NEWS.1-17 96 KB

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  1. GNU Emacs NEWS -- history of user-visible changes. 26-Mar-1986
  2. Copyright (C) 1985-1986, 2006-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  3. See the end of the file for license conditions.
  4. This file is about changes in emacs versions 1 through 17.
  5. Changes in Emacs 17
  6. * Frustrated?
  7. Try M-x doctor.
  8. * Bored?
  9. Try M-x hanoi.
  10. * Brain-damaged?
  11. Try M-x yow.
  12. * Sun3, Tahoe, Apollo, HP9000s300, Celerity, NCR Tower 32,
  13. Sequent, Stride, Encore, Plexus and AT&T 7300 machines supported.
  14. The Tahoe, Sun3, Sequent and Celerity use 4.2. In regard to the
  15. Apollo, see the file APOLLO in this directory. NCR Tower32,
  16. HP9000s300, Stride and Nu run forms of System V. System V rel 2 also
  17. works on Vaxes now. See etc/MACHINES.
  18. * System V Unix supported, including subprocesses.
  19. It should be possible now to bring up Emacs on a machine running
  20. mere unameliorated system V Unix with no major work; just possible bug
  21. fixes. But you can expect to find a handful of those on any machine
  22. that Emacs has not been run on before.
  23. * Berkeley 4.1 Unix supported.
  24. See etc/MACHINES.
  25. * Portable `alloca' provided.
  26. Emacs can now run on machines that do not and cannot support the library
  27. subroutine `alloca' in the canonical fashion, using an `alloca' emulation
  28. written in C.
  29. * On-line manual.
  30. Info now contains an Emacs manual, with essentially the same text
  31. as in the printed manual.
  32. The manual can now be printed with a standard TeX.
  33. Nicely typeset and printed copies of the manual are available
  34. from the Free Software Foundation.
  35. * Backup file version numbers.
  36. Emacs now supports version numbers in backup files.
  37. The first time you save a particular file in one editing session,
  38. the old file is copied or renamed to serve as a backup file.
  39. In the past, the name for the backup file was made by appending `~'
  40. to the end of the original file name.
  41. Now the backup file name can instead be made by appending ".~NN~" to
  42. the original file name, where NN stands for a numeric version. Each
  43. time this is done, the new version number is one higher than the
  44. highest previously used.
  45. Thus, the active, current file does not have a version number.
  46. Only the backups have them.
  47. This feature is controlled by the variable `version-control'. If it
  48. is `nil', as normally, then numbered backups are made only for files
  49. that already have numbered backups. Backup names with just `~' are
  50. used for files that have no numbered backups.
  51. If `version-control' is `never', then the backup file's name is
  52. made with just `~' in any case.
  53. If `version-control' is not `nil' or `never', numbered backups are
  54. made unconditionally.
  55. To prevent unlimited consumption of disk space, Emacs can delete
  56. old backup versions automatically. Generally Emacs keeps the first
  57. few backups and the latest few backups, deleting any in between.
  58. This happens every time a new backup is made. The two variables that
  59. control the deletion are `kept-old-versions' and `kept-new-versions'.
  60. Their values are, respectively, the number of oldest backups to keep
  61. and the number of newest ones to keep, each time a new backup is made.
  62. The value of `kept-new-versions' includes the backup just created.
  63. By default, both values are 2.
  64. If `trim-versions-without-asking' is non-`nil', the excess middle versions
  65. are deleted without a murmur. If it is `nil', the default, then you
  66. are asked whether the excess middle versions should really be deleted.
  67. Dired has a new command `.' which marks for deletion all but the latest
  68. and oldest few of every numeric series of backups. `kept-old-versions'
  69. controls the number of oldest versions to keep, and `dired-kept-versions'
  70. controls the number of latest versions to keep. A numeric argument to
  71. the `.' command, if positive, specifies the number of latest versions
  72. to keep, overriding `dired-kept-versions'. A negative argument specifies
  73. the number of oldest versions to keep, using minus the argument to override
  74. `kept-old-versions'.
  75. * Immediate conflict detection.
  76. Emacs now locks the files it is modifying, so that if
  77. you start to modify within Emacs a file that is being
  78. modified in another Emacs, you get an immediate warning.
  79. The warning gives you three choices:
  80. 1. Give up, and do not make any changes.
  81. 2. Make changes anyway at your own risk.
  82. 3. Make changes anyway, and record yourself as
  83. the person locking the file (instead of whoever
  84. was previously recorded.)
  85. Just visiting a file does not lock it. It is locked
  86. when you try to change the buffer that is visiting the file.
  87. Saving the file unlocks it until you make another change.
  88. Locking is done by writing a lock file in a special designated
  89. directory. If such a directory is not provided and told to
  90. Emacs as part of configuring it for your machine, the lock feature
  91. is turned off.
  92. * M-x recover-file.
  93. This command is used to get a file back from an auto-save
  94. (after a system crash, for example). It takes a file name
  95. as argument and visits that file, but gets the data from the
  96. file's last auto save rather than from the file itself.
  97. * M-x normal-mode.
  98. This command resets the current buffer's major mode and local
  99. variables to be as specified by the visit filename, the -*- line
  100. and/or the Local Variables: block at the end of the buffer.
  101. It is the same thing normally done when a file is first visited.
  102. * Echo area messages disappear shortly if minibuffer is in use.
  103. Any message in the echo area disappears after 2 seconds
  104. if the minibuffer is active. This allows the minibuffer
  105. to become visible again.
  106. * C-z on System V runs a subshell.
  107. On systems which do not allow programs to be suspended, the C-z command
  108. forks a subshell that talks directly to the terminal, and then waits
  109. for the subshell to exit. This gets almost the effect of suspending
  110. in that you can run other programs and then return to Emacs. However,
  111. you cannot log out from the subshell.
  112. * C-c is always a prefix character.
  113. Also, subcommands of C-c which are letters are always
  114. reserved for the user. No standard Emacs major mode
  115. defines any of them.
  116. * Picture mode C-c commands changed.
  117. The old C-c k command is now C-c C-w.
  118. The old C-c y command is now C-c C-x.
  119. * Shell mode commands changed.
  120. All the special commands of Shell mode are now moved onto
  121. the C-c prefix. Most are not changed aside from that.
  122. Thus, the old Shell mode C-c command (kill current job)
  123. is now C-c C-c; the old C-z (suspend current job) is now C-c C-z,
  124. etc.
  125. The old C-x commands are now C-c commands. C-x C-k (kill output)
  126. is now C-c C-o, and C-x C-v (show output) is now C-c C-r.
  127. The old M-= (copy previous input) command is now C-c C-y.
  128. * Shell mode recognizes aliases for `pushd', `popd' and `cd'.
  129. Shell mode now uses the variable `shell-pushd-regexp' as a
  130. regular expression to recognize any command name that is
  131. equivalent to a `pushd' command. By default it is set up
  132. to recognize just `pushd' itself. If you use aliases for
  133. `pushd', change the regexp to recognize them as well.
  134. There are also `shell-popd-regexp' to recognize commands
  135. with the effect of a `popd', and `shell-cd-regexp' to recognize
  136. commands with the effect of a `cd'.
  137. * "Exit" command in certain modes now C-c C-c.
  138. These include electric buffer menu mode, electric command history
  139. mode, Info node edit mode, and Rmail edit mode. In all these
  140. modes, the command to exit used to be just C-c.
  141. * Outline mode changes.
  142. Lines that are not heading lines are now called "body" lines.
  143. The command `hide-text' is renamed to `hide-body'.
  144. The key M-H is renamed to C-c C-h.
  145. The key M-S is renamed to C-c C-s.
  146. The key M-s is renamed to C-c C-i.
  147. Changes of line visibility are no longer undoable. As a result,
  148. they no longer use up undo memory and no longer interfere with
  149. undoing earlier commands.
  150. * Rmail changes.
  151. The s and q commands now both expunge deleted messages before saving;
  152. use C-x C-s to save without expunging.
  153. The u command now undeletes the current message if it is deleted;
  154. otherwise, it backs up as far as necessary to reach a deleted message,
  155. and undeletes that one. The u command in the summary behaves likewise,
  156. but considers only messages listed in the summary. The M-u command
  157. has been eliminated.
  158. The o and C-o keys' meanings are interchanged.
  159. o now outputs to an Rmail file, and C-o to a Unix mail file.
  160. The F command (rmail-find) is renamed to M-s (rmail-search).
  161. Various new commands and features exist; see the Emacs manual.
  162. * Local bindings described first in describe-bindings.
  163. * [...], {...} now balance in Fundamental mode.
  164. * Nroff mode and TeX mode.
  165. There are two new major modes for editing nroff input and TeX input.
  166. See the Emacs manual for full information.
  167. * New C indentation style variable `c-brace-imaginary-offset'.
  168. The value of `c-brace-imaginary-offset', normally zero, controls the
  169. indentation of a statement inside a brace-group where the open-brace
  170. is not the first thing on a line. The value says where the open-brace
  171. is imagined to be, relative to the first nonblank character on the line.
  172. * Dired improvements.
  173. Dired now normally keeps the cursor at the beginning of the file name,
  174. not at the beginning of the line. The most used motion commands are
  175. redefined in Dired to position the cursor this way.
  176. `n' and `p' are now equivalent in dired to `C-n' and `C-p'.
  177. If any files to be deleted cannot be deleted, their names are
  178. printed in an error message.
  179. If the `v' command is invoked on a file which is a directory,
  180. dired is run on that directory.
  181. * `visit-tag-table' renamed `visit-tags-table'.
  182. This is so apropos of `tags' finds everything you need to
  183. know about in connection with Tags.
  184. * `mh-e' library uses C-c as prefix.
  185. All the special commands of `mh-rmail' now are placed on a
  186. C-c prefix rather than on the C-x prefix. This is for
  187. consistency with other special modes with their own commands.
  188. * M-$ or `spell-word' checks word before point.
  189. It used to check the word after point.
  190. * Quitting during autoloading no longer causes trouble.
  191. Now, when a file is autoloaded, all function redefinitions
  192. and `provide' calls are recorded and are undone if you quit
  193. before the file is finished loading.
  194. As a result, it no longer happens that some of the entry points
  195. which are normally autoloading have been defined already, but the
  196. entire file is not really present to support them.
  197. * `else' can now be indented correctly in C mode.
  198. TAB in C mode now knows which `if' statement an `else' matches
  199. up with, and can indent the `else' correctly under the `if',
  200. even if the `if' contained such things as another `if' statement,
  201. or a `while' or `for' statement, with no braces around it.
  202. * `batch-byte-compile'
  203. Runs byte-compile-file on the files specified on the command line.
  204. All the rest of the command line arguments are taken as files to
  205. compile (or, if directories, to do byte-recompile-directory on).
  206. Must be used only with -batch, and kills emacs on completion.
  207. Each file will be processed even if an error occurred previously.
  208. For example, invoke `emacs -batch -f batch-byte-compile *.el'.
  209. * `-batch' changes.
  210. `-batch' now implies `-q': no init file is loaded by Emacs when
  211. `-batch' is used. Also, no `term/TERMTYPE.el' file is loaded. Auto
  212. saving is not done except in buffers in which it is explicitly
  213. requested. Also, many echo-area printouts describing what is going on
  214. are inhibited in batch mode, so that the only output you get is the
  215. output you program specifically.
  216. One echo-area message that is not suppressed is the one that says
  217. that a file is being loaded. That is because you can prevent this
  218. message by passing `t' as the third argument to `load'.
  219. * Display of search string in incremental search.
  220. Now, when you type C-s or C-r to reuse the previous search
  221. string, that search string is displayed immediately in the echo area.
  222. Three dots are displayed after the search string while search
  223. is actually going on.
  224. * View commands.
  225. The commands C-x ], C-x [, C-x /, C-x j and C-x o are now
  226. available inside `view-buffer' and `view-file', with their
  227. normal meanings.
  228. * Full-width windows preferred.
  229. The ``other-window'' commands prefer other full width windows,
  230. and will split only full width windows.
  231. * M-x rename-file can copy if necessary.
  232. When used between different file systems, since actual renaming does
  233. not work, the old file will be copied and deleted.
  234. * Within C-x ESC, you can pick the command to repeat.
  235. While editing a previous command to be repeated, inside C-x ESC,
  236. you can now use the commands M-p and M-n to pick an earlier or
  237. later command to repeat. M-n picks the next earlier command
  238. and M-p picks the next later one. The new command appears in
  239. the minibuffer, and you can go ahead and edit it, and repeat it
  240. when you exit the minibuffer.
  241. Using M-n or M-p within C-x ESC is like having used a different
  242. numeric argument when you ran C-x ESC in the first place.
  243. The command you finally execute using C-x ESC is added to the
  244. front of the command history, unless it is identical with the
  245. first thing in the command history.
  246. * Use C-c C-c to exit from editing within Info.
  247. It used to be C-z for this. Somehow this use of C-z was
  248. left out when all the others were moved. The intention is that
  249. C-z should always suspend Emacs.
  250. * Default arg to C-x < and C-x > now window width minus 2.
  251. These commands, which scroll the current window horizontally
  252. by a specified number of columns, now scroll a considerable
  253. distance rather than a single column if used with no argument.
  254. * Auto Save Files Deleted.
  255. The default value of `delete-auto-save-files' is now `t', so that
  256. when you save a file for real, its auto save file is deleted.
  257. * Rnews changes.
  258. The N, P and J keys in Rnews are renamed to M-n, M-p and M-j.
  259. These keys move among newsgroups.
  260. The n and p keys for moving sequentially between news articles now
  261. accept repeat count arguments, and the + and - keys, made redundant by
  262. this change, are eliminated.
  263. The s command for outputting the current article to a file
  264. is renamed as o, to be compatible with Rmail.
  265. * Sendmail changes.
  266. If you have a ~/.mailrc file, Emacs searches it for mailing address
  267. aliases, and these aliases are expanded when you send mail in Emacs.
  268. Fcc fields can now be used in the headers in the *mail* buffer
  269. to specify files in which copies of the message should be put.
  270. The message is written into those files in Unix mail file format.
  271. The message as sent does not contain any Fcc fields in its header.
  272. You can use any number of Fcc fields, but only one file name in each one.
  273. The variable `mail-archive-file-name', if non-`nil', can be a string
  274. which is a file name; an Fcc to that file will be inserted in every
  275. message when you begin to compose it.
  276. A new command C-c q now exists in Mail mode. It fills the
  277. paragraphs of an old message that had been inserted with C-c y.
  278. When the *mail* buffer is put in Mail mode, text-mode-hook
  279. is now run in addition to mail-mode-hook. text-mode-hook
  280. is run first.
  281. The new variable `mail-header-separator' now specifies the string
  282. to use on the line that goes between the headers and the message text.
  283. By default it is still "--text follows this line--".
  284. * Command history truncated automatically.
  285. Just before each garbage collection, all but the last 30 elements
  286. of the command history are discarded.
  287. Incompatible Lisp Programming Changes in Emacs 17
  288. * `&quote' no longer supported.
  289. This feature, which allowed Lisp functions to take arguments
  290. that were not evaluated, has been eliminated, because it is
  291. inescapably hard to make the compiler work properly with such
  292. functions.
  293. You should use macros instead. A simple way to change any
  294. code that uses `&quote' is to replace
  295. (defun foo (&quote x y z) ...
  296. with
  297. (defmacro foo (x y z)
  298. (list 'foo-1 (list 'quote x) (list 'quote y) (list 'quote z)))
  299. (defun foo-1 (x y z) ...
  300. * Functions `region-to-string' and `region-around-match' removed.
  301. These functions were made for compatibility with Gosling Emacs, but it
  302. turns out to be undesirable to use them in GNU Emacs because they use
  303. the mark. They have been eliminated from Emacs proper, but are
  304. present in mlsupport.el for the sake of converted mocklisp programs.
  305. If you were using `region-to-string', you should instead use
  306. `buffer-substring'; then you can pass the bounds as arguments and
  307. can avoid setting the mark.
  308. If you were using `region-around-match', you can use instead
  309. the two functions `match-beginning' and `match-end'. These give
  310. you one bound at a time, as a numeric value, without changing
  311. point or the mark.
  312. * Function `function-type' removed.
  313. This just appeared not to be very useful. It can easily be written in
  314. Lisp if you happen to want it. Just use `symbol-function' to get the
  315. function definition of a symbol, and look at its data type or its car
  316. if it is a list.
  317. * Variable `buffer-number' removed.
  318. You can still use the function `buffer-number' to find out
  319. a buffer's unique number (assigned in order of creation).
  320. * Variable `executing-macro' renamed `executing-kbd-macro'.
  321. This variable is the currently executing keyboard macro, as
  322. a string, or `nil' when no keyboard macro is being executed.
  323. * Loading term/$TERM.
  324. The library term/$TERM (where $TERM get replaced by your terminal
  325. type), which is done by Emacs automatically when it starts up, now
  326. happens after the user's .emacs file is loaded.
  327. In previous versions of Emacs, these files had names of the form
  328. term-$TERM; thus, for example, term-vt100.el, but now they live
  329. in a special subdirectory named term, and have names like
  330. term/vt100.el.
  331. * `command-history' format changed.
  332. The elements of this list are now Lisp expressions which can
  333. be evaluated directly to repeat a command.
  334. * Unused editing commands removed.
  335. The functions `forward-to-word', `backward-to-word',
  336. `upcase-char', `mark-beginning-of-buffer' and `mark-end-of-buffer'
  337. have been removed. Their definitions can be found in file
  338. lisp/unused.el if you need them.
  339. Upward Compatible Lisp Programming Changes in Emacs 17
  340. * You can now continue after errors and quits.
  341. When the debugger is entered because of a C-g, due to
  342. a non-`nil' value of `debug-on-quit', the `c' command in the debugger
  343. resumes execution of the code that was running when the quit happened.
  344. Use the `q' command to go ahead and quit.
  345. The same applies to some kinds of errors, but not all. Errors
  346. signaled with the Lisp function `signal' can be continued; the `c'
  347. command causes `signal' to return. The `r' command causes `signal' to
  348. return the value you specify. The `c' command is equivalent to `r'
  349. with the value `nil'.
  350. For a `wrong-type-argument' error, the value returned with the `r'
  351. command is used in place of the invalid argument. If this new value
  352. is not valid, another error occurs.
  353. Errors signaled with the function `error' cannot be continued.
  354. If you try to continue, the error just happens again.
  355. * `dot' renamed `point'.
  356. The word `dot' has been replaced with `point' in all
  357. function and variable names, including:
  358. point, point-min, point-max,
  359. point-marker, point-min-marker, point-max-marker,
  360. window-point, set-window-point,
  361. point-to-register, register-to-point,
  362. exchange-point-and-mark.
  363. The old names are still supported, for now.
  364. * `string-match' records position of end of match.
  365. After a successful call to `string-match', `(match-end 0)' will
  366. return the index in the string of the first character after the match.
  367. Also, `match-begin' and `match-end' with nonzero arguments can be
  368. used to find the indices of beginnings and ends of substrings matched
  369. by subpatterns surrounded by parentheses.
  370. * New function `insert-before-markers'.
  371. This function is just like `insert' except in the handling of any
  372. relocatable markers that are located at the point of insertion.
  373. With `insert', such markers end up pointing before the inserted text.
  374. With `insert-before-markers', they end up pointing after the inserted
  375. text.
  376. * New function `copy-alist'.
  377. This function takes one argument, a list, and makes a disjoint copy
  378. of the alist structure. The list itself is copied, and each element
  379. that is a cons cell is copied, but the cars and cdrs of elements
  380. remain shared with the original argument.
  381. This is what it takes to get two alists disjoint enough that changes
  382. in one do not change the result of `assq' on the other.
  383. * New function `copy-keymap'.
  384. This function takes a keymap as argument and returns a new keymap
  385. containing initially the same bindings. Rebindings in either one of
  386. them will not alter the bindings in the other.
  387. * New function `copy-syntax-table'.
  388. This function takes a syntax table as argument and returns a new
  389. syntax table containing initially the same syntax settings. Changes
  390. in either one of them will not alter the other.
  391. * Randomizing the random numbers.
  392. `(random t)' causes the random number generator's seed to be set
  393. based on the current time and Emacs's process id.
  394. * Third argument to `modify-syntax-entry'.
  395. The optional third argument to `modify-syntax-entry', if specified
  396. should be a syntax table. The modification is made in that syntax table
  397. rather than in the current syntax table.
  398. * New function `run-hooks'.
  399. This function takes any number of symbols as arguments.
  400. It processes the symbols in order. For each symbol which
  401. has a value (as a variable) that is non-nil, the value is
  402. called as a function, with no arguments.
  403. This is useful in major mode commands.
  404. * Second arg to `switch-to-buffer'.
  405. If this function is given a non-`nil' second argument, then the
  406. selection being done is not recorded on the selection history.
  407. The buffer's position in the history remains unchanged. This
  408. feature is used by the view commands, so that the selection history
  409. after exiting from viewing is the same as it was before.
  410. * Second arg to `display-buffer' and `pop-to-buffer'.
  411. These two functions both accept an optional second argument which
  412. defaults to `nil'. If the argument is not `nil', it means that
  413. another window (not the selected one) must be found or created to
  414. display the specified buffer in, even if it is already shown in
  415. the selected window.
  416. This feature is used by `switch-to-buffer-other-window'.
  417. * New variable `completion-ignore-case'.
  418. If this variable is non-`nil', completion allows strings
  419. in different cases to be considered matching. The global value
  420. is `nil'
  421. This variable exists for the sake of commands that are completing
  422. an argument in which case is not significant. It is possible
  423. to change the value globally, but you might not like the consequences
  424. in the many situations (buffer names, command names, file names)
  425. where case makes a difference.
  426. * Major modes related to Text mode call text-mode-hook, then their own hooks.
  427. For example, turning on Outline mode first calls the value of
  428. `text-mode-hook' as a function, if it exists and is non-`nil',
  429. and then does likewise for the variable `outline-mode-hook'.
  430. * Defining new command line switches.
  431. You can define a new command line switch in your .emacs file
  432. by putting elements on the value of `command-switch-alist'.
  433. Each element of this list should look like
  434. (SWITCHSTRING . FUNCTION)
  435. where SWITCHSTRING is a string containing the switch to be
  436. defined, such as "-foo", and FUNCTION is a function to be called
  437. if such an argument is found in the command line. FUNCTION
  438. receives the command line argument, a string, as its argument.
  439. To implement a switch that uses up one or more following arguments,
  440. use the fact that the remaining command line arguments are kept
  441. as a list in the variable `command-line-args'. FUNCTION can
  442. examine this variable, and do
  443. (setq command-line-args (cdr command-line-args)
  444. to "use up" an argument.
  445. * New variable `load-in-progress'.
  446. This variable is non-`nil' when a file of Lisp code is being read
  447. and executed by `load'.
  448. * New variable `print-length'.
  449. The value of this variable is normally `nil'. It may instead be
  450. a number; in that case, when a list is printed by `prin1' or
  451. `princ' only that many initial elements are printed; the rest are
  452. replaced by `...'.
  453. * New variable `find-file-not-found-hook'.
  454. If `find-file' or any of its variants is used on a nonexistent file,
  455. the value of `find-file-not-found-hook' is called (if it is not `nil')
  456. with no arguments, after creating an empty buffer. The file's name
  457. can be found as the value of `buffer-file-name'.
  458. * Processes without buffers.
  459. In the function `start-process', you can now specify `nil' as
  460. the process's buffer. You can also set a process's buffer to `nil'
  461. using `set-process-buffer'.
  462. The reason you might want to do this is to prevent the process
  463. from being killed because any particular buffer is killed.
  464. When a process has a buffer, killing that buffer kills the
  465. process too.
  466. When a process has no buffer, its output is lost unless it has a
  467. filter, and no indication of its being stopped or killed is given
  468. unless it has a sentinel.
  469. * New function `user-variable-p'. `v' arg prompting changed.
  470. This function takes a symbol as argument and returns `t' if
  471. the symbol is defined as a user option variable. This means
  472. that it has a `variable-documentation' property whose value is
  473. a string starting with `*'.
  474. Code `v' in an interactive arg reading string now accepts
  475. user variables only, and completion is limited to the space of
  476. user variables.
  477. The function `read-variable' also now accepts and completes
  478. over user variables only.
  479. * CBREAK mode input is the default in Unix 4.3 bsd.
  480. In Berkeley 4.3 Unix, there are sufficient features for Emacs to
  481. work fully correctly using CBREAK mode and not using SIGIO.
  482. Therefore, this mode is the default when running under 4.3.
  483. This mode corresponds to `nil' as the first argument to
  484. `set-input-mode'. You can still select either mode by calling
  485. that function.
  486. * Information on memory usage.
  487. The new variable `data-bytes-used' contains the number
  488. of bytes of impure space allocated in Emacs.
  489. `data-bytes-free' contains the number of additional bytes
  490. Emacs could allocate. Note that space formerly allocated
  491. and freed again still counts as `used', since it is still
  492. in Emacs's address space.
  493. * No limit on size of output from `format'.
  494. The string output from `format' used to be truncated to
  495. 100 characters in length. Now it can have any length.
  496. * New errors `void-variable' and `void-function' replace `void-symbol'.
  497. This change makes it possible to have error messages that
  498. clearly distinguish undefined variables from undefined functions.
  499. It also allows `condition-case' to handle one case without the other.
  500. * `replace-match' handling of `\'.
  501. In `replace-match', when the replacement is not literal,
  502. `\' in the replacement string is always treated as an
  503. escape marker. The only two special `\' constructs
  504. are `\&' and `\DIGIT', so `\' followed by anything other than
  505. `&' or a digit has no effect. `\\' is necessary to include
  506. a `\' in the replacement text.
  507. This level of escaping is comparable with what goes on in
  508. a regular expression. It is over and above the level of `\'
  509. escaping that goes on when strings are read in Lisp syntax.
  510. * New error `invalid-regexp'.
  511. A regexp search signals this type of error if the argument does
  512. not meet the rules for regexp syntax.
  513. * `kill-emacs' with argument.
  514. If the argument is a number, it is returned as the exit status code
  515. of the Emacs process. If the argument is a string, its contents
  516. are stuffed as pending terminal input, to be read by another program
  517. after Emacs is dead.
  518. * New fifth argument to `subst-char-in-region'.
  519. This argument is optional and defaults to `nil'. If it is not `nil',
  520. then the substitutions made by this function are not recorded
  521. in the Undo mechanism.
  522. This feature should be used with great care. It is now used
  523. by Outline mode to make lines visible or invisible.
  524. * ` *Backtrace*' buffer renamed to `*Backtrace*'.
  525. As a result, you can now reselect this buffer easily if you switch to
  526. another while in the debugger.
  527. Exiting from the debugger kills the `*Backtrace*' buffer, so you will
  528. not try to give commands in it when no longer really in the debugger.
  529. * New function `switch-to-buffer-other-window'.
  530. This is the new primitive to select a specified buffer (the
  531. argument) in another window. It is not quite the same as
  532. `pop-to-buffer', because it is guaranteed to create another
  533. window (assuming there is room on the screen) so that it can
  534. leave the current window's old buffer displayed as well.
  535. All functions to select a buffer in another window should
  536. do so by calling this new function.
  537. * New variable `minibuffer-help-form'.
  538. At entry to the minibuffer, the variable `help-form' is bound
  539. to the value of `minibuffer-help-form'.
  540. `help-form' is expected at all times to contain either `nil'
  541. or an expression to be executed when C-h is typed (overriding
  542. the definition of C-h as a command). `minibuffer-help-form'
  543. can be used to provide a different default way of handling
  544. C-h while in the minibuffer.
  545. * New \{...} documentation construct.
  546. It is now possible to set up the documentation string for
  547. a major mode in such a way that it always describes the contents
  548. of the major mode's keymap, as it has been customized.
  549. To do this, include in the documentation string the characters `\{'
  550. followed by the name of the variable containing the keymap,
  551. terminated with `}'. (The `\' at the beginning probably needs to
  552. be quoted with a second `\', to include it in the doc string.)
  553. This construct is normally used on a line by itself, with no blank
  554. lines before or after.
  555. For example, the documentation string for the function `c-mode' contains
  556. ...
  557. Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
  558. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
  559. \\{c-mode-map}
  560. Variables controlling indentation style:
  561. ...
  562. * New character syntax class "punctuation".
  563. Punctuation characters behave like whitespace in word and
  564. list parsing, but can be distinguished in regexps and in the
  565. function `char-syntax'. Punctuation syntax is represented by
  566. a period in `modify-syntax-entry'.
  567. * `auto-mode-alist' no longer needs entries for backup-file names,
  568. Backup suffixes of all kinds are now stripped from a file's name
  569. before searching `auto-mode-alist'.
  570. Changes in Emacs 16
  571. * No special code for Ambassadors, VT-100's and Concept-100's.
  572. Emacs now controls these terminals based on the termcap entry, like
  573. all other terminals. Formerly it did not refer to the termcap entries
  574. for those terminal types, and often the termcap entries for those
  575. terminals are wrong or inadequate. If you experience worse behavior
  576. on these terminals than in version 15, you can probably correct it by
  577. fixing up the termcap entry. See ./TERMS for more info.
  578. See ./TERMS in any case if you find that some terminal does not work
  579. right with Emacs now.
  580. * Minibuffer default completion character is TAB (and not ESC).
  581. So that ESC can be used in minibuffer for more useful prefix commands.
  582. * C-z suspends Emacs in all modes.
  583. Formerly, C-z was redefined for other purposes by certain modes,
  584. such as Buffer Menu mode. Now other keys are used for those purposes,
  585. to keep the meaning of C-z uniform.
  586. * C-x ESC (repeat-complex-command) allows editing the command it repeats.
  587. Instead of asking for confirmation to re-execute a command from the
  588. command history, the command is placed, in its Lisp form, into the
  589. minibuffer for editing. You can confirm by typing RETURN, change some
  590. arguments and then confirm, or abort with C-g.
  591. * Incremental search does less redisplay on slow terminals.
  592. If the terminal baud rate is <= the value of `isearch-slow-speed',
  593. incremental searching outside the text on the screen creates
  594. a single-line window and uses that to display the line on which
  595. a match has been found. Exiting or quitting the search restores
  596. the previous window configuration and redisplays the window you
  597. were searching in.
  598. The initial value of `isearch-slow-speed' is 1200.
  599. This feature is courtesy of crl@purdue.
  600. * Recursive minibuffers not allowed.
  601. If the minibuffer window is selected, most commands that would
  602. use the minibuffer gets an error instead. (Specific commands
  603. may override this feature and therefore still be allowed.)
  604. Strictly speaking, recursive entry to the minibuffer is still
  605. possible, because you can switch to another window after
  606. entering the minibuffer, and then minibuffer-using commands
  607. are allowed. This is still allowed by a deliberate decision:
  608. if you know enough to switch windows while in the minibuffer,
  609. you can probably understand recursive minibuffers.
  610. This may be overridden by binding the variable
  611. `enable-recursive-minibuffers' to t.
  612. * New major mode Emacs-Lisp mode, for editing Lisp code to run in Emacs.
  613. The mode in which emacs lisp files is edited is now called emacs-lisp-mode
  614. and is distinct from lisp-mode. The latter is intended for use with
  615. lisps external to emacs.
  616. The hook which is funcalled (if non-nil) on entry to elisp-mode is now
  617. called emacs-lisp-mode-hook. A consequence of this changes is that
  618. .emacs init files which set the value of lisp-mode-hook may need to be
  619. changed to use the new names.
  620. * Correct matching of parentheses is checked on insertion.
  621. When you insert a close-paren, the matching open-paren
  622. is checked for validity. The close paren must be the kind
  623. of close-paren that the open-paren says it should match.
  624. Otherwise, a warning message is printed. close-paren immediately
  625. preceded by quoting backslash syntax character is not matched.
  626. This feature was originally written by shane@mit-ajax.
  627. * M-x list-command-history
  628. * M-x command-history-mode
  629. * M-x electric-command-history
  630. `list-command-history' displays forms from the command history subject
  631. to user controlled filtering and limit on number of forms. It leaves
  632. the buffer in `command-history-mode'. M-x command-history-mode
  633. recomputes the command history each time it is invoked via
  634. `list-command-history'. It is like Emacs-Lisp mode except that characters
  635. don't insert themselves and provision is made for re-evaluating an
  636. expression from the list. `electric-command-history' pops up a type
  637. out window with the command history displayed. If the very next
  638. character is Space, the window goes away and the previous window
  639. configuration is restored. Otherwise you can move around in the
  640. history and select an expression for evaluation *inside* the buffer
  641. which invoked `electric-command-history'. The original window
  642. configuration is restored on exit unless the command selected changes
  643. it.
  644. * M-x edit-picture
  645. Enters a temporary major mode (the previous major mode is remembered
  646. and can is restored on exit) designed for editing pictures and tables.
  647. Printing characters replace rather than insert themselves with motion
  648. afterwards that is user controlled (you can specify any of the 8
  649. compass directions). Special commands for movement are provided.
  650. Special commands for hacking tabs and tab stops are provided. Special
  651. commands for killing rectangles and overlaying them are provided. See
  652. the documentation of function edit-picture for more details.
  653. Calls value of `edit-picture-hook' on entry if non-nil.
  654. * Stupid C-s/C-q `flow control' supported.
  655. Do (set-input-mode nil t) to tell Emacs to use CBREAK mode and interpret
  656. C-s and C-q as flow control commands. (set-input-mode t nil) switches
  657. back to interrupt-driven input. (set-input-mode nil nil) uses CBREAK
  658. mode but no `flow control'; this may make it easier to run Emacs under
  659. certain debuggers that have trouble dealing with inferiors that use SIGIO.
  660. CBREAK mode has certain inherent disadvantages, which are why it is
  661. not the default:
  662. Meta-keys are ignored; CBREAK mode discards the 8th bit of
  663. input characters.
  664. Control-G as keyboard input discards buffered output,
  665. and therefore can cause incorrect screen updating.
  666. The use of `flow control' has its own additional disadvantage: the
  667. characters C-s and C-q are not available as editing commands. You can
  668. partially compensate for this by setting up a keyboard-translate-table
  669. (see file ONEWS) that maps two other characters (such as C-^ and C-\) into
  670. C-s and C-q. Of course, C-^ and C-\ are commonly used as escape
  671. characters in remote-terminal programs. You really can't win except
  672. by getting rid of this sort of `flow control.'
  673. The configuration switch CBREAK_INPUT is now eliminated.
  674. INTERRUPT_INPUT exists only to specify the default mode of operation;
  675. #define it to make interrupt-driven input the default.
  676. * Completion of directory names provides a slash.
  677. If file name completion yields the name of a directory,
  678. a slash is appended to it.
  679. * Undo can clear modified-flag.
  680. If you undo changes in a buffer back to a state in which the
  681. buffer was not considered "modified", then it is labeled as
  682. once again "unmodified".
  683. * M-x run-lisp.
  684. This command creates an inferior Lisp process whose input and output
  685. appear in the Emacs buffer named `*lisp*'. That buffer uses a major mode
  686. called inferior-lisp-mode, which has many of the commands of lisp-mode
  687. and those of shell-mode. Calls the value of shell-mode-hook and
  688. lisp-mode-hook, in that order, if non-nil.
  689. Meanwhile, in lisp-mode, the command C-M-x is defined to
  690. send the current defun as input to the `*lisp*' subprocess.
  691. * Mode line says `Narrow' when buffer is clipped.
  692. If a buffer has a clipping restriction (made by `narrow-to-region')
  693. then its mode line contains the word `Narrow' after the major and
  694. minor modes.
  695. * Mode line says `Abbrev' when abbrev mode is on.
  696. * add-change-log-entry takes prefix argument
  697. Giving a prefix argument makes it prompt for login name, full name,
  698. and site name, with defaults. Otherwise the defaults are used
  699. with no confirmation.
  700. * M-x view-buffer and M-x view-file
  701. view-buffer selects the named buffer, view-file finds the named file; the
  702. resulting buffer is placed into view-mode (a recursive edit). The normal
  703. emacs commands are not available. Instead a set of special commands is
  704. provided which facilitate moving around in the buffer, searching and
  705. scrolling by screenfuls. Exiting view-mode returns to the buffer in which
  706. the view-file or view-buffer command was given.
  707. Type ? or h when viewing for a complete list of view commands.
  708. Each calls value of `view-hook' if non-nil on entry.
  709. written by shane@mit-ajax.
  710. * New key commands in dired.
  711. `v' views (like more) the file on the current line.
  712. `#' marks auto-save files for deletion.
  713. `~' marks backup files for deletion.
  714. `r' renames a file and updates the directory listing if the
  715. file is renamed to same directory.
  716. `c' copies a file and updates the directory listing if the file is
  717. copied to the same directory.
  718. * New function `electric-buffer-list'.
  719. This pops up a buffer describing the set of emacs buffers.
  720. Immediately typing space makes the buffer list go away and returns
  721. to the buffer and window which were previously selected.
  722. Otherwise one may use the c-p and c-n commands to move around in the
  723. buffer-list buffer and type Space or C-z to select the buffer on the
  724. cursor's line. There are a number of other commands which are the same
  725. as those of buffer-menu-mode.
  726. This is a useful thing to bind to c-x c-b in your `.emacs' file if the
  727. rather non-standard `electric' behavior of the buffer list suits your taste.
  728. Type C-h after invoking electric-buffer-list for more information.
  729. Calls value of `electric-buffer-menu-mode-hook' if non-nil on entry.
  730. Calls value of `after-electric-buffer-menu' on exit (select) if non-nil.
  731. Changes in version 16 for mail reading and sending
  732. * sendmail prefix character is C-c (and not C-z). New command C-c w.
  733. For instance C-c C-c (or C-c C-s) sends mail now rather than C-z C-z.
  734. C-c w inserts your `signature' (contents of ~/.signature) at the end
  735. of mail.
  736. * New feature in C-c y command in sending mail.
  737. C-c y is the command to insert the message being replied to.
  738. Normally it deletes most header fields and indents everything
  739. by three spaces.
  740. Now, C-c y does not delete header fields or indent.
  741. C-c y with any other numeric argument does delete most header
  742. fields, but indents by the amount specified in the argument.
  743. * C-r command in Rmail edits current message.
  744. It does this by switching to a different major mode
  745. which is nearly the same as Text mode. The only difference
  746. between it and text mode are the two command C-c and C-].
  747. C-c is defined to switch back to Rmail mode, and C-]
  748. is defined to restore the original contents of the message
  749. and then switch back to Rmail mode.
  750. C-c and C-] are the only ways "back into Rmail", but you
  751. can switch to other buffers and edit them as usual.
  752. C-r in Rmail changes only the handling of the Rmail buffer.
  753. * Rmail command `t' toggles header display.
  754. Normally Rmail reformats messages to hide most header fields.
  755. `t' switches to display of all the header fields of the
  756. current message, as long as it remains current.
  757. Another `t' switches back to the usual display.
  758. * Rmail command '>' goes to the last message.
  759. * Rmail commands `a' and `k' set message attributes.
  760. `a' adds an attribute and `k' removes one. You specify
  761. the attribute by name. You can specify either a built-in
  762. flag such as "deleted" or "filed", or a user-defined keyword
  763. (anything not recognized as built-in).
  764. * Rmail commands `l' and `L' summarize by attributes.
  765. These commands create a summary with one line per message,
  766. like `h', but they list only some of the messages. You
  767. specify which attribute (for `l') or attributes (for `L')
  768. the messages should have.
  769. * Rmail can parse mmdf mail files.
  770. * Interface to MH mail system.
  771. mh-e is a front end for GNU emacs and the MH mail system. It
  772. provides a friendly and convenient interface to the MH commands.
  773. To read mail, invoke mh-rmail. This will inc new mail and display the
  774. scan listing on the screen. To see a summary of the mh-e commands,
  775. type ?. Help is available through the usual facilities.
  776. To send mail, invoke mh-smail.
  777. mh-e requires a copy of MH.5 that has been compiled with the MHE
  778. compiler switch.
  779. From larus@berkeley.
  780. New hooks and parameters in version 16
  781. * New variable `blink-matching-paren-distance'.
  782. This is the maximum number of characters to search for
  783. an open-paren to match an inserted close-paren.
  784. The matching open-paren is shown and checked if it is found
  785. within this distance.
  786. `nil' means search all the way to the beginning of the buffer.
  787. In this case, a warning message is printed if no matching
  788. open-paren is found.
  789. This feature was originally written by shane@mit-ajax.
  790. * New variable `find-file-run-dired'
  791. If nil, find-file will report an error if an attempt to visit a
  792. directory is detected; otherwise, it runs dired on that directory.
  793. The default is t.
  794. * Variable `dired-listing-switches' holds switches given to `ls' by dired.
  795. The value should be a string containing `-' followed by letters.
  796. The letter `l' had better be included and letter 'F' had better be excluded!
  797. The default is "-al".
  798. This feature was originally written by shane@mit-ajax.
  799. * New variable `display-time-day-and-date'.
  800. If this variable is set non-`nil', the function M-x display-time
  801. displays the day and date, as well as the time.
  802. * New parameter `c-continued-statement-indent'.
  803. This controls the extra indentation given to a line
  804. that continues a C statement started on the previous line.
  805. By default it is 2, which is why you would see
  806. if (foo)
  807. bar ();
  808. * Changed meaning of `c-indent-level'.
  809. The value of `c-brace-offset' used to be
  810. subtracted from the value of `c-indent-level' whenever
  811. that value was used. Now it is not.
  812. As a result, `c-indent-level' is now the offset of
  813. statements within a block, relative to the line containing
  814. the open-brace that starts the block.
  815. * turn-on-auto-fill is useful value for text-mode-hook.
  816. (setq text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)
  817. is all you have to do to make sure Auto Fill mode is turned
  818. on whenever you enter Text mode.
  819. * Parameter explicit-shell-file-name for M-x shell.
  820. This variable, if non-nil, specifies the file name to use
  821. for the shell to run if you do M-x shell.
  822. Changes in version 16 affecting Lisp programming:
  823. * Documentation strings adapt to customization.
  824. Often the documentation string for a command wants to mention
  825. another command. Simply stating the other command as a
  826. character sequence has a disadvantage: if the user customizes
  827. Emacs by moving that function to a different command, the
  828. cross reference in the documentation becomes wrong.
  829. A new feature allows you to write the documentation string
  830. using a function name, and the command to run that function
  831. is looked up when the documentation is printed.
  832. If a documentation string contains `\[' (two characters) then
  833. the following text, up to the next `]', is taken as a function name.
  834. Instead of printing that function name, the command that runs it is printed.
  835. (M-x is used to construct a command if no shorter one exists.)
  836. For example, instead of putting `C-n' in a documentation string
  837. to refer to the C-n command, put in `\[next-line]'. (In practice
  838. you will need to quote the backslash with another backslash,
  839. due to the syntax for strings in Lisp and C.)
  840. To include the literal characters `\[' in a documentation string,
  841. precede them with `\='. To include the characters `\=', precede
  842. them with `\='. For example, "\\=\\= is the way to quote \\=\\["
  843. will come out as `\= is the way to quote \['.
  844. The new function `substitute-command-keys' takes a string possibly
  845. containing \[...] constructs and replaces those constructs with
  846. the key sequences they currently stand for.
  847. * Primitives `find-line-comment' and `find-line-comment-body' flushed.
  848. Search for the value of `comment-start-skip' if you want to find
  849. whether and where a line has a comment.
  850. * New function `auto-save-file-name-p'
  851. Should return non-`nil' if given a string which is the name of an
  852. auto-save file (sans directory name). If you redefine
  853. `make-auto-save-file-name', you should redefine this accordingly. By
  854. default, this function returns `t' for filenames beginning with
  855. character `#'.
  856. * The value of `exec-directory' now ends in a slash.
  857. This is to be compatible with most directory names in GNU Emacs.
  858. * Dribble files and termscript files.
  859. (open-dribble-file FILE) opens a dribble file named FILE. When a
  860. dribble file is open, every character Emacs reads from the terminal is
  861. written to the dribble file.
  862. (open-termscript FILE) opens a termscript file named FILE. When a
  863. termscript file is open, all characters sent to the terminal by Emacs
  864. are also written in the termscript file.
  865. The two of these together are very useful for debugging Emacs problems
  866. in redisplay.
  867. * Upper case command characters by default are same as lower case.
  868. If a character in a command is an upper case letter, and is not defined,
  869. Emacs uses the definition of the corresponding lower case letter.
  870. For example, if C-x U is not directly undefined, it is treated as
  871. a synonym for C-x u (undo).
  872. * Undefined function errors versus undefined variable errors.
  873. Void-symbol errors now say "boundp" if the symbol's value was void
  874. or "fboundp" if the function definition was void.
  875. * New function `bury-buffer'.
  876. The new function `bury-buffer' takes one argument, a buffer object,
  877. and puts that buffer at the end of the internal list of buffers.
  878. So it is the least preferred candidate for use as the default value
  879. of C-x b, or for other-buffer to return.
  880. * Already-displayed buffers have low priority for display.
  881. When a buffer is chosen automatically for display, or to be the
  882. default in C-x b, buffers already displayed in windows have lower
  883. priority than buffers not currently visible.
  884. * `set-window-start' accepts a third argument NOFORCE.
  885. This argument, if non-nil, prevents the window's force_start flag
  886. from being set. Setting the force_start flag causes the next
  887. redisplay to insist on starting display at the specified starting
  888. point, even if dot must be moved to get it onto the screen.
  889. * New function `send-string-to-terminal'.
  890. This function takes one argument, a string, and outputs its contents
  891. to the terminal exactly as specified: control characters, escape
  892. sequences, and all.
  893. * Keypad put in command mode.
  894. The terminal's keypad is now put into command mode, as opposed to
  895. numeric mode, while Emacs is running. This is done by means of the
  896. termcap `ks' and `ke' strings.
  897. * New function `generate-new-buffer'
  898. This function takes a string as an argument NAME and looks for a
  899. creates and returns a buffer called NAME if one did not already exist.
  900. Otherwise, it successively tries appending suffixes of the form "<1>",
  901. "<2>" etc to NAME until it creates a string which does not name an
  902. existing buffer. A new buffer with that name is the created and returned.
  903. * New function `prin1-to-string'
  904. This function takes one argument, a lisp object, and returns a string
  905. containing that object's printed representation, such as `prin1'
  906. would output.
  907. * New function `read-from-minibuffer'
  908. Lets you supply a prompt, initial-contents, a keymap, and specify
  909. whether the result should be interpreted as a string or a lisp object.
  910. Old functions `read-minibuffer', `eval-minibuffer', `read-string' all
  911. take second optional string argument which is initial contents of
  912. minibuffer.
  913. * minibuffer variable names changed (names of keymaps)
  914. minibuf-local-map -> minibuffer-local-map
  915. minibuf-local-ns-map -> minibuffer-local-ns-map
  916. minibuf-local-completion-map -> minibuffer-local-completion-map
  917. minibuf-local-must-match-map -> minibuffer-local-must-match-map
  918. Changes in version 16 affecting configuring and building Emacs
  919. * Configuration switch VT100_INVERSE eliminated.
  920. You can control the use of inverse video on any terminal by setting
  921. the variable `inverse-video', or by changing the termcap entry. If
  922. you like, set `inverse-video' in your `.emacs' file based on
  923. examination of (getenv "TERM").
  924. * New switch `-batch' makes Emacs run noninteractively.
  925. If the switch `-batch' is used, Emacs treats its standard output
  926. and input like ordinary files (even if they are a terminal).
  927. It does not display buffers or windows; the only output to standard output
  928. is what would appear as messages in the echo area, and each
  929. message is followed by a newline.
  930. The terminal modes are not changed, so that C-z and C-c retain
  931. their normal Unix meanings. Emacs does still read commands from
  932. the terminal, but the idea of `-batch' is that you use it with
  933. other command line arguments that tell Emacs a complete task to perform,
  934. including killing itself. `-kill' used as the last argument is a good
  935. way to accomplish this.
  936. The Lisp variable `noninteractive' is now defined, to be `nil'
  937. except when `-batch' has been specified.
  938. * Emacs can be built with output redirected to a file.
  939. This is because -batch (see above) is now used in building Emacs.
  940. Changes in Emacs 15
  941. * Emacs now runs on Sun and Megatest 68000 systems;
  942. also on at least one 16000 system running 4.2.
  943. * Emacs now alters the output-start and output-stop characters
  944. to prevent C-s and C-q from being considered as flow control
  945. by cretinous rlogin software in 4.2.
  946. * It is now possible convert Mocklisp code (for Gosling Emacs) to Lisp code
  947. that can run in GNU Emacs. M-x convert-mocklisp-buffer
  948. converts the contents of the current buffer from Mocklisp to
  949. GNU Emacs Lisp. You should then save the converted buffer with C-x C-w
  950. under a name ending in ".el"
  951. There are probably some Mocklisp constructs that are not handled.
  952. If you encounter one, feel free to report the failure as a bug.
  953. The construct will be handled in a future Emacs release, if that is not
  954. not too hard to do.
  955. Note that lisp code converted from Mocklisp code will not necessarily
  956. run as fast as code specifically written for GNU Emacs, nor will it use
  957. the many features of GNU Emacs which are not present in Gosling's emacs.
  958. (In particular, the byte-compiler (m-x byte-compile-file) knows little
  959. about compilation of code directly converted from mocklisp.)
  960. It is envisaged that old mocklisp code will be incrementally converted
  961. to GNU lisp code, with M-x convert-mocklisp-buffer being the first
  962. step in this process.
  963. * Control-x n (narrow-to-region) is now by default a disabled command.
  964. This means that, if you issue this command, it will ask whether
  965. you really mean it. You have the opportunity to enable the
  966. command permanently at that time, so you will not be asked again.
  967. This will place the form "(put 'narrow-to-region 'disabled nil)" in your
  968. .emacs file.
  969. * Tags now prompts for the tag table file name to use.
  970. All the tags commands ask for the tag table file name
  971. if you have not yet specified one.
  972. Also, the command M-x visit-tag-table can now be used to
  973. specify the tag table file name initially, or to switch
  974. to a new tag table.
  975. * If truncate-partial-width-windows is non-nil (as it initially is),
  976. all windows less than the full screen width (that is,
  977. made by side-by-side splitting) truncate lines rather than continuing
  978. them.
  979. * Emacs now checks for Lisp stack overflow to avoid fatal errors.
  980. The depth in eval, apply and funcall may not exceed max-lisp-eval-depth.
  981. The depth in variable bindings and unwind-protects may not exceed
  982. max-specpdl-size. If either limit is exceeded, an error occurs.
  983. You can set the limits to larger values if you wish, but if you make them
  984. too large, you are vulnerable to a fatal error if you invoke
  985. Lisp code that does infinite recursion.
  986. * New hooks find-file-hook and write-file-hook.
  987. Both of these variables if non-nil should be functions of no arguments.
  988. At the time they are called (current-buffer) will be the buffer being
  989. read or written respectively.
  990. find-file-hook is called whenever a file is read into its own buffer,
  991. such as by calling find-file, revert-buffer, etc. It is not called by
  992. functions such as insert-file which do not read the file into a buffer of
  993. its own.
  994. find-file-hook is called after the file has been read in and its
  995. local variables (if any) have been processed.
  996. write-file-hook is called just before writing out a file from a buffer.
  997. * The initial value of shell-prompt-pattern is now "^[^#$%>]*[#$%>] *"
  998. * If the .emacs file sets inhibit-startup-message to non-nil,
  999. the messages normally printed by Emacs at startup time
  1000. are inhibited.
  1001. * Facility for run-time conditionalization on the basis of emacs features.
  1002. The new variable features is a list of symbols which represent "features"
  1003. of the executing emacs, for use in run-time conditionalization.
  1004. The function featurep of one argument may be used to test for the
  1005. presence of a feature. It is just the same as
  1006. (not (null (memq FEATURE features))) where FEATURE is its argument.
  1007. For example, (if (featurep 'magic-window-hack)
  1008. (transmogrify-window 'vertical)
  1009. (split-window-vertically))
  1010. The function provide of one argument "announces" that FEATURE is present.
  1011. It is much the same as (if (not (featurep FEATURE))
  1012. (setq features (cons FEATURE features)))
  1013. The function require with arguments FEATURE and FILE-NAME loads FILE-NAME
  1014. (which should contain the form (provide FEATURE)) unless FEATURE is present.
  1015. It is much the same as (if (not (featurep FEATURE))
  1016. (progn (load FILE-NAME)
  1017. (if (not featurep FEATURE) (error ...))))
  1018. FILE-NAME is optional and defaults to FEATURE.
  1019. * New function load-average.
  1020. This returns a list of three integers, which are
  1021. the current 1 minute, 5 minute and 15 minute load averages,
  1022. each multiplied by a hundred (since normally they are floating
  1023. point numbers).
  1024. * Per-terminal libraries loaded automatically.
  1025. Emacs when starting up on terminal type T automatically loads
  1026. a library named term-T. T is the value of the TERM environment variable.
  1027. Thus, on terminal type vt100, Emacs would do (load "term-vt100" t t).
  1028. Such libraries are good places to set the character translation table.
  1029. It is a bad idea to redefine lots of commands in a per-terminal library,
  1030. since this affects all users. Instead, define a command to do the
  1031. redefinitions and let the user's init file, which is loaded later,
  1032. call that command or not, as the user prefers.
  1033. * Programmer's note: detecting killed buffers.
  1034. Buffers are eliminated by explicitly killing them, using
  1035. the function kill-buffer. This does not eliminate or affect
  1036. the pointers to the buffer which may exist in list structure.
  1037. If you have a pointer to a buffer and wish to tell whether
  1038. the buffer has been killed, use the function buffer-name.
  1039. It returns nil on a killed buffer, and a string on a live buffer.
  1040. * New ways to access the last command input character.
  1041. The function last-key-struck, which used to return the last
  1042. input character that was read by command input, is eliminated.
  1043. Instead, you can find this information as the value of the
  1044. variable last-command-char. (This variable used to be called
  1045. last-key).
  1046. Another new variable, last-input-char, holds the last character
  1047. read from the command input stream regardless of what it was
  1048. read for. last-input-char and last-command-char are different
  1049. only inside a command that has called read-char to read input.
  1050. * The new switch -kill causes Emacs to exit after processing the
  1051. preceding command line arguments. Thus,
  1052. emacs -l lib data -e do-it -kill
  1053. means to load lib, find file data, call do-it on no arguments,
  1054. and then exit.
  1055. * The config.h file has been modularized.
  1056. Options that depend on the machine you are running on are defined
  1057. in a file whose name starts with "m-", such as m-vax.h.
  1058. Options that depend on the operating system software version you are
  1059. running on are defined in a file whose name starts with "s-",
  1060. such as s-bsd4.2.h.
  1061. config.h includes one m- file and one s- file. It also defines a
  1062. few other options whose values do not follow from the machine type
  1063. and system type being used. Installers normally will have to
  1064. select the correct m- and s- files but will never have to change their
  1065. contents.
  1066. * Termcap AL and DL strings are understood.
  1067. If the termcap entry defines AL and DL strings, for insertion
  1068. and deletion of multiple lines in one blow, Emacs now uses them.
  1069. This matters most on certain bit map display terminals for which
  1070. scrolling is comparatively slow.
  1071. * Bias against scrolling screen far on fast terminals.
  1072. Emacs now prefers to redraw a few lines rather than
  1073. shift them a long distance on the screen, when the terminal is fast.
  1074. * New major mode, mim-mode.
  1075. This major mode is for editing MDL code. Perhaps a MDL
  1076. user can explain why it is not called mdl-mode.
  1077. You must load the library mim-mode explicitly to use this.
  1078. * GNU documentation formatter `texinfo'.
  1079. The `texinfo' library defines a format for documentation
  1080. files which can be passed through Tex to make a printed manual
  1081. or passed through texinfo to make an Info file. Texinfo is
  1082. documented fully by its own Info file; compare this file
  1083. with its source, texinfo.texinfo, for additional guidance.
  1084. All documentation files for GNU utilities should be written
  1085. in texinfo input format.
  1086. Tex processing of texinfo files requires the Botex macro package.
  1087. This is not ready for distribution yet, but will appear at
  1088. a later time.
  1089. * New function read-from-string (emacs 15.29)
  1090. read-from-string takes three arguments: a string to read from,
  1091. and optionally start and end indices which delimit a substring
  1092. from which to read. (They default to 0 and the length of the string,
  1093. respectively.)
  1094. This function returns a cons cell whose car is the object produced
  1095. by reading from the string and whose cdr is a number giving the
  1096. index in the string of the first character not read. That index may
  1097. be passed as the second argument to a later call to read-from-string
  1098. to read the next form represented by the string.
  1099. In addition, the function read now accepts a string as its argument.
  1100. In this case, it calls read-from-string on the whole string, and
  1101. returns the car of the result (ie the actual object read.)
  1102. Changes in Emacs 14
  1103. * Completion now prints various messages such as [Sole Completion]
  1104. or [Next Character Not Unique] to describe the results obtained.
  1105. These messages appear after the text in the minibuffer, and remain
  1106. on the screen until a few seconds go by or you type a key.
  1107. * The buffer-read-only flag is implemented.
  1108. Setting or binding this per-buffer variable to a non-nil value
  1109. makes illegal any operation which would modify the textual content of
  1110. the buffer. (Such operations signal a buffer-read-only error)
  1111. The read-only state of a buffer may be altered using toggle-read-only
  1112. (C-x C-q)
  1113. The buffers used by Rmail, Dired, Rnews, and Info are now read-only
  1114. by default to prevent accidental damage to the information in those
  1115. buffers.
  1116. * Functions car-safe and cdr-safe.
  1117. These functions are like car and cdr when the argument is a cons.
  1118. Given an argument not a cons, car-safe always returns nil, with
  1119. no error; the same for cdr-safe.
  1120. * The new function user-real-login-name returns the name corresponding
  1121. to the real uid of the Emacs process. This is usually the same
  1122. as what user-login-name returns; however, when Emacs is invoked
  1123. from su, user-real-login-name returns "root" but user-login-name
  1124. returns the name of the user who invoked su.
  1125. Changes in Emacs 13
  1126. * There is a new version numbering scheme.
  1127. What used to be the first version number, which was 1,
  1128. has been discarded since it does not seem that I need three
  1129. levels of version number.
  1130. However, a new third version number has been added to represent
  1131. changes by user sites. This number will always be zero in
  1132. Emacs when I distribute it; it will be incremented each time
  1133. Emacs is built at another site.
  1134. * There is now a reader syntax for Meta characters:
  1135. \M-CHAR means CHAR or'ed with the Meta bit. For example:
  1136. ?\M-x is (+ ?x 128)
  1137. ?\M-\n is (+ ?\n 128)
  1138. ?\M-\^f is (+ ?\^f 128)
  1139. This syntax can be used in strings too. Note, however, that
  1140. Meta characters are not meaningful in key sequences being passed
  1141. to define-key or lookup-key; you must use ESC characters (\e)
  1142. in them instead.
  1143. ?\C- can be used likewise for control characters. (13.9)
  1144. * Installation change
  1145. The string "../lisp" now adds to the front of the load-path
  1146. used for searching for Lisp files during Emacs initialization.
  1147. It used to replace the path specified in paths.h entirely.
  1148. Now the directory ../lisp is searched first and the directories
  1149. specified in paths.h are searched afterward.
  1150. Changes in Emacs 1.12
  1151. * There is a new installation procedure.
  1152. See the file INSTALL that comes in the top level
  1153. directory in the tar file or tape.
  1154. * The Meta key is now supported on terminals that have it.
  1155. This is a shift key which causes the high bit to be turned on
  1156. in all input characters typed while it is held down.
  1157. read-char now returns a value in the range 128-255 if
  1158. a Meta character is typed. When interpreted as command
  1159. input, a Meta character is equivalent to a two character
  1160. sequence, the meta prefix character followed by the unmetized
  1161. character (Meta-G unmetized is G).
  1162. The meta prefix character
  1163. is specified by the value of the variable meta-prefix-char.
  1164. If this character (normally Escape) has been redefined locally
  1165. with a non-prefix definition (such as happens in completing
  1166. minibuffers) then the local redefinition is suppressed when
  1167. the character is not the last one in a key sequence.
  1168. So the local redefinition is effective if you type the character
  1169. explicitly, but not effective if the character comes from
  1170. the use of the Meta key.
  1171. * `-' is no longer a completion command in the minibuffer.
  1172. It is an ordinary self-inserting character.
  1173. * The list load-path of directories load to search for Lisp files
  1174. is now controlled by the EMACSLOADPATH environment variable
  1175. [[ Note this was originally EMACS-LOAD-PATH and has been changed
  1176. again; sh does not deal properly with hyphens in env variable names]]
  1177. rather than the EPATH environment variable. This is to avoid
  1178. conflicts with other Emacses.
  1179. While Emacs is being built initially, the load-path
  1180. is now just ("../lisp"), ignoring paths.h. It does not
  1181. ignore EMACSLOADPATH, however; you should avoid having
  1182. this variable set while building Emacs.
  1183. * You can now specify a translation table for keyboard
  1184. input characters, as a way of exchanging or substituting
  1185. keys on the keyboard.
  1186. If the value of keyboard-translate-table is a string,
  1187. every character received from the keyboard is used as an
  1188. index in that string, and the character at that index in
  1189. the string is used as input instead of what was actually
  1190. typed. If the actual input character is >= the length of
  1191. the string, it is used unchanged.
  1192. One way this feature can be used is to fix bad keyboard
  1193. designs. For example, on some terminals, Delete is
  1194. Shift-Underscore. Since Delete is a more useful character
  1195. than Underscore, it is an improvement to make the unshifted
  1196. character Delete and the shifted one Underscore. This can
  1197. be done with
  1198. ;; First make a translate table that does the identity translation.
  1199. (setq keyboard-translate-table (make-string 128 0))
  1200. (let ((i 0))
  1201. (while (< i 128)
  1202. (aset keyboard-translate-table i i)
  1203. (setq i (1+ i))))
  1204. ;; Now alter translations of some characters.
  1205. (aset keyboard-translate-table ?\_ ?\^?)
  1206. (aset keyboard-translate-table ?\^? ?\_)
  1207. If your terminal has a Meta key and can therefore send
  1208. codes up to 255, Meta characters are translated through
  1209. elements 128 through 255 of the translate table, and therefore
  1210. are translated independently of the corresponding non-Meta
  1211. characters. You must therefore establish translations
  1212. independently for the Meta characters if you want them too:
  1213. ;; First make a translate table that does the identity translation.
  1214. (setq keyboard-translate-table (make-string 256 0))
  1215. (let ((i 0))
  1216. (while (< i 256)
  1217. (aset keyboard-translate-table i i)
  1218. (setq i (1+ i))))
  1219. ;; Now alter translations of some characters.
  1220. (aset keyboard-translate-table ?\_ ?\^?)
  1221. (aset keyboard-translate-table ?\^? ?\_)
  1222. ;; Now alter translations of some Meta characters.
  1223. (aset keyboard-translate-table (+ 128 ?\_) (+ 128 ?\^?))
  1224. (aset keyboard-translate-table (+ 128 ?\^?) (+ 128 ?\_))
  1225. * (process-kill-without-query PROCESS)
  1226. This marks the process so that, when you kill Emacs,
  1227. you will not on its account be queried about active subprocesses.
  1228. Changes in Emacs 1.11
  1229. * The commands C-c and C-z have been interchanged,
  1230. for greater compatibility with normal Unix usage.
  1231. C-z now runs suspend-emacs and C-c runs exit-recursive-edit.
  1232. * The value returned by file-name-directory now ends
  1233. with a slash. (file-name-directory "foo/bar") => "foo/".
  1234. This avoids confusing results when dealing with files
  1235. in the root directory.
  1236. The value of the per-buffer variable default-directory
  1237. is also supposed to have a final slash now.
  1238. * There are now variables to control the switches passed to
  1239. `ls' by the C-x C-d command (list-directory).
  1240. list-directory-brief-switches is a string, initially "-CF",
  1241. used for brief listings, and list-directory-verbose-switches
  1242. is a string, initially "-l", used for verbose ones.
  1243. * For Ann Arbor Ambassador terminals, the termcap "ti" string
  1244. is now used to initialize the screen geometry on entry to Emacs,
  1245. and the "te" string is used to set it back on exit.
  1246. If the termcap entry does not define the "ti" or "te" string,
  1247. Emacs does what it used to do.
  1248. Changes in Emacs 1.10
  1249. * GNU Emacs has been made almost 1/3 smaller.
  1250. It now dumps out as only 530kbytes on Vax 4.2bsd.
  1251. * The term "checkpoint" has been replaced by "auto save"
  1252. throughout the function names, variable names and documentation
  1253. of GNU Emacs.
  1254. * The function load now tries appending ".elc" and ".el"
  1255. to the specified filename BEFORE it tries the filename
  1256. without change.
  1257. * rmail now makes the mode line display the total number
  1258. of messages and the current message number.
  1259. The "f" command now means forward a message to another user.
  1260. The command to search through all messages for a string is now "F".
  1261. The "u" command now means to move back to the previous
  1262. message and undelete it. To undelete the selected message, use Meta-u.
  1263. * The hyphen character is now equivalent to a Space while
  1264. in completing minibuffers. Both mean to complete an additional word.
  1265. * The Lisp function error now takes args like format
  1266. which are used to construct the error message.
  1267. * Redisplay will refuse to start its display at the end of the buffer.
  1268. It will pick a new place to display from, rather than use that.
  1269. * The value returned by garbage-collect has been changed.
  1270. Its first element is no longer a number but a cons,
  1271. whose car is the number of cons cells now in use,
  1272. and whose cdr is the number of cons cells that have been
  1273. made but are now free.
  1274. The second element is similar but describes symbols rather than cons cells.
  1275. The third element is similar but describes markers.
  1276. * The variable buffer-name has been eliminated.
  1277. The function buffer-name still exists. This is to prevent
  1278. user programs from changing buffer names without going
  1279. through the rename-buffer function.
  1280. Changes in Emacs 1.9
  1281. * When a fill prefix is in effect, paragraphs are started
  1282. or separated by lines that do not start with the fill prefix.
  1283. Also, a line which consists of the fill prefix followed by
  1284. white space separates paragraphs.
  1285. * C-x C-v runs the new function find-alternate-file.
  1286. It finds the specified file, switches to that buffer,
  1287. and kills the previous current buffer. (It requires
  1288. confirmation if that buffer had changes.) This is
  1289. most useful after you find the wrong file due to a typo.
  1290. * Exiting the minibuffer moves the cursor to column 0,
  1291. to show you that it has really been exited.
  1292. * Meta-g (fill-region) now fills each paragraph in the
  1293. region individually. To fill the region as if it were
  1294. a single paragraph (for when the paragraph-delimiting mechanism
  1295. does the wrong thing), use fill-region-as-paragraph.
  1296. * Tab in text mode now runs the function tab-to-tab-stop.
  1297. A new mode called indented-text-mode is like text-mode
  1298. except that in it Tab runs the function indent-relative,
  1299. which indents the line under the previous line.
  1300. If auto fill is enabled while in indented-text-mode,
  1301. the new lines that it makes are indented.
  1302. * Functions kill-rectangle and yank-rectangle.
  1303. kill-rectangle deletes the rectangle specified by dot and mark
  1304. (or by two arguments) and saves it in the variable killed-rectangle.
  1305. yank-rectangle inserts the rectangle in that variable.
  1306. Tab characters in a rectangle being saved are replaced
  1307. by spaces in such a way that their appearance will
  1308. not be changed if the rectangle is later reinserted
  1309. at a different column position.
  1310. * `+' in a regular expression now means
  1311. to repeat the previous expression one or more times.
  1312. `?' means to repeat it zero or one time.
  1313. They are in all regards like `*' except for the
  1314. number of repetitions they match.
  1315. \< in a regular expression now matches the null string
  1316. when it is at the beginning of a word; \> matches
  1317. the null string at the end of a word.
  1318. * C-x p narrows the buffer so that only the current page
  1319. is visible.
  1320. * C-x ) with argument repeats the kbd macro just
  1321. defined that many times, counting the definition
  1322. as one repetition.
  1323. * C-x ( with argument begins defining a kbd macro
  1324. starting with the last one defined. It executes that
  1325. previous kbd macro initially, just as if you began
  1326. by typing it over again.
  1327. * C-x q command queries the user during kbd macro execution.
  1328. With prefix argument, enters recursive edit,
  1329. reading keyboard commands even within a kbd macro.
  1330. You can give different commands each time the macro executes.
  1331. Without prefix argument, reads a character. Your options are:
  1332. Space -- execute the rest of the macro.
  1333. Delete -- skip the rest of the macro; start next repetition.
  1334. C-d -- skip rest of the macro and don't repeat it any more.
  1335. C-r -- enter a recursive edit, then on exit ask again for a character
  1336. C-l -- redisplay screen and ask again."
  1337. * write-kbd-macro and append-kbd-macro are used to save
  1338. a kbd macro definition in a file (as Lisp code to
  1339. redefine the macro when the file is loaded).
  1340. These commands differ in that write-kbd-macro
  1341. discards the previous contents of the file.
  1342. If given a prefix argument, both commands
  1343. record the keys which invoke the macro as well as the
  1344. macro's definition.
  1345. * The variable global-minor-modes is used to display
  1346. strings in the mode line of all buffers. It should be
  1347. a list of elements that are conses whose cdrs are strings
  1348. to be displayed. This complements the variable
  1349. minor-modes, which has the same effect but has a separate
  1350. value in each buffer.
  1351. * C-x = describes horizontal scrolling in effect, if any.
  1352. * Return now auto-fills the line it is ending, in auto fill mode.
  1353. Space with zero as argument auto-fills the line before it
  1354. just like Space without an argument.
  1355. Changes in Emacs 1.8
  1356. This release mostly fixes bugs. There are a few new features:
  1357. * apropos now sorts the symbols before displaying them.
  1358. Also, it returns a list of the symbols found.
  1359. apropos now accepts a second arg PRED which should be a function
  1360. of one argument; if PRED is non-nil, each symbol is tested
  1361. with PRED and only symbols for which PRED returns non-nil
  1362. appear in the output or the returned list.
  1363. If the third argument to apropos is non-nil, apropos does not
  1364. display anything; it merely returns the list of symbols found.
  1365. C-h a now runs the new function command-apropos rather than
  1366. apropos, and shows only symbols with definitions as commands.
  1367. * M-x shell sends the command
  1368. if (-f ~/.emacs_NAME)source ~/.emacs_NAME
  1369. invisibly to the shell when it starts. Here NAME
  1370. is replaced by the name of shell used,
  1371. as it came from your ESHELL or SHELL environment variable
  1372. but with directory name, if any, removed.
  1373. * M-, now runs the command tags-loop-continue, which is used
  1374. to resume a terminated tags-search or tags-query-replace.
  1375. Changes in Emacs 1.7
  1376. It's Beat CCA Week.
  1377. * The initial buffer is now called "*scratch*" instead of "scratch",
  1378. so that all buffer names used automatically by Emacs now have *'s.
  1379. * Undo information is now stored separately for each buffer.
  1380. The Undo command (C-x u) always applies to the current
  1381. buffer only.
  1382. C-_ is now a synonym for C-x u.
  1383. (buffer-flush-undo BUFFER) causes undo information not to
  1384. be kept for BUFFER, and frees the space that would have
  1385. been used to hold it. In any case, no undo information is
  1386. kept for buffers whose names start with spaces. (These
  1387. buffers also do not appear in the C-x C-b display.)
  1388. * Rectangle operations are now implemented.
  1389. C-x r stores the rectangle described by dot and mark
  1390. into a register; it reads the register name from the keyboard.
  1391. C-x g, the command to insert the contents of a register,
  1392. can be used to reinsert the rectangle elsewhere.
  1393. Other rectangle commands include
  1394. open-rectangle:
  1395. insert a blank rectangle in the position and size
  1396. described by dot and mark, at its corners;
  1397. the existing text is pushed to the right.
  1398. clear-rectangle:
  1399. replace the rectangle described by dot ane mark
  1400. with blanks. The previous text is deleted.
  1401. delete-rectangle:
  1402. delete the text of the specified rectangle,
  1403. moving the text beyond it on each line leftward.
  1404. * Side-by-side windows are allowed. Use C-x 5 to split the
  1405. current window into two windows side by side.
  1406. C-x } makes the selected window ARG columns wider at the
  1407. expense of the windows at its sides. C-x { makes the selected
  1408. window ARG columns narrower. An argument to C-x 5 specifies
  1409. how many columns to give to the leftmost of the two windows made.
  1410. C-x 2 now accepts a numeric argument to specify the number of
  1411. lines to give to the uppermost of the two windows it makes.
  1412. * Horizontal scrolling of the lines in a window is now implemented.
  1413. C-x < (scroll-left) scrolls all displayed lines left,
  1414. with the numeric argument (default 1) saying how far to scroll.
  1415. When the window is scrolled left, some amount of the beginning
  1416. of each nonempty line is replaced by an "$".
  1417. C-x > scrolls right. If a window has no text hidden at the left
  1418. margin, it cannot be scrolled any farther right than that.
  1419. When nonzero leftwards scrolling is in effect in a window.
  1420. lines are automatically truncated at the window's right margin
  1421. regardless of the value of the variable truncate-lines in the
  1422. buffer being displayed.
  1423. * C-x C-d now uses the default output format of `ls',
  1424. which gives just file names in multiple columns.
  1425. C-u C-x C-d passes the -l switch to `ls'.
  1426. * C-t at the end of a line now exchanges the two preceding characters.
  1427. All the transpose commands now interpret zero as an argument
  1428. to mean to transpose the textual unit after or around dot
  1429. with the one after or around the mark.
  1430. * M-! executes a shell command in an inferior shell
  1431. and displays the output from it. With a prefix argument,
  1432. it inserts the output in the current buffer after dot
  1433. and sets the mark after the output. The shell command
  1434. gets /dev/null as its standard input.
  1435. M-| is like M-! but passes the contents of the region
  1436. as input to the shell command. A prefix argument makes
  1437. the output from the command replace the contents of the region.
  1438. * The mode line will now say "Def" after the major mode
  1439. while a keyboard macro is being defined.
  1440. * The variable fill-prefix is now used by Meta-q.
  1441. Meta-q removes the fill prefix from lines that start with it
  1442. before filling, and inserts the fill prefix on each line
  1443. after filling.
  1444. The command C-x . sets the fill prefix equal to the text
  1445. on the current line before dot.
  1446. * The new command Meta-j (indent-new-comment-line),
  1447. is like Linefeed (indent-new-line) except when dot is inside a comment;
  1448. in that case, Meta-j inserts a comment starter on the new line,
  1449. indented under the comment starter above. It also inserts
  1450. a comment terminator at the end of the line above,
  1451. if the language being edited calls for one.
  1452. * Rmail should work correctly now, and has some C-h m documentation.
  1453. Changes in Emacs 1.6
  1454. * save-buffers-kill-emacs is now on C-x C-c
  1455. while C-x C-z does suspend-emacs. This is to make
  1456. C-x C-c like the normal Unix meaning of C-c
  1457. and C-x C-z like the normal Unix meaning of C-z.
  1458. * M-ESC (eval-expression) is now a disabled command by default.
  1459. This prevents users who type ESC ESC accidentally from
  1460. getting confusing results. Put
  1461. (put 'eval-expression 'disabled nil)
  1462. in your ~/.emacs file to enable the command.
  1463. * Self-inserting text is grouped into bunches for undoing.
  1464. Each C-x u command undoes up to 20 consecutive self-inserting
  1465. characters.
  1466. * Help f now uses as a default the function being called
  1467. in the innermost Lisp expression that dot is in.
  1468. This makes it more convenient to use while writing
  1469. Lisp code to run in Emacs.
  1470. (If the text around dot does not appear to be a call
  1471. to a Lisp function, there is no default.)
  1472. Likewise, Help v uses the symbol around or before dot
  1473. as a default, if that is a variable name.
  1474. * Commands that read filenames now insert the default
  1475. directory in the minibuffer, to become part of your input.
  1476. This allows you to see what the default is.
  1477. You may type a filename which goes at the end of the
  1478. default directory, or you may edit the default directory
  1479. as you like to create the input you want to give.
  1480. You may also type an absolute pathname (starting with /)
  1481. or refer to a home directory (input starting with ~)
  1482. after the default; the presence of // or /~ causes
  1483. everything up through the slash that precedes your
  1484. type-in to be ignored.
  1485. Returning the default directory without change,
  1486. including the terminating slash, requests the use
  1487. of the default file name (usually the visited file's name).
  1488. Set the variable insert-default-directory to nil
  1489. to turn off this feature.
  1490. * M-x shell now uses the environment variable ESHELL,
  1491. if it exists, as the file name of the shell to run.
  1492. If there is no ESHELL variable, the SHELL variable is used.
  1493. This is because some shells do not work properly as inferiors
  1494. of Emacs (or anything like Emacs).
  1495. * A new variable minor-modes now exists, with a separate value
  1496. in each buffer. Its value should be an alist of elements
  1497. (MODE-FUNCTION-SYMBOL . PRETTY-NAME-STRING), one for each
  1498. minor mode that is turned on in the buffer. The pretty
  1499. name strings are displayed in the mode line after the name of the
  1500. major mode (with spaces between them). The mode function
  1501. symbols should be symbols whose function definitions will
  1502. turn on the minor mode if given 1 as an argument; they are present
  1503. so that Help m can find their documentation strings.
  1504. * The format of tag table files has been changed.
  1505. The new format enables Emacs to find tags much faster.
  1506. A new program, etags, exists to make the kind of
  1507. tag table that Emacs wants. etags is invoked just
  1508. like ctags; in fact, if you give it any switches,
  1509. it does exactly what ctags would do. Give it the
  1510. empty switch ("-") to make it act like ctags with no switches.
  1511. etags names the tag table file "TAGS" rather than "tags",
  1512. so that these tag tables and the standard Unix ones
  1513. can coexist.
  1514. The tags library can no longer use standard ctags-style
  1515. tag tables files.
  1516. * The file of Lisp code Emacs reads on startup is now
  1517. called ~/.emacs rather than ~/.emacs_pro.
  1518. * copy-file now gives the copied file the same mode bits
  1519. as the original file.
  1520. * Output from a process inserted into the process's buffer
  1521. no longer sets the buffer's mark. Instead it sets a
  1522. marker associated with the process to point to the end
  1523. of the inserted text. You can access this marker with
  1524. (process-mark PROCESS)
  1525. and then either examine its position with marker-position
  1526. or set its position with set-marker.
  1527. * completing-read takes a new optional fifth argument which,
  1528. if non-nil, should be a string of text to insert into
  1529. the minibuffer before reading user commands.
  1530. * The Lisp function elt now exists:
  1531. (elt ARRAY N) is like (aref ARRAY N),
  1532. (elt LIST N) is like (nth N LIST).
  1533. * rplaca is now a synonym for setcar, and rplacd for setcdr.
  1534. eql is now a synonym for eq; it turns out that the Common Lisp
  1535. distinction between eq and eql is insignificant in Emacs.
  1536. numberp is a new synonym for integerp.
  1537. * auto-save has been renamed to auto-save-mode.
  1538. * Auto save file names for buffers are now created by the
  1539. function make-auto-save-file-name. This is so you can
  1540. redefine that function to change the way auto save file names
  1541. are chosen.
  1542. * expand-file-name no longer discards a final slash.
  1543. (expand-file-name "foo" "/lose") => "/lose/foo"
  1544. (expand-file-name "foo/" "/lose") => "/lose/foo/"
  1545. Also, expand-file-name no longer substitutes $ constructs.
  1546. A new function substitute-in-file-name does this. Reading
  1547. a file name with read-file-name or the `f' or`F' option
  1548. of interactive calling uses substitute-in-file-name
  1549. on the file name that was read and returns the result.
  1550. All I/O primitives including insert-file-contents and
  1551. delete-file call expand-file-name on the file name supplied.
  1552. This change makes them considerably faster in the usual case.
  1553. * Interactive calling spec strings allow the new code letter 'D'
  1554. which means to read a directory name. It is like 'f' except
  1555. that the default if the user makes no change in the minibuffer
  1556. is to return the current default directory rather than the
  1557. current visited file name.
  1558. Changes in Emacs 1.5
  1559. * suspend-emacs now accepts an optional argument
  1560. which is a string to be stuffed as terminal input
  1561. to be read by Emacs's superior shell after Emacs exits.
  1562. A library called ledit exists which uses this feature
  1563. to transmit text to a Lisp job running as a sibling of
  1564. Emacs.
  1565. * If find-file is given the name of a directory,
  1566. it automatically invokes dired on that directory
  1567. rather than reading in the binary data that make up
  1568. the actual contents of the directory according to Unix.
  1569. * Saving an Emacs buffer now preserves the file modes
  1570. of any previously existing file with the same name.
  1571. This works using new Lisp functions file-modes and
  1572. set-file-modes, which can be used to read or set the mode
  1573. bits of any file.
  1574. * The Lisp function cond now exists, with its traditional meaning.
  1575. * defvar and defconst now permit the documentation string
  1576. to be omitted. defvar also permits the initial value
  1577. to be omitted; then it acts only as a comment.
  1578. Changes in Emacs 1.4
  1579. * Auto-filling now normally indents the new line it creates
  1580. by calling indent-according-to-mode. This function, meanwhile,
  1581. has in Fundamental and Text modes the effect of making the line
  1582. have an indentation of the value of left-margin, a per-buffer variable.
  1583. Tab no longer precisely does indent-according-to-mode;
  1584. it does that in all modes that supply their own indentation routine,
  1585. but in Fundamental, Text and allied modes it inserts a tab character.
  1586. * The command M-x grep now invokes grep (on arguments
  1587. supplied by the user) and reads the output from grep
  1588. asynchronously into a buffer. The command C-x ` can
  1589. be used to move to the lines that grep has found.
  1590. This is an adaptation of the mechanism used for
  1591. running compilations and finding the loci of error messages.
  1592. You can now use C-x ` even while grep or compilation
  1593. is proceeding; as more matches or error messages arrive,
  1594. C-x ` will parse them and be able to find them.
  1595. * M-x mail now provides a command to send the message
  1596. and "exit"--that is, return to the previously selected
  1597. buffer. It is C-z C-z.
  1598. * Tab in C mode now tries harder to adapt to all indentation styles.
  1599. If the line being indented is a statement that is not the first
  1600. one in the containing compound-statement, it is aligned under
  1601. the beginning of the first statement.
  1602. * The functions screen-width and screen-height return the
  1603. total width and height of the screen as it is now being used.
  1604. set-screen-width and set-screen-height tell Emacs how big
  1605. to assume the screen is; they each take one argument,
  1606. an integer.
  1607. * The Lisp function 'function' now exists. function is the
  1608. same as quote, except that it serves as a signal to the
  1609. Lisp compiler that the argument should be compiled as
  1610. a function. Example:
  1611. (mapcar (function (lambda (x) (+ x 5))) list)
  1612. * The function set-key has been renamed to global-set-key.
  1613. undefine-key and local-undefine-key has been renamed to
  1614. global-unset-key and local-unset-key.
  1615. * Emacs now collects input from asynchronous subprocesses
  1616. while waiting in the functions sleep-for and sit-for.
  1617. * Shell mode's Newline command attempts to distinguish subshell
  1618. prompts from user input when issued in the middle of the buffer.
  1619. It no longer reexecutes from dot to the end of the line;
  1620. it reeexecutes the entire line minus any prompt.
  1621. The prompt is recognized by searching for the value of
  1622. shell-prompt-pattern, starting from the beginning of the line.
  1623. Anything thus skipped is not reexecuted.
  1624. Changes in Emacs 1.3
  1625. * An undo facility exists now. Type C-x u to undo a batch of
  1626. changes (usually one command's changes, but some commands
  1627. such as query-replace divide their changes into multiple
  1628. batches. You can repeat C-x u to undo further. As long
  1629. as no commands other than C-x u intervene, each one undoes
  1630. another batch. A numeric argument to C-x u acts as a repeat
  1631. count.
  1632. If you keep on undoing, eventually you may be told that
  1633. you have used up all the recorded undo information.
  1634. Some actions, such as reading in files, discard all
  1635. undo information.
  1636. The undo information is not currently stored separately
  1637. for each buffer, so it is mainly good if you do something
  1638. totally spastic. [This has since been fixed.]
  1639. * A learn-by-doing tutorial introduction to Emacs now exists.
  1640. Type C-h t to enter it.
  1641. * An Info documentation browser exists. Do M-x info to enter it.
  1642. It contains a tutorial introduction so that no more documentation
  1643. is needed here. As of now, the only documentation in it
  1644. is that of Info itself.
  1645. * Help k and Help c are now different. Help c prints just the
  1646. name of the function which the specified key invokes. Help k
  1647. prints the documentation of the function as well.
  1648. * A document of the differences between GNU Emacs and Twenex Emacs
  1649. now exists. It is called DIFF, in the same directory as this file.
  1650. * C mode can now indent comments better, including multi-line ones.
  1651. Meta-Control-q now reindents comment lines within the expression
  1652. being aligned.
  1653. * Insertion of a close-parenthesis now shows the matching open-parenthesis
  1654. even if it is off screen, by printing the text following it on its line
  1655. in the minibuffer.
  1656. * A file can now contain a list of local variable values
  1657. to be in effect when the file is edited. See the file DIFF
  1658. in the same directory as this file for full details.
  1659. * A function nth is defined. It means the same thing as in Common Lisp.
  1660. * The function install-command has been renamed to set-key.
  1661. It now takes the key sequence as the first argument
  1662. and the definition for it as the second argument.
  1663. Likewise, local-install-command has been renamed to local-set-key.
  1664. Changes in Emacs 1.2
  1665. * A Lisp single-stepping and debugging facility exists.
  1666. To cause the debugger to be entered when an error
  1667. occurs, set the variable debug-on-error non-nil.
  1668. To cause the debugger to be entered whenever function foo
  1669. is called, do (debug-on-entry 'foo). To cancel this,
  1670. do (cancel-debug-on-entry 'foo). debug-on-entry does
  1671. not work for primitives (written in C), only functions
  1672. written in Lisp. Most standard Emacs commands are in Lisp.
  1673. When the debugger is entered, the selected window shows
  1674. a buffer called " *Backtrace" which displays a series
  1675. of stack frames, most recently entered first. For each
  1676. frame, the function name called is shown, usually followed
  1677. by the argument values unless arguments are still being
  1678. calculated. At the beginning of the buffer is a description
  1679. of why the debugger was entered: function entry, function exit,
  1680. error, or simply that the user called the function `debug'.
  1681. To exit the debugger and return to top level, type `q'.
  1682. In the debugger, you can evaluate Lisp expressions by
  1683. typing `e'. This is equivalent to `M-ESC'.
  1684. When the debugger is entered due to an error, that is
  1685. all you can do. When it is entered due to function entry
  1686. (such as, requested by debug-on-entry), you have two
  1687. options:
  1688. Continue execution and reenter debugger after the
  1689. completion of the function being entered. Type `c'.
  1690. Continue execution but enter the debugger before
  1691. the next subexpression. Type `d'.
  1692. You will see that some stack frames are marked with *.
  1693. This means the debugger will be entered when those
  1694. frames exit. You will see the value being returned
  1695. in the first line of the backtrace buffer. Your options:
  1696. Continue execution, and return that value. Type `c'.
  1697. Continue execution, and return a specified value. Type `r'.
  1698. You can mark a frame to enter the debugger on exit
  1699. with the `b' command, or clear such a mark with `u'.
  1700. * Lisp macros now exist.
  1701. For example, you can write
  1702. (defmacro cadr (arg) (list 'car (list 'cdr arg)))
  1703. and then the expression
  1704. (cadr foo)
  1705. will expand into
  1706. (car (cdr foo))
  1707. Changes in Emacs 1.1
  1708. * The initial buffer is now called "scratch" and is in a
  1709. new major mode, Lisp Interaction mode. This mode is
  1710. intended for typing Lisp expressions, evaluating them,
  1711. and having the values printed into the buffer.
  1712. Type Linefeed after a Lisp expression, to evaluate the
  1713. expression and have its value printed into the buffer,
  1714. advancing dot.
  1715. The other commands of Lisp mode are available.
  1716. * The C-x C-e command for evaluating the Lisp expression
  1717. before dot has been changed to print the value in the
  1718. minibuffer line rather than insert it in the buffer.
  1719. A numeric argument causes the printed value to appear
  1720. in the buffer instead.
  1721. * In Lisp mode, the command M-C-x evaluates the defun
  1722. containing or following dot. The value is printed in
  1723. the minibuffer.
  1724. * The value of a Lisp expression evaluated using M-ESC
  1725. is now printed in the minibuffer.
  1726. * M-q now runs fill-paragraph, independent of major mode.
  1727. * C-h m now prints documentation on the current buffer's
  1728. major mode. What it prints is the documentation of the
  1729. major mode name as a function. All major modes have been
  1730. equipped with documentation that describes all commands
  1731. peculiar to the major mode, for this purpose.
  1732. * You can display a Unix manual entry with
  1733. the M-x manual-entry command.
  1734. * You can run a shell, displaying its output in a buffer,
  1735. with the M-x shell command. The Return key sends input
  1736. to the subshell. Output is printed inserted automatically
  1737. in the buffer. Commands C-c, C-d, C-u, C-w and C-z are redefined
  1738. for controlling the subshell and its subjobs.
  1739. "cd", "pushd" and "popd" commands are recognized as you
  1740. enter them, so that the default directory of the Emacs buffer
  1741. always remains the same as that of the subshell.
  1742. * C-x $ (that's a real dollar sign) controls line-hiding based
  1743. on indentation. With a numeric arg N > 0, it causes all lines
  1744. indented by N or more columns to become invisible.
  1745. They are, effectively, tacked onto the preceding line, where
  1746. they are represented by " ..." on the screen.
  1747. (The end of the preceding visible line corresponds to a
  1748. screen cursor position before the "...". Anywhere in the
  1749. invisible lines that follow appears on the screen as a cursor
  1750. position after the "...".)
  1751. Currently, all editing commands treat invisible lines just
  1752. like visible ones, except for C-n and C-p, which have special
  1753. code to count visible lines only.
  1754. C-x $ with no argument turns off this mode, which in any case
  1755. is remembered separately for each buffer.
  1756. * Outline mode is another form of selective display.
  1757. It is a major mode invoked with M-x outline-mode.
  1758. It is intended for editing files that are structured as
  1759. outlines, with heading lines (lines that begin with one
  1760. or more asterisks) and text lines (all other lines).
  1761. The number of asterisks in a heading line are its level;
  1762. the subheadings of a heading line are all following heading
  1763. lines at higher levels, until but not including the next
  1764. heading line at the same or a lower level, regardless
  1765. of intervening text lines.
  1766. In outline mode, you have commands to hide (remove from display)
  1767. or show the text or subheadings under each heading line
  1768. independently. Hidden text or subheadings are invisibly
  1769. attached to the end of the preceding heading line, so that
  1770. if you kill the heading line and yank it back elsewhere
  1771. all the invisible lines accompany it.
  1772. All editing commands treat hidden outline-mode lines
  1773. as part of the preceding visible line.
  1774. * C-x C-z runs save-buffers-kill-emacs
  1775. offers to save each file buffer, then exits.
  1776. * C-c's function is now called suspend-emacs.
  1777. * The command C-x m runs mail, which switches to a buffer *mail*
  1778. and lets you compose a message to send. C-x 4 m runs mail in
  1779. another window. Type C-z C-s in the mail buffer to send the
  1780. message according to what you have entered in the buffer.
  1781. You must separate the headers from the message text with
  1782. an empty line.
  1783. * You can now dired partial directories (specified with names
  1784. containing *'s, etc, all processed by the shell). Also, you
  1785. can dired more than one directory; dired names the buffer
  1786. according to the filespec or directory name. Reinvoking
  1787. dired on a directory already diredded just switches back to
  1788. the same directory used last time; do M-x revert if you want
  1789. to read in the current contents of the directory.
  1790. C-x d runs dired, and C-x 4 d runs dired in another window.
  1791. C-x C-d (list-directory) also allows partial directories now.
  1792. Lisp programming changes
  1793. * t as an output stream now means "print to the minibuffer".
  1794. If there is already text in the minibuffer printed via t
  1795. as an output stream, the new text is appended to the old
  1796. (or is truncated and lost at the margin). If the minibuffer
  1797. contains text put there for some other reason, it is cleared
  1798. first.
  1799. t is now the top-level value of standard-output.
  1800. t as an input stream now means "read via the minibuffer".
  1801. The minibuffer is used to read a line of input, with editing,
  1802. and this line is then parsed. Any excess not used by `read'
  1803. is ignored; each `read' from t reads fresh input.
  1804. t is now the top-level value of standard-input.
  1805. * A marker may be used as an input stream or an output stream.
  1806. The effect is to grab input from where the marker points,
  1807. advancing it over the characters read, or to insert output
  1808. at the marker and advance it.
  1809. * Output from an asynchronous subprocess is now inserted at
  1810. the end of the associated buffer, not at the buffer's dot,
  1811. and the buffer's mark is set to the end of the inserted output
  1812. each time output is inserted.
  1813. * (pos-visible-in-window-p POS WINDOW)
  1814. returns t if position POS in WINDOW's buffer is in the range
  1815. that is being displayed in WINDOW; nil if it is scrolled
  1816. vertically out of visibility.
  1817. If display in WINDOW is not currently up to date, this function
  1818. calculates carefully whether POS would appear if display were
  1819. done immediately based on the current (window-start WINDOW).
  1820. POS defaults to (dot), and WINDOW to (selected-window).
  1821. * Variable buffer-alist replaced by function (buffer-list).
  1822. The actual alist of buffers used internally by Emacs is now
  1823. no longer accessible, to prevent the user from crashing Emacs
  1824. by modifying it. The function buffer-list returns a list
  1825. of all existing buffers. Modifying this list cannot hurt anything
  1826. as a new list is constructed by each call to buffer-list.
  1827. * load now takes an optional third argument NOMSG which, if non-nil,
  1828. prevents load from printing a message when it starts and when
  1829. it is done.
  1830. * byte-recompile-directory is a new function which finds all
  1831. the .elc files in a directory, and regenerates each one which
  1832. is older than the corresponding .el (Lisp source) file.
  1833. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  1834. This file is part of GNU Emacs.
  1835. GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
  1836. it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
  1837. the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
  1838. (at your option) any later version.
  1839. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  1840. but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  1841. MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
  1842. GNU General Public License for more details.
  1843. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
  1844. along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
  1845. Local variables:
  1846. mode: text
  1847. end: