  16230. \(fn N-UP DIR FILE-REGEXP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16231. (autoload 'pr-ps-buffer-preview "printing" "\
  16232. Preview buffer using ghostview.
  16233. Interactively, the command prompts for N-UP printing number and, when you use a
  16234. prefix argument (C-u), the command prompts the user for a file name, and saves
  16235. the PostScript image in that file instead of saving it in a temporary file.
  16236. Noninteractively, if N-UP is nil, prompts for N-UP printing number. The
  16237. argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it's nil, save the image in a
  16238. temporary file. If FILENAME is a string, save the PostScript image in a file
  16239. with that name. If FILENAME is t, prompts for a file name.
  16240. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16241. (autoload 'pr-ps-buffer-using-ghostscript "printing" "\
  16242. Print buffer using PostScript through ghostscript.
  16243. Interactively, the command prompts for N-UP printing number and, when you use a
  16244. prefix argument (C-u), the command prompts the user for a file name, and saves
  16245. the PostScript image in that file instead of sending it to the printer.
  16246. Noninteractively, if N-UP is nil, prompts for N-UP printing number. The
  16247. argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it's nil, send the image to the
  16248. printer. If FILENAME is a string, save the PostScript image in a file with
  16249. that name. If FILENAME is t, prompts for a file name.
  16250. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16251. (autoload 'pr-ps-buffer-print "printing" "\
  16252. Print buffer using PostScript printer.
  16253. Interactively, the command prompts for N-UP printing number and, when you use a
  16254. prefix argument (C-u), the command prompts the user for a file name, and saves
  16255. the PostScript image in that file instead of sending it to the printer.
  16256. Noninteractively, if N-UP is nil, prompts for N-UP printing number. The
  16257. argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it's nil, send the image to the
  16258. printer. If FILENAME is a string, save the PostScript image in a file with
  16259. that name. If FILENAME is t, prompts for a file name.
  16260. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16261. (autoload 'pr-ps-buffer-ps-print "printing" "\
  16262. Print buffer using PostScript printer or through ghostscript.
  16263. It depends on `pr-print-using-ghostscript'.
  16264. Interactively, the command prompts for N-UP printing number and, when you use a
  16265. prefix argument (C-u), the command prompts the user for a file name, and saves
  16266. the PostScript image in that file instead of sending it to the printer.
  16267. Noninteractively, if N-UP is nil, prompts for N-UP printing number. The
  16268. argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it's nil, send the image to the
  16269. printer. If FILENAME is a string, save the PostScript image in a file with
  16270. that name. If FILENAME is t, prompts for a file name.
  16271. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16272. (autoload 'pr-ps-region-preview "printing" "\
  16273. Preview region using ghostview.
  16274. See also `pr-ps-buffer-preview'.
  16275. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16276. (autoload 'pr-ps-region-using-ghostscript "printing" "\
  16277. Print region using PostScript through ghostscript.
  16278. See also `pr-ps-buffer-using-ghostscript'.
  16279. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16280. (autoload 'pr-ps-region-print "printing" "\
  16281. Print region using PostScript printer.
  16282. See also `pr-ps-buffer-print'.
  16283. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16284. (autoload 'pr-ps-region-ps-print "printing" "\
  16285. Print region using PostScript printer or through ghostscript.
  16286. See also `pr-ps-buffer-ps-print'.
  16287. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16288. (autoload 'pr-ps-mode-preview "printing" "\
  16289. Preview major mode using ghostview.
  16290. See also `pr-ps-buffer-preview'.
  16291. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16292. (autoload 'pr-ps-mode-using-ghostscript "printing" "\
  16293. Print major mode using PostScript through ghostscript.
  16294. See also `pr-ps-buffer-using-ghostscript'.
  16295. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16296. (autoload 'pr-ps-mode-print "printing" "\
  16297. Print major mode using PostScript printer.
  16298. See also `pr-ps-buffer-print'.
  16299. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16300. (autoload 'pr-ps-mode-ps-print "printing" "\
  16301. Print major mode using PostScript or through ghostscript.
  16302. See also `pr-ps-buffer-ps-print'.
  16303. \(fn N-UP &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16304. (autoload 'pr-printify-directory "printing" "\
  16305. Replace nonprinting characters in directory with printable representations.
  16306. The printable representations use ^ (for ASCII control characters) or hex.
  16307. The characters tab, linefeed, space, return and formfeed are not affected.
  16308. Interactively, the command prompts for a directory and a file name regexp for
  16309. matching.
  16310. Noninteractively, if DIR is nil, prompts for DIRectory. If FILE-REGEXP is nil,
  16311. prompts for FILE(name)-REGEXP.
  16312. See also documentation for `pr-list-directory'.
  16313. \(fn &optional DIR FILE-REGEXP)" t nil)
  16314. (autoload 'pr-printify-buffer "printing" "\
  16315. Replace nonprinting characters in buffer with printable representations.
  16316. The printable representations use ^ (for ASCII control characters) or hex.
  16317. The characters tab, linefeed, space, return and formfeed are not affected.
  16318. \(fn)" t nil)
  16319. (autoload 'pr-printify-region "printing" "\
  16320. Replace nonprinting characters in region with printable representations.
  16321. The printable representations use ^ (for ASCII control characters) or hex.
  16322. The characters tab, linefeed, space, return and formfeed are not affected.
  16323. \(fn)" t nil)
  16324. (autoload 'pr-txt-directory "printing" "\
  16325. Print directory using text printer.
  16326. Interactively, the command prompts for a directory and a file name regexp for
  16327. matching.
  16328. Noninteractively, if DIR is nil, prompts for DIRectory. If FILE-REGEXP is nil,
  16329. prompts for FILE(name)-REGEXP.
  16330. See also documentation for `pr-list-directory'.
  16331. \(fn &optional DIR FILE-REGEXP)" t nil)
  16332. (autoload 'pr-txt-buffer "printing" "\
  16333. Print buffer using text printer.
  16334. \(fn)" t nil)
  16335. (autoload 'pr-txt-region "printing" "\
  16336. Print region using text printer.
  16337. \(fn)" t nil)
  16338. (autoload 'pr-txt-mode "printing" "\
  16339. Print major mode using text printer.
  16340. \(fn)" t nil)
  16341. (autoload 'pr-despool-preview "printing" "\
  16342. Preview spooled PostScript.
  16343. Interactively, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the command prompts the
  16344. user for a file name, and saves the spooled PostScript image in that file
  16345. instead of saving it in a temporary file.
  16346. Noninteractively, the argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it is nil,
  16347. save the image in a temporary file. If FILENAME is a string, save the
  16348. PostScript image in a file with that name.
  16349. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16350. (autoload 'pr-despool-using-ghostscript "printing" "\
  16351. Print spooled PostScript using ghostscript.
  16352. Interactively, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the command prompts the
  16353. user for a file name, and saves the spooled PostScript image in that file
  16354. instead of sending it to the printer.
  16355. Noninteractively, the argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it is nil,
  16356. send the image to the printer. If FILENAME is a string, save the PostScript
  16357. image in a file with that name.
  16358. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16359. (autoload 'pr-despool-print "printing" "\
  16360. Send the spooled PostScript to the printer.
  16361. Interactively, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the command prompts the
  16362. user for a file name, and saves the spooled PostScript image in that file
  16363. instead of sending it to the printer.
  16364. Noninteractively, the argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it is nil,
  16365. send the image to the printer. If FILENAME is a string, save the PostScript
  16366. image in a file with that name.
  16367. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16368. (autoload 'pr-despool-ps-print "printing" "\
  16369. Send the spooled PostScript to the printer or use ghostscript to print it.
  16370. Interactively, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the command prompts the
  16371. user for a file name, and saves the spooled PostScript image in that file
  16372. instead of sending it to the printer.
  16373. Noninteractively, the argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it is nil,
  16374. send the image to the printer. If FILENAME is a string, save the PostScript
  16375. image in a file with that name.
  16376. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16377. (autoload 'pr-ps-file-preview "printing" "\
  16378. Preview PostScript file FILENAME.
  16379. \(fn FILENAME)" t nil)
  16380. (autoload 'pr-ps-file-up-preview "printing" "\
  16381. Preview PostScript file FILENAME.
  16382. \(fn N-UP IFILENAME &optional OFILENAME)" t nil)
  16383. (autoload 'pr-ps-file-using-ghostscript "printing" "\
  16384. Print PostScript file FILENAME using ghostscript.
  16385. \(fn FILENAME)" t nil)
  16386. (autoload 'pr-ps-file-print "printing" "\
  16387. Print PostScript file FILENAME.
  16388. \(fn FILENAME)" t nil)
  16389. (autoload 'pr-ps-file-ps-print "printing" "\
  16390. Send PostScript file FILENAME to printer or use ghostscript to print it.
  16391. \(fn FILENAME)" t nil)
  16392. (autoload 'pr-ps-file-up-ps-print "printing" "\
  16393. Process a PostScript file IFILENAME and send it to printer.
  16394. Interactively, the command prompts for N-UP printing number, for an input
  16395. PostScript file IFILENAME and, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the
  16396. command prompts the user for an output PostScript file name OFILENAME, and
  16397. saves the PostScript image in that file instead of sending it to the printer.
  16398. Noninteractively, if N-UP is nil, prompts for N-UP printing number. The
  16399. argument IFILENAME is treated as follows: if it's t, prompts for an input
  16400. PostScript file name; otherwise, it *must* be a string that it's an input
  16401. PostScript file name. The argument OFILENAME is treated as follows: if it's
  16402. nil, send the image to the printer. If OFILENAME is a string, save the
  16403. PostScript image in a file with that name. If OFILENAME is t, prompts for a
  16404. file name.
  16405. \(fn N-UP IFILENAME &optional OFILENAME)" t nil)
  16406. (autoload 'pr-toggle-file-duplex "printing" "\
  16407. Toggle duplex for PostScript file.
  16408. \(fn)" t nil)
  16409. (autoload 'pr-toggle-file-tumble "printing" "\
  16410. Toggle tumble for PostScript file.
  16411. If tumble is off, produces a printing suitable for binding on the left or
  16412. right.
  16413. If tumble is on, produces a printing suitable for binding at the top or
  16414. bottom.
  16415. \(fn)" t nil)
  16416. (autoload 'pr-toggle-file-landscape "printing" "\
  16417. Toggle landscape for PostScript file.
  16418. \(fn)" t nil)
  16419. (autoload 'pr-toggle-ghostscript "printing" "\
  16420. Toggle printing using ghostscript.
  16421. \(fn)" t nil)
  16422. (autoload 'pr-toggle-faces "printing" "\
  16423. Toggle printing with faces.
  16424. \(fn)" t nil)
  16425. (autoload 'pr-toggle-spool "printing" "\
  16426. Toggle spooling.
  16427. \(fn)" t nil)
  16428. (autoload 'pr-toggle-duplex "printing" "\
  16429. Toggle duplex.
  16430. \(fn)" t nil)
  16431. (autoload 'pr-toggle-tumble "printing" "\
  16432. Toggle tumble.
  16433. If tumble is off, produces a printing suitable for binding on the left or
  16434. right.
  16435. If tumble is on, produces a printing suitable for binding at the top or
  16436. bottom.
  16437. \(fn)" t nil)
  16438. (autoload 'pr-toggle-landscape "printing" "\
  16439. Toggle landscape.
  16440. \(fn)" t nil)
  16441. (autoload 'pr-toggle-upside-down "printing" "\
  16442. Toggle upside-down.
  16443. \(fn)" t nil)
  16444. (autoload 'pr-toggle-line "printing" "\
  16445. Toggle line number.
  16446. \(fn)" t nil)
  16447. (autoload 'pr-toggle-zebra "printing" "\
  16448. Toggle zebra stripes.
  16449. \(fn)" t nil)
  16450. (autoload 'pr-toggle-header "printing" "\
  16451. Toggle printing header.
  16452. \(fn)" t nil)
  16453. (autoload 'pr-toggle-header-frame "printing" "\
  16454. Toggle printing header frame.
  16455. \(fn)" t nil)
  16456. (autoload 'pr-toggle-lock "printing" "\
  16457. Toggle menu lock.
  16458. \(fn)" t nil)
  16459. (autoload 'pr-toggle-region "printing" "\
  16460. Toggle whether the region is automagically detected.
  16461. \(fn)" t nil)
  16462. (autoload 'pr-toggle-mode "printing" "\
  16463. Toggle auto mode.
  16464. \(fn)" t nil)
  16465. (autoload 'pr-customize "printing" "\
  16466. Customization of the `printing' group.
  16467. \(fn &rest IGNORE)" t nil)
  16468. (autoload 'lpr-customize "printing" "\
  16469. Customization of the `lpr' group.
  16470. \(fn &rest IGNORE)" t nil)
  16471. (autoload 'pr-help "printing" "\
  16472. Help for the printing package.
  16473. \(fn &rest IGNORE)" t nil)
  16474. (autoload 'pr-ps-name "printing" "\
  16475. Interactively select a PostScript printer.
  16476. \(fn)" t nil)
  16477. (autoload 'pr-txt-name "printing" "\
  16478. Interactively select a text printer.
  16479. \(fn)" t nil)
  16480. (autoload 'pr-ps-utility "printing" "\
  16481. Interactively select a PostScript utility.
  16482. \(fn)" t nil)
  16483. (autoload 'pr-show-ps-setup "printing" "\
  16484. Show current ps-print settings.
  16485. \(fn &rest IGNORE)" t nil)
  16486. (autoload 'pr-show-pr-setup "printing" "\
  16487. Show current printing settings.
  16488. \(fn &rest IGNORE)" t nil)
  16489. (autoload 'pr-show-lpr-setup "printing" "\
  16490. Show current lpr settings.
  16491. \(fn &rest IGNORE)" t nil)
  16492. (autoload 'pr-ps-fast-fire "printing" "\
  16493. Fast fire function for PostScript printing.
  16494. If a region is active, the region will be printed instead of the whole buffer.
  16495. Also if the current major-mode is defined in `pr-mode-alist', the settings in
  16496. `pr-mode-alist' will be used, that is, the current buffer or region will be
  16497. printed using `pr-ps-mode-ps-print'.
  16498. Interactively, you have the following situations:
  16499. M-x pr-ps-fast-fire RET
  16500. The command prompts the user for a N-UP value and printing will
  16501. immediately be done using the current active printer.
  16502. C-u M-x pr-ps-fast-fire RET
  16503. C-u 0 M-x pr-ps-fast-fire RET
  16504. The command prompts the user for a N-UP value and also for a current
  16505. PostScript printer, then printing will immediately be done using the new
  16506. current active printer.
  16507. C-u 1 M-x pr-ps-fast-fire RET
  16508. The command prompts the user for a N-UP value and also for a file name,
  16509. and saves the PostScript image in that file instead of sending it to the
  16510. printer.
  16511. C-u 2 M-x pr-ps-fast-fire RET
  16512. The command prompts the user for a N-UP value, then for a current
  16513. PostScript printer and, finally, for a file name. Then change the active
  16514. printer to that chosen by user and saves the PostScript image in
  16515. that file instead of sending it to the printer.
  16516. Noninteractively, the argument N-UP should be a positive integer greater than
  16517. zero and the argument SELECT is treated as follows:
  16518. If it's nil, send the image to the printer.
  16519. If it's a list or an integer lesser or equal to zero, the command prompts
  16520. the user for a current PostScript printer, then printing will immediately
  16521. be done using the new current active printer.
  16522. If it's an integer equal to 1, the command prompts the user for a file name
  16523. and saves the PostScript image in that file instead of sending it to the
  16524. printer.
  16525. If it's an integer greater or equal to 2, the command prompts the user for a
  16526. current PostScript printer and for a file name. Then change the active
  16527. printer to that chosen by user and saves the PostScript image in that file
  16528. instead of sending it to the printer.
  16529. If it's a symbol which it's defined in `pr-ps-printer-alist', it's the new
  16530. active printer and printing will immediately be done using the new active
  16531. printer.
  16532. Otherwise, send the image to the printer.
  16533. Note that this command always behaves as if `pr-auto-region' and `pr-auto-mode'
  16534. are both set to t.
  16535. \(fn N-UP &optional SELECT)" t nil)
  16536. (autoload 'pr-txt-fast-fire "printing" "\
  16537. Fast fire function for text printing.
  16538. If a region is active, the region will be printed instead of the whole buffer.
  16539. Also if the current major-mode is defined in `pr-mode-alist', the settings in
  16540. `pr-mode-alist' will be used, that is, the current buffer or region will be
  16541. printed using `pr-txt-mode'.
  16542. Interactively, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the command prompts the
  16543. user for a new active text printer.
  16544. Noninteractively, the argument SELECT-PRINTER is treated as follows:
  16545. If it's nil, the printing is sent to the current active text printer.
  16546. If it's a symbol which it's defined in `pr-txt-printer-alist', it's the new
  16547. active printer and printing will immediately be done using the new active
  16548. printer.
  16549. If it's non-nil, the command prompts the user for a new active text printer.
  16550. Note that this command always behaves as if `pr-auto-region' and `pr-auto-mode'
  16551. are both set to t.
  16552. \(fn &optional SELECT-PRINTER)" t nil)
  16553. ;;;***
  16554. ;;;### (autoloads (proced) "proced" "proced.el" (20352 65510))
  16555. ;;; Generated autoloads from proced.el
  16556. (autoload 'proced "proced" "\
  16557. Generate a listing of UNIX system processes.
  16558. If invoked with optional ARG the window displaying the process
  16559. information will be displayed but not selected.
  16560. Runs the normal hook `proced-post-display-hook'.
  16561. See `proced-mode' for a description of features available in Proced buffers.
  16562. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  16563. ;;;***
  16564. ;;;### (autoloads (run-prolog mercury-mode prolog-mode) "prolog"
  16565. ;;;;;; "progmodes/prolog.el" (20400 62402))
  16566. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/prolog.el
  16567. (autoload 'prolog-mode "prolog" "\
  16568. Major mode for editing Prolog code.
  16569. Blank lines and `%%...' separate paragraphs. `%'s starts a comment
  16570. line and comments can also be enclosed in /* ... */.
  16571. If an optional argument SYSTEM is non-nil, set up mode for the given system.
  16572. To find out what version of Prolog mode you are running, enter
  16573. `\\[prolog-mode-version]'.
  16574. Commands:
  16575. \\{prolog-mode-map}
  16576. Entry to this mode calls the value of `prolog-mode-hook'
  16577. if that value is non-nil.
  16578. \(fn)" t nil)
  16579. (autoload 'mercury-mode "prolog" "\
  16580. Major mode for editing Mercury programs.
  16581. Actually this is just customized `prolog-mode'.
  16582. \(fn)" t nil)
  16583. (autoload 'run-prolog "prolog" "\
  16584. Run an inferior Prolog process, input and output via buffer *prolog*.
  16585. With prefix argument ARG, restart the Prolog process if running before.
  16586. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  16587. ;;;***
  16588. ;;;### (autoloads (bdf-directory-list) "ps-bdf" "ps-bdf.el" (20352
  16589. ;;;;;; 65510))
  16590. ;;; Generated autoloads from ps-bdf.el
  16591. (defvar bdf-directory-list (if (memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt)) (list (expand-file-name "fonts/bdf" installation-directory)) '("/usr/local/share/emacs/fonts/bdf")) "\
  16592. List of directories to search for `BDF' font files.
  16593. The default value is '(\"/usr/local/share/emacs/fonts/bdf\").")
  16594. (custom-autoload 'bdf-directory-list "ps-bdf" t)
  16595. ;;;***
  16596. ;;;### (autoloads (ps-mode) "ps-mode" "progmodes/ps-mode.el" (20400
  16597. ;;;;;; 62402))
  16598. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ps-mode.el
  16599. (autoload 'ps-mode "ps-mode" "\
  16600. Major mode for editing PostScript with GNU Emacs.
  16601. Entry to this mode calls `ps-mode-hook'.
  16602. The following variables hold user options, and can
  16603. be set through the `customize' command:
  16604. `ps-mode-auto-indent'
  16605. `ps-mode-tab'
  16606. `ps-mode-paper-size'
  16607. `ps-mode-print-function'
  16608. `ps-run-prompt'
  16609. `ps-run-font-lock-keywords-2'
  16610. `ps-run-x'
  16611. `ps-run-dumb'
  16612. `ps-run-init'
  16613. `ps-run-error-line-numbers'
  16614. `ps-run-tmp-dir'
  16615. Type \\[describe-variable] for documentation on these options.
  16616. \\{ps-mode-map}
  16617. When starting an interactive PostScript process with \\[ps-run-start],
  16618. a second window will be displayed, and `ps-run-mode-hook' will be called.
  16619. The keymap for this second window is:
  16620. \\{ps-run-mode-map}
  16621. When Ghostscript encounters an error it displays an error message
  16622. with a file position. Clicking mouse-2 on this number will bring
  16623. point to the corresponding spot in the PostScript window, if input
  16624. to the interpreter was sent from that window.
  16625. Typing \\<ps-run-mode-map>\\[ps-run-goto-error] when the cursor is at the number has the same effect.
  16626. \(fn)" t nil)
  16627. ;;;***
  16628. ;;;### (autoloads (ps-extend-face ps-extend-face-list ps-setup ps-nb-pages-region
  16629. ;;;;;; ps-nb-pages-buffer ps-line-lengths ps-despool ps-spool-region-with-faces
  16630. ;;;;;; ps-spool-region ps-spool-buffer-with-faces ps-spool-buffer
  16631. ;;;;;; ps-print-region-with-faces ps-print-region ps-print-buffer-with-faces
  16632. ;;;;;; ps-print-buffer ps-print-customize ps-print-color-p ps-paper-type
  16633. ;;;;;; ps-page-dimensions-database) "ps-print" "ps-print.el" (20352
  16634. ;;;;;; 65510))
  16635. ;;; Generated autoloads from ps-print.el
  16636. (defvar ps-page-dimensions-database (purecopy (list (list 'a4 (/ (* 72 21.0) 2.54) (/ (* 72 29.7) 2.54) "A4") (list 'a3 (/ (* 72 29.7) 2.54) (/ (* 72 42.0) 2.54) "A3") (list 'letter (* 72 8.5) (* 72 11.0) "Letter") (list 'legal (* 72 8.5) (* 72 14.0) "Legal") (list 'letter-small (* 72 7.68) (* 72 10.16) "LetterSmall") (list 'tabloid (* 72 11.0) (* 72 17.0) "Tabloid") (list 'ledger (* 72 17.0) (* 72 11.0) "Ledger") (list 'statement (* 72 5.5) (* 72 8.5) "Statement") (list 'executive (* 72 7.5) (* 72 10.0) "Executive") (list 'a4small (* 72 7.47) (* 72 10.85) "A4Small") (list 'b4 (* 72 10.125) (* 72 14.33) "B4") (list 'b5 (* 72 7.16) (* 72 10.125) "B5") '(addresslarge 236.0 99.0 "AddressLarge") '(addresssmall 236.0 68.0 "AddressSmall") '(cuthanging13 90.0 222.0 "CutHanging13") '(cuthanging15 90.0 114.0 "CutHanging15") '(diskette 181.0 136.0 "Diskette") '(eurofilefolder 139.0 112.0 "EuropeanFilefolder") '(eurofoldernarrow 526.0 107.0 "EuroFolderNarrow") '(eurofolderwide 526.0 136.0 "EuroFolderWide") '(euronamebadge 189.0 108.0 "EuroNameBadge") '(euronamebadgelarge 223.0 136.0 "EuroNameBadgeLarge") '(filefolder 230.0 37.0 "FileFolder") '(jewelry 76.0 136.0 "Jewelry") '(mediabadge 180.0 136.0 "MediaBadge") '(multipurpose 126.0 68.0 "MultiPurpose") '(retaillabel 90.0 104.0 "RetailLabel") '(shipping 271.0 136.0 "Shipping") '(slide35mm 26.0 104.0 "Slide35mm") '(spine8mm 187.0 26.0 "Spine8mm") '(topcoated 425.19685 136.0 "TopCoatedPaper") '(topcoatedpaper 396.0 136.0 "TopcoatedPaper150") '(vhsface 205.0 127.0 "VHSFace") '(vhsspine 400.0 50.0 "VHSSpine") '(zipdisk 156.0 136.0 "ZipDisk"))) "\
  16637. List associating a symbolic paper type to its width, height and doc media.
  16638. See `ps-paper-type'.")
  16639. (custom-autoload 'ps-page-dimensions-database "ps-print" t)
  16640. (defvar ps-paper-type 'letter "\
  16641. Specify the size of paper to format for.
  16642. Should be one of the paper types defined in `ps-page-dimensions-database', for
  16643. example `letter', `legal' or `a4'.")
  16644. (custom-autoload 'ps-paper-type "ps-print" t)
  16645. (defvar ps-print-color-p (or (fboundp 'x-color-values) (fboundp 'color-instance-rgb-components)) "\
  16646. Specify how buffer's text color is printed.
  16647. Valid values are:
  16648. nil Do not print colors.
  16649. t Print colors.
  16650. black-white Print colors on black/white printer.
  16651. See also `ps-black-white-faces'.
  16652. Any other value is treated as t.")
  16653. (custom-autoload 'ps-print-color-p "ps-print" t)
  16654. (autoload 'ps-print-customize "ps-print" "\
  16655. Customization of ps-print group.
  16656. \(fn)" t nil)
  16657. (autoload 'ps-print-buffer "ps-print" "\
  16658. Generate and print a PostScript image of the buffer.
  16659. Interactively, when you use a prefix argument (\\[universal-argument]), the command prompts the
  16660. user for a file name, and saves the PostScript image in that file instead of
  16661. sending it to the printer.
  16662. Noninteractively, the argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it is nil,
  16663. send the image to the printer. If FILENAME is a string, save the PostScript
  16664. image in a file with that name.
  16665. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16666. (autoload 'ps-print-buffer-with-faces "ps-print" "\
  16667. Generate and print a PostScript image of the buffer.
  16668. Like `ps-print-buffer', but includes font, color, and underline information in
  16669. the generated image. This command works only if you are using a window system,
  16670. so it has a way to determine color values.
  16671. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16672. (autoload 'ps-print-region "ps-print" "\
  16673. Generate and print a PostScript image of the region.
  16674. Like `ps-print-buffer', but prints just the current region.
  16675. \(fn FROM TO &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16676. (autoload 'ps-print-region-with-faces "ps-print" "\
  16677. Generate and print a PostScript image of the region.
  16678. Like `ps-print-region', but includes font, color, and underline information in
  16679. the generated image. This command works only if you are using a window system,
  16680. so it has a way to determine color values.
  16681. \(fn FROM TO &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16682. (autoload 'ps-spool-buffer "ps-print" "\
  16683. Generate and spool a PostScript image of the buffer.
  16684. Like `ps-print-buffer' except that the PostScript image is saved in a local
  16685. buffer to be sent to the printer later.
  16686. Use the command `ps-despool' to send the spooled images to the printer.
  16687. \(fn)" t nil)
  16688. (autoload 'ps-spool-buffer-with-faces "ps-print" "\
  16689. Generate and spool a PostScript image of the buffer.
  16690. Like `ps-spool-buffer', but includes font, color, and underline information in
  16691. the generated image. This command works only if you are using a window system,
  16692. so it has a way to determine color values.
  16693. Use the command `ps-despool' to send the spooled images to the printer.
  16694. \(fn)" t nil)
  16695. (autoload 'ps-spool-region "ps-print" "\
  16696. Generate a PostScript image of the region and spool locally.
  16697. Like `ps-spool-buffer', but spools just the current region.
  16698. Use the command `ps-despool' to send the spooled images to the printer.
  16699. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  16700. (autoload 'ps-spool-region-with-faces "ps-print" "\
  16701. Generate a PostScript image of the region and spool locally.
  16702. Like `ps-spool-region', but includes font, color, and underline information in
  16703. the generated image. This command works only if you are using a window system,
  16704. so it has a way to determine color values.
  16705. Use the command `ps-despool' to send the spooled images to the printer.
  16706. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  16707. (autoload 'ps-despool "ps-print" "\
  16708. Send the spooled PostScript to the printer.
  16709. Interactively, when you use a prefix argument (\\[universal-argument]), the command prompts the
  16710. user for a file name, and saves the spooled PostScript image in that file
  16711. instead of sending it to the printer.
  16712. Noninteractively, the argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it is nil,
  16713. send the image to the printer. If FILENAME is a string, save the PostScript
  16714. image in a file with that name.
  16715. \(fn &optional FILENAME)" t nil)
  16716. (autoload 'ps-line-lengths "ps-print" "\
  16717. Display the correspondence between a line length and a font size.
  16718. Done using the current ps-print setup.
  16719. Try: pr -t file | awk '{printf \"%3d %s
  16720. \", length($0), $0}' | sort -r | head
  16721. \(fn)" t nil)
  16722. (autoload 'ps-nb-pages-buffer "ps-print" "\
  16723. Display number of pages to print this buffer, for various font heights.
  16724. The table depends on the current ps-print setup.
  16725. \(fn NB-LINES)" t nil)
  16726. (autoload 'ps-nb-pages-region "ps-print" "\
  16727. Display number of pages to print the region, for various font heights.
  16728. The table depends on the current ps-print setup.
  16729. \(fn NB-LINES)" t nil)
  16730. (autoload 'ps-setup "ps-print" "\
  16731. Return the current PostScript-generation setup.
  16732. \(fn)" nil nil)
  16733. (autoload 'ps-extend-face-list "ps-print" "\
  16734. Extend face in ALIST-SYM.
  16735. If optional MERGE-P is non-nil, extensions in FACE-EXTENSION-LIST are merged
  16736. with face extension in ALIST-SYM; otherwise, overrides.
  16737. If optional ALIST-SYM is nil, `ps-print-face-extension-alist' is used;
  16738. otherwise, it should be an alist symbol.
  16739. The elements in FACE-EXTENSION-LIST are like those for `ps-extend-face'.
  16740. See `ps-extend-face' for documentation.
  16741. \(fn FACE-EXTENSION-LIST &optional MERGE-P ALIST-SYM)" nil nil)
  16742. (autoload 'ps-extend-face "ps-print" "\
  16743. Extend face in ALIST-SYM.
  16744. If optional MERGE-P is non-nil, extensions in FACE-EXTENSION list are merged
  16745. with face extensions in ALIST-SYM; otherwise, overrides.
  16746. If optional ALIST-SYM is nil, `ps-print-face-extension-alist' is used;
  16747. otherwise, it should be an alist symbol.
  16748. The elements of FACE-EXTENSION list have the form:
  16749. (FACE-NAME FOREGROUND BACKGROUND EXTENSION...)
  16750. FACE-NAME is a face name symbol.
  16751. FOREGROUND and BACKGROUND may be nil or a string that denotes the
  16752. foreground and background colors respectively.
  16753. EXTENSION is one of the following symbols:
  16754. bold - use bold font.
  16755. italic - use italic font.
  16756. underline - put a line under text.
  16757. strikeout - like underline, but the line is in middle of text.
  16758. overline - like underline, but the line is over the text.
  16759. shadow - text will have a shadow.
  16760. box - text will be surrounded by a box.
  16761. outline - print characters as hollow outlines.
  16762. If EXTENSION is any other symbol, it is ignored.
  16763. \(fn FACE-EXTENSION &optional MERGE-P ALIST-SYM)" nil nil)
  16764. ;;;***
  16765. ;;;### (autoloads (jython-mode python-mode python-after-info-look
  16766. ;;;;;; run-python) "python" "progmodes/python.el" (20400 62402))
  16767. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/python.el
  16768. (add-to-list 'interpreter-mode-alist (cons (purecopy "jython") 'jython-mode))
  16769. (add-to-list 'interpreter-mode-alist (cons (purecopy "python") 'python-mode))
  16770. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist (cons (purecopy "\\.py\\'") 'python-mode))
  16771. (autoload 'run-python "python" "\
  16772. Run an inferior Python process, input and output via buffer *Python*.
  16773. CMD is the Python command to run. NOSHOW non-nil means don't
  16774. show the buffer automatically.
  16775. Interactively, a prefix arg means to prompt for the initial
  16776. Python command line (default is `python-command').
  16777. A new process is started if one isn't running attached to
  16778. `python-buffer', or if called from Lisp with non-nil arg NEW.
  16779. Otherwise, if a process is already running in `python-buffer',
  16780. switch to that buffer.
  16781. This command runs the hook `inferior-python-mode-hook' after
  16782. running `comint-mode-hook'. Type \\[describe-mode] in the
  16783. process buffer for a list of commands.
  16784. By default, Emacs inhibits the loading of Python modules from the
  16785. current working directory, for security reasons. To disable this
  16786. behavior, change `python-remove-cwd-from-path' to nil.
  16787. \(fn &optional CMD NOSHOW NEW)" t nil)
  16788. (autoload 'python-after-info-look "python" "\
  16789. Set up info-look for Python.
  16790. Used with `eval-after-load'.
  16791. \(fn)" nil nil)
  16792. (autoload 'python-mode "python" "\
  16793. Major mode for editing Python files.
  16794. Turns on Font Lock mode unconditionally since it is currently required
  16795. for correct parsing of the source.
  16796. See also `jython-mode', which is actually invoked if the buffer appears to
  16797. contain Jython code. See also `run-python' and associated Python mode
  16798. commands for running Python under Emacs.
  16799. The Emacs commands which work with `defun's, e.g. \\[beginning-of-defun], deal
  16800. with nested `def' and `class' blocks. They take the innermost one as
  16801. current without distinguishing method and class definitions. Used multiple
  16802. times, they move over others at the same indentation level until they reach
  16803. the end of definitions at that level, when they move up a level.
  16804. \\<python-mode-map>
  16805. Colon is electric: it outdents the line if appropriate, e.g. for
  16806. an else statement. \\[python-backspace] at the beginning of an indented statement
  16807. deletes a level of indentation to close the current block; otherwise it
  16808. deletes a character backward. TAB indents the current line relative to
  16809. the preceding code. Successive TABs, with no intervening command, cycle
  16810. through the possibilities for indentation on the basis of enclosing blocks.
  16811. \\[fill-paragraph] fills comments and multi-line strings appropriately, but has no
  16812. effect outside them.
  16813. Supports Eldoc mode (only for functions, using a Python process),
  16814. Info-Look and Imenu. In Outline minor mode, `class' and `def'
  16815. lines count as headers. Symbol completion is available in the
  16816. same way as in the Python shell using the `rlcompleter' module
  16817. and this is added to the Hippie Expand functions locally if
  16818. Hippie Expand mode is turned on. Completion of symbols of the
  16819. form x.y only works if the components are literal
  16820. module/attribute names, not variables. An abbrev table is set up
  16821. with skeleton expansions for compound statement templates.
  16822. \\{python-mode-map}
  16823. \(fn)" t nil)
  16824. (autoload 'jython-mode "python" "\
  16825. Major mode for editing Jython files.
  16826. Like `python-mode', but sets up parameters for Jython subprocesses.
  16827. Runs `jython-mode-hook' after `python-mode-hook'.
  16828. \(fn)" t nil)
  16829. ;;;***
  16830. ;;;### (autoloads (quoted-printable-decode-region) "qp" "gnus/qp.el"
  16831. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  16832. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/qp.el
  16833. (autoload 'quoted-printable-decode-region "qp" "\
  16834. Decode quoted-printable in the region between FROM and TO, per RFC 2045.
  16835. If CODING-SYSTEM is non-nil, decode bytes into characters with that
  16836. coding-system.
  16837. Interactively, you can supply the CODING-SYSTEM argument
  16838. with \\[universal-coding-system-argument].
  16839. The CODING-SYSTEM argument is a historical hangover and is deprecated.
  16840. QP encodes raw bytes and should be decoded into raw bytes. Decoding
  16841. them into characters should be done separately.
  16842. \(fn FROM TO &optional CODING-SYSTEM)" t nil)
  16843. ;;;***
  16844. ;;;### (autoloads (quail-update-leim-list-file quail-defrule-internal
  16845. ;;;;;; quail-defrule quail-install-decode-map quail-install-map
  16846. ;;;;;; quail-define-rules quail-show-keyboard-layout quail-set-keyboard-layout
  16847. ;;;;;; quail-define-package quail-use-package quail-title) "quail"
  16848. ;;;;;; "international/quail.el" (20400 62402))
  16849. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/quail.el
  16850. (autoload 'quail-title "quail" "\
  16851. Return the title of the current Quail package.
  16852. \(fn)" nil nil)
  16853. (autoload 'quail-use-package "quail" "\
  16854. Start using Quail package PACKAGE-NAME.
  16855. The remaining arguments are LIBRARIES to be loaded before using the package.
  16856. This activates input method defined by PACKAGE-NAME by running
  16857. `quail-activate', which see.
  16858. \(fn PACKAGE-NAME &rest LIBRARIES)" nil nil)
  16859. (autoload 'quail-define-package "quail" "\
  16860. Define NAME as a new Quail package for input LANGUAGE.
  16861. TITLE is a string to be displayed at mode-line to indicate this package.
  16862. Optional arguments are GUIDANCE, DOCSTRING, TRANSLATION-KEYS,
  16863. FORGET-LAST-SELECTION, DETERMINISTIC, KBD-TRANSLATE, SHOW-LAYOUT,
  16864. CREATE-DECODE-MAP, MAXIMUM-SHORTEST, OVERLAY-PLIST,
  16865. UPDATE-TRANSLATION-FUNCTION, CONVERSION-KEYS and SIMPLE.
  16866. GUIDANCE specifies how a guidance string is shown in echo area.
  16867. If it is t, list of all possible translations for the current key is shown
  16868. with the currently selected translation being highlighted.
  16869. If it is an alist, the element has the form (CHAR . STRING). Each character
  16870. in the current key is searched in the list and the corresponding string is
  16871. shown.
  16872. If it is nil, the current key is shown.
  16873. DOCSTRING is the documentation string of this package. The command
  16874. `describe-input-method' shows this string while replacing the form
  16875. \\=\\<VAR> in the string by the value of VAR. That value should be a
  16876. string. For instance, the form \\=\\<quail-translation-docstring> is
  16877. replaced by a description about how to select a translation from a
  16878. list of candidates.
  16879. TRANSLATION-KEYS specifies additional key bindings used while translation
  16880. region is active. It is an alist of single key character vs. corresponding
  16881. command to be called.
  16882. FORGET-LAST-SELECTION non-nil means a selected translation is not kept
  16883. for the future to translate the same key. If this flag is nil, a
  16884. translation selected for a key is remembered so that it can be the
  16885. first candidate when the same key is entered later.
  16886. DETERMINISTIC non-nil means the first candidate of translation is
  16887. selected automatically without allowing users to select another
  16888. translation for a key. In this case, unselected translations are of
  16889. no use for an interactive use of Quail but can be used by some other
  16890. programs. If this flag is non-nil, FORGET-LAST-SELECTION is also set
  16891. to t.
  16892. KBD-TRANSLATE non-nil means input characters are translated from a
  16893. user's keyboard layout to the standard keyboard layout. See the
  16894. documentation of `quail-keyboard-layout' and
  16895. `quail-keyboard-layout-standard' for more detail.
  16896. SHOW-LAYOUT non-nil means the `quail-help' command should show
  16897. the user's keyboard layout visually with translated characters.
  16898. If KBD-TRANSLATE is set, it is desirable to set also this flag unless
  16899. this package defines no translations for single character keys.
  16900. CREATE-DECODE-MAP non-nil means decode map is also created. A decode
  16901. map is an alist of translations and corresponding original keys.
  16902. Although this map is not used by Quail itself, it can be used by some
  16903. other programs. For instance, Vietnamese supporting needs this map to
  16904. convert Vietnamese text to VIQR format which uses only ASCII
  16905. characters to represent Vietnamese characters.
  16906. MAXIMUM-SHORTEST non-nil means break key sequence to get maximum
  16907. length of the shortest sequence. When we don't have a translation of
  16908. key \"..ABCD\" but have translations of \"..AB\" and \"CD..\", break
  16909. the key at \"..AB\" and start translation of \"CD..\". Hangul
  16910. packages, for instance, use this facility. If this flag is nil, we
  16911. break the key just at \"..ABC\" and start translation of \"D..\".
  16912. OVERLAY-PLIST if non-nil is a property list put on an overlay which
  16913. covers Quail translation region.
  16914. UPDATE-TRANSLATION-FUNCTION if non-nil is a function to call to update
  16915. the current translation region according to a new translation data. By
  16916. default, a translated text or a user's key sequence (if no translation
  16917. for it) is inserted.
  16918. CONVERSION-KEYS specifies additional key bindings used while
  16919. conversion region is active. It is an alist of single key character
  16920. vs. corresponding command to be called.
  16921. If SIMPLE is non-nil, then we do not alter the meanings of
  16922. commands such as C-f, C-b, C-n, C-p and TAB; they are treated as
  16923. non-Quail commands.
  16924. \(fn NAME LANGUAGE TITLE &optional GUIDANCE DOCSTRING TRANSLATION-KEYS FORGET-LAST-SELECTION DETERMINISTIC KBD-TRANSLATE SHOW-LAYOUT CREATE-DECODE-MAP MAXIMUM-SHORTEST OVERLAY-PLIST UPDATE-TRANSLATION-FUNCTION CONVERSION-KEYS SIMPLE)" nil nil)
  16925. (autoload 'quail-set-keyboard-layout "quail" "\
  16926. Set the current keyboard layout to the same as keyboard KBD-TYPE.
  16927. Since some Quail packages depends on a physical layout of keys (not
  16928. characters generated by them), those are created by assuming the
  16929. standard layout defined in `quail-keyboard-layout-standard'. This
  16930. function tells Quail system the layout of your keyboard so that what
  16931. you type is correctly handled.
  16932. \(fn KBD-TYPE)" t nil)
  16933. (autoload 'quail-show-keyboard-layout "quail" "\
  16934. Show the physical layout of the keyboard type KEYBOARD-TYPE.
  16935. The variable `quail-keyboard-layout-type' holds the currently selected
  16936. keyboard type.
  16937. \(fn &optional KEYBOARD-TYPE)" t nil)
  16938. (autoload 'quail-define-rules "quail" "\
  16939. Define translation rules of the current Quail package.
  16940. Each argument is a list of KEY and TRANSLATION.
  16941. KEY is a string meaning a sequence of keystrokes to be translated.
  16942. TRANSLATION is a character, a string, a vector, a Quail map, or a function.
  16943. If it is a character, it is the sole translation of KEY.
  16944. If it is a string, each character is a candidate for the translation.
  16945. If it is a vector, each element (string or character) is a candidate
  16946. for the translation.
  16947. In these cases, a key specific Quail map is generated and assigned to KEY.
  16948. If TRANSLATION is a Quail map or a function symbol which returns a Quail map,
  16949. it is used to handle KEY.
  16950. The first argument may be an alist of annotations for the following
  16951. rules. Each element has the form (ANNOTATION . VALUE), where
  16952. ANNOTATION is a symbol indicating the annotation type. Currently
  16953. the following annotation types are supported.
  16954. append -- the value non-nil means that the following rules should
  16955. be appended to the rules of the current Quail package.
  16956. face -- the value is a face to use for displaying TRANSLATIONs in
  16957. candidate list.
  16958. advice -- the value is a function to call after one of RULES is
  16959. selected. The function is called with one argument, the
  16960. selected TRANSLATION string, after the TRANSLATION is
  16961. inserted.
  16962. no-decode-map --- the value non-nil means that decoding map is not
  16963. generated for the following translations.
  16964. \(fn &rest RULES)" nil (quote macro))
  16965. (autoload 'quail-install-map "quail" "\
  16966. Install the Quail map MAP in the current Quail package.
  16967. Optional 2nd arg NAME, if non-nil, is a name of Quail package for
  16968. which to install MAP.
  16969. The installed map can be referred by the function `quail-map'.
  16970. \(fn MAP &optional NAME)" nil nil)
  16971. (autoload 'quail-install-decode-map "quail" "\
  16972. Install the Quail decode map DECODE-MAP in the current Quail package.
  16973. Optional 2nd arg NAME, if non-nil, is a name of Quail package for
  16974. which to install MAP.
  16975. The installed decode map can be referred by the function `quail-decode-map'.
  16976. \(fn DECODE-MAP &optional NAME)" nil nil)
  16977. (autoload 'quail-defrule "quail" "\
  16978. Add one translation rule, KEY to TRANSLATION, in the current Quail package.
  16979. KEY is a string meaning a sequence of keystrokes to be translated.
  16980. TRANSLATION is a character, a string, a vector, a Quail map,
  16981. a function, or a cons.
  16982. It it is a character, it is the sole translation of KEY.
  16983. If it is a string, each character is a candidate for the translation.
  16984. If it is a vector, each element (string or character) is a candidate
  16985. for the translation.
  16986. If it is a cons, the car is one of the above and the cdr is a function
  16987. to call when translating KEY (the return value is assigned to the
  16988. variable `quail-current-data'). If the cdr part is not a function,
  16989. the value itself is assigned to `quail-current-data'.
  16990. In these cases, a key specific Quail map is generated and assigned to KEY.
  16991. If TRANSLATION is a Quail map or a function symbol which returns a Quail map,
  16992. it is used to handle KEY.
  16993. Optional 3rd argument NAME, if specified, says which Quail package
  16994. to define this translation rule in. The default is to define it in the
  16995. current Quail package.
  16996. Optional 4th argument APPEND, if non-nil, appends TRANSLATION
  16997. to the current translations for KEY instead of replacing them.
  16998. \(fn KEY TRANSLATION &optional NAME APPEND)" nil nil)
  16999. (autoload 'quail-defrule-internal "quail" "\
  17000. Define KEY as TRANS in a Quail map MAP.
  17001. If Optional 4th arg APPEND is non-nil, TRANS is appended to the
  17002. current translations for KEY instead of replacing them.
  17003. Optional 5th arg DECODE-MAP is a Quail decode map.
  17004. Optional 6th arg PROPS is a property list annotating TRANS. See the
  17005. function `quail-define-rules' for the detail.
  17006. \(fn KEY TRANS MAP &optional APPEND DECODE-MAP PROPS)" nil nil)
  17007. (autoload 'quail-update-leim-list-file "quail" "\
  17008. Update entries for Quail packages in `LEIM' list file in directory DIRNAME.
  17009. DIRNAME is a directory containing Emacs input methods;
  17010. normally, it should specify the `leim' subdirectory
  17011. of the Emacs source tree.
  17012. It searches for Quail packages under `quail' subdirectory of DIRNAME,
  17013. and update the file \"leim-list.el\" in DIRNAME.
  17014. When called from a program, the remaining arguments are additional
  17015. directory names to search for Quail packages under `quail' subdirectory
  17016. of each directory.
  17017. \(fn DIRNAME &rest DIRNAMES)" t nil)
  17018. ;;;***
  17019. ;;;### (autoloads (quickurl-list quickurl-list-mode quickurl-edit-urls
  17020. ;;;;;; quickurl-browse-url-ask quickurl-browse-url quickurl-add-url
  17021. ;;;;;; quickurl-ask quickurl) "quickurl" "net/quickurl.el" (20400
  17022. ;;;;;; 62402))
  17023. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/quickurl.el
  17024. (defconst quickurl-reread-hook-postfix "\n;; Local Variables:\n;; eval: (progn (require 'quickurl) (add-hook 'local-write-file-hooks (lambda () (quickurl-read) nil)))\n;; End:\n" "\
  17025. Example `quickurl-postfix' text that adds a local variable to the
  17026. `quickurl-url-file' so that if you edit it by hand it will ensure that
  17027. `quickurl-urls' is updated with the new URL list.
  17028. To make use of this do something like:
  17029. (setq quickurl-postfix quickurl-reread-hook-postfix)
  17030. in your ~/.emacs (after loading/requiring quickurl).")
  17031. (autoload 'quickurl "quickurl" "\
  17032. Insert a URL based on LOOKUP.
  17033. If not supplied LOOKUP is taken to be the word at point in the current
  17034. buffer, this default action can be modified via
  17035. `quickurl-grab-lookup-function'.
  17036. \(fn &optional LOOKUP)" t nil)
  17037. (autoload 'quickurl-ask "quickurl" "\
  17038. Insert a URL, with `completing-read' prompt, based on LOOKUP.
  17039. \(fn LOOKUP)" t nil)
  17040. (autoload 'quickurl-add-url "quickurl" "\
  17041. Allow the user to interactively add a new URL associated with WORD.
  17042. See `quickurl-grab-url' for details on how the default word/URL combination
  17043. is decided.
  17044. \(fn WORD URL COMMENT)" t nil)
  17045. (autoload 'quickurl-browse-url "quickurl" "\
  17046. Browse the URL associated with LOOKUP.
  17047. If not supplied LOOKUP is taken to be the word at point in the
  17048. current buffer, this default action can be modified via
  17049. `quickurl-grab-lookup-function'.
  17050. \(fn &optional LOOKUP)" t nil)
  17051. (autoload 'quickurl-browse-url-ask "quickurl" "\
  17052. Browse the URL, with `completing-read' prompt, associated with LOOKUP.
  17053. \(fn LOOKUP)" t nil)
  17054. (autoload 'quickurl-edit-urls "quickurl" "\
  17055. Pull `quickurl-url-file' into a buffer for hand editing.
  17056. \(fn)" t nil)
  17057. (autoload 'quickurl-list-mode "quickurl" "\
  17058. A mode for browsing the quickurl URL list.
  17059. The key bindings for `quickurl-list-mode' are:
  17060. \\{quickurl-list-mode-map}
  17061. \(fn)" t nil)
  17062. (autoload 'quickurl-list "quickurl" "\
  17063. Display `quickurl-list' as a formatted list using `quickurl-list-mode'.
  17064. \(fn)" t nil)
  17065. ;;;***
  17066. ;;;### (autoloads (rcirc-track-minor-mode rcirc-connect rcirc) "rcirc"
  17067. ;;;;;; "net/rcirc.el" (20523 50225))
  17068. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/rcirc.el
  17069. (autoload 'rcirc "rcirc" "\
  17070. Connect to all servers in `rcirc-server-alist'.
  17071. Do not connect to a server if it is already connected.
  17072. If ARG is non-nil, instead prompt for connection parameters.
  17073. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  17074. (defalias 'irc 'rcirc)
  17075. (autoload 'rcirc-connect "rcirc" "\
  17076. \(fn SERVER &optional PORT NICK USER-NAME FULL-NAME STARTUP-CHANNELS PASSWORD ENCRYPTION)" nil nil)
  17077. (defvar rcirc-track-minor-mode nil "\
  17078. Non-nil if Rcirc-Track minor mode is enabled.
  17079. See the command `rcirc-track-minor-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  17080. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  17081. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  17082. or call the function `rcirc-track-minor-mode'.")
  17083. (custom-autoload 'rcirc-track-minor-mode "rcirc" nil)
  17084. (autoload 'rcirc-track-minor-mode "rcirc" "\
  17085. Global minor mode for tracking activity in rcirc buffers.
  17086. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  17087. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  17088. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  17089. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  17090. ;;;***
  17091. ;;;### (autoloads (remote-compile) "rcompile" "net/rcompile.el" (20352
  17092. ;;;;;; 65510))
  17093. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/rcompile.el
  17094. (autoload 'remote-compile "rcompile" "\
  17095. Compile the current buffer's directory on HOST. Log in as USER.
  17096. See \\[compile].
  17097. \(fn HOST USER COMMAND)" t nil)
  17098. ;;;***
  17099. ;;;### (autoloads (re-builder) "re-builder" "emacs-lisp/re-builder.el"
  17100. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17101. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/re-builder.el
  17102. (defalias 'regexp-builder 're-builder)
  17103. (autoload 're-builder "re-builder" "\
  17104. Construct a regexp interactively.
  17105. This command makes the current buffer the \"target\" buffer of
  17106. the regexp builder. It displays a buffer named \"*RE-Builder*\"
  17107. in another window, initially containing an empty regexp.
  17108. As you edit the regexp in the \"*RE-Builder*\" buffer, the
  17109. matching parts of the target buffer will be highlighted.
  17110. \(fn)" t nil)
  17111. ;;;***
  17112. ;;;### (autoloads (recentf-mode) "recentf" "recentf.el" (20400 62402))
  17113. ;;; Generated autoloads from recentf.el
  17114. (defvar recentf-mode nil "\
  17115. Non-nil if Recentf mode is enabled.
  17116. See the command `recentf-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  17117. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  17118. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  17119. or call the function `recentf-mode'.")
  17120. (custom-autoload 'recentf-mode "recentf" nil)
  17121. (autoload 'recentf-mode "recentf" "\
  17122. Toggle \"Open Recent\" menu (Recentf mode).
  17123. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Recentf mode if ARG is
  17124. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  17125. Recentf mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  17126. When Recentf mode is enabled, a \"Open Recent\" submenu is
  17127. displayed in the \"File\" menu, containing a list of files that
  17128. were operated on recently.
  17129. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  17130. ;;;***
  17131. ;;;### (autoloads (rectangle-number-lines clear-rectangle string-insert-rectangle
  17132. ;;;;;; string-rectangle delete-whitespace-rectangle open-rectangle
  17133. ;;;;;; insert-rectangle yank-rectangle kill-rectangle extract-rectangle
  17134. ;;;;;; delete-extract-rectangle delete-rectangle) "rect" "rect.el"
  17135. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17136. ;;; Generated autoloads from rect.el
  17137. (define-key ctl-x-r-map "c" 'clear-rectangle)
  17138. (define-key ctl-x-r-map "k" 'kill-rectangle)
  17139. (define-key ctl-x-r-map "d" 'delete-rectangle)
  17140. (define-key ctl-x-r-map "y" 'yank-rectangle)
  17141. (define-key ctl-x-r-map "o" 'open-rectangle)
  17142. (define-key ctl-x-r-map "t" 'string-rectangle)
  17143. (define-key ctl-x-r-map "N" 'rectangle-number-lines)
  17144. (autoload 'delete-rectangle "rect" "\
  17145. Delete (don't save) text in the region-rectangle.
  17146. The same range of columns is deleted in each line starting with the
  17147. line where the region begins and ending with the line where the region
  17148. ends.
  17149. When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
  17150. With a prefix (or a FILL) argument, also fill lines where nothing has
  17151. to be deleted.
  17152. \(fn START END &optional FILL)" t nil)
  17153. (autoload 'delete-extract-rectangle "rect" "\
  17154. Delete the contents of the rectangle with corners at START and END.
  17155. Return it as a list of strings, one for each line of the rectangle.
  17156. When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
  17157. With an optional FILL argument, also fill lines where nothing has to be
  17158. deleted.
  17159. \(fn START END &optional FILL)" nil nil)
  17160. (autoload 'extract-rectangle "rect" "\
  17161. Return the contents of the rectangle with corners at START and END.
  17162. Return it as a list of strings, one for each line of the rectangle.
  17163. \(fn START END)" nil nil)
  17164. (autoload 'kill-rectangle "rect" "\
  17165. Delete the region-rectangle and save it as the last killed one.
  17166. When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
  17167. You might prefer to use `delete-extract-rectangle' from a program.
  17168. With a prefix (or a FILL) argument, also fill lines where nothing has to be
  17169. deleted.
  17170. If the buffer is read-only, Emacs will beep and refrain from deleting
  17171. the rectangle, but put it in the kill ring anyway. This means that
  17172. you can use this command to copy text from a read-only buffer.
  17173. \(If the variable `kill-read-only-ok' is non-nil, then this won't
  17174. even beep.)
  17175. \(fn START END &optional FILL)" t nil)
  17176. (autoload 'yank-rectangle "rect" "\
  17177. Yank the last killed rectangle with upper left corner at point.
  17178. \(fn)" t nil)
  17179. (autoload 'insert-rectangle "rect" "\
  17180. Insert text of RECTANGLE with upper left corner at point.
  17181. RECTANGLE's first line is inserted at point, its second
  17182. line is inserted at a point vertically under point, etc.
  17183. RECTANGLE should be a list of strings.
  17184. After this command, the mark is at the upper left corner
  17185. and point is at the lower right corner.
  17186. \(fn RECTANGLE)" nil nil)
  17187. (autoload 'open-rectangle "rect" "\
  17188. Blank out the region-rectangle, shifting text right.
  17189. The text previously in the region is not overwritten by the blanks,
  17190. but instead winds up to the right of the rectangle.
  17191. When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
  17192. With a prefix (or a FILL) argument, fill with blanks even if there is
  17193. no text on the right side of the rectangle.
  17194. \(fn START END &optional FILL)" t nil)
  17195. (defalias 'close-rectangle 'delete-whitespace-rectangle)
  17196. (autoload 'delete-whitespace-rectangle "rect" "\
  17197. Delete all whitespace following a specified column in each line.
  17198. The left edge of the rectangle specifies the position in each line
  17199. at which whitespace deletion should begin. On each line in the
  17200. rectangle, all continuous whitespace starting at that column is deleted.
  17201. When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
  17202. With a prefix (or a FILL) argument, also fill too short lines.
  17203. \(fn START END &optional FILL)" t nil)
  17204. (autoload 'string-rectangle "rect" "\
  17205. Replace rectangle contents with STRING on each line.
  17206. The length of STRING need not be the same as the rectangle width.
  17207. Called from a program, takes three args; START, END and STRING.
  17208. \(fn START END STRING)" t nil)
  17209. (defalias 'replace-rectangle 'string-rectangle)
  17210. (autoload 'string-insert-rectangle "rect" "\
  17211. Insert STRING on each line of region-rectangle, shifting text right.
  17212. When called from a program, the rectangle's corners are START and END.
  17213. The left edge of the rectangle specifies the column for insertion.
  17214. This command does not delete or overwrite any existing text.
  17215. \(fn START END STRING)" t nil)
  17216. (autoload 'clear-rectangle "rect" "\
  17217. Blank out the region-rectangle.
  17218. The text previously in the region is overwritten with blanks.
  17219. When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
  17220. With a prefix (or a FILL) argument, also fill with blanks the parts of the
  17221. rectangle which were empty.
  17222. \(fn START END &optional FILL)" t nil)
  17223. (autoload 'rectangle-number-lines "rect" "\
  17224. Insert numbers in front of the region-rectangle.
  17225. START-AT, if non-nil, should be a number from which to begin
  17226. counting. FORMAT, if non-nil, should be a format string to pass
  17227. to `format' along with the line count. When called interactively
  17228. with a prefix argument, prompt for START-AT and FORMAT.
  17229. \(fn START END START-AT &optional FORMAT)" t nil)
  17230. ;;;***
  17231. ;;;### (autoloads (refill-mode) "refill" "textmodes/refill.el" (20352
  17232. ;;;;;; 65510))
  17233. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/refill.el
  17234. (autoload 'refill-mode "refill" "\
  17235. Toggle automatic refilling (Refill mode).
  17236. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Refill mode if ARG is
  17237. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  17238. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  17239. Refill mode is a buffer-local minor mode. When enabled, the
  17240. current paragraph is refilled as you edit. Self-inserting
  17241. characters only cause refilling if they would cause
  17242. auto-filling.
  17243. For true \"word wrap\" behavior, use `visual-line-mode' instead.
  17244. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  17245. ;;;***
  17246. ;;;### (autoloads (reftex-reset-scanning-information reftex-mode
  17247. ;;;;;; turn-on-reftex) "reftex" "textmodes/reftex.el" (20352 65510))
  17248. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/reftex.el
  17249. (autoload 'turn-on-reftex "reftex" "\
  17250. Turn on RefTeX mode.
  17251. \(fn)" nil nil)
  17252. (autoload 'reftex-mode "reftex" "\
  17253. Toggle RefTeX mode.
  17254. With a prefix argument ARG, enable RefTeX mode if ARG is
  17255. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  17256. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  17257. RefTeX mode is a buffer-local minor mode with distinct support
  17258. for \\label, \\ref and \\cite in LaTeX.
  17259. \\<reftex-mode-map>A Table of Contents of the entire (multifile) document with browsing
  17260. capabilities is available with `\\[reftex-toc]'.
  17261. Labels can be created with `\\[reftex-label]' and referenced with `\\[reftex-reference]'.
  17262. When referencing, you get a menu with all labels of a given type and
  17263. context of the label definition. The selected label is inserted as a
  17264. \\ref macro.
  17265. Citations can be made with `\\[reftex-citation]' which will use a regular expression
  17266. to pull out a *formatted* list of articles from your BibTeX
  17267. database. The selected citation is inserted as a \\cite macro.
  17268. Index entries can be made with `\\[reftex-index-selection-or-word]' which indexes the word at point
  17269. or the current selection. More general index entries are created with
  17270. `\\[reftex-index]'. `\\[reftex-display-index]' displays the compiled index.
  17271. Most command have help available on the fly. This help is accessed by
  17272. pressing `?' to any prompt mentioning this feature.
  17273. Extensive documentation about RefTeX is available in Info format.
  17274. You can view this information with `\\[reftex-info]'.
  17275. \\{reftex-mode-map}
  17276. Under X, these and other functions will also be available as `Ref' menu
  17277. on the menu bar.
  17278. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  17279. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  17280. (autoload 'reftex-reset-scanning-information "reftex" "\
  17281. Reset the symbols containing information from buffer scanning.
  17282. This enforces rescanning the buffer on next use.
  17283. \(fn)" nil nil)
  17284. ;;;***
  17285. ;;;### (autoloads (reftex-citation) "reftex-cite" "textmodes/reftex-cite.el"
  17286. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17287. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/reftex-cite.el
  17288. (autoload 'reftex-citation "reftex-cite" "\
  17289. Make a citation using BibTeX database files.
  17290. After prompting for a regular expression, scans the buffers with
  17291. bibtex entries (taken from the \\bibliography command) and offers the
  17292. matching entries for selection. The selected entry is formatted according
  17293. to `reftex-cite-format' and inserted into the buffer.
  17294. If NO-INSERT is non-nil, nothing is inserted, only the selected key returned.
  17295. FORMAT-KEY can be used to pre-select a citation format.
  17296. When called with a `C-u' prefix, prompt for optional arguments in
  17297. cite macros. When called with a numeric prefix, make that many
  17298. citations. When called with point inside the braces of a `\\cite'
  17299. command, it will add another key, ignoring the value of
  17300. `reftex-cite-format'.
  17301. The regular expression uses an expanded syntax: && is interpreted as `and'.
  17302. Thus, `aaaa&&bbb' matches entries which contain both `aaaa' and `bbb'.
  17303. While entering the regexp, completion on knows citation keys is possible.
  17304. `=' is a good regular expression to match all entries in all files.
  17305. \(fn &optional NO-INSERT FORMAT-KEY)" t nil)
  17306. ;;;***
  17307. ;;;### (autoloads (reftex-isearch-minor-mode) "reftex-global" "textmodes/reftex-global.el"
  17308. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17309. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/reftex-global.el
  17310. (autoload 'reftex-isearch-minor-mode "reftex-global" "\
  17311. When on, isearch searches the whole document, not only the current file.
  17312. This minor mode allows isearch to search through all the files of
  17313. the current TeX document.
  17314. With no argument, this command toggles
  17315. `reftex-isearch-minor-mode'. With a prefix argument ARG, turn
  17316. `reftex-isearch-minor-mode' on if ARG is positive, otherwise turn it off.
  17317. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  17318. ;;;***
  17319. ;;;### (autoloads (reftex-index-phrases-mode) "reftex-index" "textmodes/reftex-index.el"
  17320. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  17321. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/reftex-index.el
  17322. (autoload 'reftex-index-phrases-mode "reftex-index" "\
  17323. Major mode for managing the Index phrases of a LaTeX document.
  17324. This buffer was created with RefTeX.
  17325. To insert new phrases, use
  17326. - `C-c \\' in the LaTeX document to copy selection or word
  17327. - `\\[reftex-index-new-phrase]' in the phrases buffer.
  17328. To index phrases use one of:
  17329. \\[reftex-index-this-phrase] index current phrase
  17330. \\[reftex-index-next-phrase] index next phrase (or N with prefix arg)
  17331. \\[reftex-index-all-phrases] index all phrases
  17332. \\[reftex-index-remaining-phrases] index current and following phrases
  17333. \\[reftex-index-region-phrases] index the phrases in the region
  17334. You can sort the phrases in this buffer with \\[reftex-index-sort-phrases].
  17335. To display information about the phrase at point, use \\[reftex-index-phrases-info].
  17336. For more information see the RefTeX User Manual.
  17337. Here are all local bindings.
  17338. \\{reftex-index-phrases-mode-map}
  17339. \(fn)" t nil)
  17340. ;;;***
  17341. ;;;### (autoloads (reftex-all-document-files) "reftex-parse" "textmodes/reftex-parse.el"
  17342. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17343. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/reftex-parse.el
  17344. (autoload 'reftex-all-document-files "reftex-parse" "\
  17345. Return a list of all files belonging to the current document.
  17346. When RELATIVE is non-nil, give file names relative to directory
  17347. of master file.
  17348. \(fn &optional RELATIVE)" nil nil)
  17349. ;;;***
  17350. ;;;### (autoloads nil "reftex-vars" "textmodes/reftex-vars.el" (20400
  17351. ;;;;;; 62402))
  17352. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/reftex-vars.el
  17353. (put 'reftex-vref-is-default 'safe-local-variable (lambda (x) (or (stringp x) (symbolp x))))
  17354. (put 'reftex-fref-is-default 'safe-local-variable (lambda (x) (or (stringp x) (symbolp x))))
  17355. (put 'reftex-level-indent 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  17356. (put 'reftex-guess-label-type 'safe-local-variable (lambda (x) (memq x '(nil t))))
  17357. ;;;***
  17358. ;;;### (autoloads (regexp-opt-depth regexp-opt) "regexp-opt" "emacs-lisp/regexp-opt.el"
  17359. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  17360. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/regexp-opt.el
  17361. (autoload 'regexp-opt "regexp-opt" "\
  17362. Return a regexp to match a string in the list STRINGS.
  17363. Each string should be unique in STRINGS and should not contain any regexps,
  17364. quoted or not. If optional PAREN is non-nil, ensure that the returned regexp
  17365. is enclosed by at least one regexp grouping construct.
  17366. The returned regexp is typically more efficient than the equivalent regexp:
  17367. (let ((open (if PAREN \"\\\\(\" \"\")) (close (if PAREN \"\\\\)\" \"\")))
  17368. (concat open (mapconcat 'regexp-quote STRINGS \"\\\\|\") close))
  17369. If PAREN is `words', then the resulting regexp is additionally surrounded
  17370. by \\=\\< and \\>.
  17371. If PAREN is `symbols', then the resulting regexp is additionally surrounded
  17372. by \\=\\_< and \\_>.
  17373. \(fn STRINGS &optional PAREN)" nil nil)
  17374. (autoload 'regexp-opt-depth "regexp-opt" "\
  17375. Return the depth of REGEXP.
  17376. This means the number of non-shy regexp grouping constructs
  17377. \(parenthesized expressions) in REGEXP.
  17378. \(fn REGEXP)" nil nil)
  17379. ;;;***
  17380. ;;;### (autoloads (remember-diary-extract-entries remember-clipboard
  17381. ;;;;;; remember-other-frame remember) "remember" "textmodes/remember.el"
  17382. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17383. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/remember.el
  17384. (autoload 'remember "remember" "\
  17385. Remember an arbitrary piece of data.
  17386. INITIAL is the text to initially place in the *Remember* buffer,
  17387. or nil to bring up a blank *Remember* buffer.
  17388. With a prefix or a visible region, use the region as INITIAL.
  17389. \(fn &optional INITIAL)" t nil)
  17390. (autoload 'remember-other-frame "remember" "\
  17391. Call `remember' in another frame.
  17392. \(fn &optional INITIAL)" t nil)
  17393. (autoload 'remember-clipboard "remember" "\
  17394. Remember the contents of the current clipboard.
  17395. Most useful for remembering things from Netscape or other X Windows
  17396. application.
  17397. \(fn)" t nil)
  17398. (autoload 'remember-diary-extract-entries "remember" "\
  17399. Extract diary entries from the region.
  17400. \(fn)" nil nil)
  17401. ;;;***
  17402. ;;;### (autoloads (repeat) "repeat" "repeat.el" (20400 62402))
  17403. ;;; Generated autoloads from repeat.el
  17404. (autoload 'repeat "repeat" "\
  17405. Repeat most recently executed command.
  17406. With prefix arg, apply new prefix arg to that command; otherwise,
  17407. use the prefix arg that was used before (if any).
  17408. This command is like the `.' command in the vi editor.
  17409. If this command is invoked by a multi-character key sequence, it
  17410. can then be repeated by repeating the final character of that
  17411. sequence. This behavior can be modified by the global variable
  17412. `repeat-on-final-keystroke'.
  17413. `repeat' ignores commands bound to input events. Hence the term
  17414. \"most recently executed command\" shall be read as \"most
  17415. recently executed command not bound to an input event\".
  17416. \(fn REPEAT-ARG)" t nil)
  17417. ;;;***
  17418. ;;;### (autoloads (reporter-submit-bug-report) "reporter" "mail/reporter.el"
  17419. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17420. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/reporter.el
  17421. (autoload 'reporter-submit-bug-report "reporter" "\
  17422. Begin submitting a bug report via email.
  17423. ADDRESS is the email address for the package's maintainer. PKGNAME is
  17424. the name of the package (if you want to include version numbers,
  17425. you must put them into PKGNAME before calling this function).
  17426. Optional PRE-HOOKS and POST-HOOKS are passed to `reporter-dump-state'.
  17427. Optional SALUTATION is inserted at the top of the mail buffer,
  17428. and point is left after the salutation.
  17429. VARLIST is the list of variables to dump (see `reporter-dump-state'
  17430. for details). The optional argument PRE-HOOKS and POST-HOOKS are
  17431. passed to `reporter-dump-state'. Optional argument SALUTATION is text
  17432. to be inserted at the top of the mail buffer; in that case, point is
  17433. left after that text.
  17434. This function prompts for a summary if `reporter-prompt-for-summary-p'
  17435. is non-nil.
  17436. This function does not send a message; it uses the given information
  17437. to initialize a message, which the user can then edit and finally send
  17438. \(or decline to send). The variable `mail-user-agent' controls which
  17439. mail-sending package is used for editing and sending the message.
  17440. \(fn ADDRESS PKGNAME VARLIST &optional PRE-HOOKS POST-HOOKS SALUTATION)" nil nil)
  17441. ;;;***
  17442. ;;;### (autoloads (reposition-window) "reposition" "reposition.el"
  17443. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17444. ;;; Generated autoloads from reposition.el
  17445. (autoload 'reposition-window "reposition" "\
  17446. Make the current definition and/or comment visible.
  17447. Further invocations move it to the top of the window or toggle the
  17448. visibility of comments that precede it.
  17449. Point is left unchanged unless prefix ARG is supplied.
  17450. If the definition is fully onscreen, it is moved to the top of the
  17451. window. If it is partly offscreen, the window is scrolled to get the
  17452. definition (or as much as will fit) onscreen, unless point is in a comment
  17453. which is also partly offscreen, in which case the scrolling attempts to get
  17454. as much of the comment onscreen as possible.
  17455. Initially `reposition-window' attempts to make both the definition and
  17456. preceding comments visible. Further invocations toggle the visibility of
  17457. the comment lines.
  17458. If ARG is non-nil, point may move in order to make the whole defun
  17459. visible (if only part could otherwise be made so), to make the defun line
  17460. visible (if point is in code and it could not be made so, or if only
  17461. comments, including the first comment line, are visible), or to make the
  17462. first comment line visible (if point is in a comment).
  17463. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  17464. ;;;***
  17465. ;;;### (autoloads (global-reveal-mode reveal-mode) "reveal" "reveal.el"
  17466. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17467. ;;; Generated autoloads from reveal.el
  17468. (autoload 'reveal-mode "reveal" "\
  17469. Toggle uncloaking of invisible text near point (Reveal mode).
  17470. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Reveal mode if ARG is
  17471. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  17472. Reveal mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  17473. Reveal mode is a buffer-local minor mode. When enabled, it
  17474. reveals invisible text around point.
  17475. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  17476. (defvar global-reveal-mode nil "\
  17477. Non-nil if Global-Reveal mode is enabled.
  17478. See the command `global-reveal-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  17479. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  17480. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  17481. or call the function `global-reveal-mode'.")
  17482. (custom-autoload 'global-reveal-mode "reveal" nil)
  17483. (autoload 'global-reveal-mode "reveal" "\
  17484. Toggle Reveal mode in all buffers (Global Reveal mode).
  17485. Reveal mode renders invisible text around point visible again.
  17486. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Global Reveal mode if ARG is
  17487. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  17488. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  17489. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  17490. ;;;***
  17491. ;;;### (autoloads (make-ring ring-p) "ring" "emacs-lisp/ring.el"
  17492. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17493. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/ring.el
  17494. (autoload 'ring-p "ring" "\
  17495. Return t if X is a ring; nil otherwise.
  17496. \(fn X)" nil nil)
  17497. (autoload 'make-ring "ring" "\
  17498. Make a ring that can contain SIZE elements.
  17499. \(fn SIZE)" nil nil)
  17500. ;;;***
  17501. ;;;### (autoloads (rlogin) "rlogin" "net/rlogin.el" (20398 608))
  17502. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/rlogin.el
  17503. (autoload 'rlogin "rlogin" "\
  17504. Open a network login connection via `rlogin' with args INPUT-ARGS.
  17505. INPUT-ARGS should start with a host name; it may also contain
  17506. other arguments for `rlogin'.
  17507. Input is sent line-at-a-time to the remote connection.
  17508. Communication with the remote host is recorded in a buffer `*rlogin-HOST*'
  17509. \(or `*rlogin-USER@HOST*' if the remote username differs).
  17510. If a prefix argument is given and the buffer `*rlogin-HOST*' already exists,
  17511. a new buffer with a different connection will be made.
  17512. When called from a program, if the optional second argument BUFFER is
  17513. a string or buffer, it specifies the buffer to use.
  17514. The variable `rlogin-program' contains the name of the actual program to
  17515. run. It can be a relative or absolute path.
  17516. The variable `rlogin-explicit-args' is a list of arguments to give to
  17517. the rlogin when starting. They are added after any arguments given in
  17518. INPUT-ARGS.
  17519. If the default value of `rlogin-directory-tracking-mode' is t, then the
  17520. default directory in that buffer is set to a remote (FTP) file name to
  17521. access your home directory on the remote machine. Occasionally this causes
  17522. an error, if you cannot access the home directory on that machine. This
  17523. error is harmless as long as you don't try to use that default directory.
  17524. If `rlogin-directory-tracking-mode' is neither t nor nil, then the default
  17525. directory is initially set up to your (local) home directory.
  17526. This is useful if the remote machine and your local machine
  17527. share the same files via NFS. This is the default.
  17528. If you wish to change directory tracking styles during a session, use the
  17529. function `rlogin-directory-tracking-mode' rather than simply setting the
  17530. variable.
  17531. \(fn INPUT-ARGS &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  17532. ;;;***
  17533. ;;;### (autoloads (rmail-set-remote-password rmail-input rmail-mode
  17534. ;;;;;; rmail rmail-show-message-hook rmail-secondary-file-regexp
  17535. ;;;;;; rmail-secondary-file-directory rmail-primary-inbox-list rmail-highlighted-headers
  17536. ;;;;;; rmail-retry-ignored-headers rmail-displayed-headers rmail-ignored-headers
  17537. ;;;;;; rmail-user-mail-address-regexp rmail-movemail-variant-p)
  17538. ;;;;;; "rmail" "mail/rmail.el" (20436 17935))
  17539. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/rmail.el
  17540. (autoload 'rmail-movemail-variant-p "rmail" "\
  17541. Return t if the current movemail variant is any of VARIANTS.
  17542. Currently known variants are 'emacs and 'mailutils.
  17543. \(fn &rest VARIANTS)" nil nil)
  17544. (defvar rmail-user-mail-address-regexp nil "\
  17545. Regexp matching user mail addresses.
  17546. If non-nil, this variable is used to identify the correspondent
  17547. when receiving new mail. If it matches the address of the sender,
  17548. the recipient is taken as correspondent of a mail.
  17549. If nil (default value), your `user-login-name' and `user-mail-address'
  17550. are used to exclude yourself as correspondent.
  17551. Usually you don't have to set this variable, except if you collect mails
  17552. sent by you under different user names.
  17553. Then it should be a regexp matching your mail addresses.
  17554. Setting this variable has an effect only before reading a mail.")
  17555. (custom-autoload 'rmail-user-mail-address-regexp "rmail" t)
  17556. (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'rmail-dont-reply-to-names 'mail-dont-reply-to-names "24.1")
  17557. (defvar rmail-default-dont-reply-to-names nil "\
  17558. Regexp specifying part of the default value of `mail-dont-reply-to-names'.
  17559. This is used when the user does not set `mail-dont-reply-to-names'
  17560. explicitly.")
  17561. (make-obsolete-variable 'rmail-default-dont-reply-to-names 'mail-dont-reply-to-names "24.1")
  17562. (defvar rmail-ignored-headers (purecopy (concat "^via:\\|^mail-from:\\|^origin:\\|^references:\\|^sender:" "\\|^status:\\|^received:\\|^x400-originator:\\|^x400-recipients:" "\\|^x400-received:\\|^x400-mts-identifier:\\|^x400-content-type:" "\\|^\\(resent-\\|\\)message-id:\\|^summary-line:\\|^resent-date:" "\\|^nntp-posting-host:\\|^path:\\|^x-char.*:\\|^x-face:\\|^face:" "\\|^x-mailer:\\|^delivered-to:\\|^lines:" "\\|^content-transfer-encoding:\\|^x-coding-system:" "\\|^return-path:\\|^errors-to:\\|^return-receipt-to:" "\\|^precedence:\\|^mime-version:" "\\|^list-owner:\\|^list-help:\\|^list-post:\\|^list-subscribe:" "\\|^list-id:\\|^list-unsubscribe:\\|^list-archive:" "\\|^content-length:\\|^nntp-posting-date:\\|^user-agent" "\\|^importance:\\|^envelope-to:\\|^delivery-date\\|^openpgp:" "\\|^mbox-line:\\|^cancel-lock:" "\\|^DomainKey-Signature:\\|^dkim-signature:" "\\|^resent-face:\\|^resent-x.*:\\|^resent-organization:\\|^resent-openpgp:" "\\|^x-.*:")) "\
  17563. Regexp to match header fields that Rmail should normally hide.
  17564. \(See also `rmail-nonignored-headers', which overrides this regexp.)
  17565. This variable is used for reformatting the message header,
  17566. which normally happens once for each message,
  17567. when you view the message for the first time in Rmail.
  17568. To make a change in this variable take effect
  17569. for a message that you have already viewed,
  17570. go to that message and type \\[rmail-toggle-header] twice.")
  17571. (custom-autoload 'rmail-ignored-headers "rmail" t)
  17572. (defvar rmail-displayed-headers nil "\
  17573. Regexp to match Header fields that Rmail should display.
  17574. If nil, display all header fields except those matched by
  17575. `rmail-ignored-headers'.")
  17576. (custom-autoload 'rmail-displayed-headers "rmail" t)
  17577. (defvar rmail-retry-ignored-headers (purecopy "^x-authentication-warning:\\|^x-detected-operating-system:\\|^x-spam[-a-z]*:\\|content-type:\\|content-transfer-encoding:\\|mime-version:\\|message-id:") "\
  17578. Headers that should be stripped when retrying a failed message.")
  17579. (custom-autoload 'rmail-retry-ignored-headers "rmail" t)
  17580. (defvar rmail-highlighted-headers (purecopy "^From:\\|^Subject:") "\
  17581. Regexp to match Header fields that Rmail should normally highlight.
  17582. A value of nil means don't highlight. Uses the face `rmail-highlight'.")
  17583. (custom-autoload 'rmail-highlighted-headers "rmail" t)
  17584. (defvar rmail-primary-inbox-list nil "\
  17585. List of files that are inboxes for your primary mail file `rmail-file-name'.
  17586. If this is nil, uses the environment variable MAIL. If that is
  17587. unset, uses a file named by the function `user-login-name' in the
  17588. directory `rmail-spool-directory' (whose value depends on the
  17589. operating system). For example, \"/var/mail/USER\".")
  17590. (custom-autoload 'rmail-primary-inbox-list "rmail" t)
  17591. (defvar rmail-secondary-file-directory (purecopy "~/") "\
  17592. Directory for additional secondary Rmail files.")
  17593. (custom-autoload 'rmail-secondary-file-directory "rmail" t)
  17594. (defvar rmail-secondary-file-regexp (purecopy "\\.xmail$") "\
  17595. Regexp for which files are secondary Rmail files.")
  17596. (custom-autoload 'rmail-secondary-file-regexp "rmail" t)
  17597. (defvar rmail-mode-hook nil "\
  17598. List of functions to call when Rmail is invoked.")
  17599. (defvar rmail-show-message-hook nil "\
  17600. List of functions to call when Rmail displays a message.")
  17601. (custom-autoload 'rmail-show-message-hook "rmail" t)
  17602. (defvar rmail-file-coding-system nil "\
  17603. Coding system used in RMAIL file.
  17604. This is set to nil by default.")
  17605. (defvar rmail-insert-mime-forwarded-message-function nil "\
  17606. Function to insert a message in MIME format so it can be forwarded.
  17607. This function is called if `rmail-enable-mime' and
  17608. `rmail-enable-mime-composing' are non-nil.
  17609. It is called with one argument FORWARD-BUFFER, which is a
  17610. buffer containing the message to forward. The current buffer
  17611. is the outgoing mail buffer.")
  17612. (autoload 'rmail "rmail" "\
  17613. Read and edit incoming mail.
  17614. Moves messages into file named by `rmail-file-name' and edits that
  17615. file in RMAIL Mode.
  17616. Type \\[describe-mode] once editing that file, for a list of RMAIL commands.
  17617. May be called with file name as argument; then performs rmail editing on
  17618. that file, but does not copy any new mail into the file.
  17619. Interactively, if you supply a prefix argument, then you
  17620. have a chance to specify a file name with the minibuffer.
  17621. If `rmail-display-summary' is non-nil, make a summary for this RMAIL file.
  17622. \(fn &optional FILE-NAME-ARG)" t nil)
  17623. (autoload 'rmail-mode "rmail" "\
  17624. Rmail Mode is used by \\<rmail-mode-map>\\[rmail] for editing Rmail files.
  17625. All normal editing commands are turned off.
  17626. Instead, these commands are available:
  17627. \\[rmail-beginning-of-message] Move point to front of this message.
  17628. \\[rmail-end-of-message] Move point to bottom of this message.
  17629. \\[scroll-up] Scroll to next screen of this message.
  17630. \\[scroll-down] Scroll to previous screen of this message.
  17631. \\[rmail-next-undeleted-message] Move to Next non-deleted message.
  17632. \\[rmail-previous-undeleted-message] Move to Previous non-deleted message.
  17633. \\[rmail-next-message] Move to Next message whether deleted or not.
  17634. \\[rmail-previous-message] Move to Previous message whether deleted or not.
  17635. \\[rmail-first-message] Move to the first message in Rmail file.
  17636. \\[rmail-last-message] Move to the last message in Rmail file.
  17637. \\[rmail-show-message] Jump to message specified by numeric position in file.
  17638. \\[rmail-search] Search for string and show message it is found in.
  17639. \\[rmail-delete-forward] Delete this message, move to next nondeleted.
  17640. \\[rmail-delete-backward] Delete this message, move to previous nondeleted.
  17641. \\[rmail-undelete-previous-message] Undelete message. Tries current message, then earlier messages
  17642. till a deleted message is found.
  17643. \\[rmail-edit-current-message] Edit the current message. \\[rmail-cease-edit] to return to Rmail.
  17644. \\[rmail-expunge] Expunge deleted messages.
  17645. \\[rmail-expunge-and-save] Expunge and save the file.
  17646. \\[rmail-quit] Quit Rmail: expunge, save, then switch to another buffer.
  17647. \\[save-buffer] Save without expunging.
  17648. \\[rmail-get-new-mail] Move new mail from system spool directory into this file.
  17649. \\[rmail-mail] Mail a message (same as \\[mail-other-window]).
  17650. \\[rmail-continue] Continue composing outgoing message started before.
  17651. \\[rmail-reply] Reply to this message. Like \\[rmail-mail] but initializes some fields.
  17652. \\[rmail-retry-failure] Send this message again. Used on a mailer failure message.
  17653. \\[rmail-forward] Forward this message to another user.
  17654. \\[rmail-output] Output (append) this message to another mail file.
  17655. \\[rmail-output-as-seen] Output (append) this message to file as it's displayed.
  17656. \\[rmail-output-body-to-file] Save message body to a file. Default filename comes from Subject line.
  17657. \\[rmail-input] Input Rmail file. Run Rmail on that file.
  17658. \\[rmail-add-label] Add label to message. It will be displayed in the mode line.
  17659. \\[rmail-kill-label] Kill label. Remove a label from current message.
  17660. \\[rmail-next-labeled-message] Move to Next message with specified label
  17661. (label defaults to last one specified).
  17662. Standard labels: filed, unseen, answered, forwarded, deleted.
  17663. Any other label is present only if you add it with \\[rmail-add-label].
  17664. \\[rmail-previous-labeled-message] Move to Previous message with specified label
  17665. \\[rmail-summary] Show headers buffer, with a one line summary of each message.
  17666. \\[rmail-summary-by-labels] Summarize only messages with particular label(s).
  17667. \\[rmail-summary-by-recipients] Summarize only messages with particular recipient(s).
  17668. \\[rmail-summary-by-regexp] Summarize only messages with particular regexp(s).
  17669. \\[rmail-summary-by-topic] Summarize only messages with subject line regexp(s).
  17670. \\[rmail-toggle-header] Toggle display of complete header.
  17671. \(fn)" t nil)
  17672. (autoload 'rmail-input "rmail" "\
  17673. Run Rmail on file FILENAME.
  17674. \(fn FILENAME)" t nil)
  17675. (autoload 'rmail-set-remote-password "rmail" "\
  17676. Set PASSWORD to be used for retrieving mail from a POP or IMAP server.
  17677. \(fn PASSWORD)" t nil)
  17678. ;;;***
  17679. ;;;### (autoloads (rmail-output-body-to-file rmail-output-as-seen
  17680. ;;;;;; rmail-output) "rmailout" "mail/rmailout.el" (20352 65510))
  17681. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/rmailout.el
  17682. (put 'rmail-output-file-alist 'risky-local-variable t)
  17683. (autoload 'rmail-output "rmailout" "\
  17684. Append this message to mail file FILE-NAME.
  17685. Writes mbox format, unless FILE-NAME exists and is Babyl format, in which
  17686. case it writes Babyl.
  17687. Interactively, the default file name comes from `rmail-default-file',
  17688. which is updated to the name you use in this command. In all uses, if
  17689. FILE-NAME is not absolute, it is expanded with the directory part of
  17690. `rmail-default-file'.
  17691. If a buffer is visiting FILE-NAME, adds the text to that buffer
  17692. rather than saving the file directly. If the buffer is an Rmail
  17693. buffer, updates it accordingly.
  17694. This command always outputs the complete message header, even if
  17695. the header display is currently pruned.
  17696. Optional prefix argument COUNT (default 1) says to output that
  17697. many consecutive messages, starting with the current one (ignoring
  17698. deleted messages). If `rmail-delete-after-output' is non-nil, deletes
  17699. messages after output.
  17700. The optional third argument NOATTRIBUTE, if non-nil, says not to
  17701. set the `filed' attribute, and not to display a \"Wrote file\"
  17702. message (if writing a file directly).
  17703. Set the optional fourth argument NOT-RMAIL non-nil if you call this
  17704. from a non-Rmail buffer. In this case, COUNT is ignored.
  17705. \(fn FILE-NAME &optional COUNT NOATTRIBUTE NOT-RMAIL)" t nil)
  17706. (autoload 'rmail-output-as-seen "rmailout" "\
  17707. Append this message to mbox file named FILE-NAME.
  17708. The details are as for `rmail-output', except that:
  17709. i) the header is output as currently seen
  17710. ii) this function cannot write to Babyl files
  17711. iii) an Rmail buffer cannot be visiting FILE-NAME
  17712. Note that if NOT-RMAIL is non-nil, there is no difference between this
  17713. function and `rmail-output'. This argument may be removed in future,
  17714. so you should call `rmail-output' directly in that case.
  17715. \(fn FILE-NAME &optional COUNT NOATTRIBUTE NOT-RMAIL)" t nil)
  17716. (autoload 'rmail-output-body-to-file "rmailout" "\
  17717. Write this message body to the file FILE-NAME.
  17718. Interactively, the default file name comes from either the message
  17719. \"Subject\" header, or from `rmail-default-body-file'. Updates the value
  17720. of `rmail-default-body-file' accordingly. In all uses, if FILE-NAME
  17721. is not absolute, it is expanded with the directory part of
  17722. `rmail-default-body-file'.
  17723. Note that this overwrites FILE-NAME (after confirmation), rather
  17724. than appending to it. Deletes the message after writing if
  17725. `rmail-delete-after-output' is non-nil.
  17726. \(fn FILE-NAME)" t nil)
  17727. ;;;***
  17728. ;;;### (autoloads (rng-c-load-schema) "rng-cmpct" "nxml/rng-cmpct.el"
  17729. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17730. ;;; Generated autoloads from nxml/rng-cmpct.el
  17731. (autoload 'rng-c-load-schema "rng-cmpct" "\
  17732. Load a schema in RELAX NG compact syntax from FILENAME.
  17733. Return a pattern.
  17734. \(fn FILENAME)" nil nil)
  17735. ;;;***
  17736. ;;;### (autoloads (rng-nxml-mode-init) "rng-nxml" "nxml/rng-nxml.el"
  17737. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  17738. ;;; Generated autoloads from nxml/rng-nxml.el
  17739. (autoload 'rng-nxml-mode-init "rng-nxml" "\
  17740. Initialize `nxml-mode' to take advantage of `rng-validate-mode'.
  17741. This is typically called from `nxml-mode-hook'.
  17742. Validation will be enabled if `rng-nxml-auto-validate-flag' is non-nil.
  17743. \(fn)" t nil)
  17744. ;;;***
  17745. ;;;### (autoloads (rng-validate-mode) "rng-valid" "nxml/rng-valid.el"
  17746. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  17747. ;;; Generated autoloads from nxml/rng-valid.el
  17748. (autoload 'rng-validate-mode "rng-valid" "\
  17749. Minor mode performing continual validation against a RELAX NG schema.
  17750. Checks whether the buffer is a well-formed XML 1.0 document,
  17751. conforming to the XML Namespaces Recommendation and valid against a
  17752. RELAX NG schema. The mode-line indicates whether it is or not. Any
  17753. parts of the buffer that cause it not to be are considered errors and
  17754. are highlighted with face `rng-error'. A description of each error is
  17755. available as a tooltip. \\[rng-next-error] goes to the next error
  17756. after point. Clicking mouse-1 on the word `Invalid' in the mode-line
  17757. goes to the first error in the buffer. If the buffer changes, then it
  17758. will be automatically rechecked when Emacs becomes idle; the
  17759. rechecking will be paused whenever there is input pending.
  17760. By default, uses a vacuous schema that allows any well-formed XML
  17761. document. A schema can be specified explicitly using
  17762. \\[rng-set-schema-file-and-validate], or implicitly based on the buffer's
  17763. file name or on the root element name. In each case the schema must
  17764. be a RELAX NG schema using the compact schema (such schemas
  17765. conventionally have a suffix of `.rnc'). The variable
  17766. `rng-schema-locating-files' specifies files containing rules
  17767. to use for finding the schema.
  17768. \(fn &optional ARG NO-CHANGE-SCHEMA)" t nil)
  17769. ;;;***
  17770. ;;;### (autoloads (rng-xsd-compile) "rng-xsd" "nxml/rng-xsd.el" (20352
  17771. ;;;;;; 65510))
  17772. ;;; Generated autoloads from nxml/rng-xsd.el
  17773. (put 'http://www\.w3\.org/2001/XMLSchema-datatypes 'rng-dt-compile 'rng-xsd-compile)
  17774. (autoload 'rng-xsd-compile "rng-xsd" "\
  17775. Provides W3C XML Schema as a RELAX NG datatypes library.
  17776. NAME is a symbol giving the local name of the datatype. PARAMS is a
  17777. list of pairs (PARAM-NAME . PARAM-VALUE) where PARAM-NAME is a symbol
  17778. giving the name of the parameter and PARAM-VALUE is a string giving
  17779. its value. If NAME or PARAMS are invalid, it calls rng-dt-error
  17780. passing it arguments in the same style as format; the value from
  17781. rng-dt-error will be returned. Otherwise, it returns a list. The
  17782. first member of the list is t if any string is a legal value for the
  17783. datatype and nil otherwise. The second argument is a symbol; this
  17784. symbol will be called as a function passing it a string followed by
  17785. the remaining members of the list. The function must return an object
  17786. representing the value of the datatype that was represented by the
  17787. string, or nil if the string is not a representation of any value.
  17788. The object returned can be any convenient non-nil value, provided
  17789. that, if two strings represent the same value, the returned objects
  17790. must be equal.
  17791. \(fn NAME PARAMS)" nil nil)
  17792. ;;;***
  17793. ;;;### (autoloads (robin-use-package robin-modify-package robin-define-package)
  17794. ;;;;;; "robin" "international/robin.el" (20352 65510))
  17795. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/robin.el
  17796. (autoload 'robin-define-package "robin" "\
  17797. Define a robin package.
  17798. NAME is the string of this robin package.
  17799. DOCSTRING is the documentation string of this robin package.
  17800. Each RULE is of the form (INPUT OUTPUT) where INPUT is a string and
  17801. OUTPUT is either a character or a string. RULES are not evaluated.
  17802. If there already exists a robin package whose name is NAME, the new
  17803. one replaces the old one.
  17804. \(fn NAME DOCSTRING &rest RULES)" nil (quote macro))
  17805. (autoload 'robin-modify-package "robin" "\
  17806. Change a rule in an already defined robin package.
  17807. NAME is the string specifying a robin package.
  17808. INPUT is a string that specifies the input pattern.
  17809. OUTPUT is either a character or a string to be generated.
  17810. \(fn NAME INPUT OUTPUT)" nil nil)
  17811. (autoload 'robin-use-package "robin" "\
  17812. Start using robin package NAME, which is a string.
  17813. \(fn NAME)" nil nil)
  17814. ;;;***
  17815. ;;;### (autoloads (toggle-rot13-mode rot13-other-window rot13-region
  17816. ;;;;;; rot13-string rot13) "rot13" "rot13.el" (20352 65510))
  17817. ;;; Generated autoloads from rot13.el
  17818. (autoload 'rot13 "rot13" "\
  17819. Return ROT13 encryption of OBJECT, a buffer or string.
  17820. \(fn OBJECT &optional START END)" nil nil)
  17821. (autoload 'rot13-string "rot13" "\
  17822. Return ROT13 encryption of STRING.
  17823. \(fn STRING)" nil nil)
  17824. (autoload 'rot13-region "rot13" "\
  17825. ROT13 encrypt the region between START and END in current buffer.
  17826. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  17827. (autoload 'rot13-other-window "rot13" "\
  17828. Display current buffer in ROT13 in another window.
  17829. The text itself is not modified, only the way it is displayed is affected.
  17830. To terminate the ROT13 display, delete that window. As long as that window
  17831. is not deleted, any buffer displayed in it will become instantly encoded
  17832. in ROT13.
  17833. See also `toggle-rot13-mode'.
  17834. \(fn)" t nil)
  17835. (autoload 'toggle-rot13-mode "rot13" "\
  17836. Toggle the use of ROT13 encoding for the current window.
  17837. \(fn)" t nil)
  17838. ;;;***
  17839. ;;;### (autoloads (rst-minor-mode rst-mode) "rst" "textmodes/rst.el"
  17840. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  17841. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/rst.el
  17842. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist (purecopy '("\\.re?st\\'" . rst-mode)))
  17843. (autoload 'rst-mode "rst" "\
  17844. Major mode for editing reStructuredText documents.
  17845. \\<rst-mode-map>
  17846. There are a number of convenient keybindings provided by
  17847. Rst mode. The main one is \\[rst-adjust], it updates or rotates
  17848. the section title around point or promotes/demotes the
  17849. decorations within the region (see full details below).
  17850. Use negative prefix arg to rotate in the other direction.
  17851. Turning on `rst-mode' calls the normal hooks `text-mode-hook'
  17852. and `rst-mode-hook'. This mode also supports font-lock
  17853. highlighting. You may customize `rst-mode-lazy' to toggle
  17854. font-locking of blocks.
  17855. \\{rst-mode-map}
  17856. \(fn)" t nil)
  17857. (autoload 'rst-minor-mode "rst" "\
  17858. Toggle ReST minor mode.
  17859. With a prefix argument ARG, enable ReST minor mode if ARG is
  17860. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  17861. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  17862. When ReST minor mode is enabled, the ReST mode keybindings
  17863. are installed on top of the major mode bindings. Use this
  17864. for modes derived from Text mode, like Mail mode.
  17865. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  17866. ;;;***
  17867. ;;;### (autoloads (ruby-mode) "ruby-mode" "progmodes/ruby-mode.el"
  17868. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  17869. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ruby-mode.el
  17870. (autoload 'ruby-mode "ruby-mode" "\
  17871. Major mode for editing Ruby scripts.
  17872. \\[ruby-indent-line] properly indents subexpressions of multi-line
  17873. class, module, def, if, while, for, do, and case statements, taking
  17874. nesting into account.
  17875. The variable `ruby-indent-level' controls the amount of indentation.
  17876. \\{ruby-mode-map}
  17877. \(fn)" t nil)
  17878. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist (cons (purecopy "\\.rb\\'") 'ruby-mode))
  17879. (dolist (name (list "ruby" "rbx" "jruby" "ruby1.9" "ruby1.8")) (add-to-list 'interpreter-mode-alist (cons (purecopy name) 'ruby-mode)))
  17880. ;;;***
  17881. ;;;### (autoloads (ruler-mode) "ruler-mode" "ruler-mode.el" (20352
  17882. ;;;;;; 65510))
  17883. ;;; Generated autoloads from ruler-mode.el
  17884. (defvar ruler-mode nil "\
  17885. Non-nil if Ruler mode is enabled.
  17886. Use the command `ruler-mode' to change this variable.")
  17887. (autoload 'ruler-mode "ruler-mode" "\
  17888. Toggle display of ruler in header line (Ruler mode).
  17889. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Ruler mode if ARG is positive,
  17890. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  17891. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  17892. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  17893. ;;;***
  17894. ;;;### (autoloads (rx rx-to-string) "rx" "emacs-lisp/rx.el" (20352
  17895. ;;;;;; 65510))
  17896. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/rx.el
  17897. (autoload 'rx-to-string "rx" "\
  17898. Parse and produce code for regular expression FORM.
  17899. FORM is a regular expression in sexp form.
  17900. NO-GROUP non-nil means don't put shy groups around the result.
  17901. \(fn FORM &optional NO-GROUP)" nil nil)
  17902. (autoload 'rx "rx" "\
  17903. Translate regular expressions REGEXPS in sexp form to a regexp string.
  17904. REGEXPS is a non-empty sequence of forms of the sort listed below.
  17905. Note that `rx' is a Lisp macro; when used in a Lisp program being
  17906. compiled, the translation is performed by the compiler.
  17907. See `rx-to-string' for how to do such a translation at run-time.
  17908. The following are valid subforms of regular expressions in sexp
  17909. notation.
  17910. STRING
  17911. matches string STRING literally.
  17912. CHAR
  17913. matches character CHAR literally.
  17914. `not-newline', `nonl'
  17915. matches any character except a newline.
  17916. `anything'
  17917. matches any character
  17918. `(any SET ...)'
  17919. `(in SET ...)'
  17920. `(char SET ...)'
  17921. matches any character in SET .... SET may be a character or string.
  17922. Ranges of characters can be specified as `A-Z' in strings.
  17923. Ranges may also be specified as conses like `(?A . ?Z)'.
  17924. SET may also be the name of a character class: `digit',
  17925. `control', `hex-digit', `blank', `graph', `print', `alnum',
  17926. `alpha', `ascii', `nonascii', `lower', `punct', `space', `upper',
  17927. `word', or one of their synonyms.
  17928. `(not (any SET ...))'
  17929. matches any character not in SET ...
  17930. `line-start', `bol'
  17931. matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of a line
  17932. in the text being matched
  17933. `line-end', `eol'
  17934. is similar to `line-start' but matches only at the end of a line
  17935. `string-start', `bos', `bot'
  17936. matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of the
  17937. string being matched against.
  17938. `string-end', `eos', `eot'
  17939. matches the empty string, but only at the end of the
  17940. string being matched against.
  17941. `buffer-start'
  17942. matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of the
  17943. buffer being matched against. Actually equivalent to `string-start'.
  17944. `buffer-end'
  17945. matches the empty string, but only at the end of the
  17946. buffer being matched against. Actually equivalent to `string-end'.
  17947. `point'
  17948. matches the empty string, but only at point.
  17949. `word-start', `bow'
  17950. matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of a word.
  17951. `word-end', `eow'
  17952. matches the empty string, but only at the end of a word.
  17953. `word-boundary'
  17954. matches the empty string, but only at the beginning or end of a
  17955. word.
  17956. `(not word-boundary)'
  17957. `not-word-boundary'
  17958. matches the empty string, but not at the beginning or end of a
  17959. word.
  17960. `symbol-start'
  17961. matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of a symbol.
  17962. `symbol-end'
  17963. matches the empty string, but only at the end of a symbol.
  17964. `digit', `numeric', `num'
  17965. matches 0 through 9.
  17966. `control', `cntrl'
  17967. matches ASCII control characters.
  17968. `hex-digit', `hex', `xdigit'
  17969. matches 0 through 9, a through f and A through F.
  17970. `blank'
  17971. matches space and tab only.
  17972. `graphic', `graph'
  17973. matches graphic characters--everything except ASCII control chars,
  17974. space, and DEL.
  17975. `printing', `print'
  17976. matches printing characters--everything except ASCII control chars
  17977. and DEL.
  17978. `alphanumeric', `alnum'
  17979. matches letters and digits. (But at present, for multibyte characters,
  17980. it matches anything that has word syntax.)
  17981. `letter', `alphabetic', `alpha'
  17982. matches letters. (But at present, for multibyte characters,
  17983. it matches anything that has word syntax.)
  17984. `ascii'
  17985. matches ASCII (unibyte) characters.
  17986. `nonascii'
  17987. matches non-ASCII (multibyte) characters.
  17988. `lower', `lower-case'
  17989. matches anything lower-case.
  17990. `upper', `upper-case'
  17991. matches anything upper-case.
  17992. `punctuation', `punct'
  17993. matches punctuation. (But at present, for multibyte characters,
  17994. it matches anything that has non-word syntax.)
  17995. `space', `whitespace', `white'
  17996. matches anything that has whitespace syntax.
  17997. `word', `wordchar'
  17998. matches anything that has word syntax.
  17999. `not-wordchar'
  18000. matches anything that has non-word syntax.
  18001. `(syntax SYNTAX)'
  18002. matches a character with syntax SYNTAX. SYNTAX must be one
  18003. of the following symbols, or a symbol corresponding to the syntax
  18004. character, e.g. `\\.' for `\\s.'.
  18005. `whitespace' (\\s- in string notation)
  18006. `punctuation' (\\s.)
  18007. `word' (\\sw)
  18008. `symbol' (\\s_)
  18009. `open-parenthesis' (\\s()
  18010. `close-parenthesis' (\\s))
  18011. `expression-prefix' (\\s')
  18012. `string-quote' (\\s\")
  18013. `paired-delimiter' (\\s$)
  18014. `escape' (\\s\\)
  18015. `character-quote' (\\s/)
  18016. `comment-start' (\\s<)
  18017. `comment-end' (\\s>)
  18018. `string-delimiter' (\\s|)
  18019. `comment-delimiter' (\\s!)
  18020. `(not (syntax SYNTAX))'
  18021. matches a character that doesn't have syntax SYNTAX.
  18022. `(category CATEGORY)'
  18023. matches a character with category CATEGORY. CATEGORY must be
  18024. either a character to use for C, or one of the following symbols.
  18025. `consonant' (\\c0 in string notation)
  18026. `base-vowel' (\\c1)
  18027. `upper-diacritical-mark' (\\c2)
  18028. `lower-diacritical-mark' (\\c3)
  18029. `tone-mark' (\\c4)
  18030. `symbol' (\\c5)
  18031. `digit' (\\c6)
  18032. `vowel-modifying-diacritical-mark' (\\c7)
  18033. `vowel-sign' (\\c8)
  18034. `semivowel-lower' (\\c9)
  18035. `not-at-end-of-line' (\\c<)
  18036. `not-at-beginning-of-line' (\\c>)
  18037. `alpha-numeric-two-byte' (\\cA)
  18038. `chinse-two-byte' (\\cC)
  18039. `greek-two-byte' (\\cG)
  18040. `japanese-hiragana-two-byte' (\\cH)
  18041. `indian-tow-byte' (\\cI)
  18042. `japanese-katakana-two-byte' (\\cK)
  18043. `korean-hangul-two-byte' (\\cN)
  18044. `cyrillic-two-byte' (\\cY)
  18045. `combining-diacritic' (\\c^)
  18046. `ascii' (\\ca)
  18047. `arabic' (\\cb)
  18048. `chinese' (\\cc)
  18049. `ethiopic' (\\ce)
  18050. `greek' (\\cg)
  18051. `korean' (\\ch)
  18052. `indian' (\\ci)
  18053. `japanese' (\\cj)
  18054. `japanese-katakana' (\\ck)
  18055. `latin' (\\cl)
  18056. `lao' (\\co)
  18057. `tibetan' (\\cq)
  18058. `japanese-roman' (\\cr)
  18059. `thai' (\\ct)
  18060. `vietnamese' (\\cv)
  18061. `hebrew' (\\cw)
  18062. `cyrillic' (\\cy)
  18063. `can-break' (\\c|)
  18064. `(not (category CATEGORY))'
  18065. matches a character that doesn't have category CATEGORY.
  18066. `(and SEXP1 SEXP2 ...)'
  18067. `(: SEXP1 SEXP2 ...)'
  18068. `(seq SEXP1 SEXP2 ...)'
  18069. `(sequence SEXP1 SEXP2 ...)'
  18070. matches what SEXP1 matches, followed by what SEXP2 matches, etc.
  18071. `(submatch SEXP1 SEXP2 ...)'
  18072. `(group SEXP1 SEXP2 ...)'
  18073. like `and', but makes the match accessible with `match-end',
  18074. `match-beginning', and `match-string'.
  18075. `(submatch-n N SEXP1 SEXP2 ...)'
  18076. `(group-n N SEXP1 SEXP2 ...)'
  18077. like `group', but make it an explicitly-numbered group with
  18078. group number N.
  18079. `(or SEXP1 SEXP2 ...)'
  18080. `(| SEXP1 SEXP2 ...)'
  18081. matches anything that matches SEXP1 or SEXP2, etc. If all
  18082. args are strings, use `regexp-opt' to optimize the resulting
  18083. regular expression.
  18084. `(minimal-match SEXP)'
  18085. produce a non-greedy regexp for SEXP. Normally, regexps matching
  18086. zero or more occurrences of something are \"greedy\" in that they
  18087. match as much as they can, as long as the overall regexp can
  18088. still match. A non-greedy regexp matches as little as possible.
  18089. `(maximal-match SEXP)'
  18090. produce a greedy regexp for SEXP. This is the default.
  18091. Below, `SEXP ...' represents a sequence of regexp forms, treated as if
  18092. enclosed in `(and ...)'.
  18093. `(zero-or-more SEXP ...)'
  18094. `(0+ SEXP ...)'
  18095. matches zero or more occurrences of what SEXP ... matches.
  18096. `(* SEXP ...)'
  18097. like `zero-or-more', but always produces a greedy regexp, independent
  18098. of `rx-greedy-flag'.
  18099. `(*? SEXP ...)'
  18100. like `zero-or-more', but always produces a non-greedy regexp,
  18101. independent of `rx-greedy-flag'.
  18102. `(one-or-more SEXP ...)'
  18103. `(1+ SEXP ...)'
  18104. matches one or more occurrences of SEXP ...
  18105. `(+ SEXP ...)'
  18106. like `one-or-more', but always produces a greedy regexp.
  18107. `(+? SEXP ...)'
  18108. like `one-or-more', but always produces a non-greedy regexp.
  18109. `(zero-or-one SEXP ...)'
  18110. `(optional SEXP ...)'
  18111. `(opt SEXP ...)'
  18112. matches zero or one occurrences of A.
  18113. `(? SEXP ...)'
  18114. like `zero-or-one', but always produces a greedy regexp.
  18115. `(?? SEXP ...)'
  18116. like `zero-or-one', but always produces a non-greedy regexp.
  18117. `(repeat N SEXP)'
  18118. `(= N SEXP ...)'
  18119. matches N occurrences.
  18120. `(>= N SEXP ...)'
  18121. matches N or more occurrences.
  18122. `(repeat N M SEXP)'
  18123. `(** N M SEXP ...)'
  18124. matches N to M occurrences.
  18125. `(backref N)'
  18126. matches what was matched previously by submatch N.
  18127. `(eval FORM)'
  18128. evaluate FORM and insert result. If result is a string,
  18129. `regexp-quote' it.
  18130. `(regexp REGEXP)'
  18131. include REGEXP in string notation in the result.
  18132. \(fn &rest REGEXPS)" nil (quote macro))
  18133. ;;;***
  18134. ;;;### (autoloads (savehist-mode) "savehist" "savehist.el" (20352
  18135. ;;;;;; 65510))
  18136. ;;; Generated autoloads from savehist.el
  18137. (defvar savehist-mode nil "\
  18138. Non-nil if Savehist mode is enabled.
  18139. See the command `savehist-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  18140. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  18141. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  18142. or call the function `savehist-mode'.")
  18143. (custom-autoload 'savehist-mode "savehist" nil)
  18144. (autoload 'savehist-mode "savehist" "\
  18145. Toggle saving of minibuffer history (Savehist mode).
  18146. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Savehist mode if ARG is
  18147. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  18148. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  18149. When Savehist mode is enabled, minibuffer history is saved
  18150. periodically and when exiting Emacs. When Savehist mode is
  18151. enabled for the first time in an Emacs session, it loads the
  18152. previous minibuffer history from `savehist-file'.
  18153. This mode should normally be turned on from your Emacs init file.
  18154. Calling it at any other time replaces your current minibuffer
  18155. histories, which is probably undesirable.
  18156. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  18157. ;;;***
  18158. ;;;### (autoloads (dsssl-mode scheme-mode) "scheme" "progmodes/scheme.el"
  18159. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  18160. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/scheme.el
  18161. (autoload 'scheme-mode "scheme" "\
  18162. Major mode for editing Scheme code.
  18163. Editing commands are similar to those of `lisp-mode'.
  18164. In addition, if an inferior Scheme process is running, some additional
  18165. commands will be defined, for evaluating expressions and controlling
  18166. the interpreter, and the state of the process will be displayed in the
  18167. modeline of all Scheme buffers. The names of commands that interact
  18168. with the Scheme process start with \"xscheme-\" if you use the MIT
  18169. Scheme-specific `xscheme' package; for more information see the
  18170. documentation for `xscheme-interaction-mode'. Use \\[run-scheme] to
  18171. start an inferior Scheme using the more general `cmuscheme' package.
  18172. Commands:
  18173. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  18174. Blank lines separate paragraphs. Semicolons start comments.
  18175. \\{scheme-mode-map}
  18176. Entry to this mode calls the value of `scheme-mode-hook'
  18177. if that value is non-nil.
  18178. \(fn)" t nil)
  18179. (autoload 'dsssl-mode "scheme" "\
  18180. Major mode for editing DSSSL code.
  18181. Editing commands are similar to those of `lisp-mode'.
  18182. Commands:
  18183. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  18184. Blank lines separate paragraphs. Semicolons start comments.
  18185. \\{scheme-mode-map}
  18186. Entering this mode runs the hooks `scheme-mode-hook' and then
  18187. `dsssl-mode-hook' and inserts the value of `dsssl-sgml-declaration' if
  18188. that variable's value is a string.
  18189. \(fn)" t nil)
  18190. ;;;***
  18191. ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-score-mode) "score-mode" "gnus/score-mode.el"
  18192. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  18193. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/score-mode.el
  18194. (autoload 'gnus-score-mode "score-mode" "\
  18195. Mode for editing Gnus score files.
  18196. This mode is an extended emacs-lisp mode.
  18197. \\{gnus-score-mode-map}
  18198. \(fn)" t nil)
  18199. ;;;***
  18200. ;;;### (autoloads (scroll-all-mode) "scroll-all" "scroll-all.el"
  18201. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  18202. ;;; Generated autoloads from scroll-all.el
  18203. (defvar scroll-all-mode nil "\
  18204. Non-nil if Scroll-All mode is enabled.
  18205. See the command `scroll-all-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  18206. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  18207. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  18208. or call the function `scroll-all-mode'.")
  18209. (custom-autoload 'scroll-all-mode "scroll-all" nil)
  18210. (autoload 'scroll-all-mode "scroll-all" "\
  18211. Toggle shared scrolling in same-frame windows (Scroll-All mode).
  18212. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Scroll-All mode if ARG is
  18213. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  18214. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  18215. When Scroll-All mode is enabled, scrolling commands invoked in
  18216. one window apply to all visible windows in the same frame.
  18217. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  18218. ;;;***
  18219. ;;;### (autoloads (scroll-lock-mode) "scroll-lock" "scroll-lock.el"
  18220. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  18221. ;;; Generated autoloads from scroll-lock.el
  18222. (autoload 'scroll-lock-mode "scroll-lock" "\
  18223. Buffer-local minor mode for pager-like scrolling.
  18224. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  18225. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  18226. if ARG is omitted or nil. When enabled, keys that normally move
  18227. point by line or paragraph will scroll the buffer by the
  18228. respective amount of lines instead and point will be kept
  18229. vertically fixed relative to window boundaries during scrolling.
  18230. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  18231. ;;;***
  18232. ;;;### (autoloads nil "secrets" "net/secrets.el" (20352 65510))
  18233. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/secrets.el
  18234. (when (featurep 'dbusbind)
  18235. (autoload 'secrets-show-secrets "secrets" nil t))
  18236. ;;;***
  18237. ;;;### (autoloads (semantic-mode semantic-default-submodes) "semantic"
  18238. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic.el" (20400 62402))
  18239. ;;; Generated autoloads from cedet/semantic.el
  18240. (defvar semantic-default-submodes '(global-semantic-idle-scheduler-mode global-semanticdb-minor-mode) "\
  18241. List of auxiliary Semantic minor modes enabled by `semantic-mode'.
  18242. The possible elements of this list include the following:
  18243. `global-semanticdb-minor-mode' - Maintain tag database.
  18244. `global-semantic-idle-scheduler-mode' - Reparse buffer when idle.
  18245. `global-semantic-idle-summary-mode' - Show summary of tag at point.
  18246. `global-semantic-idle-completions-mode' - Show completions when idle.
  18247. `global-semantic-decoration-mode' - Additional tag decorations.
  18248. `global-semantic-highlight-func-mode' - Highlight the current tag.
  18249. `global-semantic-stickyfunc-mode' - Show current fun in header line.
  18250. `global-semantic-mru-bookmark-mode' - Provide `switch-to-buffer'-like
  18251. keybinding for tag names.")
  18252. (custom-autoload 'semantic-default-submodes "semantic" t)
  18253. (defvar semantic-mode nil "\
  18254. Non-nil if Semantic mode is enabled.
  18255. See the command `semantic-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  18256. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  18257. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  18258. or call the function `semantic-mode'.")
  18259. (custom-autoload 'semantic-mode "semantic" nil)
  18260. (autoload 'semantic-mode "semantic" "\
  18261. Toggle parser features (Semantic mode).
  18262. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Semantic mode if ARG is
  18263. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  18264. Semantic mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  18265. In Semantic mode, Emacs parses the buffers you visit for their
  18266. semantic content. This information is used by a variety of
  18267. auxiliary minor modes, listed in `semantic-default-submodes';
  18268. all the minor modes in this list are also enabled when you enable
  18269. Semantic mode.
  18270. \\{semantic-mode-map}
  18271. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  18272. ;;;***
  18273. ;;;### (autoloads (mail-other-frame mail-other-window mail mail-mailing-lists
  18274. ;;;;;; mail-mode sendmail-user-agent-compose sendmail-query-once
  18275. ;;;;;; mail-default-headers mail-default-directory mail-signature-file
  18276. ;;;;;; mail-signature mail-citation-prefix-regexp mail-citation-hook
  18277. ;;;;;; mail-indentation-spaces mail-yank-prefix mail-setup-hook
  18278. ;;;;;; mail-personal-alias-file mail-default-reply-to mail-archive-file-name
  18279. ;;;;;; mail-header-separator send-mail-function mail-interactive
  18280. ;;;;;; mail-self-blind mail-specify-envelope-from mail-from-style)
  18281. ;;;;;; "sendmail" "mail/sendmail.el" (20420 42151))
  18282. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/sendmail.el
  18283. (defvar mail-from-style 'default "\
  18284. Specifies how \"From:\" fields look.
  18285. If `nil', they contain just the return address like:
  18286. king@grassland.com
  18287. If `parens', they look like:
  18288. king@grassland.com (Elvis Parsley)
  18289. If `angles', they look like:
  18290. Elvis Parsley <king@grassland.com>
  18291. Otherwise, most addresses look like `angles', but they look like
  18292. `parens' if `angles' would need quoting and `parens' would not.")
  18293. (custom-autoload 'mail-from-style "sendmail" t)
  18294. (defvar mail-specify-envelope-from nil "\
  18295. If non-nil, specify the envelope-from address when sending mail.
  18296. The value used to specify it is whatever is found in
  18297. the variable `mail-envelope-from', with `user-mail-address' as fallback.
  18298. On most systems, specifying the envelope-from address is a
  18299. privileged operation. This variable affects sendmail and
  18300. smtpmail -- if you use feedmail to send mail, see instead the
  18301. variable `feedmail-deduce-envelope-from'.")
  18302. (custom-autoload 'mail-specify-envelope-from "sendmail" t)
  18303. (defvar mail-self-blind nil "\
  18304. Non-nil means insert BCC to self in messages to be sent.
  18305. This is done when the message is initialized,
  18306. so you can remove or alter the BCC field to override the default.")
  18307. (custom-autoload 'mail-self-blind "sendmail" t)
  18308. (defvar mail-interactive t "\
  18309. Non-nil means when sending a message wait for and display errors.
  18310. Otherwise, let mailer send back a message to report errors.")
  18311. (custom-autoload 'mail-interactive "sendmail" t)
  18312. (defvar send-mail-function (if (and (boundp 'smtpmail-smtp-server) smtpmail-smtp-server) 'smtpmail-send-it 'sendmail-query-once) "\
  18313. Function to call to send the current buffer as mail.
  18314. The headers should be delimited by a line which is
  18315. not a valid RFC822 header or continuation line,
  18316. that matches the variable `mail-header-separator'.
  18317. This is used by the default mail-sending commands. See also
  18318. `message-send-mail-function' for use with the Message package.")
  18319. (custom-autoload 'send-mail-function "sendmail" t)
  18320. (defvar mail-header-separator (purecopy "--text follows this line--") "\
  18321. Line used to separate headers from text in messages being composed.")
  18322. (custom-autoload 'mail-header-separator "sendmail" t)
  18323. (defvar mail-archive-file-name nil "\
  18324. Name of file to write all outgoing messages in, or nil for none.
  18325. This is normally an mbox file, but for backwards compatibility may also
  18326. be a Babyl file.")
  18327. (custom-autoload 'mail-archive-file-name "sendmail" t)
  18328. (defvar mail-default-reply-to nil "\
  18329. Address to insert as default Reply-to field of outgoing messages.
  18330. If nil, it will be initialized from the REPLYTO environment variable
  18331. when you first send mail.")
  18332. (custom-autoload 'mail-default-reply-to "sendmail" t)
  18333. (defvar mail-personal-alias-file (purecopy "~/.mailrc") "\
  18334. If non-nil, the name of the user's personal mail alias file.
  18335. This file typically should be in same format as the `.mailrc' file used by
  18336. the `Mail' or `mailx' program.
  18337. This file need not actually exist.")
  18338. (custom-autoload 'mail-personal-alias-file "sendmail" t)
  18339. (defvar mail-setup-hook nil "\
  18340. Normal hook, run each time a new outgoing message is initialized.")
  18341. (custom-autoload 'mail-setup-hook "sendmail" t)
  18342. (defvar mail-aliases t "\
  18343. Alist of mail address aliases,
  18344. or t meaning should be initialized from your mail aliases file.
  18345. \(The file's name is normally `~/.mailrc', but `mail-personal-alias-file'
  18346. can specify a different file name.)
  18347. The alias definitions in the file have this form:
  18348. alias ALIAS MEANING")
  18349. (defvar mail-yank-prefix "> " "\
  18350. Prefix insert on lines of yanked message being replied to.
  18351. If this is nil, use indentation, as specified by `mail-indentation-spaces'.")
  18352. (custom-autoload 'mail-yank-prefix "sendmail" t)
  18353. (defvar mail-indentation-spaces 3 "\
  18354. Number of spaces to insert at the beginning of each cited line.
  18355. Used by `mail-yank-original' via `mail-indent-citation'.")
  18356. (custom-autoload 'mail-indentation-spaces "sendmail" t)
  18357. (defvar mail-citation-hook nil "\
  18358. Hook for modifying a citation just inserted in the mail buffer.
  18359. Each hook function can find the citation between (point) and (mark t),
  18360. and should leave point and mark around the citation text as modified.
  18361. The hook functions can find the header of the cited message
  18362. in the variable `mail-citation-header', whether or not this is included
  18363. in the cited portion of the message.
  18364. If this hook is entirely empty (nil), a default action is taken
  18365. instead of no action.")
  18366. (custom-autoload 'mail-citation-hook "sendmail" t)
  18367. (defvar mail-citation-prefix-regexp (purecopy "\\([ ]*\\(\\w\\|[_.]\\)+>+\\|[ ]*[]>|]\\)+") "\
  18368. Regular expression to match a citation prefix plus whitespace.
  18369. It should match whatever sort of citation prefixes you want to handle,
  18370. with whitespace before and after; it should also match just whitespace.
  18371. The default value matches citations like `foo-bar>' plus whitespace.")
  18372. (custom-autoload 'mail-citation-prefix-regexp "sendmail" t)
  18373. (defvar mail-signature t "\
  18374. Text inserted at end of mail buffer when a message is initialized.
  18375. If t, it means to insert the contents of the file `mail-signature-file'.
  18376. If a string, that string is inserted.
  18377. (To make a proper signature, the string should begin with \\n\\n-- \\n,
  18378. which is the standard way to delimit a signature in a message.)
  18379. Otherwise, it should be an expression; it is evaluated
  18380. and should insert whatever you want to insert.")
  18381. (custom-autoload 'mail-signature "sendmail" t)
  18382. (defvar mail-signature-file (purecopy "~/.signature") "\
  18383. File containing the text inserted at end of mail buffer.")
  18384. (custom-autoload 'mail-signature-file "sendmail" t)
  18385. (defvar mail-default-directory (purecopy "~/") "\
  18386. Value of `default-directory' for Mail mode buffers.
  18387. This directory is used for auto-save files of Mail mode buffers.
  18388. Note that Message mode does not use this variable; it auto-saves
  18389. in `message-auto-save-directory'.")
  18390. (custom-autoload 'mail-default-directory "sendmail" t)
  18391. (defvar mail-default-headers nil "\
  18392. A string containing header lines, to be inserted in outgoing messages.
  18393. It can contain newlines, and should end in one. It is inserted
  18394. before you edit the message, so you can edit or delete the lines.")
  18395. (custom-autoload 'mail-default-headers "sendmail" t)
  18396. (autoload 'sendmail-query-once "sendmail" "\
  18397. Query for `send-mail-function' and send mail with it.
  18398. This also saves the value of `send-mail-function' via Customize.
  18399. \(fn)" nil nil)
  18400. (define-mail-user-agent 'sendmail-user-agent 'sendmail-user-agent-compose 'mail-send-and-exit)
  18401. (autoload 'sendmail-user-agent-compose "sendmail" "\
  18402. \(fn &optional TO SUBJECT OTHER-HEADERS CONTINUE SWITCH-FUNCTION YANK-ACTION SEND-ACTIONS RETURN-ACTION &rest IGNORED)" nil nil)
  18403. (autoload 'mail-mode "sendmail" "\
  18404. Major mode for editing mail to be sent.
  18405. Like Text Mode but with these additional commands:
  18406. \\[mail-send] mail-send (send the message)
  18407. \\[mail-send-and-exit] mail-send-and-exit (send the message and exit)
  18408. Here are commands that move to a header field (and create it if there isn't):
  18409. \\[mail-to] move to To: \\[mail-subject] move to Subj:
  18410. \\[mail-bcc] move to BCC: \\[mail-cc] move to CC:
  18411. \\[mail-fcc] move to FCC: \\[mail-reply-to] move to Reply-To:
  18412. \\[mail-mail-reply-to] move to Mail-Reply-To:
  18413. \\[mail-mail-followup-to] move to Mail-Followup-To:
  18414. \\[mail-text] move to message text.
  18415. \\[mail-signature] mail-signature (insert `mail-signature-file' file).
  18416. \\[mail-yank-original] mail-yank-original (insert current message, in Rmail).
  18417. \\[mail-fill-yanked-message] mail-fill-yanked-message (fill what was yanked).
  18418. \\[mail-insert-file] insert a text file into the message.
  18419. \\[mail-add-attachment] attach to the message a file as binary attachment.
  18420. Turning on Mail mode runs the normal hooks `text-mode-hook' and
  18421. `mail-mode-hook' (in that order).
  18422. \(fn)" t nil)
  18423. (defvar mail-mailing-lists nil "\
  18424. List of mailing list addresses the user is subscribed to.
  18425. The variable is used to trigger insertion of the \"Mail-Followup-To\"
  18426. header when sending a message to a mailing list.")
  18427. (custom-autoload 'mail-mailing-lists "sendmail" t)
  18428. (defvar sendmail-coding-system nil "\
  18429. *Coding system for encoding the outgoing mail.
  18430. This has higher priority than the default `buffer-file-coding-system'
  18431. and `default-sendmail-coding-system',
  18432. but lower priority than the local value of `buffer-file-coding-system'.
  18433. See also the function `select-message-coding-system'.")
  18434. (defvar default-sendmail-coding-system 'iso-latin-1 "\
  18435. Default coding system for encoding the outgoing mail.
  18436. This variable is used only when `sendmail-coding-system' is nil.
  18437. This variable is set/changed by the command `set-language-environment'.
  18438. User should not set this variable manually,
  18439. instead use `sendmail-coding-system' to get a constant encoding
  18440. of outgoing mails regardless of the current language environment.
  18441. See also the function `select-message-coding-system'.")
  18442. (autoload 'mail "sendmail" "\
  18443. Edit a message to be sent. Prefix arg means resume editing (don't erase).
  18444. When this function returns, the buffer `*mail*' is selected.
  18445. The value is t if the message was newly initialized; otherwise, nil.
  18446. Optionally, the signature file `mail-signature-file' can be inserted at the
  18447. end; see the variable `mail-signature'.
  18448. \\<mail-mode-map>
  18449. While editing message, type \\[mail-send-and-exit] to send the message and exit.
  18450. Various special commands starting with C-c are available in sendmail mode
  18451. to move to message header fields:
  18452. \\{mail-mode-map}
  18453. If `mail-self-blind' is non-nil, a BCC to yourself is inserted
  18454. when the message is initialized.
  18455. If `mail-default-reply-to' is non-nil, it should be an address (a string);
  18456. a Reply-to: field with that address is inserted.
  18457. If `mail-archive-file-name' is non-nil, an FCC field with that file name
  18458. is inserted.
  18459. The normal hook `mail-setup-hook' is run after the message is
  18460. initialized. It can add more default fields to the message.
  18461. The first argument, NOERASE, determines what to do when there is
  18462. an existing modified `*mail*' buffer. If NOERASE is nil, the
  18463. existing mail buffer is used, and the user is prompted whether to
  18464. keep the old contents or to erase them. If NOERASE has the value
  18465. `new', a new mail buffer will be created instead of using the old
  18466. one. Any other non-nil value means to always select the old
  18467. buffer without erasing the contents.
  18468. The second through fifth arguments,
  18469. TO, SUBJECT, IN-REPLY-TO and CC, specify if non-nil
  18470. the initial contents of those header fields.
  18471. These arguments should not have final newlines.
  18472. The sixth argument REPLYBUFFER is a buffer which contains an
  18473. original message being replied to, or else an action
  18474. of the form (FUNCTION . ARGS) which says how to insert the original.
  18475. Or it can be nil, if not replying to anything.
  18476. The seventh argument ACTIONS is a list of actions to take
  18477. if/when the message is sent. Each action looks like (FUNCTION . ARGS);
  18478. when the message is sent, we apply FUNCTION to ARGS.
  18479. This is how Rmail arranges to mark messages `answered'.
  18480. \(fn &optional NOERASE TO SUBJECT IN-REPLY-TO CC REPLYBUFFER ACTIONS RETURN-ACTION)" t nil)
  18481. (autoload 'mail-other-window "sendmail" "\
  18482. Like `mail' command, but display mail buffer in another window.
  18483. \(fn &optional NOERASE TO SUBJECT IN-REPLY-TO CC REPLYBUFFER SENDACTIONS)" t nil)
  18484. (autoload 'mail-other-frame "sendmail" "\
  18485. Like `mail' command, but display mail buffer in another frame.
  18486. \(fn &optional NOERASE TO SUBJECT IN-REPLY-TO CC REPLYBUFFER SENDACTIONS)" t nil)
  18487. ;;;***
  18488. ;;;### (autoloads (server-save-buffers-kill-terminal server-mode
  18489. ;;;;;; server-force-delete server-start) "server" "server.el" (20400
  18490. ;;;;;; 62402))
  18491. ;;; Generated autoloads from server.el
  18492. (put 'server-host 'risky-local-variable t)
  18493. (put 'server-port 'risky-local-variable t)
  18494. (put 'server-auth-dir 'risky-local-variable t)
  18495. (autoload 'server-start "server" "\
  18496. Allow this Emacs process to be a server for client processes.
  18497. This starts a server communications subprocess through which
  18498. client \"editors\" can send your editing commands to this Emacs
  18499. job. To use the server, set up the program `emacsclient' in the
  18500. Emacs distribution as your standard \"editor\".
  18501. Optional argument LEAVE-DEAD (interactively, a prefix arg) means just
  18502. kill any existing server communications subprocess.
  18503. If a server is already running, restart it. If clients are
  18504. running, ask the user for confirmation first, unless optional
  18505. argument INHIBIT-PROMPT is non-nil.
  18506. To force-start a server, do \\[server-force-delete] and then
  18507. \\[server-start].
  18508. \(fn &optional LEAVE-DEAD INHIBIT-PROMPT)" t nil)
  18509. (autoload 'server-force-delete "server" "\
  18510. Unconditionally delete connection file for server NAME.
  18511. If server is running, it is first stopped.
  18512. NAME defaults to `server-name'. With argument, ask for NAME.
  18513. \(fn &optional NAME)" t nil)
  18514. (defvar server-mode nil "\
  18515. Non-nil if Server mode is enabled.
  18516. See the command `server-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  18517. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  18518. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  18519. or call the function `server-mode'.")
  18520. (custom-autoload 'server-mode "server" nil)
  18521. (autoload 'server-mode "server" "\
  18522. Toggle Server mode.
  18523. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Server mode if ARG is
  18524. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  18525. Server mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  18526. Server mode runs a process that accepts commands from the
  18527. `emacsclient' program. See Info node `Emacs server' and
  18528. `server-start' for details.
  18529. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  18530. (autoload 'server-save-buffers-kill-terminal "server" "\
  18531. Offer to save each buffer, then kill the current client.
  18532. With ARG non-nil, silently save all file-visiting buffers, then kill.
  18533. If emacsclient was started with a list of filenames to edit, then
  18534. only these files will be asked to be saved.
  18535. \(fn ARG)" nil nil)
  18536. ;;;***
  18537. ;;;### (autoloads (ses-mode) "ses" "ses.el" (20400 62402))
  18538. ;;; Generated autoloads from ses.el
  18539. (autoload 'ses-mode "ses" "\
  18540. Major mode for Simple Emacs Spreadsheet.
  18541. See \"ses-example.ses\" (in `data-directory') for more info.
  18542. Key definitions:
  18543. \\{ses-mode-map}
  18544. These key definitions are active only in the print area (the visible part):
  18545. \\{ses-mode-print-map}
  18546. These are active only in the minibuffer, when entering or editing a formula:
  18547. \\{ses-mode-edit-map}
  18548. \(fn)" t nil)
  18549. ;;;***
  18550. ;;;### (autoloads (html-mode sgml-mode) "sgml-mode" "textmodes/sgml-mode.el"
  18551. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  18552. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/sgml-mode.el
  18553. (autoload 'sgml-mode "sgml-mode" "\
  18554. Major mode for editing SGML documents.
  18555. Makes > match <.
  18556. Keys <, &, SPC within <>, \", / and ' can be electric depending on
  18557. `sgml-quick-keys'.
  18558. An argument of N to a tag-inserting command means to wrap it around
  18559. the next N words. In Transient Mark mode, when the mark is active,
  18560. N defaults to -1, which means to wrap it around the current region.
  18561. If you like upcased tags, put (setq sgml-transformation-function 'upcase)
  18562. in your `.emacs' file.
  18563. Use \\[sgml-validate] to validate your document with an SGML parser.
  18564. Do \\[describe-variable] sgml- SPC to see available variables.
  18565. Do \\[describe-key] on the following bindings to discover what they do.
  18566. \\{sgml-mode-map}
  18567. \(fn)" t nil)
  18568. (autoload 'html-mode "sgml-mode" "\
  18569. Major mode based on SGML mode for editing HTML documents.
  18570. This allows inserting skeleton constructs used in hypertext documents with
  18571. completion. See below for an introduction to HTML. Use
  18572. \\[browse-url-of-buffer] to see how this comes out. See also `sgml-mode' on
  18573. which this is based.
  18574. Do \\[describe-variable] html- SPC and \\[describe-variable] sgml- SPC to see available variables.
  18575. To write fairly well formatted pages you only need to know few things. Most
  18576. browsers have a function to read the source code of the page being seen, so
  18577. you can imitate various tricks. Here's a very short HTML primer which you
  18578. can also view with a browser to see what happens:
  18579. <title>A Title Describing Contents</title> should be on every page. Pages can
  18580. have <h1>Very Major Headlines</h1> through <h6>Very Minor Headlines</h6>
  18581. <hr> Parts can be separated with horizontal rules.
  18582. <p>Paragraphs only need an opening tag. Line breaks and multiple spaces are
  18583. ignored unless the text is <pre>preformatted.</pre> Text can be marked as
  18584. <b>bold</b>, <i>italic</i> or <u>underlined</u> using the normal M-o or
  18585. Edit/Text Properties/Face commands.
  18586. Pages can have <a name=\"SOMENAME\">named points</a> and can link other points
  18587. to them with <a href=\"#SOMENAME\">see also somename</a>. In the same way <a
  18588. href=\"URL\">see also URL</a> where URL is a filename relative to current
  18589. directory, or absolute as in `http://www.cs.indiana.edu/elisp/w3/docs.html'.
  18590. Images in many formats can be inlined with <img src=\"URL\">.
  18591. If you mainly create your own documents, `sgml-specials' might be
  18592. interesting. But note that some HTML 2 browsers can't handle `&apos;'.
  18593. To work around that, do:
  18594. (eval-after-load \"sgml-mode\" '(aset sgml-char-names ?' nil))
  18595. \\{html-mode-map}
  18596. \(fn)" t nil)
  18597. ;;;***
  18598. ;;;### (autoloads (sh-mode) "sh-script" "progmodes/sh-script.el"
  18599. ;;;;;; (20487 24216))
  18600. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/sh-script.el
  18601. (put 'sh-shell 'safe-local-variable 'symbolp)
  18602. (autoload 'sh-mode "sh-script" "\
  18603. Major mode for editing shell scripts.
  18604. This mode works for many shells, since they all have roughly the same syntax,
  18605. as far as commands, arguments, variables, pipes, comments etc. are concerned.
  18606. Unless the file's magic number indicates the shell, your usual shell is
  18607. assumed. Since filenames rarely give a clue, they are not further analyzed.
  18608. This mode adapts to the variations between shells (see `sh-set-shell') by
  18609. means of an inheritance based feature lookup (see `sh-feature'). This
  18610. mechanism applies to all variables (including skeletons) that pertain to
  18611. shell-specific features.
  18612. The default style of this mode is that of Rosenblatt's Korn shell book.
  18613. The syntax of the statements varies with the shell being used. The
  18614. following commands are available, based on the current shell's syntax:
  18615. \\<sh-mode-map>
  18616. \\[sh-case] case statement
  18617. \\[sh-for] for loop
  18618. \\[sh-function] function definition
  18619. \\[sh-if] if statement
  18620. \\[sh-indexed-loop] indexed loop from 1 to n
  18621. \\[sh-while-getopts] while getopts loop
  18622. \\[sh-repeat] repeat loop
  18623. \\[sh-select] select loop
  18624. \\[sh-until] until loop
  18625. \\[sh-while] while loop
  18626. For sh and rc shells indentation commands are:
  18627. \\[sh-show-indent] Show the variable controlling this line's indentation.
  18628. \\[sh-set-indent] Set then variable controlling this line's indentation.
  18629. \\[sh-learn-line-indent] Change the indentation variable so this line
  18630. would indent to the way it currently is.
  18631. \\[sh-learn-buffer-indent] Set the indentation variables so the
  18632. buffer indents as it currently is indented.
  18633. \\[backward-delete-char-untabify] Delete backward one position, even if it was a tab.
  18634. \\[newline-and-indent] Delete unquoted space and indent new line same as this one.
  18635. \\[sh-end-of-command] Go to end of successive commands.
  18636. \\[sh-beginning-of-command] Go to beginning of successive commands.
  18637. \\[sh-set-shell] Set this buffer's shell, and maybe its magic number.
  18638. \\[sh-execute-region] Have optional header and region be executed in a subshell.
  18639. \\[sh-maybe-here-document] Without prefix, following an unquoted < inserts here document.
  18640. {, (, [, ', \", `
  18641. Unless quoted with \\, insert the pairs {}, (), [], or '', \"\", ``.
  18642. If you generally program a shell different from your login shell you can
  18643. set `sh-shell-file' accordingly. If your shell's file name doesn't correctly
  18644. indicate what shell it is use `sh-alias-alist' to translate.
  18645. If your shell gives error messages with line numbers, you can use \\[executable-interpret]
  18646. with your script for an edit-interpret-debug cycle.
  18647. \(fn)" t nil)
  18648. (defalias 'shell-script-mode 'sh-mode)
  18649. ;;;***
  18650. ;;;### (autoloads (list-load-path-shadows) "shadow" "emacs-lisp/shadow.el"
  18651. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  18652. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/shadow.el
  18653. (autoload 'list-load-path-shadows "shadow" "\
  18654. Display a list of Emacs Lisp files that shadow other files.
  18655. If STRINGP is non-nil, returns any shadows as a string.
  18656. Otherwise, if interactive shows any shadows in a `*Shadows*' buffer;
  18657. else prints messages listing any shadows.
  18658. This function lists potential load path problems. Directories in
  18659. the `load-path' variable are searched, in order, for Emacs Lisp
  18660. files. When a previously encountered file name is found again, a
  18661. message is displayed indicating that the later file is \"hidden\" by
  18662. the earlier.
  18663. For example, suppose `load-path' is set to
  18664. \(\"/usr/gnu/emacs/site-lisp\" \"/usr/gnu/emacs/share/emacs/19.30/lisp\")
  18665. and that each of these directories contains a file called XXX.el. Then
  18666. XXX.el in the site-lisp directory is referred to by all of:
  18667. \(require 'XXX), (autoload .... \"XXX\"), (load-library \"XXX\") etc.
  18668. The first XXX.el file prevents Emacs from seeing the second (unless
  18669. the second is loaded explicitly via `load-file').
  18670. When not intended, such shadowings can be the source of subtle
  18671. problems. For example, the above situation may have arisen because the
  18672. XXX package was not distributed with versions of Emacs prior to
  18673. 19.30. An Emacs maintainer downloaded XXX from elsewhere and installed
  18674. it. Later, XXX was updated and included in the Emacs distribution.
  18675. Unless the Emacs maintainer checks for this, the new version of XXX
  18676. will be hidden behind the old (which may no longer work with the new
  18677. Emacs version).
  18678. This function performs these checks and flags all possible
  18679. shadowings. Because a .el file may exist without a corresponding .elc
  18680. \(or vice-versa), these suffixes are essentially ignored. A file
  18681. XXX.elc in an early directory (that does not contain XXX.el) is
  18682. considered to shadow a later file XXX.el, and vice-versa.
  18683. Shadowings are located by calling the (non-interactive) companion
  18684. function, `load-path-shadows-find'.
  18685. \(fn &optional STRINGP)" t nil)
  18686. ;;;***
  18687. ;;;### (autoloads (shadow-initialize shadow-define-regexp-group shadow-define-literal-group
  18688. ;;;;;; shadow-define-cluster) "shadowfile" "shadowfile.el" (20352
  18689. ;;;;;; 65510))
  18690. ;;; Generated autoloads from shadowfile.el
  18691. (autoload 'shadow-define-cluster "shadowfile" "\
  18692. Edit (or create) the definition of a cluster NAME.
  18693. This is a group of hosts that share directories, so that copying to or from
  18694. one of them is sufficient to update the file on all of them. Clusters are
  18695. defined by a name, the network address of a primary host (the one we copy
  18696. files to), and a regular expression that matches the hostnames of all the
  18697. sites in the cluster.
  18698. \(fn NAME)" t nil)
  18699. (autoload 'shadow-define-literal-group "shadowfile" "\
  18700. Declare a single file to be shared between sites.
  18701. It may have different filenames on each site. When this file is edited, the
  18702. new version will be copied to each of the other locations. Sites can be
  18703. specific hostnames, or names of clusters (see `shadow-define-cluster').
  18704. \(fn)" t nil)
  18705. (autoload 'shadow-define-regexp-group "shadowfile" "\
  18706. Make each of a group of files be shared between hosts.
  18707. Prompts for regular expression; files matching this are shared between a list
  18708. of sites, which are also prompted for. The filenames must be identical on all
  18709. hosts (if they aren't, use `shadow-define-literal-group' instead of this
  18710. function). Each site can be either a hostname or the name of a cluster (see
  18711. `shadow-define-cluster').
  18712. \(fn)" t nil)
  18713. (autoload 'shadow-initialize "shadowfile" "\
  18714. Set up file shadowing.
  18715. \(fn)" t nil)
  18716. ;;;***
  18717. ;;;### (autoloads (shell shell-dumb-shell-regexp) "shell" "shell.el"
  18718. ;;;;;; (20396 34067))
  18719. ;;; Generated autoloads from shell.el
  18720. (defvar shell-dumb-shell-regexp (purecopy "cmd\\(proxy\\)?\\.exe") "\
  18721. Regexp to match shells that don't save their command history, and
  18722. don't handle the backslash as a quote character. For shells that
  18723. match this regexp, Emacs will write out the command history when the
  18724. shell finishes, and won't remove backslashes when it unquotes shell
  18725. arguments.")
  18726. (custom-autoload 'shell-dumb-shell-regexp "shell" t)
  18727. (autoload 'shell "shell" "\
  18728. Run an inferior shell, with I/O through BUFFER (which defaults to `*shell*').
  18729. Interactively, a prefix arg means to prompt for BUFFER.
  18730. If `default-directory' is a remote file name, it is also prompted
  18731. to change if called with a prefix arg.
  18732. If BUFFER exists but shell process is not running, make new shell.
  18733. If BUFFER exists and shell process is running, just switch to BUFFER.
  18734. Program used comes from variable `explicit-shell-file-name',
  18735. or (if that is nil) from the ESHELL environment variable,
  18736. or (if that is nil) from `shell-file-name'.
  18737. If a file `~/.emacs_SHELLNAME' exists, or `~/.emacs.d/init_SHELLNAME.sh',
  18738. it is given as initial input (but this may be lost, due to a timing
  18739. error, if the shell discards input when it starts up).
  18740. The buffer is put in Shell mode, giving commands for sending input
  18741. and controlling the subjobs of the shell. See `shell-mode'.
  18742. See also the variable `shell-prompt-pattern'.
  18743. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  18744. in the input and output to the shell, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  18745. before \\[shell]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  18746. in the shell buffer, after you start the shell.
  18747. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  18748. `default-process-coding-system'.
  18749. The shell file name (sans directories) is used to make a symbol name
  18750. such as `explicit-csh-args'. If that symbol is a variable,
  18751. its value is used as a list of arguments when invoking the shell.
  18752. Otherwise, one argument `-i' is passed to the shell.
  18753. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the shell buffer for a list of commands.)
  18754. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  18755. ;;;***
  18756. ;;;### (autoloads (shr-insert-document) "shr" "gnus/shr.el" (20487
  18757. ;;;;;; 24216))
  18758. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/shr.el
  18759. (autoload 'shr-insert-document "shr" "\
  18760. Render the parsed document DOM into the current buffer.
  18761. DOM should be a parse tree as generated by
  18762. `libxml-parse-html-region' or similar.
  18763. \(fn DOM)" nil nil)
  18764. ;;;***
  18765. ;;;### (autoloads (sieve-upload-and-bury sieve-upload sieve-manage)
  18766. ;;;;;; "sieve" "gnus/sieve.el" (20352 65510))
  18767. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/sieve.el
  18768. (autoload 'sieve-manage "sieve" "\
  18769. \(fn SERVER &optional PORT)" t nil)
  18770. (autoload 'sieve-upload "sieve" "\
  18771. \(fn &optional NAME)" t nil)
  18772. (autoload 'sieve-upload-and-bury "sieve" "\
  18773. \(fn &optional NAME)" t nil)
  18774. ;;;***
  18775. ;;;### (autoloads (sieve-mode) "sieve-mode" "gnus/sieve-mode.el"
  18776. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  18777. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/sieve-mode.el
  18778. (autoload 'sieve-mode "sieve-mode" "\
  18779. Major mode for editing Sieve code.
  18780. This is much like C mode except for the syntax of comments. Its keymap
  18781. inherits from C mode's and it has the same variables for customizing
  18782. indentation. It has its own abbrev table and its own syntax table.
  18783. Turning on Sieve mode runs `sieve-mode-hook'.
  18784. \(fn)" t nil)
  18785. ;;;***
  18786. ;;;### (autoloads (simula-mode) "simula" "progmodes/simula.el" (20400
  18787. ;;;;;; 62402))
  18788. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/simula.el
  18789. (autoload 'simula-mode "simula" "\
  18790. Major mode for editing SIMULA code.
  18791. \\{simula-mode-map}
  18792. Variables controlling indentation style:
  18793. `simula-tab-always-indent'
  18794. Non-nil means TAB in SIMULA mode should always reindent the current line,
  18795. regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
  18796. `simula-indent-level'
  18797. Indentation of SIMULA statements with respect to containing block.
  18798. `simula-substatement-offset'
  18799. Extra indentation after DO, THEN, ELSE, WHEN and OTHERWISE.
  18800. `simula-continued-statement-offset' 3
  18801. Extra indentation for lines not starting a statement or substatement,
  18802. e.g. a nested FOR-loop. If value is a list, each line in a multiple-
  18803. line continued statement will have the car of the list extra indentation
  18804. with respect to the previous line of the statement.
  18805. `simula-label-offset' -4711
  18806. Offset of SIMULA label lines relative to usual indentation.
  18807. `simula-if-indent' '(0 . 0)
  18808. Extra indentation of THEN and ELSE with respect to the starting IF.
  18809. Value is a cons cell, the car is extra THEN indentation and the cdr
  18810. extra ELSE indentation. IF after ELSE is indented as the starting IF.
  18811. `simula-inspect-indent' '(0 . 0)
  18812. Extra indentation of WHEN and OTHERWISE with respect to the
  18813. corresponding INSPECT. Value is a cons cell, the car is
  18814. extra WHEN indentation and the cdr extra OTHERWISE indentation.
  18815. `simula-electric-indent' nil
  18816. If this variable is non-nil, `simula-indent-line'
  18817. will check the previous line to see if it has to be reindented.
  18818. `simula-abbrev-keyword' 'upcase
  18819. Determine how SIMULA keywords will be expanded. Value is one of
  18820. the symbols `upcase', `downcase', `capitalize', (as in) `abbrev-table',
  18821. or nil if they should not be changed.
  18822. `simula-abbrev-stdproc' 'abbrev-table
  18823. Determine how standard SIMULA procedure and class names will be
  18824. expanded. Value is one of the symbols `upcase', `downcase', `capitalize',
  18825. (as in) `abbrev-table', or nil if they should not be changed.
  18826. Turning on SIMULA mode calls the value of the variable simula-mode-hook
  18827. with no arguments, if that value is non-nil.
  18828. \(fn)" t nil)
  18829. ;;;***
  18830. ;;;### (autoloads (skeleton-pair-insert-maybe skeleton-insert skeleton-proxy-new
  18831. ;;;;;; define-skeleton) "skeleton" "skeleton.el" (20400 62402))
  18832. ;;; Generated autoloads from skeleton.el
  18833. (defvar skeleton-filter-function 'identity "\
  18834. Function for transforming a skeleton proxy's aliases' variable value.")
  18835. (autoload 'define-skeleton "skeleton" "\
  18836. Define a user-configurable COMMAND that enters a statement skeleton.
  18837. DOCUMENTATION is that of the command.
  18838. SKELETON is as defined under `skeleton-insert'.
  18839. \(fn COMMAND DOCUMENTATION &rest SKELETON)" nil (quote macro))
  18840. (autoload 'skeleton-proxy-new "skeleton" "\
  18841. Insert SKELETON.
  18842. Prefix ARG allows wrapping around words or regions (see `skeleton-insert').
  18843. If no ARG was given, but the region is visible, ARG defaults to -1 depending
  18844. on `skeleton-autowrap'. An ARG of M-0 will prevent this just for once.
  18845. This command can also be an abbrev expansion (3rd and 4th columns in
  18846. \\[edit-abbrevs] buffer: \"\" command-name).
  18847. Optional second argument STR may also be a string which will be the value
  18848. of `str' whereas the skeleton's interactor is then ignored.
  18849. \(fn SKELETON &optional STR ARG)" nil nil)
  18850. (autoload 'skeleton-insert "skeleton" "\
  18851. Insert the complex statement skeleton SKELETON describes very concisely.
  18852. With optional second argument REGIONS, wrap first interesting point
  18853. \(`_') in skeleton around next REGIONS words, if REGIONS is positive.
  18854. If REGIONS is negative, wrap REGIONS preceding interregions into first
  18855. REGIONS interesting positions (successive `_'s) in skeleton.
  18856. An interregion is the stretch of text between two contiguous marked
  18857. points. If you marked A B C [] (where [] is the cursor) in
  18858. alphabetical order, the 3 interregions are simply the last 3 regions.
  18859. But if you marked B A [] C, the interregions are B-A, A-[], []-C.
  18860. The optional third argument STR, if specified, is the value for the
  18861. variable `str' within the skeleton. When this is non-nil, the
  18862. interactor gets ignored, and this should be a valid skeleton element.
  18863. SKELETON is made up as (INTERACTOR ELEMENT ...). INTERACTOR may be nil if
  18864. not needed, a prompt-string or an expression for complex read functions.
  18865. If ELEMENT is a string or a character it gets inserted (see also
  18866. `skeleton-transformation-function'). Other possibilities are:
  18867. \\n go to next line and indent according to mode
  18868. _ interesting point, interregion here
  18869. - interesting point, no interregion interaction, overrides
  18870. interesting point set by _
  18871. > indent line (or interregion if > _) according to major mode
  18872. @ add position to `skeleton-positions'
  18873. & do next ELEMENT if previous moved point
  18874. | do next ELEMENT if previous didn't move point
  18875. -num delete num preceding characters (see `skeleton-untabify')
  18876. resume: skipped, continue here if quit is signaled
  18877. nil skipped
  18878. After termination, point will be positioned at the last occurrence of -
  18879. or at the first occurrence of _ or at the end of the inserted text.
  18880. Further elements can be defined via `skeleton-further-elements'. ELEMENT may
  18881. itself be a SKELETON with an INTERACTOR. The user is prompted repeatedly for
  18882. different inputs. The SKELETON is processed as often as the user enters a
  18883. non-empty string. \\[keyboard-quit] terminates skeleton insertion, but
  18884. continues after `resume:' and positions at `_' if any. If INTERACTOR in such
  18885. a subskeleton is a prompt-string which contains a \".. %s ..\" it is
  18886. formatted with `skeleton-subprompt'. Such an INTERACTOR may also be a list of
  18887. strings with the subskeleton being repeated once for each string.
  18888. Quoted Lisp expressions are evaluated for their side-effects.
  18889. Other Lisp expressions are evaluated and the value treated as above.
  18890. Note that expressions may not return t since this implies an
  18891. endless loop. Modes can define other symbols by locally setting them
  18892. to any valid skeleton element. The following local variables are
  18893. available:
  18894. str first time: read a string according to INTERACTOR
  18895. then: insert previously read string once more
  18896. help help-form during interaction with the user or nil
  18897. input initial input (string or cons with index) while reading str
  18898. v1, v2 local variables for memorizing anything you want
  18899. When done with skeleton, but before going back to `_'-point call
  18900. `skeleton-end-hook' if that is non-nil.
  18901. \(fn SKELETON &optional REGIONS STR)" nil nil)
  18902. (autoload 'skeleton-pair-insert-maybe "skeleton" "\
  18903. Insert the character you type ARG times.
  18904. With no ARG, if `skeleton-pair' is non-nil, pairing can occur. If the region
  18905. is visible the pair is wrapped around it depending on `skeleton-autowrap'.
  18906. Else, if `skeleton-pair-on-word' is non-nil or we are not before or inside a
  18907. word, and if `skeleton-pair-filter-function' returns nil, pairing is performed.
  18908. Pairing is also prohibited if we are right after a quoting character
  18909. such as backslash.
  18910. If a match is found in `skeleton-pair-alist', that is inserted, else
  18911. the defaults are used. These are (), [], {}, <> and `' for the
  18912. symmetrical ones, and the same character twice for the others.
  18913. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  18914. ;;;***
  18915. ;;;### (autoloads (smerge-start-session smerge-mode smerge-ediff)
  18916. ;;;;;; "smerge-mode" "vc/smerge-mode.el" (20400 62402))
  18917. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/smerge-mode.el
  18918. (autoload 'smerge-ediff "smerge-mode" "\
  18919. Invoke ediff to resolve the conflicts.
  18920. NAME-MINE, NAME-OTHER, and NAME-BASE, if non-nil, are used for the
  18921. buffer names.
  18922. \(fn &optional NAME-MINE NAME-OTHER NAME-BASE)" t nil)
  18923. (autoload 'smerge-mode "smerge-mode" "\
  18924. Minor mode to simplify editing output from the diff3 program.
  18925. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  18926. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  18927. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  18928. \\{smerge-mode-map}
  18929. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  18930. (autoload 'smerge-start-session "smerge-mode" "\
  18931. Turn on `smerge-mode' and move point to first conflict marker.
  18932. If no conflict maker is found, turn off `smerge-mode'.
  18933. \(fn)" t nil)
  18934. ;;;***
  18935. ;;;### (autoloads (smiley-buffer smiley-region) "smiley" "gnus/smiley.el"
  18936. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  18937. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/smiley.el
  18938. (autoload 'smiley-region "smiley" "\
  18939. Replace in the region `smiley-regexp-alist' matches with corresponding images.
  18940. A list of images is returned.
  18941. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  18942. (autoload 'smiley-buffer "smiley" "\
  18943. Run `smiley-region' at the BUFFER, specified in the argument or
  18944. interactively. If there's no argument, do it at the current buffer.
  18945. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  18946. ;;;***
  18947. ;;;### (autoloads (smtpmail-send-queued-mail smtpmail-send-it) "smtpmail"
  18948. ;;;;;; "mail/smtpmail.el" (20396 34067))
  18949. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/smtpmail.el
  18950. (autoload 'smtpmail-send-it "smtpmail" "\
  18951. \(fn)" nil nil)
  18952. (autoload 'smtpmail-send-queued-mail "smtpmail" "\
  18953. Send mail that was queued as a result of setting `smtpmail-queue-mail'.
  18954. \(fn)" t nil)
  18955. ;;;***
  18956. ;;;### (autoloads (snake) "snake" "play/snake.el" (20352 65510))
  18957. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/snake.el
  18958. (autoload 'snake "snake" "\
  18959. Play the Snake game.
  18960. Move the snake around without colliding with its tail or with the border.
  18961. Eating dots causes the snake to get longer.
  18962. Snake mode keybindings:
  18963. \\<snake-mode-map>
  18964. \\[snake-start-game] Starts a new game of Snake
  18965. \\[snake-end-game] Terminates the current game
  18966. \\[snake-pause-game] Pauses (or resumes) the current game
  18967. \\[snake-move-left] Makes the snake move left
  18968. \\[snake-move-right] Makes the snake move right
  18969. \\[snake-move-up] Makes the snake move up
  18970. \\[snake-move-down] Makes the snake move down
  18971. \(fn)" t nil)
  18972. ;;;***
  18973. ;;;### (autoloads (snmpv2-mode snmp-mode) "snmp-mode" "net/snmp-mode.el"
  18974. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  18975. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/snmp-mode.el
  18976. (autoload 'snmp-mode "snmp-mode" "\
  18977. Major mode for editing SNMP MIBs.
  18978. Expression and list commands understand all C brackets.
  18979. Tab indents for C code.
  18980. Comments start with -- and end with newline or another --.
  18981. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  18982. \\{snmp-mode-map}
  18983. Turning on snmp-mode runs the hooks in `snmp-common-mode-hook', then
  18984. `snmp-mode-hook'.
  18985. \(fn)" t nil)
  18986. (autoload 'snmpv2-mode "snmp-mode" "\
  18987. Major mode for editing SNMPv2 MIBs.
  18988. Expression and list commands understand all C brackets.
  18989. Tab indents for C code.
  18990. Comments start with -- and end with newline or another --.
  18991. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  18992. \\{snmp-mode-map}
  18993. Turning on snmp-mode runs the hooks in `snmp-common-mode-hook',
  18994. then `snmpv2-mode-hook'.
  18995. \(fn)" t nil)
  18996. ;;;***
  18997. ;;;### (autoloads (sunrise-sunset) "solar" "calendar/solar.el" (20352
  18998. ;;;;;; 65510))
  18999. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/solar.el
  19000. (autoload 'sunrise-sunset "solar" "\
  19001. Local time of sunrise and sunset for today. Accurate to a few seconds.
  19002. If called with an optional prefix argument ARG, prompt for date.
  19003. If called with an optional double prefix argument, prompt for
  19004. longitude, latitude, time zone, and date, and always use standard time.
  19005. This function is suitable for execution in a .emacs file.
  19006. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  19007. ;;;***
  19008. ;;;### (autoloads (solitaire) "solitaire" "play/solitaire.el" (20352
  19009. ;;;;;; 65510))
  19010. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/solitaire.el
  19011. (autoload 'solitaire "solitaire" "\
  19012. Play Solitaire.
  19013. To play Solitaire, type \\[solitaire].
  19014. \\<solitaire-mode-map>
  19015. Move around the board using the cursor keys.
  19016. Move stones using \\[solitaire-move] followed by a direction key.
  19017. Undo moves using \\[solitaire-undo].
  19018. Check for possible moves using \\[solitaire-do-check].
  19019. \(The variable `solitaire-auto-eval' controls whether to automatically
  19020. check after each move or undo.)
  19021. What is Solitaire?
  19022. I don't know who invented this game, but it seems to be rather old and
  19023. its origin seems to be northern Africa. Here's how to play:
  19024. Initially, the board will look similar to this:
  19025. Le Solitaire
  19026. ============
  19027. o o o
  19028. o o o
  19029. o o o o o o o
  19030. o o o . o o o
  19031. o o o o o o o
  19032. o o o
  19033. o o o
  19034. Let's call the o's stones and the .'s holes. One stone fits into one
  19035. hole. As you can see, all holes but one are occupied by stones. The
  19036. aim of the game is to get rid of all but one stone, leaving that last
  19037. one in the middle of the board if you're cool.
  19038. A stone can be moved if there is another stone next to it, and a hole
  19039. after that one. Thus there must be three fields in a row, either
  19040. horizontally or vertically, up, down, left or right, which look like
  19041. this: o o .
  19042. Then the first stone is moved to the hole, jumping over the second,
  19043. which therefore is taken away. The above thus `evaluates' to: . . o
  19044. That's all. Here's the board after two moves:
  19045. o o o
  19046. . o o
  19047. o o . o o o o
  19048. o . o o o o o
  19049. o o o o o o o
  19050. o o o
  19051. o o o
  19052. Pick your favorite shortcuts:
  19053. \\{solitaire-mode-map}
  19054. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  19055. ;;;***
  19056. ;;;### (autoloads (reverse-region sort-columns sort-regexp-fields
  19057. ;;;;;; sort-fields sort-numeric-fields sort-pages sort-paragraphs
  19058. ;;;;;; sort-lines sort-subr) "sort" "sort.el" (20352 65510))
  19059. ;;; Generated autoloads from sort.el
  19060. (put 'sort-fold-case 'safe-local-variable 'booleanp)
  19061. (autoload 'sort-subr "sort" "\
  19062. General text sorting routine to divide buffer into records and sort them.
  19063. We divide the accessible portion of the buffer into disjoint pieces
  19064. called sort records. A portion of each sort record (perhaps all of
  19065. it) is designated as the sort key. The records are rearranged in the
  19066. buffer in order by their sort keys. The records may or may not be
  19067. contiguous.
  19068. Usually the records are rearranged in order of ascending sort key.
  19069. If REVERSE is non-nil, they are rearranged in order of descending sort key.
  19070. The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
  19071. the sort order.
  19072. The next four arguments are functions to be called to move point
  19073. across a sort record. They will be called many times from within sort-subr.
  19074. NEXTRECFUN is called with point at the end of the previous record.
  19075. It moves point to the start of the next record.
  19076. It should move point to the end of the buffer if there are no more records.
  19077. The first record is assumed to start at the position of point when sort-subr
  19078. is called.
  19079. ENDRECFUN is called with point within the record.
  19080. It should move point to the end of the record.
  19081. STARTKEYFUN moves from the start of the record to the start of the key.
  19082. It may return either a non-nil value to be used as the key, or
  19083. else the key is the substring between the values of point after
  19084. STARTKEYFUN and ENDKEYFUN are called. If STARTKEYFUN is nil, the key
  19085. starts at the beginning of the record.
  19086. ENDKEYFUN moves from the start of the sort key to the end of the sort key.
  19087. ENDKEYFUN may be nil if STARTKEYFUN returns a value or if it would be the
  19088. same as ENDRECFUN.
  19089. PREDICATE is the function to use to compare keys. If keys are numbers,
  19090. it defaults to `<', otherwise it defaults to `string<'.
  19091. \(fn REVERSE NEXTRECFUN ENDRECFUN &optional STARTKEYFUN ENDKEYFUN PREDICATE)" nil nil)
  19092. (autoload 'sort-lines "sort" "\
  19093. Sort lines in region alphabetically; argument means descending order.
  19094. Called from a program, there are three arguments:
  19095. REVERSE (non-nil means reverse order), BEG and END (region to sort).
  19096. The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
  19097. the sort order.
  19098. \(fn REVERSE BEG END)" t nil)
  19099. (autoload 'sort-paragraphs "sort" "\
  19100. Sort paragraphs in region alphabetically; argument means descending order.
  19101. Called from a program, there are three arguments:
  19102. REVERSE (non-nil means reverse order), BEG and END (region to sort).
  19103. The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
  19104. the sort order.
  19105. \(fn REVERSE BEG END)" t nil)
  19106. (autoload 'sort-pages "sort" "\
  19107. Sort pages in region alphabetically; argument means descending order.
  19108. Called from a program, there are three arguments:
  19109. REVERSE (non-nil means reverse order), BEG and END (region to sort).
  19110. The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
  19111. the sort order.
  19112. \(fn REVERSE BEG END)" t nil)
  19113. (put 'sort-numeric-base 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  19114. (autoload 'sort-numeric-fields "sort" "\
  19115. Sort lines in region numerically by the ARGth field of each line.
  19116. Fields are separated by whitespace and numbered from 1 up.
  19117. Specified field must contain a number in each line of the region,
  19118. which may begin with \"0x\" or \"0\" for hexadecimal and octal values.
  19119. Otherwise, the number is interpreted according to sort-numeric-base.
  19120. With a negative arg, sorts by the ARGth field counted from the right.
  19121. Called from a program, there are three arguments:
  19122. FIELD, BEG and END. BEG and END specify region to sort.
  19123. \(fn FIELD BEG END)" t nil)
  19124. (autoload 'sort-fields "sort" "\
  19125. Sort lines in region lexicographically by the ARGth field of each line.
  19126. Fields are separated by whitespace and numbered from 1 up.
  19127. With a negative arg, sorts by the ARGth field counted from the right.
  19128. Called from a program, there are three arguments:
  19129. FIELD, BEG and END. BEG and END specify region to sort.
  19130. The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
  19131. the sort order.
  19132. \(fn FIELD BEG END)" t nil)
  19133. (autoload 'sort-regexp-fields "sort" "\
  19134. Sort the region lexicographically as specified by RECORD-REGEXP and KEY.
  19135. RECORD-REGEXP specifies the textual units which should be sorted.
  19136. For example, to sort lines RECORD-REGEXP would be \"^.*$\"
  19137. KEY specifies the part of each record (ie each match for RECORD-REGEXP)
  19138. is to be used for sorting.
  19139. If it is \"\\\\digit\" then the digit'th \"\\\\(...\\\\)\" match field from
  19140. RECORD-REGEXP is used.
  19141. If it is \"\\\\&\" then the whole record is used.
  19142. Otherwise, it is a regular-expression for which to search within the record.
  19143. If a match for KEY is not found within a record then that record is ignored.
  19144. With a negative prefix arg sorts in reverse order.
  19145. The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
  19146. the sort order.
  19147. For example: to sort lines in the region by the first word on each line
  19148. starting with the letter \"f\",
  19149. RECORD-REGEXP would be \"^.*$\" and KEY would be \"\\\\=\\<f\\\\w*\\\\>\"
  19150. \(fn REVERSE RECORD-REGEXP KEY-REGEXP BEG END)" t nil)
  19151. (autoload 'sort-columns "sort" "\
  19152. Sort lines in region alphabetically by a certain range of columns.
  19153. For the purpose of this command, the region BEG...END includes
  19154. the entire line that point is in and the entire line the mark is in.
  19155. The column positions of point and mark bound the range of columns to sort on.
  19156. A prefix argument means sort into REVERSE order.
  19157. The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
  19158. the sort order.
  19159. Note that `sort-columns' rejects text that contains tabs,
  19160. because tabs could be split across the specified columns
  19161. and it doesn't know how to handle that. Also, when possible,
  19162. it uses the `sort' utility program, which doesn't understand tabs.
  19163. Use \\[untabify] to convert tabs to spaces before sorting.
  19164. \(fn REVERSE &optional BEG END)" t nil)
  19165. (autoload 'reverse-region "sort" "\
  19166. Reverse the order of lines in a region.
  19167. From a program takes two point or marker arguments, BEG and END.
  19168. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  19169. ;;;***
  19170. ;;;### (autoloads (spam-initialize) "spam" "gnus/spam.el" (20352
  19171. ;;;;;; 65510))
  19172. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/spam.el
  19173. (autoload 'spam-initialize "spam" "\
  19174. Install the spam.el hooks and do other initialization.
  19175. When SYMBOLS is given, set those variables to t. This is so you
  19176. can call `spam-initialize' before you set spam-use-* variables on
  19177. explicitly, and matters only if you need the extra headers
  19178. installed through `spam-necessary-extra-headers'.
  19179. \(fn &rest SYMBOLS)" t nil)
  19180. ;;;***
  19181. ;;;### (autoloads (spam-report-deagentize spam-report-agentize spam-report-url-to-file
  19182. ;;;;;; spam-report-url-ping-mm-url spam-report-process-queue) "spam-report"
  19183. ;;;;;; "gnus/spam-report.el" (20352 65510))
  19184. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/spam-report.el
  19185. (autoload 'spam-report-process-queue "spam-report" "\
  19186. Report all queued requests from `spam-report-requests-file'.
  19187. If FILE is given, use it instead of `spam-report-requests-file'.
  19188. If KEEP is t, leave old requests in the file. If KEEP is the
  19189. symbol `ask', query before flushing the queue file.
  19190. \(fn &optional FILE KEEP)" t nil)
  19191. (autoload 'spam-report-url-ping-mm-url "spam-report" "\
  19192. Ping a host through HTTP, addressing a specific GET resource. Use
  19193. the external program specified in `mm-url-program' to connect to
  19194. server.
  19195. \(fn HOST REPORT)" nil nil)
  19196. (autoload 'spam-report-url-to-file "spam-report" "\
  19197. Collect spam report requests in `spam-report-requests-file'.
  19198. Customize `spam-report-url-ping-function' to use this function.
  19199. \(fn HOST REPORT)" nil nil)
  19200. (autoload 'spam-report-agentize "spam-report" "\
  19201. Add spam-report support to the Agent.
  19202. Spam reports will be queued with \\[spam-report-url-to-file] when
  19203. the Agent is unplugged, and will be submitted in a batch when the
  19204. Agent is plugged.
  19205. \(fn)" t nil)
  19206. (autoload 'spam-report-deagentize "spam-report" "\
  19207. Remove spam-report support from the Agent.
  19208. Spam reports will be queued with the method used when
  19209. \\[spam-report-agentize] was run.
  19210. \(fn)" t nil)
  19211. ;;;***
  19212. ;;;### (autoloads (speedbar-get-focus speedbar-frame-mode) "speedbar"
  19213. ;;;;;; "speedbar.el" (20400 62402))
  19214. ;;; Generated autoloads from speedbar.el
  19215. (defalias 'speedbar 'speedbar-frame-mode)
  19216. (autoload 'speedbar-frame-mode "speedbar" "\
  19217. Enable or disable speedbar. Positive ARG means turn on, negative turn off.
  19218. A nil ARG means toggle. Once the speedbar frame is activated, a buffer in
  19219. `speedbar-mode' will be displayed. Currently, only one speedbar is
  19220. supported at a time.
  19221. `speedbar-before-popup-hook' is called before popping up the speedbar frame.
  19222. `speedbar-before-delete-hook' is called before the frame is deleted.
  19223. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  19224. (autoload 'speedbar-get-focus "speedbar" "\
  19225. Change frame focus to or from the speedbar frame.
  19226. If the selected frame is not speedbar, then speedbar frame is
  19227. selected. If the speedbar frame is active, then select the attached frame.
  19228. \(fn)" t nil)
  19229. ;;;***
  19230. ;;;### (autoloads (snarf-spooks spook) "spook" "play/spook.el" (20352
  19231. ;;;;;; 65510))
  19232. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/spook.el
  19233. (autoload 'spook "spook" "\
  19234. Adds that special touch of class to your outgoing mail.
  19235. \(fn)" t nil)
  19236. (autoload 'snarf-spooks "spook" "\
  19237. Return a vector containing the lines from `spook-phrases-file'.
  19238. \(fn)" nil nil)
  19239. ;;;***
  19240. ;;;### (autoloads (sql-linter sql-db2 sql-interbase sql-postgres
  19241. ;;;;;; sql-ms sql-ingres sql-solid sql-mysql sql-sqlite sql-informix
  19242. ;;;;;; sql-sybase sql-oracle sql-product-interactive sql-connect
  19243. ;;;;;; sql-mode sql-help sql-add-product-keywords) "sql" "progmodes/sql.el"
  19244. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  19245. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/sql.el
  19246. (autoload 'sql-add-product-keywords "sql" "\
  19247. Add highlighting KEYWORDS for SQL PRODUCT.
  19248. PRODUCT should be a symbol, the name of a SQL product, such as
  19249. `oracle'. KEYWORDS should be a list; see the variable
  19250. `font-lock-keywords'. By default they are added at the beginning
  19251. of the current highlighting list. If optional argument APPEND is
  19252. `set', they are used to replace the current highlighting list.
  19253. If APPEND is any other non-nil value, they are added at the end
  19254. of the current highlighting list.
  19255. For example:
  19256. (sql-add-product-keywords 'ms
  19257. '((\"\\\\b\\\\w+_t\\\\b\" . font-lock-type-face)))
  19258. adds a fontification pattern to fontify identifiers ending in
  19259. `_t' as data types.
  19260. \(fn PRODUCT KEYWORDS &optional APPEND)" nil nil)
  19261. (autoload 'sql-help "sql" "\
  19262. Show short help for the SQL modes.
  19263. Use an entry function to open an interactive SQL buffer. This buffer is
  19264. usually named `*SQL*'. The name of the major mode is SQLi.
  19265. Use the following commands to start a specific SQL interpreter:
  19266. \\\\FREE
  19267. Other non-free SQL implementations are also supported:
  19268. \\\\NONFREE
  19269. But we urge you to choose a free implementation instead of these.
  19270. You can also use \\[sql-product-interactive] to invoke the
  19271. interpreter for the current `sql-product'.
  19272. Once you have the SQLi buffer, you can enter SQL statements in the
  19273. buffer. The output generated is appended to the buffer and a new prompt
  19274. is generated. See the In/Out menu in the SQLi buffer for some functions
  19275. that help you navigate through the buffer, the input history, etc.
  19276. If you have a really complex SQL statement or if you are writing a
  19277. procedure, you can do this in a separate buffer. Put the new buffer in
  19278. `sql-mode' by calling \\[sql-mode]. The name of this buffer can be
  19279. anything. The name of the major mode is SQL.
  19280. In this SQL buffer (SQL mode), you can send the region or the entire
  19281. buffer to the interactive SQL buffer (SQLi mode). The results are
  19282. appended to the SQLi buffer without disturbing your SQL buffer.
  19283. \(fn)" t nil)
  19284. (autoload 'sql-mode "sql" "\
  19285. Major mode to edit SQL.
  19286. You can send SQL statements to the SQLi buffer using
  19287. \\[sql-send-region]. Such a buffer must exist before you can do this.
  19288. See `sql-help' on how to create SQLi buffers.
  19289. \\{sql-mode-map}
  19290. Customization: Entry to this mode runs the `sql-mode-hook'.
  19291. When you put a buffer in SQL mode, the buffer stores the last SQLi
  19292. buffer created as its destination in the variable `sql-buffer'. This
  19293. will be the buffer \\[sql-send-region] sends the region to. If this
  19294. SQLi buffer is killed, \\[sql-send-region] is no longer able to
  19295. determine where the strings should be sent to. You can set the
  19296. value of `sql-buffer' using \\[sql-set-sqli-buffer].
  19297. For information on how to create multiple SQLi buffers, see
  19298. `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19299. Note that SQL doesn't have an escape character unless you specify
  19300. one. If you specify backslash as escape character in SQL,
  19301. you must tell Emacs. Here's how to do that in your `~/.emacs' file:
  19302. \(add-hook 'sql-mode-hook
  19303. (lambda ()
  19304. (modify-syntax-entry ?\\\\ \".\" sql-mode-syntax-table)))
  19305. \(fn)" t nil)
  19306. (autoload 'sql-connect "sql" "\
  19307. Connect to an interactive session using CONNECTION settings.
  19308. See `sql-connection-alist' to see how to define connections and
  19309. their settings.
  19310. The user will not be prompted for any login parameters if a value
  19311. is specified in the connection settings.
  19312. \(fn CONNECTION &optional NEW-NAME)" t nil)
  19313. (autoload 'sql-product-interactive "sql" "\
  19314. Run PRODUCT interpreter as an inferior process.
  19315. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19316. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer `*SQL*'.
  19317. To specify the SQL product, prefix the call with
  19318. \\[universal-argument]. To set the buffer name as well, prefix
  19319. the call to \\[sql-product-interactive] with
  19320. \\[universal-argument] \\[universal-argument].
  19321. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19322. \(fn &optional PRODUCT NEW-NAME)" t nil)
  19323. (autoload 'sql-oracle "sql" "\
  19324. Run sqlplus by Oracle as an inferior process.
  19325. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19326. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19327. `*SQL*'.
  19328. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-oracle-program'. Login uses
  19329. the variables `sql-user', `sql-password', and `sql-database' as
  19330. defaults, if set. Additional command line parameters can be stored in
  19331. the list `sql-oracle-options'.
  19332. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19333. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19334. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19335. before \\[sql-oracle]. Once session has started,
  19336. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19337. buffer.
  19338. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19339. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19340. before \\[sql-oracle]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19341. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19342. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19343. `default-process-coding-system'.
  19344. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19345. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19346. (autoload 'sql-sybase "sql" "\
  19347. Run isql by Sybase as an inferior process.
  19348. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19349. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19350. `*SQL*'.
  19351. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-sybase-program'. Login uses
  19352. the variables `sql-server', `sql-user', `sql-password', and
  19353. `sql-database' as defaults, if set. Additional command line parameters
  19354. can be stored in the list `sql-sybase-options'.
  19355. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19356. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19357. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19358. before \\[sql-sybase]. Once session has started,
  19359. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19360. buffer.
  19361. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19362. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19363. before \\[sql-sybase]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19364. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19365. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19366. `default-process-coding-system'.
  19367. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19368. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19369. (autoload 'sql-informix "sql" "\
  19370. Run dbaccess by Informix as an inferior process.
  19371. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19372. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19373. `*SQL*'.
  19374. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-informix-program'. Login uses
  19375. the variable `sql-database' as default, if set.
  19376. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19377. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19378. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19379. before \\[sql-informix]. Once session has started,
  19380. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19381. buffer.
  19382. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19383. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19384. before \\[sql-informix]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19385. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19386. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19387. `default-process-coding-system'.
  19388. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19389. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19390. (autoload 'sql-sqlite "sql" "\
  19391. Run sqlite as an inferior process.
  19392. SQLite is free software.
  19393. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19394. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19395. `*SQL*'.
  19396. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-sqlite-program'. Login uses
  19397. the variables `sql-user', `sql-password', `sql-database', and
  19398. `sql-server' as defaults, if set. Additional command line parameters
  19399. can be stored in the list `sql-sqlite-options'.
  19400. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19401. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19402. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19403. before \\[sql-sqlite]. Once session has started,
  19404. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19405. buffer.
  19406. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19407. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19408. before \\[sql-sqlite]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19409. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19410. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19411. `default-process-coding-system'.
  19412. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19413. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19414. (autoload 'sql-mysql "sql" "\
  19415. Run mysql by TcX as an inferior process.
  19416. Mysql versions 3.23 and up are free software.
  19417. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19418. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19419. `*SQL*'.
  19420. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-mysql-program'. Login uses
  19421. the variables `sql-user', `sql-password', `sql-database', and
  19422. `sql-server' as defaults, if set. Additional command line parameters
  19423. can be stored in the list `sql-mysql-options'.
  19424. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19425. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19426. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19427. before \\[sql-mysql]. Once session has started,
  19428. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19429. buffer.
  19430. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19431. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19432. before \\[sql-mysql]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19433. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19434. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19435. `default-process-coding-system'.
  19436. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19437. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19438. (autoload 'sql-solid "sql" "\
  19439. Run solsql by Solid as an inferior process.
  19440. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19441. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19442. `*SQL*'.
  19443. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-solid-program'. Login uses
  19444. the variables `sql-user', `sql-password', and `sql-server' as
  19445. defaults, if set.
  19446. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19447. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19448. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19449. before \\[sql-solid]. Once session has started,
  19450. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19451. buffer.
  19452. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19453. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19454. before \\[sql-solid]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19455. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19456. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19457. `default-process-coding-system'.
  19458. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19459. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19460. (autoload 'sql-ingres "sql" "\
  19461. Run sql by Ingres as an inferior process.
  19462. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19463. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19464. `*SQL*'.
  19465. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-ingres-program'. Login uses
  19466. the variable `sql-database' as default, if set.
  19467. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19468. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19469. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19470. before \\[sql-ingres]. Once session has started,
  19471. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19472. buffer.
  19473. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19474. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19475. before \\[sql-ingres]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19476. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19477. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19478. `default-process-coding-system'.
  19479. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19480. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19481. (autoload 'sql-ms "sql" "\
  19482. Run osql by Microsoft as an inferior process.
  19483. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19484. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19485. `*SQL*'.
  19486. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-ms-program'. Login uses the
  19487. variables `sql-user', `sql-password', `sql-database', and `sql-server'
  19488. as defaults, if set. Additional command line parameters can be stored
  19489. in the list `sql-ms-options'.
  19490. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19491. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19492. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19493. before \\[sql-ms]. Once session has started,
  19494. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19495. buffer.
  19496. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19497. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19498. before \\[sql-ms]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19499. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19500. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19501. `default-process-coding-system'.
  19502. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19503. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19504. (autoload 'sql-postgres "sql" "\
  19505. Run psql by Postgres as an inferior process.
  19506. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19507. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19508. `*SQL*'.
  19509. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-postgres-program'. Login uses
  19510. the variables `sql-database' and `sql-server' as default, if set.
  19511. Additional command line parameters can be stored in the list
  19512. `sql-postgres-options'.
  19513. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19514. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19515. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19516. before \\[sql-postgres]. Once session has started,
  19517. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19518. buffer.
  19519. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19520. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19521. before \\[sql-postgres]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19522. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19523. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19524. `default-process-coding-system'. If your output lines end with ^M,
  19525. your might try undecided-dos as a coding system. If this doesn't help,
  19526. Try to set `comint-output-filter-functions' like this:
  19527. \(setq comint-output-filter-functions (append comint-output-filter-functions
  19528. '(comint-strip-ctrl-m)))
  19529. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19530. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19531. (autoload 'sql-interbase "sql" "\
  19532. Run isql by Interbase as an inferior process.
  19533. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19534. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19535. `*SQL*'.
  19536. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-interbase-program'. Login
  19537. uses the variables `sql-user', `sql-password', and `sql-database' as
  19538. defaults, if set.
  19539. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19540. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19541. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19542. before \\[sql-interbase]. Once session has started,
  19543. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19544. buffer.
  19545. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19546. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19547. before \\[sql-interbase]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19548. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19549. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19550. `default-process-coding-system'.
  19551. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19552. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19553. (autoload 'sql-db2 "sql" "\
  19554. Run db2 by IBM as an inferior process.
  19555. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19556. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19557. `*SQL*'.
  19558. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-db2-program'. There is not
  19559. automatic login.
  19560. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19561. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19562. If you use \\[sql-accumulate-and-indent] to send multiline commands to
  19563. db2, newlines will be escaped if necessary. If you don't want that, set
  19564. `comint-input-sender' back to `comint-simple-send' by writing an after
  19565. advice. See the elisp manual for more information.
  19566. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19567. before \\[sql-db2]. Once session has started,
  19568. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19569. buffer.
  19570. To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
  19571. in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
  19572. before \\[sql-db2]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
  19573. in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
  19574. The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
  19575. `default-process-coding-system'.
  19576. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19577. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19578. (autoload 'sql-linter "sql" "\
  19579. Run inl by RELEX as an inferior process.
  19580. If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
  19581. If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
  19582. `*SQL*'.
  19583. Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-linter-program' - usually `inl'.
  19584. Login uses the variables `sql-user', `sql-password', `sql-database' and
  19585. `sql-server' as defaults, if set. Additional command line parameters
  19586. can be stored in the list `sql-linter-options'. Run inl -h to get help on
  19587. parameters.
  19588. `sql-database' is used to set the LINTER_MBX environment variable for
  19589. local connections, `sql-server' refers to the server name from the
  19590. `nodetab' file for the network connection (dbc_tcp or friends must run
  19591. for this to work). If `sql-password' is an empty string, inl will use
  19592. an empty password.
  19593. The buffer is put in SQL interactive mode, giving commands for sending
  19594. input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
  19595. To set the buffer name directly, use \\[universal-argument]
  19596. before \\[sql-linter]. Once session has started,
  19597. \\[sql-rename-buffer] can be called separately to rename the
  19598. buffer.
  19599. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)
  19600. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  19601. ;;;***
  19602. ;;;### (autoloads (srecode-template-mode) "srecode/srt-mode" "cedet/srecode/srt-mode.el"
  19603. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  19604. ;;; Generated autoloads from cedet/srecode/srt-mode.el
  19605. (autoload 'srecode-template-mode "srecode/srt-mode" "\
  19606. Major-mode for writing SRecode macros.
  19607. \(fn)" t nil)
  19608. (defalias 'srt-mode 'srecode-template-mode)
  19609. ;;;***
  19610. ;;;### (autoloads (starttls-open-stream) "starttls" "gnus/starttls.el"
  19611. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  19612. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/starttls.el
  19613. (autoload 'starttls-open-stream "starttls" "\
  19614. Open a TLS connection for a port to a host.
  19615. Returns a subprocess object to represent the connection.
  19616. Input and output work as for subprocesses; `delete-process' closes it.
  19617. Args are NAME BUFFER HOST PORT.
  19618. NAME is name for process. It is modified if necessary to make it unique.
  19619. BUFFER is the buffer (or `buffer-name') to associate with the process.
  19620. Process output goes at end of that buffer, unless you specify
  19621. an output stream or filter function to handle the output.
  19622. BUFFER may be also nil, meaning that this process is not associated
  19623. with any buffer
  19624. Third arg is name of the host to connect to, or its IP address.
  19625. Fourth arg PORT is an integer specifying a port to connect to.
  19626. If `starttls-use-gnutls' is nil, this may also be a service name, but
  19627. GnuTLS requires a port number.
  19628. \(fn NAME BUFFER HOST PORT)" nil nil)
  19629. ;;;***
  19630. ;;;### (autoloads (strokes-compose-complex-stroke strokes-decode-buffer
  19631. ;;;;;; strokes-mode strokes-list-strokes strokes-load-user-strokes
  19632. ;;;;;; strokes-help strokes-describe-stroke strokes-do-complex-stroke
  19633. ;;;;;; strokes-do-stroke strokes-read-complex-stroke strokes-read-stroke
  19634. ;;;;;; strokes-global-set-stroke) "strokes" "strokes.el" (20352
  19635. ;;;;;; 65510))
  19636. ;;; Generated autoloads from strokes.el
  19637. (autoload 'strokes-global-set-stroke "strokes" "\
  19638. Interactively give STROKE the global binding as COMMAND.
  19639. Operated just like `global-set-key', except for strokes.
  19640. COMMAND is a symbol naming an interactively-callable function. STROKE
  19641. is a list of sampled positions on the stroke grid as described in the
  19642. documentation for the `strokes-define-stroke' function.
  19643. See also `strokes-global-set-stroke-string'.
  19644. \(fn STROKE COMMAND)" t nil)
  19645. (autoload 'strokes-read-stroke "strokes" "\
  19646. Read a simple stroke (interactively) and return the stroke.
  19647. Optional PROMPT in minibuffer displays before and during stroke reading.
  19648. This function will display the stroke interactively as it is being
  19649. entered in the strokes buffer if the variable
  19650. `strokes-use-strokes-buffer' is non-nil.
  19651. Optional EVENT is acceptable as the starting event of the stroke.
  19652. \(fn &optional PROMPT EVENT)" nil nil)
  19653. (autoload 'strokes-read-complex-stroke "strokes" "\
  19654. Read a complex stroke (interactively) and return the stroke.
  19655. Optional PROMPT in minibuffer displays before and during stroke reading.
  19656. Note that a complex stroke allows the user to pen-up and pen-down. This
  19657. is implemented by allowing the user to paint with button 1 or button 2 and
  19658. then complete the stroke with button 3.
  19659. Optional EVENT is acceptable as the starting event of the stroke.
  19660. \(fn &optional PROMPT EVENT)" nil nil)
  19661. (autoload 'strokes-do-stroke "strokes" "\
  19662. Read a simple stroke from the user and then execute its command.
  19663. This must be bound to a mouse event.
  19664. \(fn EVENT)" t nil)
  19665. (autoload 'strokes-do-complex-stroke "strokes" "\
  19666. Read a complex stroke from the user and then execute its command.
  19667. This must be bound to a mouse event.
  19668. \(fn EVENT)" t nil)
  19669. (autoload 'strokes-describe-stroke "strokes" "\
  19670. Displays the command which STROKE maps to, reading STROKE interactively.
  19671. \(fn STROKE)" t nil)
  19672. (autoload 'strokes-help "strokes" "\
  19673. Get instruction on using the Strokes package.
  19674. \(fn)" t nil)
  19675. (autoload 'strokes-load-user-strokes "strokes" "\
  19676. Load user-defined strokes from file named by `strokes-file'.
  19677. \(fn)" t nil)
  19678. (autoload 'strokes-list-strokes "strokes" "\
  19679. Pop up a buffer containing an alphabetical listing of strokes in STROKES-MAP.
  19680. With CHRONOLOGICAL prefix arg (\\[universal-argument]) list strokes
  19681. chronologically by command name.
  19682. If STROKES-MAP is not given, `strokes-global-map' will be used instead.
  19683. \(fn &optional CHRONOLOGICAL STROKES-MAP)" t nil)
  19684. (defvar strokes-mode nil "\
  19685. Non-nil if Strokes mode is enabled.
  19686. See the command `strokes-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  19687. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  19688. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  19689. or call the function `strokes-mode'.")
  19690. (custom-autoload 'strokes-mode "strokes" nil)
  19691. (autoload 'strokes-mode "strokes" "\
  19692. Toggle Strokes mode, a global minor mode.
  19693. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Strokes mode if ARG is
  19694. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  19695. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  19696. \\<strokes-mode-map>
  19697. Strokes are pictographic mouse gestures which invoke commands.
  19698. Strokes are invoked with \\[strokes-do-stroke]. You can define
  19699. new strokes with \\[strokes-global-set-stroke]. See also
  19700. \\[strokes-do-complex-stroke] for `complex' strokes.
  19701. To use strokes for pictographic editing, such as Chinese/Japanese, use
  19702. \\[strokes-compose-complex-stroke], which draws strokes and inserts them.
  19703. Encode/decode your strokes with \\[strokes-encode-buffer],
  19704. \\[strokes-decode-buffer].
  19705. \\{strokes-mode-map}
  19706. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  19707. (autoload 'strokes-decode-buffer "strokes" "\
  19708. Decode stroke strings in BUFFER and display their corresponding glyphs.
  19709. Optional BUFFER defaults to the current buffer.
  19710. Optional FORCE non-nil will ignore the buffer's read-only status.
  19711. \(fn &optional BUFFER FORCE)" t nil)
  19712. (autoload 'strokes-compose-complex-stroke "strokes" "\
  19713. Read a complex stroke and insert its glyph into the current buffer.
  19714. \(fn)" t nil)
  19715. ;;;***
  19716. ;;;### (autoloads (studlify-buffer studlify-word studlify-region)
  19717. ;;;;;; "studly" "play/studly.el" (20352 65510))
  19718. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/studly.el
  19719. (autoload 'studlify-region "studly" "\
  19720. Studlify-case the region.
  19721. \(fn BEGIN END)" t nil)
  19722. (autoload 'studlify-word "studly" "\
  19723. Studlify-case the current word, or COUNT words if given an argument.
  19724. \(fn COUNT)" t nil)
  19725. (autoload 'studlify-buffer "studly" "\
  19726. Studlify-case the current buffer.
  19727. \(fn)" t nil)
  19728. ;;;***
  19729. ;;;### (autoloads (global-subword-mode subword-mode) "subword" "progmodes/subword.el"
  19730. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  19731. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/subword.el
  19732. (autoload 'subword-mode "subword" "\
  19733. Toggle subword movement and editing (Subword mode).
  19734. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Subword mode if ARG is
  19735. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  19736. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  19737. Subword mode is a buffer-local minor mode. Enabling it remaps
  19738. word-based editing commands to subword-based commands that handle
  19739. symbols with mixed uppercase and lowercase letters,
  19740. e.g. \"GtkWidget\", \"EmacsFrameClass\", \"NSGraphicsContext\".
  19741. Here we call these mixed case symbols `nomenclatures'. Each
  19742. capitalized (or completely uppercase) part of a nomenclature is
  19743. called a `subword'. Here are some examples:
  19744. Nomenclature Subwords
  19745. ===========================================================
  19746. GtkWindow => \"Gtk\" and \"Window\"
  19747. EmacsFrameClass => \"Emacs\", \"Frame\" and \"Class\"
  19748. NSGraphicsContext => \"NS\", \"Graphics\" and \"Context\"
  19749. The subword oriented commands activated in this minor mode recognize
  19750. subwords in a nomenclature to move between subwords and to edit them
  19751. as words.
  19752. \\{subword-mode-map}
  19753. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  19754. (defvar global-subword-mode nil "\
  19755. Non-nil if Global-Subword mode is enabled.
  19756. See the command `global-subword-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  19757. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  19758. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  19759. or call the function `global-subword-mode'.")
  19760. (custom-autoload 'global-subword-mode "subword" nil)
  19761. (autoload 'global-subword-mode "subword" "\
  19762. Toggle Subword mode in all buffers.
  19763. With prefix ARG, enable Global-Subword mode if ARG is positive;
  19764. otherwise, disable it. If called from Lisp, enable the mode if
  19765. ARG is omitted or nil.
  19766. Subword mode is enabled in all buffers where
  19767. `(lambda nil (subword-mode 1))' would do it.
  19768. See `subword-mode' for more information on Subword mode.
  19769. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  19770. ;;;***
  19771. ;;;### (autoloads (sc-cite-original) "supercite" "mail/supercite.el"
  19772. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  19773. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/supercite.el
  19774. (autoload 'sc-cite-original "supercite" "\
  19775. Workhorse citing function which performs the initial citation.
  19776. This is callable from the various mail and news readers' reply
  19777. function according to the agreed upon standard. See the associated
  19778. info node `(SC)Top' for more details.
  19779. `sc-cite-original' does not do any yanking of the
  19780. original message but it does require a few things:
  19781. 1) The reply buffer is the current buffer.
  19782. 2) The original message has been yanked and inserted into the
  19783. reply buffer.
  19784. 3) Verbose mail headers from the original message have been
  19785. inserted into the reply buffer directly before the text of the
  19786. original message.
  19787. 4) Point is at the beginning of the verbose headers.
  19788. 5) Mark is at the end of the body of text to be cited.
  19789. The region need not be active (and typically isn't when this
  19790. function is called). Also, the hook `sc-pre-hook' is run before,
  19791. and `sc-post-hook' is run after the guts of this function.
  19792. \(fn)" nil nil)
  19793. ;;;***
  19794. ;;;### (autoloads (gpm-mouse-mode) "t-mouse" "t-mouse.el" (20352
  19795. ;;;;;; 65510))
  19796. ;;; Generated autoloads from t-mouse.el
  19797. (define-obsolete-function-alias 't-mouse-mode 'gpm-mouse-mode "23.1")
  19798. (defvar gpm-mouse-mode t "\
  19799. Non-nil if Gpm-Mouse mode is enabled.
  19800. See the command `gpm-mouse-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  19801. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  19802. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  19803. or call the function `gpm-mouse-mode'.")
  19804. (custom-autoload 'gpm-mouse-mode "t-mouse" nil)
  19805. (autoload 'gpm-mouse-mode "t-mouse" "\
  19806. Toggle mouse support in GNU/Linux consoles (GPM Mouse mode).
  19807. With a prefix argument ARG, enable GPM Mouse mode if ARG is
  19808. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  19809. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  19810. This allows the use of the mouse when operating on a GNU/Linux console,
  19811. in the same way as you can use the mouse under X11.
  19812. It relies on the `gpm' daemon being activated.
  19813. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  19814. ;;;***
  19815. ;;;### (autoloads (tabify untabify) "tabify" "tabify.el" (20352 65510))
  19816. ;;; Generated autoloads from tabify.el
  19817. (autoload 'untabify "tabify" "\
  19818. Convert all tabs in region to multiple spaces, preserving columns.
  19819. Called non-interactively, the region is specified by arguments
  19820. START and END, rather than by the position of point and mark.
  19821. The variable `tab-width' controls the spacing of tab stops.
  19822. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  19823. (autoload 'tabify "tabify" "\
  19824. Convert multiple spaces in region to tabs when possible.
  19825. A group of spaces is partially replaced by tabs
  19826. when this can be done without changing the column they end at.
  19827. Called non-interactively, the region is specified by arguments
  19828. START and END, rather than by the position of point and mark.
  19829. The variable `tab-width' controls the spacing of tab stops.
  19830. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  19831. ;;;***
  19832. ;;;### (autoloads (table-release table-capture table-delete-column
  19833. ;;;;;; table-delete-row table-insert-sequence table-generate-source
  19834. ;;;;;; table-query-dimension table-fixed-width-mode table-justify-column
  19835. ;;;;;; table-justify-row table-justify-cell table-justify table-split-cell
  19836. ;;;;;; table-split-cell-horizontally table-split-cell-vertically
  19837. ;;;;;; table-span-cell table-backward-cell table-forward-cell table-narrow-cell
  19838. ;;;;;; table-widen-cell table-shorten-cell table-heighten-cell table-unrecognize-cell
  19839. ;;;;;; table-recognize-cell table-unrecognize-table table-recognize-table
  19840. ;;;;;; table-unrecognize-region table-recognize-region table-unrecognize
  19841. ;;;;;; table-recognize table-insert-row-column table-insert-column
  19842. ;;;;;; table-insert-row table-insert table-point-left-cell-hook
  19843. ;;;;;; table-point-entered-cell-hook table-load-hook table-cell-map-hook)
  19844. ;;;;;; "table" "textmodes/table.el" (20400 62402))
  19845. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/table.el
  19846. (defvar table-cell-map-hook nil "\
  19847. Normal hooks run when finishing construction of `table-cell-map'.
  19848. User can modify `table-cell-map' by adding custom functions here.")
  19849. (custom-autoload 'table-cell-map-hook "table" t)
  19850. (defvar table-load-hook nil "\
  19851. List of functions to be called after the table is first loaded.")
  19852. (custom-autoload 'table-load-hook "table" t)
  19853. (defvar table-point-entered-cell-hook nil "\
  19854. List of functions to be called after point entered a table cell.")
  19855. (custom-autoload 'table-point-entered-cell-hook "table" t)
  19856. (defvar table-point-left-cell-hook nil "\
  19857. List of functions to be called after point left a table cell.")
  19858. (custom-autoload 'table-point-left-cell-hook "table" t)
  19859. (autoload 'table-insert "table" "\
  19860. Insert an editable text table.
  19861. Insert a table of specified number of COLUMNS and ROWS. Optional
  19862. parameter CELL-WIDTH and CELL-HEIGHT can specify the size of each
  19863. cell. The cell size is uniform across the table if the specified size
  19864. is a number. They can be a list of numbers to specify different size
  19865. for each cell. When called interactively, the list of number is
  19866. entered by simply listing all the numbers with space characters
  19867. delimiting them.
  19868. Examples:
  19869. \\[table-insert] inserts a table at the current point location.
  19870. Suppose we have the following situation where `-!-' indicates the
  19871. location of point.
  19872. -!-
  19873. Type \\[table-insert] and hit ENTER key. As it asks table
  19874. specification, provide 3 for number of columns, 1 for number of rows,
  19875. 5 for cell width and 1 for cell height. Now you shall see the next
  19876. table and the point is automatically moved to the beginning of the
  19877. first cell.
  19878. +-----+-----+-----+
  19879. |-!- | | |
  19880. +-----+-----+-----+
  19881. Inside a table cell, there are special key bindings. \\<table-cell-map>
  19882. M-9 \\[table-widen-cell] (or \\[universal-argument] 9 \\[table-widen-cell]) widens the first cell by 9 character
  19883. width, which results as
  19884. +--------------+-----+-----+
  19885. |-!- | | |
  19886. +--------------+-----+-----+
  19887. Type TAB \\[table-widen-cell] then type TAB M-2 M-7 \\[table-widen-cell] (or \\[universal-argument] 2 7 \\[table-widen-cell]). Typing
  19888. TAB moves the point forward by a cell. The result now looks like this:
  19889. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19890. | | |-!- |
  19891. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19892. If you knew each width of the columns prior to the table creation,
  19893. what you could have done better was to have had given the complete
  19894. width information to `table-insert'.
  19895. Cell width(s): 14 6 32
  19896. instead of
  19897. Cell width(s): 5
  19898. This would have eliminated the previously mentioned width adjustment
  19899. work all together.
  19900. If the point is in the last cell type S-TAB S-TAB to move it to the
  19901. first cell. Now type \\[table-heighten-cell] which heighten the row by a line.
  19902. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19903. |-!- | | |
  19904. | | | |
  19905. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19906. Type \\[table-insert-row-column] and tell it to insert a row.
  19907. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19908. |-!- | | |
  19909. | | | |
  19910. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19911. | | | |
  19912. | | | |
  19913. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19914. Move the point under the table as shown below.
  19915. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19916. | | | |
  19917. | | | |
  19918. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19919. | | | |
  19920. | | | |
  19921. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19922. -!-
  19923. Type M-x table-insert-row instead of \\[table-insert-row-column]. \\[table-insert-row-column] does not work
  19924. when the point is outside of the table. This insertion at
  19925. outside of the table effectively appends a row at the end.
  19926. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19927. | | | |
  19928. | | | |
  19929. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19930. | | | |
  19931. | | | |
  19932. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19933. |-!- | | |
  19934. | | | |
  19935. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19936. Text editing inside the table cell produces reasonably expected
  19937. results.
  19938. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19939. | | | |
  19940. | | | |
  19941. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19942. | | |Text editing inside the table |
  19943. | | |cell produces reasonably |
  19944. | | |expected results.-!- |
  19945. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19946. | | | |
  19947. | | | |
  19948. +--------------+------+--------------------------------+
  19949. Inside a table cell has a special keymap.
  19950. \\{table-cell-map}
  19951. \(fn COLUMNS ROWS &optional CELL-WIDTH CELL-HEIGHT)" t nil)
  19952. (autoload 'table-insert-row "table" "\
  19953. Insert N table row(s).
  19954. When point is in a table the newly inserted row(s) are placed above
  19955. the current row. When point is outside of the table it must be below
  19956. the table within the table width range, then the newly created row(s)
  19957. are appended at the bottom of the table.
  19958. \(fn N)" t nil)
  19959. (autoload 'table-insert-column "table" "\
  19960. Insert N table column(s).
  19961. When point is in a table the newly inserted column(s) are placed left
  19962. of the current column. When point is outside of the table it must be
  19963. right side of the table within the table height range, then the newly
  19964. created column(s) are appended at the right of the table.
  19965. \(fn N)" t nil)
  19966. (autoload 'table-insert-row-column "table" "\
  19967. Insert row(s) or column(s).
  19968. See `table-insert-row' and `table-insert-column'.
  19969. \(fn ROW-COLUMN N)" t nil)
  19970. (autoload 'table-recognize "table" "\
  19971. Recognize all tables within the current buffer and activate them.
  19972. Scans the entire buffer and recognizes valid table cells. If the
  19973. optional numeric prefix argument ARG is negative the tables in the
  19974. buffer become inactive, meaning the tables become plain text and loses
  19975. all the table specific features.
  19976. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  19977. (autoload 'table-unrecognize "table" "\
  19978. \(fn)" t nil)
  19979. (autoload 'table-recognize-region "table" "\
  19980. Recognize all tables within region.
  19981. BEG and END specify the region to work on. If the optional numeric
  19982. prefix argument ARG is negative the tables in the region become
  19983. inactive, meaning the tables become plain text and lose all the table
  19984. specific features.
  19985. \(fn BEG END &optional ARG)" t nil)
  19986. (autoload 'table-unrecognize-region "table" "\
  19987. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  19988. (autoload 'table-recognize-table "table" "\
  19989. Recognize a table at point.
  19990. If the optional numeric prefix argument ARG is negative the table
  19991. becomes inactive, meaning the table becomes plain text and loses all
  19992. the table specific features.
  19993. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  19994. (autoload 'table-unrecognize-table "table" "\
  19995. \(fn)" t nil)
  19996. (autoload 'table-recognize-cell "table" "\
  19997. Recognize a table cell that contains current point.
  19998. Probe the cell dimension and prepare the cell information. The
  19999. optional two arguments FORCE and NO-COPY are for internal use only and
  20000. must not be specified. When the optional numeric prefix argument ARG
  20001. is negative the cell becomes inactive, meaning that the cell becomes
  20002. plain text and loses all the table specific features.
  20003. \(fn &optional FORCE NO-COPY ARG)" t nil)
  20004. (autoload 'table-unrecognize-cell "table" "\
  20005. \(fn)" t nil)
  20006. (autoload 'table-heighten-cell "table" "\
  20007. Heighten the current cell by N lines by expanding the cell vertically.
  20008. Heightening is done by adding blank lines at the bottom of the current
  20009. cell. Other cells aligned horizontally with the current one are also
  20010. heightened in order to keep the rectangular table structure. The
  20011. optional argument NO-COPY is internal use only and must not be
  20012. specified.
  20013. \(fn N &optional NO-COPY NO-UPDATE)" t nil)
  20014. (autoload 'table-shorten-cell "table" "\
  20015. Shorten the current cell by N lines by shrinking the cell vertically.
  20016. Shortening is done by removing blank lines from the bottom of the cell
  20017. and possibly from the top of the cell as well. Therefore, the cell
  20018. must have some bottom/top blank lines to be shorten effectively. This
  20019. is applicable to all the cells aligned horizontally with the current
  20020. one because they are also shortened in order to keep the rectangular
  20021. table structure.
  20022. \(fn N)" t nil)
  20023. (autoload 'table-widen-cell "table" "\
  20024. Widen the current cell by N columns and expand the cell horizontally.
  20025. Some other cells in the same table are widen as well to keep the
  20026. table's rectangle structure.
  20027. \(fn N &optional NO-COPY NO-UPDATE)" t nil)
  20028. (autoload 'table-narrow-cell "table" "\
  20029. Narrow the current cell by N columns and shrink the cell horizontally.
  20030. Some other cells in the same table are narrowed as well to keep the
  20031. table's rectangle structure.
  20032. \(fn N)" t nil)
  20033. (autoload 'table-forward-cell "table" "\
  20034. Move point forward to the beginning of the next cell.
  20035. With argument ARG, do it ARG times;
  20036. a negative argument ARG = -N means move backward N cells.
  20037. Do not specify NO-RECOGNIZE and UNRECOGNIZE. They are for internal use only.
  20038. Sample Cell Traveling Order (In Irregular Table Cases)
  20039. You can actually try how it works in this buffer. Press
  20040. \\[table-recognize] and go to cells in the following tables and press
  20041. \\[table-forward-cell] or TAB key.
  20042. +-----+--+ +--+-----+ +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+ +---------+ +--+---+--+
  20043. |0 |1 | |0 |1 | |0 |1 |2 | |0 |1 |2 | |0 | |0 |1 |2 |
  20044. +--+--+ | | +--+--+ +--+ | | | | +--+ +----+----+ +--+-+-+--+
  20045. |2 |3 | | | |2 |3 | |3 +--+ | | +--+3 | |1 |2 | |3 |4 |
  20046. | +--+--+ +--+--+ | +--+4 | | | |4 +--+ +--+-+-+--+ +----+----+
  20047. | |4 | |4 | | |5 | | | | | |5 | |3 |4 |5 | |5 |
  20048. +--+-----+ +-----+--+ +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+ +--+---+--+ +---------+
  20049. +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+
  20050. |0 |1 |2 | |0 |1 |2 | |0 |1 |2 | |0 |1 |2 |
  20051. | | | | | +--+ | | | | | +--+ +--+
  20052. +--+ +--+ +--+3 +--+ | +--+ | |3 +--+4 |
  20053. |3 | |4 | |4 +--+5 | | |3 | | +--+5 +--+
  20054. | | | | | |6 | | | | | | |6 | |7 |
  20055. +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+
  20056. +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+--+ +--+-----+--+ +--+--+--+--+
  20057. |0 |1 |2 | |0 |1 |2 | |0 |1 |2 |3 | |0 |1 |2 | |0 |1 |2 |3 |
  20058. | +--+ | | +--+ | | +--+--+ | | | | | | +--+--+ |
  20059. | |3 +--+ +--+3 | | +--+4 +--+ +--+ +--+ +--+4 +--+
  20060. +--+ |4 | |4 | +--+ |5 +--+--+6 | |3 +--+--+4 | |5 | |6 |
  20061. |5 +--+ | | +--+5 | | |7 |8 | | | |5 |6 | | | | | |
  20062. | |6 | | | |6 | | +--+--+--+--+ +--+--+--+--+ +--+-----+--+
  20063. +--+--+--+ +--+--+--+
  20064. \(fn &optional ARG NO-RECOGNIZE UNRECOGNIZE)" t nil)
  20065. (autoload 'table-backward-cell "table" "\
  20066. Move backward to the beginning of the previous cell.
  20067. With argument ARG, do it ARG times;
  20068. a negative argument ARG = -N means move forward N cells.
  20069. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  20070. (autoload 'table-span-cell "table" "\
  20071. Span current cell into adjacent cell in DIRECTION.
  20072. DIRECTION is one of symbols; right, left, above or below.
  20073. \(fn DIRECTION)" t nil)
  20074. (autoload 'table-split-cell-vertically "table" "\
  20075. Split current cell vertically.
  20076. Creates a cell above and a cell below the current point location.
  20077. \(fn)" t nil)
  20078. (autoload 'table-split-cell-horizontally "table" "\
  20079. Split current cell horizontally.
  20080. Creates a cell on the left and a cell on the right of the current point location.
  20081. \(fn)" t nil)
  20082. (autoload 'table-split-cell "table" "\
  20083. Split current cell in ORIENTATION.
  20084. ORIENTATION is a symbol either horizontally or vertically.
  20085. \(fn ORIENTATION)" t nil)
  20086. (autoload 'table-justify "table" "\
  20087. Justify contents of a cell, a row of cells or a column of cells.
  20088. WHAT is a symbol 'cell, 'row or 'column. JUSTIFY is a symbol 'left,
  20089. 'center, 'right, 'top, 'middle, 'bottom or 'none.
  20090. \(fn WHAT JUSTIFY)" t nil)
  20091. (autoload 'table-justify-cell "table" "\
  20092. Justify cell contents.
  20093. JUSTIFY is a symbol 'left, 'center or 'right for horizontal, or 'top,
  20094. 'middle, 'bottom or 'none for vertical. When optional PARAGRAPH is
  20095. non-nil the justify operation is limited to the current paragraph,
  20096. otherwise the entire cell contents is justified.
  20097. \(fn JUSTIFY &optional PARAGRAPH)" t nil)
  20098. (autoload 'table-justify-row "table" "\
  20099. Justify cells of a row.
  20100. JUSTIFY is a symbol 'left, 'center or 'right for horizontal, or top,
  20101. 'middle, 'bottom or 'none for vertical.
  20102. \(fn JUSTIFY)" t nil)
  20103. (autoload 'table-justify-column "table" "\
  20104. Justify cells of a column.
  20105. JUSTIFY is a symbol 'left, 'center or 'right for horizontal, or top,
  20106. 'middle, 'bottom or 'none for vertical.
  20107. \(fn JUSTIFY)" t nil)
  20108. (autoload 'table-fixed-width-mode "table" "\
  20109. Toggle fixing width mode.
  20110. In the fixed width mode, typing inside a cell never changes the cell
  20111. width where in the normal mode the cell width expands automatically in
  20112. order to prevent a word being folded into multiple lines.
  20113. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  20114. (autoload 'table-query-dimension "table" "\
  20115. Return the dimension of the current cell and the current table.
  20116. The result is a list (cw ch tw th c r cells) where cw is the cell
  20117. width, ch is the cell height, tw is the table width, th is the table
  20118. height, c is the number of columns, r is the number of rows and cells
  20119. is the total number of cells. The cell dimension excludes the cell
  20120. frame while the table dimension includes the table frame. The columns
  20121. and the rows are counted by the number of cell boundaries. Therefore
  20122. the number tends to be larger than it appears for the tables with
  20123. non-uniform cell structure (heavily spanned and split). When optional
  20124. WHERE is provided the cell and table at that location is reported.
  20125. \(fn &optional WHERE)" t nil)
  20126. (autoload 'table-generate-source "table" "\
  20127. Generate source of the current table in the specified language.
  20128. LANGUAGE is a symbol that specifies the language to describe the
  20129. structure of the table. It must be either 'html, 'latex or 'cals.
  20130. The resulted source text is inserted into DEST-BUFFER and the buffer
  20131. object is returned. When DEST-BUFFER is omitted or nil the default
  20132. buffer specified in `table-dest-buffer-name' is used. In this case
  20133. the content of the default buffer is erased prior to the generation.
  20134. When DEST-BUFFER is non-nil it is expected to be either a destination
  20135. buffer or a name of the destination buffer. In this case the
  20136. generated result is inserted at the current point in the destination
  20137. buffer and the previously existing contents in the buffer are
  20138. untouched.
  20139. References used for this implementation:
  20140. HTML:
  20141. URL `http://www.w3.org'
  20142. LaTeX:
  20143. URL `http://www.maths.tcd.ie/~dwilkins/LaTeXPrimer/Tables.html'
  20144. CALS (DocBook DTD):
  20145. URL `http://www.oasis-open.org/html/a502.htm'
  20146. URL `http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/docbook/chapter/book/table.html#AEN114751'
  20147. \(fn LANGUAGE &optional DEST-BUFFER CAPTION)" t nil)
  20148. (autoload 'table-insert-sequence "table" "\
  20149. Travel cells forward while inserting a specified sequence string in each cell.
  20150. STR is the base string from which the sequence starts. When STR is an
  20151. empty string then each cell content is erased. When STR ends with
  20152. numerical characters (they may optionally be surrounded by a pair of
  20153. parentheses) they are incremented as a decimal number. Otherwise the
  20154. last character in STR is incremented in ASCII code order. N is the
  20155. number of sequence elements to insert. When N is negative the cell
  20156. traveling direction is backward. When N is zero it travels forward
  20157. entire table. INCREMENT is the increment between adjacent sequence
  20158. elements and can be a negative number for effectively decrementing.
  20159. INTERVAL is the number of cells to travel between sequence element
  20160. insertion which is normally 1. When zero or less is given for
  20161. INTERVAL it is interpreted as number of cells per row so that sequence
  20162. is placed straight down vertically as long as the table's cell
  20163. structure is uniform. JUSTIFY is one of the symbol 'left, 'center or
  20164. 'right, that specifies justification of the inserted string.
  20165. Example:
  20166. (progn
  20167. (table-insert 16 3 5 1)
  20168. (table-forward-cell 15)
  20169. (table-insert-sequence \"D0\" -16 1 1 'center)
  20170. (table-forward-cell 16)
  20171. (table-insert-sequence \"A[0]\" -16 1 1 'center)
  20172. (table-forward-cell 1)
  20173. (table-insert-sequence \"-\" 16 0 1 'center))
  20174. (progn
  20175. (table-insert 16 8 5 1)
  20176. (table-insert-sequence \"@\" 0 1 2 'right)
  20177. (table-forward-cell 1)
  20178. (table-insert-sequence \"64\" 0 1 2 'left))
  20179. \(fn STR N INCREMENT INTERVAL JUSTIFY)" t nil)
  20180. (autoload 'table-delete-row "table" "\
  20181. Delete N row(s) of cells.
  20182. Delete N rows of cells from current row. The current row is the row
  20183. contains the current cell where point is located. Each row must
  20184. consists from cells of same height.
  20185. \(fn N)" t nil)
  20186. (autoload 'table-delete-column "table" "\
  20187. Delete N column(s) of cells.
  20188. Delete N columns of cells from current column. The current column is
  20189. the column contains the current cell where point is located. Each
  20190. column must consists from cells of same width.
  20191. \(fn N)" t nil)
  20192. (autoload 'table-capture "table" "\
  20193. Convert plain text into a table by capturing the text in the region.
  20194. Create a table with the text in region as cell contents. BEG and END
  20195. specify the region. The text in the region is replaced with a table.
  20196. The removed text is inserted in the table. When optional
  20197. COL-DELIM-REGEXP and ROW-DELIM-REGEXP are provided the region contents
  20198. is parsed and separated into individual cell contents by using the
  20199. delimiter regular expressions. This parsing determines the number of
  20200. columns and rows of the table automatically. If COL-DELIM-REGEXP and
  20201. ROW-DELIM-REGEXP are omitted the result table has only one cell and
  20202. the entire region contents is placed in that cell. Optional JUSTIFY
  20203. is one of 'left, 'center or 'right, which specifies the cell
  20204. justification. Optional MIN-CELL-WIDTH specifies the minimum cell
  20205. width. Optional COLUMNS specify the number of columns when
  20206. ROW-DELIM-REGEXP is not specified.
  20207. Example 1:
  20208. 1, 2, 3, 4
  20209. 5, 6, 7, 8
  20210. , 9, 10
  20211. Running `table-capture' on above 3 line region with COL-DELIM-REGEXP
  20212. \",\" and ROW-DELIM-REGEXP \"\\n\" creates the following table. In
  20213. this example the cells are centered and minimum cell width is
  20214. specified as 5.
  20215. +-----+-----+-----+-----+
  20216. | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
  20217. +-----+-----+-----+-----+
  20218. | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
  20219. +-----+-----+-----+-----+
  20220. | | 9 | 10 | |
  20221. +-----+-----+-----+-----+
  20222. Note:
  20223. In case the function is called interactively user must use \\[quoted-insert] `quoted-insert'
  20224. in order to enter \"\\n\" successfully. COL-DELIM-REGEXP at the end
  20225. of each row is optional.
  20226. Example 2:
  20227. This example shows how a table can be used for text layout editing.
  20228. Let `table-capture' capture the following region starting from
  20229. -!- and ending at -*-, that contains three paragraphs and two item
  20230. name headers. This time specify empty string for both
  20231. COL-DELIM-REGEXP and ROW-DELIM-REGEXP.
  20232. -!-`table-capture' is a powerful command however mastering its power
  20233. requires some practice. Here is a list of items what it can do.
  20234. Parse Cell Items By using column delimiter regular
  20235. expression and raw delimiter regular
  20236. expression, it parses the specified text
  20237. area and extracts cell items from
  20238. non-table text and then forms a table out
  20239. of them.
  20240. Capture Text Area When no delimiters are specified it
  20241. creates a single cell table. The text in
  20242. the specified region is placed in that
  20243. cell.-*-
  20244. Now the entire content is captured in a cell which is itself a table
  20245. like this.
  20246. +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
  20247. |`table-capture' is a powerful command however mastering its power|
  20248. |requires some practice. Here is a list of items what it can do. |
  20249. | |
  20250. |Parse Cell Items By using column delimiter regular |
  20251. | expression and raw delimiter regular |
  20252. | expression, it parses the specified text |
  20253. | area and extracts cell items from |
  20254. | non-table text and then forms a table out |
  20255. | of them. |
  20256. | |
  20257. |Capture Text Area When no delimiters are specified it |
  20258. | creates a single cell table. The text in |
  20259. | the specified region is placed in that |
  20260. | cell. |
  20261. +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
  20262. By splitting the cell appropriately we now have a table consisting of
  20263. paragraphs occupying its own cell. Each cell can now be edited
  20264. independently.
  20265. +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
  20266. |`table-capture' is a powerful command however mastering its power|
  20267. |requires some practice. Here is a list of items what it can do. |
  20268. +---------------------+-------------------------------------------+
  20269. |Parse Cell Items |By using column delimiter regular |
  20270. | |expression and raw delimiter regular |
  20271. | |expression, it parses the specified text |
  20272. | |area and extracts cell items from |
  20273. | |non-table text and then forms a table out |
  20274. | |of them. |
  20275. +---------------------+-------------------------------------------+
  20276. |Capture Text Area |When no delimiters are specified it |
  20277. | |creates a single cell table. The text in |
  20278. | |the specified region is placed in that |
  20279. | |cell. |
  20280. +---------------------+-------------------------------------------+
  20281. By applying `table-release', which does the opposite process, the
  20282. contents become once again plain text. `table-release' works as
  20283. companion command to `table-capture' this way.
  20284. \(fn BEG END &optional COL-DELIM-REGEXP ROW-DELIM-REGEXP JUSTIFY MIN-CELL-WIDTH COLUMNS)" t nil)
  20285. (autoload 'table-release "table" "\
  20286. Convert a table into plain text by removing the frame from a table.
  20287. Remove the frame from a table and deactivate the table. This command
  20288. converts a table into plain text without frames. It is a companion to
  20289. `table-capture' which does the opposite process.
  20290. \(fn)" t nil)
  20291. ;;;***
  20292. ;;;### (autoloads (tabulated-list-mode) "tabulated-list" "emacs-lisp/tabulated-list.el"
  20293. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  20294. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/tabulated-list.el
  20295. (autoload 'tabulated-list-mode "tabulated-list" "\
  20296. Generic major mode for browsing a list of items.
  20297. This mode is usually not used directly; instead, other major
  20298. modes are derived from it, using `define-derived-mode'.
  20299. In this major mode, the buffer is divided into multiple columns,
  20300. which are labeled using the header line. Each non-empty line
  20301. belongs to one \"entry\", and the entries can be sorted according
  20302. to their column values.
  20303. An inheriting mode should usually do the following in their body:
  20304. - Set `tabulated-list-format', specifying the column format.
  20305. - Set `tabulated-list-revert-hook', if the buffer contents need
  20306. to be specially recomputed prior to `revert-buffer'.
  20307. - Maybe set a `tabulated-list-entries' function (see below).
  20308. - Maybe set `tabulated-list-printer' (see below).
  20309. - Maybe set `tabulated-list-padding'.
  20310. - Call `tabulated-list-init-header' to initialize `header-line-format'
  20311. according to `tabulated-list-format'.
  20312. An inheriting mode is usually accompanied by a \"list-FOO\"
  20313. command (e.g. `list-packages', `list-processes'). This command
  20314. creates or switches to a buffer and enables the major mode in
  20315. that buffer. If `tabulated-list-entries' is not a function, the
  20316. command should initialize it to a list of entries for displaying.
  20317. Finally, it should call `tabulated-list-print'.
  20318. `tabulated-list-print' calls the printer function specified by
  20319. `tabulated-list-printer', once for each entry. The default
  20320. printer is `tabulated-list-print-entry', but a mode that keeps
  20321. data in an ewoc may instead specify a printer function (e.g., one
  20322. that calls `ewoc-enter-last'), with `tabulated-list-print-entry'
  20323. as the ewoc pretty-printer.
  20324. \(fn)" t nil)
  20325. ;;;***
  20326. ;;;### (autoloads (talk talk-connect) "talk" "talk.el" (20352 65510))
  20327. ;;; Generated autoloads from talk.el
  20328. (autoload 'talk-connect "talk" "\
  20329. Connect to display DISPLAY for the Emacs talk group.
  20330. \(fn DISPLAY)" t nil)
  20331. (autoload 'talk "talk" "\
  20332. Connect to the Emacs talk group from the current X display or tty frame.
  20333. \(fn)" t nil)
  20334. ;;;***
  20335. ;;;### (autoloads (tar-mode) "tar-mode" "tar-mode.el" (20400 62402))
  20336. ;;; Generated autoloads from tar-mode.el
  20337. (autoload 'tar-mode "tar-mode" "\
  20338. Major mode for viewing a tar file as a dired-like listing of its contents.
  20339. You can move around using the usual cursor motion commands.
  20340. Letters no longer insert themselves.
  20341. Type `e' to pull a file out of the tar file and into its own buffer;
  20342. or click mouse-2 on the file's line in the Tar mode buffer.
  20343. Type `c' to copy an entry from the tar file into another file on disk.
  20344. If you edit a sub-file of this archive (as with the `e' command) and
  20345. save it with \\[save-buffer], the contents of that buffer will be
  20346. saved back into the tar-file buffer; in this way you can edit a file
  20347. inside of a tar archive without extracting it and re-archiving it.
  20348. See also: variables `tar-update-datestamp' and `tar-anal-blocksize'.
  20349. \\{tar-mode-map}
  20350. \(fn)" t nil)
  20351. ;;;***
  20352. ;;;### (autoloads (tcl-help-on-word inferior-tcl tcl-mode) "tcl"
  20353. ;;;;;; "progmodes/tcl.el" (20400 62402))
  20354. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/tcl.el
  20355. (autoload 'tcl-mode "tcl" "\
  20356. Major mode for editing Tcl code.
  20357. Expression and list commands understand all Tcl brackets.
  20358. Tab indents for Tcl code.
  20359. Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
  20360. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  20361. Variables controlling indentation style:
  20362. `tcl-indent-level'
  20363. Indentation of Tcl statements within surrounding block.
  20364. `tcl-continued-indent-level'
  20365. Indentation of continuation line relative to first line of command.
  20366. Variables controlling user interaction with mode (see variable
  20367. documentation for details):
  20368. `tcl-tab-always-indent'
  20369. Controls action of TAB key.
  20370. `tcl-auto-newline'
  20371. Non-nil means automatically newline before and after braces, brackets,
  20372. and semicolons inserted in Tcl code.
  20373. `tcl-use-smart-word-finder'
  20374. If not nil, use a smarter, Tcl-specific way to find the current
  20375. word when looking up help on a Tcl command.
  20376. Turning on Tcl mode runs `tcl-mode-hook'. Read the documentation for
  20377. `tcl-mode-hook' to see what kinds of interesting hook functions
  20378. already exist.
  20379. \(fn)" t nil)
  20380. (autoload 'inferior-tcl "tcl" "\
  20381. Run inferior Tcl process.
  20382. Prefix arg means enter program name interactively.
  20383. See documentation for function `inferior-tcl-mode' for more information.
  20384. \(fn CMD)" t nil)
  20385. (autoload 'tcl-help-on-word "tcl" "\
  20386. Get help on Tcl command. Default is word at point.
  20387. Prefix argument means invert sense of `tcl-use-smart-word-finder'.
  20388. \(fn COMMAND &optional ARG)" t nil)
  20389. ;;;***
  20390. ;;;### (autoloads (rsh telnet) "telnet" "net/telnet.el" (20352 65510))
  20391. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/telnet.el
  20392. (autoload 'telnet "telnet" "\
  20393. Open a network login connection to host named HOST (a string).
  20394. Optional arg PORT specifies alternative port to connect to.
  20395. Interactively, use \\[universal-argument] prefix to be prompted for port number.
  20396. Communication with HOST is recorded in a buffer `*PROGRAM-HOST*'
  20397. where PROGRAM is the telnet program being used. This program
  20398. is controlled by the contents of the global variable `telnet-host-properties',
  20399. falling back on the value of the global variable `telnet-program'.
  20400. Normally input is edited in Emacs and sent a line at a time.
  20401. \(fn HOST &optional PORT)" t nil)
  20402. (autoload 'rsh "telnet" "\
  20403. Open a network login connection to host named HOST (a string).
  20404. Communication with HOST is recorded in a buffer `*rsh-HOST*'.
  20405. Normally input is edited in Emacs and sent a line at a time.
  20406. \(fn HOST)" t nil)
  20407. ;;;***
  20408. ;;;### (autoloads (serial-term ansi-term term make-term) "term" "term.el"
  20409. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  20410. ;;; Generated autoloads from term.el
  20411. (autoload 'make-term "term" "\
  20412. Make a term process NAME in a buffer, running PROGRAM.
  20413. The name of the buffer is made by surrounding NAME with `*'s.
  20414. If there is already a running process in that buffer, it is not restarted.
  20415. Optional third arg STARTFILE is the name of a file to send the contents of to
  20416. the process. Any more args are arguments to PROGRAM.
  20417. \(fn NAME PROGRAM &optional STARTFILE &rest SWITCHES)" nil nil)
  20418. (autoload 'term "term" "\
  20419. Start a terminal-emulator in a new buffer.
  20420. The buffer is in Term mode; see `term-mode' for the
  20421. commands to use in that buffer.
  20422. \\<term-raw-map>Type \\[switch-to-buffer] to switch to another buffer.
  20423. \(fn PROGRAM)" t nil)
  20424. (autoload 'ansi-term "term" "\
  20425. Start a terminal-emulator in a new buffer.
  20426. \(fn PROGRAM &optional NEW-BUFFER-NAME)" t nil)
  20427. (autoload 'serial-term "term" "\
  20428. Start a terminal-emulator for a serial port in a new buffer.
  20429. PORT is the path or name of the serial port. For example, this
  20430. could be \"/dev/ttyS0\" on Unix. On Windows, this could be
  20431. \"COM1\" or \"\\\\.\\COM10\".
  20432. SPEED is the speed of the serial port in bits per second. 9600
  20433. is a common value. SPEED can be nil, see
  20434. `serial-process-configure' for details.
  20435. The buffer is in Term mode; see `term-mode' for the commands to
  20436. use in that buffer.
  20437. \\<term-raw-map>Type \\[switch-to-buffer] to switch to another buffer.
  20438. \(fn PORT SPEED)" t nil)
  20439. ;;;***
  20440. ;;;### (autoloads (terminal-emulator) "terminal" "terminal.el" (20352
  20441. ;;;;;; 65510))
  20442. ;;; Generated autoloads from terminal.el
  20443. (autoload 'terminal-emulator "terminal" "\
  20444. Under a display-terminal emulator in BUFFER, run PROGRAM on arguments ARGS.
  20445. ARGS is a list of argument-strings. Remaining arguments are WIDTH and HEIGHT.
  20446. BUFFER's contents are made an image of the display generated by that program,
  20447. and any input typed when BUFFER is the current Emacs buffer is sent to that
  20448. program as keyboard input.
  20449. Interactively, BUFFER defaults to \"*terminal*\" and PROGRAM and ARGS
  20450. are parsed from an input-string using your usual shell.
  20451. WIDTH and HEIGHT are determined from the size of the current window
  20452. -- WIDTH will be one less than the window's width, HEIGHT will be its height.
  20453. To switch buffers and leave the emulator, or to give commands
  20454. to the emulator itself (as opposed to the program running under it),
  20455. type Control-^. The following character is an emulator command.
  20456. Type Control-^ twice to send it to the subprogram.
  20457. This escape character may be changed using the variable `terminal-escape-char'.
  20458. `Meta' characters may not currently be sent through the terminal emulator.
  20459. Here is a list of some of the variables which control the behavior
  20460. of the emulator -- see their documentation for more information:
  20461. terminal-escape-char, terminal-scrolling, terminal-more-processing,
  20462. terminal-redisplay-interval.
  20463. This function calls the value of terminal-mode-hook if that exists
  20464. and is non-nil after the terminal buffer has been set up and the
  20465. subprocess started.
  20466. \(fn BUFFER PROGRAM ARGS &optional WIDTH HEIGHT)" t nil)
  20467. ;;;***
  20468. ;;;### (autoloads (testcover-this-defun) "testcover" "emacs-lisp/testcover.el"
  20469. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  20470. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/testcover.el
  20471. (autoload 'testcover-this-defun "testcover" "\
  20472. Start coverage on function under point.
  20473. \(fn)" t nil)
  20474. ;;;***
  20475. ;;;### (autoloads (tetris) "tetris" "play/tetris.el" (20352 65510))
  20476. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/tetris.el
  20477. (autoload 'tetris "tetris" "\
  20478. Play the Tetris game.
  20479. Shapes drop from the top of the screen, and the user has to move and
  20480. rotate the shape to fit in with those at the bottom of the screen so
  20481. as to form complete rows.
  20482. tetris-mode keybindings:
  20483. \\<tetris-mode-map>
  20484. \\[tetris-start-game] Starts a new game of Tetris
  20485. \\[tetris-end-game] Terminates the current game
  20486. \\[tetris-pause-game] Pauses (or resumes) the current game
  20487. \\[tetris-move-left] Moves the shape one square to the left
  20488. \\[tetris-move-right] Moves the shape one square to the right
  20489. \\[tetris-rotate-prev] Rotates the shape clockwise
  20490. \\[tetris-rotate-next] Rotates the shape anticlockwise
  20491. \\[tetris-move-bottom] Drops the shape to the bottom of the playing area
  20492. \(fn)" t nil)
  20493. ;;;***
  20494. ;;;### (autoloads (doctex-mode tex-start-shell slitex-mode latex-mode
  20495. ;;;;;; plain-tex-mode tex-mode tex-close-quote tex-open-quote tex-default-mode
  20496. ;;;;;; tex-show-queue-command tex-dvi-view-command tex-alt-dvi-print-command
  20497. ;;;;;; tex-dvi-print-command tex-bibtex-command latex-block-names
  20498. ;;;;;; tex-start-commands tex-start-options slitex-run-command latex-run-command
  20499. ;;;;;; tex-run-command tex-offer-save tex-main-file tex-first-line-header-regexp
  20500. ;;;;;; tex-directory tex-shell-file-name) "tex-mode" "textmodes/tex-mode.el"
  20501. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  20502. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/tex-mode.el
  20503. (defvar tex-shell-file-name nil "\
  20504. If non-nil, the shell file name to run in the subshell used to run TeX.")
  20505. (custom-autoload 'tex-shell-file-name "tex-mode" t)
  20506. (defvar tex-directory (purecopy ".") "\
  20507. Directory in which temporary files are written.
  20508. You can make this `/tmp' if your TEXINPUTS has no relative directories in it
  20509. and you don't try to apply \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer] when there are
  20510. `\\input' commands with relative directories.")
  20511. (custom-autoload 'tex-directory "tex-mode" t)
  20512. (defvar tex-first-line-header-regexp nil "\
  20513. Regexp for matching a first line which `tex-region' should include.
  20514. If this is non-nil, it should be a regular expression string;
  20515. if it matches the first line of the file,
  20516. `tex-region' always includes the first line in the TeX run.")
  20517. (custom-autoload 'tex-first-line-header-regexp "tex-mode" t)
  20518. (defvar tex-main-file nil "\
  20519. The main TeX source file which includes this buffer's file.
  20520. The command `tex-file' runs TeX on the file specified by `tex-main-file'
  20521. if the variable is non-nil.")
  20522. (custom-autoload 'tex-main-file "tex-mode" t)
  20523. (defvar tex-offer-save t "\
  20524. If non-nil, ask about saving modified buffers before \\[tex-file] is run.")
  20525. (custom-autoload 'tex-offer-save "tex-mode" t)
  20526. (defvar tex-run-command (purecopy "tex") "\
  20527. Command used to run TeX subjob.
  20528. TeX Mode sets `tex-command' to this string.
  20529. See the documentation of that variable.")
  20530. (custom-autoload 'tex-run-command "tex-mode" t)
  20531. (defvar latex-run-command (purecopy "latex") "\
  20532. Command used to run LaTeX subjob.
  20533. LaTeX Mode sets `tex-command' to this string.
  20534. See the documentation of that variable.")
  20535. (custom-autoload 'latex-run-command "tex-mode" t)
  20536. (defvar slitex-run-command (purecopy "slitex") "\
  20537. Command used to run SliTeX subjob.
  20538. SliTeX Mode sets `tex-command' to this string.
  20539. See the documentation of that variable.")
  20540. (custom-autoload 'slitex-run-command "tex-mode" t)
  20541. (defvar tex-start-options (purecopy "") "\
  20542. TeX options to use when starting TeX.
  20543. These immediately precede the commands in `tex-start-commands'
  20544. and the input file name, with no separating space and are not shell-quoted.
  20545. If nil, TeX runs with no options. See the documentation of `tex-command'.")
  20546. (custom-autoload 'tex-start-options "tex-mode" t)
  20547. (defvar tex-start-commands (purecopy "\\nonstopmode\\input") "\
  20548. TeX commands to use when starting TeX.
  20549. They are shell-quoted and precede the input file name, with a separating space.
  20550. If nil, no commands are used. See the documentation of `tex-command'.")
  20551. (custom-autoload 'tex-start-commands "tex-mode" t)
  20552. (defvar latex-block-names nil "\
  20553. User defined LaTeX block names.
  20554. Combined with `latex-standard-block-names' for minibuffer completion.")
  20555. (custom-autoload 'latex-block-names "tex-mode" t)
  20556. (defvar tex-bibtex-command (purecopy "bibtex") "\
  20557. Command used by `tex-bibtex-file' to gather bibliographic data.
  20558. If this string contains an asterisk (`*'), that is replaced by the file name;
  20559. otherwise, the file name, preceded by blank, is added at the end.")
  20560. (custom-autoload 'tex-bibtex-command "tex-mode" t)
  20561. (defvar tex-dvi-print-command (purecopy "lpr -d") "\
  20562. Command used by \\[tex-print] to print a .dvi file.
  20563. If this string contains an asterisk (`*'), that is replaced by the file name;
  20564. otherwise, the file name, preceded by blank, is added at the end.")
  20565. (custom-autoload 'tex-dvi-print-command "tex-mode" t)
  20566. (defvar tex-alt-dvi-print-command (purecopy "lpr -d") "\
  20567. Command used by \\[tex-print] with a prefix arg to print a .dvi file.
  20568. If this string contains an asterisk (`*'), that is replaced by the file name;
  20569. otherwise, the file name, preceded by blank, is added at the end.
  20570. If two printers are not enough of a choice, you can set the variable
  20571. `tex-alt-dvi-print-command' to an expression that asks what you want;
  20572. for example,
  20573. (setq tex-alt-dvi-print-command
  20574. '(format \"lpr -P%s\" (read-string \"Use printer: \")))
  20575. would tell \\[tex-print] with a prefix argument to ask you which printer to
  20576. use.")
  20577. (custom-autoload 'tex-alt-dvi-print-command "tex-mode" t)
  20578. (defvar tex-dvi-view-command `(cond ((eq window-system 'x) ,(purecopy "xdvi")) ((eq window-system 'w32) ,(purecopy "yap")) (t ,(purecopy "dvi2tty * | cat -s"))) "\
  20579. Command used by \\[tex-view] to display a `.dvi' file.
  20580. If it is a string, that specifies the command directly.
  20581. If this string contains an asterisk (`*'), that is replaced by the file name;
  20582. otherwise, the file name, preceded by a space, is added at the end.
  20583. If the value is a form, it is evaluated to get the command to use.")
  20584. (custom-autoload 'tex-dvi-view-command "tex-mode" t)
  20585. (defvar tex-show-queue-command (purecopy "lpq") "\
  20586. Command used by \\[tex-show-print-queue] to show the print queue.
  20587. Should show the queue(s) that \\[tex-print] puts jobs on.")
  20588. (custom-autoload 'tex-show-queue-command "tex-mode" t)
  20589. (defvar tex-default-mode 'latex-mode "\
  20590. Mode to enter for a new file that might be either TeX or LaTeX.
  20591. This variable is used when it can't be determined whether the file
  20592. is plain TeX or LaTeX or what because the file contains no commands.
  20593. Normally set to either `plain-tex-mode' or `latex-mode'.")
  20594. (custom-autoload 'tex-default-mode "tex-mode" t)
  20595. (defvar tex-open-quote (purecopy "``") "\
  20596. String inserted by typing \\[tex-insert-quote] to open a quotation.")
  20597. (custom-autoload 'tex-open-quote "tex-mode" t)
  20598. (defvar tex-close-quote (purecopy "''") "\
  20599. String inserted by typing \\[tex-insert-quote] to close a quotation.")
  20600. (custom-autoload 'tex-close-quote "tex-mode" t)
  20601. (autoload 'tex-mode "tex-mode" "\
  20602. Major mode for editing files of input for TeX, LaTeX, or SliTeX.
  20603. Tries to determine (by looking at the beginning of the file) whether
  20604. this file is for plain TeX, LaTeX, or SliTeX and calls `plain-tex-mode',
  20605. `latex-mode', or `slitex-mode', respectively. If it cannot be determined,
  20606. such as if there are no commands in the file, the value of `tex-default-mode'
  20607. says which mode to use.
  20608. \(fn)" t nil)
  20609. (defalias 'TeX-mode 'tex-mode)
  20610. (defalias 'plain-TeX-mode 'plain-tex-mode)
  20611. (defalias 'LaTeX-mode 'latex-mode)
  20612. (autoload 'plain-tex-mode "tex-mode" "\
  20613. Major mode for editing files of input for plain TeX.
  20614. Makes $ and } display the characters they match.
  20615. Makes \" insert `` when it seems to be the beginning of a quotation,
  20616. and '' when it appears to be the end; it inserts \" only after a \\.
  20617. Use \\[tex-region] to run TeX on the current region, plus a \"header\"
  20618. copied from the top of the file (containing macro definitions, etc.),
  20619. running TeX under a special subshell. \\[tex-buffer] does the whole buffer.
  20620. \\[tex-file] saves the buffer and then processes the file.
  20621. \\[tex-print] prints the .dvi file made by any of these.
  20622. \\[tex-view] previews the .dvi file made by any of these.
  20623. \\[tex-bibtex-file] runs bibtex on the file of the current buffer.
  20624. Use \\[tex-validate-buffer] to check buffer for paragraphs containing
  20625. mismatched $'s or braces.
  20626. Special commands:
  20627. \\{plain-tex-mode-map}
  20628. Mode variables:
  20629. tex-run-command
  20630. Command string used by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
  20631. tex-directory
  20632. Directory in which to create temporary files for TeX jobs
  20633. run by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
  20634. tex-dvi-print-command
  20635. Command string used by \\[tex-print] to print a .dvi file.
  20636. tex-alt-dvi-print-command
  20637. Alternative command string used by \\[tex-print] (when given a prefix
  20638. argument) to print a .dvi file.
  20639. tex-dvi-view-command
  20640. Command string used by \\[tex-view] to preview a .dvi file.
  20641. tex-show-queue-command
  20642. Command string used by \\[tex-show-print-queue] to show the print
  20643. queue that \\[tex-print] put your job on.
  20644. Entering Plain-tex mode runs the hook `text-mode-hook', then the hook
  20645. `tex-mode-hook', and finally the hook `plain-tex-mode-hook'. When the
  20646. special subshell is initiated, the hook `tex-shell-hook' is run.
  20647. \(fn)" t nil)
  20648. (autoload 'latex-mode "tex-mode" "\
  20649. Major mode for editing files of input for LaTeX.
  20650. Makes $ and } display the characters they match.
  20651. Makes \" insert `` when it seems to be the beginning of a quotation,
  20652. and '' when it appears to be the end; it inserts \" only after a \\.
  20653. Use \\[tex-region] to run LaTeX on the current region, plus the preamble
  20654. copied from the top of the file (containing \\documentstyle, etc.),
  20655. running LaTeX under a special subshell. \\[tex-buffer] does the whole buffer.
  20656. \\[tex-file] saves the buffer and then processes the file.
  20657. \\[tex-print] prints the .dvi file made by any of these.
  20658. \\[tex-view] previews the .dvi file made by any of these.
  20659. \\[tex-bibtex-file] runs bibtex on the file of the current buffer.
  20660. Use \\[tex-validate-buffer] to check buffer for paragraphs containing
  20661. mismatched $'s or braces.
  20662. Special commands:
  20663. \\{latex-mode-map}
  20664. Mode variables:
  20665. latex-run-command
  20666. Command string used by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
  20667. tex-directory
  20668. Directory in which to create temporary files for LaTeX jobs
  20669. run by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
  20670. tex-dvi-print-command
  20671. Command string used by \\[tex-print] to print a .dvi file.
  20672. tex-alt-dvi-print-command
  20673. Alternative command string used by \\[tex-print] (when given a prefix
  20674. argument) to print a .dvi file.
  20675. tex-dvi-view-command
  20676. Command string used by \\[tex-view] to preview a .dvi file.
  20677. tex-show-queue-command
  20678. Command string used by \\[tex-show-print-queue] to show the print
  20679. queue that \\[tex-print] put your job on.
  20680. Entering Latex mode runs the hook `text-mode-hook', then
  20681. `tex-mode-hook', and finally `latex-mode-hook'. When the special
  20682. subshell is initiated, `tex-shell-hook' is run.
  20683. \(fn)" t nil)
  20684. (autoload 'slitex-mode "tex-mode" "\
  20685. Major mode for editing files of input for SliTeX.
  20686. Makes $ and } display the characters they match.
  20687. Makes \" insert `` when it seems to be the beginning of a quotation,
  20688. and '' when it appears to be the end; it inserts \" only after a \\.
  20689. Use \\[tex-region] to run SliTeX on the current region, plus the preamble
  20690. copied from the top of the file (containing \\documentstyle, etc.),
  20691. running SliTeX under a special subshell. \\[tex-buffer] does the whole buffer.
  20692. \\[tex-file] saves the buffer and then processes the file.
  20693. \\[tex-print] prints the .dvi file made by any of these.
  20694. \\[tex-view] previews the .dvi file made by any of these.
  20695. \\[tex-bibtex-file] runs bibtex on the file of the current buffer.
  20696. Use \\[tex-validate-buffer] to check buffer for paragraphs containing
  20697. mismatched $'s or braces.
  20698. Special commands:
  20699. \\{slitex-mode-map}
  20700. Mode variables:
  20701. slitex-run-command
  20702. Command string used by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
  20703. tex-directory
  20704. Directory in which to create temporary files for SliTeX jobs
  20705. run by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
  20706. tex-dvi-print-command
  20707. Command string used by \\[tex-print] to print a .dvi file.
  20708. tex-alt-dvi-print-command
  20709. Alternative command string used by \\[tex-print] (when given a prefix
  20710. argument) to print a .dvi file.
  20711. tex-dvi-view-command
  20712. Command string used by \\[tex-view] to preview a .dvi file.
  20713. tex-show-queue-command
  20714. Command string used by \\[tex-show-print-queue] to show the print
  20715. queue that \\[tex-print] put your job on.
  20716. Entering SliTeX mode runs the hook `text-mode-hook', then the hook
  20717. `tex-mode-hook', then the hook `latex-mode-hook', and finally the hook
  20718. `slitex-mode-hook'. When the special subshell is initiated, the hook
  20719. `tex-shell-hook' is run.
  20720. \(fn)" t nil)
  20721. (autoload 'tex-start-shell "tex-mode" "\
  20722. \(fn)" nil nil)
  20723. (autoload 'doctex-mode "tex-mode" "\
  20724. Major mode to edit DocTeX files.
  20725. \(fn)" t nil)
  20726. ;;;***
  20727. ;;;### (autoloads (texi2info texinfo-format-region texinfo-format-buffer)
  20728. ;;;;;; "texinfmt" "textmodes/texinfmt.el" (20400 62402))
  20729. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/texinfmt.el
  20730. (autoload 'texinfo-format-buffer "texinfmt" "\
  20731. Process the current buffer as texinfo code, into an Info file.
  20732. The Info file output is generated in a buffer visiting the Info file
  20733. name specified in the @setfilename command.
  20734. Non-nil argument (prefix, if interactive) means don't make tag table
  20735. and don't split the file if large. You can use `Info-tagify' and
  20736. `Info-split' to do these manually.
  20737. \(fn &optional NOSPLIT)" t nil)
  20738. (autoload 'texinfo-format-region "texinfmt" "\
  20739. Convert the current region of the Texinfo file to Info format.
  20740. This lets you see what that part of the file will look like in Info.
  20741. The command is bound to \\[texinfo-format-region]. The text that is
  20742. converted to Info is stored in a temporary buffer.
  20743. \(fn REGION-BEGINNING REGION-END)" t nil)
  20744. (autoload 'texi2info "texinfmt" "\
  20745. Convert the current buffer (written in Texinfo code) into an Info file.
  20746. The Info file output is generated in a buffer visiting the Info file
  20747. names specified in the @setfilename command.
  20748. This function automatically updates all node pointers and menus, and
  20749. creates a master menu. This work is done on a temporary buffer that
  20750. is automatically removed when the Info file is created. The original
  20751. Texinfo source buffer is not changed.
  20752. Non-nil argument (prefix, if interactive) means don't split the file
  20753. if large. You can use `Info-split' to do this manually.
  20754. \(fn &optional NOSPLIT)" t nil)
  20755. ;;;***
  20756. ;;;### (autoloads (texinfo-mode texinfo-close-quote texinfo-open-quote)
  20757. ;;;;;; "texinfo" "textmodes/texinfo.el" (20352 65510))
  20758. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/texinfo.el
  20759. (defvar texinfo-open-quote (purecopy "``") "\
  20760. String inserted by typing \\[texinfo-insert-quote] to open a quotation.")
  20761. (custom-autoload 'texinfo-open-quote "texinfo" t)
  20762. (defvar texinfo-close-quote (purecopy "''") "\
  20763. String inserted by typing \\[texinfo-insert-quote] to close a quotation.")
  20764. (custom-autoload 'texinfo-close-quote "texinfo" t)
  20765. (autoload 'texinfo-mode "texinfo" "\
  20766. Major mode for editing Texinfo files.
  20767. It has these extra commands:
  20768. \\{texinfo-mode-map}
  20769. These are files that are used as input for TeX to make printed manuals
  20770. and also to be turned into Info files with \\[makeinfo-buffer] or
  20771. the `makeinfo' program. These files must be written in a very restricted and
  20772. modified version of TeX input format.
  20773. Editing commands are like text-mode except that the syntax table is
  20774. set up so expression commands skip Texinfo bracket groups. To see
  20775. what the Info version of a region of the Texinfo file will look like,
  20776. use \\[makeinfo-region], which runs `makeinfo' on the current region.
  20777. You can show the structure of a Texinfo file with \\[texinfo-show-structure].
  20778. This command shows the structure of a Texinfo file by listing the
  20779. lines with the @-sign commands for @chapter, @section, and the like.
  20780. These lines are displayed in another window called the *Occur* window.
  20781. In that window, you can position the cursor over one of the lines and
  20782. use \\[occur-mode-goto-occurrence], to jump to the corresponding spot
  20783. in the Texinfo file.
  20784. In addition, Texinfo mode provides commands that insert various
  20785. frequently used @-sign commands into the buffer. You can use these
  20786. commands to save keystrokes. And you can insert balanced braces with
  20787. \\[texinfo-insert-braces] and later use the command \\[up-list] to
  20788. move forward past the closing brace.
  20789. Also, Texinfo mode provides functions for automatically creating or
  20790. updating menus and node pointers. These functions
  20791. * insert the `Next', `Previous' and `Up' pointers of a node,
  20792. * insert or update the menu for a section, and
  20793. * create a master menu for a Texinfo source file.
  20794. Here are the functions:
  20795. texinfo-update-node \\[texinfo-update-node]
  20796. texinfo-every-node-update \\[texinfo-every-node-update]
  20797. texinfo-sequential-node-update
  20798. texinfo-make-menu \\[texinfo-make-menu]
  20799. texinfo-all-menus-update \\[texinfo-all-menus-update]
  20800. texinfo-master-menu
  20801. texinfo-indent-menu-description (column &optional region-p)
  20802. The `texinfo-column-for-description' variable specifies the column to
  20803. which menu descriptions are indented.
  20804. Passed an argument (a prefix argument, if interactive), the
  20805. `texinfo-update-node' and `texinfo-make-menu' functions do their jobs
  20806. in the region.
  20807. To use the updating commands, you must structure your Texinfo file
  20808. hierarchically, such that each `@node' line, with the exception of the
  20809. Top node, is accompanied by some kind of section line, such as an
  20810. `@chapter' or `@section' line.
  20811. If the file has a `top' node, it must be called `top' or `Top' and
  20812. be the first node in the file.
  20813. Entering Texinfo mode calls the value of `text-mode-hook', and then the
  20814. value of `texinfo-mode-hook'.
  20815. \(fn)" t nil)
  20816. ;;;***
  20817. ;;;### (autoloads (thai-composition-function thai-compose-buffer
  20818. ;;;;;; thai-compose-string thai-compose-region) "thai-util" "language/thai-util.el"
  20819. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  20820. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/thai-util.el
  20821. (autoload 'thai-compose-region "thai-util" "\
  20822. Compose Thai characters in the region.
  20823. When called from a program, expects two arguments,
  20824. positions (integers or markers) specifying the region.
  20825. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  20826. (autoload 'thai-compose-string "thai-util" "\
  20827. Compose Thai characters in STRING and return the resulting string.
  20828. \(fn STRING)" nil nil)
  20829. (autoload 'thai-compose-buffer "thai-util" "\
  20830. Compose Thai characters in the current buffer.
  20831. \(fn)" t nil)
  20832. (autoload 'thai-composition-function "thai-util" "\
  20833. \(fn GSTRING)" nil nil)
  20834. ;;;***
  20835. ;;;### (autoloads (list-at-point number-at-point symbol-at-point
  20836. ;;;;;; sexp-at-point thing-at-point bounds-of-thing-at-point forward-thing)
  20837. ;;;;;; "thingatpt" "thingatpt.el" (20352 65510))
  20838. ;;; Generated autoloads from thingatpt.el
  20839. (autoload 'forward-thing "thingatpt" "\
  20840. Move forward to the end of the Nth next THING.
  20841. THING should be a symbol specifying a type of syntactic entity.
  20842. Possibilities include `symbol', `list', `sexp', `defun',
  20843. `filename', `url', `email', `word', `sentence', `whitespace',
  20844. `line', and `page'.
  20845. \(fn THING &optional N)" nil nil)
  20846. (autoload 'bounds-of-thing-at-point "thingatpt" "\
  20847. Determine the start and end buffer locations for the THING at point.
  20848. THING should be a symbol specifying a type of syntactic entity.
  20849. Possibilities include `symbol', `list', `sexp', `defun',
  20850. `filename', `url', `email', `word', `sentence', `whitespace',
  20851. `line', and `page'.
  20852. See the file `thingatpt.el' for documentation on how to define a
  20853. valid THING.
  20854. Return a cons cell (START . END) giving the start and end
  20855. positions of the thing found.
  20856. \(fn THING)" nil nil)
  20857. (autoload 'thing-at-point "thingatpt" "\
  20858. Return the THING at point.
  20859. THING should be a symbol specifying a type of syntactic entity.
  20860. Possibilities include `symbol', `list', `sexp', `defun',
  20861. `filename', `url', `email', `word', `sentence', `whitespace',
  20862. `line', and `page'.
  20863. See the file `thingatpt.el' for documentation on how to define
  20864. a symbol as a valid THING.
  20865. \(fn THING)" nil nil)
  20866. (autoload 'sexp-at-point "thingatpt" "\
  20867. Return the sexp at point, or nil if none is found.
  20868. \(fn)" nil nil)
  20869. (autoload 'symbol-at-point "thingatpt" "\
  20870. Return the symbol at point, or nil if none is found.
  20871. \(fn)" nil nil)
  20872. (autoload 'number-at-point "thingatpt" "\
  20873. Return the number at point, or nil if none is found.
  20874. \(fn)" nil nil)
  20875. (autoload 'list-at-point "thingatpt" "\
  20876. Return the Lisp list at point, or nil if none is found.
  20877. \(fn)" nil nil)
  20878. ;;;***
  20879. ;;;### (autoloads (thumbs-dired-setroot thumbs-dired-show thumbs-dired-show-marked
  20880. ;;;;;; thumbs-show-from-dir thumbs-find-thumb) "thumbs" "thumbs.el"
  20881. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  20882. ;;; Generated autoloads from thumbs.el
  20883. (autoload 'thumbs-find-thumb "thumbs" "\
  20884. Display the thumbnail for IMG.
  20885. \(fn IMG)" t nil)
  20886. (autoload 'thumbs-show-from-dir "thumbs" "\
  20887. Make a preview buffer for all images in DIR.
  20888. Optional argument REG to select file matching a regexp,
  20889. and SAME-WINDOW to show thumbs in the same window.
  20890. \(fn DIR &optional REG SAME-WINDOW)" t nil)
  20891. (autoload 'thumbs-dired-show-marked "thumbs" "\
  20892. In dired, make a thumbs buffer with marked files.
  20893. \(fn)" t nil)
  20894. (autoload 'thumbs-dired-show "thumbs" "\
  20895. In dired, make a thumbs buffer with all files in current directory.
  20896. \(fn)" t nil)
  20897. (defalias 'thumbs 'thumbs-show-from-dir)
  20898. (autoload 'thumbs-dired-setroot "thumbs" "\
  20899. In dired, call the setroot program on the image at point.
  20900. \(fn)" t nil)
  20901. ;;;***
  20902. ;;;### (autoloads (tibetan-pre-write-canonicalize-for-unicode tibetan-pre-write-conversion
  20903. ;;;;;; tibetan-post-read-conversion tibetan-compose-buffer tibetan-decompose-buffer
  20904. ;;;;;; tibetan-decompose-string tibetan-decompose-region tibetan-compose-region
  20905. ;;;;;; tibetan-compose-string tibetan-transcription-to-tibetan tibetan-tibetan-to-transcription
  20906. ;;;;;; tibetan-char-p) "tibet-util" "language/tibet-util.el" (20400
  20907. ;;;;;; 62402))
  20908. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/tibet-util.el
  20909. (autoload 'tibetan-char-p "tibet-util" "\
  20910. Check if char CH is Tibetan character.
  20911. Returns non-nil if CH is Tibetan. Otherwise, returns nil.
  20912. \(fn CH)" nil nil)
  20913. (autoload 'tibetan-tibetan-to-transcription "tibet-util" "\
  20914. Transcribe Tibetan string STR and return the corresponding Roman string.
  20915. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  20916. (autoload 'tibetan-transcription-to-tibetan "tibet-util" "\
  20917. Convert Tibetan Roman string STR to Tibetan character string.
  20918. The returned string has no composition information.
  20919. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  20920. (autoload 'tibetan-compose-string "tibet-util" "\
  20921. Compose Tibetan string STR.
  20922. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  20923. (autoload 'tibetan-compose-region "tibet-util" "\
  20924. Compose Tibetan text the region BEG and END.
  20925. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  20926. (autoload 'tibetan-decompose-region "tibet-util" "\
  20927. Decompose Tibetan text in the region FROM and TO.
  20928. This is different from decompose-region because precomposed Tibetan characters
  20929. are decomposed into normal Tibetan character sequences.
  20930. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  20931. (autoload 'tibetan-decompose-string "tibet-util" "\
  20932. Decompose Tibetan string STR.
  20933. This is different from decompose-string because precomposed Tibetan characters
  20934. are decomposed into normal Tibetan character sequences.
  20935. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  20936. (autoload 'tibetan-decompose-buffer "tibet-util" "\
  20937. Decomposes Tibetan characters in the buffer into their components.
  20938. See also the documentation of the function `tibetan-decompose-region'.
  20939. \(fn)" t nil)
  20940. (autoload 'tibetan-compose-buffer "tibet-util" "\
  20941. Composes Tibetan character components in the buffer.
  20942. See also docstring of the function tibetan-compose-region.
  20943. \(fn)" t nil)
  20944. (autoload 'tibetan-post-read-conversion "tibet-util" "\
  20945. \(fn LEN)" nil nil)
  20946. (autoload 'tibetan-pre-write-conversion "tibet-util" "\
  20947. \(fn FROM TO)" nil nil)
  20948. (autoload 'tibetan-pre-write-canonicalize-for-unicode "tibet-util" "\
  20949. \(fn FROM TO)" nil nil)
  20950. ;;;***
  20951. ;;;### (autoloads (tildify-buffer tildify-region) "tildify" "textmodes/tildify.el"
  20952. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  20953. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/tildify.el
  20954. (autoload 'tildify-region "tildify" "\
  20955. Add hard spaces in the region between BEG and END.
  20956. See variables `tildify-pattern-alist', `tildify-string-alist', and
  20957. `tildify-ignored-environments-alist' for information about configuration
  20958. parameters.
  20959. This function performs no refilling of the changed text.
  20960. \(fn BEG END)" t nil)
  20961. (autoload 'tildify-buffer "tildify" "\
  20962. Add hard spaces in the current buffer.
  20963. See variables `tildify-pattern-alist', `tildify-string-alist', and
  20964. `tildify-ignored-environments-alist' for information about configuration
  20965. parameters.
  20966. This function performs no refilling of the changed text.
  20967. \(fn)" t nil)
  20968. ;;;***
  20969. ;;;### (autoloads (emacs-init-time emacs-uptime display-time-world
  20970. ;;;;;; display-time-mode display-time display-time-day-and-date)
  20971. ;;;;;; "time" "time.el" (20400 62402))
  20972. ;;; Generated autoloads from time.el
  20973. (defvar display-time-day-and-date nil "\
  20974. Non-nil means \\[display-time] should display day and date as well as time.")
  20975. (custom-autoload 'display-time-day-and-date "time" t)
  20976. (put 'display-time-string 'risky-local-variable t)
  20977. (autoload 'display-time "time" "\
  20978. Enable display of time, load level, and mail flag in mode lines.
  20979. This display updates automatically every minute.
  20980. If `display-time-day-and-date' is non-nil, the current day and date
  20981. are displayed as well.
  20982. This runs the normal hook `display-time-hook' after each update.
  20983. \(fn)" t nil)
  20984. (defvar display-time-mode nil "\
  20985. Non-nil if Display-Time mode is enabled.
  20986. See the command `display-time-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  20987. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  20988. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  20989. or call the function `display-time-mode'.")
  20990. (custom-autoload 'display-time-mode "time" nil)
  20991. (autoload 'display-time-mode "time" "\
  20992. Toggle display of time, load level, and mail flag in mode lines.
  20993. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Display Time mode if ARG is
  20994. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  20995. it if ARG is omitted or nil.
  20996. When Display Time mode is enabled, it updates every minute (you
  20997. can control the number of seconds between updates by customizing
  20998. `display-time-interval'). If `display-time-day-and-date' is
  20999. non-nil, the current day and date are displayed as well. This
  21000. runs the normal hook `display-time-hook' after each update.
  21001. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  21002. (autoload 'display-time-world "time" "\
  21003. Enable updating display of times in various time zones.
  21004. `display-time-world-list' specifies the zones.
  21005. To turn off the world time display, go to that window and type `q'.
  21006. \(fn)" t nil)
  21007. (autoload 'emacs-uptime "time" "\
  21008. Return a string giving the uptime of this instance of Emacs.
  21009. FORMAT is a string to format the result, using `format-seconds'.
  21010. For example, the Unix uptime command format is \"%D, %z%2h:%.2m\".
  21011. \(fn &optional FORMAT)" t nil)
  21012. (autoload 'emacs-init-time "time" "\
  21013. Return a string giving the duration of the Emacs initialization.
  21014. \(fn)" t nil)
  21015. ;;;***
  21016. ;;;### (autoloads (format-seconds safe-date-to-time time-to-days
  21017. ;;;;;; time-to-day-in-year date-leap-year-p days-between date-to-day
  21018. ;;;;;; time-add time-subtract time-since days-to-time time-less-p
  21019. ;;;;;; seconds-to-time date-to-time) "time-date" "calendar/time-date.el"
  21020. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  21021. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/time-date.el
  21022. (autoload 'date-to-time "time-date" "\
  21023. Parse a string DATE that represents a date-time and return a time value.
  21024. If DATE lacks timezone information, GMT is assumed.
  21025. \(fn DATE)" nil nil)
  21026. (if (or (featurep 'emacs)
  21027. (and (fboundp 'float-time)
  21028. (subrp (symbol-function 'float-time))))
  21029. (progn
  21030. (defalias 'time-to-seconds 'float-time)
  21031. (make-obsolete 'time-to-seconds 'float-time "21.1"))
  21032. (autoload 'time-to-seconds "time-date"))
  21033. (autoload 'seconds-to-time "time-date" "\
  21034. Convert SECONDS (a floating point number) to a time value.
  21035. \(fn SECONDS)" nil nil)
  21036. (autoload 'time-less-p "time-date" "\
  21037. Return non-nil if time value T1 is earlier than time value T2.
  21038. \(fn T1 T2)" nil nil)
  21039. (autoload 'days-to-time "time-date" "\
  21040. Convert DAYS into a time value.
  21041. \(fn DAYS)" nil nil)
  21042. (autoload 'time-since "time-date" "\
  21043. Return the time elapsed since TIME.
  21044. TIME should be either a time value or a date-time string.
  21045. \(fn TIME)" nil nil)
  21046. (defalias 'subtract-time 'time-subtract)
  21047. (autoload 'time-subtract "time-date" "\
  21048. Subtract two time values, T1 minus T2.
  21049. Return the difference in the format of a time value.
  21050. \(fn T1 T2)" nil nil)
  21051. (autoload 'time-add "time-date" "\
  21052. Add two time values T1 and T2. One should represent a time difference.
  21053. \(fn T1 T2)" nil nil)
  21054. (autoload 'date-to-day "time-date" "\
  21055. Return the number of days between year 1 and DATE.
  21056. DATE should be a date-time string.
  21057. \(fn DATE)" nil nil)
  21058. (autoload 'days-between "time-date" "\
  21059. Return the number of days between DATE1 and DATE2.
  21060. DATE1 and DATE2 should be date-time strings.
  21061. \(fn DATE1 DATE2)" nil nil)
  21062. (autoload 'date-leap-year-p "time-date" "\
  21063. Return t if YEAR is a leap year.
  21064. \(fn YEAR)" nil nil)
  21065. (autoload 'time-to-day-in-year "time-date" "\
  21066. Return the day number within the year corresponding to TIME.
  21067. \(fn TIME)" nil nil)
  21068. (autoload 'time-to-days "time-date" "\
  21069. The number of days between the Gregorian date 0001-12-31bce and TIME.
  21070. TIME should be a time value.
  21071. The Gregorian date Sunday, December 31, 1bce is imaginary.
  21072. \(fn TIME)" nil nil)
  21073. (autoload 'safe-date-to-time "time-date" "\
  21074. Parse a string DATE that represents a date-time and return a time value.
  21075. If DATE is malformed, return a time value of zeros.
  21076. \(fn DATE)" nil nil)
  21077. (autoload 'format-seconds "time-date" "\
  21078. Use format control STRING to format the number SECONDS.
  21079. The valid format specifiers are:
  21080. %y is the number of (365-day) years.
  21081. %d is the number of days.
  21082. %h is the number of hours.
  21083. %m is the number of minutes.
  21084. %s is the number of seconds.
  21085. %z is a non-printing control flag (see below).
  21086. %% is a literal \"%\".
  21087. Upper-case specifiers are followed by the unit-name (e.g. \"years\").
  21088. Lower-case specifiers return only the unit.
  21089. \"%\" may be followed by a number specifying a width, with an
  21090. optional leading \".\" for zero-padding. For example, \"%.3Y\" will
  21091. return something of the form \"001 year\".
  21092. The \"%z\" specifier does not print anything. When it is used, specifiers
  21093. must be given in order of decreasing size. To the left of \"%z\", nothing
  21094. is output until the first non-zero unit is encountered.
  21095. This function does not work for SECONDS greater than `most-positive-fixnum'.
  21096. \(fn STRING SECONDS)" nil nil)
  21097. ;;;***
  21098. ;;;### (autoloads (time-stamp-toggle-active time-stamp) "time-stamp"
  21099. ;;;;;; "time-stamp.el" (20352 65510))
  21100. ;;; Generated autoloads from time-stamp.el
  21101. (put 'time-stamp-format 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  21102. (put 'time-stamp-time-zone 'safe-local-variable 'string-or-null-p)
  21103. (put 'time-stamp-line-limit 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  21104. (put 'time-stamp-start 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  21105. (put 'time-stamp-end 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  21106. (put 'time-stamp-inserts-lines 'safe-local-variable 'symbolp)
  21107. (put 'time-stamp-count 'safe-local-variable 'integerp)
  21108. (put 'time-stamp-pattern 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
  21109. (autoload 'time-stamp "time-stamp" "\
  21110. Update the time stamp string(s) in the buffer.
  21111. A template in a file can be automatically updated with a new time stamp
  21112. every time you save the file. Add this line to your .emacs file:
  21113. (add-hook 'before-save-hook 'time-stamp)
  21114. or customize `before-save-hook' through Custom.
  21115. Normally the template must appear in the first 8 lines of a file and
  21116. look like one of the following:
  21117. Time-stamp: <>
  21118. Time-stamp: \" \"
  21119. The time stamp is written between the brackets or quotes:
  21120. Time-stamp: <2001-02-18 10:20:51 gildea>
  21121. The time stamp is updated only if the variable `time-stamp-active' is non-nil.
  21122. The format of the time stamp is set by the variable `time-stamp-pattern' or
  21123. `time-stamp-format'. The variables `time-stamp-pattern',
  21124. `time-stamp-line-limit', `time-stamp-start', `time-stamp-end',
  21125. `time-stamp-count', and `time-stamp-inserts-lines' control finding
  21126. the template.
  21127. \(fn)" t nil)
  21128. (autoload 'time-stamp-toggle-active "time-stamp" "\
  21129. Toggle `time-stamp-active', setting whether \\[time-stamp] updates a buffer.
  21130. With ARG, turn time stamping on if and only if arg is positive.
  21131. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  21132. ;;;***
  21133. ;;;### (autoloads (timeclock-when-to-leave-string timeclock-workday-elapsed-string
  21134. ;;;;;; timeclock-workday-remaining-string timeclock-reread-log timeclock-query-out
  21135. ;;;;;; timeclock-change timeclock-status-string timeclock-out timeclock-in
  21136. ;;;;;; timeclock-modeline-display) "timeclock" "calendar/timeclock.el"
  21137. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  21138. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/timeclock.el
  21139. (autoload 'timeclock-modeline-display "timeclock" "\
  21140. Toggle display of the amount of time left today in the modeline.
  21141. If `timeclock-use-display-time' is non-nil (the default), then
  21142. the function `display-time-mode' must be active, and the modeline
  21143. will be updated whenever the time display is updated. Otherwise,
  21144. the timeclock will use its own sixty second timer to do its
  21145. updating. With prefix ARG, turn modeline display on if and only
  21146. if ARG is positive. Returns the new status of timeclock modeline
  21147. display (non-nil means on).
  21148. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  21149. (autoload 'timeclock-in "timeclock" "\
  21150. Clock in, recording the current time moment in the timelog.
  21151. With a numeric prefix ARG, record the fact that today has only that
  21152. many hours in it to be worked. If ARG is a non-numeric prefix argument
  21153. \(non-nil, but not a number), 0 is assumed (working on a holiday or
  21154. weekend). *If not called interactively, ARG should be the number of
  21155. _seconds_ worked today*. This feature only has effect the first time
  21156. this function is called within a day.
  21157. PROJECT is the project being clocked into. If PROJECT is nil, and
  21158. FIND-PROJECT is non-nil -- or the user calls `timeclock-in'
  21159. interactively -- call the function `timeclock-get-project-function' to
  21160. discover the name of the project.
  21161. \(fn &optional ARG PROJECT FIND-PROJECT)" t nil)
  21162. (autoload 'timeclock-out "timeclock" "\
  21163. Clock out, recording the current time moment in the timelog.
  21164. If a prefix ARG is given, the user has completed the project that was
  21165. begun during the last time segment.
  21166. REASON is the user's reason for clocking out. If REASON is nil, and
  21167. FIND-REASON is non-nil -- or the user calls `timeclock-out'
  21168. interactively -- call the function `timeclock-get-reason-function' to
  21169. discover the reason.
  21170. \(fn &optional ARG REASON FIND-REASON)" t nil)
  21171. (autoload 'timeclock-status-string "timeclock" "\
  21172. Report the overall timeclock status at the present moment.
  21173. If SHOW-SECONDS is non-nil, display second resolution.
  21174. If TODAY-ONLY is non-nil, the display will be relative only to time
  21175. worked today, ignoring the time worked on previous days.
  21176. \(fn &optional SHOW-SECONDS TODAY-ONLY)" t nil)
  21177. (autoload 'timeclock-change "timeclock" "\
  21178. Change to working on a different project.
  21179. This clocks out of the current project, then clocks in on a new one.
  21180. With a prefix ARG, consider the previous project as finished at the
  21181. time of changeover. PROJECT is the name of the last project you were
  21182. working on.
  21183. \(fn &optional ARG PROJECT)" t nil)
  21184. (autoload 'timeclock-query-out "timeclock" "\
  21185. Ask the user whether to clock out.
  21186. This is a useful function for adding to `kill-emacs-query-functions'.
  21187. \(fn)" nil nil)
  21188. (autoload 'timeclock-reread-log "timeclock" "\
  21189. Re-read the timeclock, to account for external changes.
  21190. Returns the new value of `timeclock-discrepancy'.
  21191. \(fn)" t nil)
  21192. (autoload 'timeclock-workday-remaining-string "timeclock" "\
  21193. Return a string representing the amount of time left today.
  21194. Display second resolution if SHOW-SECONDS is non-nil. If TODAY-ONLY
  21195. is non-nil, the display will be relative only to time worked today.
  21196. See `timeclock-relative' for more information about the meaning of
  21197. \"relative to today\".
  21198. \(fn &optional SHOW-SECONDS TODAY-ONLY)" t nil)
  21199. (autoload 'timeclock-workday-elapsed-string "timeclock" "\
  21200. Return a string representing the amount of time worked today.
  21201. Display seconds resolution if SHOW-SECONDS is non-nil. If RELATIVE is
  21202. non-nil, the amount returned will be relative to past time worked.
  21203. \(fn &optional SHOW-SECONDS)" t nil)
  21204. (autoload 'timeclock-when-to-leave-string "timeclock" "\
  21205. Return a string representing the end of today's workday.
  21206. This string is relative to the value of `timeclock-workday'. If
  21207. SHOW-SECONDS is non-nil, the value printed/returned will include
  21208. seconds. If TODAY-ONLY is non-nil, the value returned will be
  21209. relative only to the time worked today, and not to past time.
  21210. \(fn &optional SHOW-SECONDS TODAY-ONLY)" t nil)
  21211. ;;;***
  21212. ;;;### (autoloads (batch-titdic-convert titdic-convert) "titdic-cnv"
  21213. ;;;;;; "international/titdic-cnv.el" (20352 65510))
  21214. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/titdic-cnv.el
  21215. (autoload 'titdic-convert "titdic-cnv" "\
  21216. Convert a TIT dictionary of FILENAME into a Quail package.
  21217. Optional argument DIRNAME if specified is the directory name under which
  21218. the generated Quail package is saved.
  21219. \(fn FILENAME &optional DIRNAME)" t nil)
  21220. (autoload 'batch-titdic-convert "titdic-cnv" "\
  21221. Run `titdic-convert' on the files remaining on the command line.
  21222. Use this from the command line, with `-batch';
  21223. it won't work in an interactive Emacs.
  21224. For example, invoke \"emacs -batch -f batch-titdic-convert XXX.tit\" to
  21225. generate Quail package file \"xxx.el\" from TIT dictionary file \"XXX.tit\".
  21226. To get complete usage, invoke \"emacs -batch -f batch-titdic-convert -h\".
  21227. \(fn &optional FORCE)" nil nil)
  21228. ;;;***
  21229. ;;;### (autoloads (tmm-prompt tmm-menubar-mouse tmm-menubar) "tmm"
  21230. ;;;;;; "tmm.el" (20400 62402))
  21231. ;;; Generated autoloads from tmm.el
  21232. (define-key global-map "\M-`" 'tmm-menubar)
  21233. (define-key global-map [menu-bar mouse-1] 'tmm-menubar-mouse)
  21234. (autoload 'tmm-menubar "tmm" "\
  21235. Text-mode emulation of looking and choosing from a menubar.
  21236. See the documentation for `tmm-prompt'.
  21237. X-POSITION, if non-nil, specifies a horizontal position within the menu bar;
  21238. we make that menu bar item (the one at that position) the default choice.
  21239. \(fn &optional X-POSITION)" t nil)
  21240. (autoload 'tmm-menubar-mouse "tmm" "\
  21241. Text-mode emulation of looking and choosing from a menubar.
  21242. This command is used when you click the mouse in the menubar
  21243. on a console which has no window system but does have a mouse.
  21244. See the documentation for `tmm-prompt'.
  21245. \(fn EVENT)" t nil)
  21246. (autoload 'tmm-prompt "tmm" "\
  21247. Text-mode emulation of calling the bindings in keymap.
  21248. Creates a text-mode menu of possible choices. You can access the elements
  21249. in the menu in two ways:
  21250. *) via history mechanism from minibuffer;
  21251. *) Or via completion-buffer that is automatically shown.
  21252. The last alternative is currently a hack, you cannot use mouse reliably.
  21253. MENU is like the MENU argument to `x-popup-menu': either a
  21254. keymap or an alist of alists.
  21255. DEFAULT-ITEM, if non-nil, specifies an initial default choice.
  21256. Its value should be an event that has a binding in MENU.
  21257. \(fn MENU &optional IN-POPUP DEFAULT-ITEM)" nil nil)
  21258. ;;;***
  21259. ;;;### (autoloads (todo-show todo-cp todo-mode todo-print todo-top-priorities
  21260. ;;;;;; todo-insert-item todo-add-item-non-interactively todo-add-category)
  21261. ;;;;;; "todo-mode" "calendar/todo-mode.el" (20352 65510))
  21262. ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/todo-mode.el
  21263. (autoload 'todo-add-category "todo-mode" "\
  21264. Add new category CAT to the TODO list.
  21265. \(fn &optional CAT)" t nil)
  21266. (autoload 'todo-add-item-non-interactively "todo-mode" "\
  21267. Insert NEW-ITEM in TODO list as a new entry in CATEGORY.
  21268. \(fn NEW-ITEM CATEGORY)" nil nil)
  21269. (autoload 'todo-insert-item "todo-mode" "\
  21270. Insert new TODO list entry.
  21271. With a prefix argument ARG solicit the category, otherwise use the current
  21272. category.
  21273. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  21274. (autoload 'todo-top-priorities "todo-mode" "\
  21275. List top priorities for each category.
  21276. Number of entries for each category is given by NOF-PRIORITIES which
  21277. defaults to `todo-show-priorities'.
  21278. If CATEGORY-PR-PAGE is non-nil, a page separator '^L' is inserted
  21279. between each category.
  21280. INTERACTIVE should be non-nil if this function is called interactively.
  21281. \(fn &optional NOF-PRIORITIES CATEGORY-PR-PAGE INTERACTIVE)" t nil)
  21282. (autoload 'todo-print "todo-mode" "\
  21283. Print todo summary using `todo-print-function'.
  21284. If CATEGORY-PR-PAGE is non-nil, a page separator `^L' is inserted
  21285. between each category.
  21286. Number of entries for each category is given by `todo-print-priorities'.
  21287. \(fn &optional CATEGORY-PR-PAGE)" t nil)
  21288. (autoload 'todo-mode "todo-mode" "\
  21289. Major mode for editing TODO lists.
  21290. \(fn)" t nil)
  21291. (autoload 'todo-cp "todo-mode" "\
  21292. Make a diary entry appear only in the current date's diary.
  21293. \(fn)" nil nil)
  21294. (autoload 'todo-show "todo-mode" "\
  21295. Show TODO list.
  21296. \(fn)" t nil)
  21297. ;;;***
  21298. ;;;### (autoloads (tool-bar-local-item-from-menu tool-bar-add-item-from-menu
  21299. ;;;;;; tool-bar-local-item tool-bar-add-item toggle-tool-bar-mode-from-frame)
  21300. ;;;;;; "tool-bar" "tool-bar.el" (20352 65510))
  21301. ;;; Generated autoloads from tool-bar.el
  21302. (autoload 'toggle-tool-bar-mode-from-frame "tool-bar" "\
  21303. Toggle tool bar on or off, based on the status of the current frame.
  21304. See `tool-bar-mode' for more information.
  21305. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  21306. (autoload 'tool-bar-add-item "tool-bar" "\
  21307. Add an item to the tool bar.
  21308. ICON names the image, DEF is the key definition and KEY is a symbol
  21309. for the fake function key in the menu keymap. Remaining arguments
  21310. PROPS are additional items to add to the menu item specification. See
  21311. Info node `(elisp)Tool Bar'. Items are added from left to right.
  21312. ICON is the base name of a file containing the image to use. The
  21313. function will first try to use low-color/ICON.xpm if `display-color-cells'
  21314. is less or equal to 256, then ICON.xpm, then ICON.pbm, and finally
  21315. ICON.xbm, using `find-image'.
  21316. Use this function only to make bindings in the global value of `tool-bar-map'.
  21317. To define items in any other map, use `tool-bar-local-item'.
  21318. \(fn ICON DEF KEY &rest PROPS)" nil nil)
  21319. (autoload 'tool-bar-local-item "tool-bar" "\
  21320. Add an item to the tool bar in map MAP.
  21321. ICON names the image, DEF is the key definition and KEY is a symbol
  21322. for the fake function key in the menu keymap. Remaining arguments
  21323. PROPS are additional items to add to the menu item specification. See
  21324. Info node `(elisp)Tool Bar'. Items are added from left to right.
  21325. ICON is the base name of a file containing the image to use. The
  21326. function will first try to use low-color/ICON.xpm if `display-color-cells'
  21327. is less or equal to 256, then ICON.xpm, then ICON.pbm, and finally
  21328. ICON.xbm, using `find-image'.
  21329. \(fn ICON DEF KEY MAP &rest PROPS)" nil nil)
  21330. (autoload 'tool-bar-add-item-from-menu "tool-bar" "\
  21331. Define tool bar binding for COMMAND in keymap MAP using the given ICON.
  21332. This makes a binding for COMMAND in `tool-bar-map', copying its
  21333. binding from the menu bar in MAP (which defaults to `global-map'), but
  21334. modifies the binding by adding an image specification for ICON. It
  21335. finds ICON just like `tool-bar-add-item'. PROPS are additional
  21336. properties to add to the binding.
  21337. MAP must contain appropriate binding for `[menu-bar]' which holds a keymap.
  21338. Use this function only to make bindings in the global value of `tool-bar-map'.
  21339. To define items in any other map, use `tool-bar-local-item-from-menu'.
  21340. \(fn COMMAND ICON &optional MAP &rest PROPS)" nil nil)
  21341. (autoload 'tool-bar-local-item-from-menu "tool-bar" "\
  21342. Define local tool bar binding for COMMAND using the given ICON.
  21343. This makes a binding for COMMAND in IN-MAP, copying its binding from
  21344. the menu bar in FROM-MAP (which defaults to `global-map'), but
  21345. modifies the binding by adding an image specification for ICON. It
  21346. finds ICON just like `tool-bar-add-item'. PROPS are additional
  21347. properties to add to the binding.
  21348. FROM-MAP must contain appropriate binding for `[menu-bar]' which
  21349. holds a keymap.
  21350. \(fn COMMAND ICON IN-MAP &optional FROM-MAP &rest PROPS)" nil nil)
  21351. ;;;***
  21352. ;;;### (autoloads (tpu-edt-on tpu-edt-mode) "tpu-edt" "emulation/tpu-edt.el"
  21353. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  21354. ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/tpu-edt.el
  21355. (defvar tpu-edt-mode nil "\
  21356. Non-nil if Tpu-Edt mode is enabled.
  21357. See the command `tpu-edt-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  21358. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  21359. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  21360. or call the function `tpu-edt-mode'.")
  21361. (custom-autoload 'tpu-edt-mode "tpu-edt" nil)
  21362. (autoload 'tpu-edt-mode "tpu-edt" "\
  21363. Toggle TPU/edt emulation on or off.
  21364. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  21365. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  21366. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  21367. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  21368. (defalias 'tpu-edt 'tpu-edt-on)
  21369. (autoload 'tpu-edt-on "tpu-edt" "\
  21370. Turn on TPU/edt emulation.
  21371. \(fn)" t nil)
  21372. ;;;***
  21373. ;;;### (autoloads (tpu-mapper) "tpu-mapper" "emulation/tpu-mapper.el"
  21374. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  21375. ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/tpu-mapper.el
  21376. (autoload 'tpu-mapper "tpu-mapper" "\
  21377. Create an Emacs lisp file defining the TPU-edt keypad for X-windows.
  21378. This command displays an instruction screen showing the TPU-edt keypad
  21379. and asks you to press the TPU-edt editing keys. It uses the keys you
  21380. press to create an Emacs Lisp file that will define a TPU-edt keypad
  21381. for your X server. You can even re-arrange the standard EDT keypad to
  21382. suit your tastes (or to cope with those silly Sun and PC keypads).
  21383. Finally, you will be prompted for the name of the file to store the key
  21384. definitions. If you chose the default, TPU-edt will find it and load it
  21385. automatically. If you specify a different file name, you will need to
  21386. set the variable ``tpu-xkeys-file'' before starting TPU-edt. Here's how
  21387. you might go about doing that in your .emacs file.
  21388. (setq tpu-xkeys-file (expand-file-name \"~/.my-emacs-x-keys\"))
  21389. (tpu-edt)
  21390. Known Problems:
  21391. Sometimes, tpu-mapper will ignore a key you press, and just continue to
  21392. prompt for the same key. This can happen when your window manager sucks
  21393. up the key and doesn't pass it on to Emacs, or it could be an Emacs bug.
  21394. Either way, there's nothing that tpu-mapper can do about it. You must
  21395. press RETURN, to skip the current key and continue. Later, you and/or
  21396. your local X guru can try to figure out why the key is being ignored.
  21397. \(fn)" t nil)
  21398. ;;;***
  21399. ;;;### (autoloads (tq-create) "tq" "emacs-lisp/tq.el" (20352 65510))
  21400. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/tq.el
  21401. (autoload 'tq-create "tq" "\
  21402. Create and return a transaction queue communicating with PROCESS.
  21403. PROCESS should be a subprocess capable of sending and receiving
  21404. streams of bytes. It may be a local process, or it may be connected
  21405. to a tcp server on another machine.
  21406. \(fn PROCESS)" nil nil)
  21407. ;;;***
  21408. ;;;### (autoloads (trace-function-background trace-function trace-buffer)
  21409. ;;;;;; "trace" "emacs-lisp/trace.el" (20352 65510))
  21410. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/trace.el
  21411. (defvar trace-buffer (purecopy "*trace-output*") "\
  21412. Trace output will by default go to that buffer.")
  21413. (custom-autoload 'trace-buffer "trace" t)
  21414. (autoload 'trace-function "trace" "\
  21415. Traces FUNCTION with trace output going to BUFFER.
  21416. For every call of FUNCTION Lisp-style trace messages that display argument
  21417. and return values will be inserted into BUFFER. This function generates the
  21418. trace advice for FUNCTION and activates it together with any other advice
  21419. there might be!! The trace BUFFER will popup whenever FUNCTION is called.
  21420. Do not use this to trace functions that switch buffers or do any other
  21421. display oriented stuff, use `trace-function-background' instead.
  21422. \(fn FUNCTION &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  21423. (autoload 'trace-function-background "trace" "\
  21424. Traces FUNCTION with trace output going quietly to BUFFER.
  21425. When this tracing is enabled, every call to FUNCTION writes
  21426. a Lisp-style trace message (showing the arguments and return value)
  21427. into BUFFER. This function generates advice to trace FUNCTION
  21428. and activates it together with any other advice there might be.
  21429. The trace output goes to BUFFER quietly, without changing
  21430. the window or buffer configuration.
  21431. BUFFER defaults to `trace-buffer'.
  21432. \(fn FUNCTION &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  21433. ;;;***
  21434. ;;;### (autoloads (tramp-unload-tramp tramp-completion-handle-file-name-completion
  21435. ;;;;;; tramp-completion-handle-file-name-all-completions tramp-unload-file-name-handlers
  21436. ;;;;;; tramp-file-name-handler tramp-syntax tramp-mode) "tramp"
  21437. ;;;;;; "net/tramp.el" (20400 62402))
  21438. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/tramp.el
  21439. (defvar tramp-mode t "\
  21440. *Whether Tramp is enabled.
  21441. If it is set to nil, all remote file names are used literally.")
  21442. (custom-autoload 'tramp-mode "tramp" t)
  21443. (defvar tramp-syntax (if (featurep 'xemacs) 'sep 'ftp) "\
  21444. Tramp filename syntax to be used.
  21445. It can have the following values:
  21446. 'ftp -- Ange-FTP respective EFS like syntax (GNU Emacs default)
  21447. 'sep -- Syntax as defined for XEmacs (not available yet for GNU Emacs)
  21448. 'url -- URL-like syntax.")
  21449. (custom-autoload 'tramp-syntax "tramp" t)
  21450. (defconst tramp-file-name-regexp-unified (if (memq system-type '(cygwin windows-nt)) "\\`/\\([^[/:]\\{2,\\}\\|[^/]\\{2,\\}]\\):" "\\`/\\([^[/:]+\\|[^/]+]\\):") "\
  21451. Value for `tramp-file-name-regexp' for unified remoting.
  21452. Emacs (not XEmacs) uses a unified filename syntax for Ange-FTP and
  21453. Tramp. See `tramp-file-name-structure' for more explanations.
  21454. On W32 systems, the volume letter must be ignored.")
  21455. (defconst tramp-file-name-regexp-separate "\\`/\\[.*\\]" "\
  21456. Value for `tramp-file-name-regexp' for separate remoting.
  21457. XEmacs uses a separate filename syntax for Tramp and EFS.
  21458. See `tramp-file-name-structure' for more explanations.")
  21459. (defconst tramp-file-name-regexp-url "\\`/[^/:]+://" "\
  21460. Value for `tramp-file-name-regexp' for URL-like remoting.
  21461. See `tramp-file-name-structure' for more explanations.")
  21462. (defconst tramp-file-name-regexp (cond ((equal tramp-syntax 'ftp) tramp-file-name-regexp-unified) ((equal tramp-syntax 'sep) tramp-file-name-regexp-separate) ((equal tramp-syntax 'url) tramp-file-name-regexp-url) (t (error "Wrong `tramp-syntax' defined"))) "\
  21463. *Regular expression matching file names handled by Tramp.
  21464. This regexp should match Tramp file names but no other file names.
  21465. When tramp.el is loaded, this regular expression is prepended to
  21466. `file-name-handler-alist', and that is searched sequentially. Thus,
  21467. if the Tramp entry appears rather early in the `file-name-handler-alist'
  21468. and is a bit too general, then some files might be considered Tramp
  21469. files which are not really Tramp files.
  21470. Please note that the entry in `file-name-handler-alist' is made when
  21471. this file (tramp.el) is loaded. This means that this variable must be set
  21472. before loading tramp.el. Alternatively, `file-name-handler-alist' can be
  21473. updated after changing this variable.
  21474. Also see `tramp-file-name-structure'.")
  21475. (defconst tramp-completion-file-name-regexp-unified (if (memq system-type '(cygwin windows-nt)) "\\`/[^/]\\{2,\\}\\'" "\\`/[^/]*\\'") "\
  21476. Value for `tramp-completion-file-name-regexp' for unified remoting.
  21477. GNU Emacs uses a unified filename syntax for Tramp and Ange-FTP.
  21478. See `tramp-file-name-structure' for more explanations.
  21479. On W32 systems, the volume letter must be ignored.")
  21480. (defconst tramp-completion-file-name-regexp-separate "\\`/\\([[][^]]*\\)?\\'" "\
  21481. Value for `tramp-completion-file-name-regexp' for separate remoting.
  21482. XEmacs uses a separate filename syntax for Tramp and EFS.
  21483. See `tramp-file-name-structure' for more explanations.")
  21484. (defconst tramp-completion-file-name-regexp-url "\\`/[^/:]+\\(:\\(/\\(/[^/]*\\)?\\)?\\)?\\'" "\
  21485. Value for `tramp-completion-file-name-regexp' for URL-like remoting.
  21486. See `tramp-file-name-structure' for more explanations.")
  21487. (defconst tramp-completion-file-name-regexp (cond ((equal tramp-syntax 'ftp) tramp-completion-file-name-regexp-unified) ((equal tramp-syntax 'sep) tramp-completion-file-name-regexp-separate) ((equal tramp-syntax 'url) tramp-completion-file-name-regexp-url) (t (error "Wrong `tramp-syntax' defined"))) "\
  21488. *Regular expression matching file names handled by Tramp completion.
  21489. This regexp should match partial Tramp file names only.
  21490. Please note that the entry in `file-name-handler-alist' is made when
  21491. this file (tramp.el) is loaded. This means that this variable must be set
  21492. before loading tramp.el. Alternatively, `file-name-handler-alist' can be
  21493. updated after changing this variable.
  21494. Also see `tramp-file-name-structure'.")
  21495. (defconst tramp-completion-file-name-handler-alist '((file-name-all-completions . tramp-completion-handle-file-name-all-completions) (file-name-completion . tramp-completion-handle-file-name-completion)) "\
  21496. Alist of completion handler functions.
  21497. Used for file names matching `tramp-file-name-regexp'. Operations
  21498. not mentioned here will be handled by Tramp's file name handler
  21499. functions, or the normal Emacs functions.")
  21500. (defun tramp-run-real-handler (operation args) "\
  21501. Invoke normal file name handler for OPERATION.
  21502. First arg specifies the OPERATION, second arg is a list of arguments to
  21503. pass to the OPERATION." (let* ((inhibit-file-name-handlers (\` (tramp-file-name-handler tramp-vc-file-name-handler tramp-completion-file-name-handler cygwin-mount-name-hook-function cygwin-mount-map-drive-hook-function \, (and (eq inhibit-file-name-operation operation) inhibit-file-name-handlers)))) (inhibit-file-name-operation operation)) (apply operation args)))
  21504. (defun tramp-completion-run-real-handler (operation args) "\
  21505. Invoke `tramp-file-name-handler' for OPERATION.
  21506. First arg specifies the OPERATION, second arg is a list of arguments to
  21507. pass to the OPERATION." (let* ((inhibit-file-name-handlers (\` (tramp-completion-file-name-handler cygwin-mount-name-hook-function cygwin-mount-map-drive-hook-function \, (and (eq inhibit-file-name-operation operation) inhibit-file-name-handlers)))) (inhibit-file-name-operation operation)) (apply operation args)))
  21508. (autoload 'tramp-file-name-handler "tramp" "\
  21509. Invoke Tramp file name handler.
  21510. Falls back to normal file name handler if no Tramp file name handler exists.
  21511. \(fn OPERATION &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  21512. (defun tramp-completion-file-name-handler (operation &rest args) "\
  21513. Invoke Tramp file name completion handler.
  21514. Falls back to normal file name handler if no Tramp file name handler exists." (let ((directory-sep-char 47) (fn (assoc operation tramp-completion-file-name-handler-alist))) (if (and fn tramp-mode (or (eq tramp-syntax (quote sep)) (featurep (quote tramp)) (and (boundp (quote partial-completion-mode)) (symbol-value (quote partial-completion-mode))) (featurep (quote ido)) (featurep (quote icicles)))) (save-match-data (apply (cdr fn) args)) (tramp-completion-run-real-handler operation args))))
  21515. (defun tramp-register-file-name-handlers nil "\
  21516. Add Tramp file name handlers to `file-name-handler-alist'." (let ((a1 (rassq (quote tramp-file-name-handler) file-name-handler-alist))) (setq file-name-handler-alist (delq a1 file-name-handler-alist))) (let ((a1 (rassq (quote tramp-completion-file-name-handler) file-name-handler-alist))) (setq file-name-handler-alist (delq a1 file-name-handler-alist))) (add-to-list (quote file-name-handler-alist) (cons tramp-file-name-regexp (quote tramp-file-name-handler))) (put (quote tramp-file-name-handler) (quote safe-magic) t) (add-to-list (quote file-name-handler-alist) (cons tramp-completion-file-name-regexp (quote tramp-completion-file-name-handler))) (put (quote tramp-completion-file-name-handler) (quote safe-magic) t) (dolist (fnh (quote (epa-file-handler jka-compr-handler))) (let ((entry (rassoc fnh file-name-handler-alist))) (when entry (setq file-name-handler-alist (cons entry (delete entry file-name-handler-alist)))))))
  21517. (tramp-register-file-name-handlers)
  21518. (autoload 'tramp-unload-file-name-handlers "tramp" "\
  21519. \(fn)" nil nil)
  21520. (autoload 'tramp-completion-handle-file-name-all-completions "tramp" "\
  21521. Like `file-name-all-completions' for partial Tramp files.
  21522. \(fn FILENAME DIRECTORY)" nil nil)
  21523. (autoload 'tramp-completion-handle-file-name-completion "tramp" "\
  21524. Like `file-name-completion' for Tramp files.
  21525. \(fn FILENAME DIRECTORY &optional PREDICATE)" nil nil)
  21526. (autoload 'tramp-unload-tramp "tramp" "\
  21527. Discard Tramp from loading remote files.
  21528. \(fn)" t nil)
  21529. ;;;***
  21530. ;;;### (autoloads (tramp-ftp-enable-ange-ftp) "tramp-ftp" "net/tramp-ftp.el"
  21531. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  21532. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/tramp-ftp.el
  21533. (autoload 'tramp-ftp-enable-ange-ftp "tramp-ftp" "\
  21534. \(fn)" nil nil)
  21535. ;;;***
  21536. ;;;### (autoloads (help-with-tutorial) "tutorial" "tutorial.el" (20517
  21537. ;;;;;; 48515))
  21538. ;;; Generated autoloads from tutorial.el
  21539. (autoload 'help-with-tutorial "tutorial" "\
  21540. Select the Emacs learn-by-doing tutorial.
  21541. If there is a tutorial version written in the language
  21542. of the selected language environment, that version is used.
  21543. If there's no tutorial in that language, `TUTORIAL' is selected.
  21544. With ARG, you are asked to choose which language.
  21545. If DONT-ASK-FOR-REVERT is non-nil the buffer is reverted without
  21546. any question when restarting the tutorial.
  21547. If any of the standard Emacs key bindings that are used in the
  21548. tutorial have been changed then an explanatory note about this is
  21549. shown in the beginning of the tutorial buffer.
  21550. When the tutorial buffer is killed the content and the point
  21551. position in the buffer is saved so that the tutorial may be
  21552. resumed later.
  21553. \(fn &optional ARG DONT-ASK-FOR-REVERT)" t nil)
  21554. ;;;***
  21555. ;;;### (autoloads (tai-viet-composition-function) "tv-util" "language/tv-util.el"
  21556. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  21557. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/tv-util.el
  21558. (autoload 'tai-viet-composition-function "tv-util" "\
  21559. \(fn FROM TO FONT-OBJECT STRING)" nil nil)
  21560. ;;;***
  21561. ;;;### (autoloads (2C-split 2C-associate-buffer 2C-two-columns) "two-column"
  21562. ;;;;;; "textmodes/two-column.el" (20400 62402))
  21563. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/two-column.el
  21564. (autoload '2C-command "two-column" () t 'keymap)
  21565. (global-set-key "\C-x6" '2C-command)
  21566. (global-set-key [f2] '2C-command)
  21567. (autoload '2C-two-columns "two-column" "\
  21568. Split current window vertically for two-column editing.
  21569. \\<global-map>When called the first time, associates a buffer with the current
  21570. buffer in two-column minor mode (use \\[describe-mode] once in the mode,
  21571. for details.). It runs `2C-other-buffer-hook' in the new buffer.
  21572. When called again, restores the screen layout with the current buffer
  21573. first and the associated buffer to its right.
  21574. \(fn &optional BUFFER)" t nil)
  21575. (autoload '2C-associate-buffer "two-column" "\
  21576. Associate another buffer with this one in two-column minor mode.
  21577. Can also be used to associate a just previously visited file, by
  21578. accepting the proposed default buffer.
  21579. \(See \\[describe-mode] .)
  21580. \(fn)" t nil)
  21581. (autoload '2C-split "two-column" "\
  21582. Split a two-column text at point, into two buffers in two-column minor mode.
  21583. Point becomes the local value of `2C-window-width'. Only lines that
  21584. have the ARG same preceding characters at that column get split. The
  21585. ARG preceding characters without any leading whitespace become the local
  21586. value for `2C-separator'. This way lines that continue across both
  21587. columns remain untouched in the first buffer.
  21588. This function can be used with a prototype line, to set up things. You
  21589. write the first line of each column and then split that line. E.g.:
  21590. First column's text sSs Second column's text
  21591. \\___/\\
  21592. / \\
  21593. 5 character Separator You type M-5 \\[2C-split] with the point here.
  21594. \(See \\[describe-mode] .)
  21595. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  21596. ;;;***
  21597. ;;;### (autoloads (type-break-guesstimate-keystroke-threshold type-break-statistics
  21598. ;;;;;; type-break type-break-mode type-break-keystroke-threshold
  21599. ;;;;;; type-break-good-break-interval type-break-good-rest-interval
  21600. ;;;;;; type-break-interval type-break-mode) "type-break" "type-break.el"
  21601. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  21602. ;;; Generated autoloads from type-break.el
  21603. (defvar type-break-mode nil "\
  21604. Toggle typing break mode.
  21605. See the docstring for the `type-break-mode' command for more information.
  21606. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  21607. use either \\[customize] or the function `type-break-mode'.")
  21608. (custom-autoload 'type-break-mode "type-break" nil)
  21609. (defvar type-break-interval (* 60 60) "\
  21610. Number of seconds between scheduled typing breaks.")
  21611. (custom-autoload 'type-break-interval "type-break" t)
  21612. (defvar type-break-good-rest-interval (/ type-break-interval 6) "\
  21613. Number of seconds of idle time considered to be an adequate typing rest.
  21614. When this variable is non-nil, Emacs checks the idle time between
  21615. keystrokes. If this idle time is long enough to be considered a \"good\"
  21616. rest from typing, then the next typing break is simply rescheduled for later.
  21617. If a break is interrupted before this much time elapses, the user will be
  21618. asked whether or not really to interrupt the break.")
  21619. (custom-autoload 'type-break-good-rest-interval "type-break" t)
  21620. (defvar type-break-good-break-interval nil "\
  21621. Number of seconds considered to be an adequate explicit typing rest.
  21622. When this variable is non-nil, its value is considered to be a \"good\"
  21623. length (in seconds) for a break initiated by the command `type-break',
  21624. overriding `type-break-good-rest-interval'. This provides querying of
  21625. break interruptions when `type-break-good-rest-interval' is nil.")
  21626. (custom-autoload 'type-break-good-break-interval "type-break" t)
  21627. (defvar type-break-keystroke-threshold (let* ((wpm 35) (avg-word-length 5) (upper (* wpm avg-word-length (/ type-break-interval 60))) (lower (/ upper 5))) (cons lower upper)) "\
  21628. Upper and lower bound on number of keystrokes for considering typing break.
  21629. This structure is a pair of numbers (MIN . MAX).
  21630. The first number is the minimum number of keystrokes that must have been
  21631. entered since the last typing break before considering another one, even if
  21632. the scheduled time has elapsed; the break is simply rescheduled until later
  21633. if the minimum threshold hasn't been reached. If this first value is nil,
  21634. then there is no minimum threshold; as soon as the scheduled time has
  21635. elapsed, the user will always be queried.
  21636. The second number is the maximum number of keystrokes that can be entered
  21637. before a typing break is requested immediately, pre-empting the originally
  21638. scheduled break. If this second value is nil, then no pre-emptive breaks
  21639. will occur; only scheduled ones will.
  21640. Keys with bucky bits (shift, control, meta, etc) are counted as only one
  21641. keystroke even though they really require multiple keys to generate them.
  21642. The command `type-break-guesstimate-keystroke-threshold' can be used to
  21643. guess a reasonably good pair of values for this variable.")
  21644. (custom-autoload 'type-break-keystroke-threshold "type-break" t)
  21645. (autoload 'type-break-mode "type-break" "\
  21646. Enable or disable typing-break mode.
  21647. This is a minor mode, but it is global to all buffers by default.
  21648. When this mode is enabled, the user is encouraged to take typing breaks at
  21649. appropriate intervals; either after a specified amount of time or when the
  21650. user has exceeded a keystroke threshold. When the time arrives, the user
  21651. is asked to take a break. If the user refuses at that time, Emacs will ask
  21652. again in a short period of time. The idea is to give the user enough time
  21653. to find a good breaking point in his or her work, but be sufficiently
  21654. annoying to discourage putting typing breaks off indefinitely.
  21655. A negative prefix argument disables this mode.
  21656. No argument or any non-negative argument enables it.
  21657. The user may enable or disable this mode by setting the variable of the
  21658. same name, though setting it in that way doesn't reschedule a break or
  21659. reset the keystroke counter.
  21660. If the mode was previously disabled and is enabled as a consequence of
  21661. calling this function, it schedules a break with `type-break-schedule' to
  21662. make sure one occurs (the user can call that command to reschedule the
  21663. break at any time). It also initializes the keystroke counter.
  21664. The variable `type-break-interval' specifies the number of seconds to
  21665. schedule between regular typing breaks. This variable doesn't directly
  21666. affect the time schedule; it simply provides a default for the
  21667. `type-break-schedule' command.
  21668. If set, the variable `type-break-good-rest-interval' specifies the minimum
  21669. amount of time which is considered a reasonable typing break. Whenever
  21670. that time has elapsed, typing breaks are automatically rescheduled for
  21671. later even if Emacs didn't prompt you to take one first. Also, if a break
  21672. is ended before this much time has elapsed, the user will be asked whether
  21673. or not to continue. A nil value for this variable prevents automatic
  21674. break rescheduling, making `type-break-interval' an upper bound on the time
  21675. between breaks. In this case breaks will be prompted for as usual before
  21676. the upper bound if the keystroke threshold is reached.
  21677. If `type-break-good-rest-interval' is nil and
  21678. `type-break-good-break-interval' is set, then confirmation is required to
  21679. interrupt a break before `type-break-good-break-interval' seconds
  21680. have passed. This provides for an upper bound on the time between breaks
  21681. together with confirmation of interruptions to these breaks.
  21682. The variable `type-break-keystroke-threshold' is used to determine the
  21683. thresholds at which typing breaks should be considered. You can use
  21684. the command `type-break-guesstimate-keystroke-threshold' to try to
  21685. approximate good values for this.
  21686. There are several variables that affect how or when warning messages about
  21687. imminent typing breaks are displayed. They include:
  21688. `type-break-mode-line-message-mode'
  21689. `type-break-time-warning-intervals'
  21690. `type-break-keystroke-warning-intervals'
  21691. `type-break-warning-repeat'
  21692. `type-break-warning-countdown-string'
  21693. `type-break-warning-countdown-string-type'
  21694. There are several variables that affect if, how, and when queries to begin
  21695. a typing break occur. They include:
  21696. `type-break-query-mode'
  21697. `type-break-query-function'
  21698. `type-break-query-interval'
  21699. The command `type-break-statistics' prints interesting things.
  21700. Finally, a file (named `type-break-file-name') is used to store information
  21701. across Emacs sessions. This provides recovery of the break status between
  21702. sessions and after a crash. Manual changes to the file may result in
  21703. problems.
  21704. \(fn &optional PREFIX)" t nil)
  21705. (autoload 'type-break "type-break" "\
  21706. Take a typing break.
  21707. During the break, a demo selected from the functions listed in
  21708. `type-break-demo-functions' is run.
  21709. After the typing break is finished, the next break is scheduled
  21710. as per the function `type-break-schedule'.
  21711. \(fn)" t nil)
  21712. (autoload 'type-break-statistics "type-break" "\
  21713. Print statistics about typing breaks in a temporary buffer.
  21714. This includes the last time a typing break was taken, when the next one is
  21715. scheduled, the keystroke thresholds and the current keystroke count, etc.
  21716. \(fn)" t nil)
  21717. (autoload 'type-break-guesstimate-keystroke-threshold "type-break" "\
  21718. Guess values for the minimum/maximum keystroke threshold for typing breaks.
  21719. If called interactively, the user is prompted for their guess as to how
  21720. many words per minute they usually type. This value should not be your
  21721. maximum WPM, but your average. Of course, this is harder to gauge since it
  21722. can vary considerably depending on what you are doing. For example, one
  21723. tends to type less when debugging a program as opposed to writing
  21724. documentation. (Perhaps a separate program should be written to estimate
  21725. average typing speed.)
  21726. From that, this command sets the values in `type-break-keystroke-threshold'
  21727. based on a fairly simple algorithm involving assumptions about the average
  21728. length of words (5). For the minimum threshold, it uses about a fifth of
  21729. the computed maximum threshold.
  21730. When called from Lisp programs, the optional args WORDLEN and FRAC can be
  21731. used to override the default assumption about average word length and the
  21732. fraction of the maximum threshold to which to set the minimum threshold.
  21733. FRAC should be the inverse of the fractional value; for example, a value of
  21734. 2 would mean to use one half, a value of 4 would mean to use one quarter, etc.
  21735. \(fn WPM &optional WORDLEN FRAC)" t nil)
  21736. ;;;***
  21737. ;;;### (autoloads (uce-reply-to-uce) "uce" "mail/uce.el" (20352 65510))
  21738. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/uce.el
  21739. (autoload 'uce-reply-to-uce "uce" "\
  21740. Compose a reply to unsolicited commercial email (UCE).
  21741. Sets up a reply buffer addressed to: the sender, his postmaster,
  21742. his abuse@ address, and the postmaster of the mail relay used.
  21743. You might need to set `uce-mail-reader' before using this.
  21744. \(fn &optional IGNORED)" t nil)
  21745. ;;;***
  21746. ;;;### (autoloads (ucs-normalize-HFS-NFC-string ucs-normalize-HFS-NFC-region
  21747. ;;;;;; ucs-normalize-HFS-NFD-string ucs-normalize-HFS-NFD-region
  21748. ;;;;;; ucs-normalize-NFKC-string ucs-normalize-NFKC-region ucs-normalize-NFKD-string
  21749. ;;;;;; ucs-normalize-NFKD-region ucs-normalize-NFC-string ucs-normalize-NFC-region
  21750. ;;;;;; ucs-normalize-NFD-string ucs-normalize-NFD-region) "ucs-normalize"
  21751. ;;;;;; "international/ucs-normalize.el" (20352 65510))
  21752. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/ucs-normalize.el
  21753. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-NFD-region "ucs-normalize" "\
  21754. Normalize the current region by the Unicode NFD.
  21755. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  21756. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-NFD-string "ucs-normalize" "\
  21757. Normalize the string STR by the Unicode NFD.
  21758. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  21759. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-NFC-region "ucs-normalize" "\
  21760. Normalize the current region by the Unicode NFC.
  21761. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  21762. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-NFC-string "ucs-normalize" "\
  21763. Normalize the string STR by the Unicode NFC.
  21764. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  21765. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-NFKD-region "ucs-normalize" "\
  21766. Normalize the current region by the Unicode NFKD.
  21767. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  21768. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-NFKD-string "ucs-normalize" "\
  21769. Normalize the string STR by the Unicode NFKD.
  21770. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  21771. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-NFKC-region "ucs-normalize" "\
  21772. Normalize the current region by the Unicode NFKC.
  21773. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  21774. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-NFKC-string "ucs-normalize" "\
  21775. Normalize the string STR by the Unicode NFKC.
  21776. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  21777. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-HFS-NFD-region "ucs-normalize" "\
  21778. Normalize the current region by the Unicode NFD and Mac OS's HFS Plus.
  21779. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  21780. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-HFS-NFD-string "ucs-normalize" "\
  21781. Normalize the string STR by the Unicode NFD and Mac OS's HFS Plus.
  21782. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  21783. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-HFS-NFC-region "ucs-normalize" "\
  21784. Normalize the current region by the Unicode NFC and Mac OS's HFS Plus.
  21785. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  21786. (autoload 'ucs-normalize-HFS-NFC-string "ucs-normalize" "\
  21787. Normalize the string STR by the Unicode NFC and Mac OS's HFS Plus.
  21788. \(fn STR)" nil nil)
  21789. ;;;***
  21790. ;;;### (autoloads (ununderline-region underline-region) "underline"
  21791. ;;;;;; "textmodes/underline.el" (20352 65510))
  21792. ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/underline.el
  21793. (autoload 'underline-region "underline" "\
  21794. Underline all nonblank characters in the region.
  21795. Works by overstriking underscores.
  21796. Called from program, takes two arguments START and END
  21797. which specify the range to operate on.
  21798. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  21799. (autoload 'ununderline-region "underline" "\
  21800. Remove all underlining (overstruck underscores) in the region.
  21801. Called from program, takes two arguments START and END
  21802. which specify the range to operate on.
  21803. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  21804. ;;;***
  21805. ;;;### (autoloads (unrmail batch-unrmail) "unrmail" "mail/unrmail.el"
  21806. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  21807. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/unrmail.el
  21808. (autoload 'batch-unrmail "unrmail" "\
  21809. Convert old-style Rmail Babyl files to system inbox format.
  21810. Specify the input Rmail Babyl file names as command line arguments.
  21811. For each Rmail file, the corresponding output file name
  21812. is made by adding `.mail' at the end.
  21813. For example, invoke `emacs -batch -f batch-unrmail RMAIL'.
  21814. \(fn)" nil nil)
  21815. (autoload 'unrmail "unrmail" "\
  21816. Convert old-style Rmail Babyl file FILE to system inbox format file TO-FILE.
  21817. \(fn FILE TO-FILE)" t nil)
  21818. ;;;***
  21819. ;;;### (autoloads (unsafep) "unsafep" "emacs-lisp/unsafep.el" (20352
  21820. ;;;;;; 65510))
  21821. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/unsafep.el
  21822. (autoload 'unsafep "unsafep" "\
  21823. Return nil if evaluating FORM couldn't possibly do any harm.
  21824. Otherwise result is a reason why FORM is unsafe.
  21825. UNSAFEP-VARS is a list of symbols with local bindings.
  21826. \(fn FORM &optional UNSAFEP-VARS)" nil nil)
  21827. ;;;***
  21828. ;;;### (autoloads (url-retrieve-synchronously url-retrieve) "url"
  21829. ;;;;;; "url/url.el" (20400 62402))
  21830. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url.el
  21831. (autoload 'url-retrieve "url" "\
  21832. Retrieve URL asynchronously and call CALLBACK with CBARGS when finished.
  21833. URL is either a string or a parsed URL.
  21834. CALLBACK is called when the object has been completely retrieved, with
  21835. the current buffer containing the object, and any MIME headers associated
  21836. with it. It is called as (apply CALLBACK STATUS CBARGS).
  21837. STATUS is a list with an even number of elements representing
  21838. what happened during the request, with most recent events first,
  21839. or an empty list if no events have occurred. Each pair is one of:
  21840. \(:redirect REDIRECTED-TO) - the request was redirected to this URL
  21841. \(:error (ERROR-SYMBOL . DATA)) - an error occurred. The error can be
  21842. signaled with (signal ERROR-SYMBOL DATA).
  21843. Return the buffer URL will load into, or nil if the process has
  21844. already completed (i.e. URL was a mailto URL or similar; in this case
  21845. the callback is not called).
  21846. The variables `url-request-data', `url-request-method' and
  21847. `url-request-extra-headers' can be dynamically bound around the
  21848. request; dynamic binding of other variables doesn't necessarily
  21849. take effect.
  21850. If SILENT, then don't message progress reports and the like.
  21851. If INHIBIT-COOKIES, cookies will neither be stored nor sent to
  21852. the server.
  21853. \(fn URL CALLBACK &optional CBARGS SILENT INHIBIT-COOKIES)" nil nil)
  21854. (autoload 'url-retrieve-synchronously "url" "\
  21855. Retrieve URL synchronously.
  21856. Return the buffer containing the data, or nil if there are no data
  21857. associated with it (the case for dired, info, or mailto URLs that need
  21858. no further processing). URL is either a string or a parsed URL.
  21859. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  21860. ;;;***
  21861. ;;;### (autoloads (url-register-auth-scheme url-get-authentication)
  21862. ;;;;;; "url-auth" "url/url-auth.el" (20352 65510))
  21863. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-auth.el
  21864. (autoload 'url-get-authentication "url-auth" "\
  21865. Return an authorization string suitable for use in the WWW-Authenticate
  21866. header in an HTTP/1.0 request.
  21867. URL is the url you are requesting authorization to. This can be either a
  21868. string representing the URL, or the parsed representation returned by
  21869. `url-generic-parse-url'
  21870. REALM is the realm at a specific site we are looking for. This should be a
  21871. string specifying the exact realm, or nil or the symbol 'any' to
  21872. specify that the filename portion of the URL should be used as the
  21873. realm
  21874. TYPE is the type of authentication to be returned. This is either a string
  21875. representing the type (basic, digest, etc), or nil or the symbol 'any'
  21876. to specify that any authentication is acceptable. If requesting 'any'
  21877. the strongest matching authentication will be returned. If this is
  21878. wrong, it's no big deal, the error from the server will specify exactly
  21879. what type of auth to use
  21880. PROMPT is boolean - specifies whether to ask the user for a username/password
  21881. if one cannot be found in the cache
  21882. \(fn URL REALM TYPE PROMPT &optional ARGS)" nil nil)
  21883. (autoload 'url-register-auth-scheme "url-auth" "\
  21884. Register an HTTP authentication method.
  21885. TYPE is a string or symbol specifying the name of the method.
  21886. This should be the same thing you expect to get returned in
  21887. an Authenticate header in HTTP/1.0 - it will be downcased.
  21888. FUNCTION is the function to call to get the authorization information.
  21889. This defaults to `url-?-auth', where ? is TYPE.
  21890. RATING a rating between 1 and 10 of the strength of the authentication.
  21891. This is used when asking for the best authentication for a specific
  21892. URL. The item with the highest rating is returned.
  21893. \(fn TYPE &optional FUNCTION RATING)" nil nil)
  21894. ;;;***
  21895. ;;;### (autoloads (url-cache-extract url-is-cached url-store-in-cache)
  21896. ;;;;;; "url-cache" "url/url-cache.el" (20352 65510))
  21897. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-cache.el
  21898. (autoload 'url-store-in-cache "url-cache" "\
  21899. Store buffer BUFF in the cache.
  21900. \(fn &optional BUFF)" nil nil)
  21901. (autoload 'url-is-cached "url-cache" "\
  21902. Return non-nil if the URL is cached.
  21903. The actual return value is the last modification time of the cache file.
  21904. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  21905. (autoload 'url-cache-extract "url-cache" "\
  21906. Extract FNAM from the local disk cache.
  21907. \(fn FNAM)" nil nil)
  21908. ;;;***
  21909. ;;;### (autoloads (url-cid) "url-cid" "url/url-cid.el" (20352 65510))
  21910. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-cid.el
  21911. (autoload 'url-cid "url-cid" "\
  21912. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  21913. ;;;***
  21914. ;;;### (autoloads (url-dav-vc-registered url-dav-supported-p) "url-dav"
  21915. ;;;;;; "url/url-dav.el" (20400 62402))
  21916. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-dav.el
  21917. (autoload 'url-dav-supported-p "url-dav" "\
  21918. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  21919. (autoload 'url-dav-vc-registered "url-dav" "\
  21920. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  21921. ;;;***
  21922. ;;;### (autoloads (url-file) "url-file" "url/url-file.el" (20352
  21923. ;;;;;; 65510))
  21924. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-file.el
  21925. (autoload 'url-file "url-file" "\
  21926. Handle file: and ftp: URLs.
  21927. \(fn URL CALLBACK CBARGS)" nil nil)
  21928. ;;;***
  21929. ;;;### (autoloads (url-open-stream url-gateway-nslookup-host) "url-gw"
  21930. ;;;;;; "url/url-gw.el" (20352 65510))
  21931. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-gw.el
  21932. (autoload 'url-gateway-nslookup-host "url-gw" "\
  21933. Attempt to resolve the given HOST using nslookup if possible.
  21934. \(fn HOST)" t nil)
  21935. (autoload 'url-open-stream "url-gw" "\
  21936. Open a stream to HOST, possibly via a gateway.
  21937. Args per `open-network-stream'.
  21938. Will not make a connection if `url-gateway-unplugged' is non-nil.
  21939. Might do a non-blocking connection; use `process-status' to check.
  21940. \(fn NAME BUFFER HOST SERVICE)" nil nil)
  21941. ;;;***
  21942. ;;;### (autoloads (url-insert-file-contents url-file-local-copy url-copy-file
  21943. ;;;;;; url-file-handler url-handler-mode) "url-handlers" "url/url-handlers.el"
  21944. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  21945. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-handlers.el
  21946. (defvar url-handler-mode nil "\
  21947. Non-nil if Url-Handler mode is enabled.
  21948. See the command `url-handler-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  21949. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  21950. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  21951. or call the function `url-handler-mode'.")
  21952. (custom-autoload 'url-handler-mode "url-handlers" nil)
  21953. (autoload 'url-handler-mode "url-handlers" "\
  21954. Toggle using `url' library for URL filenames (URL Handler mode).
  21955. With a prefix argument ARG, enable URL Handler mode if ARG is
  21956. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  21957. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  21958. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  21959. (autoload 'url-file-handler "url-handlers" "\
  21960. Function called from the `file-name-handler-alist' routines.
  21961. OPERATION is what needs to be done (`file-exists-p', etc). ARGS are
  21962. the arguments that would have been passed to OPERATION.
  21963. \(fn OPERATION &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  21964. (autoload 'url-copy-file "url-handlers" "\
  21965. Copy URL to NEWNAME. Both args must be strings.
  21966. Signals a `file-already-exists' error if file NEWNAME already exists,
  21967. unless a third argument OK-IF-ALREADY-EXISTS is supplied and non-nil.
  21968. A number as third arg means request confirmation if NEWNAME already exists.
  21969. This is what happens in interactive use with M-x.
  21970. Fourth arg KEEP-TIME non-nil means give the new file the same
  21971. last-modified time as the old one. (This works on only some systems.)
  21972. Fifth arg PRESERVE-UID-GID is ignored.
  21973. A prefix arg makes KEEP-TIME non-nil.
  21974. \(fn URL NEWNAME &optional OK-IF-ALREADY-EXISTS KEEP-TIME PRESERVE-UID-GID)" nil nil)
  21975. (autoload 'url-file-local-copy "url-handlers" "\
  21976. Copy URL into a temporary file on this machine.
  21977. Returns the name of the local copy, or nil, if FILE is directly
  21978. accessible.
  21979. \(fn URL &rest IGNORED)" nil nil)
  21980. (autoload 'url-insert-file-contents "url-handlers" "\
  21981. \(fn URL &optional VISIT BEG END REPLACE)" nil nil)
  21982. ;;;***
  21983. ;;;### (autoloads (url-http-options url-http-file-attributes url-http-file-exists-p
  21984. ;;;;;; url-http) "url-http" "url/url-http.el" (20461 49352))
  21985. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-http.el
  21986. (autoload 'url-http "url-http" "\
  21987. Retrieve URL via HTTP asynchronously.
  21988. URL must be a parsed URL. See `url-generic-parse-url' for details.
  21989. When retrieval is completed, the function CALLBACK is executed with
  21990. CBARGS as the arguments.
  21991. Optional arg RETRY-BUFFER, if non-nil, specifies the buffer of a
  21992. previous `url-http' call, which is being re-attempted.
  21993. \(fn URL CALLBACK CBARGS &optional RETRY-BUFFER)" nil nil)
  21994. (autoload 'url-http-file-exists-p "url-http" "\
  21995. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  21996. (defalias 'url-http-file-readable-p 'url-http-file-exists-p)
  21997. (autoload 'url-http-file-attributes "url-http" "\
  21998. \(fn URL &optional ID-FORMAT)" nil nil)
  21999. (autoload 'url-http-options "url-http" "\
  22000. Return a property list describing options available for URL.
  22001. This list is retrieved using the `OPTIONS' HTTP method.
  22002. Property list members:
  22003. methods
  22004. A list of symbols specifying what HTTP methods the resource
  22005. supports.
  22006. dav
  22007. A list of numbers specifying what DAV protocol/schema versions are
  22008. supported.
  22009. dasl
  22010. A list of supported DASL search types supported (string form)
  22011. ranges
  22012. A list of the units available for use in partial document fetches.
  22013. p3p
  22014. The `Platform For Privacy Protection' description for the resource.
  22015. Currently this is just the raw header contents. This is likely to
  22016. change once P3P is formally supported by the URL package or
  22017. Emacs/W3.
  22018. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22019. (defconst url-https-default-port 443 "\
  22020. Default HTTPS port.")
  22021. (defconst url-https-asynchronous-p t "\
  22022. HTTPS retrievals are asynchronous.")
  22023. (autoload 'url-default-expander "url-expand")
  22024. (defalias 'url-https-expand-file-name 'url-default-expander)
  22025. (autoload 'url-https "url-http")
  22026. (autoload 'url-https-file-exists-p "url-http")
  22027. (autoload 'url-https-file-readable-p "url-http")
  22028. (autoload 'url-https-file-attributes "url-http")
  22029. ;;;***
  22030. ;;;### (autoloads (url-irc) "url-irc" "url/url-irc.el" (20352 65510))
  22031. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-irc.el
  22032. (autoload 'url-irc "url-irc" "\
  22033. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22034. ;;;***
  22035. ;;;### (autoloads (url-ldap) "url-ldap" "url/url-ldap.el" (20400
  22036. ;;;;;; 62402))
  22037. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-ldap.el
  22038. (autoload 'url-ldap "url-ldap" "\
  22039. Perform an LDAP search specified by URL.
  22040. The return value is a buffer displaying the search results in HTML.
  22041. URL can be a URL string, or a URL vector of the type returned by
  22042. `url-generic-parse-url'.
  22043. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22044. ;;;***
  22045. ;;;### (autoloads (url-mailto url-mail) "url-mailto" "url/url-mailto.el"
  22046. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  22047. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-mailto.el
  22048. (autoload 'url-mail "url-mailto" "\
  22049. \(fn &rest ARGS)" t nil)
  22050. (autoload 'url-mailto "url-mailto" "\
  22051. Handle the mailto: URL syntax.
  22052. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22053. ;;;***
  22054. ;;;### (autoloads (url-data url-generic-emulator-loader url-info
  22055. ;;;;;; url-man) "url-misc" "url/url-misc.el" (20352 65510))
  22056. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-misc.el
  22057. (autoload 'url-man "url-misc" "\
  22058. Fetch a Unix manual page URL.
  22059. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22060. (autoload 'url-info "url-misc" "\
  22061. Fetch a GNU Info URL.
  22062. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22063. (autoload 'url-generic-emulator-loader "url-misc" "\
  22064. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22065. (defalias 'url-rlogin 'url-generic-emulator-loader)
  22066. (defalias 'url-telnet 'url-generic-emulator-loader)
  22067. (defalias 'url-tn3270 'url-generic-emulator-loader)
  22068. (autoload 'url-data "url-misc" "\
  22069. Fetch a data URL (RFC 2397).
  22070. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22071. ;;;***
  22072. ;;;### (autoloads (url-snews url-news) "url-news" "url/url-news.el"
  22073. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  22074. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-news.el
  22075. (autoload 'url-news "url-news" "\
  22076. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22077. (autoload 'url-snews "url-news" "\
  22078. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22079. ;;;***
  22080. ;;;### (autoloads (url-ns-user-pref url-ns-prefs isInNet isResolvable
  22081. ;;;;;; dnsResolve dnsDomainIs isPlainHostName) "url-ns" "url/url-ns.el"
  22082. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  22083. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-ns.el
  22084. (autoload 'isPlainHostName "url-ns" "\
  22085. \(fn HOST)" nil nil)
  22086. (autoload 'dnsDomainIs "url-ns" "\
  22087. \(fn HOST DOM)" nil nil)
  22088. (autoload 'dnsResolve "url-ns" "\
  22089. \(fn HOST)" nil nil)
  22090. (autoload 'isResolvable "url-ns" "\
  22091. \(fn HOST)" nil nil)
  22092. (autoload 'isInNet "url-ns" "\
  22093. \(fn IP NET MASK)" nil nil)
  22094. (autoload 'url-ns-prefs "url-ns" "\
  22095. \(fn &optional FILE)" nil nil)
  22096. (autoload 'url-ns-user-pref "url-ns" "\
  22097. \(fn KEY &optional DEFAULT)" nil nil)
  22098. ;;;***
  22099. ;;;### (autoloads (url-generic-parse-url url-recreate-url) "url-parse"
  22100. ;;;;;; "url/url-parse.el" (20400 62402))
  22101. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-parse.el
  22102. (autoload 'url-recreate-url "url-parse" "\
  22103. Recreate a URL string from the parsed URLOBJ.
  22104. \(fn URLOBJ)" nil nil)
  22105. (autoload 'url-generic-parse-url "url-parse" "\
  22106. Return an URL-struct of the parts of URL.
  22107. The CL-style struct contains the following fields:
  22108. TYPE USER PASSWORD HOST PORTSPEC FILENAME TARGET ATTRIBUTES FULLNESS.
  22109. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22110. ;;;***
  22111. ;;;### (autoloads (url-setup-privacy-info) "url-privacy" "url/url-privacy.el"
  22112. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  22113. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-privacy.el
  22114. (autoload 'url-setup-privacy-info "url-privacy" "\
  22115. Setup variables that expose info about you and your system.
  22116. \(fn)" t nil)
  22117. ;;;***
  22118. ;;;### (autoloads (url-queue-retrieve) "url-queue" "url/url-queue.el"
  22119. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  22120. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-queue.el
  22121. (autoload 'url-queue-retrieve "url-queue" "\
  22122. Retrieve URL asynchronously and call CALLBACK with CBARGS when finished.
  22123. This is like `url-retrieve' (which see for details of the arguments),
  22124. but with limits on the degree of parallelism. The variable
  22125. `url-queue-parallel-processes' sets the number of concurrent processes.
  22126. The variable `url-queue-timeout' sets a timeout.
  22127. \(fn URL CALLBACK &optional CBARGS SILENT INHIBIT-COOKIES)" nil nil)
  22128. ;;;***
  22129. ;;;### (autoloads (url-view-url url-truncate-url-for-viewing url-file-extension
  22130. ;;;;;; url-hexify-string url-unhex-string url-parse-query-string
  22131. ;;;;;; url-file-nondirectory url-file-directory url-percentage url-display-percentage
  22132. ;;;;;; url-pretty-length url-strip-leading-spaces url-eat-trailing-space
  22133. ;;;;;; url-get-normalized-date url-lazy-message url-normalize-url
  22134. ;;;;;; url-insert-entities-in-string url-parse-args url-debug url-debug)
  22135. ;;;;;; "url-util" "url/url-util.el" (20400 62402))
  22136. ;;; Generated autoloads from url/url-util.el
  22137. (defvar url-debug nil "\
  22138. What types of debug messages from the URL library to show.
  22139. Debug messages are logged to the *URL-DEBUG* buffer.
  22140. If t, all messages will be logged.
  22141. If a number, all messages will be logged, as well shown via `message'.
  22142. If a list, it is a list of the types of messages to be logged.")
  22143. (custom-autoload 'url-debug "url-util" t)
  22144. (autoload 'url-debug "url-util" "\
  22145. \(fn TAG &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  22146. (autoload 'url-parse-args "url-util" "\
  22147. \(fn STR &optional NODOWNCASE)" nil nil)
  22148. (autoload 'url-insert-entities-in-string "url-util" "\
  22149. Convert HTML markup-start characters to entity references in STRING.
  22150. Also replaces the \" character, so that the result may be safely used as
  22151. an attribute value in a tag. Returns a new string with the result of the
  22152. conversion. Replaces these characters as follows:
  22153. & ==> &amp;
  22154. < ==> &lt;
  22155. > ==> &gt;
  22156. \" ==> &quot;
  22157. \(fn STRING)" nil nil)
  22158. (autoload 'url-normalize-url "url-util" "\
  22159. Return a 'normalized' version of URL.
  22160. Strips out default port numbers, etc.
  22161. \(fn URL)" nil nil)
  22162. (autoload 'url-lazy-message "url-util" "\
  22163. Just like `message', but is a no-op if called more than once a second.
  22164. Will not do anything if `url-show-status' is nil.
  22165. \(fn &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  22166. (autoload 'url-get-normalized-date "url-util" "\
  22167. Return a 'real' date string that most HTTP servers can understand.
  22168. \(fn &optional SPECIFIED-TIME)" nil nil)
  22169. (autoload 'url-eat-trailing-space "url-util" "\
  22170. Remove spaces/tabs at the end of a string.
  22171. \(fn X)" nil nil)
  22172. (autoload 'url-strip-leading-spaces "url-util" "\
  22173. Remove spaces at the front of a string.
  22174. \(fn X)" nil nil)
  22175. (autoload 'url-pretty-length "url-util" "\
  22176. \(fn N)" nil nil)
  22177. (autoload 'url-display-percentage "url-util" "\
  22178. \(fn FMT PERC &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  22179. (autoload 'url-percentage "url-util" "\
  22180. \(fn X Y)" nil nil)
  22181. (defalias 'url-basepath 'url-file-directory)
  22182. (autoload 'url-file-directory "url-util" "\
  22183. Return the directory part of FILE, for a URL.
  22184. \(fn FILE)" nil nil)
  22185. (autoload 'url-file-nondirectory "url-util" "\
  22186. Return the nondirectory part of FILE, for a URL.
  22187. \(fn FILE)" nil nil)
  22188. (autoload 'url-parse-query-string "url-util" "\
  22189. \(fn QUERY &optional DOWNCASE ALLOW-NEWLINES)" nil nil)
  22190. (autoload 'url-unhex-string "url-util" "\
  22191. Remove %XX embedded spaces, etc in a URL.
  22192. If optional second argument ALLOW-NEWLINES is non-nil, then allow the
  22193. decoding of carriage returns and line feeds in the string, which is normally
  22194. forbidden in URL encoding.
  22195. \(fn STR &optional ALLOW-NEWLINES)" nil nil)
  22196. (autoload 'url-hexify-string "url-util" "\
  22197. Return a new string that is STRING URI-encoded.
  22198. First, STRING is converted to utf-8, if necessary. Then, for each
  22199. character in the utf-8 string, those found in `url-unreserved-chars'
  22200. are left as-is, all others are represented as a three-character
  22201. string: \"%\" followed by two lowercase hex digits.
  22202. \(fn STRING)" nil nil)
  22203. (autoload 'url-file-extension "url-util" "\
  22204. Return the filename extension of FNAME.
  22205. If optional argument X is t, then return the basename
  22206. of the file with the extension stripped off.
  22207. \(fn FNAME &optional X)" nil nil)
  22208. (autoload 'url-truncate-url-for-viewing "url-util" "\
  22209. Return a shortened version of URL that is WIDTH characters wide or less.
  22210. WIDTH defaults to the current frame width.
  22211. \(fn URL &optional WIDTH)" nil nil)
  22212. (autoload 'url-view-url "url-util" "\
  22213. View the current document's URL.
  22214. Optional argument NO-SHOW means just return the URL, don't show it in
  22215. the minibuffer.
  22216. This uses `url-current-object', set locally to the buffer.
  22217. \(fn &optional NO-SHOW)" t nil)
  22218. ;;;***
  22219. ;;;### (autoloads (ask-user-about-supersession-threat ask-user-about-lock)
  22220. ;;;;;; "userlock" "userlock.el" (20487 24216))
  22221. ;;; Generated autoloads from userlock.el
  22222. (autoload 'ask-user-about-lock "userlock" "\
  22223. Ask user what to do when he wants to edit FILE but it is locked by OPPONENT.
  22224. This function has a choice of three things to do:
  22225. do (signal 'file-locked (list FILE OPPONENT))
  22226. to refrain from editing the file
  22227. return t (grab the lock on the file)
  22228. return nil (edit the file even though it is locked).
  22229. You can redefine this function to choose among those three alternatives
  22230. in any way you like.
  22231. \(fn FILE OPPONENT)" nil nil)
  22232. (autoload 'ask-user-about-supersession-threat "userlock" "\
  22233. Ask a user who is about to modify an obsolete buffer what to do.
  22234. This function has two choices: it can return, in which case the modification
  22235. of the buffer will proceed, or it can (signal 'file-supersession (file)),
  22236. in which case the proposed buffer modification will not be made.
  22237. You can rewrite this to use any criterion you like to choose which one to do.
  22238. The buffer in question is current when this function is called.
  22239. \(fn FN)" nil nil)
  22240. ;;;***
  22241. ;;;### (autoloads (utf-7-imap-pre-write-conversion utf-7-pre-write-conversion
  22242. ;;;;;; utf-7-imap-post-read-conversion utf-7-post-read-conversion)
  22243. ;;;;;; "utf-7" "international/utf-7.el" (20352 65510))
  22244. ;;; Generated autoloads from international/utf-7.el
  22245. (autoload 'utf-7-post-read-conversion "utf-7" "\
  22246. \(fn LEN)" nil nil)
  22247. (autoload 'utf-7-imap-post-read-conversion "utf-7" "\
  22248. \(fn LEN)" nil nil)
  22249. (autoload 'utf-7-pre-write-conversion "utf-7" "\
  22250. \(fn FROM TO)" nil nil)
  22251. (autoload 'utf-7-imap-pre-write-conversion "utf-7" "\
  22252. \(fn FROM TO)" nil nil)
  22253. ;;;***
  22254. ;;;### (autoloads (utf7-encode) "utf7" "gnus/utf7.el" (20352 65510))
  22255. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/utf7.el
  22256. (autoload 'utf7-encode "utf7" "\
  22257. Encode UTF-7 STRING. Use IMAP modification if FOR-IMAP is non-nil.
  22258. \(fn STRING &optional FOR-IMAP)" nil nil)
  22259. ;;;***
  22260. ;;;### (autoloads (uudecode-decode-region uudecode-decode-region-internal
  22261. ;;;;;; uudecode-decode-region-external) "uudecode" "mail/uudecode.el"
  22262. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  22263. ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/uudecode.el
  22264. (autoload 'uudecode-decode-region-external "uudecode" "\
  22265. Uudecode region between START and END using external program.
  22266. If FILE-NAME is non-nil, save the result to FILE-NAME. The program
  22267. used is specified by `uudecode-decoder-program'.
  22268. \(fn START END &optional FILE-NAME)" t nil)
  22269. (autoload 'uudecode-decode-region-internal "uudecode" "\
  22270. Uudecode region between START and END without using an external program.
  22271. If FILE-NAME is non-nil, save the result to FILE-NAME.
  22272. \(fn START END &optional FILE-NAME)" t nil)
  22273. (autoload 'uudecode-decode-region "uudecode" "\
  22274. Uudecode region between START and END.
  22275. If FILE-NAME is non-nil, save the result to FILE-NAME.
  22276. \(fn START END &optional FILE-NAME)" nil nil)
  22277. ;;;***
  22278. ;;;### (autoloads (vc-branch-part vc-update-change-log vc-rename-file
  22279. ;;;;;; vc-delete-file vc-transfer-file vc-switch-backend vc-pull
  22280. ;;;;;; vc-rollback vc-revert vc-log-outgoing vc-log-incoming vc-print-root-log
  22281. ;;;;;; vc-print-log vc-retrieve-tag vc-create-tag vc-merge vc-insert-headers
  22282. ;;;;;; vc-revision-other-window vc-root-diff vc-ediff vc-version-ediff
  22283. ;;;;;; vc-diff vc-version-diff vc-register vc-next-action vc-before-checkin-hook
  22284. ;;;;;; vc-checkin-hook vc-checkout-hook) "vc" "vc/vc.el" (20400
  22285. ;;;;;; 62402))
  22286. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc.el
  22287. (defvar vc-checkout-hook nil "\
  22288. Normal hook (list of functions) run after checking out a file.
  22289. See `run-hooks'.")
  22290. (custom-autoload 'vc-checkout-hook "vc" t)
  22291. (defvar vc-checkin-hook nil "\
  22292. Normal hook (list of functions) run after commit or file checkin.
  22293. See also `log-edit-done-hook'.")
  22294. (custom-autoload 'vc-checkin-hook "vc" t)
  22295. (defvar vc-before-checkin-hook nil "\
  22296. Normal hook (list of functions) run before a commit or a file checkin.
  22297. See `run-hooks'.")
  22298. (custom-autoload 'vc-before-checkin-hook "vc" t)
  22299. (autoload 'vc-next-action "vc" "\
  22300. Do the next logical version control operation on the current fileset.
  22301. This requires that all files in the current VC fileset be in the
  22302. same state. If not, signal an error.
  22303. For merging-based version control systems:
  22304. If every file in the VC fileset is not registered for version
  22305. control, register the fileset (but don't commit).
  22306. If every work file in the VC fileset is added or changed, pop
  22307. up a *vc-log* buffer to commit the fileset.
  22308. For a centralized version control system, if any work file in
  22309. the VC fileset is out of date, offer to update the fileset.
  22310. For old-style locking-based version control systems, like RCS:
  22311. If every file is not registered, register the file(s).
  22312. If every file is registered and unlocked, check out (lock)
  22313. the file(s) for editing.
  22314. If every file is locked by you and has changes, pop up a
  22315. *vc-log* buffer to check in the changes. If the variable
  22316. `vc-keep-workfiles' is non-nil (the default), leave a
  22317. read-only copy of each changed file after checking in.
  22318. If every file is locked by you and unchanged, unlock them.
  22319. If every file is locked by someone else, offer to steal the lock.
  22320. \(fn VERBOSE)" t nil)
  22321. (autoload 'vc-register "vc" "\
  22322. Register into a version control system.
  22323. If VC-FILESET is given, register the files in that fileset.
  22324. Otherwise register the current file.
  22325. With prefix argument SET-REVISION, allow user to specify initial revision
  22326. level. If COMMENT is present, use that as an initial comment.
  22327. The version control system to use is found by cycling through the list
  22328. `vc-handled-backends'. The first backend in that list which declares
  22329. itself responsible for the file (usually because other files in that
  22330. directory are already registered under that backend) will be used to
  22331. register the file. If no backend declares itself responsible, the
  22332. first backend that could register the file is used.
  22333. \(fn &optional SET-REVISION VC-FILESET COMMENT)" t nil)
  22334. (autoload 'vc-version-diff "vc" "\
  22335. Report diffs between revisions of the fileset in the repository history.
  22336. \(fn FILES REV1 REV2)" t nil)
  22337. (autoload 'vc-diff "vc" "\
  22338. Display diffs between file revisions.
  22339. Normally this compares the currently selected fileset with their
  22340. working revisions. With a prefix argument HISTORIC, it reads two revision
  22341. designators specifying which revisions to compare.
  22342. The optional argument NOT-URGENT non-nil means it is ok to say no to
  22343. saving the buffer.
  22344. \(fn HISTORIC &optional NOT-URGENT)" t nil)
  22345. (autoload 'vc-version-ediff "vc" "\
  22346. Show differences between revisions of the fileset in the
  22347. repository history using ediff.
  22348. \(fn FILES REV1 REV2)" t nil)
  22349. (autoload 'vc-ediff "vc" "\
  22350. Display diffs between file revisions using ediff.
  22351. Normally this compares the currently selected fileset with their
  22352. working revisions. With a prefix argument HISTORIC, it reads two revision
  22353. designators specifying which revisions to compare.
  22354. The optional argument NOT-URGENT non-nil means it is ok to say no to
  22355. saving the buffer.
  22356. \(fn HISTORIC &optional NOT-URGENT)" t nil)
  22357. (autoload 'vc-root-diff "vc" "\
  22358. Display diffs between VC-controlled whole tree revisions.
  22359. Normally, this compares the tree corresponding to the current
  22360. fileset with the working revision.
  22361. With a prefix argument HISTORIC, prompt for two revision
  22362. designators specifying which revisions to compare.
  22363. The optional argument NOT-URGENT non-nil means it is ok to say no to
  22364. saving the buffer.
  22365. \(fn HISTORIC &optional NOT-URGENT)" t nil)
  22366. (autoload 'vc-revision-other-window "vc" "\
  22367. Visit revision REV of the current file in another window.
  22368. If the current file is named `F', the revision is named `F.~REV~'.
  22369. If `F.~REV~' already exists, use it instead of checking it out again.
  22370. \(fn REV)" t nil)
  22371. (autoload 'vc-insert-headers "vc" "\
  22372. Insert headers into a file for use with a version control system.
  22373. Headers desired are inserted at point, and are pulled from
  22374. the variable `vc-BACKEND-header'.
  22375. \(fn)" t nil)
  22376. (autoload 'vc-merge "vc" "\
  22377. Perform a version control merge operation.
  22378. You must be visiting a version controlled file, or in a `vc-dir' buffer.
  22379. On a distributed version control system, this runs a \"merge\"
  22380. operation to incorporate changes from another branch onto the
  22381. current branch, prompting for an argument list.
  22382. On a non-distributed version control system, this merges changes
  22383. between two revisions into the current fileset. This asks for
  22384. two revisions to merge from in the minibuffer. If the first
  22385. revision is a branch number, then merge all changes from that
  22386. branch. If the first revision is empty, merge the most recent
  22387. changes from the current branch.
  22388. \(fn)" t nil)
  22389. (defalias 'vc-resolve-conflicts 'smerge-ediff)
  22390. (autoload 'vc-create-tag "vc" "\
  22391. Descending recursively from DIR, make a tag called NAME.
  22392. For each registered file, the working revision becomes part of
  22393. the named configuration. If the prefix argument BRANCHP is
  22394. given, the tag is made as a new branch and the files are
  22395. checked out in that new branch.
  22396. \(fn DIR NAME BRANCHP)" t nil)
  22397. (autoload 'vc-retrieve-tag "vc" "\
  22398. Descending recursively from DIR, retrieve the tag called NAME.
  22399. If NAME is empty, it refers to the latest revisions.
  22400. If locking is used for the files in DIR, then there must not be any
  22401. locked files at or below DIR (but if NAME is empty, locked files are
  22402. allowed and simply skipped).
  22403. \(fn DIR NAME)" t nil)
  22404. (autoload 'vc-print-log "vc" "\
  22405. List the change log of the current fileset in a window.
  22406. If WORKING-REVISION is non-nil, leave point at that revision.
  22407. If LIMIT is non-nil, it should be a number specifying the maximum
  22408. number of revisions to show; the default is `vc-log-show-limit'.
  22409. When called interactively with a prefix argument, prompt for
  22410. WORKING-REVISION and LIMIT.
  22411. \(fn &optional WORKING-REVISION LIMIT)" t nil)
  22412. (autoload 'vc-print-root-log "vc" "\
  22413. List the change log for the current VC controlled tree in a window.
  22414. If LIMIT is non-nil, it should be a number specifying the maximum
  22415. number of revisions to show; the default is `vc-log-show-limit'.
  22416. When called interactively with a prefix argument, prompt for LIMIT.
  22417. \(fn &optional LIMIT)" t nil)
  22418. (autoload 'vc-log-incoming "vc" "\
  22419. Show a log of changes that will be received with a pull operation from REMOTE-LOCATION.
  22420. When called interactively with a prefix argument, prompt for REMOTE-LOCATION..
  22421. \(fn &optional REMOTE-LOCATION)" t nil)
  22422. (autoload 'vc-log-outgoing "vc" "\
  22423. Show a log of changes that will be sent with a push operation to REMOTE-LOCATION.
  22424. When called interactively with a prefix argument, prompt for REMOTE-LOCATION.
  22425. \(fn &optional REMOTE-LOCATION)" t nil)
  22426. (autoload 'vc-revert "vc" "\
  22427. Revert working copies of the selected fileset to their repository contents.
  22428. This asks for confirmation if the buffer contents are not identical
  22429. to the working revision (except for keyword expansion).
  22430. \(fn)" t nil)
  22431. (autoload 'vc-rollback "vc" "\
  22432. Roll back (remove) the most recent changeset committed to the repository.
  22433. This may be either a file-level or a repository-level operation,
  22434. depending on the underlying version-control system.
  22435. \(fn)" t nil)
  22436. (define-obsolete-function-alias 'vc-revert-buffer 'vc-revert "23.1")
  22437. (autoload 'vc-pull "vc" "\
  22438. Update the current fileset or branch.
  22439. You must be visiting a version controlled file, or in a `vc-dir' buffer.
  22440. On a distributed version control system, this runs a \"pull\"
  22441. operation to update the current branch, prompting for an argument
  22442. list if required. Optional prefix ARG forces a prompt.
  22443. On a non-distributed version control system, update the current
  22444. fileset to the tip revisions. For each unchanged and unlocked
  22445. file, this simply replaces the work file with the latest revision
  22446. on its branch. If the file contains changes, any changes in the
  22447. tip revision are merged into the working file.
  22448. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  22449. (defalias 'vc-update 'vc-pull)
  22450. (autoload 'vc-switch-backend "vc" "\
  22451. Make BACKEND the current version control system for FILE.
  22452. FILE must already be registered in BACKEND. The change is not
  22453. permanent, only for the current session. This function only changes
  22454. VC's perspective on FILE, it does not register or unregister it.
  22455. By default, this command cycles through the registered backends.
  22456. To get a prompt, use a prefix argument.
  22457. \(fn FILE BACKEND)" t nil)
  22458. (autoload 'vc-transfer-file "vc" "\
  22459. Transfer FILE to another version control system NEW-BACKEND.
  22460. If NEW-BACKEND has a higher precedence than FILE's current backend
  22461. \(i.e. it comes earlier in `vc-handled-backends'), then register FILE in
  22462. NEW-BACKEND, using the revision number from the current backend as the
  22463. base level. If NEW-BACKEND has a lower precedence than the current
  22464. backend, then commit all changes that were made under the current
  22465. backend to NEW-BACKEND, and unregister FILE from the current backend.
  22466. \(If FILE is not yet registered under NEW-BACKEND, register it.)
  22467. \(fn FILE NEW-BACKEND)" nil nil)
  22468. (autoload 'vc-delete-file "vc" "\
  22469. Delete file and mark it as such in the version control system.
  22470. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  22471. (autoload 'vc-rename-file "vc" "\
  22472. Rename file OLD to NEW in both work area and repository.
  22473. \(fn OLD NEW)" t nil)
  22474. (autoload 'vc-update-change-log "vc" "\
  22475. Find change log file and add entries from recent version control logs.
  22476. Normally, find log entries for all registered files in the default
  22477. directory.
  22478. With prefix arg of \\[universal-argument], only find log entries for the current buffer's file.
  22479. With any numeric prefix arg, find log entries for all currently visited
  22480. files that are under version control. This puts all the entries in the
  22481. log for the default directory, which may not be appropriate.
  22482. From a program, any ARGS are assumed to be filenames for which
  22483. log entries should be gathered.
  22484. \(fn &rest ARGS)" t nil)
  22485. (autoload 'vc-branch-part "vc" "\
  22486. Return the branch part of a revision number REV.
  22487. \(fn REV)" nil nil)
  22488. ;;;***
  22489. ;;;### (autoloads (vc-annotate) "vc-annotate" "vc/vc-annotate.el"
  22490. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  22491. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-annotate.el
  22492. (autoload 'vc-annotate "vc-annotate" "\
  22493. Display the edit history of the current FILE using colors.
  22494. This command creates a buffer that shows, for each line of the current
  22495. file, when it was last edited and by whom. Additionally, colors are
  22496. used to show the age of each line--blue means oldest, red means
  22497. youngest, and intermediate colors indicate intermediate ages. By
  22498. default, the time scale stretches back one year into the past;
  22499. everything that is older than that is shown in blue.
  22500. With a prefix argument, this command asks two questions in the
  22501. minibuffer. First, you may enter a revision number REV; then the buffer
  22502. displays and annotates that revision instead of the working revision
  22503. \(type RET in the minibuffer to leave that default unchanged). Then,
  22504. you are prompted for the time span in days which the color range
  22505. should cover. For example, a time span of 20 days means that changes
  22506. over the past 20 days are shown in red to blue, according to their
  22507. age, and everything that is older than that is shown in blue.
  22508. If MOVE-POINT-TO is given, move the point to that line.
  22509. If VC-BK is given used that VC backend.
  22510. Customization variables:
  22511. `vc-annotate-menu-elements' customizes the menu elements of the
  22512. mode-specific menu. `vc-annotate-color-map' and
  22513. `vc-annotate-very-old-color' define the mapping of time to colors.
  22514. `vc-annotate-background' specifies the background color.
  22515. \(fn FILE REV &optional DISPLAY-MODE BUF MOVE-POINT-TO VC-BK)" t nil)
  22516. ;;;***
  22517. ;;;### (autoloads nil "vc-arch" "vc/vc-arch.el" (20400 62402))
  22518. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-arch.el
  22519. (defun vc-arch-registered (file)
  22520. (if (vc-find-root file "{arch}/=tagging-method")
  22521. (progn
  22522. (load "vc-arch")
  22523. (vc-arch-registered file))))
  22524. ;;;***
  22525. ;;;### (autoloads nil "vc-bzr" "vc/vc-bzr.el" (20400 62402))
  22526. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-bzr.el
  22527. (defconst vc-bzr-admin-dirname ".bzr" "\
  22528. Name of the directory containing Bzr repository status files.")
  22529. (defconst vc-bzr-admin-checkout-format-file (concat vc-bzr-admin-dirname "/checkout/format") "\
  22530. Name of the format file in a .bzr directory.")
  22531. (defun vc-bzr-registered (file)
  22532. (if (vc-find-root file vc-bzr-admin-checkout-format-file)
  22533. (progn
  22534. (load "vc-bzr")
  22535. (vc-bzr-registered file))))
  22536. ;;;***
  22537. ;;;### (autoloads nil "vc-cvs" "vc/vc-cvs.el" (20400 62402))
  22538. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-cvs.el
  22539. (defun vc-cvs-registered (f)
  22540. "Return non-nil if file F is registered with CVS."
  22541. (when (file-readable-p (expand-file-name
  22542. "CVS/Entries" (file-name-directory f)))
  22543. (load "vc-cvs")
  22544. (vc-cvs-registered f)))
  22545. ;;;***
  22546. ;;;### (autoloads (vc-dir) "vc-dir" "vc/vc-dir.el" (20400 62402))
  22547. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-dir.el
  22548. (autoload 'vc-dir "vc-dir" "\
  22549. Show the VC status for \"interesting\" files in and below DIR.
  22550. This allows you to mark files and perform VC operations on them.
  22551. The list omits files which are up to date, with no changes in your copy
  22552. or the repository, if there is nothing in particular to say about them.
  22553. Preparing the list of file status takes time; when the buffer
  22554. first appears, it has only the first few lines of summary information.
  22555. The file lines appear later.
  22556. Optional second argument BACKEND specifies the VC backend to use.
  22557. Interactively, a prefix argument means to ask for the backend.
  22558. These are the commands available for use in the file status buffer:
  22559. \\{vc-dir-mode-map}
  22560. \(fn DIR &optional BACKEND)" t nil)
  22561. ;;;***
  22562. ;;;### (autoloads (vc-do-command) "vc-dispatcher" "vc/vc-dispatcher.el"
  22563. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  22564. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-dispatcher.el
  22565. (autoload 'vc-do-command "vc-dispatcher" "\
  22566. Execute a slave command, notifying user and checking for errors.
  22567. Output from COMMAND goes to BUFFER, or the current buffer if
  22568. BUFFER is t. If the destination buffer is not already current,
  22569. set it up properly and erase it. The command is considered
  22570. successful if its exit status does not exceed OKSTATUS (if
  22571. OKSTATUS is nil, that means to ignore error status, if it is
  22572. `async', that means not to wait for termination of the
  22573. subprocess; if it is t it means to ignore all execution errors).
  22574. FILE-OR-LIST is the name of a working file; it may be a list of
  22575. files or be nil (to execute commands that don't expect a file
  22576. name or set of files). If an optional list of FLAGS is present,
  22577. that is inserted into the command line before the filename.
  22578. Return the return value of the slave command in the synchronous
  22579. case, and the process object in the asynchronous case.
  22580. \(fn BUFFER OKSTATUS COMMAND FILE-OR-LIST &rest FLAGS)" nil nil)
  22581. ;;;***
  22582. ;;;### (autoloads nil "vc-git" "vc/vc-git.el" (20400 62402))
  22583. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-git.el
  22584. (defun vc-git-registered (file)
  22585. "Return non-nil if FILE is registered with git."
  22586. (if (vc-find-root file ".git") ; Short cut.
  22587. (progn
  22588. (load "vc-git")
  22589. (vc-git-registered file))))
  22590. ;;;***
  22591. ;;;### (autoloads nil "vc-hg" "vc/vc-hg.el" (20400 62402))
  22592. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-hg.el
  22593. (defun vc-hg-registered (file)
  22594. "Return non-nil if FILE is registered with hg."
  22595. (if (vc-find-root file ".hg") ; short cut
  22596. (progn
  22597. (load "vc-hg")
  22598. (vc-hg-registered file))))
  22599. ;;;***
  22600. ;;;### (autoloads nil "vc-mtn" "vc/vc-mtn.el" (20400 62402))
  22601. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-mtn.el
  22602. (defconst vc-mtn-admin-dir "_MTN" "\
  22603. Name of the monotone directory.")
  22604. (defconst vc-mtn-admin-format (concat vc-mtn-admin-dir "/format") "\
  22605. Name of the monotone directory's format file.")
  22606. (defun vc-mtn-registered (file)
  22607. (if (vc-find-root file vc-mtn-admin-format)
  22608. (progn
  22609. (load "vc-mtn")
  22610. (vc-mtn-registered file))))
  22611. ;;;***
  22612. ;;;### (autoloads (vc-rcs-master-templates) "vc-rcs" "vc/vc-rcs.el"
  22613. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  22614. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-rcs.el
  22615. (defvar vc-rcs-master-templates (purecopy '("%sRCS/%s,v" "%s%s,v" "%sRCS/%s")) "\
  22616. Where to look for RCS master files.
  22617. For a description of possible values, see `vc-check-master-templates'.")
  22618. (custom-autoload 'vc-rcs-master-templates "vc-rcs" t)
  22619. (defun vc-rcs-registered (f) (vc-default-registered 'RCS f))
  22620. ;;;***
  22621. ;;;### (autoloads (vc-sccs-master-templates) "vc-sccs" "vc/vc-sccs.el"
  22622. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  22623. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-sccs.el
  22624. (defvar vc-sccs-master-templates (purecopy '("%sSCCS/s.%s" "%ss.%s" vc-sccs-search-project-dir)) "\
  22625. Where to look for SCCS master files.
  22626. For a description of possible values, see `vc-check-master-templates'.")
  22627. (custom-autoload 'vc-sccs-master-templates "vc-sccs" t)
  22628. (defun vc-sccs-registered(f) (vc-default-registered 'SCCS f))
  22629. (defun vc-sccs-search-project-dir (dirname basename) "\
  22630. Return the name of a master file in the SCCS project directory.
  22631. Does not check whether the file exists but returns nil if it does not
  22632. find any project directory." (let ((project-dir (getenv "PROJECTDIR")) dirs dir) (when project-dir (if (file-name-absolute-p project-dir) (setq dirs (quote ("SCCS" ""))) (setq dirs (quote ("src/SCCS" "src" "source/SCCS" "source"))) (setq project-dir (expand-file-name (concat "~" project-dir)))) (while (and (not dir) dirs) (setq dir (expand-file-name (car dirs) project-dir)) (unless (file-directory-p dir) (setq dir nil) (setq dirs (cdr dirs)))) (and dir (expand-file-name (concat "s." basename) dir)))))
  22633. ;;;***
  22634. ;;;### (autoloads nil "vc-svn" "vc/vc-svn.el" (20352 65510))
  22635. ;;; Generated autoloads from vc/vc-svn.el
  22636. (defun vc-svn-registered (f)
  22637. (let ((admin-dir (cond ((and (eq system-type 'windows-nt)
  22638. (getenv "SVN_ASP_DOT_NET_HACK"))
  22639. "_svn")
  22640. (t ".svn"))))
  22641. (when (vc-find-root f admin-dir)
  22642. (load "vc-svn")
  22643. (vc-svn-registered f))))
  22644. ;;;***
  22645. ;;;### (autoloads (vera-mode) "vera-mode" "progmodes/vera-mode.el"
  22646. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  22647. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/vera-mode.el
  22648. (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist (cons (purecopy "\\.vr[hi]?\\'") 'vera-mode))
  22649. (autoload 'vera-mode "vera-mode" "\
  22650. Major mode for editing Vera code.
  22651. Usage:
  22652. ------
  22653. INDENTATION: Typing `TAB' at the beginning of a line indents the line.
  22654. The amount of indentation is specified by option `vera-basic-offset'.
  22655. Indentation can be done for an entire region (`M-C-\\') or buffer (menu).
  22656. `TAB' always indents the line if option `vera-intelligent-tab' is nil.
  22657. WORD/COMMAND COMPLETION: Typing `TAB' after a (not completed) word looks
  22658. for a word in the buffer or a Vera keyword that starts alike, inserts it
  22659. and adjusts case. Re-typing `TAB' toggles through alternative word
  22660. completions.
  22661. Typing `TAB' after a non-word character inserts a tabulator stop (if not
  22662. at the beginning of a line). `M-TAB' always inserts a tabulator stop.
  22663. COMMENTS: `C-c C-c' comments out a region if not commented out, and
  22664. uncomments a region if already commented out.
  22665. HIGHLIGHTING (fontification): Vera keywords, predefined types and
  22666. constants, function names, declaration names, directives, as well as
  22667. comments and strings are highlighted using different colors.
  22668. VERA VERSION: OpenVera 1.4 and Vera version 6.2.8.
  22669. Maintenance:
  22670. ------------
  22671. To submit a bug report, use the corresponding menu entry within Vera Mode.
  22672. Add a description of the problem and include a reproducible test case.
  22673. Feel free to send questions and enhancement requests to <reto@gnu.org>.
  22674. Official distribution is at
  22675. URL `http://www.iis.ee.ethz.ch/~zimmi/emacs/vera-mode.html'
  22676. The Vera Mode Maintainer
  22677. Reto Zimmermann <reto@gnu.org>
  22678. Key bindings:
  22679. -------------
  22680. \\{vera-mode-map}
  22681. \(fn)" t nil)
  22682. ;;;***
  22683. ;;;### (autoloads (verilog-mode) "verilog-mode" "progmodes/verilog-mode.el"
  22684. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  22685. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/verilog-mode.el
  22686. (autoload 'verilog-mode "verilog-mode" "\
  22687. Major mode for editing Verilog code.
  22688. \\<verilog-mode-map>
  22689. See \\[describe-function] verilog-auto (\\[verilog-auto]) for details on how
  22690. AUTOs can improve coding efficiency.
  22691. Use \\[verilog-faq] for a pointer to frequently asked questions.
  22692. NEWLINE, TAB indents for Verilog code.
  22693. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  22694. Supports highlighting.
  22695. Turning on Verilog mode calls the value of the variable `verilog-mode-hook'
  22696. with no args, if that value is non-nil.
  22697. Variables controlling indentation/edit style:
  22698. variable `verilog-indent-level' (default 3)
  22699. Indentation of Verilog statements with respect to containing block.
  22700. `verilog-indent-level-module' (default 3)
  22701. Absolute indentation of Module level Verilog statements.
  22702. Set to 0 to get initial and always statements lined up
  22703. on the left side of your screen.
  22704. `verilog-indent-level-declaration' (default 3)
  22705. Indentation of declarations with respect to containing block.
  22706. Set to 0 to get them list right under containing block.
  22707. `verilog-indent-level-behavioral' (default 3)
  22708. Indentation of first begin in a task or function block
  22709. Set to 0 to get such code to lined up underneath the task or
  22710. function keyword.
  22711. `verilog-indent-level-directive' (default 1)
  22712. Indentation of `ifdef/`endif blocks.
  22713. `verilog-cexp-indent' (default 1)
  22714. Indentation of Verilog statements broken across lines i.e.:
  22715. if (a)
  22716. begin
  22717. `verilog-case-indent' (default 2)
  22718. Indentation for case statements.
  22719. `verilog-auto-newline' (default nil)
  22720. Non-nil means automatically newline after semicolons and the punctuation
  22721. mark after an end.
  22722. `verilog-auto-indent-on-newline' (default t)
  22723. Non-nil means automatically indent line after newline.
  22724. `verilog-tab-always-indent' (default t)
  22725. Non-nil means TAB in Verilog mode should always reindent the current line,
  22726. regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
  22727. `verilog-indent-begin-after-if' (default t)
  22728. Non-nil means to indent begin statements following a preceding
  22729. if, else, while, for and repeat statements, if any. Otherwise,
  22730. the begin is lined up with the preceding token. If t, you get:
  22731. if (a)
  22732. begin // amount of indent based on `verilog-cexp-indent'
  22733. otherwise you get:
  22734. if (a)
  22735. begin
  22736. `verilog-auto-endcomments' (default t)
  22737. Non-nil means a comment /* ... */ is set after the ends which ends
  22738. cases, tasks, functions and modules.
  22739. The type and name of the object will be set between the braces.
  22740. `verilog-minimum-comment-distance' (default 10)
  22741. Minimum distance (in lines) between begin and end required before a comment
  22742. will be inserted. Setting this variable to zero results in every
  22743. end acquiring a comment; the default avoids too many redundant
  22744. comments in tight quarters.
  22745. `verilog-auto-lineup' (default 'declarations)
  22746. List of contexts where auto lineup of code should be done.
  22747. Variables controlling other actions:
  22748. `verilog-linter' (default surelint)
  22749. Unix program to call to run the lint checker. This is the default
  22750. command for \\[compile-command] and \\[verilog-auto-save-compile].
  22751. See \\[customize] for the complete list of variables.
  22752. AUTO expansion functions are, in part:
  22753. \\[verilog-auto] Expand AUTO statements.
  22754. \\[verilog-delete-auto] Remove the AUTOs.
  22755. \\[verilog-inject-auto] Insert AUTOs for the first time.
  22756. Some other functions are:
  22757. \\[verilog-complete-word] Complete word with appropriate possibilities.
  22758. \\[verilog-mark-defun] Mark function.
  22759. \\[verilog-beg-of-defun] Move to beginning of current function.
  22760. \\[verilog-end-of-defun] Move to end of current function.
  22761. \\[verilog-label-be] Label matching begin ... end, fork ... join, etc statements.
  22762. \\[verilog-comment-region] Put marked area in a comment.
  22763. \\[verilog-uncomment-region] Uncomment an area commented with \\[verilog-comment-region].
  22764. \\[verilog-insert-block] Insert begin ... end.
  22765. \\[verilog-star-comment] Insert /* ... */.
  22766. \\[verilog-sk-always] Insert an always @(AS) begin .. end block.
  22767. \\[verilog-sk-begin] Insert a begin .. end block.
  22768. \\[verilog-sk-case] Insert a case block, prompting for details.
  22769. \\[verilog-sk-for] Insert a for (...) begin .. end block, prompting for details.
  22770. \\[verilog-sk-generate] Insert a generate .. endgenerate block.
  22771. \\[verilog-sk-header] Insert a header block at the top of file.
  22772. \\[verilog-sk-initial] Insert an initial begin .. end block.
  22773. \\[verilog-sk-fork] Insert a fork begin .. end .. join block.
  22774. \\[verilog-sk-module] Insert a module .. (/*AUTOARG*/);.. endmodule block.
  22775. \\[verilog-sk-ovm-class] Insert an OVM Class block.
  22776. \\[verilog-sk-uvm-class] Insert an UVM Class block.
  22777. \\[verilog-sk-primitive] Insert a primitive .. (.. );.. endprimitive block.
  22778. \\[verilog-sk-repeat] Insert a repeat (..) begin .. end block.
  22779. \\[verilog-sk-specify] Insert a specify .. endspecify block.
  22780. \\[verilog-sk-task] Insert a task .. begin .. end endtask block.
  22781. \\[verilog-sk-while] Insert a while (...) begin .. end block, prompting for details.
  22782. \\[verilog-sk-casex] Insert a casex (...) item: begin.. end endcase block, prompting for details.
  22783. \\[verilog-sk-casez] Insert a casez (...) item: begin.. end endcase block, prompting for details.
  22784. \\[verilog-sk-if] Insert an if (..) begin .. end block.
  22785. \\[verilog-sk-else-if] Insert an else if (..) begin .. end block.
  22786. \\[verilog-sk-comment] Insert a comment block.
  22787. \\[verilog-sk-assign] Insert an assign .. = ..; statement.
  22788. \\[verilog-sk-function] Insert a function .. begin .. end endfunction block.
  22789. \\[verilog-sk-input] Insert an input declaration, prompting for details.
  22790. \\[verilog-sk-output] Insert an output declaration, prompting for details.
  22791. \\[verilog-sk-state-machine] Insert a state machine definition, prompting for details.
  22792. \\[verilog-sk-inout] Insert an inout declaration, prompting for details.
  22793. \\[verilog-sk-wire] Insert a wire declaration, prompting for details.
  22794. \\[verilog-sk-reg] Insert a register declaration, prompting for details.
  22795. \\[verilog-sk-define-signal] Define signal under point as a register at the top of the module.
  22796. All key bindings can be seen in a Verilog-buffer with \\[describe-bindings].
  22797. Key bindings specific to `verilog-mode-map' are:
  22798. \\{verilog-mode-map}
  22799. \(fn)" t nil)
  22800. ;;;***
  22801. ;;;### (autoloads (vhdl-mode) "vhdl-mode" "progmodes/vhdl-mode.el"
  22802. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  22803. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/vhdl-mode.el
  22804. (autoload 'vhdl-mode "vhdl-mode" "\
  22805. Major mode for editing VHDL code.
  22806. Usage:
  22807. ------
  22808. TEMPLATE INSERTION (electrification):
  22809. After typing a VHDL keyword and entering `SPC', you are prompted for
  22810. arguments while a template is generated for that VHDL construct. Typing
  22811. `RET' or `C-g' at the first (mandatory) prompt aborts the current
  22812. template generation. Optional arguments are indicated by square
  22813. brackets and removed if the queried string is left empty. Prompts for
  22814. mandatory arguments remain in the code if the queried string is left
  22815. empty. They can be queried again by `C-c C-t C-q'. Enabled
  22816. electrification is indicated by `/e' in the modeline.
  22817. Typing `M-SPC' after a keyword inserts a space without calling the
  22818. template generator. Automatic template generation (i.e.
  22819. electrification) can be disabled (enabled) by typing `C-c C-m C-e' or by
  22820. setting option `vhdl-electric-mode' (see OPTIONS).
  22821. Template generators can be invoked from the VHDL menu, by key
  22822. bindings, by typing `C-c C-i C-c' and choosing a construct, or by typing
  22823. the keyword (i.e. first word of menu entry not in parenthesis) and
  22824. `SPC'. The following abbreviations can also be used: arch, attr, cond,
  22825. conf, comp, cons, func, inst, pack, sig, var.
  22826. Template styles can be customized in customization group
  22827. `vhdl-template' (see OPTIONS).
  22828. HEADER INSERTION:
  22829. A file header can be inserted by `C-c C-t C-h'. A file footer
  22830. (template at the end of the file) can be inserted by `C-c C-t C-f'.
  22831. See customization group `vhdl-header'.
  22832. STUTTERING:
  22833. Double striking of some keys inserts cumbersome VHDL syntax elements.
  22834. Stuttering can be disabled (enabled) by typing `C-c C-m C-s' or by
  22835. option `vhdl-stutter-mode'. Enabled stuttering is indicated by `/s' in
  22836. the modeline. The stuttering keys and their effects are:
  22837. ;; --> \" : \" [ --> ( -- --> comment
  22838. ;;; --> \" := \" [[ --> [ --CR --> comment-out code
  22839. .. --> \" => \" ] --> ) --- --> horizontal line
  22840. ,, --> \" <= \" ]] --> ] ---- --> display comment
  22841. == --> \" == \" '' --> \\\"
  22842. WORD COMPLETION:
  22843. Typing `TAB' after a (not completed) word looks for a VHDL keyword or a
  22844. word in the buffer that starts alike, inserts it and adjusts case.
  22845. Re-typing `TAB' toggles through alternative word completions. This also
  22846. works in the minibuffer (i.e. in template generator prompts).
  22847. Typing `TAB' after `(' looks for and inserts complete parenthesized
  22848. expressions (e.g. for array index ranges). All keywords as well as
  22849. standard types and subprograms of VHDL have predefined abbreviations
  22850. (e.g. type \"std\" and `TAB' will toggle through all standard types
  22851. beginning with \"std\").
  22852. Typing `TAB' after a non-word character indents the line if at the
  22853. beginning of a line (i.e. no preceding non-blank characters), and
  22854. inserts a tabulator stop otherwise. `M-TAB' always inserts a tabulator
  22855. stop.
  22856. COMMENTS:
  22857. `--' puts a single comment.
  22858. `---' draws a horizontal line for separating code segments.
  22859. `----' inserts a display comment, i.e. two horizontal lines
  22860. with a comment in between.
  22861. `--CR' comments out code on that line. Re-hitting CR comments
  22862. out following lines.
  22863. `C-c c' comments out a region if not commented out,
  22864. uncomments a region if already commented out.
  22865. You are prompted for comments after object definitions (i.e. signals,
  22866. variables, constants, ports) and after subprogram and process
  22867. specifications if option `vhdl-prompt-for-comments' is non-nil.
  22868. Comments are automatically inserted as additional labels (e.g. after
  22869. begin statements) and as help comments if `vhdl-self-insert-comments' is
  22870. non-nil.
  22871. Inline comments (i.e. comments after a piece of code on the same line)
  22872. are indented at least to `vhdl-inline-comment-column'. Comments go at
  22873. maximum to `vhdl-end-comment-column'. `RET' after a space in a comment
  22874. will open a new comment line. Typing beyond `vhdl-end-comment-column'
  22875. in a comment automatically opens a new comment line. `M-q' re-fills
  22876. multi-line comments.
  22877. INDENTATION:
  22878. `TAB' indents a line if at the beginning of the line. The amount of
  22879. indentation is specified by option `vhdl-basic-offset'. `C-c C-i C-l'
  22880. always indents the current line (is bound to `TAB' if option
  22881. `vhdl-intelligent-tab' is nil).
  22882. Indentation can be done for a group of lines (`C-c C-i C-g'), a region
  22883. (`M-C-\\') or the entire buffer (menu). Argument and port lists are
  22884. indented normally (nil) or relative to the opening parenthesis (non-nil)
  22885. according to option `vhdl-argument-list-indent'.
  22886. If option `vhdl-indent-tabs-mode' is nil, spaces are used instead of
  22887. tabs. `M-x tabify' and `M-x untabify' allow to convert spaces to tabs
  22888. and vice versa.
  22889. Syntax-based indentation can be very slow in large files. Option
  22890. `vhdl-indent-syntax-based' allows to use faster but simpler indentation.
  22891. ALIGNMENT:
  22892. The alignment functions align operators, keywords, and inline comments
  22893. to beautify the code. `C-c C-a C-a' aligns a group of consecutive lines
  22894. separated by blank lines, `C-c C-a C-i' a block of lines with same
  22895. indent. `C-c C-a C-l' aligns all lines belonging to a list enclosed by
  22896. a pair of parentheses (e.g. port clause/map, argument list), and `C-c
  22897. C-a C-d' all lines within the declarative part of a design unit. `C-c
  22898. C-a M-a' aligns an entire region. `C-c C-a C-c' aligns inline comments
  22899. for a group of lines, and `C-c C-a M-c' for a region.
  22900. If option `vhdl-align-groups' is non-nil, groups of code lines
  22901. separated by special lines (see option `vhdl-align-group-separate') are
  22902. aligned individually. If option `vhdl-align-same-indent' is non-nil,
  22903. blocks of lines with same indent are aligned separately. Some templates
  22904. are automatically aligned after generation if option `vhdl-auto-align'
  22905. is non-nil.
  22906. Alignment tries to align inline comments at
  22907. `vhdl-inline-comment-column' and tries inline comment not to exceed
  22908. `vhdl-end-comment-column'.
  22909. `C-c C-x M-w' fixes up whitespace in a region. That is, operator
  22910. symbols are surrounded by one space, and multiple spaces are eliminated.
  22911. CODE FILLING:
  22912. Code filling allows to condense code (e.g. sensitivity lists or port
  22913. maps) by removing comments and newlines and re-wrapping so that all
  22914. lines are maximally filled (block filling). `C-c C-f C-f' fills a list
  22915. enclosed by parenthesis, `C-c C-f C-g' a group of lines separated by
  22916. blank lines, `C-c C-f C-i' a block of lines with same indent, and
  22917. `C-c C-f M-f' an entire region.
  22918. CODE BEAUTIFICATION:
  22919. `C-c M-b' and `C-c C-b' beautify the code of a region or of the entire
  22920. buffer respectively. This includes indentation, alignment, and case
  22921. fixing. Code beautification can also be run non-interactively using the
  22922. command:
  22923. emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs filename.vhd -f vhdl-beautify-buffer
  22924. PORT TRANSLATION:
  22925. Generic and port clauses from entity or component declarations can be
  22926. copied (`C-c C-p C-w') and pasted as entity and component declarations,
  22927. as component instantiations and corresponding internal constants and
  22928. signals, as a generic map with constants as actual generics, and as
  22929. internal signal initializations (menu).
  22930. To include formals in component instantiations, see option
  22931. `vhdl-association-list-with-formals'. To include comments in pasting,
  22932. see options `vhdl-include-...-comments'.
  22933. A clause with several generic/port names on the same line can be
  22934. flattened (`C-c C-p C-f') so that only one name per line exists. The
  22935. direction of ports can be reversed (`C-c C-p C-r'), i.e., inputs become
  22936. outputs and vice versa, which can be useful in testbenches. (This
  22937. reversion is done on the internal data structure and is only reflected
  22938. in subsequent paste operations.)
  22939. Names for actual ports, instances, testbenches, and
  22940. design-under-test instances can be derived from existing names according
  22941. to options `vhdl-...-name'. See customization group `vhdl-port'.
  22942. SUBPROGRAM TRANSLATION:
  22943. Similar functionality exists for copying/pasting the interface of
  22944. subprograms (function/procedure). A subprogram interface can be copied
  22945. and then pasted as a subprogram declaration, body or call (uses
  22946. association list with formals).
  22947. TESTBENCH GENERATION:
  22948. A copied port can also be pasted as a testbench. The generated
  22949. testbench includes an entity, an architecture, and an optional
  22950. configuration. The architecture contains the component declaration and
  22951. instantiation of the DUT as well as internal constant and signal
  22952. declarations. Additional user-defined templates can be inserted. The
  22953. names used for entity/architecture/configuration/DUT as well as the file
  22954. structure to be generated can be customized. See customization group
  22955. `vhdl-testbench'.
  22956. KEY BINDINGS:
  22957. Key bindings (`C-c ...') exist for most commands (see in menu).
  22958. VHDL MENU:
  22959. All commands can be found in the VHDL menu including their key bindings.
  22960. FILE BROWSER:
  22961. The speedbar allows browsing of directories and file contents. It can
  22962. be accessed from the VHDL menu and is automatically opened if option
  22963. `vhdl-speedbar-auto-open' is non-nil.
  22964. In speedbar, open files and directories with `mouse-2' on the name and
  22965. browse/rescan their contents with `mouse-2'/`S-mouse-2' on the `+'.
  22966. DESIGN HIERARCHY BROWSER:
  22967. The speedbar can also be used for browsing the hierarchy of design units
  22968. contained in the source files of the current directory or the specified
  22969. projects (see option `vhdl-project-alist').
  22970. The speedbar can be switched between file, directory hierarchy and
  22971. project hierarchy browsing mode in the speedbar menu or by typing `f',
  22972. `h' or `H' in speedbar.
  22973. In speedbar, open design units with `mouse-2' on the name and browse
  22974. their hierarchy with `mouse-2' on the `+'. Ports can directly be copied
  22975. from entities and components (in packages). Individual design units and
  22976. complete designs can directly be compiled (\"Make\" menu entry).
  22977. The hierarchy is automatically updated upon saving a modified source
  22978. file when option `vhdl-speedbar-update-on-saving' is non-nil. The
  22979. hierarchy is only updated for projects that have been opened once in the
  22980. speedbar. The hierarchy is cached between Emacs sessions in a file (see
  22981. options in group `vhdl-speedbar').
  22982. Simple design consistency checks are done during scanning, such as
  22983. multiple declarations of the same unit or missing primary units that are
  22984. required by secondary units.
  22985. STRUCTURAL COMPOSITION:
  22986. Enables simple structural composition. `C-c C-c C-n' creates a skeleton
  22987. for a new component. Subcomponents (i.e. component declaration and
  22988. instantiation) can be automatically placed from a previously read port
  22989. (`C-c C-c C-p') or directly from the hierarchy browser (`P'). Finally,
  22990. all subcomponents can be automatically connected using internal signals
  22991. and ports (`C-c C-c C-w') following these rules:
  22992. - subcomponent actual ports with same name are considered to be
  22993. connected by a signal (internal signal or port)
  22994. - signals that are only inputs to subcomponents are considered as
  22995. inputs to this component -> input port created
  22996. - signals that are only outputs from subcomponents are considered as
  22997. outputs from this component -> output port created
  22998. - signals that are inputs to AND outputs from subcomponents are
  22999. considered as internal connections -> internal signal created
  23000. Purpose: With appropriate naming conventions it is possible to
  23001. create higher design levels with only a few mouse clicks or key
  23002. strokes. A new design level can be created by simply generating a new
  23003. component, placing the required subcomponents from the hierarchy
  23004. browser, and wiring everything automatically.
  23005. Note: Automatic wiring only works reliably on templates of new
  23006. components and component instantiations that were created by VHDL mode.
  23007. Component declarations can be placed in a components package (option
  23008. `vhdl-use-components-package') which can be automatically generated for
  23009. an entire directory or project (`C-c C-c M-p'). The VHDL'93 direct
  23010. component instantiation is also supported (option
  23011. `vhdl-use-direct-instantiation').
  23012. | Configuration declarations can automatically be generated either from
  23013. | the menu (`C-c C-c C-f') (for the architecture the cursor is in) or from
  23014. | the speedbar menu (for the architecture under the cursor). The
  23015. | configurations can optionally be hierarchical (i.e. include all
  23016. | component levels of a hierarchical design, option
  23017. | `vhdl-compose-configuration-hierarchical') or include subconfigurations
  23018. | (option `vhdl-compose-configuration-use-subconfiguration'). For
  23019. | subcomponents in hierarchical configurations, the most-recently-analyzed
  23020. | (mra) architecture is selected. If another architecture is desired, it
  23021. | can be marked as most-recently-analyzed (speedbar menu) before
  23022. | generating the configuration.
  23023. |
  23024. | Note: Configurations of subcomponents (i.e. hierarchical configuration
  23025. | declarations) are currently not considered when displaying
  23026. | configurations in speedbar.
  23027. See the options group `vhdl-compose' for all relevant user options.
  23028. SOURCE FILE COMPILATION:
  23029. The syntax of the current buffer can be analyzed by calling a VHDL
  23030. compiler (menu, `C-c C-k'). The compiler to be used is specified by
  23031. option `vhdl-compiler'. The available compilers are listed in option
  23032. `vhdl-compiler-alist' including all required compilation command,
  23033. command options, compilation directory, and error message syntax
  23034. information. New compilers can be added.
  23035. All the source files of an entire design can be compiled by the `make'
  23036. command (menu, `C-c M-C-k') if an appropriate Makefile exists.
  23037. MAKEFILE GENERATION:
  23038. Makefiles can be generated automatically by an internal generation
  23039. routine (`C-c M-k'). The library unit dependency information is
  23040. obtained from the hierarchy browser. Makefile generation can be
  23041. customized for each compiler in option `vhdl-compiler-alist'.
  23042. Makefile generation can also be run non-interactively using the
  23043. command:
  23044. emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs -l vhdl-mode
  23045. [-compiler compilername] [-project projectname]
  23046. -f vhdl-generate-makefile
  23047. The Makefile's default target \"all\" compiles the entire design, the
  23048. target \"clean\" removes it and the target \"library\" creates the
  23049. library directory if not existent. The Makefile also includes a target
  23050. for each primary library unit which allows selective compilation of this
  23051. unit, its secondary units and its subhierarchy (example: compilation of
  23052. a design specified by a configuration). User specific parts can be
  23053. inserted into a Makefile with option `vhdl-makefile-generation-hook'.
  23054. Limitations:
  23055. - Only library units and dependencies within the current library are
  23056. considered. Makefiles for designs that span multiple libraries are
  23057. not (yet) supported.
  23058. - Only one-level configurations are supported (also hierarchical),
  23059. but configurations that go down several levels are not.
  23060. - The \"others\" keyword in configurations is not supported.
  23061. PROJECTS:
  23062. Projects can be defined in option `vhdl-project-alist' and a current
  23063. project be selected using option `vhdl-project' (permanently) or from
  23064. the menu or speedbar (temporarily). For each project, title and
  23065. description strings (for the file headers), source files/directories
  23066. (for the hierarchy browser and Makefile generation), library name, and
  23067. compiler-dependent options, exceptions and compilation directory can be
  23068. specified. Compilation settings overwrite the settings of option
  23069. `vhdl-compiler-alist'.
  23070. Project setups can be exported (i.e. written to a file) and imported.
  23071. Imported setups are not automatically saved in `vhdl-project-alist' but
  23072. can be saved afterwards in its customization buffer. When starting
  23073. Emacs with VHDL Mode (i.e. load a VHDL file or use \"emacs -l
  23074. vhdl-mode\") in a directory with an existing project setup file, it is
  23075. automatically loaded and its project activated if option
  23076. `vhdl-project-auto-load' is non-nil. Names/paths of the project setup
  23077. files can be specified in option `vhdl-project-file-name'. Multiple
  23078. project setups can be automatically loaded from global directories.
  23079. This is an alternative to specifying project setups with option
  23080. `vhdl-project-alist'.
  23081. SPECIAL MENUES:
  23082. As an alternative to the speedbar, an index menu can be added (set
  23083. option `vhdl-index-menu' to non-nil) or made accessible as a mouse menu
  23084. (e.g. add \"(global-set-key '[S-down-mouse-3] 'imenu)\" to your start-up
  23085. file) for browsing the file contents (is not populated if buffer is
  23086. larger than `font-lock-maximum-size'). Also, a source file menu can be
  23087. added (set option `vhdl-source-file-menu' to non-nil) for browsing the
  23088. current directory for VHDL source files.
  23089. VHDL STANDARDS:
  23090. The VHDL standards to be used are specified in option `vhdl-standard'.
  23091. Available standards are: VHDL'87/'93, VHDL-AMS, and Math Packages.
  23092. KEYWORD CASE:
  23093. Lower and upper case for keywords and standardized types, attributes,
  23094. and enumeration values is supported. If the option
  23095. `vhdl-upper-case-keywords' is set to non-nil, keywords can be typed in
  23096. lower case and are converted into upper case automatically (not for
  23097. types, attributes, and enumeration values). The case of keywords,
  23098. types, attributes,and enumeration values can be fixed for an entire
  23099. region (menu) or buffer (`C-c C-x C-c') according to the options
  23100. `vhdl-upper-case-{keywords,types,attributes,enum-values}'.
  23101. HIGHLIGHTING (fontification):
  23102. Keywords and standardized types, attributes, enumeration values, and
  23103. function names (controlled by option `vhdl-highlight-keywords'), as well
  23104. as comments, strings, and template prompts are highlighted using
  23105. different colors. Unit, subprogram, signal, variable, constant,
  23106. parameter and generic/port names in declarations as well as labels are
  23107. highlighted if option `vhdl-highlight-names' is non-nil.
  23108. Additional reserved words or words with a forbidden syntax (e.g. words
  23109. that should be avoided) can be specified in option
  23110. `vhdl-forbidden-words' or `vhdl-forbidden-syntax' and be highlighted in
  23111. a warning color (option `vhdl-highlight-forbidden-words'). Verilog
  23112. keywords are highlighted as forbidden words if option
  23113. `vhdl-highlight-verilog-keywords' is non-nil.
  23114. Words with special syntax can be highlighted by specifying their
  23115. syntax and color in option `vhdl-special-syntax-alist' and by setting
  23116. option `vhdl-highlight-special-words' to non-nil. This allows to
  23117. establish some naming conventions (e.g. to distinguish different kinds
  23118. of signals or other objects by using name suffices) and to support them
  23119. visually.
  23120. Option `vhdl-highlight-case-sensitive' can be set to non-nil in order
  23121. to support case-sensitive highlighting. However, keywords are then only
  23122. highlighted if written in lower case.
  23123. Code between \"translate_off\" and \"translate_on\" pragmas is
  23124. highlighted using a different background color if option
  23125. `vhdl-highlight-translate-off' is non-nil.
  23126. For documentation and customization of the used colors see
  23127. customization group `vhdl-highlight-faces' (`M-x customize-group'). For
  23128. highlighting of matching parenthesis, see customization group
  23129. `paren-showing'. Automatic buffer highlighting is turned on/off by
  23130. option `global-font-lock-mode' (`font-lock-auto-fontify' in XEmacs).
  23131. USER MODELS:
  23132. VHDL models (templates) can be specified by the user and made accessible
  23133. in the menu, through key bindings (`C-c C-m ...'), or by keyword
  23134. electrification. See option `vhdl-model-alist'.
  23135. HIDE/SHOW:
  23136. The code of blocks, processes, subprograms, component declarations and
  23137. instantiations, generic/port clauses, and configuration declarations can
  23138. be hidden using the `Hide/Show' menu or by pressing `S-mouse-2' within
  23139. the code (see customization group `vhdl-menu'). XEmacs: limited
  23140. functionality due to old `hideshow.el' package.
  23141. CODE UPDATING:
  23142. - Sensitivity List: `C-c C-u C-s' updates the sensitivity list of the
  23143. current process, `C-c C-u M-s' of all processes in the current buffer.
  23144. Limitations:
  23145. - Only declared local signals (ports, signals declared in
  23146. architecture and blocks) are automatically inserted.
  23147. - Global signals declared in packages are not automatically inserted.
  23148. Insert them once manually (will be kept afterwards).
  23149. - Out parameters of procedures are considered to be read.
  23150. Use option `vhdl-entity-file-name' to specify the entity file name
  23151. (used to obtain the port names).
  23152. CODE FIXING:
  23153. `C-c C-x C-p' fixes the closing parenthesis of a generic/port clause
  23154. (e.g. if the closing parenthesis is on the wrong line or is missing).
  23155. PRINTING:
  23156. PostScript printing with different faces (an optimized set of faces is
  23157. used if `vhdl-print-customize-faces' is non-nil) or colors (if
  23158. `ps-print-color-p' is non-nil) is possible using the standard Emacs
  23159. PostScript printing commands. Option `vhdl-print-two-column' defines
  23160. appropriate default settings for nice landscape two-column printing.
  23161. The paper format can be set by option `ps-paper-type'. Do not forget to
  23162. switch `ps-print-color-p' to nil for printing on black-and-white
  23163. printers.
  23164. OPTIONS:
  23165. User options allow customization of VHDL Mode. All options are
  23166. accessible from the \"Options\" menu entry. Simple options (switches
  23167. and choices) can directly be changed, while for complex options a
  23168. customization buffer is opened. Changed options can be saved for future
  23169. sessions using the \"Save Options\" menu entry.
  23170. Options and their detailed descriptions can also be accessed by using
  23171. the \"Customize\" menu entry or the command `M-x customize-option' (`M-x
  23172. customize-group' for groups). Some customizations only take effect
  23173. after some action (read the NOTE in the option documentation).
  23174. Customization can also be done globally (i.e. site-wide, read the
  23175. INSTALL file).
  23176. Not all options are described in this documentation, so go and see
  23177. what other useful user options there are (`M-x vhdl-customize' or menu)!
  23178. FILE EXTENSIONS:
  23179. As default, files with extensions \".vhd\" and \".vhdl\" are
  23180. automatically recognized as VHDL source files. To add an extension
  23181. \".xxx\", add the following line to your Emacs start-up file (`.emacs'):
  23182. (setq auto-mode-alist (cons '(\"\\\\.xxx\\\\'\" . vhdl-mode) auto-mode-alist))
  23183. HINTS:
  23184. - To start Emacs with open VHDL hierarchy browser without having to load
  23185. a VHDL file first, use the command:
  23186. emacs -l vhdl-mode -f speedbar-frame-mode
  23187. - Type `C-g C-g' to interrupt long operations or if Emacs hangs.
  23188. - Some features only work on properly indented code.
  23189. RELEASE NOTES:
  23190. See also the release notes (menu) for added features in new releases.
  23191. Maintenance:
  23192. ------------
  23193. To submit a bug report, enter `M-x vhdl-submit-bug-report' within VHDL Mode.
  23194. Add a description of the problem and include a reproducible test case.
  23195. Questions and enhancement requests can be sent to <reto@gnu.org>.
  23196. The `vhdl-mode-announce' mailing list informs about new VHDL Mode releases.
  23197. The `vhdl-mode-victims' mailing list informs about new VHDL Mode beta
  23198. releases. You are kindly invited to participate in beta testing. Subscribe
  23199. to above mailing lists by sending an email to <reto@gnu.org>.
  23200. VHDL Mode is officially distributed at
  23201. URL `http://opensource.ethz.ch/emacs/vhdl-mode.html'
  23202. where the latest version can be found.
  23203. Known problems:
  23204. ---------------
  23205. - Indentation bug in simultaneous if- and case-statements (VHDL-AMS).
  23206. - XEmacs: Incorrect start-up when automatically opening speedbar.
  23207. - XEmacs: Indentation in XEmacs 21.4 (and higher).
  23208. The VHDL Mode Authors
  23209. Reto Zimmermann and Rod Whitby
  23210. Key bindings:
  23211. -------------
  23212. \\{vhdl-mode-map}
  23213. \(fn)" t nil)
  23214. ;;;***
  23215. ;;;### (autoloads (vi-mode) "vi" "emulation/vi.el" (20352 65510))
  23216. ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/vi.el
  23217. (autoload 'vi-mode "vi" "\
  23218. Major mode that acts like the `vi' editor.
  23219. The purpose of this mode is to provide you the combined power of vi (namely,
  23220. the \"cross product\" effect of commands and repeat last changes) and Emacs.
  23221. This command redefines nearly all keys to look like vi commands.
  23222. It records the previous major mode, and any vi command for input
  23223. \(`i', `a', `s', etc.) switches back to that mode.
  23224. Thus, ordinary Emacs (in whatever major mode you had been using)
  23225. is \"input\" mode as far as vi is concerned.
  23226. To get back into vi from \"input\" mode, you must issue this command again.
  23227. Therefore, it is recommended that you assign it to a key.
  23228. Major differences between this mode and real vi :
  23229. * Limitations and unsupported features
  23230. - Search patterns with line offset (e.g. /pat/+3 or /pat/z.) are
  23231. not supported.
  23232. - Ex commands are not implemented; try ':' to get some hints.
  23233. - No line undo (i.e. the 'U' command), but multi-undo is a standard feature.
  23234. * Modifications
  23235. - The stopping positions for some point motion commands (word boundary,
  23236. pattern search) are slightly different from standard 'vi'.
  23237. Also, no automatic wrap around at end of buffer for pattern searching.
  23238. - Since changes are done in two steps (deletion then insertion), you need
  23239. to undo twice to completely undo a change command. But this is not needed
  23240. for undoing a repeated change command.
  23241. - No need to set/unset 'magic', to search for a string with regular expr
  23242. in it just put a prefix arg for the search commands. Replace cmds too.
  23243. - ^R is bound to incremental backward search, so use ^L to redraw screen.
  23244. * Extensions
  23245. - Some standard (or modified) Emacs commands were integrated, such as
  23246. incremental search, query replace, transpose objects, and keyboard macros.
  23247. - In command state, ^X links to the 'ctl-x-map', and ESC can be linked to
  23248. esc-map or set undefined. These can give you the full power of Emacs.
  23249. - See vi-com-map for those keys that are extensions to standard vi, e.g.
  23250. `vi-name-last-change-or-macro', `vi-verify-spelling', `vi-locate-def',
  23251. `vi-mark-region', and 'vi-quote-words'. Some of them are quite handy.
  23252. - Use \\[vi-switch-mode] to switch among different modes quickly.
  23253. Syntax table and abbrevs while in vi mode remain as they were in Emacs.
  23254. \(fn)" t nil)
  23255. ;;;***
  23256. ;;;### (autoloads (viqr-pre-write-conversion viqr-post-read-conversion
  23257. ;;;;;; viet-encode-viqr-buffer viet-encode-viqr-region viet-decode-viqr-buffer
  23258. ;;;;;; viet-decode-viqr-region viet-encode-viscii-char) "viet-util"
  23259. ;;;;;; "language/viet-util.el" (20352 65510))
  23260. ;;; Generated autoloads from language/viet-util.el
  23261. (autoload 'viet-encode-viscii-char "viet-util" "\
  23262. Return VISCII character code of CHAR if appropriate.
  23263. \(fn CHAR)" nil nil)
  23264. (autoload 'viet-decode-viqr-region "viet-util" "\
  23265. Convert `VIQR' mnemonics of the current region to Vietnamese characters.
  23266. When called from a program, expects two arguments,
  23267. positions (integers or markers) specifying the stretch of the region.
  23268. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  23269. (autoload 'viet-decode-viqr-buffer "viet-util" "\
  23270. Convert `VIQR' mnemonics of the current buffer to Vietnamese characters.
  23271. \(fn)" t nil)
  23272. (autoload 'viet-encode-viqr-region "viet-util" "\
  23273. Convert Vietnamese characters of the current region to `VIQR' mnemonics.
  23274. When called from a program, expects two arguments,
  23275. positions (integers or markers) specifying the stretch of the region.
  23276. \(fn FROM TO)" t nil)
  23277. (autoload 'viet-encode-viqr-buffer "viet-util" "\
  23278. Convert Vietnamese characters of the current buffer to `VIQR' mnemonics.
  23279. \(fn)" t nil)
  23280. (autoload 'viqr-post-read-conversion "viet-util" "\
  23281. \(fn LEN)" nil nil)
  23282. (autoload 'viqr-pre-write-conversion "viet-util" "\
  23283. \(fn FROM TO)" nil nil)
  23284. ;;;***
  23285. ;;;### (autoloads (View-exit-and-edit view-mode-enter view-return-to-alist-update
  23286. ;;;;;; view-mode view-buffer-other-frame view-buffer-other-window
  23287. ;;;;;; view-buffer view-file-other-frame view-file-other-window
  23288. ;;;;;; view-file kill-buffer-if-not-modified view-remove-frame-by-deleting)
  23289. ;;;;;; "view" "view.el" (20352 65510))
  23290. ;;; Generated autoloads from view.el
  23291. (defvar view-remove-frame-by-deleting t "\
  23292. Determine how View mode removes a frame no longer needed.
  23293. If nil, make an icon of the frame. If non-nil, delete the frame.")
  23294. (custom-autoload 'view-remove-frame-by-deleting "view" t)
  23295. (defvar view-mode nil "\
  23296. Non-nil if View mode is enabled.
  23297. Don't change this variable directly, you must change it by one of the
  23298. functions that enable or disable view mode.")
  23299. (make-variable-buffer-local 'view-mode)
  23300. (autoload 'kill-buffer-if-not-modified "view" "\
  23301. Like `kill-buffer', but does nothing if the buffer is modified.
  23302. \(fn BUF)" nil nil)
  23303. (autoload 'view-file "view" "\
  23304. View FILE in View mode, returning to previous buffer when done.
  23305. Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available; instead, a
  23306. special set of commands (mostly letters and punctuation) are defined for
  23307. moving around in the buffer.
  23308. Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
  23309. For a list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
  23310. This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
  23311. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  23312. (autoload 'view-file-other-window "view" "\
  23313. View FILE in View mode in another window.
  23314. When done, return that window to its previous buffer, and kill the
  23315. buffer visiting FILE if unmodified and if it wasn't visited before.
  23316. Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available; instead,
  23317. a special set of commands (mostly letters and punctuation)
  23318. are defined for moving around in the buffer.
  23319. Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
  23320. For a list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
  23321. This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
  23322. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  23323. (autoload 'view-file-other-frame "view" "\
  23324. View FILE in View mode in another frame.
  23325. When done, kill the buffer visiting FILE if unmodified and if it wasn't
  23326. visited before; also, maybe delete other frame and/or return to previous
  23327. buffer.
  23328. Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available; instead,
  23329. a special set of commands (mostly letters and punctuation)
  23330. are defined for moving around in the buffer.
  23331. Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
  23332. For a list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
  23333. This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
  23334. \(fn FILE)" t nil)
  23335. (autoload 'view-buffer "view" "\
  23336. View BUFFER in View mode, returning to previous buffer when done.
  23337. Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available; instead, a
  23338. special set of commands (mostly letters and punctuation) are defined for
  23339. moving around in the buffer.
  23340. Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
  23341. For a list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
  23342. This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
  23343. Optional argument EXIT-ACTION is either nil or a function with buffer as
  23344. argument. This function is called when finished viewing buffer. Use
  23345. this argument instead of explicitly setting `view-exit-action'.
  23346. Do not set EXIT-ACTION to `kill-buffer' when BUFFER visits a
  23347. file: Users may suspend viewing in order to modify the buffer.
  23348. Exiting View mode will then discard the user's edits. Setting
  23349. EXIT-ACTION to `kill-buffer-if-not-modified' avoids this.
  23350. This function does not enable View mode if the buffer's major-mode
  23351. has a `special' mode-class, because such modes usually have their
  23352. own View-like bindings.
  23353. \(fn BUFFER &optional EXIT-ACTION)" t nil)
  23354. (autoload 'view-buffer-other-window "view" "\
  23355. View BUFFER in View mode in another window.
  23356. Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available;
  23357. instead, a special set of commands (mostly letters and
  23358. punctuation) are defined for moving around in the buffer.
  23359. Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
  23360. For a list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
  23361. This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
  23362. Optional argument NOT-RETURN is ignored.
  23363. Optional argument EXIT-ACTION is either nil or a function with buffer as
  23364. argument. This function is called when finished viewing buffer. Use
  23365. this argument instead of explicitly setting `view-exit-action'.
  23366. This function does not enable View mode if the buffer's major-mode
  23367. has a `special' mode-class, because such modes usually have their
  23368. own View-like bindings.
  23369. \(fn BUFFER &optional NOT-RETURN EXIT-ACTION)" t nil)
  23370. (autoload 'view-buffer-other-frame "view" "\
  23371. View BUFFER in View mode in another frame.
  23372. Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available;
  23373. instead, a special set of commands (mostly letters and
  23374. punctuation) are defined for moving around in the buffer.
  23375. Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
  23376. For a list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
  23377. This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
  23378. Optional argument NOT-RETURN is ignored.
  23379. Optional argument EXIT-ACTION is either nil or a function with buffer as
  23380. argument. This function is called when finished viewing buffer. Use
  23381. this argument instead of explicitly setting `view-exit-action'.
  23382. This function does not enable View mode if the buffer's major-mode
  23383. has a `special' mode-class, because such modes usually have their
  23384. own View-like bindings.
  23385. \(fn BUFFER &optional NOT-RETURN EXIT-ACTION)" t nil)
  23386. (autoload 'view-mode "view" "\
  23387. Toggle View mode, a minor mode for viewing text but not editing it.
  23388. With a prefix argument ARG, enable View mode if ARG is positive,
  23389. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable View mode
  23390. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  23391. When View mode is enabled, commands that do not change the buffer
  23392. contents are available as usual. Kill commands insert text in
  23393. kill buffers but do not delete. Most other commands beep and
  23394. tell the user that the buffer is read-only.
  23395. \\<view-mode-map>
  23396. The following additional commands are provided. Most commands
  23397. take prefix arguments. Page commands default to \"page size\"
  23398. lines which is almost a whole window, or number of lines set by
  23399. \\[View-scroll-page-forward-set-page-size] or \\[View-scroll-page-backward-set-page-size].
  23400. Half page commands default to and set \"half page size\" lines
  23401. which initially is half a window full. Search commands default
  23402. to a repeat count of one.
  23403. H, h, ? This message.
  23404. Digits provide prefix arguments.
  23405. \\[negative-argument] negative prefix argument.
  23406. \\[beginning-of-buffer] move to the beginning of buffer.
  23407. > move to the end of buffer.
  23408. \\[View-scroll-to-buffer-end] scroll so that buffer end is at last line of window.
  23409. SPC scroll forward \"page size\" lines.
  23410. With prefix scroll forward prefix lines.
  23411. DEL scroll backward \"page size\" lines.
  23412. With prefix scroll backward prefix lines.
  23413. \\[View-scroll-page-forward-set-page-size] like \\[View-scroll-page-forward] but with prefix sets \"page size\" to prefix.
  23414. \\[View-scroll-page-backward-set-page-size] like \\[View-scroll-page-backward] but with prefix sets \"page size\" to prefix.
  23415. \\[View-scroll-half-page-forward] scroll forward \"half page size\" lines. With prefix, sets
  23416. \"half page size\" to prefix lines and scrolls forward that much.
  23417. \\[View-scroll-half-page-backward] scroll backward \"half page size\" lines. With prefix, sets
  23418. \"half page size\" to prefix lines and scrolls backward that much.
  23419. RET, LFD scroll forward one line. With prefix scroll forward prefix line(s).
  23420. y scroll backward one line. With prefix scroll backward prefix line(s).
  23421. \\[View-revert-buffer-scroll-page-forward] revert-buffer if necessary and scroll forward.
  23422. Use this to view a changing file.
  23423. \\[what-line] prints the current line number.
  23424. \\[View-goto-percent] goes prefix argument (default 100) percent into buffer.
  23425. \\[View-goto-line] goes to line given by prefix argument (default first line).
  23426. . set the mark.
  23427. x exchanges point and mark.
  23428. \\[View-back-to-mark] return to mark and pops mark ring.
  23429. Mark ring is pushed at start of every successful search and when
  23430. jump to line occurs. The mark is set on jump to buffer start or end.
  23431. \\[point-to-register] save current position in character register.
  23432. ' go to position saved in character register.
  23433. s do forward incremental search.
  23434. r do reverse incremental search.
  23435. \\[View-search-regexp-forward] searches forward for regular expression, starting after current page.
  23436. ! and @ have a special meaning at the beginning of the regexp.
  23437. ! means search for a line with no match for regexp. @ means start
  23438. search at beginning (end for backward search) of buffer.
  23439. \\ searches backward for regular expression, starting before current page.
  23440. \\[View-search-last-regexp-forward] searches forward for last regular expression.
  23441. p searches backward for last regular expression.
  23442. \\[View-quit] quit View mode, restoring this window and buffer to previous state.
  23443. \\[View-quit] is the normal way to leave view mode.
  23444. \\[View-exit] exit View mode but stay in current buffer. Use this if you started
  23445. viewing a buffer (file) and find out you want to edit it.
  23446. This command restores the previous read-only status of the buffer.
  23447. \\[View-exit-and-edit] exit View mode, and make the current buffer editable
  23448. even if it was not editable before entry to View mode.
  23449. \\[View-quit-all] quit View mode, restoring all windows to previous state.
  23450. \\[View-leave] quit View mode and maybe switch buffers, but don't kill this buffer.
  23451. \\[View-kill-and-leave] quit View mode, kill current buffer and go back to other buffer.
  23452. The effect of \\[View-leave], \\[View-quit] and \\[View-kill-and-leave] depends on how view-mode was entered. If it was
  23453. entered by view-file, view-file-other-window, view-file-other-frame, or
  23454. \\[dired-view-file] (\\[view-file], \\[view-file-other-window],
  23455. \\[view-file-other-frame], or the Dired mode v command),
  23456. then \\[View-quit] will try to kill the current buffer.
  23457. If view-mode was entered from another buffer, by \\[view-buffer],
  23458. \\[view-buffer-other-window], \\[view-buffer-other frame], \\[view-file],
  23459. \\[view-file-other-window], or \\[view-file-other-frame],
  23460. then \\[View-leave], \\[View-quit] and \\[View-kill-and-leave] will return to that buffer.
  23461. Entry to view-mode runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
  23462. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  23463. (autoload 'view-return-to-alist-update "view" "\
  23464. Update `view-return-to-alist' of buffer BUFFER.
  23465. Remove from `view-return-to-alist' all entries referencing dead
  23466. windows. Optional argument ITEM non-nil means add ITEM to
  23467. `view-return-to-alist' after purging. For a description of items
  23468. that can be added see the RETURN-TO-ALIST argument of the
  23469. function `view-mode-exit'. If `view-return-to-alist' contains an
  23470. entry for the selected window, purge that entry from
  23471. `view-return-to-alist' before adding ITEM.
  23472. \(fn BUFFER &optional ITEM)" nil nil)
  23473. (autoload 'view-mode-enter "view" "\
  23474. Enter View mode and set up exit from view mode depending on optional arguments.
  23475. Optional argument QUIT-RESTORE if non-nil must specify a valid
  23476. entry for quitting and restoring any window showing the current
  23477. buffer. This entry replaces any parameter installed by
  23478. `display-buffer' and is used by `view-mode-exit'.
  23479. Optional argument EXIT-ACTION, if non-nil, must specify a
  23480. function that takes a buffer as argument. This function will be
  23481. called by `view-mode-exit'.
  23482. For a list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
  23483. This function runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
  23484. \(fn &optional QUIT-RESTORE EXIT-ACTION)" nil nil)
  23485. (autoload 'View-exit-and-edit "view" "\
  23486. Exit View mode and make the current buffer editable.
  23487. \(fn)" t nil)
  23488. ;;;***
  23489. ;;;### (autoloads (vip-mode vip-setup) "vip" "emulation/vip.el" (20352
  23490. ;;;;;; 65510))
  23491. ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/vip.el
  23492. (autoload 'vip-setup "vip" "\
  23493. Set up bindings for C-x 7 and C-z that are useful for VIP users.
  23494. \(fn)" nil nil)
  23495. (autoload 'vip-mode "vip" "\
  23496. Turn on VIP emulation of VI.
  23497. \(fn)" t nil)
  23498. ;;;***
  23499. ;;;### (autoloads (viper-mode toggle-viper-mode) "viper" "emulation/viper.el"
  23500. ;;;;;; (20400 62402))
  23501. ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/viper.el
  23502. (autoload 'toggle-viper-mode "viper" "\
  23503. Toggle Viper on/off.
  23504. If Viper is enabled, turn it off. Otherwise, turn it on.
  23505. \(fn)" t nil)
  23506. (autoload 'viper-mode "viper" "\
  23507. Turn on Viper emulation of Vi in Emacs. See Info node `(viper)Top'.
  23508. \(fn)" t nil)
  23509. ;;;***
  23510. ;;;### (autoloads (warn lwarn display-warning) "warnings" "emacs-lisp/warnings.el"
  23511. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  23512. ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/warnings.el
  23513. (defvar warning-prefix-function nil "\
  23514. Function to generate warning prefixes.
  23515. This function, if non-nil, is called with two arguments,
  23516. the severity level and its entry in `warning-levels',
  23517. and should return the entry that should actually be used.
  23518. The warnings buffer is current when this function is called
  23519. and the function can insert text in it. This text becomes
  23520. the beginning of the warning.")
  23521. (defvar warning-series nil "\
  23522. Non-nil means treat multiple `display-warning' calls as a series.
  23523. A marker indicates a position in the warnings buffer
  23524. which is the start of the current series; it means that
  23525. additional warnings in the same buffer should not move point.
  23526. If t, the next warning begins a series (and stores a marker here).
  23527. A symbol with a function definition is like t, except
  23528. also call that function before the next warning.")
  23529. (defvar warning-fill-prefix nil "\
  23530. Non-nil means fill each warning text using this string as `fill-prefix'.")
  23531. (defvar warning-type-format (purecopy " (%s)") "\
  23532. Format for displaying the warning type in the warning message.
  23533. The result of formatting the type this way gets included in the
  23534. message under the control of the string in `warning-levels'.")
  23535. (autoload 'display-warning "warnings" "\
  23536. Display a warning message, MESSAGE.
  23537. TYPE is the warning type: either a custom group name (a symbol),
  23538. or a list of symbols whose first element is a custom group name.
  23539. \(The rest of the symbols represent subcategories, for warning purposes
  23540. only, and you can use whatever symbols you like.)
  23541. LEVEL should be either :debug, :warning, :error, or :emergency
  23542. \(but see `warning-minimum-level' and `warning-minimum-log-level').
  23543. Default is :warning.
  23544. :emergency -- a problem that will seriously impair Emacs operation soon
  23545. if you do not attend to it promptly.
  23546. :error -- data or circumstances that are inherently wrong.
  23547. :warning -- data or circumstances that are not inherently wrong,
  23548. but raise suspicion of a possible problem.
  23549. :debug -- info for debugging only.
  23550. BUFFER-NAME, if specified, is the name of the buffer for logging
  23551. the warning. By default, it is `*Warnings*'. If this function
  23552. has to create the buffer, it disables undo in the buffer.
  23553. See the `warnings' custom group for user customization features.
  23554. See also `warning-series', `warning-prefix-function' and
  23555. `warning-fill-prefix' for additional programming features.
  23556. \(fn TYPE MESSAGE &optional LEVEL BUFFER-NAME)" nil nil)
  23557. (autoload 'lwarn "warnings" "\
  23558. Display a warning message made from (format MESSAGE ARGS...).
  23559. Aside from generating the message with `format',
  23560. this is equivalent to `display-warning'.
  23561. TYPE is the warning type: either a custom group name (a symbol),
  23562. or a list of symbols whose first element is a custom group name.
  23563. \(The rest of the symbols represent subcategories and
  23564. can be whatever you like.)
  23565. LEVEL should be either :debug, :warning, :error, or :emergency
  23566. \(but see `warning-minimum-level' and `warning-minimum-log-level').
  23567. :emergency -- a problem that will seriously impair Emacs operation soon
  23568. if you do not attend to it promptly.
  23569. :error -- invalid data or circumstances.
  23570. :warning -- suspicious data or circumstances.
  23571. :debug -- info for debugging only.
  23572. \(fn TYPE LEVEL MESSAGE &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  23573. (autoload 'warn "warnings" "\
  23574. Display a warning message made from (format MESSAGE ARGS...).
  23575. Aside from generating the message with `format',
  23576. this is equivalent to `display-warning', using
  23577. `emacs' as the type and `:warning' as the level.
  23578. \(fn MESSAGE &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  23579. ;;;***
  23580. ;;;### (autoloads (wdired-change-to-wdired-mode) "wdired" "wdired.el"
  23581. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  23582. ;;; Generated autoloads from wdired.el
  23583. (autoload 'wdired-change-to-wdired-mode "wdired" "\
  23584. Put a dired buffer in a mode in which filenames are editable.
  23585. \\<wdired-mode-map>
  23586. This mode allows the user to change the names of the files, and after
  23587. typing \\[wdired-finish-edit] Emacs renames the files and directories
  23588. in disk.
  23589. See `wdired-mode'.
  23590. \(fn)" t nil)
  23591. ;;;***
  23592. ;;;### (autoloads (webjump) "webjump" "net/webjump.el" (20400 62402))
  23593. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/webjump.el
  23594. (autoload 'webjump "webjump" "\
  23595. Jumps to a Web site from a programmable hotlist.
  23596. See the documentation for the `webjump-sites' variable for how to customize the
  23597. hotlist.
  23598. Please submit bug reports and other feedback to the author, Neil W. Van Dyke
  23599. <nwv@acm.org>.
  23600. \(fn)" t nil)
  23601. ;;;***
  23602. ;;;### (autoloads (which-function-mode which-func-mode) "which-func"
  23603. ;;;;;; "progmodes/which-func.el" (20461 49352))
  23604. ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/which-func.el
  23605. (put 'which-func-format 'risky-local-variable t)
  23606. (put 'which-func-current 'risky-local-variable t)
  23607. (autoload 'which-func-mode "which-func" "\
  23608. \(fn &optional ARG)" nil nil)
  23609. (defvar which-function-mode nil "\
  23610. Non-nil if Which-Function mode is enabled.
  23611. See the command `which-function-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  23612. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  23613. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  23614. or call the function `which-function-mode'.")
  23615. (custom-autoload 'which-function-mode "which-func" nil)
  23616. (autoload 'which-function-mode "which-func" "\
  23617. Toggle mode line display of current function (Which Function mode).
  23618. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Which Function mode if ARG is
  23619. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  23620. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  23621. Which Function mode is a global minor mode. When enabled, the
  23622. current function name is continuously displayed in the mode line,
  23623. in certain major modes.
  23624. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  23625. ;;;***
  23626. ;;;### (autoloads (whitespace-report-region whitespace-report whitespace-cleanup-region
  23627. ;;;;;; whitespace-cleanup global-whitespace-toggle-options whitespace-toggle-options
  23628. ;;;;;; global-whitespace-newline-mode global-whitespace-mode whitespace-newline-mode
  23629. ;;;;;; whitespace-mode) "whitespace" "whitespace.el" (20352 65510))
  23630. ;;; Generated autoloads from whitespace.el
  23631. (autoload 'whitespace-mode "whitespace" "\
  23632. Toggle whitespace visualization (Whitespace mode).
  23633. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Whitespace mode if ARG is
  23634. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  23635. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  23636. See also `whitespace-style', `whitespace-newline' and
  23637. `whitespace-display-mappings'.
  23638. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  23639. (autoload 'whitespace-newline-mode "whitespace" "\
  23640. Toggle newline visualization (Whitespace Newline mode).
  23641. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Whitespace Newline mode if ARG
  23642. is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp,
  23643. enable the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  23644. Use `whitespace-newline-mode' only for NEWLINE visualization
  23645. exclusively. For other visualizations, including NEWLINE
  23646. visualization together with (HARD) SPACEs and/or TABs, please,
  23647. use `whitespace-mode'.
  23648. See also `whitespace-newline' and `whitespace-display-mappings'.
  23649. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  23650. (defvar global-whitespace-mode nil "\
  23651. Non-nil if Global-Whitespace mode is enabled.
  23652. See the command `global-whitespace-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  23653. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  23654. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  23655. or call the function `global-whitespace-mode'.")
  23656. (custom-autoload 'global-whitespace-mode "whitespace" nil)
  23657. (autoload 'global-whitespace-mode "whitespace" "\
  23658. Toggle whitespace visualization globally (Global Whitespace mode).
  23659. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Global Whitespace mode if ARG
  23660. is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp,
  23661. enable it if ARG is omitted or nil.
  23662. See also `whitespace-style', `whitespace-newline' and
  23663. `whitespace-display-mappings'.
  23664. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  23665. (defvar global-whitespace-newline-mode nil "\
  23666. Non-nil if Global-Whitespace-Newline mode is enabled.
  23667. See the command `global-whitespace-newline-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  23668. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  23669. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  23670. or call the function `global-whitespace-newline-mode'.")
  23671. (custom-autoload 'global-whitespace-newline-mode "whitespace" nil)
  23672. (autoload 'global-whitespace-newline-mode "whitespace" "\
  23673. Toggle global newline visualization (Global Whitespace Newline mode).
  23674. With a prefix argument ARG, enable Global Whitespace Newline mode
  23675. if ARG is positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from
  23676. Lisp, enable it if ARG is omitted or nil.
  23677. Use `global-whitespace-newline-mode' only for NEWLINE
  23678. visualization exclusively. For other visualizations, including
  23679. NEWLINE visualization together with (HARD) SPACEs and/or TABs,
  23680. please use `global-whitespace-mode'.
  23681. See also `whitespace-newline' and `whitespace-display-mappings'.
  23682. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  23683. (autoload 'whitespace-toggle-options "whitespace" "\
  23684. Toggle local `whitespace-mode' options.
  23685. If local whitespace-mode is off, toggle the option given by ARG
  23686. and turn on local whitespace-mode.
  23687. If local whitespace-mode is on, toggle the option given by ARG
  23688. and restart local whitespace-mode.
  23689. Interactively, it reads one of the following chars:
  23690. CHAR MEANING
  23691. (VIA FACES)
  23692. f toggle face visualization
  23693. t toggle TAB visualization
  23694. s toggle SPACE and HARD SPACE visualization
  23695. r toggle trailing blanks visualization
  23696. l toggle \"long lines\" visualization
  23697. L toggle \"long lines\" tail visualization
  23698. n toggle NEWLINE visualization
  23699. e toggle empty line at bob and/or eob visualization
  23700. C-i toggle indentation SPACEs visualization (via `indent-tabs-mode')
  23701. I toggle indentation SPACEs visualization
  23702. i toggle indentation TABs visualization
  23703. C-a toggle SPACEs after TAB visualization (via `indent-tabs-mode')
  23704. A toggle SPACEs after TAB: SPACEs visualization
  23705. a toggle SPACEs after TAB: TABs visualization
  23706. C-b toggle SPACEs before TAB visualization (via `indent-tabs-mode')
  23707. B toggle SPACEs before TAB: SPACEs visualization
  23708. b toggle SPACEs before TAB: TABs visualization
  23709. (VIA DISPLAY TABLE)
  23710. T toggle TAB visualization
  23711. S toggle SPACEs before TAB visualization
  23712. N toggle NEWLINE visualization
  23713. x restore `whitespace-style' value
  23714. ? display brief help
  23715. Non-interactively, ARG should be a symbol or a list of symbols.
  23716. The valid symbols are:
  23717. face toggle face visualization
  23718. tabs toggle TAB visualization
  23719. spaces toggle SPACE and HARD SPACE visualization
  23720. trailing toggle trailing blanks visualization
  23721. lines toggle \"long lines\" visualization
  23722. lines-tail toggle \"long lines\" tail visualization
  23723. newline toggle NEWLINE visualization
  23724. empty toggle empty line at bob and/or eob visualization
  23725. indentation toggle indentation SPACEs visualization
  23726. indentation::tab toggle indentation SPACEs visualization
  23727. indentation::space toggle indentation TABs visualization
  23728. space-after-tab toggle SPACEs after TAB visualization
  23729. space-after-tab::tab toggle SPACEs after TAB: SPACEs visualization
  23730. space-after-tab::space toggle SPACEs after TAB: TABs visualization
  23731. space-before-tab toggle SPACEs before TAB visualization
  23732. space-before-tab::tab toggle SPACEs before TAB: SPACEs visualization
  23733. space-before-tab::space toggle SPACEs before TAB: TABs visualization
  23734. tab-mark toggle TAB visualization
  23735. space-mark toggle SPACEs before TAB visualization
  23736. newline-mark toggle NEWLINE visualization
  23737. whitespace-style restore `whitespace-style' value
  23738. See `whitespace-style' and `indent-tabs-mode' for documentation.
  23739. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  23740. (autoload 'global-whitespace-toggle-options "whitespace" "\
  23741. Toggle global `whitespace-mode' options.
  23742. If global whitespace-mode is off, toggle the option given by ARG
  23743. and turn on global whitespace-mode.
  23744. If global whitespace-mode is on, toggle the option given by ARG
  23745. and restart global whitespace-mode.
  23746. Interactively, it accepts one of the following chars:
  23747. CHAR MEANING
  23748. (VIA FACES)
  23749. f toggle face visualization
  23750. t toggle TAB visualization
  23751. s toggle SPACE and HARD SPACE visualization
  23752. r toggle trailing blanks visualization
  23753. l toggle \"long lines\" visualization
  23754. L toggle \"long lines\" tail visualization
  23755. n toggle NEWLINE visualization
  23756. e toggle empty line at bob and/or eob visualization
  23757. C-i toggle indentation SPACEs visualization (via `indent-tabs-mode')
  23758. I toggle indentation SPACEs visualization
  23759. i toggle indentation TABs visualization
  23760. C-a toggle SPACEs after TAB visualization (via `indent-tabs-mode')
  23761. A toggle SPACEs after TAB: SPACEs visualization
  23762. a toggle SPACEs after TAB: TABs visualization
  23763. C-b toggle SPACEs before TAB visualization (via `indent-tabs-mode')
  23764. B toggle SPACEs before TAB: SPACEs visualization
  23765. b toggle SPACEs before TAB: TABs visualization
  23766. (VIA DISPLAY TABLE)
  23767. T toggle TAB visualization
  23768. S toggle SPACEs before TAB visualization
  23769. N toggle NEWLINE visualization
  23770. x restore `whitespace-style' value
  23771. ? display brief help
  23772. Non-interactively, ARG should be a symbol or a list of symbols.
  23773. The valid symbols are:
  23774. face toggle face visualization
  23775. tabs toggle TAB visualization
  23776. spaces toggle SPACE and HARD SPACE visualization
  23777. trailing toggle trailing blanks visualization
  23778. lines toggle \"long lines\" visualization
  23779. lines-tail toggle \"long lines\" tail visualization
  23780. newline toggle NEWLINE visualization
  23781. empty toggle empty line at bob and/or eob visualization
  23782. indentation toggle indentation SPACEs visualization
  23783. indentation::tab toggle indentation SPACEs visualization
  23784. indentation::space toggle indentation TABs visualization
  23785. space-after-tab toggle SPACEs after TAB visualization
  23786. space-after-tab::tab toggle SPACEs after TAB: SPACEs visualization
  23787. space-after-tab::space toggle SPACEs after TAB: TABs visualization
  23788. space-before-tab toggle SPACEs before TAB visualization
  23789. space-before-tab::tab toggle SPACEs before TAB: SPACEs visualization
  23790. space-before-tab::space toggle SPACEs before TAB: TABs visualization
  23791. tab-mark toggle TAB visualization
  23792. space-mark toggle SPACEs before TAB visualization
  23793. newline-mark toggle NEWLINE visualization
  23794. whitespace-style restore `whitespace-style' value
  23795. See `whitespace-style' and `indent-tabs-mode' for documentation.
  23796. \(fn ARG)" t nil)
  23797. (autoload 'whitespace-cleanup "whitespace" "\
  23798. Cleanup some blank problems in all buffer or at region.
  23799. It usually applies to the whole buffer, but in transient mark
  23800. mode when the mark is active, it applies to the region. It also
  23801. applies to the region when it is not in transient mark mode, the
  23802. mark is active and \\[universal-argument] was pressed just before
  23803. calling `whitespace-cleanup' interactively.
  23804. See also `whitespace-cleanup-region'.
  23805. The problems cleaned up are:
  23806. 1. empty lines at beginning of buffer.
  23807. 2. empty lines at end of buffer.
  23808. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `empty', remove all
  23809. empty lines at beginning and/or end of buffer.
  23810. 3. 8 or more SPACEs at beginning of line.
  23811. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `indentation':
  23812. replace 8 or more SPACEs at beginning of line by TABs, if
  23813. `indent-tabs-mode' is non-nil; otherwise, replace TABs by
  23814. SPACEs.
  23815. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `indentation::tab',
  23816. replace 8 or more SPACEs at beginning of line by TABs.
  23817. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `indentation::space',
  23818. replace TABs by SPACEs.
  23819. 4. SPACEs before TAB.
  23820. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `space-before-tab':
  23821. replace SPACEs by TABs, if `indent-tabs-mode' is non-nil;
  23822. otherwise, replace TABs by SPACEs.
  23823. If `whitespace-style' includes the value
  23824. `space-before-tab::tab', replace SPACEs by TABs.
  23825. If `whitespace-style' includes the value
  23826. `space-before-tab::space', replace TABs by SPACEs.
  23827. 5. SPACEs or TABs at end of line.
  23828. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `trailing', remove
  23829. all SPACEs or TABs at end of line.
  23830. 6. 8 or more SPACEs after TAB.
  23831. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `space-after-tab':
  23832. replace SPACEs by TABs, if `indent-tabs-mode' is non-nil;
  23833. otherwise, replace TABs by SPACEs.
  23834. If `whitespace-style' includes the value
  23835. `space-after-tab::tab', replace SPACEs by TABs.
  23836. If `whitespace-style' includes the value
  23837. `space-after-tab::space', replace TABs by SPACEs.
  23838. See `whitespace-style', `indent-tabs-mode' and `tab-width' for
  23839. documentation.
  23840. \(fn)" t nil)
  23841. (autoload 'whitespace-cleanup-region "whitespace" "\
  23842. Cleanup some blank problems at region.
  23843. The problems cleaned up are:
  23844. 1. 8 or more SPACEs at beginning of line.
  23845. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `indentation':
  23846. replace 8 or more SPACEs at beginning of line by TABs, if
  23847. `indent-tabs-mode' is non-nil; otherwise, replace TABs by
  23848. SPACEs.
  23849. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `indentation::tab',
  23850. replace 8 or more SPACEs at beginning of line by TABs.
  23851. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `indentation::space',
  23852. replace TABs by SPACEs.
  23853. 2. SPACEs before TAB.
  23854. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `space-before-tab':
  23855. replace SPACEs by TABs, if `indent-tabs-mode' is non-nil;
  23856. otherwise, replace TABs by SPACEs.
  23857. If `whitespace-style' includes the value
  23858. `space-before-tab::tab', replace SPACEs by TABs.
  23859. If `whitespace-style' includes the value
  23860. `space-before-tab::space', replace TABs by SPACEs.
  23861. 3. SPACEs or TABs at end of line.
  23862. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `trailing', remove
  23863. all SPACEs or TABs at end of line.
  23864. 4. 8 or more SPACEs after TAB.
  23865. If `whitespace-style' includes the value `space-after-tab':
  23866. replace SPACEs by TABs, if `indent-tabs-mode' is non-nil;
  23867. otherwise, replace TABs by SPACEs.
  23868. If `whitespace-style' includes the value
  23869. `space-after-tab::tab', replace SPACEs by TABs.
  23870. If `whitespace-style' includes the value
  23871. `space-after-tab::space', replace TABs by SPACEs.
  23872. See `whitespace-style', `indent-tabs-mode' and `tab-width' for
  23873. documentation.
  23874. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  23875. (autoload 'whitespace-report "whitespace" "\
  23876. Report some whitespace problems in buffer.
  23877. Return nil if there is no whitespace problem; otherwise, return
  23878. non-nil.
  23879. If FORCE is non-nil or \\[universal-argument] was pressed just
  23880. before calling `whitespace-report' interactively, it forces
  23881. `whitespace-style' to have:
  23882. empty
  23883. trailing
  23884. indentation
  23885. space-before-tab
  23886. space-after-tab
  23887. If REPORT-IF-BOGUS is non-nil, it reports only when there are any
  23888. whitespace problems in buffer.
  23889. Report if some of the following whitespace problems exist:
  23890. * If `indent-tabs-mode' is non-nil:
  23891. empty 1. empty lines at beginning of buffer.
  23892. empty 2. empty lines at end of buffer.
  23893. trailing 3. SPACEs or TABs at end of line.
  23894. indentation 4. 8 or more SPACEs at beginning of line.
  23895. space-before-tab 5. SPACEs before TAB.
  23896. space-after-tab 6. 8 or more SPACEs after TAB.
  23897. * If `indent-tabs-mode' is nil:
  23898. empty 1. empty lines at beginning of buffer.
  23899. empty 2. empty lines at end of buffer.
  23900. trailing 3. SPACEs or TABs at end of line.
  23901. indentation 4. TABS at beginning of line.
  23902. space-before-tab 5. SPACEs before TAB.
  23903. space-after-tab 6. 8 or more SPACEs after TAB.
  23904. See `whitespace-style' for documentation.
  23905. See also `whitespace-cleanup' and `whitespace-cleanup-region' for
  23906. cleaning up these problems.
  23907. \(fn &optional FORCE REPORT-IF-BOGUS)" t nil)
  23908. (autoload 'whitespace-report-region "whitespace" "\
  23909. Report some whitespace problems in a region.
  23910. Return nil if there is no whitespace problem; otherwise, return
  23911. non-nil.
  23912. If FORCE is non-nil or \\[universal-argument] was pressed just
  23913. before calling `whitespace-report-region' interactively, it
  23914. forces `whitespace-style' to have:
  23915. empty
  23916. indentation
  23917. space-before-tab
  23918. trailing
  23919. space-after-tab
  23920. If REPORT-IF-BOGUS is non-nil, it reports only when there are any
  23921. whitespace problems in buffer.
  23922. Report if some of the following whitespace problems exist:
  23923. * If `indent-tabs-mode' is non-nil:
  23924. empty 1. empty lines at beginning of buffer.
  23925. empty 2. empty lines at end of buffer.
  23926. trailing 3. SPACEs or TABs at end of line.
  23927. indentation 4. 8 or more SPACEs at beginning of line.
  23928. space-before-tab 5. SPACEs before TAB.
  23929. space-after-tab 6. 8 or more SPACEs after TAB.
  23930. * If `indent-tabs-mode' is nil:
  23931. empty 1. empty lines at beginning of buffer.
  23932. empty 2. empty lines at end of buffer.
  23933. trailing 3. SPACEs or TABs at end of line.
  23934. indentation 4. TABS at beginning of line.
  23935. space-before-tab 5. SPACEs before TAB.
  23936. space-after-tab 6. 8 or more SPACEs after TAB.
  23937. See `whitespace-style' for documentation.
  23938. See also `whitespace-cleanup' and `whitespace-cleanup-region' for
  23939. cleaning up these problems.
  23940. \(fn START END &optional FORCE REPORT-IF-BOGUS)" t nil)
  23941. ;;;***
  23942. ;;;### (autoloads (widget-minor-mode widget-browse-other-window widget-browse
  23943. ;;;;;; widget-browse-at) "wid-browse" "wid-browse.el" (20352 65510))
  23944. ;;; Generated autoloads from wid-browse.el
  23945. (autoload 'widget-browse-at "wid-browse" "\
  23946. Browse the widget under point.
  23947. \(fn POS)" t nil)
  23948. (autoload 'widget-browse "wid-browse" "\
  23949. Create a widget browser for WIDGET.
  23950. \(fn WIDGET)" t nil)
  23951. (autoload 'widget-browse-other-window "wid-browse" "\
  23952. Show widget browser for WIDGET in other window.
  23953. \(fn &optional WIDGET)" t nil)
  23954. (autoload 'widget-minor-mode "wid-browse" "\
  23955. Minor mode for traversing widgets.
  23956. With a prefix argument ARG, enable the mode if ARG is positive,
  23957. and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable the mode
  23958. if ARG is omitted or nil.
  23959. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  23960. ;;;***
  23961. ;;;### (autoloads (widget-setup widget-insert widget-delete widget-create
  23962. ;;;;;; widget-prompt-value widgetp) "wid-edit" "wid-edit.el" (20400
  23963. ;;;;;; 62402))
  23964. ;;; Generated autoloads from wid-edit.el
  23965. (autoload 'widgetp "wid-edit" "\
  23966. Return non-nil if WIDGET is a widget.
  23967. \(fn WIDGET)" nil nil)
  23968. (autoload 'widget-prompt-value "wid-edit" "\
  23969. Prompt for a value matching WIDGET, using PROMPT.
  23970. The current value is assumed to be VALUE, unless UNBOUND is non-nil.
  23971. \(fn WIDGET PROMPT &optional VALUE UNBOUND)" nil nil)
  23972. (autoload 'widget-create "wid-edit" "\
  23973. Create widget of TYPE.
  23974. The optional ARGS are additional keyword arguments.
  23975. \(fn TYPE &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  23976. (autoload 'widget-delete "wid-edit" "\
  23977. Delete WIDGET.
  23978. \(fn WIDGET)" nil nil)
  23979. (autoload 'widget-insert "wid-edit" "\
  23980. Call `insert' with ARGS even if surrounding text is read only.
  23981. \(fn &rest ARGS)" nil nil)
  23982. (defvar widget-keymap (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap))) (define-key map " " 'widget-forward) (define-key map " " 'widget-backward) (define-key map [(shift tab)] 'widget-backward) (put 'widget-backward :advertised-binding [(shift tab)]) (define-key map [backtab] 'widget-backward) (define-key map [down-mouse-2] 'widget-button-click) (define-key map [down-mouse-1] 'widget-button-click) (define-key map [(control 109)] 'widget-button-press) map) "\
  23983. Keymap containing useful binding for buffers containing widgets.
  23984. Recommended as a parent keymap for modes using widgets.
  23985. Note that such modes will need to require wid-edit.")
  23986. (autoload 'widget-setup "wid-edit" "\
  23987. Setup current buffer so editing string widgets works.
  23988. \(fn)" nil nil)
  23989. ;;;***
  23990. ;;;### (autoloads (windmove-default-keybindings windmove-down windmove-right
  23991. ;;;;;; windmove-up windmove-left) "windmove" "windmove.el" (20352
  23992. ;;;;;; 65510))
  23993. ;;; Generated autoloads from windmove.el
  23994. (autoload 'windmove-left "windmove" "\
  23995. Select the window to the left of the current one.
  23996. With no prefix argument, or with prefix argument equal to zero,
  23997. \"left\" is relative to the position of point in the window; otherwise
  23998. it is relative to the top edge (for positive ARG) or the bottom edge
  23999. \(for negative ARG) of the current window.
  24000. If no window is at the desired location, an error is signaled.
  24001. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  24002. (autoload 'windmove-up "windmove" "\
  24003. Select the window above the current one.
  24004. With no prefix argument, or with prefix argument equal to zero, \"up\"
  24005. is relative to the position of point in the window; otherwise it is
  24006. relative to the left edge (for positive ARG) or the right edge (for
  24007. negative ARG) of the current window.
  24008. If no window is at the desired location, an error is signaled.
  24009. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  24010. (autoload 'windmove-right "windmove" "\
  24011. Select the window to the right of the current one.
  24012. With no prefix argument, or with prefix argument equal to zero,
  24013. \"right\" is relative to the position of point in the window;
  24014. otherwise it is relative to the top edge (for positive ARG) or the
  24015. bottom edge (for negative ARG) of the current window.
  24016. If no window is at the desired location, an error is signaled.
  24017. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  24018. (autoload 'windmove-down "windmove" "\
  24019. Select the window below the current one.
  24020. With no prefix argument, or with prefix argument equal to zero,
  24021. \"down\" is relative to the position of point in the window; otherwise
  24022. it is relative to the left edge (for positive ARG) or the right edge
  24023. \(for negative ARG) of the current window.
  24024. If no window is at the desired location, an error is signaled.
  24025. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  24026. (autoload 'windmove-default-keybindings "windmove" "\
  24027. Set up keybindings for `windmove'.
  24028. Keybindings are of the form MODIFIER-{left,right,up,down}.
  24029. Default MODIFIER is 'shift.
  24030. \(fn &optional MODIFIER)" t nil)
  24031. ;;;***
  24032. ;;;### (autoloads (winner-mode winner-mode) "winner" "winner.el"
  24033. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  24034. ;;; Generated autoloads from winner.el
  24035. (defvar winner-mode nil "\
  24036. Toggle Winner mode.
  24037. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  24038. use either \\[customize] or the function `winner-mode'.")
  24039. (custom-autoload 'winner-mode "winner" nil)
  24040. (autoload 'winner-mode "winner" "\
  24041. Toggle Winner mode.
  24042. With arg, turn Winner mode on if and only if arg is positive.
  24043. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  24044. ;;;***
  24045. ;;;### (autoloads (woman-bookmark-jump woman-find-file woman-dired-find-file
  24046. ;;;;;; woman woman-locale) "woman" "woman.el" (20400 62402))
  24047. ;;; Generated autoloads from woman.el
  24048. (defvar woman-locale nil "\
  24049. String specifying a manual page locale, or nil.
  24050. If a manual page is available in the specified locale
  24051. \(e.g. \"sv_SE.ISO8859-1\"), it will be offered in preference to the
  24052. default version. Normally, `set-locale-environment' sets this at startup.")
  24053. (custom-autoload 'woman-locale "woman" t)
  24054. (autoload 'woman "woman" "\
  24055. Browse UN*X man page for TOPIC (Without using external Man program).
  24056. The major browsing mode used is essentially the standard Man mode.
  24057. Choose the filename for the man page using completion, based on the
  24058. topic selected from the directories specified in `woman-manpath' and
  24059. `woman-path'. The directory expansions and topics are cached for
  24060. speed, but a non-nil interactive argument forces the caches to be
  24061. updated (e.g. to re-interpret the current directory).
  24062. Used non-interactively, arguments are optional: if given then TOPIC
  24063. should be a topic string and non-nil RE-CACHE forces re-caching.
  24064. \(fn &optional TOPIC RE-CACHE)" t nil)
  24065. (autoload 'woman-dired-find-file "woman" "\
  24066. In dired, run the WoMan man-page browser on this file.
  24067. \(fn)" t nil)
  24068. (autoload 'woman-find-file "woman" "\
  24069. Find, decode and browse a specific UN*X man-page source file FILE-NAME.
  24070. Use existing buffer if possible; reformat only if prefix arg given.
  24071. When called interactively, optional argument REFORMAT forces reformatting
  24072. of an existing WoMan buffer formatted earlier.
  24073. No external programs are used, except that `gunzip' will be used to
  24074. decompress the file if appropriate. See the documentation for the
  24075. `woman' command for further details.
  24076. \(fn FILE-NAME &optional REFORMAT)" t nil)
  24077. (autoload 'woman-bookmark-jump "woman" "\
  24078. Default bookmark handler for Woman buffers.
  24079. \(fn BOOKMARK)" nil nil)
  24080. ;;;***
  24081. ;;;### (autoloads (wordstar-mode) "ws-mode" "emulation/ws-mode.el"
  24082. ;;;;;; (20352 65510))
  24083. ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/ws-mode.el
  24084. (autoload 'wordstar-mode "ws-mode" "\
  24085. Major mode with WordStar-like key bindings.
  24086. BUGS:
  24087. - Help menus with WordStar commands (C-j just calls help-for-help)
  24088. are not implemented
  24089. - Options for search and replace
  24090. - Show markers (C-k h) is somewhat strange
  24091. - Search and replace (C-q a) is only available in forward direction
  24092. No key bindings beginning with ESC are installed, they will work
  24093. Emacs-like.
  24094. The key bindings are:
  24095. C-a backward-word
  24096. C-b fill-paragraph
  24097. C-c scroll-up-line
  24098. C-d forward-char
  24099. C-e previous-line
  24100. C-f forward-word
  24101. C-g delete-char
  24102. C-h backward-char
  24103. C-i indent-for-tab-command
  24104. C-j help-for-help
  24105. C-k ordstar-C-k-map
  24106. C-l ws-repeat-search
  24107. C-n open-line
  24108. C-p quoted-insert
  24109. C-r scroll-down-line
  24110. C-s backward-char
  24111. C-t kill-word
  24112. C-u keyboard-quit
  24113. C-v overwrite-mode
  24114. C-w scroll-down
  24115. C-x next-line
  24116. C-y kill-complete-line
  24117. C-z scroll-up
  24118. C-k 0 ws-set-marker-0
  24119. C-k 1 ws-set-marker-1
  24120. C-k 2 ws-set-marker-2
  24121. C-k 3 ws-set-marker-3
  24122. C-k 4 ws-set-marker-4
  24123. C-k 5 ws-set-marker-5
  24124. C-k 6 ws-set-marker-6
  24125. C-k 7 ws-set-marker-7
  24126. C-k 8 ws-set-marker-8
  24127. C-k 9 ws-set-marker-9
  24128. C-k b ws-begin-block
  24129. C-k c ws-copy-block
  24130. C-k d save-buffers-kill-emacs
  24131. C-k f find-file
  24132. C-k h ws-show-markers
  24133. C-k i ws-indent-block
  24134. C-k k ws-end-block
  24135. C-k p ws-print-block
  24136. C-k q kill-emacs
  24137. C-k r insert-file
  24138. C-k s save-some-buffers
  24139. C-k t ws-mark-word
  24140. C-k u ws-exdent-block
  24141. C-k C-u keyboard-quit
  24142. C-k v ws-move-block
  24143. C-k w ws-write-block
  24144. C-k x kill-emacs
  24145. C-k y ws-delete-block
  24146. C-o c wordstar-center-line
  24147. C-o b switch-to-buffer
  24148. C-o j justify-current-line
  24149. C-o k kill-buffer
  24150. C-o l list-buffers
  24151. C-o m auto-fill-mode
  24152. C-o r set-fill-column
  24153. C-o C-u keyboard-quit
  24154. C-o wd delete-other-windows
  24155. C-o wh split-window-right
  24156. C-o wo other-window
  24157. C-o wv split-window-below
  24158. C-q 0 ws-find-marker-0
  24159. C-q 1 ws-find-marker-1
  24160. C-q 2 ws-find-marker-2
  24161. C-q 3 ws-find-marker-3
  24162. C-q 4 ws-find-marker-4
  24163. C-q 5 ws-find-marker-5
  24164. C-q 6 ws-find-marker-6
  24165. C-q 7 ws-find-marker-7
  24166. C-q 8 ws-find-marker-8
  24167. C-q 9 ws-find-marker-9
  24168. C-q a ws-query-replace
  24169. C-q b ws-to-block-begin
  24170. C-q c end-of-buffer
  24171. C-q d end-of-line
  24172. C-q f ws-search
  24173. C-q k ws-to-block-end
  24174. C-q l ws-undo
  24175. C-q p ws-last-cursorp
  24176. C-q r beginning-of-buffer
  24177. C-q C-u keyboard-quit
  24178. C-q w ws-last-error
  24179. C-q y ws-kill-eol
  24180. C-q DEL ws-kill-bol
  24181. \(fn)" t nil)
  24182. ;;;***
  24183. ;;;### (autoloads (xesam-search) "xesam" "net/xesam.el" (20400 62402))
  24184. ;;; Generated autoloads from net/xesam.el
  24185. (autoload 'xesam-search "xesam" "\
  24186. Perform an interactive search.
  24187. ENGINE is the Xesam search engine to be applied, it must be one of the
  24188. entries of `xesam-search-engines'. QUERY is the search string in the
  24189. Xesam user query language. If the search engine does not support
  24190. the Xesam user query language, a Xesam fulltext search is applied.
  24191. The default search engine is the first entry in `xesam-search-engines'.
  24192. Example:
  24193. (xesam-search (car (xesam-search-engines)) \"emacs\")
  24194. \(fn ENGINE QUERY)" t nil)
  24195. ;;;***
  24196. ;;;### (autoloads (xml-parse-region xml-parse-file) "xml" "xml.el"
  24197. ;;;;;; (20370 33496))
  24198. ;;; Generated autoloads from xml.el
  24199. (autoload 'xml-parse-file "xml" "\
  24200. Parse the well-formed XML file FILE.
  24201. If FILE is already visited, use its buffer and don't kill it.
  24202. Returns the top node with all its children.
  24203. If PARSE-DTD is non-nil, the DTD is parsed rather than skipped.
  24204. If PARSE-NS is non-nil, then QNAMES are expanded.
  24205. \(fn FILE &optional PARSE-DTD PARSE-NS)" nil nil)
  24206. (autoload 'xml-parse-region "xml" "\
  24207. Parse the region from BEG to END in BUFFER.
  24208. If BUFFER is nil, it defaults to the current buffer.
  24209. Returns the XML list for the region, or raises an error if the region
  24210. is not well-formed XML.
  24211. If PARSE-DTD is non-nil, the DTD is parsed rather than skipped,
  24212. and returned as the first element of the list.
  24213. If PARSE-NS is non-nil, then QNAMES are expanded.
  24214. \(fn BEG END &optional BUFFER PARSE-DTD PARSE-NS)" nil nil)
  24215. ;;;***
  24216. ;;;### (autoloads (xmltok-get-declared-encoding-position) "xmltok"
  24217. ;;;;;; "nxml/xmltok.el" (20352 65510))
  24218. ;;; Generated autoloads from nxml/xmltok.el
  24219. (autoload 'xmltok-get-declared-encoding-position "xmltok" "\
  24220. Return the position of the encoding in the XML declaration at point.
  24221. If there is a well-formed XML declaration starting at point and it
  24222. contains an encoding declaration, then return (START . END)
  24223. where START and END are the positions of the start and the end
  24224. of the encoding name; if there is no encoding declaration return
  24225. the position where and encoding declaration could be inserted.
  24226. If there is XML that is not well-formed that looks like an XML
  24227. declaration, return nil. Otherwise, return t.
  24228. If LIMIT is non-nil, then do not consider characters beyond LIMIT.
  24229. \(fn &optional LIMIT)" nil nil)
  24230. ;;;***
  24231. ;;;### (autoloads (xterm-mouse-mode) "xt-mouse" "xt-mouse.el" (20352
  24232. ;;;;;; 65510))
  24233. ;;; Generated autoloads from xt-mouse.el
  24234. (defvar xterm-mouse-mode nil "\
  24235. Non-nil if Xterm-Mouse mode is enabled.
  24236. See the command `xterm-mouse-mode' for a description of this minor mode.
  24237. Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
  24238. either customize it (see the info node `Easy Customization')
  24239. or call the function `xterm-mouse-mode'.")
  24240. (custom-autoload 'xterm-mouse-mode "xt-mouse" nil)
  24241. (autoload 'xterm-mouse-mode "xt-mouse" "\
  24242. Toggle XTerm mouse mode.
  24243. With a prefix argument ARG, enable XTerm mouse mode if ARG is
  24244. positive, and disable it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable
  24245. the mode if ARG is omitted or nil.
  24246. Turn it on to use Emacs mouse commands, and off to use xterm mouse commands.
  24247. This works in terminal emulators compatible with xterm. It only
  24248. works for simple uses of the mouse. Basically, only non-modified
  24249. single clicks are supported. When turned on, the normal xterm
  24250. mouse functionality for such clicks is still available by holding
  24251. down the SHIFT key while pressing the mouse button.
  24252. \(fn &optional ARG)" t nil)
  24253. ;;;***
  24254. ;;;### (autoloads (yenc-extract-filename yenc-decode-region) "yenc"
  24255. ;;;;;; "gnus/yenc.el" (20352 65510))
  24256. ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/yenc.el
  24257. (autoload 'yenc-decode-region "yenc" "\
  24258. Yenc decode region between START and END using an internal decoder.
  24259. \(fn START END)" t nil)
  24260. (autoload 'yenc-extract-filename "yenc" "\
  24261. Extract file name from an yenc header.
  24262. \(fn)" nil nil)
  24263. ;;;***
  24264. ;;;### (autoloads (psychoanalyze-pinhead apropos-zippy insert-zippyism
  24265. ;;;;;; yow) "yow" "play/yow.el" (20400 62402))
  24266. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/yow.el
  24267. (autoload 'yow "yow" "\
  24268. Return or display a random Zippy quotation. With prefix arg, insert it.
  24269. \(fn &optional INSERT DISPLAY)" t nil)
  24270. (autoload 'insert-zippyism "yow" "\
  24271. Prompt with completion for a known Zippy quotation, and insert it at point.
  24272. \(fn &optional ZIPPYISM)" t nil)
  24273. (autoload 'apropos-zippy "yow" "\
  24274. Return a list of all Zippy quotes matching REGEXP.
  24275. If called interactively, display a list of matches.
  24276. \(fn REGEXP)" t nil)
  24277. (autoload 'psychoanalyze-pinhead "yow" "\
  24278. Zippy goes to the analyst.
  24279. \(fn)" t nil)
  24280. ;;;***
  24281. ;;;### (autoloads (zone) "zone" "play/zone.el" (20400 62402))
  24282. ;;; Generated autoloads from play/zone.el
  24283. (autoload 'zone "zone" "\
  24284. Zone out, completely.
  24285. \(fn)" t nil)
  24286. ;;;***
  24287. ;;;### (autoloads nil nil ("calc/calc-aent.el" "calc/calc-alg.el"
  24288. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-arith.el" "calc/calc-bin.el" "calc/calc-comb.el"
  24289. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-cplx.el" "calc/calc-embed.el" "calc/calc-ext.el"
  24290. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-fin.el" "calc/calc-forms.el" "calc/calc-frac.el"
  24291. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-funcs.el" "calc/calc-graph.el" "calc/calc-help.el"
  24292. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-incom.el" "calc/calc-keypd.el" "calc/calc-lang.el"
  24293. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-macs.el" "calc/calc-map.el" "calc/calc-math.el"
  24294. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-menu.el" "calc/calc-misc.el" "calc/calc-mode.el"
  24295. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-mtx.el" "calc/calc-nlfit.el" "calc/calc-poly.el"
  24296. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-prog.el" "calc/calc-rewr.el" "calc/calc-rules.el"
  24297. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-sel.el" "calc/calc-stat.el" "calc/calc-store.el"
  24298. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-stuff.el" "calc/calc-trail.el" "calc/calc-units.el"
  24299. ;;;;;; "calc/calc-vec.el" "calc/calc-yank.el" "calc/calcalg2.el"
  24300. ;;;;;; "calc/calcalg3.el" "calc/calccomp.el" "calc/calcsel2.el"
  24301. ;;;;;; "calendar/cal-bahai.el" "calendar/cal-coptic.el" "calendar/cal-french.el"
  24302. ;;;;;; "calendar/cal-html.el" "calendar/cal-islam.el" "calendar/cal-iso.el"
  24303. ;;;;;; "calendar/cal-julian.el" "calendar/cal-loaddefs.el" "calendar/cal-mayan.el"
  24304. ;;;;;; "calendar/cal-menu.el" "calendar/cal-move.el" "calendar/cal-persia.el"
  24305. ;;;;;; "calendar/cal-tex.el" "calendar/cal-x.el" "calendar/diary-loaddefs.el"
  24306. ;;;;;; "calendar/hol-loaddefs.el" "cdl.el" "cedet/cedet-cscope.el"
  24307. ;;;;;; "cedet/cedet-files.el" "cedet/cedet-global.el" "cedet/cedet-idutils.el"
  24308. ;;;;;; "cedet/cedet.el" "cedet/ede/auto.el" "cedet/ede/autoconf-edit.el"
  24309. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/base.el" "cedet/ede/cpp-root.el" "cedet/ede/custom.el"
  24310. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/dired.el" "cedet/ede/emacs.el" "cedet/ede/files.el"
  24311. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/generic.el" "cedet/ede/linux.el" "cedet/ede/locate.el"
  24312. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/make.el" "cedet/ede/makefile-edit.el" "cedet/ede/pconf.el"
  24313. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/pmake.el" "cedet/ede/proj-archive.el" "cedet/ede/proj-aux.el"
  24314. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/proj-comp.el" "cedet/ede/proj-elisp.el" "cedet/ede/proj-info.el"
  24315. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/proj-misc.el" "cedet/ede/proj-obj.el" "cedet/ede/proj-prog.el"
  24316. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/proj-scheme.el" "cedet/ede/proj-shared.el" "cedet/ede/proj.el"
  24317. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/project-am.el" "cedet/ede/shell.el" "cedet/ede/simple.el"
  24318. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/source.el" "cedet/ede/speedbar.el" "cedet/ede/srecode.el"
  24319. ;;;;;; "cedet/ede/system.el" "cedet/ede/util.el" "cedet/inversion.el"
  24320. ;;;;;; "cedet/mode-local.el" "cedet/pulse.el" "cedet/semantic/analyze.el"
  24321. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/analyze/complete.el" "cedet/semantic/analyze/debug.el"
  24322. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/analyze/fcn.el" "cedet/semantic/analyze/refs.el"
  24323. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/bovine.el" "cedet/semantic/bovine/c-by.el"
  24324. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/bovine/c.el" "cedet/semantic/bovine/debug.el"
  24325. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/bovine/el.el" "cedet/semantic/bovine/gcc.el"
  24326. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/bovine/make-by.el" "cedet/semantic/bovine/make.el"
  24327. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/bovine/scm-by.el" "cedet/semantic/bovine/scm.el"
  24328. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/chart.el" "cedet/semantic/complete.el" "cedet/semantic/ctxt.el"
  24329. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/db-debug.el" "cedet/semantic/db-ebrowse.el"
  24330. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/db-el.el" "cedet/semantic/db-file.el" "cedet/semantic/db-find.el"
  24331. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/db-global.el" "cedet/semantic/db-javascript.el"
  24332. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/db-mode.el" "cedet/semantic/db-ref.el" "cedet/semantic/db-typecache.el"
  24333. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/db.el" "cedet/semantic/debug.el" "cedet/semantic/decorate.el"
  24334. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/decorate/include.el" "cedet/semantic/decorate/mode.el"
  24335. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/dep.el" "cedet/semantic/doc.el" "cedet/semantic/ede-grammar.el"
  24336. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/edit.el" "cedet/semantic/find.el" "cedet/semantic/format.el"
  24337. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/fw.el" "cedet/semantic/grammar-wy.el" "cedet/semantic/grammar.el"
  24338. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/html.el" "cedet/semantic/ia-sb.el" "cedet/semantic/ia.el"
  24339. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/idle.el" "cedet/semantic/imenu.el" "cedet/semantic/java.el"
  24340. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/lex-spp.el" "cedet/semantic/lex.el" "cedet/semantic/mru-bookmark.el"
  24341. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/sb.el" "cedet/semantic/scope.el" "cedet/semantic/senator.el"
  24342. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/sort.el" "cedet/semantic/symref.el" "cedet/semantic/symref/cscope.el"
  24343. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/symref/filter.el" "cedet/semantic/symref/global.el"
  24344. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/symref/grep.el" "cedet/semantic/symref/idutils.el"
  24345. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/symref/list.el" "cedet/semantic/tag-file.el"
  24346. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/tag-ls.el" "cedet/semantic/tag-write.el"
  24347. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/tag.el" "cedet/semantic/texi.el" "cedet/semantic/util-modes.el"
  24348. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/util.el" "cedet/semantic/wisent.el" "cedet/semantic/wisent/comp.el"
  24349. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/wisent/java-tags.el" "cedet/semantic/wisent/javascript.el"
  24350. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/wisent/javat-wy.el" "cedet/semantic/wisent/js-wy.el"
  24351. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/wisent/python-wy.el" "cedet/semantic/wisent/python.el"
  24352. ;;;;;; "cedet/semantic/wisent/wisent.el" "cedet/srecode.el" "cedet/srecode/args.el"
  24353. ;;;;;; "cedet/srecode/compile.el" "cedet/srecode/cpp.el" "cedet/srecode/ctxt.el"
  24354. ;;;;;; "cedet/srecode/dictionary.el" "cedet/srecode/document.el"
  24355. ;;;;;; "cedet/srecode/el.el" "cedet/srecode/expandproto.el" "cedet/srecode/extract.el"
  24356. ;;;;;; "cedet/srecode/fields.el" "cedet/srecode/filters.el" "cedet/srecode/find.el"
  24357. ;;;;;; "cedet/srecode/getset.el" "cedet/srecode/insert.el" "cedet/srecode/java.el"
  24358. ;;;;;; "cedet/srecode/map.el" "cedet/srecode/mode.el" "cedet/srecode/semantic.el"
  24359. ;;;;;; "cedet/srecode/srt-wy.el" "cedet/srecode/srt.el" "cedet/srecode/table.el"
  24360. ;;;;;; "cedet/srecode/template.el" "cedet/srecode/texi.el" "cus-dep.el"
  24361. ;;;;;; "dframe.el" "dired-aux.el" "dired-x.el" "dos-fns.el" "dos-vars.el"
  24362. ;;;;;; "dos-w32.el" "dynamic-setting.el" "emacs-lisp/assoc.el" "emacs-lisp/authors.el"
  24363. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/avl-tree.el" "emacs-lisp/bindat.el" "emacs-lisp/byte-opt.el"
  24364. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/chart.el" "emacs-lisp/cl-extra.el" "emacs-lisp/cl-loaddefs.el"
  24365. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/cl-macs.el" "emacs-lisp/cl-seq.el" "emacs-lisp/cl-specs.el"
  24366. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/cust-print.el" "emacs-lisp/eieio-base.el" "emacs-lisp/eieio-custom.el"
  24367. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/eieio-datadebug.el" "emacs-lisp/eieio-opt.el"
  24368. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/eieio-speedbar.el" "emacs-lisp/eieio.el" "emacs-lisp/find-gc.el"
  24369. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/gulp.el" "emacs-lisp/lisp-mnt.el" "emacs-lisp/package-x.el"
  24370. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/regi.el" "emacs-lisp/smie.el" "emacs-lisp/tcover-ses.el"
  24371. ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/tcover-unsafep.el" "emulation/cua-gmrk.el" "emulation/cua-rect.el"
  24372. ;;;;;; "emulation/edt-lk201.el" "emulation/edt-mapper.el" "emulation/edt-pc.el"
  24373. ;;;;;; "emulation/edt-vt100.el" "emulation/tpu-extras.el" "emulation/viper-cmd.el"
  24374. ;;;;;; "emulation/viper-ex.el" "emulation/viper-init.el" "emulation/viper-keym.el"
  24375. ;;;;;; "emulation/viper-macs.el" "emulation/viper-mous.el" "emulation/viper-util.el"
  24376. ;;;;;; "erc/erc-backend.el" "erc/erc-goodies.el" "erc/erc-ibuffer.el"
  24377. ;;;;;; "erc/erc-lang.el" "eshell/em-alias.el" "eshell/em-banner.el"
  24378. ;;;;;; "eshell/em-basic.el" "eshell/em-cmpl.el" "eshell/em-dirs.el"
  24379. ;;;;;; "eshell/em-glob.el" "eshell/em-hist.el" "eshell/em-ls.el"
  24380. ;;;;;; "eshell/em-pred.el" "eshell/em-prompt.el" "eshell/em-rebind.el"
  24381. ;;;;;; "eshell/em-script.el" "eshell/em-smart.el" "eshell/em-term.el"
  24382. ;;;;;; "eshell/em-unix.el" "eshell/em-xtra.el" "eshell/esh-arg.el"
  24383. ;;;;;; "eshell/esh-cmd.el" "eshell/esh-ext.el" "eshell/esh-io.el"
  24384. ;;;;;; "eshell/esh-module.el" "eshell/esh-opt.el" "eshell/esh-proc.el"
  24385. ;;;;;; "eshell/esh-util.el" "eshell/esh-var.el" "ezimage.el" "foldout.el"
  24386. ;;;;;; "format-spec.el" "forms-d2.el" "forms-pass.el" "fringe.el"
  24387. ;;;;;; "generic-x.el" "gnus/compface.el" "gnus/gnus-async.el" "gnus/gnus-bcklg.el"
  24388. ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-cite.el" "gnus/gnus-cus.el" "gnus/gnus-demon.el"
  24389. ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-dup.el" "gnus/gnus-eform.el" "gnus/gnus-ems.el"
  24390. ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-int.el" "gnus/gnus-logic.el" "gnus/gnus-mh.el"
  24391. ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-salt.el" "gnus/gnus-score.el" "gnus/gnus-setup.el"
  24392. ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-srvr.el" "gnus/gnus-topic.el" "gnus/gnus-undo.el"
  24393. ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-util.el" "gnus/gnus-uu.el" "gnus/gnus-vm.el" "gnus/gssapi.el"
  24394. ;;;;;; "gnus/ietf-drums.el" "gnus/legacy-gnus-agent.el" "gnus/mail-parse.el"
  24395. ;;;;;; "gnus/mail-prsvr.el" "gnus/mail-source.el" "gnus/mailcap.el"
  24396. ;;;;;; "gnus/messcompat.el" "gnus/mm-bodies.el" "gnus/mm-decode.el"
  24397. ;;;;;; "gnus/mm-util.el" "gnus/mm-view.el" "gnus/mml-sec.el" "gnus/mml-smime.el"
  24398. ;;;;;; "gnus/nnagent.el" "gnus/nnbabyl.el" "gnus/nndir.el" "gnus/nndraft.el"
  24399. ;;;;;; "gnus/nneething.el" "gnus/nngateway.el" "gnus/nnheader.el"
  24400. ;;;;;; "gnus/nnimap.el" "gnus/nnir.el" "gnus/nnmail.el" "gnus/nnmaildir.el"
  24401. ;;;;;; "gnus/nnmairix.el" "gnus/nnmbox.el" "gnus/nnmh.el" "gnus/nnnil.el"
  24402. ;;;;;; "gnus/nnoo.el" "gnus/nnregistry.el" "gnus/nnrss.el" "gnus/nnspool.el"
  24403. ;;;;;; "gnus/nntp.el" "gnus/nnvirtual.el" "gnus/nnweb.el" "gnus/registry.el"
  24404. ;;;;;; "gnus/rfc1843.el" "gnus/rfc2045.el" "gnus/rfc2047.el" "gnus/rfc2104.el"
  24405. ;;;;;; "gnus/rfc2231.el" "gnus/rtree.el" "gnus/shr-color.el" "gnus/sieve-manage.el"
  24406. ;;;;;; "gnus/smime.el" "gnus/spam-stat.el" "gnus/spam-wash.el" "hex-util.el"
  24407. ;;;;;; "hfy-cmap.el" "ibuf-ext.el" "international/cp51932.el" "international/eucjp-ms.el"
  24408. ;;;;;; "international/fontset.el" "international/iso-ascii.el" "international/ja-dic-cnv.el"
  24409. ;;;;;; "international/ja-dic-utl.el" "international/ogonek.el" "international/uni-bidi.el"
  24410. ;;;;;; "international/uni-category.el" "international/uni-combining.el"
  24411. ;;;;;; "international/uni-comment.el" "international/uni-decimal.el"
  24412. ;;;;;; "international/uni-decomposition.el" "international/uni-digit.el"
  24413. ;;;;;; "international/uni-lowercase.el" "international/uni-mirrored.el"
  24414. ;;;;;; "international/uni-name.el" "international/uni-numeric.el"
  24415. ;;;;;; "international/uni-old-name.el" "international/uni-titlecase.el"
  24416. ;;;;;; "international/uni-uppercase.el" "json.el" "kermit.el" "language/hanja-util.el"
  24417. ;;;;;; "language/thai-word.el" "ldefs-boot.el" "loadup.el" "mail/blessmail.el"
  24418. ;;;;;; "mail/mailheader.el" "mail/mailpost.el" "mail/mspools.el"
  24419. ;;;;;; "mail/rfc2368.el" "mail/rfc822.el" "mail/rmail-spam-filter.el"
  24420. ;;;;;; "mail/rmailedit.el" "mail/rmailkwd.el" "mail/rmailmm.el"
  24421. ;;;;;; "mail/rmailmsc.el" "mail/rmailsort.el" "mail/rmailsum.el"
  24422. ;;;;;; "mail/undigest.el" "md4.el" "mh-e/mh-acros.el" "mh-e/mh-alias.el"
  24423. ;;;;;; "mh-e/mh-buffers.el" "mh-e/mh-compat.el" "mh-e/mh-funcs.el"
  24424. ;;;;;; "mh-e/mh-gnus.el" "mh-e/mh-identity.el" "mh-e/mh-inc.el"
  24425. ;;;;;; "mh-e/mh-junk.el" "mh-e/mh-letter.el" "mh-e/mh-limit.el"
  24426. ;;;;;; "mh-e/mh-loaddefs.el" "mh-e/mh-mime.el" "mh-e/mh-print.el"
  24427. ;;;;;; "mh-e/mh-scan.el" "mh-e/mh-search.el" "mh-e/mh-seq.el" "mh-e/mh-show.el"
  24428. ;;;;;; "mh-e/mh-speed.el" "mh-e/mh-thread.el" "mh-e/mh-tool-bar.el"
  24429. ;;;;;; "mh-e/mh-utils.el" "mh-e/mh-xface.el" "mouse-copy.el" "mouse.el"
  24430. ;;;;;; "mwheel.el" "net/dns.el" "net/eudc-vars.el" "net/eudcb-bbdb.el"
  24431. ;;;;;; "net/eudcb-ldap.el" "net/eudcb-mab.el" "net/eudcb-ph.el"
  24432. ;;;;;; "net/hmac-def.el" "net/hmac-md5.el" "net/imap.el" "net/ldap.el"
  24433. ;;;;;; "net/mairix.el" "net/newsticker.el" "net/ntlm.el" "net/sasl-cram.el"
  24434. ;;;;;; "net/sasl-digest.el" "net/sasl-ntlm.el" "net/sasl.el" "net/soap-client.el"
  24435. ;;;;;; "net/soap-inspect.el" "net/socks.el" "net/tls.el" "net/tramp-cache.el"
  24436. ;;;;;; "net/tramp-cmds.el" "net/tramp-compat.el" "net/tramp-gvfs.el"
  24437. ;;;;;; "net/tramp-gw.el" "net/tramp-loaddefs.el" "net/tramp-sh.el"
  24438. ;;;;;; "net/tramp-smb.el" "net/tramp-uu.el" "net/trampver.el" "net/zeroconf.el"
  24439. ;;;;;; "notifications.el" "nxml/nxml-enc.el" "nxml/nxml-maint.el"
  24440. ;;;;;; "nxml/nxml-ns.el" "nxml/nxml-outln.el" "nxml/nxml-parse.el"
  24441. ;;;;;; "nxml/nxml-rap.el" "nxml/nxml-util.el" "nxml/rng-dt.el" "nxml/rng-loc.el"
  24442. ;;;;;; "nxml/rng-maint.el" "nxml/rng-match.el" "nxml/rng-parse.el"
  24443. ;;;;;; "nxml/rng-pttrn.el" "nxml/rng-uri.el" "nxml/rng-util.el"
  24444. ;;;;;; "nxml/xsd-regexp.el" "org/ob-C.el" "org/ob-R.el" "org/ob-asymptote.el"
  24445. ;;;;;; "org/ob-awk.el" "org/ob-calc.el" "org/ob-clojure.el" "org/ob-comint.el"
  24446. ;;;;;; "org/ob-css.el" "org/ob-ditaa.el" "org/ob-dot.el" "org/ob-emacs-lisp.el"
  24447. ;;;;;; "org/ob-eval.el" "org/ob-exp.el" "org/ob-fortran.el" "org/ob-gnuplot.el"
  24448. ;;;;;; "org/ob-haskell.el" "org/ob-java.el" "org/ob-js.el" "org/ob-latex.el"
  24449. ;;;;;; "org/ob-ledger.el" "org/ob-lilypond.el" "org/ob-lisp.el"
  24450. ;;;;;; "org/ob-matlab.el" "org/ob-maxima.el" "org/ob-mscgen.el"
  24451. ;;;;;; "org/ob-ocaml.el" "org/ob-octave.el" "org/ob-org.el" "org/ob-perl.el"
  24452. ;;;;;; "org/ob-picolisp.el" "org/ob-plantuml.el" "org/ob-python.el"
  24453. ;;;;;; "org/ob-ref.el" "org/ob-ruby.el" "org/ob-sass.el" "org/ob-scheme.el"
  24454. ;;;;;; "org/ob-screen.el" "org/ob-sh.el" "org/ob-shen.el" "org/ob-sql.el"
  24455. ;;;;;; "org/ob-sqlite.el" "org/ob-table.el" "org/org-beamer.el"
  24456. ;;;;;; "org/org-bibtex.el" "org/org-colview.el" "org/org-compat.el"
  24457. ;;;;;; "org/org-crypt.el" "org/org-ctags.el" "org/org-docview.el"
  24458. ;;;;;; "org/org-entities.el" "org/org-eshell.el" "org/org-exp-blocks.el"
  24459. ;;;;;; "org/org-faces.el" "org/org-gnus.el" "org/org-habit.el" "org/org-info.el"
  24460. ;;;;;; "org/org-inlinetask.el" "org/org-install.el" "org/org-jsinfo.el"
  24461. ;;;;;; "org/org-list.el" "org/org-mac-message.el" "org/org-macs.el"
  24462. ;;;;;; "org/org-mew.el" "org/org-mhe.el" "org/org-mks.el" "org/org-mouse.el"
  24463. ;;;;;; "org/org-pcomplete.el" "org/org-protocol.el" "org/org-rmail.el"
  24464. ;;;;;; "org/org-special-blocks.el" "org/org-src.el" "org/org-vm.el"
  24465. ;;;;;; "org/org-w3m.el" "org/org-wl.el" "patcomp.el" "play/gamegrid.el"
  24466. ;;;;;; "play/gametree.el" "play/meese.el" "progmodes/ada-prj.el"
  24467. ;;;;;; "progmodes/cc-align.el" "progmodes/cc-awk.el" "progmodes/cc-bytecomp.el"
  24468. ;;;;;; "progmodes/cc-cmds.el" "progmodes/cc-defs.el" "progmodes/cc-fonts.el"
  24469. ;;;;;; "progmodes/cc-langs.el" "progmodes/cc-menus.el" "progmodes/ebnf-abn.el"
  24470. ;;;;;; "progmodes/ebnf-bnf.el" "progmodes/ebnf-dtd.el" "progmodes/ebnf-ebx.el"
  24471. ;;;;;; "progmodes/ebnf-iso.el" "progmodes/ebnf-otz.el" "progmodes/ebnf-yac.el"
  24472. ;;;;;; "progmodes/idlw-complete-structtag.el" "progmodes/idlw-help.el"
  24473. ;;;;;; "progmodes/idlw-toolbar.el" "progmodes/mantemp.el" "progmodes/xscheme.el"
  24474. ;;;;;; "ps-def.el" "ps-mule.el" "ps-samp.el" "saveplace.el" "sb-image.el"
  24475. ;;;;;; "scroll-bar.el" "select.el" "soundex.el" "subdirs.el" "tempo.el"
  24476. ;;;;;; "textmodes/bib-mode.el" "textmodes/makeinfo.el" "textmodes/page-ext.el"
  24477. ;;;;;; "textmodes/refbib.el" "textmodes/refer.el" "textmodes/reftex-auc.el"
  24478. ;;;;;; "textmodes/reftex-dcr.el" "textmodes/reftex-ref.el" "textmodes/reftex-sel.el"
  24479. ;;;;;; "textmodes/reftex-toc.el" "textmodes/texnfo-upd.el" "timezone.el"
  24480. ;;;;;; "tooltip.el" "tree-widget.el" "uniquify.el" "url/url-about.el"
  24481. ;;;;;; "url/url-cookie.el" "url/url-dired.el" "url/url-expand.el"
  24482. ;;;;;; "url/url-ftp.el" "url/url-future.el" "url/url-history.el"
  24483. ;;;;;; "url/url-imap.el" "url/url-methods.el" "url/url-nfs.el" "url/url-proxy.el"
  24484. ;;;;;; "url/url-vars.el" "vc/ediff-diff.el" "vc/ediff-init.el" "vc/ediff-merg.el"
  24485. ;;;;;; "vc/ediff-ptch.el" "vc/ediff-vers.el" "vc/ediff-wind.el"
  24486. ;;;;;; "vc/pcvs-info.el" "vc/pcvs-parse.el" "vc/pcvs-util.el" "vc/vc-dav.el"
  24487. ;;;;;; "vcursor.el" "vt-control.el" "vt100-led.el" "w32-fns.el"
  24488. ;;;;;; "w32-vars.el" "x-dnd.el") (20523 50589 129181))
  24489. ;;;***
  24490. (provide 'loaddefs)
  24491. ;; Local Variables:
  24492. ;; version-control: never
  24493. ;; no-byte-compile: t
  24494. ;; no-update-autoloads: t
  24495. ;; coding: utf-8
  24496. ;; End:
  24497. ;;; loaddefs.el ends here