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+ − 1 ! This is the app-defaults file for XEmacs.
+ − 2 !
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+ − 3 ! This used to be identical to sample.Xresources, but the resources
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+ − 4 ! below have been rewritten to be as general as possible to avoid
+ − 5 ! overriding user resources. Other than the form rewriting, both
+ − 6 ! files should be kept in sync.
+ − 7 !
+ − 8 ! The resources below are loaded into the XEmacs executable at compile-time:
+ − 9 ! changes to .../etc/Emacs.ad made after XEmacs has been built will have no
+ − 10 ! effect.
+ − 11 !
+ − 12 ! However, you may copy .../etc/Emacs.ad to /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/Emacs
+ − 13 ! (or whatever the standard app-defaults directory is at your site) to cause
+ − 14 ! it to be consulted at run-time. (Do this only for site-wide customizations:
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+ − 15 ! personal customizations should be put into ~/.Xresources instead.)
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+ − 16 ! Note that the file must be named Emacs, not XEmacs.
+ − 17 !
+ − 18 ! See the NEWS file (C-h n) or XEmacs manual (C-h i) for a description of
+ − 19 ! the various resources and the syntax for setting them.
+ − 20
+ − 21
+ − 22 ! Colors and backgrounds.
+ − 23 ! ======================
+ − 24 ! The contrasts of these colors will cause them to map to the appropriate
+ − 25 ! one of "black" or "white" on monochrome systems.
+ − 26 !
+ − 27 ! The valid color names on your system can be found by looking in the file
+ − 28 ! `rgb.txt', usually found in /usr/lib/X11/ or /usr/openwin/lib/X11/.
+ − 29
+ − 30 ! Set the modeline colors.
+ − 31 !Emacs.modeline*attributeForeground: Black
+ − 32 !Emacs.modeline*attributeBackground: Gray75
+ − 33
+ − 34 ! Set the color of the text cursor.
+ − 35 !Emacs.text-cursor*attributeBackground: Red3
+ − 36
+ − 37 ! If you want to set the color of the mouse pointer, do this:
+ − 38 ! Emacs.pointer*attributeForeground: Black
+ − 39 ! If you want to set the background of the mouse pointer, do this:
+ − 40 ! Emacs.pointer*attributeBackground: White
+ − 41 ! Note that by default, the pointer foreground and background are the same
+ − 42 ! as the default face.
+ − 43
+ − 44 ! Set the menubar colors. This overrides the default foreground and
+ − 45 ! background colors specified above.
+ − 46 *menubar*Foreground: Gray30
+ − 47 *menubar*Background: Gray80
+ − 48 ! This is for buttons in the menubar.
+ − 49 ! Yellow would be better, but that would map to white on monochrome.
+ − 50 *menubar*buttonForeground: Blue
+ − 51 *XlwMenu*highlightForeground: Red
+ − 52 *XlwMenu*titleForeground: Maroon
+ − 53 *XlwMenu*selectColor: ForestGreen
+ − 54 *XmToggleButton*selectColor: ForestGreen
+ − 55
+ − 56 ! Specify the colors of popup menus.
+ − 57 *popup*Foreground: Black
+ − 58 *popup*Background: Gray80
+ − 59
+ − 60 ! Specify the colors of the various sub-widgets of the dialog boxes.
+ − 61 *dialog*Foreground: Black
+ − 62 ! #A5C0C1 is a shade of blue
+ − 63 *dialog*Background: #A5C0C1
+ − 64 ! The following three are for Motif dialog boxes ...
+ − 65 *dialog*XmTextField*Background: WhiteSmoke
+ − 66 *dialog*XmText*Background: WhiteSmoke
+ − 67 *dialog*XmList*Background: WhiteSmoke
+ − 68 ! While this one is for Athena dialog boxes.
+ − 69 *dialog*Command*Background: WhiteSmoke
+ − 70
+ − 71 ! Xlw Scrollbar colors
+ − 72 *XlwScrollBar*Foreground: Gray30
+ − 73 *XlwScrollBar*Background: Gray80
+ − 74 *XmScrollBar*Foreground: Gray30
+ − 75 *XmScrollBar*Background: Gray80
+ − 76
+ − 77 !
+ − 78 ! The Lucid Scrollbar supports two added resources, SliderStyle is either
+ − 79 ! "plain" (default) or "dimple". Dimple puts a small dimple in the middle
+ − 80 ! of the slider that depresses when the slider is clicked on. ArrowPosition is
+ − 81 ! either "opposite" (default) or "same". Opposite puts the arrows at opposite
+ − 82 ! of the scrollbar, same puts both arrows at the same end, like the Amiga.
+ − 83 !
+ − 84 ! Emacs*XlwScrollBar.SliderStyle: dimple
+ − 85 ! Emacs*XlwScrollBar.ArrowPosition: opposite
+ − 86
+ − 87
+ − 88 !
+ − 89 ! If you want to turn off a toolbar, set its height or width to 0.
+ − 90 ! The correct size value is not really arbitrary. We only control it
+ − 91 ! this way in order to avoid excess frame resizing when turning the
+ − 92 ! toolbars on and off.
+ − 93 !
+ − 94 ! To change the heights and widths of the toolbars:
+ − 95 !
+ − 96 ! Emacs.topToolBarHeight: 37
+ − 97 ! Emacs.bottomToolBarHeight: 0
+ − 98 ! Emacs.leftToolBarWidth: 0
+ − 99 ! Emacs.rightToolBarWidth: 0
+ − 100
+ − 101 !*topToolBarShadowColor: Gray90
+ − 102 !*bottomToolBarShadowColor: Gray40
+ − 103 !*backgroundToolBarColor: Gray80
+ − 104 *toolBarShadowThickness: 2
+ − 105
+ − 106
+ − 107 ! If you want to turn off vertical scrollbars, or change the default
+ − 108 ! pixel width of the vertical scrollbars, do it like this (0 width
+ − 109 ! means no vertical scrollbars):
+ − 110 !
+ − 111 ! Emacs.scrollBarWidth: 0
+ − 112 !
+ − 113 ! To change it for a particular frame, do this:
+ − 114 !
+ − 115 ! Emacs*FRAME-NAME.scrollBarWidth: 0
+ − 116
+ − 117
+ − 118 ! If you want to turn off horizontal scrollbars, or change the default
+ − 119 ! pixel height of the horizontal scrollbars, do it like this (0 height
+ − 120 ! means no horizontal scrollbars):
+ − 121 !
+ − 122 ! Emacs.scrollBarHeight: 0
+ − 123 !
+ − 124 ! To change it for a particular frame, do this:
+ − 125 !
+ − 126 ! Emacs*FRAME-NAME.scrollBarHeight: 0
+ − 127
+ − 128
+ − 129 ! To dynamically change the labels used for menubar buttons...
+ − 130 !
+ − 131 ! Emacs*XlwMenu.resourceLabels: True
+ − 132 ! Emacs*XlwMenu.newFrame.labelString: Open Another Window
+ − 133
+ − 134 ! To have the Motif scrollbars on the left instead of the right, do this:
+ − 135 !
+ − 136 ! Emacs*scrollBarPlacement: BOTTOM_LEFT
+ − 137 !
+ − 138 ! To have the Athena scrollbars on the right, use `BOTTOM_RIGHT' instead
+ − 139
+ − 140 ! To have Motif scrollbars act more like Xt scrollbars...
+ − 141 !
+ − 142 ! Emacs*XmScrollBar.translations: #override \n\
+ − 143 ! <Btn1Down>: PageDownOrRight(0) \n\
+ − 144 ! <Btn3Down>: PageUpOrLeft(0)
+ − 145
+ − 146 ! Fonts.
+ − 147 ! ======
+ − 148 ! XEmacs requires the use of XLFD (X Logical Font Description) format font
+ − 149 ! names, which look like
+ − 150 !
+ − 151 ! *-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-*-*
+ − 152 !
+ − 153 ! if you use any of the other, less strict font name formats, some of which
+ − 154 ! look like
+ − 155 ! lucidasanstypewriter-12
+ − 156 ! and fixed
+ − 157 ! and 9x13
+ − 158 !
+ − 159 ! then XEmacs won't be able to guess the names of the bold and italic versions.
+ − 160 ! All X fonts can be referred to via XLFD-style names, so you should use those
+ − 161 ! forms. See the man pages for X(1), xlsfonts(1), and xfontsel(1).
+ − 162
+ − 163
+ − 164 ! The default font for the text area of XEmacs is chosen at run-time
+ − 165 ! by lisp code which tries a number of different possibilities in order
+ − 166 ! of preference. If you wish to override it, use this:
+ − 167 !
+ − 168 ! Emacs.default.attributeFont: -*-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
+ − 169
+ − 170 ! If you choose a font which does not have an italic version, you can specify
+ − 171 ! some other font to use for it here:
+ − 172 !
+ − 173 ! Emacs.italic.attributeFont: -*-courier-medium-o-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
+ − 174 !
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+ − 175 ! If you choose a font which does not have a bold-italic version,
+ − 176 ! you can specify some other font to use for it here:
+ − 177 !
+ − 178 ! Emacs.bold-italic.attributeFont: -*-courier-bold-o-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
+ − 179 !
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+ − 180 ! And here is how you would set the background color of the `highlight' face,
+ − 181 ! but only on the screen named `debugger':
+ − 182 !
+ − 183 ! Emacs*debugger.highlight.attributeBackground: PaleTurquoise
+ − 184 !
+ − 185 ! See the NEWS file (C-h n) for a more complete description of the resource
+ − 186 ! syntax of faces.
+ − 187
+ − 188
+ − 189 ! Font of the modeline, menubar and pop-up menus.
+ − 190 ! Note that the menubar resources do not use the `face' syntax, since they
+ − 191 ! are X toolkit widgets and thus outside the domain of XEmacs proper.
+ − 192 !
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+ − 193 ! When X Font Sets are enabled with ./configure --with-xfs (eg, for
+ − 194 ! multilingual menubars and XIM), some .font resources (those specific to
+ − 195 ! the Lucid widget set) are ignored in favor of .fontSet resources. This
+ − 196 ! example shows how to add fonts for Japanese menubars:
+ − 197 !
+ − 198 ! *menubar*FontSet: -*-helvetica-bold-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*, \
+ − 199 ! -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-120-*-jisx0208.1983-0
+ − 200 !
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+ − 201 *menubar*Font: -*-helvetica-bold-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
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+ − 202 *popup*Font: -*-helvetica-bold-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
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+ − 203 *menubar*FontSet: -*-helvetica-bold-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*, \
+ − 204 -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-120-*-iso10646-1, \
+ − 205 -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-120-*-jisx0208.1983-0, \
+ − 206 -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-120-*-jisx0201.1976-0
+ − 207 *popup*FontSet: -*-helvetica-bold-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*, \
+ − 208 -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-120-*-iso10646-1, \
+ − 209 -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-120-*-jisx0208.1983-0, \
+ − 210 -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-120-*-jisx0201.1976-0
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+ − 211
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+ − 212 ! Gui elements share this font
+ − 213 !
+ − 214 Emacs.gui-element.attributeFont: -*-helvetica-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
+ − 215
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+ − 216 ! Font in the Motif dialog boxes.
+ − 217 ! (Motif uses `fontList' while most other things use `font' - if you don't
+ − 218 ! know why you probably don't want to.)
+ − 219 !
+ − 220 *XmDialogShell*FontList: -*-helvetica-bold-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
+ − 221 *XmTextField*FontList: -*-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
+ − 222 *XmText*FontList: -*-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
+ − 223 *XmList*FontList: -*-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
+ − 224
+ − 225 ! Font in the Athena dialog boxes.
+ − 226 ! I think 14-point looks nicer than 12-point.
+ − 227 ! Some people use 12-point anyway because you get more text, but
+ − 228 ! there's no purpose at all in doing this for dialog boxes.
+ − 229
+ − 230 *Dialog*Font: -*-helvetica-bold-r-*-*-*-140-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
+ − 231
+ − 232 ! Dialog box translations.
+ − 233 ! =======================
+ − 234
+ − 235 ! This accelerator binds <return> in a dialog box to <activate> on button1
+ − 236 *dialog*button1.accelerators:#override\
+ − 237 <KeyPress>Return: ArmAndActivate()\n\
+ − 238 <KeyPress>KP_Enter: ArmAndActivate()\n\
+ − 239 Ctrl<KeyPress>m: ArmAndActivate()\n
+ − 240
+ − 241 ! Translations to make the TextField widget behave more like XEmacs
+ − 242 *XmTextField*translations: #override\n\
+ − 243 !<Key>osfBackSpace: delete-previous-character()\n\
+ − 244 !<Key>osfDelete: delete-previous-character()\n\
+ − 245 !Ctrl<Key>h: delete-previous-character()\n\
+ − 246 !Ctrl<Key>d: delete-next-character()\n\
+ − 247 !Meta<Key>osfDelete: delete-previous-word()\n\
+ − 248 !Meta<Key>osfBackSpace: delete-previous-word()\n\
+ − 249 !Meta<Key>d: delete-next-word()\n\
+ − 250 !Ctrl<Key>k: delete-to-end-of-line()\n\
+ − 251 !Ctrl<Key>g: process-cancel()\n\
+ − 252 !Ctrl<Key>b: backward-character()\n\
+ − 253 !<Key>osfLeft: backward-character()\n\
+ − 254 !Ctrl<Key>f: forward-character()\n\
+ − 255 !<Key>osfRight: forward-character()\n\
+ − 256 !Meta<Key>b: backward-word()\n\
+ − 257 !Meta<Key>osfLeft: backward-word()\n\
+ − 258 !Meta<Key>f: forward-word()\n\
+ − 259 !Meta<Key>osfRight: forward-word()\n\
+ − 260 !Ctrl<Key>e: end-of-line()\n\
+ − 261 !Ctrl<Key>a: beginning-of-line()\n\
+ − 262 !Ctrl<Key>w: cut-clipboard()\n\
+ − 263 !Meta<Key>w: copy-clipboard()\n\
+ − 264 <Btn2Up>: copy-primary()\n
+ − 265
+ − 266 ! With the XEmacs typeahead it's better to not have space be bound to
+ − 267 ! ArmAndActivate() for buttons that appear in dialog boxes. This is
+ − 268 ! not 100% Motif compliant but the benefits far outweight the
+ − 269 ! compliancy problem.
+ − 270 *dialog*XmPushButton*translations:#override\n\
+ − 271 <Btn1Down>: Arm()\n\
+ − 272 <Btn1Down>,<Btn1Up>: Activate()\
+ − 273 Disarm()\n\
+ − 274 <Btn1Down>(2+): MultiArm()\n\
+ − 275 <Btn1Up>(2+): MultiActivate()\n\
+ − 276 <Btn1Up>: Activate()\
+ − 277 Disarm()\n\
+ − 278 <Key>osfSelect: ArmAndActivate()\n\
+ − 279 <Key>osfActivate: ArmAndActivate()\n\
+ − 280 <Key>osfHelp: Help()\n\
+ − 281 ~Shift ~Meta ~Alt <Key>Return: ArmAndActivate()\n\
+ − 282 <EnterWindow>: Enter()\n\
+ − 283 <LeaveWindow>: Leave()\n
+ − 284
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+ − 285 ! Native Widget translations
+ − 286 ! =======================
+ − 287 Emacs*Text*translations: #override\n\
+ − 288 <Btn1Down>: widget-focus-in() select-start()\n
+ − 289
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+ − 290 ! XIM input method style
+ − 291 ! =======================
+ − 292
+ − 293 ! ximStyles is a (whitespace or comma-separated) list of XIMStyles in
+ − 294 ! order of user's preference.
+ − 295 ! Choose a subset of the following styles or reorder to taste
+ − 296 *ximStyles: XIMPreeditPosition|XIMStatusArea\
+ − 297 XIMPreeditPosition|XIMStatusNothing\
+ − 298 XIMPreeditPosition|XIMStatusNone\
+ − 299 XIMPreeditNothing|XIMStatusArea\
+ − 300 XIMPreeditNothing|XIMStatusNothing\
+ − 301 XIMPreeditNothing|XIMStatusNone\
+ − 302 XIMPreeditNone|XIMStatusArea\
+ − 303 XIMPreeditNone|XIMStatusNothing\
+ − 304 XIMPreeditNone|XIMStatusNone
+ − 305
+ − 306 ! XIM Preedit and Status foreground and background
+ − 307 *EmacsFrame.ximForeground: black
+ − 308 *EmacsFrame.ximBackground: white
+ − 309
+ − 310 ! XIM fontset (defaults to system fontset default)
+ − 311 ! *EmacsFrame.FontSet: -dt-interface user-medium-r-normal-s*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*