comparison lisp/README @ 0:376386a54a3c r19-14

Import from CVS: tag r19-14
author cvs
date Mon, 13 Aug 2007 08:45:50 +0200
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children 8d2a9b52c682
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1
2 The subdirectories of this directory contain source code for the XEmacs
3 facilities written in Emacs Lisp. *.el files are Elisp source, and *.elc
4 files are byte-compiled versions of the corresponding *.el files.
5 Byte-compiled files are architecture-independent.
6
7 When XEmacs starts up, it adds all subdirectories of the site-lisp
8 directory. The site-lisp directory normally exists only in
9 installation trees. For more information about the site-lisp
10 directory see the NEWS file.
11
12 After XEmacs adds all subdirectories of the site-lisp directory, it
13 adds all subdirectories of this directory to the load-path (the list
14 of directories to be searched when loading files.) To speed up this
15 process, this directory has been rearranged to have very few files at
16 the top-level, so that emacs doesn't have to stat() several hundred
17 files to find the dozen or so which are actually subdirectories.
18
19 Directories whose names begin with "-" or "." are not added to the default
20 load-path.
21
22 The only files which remain at top-level are those which you might
23 reasonably want to alter when installing or customizing XEmacs at your
24 site. The files which may appear at top level are:
25
26 paths.el You may need to change the default pathnames here,
27 but probably not. This is loaded before XEmacs is
28 dumped.
29
30 site-init.el To pre-load additional libraries into XEmacs and dump
31 them in the executable, load them from this file.
32
33 site-load.el This is like site-init.el, but if you want the
34 docstrings of your preloaded libraries to be kept in
35 the DOC file instead of in the executable, you should
36 load them from this file instead. To do this, you must
37 also cause them to be scanned when the DOC file is
38 generated by editing ../src/Makefile.in.in and
39 rerunning configure.
40
41 site-start.el This is loaded each time XEmacs starts up, before the
42 user's .emacs file.
43
44 default.el This is loaded each time XEmacs starts up, after the
45 user's .emacs file, unless .emacs sets the variable
46 inhibit-default-init to t.
47
48 version.el This contains the version information for XEmacs.
49
50
51 These are the main subdirectories:
52
53 prim Fundamental XEmacs functionality. Some of this is
54 pre-dumped with XEmacs, some is autoloaded.
55
56 utils Various utility functions that some other XEmacs
57 packages build on. These are not user commands.
58
59 modes Text-editing and programming-language-sensitive modes.
60
61 emulators XEmacs can emulate a few different editors. These are
62 a bit more than what `modes' generally are.
63
64 term Terminal-specific customization files. When XEmacs
65 starts, it checks the $TERM environment variable to
66 see what type of terminal the user is running on, and
67 loads a file named $TERM.el from this directory, if
68 that file exists.
69
70 vms VMS-specific code.
71
72 x11 X Window System-specific code.
73
74 games Various ways to waste time.
75
76 packages Random other utilities that are not primarily about
77 editing text. For example, code for automatically
78 uncompressing .Z files would be here. This is an
79 `everything else' sort of directory.
80
81 Some packages are fairly large; those have been given their own directories:
82
83 bytecomp The XEmacs-lisp compiler.
84
85 calendar A calendar and appointment manager.
86
87 comint General code for interacting with inferior processes,
88 like shell buffers and lisp interpreters.
89
90 dired The directory editor.
91
92 edebug A source-level debugger for Elisp.
93
94 ediff A comprehensive visual interface to diff and patch.
95
96 electric The "electric" commands; these implement temporary
97 windows for help, list-buffers, etc.
98
99 energize An interface to the Lucid Energize system.
100
101 eos An interface to Sun's SparcWorks product.
102
103 eterm A merge of the comint shell mode with an
104 ANSI-compatible terminal-emulator.
105
106 gnus An NNTP-based newsreader; version 3.14.
107
108 hm--html-menus Menu interface to html-mode.
109
110 hyperbole An information management and hypertext system.
111
112 ilisp A comint-based package for interacting with inferior
113 lisp processes.
114
115 mh-e An interface to the MH-E mail handling system.
116
117 oobr An Object-Oriented class browser.
118
119 pcl-cvs An interface to the Concurrent Version System.
120
121 rmail A BABYL-format mail reader.
122
123 sunpro Additional code for interfacing with SunPro products.
124
125 tooltalk An inteface to the ToolTalk communication protocol.
126
127 viper A full-featured VI emulator.
128
129 vm View Mail, an UNIX-format alternative to RMAIL.
130
131 w3 A World Wide Web interface.