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1 \input texinfo.tex @c -*-texinfo-*-
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2 @c %**start of header
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3 @setfilename xemacs-faq.info
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4 @settitle Frequently asked questions about XEmacs
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5 @setchapternewpage off
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6 @c %**end of header
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7
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8 @titlepage
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9 @title XEmacs FAQ
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10 @subtitle Frequently asked questions about XEmacs
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11 @subtitle Last Modified: 1997-06-18
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12 @sp 1
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13 @author Tony Rossini <arossini@@stat.sc.edu>
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14 @author Ben Wing <wing@@netcom.com>
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15 @author Chuck Thompson <cthomp@@cs.uiuc.edu>
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16 @author Steve Baur <steve@@miranova.com>
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17 @author Andreas Kaempf <andreas@@sccon.com>
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18 @page
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19 @end titlepage
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20
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21 @node Top, Introduction, (dir), (dir)
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22 @top XEmacs FAQ
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23
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24 This is the guide to the XEmacs Frequently Asked Questions list---a
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25 compendium of questions and answers pertaining to one of the finest
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26 programs ever written. It is much more than just a Text Editor.
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27
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28 This FAQ is freely redistributable. I take no liability for the
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29 correctness and safety of any procedures or advice given here. This
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30 FAQ is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
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31 WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
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32 FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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33
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34 If you have a Web browser, the official hypertext version is at
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35 <URL:http://www.sccon.com/~andreas/xemacs-faq.html> and also at
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36 <URL:http://www.xemacs.org/faq/xemacs-faq.html>. This version is much
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37 nicer than the unofficial hypertext versions that are archived at
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38 Utrecht, Oxford, Smart Pages, and other FAQ archives.
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39
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40 @menu
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41 * Introduction:: Introduction, Policy, Credits.
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42 * Installation:: Installation and Trouble Shooting.
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43 * Customization:: Customization and Options.
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44 * Subsystems:: Major Subsystems.
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45 * Miscellaneous:: The Miscellaneous Stuff.
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46 * Current Events:: What the Future Holds.
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47 @end menu
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48
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49 @node Introduction, Installation, Top, Top
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50 @chapter Introduction, Policy, Credits
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51
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52 Learning XEmacs is a lifelong activity. I've been using Emacs for
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53 over a decade now, and I'm still discovering new features. Therefore
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54 this document cannot be complete. Instead it is aimed at the person
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55 who is either considering XEmacs for their own use, or has just
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56 obtained it and is wondering what to do next. It is also useful as a
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57 reference to available resources.
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58
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59 The previous maintainer of the FAQ was Anthony Rossini
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60 <rossini@@stat.sc.edu>, who started it, after getting tired of hearing
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61 JWZ complain about repeatedly having to answer questions. Ben Wing
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62 <ben@@666.com> and Chuck Thompson <cthomp@@xemacs.org>, the principal
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63 authors of XEmacs, then took over and Ben did a massive update
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64 reorganizing the whole thing. At which point Anthony took back over,
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65 but then had to give it up again. Some of the other contributors to
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66 this FAQ are listed later in this document.
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67
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68 The previous version was converted to hypertext format, and edited by
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69 Steven L. Baur <steve@@altair.xemacs.org>. It was converted back to
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70 texinfo by Hrvoje Niksic <hniksic@@srce.hr>.
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71
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72 Since Steve Baur is so busy putting out multiple versions of XEmacs I
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73 have taken on the task of maintaining the FAQ. I use XEmacs on a daily
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74 basis and I wanted to give something back to the community that has made
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75 XEmacs possible. If you notice any errors or items which should be
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76 added or amended to this FAQ please send email to Andreas Kaempf
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77 <andreas@@sccon.com>. Include @samp{XEmacs FAQ} on the Subject: line.
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78
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79 @menu
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80 Introduction:
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81 * Q1.0.1:: What is XEmacs?
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82 * Q1.0.2:: What is the current version of XEmacs?
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83 * Q1.0.3:: Where can I find it?
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84 * Q1.0.4:: Why Another Version of Emacs?
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85 * Q1.0.5:: Why Haven't XEmacs and GNU Emacs Merged?
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86 * Q1.0.6:: Where can I get help?
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87 * Q1.0.7:: Where is the mailing list archived?
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88 * Q1.0.8:: How do you pronounce XEmacs?
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89 * Q1.0.9:: What does XEmacs look like?
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90 * Q1.0.10:: Is there a port of XEmacs to Microsoft ('95 or NT)?
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91 * Q1.0.11:: Is there a port of XEmacs to the Macintosh?
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92 * Q1.0.12:: Is there a port of XEmacs to NextStep?
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93 * Q1.0.13:: Is there a port of XEmacs to OS/2?
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94 * Q1.0.14:: Where can I get a printed copy of the XEmacs users manual?
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95
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96 Policies:
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97 * Q1.1.1:: What is the FAQ editorial policy?
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98 * Q1.1.2:: How do I become a Beta Tester?
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99 * Q1.1.3:: How do I contribute to XEmacs itself?
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100
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101 Credits:
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102 * Q1.2.1:: Who wrote XEmacs?
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103 * Q1.2.2:: Who contributed to this version of the FAQ?
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104 * Q1.2.3:: Who contributed to the FAQ in the past?
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105
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106 Internationalization:
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107 * Q1.3.1:: What is the status of XEmacs v20?
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108 * Q1.3.2:: What is the status of Asian-language support, aka @var{mule}?
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109 * Q1.3.3:: How do I type non-ASCII characters?
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110 * Q1.3.4:: Can XEmacs messages come out in a different language?
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111 * Q1.3.5:: Please explain the various input methods in MULE/XEmacs 20.0
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112 * Q1.3.6:: How do I portably code for MULE/XEmacs 20.0?
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113 * Q1.3.7:: How about Cyrillic Modes?
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114
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115 Getting Started:
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116 * Q1.4.1:: What is a @file{.emacs} and is there a sample one?
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117 * Q1.4.2:: Can I use the same @file{.emacs} with the other Emacs?
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118 * Q1.4.3:: Any good XEmacs tutorials around?
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119 * Q1.4.4:: May I see an example of a useful XEmacs Lisp function?
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120 * Q1.4.5:: And how do I bind it to a key?
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121 * Q1.4.6:: What's the difference between a macro and a function?
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122 * Q1.4.7:: Why options saved with 19.13 don't work with 19.14 or later?
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123 @end menu
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124
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125 @node Q1.0.1, Q1.0.2, Introduction, Introduction
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126 @section What is XEmacs?
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127
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128 An alternative to GNU Emacs, originally based on an early alpha version
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129 of FSF's version 19, and has diverged quite a bit since then. XEmacs
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130 was known as Lucid Emacs through version 19.10. Almost all features of
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131 GNU Emacs are supported in XEmacs The maintainers of XEmacs actively
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132 track changes to GNU Emacs while also working to add new features.
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133
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134 @node Q1.0.2, Q1.0.3, Q1.0.1, Introduction
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135 @section What is the current version of XEmacs?
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136
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137 The current stable version of XEmacs is 20.2, released in May, 1997.
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138 The next feature release will XEmacs 20.3.
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139
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140 XEmacs 19.15 was the last release of v19, released in March, 1997.
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141
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142 To help users who are not yet ready to move to XEmacs 20, we run a
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143 patch-page with official bugfixes for 19.15 at:
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144
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145 @example
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146 <URL:http://www.xemacs.org/xemacs-19.15-patches/patch-page.html>
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147 @end example
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148
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149 The page is maintained by Vinnie Shelton @code{<acs@@acm.org>}. These
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150 fixes will be integrated to a XEmacs and released as 19.16, which would
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151 serve as stable XEmacs until 20.x settles completely.
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152
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153 @node Q1.0.3, Q1.0.4, Q1.0.2, Introduction
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154 @section Where can I find it?
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155
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156 The canonical source and binaries is found via anonymous FTP at:
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157
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158 @example
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159 <URL:ftp.xemacs.org:/pub/xemacs/>
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160 @end example
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161
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162 @node Q1.0.4, Q1.0.5, Q1.0.3, Introduction
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163 @section Why Another Version of Emacs?
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164
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165 For a detailed description of the differences between GNU Emacs and
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166 XEmacs and a detailed history of XEmacs, check out the
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167 @example
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168 <URL:http://www.xemacs.org/NEWS.html>
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169 @end example
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170
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171 However, here is a list of some of the reasons why we think you might
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172 consider using it:
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173
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174 @itemize @bullet
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175 @item
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176 It looks nicer.
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177
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178 @item
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179 The XEmacs maintainers are generally more receptive to suggestions than
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180 the GNU Emacs maintainers.
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181
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182 @item
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183 Many more bundled packages than GNU Emacs
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184
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185 @item
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186 Binaries are available for many common operating systems.
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187
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188 @item
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189 Face support on TTY's.
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190
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191 @item
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192 A built-in toolbar.
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193
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194 @item
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195 Better Motif compliance.
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196
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197 @item
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198 Some internationalization support (including full MULE support, if
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199 compiled with it.)
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200
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201 @item
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202 Variable-width fonts.
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203
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204 @item
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205 Variable-height lines.
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206
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207 @item
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208 Marginal annotations.
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209
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210 @item
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211 ToolTalk support.
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212
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213 @item
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214 XEmacs can be used as an Xt widget, and can be embedded within another
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215 application.
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216
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217 @item
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218 Horizontal and vertical scrollbars (using real toolkit scrollbars).
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219
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220 @item
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221 Better APIs (and performance) for attaching fonts, colors, and other
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222 properties to text.
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223
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224 @item
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225 The ability to embed arbitrary graphics in a buffer.
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226
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227 @item
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228 Completely compatible (at the C level) with the Xt-based toolkits.
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229
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230 @item
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231 First production Web Browser supporting Style Sheets.
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232 @end itemize
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233
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234 @node Q1.0.5, Q1.0.6, Q1.0.4, Introduction
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235 @section Why Haven't XEmacs and GNU Emacs Merged?
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236
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237 There are currently irreconcilable differences in the views about
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238 technical, programming, design and organizational matters between RMS
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239 and the XEmacs development team which provide little hope for a merge to
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240 take place in the short-term future.
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241
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242 @node Q1.0.6, Q1.0.7, Q1.0.5, Introduction
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243 @section Where can I get help?
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244
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245 Probably the easiest way, if everything is installed, is to use info, by
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246 pressing @kbd{C-h i}, or selecting @code{Emacs Info} from the Help Menu.
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247
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248 Also, @kbd{M-x apropos} will look for commands for you.
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249
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250 Try reading this FAQ, examining the regular GNU Emacs FAQ (which can be
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251 found with the Emacs 19 distribution) as well as at
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252 @example
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253 <URL:http://www.eecs.nwu.edu/emacs/faq/>
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254 @end example
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255 and reading the Usenet group comp.emacs.xemacs.
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256
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257 If that does not help, try posting your question to comp.emacs.xemacs.
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258 Please @strong{do not} post XEmacs related questions to gnu.emacs.help.
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259
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260 If you cannot post or read Usenet news, there is a corresponding mailing
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261 list which is available. It can be subscribed to by sending a message
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262 with a subject of @samp{subscribe} to
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263 @example
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264 <xemacs-request@@xemacs.org>
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265 @end example
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266 for subscription information and
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267 @example
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268 <xemacs@@xemacs.org>
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269 @end example
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270 to send messages to the list.
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271
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272 To cancel a subscription, you @strong{must} use the xemacs-request
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273 address. Send a message with a subject of @samp{unsubscribe} to be
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274 removed.
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275
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276 @node Q1.0.7, Q1.0.8, Q1.0.6, Introduction
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277 @section Where is the mailing list archived?
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278
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279 The mailing list is archived in the directory
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280 @example
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281 <URL:ftp://ftp.xemacs.org:/pub/mlists/>.
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282 @end example
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283
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284 @node Q1.0.8, Q1.0.9, Q1.0.7, Introduction
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285 @section How do you pronounce XEmacs?
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286
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287 I pronounce it @samp{Eks eemax}.
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288
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289 @node Q1.0.9, Q1.0.10, Q1.0.8, Introduction
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290 @section What does XEmacs look like?
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291
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292 Screen snapshots are available in the WWW version of the FAQ.
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293 @example
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294 <URL:http://www.xemacs.org/faq/xemacs-faq.html>
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295 @end example
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296
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297 @node Q1.0.10, Q1.0.11, Q1.0.9, Introduction
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298 @section Is there a port of XEmacs to Microsoft ('95 or NT)?
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299
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300 Altrasoft is actively seeking corporate and government sponsors to help
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301 fund a fully native port of XEmacs to Windows 95 and NT using full-time,
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302 senior-level staff working under a professionally managed project
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303 structure. See <URL:http://www.altrasoft.com/> for more details or
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304 contact Altrasoft directly at 1-888-ALTSOFT.
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305
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306 The closest is @dfn{Win-Emacs}, which is based on Lucid Emacs 19.6.
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307 Available from <URL:http://www.pearlsoft.com/>.
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308
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309 There's a port of GNU Emacs (not XEmacs) at
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310 @example
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311 <URL:http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/voelker/ntemacs.html>.
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312 @end example
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313
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314 @node Q1.0.11, Q1.0.12, Q1.0.10, Introduction
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315 @section Is there a port of XEmacs to the Macintosh?
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316
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317 There has been a port to the MachTen environment of XEmacs 19.13, but no
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318 patches have been submitted to the maintainers to get this in the
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319 mainstream distribution.
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320
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321 @node Q1.0.12, Q1.0.13, Q1.0.11, Introduction
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322 @section Is there a port of XEmacs to NextStep?
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323
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324 Carl Edman, apparently no longer at <cedman@@princeton.edu>, did the
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325 port of GNU Emacs to NeXTstep and expressed interest in doing the XEmacs
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326 port, but never went any farther.
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327
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328 @node Q1.0.13, Q1.0.14, Q1.0.12, Introduction
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329 @section Is there a port of XEmacs to OS/2?
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330
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331 No, and there is no news of anyone working on it.
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332
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333 @node Q1.0.14, Q1.1.1, Q1.0.13, Introduction
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334 @section Where can I obtain a printed copy of the XEmacs users manual?
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335
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336 InfoDock Associates, a firm specializing in Emacs-related support and
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337 development, will be maintaining the XEmacs user manual. The firm plans
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338 to begin publishing printed copies of the manual in March 1997.
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339
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340 @example
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341 Web: http://www.xemacs.com
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342 E-mail: <info@@xemacs.com>
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343 Tel: +1 408 243 3300
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344 @end example
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345
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346 @node Q1.1.1, Q1.1.2, Q1.0.14, Introduction
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347 @section What is the FAQ editorial policy?
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348
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349 The FAQ is actively maintained and modified regularly. All links should
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350 be up to date.
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351
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352 Changes are displayed on a monthly basis. @dfn{Months}, for this
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353 purpose are defined as the 5th of the month through the 5th of the
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354 month. Preexisting questions that have been changed are marked as such.
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355 Brand new questions are tagged.
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356
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357 All submissions are welcome. E-mail submissions to Andreas Kaempf
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358 <andreas@@sccon.com>.
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359
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360 Please make sure that @samp{XEmacs FAQ} appears on the Subject: line.
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361 If you think you have a better way of answering a question, or think a
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362 question should be included, I'd like to hear about it. Questions and
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363 answers included into the FAQ will be edited for spelling and grammar,
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364 and will be attributed. Answers appearing without attribution are
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365 either from versions of the FAQ dated before May 1996, or are from one
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366 of the four people listed at the top of this document. Answers quoted
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367 from Usenet news articles will always be attributed, regardless of the
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368 author.
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369
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370 @node Q1.1.2, Q1.1.3, Q1.1.1, Introduction
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371 @section How do I become a Beta Tester?
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372
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373 Send an email message to <xemacs-beta-request@@xemacs.org> with a
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374 subject line of @samp{subscribe}. Fill out and return the questionnaire
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375 you get back, and you will receive the password to get at the current
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376 beta.
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377
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378 Be prepared to get your hands dirty, as beta testers are expected to
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379 identify problems as best they can.
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380
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381 @node Q1.1.3, Q1.2.1, Q1.1.2, Introduction
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382 @section How do I contribute to XEmacs itself?
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383
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384 Ben Wing <ben@@666.com> writes:
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385
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386 @quotation
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387 BTW if you have a wish list of things that you want added, you have to
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388 speak up about it! More specifically, you can do the following if you
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389 want a feature added (in increasing order of usefulness):
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390
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391 @itemize @bullet
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392 @item
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393 Make a posting about a feature you want added.
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394
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395 @item
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396 Become a beta tester and make more postings about those same features.
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397
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398 @item
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399 Convince us that you're going to use the features in some cool and
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400 useful way.
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401
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402 @item
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403 Come up with a clear and well-thought-out API concerning the features.
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404
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405 @item
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406 Write the code to implement a feature and send us a patch.
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407 @end itemize
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408
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409 (not that we're necessarily requiring you to write the code, but we can
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410 always hope :)
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411 @end quotation
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412
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413 @node Q1.2.1, Q1.2.2, Q1.1.3, Introduction
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414 @section Who wrote XEmacs?
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415
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416 XEmacs is the result of the time and effort of many people. The
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417 developers responsible for the 19.15/20.0 release are:
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418
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419 @itemize @bullet
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420 @item Martin Buchholz <mrb@@eng.sun.com>
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421
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422 @item Steve Baur <steve@@altair.xemacs.org>
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423 @end itemize
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424
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425 The developers responsible for the 19.14 release are:
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426
|
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427 @itemize @bullet
|
|
428 @item Chuck Thompson <cthomp@@xemacs.org>
|
|
429
|
|
430 Chuck was Mr. XEmacs from 19.11 through 19.14, and is responsible
|
|
431 for XEmacs becoming a widely distributed program over the Internet.
|
|
432
|
|
433 @item Ben Wing <ben@@666.com>
|
|
434 @end itemize
|
|
435
|
|
436 Jamie Zawinski was Mr. Lucid Emacs from 19.0 through 19.10, the last
|
|
437 release actually named Lucid Emacs. Richard Mlynarik was crucial to
|
|
438 most of those releases.
|
|
439
|
|
440 @itemize @bullet
|
|
441 @item Jamie Zawinski <jwz@@netscape.com>
|
|
442
|
|
443 @item Richard Mlynarik <mly@@adoc.xerox.com>
|
|
444 @end itemize
|
|
445
|
|
446 Along with many other contributors, partially enumerated in the
|
|
447 @samp{About XEmacs} option in the Help menu.
|
|
448
|
|
449 @node Q1.2.2, Q1.2.3, Q1.2.1, Introduction
|
|
450 @section Who contributed to this version of the FAQ?
|
|
451
|
|
452 The following people contributed valuable suggestions to building this
|
|
453 version of the FAQ (listed in alphabetical order):
|
|
454
|
|
455 @itemize @bullet
|
116
|
456 @item Steven L Baur <steve@@miranova.com>
|
|
457
|
126
|
458 @item Hrvoje Niksic <hniksic@@srce.hr>
|
|
459
|
82
|
460 @end itemize
|
|
461
|
|
462 @node Q1.2.3, Q1.3.1, Q1.2.2, Introduction
|
|
463 @section Who contributed to the FAQ in the past?
|
|
464
|
|
465 This is only a partial list, as many names were lost in a hard disk
|
|
466 crash some time ago.
|
|
467
|
|
468 @itemize @bullet
|
|
469 @item Curtis.N.Bingham <binge@@aloft.att.com>
|
|
470
|
|
471 @item Richard Caley <rjc@@cogsci.ed.ac.uk>
|
|
472
|
163
|
473 @item Richard Cognot <cognot@@ensg.u-nancy.fr>
|
|
474
|
82
|
475 @item William G. Dubuque <wgd@@martigny.ai.mit.edu>
|
|
476
|
|
477 @item Eric Eide <eeide@@cs.utah.edu>
|
|
478
|
|
479 @item Chris Flatters <cflatter@@nrao.edu>
|
|
480
|
|
481 @item Evelyn Ginsparg <ginsparg@@adra.com>
|
|
482
|
|
483 @item Marty Hall <hall@@aplcenmp.apl.jhu.edu>
|
|
484
|
126
|
485 @item Darrell Kindred <dkindred@@cmu.edu>
|
|
486
|
163
|
487 @item David Moore <dmoore@@ucsd.edu>
|
126
|
488
|
82
|
489 @item Arup Mukherjee <arup+@@cmu.edu>
|
|
490
|
|
491 @item Juergen Nickelsen <nickel@@prz.tu-berlin.de>
|
|
492
|
|
493 @item Kevin R. Powell <powell@@csl.ncsa.uiuc.edu>
|
|
494
|
126
|
495 @item Justin Sheehy <dworkin@@ccs.neu.edu>
|
|
496
|
82
|
497 @item Stig <stig@@hackvan.com>
|
163
|
498
|
|
499 @item Aki Vehtari <Aki.Vehtari@@hut.fi>
|
82
|
500 @end itemize
|
|
501
|
|
502 @node Q1.3.1, Q1.3.2, Q1.2.3, Introduction
|
|
503 @section What is the status of XEmacs v20?
|
|
504
|
|
505 XEmacs v20 is the version of XEmacs that includes MULE (Asian-language)
|
163
|
506 support. XEmacs 20.0 was released in February 1997, followed by XEmacs
|
|
507 20.2 in May. When compiled without MULE support 20.2 is currently very
|
|
508 similar to 19.15 (except for some changes to the byte-code format, some
|
|
509 new primitive types including @code{char}, @code{char-table}, and
|
|
510 @code{range-table}) and equally stable.
|
82
|
511
|
|
512 @node Q1.3.2, Q1.3.3, Q1.3.1, Introduction
|
|
513 @section What is the status of Asian-language support, aka MULE?
|
|
514
|
|
515 The MULE support works OK but still needs a fair amount of work before
|
|
516 it's really solid. We could definitely use some help here, esp. people
|
|
517 who speak Japanese and will use XEmacs/MULE to work with Japanese and
|
|
518 have some experience with E-Lisp. Martin Buchholz
|
|
519 <Martin.Buchholz@@sun.com> is working full-time on this currently. If
|
|
520 you can help out here, @xref{Q1.1.2}.
|
|
521
|
|
522 @node Q1.3.3, Q1.3.4, Q1.3.2, Introduction
|
|
523 @section How do I type non-ASCII characters?
|
|
524
|
|
525 See question 3.5.7 (@xref{Q3.5.7}) in part 3 of this FAQ.
|
|
526
|
|
527 @node Q1.3.4, Q1.3.5, Q1.3.3, Introduction
|
|
528 @section Can XEmacs messages come out in a different language?
|
|
529
|
|
530 The message-catalog support has mostly been written but doesn't
|
|
531 currently work. The first release of XEmacs 20 will @emph{not} support
|
|
532 it. However, menubar localization @emph{does} work, even in 19.14. To
|
|
533 enable it, add to your @file{Emacs} file entries like this:
|
|
534
|
|
535 @example
|
|
536 Emacs*XlwMenu.resourceLabels: True
|
|
537 Emacs*XlwMenu.file.labelString: Fichier
|
|
538 Emacs*XlwMenu.openInOtherWindow.labelString: In anderem Fenster offnen
|
|
539 @end example
|
|
540
|
|
541 The name of the resource is derived from the non-localized entry by
|
|
542 removing punctuation and capitalizing as above. Martin Buchholz
|
|
543 <Martin.Buchholz@@sun.com> is working on adding support for Asian
|
|
544 language menubar localization to XEmacs 20.
|
|
545
|
|
546 @node Q1.3.5, Q1.3.6, Q1.3.4, Introduction
|
|
547 @section Please explain the various input methods in MULE/XEmacs 20.0
|
|
548
|
|
549 MORIOKA Tomohiko <morioka@@jaist.ac.jp> writes:
|
|
550
|
|
551 @quotation
|
|
552 Original Mule supports following input methods: Wnn4, Wnn6, Canna, SJ3
|
|
553 and XIM. Interfaces for Wnn and SJ3 uses the @code{egg} user
|
|
554 interface. Interface for Canna does not use @samp{egg}. I don't know
|
|
555 about XIM. It is to support ATOK, of course, it may work for another
|
|
556 servers.
|
|
557
|
|
558 Wnn supports Japanese, Chinese and Korean. It is made by OMRON and Kyôto
|
|
559 university. It is a powerful and complex system. Wnn4 is free and Wnn6
|
|
560 is not free.
|
|
561
|
|
562 Canna supports only Japanese. It is made by NEC. It is a simple and
|
|
563 powerful system. Canna uses only grammar (Wnn uses grammar and
|
|
564 probability between words), so I think Wnn is cleverer than Canna,
|
|
565 however Canna users made a good grammar and dictionary. So for standard
|
|
566 modern Japanese, Canna seems cleverer than Wnn4. In addition, the UNIX
|
|
567 version of Canna is free (now there is a Microsoft Windows version).
|
|
568
|
|
569 SJ3 supports only Japanese. It is made by Sony. XIM supports was made
|
|
570 to use ATOK (a major input method in personal computer world). XIM is
|
|
571 the standard for accessing input methods bundled in Japanese versions of
|
|
572 Solaris. (XEmacs 20 will support XIM input).
|
|
573
|
|
574 Egg consists of following parts:
|
|
575
|
|
576 @enumerate
|
|
577 @item Input character Translation System (ITS) layer.
|
|
578 It translates ASCII inputs to Kana/PinYin/Hangul characters.
|
|
579
|
|
580 @item Kana/PinYin/Hangul to Kanji transfer layer.
|
126
|
581 It is interface layer for network Kana-Kanji server (Wnn and Sj3).
|
82
|
582 @end enumerate
|
|
583
|
|
584 These input methods are modal, namely there are mode, alphabet mode and
|
|
585 Kana-Kanji transfer mode. However there are mode-less input methods for
|
|
586 Egg and Canna. @samp{Boiled-egg} is a mode-less input method running on
|
|
587 Egg. For Canna, @samp{canna.el} has a tiny boiled-egg like command,
|
|
588 @code{(canna-boil)}, and there are some boiled-egg like utilities. In
|
|
589 addition, it was planned to make an abstraction for all transfer type
|
|
590 input methods. However authors of input methods are busy, so maybe this
|
|
591 plan is stopped. Perhaps after Mule merged GNU Emacs will be released,
|
|
592 it will be continued.
|
|
593 @end quotation
|
|
594
|
|
595 @node Q1.3.6, Q1.3.7, Q1.3.5, Introduction
|
163
|
596 @section How do I portably code for MULE/XEmacs 20?
|
82
|
597
|
|
598 MORIOKA Tomohiko <morioka@@jaist.ac.jp> writes:
|
|
599
|
|
600 @quotation
|
|
601 MULE and XEmacs are quite different. So the application
|
|
602 implementor must write separate code for these mule variants.
|
|
603
|
|
604 MULE and the next version of Emacs are similar but the symbols are very
|
|
605 different---requiring separate code as well.
|
|
606
|
|
607 Namely we must support 3 kinds of mule variants and 4 or 5 or 6 kinds of
|
|
608 emacs variants... (;_;) I'm shocked, so I wrote a wrapper package called
|
|
609 @code{emu} to provide a common interface.
|
|
610
|
|
611 I have the following suggestions about dealing with mule variants:
|
|
612
|
|
613 @itemize @bullet
|
|
614 @item
|
|
615 @code{(featurep 'mule)} @code{t} on all mule variants
|
|
616
|
|
617 @item
|
|
618 @code{(boundp 'MULE)} is @code{t} on only MULE. Maybe the next version
|
|
619 of Emacs will not have this symbol.
|
|
620
|
|
621 @item
|
|
622 MULE has a variable @code{mule-version}. Perhaps the next version of
|
|
623 Emacs will have this variable as well.
|
|
624 @end itemize
|
|
625
|
|
626 Following is a sample to distinguish mule variants:
|
|
627
|
|
628 @lisp
|
|
629 (if (featurep 'mule)
|
|
630 (cond ((boundp 'MULE)
|
|
631 ;; for original Mule
|
|
632 )
|
|
633 ((string-match "XEmacs" emacs-version)
|
|
634 ;; for XEmacs with Mule
|
|
635 )
|
|
636 (t
|
|
637 ;; for next version of Emacs
|
|
638 ))
|
|
639 ;; for old emacs variants
|
|
640 )
|
|
641 @end lisp
|
|
642 @end quotation
|
|
643
|
|
644 @node Q1.3.7, Q1.4.1, Q1.3.6, Introduction
|
|
645 @section How about Cyrillic Modes?
|
|
646
|
|
647 Ilya Zakharevich <ilya@@math.ohio-state.edu> writes:
|
|
648
|
|
649 @quotation
|
|
650 There is a cyrillic mode in the file @file{mysetup.zip} in
|
|
651 <URL:ftp://ftp.math.ohio-state.edu/pub/users/ilya/emacs/>. This is a
|
|
652 modification to Valery Alexeev's <ava@@math.jhu.ed> @file{russian.el}
|
116
|
653 which can be obtained from
|
126
|
654 <URL:ftp://ftp.cis.ohio-state.edu/pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/packages/russian.el.Z>.
|
82
|
655 @end quotation
|
|
656
|
|
657 Dima Barsky <d.barsky@@ee.surrey.ac.uk> writes:
|
|
658
|
|
659 @quotation
|
|
660 There is another cyrillic mode for both GNU Emacs and XEmacs by Dmitrii
|
|
661 (Mitya) Manin <manin@@camelot.mssm.edu> at
|
|
662 <URL:http://camelot.mssm.edu/~manin/cyr.el>.
|
|
663 @end quotation
|
|
664
|
|
665 @node Q1.4.1, Q1.4.2, Q1.3.7, Introduction
|
|
666 @section What is a @file{.emacs} and is there a sample one?
|
|
667
|
|
668 The @file{.emacs} file is used to customize XEmacs to your tastes. No
|
|
669 two are alike, nor are they expected to be alike, but that's the point.
|
|
670 The XEmacs distribution contains an excellent starter example in the etc
|
|
671 directory called @file{sample.emacs}. Copy this file from there to your
|
|
672 home directory and rename it @file{.emacs}. Then edit it to suit.
|
|
673
|
|
674 Starting with 19.14, you may bring the @file{sample.emacs} into an
|
|
675 XEmacs buffer by selecting @samp{Help->Sample .emacs} from the menubar.
|
|
676 To determine the location of the @file{etc} directory type the command
|
|
677 @kbd{C-h v data-directory RET}.
|
|
678
|
|
679 @node Q1.4.2, Q1.4.3, Q1.4.1, Introduction
|
|
680 @section Can I use the same @file{.emacs} with the other Emacs?
|
|
681
|
|
682 Yes. The sample @file{.emacs} included in the XEmacs distribution will
|
|
683 show you how to handle different versions and flavors of Emacs.
|
|
684
|
|
685 @node Q1.4.3, Q1.4.4, Q1.4.2, Introduction
|
|
686 @section Any good tutorials around?
|
|
687
|
|
688 There's the XEmacs tutorial available from the Help Menu, or by typing
|
|
689 @kbd{C-h t}.
|
|
690
|
|
691 There's an Emacs Lisp tutorial at
|
|
692
|
|
693 @example
|
|
694 <URL:ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/emacs-lisp-intro-1.04.tar.gz>.
|
|
695 @end example
|
|
696
|
|
697 Erik Sundermann <erik@@petaxp.rug.ac.be> has made a tutorial web page at
|
|
698 <URL:http://petaxp.rug.ac.be/~erik/xemacs/>.
|
|
699
|
|
700 @node Q1.4.4, Q1.4.5, Q1.4.3, Introduction
|
|
701 @section May I see an example of a useful XEmacs Lisp function?
|
|
702
|
|
703 The following function does a little bit of everything useful. It does
|
|
704 something with the prefix argument, it examines the text around the
|
|
705 cursor, and it's interactive so it may be bound to a key. It inserts
|
|
706 copies of the current word the cursor is sitting on at the cursor. If
|
|
707 you give it a prefix argument: @kbd{C-u 3 M-x double-word} then it will
|
|
708 insert 3 copies.
|
|
709
|
|
710 @lisp
|
|
711 (defun double-word (count)
|
|
712 "Insert a copy of the current word underneath the cursor"
|
|
713 (interactive "*p")
|
|
714 (let (here there string)
|
|
715 (save-excursion
|
|
716 (forward-word -1)
|
|
717 (setq here (point))
|
|
718 (forward-word 1)
|
|
719 (setq there (point))
|
|
720 (setq string (buffer-substring here there)))
|
|
721 (while (>= count 1)
|
163
|
722 (insert string)
|
|
723 (decf count))))
|
82
|
724 @end lisp
|
|
725
|
|
726 The best way to see what is going on here is to let XEmacs tell you.
|
|
727 Put the code into an XEmacs buffer, and do a @kbd{C-h f} with the cursor
|
|
728 sitting just to the right of the function you want explained. Eg. move
|
|
729 the cursor to the SPACE between @code{interactive} and @samp{"*p"} and
|
|
730 hit @kbd{C-h f} to see what the function @code{interactive} does. Doing
|
|
731 this will tell you that the @code{*} requires a writable buffer, and
|
|
732 @code{p} converts the prefix argument to a number, and
|
|
733 @code{interactive} allows you to execute the command with @kbd{M-x}.
|
|
734
|
|
735 @node Q1.4.5, Q1.4.6, Q1.4.4, Introduction
|
|
736 @section And how do I bind it to a key?
|
|
737
|
|
738 To bind to a key do:
|
|
739
|
|
740 @lisp
|
|
741 (global-set-key "\C-cd" 'double-word)
|
|
742 @end lisp
|
|
743
|
|
744 Or interactively, @kbd{M-x global-set-key} and follow the prompts.
|
|
745
|
163
|
746 You can also view Jari Aalto's <jaalto@@tre.ntc.nokia.com> file:
|
|
747
|
|
748 @example
|
|
749 <URL:ftp://cs.uta.fi/pub/ssjaaa/ema-keys.html>
|
|
750 @end example
|
82
|
751
|
|
752 @node Q1.4.6, Q1.4.7, Q1.4.5, Introduction
|
|
753 @section What's the difference between a macro and a function?
|
|
754
|
163
|
755 Quoting from the Lisp Reference (a.k.a @dfn{Lispref}) Manual:
|
82
|
756
|
|
757 @dfn{Macros} enable you to define new control constructs and other
|
|
758 language features. A macro is defined much like a function, but instead
|
|
759 of telling how to compute a value, it tells how to compute another Lisp
|
|
760 expression which will in turn compute the value. We call this
|
|
761 expression the @dfn{expansion} of the macro.
|
|
762
|
|
763 Macros can do this because they operate on the unevaluated expressions
|
|
764 for the arguments, not on the argument values as functions do. They can
|
|
765 therefore construct an expansion containing these argument expressions
|
|
766 or parts of them.
|
|
767
|
163
|
768 Do not confuse the two terms with @dfn{keyboard macros}, which are
|
|
769 another matter, entirely. A keyboard macro is a key bound to several
|
|
770 other keys. Refer to manual for details.
|
|
771
|
82
|
772 @node Q1.4.7, , Q1.4.6, Introduction
|
126
|
773 @section How come options saved with 19.13 don't work with 19.14 or later?
|
82
|
774
|
|
775 There's a problem with options of the form:
|
|
776
|
|
777 @lisp
|
|
778 (add-spec-list-to-specifier (face-property 'searchm-field 'font)
|
|
779 '((global (nil))))
|
|
780 @end lisp
|
|
781
|
|
782 saved by a 19.13 XEmacs that causes a 19.14 XEmacs grief. You must
|
126
|
783 delete these options. XEmacs 19.14 and later no longer write the
|
|
784 options directly to @file{.emacs} which should allow us to deal with
|
|
785 version incompatibilities better in the future.
|
82
|
786
|
|
787 Options saved under XEmacs 19.13 are protected by code that specifically
|
|
788 requires a version 19 XEmacs. This won't be a problem unless you're
|
|
789 testing XEmacs v20. You should consider changing the code to read:
|
|
790
|
|
791 @lisp
|
|
792 (cond
|
|
793 ((and (string-match "XEmacs" emacs-version)
|
|
794 (boundp 'emacs-major-version)
|
|
795 (or (and (= emacs-major-version 19)
|
|
796 (>= emacs-minor-version 12))
|
|
797 (>= emacs-major-version 20)))
|
|
798 ...
|
163
|
799 ))
|
82
|
800 @end lisp
|
|
801
|
|
802 @node Installation, Customization, Introduction, Top
|
|
803 @chapter Installation and Trouble Shooting
|
|
804
|
|
805 This is part 2 of the XEmacs Frequently Asked Questions list. This
|
|
806 section is devoted to Installation, Maintenance and Trouble Shooting.
|
|
807
|
|
808 @menu
|
|
809 Installation:
|
163
|
810 * Q2.0.1:: Running XEmacs without installing.
|
|
811 * Q2.0.2:: XEmacs is too big.
|
82
|
812 * Q2.0.3:: Compiling XEmacs with Netaudio.
|
163
|
813 * Q2.0.4:: Problems with Linux and ncurses.
|
82
|
814 * Q2.0.5:: Do I need X11 to run XEmacs?
|
|
815 * Q2.0.6:: I'm having strange crashes. What do I do?
|
|
816 * Q2.0.7:: Libraries in non-standard locations.
|
|
817 * Q2.0.8:: can't resolve symbol _h_errno
|
163
|
818 * Q2.0.9:: Where do I find external libraries?
|
82
|
819 * Q2.0.10:: After I run configure I find a coredump, is something wrong?
|
|
820 * Q2.0.11:: XEmacs can't resolve host names.
|
163
|
821 * Q2.0.12:: Why can't I strip XEmacs?
|
82
|
822 * Q2.0.13:: Can't link XEmacs on Solaris with Gcc.
|
163
|
823 * Q2.0.14:: Make on HP/UX 9 fails after linking temacs
|
82
|
824
|
|
825 Trouble Shooting:
|
|
826 * Q2.1.1:: XEmacs just crashed on me!
|
|
827 * Q2.1.2:: Cryptic Minibuffer messages.
|
163
|
828 * Q2.1.3:: Translation Table Syntax messages at Startup.
|
82
|
829 * Q2.1.4:: Startup warnings about deducing proper fonts?
|
|
830 * Q2.1.5:: XEmacs cannot connect to my X Terminal.
|
|
831 * Q2.1.6:: XEmacs just locked up my Linux X server.
|
|
832 * Q2.1.7:: HP Alt key as Meta.
|
|
833 * Q2.1.8:: got (wrong-type-argument color-instance-p nil)!
|
|
834 * Q2.1.9:: XEmacs causes my OpenWindows 3.0 server to crash.
|
|
835 * Q2.1.10:: Warnings from incorrect key modifiers.
|
163
|
836 * Q2.1.11:: [This question intentionally left blank]
|
82
|
837 * Q2.1.12:: Regular Expression Problems on DEC OSF1.
|
|
838 * Q2.1.13:: HP/UX 10.10 and @code{create_process} failure
|
|
839 * Q2.1.14:: @kbd{C-g} doesn't work for me. Is it broken?
|
|
840 * Q2.1.15:: How to debug an XEmacs problem with a debugger.
|
|
841 * Q2.1.16:: XEmacs crashes in @code{strcat} on HP/UX 10.
|
|
842 * Q2.1.17:: @samp{Marker does not point anywhere}.
|
|
843 * Q2.1.18:: 19.14 hangs on HP/UX 10.10.
|
|
844 * Q2.1.19:: XEmacs does not follow the local timezone.
|
|
845 * Q2.1.20:: @samp{Symbol's function definition is void: hkey-help-show.}
|
|
846 * Q2.1.21:: Every so often the XEmacs frame freezes.
|
116
|
847 * Q2.1.22:: XEmacs seems to take a really long time to do some things.
|
163
|
848 * Q2.1.23:: Movemail on Linux does not work for XEmacs 19.15 and later.
|
82
|
849 @end menu
|
|
850
|
|
851 @node Q2.0.1, Q2.0.2, Installation, Installation
|
|
852 @section Running XEmacs without installing
|
|
853
|
|
854 The @file{INSTALL} file says that up to 108 MB of space is needed
|
|
855 temporarily during installation! How can I just try it out?
|
|
856
|
|
857 XEmacs will run in place without requiring installation and copying of
|
|
858 the Lisp directories, and without having to specify a special build-time
|
|
859 flag. It's the copying of the Lisp directories that requires so much
|
|
860 space. XEmacs is largely written in Lisp.
|
|
861
|
|
862 A good method is to make a shell alias for xemacs:
|
|
863
|
|
864 @example
|
163
|
865 alias xemacs=/i/xemacs-20.2/src/xemacs
|
82
|
866 @end example
|
|
867
|
|
868 (You will obviously use whatever directory you downloaded the source
|
163
|
869 tree to instead of @file{/i/xemacs-20.2}).
|
82
|
870
|
|
871 This will let you run XEmacs without massive copying.
|
|
872
|
|
873 @node Q2.0.2, Q2.0.3, Q2.0.1, Installation
|
|
874 @section XEmacs is too big
|
|
875
|
|
876 Steve Baur <steve@@altair.xemacs.org> writes:
|
|
877
|
|
878 @quotation
|
163
|
879 XEmacs 20.3 will unbundle the lisp hierarchy and allow the installer
|
126
|
880 to choose exactly how much support code gets installed.
|
82
|
881 @end quotation
|
|
882
|
|
883 @node Q2.0.3, Q2.0.4, Q2.0.2, Installation
|
|
884 @section Compiling XEmacs with Netaudio.
|
|
885
|
|
886 What is the best way to compile XEmacs with the netaudio system, since I
|
|
887 have got the netaudio system compiled but installed at a weird place, I
|
|
888 am not root. Also in the READMEs it does not say anything about
|
|
889 compiling with the audioserver?
|
|
890
|
|
891 You should only need to add some stuff to the configure command line.
|
|
892 To tell it to compile in netaudio support: @samp{--with-sound=both}, or
|
|
893 @samp{--with-sound=nas} if you don't want native sound support for some
|
|
894 reason.) To tell it where to find the netaudio includes and libraries:
|
16
|
895
|
|
896 @example
|
82
|
897 --site-libraries=WHATEVER
|
|
898 --site-includes=WHATEVER
|
|
899 @end example
|
|
900
|
|
901 Then (fingers crossed) it should compile and it will use netaudio if you
|
|
902 have a server running corresponding to the X server. The netaudio server
|
|
903 has to be there when XEmacs starts. If the netaudio server goes away and
|
|
904 another is run, XEmacs should cope (fingers crossed, error handling in
|
|
905 netaudio isn't perfect).
|
|
906
|
|
907 BTW, netaudio has been renamed as it has a name clash with something
|
|
908 else, so if you see references to NAS or Network Audio System, it's the
|
|
909 same thing. It also might be found at
|
|
910 <URL:ftp.x.org:/contrib/audio/nas/>.
|
|
911
|
|
912 @node Q2.0.4, Q2.0.5, Q2.0.3, Installation
|
|
913 @section Problems with Linux and ncurses.
|
|
914
|
|
915 On Linux 1.3.98 with termcap 2.0.8 and the ncurses that came with libc
|
126
|
916 5.2.18, XEmacs 20.0b20 is unable to open a tty device:
|
82
|
917
|
|
918 @example
|
|
919 src/xemacs -nw -q
|
|
920 Initialization error: Terminal type `xterm' undefined (or can't access database?)
|
|
921 @end example
|
|
922
|
|
923 Ben Wing <ben@@666.com> writes:
|
|
924
|
|
925 @quotation
|
|
926 Your ncurses configuration is messed up. Your /usr/lib/terminfo is a
|
|
927 bad pointer, perhaps to a CD-ROM that is not inserted.
|
|
928 @end quotation
|
|
929
|
|
930 @node Q2.0.5, Q2.0.6, Q2.0.4, Installation
|
|
931 @section Do I need X11 to run XEmacs?
|
|
932
|
|
933 No. The name @dfn{XEmacs} is unfortunate in the sense that it is
|
|
934 @strong{not} an X Window System-only version of Emacs. Starting with
|
|
935 19.14 XEmacs has full color support on a color capable character
|
|
936 terminal.
|
|
937
|
|
938 @node Q2.0.6, Q2.0.7, Q2.0.5, Installation
|
|
939 @section I'm having strange crashes. What do I do?
|
|
940
|
|
941 There have been a variety of reports of crashes due to compilers with
|
|
942 buggy optimizers. Please see the @file{PROBLEMS} file that comes with
|
|
943 XEmacs to read what it says about your platform.
|
|
944
|
|
945 @node Q2.0.7, Q2.0.8, Q2.0.6, Installation
|
|
946 @section Libraries in non-standard locations
|
|
947
|
|
948 I have x-faces, jpeg, xpm etc. all in different places. I've tried
|
|
949 space-separated, comma-separated, several --site-libraries, all to no
|
|
950 avail.
|
|
951
|
|
952 @example
|
|
953 --site-libraries='/path/one /path/two /path/etc'
|
|
954 @end example
|
|
955
|
|
956 @node Q2.0.8, Q2.0.9, Q2.0.7, Installation
|
|
957 @section can't resolve symbol _h_errno
|
|
958
|
|
959 You are using the Linux/ELF distribution of XEmacs 19.14, and your ELF
|
|
960 libraries are out of date. You have the following options:
|
|
961
|
|
962 @enumerate
|
|
963 @item
|
|
964 Upgrade your libc to at least 5.2.16 (better is 5.2.18, 5.3.12, or
|
|
965 5.4.10).
|
|
966
|
|
967 @item
|
|
968 Patch the XEmacs binary by replacing all occurrences of
|
|
969 @samp{_h_errno^@@} with @samp{h_errno^@@^@@}. Any version of Emacs will
|
|
970 suffice. If you don't understand how to do this, don't do it.
|
|
971
|
|
972 @item
|
|
973 Rebuild XEmacs yourself -- any working ELF version of libc should be
|
|
974 O.K.
|
|
975 @end enumerate
|
|
976
|
|
977 Hrvoje Niksic <hniksic@@srce.hr> writes:
|
|
978
|
|
979 @quotation
|
|
980 Why not use a Perl one-liner for No. 2?
|
|
981
|
|
982 @example
|
|
983 perl -pi -e 's/_h_errno\0/h_errno\0\0/g' /usr/local/bin/xemacs-19.14
|
|
984 @end example
|
|
985
|
|
986 NB: You @emph{must} patch @file{/usr/local/bin/xemacs-19.14}, and not
|
|
987 @file{xemacs} because @file{xemacs} is a link to @file{xemacs-19.14};
|
|
988 the Perl @samp{-i} option will cause unwanted side-effects if applied to
|
|
989 a symbolic link.
|
|
990 @end quotation
|
|
991
|
116
|
992 Steve L. Baur <steve@@miranova.com> writes:
|
|
993
|
|
994 @quotation
|
|
995 If you build against a recent libc-5.4 (late enough to have caused
|
|
996 problems earlier in the beta cycle) and then run with an earlier version
|
|
997 of libc, you get a
|
|
998
|
|
999 @example
|
|
1000 $ xemacs
|
|
1001 xemacs: can't resolve symbol '__malloc_hook'
|
|
1002 zsh: 7942 segmentation fault (core dumped) xemacs
|
|
1003 @end example
|
|
1004
|
|
1005 (Example binary compiled against libc-5.4.23 and run with libc-5.4.16).
|
|
1006
|
|
1007 The solution is to upgrade to at least libc-5.4.23. Sigh. Drat.
|
|
1008 @end quotation
|
|
1009
|
82
|
1010 @node Q2.0.9, Q2.0.10, Q2.0.8, Installation
|
|
1011 @section Where do I find external libraries?
|
|
1012
|
|
1013 All external libraries used by XEmacs can be found at the XEmacs FTP
|
|
1014 site <URL:ftp://ftp.xemacs.org/pub/aux/>.
|
|
1015
|
163
|
1016 The canonical locations (at the time of this writing) are as follows:
|
82
|
1017
|
|
1018 @table @asis
|
|
1019 @item JPEG
|
|
1020 <URL:ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/>. Version 6a is current.
|
|
1021
|
|
1022 @item XPM
|
|
1023 <URL:ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib/libraries/>. Version 3.4j is current.
|
|
1024 Older versions of this package are known to cause XEmacs crashes.
|
|
1025
|
|
1026 @item TIFF
|
|
1027 <URL:ftp://ftp.sgi.com/graphics/tiff/>. v3.4 is current. The latest
|
|
1028 beta is v3.4b035. There is a HOWTO here.
|
|
1029
|
|
1030 @item PNG
|
|
1031 <URL:ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/png/>. 0.89c is current. XEmacs
|
|
1032 requires a fairly recent version to avoid using temporary files.
|
|
1033
|
|
1034 <URL:ftp://swrinde.nde.swri.edu/pub/png/src/>
|
|
1035
|
|
1036 @item Compface
|
|
1037 <URL:ftp://ftp.cs.indiana.edu/pub/faces/compface/>. This library has
|
|
1038 been frozen for about 6 years, and is distributed without version
|
|
1039 numbers. @emph{It should be compiled with the same options that X11 was
|
|
1040 compiled with on your system}. The version of this library at
|
|
1041 XEmacs.org includes the @file{xbm2xface.pl} script, written by
|
|
1042 stig@@hackvan.com, which may be useful when generating your own xface.
|
|
1043
|
|
1044 @item NAS
|
|
1045 <URL:ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib/audio/nas/>.
|
|
1046 Version 1.2p5 is current. There is a FAQ here.
|
|
1047 @end table
|
|
1048
|
|
1049 @node Q2.0.10, Q2.0.11, Q2.0.9, Installation
|
126
|
1050 @section After I run configure I find a core dump, is something wrong?
|
82
|
1051
|
|
1052 Not necessarily. If you have GNU sed 3.0 you should downgrade it to
|
|
1053 2.05. From the @file{README} at prep.ai.mit.edu:
|
|
1054
|
|
1055 @quotation
|
|
1056 sed 3.0 has been withdrawn from distribution. It has major revisions,
|
|
1057 which mostly seem to be improvements; but it turns out to have bugs too
|
|
1058 which cause trouble in some common cases.
|
|
1059
|
|
1060 Tom Lord won't be able to work fixing the bugs until May. So in the
|
|
1061 mean time, we've decided to withdraw sed 3.0 from distribution and make
|
|
1062 version 2.05 once again the recommended version.
|
|
1063 @end quotation
|
|
1064
|
|
1065 It has also been observed that the vfork test on Solaris will leave a
|
126
|
1066 core dump.
|
82
|
1067
|
|
1068 @node Q2.0.11, Q2.0.12, Q2.0.10, Installation
|
|
1069 @section XEmacs doesn't resolve hostnames.
|
|
1070
|
|
1071 This is the result of a long-standing problem with SunOS and the fact
|
|
1072 that stock SunOS systems do not ship with DNS resolver code in libc.
|
|
1073
|
|
1074 Christopher Davis <ckd@@loiosh.kei.com> writes:
|
|
1075
|
|
1076 @quotation
|
|
1077 That's correct [The SunOS 4.1.3 precompiled binaries don't do name
|
|
1078 lookup]. Since Sun figured that everyone used NIS to do name lookups
|
|
1079 (that DNS thing was apparently only a passing fad, right?), the stock
|
|
1080 SunOS 4.x systems don't have DNS-based name lookups in libc.
|
|
1081
|
|
1082 This is also why Netscape ships two binaries for SunOS 4.1.x.
|
|
1083
|
|
1084 The best solution is to compile it yourself; the configure script will
|
|
1085 check to see if you've put DNS in the shared libc and will then proceed
|
|
1086 to link against the DNS resolver library code.
|
|
1087 @end quotation
|
|
1088
|
|
1089 @node Q2.0.12, Q2.0.13, Q2.0.11, Installation
|
|
1090 @section Why can't I strip XEmacs?
|
|
1091
|
|
1092 Richard Cognot <cognot@@fronsac.ensg.u-nancy.fr> writes:
|
|
1093
|
|
1094 @quotation
|
|
1095 Because of the way XEmacs (and every other Emacsen, AFAIK) is built. The
|
|
1096 link gives you a bare-boned emacs (called temacs). temacs is then run,
|
|
1097 preloading some of the lisp files. The result is then dumped into a new
|
|
1098 executable, named xemacs, which will contain all of the preloaded lisp
|
|
1099 functions and data.
|
|
1100
|
|
1101 Now, during the dump itself, the executable (code+data+symbols) is
|
|
1102 written on disk using a special unexec() function. This function is
|
|
1103 obviously heavily system dependent. And on some systems, it leads to an
|
|
1104 executable which, although valid, cannot be stripped without damage. If
|
|
1105 memory serves, this is especially the case for AIX binaries. On other
|
|
1106 architecture it might work OK.
|
|
1107
|
|
1108 The Right Way to strip the emacs binary is to strip temacs prior to
|
|
1109 dumping xemacs. This will always work, although you can do that only if
|
|
1110 you install from sources (as temacs is @file{not} part of the binary
|
|
1111 kits).
|
|
1112 @end quotation
|
|
1113
|
|
1114 Nat Makarevitch <nat@@nataa.fr.eu.org> writes:
|
|
1115
|
|
1116 @quotation
|
|
1117 Here is the trick:
|
|
1118
|
|
1119 @enumerate
|
|
1120 @item
|
163
|
1121 [ ./configure; make ]
|
82
|
1122
|
|
1123 @item
|
163
|
1124 rm src/xemacs
|
82
|
1125
|
|
1126 @item
|
163
|
1127 strip src/temacs
|
82
|
1128
|
|
1129 @item
|
|
1130 make
|
|
1131
|
|
1132 @item
|
|
1133 cp src/xemacs /usr/local/bin/xemacs
|
|
1134
|
|
1135 @item
|
126
|
1136 cp lib-src/DOC-19.15-XEmacs /usr/local/lib/xemacs-19.15/i586-unknown-linuxaout
|
82
|
1137 @end enumerate
|
|
1138 @end quotation
|
|
1139
|
126
|
1140 @node Q2.0.13, Q2.0.14, Q2.0.12, Installation
|
82
|
1141 @section Problems linking with Gcc on Solaris
|
|
1142
|
|
1143 There are known difficulties linking with Gnu ld on Solaris. A typical
|
|
1144 error message might look like:
|
|
1145
|
|
1146 @example
|
|
1147 unexec(): dlopen(../dynodump/dynodump.so): ld.so.1: ./temacs:
|
|
1148 fatal: relocation error:
|
|
1149 symbol not found: main: referenced in ../dynodump/dynodump.so
|
|
1150 @end example
|
|
1151
|
|
1152 Martin Buchholz <mrb@@eng.sun.com> writes:
|
|
1153
|
|
1154 @quotation
|
|
1155 You need to specify @samp{-fno-gnu-linker} as part of your flags to pass
|
|
1156 to ld. Future releases of XEmacs will try to do this automatically.
|
|
1157 @end quotation
|
|
1158
|
126
|
1159 @node Q2.0.14, Q2.1.1, Q2.0.13, Installation
|
|
1160 @section Make on HP/UX 9 fails after linking temacs
|
|
1161
|
|
1162 Problem when building xemacs-19.15 on hpux 9:
|
|
1163
|
|
1164 Richard Cognot <cognot@@ensg.u-nancy.fr> writes:
|
|
1165
|
|
1166 @quotation
|
|
1167 make on hpux fails after linking temacs with a message:
|
|
1168
|
|
1169 @example
|
|
1170 "make: don't know how to make .y."
|
|
1171 @end example
|
|
1172
|
|
1173 Solution: This is a problem with HP make revision 70.X. Either use GNU
|
|
1174 make, or install PHCO_6552, which will bring make to revision
|
|
1175 72.24.1.17.
|
|
1176 @end quotation
|
|
1177
|
|
1178
|
|
1179 @node Q2.1.1, Q2.1.2, Q2.0.14, Installation
|
82
|
1180 @section Help! XEmacs just crashed on me!
|
|
1181
|
|
1182 First of all, don't panic. Whenever XEmacs crashes, it tries extremely
|
163
|
1183 hard to auto-save all of your files before dying. (The main time that
|
82
|
1184 this will not happen is if the machine physically lost power or if you
|
163
|
1185 killed the XEmacs process using @code{kill -9}). The next time you try
|
82
|
1186 to edit those files, you will be informed that a more recent auto-save
|
|
1187 file exists. You can use @kbd{M-x recover-file} to retrieve the
|
|
1188 auto-saved version of the file.
|
|
1189
|
|
1190 Starting with 19.14, you may use the command @kbd{M-x recover-session}
|
|
1191 after a crash to pick up where you left off.
|
|
1192
|
|
1193 Now, XEmacs is not perfect, and there may occasionally be times, or
|
|
1194 particular sequences of actions, that cause it to crash. If you can
|
|
1195 come up with a reproducible way of doing this (or even if you have a
|
|
1196 pretty good memory of exactly what you were doing at the time), the
|
|
1197 maintainers would be very interested in knowing about it. Post a
|
|
1198 message to comp.emacs.xemacs or send mail to <crashes@@xemacs.org>.
|
|
1199 Please note that the @samp{crashes} address is exclusively for crash
|
|
1200 reports.
|
|
1201
|
|
1202 If at all possible, include a stack backtrace of the core dump that was
|
|
1203 produced. This shows where exactly things went wrong, and makes it much
|
|
1204 easier to diagnose problems. To do this, you need to locate the core
|
|
1205 file (it's called @file{core}, and is usually sitting in the directory
|
|
1206 that you started XEmacs from, or your home directory if that other
|
|
1207 directory was not writable). Then, go to that directory and execute a
|
|
1208 command like:
|
|
1209
|
|
1210 @example
|
|
1211 gdb `which xemacs` core
|
|
1212 @end example
|
|
1213
|
|
1214 and then issue the command @samp{where} to get the stack backtrace. You
|
|
1215 might have to use @code{dbx} or some similar debugger in place of
|
|
1216 @code{gdb}. If you don't have any such debugger available, complain to
|
|
1217 your system administrator.
|
|
1218
|
|
1219 It's possible that a core file didn't get produced, in which case you're
|
|
1220 out of luck. Go complain to your system administrator and tell him not
|
|
1221 to disable core files by default. Also @xref{Q2.1.15} for tips and
|
|
1222 techniques for dealing with a debugger.
|
|
1223
|
|
1224 When making a problem report make sure that:
|
|
1225
|
|
1226 @enumerate
|
|
1227 @item
|
|
1228 Report @strong{all} of the information output by XEmacs during the
|
|
1229 crash.
|
|
1230
|
|
1231 @item
|
|
1232 You mention what O/S & Hardware you are running XEmacs on.
|
|
1233
|
|
1234 @item
|
|
1235 What version of XEmacs you are running.
|
|
1236
|
|
1237 @item
|
|
1238 What build options you are using.
|
|
1239
|
|
1240 @item
|
|
1241 If the problem is related to graphics, we will also need to know what
|
|
1242 version of the X Window System you are running, and what window manager
|
|
1243 you are using.
|
|
1244
|
|
1245 @item
|
|
1246 If the problem happened on a tty, please include the terminal type.
|
|
1247 @end enumerate
|
|
1248
|
|
1249 @node Q2.1.2, Q2.1.3, Q2.1.1, Installation
|
|
1250 @section Cryptic Minibuffer messages.
|
|
1251
|
|
1252 When I try to use some particular option of some particular package, I
|
|
1253 get a cryptic error in the minibuffer.
|
|
1254
|
|
1255 If you can't figure out what's going on, select Options/General
|
|
1256 Options/Debug on Error from the Menubar and then try and make the error
|
|
1257 happen again. This will give you a backtrace that may be enlightening.
|
|
1258 If not, try reading through this FAQ; if that fails, you could try
|
|
1259 posting to comp.emacs.xemacs (making sure to include the backtrace) and
|
|
1260 someone may be able to help. If you can identify which Emacs lisp
|
|
1261 source file the error is coming from you can get a more detailed stack
|
|
1262 backtrace by doing the following:
|
|
1263
|
|
1264 @enumerate
|
|
1265 @item
|
|
1266 Visit the .el file in an XEmacs buffer.
|
|
1267
|
|
1268 @item
|
|
1269 Issue the command @kbd{M-x eval-current-buffer}.
|
|
1270
|
|
1271 @item
|
|
1272 Reproduce the error.
|
|
1273 @end enumerate
|
|
1274
|
|
1275 Depending on the version of XEmacs, you may either select Edit->Show
|
|
1276 Messages (19.13 and earlier) or Help->Recent Keystrokes/Messages (19.14
|
|
1277 and later) from the menubar to see the most recent messages. This
|
|
1278 command is bound to @kbd{C-h l} by default.
|
|
1279
|
|
1280 @node Q2.1.3, Q2.1.4, Q2.1.2, Installation
|
|
1281 @section Translation Table Syntax messages at Startup
|
|
1282
|
|
1283 I get tons of translation table syntax error messages during startup.
|
|
1284 How do I get rid of them?
|
|
1285
|
|
1286 There are two causes of this problem. The first usually only strikes
|
|
1287 people using the prebuilt binaries. The culprit in both cases is the
|
|
1288 file @file{XKeysymDB}.
|
|
1289
|
|
1290 @itemize @bullet
|
|
1291 @item
|
|
1292 The binary cannot find the @file{XKeysymDB} file. The location is
|
|
1293 hardcoded at compile time so if the system the binary was built on puts
|
|
1294 it a different place than your system does, you have problems. To fix,
|
|
1295 set the environment variable @var{XKEYSYMDB} to the location of the
|
|
1296 @file{XKeysymDB} file on your system or to the location of the one
|
|
1297 included with XEmacs which should be at
|
126
|
1298 @file{<xemacs_root_directory>/lib/xemacs-19.15/etc/XKeysymDB}.
|
82
|
1299
|
|
1300 @item
|
|
1301 The binary is finding the XKeysymDB but it is out-of-date on your system
|
|
1302 and does not contain the necessary lines. Either ask your system
|
|
1303 administrator to replace it with the one which comes with XEmacs (which
|
|
1304 is the stock R6 version and is backwards compatible) or set your
|
|
1305 @var{XKEYSYMDB} variable to the location of XEmacs's described above.
|
|
1306 @end itemize
|
|
1307
|
|
1308 @node Q2.1.4, Q2.1.5, Q2.1.3, Installation
|
|
1309 @section Startup warnings about deducing proper fonts?
|
|
1310
|
|
1311 How can I avoid the startup warnings about deducing proper fonts?
|
|
1312
|
|
1313 This is highly dependent on your installation, but try with the
|
|
1314 following font as your base font for XEmacs and see what it does:
|
|
1315
|
|
1316 @example
|
|
1317 -adobe-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1
|
|
1318 @end example
|
|
1319
|
|
1320 More precisely, do the following in your resource file:
|
|
1321
|
|
1322 @example
|
|
1323 Emacs.default.attributeFont: -adobe-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1
|
16
|
1324 @end example
|
|
1325
|
82
|
1326 If you just don't want to see the @samp{*Warnings*} buffer at startup
|
|
1327 time, you can set this:
|
|
1328
|
|
1329 @lisp
|
|
1330 (setq display-warning-minimum-level 'error)
|
|
1331 @end lisp
|
|
1332
|
|
1333 The buffer still exists; it just isn't in your face.
|
|
1334
|
|
1335 @node Q2.1.5, Q2.1.6, Q2.1.4, Installation
|
|
1336 @section XEmacs cannot connect to my X Terminal!
|
|
1337
|
|
1338 Help! I can not get XEmacs to display on my Envizex X-terminal!
|
|
1339
|
|
1340 Try setting the @var{DISPLAY} variable using the numeric IP address of
|
|
1341 the host you are running XEmacs from.
|
|
1342
|
|
1343 @node Q2.1.6, Q2.1.7, Q2.1.5, Installation
|
|
1344 @section XEmacs just locked up my Linux X server!
|
|
1345
|
|
1346 There have been several reports of the X server locking up under Linux.
|
|
1347 In all reported cases removing speedo and scaled fonts from the font
|
|
1348 path corrected the problem. This can be done with the command
|
163
|
1349 @code{xset}.
|
82
|
1350
|
|
1351 It is possible that using a font server may also solve the problem.
|
|
1352
|
|
1353 @node Q2.1.7, Q2.1.8, Q2.1.6, Installation
|
|
1354 @section HP Alt key as Meta.
|
|
1355
|
|
1356 How can I make XEmacs recognize the Alt key of my HP workstation as a
|
|
1357 Meta key?
|
|
1358
|
|
1359 Put the following line into a file and load it with xmodmap(1) before
|
|
1360 starting XEmacs:
|
|
1361
|
|
1362 @example
|
|
1363 remove Mod1 = Mode_switch
|
|
1364 @end example
|
|
1365
|
|
1366 @node Q2.1.8, Q2.1.9, Q2.1.7, Installation
|
|
1367 @section got (wrong-type-argument color-instance-p nil)
|
|
1368
|
|
1369 Natalie Kershaw <nataliek@@rd.scitec.com.au> writes:
|
|
1370
|
|
1371 @quotation
|
|
1372 I am trying to run xemacs 19.13 under X11R4. Whenever I move the mouse I
|
|
1373 get the following error. Has anyone seen anything like this? This
|
|
1374 doesn't occur on X11R5.
|
|
1375
|
|
1376 @lisp
|
|
1377 Signalling: (error "got (wrong-type-argument color-instance-p nil) and I don't know why!")
|
|
1378 @end lisp
|
|
1379 @end quotation
|
|
1380
|
|
1381 dinos <map01kd@@gold.ac.uk> writes:
|
|
1382
|
|
1383 @quotation
|
|
1384 I think this is due to undefined resources; You need to define color
|
|
1385 backgrounds and foregrounds into your @file{.../app-defaults/Emacs}
|
|
1386 like:
|
|
1387
|
|
1388 @example
|
|
1389 *Foreground: Black ;everything will be of black on grey95,
|
|
1390 *Background: Grey95 ;unless otherwise specified.
|
|
1391 *cursorColor: Red3 ;red3 cursor with grey95 border.
|
|
1392 *pointerColor: Red3 ;red3 pointer with grey95 border.
|
|
1393 @end example
|
|
1394 @end quotation
|
|
1395
|
|
1396 Natalie Kershaw adds:
|
|
1397
|
|
1398 @quotation
|
|
1399 What fixed the problem was adding some more colors to the X color
|
|
1400 database (copying the X11R5 colors over), and also defining the
|
|
1401 following resources:
|
|
1402
|
|
1403 @example
|
|
1404 xemacs*cursorColor: black
|
|
1405 xemacs*pointerColor: black
|
|
1406 @end example
|
|
1407
|
|
1408 With the new colours installed the problem still occurs if the above
|
|
1409 resources are not defined.
|
|
1410
|
|
1411 If the new colours are not present then an additional error occurs on
|
|
1412 XEmacs startup, which says @samp{Color Red3} not defined.
|
|
1413 @end quotation
|
|
1414
|
|
1415 @node Q2.1.9, Q2.1.10, Q2.1.8, Installation
|
|
1416 @section XEmacs causes my OpenWindows 3.0 server to crash.
|
|
1417
|
|
1418 The OpenWindows 3.0 server is incredibly buggy. Your best bet is to
|
|
1419 replace it with one from the generic MIT X11 release. You might also
|
|
1420 try disabling parts of your @file{.emacs}, like enabling background
|
|
1421 pixmaps.
|
|
1422
|
|
1423 @node Q2.1.10, Q2.1.11, Q2.1.9, Installation
|
|
1424 @section Warnings from incorrect key modifiers.
|
|
1425
|
|
1426 The following information comes from the @file{PROBLEMS} file that comes
|
|
1427 with XEmacs.
|
|
1428
|
|
1429 If you're having troubles with HP/UX it is because HP/UX defines the
|
|
1430 modifiers wrong in X. Here is a shell script to fix the problem; be
|
|
1431 sure that it is run after VUE configures the X server.
|
|
1432
|
|
1433 @example
|
|
1434 #! /bin/sh
|
|
1435 xmodmap 2> /dev/null - << EOF
|
|
1436 keysym Alt_L = Meta_L
|
|
1437 keysym Alt_R = Meta_R
|
|
1438 EOF
|
|
1439
|
|
1440 xmodmap - << EOF
|
|
1441 clear mod1
|
|
1442 keysym Mode_switch = NoSymbol
|
|
1443 add mod1 = Meta_L
|
|
1444 keysym Meta_R = Mode_switch
|
|
1445 add mod2 = Mode_switch
|
|
1446 EOF
|
|
1447 @end example
|
|
1448
|
|
1449 @node Q2.1.11, Q2.1.12, Q2.1.10, Installation
|
126
|
1450 @section [This question intentionally left blank]
|
|
1451
|
|
1452 Obsolete question, left blank to avoid renumbering.
|
82
|
1453
|
|
1454 @node Q2.1.12, Q2.1.13, Q2.1.11, Installation
|
|
1455 @section Problems with Regular Expressions on DEC OSF1.
|
|
1456
|
|
1457 I have xemacs 19.13 running on an alpha running OSF1 V3.2 148 and ispell
|
|
1458 would not run because it claimed the version number was incorrect
|
|
1459 although it was indeed OK. I traced the problem to the regular
|
|
1460 expression handler.
|
|
1461
|
|
1462 Douglas Kosovic <douglask@@dstc.edu.au> writes:
|
|
1463
|
|
1464 @quotation
|
|
1465 Actually it's a DEC cc optimisation bug that screws up the regexp
|
|
1466 handling in XEmacs.
|
|
1467
|
|
1468 Rebuilding using the @samp{-migrate} switch for DEC cc (which uses a
|
|
1469 different sort of optimisation) works fine.
|
|
1470 @end quotation
|
|
1471
|
|
1472 See @file{xemacs-19_13-dunix-3_2c.patch} at the following URL on how to
|
|
1473 build with the @samp{-migrate} flag:
|
|
1474
|
|
1475 @example
|
|
1476 <URL:http://www-digital.cern.ch/carney/emacs/emacs.html>
|
|
1477 @end example
|
|
1478
|
|
1479 NOTE: There have been a variety of other problems reported that are
|
|
1480 fixed in this fashion.
|
|
1481
|
|
1482 @node Q2.1.13, Q2.1.14, Q2.1.12, Installation
|
|
1483 @section HP/UX 10.10 and @code{create_process} failure.
|
|
1484
|
|
1485 Dave Carrigan <Dave.Carrigan@@ipl.ca> writes:
|
|
1486
|
|
1487 @quotation
|
|
1488 With XEmacs 19.13 and HP/UX 10.10, anything that relies on the
|
|
1489 @code{create_process} function fails. This breaks a lot of things
|
|
1490 (shell-mode, compile, ange-ftp, to name a few).
|
|
1491 @end quotation
|
|
1492
|
|
1493 Phil Johnson <johnson@@dtc.hp.com> writes:
|
|
1494
|
|
1495 @quotation
|
|
1496 This is a problem specific to HP-UX 10.10. It only occurs when XEmacs
|
|
1497 is compiled for shared libraries (the default), so you can work around
|
|
1498 it by compiling a statically-linked binary (run configure with
|
|
1499 @samp{--dynamic=no}).
|
|
1500
|
|
1501 I'm not sure whether the problem is with a particular shared library or
|
|
1502 if it's a kernel problem which crept into 10.10.
|
|
1503 @end quotation
|
|
1504
|
|
1505 Richard Cognot <cognot@@ensg.u-nancy.fr> writes:
|
|
1506
|
|
1507 @quotation
|
|
1508 I had a few problems with 10.10. Apparently, some of them were solved by
|
|
1509 forcing a static link of libc (manually).
|
|
1510 @end quotation
|
|
1511
|
|
1512 @node Q2.1.14, Q2.1.15, Q2.1.13, Installation
|
|
1513 @section @kbd{C-g} doesn't work for me. Is it broken?
|
|
1514
|
|
1515 Ben Wing <ben@@666.com> writes:
|
|
1516
|
|
1517 @quotation
|
|
1518 @kbd{C-g} does work for most people in most circumstances. If it
|
|
1519 doesn't, there are only two explanations:
|
|
1520
|
|
1521 @enumerate
|
|
1522 @item
|
|
1523 The code is wrapped with a binding of @code{inhibit-quit} to
|
|
1524 @code{t}. @kbd{Ctrl-Shift-G} should still work, I think.
|
|
1525
|
|
1526 @item
|
|
1527 SIGIO is broken on your system, but BROKEN_SIGIO isn't defined.
|
|
1528 @end enumerate
|
|
1529
|
|
1530 To test #2, try executing @code{(while t)} from the @samp{*scratch*}
|
|
1531 buffer. If @kbd{C-g} doesn't interrupt, then you're seeing #2.
|
|
1532 @end quotation
|
|
1533
|
|
1534 Morten Welinder <terra@@diku.dk> writes:
|
|
1535
|
|
1536 @quotation
|
|
1537 On some (but @emph{not} all) machines a hung XEmacs can be revived by
|
|
1538 @code{kill -FPE <pid>}. This is a hack, of course, not a solution.
|
|
1539 This technique works on a Sun4 running 4.1.3_U1. To see if it works for
|
|
1540 you, start another XEmacs and test with that first. If you get a core
|
|
1541 dump the method doesn't work and if you get @samp{Arithmetic error} then
|
|
1542 it does.
|
|
1543 @end quotation
|
|
1544
|
|
1545 @node Q2.1.15, Q2.1.16, Q2.1.14, Installation
|
|
1546 @section How to Debug an XEmacs problem with a debugger
|
|
1547
|
|
1548 Ben Wing <ben@@666.com> writes:
|
|
1549
|
|
1550 @quotation
|
|
1551 If XEmacs does crash on you, one of the most productive things you can
|
|
1552 do to help get the bug fixed is to poke around a bit with the debugger.
|
|
1553 Here are some hints:
|
|
1554
|
|
1555 @itemize @bullet
|
|
1556 @item
|
|
1557 First of all, if the crash is at all reproducible, consider very
|
|
1558 strongly recompiling your XEmacs with debugging symbols, with no
|
|
1559 optimization, and with the configure options @samp{--debug=yes},
|
|
1560 @samp{--error-checking=all}, and @samp{--dynamic=no}. This will make
|
|
1561 your XEmacs run somewhat slower but make it a lot more likely to catch
|
|
1562 the problem earlier (closer to its source), and a lot easier to
|
|
1563 determine what's going on with a debugger.
|
|
1564
|
|
1565 @item
|
|
1566 If you're able to run XEmacs under a debugger and reproduce the crash
|
|
1567 (if it's inconvenient to do this because XEmacs is already running or is
|
|
1568 running in batch mode as part of a bunch of scripts, consider attaching
|
|
1569 to the existing process with your debugger; most debuggers let you do
|
|
1570 this by substituting the process ID for the core file when you invoke
|
|
1571 the debugger from the command line, or by using the @code{attach}
|
|
1572 command or something similar), here are some things you can do:
|
|
1573
|
|
1574 @item
|
|
1575 If XEmacs is hitting an assertion failure, put a breakpoint on
|
|
1576 @code{assert_failed()}.
|
|
1577
|
|
1578 @item
|
|
1579 If XEmacs is hitting some weird Lisp error that's causing it to crash
|
|
1580 (e.g. during startup), put a breakpoint on @code{signal_1()}---this is
|
|
1581 declared static in eval.c.
|
|
1582
|
|
1583 @item
|
|
1584 Internally, you will probably see lots of variables that hold objects of
|
|
1585 type @code{Lisp_Object}. These are exactly what they appear to be,
|
|
1586 i.e. references to Lisp objects. Printing them out with the debugger
|
|
1587 probably won't be too useful---you'll just see a number. To decode
|
|
1588 them, do this:
|
|
1589
|
|
1590 @example
|
|
1591 call debug_print (OBJECT)
|
|
1592 @end example
|
|
1593
|
|
1594 where @var{OBJECT} is whatever you want to decode (it can be a variable,
|
|
1595 a function call, etc.). This will print out a readable representation
|
|
1596 on the TTY from which the xemacs process was invoked.
|
|
1597
|
|
1598 @item
|
|
1599 If you want to get a Lisp backtrace showing the Lisp call
|
|
1600 stack, do this:
|
|
1601
|
|
1602 @example
|
|
1603 call debug_backtrace ()
|
|
1604 @end example
|
|
1605
|
|
1606 @item
|
|
1607 If all you've got is a core dump, all is not lost. You can still poke
|
|
1608 around somewhat, and if you're using GDB, there are some macros in the
|
|
1609 file @file{gdbinit} in the @file{src} directory of the XEmacs
|
|
1610 distribution that should make it easier for you to decode Lisp objects.
|
|
1611
|
|
1612 If you're using DBX, you may be able to get further help from Martin
|
|
1613 Buchholz, the engineer at Sun who works on XEmacs. Write to him at
|
|
1614 <Martin.Buchholz@@sun.com>.
|
|
1615
|
|
1616 @item
|
|
1617 If you're using a debugger to get a C stack backtrace and you're seeing
|
|
1618 stack traces with some of the innermost frames mangled, it may be due to
|
|
1619 dynamic linking. (This happens especially under Linux.) Consider
|
|
1620 reconfiguring with @samp{--dynamic=no}. Also, sometimes (again under
|
|
1621 Linux), stack backtraces of core dumps will have the frame where the
|
|
1622 fatal signal occurred mangled; if you can obtain a stack trace while
|
|
1623 running the XEmacs process under a debugger, the stack trace should be
|
|
1624 clean.
|
|
1625
|
|
1626 Curtiss <1CMC3466@@ibm.mtsac.edu> suggests upgrading to ld.so version 1.8
|
|
1627 if dynamic linking and debugging is a problem on Linux.
|
|
1628
|
|
1629 @item
|
|
1630 If you're using a debugger to get a C stack backtrace and you're
|
|
1631 getting a completely mangled and bogus stack trace, it's probably due to
|
|
1632 one of the following:
|
|
1633
|
|
1634 @enumerate a
|
|
1635 @item
|
|
1636 Your executable has been stripped. Bad news. Tell your sysadmin not to
|
|
1637 do this---it doesn't accomplish anything except to save a bit of disk
|
|
1638 space, and makes debugging much much harder.
|
|
1639
|
|
1640 @item
|
|
1641 Your stack is getting trashed. Debugging this is hard; you have to do a
|
|
1642 binary-search-type of narrowing down where the crash occurs, until you
|
|
1643 figure out exactly which line is causing the problem. Of course, this
|
|
1644 only works if the bug is highly reproducible.
|
|
1645
|
|
1646 @item
|
|
1647 If your stack trace has exactly one frame in it, with address 0x0, this
|
|
1648 could simply mean that XEmacs attempted to execute code at that address,
|
|
1649 e.g. through jumping to a null function pointer. Unfortunately, under
|
|
1650 those circumstances, GDB under Linux doesn't know how to get a stack
|
|
1651 trace. (Yes, this is the third Linux-related problem I've mentioned. I
|
|
1652 have no idea why GDB under Linux is so bogus. Complain to the GDB
|
|
1653 authors, or to comp.os.linux.development.system). Again, you'll have to
|
|
1654 use the narrowing-down process described above.
|
|
1655
|
|
1656 @item
|
163
|
1657 If you compiled 19.14 with @samp{--debug} (or by default in later
|
|
1658 versions), you will get a Lisp backtrace output when XEmacs crashes, so
|
|
1659 you'll have something useful. If you're in 19.13, you could try doing
|
|
1660 @code{call debug_backtrace()}---sometimes this works even after a fatal
|
|
1661 signal has been received.
|
82
|
1662 @end enumerate
|
|
1663 @end itemize
|
|
1664 @end quotation
|
|
1665
|
|
1666 Here's some more info about using gdbinit:
|
|
1667
|
|
1668 Different version of @code{gdbinit} are provided for different
|
|
1669 platforms. One of these should be installed as @file{.gdbinit} in your
|
|
1670 home directory. If you're using XEmacs 19.14 or better, you should
|
|
1671 install the default @code{gdbinit} in the @file{src/} directory if you
|
|
1672 have GDB 4.14 or better. With GDB 4.13 or earlier, install
|
|
1673 @file{gdbinit.pre-4.14}; however, this is noticeably harder to use. If
|
|
1674 you're on a machine that uses a union type for Lisp_Objects (only the
|
|
1675 DEC Alpha, I think), you'll have to use @code{gdbinit.union}, which is
|
|
1676 of the pre-4.14 variety but should be easily upgradable.
|
|
1677
|
|
1678 With XEmacs 19.13 and earlier, only one @code{gdbinit} is provided (I
|
|
1679 think); it's of the pre-4.14 variety and of the union-type
|
|
1680 variety. (Many more machines used the union type under 19.13).
|
|
1681
|
|
1682 With the GDB 4.14+ gdbinit, you can print out a Lisp_Object using
|
|
1683 @code{p1 OBJECT} (which calls @code{debug_print()}, and hence only works
|
|
1684 if you have a running process) or @code{frob OBJECT} (which works even
|
|
1685 on core dumps, and does its own decoding of the object, but its output
|
|
1686 isn't always so convenient).
|
|
1687
|
|
1688 With the pre-GDB 4.14 gdbinit, you have to do these steps:
|
|
1689
|
|
1690 @example
|
|
1691 print OBJECT
|
|
1692 xtype
|
|
1693 <then type "xcons" or "xstring" or whatever, depending on the type>
|
|
1694 @end example
|
|
1695
|
|
1696 If the object is a record type, you'll probably have to the following
|
|
1697 steps:
|
|
1698
|
|
1699 @example
|
|
1700 print OBJECT
|
|
1701 xtype
|
|
1702 xrecord
|
|
1703 <remember what type is printed>
|
|
1704 print OBJECT
|
|
1705 <then type "xbuffer" or "xsymbol" or whatever>
|
|
1706 @end example
|
|
1707
|
|
1708 Of course, if you know in advance what type the object is of, you can
|
|
1709 omit all but the last two steps.
|
|
1710
|
|
1711 @node Q2.1.16, Q2.1.17, Q2.1.15, Installation
|
|
1712 @section XEmacs crashes in @code{strcat} on HP/UX 10
|
|
1713
|
|
1714 >From the problems database (through
|
|
1715 <URL:http://support.mayfield.hp.com/>):
|
54
|
1716
|
|
1717 @example
|
82
|
1718 Problem Report: 5003302299
|
|
1719 Status: Open
|
|
1720
|
|
1721 System/Model: 9000/700
|
|
1722 Product Name: HPUX S800 10.0X
|
|
1723 Product Vers: 9245XB.10.00
|
|
1724
|
|
1725 Description: strcat(3C) may read beyond end of source string, can cause
|
|
1726 SIGSEGV
|
|
1727
|
|
1728
|
|
1729 *** PROBLEM TEXT ***
|
|
1730 strcat(3C) may read beyond the source string onto an unmapped page,
|
|
1731 causing a segmentation violation.
|
|
1732 @end example
|
|
1733
|
|
1734 @node Q2.1.17, Q2.1.18, Q2.1.16, Installation
|
|
1735 @section @samp{Marker does not point anywhere}
|
|
1736
|
163
|
1737 As with other errors, set @code{debug-on-error} to @code{t} to get the
|
|
1738 backtrace when the error occurs. Specifically, two problems have been
|
|
1739 reported (and fixed).
|
|
1740
|
|
1741 @enumerate
|
|
1742 @item
|
|
1743 A problem with line-number-mode in XEmacs 19.14 affected a large number
|
|
1744 of other packages. If you see this error message, turn off
|
82
|
1745 line-number-mode.
|
|
1746
|
163
|
1747 @item
|
|
1748 A problem with some early versions of Gnus 5.4 caused this error.
|
|
1749 Upgrade your Gnus.
|
|
1750 @end enumerate
|
|
1751
|
82
|
1752 @node Q2.1.18, Q2.1.19, Q2.1.17, Installation
|
|
1753 @section 19.14 hangs on HP/UX 10.10.
|
|
1754
|
|
1755 Richard Cognot <cognot@@ensg.u-nancy.fr> writes:
|
|
1756
|
|
1757 @quotation
|
|
1758 For the record, compiling on hpux 10.10 leads to a hang in Gnus when
|
|
1759 compiled with optimization on.
|
|
1760
|
|
1761 I've just discovered that my hpux 10.01 binary was working less well
|
|
1762 than expected. In fact, on a 10.10 system, @code{(while t)} was not
|
|
1763 interupted by @kbd{C-g}. I defined @code{BROKEN_SIGIO} and recompiled on
|
|
1764 10.10, and... the hang is now gone.
|
|
1765
|
|
1766 As far as configure goes, this will be a bit tricky: @code{BROKEN_SIGIO}
|
|
1767 is needed on 10.10, but @strong{not} on 10.01: if I run my 10.01 binary
|
|
1768 on a 10.01 machine, without @code{BROKEN_SIGIO} being defined, @kbd{C-g}
|
|
1769 works as expected.
|
|
1770 @end quotation
|
|
1771
|
|
1772 Richard Cognot <cognot@@ensg.u-nancy.fr> adds:
|
|
1773
|
|
1774 @quotation
|
|
1775 Apparently somebody has found the reason why there is this @samp{poll:
|
|
1776 interrupted...} message for each event. For some reason, libcurses
|
|
1777 reimplements a @code{select()} system call, in a highly broken fashion.
|
|
1778 The fix is to add a -lc to the link line @emph{before} the
|
|
1779 -lxcurses. XEmacs will then use the right version of @code{select()}.
|
|
1780 @end quotation
|
|
1781
|
|
1782
|
|
1783 Alain Fauconnet <af@@biomath.jussieu.fr> writes:
|
|
1784
|
|
1785 @quotation
|
|
1786 The @emph{real} solution is to @emph{not} link -lcurses in! I just
|
|
1787 changed -lcurses to -ltermcap in the Makefile and it fixed:
|
|
1788
|
|
1789 @enumerate
|
|
1790 @item
|
|
1791 The @samp{poll: interrupted system call} message.
|
|
1792
|
|
1793 @item
|
|
1794 A more serious problem I had discovered in the meantime, that is the
|
|
1795 fact that subprocess handling was seriously broken: subprocesses
|
163
|
1796 e.g. started by AUC TeX for TeX compilation of a buffer would
|
82
|
1797 @emph{hang}. Actually they would wait forever for emacs to read the
|
|
1798 socket which connects stdout...
|
|
1799 @end enumerate
|
|
1800 @end quotation
|
|
1801
|
|
1802 @node Q2.1.19, Q2.1.20, Q2.1.18, Installation
|
|
1803 @section XEmacs does not follow the local timezone.
|
|
1804
|
|
1805 When using one of the prebuilt binaries many users have observed that
|
|
1806 XEmacs uses the timezone under which it was built, but not the timezone
|
|
1807 under which it is running. The solution is to add:
|
|
1808
|
|
1809 @lisp
|
|
1810 (set-time-zone-rule "MET")
|
|
1811 @end lisp
|
|
1812
|
|
1813 to your @file{.emacs} or the @file{site-start.el} file if you can.
|
|
1814 Replace @code{MET} with your local timezone.
|
|
1815
|
|
1816 @node Q2.1.20, Q2.1.21, Q2.1.19, Installation
|
|
1817 @section @samp{Symbol's function definition is void: hkey-help-show.}
|
|
1818
|
|
1819 This is a problem with a partially loaded hyperbole. Try adding:
|
|
1820
|
|
1821 @lisp
|
|
1822 (require 'hmouse-drv)
|
|
1823 @end lisp
|
|
1824
|
|
1825 where you load hyperbole and the problem should go away.
|
|
1826
|
116
|
1827 @node Q2.1.21, Q2.1.22, Q2.1.20, Installation
|
82
|
1828 @section Every so often the XEmacs frame freezes
|
|
1829
|
|
1830 This problem has been fixed in 19.15, and was due to a not easily
|
|
1831 reproducible race condition.
|
|
1832
|
126
|
1833 @node Q2.1.22, Q2.1.23, Q2.1.21, Installation
|
116
|
1834 @section XEmacs seems to take a really long time to do some things
|
|
1835
|
|
1836 David Moore <dmoore@@ucsd.edu> writes:
|
|
1837
|
|
1838 @quotation
|
|
1839 Two things you can do:
|
|
1840
|
|
1841 1) C level:
|
|
1842
|
|
1843 When you see it going mad like this, you might want to use gdb from an
|
|
1844 'xterm' to attach to the running process and get a stack trace. To do
|
|
1845 this just run:
|
|
1846
|
|
1847 @example
|
|
1848 gdb /path/to/xemacs/xemacs ####
|
|
1849 @end example
|
|
1850
|
163
|
1851 Where @code{####} is the process id of your xemacs, instead of
|
|
1852 specifying the core. When gdb attaches, the xemacs will stop [1] and
|
|
1853 you can type `where' in gdb to get a stack trace as usual. To get
|
|
1854 things moving again, you can just type `quit' in gdb. It'll tell you
|
|
1855 the program is running and ask if you want to quit anyways. Say 'y' and
|
|
1856 it'll quit and have your emacs continue from where it was at.
|
116
|
1857
|
|
1858 2) Lisp level:
|
|
1859
|
|
1860 Turn on debug-on-quit early on. When you think things are going slow
|
|
1861 hit C-g and it may pop you in the debugger so you can see what routine
|
|
1862 is running. Press `c' to get going again.
|
|
1863
|
|
1864 debug-on-quit doesn't work if something's turned on inhibit-quit or in
|
|
1865 some other strange cases.
|
|
1866 @end quotation
|
|
1867
|
126
|
1868 @node Q2.1.23, , Q2.1.22, Installation
|
|
1869 @section Movemail on Linux doe snot work for XEmacs 19.15 and later.
|
|
1870
|
|
1871 Movemail used to work fine in 19.14 but has stopped working in 19.15
|
|
1872 and 20.x. I am using Linux.
|
|
1873
|
|
1874 Steven L Baur <steve@@miranova.com> writes:
|
|
1875
|
|
1876 @quotation
|
163
|
1877 Movemail on Linux used to default to using flock file locking. With
|
|
1878 19.15 and later versions it now defaults to using @code{.lock} file
|
|
1879 locking. If this is not appropriate for your system, edit src/s/linux.h
|
|
1880 and uncomment the line that reads:
|
|
1881
|
|
1882 @example
|
|
1883 #define MAIL_USE_FLOCK
|
|
1884 @end example
|
126
|
1885 @end quotation
|
|
1886
|
82
|
1887 @node Customization, Subsystems, Installation, Top
|
|
1888 @chapter Customization and Options
|
|
1889
|
|
1890 This is part 3 of the XEmacs Frequently Asked Questions list. This
|
|
1891 section is devoted to Customization and screen settings.
|
|
1892
|
|
1893 @menu
|
|
1894 Customization---Emacs Lisp and @file{.emacs}:
|
163
|
1895 * Q3.0.1:: What version of Emacs am I running?
|
82
|
1896 * Q3.0.2:: How do I evaluate Elisp expressions?
|
|
1897 * Q3.0.3:: @code{(setq tab-width 6)} behaves oddly.
|
|
1898 * Q3.0.4:: How can I add directories to the @code{load-path}?
|
|
1899 * Q3.0.5:: How to check if a lisp function is defined?
|
|
1900 * Q3.0.6:: Can I force the output of @code{(face-list)} to a buffer?
|
163
|
1901 * Q3.0.7:: Font selections don't get saved after @code{Save Options}.
|
82
|
1902 * Q3.0.8:: How do I make a single minibuffer frame?
|
|
1903
|
|
1904 X Window System & Resources:
|
|
1905 * Q3.1.1:: Where is a list of X resources?
|
|
1906 * Q3.1.2:: How can I detect a color display?
|
|
1907 * Q3.1.3:: @code{(set-screen-width)} worked in 19.6, but not in 19.13?
|
163
|
1908 * Q3.1.4:: Specifiying @code{Emacs*EmacsScreen.geometry} in @file{.emacs} does not work in 19.15?
|
82
|
1909 * Q3.1.5:: How can I get the icon to just say @samp{XEmacs}?
|
|
1910 * Q3.1.6:: How can I have the window title area display the full path?
|
|
1911 * Q3.1.7:: @samp{xemacs -name junk} doesn't work?
|
|
1912 * Q3.1.8:: @samp{-iconic} it doesn't work.
|
|
1913
|
|
1914 Textual Fonts & Colors:
|
|
1915 * Q3.2.1:: How can I set color options from @file{.emacs}?
|
|
1916 * Q3.2.2:: How do I set the text, menu and modeline fonts?
|
|
1917 * Q3.2.3:: How can I set the colors when highlighting a region?
|
163
|
1918 * Q3.2.4:: How can I limit color map usage?
|
82
|
1919 * Q3.2.5:: My tty supports color, but XEmacs doesn't use them.
|
|
1920
|
|
1921 The Modeline:
|
|
1922 * Q3.3.1:: How can I make the modeline go away?
|
|
1923 * Q3.3.2:: How do you have XEmacs display the line number in the modeline?
|
|
1924 * Q3.3.3:: How do I get XEmacs to put the time of day on the modeline?
|
163
|
1925 * Q3.3.4:: How do I turn off current chapter from AUC TeX modeline?
|
|
1926 * Q3.3.5:: How can one change the modeline color based on the mode used?
|
82
|
1927
|
|
1928 3.4 Multiple Device Support:
|
163
|
1929 * Q3.4.1:: How do I open a frame on another screen of my multi-headed display?
|
82
|
1930 * Q3.4.2:: Can I really connect to a running XEmacs after calling up over a modem? How?
|
|
1931
|
|
1932 3.5 The Keyboard:
|
|
1933 * Q3.5.1:: How can I bind complex functions (or macros) to keys?
|
|
1934 * Q3.5.2:: How can I stop down-arrow from adding empty lines to the bottom of my buffers?
|
|
1935 * Q3.5.3:: How do I bind C-. and C-; to scroll one line up and down?
|
|
1936 * Q3.5.4:: Globally binding @kbd{Delete}?
|
|
1937 * Q3.5.5:: Scrolling one line at a time.
|
163
|
1938 * Q3.5.6:: How to map @kbd{Help} key alone on Sun type4 keyboard?
|
82
|
1939 * Q3.5.7:: How can you type in special characters in XEmacs?
|
|
1940 * Q3.5.8:: Why does @code{(global-set-key [delete-forward] 'delete-char)} complain?
|
|
1941 * Q3.5.9:: How do I make the Delete key delete forward?
|
|
1942 * Q3.5.10:: Can I turn on @dfn{sticky} modifier keys?
|
|
1943
|
|
1944 The Cursor:
|
|
1945 * Q3.6.1:: Is there a way to make the bar cursor thicker?
|
|
1946 * Q3.6.2:: Is there a way to get back the old block cursor where the cursor covers the character in front of the point?
|
|
1947 * Q3.6.3:: Can I make the cursor blink?
|
|
1948
|
|
1949 The Mouse and Highlighting:
|
|
1950 * Q3.7.1:: How can I turn off Mouse pasting?
|
|
1951 * Q3.7.2:: How do I set control/meta/etc modifiers on mouse buttons?
|
|
1952 * Q3.7.3:: Clicking the left button does not do anything in buffer list.
|
|
1953 * Q3.7.4:: How can I get a list of buffers when I hit mouse button 3?
|
|
1954 * Q3.7.5:: Why does cut-and-paste not work between XEmacs and a cmdtool?
|
|
1955 * Q3.7.6:: How I can set XEmacs up so that it pastes where the text cursor is?
|
|
1956 * Q3.7.7:: How do I select a rectangular region?
|
|
1957 * Q3.7.8:: Why does @kbd{M-w} take so long?
|
|
1958
|
|
1959 The Menubar and Toolbar:
|
|
1960 * Q3.8.1:: How do I get rid of the menu (or menubar)?
|
|
1961 * Q3.8.2:: Can I customize the basic menubar?
|
|
1962 * Q3.8.3:: How do I control how many buffers are listed in the menu @code{Buffers} list?
|
|
1963 * Q3.8.4:: Resources like @code{Emacs*menubar*font} are not working?
|
|
1964 * Q3.8.5:: How can I bind a key to a function to toggle the toolbar?
|
|
1965
|
|
1966 Scrollbars:
|
|
1967 * Q3.9.1:: How can I disable the scrollbar?
|
|
1968 * Q3.9.2:: How can one use resources to change scrollbar colors?
|
|
1969 * Q3.9.3:: Moving the scrollbar can move the point; can I disable this?
|
|
1970 * Q3.9.4:: How can I get automatic horizontal scrolling?
|
|
1971
|
|
1972 Text Selections:
|
163
|
1973 * Q3.10.1:: How can I turn off or change highlighted selections?
|
82
|
1974 * Q3.10.2:: How do I get that typing on an active region removes it?
|
|
1975 * Q3.10.3:: Can I turn off the highlight during isearch?
|
|
1976 * Q3.10.4:: How do I turn off highlighting after @kbd{C-x C-p} (mark-page)?
|
|
1977 * Q3.10.5:: The region disappears when I hit the end of buffer while scrolling.
|
|
1978 @end menu
|
|
1979
|
|
1980 @node Q3.0.1, Q3.0.2, Customization, Customization
|
|
1981 @section What version of Emacs am I running?
|
|
1982
|
|
1983 How can @file{.emacs} determine which of the family of Emacsen I am
|
|
1984 using?
|
|
1985
|
|
1986 To determine if you are currently running GNU Emacs 18, GNU Emacs 19,
|
126
|
1987 XEmacs 19, XEmacs 20, or Epoch, and use appropriate code, check out the
|
|
1988 example given in @file{etc/sample.emacs}. There are other nifty things
|
|
1989 in there as well!
|
82
|
1990
|
|
1991 For all new code, all you really need to do is:
|
|
1992
|
|
1993 @lisp
|
|
1994 (defvar running-xemacs (string-match "XEmacs\\|Lucid" emacs-version))
|
|
1995 @end lisp
|
|
1996
|
|
1997 @node Q3.0.2, Q3.0.3, Q3.0.1, Customization
|
|
1998 @section How can I evaluate Emacs-Lisp expressions?
|
|
1999
|
|
2000 I know I can evaluate Elisp expressions from @code{*scratch*} buffer
|
|
2001 with @kbd{C-j} after the expression. How do I do it from another
|
|
2002 buffer?
|
|
2003
|
163
|
2004 Press @kbd{M-:} (the default binding of @code{eval-expression}), and
|
|
2005 enter the expression to the minibuffer. In XEmacs prior to 19.15
|
|
2006 @code{eval-expression} used to be a disabled command by default. If
|
|
2007 this is the case, upgrade your XEmacs.
|
82
|
2008
|
|
2009 @node Q3.0.3, Q3.0.4, Q3.0.2, Customization
|
|
2010 @section @code{(setq tab-width 6)} behaves oddly.
|
|
2011
|
|
2012 If you put @code{(setq tab-width 6)} in your @file{.emacs} file it does
|
|
2013 not work! Is there a reason for this? If you do it at the EVAL prompt
|
|
2014 it works fine!! How strange.
|
|
2015
|
|
2016 Use @code{setq-default} instead, since @code{tab-width} is
|
|
2017 all-buffer-local.
|
|
2018
|
|
2019 @node Q3.0.4, Q3.0.5, Q3.0.3, Customization
|
|
2020 @section How can I add directories to the @code{load-path}?
|
|
2021
|
|
2022 Here are two ways to do that, one that puts your directories at the
|
|
2023 front of the load-path, the other at the end:
|
|
2024
|
|
2025 @lisp
|
|
2026 ;;; Add things at the beginning of the load-path, do not add
|
|
2027 ;;; duplicate directories:
|
163
|
2028 (pushnew "bar" load-path :test 'equal)
|
|
2029
|
|
2030 (pushnew "foo" load-path :test 'equal)
|
82
|
2031
|
|
2032 ;;; Add things at the end, unconditionally
|
163
|
2033 (setq load-path (nconc load-path '("foo" "bar")))
|
82
|
2034 @end lisp
|
|
2035
|
|
2036 keith (k.p.) hanlan <keithh@@nortel.ca> writes:
|
|
2037
|
|
2038 @quotation
|
|
2039 To add directories using Unix shell metacharacters use
|
|
2040 @file{expand-file-name} like this:
|
|
2041
|
|
2042 @lisp
|
163
|
2043 (push (expand-file-name "~keithh/.emacsdir") load-path)
|
82
|
2044 @end lisp
|
|
2045 @end quotation
|
|
2046
|
|
2047 @node Q3.0.5, Q3.0.6, Q3.0.4, Customization
|
|
2048 @section How to check if a lisp function is defined?
|
|
2049
|
|
2050 Use the following elisp:
|
|
2051
|
|
2052 @lisp
|
|
2053 (fboundp 'foo)
|
|
2054 @end lisp
|
|
2055
|
|
2056 It's almost always a mistake to test @code{emacs-version} or any similar
|
|
2057 variables.
|
|
2058
|
|
2059 Instead, use feature-tests, such as @code{featurep}, @code{boundp},
|
|
2060 @code{fboundp}, or even simple behavioural tests, eg.:
|
|
2061
|
|
2062 @lisp
|
|
2063 (defvar foo-old-losing-code-p
|
|
2064 (condition-case nil (progn (losing-code t) nil)
|
|
2065 (wrong-number-of-arguments t)))
|
|
2066 @end lisp
|
|
2067
|
|
2068 There is an incredible amount of broken code out there which could work
|
|
2069 much better more often in more places if it did the above instead of
|
|
2070 trying to divine its environment from the value of one variable.
|
|
2071
|
|
2072 @node Q3.0.6, Q3.0.7, Q3.0.5, Customization
|
|
2073 @section Can I force the output of @code{(face-list)} to a buffer?
|
|
2074
|
|
2075 It would be good having it in a buffer, as the output of
|
|
2076 @code{(face-list)} is too wide to fit to a minibuffer.
|
|
2077
|
|
2078 Evaluate the expression in the @samp{*scratch*} buffer with point after
|
|
2079 the rightmost paren and typing @kbd{C-j}.
|
|
2080
|
163
|
2081 If the minibuffer smallness is the only problem you encounter, you can
|
|
2082 simply press @kbd{C-h l} to get the former minibuffer contents in a
|
|
2083 buffer.
|
|
2084
|
82
|
2085 @node Q3.0.7, Q3.0.8, Q3.0.6, Customization
|
126
|
2086 @section Font selections in don't get saved after @code{Save Options}.
|
|
2087
|
|
2088 For XEmacs 19.14 and previous:
|
82
|
2089
|
|
2090 John Mann <mannj@@ll.mit.edu> writes:
|
|
2091
|
|
2092 @quotation
|
|
2093 You have to go to Options->Menubar Appearance and unselect
|
|
2094 @samp{Frame-Local Font Menu}. If this option is selected, font changes
|
|
2095 are only applied to the @emph{current} frame and do @emph{not} get saved
|
|
2096 when you save options.
|
|
2097 @end quotation
|
|
2098
|
126
|
2099 For XEmacs 19.15 and later:
|
|
2100
|
|
2101 Implement the above as well as set the following in your @file{.emacs}
|
|
2102
|
|
2103 @lisp
|
163
|
2104 (setq options-save-faces t)
|
126
|
2105 @end lisp
|
|
2106
|
82
|
2107 @node Q3.0.8, Q3.1.1, Q3.0.7, Customization
|
|
2108 @section How do I get a single minibuffer frame?
|
|
2109
|
|
2110 Vin Shelton <acs@@acm.org> writes:
|
|
2111
|
|
2112 @lisp
|
|
2113 (setq initial-frame-plist '(minibuffer nil))
|
|
2114 (setq default-frame-plist '(minibuffer nil))
|
|
2115 (setq default-minibuffer-frame
|
|
2116 (make-frame
|
|
2117 '(minibuffer only
|
|
2118 width 86
|
|
2119 height 1
|
|
2120 menubar-visible-p nil
|
|
2121 default-toolbar-visible-p nil
|
|
2122 name "minibuffer"
|
|
2123 top -2
|
|
2124 left -2
|
|
2125 has-modeline-p nil)))
|
|
2126 (frame-notice-user-settings)
|
|
2127 @end lisp
|
|
2128
|
|
2129 @strong{NOTE:} The single minibuffer frame may not be to everyone's
|
|
2130 taste, and there any number of other XEmacs options settings that may
|
|
2131 make it difficult or inconvenient to use.
|
|
2132
|
|
2133 @node Q3.1.1, Q3.1.2, Q3.0.8, Customization
|
|
2134 @section Where is a list of X resources?
|
|
2135
|
|
2136 Search through the @file{NEWS} file for @samp{X Resources}. A fairly
|
|
2137 comprehensive list is given after it.
|
|
2138
|
|
2139 In addition, an @file{app-defaults} file is supplied,
|
|
2140 @file{etc/Emacs.ad} listing the defaults. The file
|
|
2141 @file{etc/sample.Xdefaults} gives a set of defaults that you might
|
|
2142 consider. It is essentially the same as @file{etc/Emacs.ad} but some
|
|
2143 entries are slightly altered. Be careful about installing the contents
|
|
2144 of this file into your @file{.Xdefaults} or @file{.Xresources} file if
|
|
2145 you use GNU Emacs under X11 as well.
|
|
2146
|
|
2147 @node Q3.1.2, Q3.1.3, Q3.1.1, Customization
|
|
2148 @section How can I detect a color display?
|
|
2149
|
|
2150 You can test the return value of the function @code{(device-class)}, as
|
|
2151 in:
|
|
2152
|
|
2153 @lisp
|
|
2154 (when (eq (device-class) 'color)
|
|
2155 (set-face-foreground 'font-lock-comment-face "Grey")
|
|
2156 (set-face-foreground 'font-lock-string-face "Red")
|
|
2157 ....
|
|
2158 )
|
|
2159 @end lisp
|
|
2160
|
|
2161 @node Q3.1.3, Q3.1.4, Q3.1.2, Customization
|
|
2162 @section @code{(set-screen-width)} worked in 19.6, but not in 19.13?
|
|
2163
|
|
2164 In Lucid Emacs 19.6 I did @code{(set-screen-width @var{characters})} and
|
|
2165 @code{(set-screen-height @var{lines})} in my @file{.emacs} instead of
|
|
2166 specifying @code{Emacs*EmacsScreen.geometry} in my @file{.Xdefaults} but
|
|
2167 this does not work in XEmacs 19.13.
|
|
2168
|
|
2169 These two functions now take frame arguments:
|
|
2170
|
|
2171 @lisp
|
|
2172 (set-frame-width (selected-frame) @var{characters})
|
|
2173 (set-frame-height (selected-frame) @var{lines})
|
|
2174 @end lisp
|
|
2175
|
|
2176 @node Q3.1.4, Q3.1.5, Q3.1.3, Customization
|
126
|
2177 @section Specifiying @code{Emacs*EmacsScreen.geometry} in @file{.emacs} does not work in 19.15?
|
82
|
2178
|
|
2179 In XEmacs 19.11 I specified @code{Emacs*EmacsScreen.geometry} in
|
126
|
2180 my @file{.emacs} but this does not work in XEmacs 19.15.
|
82
|
2181
|
|
2182 We have switched from using the term @dfn{screen} to using the term
|
|
2183 @dfn{frame}.
|
|
2184
|
|
2185 The correct entry for your @file{.Xdefaults} is now:
|
|
2186
|
|
2187 @example
|
|
2188 Emacs*EmacsFrame.geometry
|
|
2189 @end example
|
|
2190
|
|
2191 @node Q3.1.5, Q3.1.6, Q3.1.4, Customization
|
|
2192 @section How can I get the icon to just say @samp{XEmacs}?
|
|
2193
|
|
2194 I'd like the icon to just say @samp{XEmacs}, and not include the name of
|
|
2195 the current file in it.
|
|
2196
|
|
2197 Add the following line to your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
2198
|
|
2199 @lisp
|
|
2200 (setq frame-icon-title-format "XEmacs")
|
|
2201 @end lisp
|
|
2202
|
|
2203 @node Q3.1.6, Q3.1.7, Q3.1.5, Customization
|
|
2204 @section How can I have the window title area display the full path?
|
|
2205
|
|
2206 I'd like to have the window title area display the full directory/name
|
|
2207 of the current buffer file and not just the name.
|
|
2208
|
|
2209 Add the following line to your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
2210
|
|
2211 @lisp
|
|
2212 (setq frame-title-format "%S: %f")
|
|
2213 @end lisp
|
|
2214
|
|
2215 A more sophisticated title might be:
|
|
2216
|
|
2217 @lisp
|
|
2218 (setq frame-title-format
|
|
2219 '("%S: " (buffer-file-name "%f" (dired-directory dired-directory "%b"))))
|
|
2220 @end lisp
|
|
2221
|
|
2222 That is, use the file name, or the dired-directory, or the buffer name.
|
|
2223
|
|
2224 @node Q3.1.7, Q3.1.8, Q3.1.6, Customization
|
|
2225 @section @samp{xemacs -name junk} doesn't work?
|
|
2226
|
|
2227 When I run @samp{xterm -name junk}, I get an xterm whose class name
|
|
2228 according to xprop, is @samp{junk}. This is the way it's supposed to
|
|
2229 work, I think. When I run @samp{xemacs -name junk} the class name is
|
|
2230 not set to @samp{junk}. It's still @samp{emacs}. What does
|
|
2231 @samp{xemacs -name} really do? The reason I ask is that my window
|
|
2232 manager (fvwm) will make a window sticky and I use XEmacs to read my
|
|
2233 mail. I want that XEmacs window to be sticky, without having to use the
|
|
2234 window manager's function to set the window sticky. What gives?
|
|
2235
|
|
2236 @samp{xemacs -name} sets the application name for the program (that is,
|
|
2237 the thing which normally comes from @samp{argv[0]}). Using @samp{-name}
|
|
2238 is the same as making a copy of the executable with that new name. The
|
|
2239 @code{WM_CLASS} property on each frame is set to the frame-name, and the
|
|
2240 application-class. So, if you did @samp{xemacs -name FOO} and then
|
|
2241 created a frame named @var{BAR}, you'd get an X window with WM_CLASS =
|
|
2242 @code{( "BAR", "Emacs")}. However, the resource hierarchy for this
|
|
2243 widget would be:
|
|
2244
|
|
2245 @example
|
|
2246 Name: FOO .shell .container .BAR
|
|
2247 Class: Emacs .TopLevelEmacsShell.EmacsManager.EmacsFrame
|
|
2248 @end example
|
|
2249
|
|
2250 instead of the default
|
|
2251
|
|
2252 @example
|
|
2253 Name: xemacs.shell .container .emacs
|
|
2254 Class: Emacs .TopLevelEmacsShell.EmacsManager.EmacsFrame
|
|
2255 @end example
|
|
2256
|
|
2257
|
|
2258 It is arguable that the first element of WM_CLASS should be set to the
|
|
2259 application-name instead of the frame-name, but I think that's less
|
|
2260 flexible, since it does not give you the ability to have multiple frames
|
|
2261 with different WM_CLASS properties. Another possibility would be for
|
|
2262 the default frame name to come from the application name instead of
|
|
2263 simply being @samp{emacs}. However, at this point, making that change
|
|
2264 would be troublesome: it would mean that many users would have to make
|
|
2265 yet another change to their resource files (since the default frame name
|
|
2266 would suddenly change from @samp{emacs} to @samp{xemacs}, or whatever
|
|
2267 the executable happened to be named), so we'd rather avoid it.
|
|
2268
|
|
2269 To make a frame with a particular name use:
|
|
2270
|
|
2271 @lisp
|
|
2272 (make-frame '((name . "the-name")))
|
|
2273 @end lisp
|
|
2274
|
|
2275 @node Q3.1.8, Q3.2.1, Q3.1.7, Customization
|
|
2276 @section @samp{-iconic} doesn't work.
|
|
2277
|
|
2278 When I start up XEmacs using @samp{-iconic} it doesn't work right.
|
|
2279 Using @samp{-unmapped} on the command line, and setting the
|
|
2280 @code{initiallyUnmapped} X Resource don't seem to help much either...
|
|
2281
|
|
2282 Ben Wing <ben@@666.com> writes:
|
|
2283
|
|
2284 @quotation
|
|
2285 Ugh, this stuff is such an incredible mess that I've about given up
|
|
2286 getting it to work. The principal problem is numerous window-manager
|
|
2287 bugs...
|
|
2288 @end quotation
|
|
2289
|
|
2290 @node Q3.2.1, Q3.2.2, Q3.1.8, Customization
|
|
2291 @section How can I set color options from @file{.emacs}?
|
|
2292
|
|
2293 How can I set the most commonly used color options from my @file{.emacs}
|
|
2294 instead of from my @file{.Xdefaults}?
|
|
2295
|
|
2296 Like this:
|
|
2297
|
|
2298 @lisp
|
|
2299 (set-face-background 'default "bisque") ; frame background
|
|
2300 (set-face-foreground 'default "black") ; normal text
|
|
2301 (set-face-background 'zmacs-region "red") ; When selecting w/
|
|
2302 ; mouse
|
|
2303 (set-face-foreground 'zmacs-region "yellow")
|
|
2304 (set-face-font 'default "*courier-bold-r*120-100-100*")
|
|
2305 (set-face-background 'highlight "blue") ; Ie when selecting buffers
|
|
2306 (set-face-foreground 'highlight "yellow")
|
|
2307 (set-face-background 'modeline "blue") ; Line at bottom of buffer
|
|
2308 (set-face-foreground 'modeline "white")
|
|
2309 (set-face-font 'modeline "*bold-r-normal*140-100-100*")
|
|
2310 (set-face-background 'isearch "yellow") ; When highlighting while
|
|
2311 ; searching
|
|
2312 (set-face-foreground 'isearch "red")
|
|
2313 (setq x-pointer-foreground-color "black") ; Adds to bg color,
|
|
2314 ; so keep black
|
|
2315 (setq x-pointer-background-color "blue") ; This is color you really
|
|
2316 ; want ptr/crsr
|
|
2317 @end lisp
|
|
2318
|
|
2319 @node Q3.2.2, Q3.2.3, Q3.2.1, Customization
|
|
2320 @section How do I set the text, menu and modeline fonts?
|
|
2321
|
|
2322 Note that you should use @samp{Emacs.} and not @samp{Emacs*} when
|
|
2323 setting face values.
|
|
2324
|
|
2325 In @file{.Xdefaults}:
|
|
2326
|
|
2327 @example
|
|
2328 Emacs.default.attributeFont: -*-*-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-m-*-*-*
|
|
2329 Emacs*menubar*font: fixed
|
|
2330 Emacs.modeline.attributeFont: fixed
|
|
2331 @end example
|
|
2332
|
|
2333 This is confusing because modeline is a face, and can be found listed
|
|
2334 with all faces in the current mode by using @kbd{M-x set-face-font
|
|
2335 (enter) ?}. It uses the face specification of @code{attributeFont},
|
|
2336 while menubar is a normal X thing that uses the specification
|
|
2337 @code{font}. With Motif it may be necessary to use @code{fontList}
|
|
2338 instead of @code{font}.
|
|
2339
|
|
2340 @node Q3.2.3, Q3.2.4, Q3.2.2, Customization
|
|
2341 @section How can I set the colors when highlighting a region?
|
|
2342
|
|
2343 How can I set the background/foreground colors when highlighting a
|
|
2344 region?
|
|
2345
|
|
2346 You can change the face @code{zmacs-region} either in your
|
|
2347 @file{.Xdefaults}:
|
|
2348
|
|
2349 @example
|
|
2350 Emacs.zmacs-region.attributeForeground: firebrick
|
|
2351 Emacs.zmacs-region.attributeBackground: lightseagreen
|
16
|
2352 @end example
|
|
2353
|
82
|
2354 or in your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
2355
|
|
2356 @lisp
|
|
2357 (set-face-background 'zmacs-region "red")
|
|
2358 (set-face-foreground 'zmacs-region "yellow")
|
|
2359 @end lisp
|
|
2360
|
|
2361 @node Q3.2.4, Q3.2.5, Q3.2.3, Customization
|
|
2362 @section How can I limit color map usage?
|
|
2363
|
|
2364 I'm using Netscape (or another color grabber like XEmacs);
|
|
2365 is there anyway to limit the number of available colors in the color map?
|
|
2366
|
126
|
2367 XEmacs 19.13 didn't have such a mechanism (unlike netscape, or other
|
82
|
2368 color-hogs). One solution is to start XEmacs prior to netscape, since
|
|
2369 this will prevent Netscape from grabbing all colors (but Netscape will
|
|
2370 complain). You can use the flags for Netscape, like -mono, -ncols <#>
|
|
2371 or -install (for mono, limiting to <#> colors, or for using a private
|
|
2372 color map). Since Netscape will take the entire colormap and never
|
|
2373 release it, the only reasonable way to run it is with @samp{-install}.
|
|
2374
|
|
2375 If you have the money, another solution would be to use a truecolor or
|
|
2376 direct color video.
|
|
2377
|
|
2378 Starting with XEmacs 19.14, XEmacs uses the closest available color if
|
|
2379 the colormap is full, so it's O.K. now to start Netscape first.
|
|
2380
|
|
2381 @node Q3.2.5, Q3.3.1, Q3.2.4, Customization
|
|
2382 @section My tty supports color, but XEmacs doesn't use them.
|
|
2383
|
|
2384 XEmacs tries to automatically determine whether your tty supports color,
|
|
2385 but sometimes guesses wrong. In that case, you can make XEmacs Do The
|
|
2386 Right Thing using this Lisp code:
|
|
2387
|
|
2388 @lisp
|
|
2389 (if (eq 'tty (device-type))
|
|
2390 (set-device-class nil 'color))
|
|
2391 @end lisp
|
|
2392
|
|
2393 @node Q3.3.1, Q3.3.2, Q3.2.5, Customization
|
|
2394 @section How can I make the modeline go away?
|
|
2395
|
|
2396 @lisp
|
|
2397 (set-specifier has-modeline-p nil)
|
|
2398 @end lisp
|
|
2399
|
|
2400 Starting with XEmacs 19.14 the modeline responds to mouse clicks, so if
|
|
2401 you haven't liked or used the modeline in the past, you might want to
|
|
2402 try the new version out.
|
|
2403
|
|
2404 @node Q3.3.2, Q3.3.3, Q3.3.1, Customization
|
|
2405 @section How do you have XEmacs display the line number in the modeline?
|
|
2406
|
|
2407 Add the following line to your @file{.emacs} file to display the
|
|
2408 line number:
|
|
2409
|
|
2410 @lisp
|
|
2411 (setq line-number-mode t)
|
|
2412 @end lisp
|
|
2413
|
|
2414 Use the following to display the column number:
|
|
2415
|
|
2416 @lisp
|
|
2417 (display-column-mode)
|
|
2418 @end lisp
|
|
2419
|
|
2420 @node Q3.3.3, Q3.3.4, Q3.3.2, Customization
|
|
2421 @section How do I get XEmacs to put the time of day on the modeline?
|
|
2422
|
|
2423 @lisp
|
|
2424 (display-time)
|
|
2425 @end lisp
|
|
2426
|
|
2427 @node Q3.3.4, Q3.3.5, Q3.3.3, Customization
|
163
|
2428 @section How do I turn off current chapter from AUC TeX modeline?
|
|
2429
|
|
2430 With AUC TeX, fast typing is hard because the current chapter, section
|
82
|
2431 etc. are given in the modeline. How can I turn this off?
|
|
2432
|
163
|
2433 It's not AUC TeX, it comes from @code{func-menu} in @file{func-menu.el}.
|
82
|
2434 Add this code to your @file{.emacs} to turn it off:
|
|
2435
|
|
2436 @lisp
|
|
2437 (setq fume-display-in-modeline-p nil)
|
|
2438 @end lisp
|
|
2439
|
|
2440 Or just add a hook to @code{TeX-mode-hook} to turn it off only for TeX
|
|
2441 mode:
|
|
2442
|
|
2443 @lisp
|
|
2444 (add-hook 'TeX-mode-hook '(lambda () (setq fume-display-in-modeline-p nil)))
|
|
2445 @end lisp
|
|
2446
|
|
2447 David Hughes <dhughes@@origin-at.co.uk> writes:
|
|
2448
|
|
2449 @quotation
|
|
2450 If you have 19.14 or later, try this instead; you'll still get the
|
|
2451 function name displayed in the modeline, but it won't attempt to keep
|
|
2452 track when you modify the file. To refresh when it gets out of synch,
|
|
2453 you simply need click on the @samp{Rescan Buffer} option in the
|
|
2454 function-menu.
|
|
2455
|
|
2456 @lisp
|
|
2457 (setq-default fume-auto-rescan-buffer-p nil)
|
|
2458 @end lisp
|
|
2459 @end quotation
|
|
2460
|
|
2461 @node Q3.3.5, Q3.4.1, Q3.3.4, Customization
|
|
2462 @section How can one change the modeline color based on the mode used?
|
|
2463
|
|
2464 You can use something like the following:
|
|
2465
|
|
2466 @lisp
|
|
2467 (add-hook 'lisp-mode-hook
|
163
|
2468 (lambda ()
|
|
2469 (set-face-background 'modeline "red" (current-buffer))))
|
82
|
2470 @end lisp
|
|
2471
|
|
2472 Then, when editing a Lisp file (i.e. when in Lisp mode), the modeline
|
|
2473 colors change from the default set in your @file{.emacs}. The change
|
|
2474 will only be made in the buffer you just entered (which contains the
|
|
2475 Lisp file you are editing) and will not affect the modeline colors
|
|
2476 anywhere else.
|
|
2477
|
|
2478 Notes:
|
|
2479
|
|
2480 @itemize @bullet
|
|
2481
|
|
2482 @item
|
|
2483 The hook is the mode name plus @code{-hook}. eg. c-mode-hook,
|
|
2484 c++-mode-hook, emacs-lisp-mode-hook (used for your @file{.emacs} or a
|
|
2485 @file{xx.el} file), lisp-interaction-mode-hook (the @samp{*scratch*}
|
|
2486 buffer), text-mode-hook, etc.
|
|
2487
|
|
2488 @item
|
|
2489 Be sure to use @code{add-hook}, not @code{(setq c-mode-hook xxxx)},
|
|
2490 otherwise you will erase anything that anybody has already put on the
|
|
2491 hook.
|
|
2492
|
|
2493 @item
|
|
2494 You can also do @code{(set-face-font 'modeline @var{font})},
|
|
2495 eg. @code{(set-face-font 'modeline "*bold-r-normal*140-100-100*"
|
|
2496 (current-buffer))} if you wish the modeline font to vary based on the
|
|
2497 current mode.
|
|
2498 @end itemize
|
|
2499
|
126
|
2500 This works in 19.15 as well, but there are additional modeline faces,
|
82
|
2501 @code{modeline-buffer-id}, @code{modeline-mousable}, and
|
|
2502 @code{modeline-mousable-minor-mode}, which you may want to customize.
|
|
2503
|
|
2504 @node Q3.4.1, Q3.4.2, Q3.3.5, Customization
|
|
2505 @section How do I open a frame on another screen of my multi-headed display?
|
|
2506
|
163
|
2507 The support for this was revamped for 19.14. Use the command
|
82
|
2508 @kbd{M-x make-frame-on-display}. This command is also on the File menu
|
|
2509 in the menubar.
|
|
2510
|
163
|
2511 XEmacs 19.14 and later also have the command @code{make-frame-on-tty}
|
|
2512 which will establish a connection to any tty-like device. Opening the
|
|
2513 TTY devices should be left to @code{gnuclient}, though.
|
82
|
2514
|
|
2515 @node Q3.4.2, Q3.5.1, Q3.4.1, Customization
|
|
2516 @section Can I really connect to a running XEmacs after calling up over a modem? How?
|
|
2517
|
|
2518 If you're not running at least XEmacs 19.14, you can't. Otherwise check
|
163
|
2519 out the @code{gnuattach} program supplied with XEmacs. Starting with
|
|
2520 XEmacs 20.3, @code{gnuattach} and @code{gnudoit} functionality will be
|
|
2521 provided by @code{gnuclient}.
|
82
|
2522
|
|
2523 @node Q3.5.1, Q3.5.2, Q3.4.2, Customization
|
|
2524 @section How can I bind complex functions (or macros) to keys?
|
|
2525
|
|
2526 As an example, say you want the @kbd{paste} key on a Sun keyboard to
|
|
2527 insert the current Primary X selection at point. You can accomplish this
|
|
2528 with:
|
|
2529
|
|
2530 @lisp
|
|
2531 (define-key global-map [f18] 'x-insert-selection)
|
|
2532 @end lisp
|
|
2533
|
|
2534 However, this only works if there is a current X selection (the
|
|
2535 selection will be highlighted). The functionality I like is for the
|
|
2536 @kbd{paste} key to insert the current X selection if there is one,
|
|
2537 otherwise insert the contents of the clipboard. To do this you need to
|
|
2538 pass arguments to @code{x-insert-selection}. This is done by wrapping
|
|
2539 the call in a 'lambda form:
|
|
2540
|
|
2541 @lisp
|
163
|
2542 (global-set-key [f18]
|
|
2543 (lambda () (interactive) (x-insert-selection t nil)))
|
82
|
2544 @end lisp
|
|
2545
|
|
2546 This binds the f18 key to a @dfn{generic} functional object. The
|
|
2547 interactive spec is required because only interactive functions can be
|
163
|
2548 bound to keys.
|
82
|
2549
|
|
2550 For the FAQ example you could use:
|
|
2551
|
|
2552 @lisp
|
|
2553 (global-set-key [(control ?.)]
|
163
|
2554 (lambda () (interactive) (scroll-up 1)))
|
82
|
2555 (global-set-key [(control ?;)]
|
163
|
2556 (lambda () (interactive) (scroll-up -1)))
|
82
|
2557 @end lisp
|
|
2558
|
|
2559 This is fine if you only need a few functions within the lambda body.
|
|
2560 If you're doing more it's cleaner to define a separate function as in
|
|
2561 question 3.5.3 (@xref{Q3.5.3}).
|
|
2562
|
|
2563 @node Q3.5.2, Q3.5.3, Q3.5.1, Customization
|
|
2564 @section How can I stop down-arrow from adding empty lines to the bottom of my buffers?
|
|
2565
|
|
2566 Add the following line to your @file{.emacs} file:
|
|
2567
|
|
2568 @lisp
|
|
2569 (setq next-line-add-newlines nil)
|
|
2570 @end lisp
|
|
2571
|
163
|
2572 This has been the default setting in XEmacs for some time.
|
|
2573
|
82
|
2574 @node Q3.5.3, Q3.5.4, Q3.5.2, Customization
|
|
2575 @section How do I bind C-. and C-; to scroll one line up and down?
|
|
2576
|
|
2577 Add the following (Thanks to Richard Mlynarik <mly@@adoc.xerox.com> and
|
|
2578 Wayne Newberry <wayne@@zen.cac.stratus.com>) to @file{.emacs}:
|
|
2579
|
|
2580 @lisp
|
|
2581 (defun scroll-up-one-line ()
|
|
2582 (interactive)
|
|
2583 (scroll-up 1))
|
|
2584
|
|
2585 (defun scroll-down-one-line ()
|
|
2586 (interactive)
|
|
2587 (scroll-down 1))
|
|
2588
|
163
|
2589 (global-set-key [(control ?.)] 'scroll-up-one-line) ; C-.
|
|
2590 (global-set-key [(control ?;)] 'scroll-down-one-line) ; C-;
|
82
|
2591 @end lisp
|
|
2592
|
|
2593 The key point is that you can only bind simple functions to keys; you
|
|
2594 can not bind a key to a function that you're also passing arguments to.
|
|
2595 (@xref{Q3.5.1} for a better answer).
|
|
2596
|
|
2597 @node Q3.5.4, Q3.5.5, Q3.5.3, Customization
|
|
2598 @section Globally binding @kbd{Delete}?
|
|
2599
|
|
2600 I cannot manage to globally bind my @kbd{Delete} key to something other
|
|
2601 than the default. How does one do this?
|
|
2602
|
|
2603 @lisp
|
163
|
2604 (defun foo ()
|
82
|
2605 (interactive)
|
163
|
2606 (message "You hit DELETE"))
|
|
2607
|
|
2608 (global-set-key 'delete 'foo)
|
82
|
2609 @end lisp
|
|
2610
|
|
2611 However, some modes explicitly bind @kbd{Delete}, so you would need to
|
|
2612 add a hook that does @code{local-set-key} for them. If what you want to
|
|
2613 do is make the Backspace and Delete keys work more PC/Motif-like, then
|
|
2614 take a look at the @file{delbackspace.el} package.
|
|
2615
|
|
2616 New in XEmacs 19.14 is a variable called @code{key-translation-map}
|
|
2617 which makes it easier to bind @kbd{Delete}. @file{delbackspace.el} is a
|
|
2618 good example of how to do this correctly.
|
|
2619
|
|
2620 @node Q3.5.5, Q3.5.6, Q3.5.4, Customization
|
|
2621 @section Scrolling one line at a time.
|
|
2622
|
|
2623 Can the cursor keys scroll the screen a line at a time, rather than the
|
|
2624 default half page jump? I tend it to find it disorienting.
|
|
2625
|
|
2626 Try this:
|
|
2627
|
|
2628 @lisp
|
|
2629 (defun scroll-one-line-up (&optional arg)
|
|
2630 "Scroll the selected window up (forward in the text) one line (or N lines)."
|
|
2631 (interactive "p")
|
|
2632 (scroll-up (or arg 1)))
|
|
2633
|
|
2634 (defun scroll-one-line-down (&optional arg)
|
|
2635 "Scroll the selected window down (backward in the text) one line (or N)."
|
|
2636 (interactive "p")
|
|
2637 (scroll-down (or arg 1)))
|
|
2638
|
163
|
2639 (global-set-key [up] 'scroll-one-line-up)
|
|
2640 (global-set-key [down] 'scroll-one-line-down)
|
82
|
2641 @end lisp
|
|
2642
|
|
2643 The following will also work but will affect more than just the cursor
|
|
2644 keys (i.e. @kbd{C-n} and @kbd{C-p}):
|
|
2645
|
|
2646 @lisp
|
|
2647 (setq scroll-step 1)
|
|
2648 @end lisp
|
|
2649
|
|
2650 @node Q3.5.6, Q3.5.7, Q3.5.5, Customization
|
|
2651 @section How to map @kbd{Help} key alone on Sun type4 keyboard?
|
|
2652
|
|
2653 The following works in GNU Emacs 19:
|
|
2654
|
|
2655 @lisp
|
|
2656 (global-set-key [help] 'help-command) ;; Help
|
|
2657 @end lisp
|
|
2658
|
126
|
2659 The following works in XEmacs 19.15 with the addition of shift:
|
82
|
2660
|
|
2661 @lisp
|
|
2662 (global-set-key [(shift help)] 'help-command) ;; Help
|
|
2663 @end lisp
|
|
2664
|
|
2665 But it doesn't work alone. This is in the file @file{PROBLEMS} which
|
|
2666 should have come with your XEmacs installation: @emph{Emacs ignores the
|
|
2667 @kbd{help} key when running OLWM}.
|
|
2668
|
|
2669 OLWM grabs the @kbd{help} key, and retransmits it to the appropriate
|
|
2670 client using @code{XSendEvent}. Allowing Emacs to react to synthetic
|
|
2671 events is a security hole, so this is turned off by default. You can
|
|
2672 enable it by setting the variable @code{x-allow-sendevents} to t. You
|
|
2673 can also cause fix this by telling OLWM to not grab the help key, with
|
|
2674 the null binding @code{OpenWindows.KeyboardCommand.Help:}.
|
|
2675
|
|
2676 @node Q3.5.7, Q3.5.8, Q3.5.6, Customization
|
|
2677 @section How can you type in special characters in XEmacs?
|
|
2678
|
|
2679 One way is to use the package @samp{x-compose}. Then you can use
|
|
2680 sequences like @kbd{Compose " a} to get ä, etc.
|
|
2681
|
163
|
2682 Another way is to use the iso-ascii package, provided in XEmacs 19.15
|
|
2683 and later.
|
82
|
2684
|
|
2685 @node Q3.5.8, Q3.5.9, Q3.5.7, Customization
|
|
2686 @section Why does @code{(global-set-key [delete-forward] 'delete-char)} complain?
|
|
2687
|
|
2688 Why does @code{(define-key global-map [ delete-forward ] 'delete-char)}
|
|
2689 complain of not being able to bind an unknown key?
|
|
2690
|
|
2691 Try this instead:
|
|
2692
|
|
2693 @lisp
|
|
2694 (define-key global-map [delete_forward] 'delete-char)
|
|
2695 @end lisp
|
|
2696
|
|
2697 and it will work.
|
|
2698
|
|
2699 What you are seeing above is a bug due to code that is trying to check
|
|
2700 for GNU Emacs syntax like:
|
|
2701
|
|
2702 (define-key global-map [C-M-a] 'delete-char)
|
|
2703
|
|
2704 which otherwise would cause no errors but would not result in the
|
|
2705 expected behavior.
|
|
2706
|
|
2707 This bug has been fixed in 19.14.
|
|
2708
|
|
2709 @node Q3.5.9, Q3.5.10, Q3.5.8, Customization
|
|
2710 @section How do I make the Delete key delete forward?
|
|
2711
|
163
|
2712 Use the @file{delbs} package:
|
82
|
2713
|
|
2714 @lisp
|
163
|
2715 (require 'delbs)
|
82
|
2716 @end lisp
|
|
2717
|
163
|
2718 This will give you the functions @code{delbs-enable-delete-forward} to
|
|
2719 set things up, and @code{delbs-disable-delete-forward} to revert to
|
|
2720 ``normal'' behavior.
|
|
2721
|
82
|
2722 Also @xref{Q3.5.4}.
|
|
2723
|
|
2724 @node Q3.5.10, Q3.6.1, Q3.5.9, Customization
|
|
2725 @section Can I turn on @dfn{sticky} modifier keys?
|
|
2726
|
|
2727 Yes, with @code{(setq modifier-keys-are-sticky t)}. This will give the
|
|
2728 effect of being able to press and release Shift and have the next
|
|
2729 character typed come out in upper case. This will affect all the other
|
|
2730 modifier keys like Control and Meta as well.
|
|
2731
|
|
2732 Ben Wing <ben@@666.com> writes:
|
|
2733
|
|
2734 @quotation
|
|
2735 One thing about the sticky modifiers is that if you move the mouse out
|
163
|
2736 of the frame and back in, it cancels all currently ``stuck'' modifiers.
|
82
|
2737 @end quotation
|
|
2738
|
|
2739 @node Q3.6.1, Q3.6.2, Q3.5.10, Customization
|
|
2740 @section Is there a way to make the bar cursor thicker?
|
|
2741
|
|
2742 I'd like to have the bar cursor a little thicker, as I tend to "lose" it
|
|
2743 often.
|
|
2744
|
|
2745 For a 1 pixel bar cursor, use:
|
|
2746
|
|
2747 @lisp
|
|
2748 (setq bar-cursor t)
|
|
2749 @end lisp
|
|
2750
|
|
2751 For a 2 pixel bar cursor, use:
|
|
2752
|
|
2753 @lisp
|
|
2754 (setq bar-cursor 'anything-else)
|
|
2755 @end lisp
|
|
2756
|
|
2757 You can use a color to make it stand out better:
|
|
2758
|
|
2759 @example
|
|
2760 Emacs*cursorColor: Red
|
|
2761 @end example
|
|
2762
|
|
2763 @node Q3.6.2, Q3.6.3, Q3.6.1, Customization
|
|
2764 @section Is there a way to get back the block cursor?
|
|
2765
|
|
2766 @lisp
|
|
2767 (setq bar-cursor nil)
|
|
2768 @end lisp
|
|
2769
|
|
2770 @node Q3.6.3, Q3.7.1, Q3.6.2, Customization
|
|
2771 @section Can I make the cursor blink?
|
|
2772
|
|
2773 If you are running a version of XEmacs older than 19.14, no. Otherwise
|
|
2774 you can do the following:
|
|
2775
|
|
2776 @lisp
|
|
2777 (blink-cursor-mode)
|
|
2778 @end lisp
|
|
2779
|
|
2780 This function toggles between a steady cursor and a blinking cursor.
|
|
2781 You may also set this mode from the menu bar by selecting @samp{Options
|
|
2782 => Frame Appearance => Blinking Cursor}.
|
|
2783
|
|
2784 @node Q3.7.1, Q3.7.2, Q3.6.3, Customization
|
|
2785 @section How can I turn off Mouse pasting?
|
|
2786
|
|
2787 I keep hitting the middle mouse button by accident and getting stuff
|
|
2788 pasted into my buffer so how can I turn this off?
|
|
2789
|
|
2790 Here is an alternative binding, whereby the middle mouse button selects
|
|
2791 (but does not cut) the expression under the mouse. Clicking middle on a
|
|
2792 left or right paren will select to the matching one. Note that you can
|
|
2793 use @code{define-key} or @code{global-set-key}.
|
|
2794
|
|
2795 @lisp
|
163
|
2796 (defun mouse-set-point-and-select (event)
|
82
|
2797 "Sets the point at the mouse location, then marks following form"
|
|
2798 (interactive "@@e")
|
|
2799 (mouse-set-point event)
|
163
|
2800 (mark-sexp 1))
|
|
2801 (define-key global-map [button2] 'mouse-set-point-and-select)
|
82
|
2802 @end lisp
|
|
2803
|
|
2804 @node Q3.7.2, Q3.7.3, Q3.7.1, Customization
|
|
2805 @section How do I set control/meta/etc modifiers on mouse buttons?
|
|
2806
|
|
2807 Use, for instance, @code{[(meta button1)]}. For example, here is a
|
|
2808 common setting for Common Lisp programmers who use the bundled ilisp
|
|
2809 package, whereby meta-button1 on a function name will find the file
|
|
2810 where the function name was defined, and put you at that location in the
|
|
2811 source file.
|
|
2812
|
|
2813 [Inside a function that gets called by the lisp-mode-hook and
|
|
2814 ilisp-mode-hook]
|
|
2815
|
|
2816 @lisp
|
|
2817 (local-set-key [(meta button1)] 'edit-definitions-lisp)
|
|
2818 @end lisp
|
|
2819
|
|
2820 @node Q3.7.3, Q3.7.4, Q3.7.2, Customization
|
|
2821 @section Clicking the left button does not do anything in buffer list.
|
|
2822
|
|
2823 I do @kbd{C-x C-b} to get a list of buffers and the entries get
|
|
2824 highlighted when I move the mouse over them but clicking the left mouse
|
|
2825 does not do anything.
|
|
2826
|
|
2827 Use the middle mouse button.
|
|
2828
|
|
2829 @node Q3.7.4, Q3.7.5, Q3.7.3, Customization
|
|
2830 @section How can I get a list of buffers when I hit mouse button 3?
|
|
2831
|
163
|
2832 The following code will replace the default popup on button3:
|
82
|
2833
|
|
2834 @lisp
|
163
|
2835 (global-set-key [button3] 'popup-buffer-menu)
|
82
|
2836 @end lisp
|
|
2837
|
|
2838 @node Q3.7.5, Q3.7.6, Q3.7.4, Customization
|
|
2839 @section Why does cut-and-paste not work between XEmacs and a cmdtool?
|
|
2840
|
|
2841 We don't know. It's a bug. There does seem to be a work-around,
|
|
2842 however. Try running xclipboard first. It appears to fix the problem
|
|
2843 even if you exit it. (This should be mostly fixed in 19.13, but we
|
|
2844 haven't yet verified that).
|
|
2845
|
|
2846 @node Q3.7.6, Q3.7.7, Q3.7.5, Customization
|
|
2847 @section How I can set XEmacs up so that it pastes where the text cursor is?
|
|
2848
|
|
2849 By default XEmacs pastes X selections where the mouse pointer is. How
|
|
2850 do I disable this?
|
|
2851
|
|
2852 Examine the function @code{mouse-yank}, by typing @kbd{C-h f mouse-yank
|
|
2853 RET}.
|
|
2854
|
|
2855 To get XEmacs to paste at the text cursor, add this your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
2856
|
|
2857 @lisp
|
|
2858 (setq mouse-yank-at-point t)
|
|
2859 @end lisp
|
|
2860
|
|
2861 @node Q3.7.7, Q3.7.8, Q3.7.6, Customization
|
|
2862 @section How do I select a rectangular region?
|
|
2863
|
|
2864 Just select the region normally, then use the rectangle commands (e.g.
|
|
2865 @code{kill-rectangle} on it. The region does not highlight as a
|
|
2866 rectangle, but the commands work just fine.
|
|
2867
|
|
2868 To actually sweep out rectangular regions with the mouse do the
|
|
2869 following:
|
|
2870
|
|
2871 @lisp
|
|
2872 (setq mouse-track-rectangle-p t)
|
|
2873 @end lisp
|
|
2874
|
|
2875 Aki Vehtari <Aki.Vehtari@@hut.fi> writes:
|
|
2876
|
|
2877 @quotation
|
|
2878 To actually sweep out rectangular regions with the mouse you can also
|
|
2879 use @code{mouse-track-do-rectangle} which is assigned to
|
|
2880 @kbd{M-button1}. Then use rectangle commands.
|
|
2881
|
|
2882 @example
|
|
2883 mouse-track-do-rectangle: (event)
|
|
2884 -- an interactive compiled Lisp function.
|
|
2885 Like `mouse-track' but selects rectangles instead of regions.
|
|
2886 @end example
|
|
2887 @end quotation
|
|
2888
|
|
2889 @node Q3.7.8, Q3.8.1, Q3.7.7, Customization
|
|
2890 @section Why does @kbd{M-w} take so long?
|
|
2891
|
|
2892 It actually doesn't. It leaves the region visible for a second so that
|
|
2893 you can see what area is being yanked. If you start working, though, it
|
|
2894 will immediately complete its operation. In other words, it will only
|
|
2895 delay for a second if you let it.
|
|
2896
|
|
2897 @node Q3.8.1, Q3.8.2, Q3.7.8, Customization
|
|
2898 @section How do I get rid of the menu (or menubar)?
|
|
2899
|
|
2900 If you are running XEmacs 19.13 and earlier, add this command to your
|
|
2901 @file{.emacs}.
|
|
2902
|
|
2903 @lisp
|
|
2904 (set-menubar nil)
|
|
2905 @end lisp
|
|
2906
|
|
2907 Starting with XEmacs 19.14 the preferred method is:
|
|
2908
|
|
2909 @lisp
|
|
2910 (set-specifier menubar-visible-p nil)
|
|
2911 @end lisp
|
|
2912
|
|
2913 @node Q3.8.2, Q3.8.3, Q3.8.1, Customization
|
|
2914 @section Can I customize the basic menubar?
|
|
2915
|
|
2916 For an extensive menubar, add this line to your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
2917
|
|
2918 @lisp
|
|
2919 (load "big-menubar")
|
|
2920 @end lisp
|
|
2921
|
|
2922 If you'd like to write your own, this file provides as good a set of
|
|
2923 examples as any to start from. The file is located in
|
|
2924 @file{lisp/packages/big-menubar.el} in the XEmacs installation
|
|
2925 directory.
|
|
2926
|
|
2927 @node Q3.8.3, Q3.8.4, Q3.8.2, Customization
|
|
2928 @section How do I control how many buffers are listed in the menu @code{Buffers List}?
|
|
2929
|
|
2930 Add the following to your @file{.emacs} (suit to fit):
|
|
2931
|
|
2932 @lisp
|
|
2933 (setq buffers-menu-max-size 20)
|
|
2934 @end lisp
|
|
2935
|
|
2936 For no limit, use an argument of @samp{nil}.
|
|
2937
|
|
2938 @node Q3.8.4, Q3.8.5, Q3.8.3, Customization
|
|
2939 @section Resources like @code{Emacs*menubar*font} are not working?
|
|
2940
|
|
2941 I am trying to use a resource like @code{Emacs*menubar*font} to set the
|
|
2942 font of the menubar but it's not working.
|
|
2943
|
|
2944 If you are using the real Motif menubar, this resource is not
|
|
2945 recognized; you have to say:
|
|
2946
|
|
2947 @example
|
|
2948 Emacs*menubar*fontList: FONT
|
|
2949 @end example
|
|
2950
|
|
2951 If you are using the Lucid menubar, the former resource will be
|
|
2952 recognized only if the latter resource is unset. This means that the
|
|
2953 resource
|
|
2954
|
|
2955 @example
|
|
2956 *fontList: FONT
|
|
2957 @end example
|
|
2958
|
|
2959 will override
|
|
2960
|
|
2961 @example
|
|
2962 Emacs*menubar*font: FONT
|
|
2963 @end example
|
|
2964
|
|
2965 even though the latter is more specific.
|
|
2966
|
|
2967 @node Q3.8.5, Q3.9.1, Q3.8.4, Customization
|
|
2968 @section How can I bind a key to a function to toggle the toolbar?
|
|
2969
|
|
2970 Try something like:
|
|
2971
|
|
2972 @lisp
|
163
|
2973 (defun my-toggle-toolbar ()
|
|
2974 (interactive)
|
|
2975 (set-specifier default-toolbar-visible-p
|
|
2976 (not (specifier-instance default-toolbar-visible-p))))
|
|
2977 (global-set-key "\C-xT" 'my-toggle-toolbar)
|
82
|
2978 @end lisp
|
|
2979
|
|
2980 There are redisplay bugs in 19.14 that may make the preceding result in
|
|
2981 a messed-up display, especially for frames with multiple windows. You
|
|
2982 may need to resize the frame before XEmacs completely realizes the
|
|
2983 toolbar is really gone.
|
|
2984
|
|
2985 Thanks to Martin Buchholz <Martin.Buchholz@@sun.com> for the correct
|
|
2986 code.
|
|
2987
|
|
2988 @node Q3.9.1, Q3.9.2, Q3.8.5, Customization
|
|
2989 @section How can I disable the scrollbar?
|
|
2990
|
|
2991 To disable them for all frames, add the following line to
|
|
2992 your @file{.Xdefaults}:
|
|
2993
|
|
2994 @example
|
|
2995 Emacs.scrollBarWidth: 0
|
|
2996 @end example
|
|
2997
|
|
2998 To turn the scrollbar off on a per-frame basis, use the following
|
|
2999 function:
|
|
3000
|
|
3001 @lisp
|
163
|
3002 (set-specifier scrollbar-width 0 (selected-frame))
|
82
|
3003 @end lisp
|
|
3004
|
|
3005 You can actually turn the scrollbars on at any level you want by
|
|
3006 substituting for (selected-frame) in the above command. For example, to
|
|
3007 turn the scrollbars off only in a single buffer:
|
|
3008
|
|
3009 @lisp
|
163
|
3010 (set-specifier scrollbar-width 0 (current-buffer))
|
82
|
3011 @end lisp
|
|
3012
|
163
|
3013 In XEmacs versions prior to 19.14, you had to use the hairier construct:
|
82
|
3014
|
|
3015 @lisp
|
163
|
3016 (set-specifier scrollbar-width (cons (selected-frame) 0))
|
82
|
3017 @end lisp
|
|
3018
|
|
3019 @node Q3.9.2, Q3.9.3, Q3.9.1, Customization
|
|
3020 @section How can one use resources to change scrollbar colors?
|
|
3021
|
|
3022 Here's a recap of how to use resources to change your scrollbar colors:
|
|
3023
|
|
3024 @example
|
|
3025 ! Motif scrollbars
|
|
3026
|
|
3027 Emacs*XmScrollBar.Background: skyblue
|
|
3028 Emacs*XmScrollBar.troughColor: lightgray
|
|
3029
|
|
3030 ! Athena scrollbars
|
|
3031
|
|
3032 Emacs*Scrollbar.Foreground: skyblue
|
|
3033 Emacs*Scrollbar.Background: lightgray
|
|
3034 @end example
|
|
3035
|
|
3036 Note the capitalization of @code{Scrollbar} for the Athena widget.
|
|
3037
|
|
3038 @node Q3.9.3, Q3.9.4, Q3.9.2, Customization
|
|
3039 @section Moving the scrollbar can move the point; can I disable this?
|
|
3040
|
|
3041 When I move the scrollbar in an XEmacs window, it moves the point as
|
|
3042 well, which should not be the default behavior. Is this a bug or a
|
|
3043 feature? Can I disable it?
|
|
3044
|
|
3045 The current behavior is a feature, not a bug. Point remains at the same
|
|
3046 buffer position as long as that position does not scroll off the screen.
|
|
3047 In that event, point will end up in either the upper-left or lower-left
|
|
3048 hand corner.
|
|
3049
|
|
3050 This cannot be changed.
|
|
3051
|
|
3052 @node Q3.9.4, Q3.10.1, Q3.9.3, Customization
|
|
3053 @section How can I get automatic horizontal scrolling?
|
|
3054
|
|
3055 By the same token, how can I turn it off in specific modes?
|
|
3056
|
|
3057 To do this, add to your @file{.emacs} file:
|
|
3058
|
|
3059 @lisp
|
|
3060 (require 'auto-show)
|
|
3061 @end lisp
|
|
3062
|
|
3063 Then do @code{(setq truncate-lines t)} in the mode-hooks for any modes
|
|
3064 in which you want lines truncated.
|
|
3065
|
|
3066 More precisely: If @code{truncate-lines} is nil, horizontal scrollbars
|
|
3067 will never appear. Otherwise, they will appear only if the value of
|
|
3068 @code{scrollbar-height} for that buffer/window/etc. is non-zero. If you
|
|
3069 do
|
|
3070
|
|
3071 @lisp
|
|
3072 (set-specifier scrollbar-height 0)
|
|
3073 @end lisp
|
|
3074
|
|
3075 then horizontal scrollbars will not appear in truncated buffers unless
|
|
3076 the package specifically asked for them.
|
|
3077
|
|
3078 Automatic horizontal scrolling is now standard, starting with 19.14.
|
|
3079
|
|
3080 @node Q3.10.1, Q3.10.2, Q3.9.4, Customization
|
|
3081 @section How can I turn off or change highlighted selections?
|
|
3082
|
|
3083 The @code{zmacs} mode allows for what some might call gratuitous
|
|
3084 highlighting for selected regions (either by setting mark or by using
|
|
3085 the mouse). This is the default behavior. To turn off, add the
|
|
3086 following line to your @file{.emacs} file:
|
|
3087
|
|
3088 @lisp
|
|
3089 (setq zmacs-regions nil)
|
|
3090 @end lisp
|
|
3091
|
126
|
3092 To change the face for selection, look at @code{Options->Customize} on
|
82
|
3093 the menubar.
|
|
3094
|
|
3095 @node Q3.10.2, Q3.10.3, Q3.10.1, Customization
|
|
3096 @section How do I get that typing on an active region removes it?
|
|
3097
|
|
3098 I want to change things so that if I select some text and start typing,
|
|
3099 the typed text replaces the selected text, similar to Motif.
|
|
3100
|
|
3101 You want to use something called @dfn{pending delete}. Pending delete
|
|
3102 is what happens when you select a region (with the mouse or keyboard)
|
|
3103 and you press a key to replace the selected region by the key you typed.
|
|
3104 Usually backspace kills the selected region.
|
|
3105
|
|
3106 To get this behavior, add the following line to your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
3107
|
|
3108 @lisp
|
|
3109 (require 'pending-del)
|
|
3110 @end lisp
|
|
3111
|
|
3112 Note that this will work with both Backspace and Delete.
|
|
3113
|
|
3114 @node Q3.10.3, Q3.10.4, Q3.10.2, Customization
|
|
3115 @section Can I turn off the highlight during isearch?
|
|
3116
|
|
3117 I do not like my text highlighted while I am doing isearch as I am not
|
|
3118 able to see what's underneath. How do I turn it off?
|
|
3119
|
|
3120 Put the following in your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
3121
|
|
3122 @lisp
|
|
3123 (setq isearch-highlight nil)
|
|
3124 @end lisp
|
|
3125
|
|
3126 Note also that isearch-highlight affects query-replace and ispell.
|
|
3127 Instead of disabling isearch-highlight you may find that a better
|
|
3128 solution consists of customizing the @code{isearch} face.
|
|
3129
|
|
3130 @node Q3.10.4, Q3.10.5, Q3.10.3, Customization
|
|
3131 @section How do I turn off highlighting after @kbd{C-x C-p} (mark-page)?
|
|
3132
|
|
3133 Put this in your @code{.emacs}:
|
|
3134
|
|
3135 @lisp
|
|
3136 (setq zmacs-regions nil)
|
|
3137 @end lisp
|
|
3138
|
|
3139 @strong{Warning: This command turns off all region highlighting.}
|
|
3140
|
|
3141 @node Q3.10.5, , Q3.10.4, Customization
|
|
3142 @section The region disappears when I hit the end of buffer while scrolling.
|
|
3143
|
|
3144 How do I turn this feature (if it indeed is a feature) off?
|
|
3145
|
|
3146 Like this:
|
|
3147
|
|
3148 @lisp
|
|
3149 (defadvice scroll-up (around scroll-up freeze)
|
|
3150 (interactive "_P")
|
|
3151 (let ((zmacs-region-stays t))
|
|
3152 (if (interactive-p)
|
|
3153 (condition-case nil
|
|
3154 ad-do-it
|
|
3155 (end-of-buffer (goto-char (point-max))))
|
|
3156 ad-do-it)))
|
|
3157
|
|
3158 (defadvice scroll-down (around scroll-down freeze)
|
|
3159 (interactive "_P")
|
|
3160 (let ((zmacs-region-stays t))
|
|
3161 (if (interactive-p)
|
|
3162 (condition-case nil
|
|
3163 ad-do-it
|
|
3164 (beginning-of-buffer (goto-char (point-min))))
|
|
3165 ad-do-it)))
|
|
3166 @end lisp
|
|
3167
|
|
3168 Thanks to T. V. Raman <raman@@adobe.com> for assistance in deriving this
|
|
3169 answer.
|
|
3170
|
|
3171 @node Subsystems, Miscellaneous, Customization, Top
|
|
3172 @chapter Major Subsystems
|
|
3173
|
|
3174 This is part 4 of the XEmacs Frequently Asked Questions list. This
|
|
3175 section is devoted to major XEmacs subsystems.
|
|
3176
|
|
3177 @menu
|
|
3178 Reading Mail with VM:
|
|
3179 * Q4.0.1:: How do I set up VM to retrieve remote mail using POP?
|
|
3180 * Q4.0.2:: How do I get VM to filter mail for me?
|
|
3181 * Q4.0.3:: How can I get VM to automatically check for new mail?
|
|
3182 * Q4.0.4:: [This question intentionally left blank]
|
|
3183 * Q4.0.5:: How do I get my outgoing mail archived?
|
|
3184 * Q4.0.6:: I have various addresses at which I receive mail. How can I tell VM to ignore them when doing a "reply-all"?
|
|
3185 * Q4.0.7:: Is there a mailing list or FAQ for VM?
|
|
3186 * Q4.0.8:: Remote Mailreading with VM.
|
|
3187 * Q4.0.9:: rmail or VM gets an error incorporating new mail.
|
|
3188 * Q4.0.10:: How do I make VM stay in a single frame?
|
|
3189 * Q4.0.11:: How do I make VM or mh-e display graphical smilies?
|
|
3190 * Q4.0.12:: Customization of VM not covered in the manual or here.
|
|
3191
|
|
3192 Web browsing with W3:
|
|
3193 * Q4.1.1:: What is W3?
|
|
3194 * Q4.1.2:: How do I run W3 from behind a firewall?
|
163
|
3195 * Q4.1.3:: Is it true that W3 supports style sheets and tables?
|
82
|
3196
|
|
3197 Reading Netnews and Mail with Gnus:
|
163
|
3198 * Q4.2.1:: GNUS, (ding) Gnus, Gnus 5, September Gnus, Red Gnus,argh!
|
82
|
3199 * Q4.2.2:: [This question intentionally left blank]
|
|
3200 * Q4.2.3:: How do I make Gnus stay within a single frame?
|
|
3201 * Q4.2.4:: How do I customize the From: line?
|
|
3202
|
|
3203 Other Mail & News:
|
|
3204 * Q4.3.1:: How can I read and/or compose MIME messages?
|
|
3205 * Q4.3.2:: What is TM and where do I get it?
|
|
3206 * Q4.3.3:: Why isn't this @code{movemail} program working?
|
|
3207 * Q4.3.4:: Movemail is also distributed by Netscape? Can that cause problems?
|
|
3208 * Q4.3.5:: Where do I find pstogif (required by tm)?
|
|
3209
|
|
3210 Sparcworks, EOS, and WorkShop:
|
163
|
3211 * Q4.4.1:: What is SPARCworks, EOS, and WorkShop
|
82
|
3212
|
|
3213 Energize:
|
|
3214 * Q4.5.1:: What is/was Energize?
|
|
3215
|
|
3216 Infodock:
|
|
3217 * Q4.6.1:: What is Infodock?
|
|
3218
|
|
3219 Other Unbundled Packages:
|
163
|
3220 * Q4.7.1:: What is AUC TeX? Where do you get it?
|
82
|
3221 * Q4.7.2:: Are there any Emacs Lisp Spreadsheets?
|
163
|
3222 * Q4.7.3:: Byte compiling AUC TeX on XEmacs 19.14
|
|
3223 * Q4.7.4:: Problems installing AUC TeX
|
|
3224 * Q4.7.5:: Is there a reason for an Emacs package not to be included in XEmacs?
|
82
|
3225 @end menu
|
|
3226
|
|
3227 @node Q4.0.1, Q4.0.2, Subsystems, Subsystems
|
|
3228 @section How do I set up VM to retrieve mail from a remote site using POP?
|
|
3229
|
|
3230 Use @code{vm-spool-files}, like this for example:
|
|
3231
|
|
3232 @lisp
|
|
3233 (setq vm-spool-files '("/var/spool/mail/wing"
|
|
3234 "netcom23.netcom.com:110:pass:wing:MYPASS"))
|
|
3235 @end lisp
|
|
3236
|
|
3237 Of course substitute your actual password for MYPASS.
|
|
3238
|
|
3239 @node Q4.0.2, Q4.0.3, Q4.0.1, Subsystems
|
|
3240 @section How do I get VM to filter mail for me?
|
|
3241
|
|
3242 One possibility is to use procmail to split your mail before it gets to
|
|
3243 VM. I prefer this personally, since there are many strange and
|
|
3244 wonderful things one can do with procmail. Procmail may be found at
|
|
3245 <URL:ftp://ftp.informatik.rwth-aachen.de/pub/packages/procmail/>.
|
|
3246
|
|
3247 Also see the Mail Filtering FAQ at:
|
|
3248 <URL:http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/mail/filtering-faq/faq.html>.
|
|
3249
|
|
3250 @node Q4.0.3, Q4.0.4, Q4.0.2, Subsystems
|
|
3251 @section How can I get VM to automatically check for new mail?
|
|
3252
|
|
3253 John Turner <turner@@lanl.gov> writes:
|
|
3254
|
|
3255 @quotation
|
|
3256 Use the following:
|
|
3257
|
|
3258 @lisp
|
|
3259 (setq vm-auto-get-new-mail 60)
|
|
3260 @end lisp
|
|
3261 @end quotation
|
|
3262
|
|
3263 @node Q4.0.4, Q4.0.5, Q4.0.3, Subsystems
|
|
3264 @section [This question intentionally left blank]
|
|
3265
|
|
3266 Obsolete question, left blank to avoid renumbering.
|
|
3267
|
|
3268 @node Q4.0.5, Q4.0.6, Q4.0.4, Subsystems
|
|
3269 @section How do I get my outgoing mail archived?
|
|
3270
|
|
3271 @lisp
|
|
3272 (setq mail-archive-file-name "~/outbox")
|
|
3273 @end lisp
|
|
3274
|
|
3275 @node Q4.0.6, Q4.0.7, Q4.0.5, Subsystems
|
|
3276 @section I have various addresses at which I receive mail. How can I tell VM to ignore them when doing a "reply-all"?
|
|
3277
|
|
3278 Set @code{vm-reply-ignored-addresses} to a list, like
|
|
3279
|
|
3280 @lisp
|
|
3281 (setq vm-reply-ignored-addresses '("wing@@netcom[0-9]*.netcom.com"
|
|
3282 "wing@@netcom.com" "wing@@666.com"))
|
|
3283 @end lisp
|
|
3284
|
|
3285 Note that each string is a regular expression.
|
|
3286
|
|
3287 @node Q4.0.7, Q4.0.8, Q4.0.6, Subsystems
|
|
3288 @section Is there a mailing list or FAQ for VM?
|
|
3289
|
|
3290 There is no archived FAQ for VM.
|
|
3291
|
|
3292 Kyle Jones <kyle_jones@@wonderworks.com> writes:
|
|
3293
|
|
3294 @quotation
|
|
3295 No, I'm too atavistic to write one. For some reason I'd rather just
|
|
3296 answer the questions myself. I guess it serves a purpose in that the VM
|
|
3297 user community knows that I'm still alive, despite the 9 months since
|
|
3298 the last release.
|
|
3299 @end quotation
|
|
3300
|
163
|
3301 VM has its own newsgroups gnu.emacs.vm.info and gnu.emacs.vm.bug.
|
82
|
3302
|
|
3303 @node Q4.0.8, Q4.0.9, Q4.0.7, Subsystems
|
|
3304 @section Remote Mailreading with VM.
|
|
3305
|
|
3306 My mailbox lives at the office on a big honkin server. My regular INBOX
|
|
3307 lives on my honkin desktop machine. I now can PPP to the office from
|
|
3308 home which is far from honking... I'd like to be able to read mail at
|
|
3309 home without storing it here and I'd like to use xemacs and VM at
|
|
3310 home... Is there a recommended setup?
|
|
3311
|
|
3312 Joseph J. Nuspl Jr. <nuspl@@nvwls.cc.purdue.edu> writes:
|
|
3313
|
|
3314 @quotation
|
|
3315 There are several ways to do this.
|
|
3316
|
|
3317 @enumerate
|
|
3318 @item
|
|
3319 Set your display to your home machine and run dxpc or one of the other X
|
|
3320 compressors.
|
|
3321
|
|
3322 @item
|
|
3323 NFS mount your desktop machine on your home machine and modify your pop
|
|
3324 command on your home machine to rsh to your desktop machine and actually
|
|
3325 do the pop get's.
|
|
3326
|
|
3327 @item
|
|
3328 Run a POP server on your desktop machine as well and do a sort of two
|
|
3329 tiered POP get.
|
|
3330 @end enumerate
|
|
3331 @end quotation
|
|
3332
|
|
3333 William Perry <wmperry@@monolith.spry.com> adds:
|
|
3334
|
|
3335 @quotation
|
|
3336 Or you could run a pop script periodically on your desktop machine, and
|
|
3337 just use ange-ftp or NFS to get to your mailbox. I used to do this all
|
|
3338 the time back at IU.
|
|
3339 @end quotation
|
|
3340
|
|
3341 @node Q4.0.9, Q4.0.10, Q4.0.8, Subsystems
|
|
3342 @section rmail or VM gets an error incorporating new mail.
|
|
3343
|
163
|
3344 Quoting the XEmacs PROBLEMS file:
|
82
|
3345
|
|
3346 @quotation
|
|
3347 rmail and VM get new mail from @file{/usr/spool/mail/$USER} using a
|
|
3348 program called @code{movemail}. This program interlocks with
|
|
3349 @code{/bin/mail} using the protocol defined by @code{/bin/mail}.
|
|
3350
|
|
3351 There are two different protocols in general use. One of them uses the
|
|
3352 @code{flock} system call. The other involves creating a lock file;
|
|
3353 @code{movemail} must be able to write in @file{/usr/spool/mail} in order
|
|
3354 to do this. You control which one is used by defining, or not defining,
|
|
3355 the macro @code{MAIL_USE_FLOCK} in @file{config.h} or the m- or s- file
|
|
3356 it includes.
|
|
3357
|
|
3358 @strong{IF YOU DON'T USE THE FORM OF INTERLOCKING THAT IS NORMAL ON YOUR
|
|
3359 SYSTEM, YOU CAN LOSE MAIL!}
|
|
3360
|
|
3361 If your system uses the lock file protocol, and fascist restrictions
|
|
3362 prevent ordinary users from writing the lock files in
|
|
3363 @file{/usr/spool/mail}, you may need to make @code{movemail} setgid to a
|
|
3364 suitable group such as @samp{mail}. You can use these commands (as
|
|
3365 root):
|
|
3366
|
|
3367 @example
|
|
3368 chgrp mail movemail
|
|
3369 chmod 2755 movemail
|
|
3370 @end example
|
|
3371
|
|
3372 If your system uses the lock file protocol, and fascist restrictions
|
|
3373 prevent ordinary users from writing the lock files in
|
|
3374 @file{/usr/spool/mail}, you may need to make @code{movemail} setgid to a
|
|
3375 suitable group such as @code{mail}. To do this, use the following
|
|
3376 commands (as root) after doing the make install.
|
|
3377
|
|
3378 @example
|
|
3379 chgrp mail movemail
|
|
3380 chmod 2755 movemail
|
|
3381 @end example
|
|
3382
|
|
3383 Installation normally copies movemail from the build directory to an
|
|
3384 installation directory which is usually under @file{/usr/local/lib}.
|
|
3385 The installed copy of @code{movemail} is usually in the directory
|
|
3386 @file{/usr/local/lib/emacs/VERSION/TARGET}. You must change the group
|
|
3387 and mode of the installed copy; changing the group and mode of the build
|
|
3388 directory copy is ineffective.
|
|
3389 @end quotation
|
|
3390
|
|
3391 @node Q4.0.10, Q4.0.11, Q4.0.9, Subsystems
|
|
3392 @section How do I make VM stay in a single frame?
|
|
3393
|
|
3394 John S Cooper <John.Cooper@@Eng.Sun.COM> writes:
|
|
3395
|
|
3396 @quotation
|
|
3397 @lisp
|
|
3398 ; Don't use multiple frames
|
|
3399 (setq vm-frame-per-composition nil)
|
|
3400 (setq vm-frame-per-folder nil)
|
|
3401 (setq vm-frame-per-edit nil)
|
|
3402 (setq vm-frame-per-summary nil)
|
|
3403 @end lisp
|
|
3404 @end quotation
|
|
3405
|
|
3406 @node Q4.0.11, Q4.0.12, Q4.0.10, Subsystems
|
|
3407 @section How do I make VM or mh-e display graphical smilies?
|
|
3408
|
|
3409 For mh-e use the following:
|
|
3410
|
|
3411 @lisp
|
|
3412 (add-hook 'mh-show-mode-hook '(lambda () (smiley-region (point-min)
|
|
3413 (point-max))))
|
|
3414 @end lisp
|
|
3415
|
|
3416 For vm use the following:
|
|
3417 @lisp
|
|
3418 (require 'messagexmas)
|
|
3419 (require 'smiley)
|
|
3420 (add-hook 'vm-select-message-hook '(lambda () (smiley-region (point-min)
|
|
3421 (point-max))))
|
|
3422 @end lisp
|
|
3423
|
|
3424 For tm use the following:
|
|
3425 @lisp
|
|
3426 (autoload 'smiley-buffer "smiley" nil t)
|
|
3427 (add-hook 'mime-viewer/plain-text-preview-hook 'smiley-buffer)
|
|
3428 @end lisp
|
|
3429
|
|
3430 @node Q4.0.12, Q4.1.1, Q4.0.11, Subsystems
|
|
3431 @section Customization of VM not covered in the manual, or here.
|
|
3432
|
|
3433 giacomo boffi <boffi@@hp735.stru.polimi.it> writes:
|
|
3434
|
|
3435 @quotation
|
|
3436 The meta-answer is to look into the file @file{vm-vars.el}, in the vm
|
|
3437 directory of the lisp library.
|
|
3438
|
|
3439 @file{vm-vars.el} contains, initializes and carefully describes, with
|
|
3440 examples of usage, the plethora of user options that @emph{fully}
|
|
3441 control VM's behavior.
|
|
3442
|
|
3443 Enter vm-vars, @code{forward-search} for toolbar, find the variables
|
|
3444 that control the toolbar placement, appearance, existence, copy to your
|
|
3445 @file{.emacs} or @file{.vm} and modify according to the detailed
|
|
3446 instructions.
|
|
3447
|
|
3448 The above also applies to all the various features of VM: search for
|
|
3449 some keywords, maybe the first you conjure isn't appropriate, find the
|
|
3450 appropriate variables, copy and experiment.
|
|
3451 @end quotation
|
|
3452
|
|
3453 @node Q4.1.1, Q4.1.2, Q4.0.12, Subsystems
|
|
3454 @section What is W3?
|
|
3455
|
|
3456 W3 is an advanced graphical browser written in Emacs lisp that runs on
|
|
3457 XEmacs. It has full support for cascaded style sheets, and more...
|
|
3458
|
|
3459 It has a home web page at
|
|
3460 <URL:http://www.cs.indiana.edu/elisp/w3/docs.html>.
|
|
3461
|
163
|
3462 @node Q4.1.2, Q4.1.3, Q4.1.1, Subsystems
|
82
|
3463 @section How do I run W3 from behind a firewall?
|
|
3464
|
|
3465 There is a long, well-written, detailed section in the W3 manual that
|
|
3466 describes how to do this. Look in the section entitled "Firewalls".
|
|
3467
|
163
|
3468 @node Q4.1.3, Q4.2.1, Q4.1.2, Subsystems
|
|
3469 @section Is it true that W3 supports style sheets and tables?
|
|
3470
|
|
3471 Yes, and much more. W3, as distributed with the latest XEmacs is a
|
|
3472 full-featured web browser.
|
|
3473
|
|
3474 @node Q4.2.1, Q4.2.2, Q4.1.3, Subsystems
|
82
|
3475 @section GNUS, (ding) Gnus, Gnus 5, September Gnus, Red Gnus, Mamey Sapote Gnus, argh!
|
|
3476
|
163
|
3477 The Gnus numbering issues are not meant for mere mortals to know them.
|
|
3478 If you feel you @emph{must} enter the muddy waters of Gnus, visit the
|
|
3479 excellent FAQ, maintained by Justin Sheehy, at:
|
|
3480
|
|
3481 @example
|
|
3482 <URL:http://www.ccs.neu.edu/software/gnus/>
|
|
3483 @end example
|
82
|
3484
|
|
3485 @node Q4.2.2, Q4.2.3, Q4.2.1, Subsystems
|
|
3486 @section This question intentionally left blank.
|
|
3487
|
|
3488 Obsolete question, left blank to avoid renumbering.
|
|
3489
|
|
3490 @node Q4.2.3, Q4.2.4, Q4.2.2, Subsystems
|
|
3491 @section How do I make Gnus stay within a single frame?
|
|
3492
|
163
|
3493 The toolbar code to start Gnus opens the new frame---and it's a feature
|
|
3494 rather than a bug. If you don't like it, but would still like to click
|
|
3495 on the seemly icon, use the following code:
|
82
|
3496
|
|
3497 @lisp
|
|
3498 (defun toolbar-news ()
|
|
3499 (gnus))
|
|
3500 @end lisp
|
163
|
3501
|
|
3502 It will redefine the callback function of the icon to just call
|
|
3503 @code{gnus}, without all the fancy frame stuff.
|
82
|
3504
|
|
3505 @node Q4.2.4, Q4.3.1, Q4.2.3, Subsystems
|
|
3506 @section How do I customize the From: line?
|
|
3507
|
|
3508 How do I change the @code{From:} line? I have set gnus-user-from-line
|
|
3509 to Gail Gurman <gail.gurman@@sybase.com>, but XEmacs Gnus doesn't use
|
|
3510 it. Instead it uses Gail Mara Gurman <gailg@@deall> and then complains
|
|
3511 that it's incorrect. Also, as you perhaps can see, my Message-ID is
|
|
3512 screwy. How can I change that?
|
|
3513
|
|
3514 Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen <larsi@@aegir.ifi.uio.no> writes:
|
|
3515
|
|
3516 @quotation
|
|
3517 Set @code{user-mail-address} to @samp{gail.gurman@@sybase.com} or
|
|
3518 @code{mail-host-address} to @samp{sybase.com}.
|
|
3519 @end quotation
|
|
3520
|
|
3521 @node Q4.3.1, Q4.3.2, Q4.2.4, Subsystems
|
|
3522 @section How can I read and/or compose MIME messages?
|
|
3523
|
|
3524 One answer is @code{tra-vm-mime}. You may find it at
|
|
3525 <URL:http://lenkkari.cs.tut.fi/~tra/software/tra-vm-mime.el>.
|
|
3526
|
|
3527 Another possibility is RMIME. You may find RMIME at
|
|
3528 <URL:http://www.cinti.net/~rmoody/rmime/index.html>.
|
|
3529
|
|
3530 You probably want to use the Tools for MIME (tm). @xref{Q4.3.2} for
|
|
3531 details.
|
|
3532
|
|
3533 Trey Jackson <trey@@cs.berkeley.edu> has an Emacs & MIME web page at
|
|
3534 <URL:http://bmrc.berkeley.edu/~trey/emacs/mime.html>.
|
|
3535
|
|
3536 @node Q4.3.2, Q4.3.3, Q4.3.1, Subsystems
|
|
3537 @section What is TM and where do I get it?
|
|
3538
|
|
3539 TM stands for @dfn{Tools for MIME} and not Tiny MIME. TM integrates
|
|
3540 with all major XEmacs packages like Gnus (all flavors), VM, MH-E, and
|
|
3541 mailcrypt. It provides totally transparent and trouble-free MIME
|
|
3542 support. When appropriate a message will be decoded in place in an
|
|
3543 XEmacs buffer.
|
|
3544
|
126
|
3545 TM now comes as a package with XEmacs 19.15 and XEmacs 20.0.
|
|
3546
|
82
|
3547 TM was written by MORIOKA Tomohiko <morioka@@jaist.ac.jp> and KOBAYASHI
|
|
3548 Shuhei <shuhei-k@@jaist.ac.jp>. It is based on the work of UMEDA
|
|
3549 Masanobu <umerin@@mse.kyutech.ac.jp>, the original writer of GNUS.
|
|
3550
|
|
3551 The following information is from the @file{README}:
|
|
3552
|
|
3553 @dfn{tm} is a MIME package for GNU Emacs.
|
|
3554 tm has following functions:
|
|
3555
|
|
3556 @itemize @bullet
|
|
3557 @item MIME style multilingual header.
|
|
3558 @item MIME message viewer (mime/viewer-mode).
|
|
3559 @item MIME message composer (mime/editor-mode).
|
|
3560 @item MIME extenders for mh-e, GNUS, RMAIL and VM.
|
|
3561 @end itemize
|
|
3562
|
|
3563 tm is available from following anonymous ftp sites:
|
|
3564 @itemize @bullet
|
|
3565 @item <URL:ftp://ftp.jaist.ac.jp/pub/GNU/elisp/mime/> (Japan).
|
|
3566 @item <URL:ftp://ftp.nis.co.jp/pub/gnu/emacs-lisp/tm/> (Japan).
|
|
3567 @item <URL:ftp://ftp.nisiq.net/pub/gnu/emacs-lisp/tm/> (US).
|
|
3568 @item <URL:ftp://ftp.miranova.com/pub/gnus/jaist.ac.jp/> (US).
|
|
3569 @item <URL:ftp://ftp.unicamp.br/pub/mail/mime/tm/> (Brasil).
|
|
3570 @item <URL:ftp://ftp.th-darmstadt.de/pub/editors/GNU-Emacs/lisp/mime/> (Germany).
|
|
3571 @item <URL:ftp://ftp.tnt.uni-hannover.de/pub/editors/xemacs/contrib/> (Germany).
|
|
3572 @end itemize
|
|
3573
|
|
3574 Don't let the installation procedure & instructions stop you from trying
|
|
3575 this package out---it's much simpler than it looks, and once installed,
|
|
3576 trivial to use.
|
|
3577
|
|
3578 @node Q4.3.3, Q4.3.4, Q4.3.2, Subsystems
|
|
3579 @section Why isn't this @code{movemail} program working?
|
|
3580
|
|
3581 Ben Wing <ben@@666.com> writes:
|
|
3582
|
|
3583 @quotation
|
|
3584 It wasn't chown'ed/chmod'd correctly.
|
|
3585 @end quotation
|
|
3586
|
|
3587 @node Q4.3.4, Q4.3.5, Q4.3.3, Subsystems
|
|
3588 @section Movemail is also distributed by Netscape? Can that cause problems?
|
|
3589
|
|
3590 Steve Baur <steve@@altair.xemacs.org> writes:
|
|
3591
|
|
3592 @quotation
|
|
3593 Yes. Always use the movemail installed with your XEmacs. Failure to do
|
|
3594 so can result in lost mail.
|
|
3595 @end quotation
|
|
3596
|
|
3597 Please refer to Jamie Zawinski's <jwz@@netscape.com> notes at
|
|
3598 <URL:http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/2.0/relnotes/demo/movemail.html>.
|
|
3599 In particular, this document will show you how to make Netscape use the
|
|
3600 version of movemail configured for your system by the person who built
|
|
3601 XEmacs.
|
|
3602
|
|
3603 @node Q4.3.5, Q4.4.1, Q4.3.4, Subsystems
|
|
3604 @section Where do I find pstogif (required by tm)?
|
|
3605
|
|
3606 pstogif is part of the latex2html package.
|
|
3607
|
|
3608 Jan Vroonhof <vroonhof@@math.ethz.ch> writes:
|
|
3609
|
|
3610 latex2html is best found at the CTAN hosts and their mirrors
|
|
3611 in @file{tex-archive/support/latex2html}.
|
|
3612
|
|
3613 CTAN hosts are:
|
|
3614
|
|
3615 @itemize @bullet
|
|
3616 @item <URL:ftp://ftp.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/support/latex2html/>.
|
|
3617 @item <URL:ftp://ftp.dante.de/tex-archive/support/latex2html/>.
|
|
3618 @end itemize
|
|
3619
|
|
3620 There is a good mirror at ftp.cdrom.com;
|
|
3621 <URL:ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/tex/ctan/support/latex2html/>.
|
|
3622
|
|
3623 @node Q4.4.1, Q4.5.1, Q4.3.5, Subsystems
|
|
3624 @section What is SPARCworks, EOS, and WorkShop?
|
|
3625
|
|
3626 John Turner <turner@@lanl.gov> writes:
|
|
3627
|
|
3628 @quotation
|
|
3629 SPARCworks is SunSoft's development environment, comprising compilers
|
|
3630 (C, C++, FORTRAN 77, Fortran 90, Ada, and Pascal), a debugger, and other
|
|
3631 tools such as TeamWare (for configuration management), MakeTool, etc.
|
|
3632 @end quotation
|
|
3633
|
126
|
3634 See <URL:http://www.sun.com/sunsoft/Developer-products/>
|
82
|
3635 for more info.
|
|
3636
|
|
3637 EOS stands for "Era on SPARCworks", but I don't know what Era stands
|
|
3638 for.
|
|
3639
|
|
3640 EOS is the integration of XEmacs with the SPARCworks debugger. It
|
|
3641 allows one to use an XEmacs frame to view code (complete with
|
|
3642 fontification, etc.), set breakpoints, print variables, etc., while
|
|
3643 using the SPARCworks debugger. It works very well and I use it all the
|
|
3644 time.
|
|
3645
|
|
3646 Chuck Thompson <cthomp@@xemacs.org> writes:
|
|
3647
|
|
3648 @quotation
|
|
3649 Era stood for "Emacs Rewritten Again". It was what we were calling the
|
|
3650 modified version of Lucid Emacs for Sun when I was dragged, er, allowed
|
|
3651 to work on this wonderful editor.
|
|
3652 @end quotation
|
|
3653
|
|
3654 Martin Buchholz <Martin.Buchholz@@sun.com> writes:
|
|
3655
|
|
3656 @quotation
|
|
3657 EOS is being replaced with a new graphical development environment
|
|
3658 called Sun WorkShop, which is currently (07/96) in Alpha Test. For more
|
|
3659 details, check out
|
|
3660 <URL:http://www.sun.com/sunsoft/Products/Developer-products/programs.html>.
|
|
3661 @end quotation
|
|
3662
|
|
3663 @node Q4.5.1, Q4.6.1, Q4.4.1, Subsystems
|
|
3664 @section What is/was Energize?
|
|
3665
|
|
3666 David N Gray <gray@@meteor.harlequin.com> writes:
|
|
3667 @quotation
|
|
3668 The files in @file{lisp/energize} are to enable Emacs to interface with
|
|
3669 the "Energize Programming System", a C and C++ development environment,
|
|
3670 which was a product of Lucid, Inc. Tragically, Lucid went out of
|
|
3671 business in 1994, so although Energize is still a great system, if you
|
|
3672 don't already have it, there isn't any way to get it now. (Unless you
|
|
3673 happen to be in Japan; INS Engineering may still be selling it there.
|
|
3674 Tartan bought the rights to sell it in the rest of the world, but never
|
|
3675 did so.)
|
|
3676 @end quotation
|
|
3677
|
|
3678 @node Q4.6.1, Q4.7.1, Q4.5.1, Subsystems
|
|
3679 @section What is Infodock?
|
|
3680
|
0
|
3681 InfoDock is an integrated productivity toolset, mainly aimed at
|
86
|
3682 technical people. It is developed and supported by InfoDock
|
|
3683 Associates, a firm that offers custom support and development
|
|
3684 for InfoDock, XEmacs and GNU Emacs. (http://www.infodock.com,
|
88
|
3685 <info@@infodock.com>, +1 408 243 3300).
|
86
|
3686
|
|
3687 InfoDock is built atop the XEmacs variant of GNU Emacs and so has all of
|
|
3688 the power of Emacs, but with an easier to use and more comprehensive
|
|
3689 menu-based user interface. The bottom portion of this text describes
|
|
3690 how it differs from XEmacs and GNU Emacs from the Free Software
|
|
3691 Foundation.
|
0
|
3692
|
|
3693 InfoDock is aimed at people who want a free, turn-key productivity
|
|
3694 environment. Although InfoDock is customizable, it is not intended for
|
|
3695 people who like basic versions of Emacs which need to be customized
|
|
3696 extensively for local use; standard Emacs distributions are better for
|
|
3697 such uses. InfoDock is for those people who want a complete,
|
|
3698 pre-customized environment in one package, which they need not touch
|
|
3699 more than once or twice a year to update to new revisions.
|
|
3700
|
86
|
3701 InfoDock is pre-built for SPARC SunOS/Solaris systems, PA-RISC HP-UX,
|
|
3702 and Intel Linux systems. It is intended for use on a color display,
|
|
3703 although most features will work on monochrome monitors. Simply unpack
|
|
3704 InfoDock according to the instructions in the ID-INSTALL file and you
|
|
3705 are ready to run.
|
0
|
3706
|
|
3707 The InfoDock Manual is concise, yet sufficient as a user guide for users
|
|
3708 who have never used an Emacs-type editor before. For users who are
|
|
3709 already familiar with Emacs, it supplements the information in the GNU
|
|
3710 Emacs Manual.
|
|
3711
|
|
3712 InfoDock menus are much more extensive and more mature than standard
|
86
|
3713 Emacs menus. Each menu offers a @samp{Manual} item which displays
|
0
|
3714 documentation associated with the menu's functions.
|
86
|
3715
|
|
3716 @noindent
|
|
3717 Four types of menubars are provided:
|
0
|
3718 @enumerate
|
|
3719 @item
|
|
3720 An extensive menubar providing access to global InfoDock commands.
|
|
3721 @item
|
|
3722 Mode-specific menubars tailored to the current major mode.
|
|
3723 @item
|
86
|
3724 A simple menubar for basic editing to help novices get started with InfoDock.
|
|
3725 @item
|
|
3726 The standard XEmacs menubar.
|
0
|
3727 @end enumerate
|
|
3728
|
86
|
3729 Most modes also include mode-specific popup menus. Additionally, region and
|
|
3730 rectangle popup menus are included.
|
|
3731
|
|
3732 @samp{Hyperbole}, the everyday information manager, is a core part of
|
0
|
3733 InfoDock. This provides context-sensitive mouse keys, a rolodex-type
|
|
3734 contact manager, programmable hypertext buttons, and an autonumbered
|
|
3735 outliner with embedded hyperlink anchors.
|
82
|
3736
|
86
|
3737 The @samp{OO-Browser}, a multi-language object-oriented code browser, is a
|
|
3738 standard part of InfoDock.
|
0
|
3739
|
|
3740 InfoDock saves a more extensive set of user options than other Emacs
|
|
3741 versions.
|
|
3742
|
|
3743 InfoDock inserts a useful file header in many file types, showing the
|
|
3744 author, summary, and last modification time of each file. A summary
|
|
3745 program can then be used to summarize all of the files in a directory,
|
|
3746 for easy MANIFEST file creation.
|
|
3747
|
|
3748 Your working set of buffers is automatically saved and restored (if you
|
|
3749 answer yes to a prompt) between InfoDock sessions.
|
|
3750
|
86
|
3751 Refined color choices for code highlighting are provided for both dark and
|
|
3752 light background display frames.
|
|
3753
|
|
3754 The @kbd{C-z} key prefix performs frame-based commands which parallel the
|
|
3755 @kbd{C-x} key prefix for window-based commands.
|
0
|
3756
|
|
3757 The Smart Menu system is included for producing command menus on dumb
|
86
|
3758 terminals.
|
0
|
3759
|
|
3760 Lisp libraries are better categorized according to function.
|
|
3761
|
86
|
3762 Extensions and improvements to many areas of Emacs are included, such as:
|
|
3763 paragraph filling, mail reading with Rmail, shell handling, outlining, code
|
|
3764 highlighting and browsing, and man page browsing.
|
0
|
3765
|
|
3766 InfoDock questions, answers and discussion should go to the mail list
|
86
|
3767 @samp{infodock@@infodock.com}. Use
|
|
3768 @samp{infodock-request@@infodock.com} to be added or removed from the
|
|
3769 list. Always include your InfoDock version number when sending help
|
|
3770 requests.
|
|
3771
|
|
3772 InfoDock is available across the Internet via anonymous FTP. To get
|
|
3773 it, first move to a directory into which you want the InfoDock archive
|
|
3774 files placed. We will call this <DIST-DIR>.
|
|
3775
|
|
3776 @example
|
|
3777 cd <DIST-DIR>
|
|
3778 @end example
|
|
3779
|
|
3780 Ftp to ftp.xemacs.org (Internet Host ID = 128.174.252.16):
|
82
|
3781
|
0
|
3782 @example
|
86
|
3783 prompt> ftp ftp.xemacs.org
|
0
|
3784 @end example
|
|
3785
|
86
|
3786 Login as @samp{anonymous} with your own <user-id>@@<site-name> as a password.
|
|
3787
|
|
3788 @example
|
|
3789 Name (ftp.xemacs.org): anonymous
|
|
3790 331 Guest login ok, send your complete e-mail address as password.
|
|
3791 Password: -<your-user-id@@your-domain>
|
|
3792 230 Guest login ok, access restrictions apply.
|
0
|
3793 @end example
|
|
3794
|
|
3795 Move to the location of the InfoDock archives:
|
|
3796
|
|
3797 @example
|
86
|
3798 ftp> cd pub/infodock
|
0
|
3799 @end example
|
|
3800
|
|
3801 Set your transfer mode to binary:
|
|
3802
|
|
3803 @example
|
86
|
3804 ftp> bin
|
|
3805 200 Type set to I.
|
0
|
3806 @end example
|
|
3807
|
|
3808 Turn off prompting:
|
|
3809
|
|
3810 @example
|
86
|
3811 ftp> prompt
|
|
3812 Interactive mode off.
|
0
|
3813 @end example
|
|
3814
|
|
3815 Retrieve the InfoDock archives that you want, either by using a
|
86
|
3816 @samp{get <file>} for each file you want or by using the following to
|
0
|
3817 get a complete distribution, including all binaries:
|
|
3818
|
|
3819 @example
|
86
|
3820 ftp> mget ID-INSTALL
|
|
3821 ftp> mget id-*
|
0
|
3822 @end example
|
|
3823
|
|
3824 Close the FTP connection:
|
|
3825
|
|
3826 @example
|
86
|
3827 ftp> quit
|
|
3828 221 Goodbye.
|
0
|
3829 @end example
|
|
3830
|
|
3831 Read the @file{ID-INSTALL} file which you just retrieved for
|
|
3832 step-by-step installation instructions.
|
|
3833
|
82
|
3834 @node Q4.7.1, Q4.7.2, Q4.6.1, Subsystems
|
163
|
3835 @section What is AUC TeX? Where do you get it?
|
|
3836
|
|
3837 AUC TeX is a package written by Per Abrahamsen <abraham@@dina.kvl.dk>.
|
|
3838 Starting with XEmacs 19.15, AUC TeX is bundled with XEmacs. The
|
|
3839 following information is from the @file{README} and website.
|
82
|
3840
|
|
3841 AUC TeX is an extensible package that supports writing and formatting
|
|
3842 TeX files for most variants of GNU Emacs. Many different macro packages
|
|
3843 are supported, including AMS TeX, LaTeX, and TeXinfo.
|
|
3844
|
|
3845 The most recent version is always available by ftp at
|
|
3846 <URL:ftp://sunsite.auc.dk/packages/auctex/auctex.tar.gz>.
|
|
3847
|
|
3848 In case you don't have access to anonymous ftp, you can get it by an
|
|
3849 email request to <URL:mailto:ftpmail@@decwrl.dec.com>.
|
|
3850
|
|
3851 WWW users may want to check out the AUC TeX page at
|
|
3852 <URL:http://sunsite.auc.dk/auctex/>.
|
|
3853
|
|
3854 @node Q4.7.2, Q4.7.3, Q4.7.1, Subsystems
|
|
3855 @section Are there any Emacs Lisp Spreadsheets?
|
|
3856
|
|
3857 Yes. Check out @dfn{dismal} (which stands for Dis' Mode Ain't Lotus) at
|
|
3858 <URL:ftp://cs.nyu.edu/pub/local/fox/dismal/>.
|
|
3859
|
|
3860 @node Q4.7.3, Q4.7.4, Q4.7.2, Subsystems
|
163
|
3861 @section Byte compiling AUC TeX on XEmacs 19.14.
|
82
|
3862
|
|
3863 Georges Brun-Cottan <bruncott@@dormeur.inria.fr> writes:
|
|
3864
|
|
3865 @quotation
|
|
3866 When byte compiling auxtex-9.4g, you must use the command:
|
0
|
3867
|
|
3868 @example
|
82
|
3869 xemacs -batch -l lpath.el
|
0
|
3870 @end example
|
82
|
3871 @end quotation
|
|
3872
|
163
|
3873 @node Q4.7.4, Q4.7.5, Q4.7.3, Subsystems
|
|
3874 @section Problems installing AUC TeX.
|
82
|
3875
|
|
3876 Jan Vroonhof <vroonhof@@math.ethz.ch> writes:
|
|
3877
|
|
3878 @quotation
|
163
|
3879 AUC TeX works fine on both stock Emacs and XEmacs has been doing so for
|
|
3880 a very very long time. This is mostly due to the work of Per Abrahamsen
|
82
|
3881 <abraham@@dina.kvl.dk> (clap clap) in particular his @file{easymenu}
|
|
3882 package. Which leads to what is probably the problem...
|
|
3883 @end quotation
|
|
3884
|
163
|
3885 Most problems with AUC TeX are one of two things:
|
0
|
3886
|
|
3887 @itemize @bullet
|
|
3888 @item
|
82
|
3889 The TeX-lisp-directory in @file{tex-site.el} and the makefile don't
|
|
3890 match.
|
|
3891
|
163
|
3892 Fix: make sure you configure AUC TeX properly @strong{before} installing.
|
82
|
3893
|
54
|
3894 @item
|
82
|
3895 You have an old version of easymenu.el in your path.
|
|
3896
|
|
3897 Fix: use @code{locate-library} and remove old versions to make sure it
|
|
3898 @strong{only} finds the one that came with XEmacs.
|
70
|
3899 @end itemize
|
|
3900
|
163
|
3901
|
|
3902 @node Q4.7.5, , Q4.7.4, Subsystems
|
|
3903 @section Is there a reason for an Emacs package not to be included in XEmacs?
|
|
3904
|
|
3905 The reason for an Emacs package not to be included in XEmacs is
|
|
3906 usually one or more of the following:
|
|
3907
|
|
3908 @enumerate
|
|
3909 @item
|
|
3910 The package has not been ported to XEmacs. This will typically happen
|
|
3911 when it uses GNU-Emacs-specific features, which make it fail under
|
|
3912 XEmacs.
|
|
3913
|
|
3914 Porting a package to XEmacs can range from a trivial amount of change to
|
|
3915 a partial or full rewrite. Fortunately, the authors of modern packages
|
|
3916 usually choose to support both Emacsen themselves.
|
|
3917
|
|
3918 @item
|
|
3919 The package has been decided not to be appropriate for XEmacs. It may
|
|
3920 have an equivalent or better replacement within XEmacs, in which case
|
|
3921 the developers may choose not to burden themselves with supporting an
|
|
3922 additional package.
|
|
3923
|
|
3924 Each package bundled with XEmacs means more work for the maintainers,
|
|
3925 whether they want it or not. If you are ready to take over the
|
|
3926 maintainence responsibilities for the package you port, be sure to say
|
|
3927 so -- we will more likely include it.
|
|
3928
|
|
3929 @item
|
|
3930 The package simply hasn't been noted by the XEmacs development. If
|
|
3931 that's the case, the messages like yours are very useful for attracting
|
|
3932 our attention.
|
|
3933
|
|
3934 @item
|
|
3935 The package was noted by the developers, but they simply haven't yet
|
|
3936 gotten around to including/porting it. Wait for the next release or,
|
|
3937 even better, offer your help. It will be gladly accepted and
|
|
3938 appreciated.
|
|
3939 @end enumerate
|
|
3940
|
82
|
3941 @node Miscellaneous, Current Events, Subsystems, Top
|
|
3942 @chapter The Miscellaneous Stuff
|
|
3943
|
|
3944 This is part 5 of the XEmacs Frequently Asked Questions list. This
|
|
3945 section is devoted to anything that doesn't fit neatly into the other
|
|
3946 sections.
|
70
|
3947
|
|
3948 @menu
|
82
|
3949 Major & Minor Modes:
|
|
3950 * Q5.0.1:: How can I do source code highlighting using font-lock?
|
|
3951 * Q5.0.2:: I do not like cc-mode. How do I use the old c-mode?
|
|
3952 * Q5.0.3:: How do I get @samp{More} Syntax Highlighting on by default?
|
|
3953 * Q5.0.4:: How can I enable auto-indent?
|
|
3954 * Q5.0.5:: How can I get XEmacs to come up in text/auto-fill mode by default?
|
|
3955 * Q5.0.6:: How do I start up a second shell buffer?
|
|
3956 * Q5.0.7:: Telnet from shell filters too much.
|
|
3957 * Q5.0.8:: Why does edt emulation not work?
|
|
3958 * Q5.0.9:: How can I emulate VI and use it as my default mode?
|
163
|
3959 * Q5.0.10:: [This question intentionally left blank]
|
|
3960 * Q5.0.11:: Filladapt doesn't work in 19.15?
|
82
|
3961 * Q5.0.12:: How do I disable gnuserv from opening a new frame?
|
|
3962 * Q5.0.13:: How do I start gnuserv so that each subsequent XEmacs is a client?
|
|
3963 * Q5.0.14:: Strange things are happening in Shell Mode.
|
|
3964 * Q5.0.15:: Where do I get the latest CC Mode?
|
|
3965 * Q5.0.16:: I find auto-show-mode disconcerting. How do I turn it off?
|
|
3966 * Q5.0.17:: How can I get two instances of info?
|
|
3967 * Q5.0.18:: I upgraded to XEmacs 19.14 and gnuserv stopped working
|
|
3968 * Q5.0.19:: Is there something better than LaTeX mode?
|
|
3969
|
|
3970 Emacs Lisp Programming Techniques:
|
|
3971 * Q5.1.1:: The difference in key sequences between XEmacs and GNU Emacs?
|
|
3972 * Q5.1.2:: Can I generate "fake" keyboard events?
|
163
|
3973 * Q5.1.3:: Could you explain @code{read-kbd-macro} in more detail?
|
|
3974 * Q5.1.4:: What is the performance hit of @code{let}?
|
|
3975 * Q5.1.5:: What is the recommended use of @code{setq}?
|
|
3976 * Q5.1.6:: What is the typical misuse of @code{setq} ?
|
|
3977 * Q5.1.7:: I like the the @code{do} form of cl, does it slow things down?
|
|
3978 * Q5.1.8:: I like recursion, does it slow things down?
|
|
3979 * Q5.1.9:: How do I put a glyph as annotation in a buffer?
|
82
|
3980
|
|
3981 Sound:
|
|
3982 * Q5.2.1:: How do I turn off the sound?
|
163
|
3983 * Q5.2.2:: How do I get funky sounds instead of a boring beep?
|
82
|
3984 * Q5.2.3:: What's NAS, how do I get it?
|
|
3985 * Q5.2.4:: Sunsite sounds don't play.
|
|
3986
|
|
3987 Miscellaneous:
|
|
3988 * Q5.3.1:: How do you make XEmacs indent CL if-clauses correctly?
|
|
3989 * Q5.3.2:: Fontifying hangs when editing a postscript file.
|
|
3990 * Q5.3.3:: How can I print WYSIWYG a font-locked buffer?
|
|
3991 * Q5.3.4:: Getting @kbd{M-x lpr} to work with postscript printer.
|
|
3992 * Q5.3.5:: How do I specify the paths that XEmacs uses for finding files?
|
|
3993 * Q5.3.6:: [This question intentionally left blank]
|
|
3994 * Q5.3.7:: Can I have the end of the buffer delimited in some way?
|
|
3995 * Q5.3.8:: How do I insert today's date into a buffer?
|
|
3996 * Q5.3.9:: Are only certain syntactic character classes available for abbrevs?
|
|
3997 * Q5.3.10:: How can I get those oh-so-neat X-Face lines?
|
|
3998 * Q5.3.11:: How do I add new Info directories?
|
|
3999 * Q5.3.12:: What do I need to change to make printing work?
|
70
|
4000 @end menu
|
|
4001
|
82
|
4002 @node Q5.0.1, Q5.0.2, Miscellaneous, Miscellaneous
|
|
4003 @section How can I do source code highlighting using font-lock?
|
|
4004
|
|
4005 For most modes, font-lock is already set up and just needs to be turned
|
|
4006 on. This can be done by @kbd{M-x font-lock-mode}, or by having XEmacs
|
|
4007 automatically start it by adding lines like:
|
|
4008
|
|
4009 @lisp
|
|
4010 (add-hook 'emacs-lisp-mode-hook 'turn-on-font-lock)
|
|
4011 (add-hook 'dired-mode-hook 'turn-on-font-lock)
|
|
4012 @end lisp
|
|
4013
|
|
4014 to your @file{.emacs}. See the file @file{etc/sample.emacs} for more
|
|
4015 examples.
|
|
4016
|
|
4017 @node Q5.0.2, Q5.0.3, Q5.0.1, Miscellaneous
|
|
4018 @section I do not like cc-mode. How do I use the old c-mode?
|
|
4019
|
|
4020 Well, first off, consider if you really want to do this. cc-mode is
|
|
4021 much more powerful than the old c-mode. If you're having trouble
|
|
4022 getting your old offsets to work, try using @code{c-set-offset} instead.
|
|
4023 You might also consider using the package @code{cc-compat}.
|
|
4024
|
|
4025 But, if you still insist, add the following lines to your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4026
|
|
4027 @lisp
|
|
4028 (fmakunbound 'c-mode)
|
|
4029 (makunbound 'c-mode-map)
|
|
4030 (fmakunbound 'c++-mode)
|
|
4031 (makunbound 'c++-mode-map)
|
|
4032 (makunbound 'c-style-alist)
|
|
4033 (load-library "old-c-mode")
|
|
4034 (load-library "old-c++-mode")
|
|
4035 @end lisp
|
|
4036
|
|
4037 This must be done before any other reference is made to either c-mode or
|
|
4038 c++-mode.
|
|
4039
|
|
4040 @node Q5.0.3, Q5.0.4, Q5.0.2, Miscellaneous
|
|
4041 @section How do I get @samp{More} Syntax Highlighting on by default?
|
|
4042
|
163
|
4043 Use the following code in your @file{.emacs}:
|
82
|
4044
|
|
4045 @lisp
|
163
|
4046 (setq-default font-lock-maximum-decoration t)
|
82
|
4047 @end lisp
|
|
4048
|
163
|
4049 In versions of XEmacs prior to 19.14, you had to use a kludgy solution
|
|
4050 like this:
|
|
4051
|
|
4052 @lisp
|
|
4053 (setq c-font-lock-keywords c-font-lock-keywords-2
|
|
4054 c++-font-lock-keywords c++-font-lock-keywords-2
|
|
4055 lisp-font-lock-keywords lisp-font-lock-keywords-2)
|
|
4056 @end lisp
|
|
4057
|
|
4058 It will work for C, C++ and Lisp.
|
|
4059
|
82
|
4060 @node Q5.0.4, Q5.0.5, Q5.0.3, Miscellaneous
|
|
4061 @section How can I enable auto-indent?
|
|
4062
|
|
4063 Put the following line in your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4064
|
|
4065 @lisp
|
|
4066 (setq indent-line-function 'indent-relative-maybe)
|
|
4067 @end lisp
|
|
4068
|
|
4069 If you want to get fancy, try the @code{filladapt} package available
|
|
4070 standard with XEmacs. Put this into your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4071
|
|
4072 @lisp
|
|
4073 (require 'filladapt)
|
|
4074 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-filladapt-mode)
|
163
|
4075 ;;; and others ...
|
82
|
4076 @end lisp
|
|
4077
|
163
|
4078 Note that well-behaving text-lookalike modes will run
|
|
4079 @code{text-mode-hook} by default (e.g. that's what Message does). For
|
|
4080 the nasty ones, you'll have to provide the @code{add-hook}s yourself.
|
|
4081
|
82
|
4082 Please note that the @code{fa-extras} package is no longer useful.
|
|
4083
|
|
4084 @node Q5.0.5, Q5.0.6, Q5.0.4, Miscellaneous
|
|
4085 @section How can I get XEmacs to come up in text/auto-fill mode by default?
|
|
4086
|
|
4087 Try the following lisp in your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4088
|
|
4089 @lisp
|
|
4090 (setq default-major-mode 'text-mode)
|
|
4091 (setq text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)
|
|
4092 @end lisp
|
|
4093
|
|
4094 @strong{WARNING}: note that changing the value of
|
|
4095 @code{default-major-mode} from @code{fundamental-mode} can break a large
|
|
4096 amount of built-in code that expects newly created buffers to be in
|
|
4097 @code{fundamental-mode}. (Changing from @code{fundamental-mode} to
|
|
4098 @code{text-mode} might not wreak too much havoc, but changing to
|
|
4099 something more exotic like a lisp-mode would break many Emacs packages).
|
|
4100
|
|
4101 Note that Emacs by default starts up in buffer @code{*scratch*} in
|
|
4102 @code{initial-major-mode}, which defaults to
|
|
4103 @code{lisp-interaction-mode}. Thus adding the following form to your
|
|
4104 Emacs init file will cause the initial @code{*scratch*} buffer to be put
|
|
4105 into auto-fill'ed @code{text-mode}:
|
|
4106
|
|
4107 @lisp
|
|
4108 (setq initial-major-mode
|
163
|
4109 (lambda ()
|
82
|
4110 (text-mode)
|
163
|
4111 (turn-on-auto-fill)))
|
82
|
4112 @end lisp
|
|
4113
|
|
4114 Note that after your init file is loaded, if
|
163
|
4115 @code{inhibit-startup-message} is @code{nil} (the default) and the
|
|
4116 startup buffer is @code{*scratch*} then the startup message will be
|
|
4117 inserted into @code{*scratch*}; it will be removed after a timeout by
|
|
4118 erasing the entire @code{*scratch*} buffer. Keep in mind this default
|
|
4119 usage of @code{*scratch*} if you desire any prior manipulation of
|
82
|
4120 @code{*scratch*} from within your Emacs init file. In particular,
|
|
4121 anything you insert into @code{*scratch*} from your init file will be
|
|
4122 later erased. Also, if you change the mode of the @code{*scratch*}
|
|
4123 buffer, be sure that this will not interfere with possible later
|
|
4124 insertion of the startup message (e.g. if you put @code{*scratch*} into
|
|
4125 a nonstandard mode that has automatic font lock rules, then the startup
|
|
4126 message might get fontified in a strange foreign manner, e.g. as code in
|
|
4127 some programming language).
|
|
4128
|
|
4129 @node Q5.0.6, Q5.0.7, Q5.0.5, Miscellaneous
|
|
4130 @section How do I start up a second shell buffer?
|
|
4131
|
|
4132 In the @code{*shell*} buffer:
|
|
4133
|
|
4134 @lisp
|
|
4135 M-x rename-buffer RET *shell-1* RET
|
|
4136 M-x shell RET
|
|
4137 @end lisp
|
|
4138
|
|
4139 This will then start a second shell. The key is that no buffer named
|
|
4140 @samp{*shell*} can exist. It might be preferable to use @kbd{M-x
|
|
4141 rename-uniquely} to rename the @code{*shell*} buffer instead of @kbd{M-x
|
|
4142 rename-buffer}.
|
|
4143
|
|
4144 @node Q5.0.7, Q5.0.8, Q5.0.6, Miscellaneous
|
|
4145 @section Telnet from shell filters too much
|
|
4146
|
|
4147 I'm using the Emacs @kbd{M-x shell} function, and I would like to invoke
|
|
4148 and use a telnet session within it. Everything works fine except that
|
|
4149 now all @samp{^M}'s are filtered out by Emacs. Fixes?
|
|
4150
|
|
4151 Use @kbd{M-x rsh} or @kbd{M-x telnet} to open remote sessions rather
|
|
4152 than doing rsh or telnet within the local shell buffer.
|
|
4153
|
|
4154 @node Q5.0.8, Q5.0.9, Q5.0.7, Miscellaneous
|
|
4155 @section Why does edt emulation not work?
|
|
4156
|
|
4157 We don't know, but you can use tpu-edt emulation instead, which works
|
|
4158 fine and is a little fancier than the standard edt emulation. To do
|
|
4159 this, add the following line to your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4160
|
|
4161 @lisp
|
163
|
4162 (tpu-edt)
|
82
|
4163 @end lisp
|
|
4164
|
|
4165 If you don't want it to replace @kbd{C-h} with an edt-style help menu
|
|
4166 add this as well:
|
|
4167
|
|
4168 @lisp
|
163
|
4169 (global-set-key [(control h)] 'help-for-help)
|
82
|
4170 @end lisp
|
|
4171
|
|
4172 @node Q5.0.9, Q5.0.10, Q5.0.8, Miscellaneous
|
|
4173 @section How can I emulate VI and use it as my default mode?
|
|
4174
|
|
4175 Our recommended VI emulator is viper. To make viper-mode the default,
|
|
4176 add this to your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4177
|
|
4178 @lisp
|
|
4179 (viper-mode)
|
|
4180 @end lisp
|
|
4181
|
|
4182 Michael Kifer <kifer@@CS.SunySB.EDU> writes:
|
|
4183
|
|
4184 @quotation
|
|
4185 This should be added as close to the top of @file{.emacs} as you can get
|
|
4186 it, otherwise some minor modes may not get viper-ized.
|
|
4187 @end quotation
|
|
4188
|
|
4189 @node Q5.0.10, Q5.0.11, Q5.0.9, Miscellaneous
|
126
|
4190 @section [This question intentionally left blank]
|
|
4191
|
|
4192 Obsolete question, left blank to avoid renumbering
|
|
4193
|
82
|
4194 @node Q5.0.11, Q5.0.12, Q5.0.10, Miscellaneous
|
126
|
4195 @section Filladapt doesn't work in 19.15
|
|
4196
|
|
4197 Filladapt 2.x is included in 19.15. In it filladapt is now a minor
|
82
|
4198 mode and minor modes are traditionally off by default. The following
|
|
4199 added to your @file{.emacs} will turn it on for all buffers:
|
|
4200
|
|
4201 @lisp
|
|
4202 (setq-default filladapt-mode t)
|
|
4203 @end lisp
|
|
4204
|
|
4205 Use @code{turn-on-filladapt-mode} to turn Filladapt on in particular
|
|
4206 major modes, like this:
|
|
4207
|
|
4208 @lisp
|
|
4209 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-filladapt-mode)
|
|
4210 @end lisp
|
|
4211
|
|
4212 @node Q5.0.12, Q5.0.13, Q5.0.11, Miscellaneous
|
|
4213 @section How do I disable gnuserv from opening a new frame?
|
|
4214
|
|
4215 If you set the @code{gnuserv-frame} variable to the frame that should be
|
|
4216 used to display buffers that are pulled up, a new frame will not be
|
|
4217 created. For example, you could put
|
|
4218
|
|
4219 @lisp
|
|
4220 (setq gnuserv-frame (selected-frame))
|
|
4221 @end lisp
|
|
4222
|
|
4223 early on in your @file{.emacs}, to ensure that the first frame created
|
|
4224 is the one used for your gnuserv buffers.
|
|
4225
|
|
4226 Starting in 19.15, there is an option to set the gnuserv target to
|
|
4227 the current frame. See
|
|
4228 @code{Options->"Other Window" Location->Make current frame gnuserv target}
|
|
4229
|
|
4230 @node Q5.0.13, Q5.0.14, Q5.0.12, Miscellaneous
|
|
4231 @section How do I start gnuserv so that each subsequent XEmacs is a client?
|
|
4232
|
|
4233 Put the following in your @file{.emacs} file to start the server:
|
|
4234
|
|
4235 @lisp
|
|
4236 (gnuserv-start)
|
|
4237 @end lisp
|
|
4238
|
|
4239 Start your first XEmacs as usual. After that, you can do:
|
70
|
4240
|
|
4241 @example
|
82
|
4242 gnuclient randomfilename
|
70
|
4243 @end example
|
|
4244
|
82
|
4245 from the command line to get your existing XEmacs process to open a new
|
|
4246 frame and visit randomfilename in that window. When you're done editing
|
|
4247 randomfilename, hit @kbd{C-x #} to kill the buffer and get rid of the
|
|
4248 frame.
|
|
4249
|
|
4250 @node Q5.0.14, Q5.0.15, Q5.0.13, Miscellaneous
|
|
4251 @section Strange things are happening in Shell Mode.
|
|
4252
|
|
4253 Sometimes (i.e. it's not repeatable, and I can't work out why it
|
|
4254 happens) when I'm typing into shell mode, I hit return and only a
|
|
4255 portion of the command is given to the shell, and a blank prompt is
|
|
4256 returned. If I hit return again, the rest of the previous command is
|
|
4257 given to the shell.
|
|
4258
|
|
4259 Martin Buchholz <Martin.Buchholz@@sun.com> writes:
|
|
4260
|
|
4261 @quotation
|
|
4262 There is a known problem with interaction between @code{csh} and the
|
|
4263 @code{filec} option and XEmacs. You should add the following to your
|
|
4264 @file{.cshrc}:
|
70
|
4265
|
|
4266 @example
|
82
|
4267 if ( "$TERM" == emacs || "$TERM" == unknown ) unset filec
|
70
|
4268 @end example
|
82
|
4269 @end quotation
|
|
4270
|
|
4271 @node Q5.0.15, Q5.0.16, Q5.0.14, Miscellaneous
|
|
4272 @section Where do I get the latest CC Mode?
|
|
4273
|
|
4274 Barry A. Warsaw <bwarsaw@@cnri.reston.va.us> writes:
|
|
4275
|
|
4276 @quotation
|
|
4277 This can be had from <URL:http://www.python.org/ftp/emacs/>.
|
|
4278 @end quotation
|
|
4279
|
|
4280 @node Q5.0.16, Q5.0.17, Q5.0.15, Miscellaneous
|
|
4281 @section I find auto-show-mode disconcerting. How do I turn it off?
|
|
4282
|
|
4283 @code{auto-show-mode} controls whether or not a horizontal scrollbar
|
|
4284 magically appears when a line is too long to be displayed. This is
|
|
4285 enabled by default. To turn it off, put the following in your
|
|
4286 @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4287
|
|
4288 @lisp
|
|
4289 (setq auto-show-mode nil)
|
|
4290 (setq-default auto-show-mode nil)
|
|
4291 @end lisp
|
|
4292
|
|
4293 @node Q5.0.17, Q5.0.18, Q5.0.16, Miscellaneous
|
|
4294 @section How can I get two instances of info?
|
|
4295
|
|
4296 You can't. The info package does not provide for multiple info buffers.
|
|
4297
|
|
4298 @node Q5.0.18, Q5.0.19, Q5.0.17, Miscellaneous
|
|
4299 @section I upgraded to XEmacs 19.14 and gnuserv stopped working.
|
|
4300
|
|
4301 Mark Daku <daku@@nortel.ca> writes:
|
|
4302
|
|
4303 @quotation
|
|
4304 It turns out I was using an older version of gnuserv. The installation
|
|
4305 didn't put the binary into the public bin directory. It put it in
|
|
4306 @file{lib/xemacs-19.14/hppa1.1-hp-hpux9.05/gnuserv}. Shouldn't it have
|
|
4307 been put in @file{bin/hppa1.1-hp-hpux9.0}?
|
|
4308 @end quotation
|
|
4309
|
|
4310 @node Q5.0.19, Q5.1.1, Q5.0.18, Miscellaneous
|
|
4311 @section Is there something better than LaTeX mode?
|
|
4312
|
|
4313 David Kastrup <dak@@fsnif.neuroinformatik.ruhr-uni-bochum.de> writes:
|
|
4314
|
|
4315 @quotation
|
|
4316 The standard TeX modes leave much to be desired, and are somewhat
|
163
|
4317 leniently maintained. Serious TeX users use AUC TeX (@xref{Q4.7.1}).
|
82
|
4318 @end quotation
|
|
4319
|
|
4320 @node Q5.1.1, Q5.1.2, Q5.0.19, Miscellaneous
|
|
4321 @section What is the difference in key sequences between XEmacs and GNU Emacs?
|
|
4322
|
|
4323 Erik Naggum <erik@@naggum.no> writes;
|
|
4324
|
|
4325 @quotation
|
|
4326 Emacs has a legacy of keyboards that produced characters with modifier
|
|
4327 bits, and therefore map a variety of input systems into this scheme even
|
|
4328 today. XEmacs is instead optimized for X events. This causes an
|
|
4329 incompatibility in the way key sequences are specified, but both Emacs
|
|
4330 and XEmacs will accept a key sequence as a vector of lists of modifiers
|
163
|
4331 that ends with a key, e.g., to bind @kbd{M-C-a}, you would say
|
|
4332 @code{[(meta control a)]} in both Emacsen. XEmacs has an abbreviated
|
|
4333 form for a single key, just (meta control a). Emacs has an abbreviated
|
|
4334 form for the Control and the Meta modifiers to string-characters (the
|
|
4335 ASCII characters), as in @samp{\M-\C-a}. XEmacs users need to be aware
|
|
4336 that the abbreviated form works only for one-character key sequences,
|
|
4337 while Emacs users need to be aware that the string-character is rather
|
|
4338 limited. Specifically, the string-character can accomodate only 256
|
|
4339 different values, 128 of which have the Meta modifier and 128 of which
|
|
4340 have not. In each of these blocks, only 32 characters have the Control
|
|
4341 modifier. Whereas @code{[(meta control A)]} differs from @code{[(meta
|
|
4342 control a)]} because the case differs, @samp{\M-\C-a} and @samp{\M-\C-A}
|
|
4343 do not. Programmers are advised to use the full common form, both
|
|
4344 because it is more readable and less error-prone, and because it is
|
|
4345 supported by both Emacsen.
|
82
|
4346 @end quotation
|
|
4347
|
163
|
4348 Another (even safer) way to be sure of the key-sequences is to use the
|
|
4349 @code{read-kbd-macro} function, which takes a string like @samp{C-c
|
|
4350 <up>}, and converts it to the internal key representation of the Emacs
|
|
4351 you use. The function is available both on XEmacs and GNU Emacs.
|
|
4352
|
82
|
4353 @node Q5.1.2, Q5.1.3, Q5.1.1, Miscellaneous
|
|
4354 @section Can I generate "fake" keyboard events?
|
|
4355
|
163
|
4356 I wonder if there is an interactive function that can generate
|
|
4357 @dfn{fake} keyboard events. This way, I could simply map them inside
|
|
4358 XEmacs.
|
70
|
4359
|
|
4360 This seems to work:
|
82
|
4361
|
|
4362 @lisp
|
70
|
4363 (defun cg--generate-char-event (ch)
|
|
4364 "Generate an event, as if ch has been typed"
|
|
4365 (dispatch-event (character-to-event ch)))
|
|
4366
|
|
4367 ;; Backspace and Delete stuff
|
163
|
4368 (global-set-key [backspace]
|
|
4369 (lambda () (interactive) (cg--generate-char-event 127)))
|
|
4370 (global-set-key [unknown_keysym_0x4]
|
|
4371 (lambda () (interactive) (cg--generate-char-event 4)))
|
82
|
4372 @end lisp
|
|
4373
|
|
4374 @node Q5.1.3, Q5.1.4, Q5.1.2, Miscellaneous
|
163
|
4375 @section Could you explain @code{read-kbd-macro} in more detail?
|
|
4376
|
|
4377 The @code{read-kbd-macro} function returns the internal Emacs
|
|
4378 representation of a human-readable string (which is its argument).
|
|
4379 Thus:
|
82
|
4380
|
|
4381 @lisp
|
163
|
4382 (read-kbd-macro "C-c C-a")
|
|
4383 @result{} [(control ?c) (control ?a)]
|
|
4384
|
|
4385 (read-kbd-macro "C-c C-. <up>")
|
|
4386 @result{} [(control ?c) (control ?.) up]
|
82
|
4387 @end lisp
|
|
4388
|
163
|
4389 In GNU Emacs the same forms will be evaluated to what GNU Emacs
|
|
4390 understands internally---the sequences @code{"\C-x\C-c"} and @code{[3
|
|
4391 67108910 up]}, respectively.
|
|
4392
|
|
4393 The exact @dfn{human-readable} syntax is defined in the docstring of
|
|
4394 @code{edmacro-mode}. I'll repeat it here, for completeness.
|
|
4395
|
|
4396 @quotation
|
|
4397 Format of keyboard macros during editing:
|
|
4398
|
|
4399 Text is divided into @dfn{words} separated by whitespace. Except for
|
|
4400 the words described below, the characters of each word go directly as
|
|
4401 characters of the macro. The whitespace that separates words is
|
|
4402 ignored. Whitespace in the macro must be written explicitly, as in
|
|
4403 @kbd{foo SPC bar RET}.
|
|
4404
|
|
4405 @itemize @bullet
|
|
4406 @item
|
|
4407 The special words @kbd{RET}, @kbd{SPC}, @kbd{TAB}, @kbd{DEL}, @kbd{LFD},
|
|
4408 @kbd{ESC}, and @kbd{NUL} represent special control characters. The
|
|
4409 words must be written in uppercase.
|
|
4410
|
|
4411 @item
|
|
4412 A word in angle brackets, e.g., @code{<return>}, @code{<down>}, or
|
|
4413 @code{<f1>}, represents a function key. (Note that in the standard
|
|
4414 configuration, the function key @code{<return>} and the control key
|
|
4415 @kbd{RET} are synonymous.) You can use angle brackets on the words
|
|
4416 @kbd{RET}, @kbd{SPC}, etc., but they are not required there.
|
|
4417
|
|
4418 @item
|
|
4419 Keys can be written by their @sc{ascii} code, using a backslash followed
|
|
4420 by up to six octal digits. This is the only way to represent keys with
|
|
4421 codes above \377.
|
|
4422
|
|
4423 @item
|
|
4424 One or more prefixes @kbd{M-} (meta), @kbd{C-} (control), @kbd{S-}
|
|
4425 (shift), @kbd{A-} (alt), @kbd{H-} (hyper), and @kbd{s-} (super) may
|
|
4426 precede a character or key notation. For function keys, the prefixes
|
|
4427 may go inside or outside of the brackets: @code{C-<down>} @equiv{}
|
|
4428 @code{<C-down>}. The prefixes may be written in any order: @kbd{M-C-x}
|
|
4429 @equiv{} @kbd{C-M-x}.
|
|
4430
|
|
4431 Prefixes are not allowed on multi-key words, e.g., @kbd{C-abc}, except
|
|
4432 that the Meta prefix is allowed on a sequence of digits and optional
|
|
4433 minus sign: @kbd{M--123} @equiv{} @kbd{M-- M-1 M-2 M-3}.
|
|
4434
|
|
4435 @item
|
|
4436 The @code{^} notation for control characters also works: @kbd{^M}
|
|
4437 @equiv{} @kbd{C-m}.
|
|
4438
|
|
4439 @item
|
|
4440 Double angle brackets enclose command names: @code{<<next-line>>} is
|
|
4441 shorthand for @kbd{M-x next-line RET}.
|
|
4442
|
|
4443 @item
|
|
4444 Finally, @code{REM} or @code{;;} causes the rest of the line to be
|
|
4445 ignored as a comment.
|
|
4446 @end itemize
|
|
4447
|
|
4448 Any word may be prefixed by a multiplier in the form of a decimal number
|
|
4449 and @code{*}: @code{3*<right>} @equiv{} @code{<right> <right> <right>},
|
|
4450 and @code{10*foo} @equiv{} @code{foofoofoofoofoofoofoofoofoofoo}.
|
|
4451
|
|
4452 Multiple text keys can normally be strung together to form a word, but
|
|
4453 you may need to add whitespace if the word would look like one of the
|
|
4454 above notations: @code{; ; ;} is a keyboard macro with three semicolons,
|
|
4455 but @code{;;;} is a comment. Likewise, @code{\ 1 2 3} is four keys but
|
|
4456 @code{\123} is a single key written in octal, and @code{< right >} is
|
|
4457 seven keys but @code{<right>} is a single function key. When in doubt,
|
|
4458 use whitespace.
|
|
4459 @end quotation
|
|
4460
|
|
4461 @node Q5.1.4, Q5.1.5, Q5.1.3, Miscellaneous
|
|
4462 @section What is the performance hit of @code{let}?
|
|
4463
|
|
4464 In most cases, not noticable. Besides, there's no avoiding
|
|
4465 @code{let}---you have to bind your local variables, after all. Some
|
|
4466 pose a question whether to nest @code{let}s, or use one @code{let} per
|
|
4467 function. I think because of clarity and maintenance (and possible
|
|
4468 future implementation), @code{let}-s should be used (nested) in a way to
|
|
4469 provide the clearest code.
|
|
4470
|
|
4471 @node Q5.1.5, Q5.1.6, Q5.1.4, Miscellaneous
|
|
4472 @section What is the recommended use of @code{setq}?
|
|
4473
|
|
4474 @itemize @bullet
|
|
4475 @item Global variables
|
|
4476
|
|
4477 You will typically @code{defvar} your global variable to a default
|
|
4478 value, and use @code{setq} to set it later.
|
|
4479
|
|
4480 It is never a good practice to @code{setq} user variables (like
|
|
4481 @code{case-fold-search}, etc.), as it ignores the user's choice
|
|
4482 unconditionally. Note that @code{defvar} doesn't change the value of a
|
|
4483 variable if it was bound previously. If you wish to change a
|
|
4484 user-variable temporarily, use @code{let}:
|
82
|
4485
|
|
4486 @lisp
|
163
|
4487 (let ((case-fold-search nil))
|
|
4488 ... ; code with searches that must be case-sensitive
|
|
4489 ...)
|
82
|
4490 @end lisp
|
|
4491
|
163
|
4492 You will notice the user-variables by their docstrings beginning with an
|
|
4493 asterisk (a convention).
|
|
4494
|
|
4495 @item Local variables
|
|
4496
|
|
4497 Bind them with @code{let}, which will unbind them (or restore their
|
|
4498 previous value, if they were bound) after exiting from the @code{let}
|
|
4499 form. Change the value of local variables with @code{setq} or whatever
|
|
4500 you like (e.g. @code{incf}, @code{setf} and such). The @code{let} form
|
|
4501 can even return one of its local variables.
|
|
4502
|
|
4503 Typical usage:
|
82
|
4504
|
|
4505 @lisp
|
163
|
4506 ;; iterate through the elements of the list returned by
|
|
4507 ;; `hairy-function-that-returns-list'
|
|
4508 (let ((l (hairy-function-that-returns-list)))
|
|
4509 (while l
|
|
4510 ... do something with (car l) ...
|
|
4511 (setq l (cdr l))))
|
|
4512 @end lisp
|
|
4513
|
|
4514 Another typical usage includes building a value simply to work with it.
|
|
4515
|
|
4516 @lisp
|
|
4517 ;; Build the mode keymap out of the key-translation-alist
|
|
4518 (let ((inbox (file-truename (expand-file-name box)))
|
|
4519 (i 0))
|
|
4520 ... code dealing with inbox ...
|
|
4521 inbox)
|
|
4522 @end lisp
|
|
4523
|
|
4524 This piece of code uses the local variable @code{inbox}, which becomes
|
|
4525 unbound (or regains old value) after exiting the form. The form also
|
|
4526 returns the value of @code{inbox}, which can be reused, for instance:
|
|
4527
|
|
4528 @lisp
|
|
4529 (setq foo-processed-inbox
|
|
4530 (let .....))
|
82
|
4531 @end lisp
|
163
|
4532 @end itemize
|
|
4533
|
|
4534 @node Q5.1.6, Q5.1.7, Q5.1.5, Miscellaneous
|
|
4535 @section What is the typical misuse of @code{setq} ?
|
|
4536
|
|
4537 A typical misuse is probably @code{setq}ing a variable that was meant to
|
|
4538 be local. Such a variable will remain bound forever, never to be
|
|
4539 garbage-collected. For example, the code doing:
|
|
4540
|
|
4541 @lisp
|
|
4542 (defun my-function (whatever)
|
|
4543 (setq a nil)
|
|
4544 ... build a large list ...
|
|
4545 ... and exit ...)
|
|
4546 @end lisp
|
|
4547
|
|
4548 does a bad thing, as @code{a} will keep consuming memory, never to be
|
|
4549 unbound. The correct thing is to do it like this:
|
|
4550
|
|
4551 @lisp
|
|
4552 (defun my-function (whatever)
|
|
4553 (let (a) ; default initialization is to nil
|
|
4554 ... build a large list ...
|
|
4555 ... and exit, unbinding `a' in the process ...)
|
|
4556 @end lisp
|
|
4557
|
|
4558 Not only is this prettier syntactically, but it makes it possible for
|
|
4559 Emacs to garbage-collect the objects which @code{a} used to reference.
|
|
4560
|
|
4561 Note that even global variables should not be @code{setq}ed without
|
|
4562 @code{defvar}ing them first, because the byte-compiler issues warnings.
|
|
4563 The reason for the warning is the following:
|
|
4564
|
|
4565 @lisp
|
|
4566 (defun flurgoze nil) ; ok, global internal variable
|
|
4567 ...
|
|
4568
|
|
4569 (setq flurghoze t) ; ops! a typo, but semantically correct.
|
|
4570 ; however, the byte-compiler warns.
|
|
4571
|
|
4572 While compiling toplevel forms:
|
|
4573 ** assignment to free variable flurghoze
|
|
4574 @end lisp
|
|
4575
|
|
4576 @node Q5.1.7, Q5.1.8, Q5.1.6, Miscellaneous
|
|
4577 @section I like the the @code{do} form of cl, does it slow things down?
|
|
4578
|
|
4579 It shouldn't. Here is what Dave Gillespie has to say about cl.el
|
|
4580 performance:
|
82
|
4581
|
|
4582 @quotation
|
163
|
4583 Many of the advanced features of this package, such as @code{defun*},
|
|
4584 @code{loop}, and @code{setf}, are implemented as Lisp macros. In
|
|
4585 byte-compiled code, these complex notations will be expanded into
|
|
4586 equivalent Lisp code which is simple and efficient. For example, the
|
|
4587 forms
|
82
|
4588
|
|
4589 @lisp
|
163
|
4590 (incf i n)
|
|
4591 (push x (car p))
|
82
|
4592 @end lisp
|
|
4593
|
163
|
4594 are expanded at compile-time to the Lisp forms
|
82
|
4595
|
|
4596 @lisp
|
163
|
4597 (setq i (+ i n))
|
|
4598 (setcar p (cons x (car p)))
|
82
|
4599 @end lisp
|
|
4600
|
163
|
4601 which are the most efficient ways of doing these respective operations
|
|
4602 in Lisp. Thus, there is no performance penalty for using the more
|
|
4603 readable @code{incf} and @code{push} forms in your compiled code.
|
|
4604
|
|
4605 @emph{Interpreted} code, on the other hand, must expand these macros
|
|
4606 every time they are executed. For this reason it is strongly
|
|
4607 recommended that code making heavy use of macros be compiled. (The
|
|
4608 features labelled @dfn{Special Form} instead of @dfn{Function} in this
|
|
4609 manual are macros.) A loop using @code{incf} a hundred times will
|
|
4610 execute considerably faster if compiled, and will also garbage-collect
|
|
4611 less because the macro expansion will not have to be generated, used,
|
|
4612 and thrown away a hundred times.
|
|
4613
|
|
4614 You can find out how a macro expands by using the @code{cl-prettyexpand}
|
|
4615 function.
|
82
|
4616 @end quotation
|
|
4617
|
163
|
4618 @node Q5.1.8, Q5.1.9, Q5.1.7, Miscellaneous
|
|
4619 @section I like recursion, does it slow things down?
|
|
4620
|
|
4621 Yes. Emacs byte-compiler cannot do much to optimize recursion. But
|
|
4622 think well whether this is a real concern in Emacs. Much of the Emacs
|
|
4623 slowness comes from internal mechanisms such as redisplay, or from the
|
|
4624 fact that it is an interpreter.
|
|
4625
|
|
4626 Please try not to make your code much uglier to gain a very small speed
|
|
4627 gain. It's not usually worth it.
|
|
4628
|
|
4629 @node Q5.1.9, Q5.2.1, Q5.1.8, Miscellaneous
|
|
4630 @section How do I put a glyph as annotation in a buffer?
|
|
4631
|
|
4632 Here is a solution that will insert the glyph annotation at the
|
|
4633 beginning of buffer:
|
|
4634
|
|
4635 @lisp
|
|
4636 (make-annotation (make-glyph '([FORMAT :file FILE]
|
|
4637 [string :data "fallback-text"]))
|
|
4638 (point-min)
|
|
4639 'text
|
|
4640 (current-buffer))
|
|
4641 @end lisp
|
|
4642
|
|
4643 Replace @samp{FORMAT} with an unquoted symbol representing the format of
|
|
4644 the image (e.g. @code{xpm}, @code{xbm}, @code{gif}, @code{jpeg}, etc.)
|
|
4645 Instead of @samp{FILE}, use the image file name
|
|
4646 (e.g. @file{/usr/local/lib/xemacs-20.2/etc/recycle.xpm}).
|
|
4647
|
|
4648 You can turn this to a function (that optionally prompts you for a file
|
|
4649 name), and inserts the glyph at @code{(point)} instead of
|
|
4650 @code{(point-min)}.
|
|
4651
|
|
4652 @node Q5.2.1, Q5.2.2, Q5.1.9, Miscellaneous
|
82
|
4653 @section How do I turn off the sound?
|
|
4654
|
|
4655 Add the following line to your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4656
|
|
4657 @lisp
|
|
4658 (setq bell-volume 0)
|
|
4659 (setq sound-alist nil)
|
|
4660 @end lisp
|
|
4661
|
163
|
4662 That will make your XEmacs totally silent -- even the default ding sound
|
|
4663 (TTY beep on TTY-s) will be gone.
|
|
4664
|
82
|
4665 @node Q5.2.2, Q5.2.3, Q5.2.1, Miscellaneous
|
|
4666 @section How do I get funky sounds instead of a boring beep?
|
|
4667
|
|
4668 Make sure your XEmacs was compiled with sound support, and then put this
|
|
4669 in your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4670
|
|
4671 @lisp
|
|
4672 (load-default-sounds)
|
|
4673 @end lisp
|
|
4674
|
126
|
4675 The sound support in XEmacs 19.14 was greatly improved over previous
|
82
|
4676 versions.
|
|
4677
|
|
4678 @node Q5.2.3, Q5.2.4, Q5.2.2, Miscellaneous
|
|
4679 @section What's NAS, how do I get it?
|
|
4680
|
|
4681 @xref{Q2.0.3} for an explanation of the @dfn{Network Audio System}.
|
|
4682
|
|
4683 @node Q5.2.4, Q5.3.1, Q5.2.3, Miscellaneous
|
|
4684 @section Sunsite sounds don't play.
|
|
4685
|
|
4686 I'm having some trouble with sounds I've downloaded from sunsite. They
|
|
4687 play when I run them through @code{showaudio} or cat them directly to
|
|
4688 @file{/dev/audio}, but XEmacs refuses to play them.
|
|
4689
|
|
4690 Markus Gutschke <gutschk@@uni-muenster.de> writes:
|
|
4691
|
|
4692 @quotation
|
|
4693 [Many of] These files have an (erroneous) 24byte header that tells about
|
|
4694 the format that they have been recorded in. If you cat them to
|
|
4695 @file{/dev/audio}, the header will be ignored and the default behavior
|
|
4696 for /dev/audio will be used. This happens to be 8kHz uLaw. It is
|
|
4697 probably possible to fix the header by piping through @code{sox} and
|
|
4698 passing explicit parameters for specifying the sampling format; you then
|
|
4699 need to perform a 'null' conversion from SunAudio to SunAudio.
|
|
4700 @end quotation
|
|
4701
|
|
4702 @node Q5.3.1, Q5.3.2, Q5.2.4, Miscellaneous
|
|
4703 @section How do you make XEmacs indent CL if-clauses correctly?
|
|
4704
|
|
4705 I'd like XEmacs to indent all the clauses of a Common Lisp @code{if} the
|
|
4706 same amount instead of indenting the 3rd clause differently from the
|
|
4707 first two.
|
70
|
4708
|
|
4709 One way is to add, to @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4710
|
82
|
4711 @lisp
|
70
|
4712 (put 'if 'lisp-indent-function nil)
|
82
|
4713 @end lisp
|
70
|
4714
|
|
4715 However, note that the package @file{cl-indent.el} that comes with
|
82
|
4716 XEmacs sets up this kind of indentation by default. @code{cl-indent}
|
|
4717 also knows about many other CL-specific forms. To use @code{cl-indent},
|
|
4718 one can do this:
|
|
4719
|
|
4720 @lisp
|
70
|
4721 (load "cl-indent")
|
|
4722 (setq lisp-indent-function (function common-lisp-indent-function))
|
82
|
4723 @end lisp
|
|
4724
|
|
4725 One can also customize @file{cl-indent.el} so it mimics the default
|
|
4726 @code{if} indentation @code{then} indented more than the @code{else}.
|
|
4727 Here's how:
|
|
4728
|
|
4729 @lisp
|
70
|
4730 (put 'if 'common-lisp-indent-function '(nil nil &body))
|
82
|
4731 @end lisp
|
70
|
4732
|
|
4733 Also, a new version (1.2) of @file{cl-indent.el} was posted to
|
82
|
4734 comp.emacs.xemacs on 12/9/94. This version includes more documentation
|
|
4735 than previous versions. This may prove useful if you need to customize
|
|
4736 any indent-functions.
|
|
4737
|
|
4738 @node Q5.3.2, Q5.3.3, Q5.3.1, Miscellaneous
|
|
4739 @section Fontifying hang when editing a postscript file.
|
|
4740
|
|
4741 When I try to edit a postscript file it gets stuck saying:
|
|
4742 @samp{fontifying 'filename' (regexps....)} and it just sits there. If I
|
|
4743 press @kbd{C-c} in the window where XEmacs was started, it suddenly
|
|
4744 becomes alive again.
|
70
|
4745
|
|
4746 This was caused by a bug in the Postscript font-lock regular
|
82
|
4747 expressions. It was fixed in 19.13. For earlier versions of XEmacs,
|
|
4748 have a look at your @file{.emacs} file. You will probably have a line
|
|
4749 like:
|
|
4750
|
|
4751 @lisp
|
70
|
4752 (add-hook 'postscript-mode-hook 'turn-on-font-lock)
|
82
|
4753 @end lisp
|
|
4754
|
|
4755 Take it out, restart XEmacs, and it won't try to fontify your postscript
|
|
4756 files anymore.
|
|
4757
|
|
4758 @node Q5.3.3, Q5.3.4, Q5.3.2, Miscellaneous
|
|
4759 @section How can I print WYSIWYG a font-locked buffer?
|
|
4760
|
|
4761 Font-lock looks nice. How can I print (WYSIWYG) the highlighted
|
|
4762 document?
|
|
4763
|
|
4764 The package @file{ps-print.el}, which is now included with XEmacs,
|
|
4765 provides the ability to do this. The source code contains complete
|
|
4766 instructions on its use, in
|
|
4767 @file{<xemacs_src_root>/lisp/packages/ps-print.el}.
|
|
4768
|
|
4769 @node Q5.3.4, Q5.3.5, Q5.3.3, Miscellaneous
|
|
4770 @section Getting @kbd{M-x lpr} to work with postscript printer.
|
|
4771
|
|
4772 My printer is a Postscript printer and @code{lpr} only works for
|
|
4773 Postscript files, so how do I get @kbd{M-x lpr-region} and @kbd{M-x
|
|
4774 lpr-buffer} to work?
|
|
4775
|
|
4776 Put something like this in your @file{.emacs}:
|
|
4777
|
|
4778 @lisp
|
|
4779 (setq lpr-command "a2ps")
|
|
4780 (setq lpr-switches '("-p" "-1"))
|
|
4781 @end lisp
|
|
4782
|
|
4783 If you don't use a2ps to convert ASCII to postscript (why not, it's
|
|
4784 free?), replace with the command you do use. Note also that some
|
|
4785 versions of a2ps require a @samp{-Pprinter} to ensure spooling.
|
|
4786
|
|
4787 @node Q5.3.5, Q5.3.6, Q5.3.4, Miscellaneous
|
|
4788 @section How do I specify the paths that XEmacs uses for finding files?
|
0
|
4789
|
|
4790 You can specify what paths to use by using a number of different flags
|
|
4791 when running configure. See the section MAKE VARIABLES in the top-level
|
|
4792 file INSTALL in the XEmacs distribution for a listing of those flags.
|
|
4793
|
82
|
4794 Most of the time, however, the simplest fix is: @strong{do not} specify
|
|
4795 paths as you might for GNU Emacs. XEmacs can generally determine the
|
0
|
4796 necessary paths dynamically at run time. The only path that generally
|
|
4797 needs to be specified is the root directory to install into. That can
|
|
4798 be specified by passing the @code{--prefix} flag to configure. For a
|
82
|
4799 description of the XEmacs install tree, please consult the @file{NEWS}
|
|
4800 file.
|
|
4801
|
|
4802 @node Q5.3.6, Q5.3.7, Q5.3.5, Miscellaneous
|
|
4803 @section [This question intentionally left blank]
|
|
4804
|
|
4805 Obsolete question, left blank to avoid renumbering.
|
|
4806
|
|
4807 @node Q5.3.7, Q5.3.8, Q5.3.6, Miscellaneous
|
|
4808 @section Can I have the end of the buffer delimited in some way?
|
|
4809
|
163
|
4810 Say, with: @samp{[END]}?
|
|
4811
|
|
4812 Try this:
|
|
4813
|
|
4814 @lisp
|
|
4815 (let ((ext (make-extent (point-min) (point-max))))
|
|
4816 (set-extent-property ext 'start-closed t)
|
|
4817 (set-extent-property ext 'end-closed t)
|
|
4818 (set-extent-property ext 'detachable nil)
|
|
4819 (set-extent-end-glyph ext (make-glyph [string :data "[END]"])))
|
|
4820 @end lisp
|
|
4821
|
|
4822 Since this is XEmacs, you can specify an icon to be shown on
|
|
4823 window-system devices. To do so, change the @code{make-glyph} call to
|
|
4824 something like this:
|
|
4825
|
|
4826 @lisp
|
|
4827 (make-glyph '([xpm :file "~/something.xpm"]
|
|
4828 [string :data "[END]"]))
|
|
4829 @end lisp
|
|
4830
|
|
4831 You can inline the @sc{xpm} definition yourself by specifying
|
|
4832 @code{:data} instead of @code{:file}. Here is such a full-featured
|
|
4833 version that works on both X and TTY devices:
|
82
|
4834
|
|
4835 @lisp
|
163
|
4836 (let ((ext (make-extent (point-min) (point-max))))
|
|
4837 (set-extent-property ext 'start-closed t)
|
|
4838 (set-extent-property ext 'end-closed t)
|
|
4839 (set-extent-property ext 'detachable nil)
|
|
4840 (set-extent-end-glyph ext (make-glyph '([xpm :data "\
|
|
4841 /* XPM */
|
|
4842 static char* eye = @{
|
|
4843 \"20 11 7 2\",
|
|
4844 \"__ c None\"
|
|
4845 \"_` c #7f7f7f\",
|
|
4846 \"_a c #fefefe\",
|
|
4847 \"_b c #7f0000\",
|
|
4848 \"_c c #fefe00\",
|
|
4849 \"_d c #fe0000\",
|
|
4850 \"_e c #bfbfbf\",
|
|
4851 \"___________`_`_`___b_b_b_b_________`____\",
|
|
4852 \"_________`_`_`___b_c_c_c_b_b____________\",
|
|
4853 \"_____`_`_`_e___b_b_c_c_c___b___b_______`\",
|
|
4854 \"___`_`_e_a___b_b_d___b___b___b___b______\",
|
|
4855 \"_`_`_e_a_e___b_b_d_b___b___b___b___b____\",
|
|
4856 \"_`_`_a_e_a___b_b_d___b___b___b___b___b__\",
|
|
4857 \"_`_`_e_a_e___b_b_d_b___b___b___b___b_b__\",
|
|
4858 \"___`_`_e_a___b_b_b_d_c___b___b___d_b____\",
|
|
4859 \"_____`_`_e_e___b_b_b_d_c___b_b_d_b______\",
|
|
4860 \"_`_____`_`_`_`___b_b_b_d_d_d_d_b________\",
|
|
4861 \"___`_____`_`_`_`___b_b_b_b_b_b__________\",
|
|
4862 @} ;"]
|
|
4863 [string :data "[END]"]))))
|
82
|
4864 @end lisp
|
|
4865
|
163
|
4866 Note that you might want to make this a function, and put it to a hook.
|
|
4867 We leave that as an excercise for the reader.
|
82
|
4868
|
|
4869 @node Q5.3.8, Q5.3.9, Q5.3.7, Miscellaneous
|
|
4870 @section How do I insert today's date into a buffer?
|
|
4871
|
|
4872 Like this:
|
|
4873
|
|
4874 @lisp
|
|
4875 (insert (current-time-string))
|
|
4876 @end lisp
|
|
4877
|
|
4878 @node Q5.3.9, Q5.3.10, Q5.3.8, Miscellaneous
|
|
4879 @section Are only certain syntactic character classes available for abbrevs?
|
|
4880
|
|
4881 Markus Gutschke <gutschk@@uni-muenster.de> writes:
|
|
4882
|
|
4883 @quotation
|
|
4884 Yes, abbrevs only expands word-syntax strings. While XEmacs does not
|
|
4885 prevent you from defining (e.g. with @kbd{C-x a g} or @kbd{C-x a l})
|
|
4886 abbrevs that contain special characters, it will refuse to expand
|
|
4887 them. So you need to ensure, that the abbreviation contains letters and
|
|
4888 digits only. This means that @samp{xd}, @samp{d5}, and @samp{5d} are
|
|
4889 valid abbrevs, but @samp{&d}, and @samp{x d} are not.
|
|
4890
|
|
4891 If this sounds confusing to you, (re-)read the online documentation for
|
|
4892 abbrevs (@kbd{C-h i m XEmacs RET m Abbrevs RET}), and then come back and
|
|
4893 read this question/answer again.
|
|
4894 @end quotation
|
|
4895
|
163
|
4896 Hrvoje Niksic <hniksic@@srce.hr> writes:
|
|
4897
|
|
4898 @quotation
|
|
4899 I consider this a bug. I may attempt to fix it one day (and add a
|
|
4900 variable to revert to the current behavior).
|
|
4901
|
|
4902 If many people wants to see this fixed, send me mails---they will move
|
|
4903 me to start hacking sooner.
|
|
4904 @end quotation
|
|
4905
|
82
|
4906 @node Q5.3.10, Q5.3.11, Q5.3.9, Miscellaneous
|
|
4907 @section How can I get those oh-so-neat X-Face lines?
|
|
4908
|
|
4909 Firstly there is an ftp site which describes X-faces and has the
|
|
4910 associated tools mentioned below, at
|
|
4911 <URL:ftp://ftp.cs.indiana.edu:/pub/faces/>.
|
|
4912
|
|
4913 Then the steps are
|
|
4914
|
|
4915 @enumerate
|
|
4916 @item
|
|
4917 Create 48x48x1 bitmap with your favorite tool
|
|
4918
|
|
4919 @item
|
|
4920 Convert to "icon" format using one of xbm2ikon, pbmtoicon, etc.,
|
|
4921 and then compile the face.
|
|
4922
|
|
4923 @item
|
0
|
4924 @example
|
82
|
4925 cat file.xbm | xbm2ikon |compface > file.face
|
0
|
4926 @end example
|
|
4927
|
82
|
4928 @item
|
|
4929 Then be sure to quote things that are necessary for emacs strings:
|
0
|
4930
|
|
4931 @example
|
82
|
4932 cat ./file.face | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g' | sed 's/\"/\\\"/g' > ./file.face.quoted
|
0
|
4933 @end example
|
|
4934
|
82
|
4935 @item
|
|
4936 Then set up emacs to include the file as a mail header - there were a
|
|
4937 couple of suggestions here---either something like:
|
|
4938
|
|
4939 @lisp
|
|
4940 (setq mail-default-headers
|
|
4941 "X-Face: <Ugly looking text string here>")
|
|
4942 @end lisp
|
|
4943
|
|
4944 Or, alternatively, as:
|
|
4945
|
|
4946 @lisp
|
|
4947 (defun mail-insert-x-face ()
|
|
4948 (save-excursion
|
|
4949 (goto-char (point-min))
|
|
4950 (search-forward mail-header-separator)
|
163
|
4951 (beginning-of-line)
|
82
|
4952 (insert "X-Face:")
|
163
|
4953 (insert-file-contents "~/.face")))
|
82
|
4954
|
|
4955 (add-hook 'mail-setup-hook 'mail-insert-x-face)
|
|
4956 @end lisp
|
|
4957 @end enumerate
|
|
4958
|
|
4959 However, 2 things might be wrong:
|
|
4960
|
|
4961 Some versions of pbmtoicon produces some header lines that is not
|
|
4962 expected by the version of compface that I grabbed. So I found I had to
|
|
4963 include a @code{tail +3} in the pipeline like this:
|
0
|
4964
|
|
4965 @example
|
82
|
4966 cat file.xbm | xbm2ikon | tail +3 |compface > file.face
|
0
|
4967 @end example
|
|
4968
|
82
|
4969 Some people have also found that if one uses the @code{(insert-file)}
|
|
4970 method, one should NOT quote the face string using the sed script .
|
|
4971
|
|
4972 It might also be helpful to use Stig's <stig@@hackvan.com> script
|
|
4973 (included in the compface distribution at XEmacs.org) to do the
|
|
4974 conversion. For convenience xbm2xface is available for anonymous FTP at
|
|
4975 <URL:ftp://ftp.miranova.com/pub/xemacs/xbm2xface.pl>.
|
|
4976
|
|
4977 Contributors for this item:
|
|
4978
|
|
4979 Paul Emsley,
|
|
4980 Ricardo Marek,
|
|
4981 Amir J. Katz,
|
|
4982 Glen McCort,
|
|
4983 Heinz Uphoff,
|
|
4984 Peter Arius,
|
|
4985 Paul Harrison, and
|
|
4986 Vegard Vesterheim
|
|
4987
|
|
4988 @node Q5.3.11, Q5.3.12, Q5.3.10, Miscellaneous
|
|
4989 @section How do I add new Info directories?
|
|
4990
|
|
4991 You use something like:
|
|
4992
|
|
4993 @lisp
|
|
4994 (setq Info-directory-list (cons
|
|
4995 (expand-file-name "~/info")
|
|
4996 Info-default-directory-list))
|
|
4997 @end lisp
|
|
4998
|
|
4999 David Masterson <davidm@@prism.kla.com> writes:
|
|
5000
|
|
5001 @quotation
|
|
5002 Emacs Info and XEmacs Info do many things differently. If you're trying to
|
|
5003 support a number of versions of Emacs, here are some notes to remember:
|
|
5004
|
|
5005 @enumerate
|
|
5006 @item
|
|
5007 Emacs Info scans @code{Info-directory-list} from right-to-left while
|
|
5008 XEmacs Info reads it from left-to-right, so append to the @emph{correct}
|
|
5009 end of the list.
|
|
5010
|
|
5011 @item
|
|
5012 Use @code{Info-default-directory-list} to initialize
|
|
5013 @code{Info-directory-list} @emph{if} it is available at startup, but not
|
|
5014 all Emacsen define it.
|
|
5015
|
|
5016 @item
|
|
5017 Emacs Info looks for a standard @file{dir} file in each of the
|
|
5018 directories scanned from #1 and magically concatenates them together.
|
|
5019
|
|
5020 @item
|
|
5021 XEmacs Info looks for a @file{localdir} file (which consists of just the
|
|
5022 menu entries from a @file{dir} file) in each of the directories scanned
|
|
5023 from #1 (except the first), does a simple concatentation of them, and
|
|
5024 magically attaches the resulting list to the end of the menu in the
|
|
5025 @file{dir} file in the first directory.
|
|
5026 @end enumerate
|
|
5027
|
|
5028 Another alternative is to convert the documentation to HTML with
|
|
5029 texi2html and read it from a web browser like Lynx or W3.
|
|
5030 @end quotation
|
|
5031
|
|
5032 @node Q5.3.12, , Q5.3.11, Miscellaneous
|
|
5033 @section What do I need to change to make printing work?
|
|
5034
|
|
5035 For regular printing there are two variables that can be customized.
|
|
5036
|
|
5037 @table @code
|
|
5038 @item lpr-command
|
|
5039 This should be set to a command that takes standard input and sends
|
|
5040 it to a printer. Something like:
|
|
5041
|
|
5042 @lisp
|
|
5043 (setq lpr-command "lp")
|
|
5044 @end lisp
|
|
5045
|
|
5046 @item lpr-switches
|
|
5047 This should be set to a list that contains whatever the print command
|
|
5048 requires to do its job. Something like:
|
|
5049
|
|
5050 @lisp
|
|
5051 (setq lpr-switches '("-depson"))
|
|
5052 @end lisp
|
|
5053 @end table
|
|
5054
|
|
5055 For postscript printing there are three analogous variables to
|
|
5056 customize.
|
|
5057
|
|
5058 @table @code
|
|
5059 @item ps-lpr-command
|
|
5060 This should be set to a command that takes postscript on standard input
|
|
5061 and directs it to a postscript printer.
|
|
5062
|
|
5063 @item ps-lpr-switches
|
|
5064 This should be set to a list of switches required for
|
|
5065 @code{ps-lpr-command} to do its job.
|
|
5066
|
|
5067 @item ps-print-color-p
|
|
5068 This boolean variable should be set @code{t} if printing will be done in
|
|
5069 color, otherwise it should be set to @code{nil}.
|
|
5070 @end table
|
|
5071
|
|
5072 NOTE: It is an undocumented limitation in XEmacs that postscript
|
|
5073 printing (the @code{Pretty Print Buffer} menu item) @strong{requires} a
|
|
5074 window system environment. It cannot be used outside of X11.
|
|
5075
|
|
5076 @node Current Events, , Miscellaneous, Top
|
|
5077 @chapter What the Future Holds
|
|
5078
|
|
5079 This is part 6 of the XEmacs Frequently Asked Questions list. This
|
|
5080 section will change monthly, and contains any interesting items that have
|
|
5081 transpired over the previous month. If you are reading this from the
|
|
5082 XEmacs distribution, please see the version on the Web or archived at the
|
|
5083 various FAQ FTP sites, as this file is surely out of date.
|
|
5084
|
|
5085 @menu
|
163
|
5086 * Q6.0.1:: What is new in 20.2?
|
|
5087 * Q6.0.2:: What is new in 20.3?
|
82
|
5088 * Q6.0.3:: Procedural changes in XEmacs development.
|
|
5089 @end menu
|
|
5090
|
163
|
5091 @node Q6.0.1, Q6.0.2, Current Events, Current Events
|
|
5092 @section What is new in 20.2?
|
|
5093
|
|
5094 The biggest changes in 20.2 include intergration of EFS (the next
|
|
5095 generation of ange-ftp) and AUC Tex (the Emacs subsystem that includes a
|
126
|
5096 major mode for editing Tex and LaTeX, and a lot of other stuff). Many
|
163
|
5097 bugs from 20.0 have been fixed for this release. 20.2 also contains a
|
|
5098 new system for customizing XEmacs options, invoked via @kbd{M-x
|
|
5099 customize}.
|
|
5100
|
|
5101 XEmacs 20.2 is the development release (20.0 was beta), and is no longer
|
|
5102 considered unstable.
|
|
5103
|
|
5104 @node Q6.0.2, Q6.0.3, Q6.0.1, Current Events
|
|
5105 @section What is new in 20.3?
|
|
5106
|
|
5107 XEmacs release 20.3 is planned for autumn 1997. It will likely contain
|
|
5108 a much smaller amount of code for basic functionality, with all the
|
|
5109 popular Lisp packages being available in the form of easy-to-install
|
|
5110 add-ons.
|
|
5111
|
|
5112 Other input methods (such as skk) will be made available for Mule, as
|
|
5113 well as more user-level documentation.
|
|
5114
|
|
5115 Many new features are planned, such as multiple TTY frames, support for
|
|
5116 Autoconf 2, synches with Emacs 20.1, and more; much of this is already
|
|
5117 running in various beta versions. Ask at
|
|
5118 @code{<xemacs-beta-request@@xemacs.org>} for more details.
|
|
5119
|
|
5120 @node Q6.0.3, , Q6.0.2, Current Events
|
82
|
5121 @section Procedural changes in XEmacs development.
|
|
5122
|
|
5123 @enumerate
|
|
5124 @item
|
|
5125 Discussion about the development of XEmacs occurs on the xemacs-beta
|
|
5126 mailing list. Subscriptions to this list will now be fully automated
|
|
5127 instead of being handled by hand. Send a mail message to
|
|
5128 <xemacs-beta-request@@xemacs.org> with a subject of subscribe to join
|
|
5129 the list. Please note this is a developers mailing list for people who
|
|
5130 have an active interest in the development process.
|
|
5131
|
|
5132 @item
|
|
5133 Due to the long development cycle in between releases, it has been
|
|
5134 decided that intermediate versions will be made available in source only
|
|
5135 form for the truly interested.
|
|
5136
|
163
|
5137 No further XEmacs 19 feature releases are planned. XEmacs 19.16 will
|
|
5138 consist of 19.15 plus the collected bugfixes, and will probably be the
|
|
5139 final version of XEmacs 19.
|
82
|
5140
|
|
5141 @item
|
|
5142 As of December 1996, Steve Baur <steve@@altair.xemacs.org> has become
|
|
5143 the lead maintainer of XEmacs.
|
163
|
5144 @end enumerate
|
82
|
5145
|
0
|
5146 @bye
|