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1 .TH XEMACS 1 "2000-09-20"
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2 .UC 4
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3 .SH NAME
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4 xemacs \- Emacs: The Next Generation
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5 .SH SYNOPSIS
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6 .B xemacs
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7 [
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8 .I command-line switches
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9 ] [
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10 .I files ...
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11 ]
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12 .br
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13 .SH DESCRIPTION
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14 .I XEmacs
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15 is a version of
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16 .IR Emacs ,
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17 compatible with and containing many improvements over
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18 .I GNU
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19 .IR Emacs ,
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20 written by Richard Stallman of the Free Software Foundation. It was
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21 originally based on an early release of
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22 .I GNU Emacs Version
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23 .IR 19 ,
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24 and has tracked subsequent releases of
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25 .I GNU Emacs
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26 as they have become available.
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27 .PP
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28 The primary documentation of
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29 .I XEmacs
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30 is in the
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31 .I XEmacs Reference
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32 .IR Manual ,
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33 which you can read on-line using Info, a subsystem of
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34 .IR XEmacs .
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35 Please look there for complete and up-to-date documentation.
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36 Complete documentation on using Emacs Lisp is available on-line
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37 through the
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38 .I XEmacs Lisp Programmer's
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39 .IR Manual .
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40 Both manuals also can be printed out nicely using the
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41 .I TeX
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42 formatting package.
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43 .PP
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44 The user functionality of
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45 .I XEmacs
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46 encompasses everything other
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47 .I Emacs
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48 editors do, and it is easily extensible since its
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49 editing commands are written in Lisp.
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50 .PP
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51 .I XEmacs
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52 has an extensive interactive help facility,
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53 but the facility assumes that you know how to manipulate
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54 .I XEmacs
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55 windows and buffers.
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56 CTRL-h enters the Help facility. Help Tutorial (CTRL-h t)
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57 requests an interactive tutorial which can teach beginners the fundamentals
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58 of
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59 .I XEmacs
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60 in a few minutes.
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61 Help Apropos (CTRL-h a) helps you
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62 find a command given its functionality, Help Key Binding (CTRL-h k)
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63 describes a given key sequence's effect, and Help Function (CTRL-h f)
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64 describes a given Lisp function specified by name. You can also
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65 look up key sequences in the
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66 .I XEmacs Reference Manual
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67 using Lookup Key Binding (CTRL-h CTRL-k),
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68 and look up Lisp functions in the
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69 .I XEmacs Lisp Programmer's Manual
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70 using Lookup Function (CTRL-h CTRL-f). All of these help functions,
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71 and more, are available on the Help menu if you are using a window
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72 system.
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73 .PP
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74 .I XEmacs
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75 has extensive GUI (graphical user interface) support when running under
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76 a window system such as
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77 .IR X ,
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78 including multiple frames (top-level windows), a menubar, a toolbar,
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79 horizontal and vertical scrollbars, dialog boxes, and extensive mouse
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80 support.
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81 .PP
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82 .I XEmacs
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83 has full support for multiple fonts and colors, variable-width fonts,
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84 and variable-height lines, and allows for pixmaps to be inserted into
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85 a buffer. (This is used in the W3 web-browsing package and in some
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86 of the debugger and outlining interfaces, among other things.)
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87 .PP
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88 .IR XEmacs 's
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89 Undo can undo several steps of modification to your buffers, so it is
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90 easy to recover from editing mistakes.
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91 .PP
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92 .IR XEmacs 's
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93 many special packages handle mail reading (VM, MH-E and RMail) and
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94 sending (Mail), Usenet news reading and posting (GNUS), World Wide Web
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95 browsing (W3), specialized modes for editing source code in all common
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96 programming languages, syntax highlighting for many languages
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97 (Font-Lock), compiling (Compile), running subshells within
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98 .I XEmacs
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99 windows (Shell), outline editing (Outline), running a Lisp read-eval-print
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100 loop (Lisp-Interaction-Mode), and automated psychotherapy (Doctor).
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101 .PP
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102 There is an extensive reference manual, but users of other Emacsen
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103 should have little trouble adapting even without a copy. Users new to
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104 Emacs will be able to use basic features fairly rapidly by studying
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105 the tutorial and using the self-documentation features.
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106 .PP
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107 .SM XEmacs Options
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108 .PP
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109 XEmacs accepts all standard X Toolkit command line options when run in
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110 an X Windows environment. In addition, the following options are accepted
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111 (when options imply a sequence of actions to perform, they are
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112 performed in the order encountered):
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113 .TP 8
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114 .BI \-t " file"
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115 Use specified
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116 .I file
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117 as the terminal instead of using stdin/stdout. This implies
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118 .BR \-nw \.
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119 .TP
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120 .BI \-batch
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121 Edit in batch mode. The editor will send messages to stdout. You
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122 must use the
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123 .BR \-l ,
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124 .BR \-f ,
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125 and
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126 .B \-eval
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127 options to specify files to execute and functions to call.
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128 .TP
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129 .B \-nw
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130 Inhibit the use of any window-system-specific display code: use the
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131 current TTY.
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132 .TP
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133 .B \-debug\-init
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134 Enter the debugger if an error occurs loading the init file.
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135 .TP
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136 .B \-unmapped
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137 Do not map the initial frame.
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138 .TP
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139 .B \-no\-site\-file
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140 Do not load the site-specific init file (site-start.el).
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141 .TP
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142 .B \-q, \-no\-init\-file
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143 Do not load an init file.
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144 .TP
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145 .B \-no-early-packages
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146 Do not process the early packages.
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147 .TP
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148 .B \-vanilla
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149 Load no extra files at startup. Equivalent to the combination of
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150 .B \-q
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151 ,
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152 .B \-no-site-file
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153 , and
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154 .B \-no-early-packages
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155 \.
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156 .TP
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157 .BI \-u " user, " \-user " user"
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158 Load
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159 .IR user 's
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160 init file.
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161 .TP 8
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162 .I file
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163 Edit
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164 .IR file \.
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165 .TP
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166 .BI \+ number
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167 Go to the line specified by
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168 .I number
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169 (do not insert a space between the "+" sign and the number).
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170 .TP
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171 .B \-help
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172 Print a help message and exit.
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173 .TP
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174 .B \-V, \-version,
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175 Print the version number and exit.
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176 .TP
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177 .BI \-f " function, " \-funcall " function"
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178 Execute the lisp function
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179 .IR function \.
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180 .TP
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181 .BI \-l " file, " \-load " file"
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182 Load the Lisp code in the file
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183 .IR file \.
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184 .TP
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185 .BI \-eval " form"
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186 Evaluate the Lisp form
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187 .IR form \.
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188 .TP
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189 .BI \-i " file, " \-insert " file"
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190 Insert
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191 .I file
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192 into the current buffer.
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193 .TP
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194 .B \-kill
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195 Exit
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196 .I XEmacs
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197 (useful with
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198 .BR \-batch ).
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199 .PP
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200 .SM Using XEmacs with X Windows
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201 .PP
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202 .I XEmacs
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203 has been tailored to work well with the X window system.
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204 If you run
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205 .I XEmacs
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206 from under X windows, it will create its own X window to display in.
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207 .PP
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208 .I XEmacs
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209 can be started with the following standard X options:
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210 .TP
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211 .BI \-visual " <visualname><bitdepth>"
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212 Select the visual that XEmacs will attempt to use.
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213 .I <visualname>
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214 should be one of the strings "StaticColor", "TrueColor", "GrayScale",
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215 "PseudoColor" or "DirectColor", and
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216 .I <bitdepth>
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217 should be the number of bits per pixel (example, "-visual TrueColor24"
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218 for a 24bit TrueColor visual) See
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219 .IR X (1)
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220 for more information.
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221 .TP
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222 .B -privateColormap
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223 Require XEmacs to create and use a private colormap for display. This
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224 will keep XEmacs from taking colors from the default colormap and
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225 keeping them from other clients, at the cost of causing annoying
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226 flicker when the focus changes. Use this option only if your X server
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227 does not support 24 bit visuals.
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228 .TP
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229 .BI \-geometry " ##x##+##+##"
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230 Specify the geometry of the initial window. The ##'s represent a number;
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231 the four numbers are width (characters), height (characters), X offset
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232 (pixels), and Y offset (pixels), respectively. Partial specifications of
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233 the form
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234 .I ##x##
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235 or
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236 .I +##+##
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237 are also allowed. (The geometry
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238 specification is in the standard X format; see
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239 .IR X (1)
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240 for more information.)
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241 .TP
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242 .B \-iconic
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243 Specifies that the initial window should initially appear iconified.
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244 .TP 8
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245 .BI \-name " name"
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246 Specifies the program name which should be used when looking up
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247 defaults in the user's X resources.
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248 .TP
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249 .BI \-title " title, " \-T " title, " \-wn " title"
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250 Specifies the title which should be assigned to the
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251 .I XEmacs
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252 window.
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253 .TP
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254 .BI \-d " displayname, " \-display " displayname"
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255 Create the
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256 .I XEmacs
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257 window on the display specified by
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258 .IR displayname .
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259 Must be the first option specified in the command line.
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260 .TP
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261 .BI \-font " font, " \-fn " font"
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262 Set the
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263 .I XEmacs
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264 window's font to that specified by
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265 .IR font \.
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266 You will find the various
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267 .I X
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268 fonts in the
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269 .I /usr/lib/X11/fonts
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270 directory.
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271 .I XEmacs
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272 works with either fixed- or variable-width fonts, but will probably
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273 look better with a fixed-width font.
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274 .TP
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275 .BI \-scrollbar\-width " pixels"
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276 Specify the width of the vertical scrollbars.
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277 .TP
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278 .BI \-scrollbar\-height " pixels"
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279 Specify the height of the horizontal scrollbars.
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280 .TP
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281 .BI \-bw " pixels, " \-borderwidth " pixels"
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282 Set the
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283 .I XEmacs
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284 window's border width to the number of pixels specified by
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285 .IR pixels \.
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286 Defaults to one pixel on each side of the window.
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287 .TP
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288 .BI \-ib " pixels, " \-internal\-border\-width " pixels"
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289 Specify the width between a frame's border and its text, in pixels.
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290 Defaults to one pixel on each side of the window.
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291 .TP
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292 .BI \-fg " color, " \-foreground " color"
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293 Sets the color of the text.
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294
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295 See the file
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296 .I /usr/lib/X11/rgb.txt
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297 for a list of valid
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298 color names.
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299 .TP
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300 .BI \-bg " color, " \-background " color"
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301 Sets the color of the window's background.
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302 .TP
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303 .BI \-bd " color, " \-bordercolor " color"
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304 Sets the color of the window's border.
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305 .TP
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306 .BI \-mc " color"
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307 Sets the color of the mouse pointer.
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308 .TP
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309 .BI \-cr " color"
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310 Sets the color of the text cursor.
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311 .TP
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312 .B \-rv, \-reverse
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313 Reverses the foreground and background colors (reverse video). Consider
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314 explicitly setting the foreground and background colors instead of using
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315 this option.
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316 .TP
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317 .BI \-xrm " argument"
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318 This allows you to set an arbitrary resource on the command line.
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319 .I argument
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320 should be a resource specification, as might be found in your
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321 .I \.Xresources
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322 or
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323 .I \.Xdefaults
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324 file.
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325 .PP
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326 You can also set resources, i.e.
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327 .I X
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328 default values, for your
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329 .I XEmacs
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330 windows in your
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331 .I \.Xresources
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332 or
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333 .I \.Xdefaults
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334 file (see
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335 .IR xrdb (1)).
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336 Use the following format:
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337 .IP
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338 Emacs.keyword:value
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339 .PP
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340 or
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341 .IP
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342 Emacs*EmacsFrame.keyword:value
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343 .PP
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344 where
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345 .I value
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346 specifies the default value of
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347 .IR keyword \.
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348 (Some resources need the former format; some the latter.)
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349 .PP
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350 You can also set resources for a particular frame by using the
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351 format
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352 .IP
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353 Emacs*framename.keyword:value
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354 .PP
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355 where
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356 .I framename
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357 is the resource name assigned to that particular frame.
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358 (Certain packages, such as VM, give their frames unique resource
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359 names, in this case "VM".)
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360 .PP
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361 .I XEmacs
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362 lets you set default values for the following keywords:
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363 .TP 8
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364 .B default.attributeFont (\fPclass\fB Face.AttributeFont)
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365 Sets the window's text font.
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366 .TP
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367 .B default.attributeForeground (\fPclass\fB Face.AttributeForeground)
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368 Sets the window's text color.
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369 .TP
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370 .B default.attributeBackground (\fPclass\fB Face.AttributeBackground)
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371 Sets the window's background color.
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372 .TP
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373 .B \fIface\fB.attributeFont (\fPclass\fB Face.AttributeFont)
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374 Sets the font for
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375 .IR face ,
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376 which should be the name of a face. Common face names are
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377 .PP
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378 .in +\w'right-margin'u+12n
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379 .ta \w'right-margin'u+4n
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380 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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381 FACE PURPOSE
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382 .br
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383 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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384 default Normal text.
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385 .br
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386 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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387 bold Bold text.
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388 .br
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389 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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390 italic Italicized text.
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391 .br
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392 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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393 bold-italic Bold and italicized text.
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394 .br
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395 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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396 modeline Modeline text.
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397 .br
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398 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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399 zmacs-region Text selected with the mouse.
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400 .br
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401 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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402 highlight Text highlighted when the mouse passes over.
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403 .br
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404 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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405 left-margin Text in the left margin.
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406 .br
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407 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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408 right-margin Text in the right margin.
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409 .br
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410 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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411 isearch Text highlighted during incremental search.
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412 .br
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413 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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414 info-node Text of Info menu items.
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415 .br
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416 .ti -\w'right-margin'u+4n
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417 info-xref Text of Info cross references.
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418 .TP 8
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419 .B \fIface\fB.attributeForeground (\fPclass\fB Face.AttributeForeground)
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420 Sets the foreground color for
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421 .IR face \.
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422 .TP 8
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423 .B \fIface\fB.attributeBackground (\fPclass\fB Face.AttributeBackground)
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424 Sets the background color for
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425 .IR face \.
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426 .TP 8
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427 .B \fIface\fB.attributeBackgroundPixmap (\fPclass\fB Face.AttributeBackgroundPixmap)
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428 Sets the background pixmap (stipple) for
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429 .IR face \.
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430 .TP 8
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431 .B \fIface\fB.attributeUnderline (\fPclass\fB Face.AttributeUnderline)
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432 Whether
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433 .I face
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434 should be underlined.
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435 .TP
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436 .B reverseVideo (\fPclass\fB ReverseVideo)
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437 If set to
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438 .IR on ,
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439 the window will be displayed in reverse video. Consider
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440 explicitly setting the foreground and background colors instead
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442
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441 of using this resource.
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428
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442 .TP
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443 .B borderWidth (\fPclass\fB BorderWidth)
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444 Sets the window's border width in pixels.
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445 .TP
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446 .B internalBorderWidth (\fPclass\fB InternalBorderWidth)
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447 Sets the window's internal border width in pixels.
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448 .TP
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449 .B borderColor (\fPclass\fB BorderColor)
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450 Sets the color of the window's border.
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451 .TP
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452 .B cursorColor (\fPclass\fB Foreground)
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453 Sets the color of the window's text cursor.
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454 .TP
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455 .B pointerColor (\fPclass\fB Foreground)
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456 Sets the color of the window's mouse cursor.
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457 .TP
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458 .B emacsVisual (\fPclass\fB EmacsVisual)
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459 Sets the default visual
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460 .I XEmacs
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461 will try to use (as described above).
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462 .TP
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463 .B privateColormap (\fPclass\fB PrivateColormap)
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442
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464 If set,
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465 .I XEmacs
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466 will default to using a private colormap.
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467 .TP
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468 .B geometry (\fPclass\fB Geometry)
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469 Sets the geometry of the
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470 .I XEmacs
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471 window (as described above).
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472 .TP
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473 .B iconic (\fPclass\fB Iconic)
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474 If set to on, the
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475 .I XEmacs
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476 window will initially appear as an icon.
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477 .TP
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478 .B menubar (\fPclass\fB Menubar)
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479 Whether the
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480 .I XEmacs
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481 window will have a menubar. Defaults to true.
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482 .TP
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483 .B initiallyUnmapped (\fPclass\fB InitiallyUnmapped)
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484 Whether
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485 .I XEmacs
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486 will leave the initial frame unmapped when it starts up.
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487 .TP
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488 .B barCursor (\fPclass\fB BarCursor)
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489 Whether the cursor should be a bar instead of the traditional box.
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490 .TP
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491 .B title (\fPclass\fB Title)
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492 Sets the title of the
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493 .I XEmacs
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494 window.
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495 .TP
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496 .B iconName (\fPclass\fB Title)
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497 Sets the icon name for the
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498 .I XEmacs
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499 window icon.
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500 .TP
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501 .B scrollBarWidth (\fPclass\fB ScrollBarWidth)
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502 Sets the width of the vertical scrollbars, in pixels. A width of 0
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503 means no vertical scrollbars.
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504 .TP
|
|
505 .B scrollBarHeight (\fPclass\fB ScrollBarHeight)
|
|
506 Sets the height of the horizontal scrollbars, in pixels. A height of 0
|
|
507 means no horizontal scrollbars.
|
|
508 .TP
|
|
509 .B scrollBarPlacement (\fPclass\fB ScrollBarPlacement)
|
|
510 Sets the position of vertical and horizontal scrollbars. Should be one
|
|
511 of the strings "top-left", "bottom-left", "top-right", or "bottom-right".
|
|
512 The default is "bottom-right" for the Motif and Lucid scrollbars and
|
442
|
513 "bottom-left" for the Athena scrollbars.
|
428
|
514 .TP
|
|
515 .B topToolBarHeight (\fPclass\fB TopToolBarHeight)
|
|
516 Sets the height of the top toolbar, in pixels. 0 means no top toolbar.
|
|
517 .TP
|
|
518 .B bottomToolBarHeight (\fPclass\fB BottomToolBarHeight)
|
|
519 Sets the height of the bottom toolbar, in pixels. 0 means no
|
|
520 bottom toolbar.
|
|
521 .TP
|
|
522 .B leftToolBarWidth (\fPclass\fB LeftToolBarWidth)
|
|
523 Sets the width of the left toolbar, in pixels. 0 means no left toolbar.
|
|
524 .TP
|
|
525 .B rightToolBarWidth (\fPclass\fB RightToolBarWidth)
|
|
526 Sets the width of the right toolbar, in pixels. 0 means no right toolbar.
|
|
527 .TP
|
|
528 .B topToolBarShadowColor (\fPclass\fB TopToolBarShadowColor)
|
|
529 Sets the color of the top shadows for the toolbars. (For all toolbars,
|
|
530 \fBnot\fR just the toolbar at the top of the frame.)
|
|
531 .TP
|
|
532 .B bottomToolBarShadowColor (\fPclass\fB BottomToolBarShadowColor)
|
|
533 Sets the color of the bottom shadows for the toolbars. (For all toolbars,
|
|
534 \fBnot\fR just the toolbar at the bottom of the frame.)
|
|
535 .TP
|
|
536 .B topToolBarShadowPixmap (\fPclass\fB TopToolBarShadowPixmap)
|
|
537 Sets the pixmap of the top shadows for the toolbars. (For all toolbars,
|
|
538 \fBnot\fR just the toolbar at the top of the frame.) If set, this
|
|
539 resource overrides the corresponding color resource.
|
|
540 .TP
|
|
541 .B bottomToolBarShadowPixmap (\fPclass\fB BottomToolBarShadowPixmap)
|
|
542 Sets the pixmap of the bottom shadows for the toolbars. (For all toolbars,
|
|
543 \fBnot\fR just the toolbar at the bottom of the frame.) If set, this
|
|
544 resource overrides the corresponding color resource.
|
|
545 .TP
|
|
546 .B toolBarShadowThickness (\fPclass\fB ToolBarShadowThickness)
|
|
547 Thickness of the shadows around the toolbars, in pixels.
|
|
548 .TP
|
|
549 .B visualBell (\fPclass\fB VisualBell)
|
|
550 Whether XEmacs should flash the screen rather than making an audible beep.
|
|
551 .TP
|
|
552 .B bellVolume (\fPclass\fB BellVolume)
|
|
553 Volume of the audible beep. Range is 0 through 100.
|
|
554 .TP
|
|
555 .B useBackingStore (\fPclass\fB UseBackingStore)
|
|
556 Whether
|
|
557 .I XEmacs
|
|
558 should set the backing-store attribute of the
|
|
559 .I X
|
|
560 windows it creates. This increases the memory usage of the
|
|
561 .I X
|
|
562 server but decreases the amount of
|
|
563 .I X
|
|
564 traffic necessary to update the screen, and is useful when the
|
|
565 connection to the
|
|
566 .I X
|
|
567 server goes over a low-bandwidth line such as a modem connection.
|
|
568 .TP
|
|
569 .B textPointer (\fPclass\fB Cursor)
|
|
570 The cursor to use when the mouse is over text.
|
|
571 .TP
|
|
572 .B selectionPointer (\fPclass\fB Cursor)
|
|
573 The cursor to use when the mouse is over a mouse-highlighted
|
|
574 text region.
|
|
575 .TP
|
|
576 .B spacePointer (\fPclass\fB Cursor)
|
|
577 The cursor to use when the mouse is over a blank space in a buffer (that
|
|
578 is, after the end of a line or after the end-of-file).
|
|
579 .TP
|
|
580 .B modeLinePointer (\fPclass\fB Cursor)
|
|
581 The cursor to use when the mouse is over a mode line.
|
|
582 .TP
|
|
583 .B gcPointer (\fPclass\fB Cursor)
|
|
584 The cursor to display when a garbage-collection is in progress.
|
|
585 .TP
|
|
586 .B scrollbarPointer (\fPclass\fB Cursor)
|
|
587 The cursor to use when the mouse is over the scrollbar.
|
|
588 .TP
|
|
589 .B pointerColor (\fPclass\fB Foreground)
|
|
590 The foreground color of the mouse cursor.
|
|
591 .TP
|
|
592 .B pointerBackground (\fPclass\fB Background)
|
|
593 The background color of the mouse cursor.
|
|
594 .PP
|
|
595 .SM Using the Mouse
|
|
596 .PP
|
|
597 The following lists the mouse button bindings for the
|
|
598 .I XEmacs
|
|
599 window under X11.
|
|
600
|
|
601 .in +\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
602 .ta \w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
603 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
604 MOUSE BUTTON FUNCTION
|
|
605 .br
|
|
606 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
607 left Set point or make a text selection.
|
|
608 .br
|
|
609 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
610 middle Paste text.
|
|
611 .br
|
|
612 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
613 right Pop up a menu of options.
|
|
614 .br
|
|
615 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
616 SHIFT-left Extend a selection.
|
|
617 .br
|
|
618 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
619 CTRL-left Make a selection and insert it at point.
|
|
620 .br
|
|
621 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
622 CTRL-middle Set point and move selected text there.
|
|
623 .br
|
|
624 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
625 CTRL-SHIFT-left Make a selection, delete it, and insert it at point.
|
|
626 .br
|
|
627 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
628 META-left Make a rectangular selection.
|
|
629 .SH FILES
|
|
630 Lisp code is read at startup from the user's init file,
|
|
631 \fB$HOME/.emacs\fP.
|
|
632
|
|
633 /usr/local/info - files for the Info documentation browser
|
|
634 (a subsystem of
|
|
635 .IR XEmacs )
|
|
636 to refer to. The complete text of the
|
|
637 .I XEmacs Reference Manual
|
|
638 and the
|
|
639 .I XEmacs Lisp Programmer's Manual
|
|
640 is included in a convenient tree structured form.
|
|
641
|
|
642 /usr/local/lib/xemacs-$VERSION/info - the Info files may be here instead.
|
|
643
|
|
644 /usr/local/lib/xemacs-$VERSION/lisp/* - Lisp source files and compiled files
|
|
645 that define most editing commands. The files are contained in subdirectories,
|
|
646 categorized by function or individual package. Some are preloaded;
|
|
647 others are autoloaded from these directories when used.
|
|
648
|
|
649 /usr/local/lib/xemacs-$VERSION/etc - some files of information, pixmap
|
|
650 files, other data files used by certain packages, etc.
|
|
651
|
|
652 /usr/local/lib/xemacs-$VERSION/$CONFIGURATION - various programs that are used
|
|
653 with XEmacs.
|
|
654
|
|
655 /usr/local/lib/xemacs-$VERSION/$CONFIGURATION/DOC -
|
|
656 contains the documentation strings for the Lisp primitives and
|
|
657 preloaded Lisp functions of \fIXEmacs\fP.
|
|
658 They are stored here to reduce the size of \fIXEmacs\fP proper.
|
|
659
|
|
660 /usr/local/lib/xemacs/site-lisp - locally-provided Lisp files.
|
|
661 .PP
|
|
662 .SH BUGS AND HELP
|
|
663 There is a newsgroup, comp.emacs.xemacs, for reporting
|
|
664 .I XEmacs
|
|
665 bugs and fixes and requesting help. But before reporting something
|
|
666 as a bug, please try to be sure that it really is a bug, not a
|
|
667 misunderstanding or a deliberate feature. We ask you to read the section
|
|
668 ``Reporting XEmacs Bugs'' near the end of the reference manual (or Info
|
|
669 system) for hints on how and when to report bugs. Also, include the version
|
|
670 number of the
|
|
671 .I XEmacs
|
|
672 you are running and the system you are running it on
|
|
673 in \fIevery\fR bug report that you send in. Finally, the more you can
|
|
674 isolate the cause of a bug and the conditions it happens under, the more
|
|
675 likely it is to be fixed, so please take the time to do so.
|
|
676
|
|
677 The newsgroup is bidirectionally gatewayed to and from the mailing list
|
|
678 xemacs@xemacs.org. You can read the list instead of the newsgroup if
|
|
679 you do not have convenient Usenet news access. To request to be added
|
|
680 to the mailing list, send mail to xemacs-request@xemacs.org. (Do not
|
|
681 send mail to the list itself.)
|
|
682
|
|
683 The
|
|
684 .I XEmacs
|
|
685 maintainers read the newsgroup regularly and will attempt to
|
|
686 fix bugs reported in a timely fashion. However, not every message will
|
|
687 get a response from one of the maintainers. Note that there are many
|
|
688 people other than the maintainers who read the newsgroup, and will usually
|
|
689 be of assistance in helping with any problems encountered.
|
|
690
|
|
691 If you need more personal assistance than can be provided by the
|
|
692 newsgroup, look in the SERVICE file (see above) for a list of people
|
|
693 who offer it.
|
|
694
|
|
695 For more information about XEmacs mailing lists, see the
|
|
696 file /usr/local/lib/xemacs-$VERSION/etc/MAILINGLISTS.
|
|
697 .SH UNRESTRICTIONS
|
|
698 .PP
|
|
699 .I XEmacs
|
|
700 is free; anyone may redistribute copies of
|
|
701 .I XEmacs
|
|
702 to
|
|
703 anyone under the terms stated in the
|
|
704 .I XEmacs
|
|
705 General Public License,
|
|
706 a copy of which accompanies each copy of
|
|
707 .I XEmacs
|
|
708 and which also
|
|
709 appears in the reference manual.
|
|
710 .PP
|
|
711 Copies of
|
|
712 .I XEmacs
|
|
713 may sometimes be received packaged with distributions of Unix systems,
|
|
714 but it is never included in the scope of any license covering those
|
|
715 systems. Such inclusion violates the terms on which distribution
|
|
716 is permitted. In fact, the primary purpose of the General Public
|
|
717 License is to prohibit anyone from attaching any other restrictions
|
|
718 to redistribution of
|
|
719 .IR XEmacs \.
|
|
720 .SH SEE ALSO
|
|
721 X(1), xlsfonts(1), xterm(1), xrdb(1), emacs(1), vi(1)
|
|
722 .SH AUTHORS
|
|
723 .PP
|
|
724 .I XEmacs
|
|
725 was written by
|
|
726 Steve Baur <steve@xemacs.org>,
|
|
727 Martin Buchholz <martin@xemacs.org>,
|
|
728 Richard Mlynarik <mly@adoc.xerox.com>,
|
|
729 Hrvoje Niksic <hniksic@xemacs.org>,
|
|
730 Chuck Thompson <cthomp@xemacs.org>,
|
|
731 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>,
|
|
732 Jamie Zawinski <jwz@jwz.org>,
|
|
733 and many others.
|
|
734 It was based on an early version of
|
|
735 .I GNU Emacs Version
|
|
736 .IR 19 ,
|
|
737 written by Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org> of the Free Software
|
|
738 Foundation, and has tracked subsequent releases of
|
|
739 .I GNU Emacs
|
|
740 as they have become available. It was originally written by Lucid, Inc.
|
|
741 (now defunct) and was called
|
|
742 .I Lucid
|
|
743 .IR Emacs \.
|
|
744 .PP
|
|
745 Chuck Thompson wrote the
|
|
746 .I XEmacs
|
|
747 redisplay engine, maintains the
|
|
748 .I XEmacs
|
|
749 FTP and WWW sites, and has put out all releases of
|
|
750 .I XEmacs
|
|
751 since 19.11 (the first release called
|
|
752 .IR XEmacs ).
|
|
753 Ben Wing wrote the Asian-language support, the on-line documentation
|
|
754 (including this man page and much of the FAQ), the external widget code,
|
|
755 and retooled or rewrote most of the basic, low-level
|
|
756 .I XEmacs
|
|
757 subsystems. Jamie Zawinski put out all releases of
|
|
758 .I Lucid
|
|
759 .IR Emacs ,
|
|
760 from the first (19.0) through the last (19.10), and was the primary
|
|
761 code contributor for all of these releases. Richard Mlynarik rewrote
|
|
762 the
|
|
763 .I XEmacs
|
|
764 Lisp-object allocation system, improved the keymap and minibuffer code,
|
|
765 and did the initial synching of
|
|
766 .I XEmacs
|
|
767 with
|
|
768 .I GNU Emacs Version
|
|
769 .IR 19 \.
|
|
770 .PP
|
|
771 Many others have also contributed significantly. For more detailed
|
|
772 information, including a long history of \fIXEmacs\fP from multiple
|
|
773 viewpoints and pretty pictures and bios of the major \fIXEmacs\fP
|
|
774 contributors, see the
|
|
775 .I XEmacs About Page
|
|
776 (the About XEmacs option on the Help menu).
|
|
777 .SH MORE INFORMATION
|
|
778 For more information about \fIXEmacs\fP, see the
|
|
779 .I XEmacs About Page
|
|
780 (mentioned above),
|
|
781 look in the file /usr/local/lib/xemacs-$VERSION/etc/NEWS,
|
|
782 or point your Web browser at
|
|
783 .PP
|
|
784 http://www.xemacs.org/
|
|
785 .PP
|
|
786 for up-to-the-minute information about \fIXEmacs\fP.
|
|
787 .PP
|
|
788 The
|
|
789 .I XEmacs
|
|
790 FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) can be found at the Web site just listed.
|
|
791 A possibly out-of-date version is also accessible through the Info system
|
|
792 inside of \fIXEmacs\fP.
|
|
793 .PP
|
|
794 The latest version of \fIXEmacs\fP can be downloaded using anonymous
|
|
795 FTP from
|
|
796 .PP
|
|
797 ftp://ftp.xemacs.org/pub/xemacs/
|
|
798 .PP
|
|
799 or from a mirror site near you. Mirror sites are listed in the file
|
|
800 etc/FTP in the XEmacs distribution or see the Web site for an up-to-date
|
|
801 list of mirror sites.
|