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1
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2 The subdirectories of this directory contain source code for the XEmacs
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3 facilities written in Emacs Lisp. *.el files are Elisp source, and *.elc
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4 files are byte-compiled versions of the corresponding *.el files.
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5 Byte-compiled files are architecture-independent.
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6
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7 When XEmacs starts up, it adds all subdirectories of the site-lisp
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8 directory. The site-lisp directory normally exists only in
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9 installation trees. For more information about the site-lisp
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10 directory see the NEWS file.
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11
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12 After XEmacs adds all subdirectories of the site-lisp directory, it
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13 adds all subdirectories of this directory to the load-path (the list
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14 of directories to be searched when loading files.) To speed up this
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15 process, this directory has been rearranged to have very few files at
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16 the top-level, so that emacs doesn't have to stat() several hundred
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17 files to find the dozen or so which are actually subdirectories.
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18
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19 Directories whose names begin with "-" or "." are not added to the default
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20 load-path.
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21
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22 The only files which remain at top-level are those which you might
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23 reasonably want to alter when installing or customizing XEmacs at your
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24 site. The files which may appear at top level are:
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25
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26 paths.el You may need to change the default pathnames here,
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27 but probably not. This is loaded before XEmacs is
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28 dumped.
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29
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30 site-init.el To pre-load additional libraries into XEmacs and dump
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31 them in the executable, load them from this file.
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32
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33 site-load.el This is like site-init.el, but if you want the
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34 docstrings of your preloaded libraries to be kept in
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35 the DOC file instead of in the executable, you should
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36 load them from this file instead. To do this, you must
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37 also cause them to be scanned when the DOC file is
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38 generated by editing ../src/Makefile.in.in and
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39 rerunning configure.
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40
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41 site-start.el This is loaded each time XEmacs starts up, before the
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42 user's .emacs file.
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43
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44 default.el This is loaded each time XEmacs starts up, after the
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45 user's .emacs file, unless .emacs sets the variable
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46 inhibit-default-init to t.
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47
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48 version.el This contains the version information for XEmacs.
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49
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50
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51 These are the main subdirectories:
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52
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53 prim Fundamental XEmacs functionality. Some of this is
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54 pre-dumped with XEmacs, some is autoloaded.
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55
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56 utils Various utility functions that some other XEmacs
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57 packages build on. These are not user commands.
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58
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59 modes Text-editing and programming-language-sensitive modes.
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60
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61 emulators XEmacs can emulate a few different editors. These are
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62 a bit more than what `modes' generally are.
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63
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64 term Terminal-specific customization files. When XEmacs
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65 starts, it checks the $TERM environment variable to
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66 see what type of terminal the user is running on, and
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67 loads a file named $TERM.el from this directory, if
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68 that file exists.
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69
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70 vms VMS-specific code. (Not functional)
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71
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72 x11 X Window System-specific code.
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73
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74 games Various ways to waste time.
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75
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76 packages Random other utilities that are not primarily about
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77 editing text. For example, code for automatically
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78 uncompressing .Z files would be here. This is an
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79 `everything else' sort of directory.
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80
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81 Some packages are fairly large; those have been given their own directories:
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82
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83 auctex A package for editing TeX documents.
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84
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85 bytecomp The XEmacs-lisp compiler.
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86
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87 calendar A calendar and appointment manager.
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88
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89 cl Common Lisp compatibility code.
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90
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91 comint General code for interacting with inferior processes,
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92 like shell buffers and lisp interpreters.
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93
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94 custom User environment customization code.
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95
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96 edebug A source-level debugger for Elisp.
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97
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98 ediff A comprehensive visual interface to diff and patch.
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99
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100 efs The directory editor, remote FTP frontend.
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101
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102 egg MULE Input Method.
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103
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104 electric The "electric" commands; these implement temporary
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105 windows for help, list-buffers, etc.
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106
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107 energize An interface to the Lucid Energize system.
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108
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109 eos An interface to Sun's SparcWorks product.
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110
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111 eterm A merge of the comint shell mode with an
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112 ANSI-compatible terminal-emulator.
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113
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114 gnus A network news and mail reader.
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115
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116 hm--html-menus Menu interface to html-mode.
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117
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118 hyperbole An information management and hypertext system.
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119
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120 ilisp A comint-based package for interacting with inferior
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121 lisp processes.
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122
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123 iso ISO Latin language support.
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124
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125 its MULE Input Method.
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126
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127 locale IE18N stuff.
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128
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129 mailcrypt Package for dealing with PGP encrypted messages.
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130
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131 mel MIME encoding library (part of the Tools for MIME).
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132
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133 mh-e An interface to the MH-E mail handling system.
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134
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135 mu Message Utilities library (part of the Tools for
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136 MIME).
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137
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138 mule Multi-lingual extensions for XEmacs.
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139
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140 ns NeXTStep support.
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141
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142 oobr An Object-Oriented class browser.
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143
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144 pcl-cvs An interface to the Concurrent Version System.
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145
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146 psgml General purpose SGML editing support with extra
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147 support for editing HTML.
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148
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149 quail MULE Input Method.
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150
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151 rmail A BABYL-format mail reader.
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152
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153 sunpro Additional code for interfacing with SunPro products.
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154
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155 tl Tiny Library (Part of the Tools for MIME).
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156
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157 tm Tools for MIME. MIME support for emacs lisp based
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158 news and mail readers.
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159
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160 tooltalk An inteface to the ToolTalk communication protocol.
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161
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162 viper A full-featured VI emulator.
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163
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164 vm View Mail, an UNIX-format alternative to RMAIL.
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165
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166 w3 A World Wide Web interface.
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