Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
comparison etc/NEWS @ 88:821dec489c24 r20-0
Import from CVS: tag r20-0
author | cvs |
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date | Mon, 13 Aug 2007 09:09:59 +0200 |
parents | 131b0175ea99 |
children | 99da576a67e7 |
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125 Well, I don't think the number of volunteers is greater by having 2 | 125 Well, I don't think the number of volunteers is greater by having 2 |
126 Emacsen. I think your affirmation holds true because of the | 126 Emacsen. I think your affirmation holds true because of the |
127 inhability of the various parties involved to work together and | 127 inhability of the various parties involved to work together and |
128 compromise. If people could all work together, I don't think there | 128 compromise. If people could all work together, I don't think there |
129 would be any benifit in having 2 Emacsen. It may seem profitable | 129 would be any benifit in having 2 Emacsen. It may seem profitable |
130 right now, but in the long run, I think everyone looses. The time | 130 right now, but in the long run, I think everyone loses. The time |
131 everyone spends porting back and forth, and imitating what the other | 131 everyone spends porting back and forth, and imitating what the other |
132 has done is not spent to do new features. I've presonnally | 132 has done is not spent to do new features. I've personnally |
133 experienced a project split in the past, and in the end everyone | 133 experienced a project split in the past, and in the end everyone |
134 lost. | 134 lost. |
135 | 135 |
136 I don't want to try to blame anybody for the current fiasco. But we do | 136 I don't want to try to blame anybody for the current fiasco. But we do |
137 have a fiasco. That is unfortunate. There are so many contributors | 137 have a fiasco. That is unfortunate. There are so many contributors |
142 people still using Emacs will continue to curse at the fact that they | 142 people still using Emacs will continue to curse at the fact that they |
143 can't start GNUS while typing an E-mail, and the various Emacs | 143 can't start GNUS while typing an E-mail, and the various Emacs |
144 contributors will continue to argue among themselves, nitpicking | 144 contributors will continue to argue among themselves, nitpicking |
145 about how to get the perfect solution, rather than try to move | 145 about how to get the perfect solution, rather than try to move |
146 forward. Meanwhile, people will enjoy using a new state of the art | 146 forward. Meanwhile, people will enjoy using a new state of the art |
147 editor. | 147 editor. |
148 | 148 |
149 Don't think we're just being needlessly perverse by continuing to have | 149 Don't think we're just being needlessly perverse by continuing to have |
150 XEmacs. I'm well aware of the problems in having a project split, and | 150 XEmacs. I'm well aware of the problems in having a project split, and |
151 don't think for a minute that we haven't tried (extremely hard, in | 151 don't think for a minute that we haven't tried (extremely hard, in |
152 fact) to come up with a merge. | 152 fact) to come up with a merge. |
168 consented to all the data abstraction I want provided that I take | 168 consented to all the data abstraction I want provided that I take |
169 sole responsibility for writing this code (which basically means | 169 sole responsibility for writing this code (which basically means |
170 I'd have to write almost all of the code or rewrite most of his | 170 I'd have to write almost all of the code or rewrite most of his |
171 code), and provided that he can use this issue as a bargaining | 171 code), and provided that he can use this issue as a bargaining |
172 chip to get concessions of his own. | 172 chip to get concessions of his own. |
173 | |
173 2. RMS sees the merge process as a series of mutual concessions | 174 2. RMS sees the merge process as a series of mutual concessions |
174 traded back and forth. IMHO this is reasonable for a peace treaty | 175 traded back and forth. IMHO this is reasonable for a peace treaty |
175 but absurd for a piece of software -- we have to have technical | 176 but absurd for a piece of software -- we have to have technical |
176 agreement on the major issues involved, and the chance of that | 177 agreement on the major issues involved, and the chance of that |
177 happening is basically nil. | 178 happening is basically nil. |
179 | |
178 3. RMS has insisted in full backwards compatibility with all aspects | 180 3. RMS has insisted in full backwards compatibility with all aspects |
179 of FSF Emacs, no matter how ugly; and furthermore, this backwards | 181 of FSF Emacs, no matter how ugly; and furthermore, this backwards |
180 compatibility must work fast enough to make existing code run | 182 compatibility must work fast enough to make existing code run |
181 without problem. This basically means that there would have to be | 183 without problem. This basically means that there would have to be |
182 parallel C implementations of events, keymaps, and many other data | 184 parallel C implementations of events, keymaps, and many other data |
184 to implement, but poses some fundamental technical problems due to | 186 to implement, but poses some fundamental technical problems due to |
185 the non-abstractedness of FSF Emacs (e.g. in FSF Emacs keymaps are | 187 the non-abstractedness of FSF Emacs (e.g. in FSF Emacs keymaps are |
186 conses or vectors and a lot of code depends on this, and | 188 conses or vectors and a lot of code depends on this, and |
187 reconciling this with XEmacs's primitive keymap type is difficult | 189 reconciling this with XEmacs's primitive keymap type is difficult |
188 to impossible). | 190 to impossible). |
191 | |
189 4. RMS will not even consent to neutral names for the two editors. He | 192 4. RMS will not even consent to neutral names for the two editors. He |
190 objects to call his editor FSF Emacs because for some unfathomable | 193 objects to calling his editor FSF Emacs because for some unfathomable |
191 reason he finds it insulting. He suggests just Emacs, which I find | 194 reason he finds it insulting. He suggests just Emacs, which I find |
192 not only insulting (XEmacs is just as much Emacs as is FSF Emacs) | 195 not only insulting (XEmacs is just as much Emacs as is FSF Emacs) |
193 but also quite confusing. He will not even consent to calling his | 196 but also quite confusing. He will not even consent to calling his |
194 editor GNU Emacs without also referring to XEmacs as GNU XEmacs -- | 197 editor GNU Emacs without also referring to XEmacs as GNU XEmacs -- |
195 basically a Borg-like assimilation attempt at making XEmacs a GNU | 198 basically a Borg-like assimilation attempt at making XEmacs a GNU |
205 testing ground for potential features to be added to FSF Emacs. | 208 testing ground for potential features to be added to FSF Emacs. |
206 All of the developers of Lucid Emacs and XEmacs assert that this | 209 All of the developers of Lucid Emacs and XEmacs assert that this |
207 is patently false -- so why does RMS continue to insist that this | 210 is patently false -- so why does RMS continue to insist that this |
208 is the case? | 211 is the case? |
209 | 212 |
210 ben | 213 Ben Wing |
211 -- | |
212 "... then the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was | |
213 more painful than the risk it took to blossom." -- Anais Nin | |
214 | 214 |
215 | 215 |
216 ** Why Another Version of Emacs? (The Lucid, Inc. Point of View) | 216 ** Why Another Version of Emacs? (The Lucid, Inc. Point of View) |
217 ================================================================= | 217 ================================================================= |
218 | 218 |
267 At the same time, Lucid Emacs has been renamed XEmacs to reflect the | 267 At the same time, Lucid Emacs has been renamed XEmacs to reflect the |
268 substantial contribution of the University of Illinois with the support of | 268 substantial contribution of the University of Illinois with the support of |
269 Sun Microsystems. | 269 Sun Microsystems. |
270 | 270 |
271 Certain elements of Lucid Emacs, or derivatives of them, have been ported to | 271 Certain elements of Lucid Emacs, or derivatives of them, have been ported to |
272 the FSF GNU Emacs. We have not been doing work in this direction, because | 272 FSF GNU Emacs. We have not been doing work in this direction, because |
273 we feel that Lucid Emacs has a cleaner and more extensible substrate, and | 273 we feel that Lucid Emacs has a cleaner and more extensible substrate, and |
274 that any kind of merger between the two branches would be far easier by | 274 that any kind of merger between the two branches would be far easier by |
275 merging the Free Software Foundation changes into our version than the other | 275 merging the Free Software Foundation changes into our version than the other |
276 way around. | 276 way around. |
277 | 277 |
280 and Lucid Emacs will soon be one and the same thing. Work is being done on | 280 and Lucid Emacs will soon be one and the same thing. Work is being done on |
281 a compatibility package which will allow Epoch 4 code to run in XEmacs with | 281 a compatibility package which will allow Epoch 4 code to run in XEmacs with |
282 little or no change. (As of 19.8, Lucid Emacs is running a descendant of | 282 little or no change. (As of 19.8, Lucid Emacs is running a descendant of |
283 the Epoch redisplay engine.) | 283 the Epoch redisplay engine.) |
284 | 284 |
285 ** Why Another Version of Emacs? (The SunPro Point of View) | 285 ** Why Another Version of Emacs? (The Sun Microsystems, Inc. Point of View) |
286 ============================================================ | 286 ============================================================ |
287 | 287 |
288 Emacs 18 has been around for a long, long time. Version 19 was supposed to | 288 Emacs 18 has been around for a long, long time. Version 19 was supposed to |
289 be the successor to Emacs 18 with X support. It was going to be available | 289 be the successor to Emacs 18 with X support. It was going to be available |
290 "real soon" for a long time (some people remember hearing about v19 as early | 290 "real soon" for a long time (some people remember hearing about v19 as early |
291 as 1984!), but it never came out. v19 development was going very, very | 291 as 1984!), but it never came out. v19 development was going very, very |
292 slowly, and from the outside it seemed that it was not moving at all. In | 292 slowly, and from the outside it seemed that it was not moving at all. In |
293 the meantime other people gave up waiting for v19 and decided to build their | 293 the meantime other people gave up waiting for v19 and decided to build their |
294 own X-aware Emacsen. The most important of these was probably Epoch, which | 294 own X-aware Emacsen. The most important of these was probably Epoch, which |
295 came from the University of Illinois and was based on v18. | 295 came from the University of Illinois ("UofI") and was based on v18. |
296 | 296 |
297 Around three years ago we decided that we wanted an integrated editor. We | 297 Around 1990, the Developer Products group within Sun Microsystems |
298 contracted with the University of Illinois to provide a number of basic | 298 Inc., decided that it wanted an integrated editor. (This group is now |
299 enhancements to the functionality in Epoch. The University of Illinois | 299 known as DevPro. It used to be known as SunPro - the name was changed |
300 initially was planning to deliver this on top of Epoch code. | 300 in mid-1994.) They contracted with the University of Illinois to |
301 | 301 provide a number of basic enhancements to the functionality in Epoch. |
302 In the meantime (actually some time before we talked with the University of | 302 UofI initially was planning to deliver this on top of Epoch code. |
303 Illinois) Lucid had decided that it also wanted to provide an integrated | 303 |
304 environment with an integrated editor. Lucid decided that the Version 19 | 304 In the meantime, (actually some time before they talked with UofI) |
305 basis was a better one than Version 18 and thus decided not to use Epoch but | 305 Lucid had decided that it also wanted to provide an integrated |
306 instead work with Richard Stallman, the head of the Free Software Foundation | 306 environment with an integrated editor. Lucid decided that the Version |
307 and principle author of Emacs, on getting Version 19 out. At some point | 307 19 base was a better one than Version 18 and thus decided not to use |
308 Stallman and Lucid parted ways. Lucid kept working and got a Version 19 out | 308 Epoch but instead to work with Richard Stallman, the head of the Free |
309 that they called Lucid Emacs 19. | 309 Software Foundation and principal author of Emacs, on getting v19 out. |
310 | 310 At some point Stallman and Lucid parted ways. Lucid kept working and |
311 After Lucid's v19 came out it became clear to us (the University of Illinois | 311 got a v19 out that they called Lucid Emacs 19. |
312 and SunPro) that the right thing to do was to push for an integration of | 312 |
313 both Lucid Emacs and Epoch, and to get the deliverables that we were asking | 313 After Lucid's v19 came out it became clear to us (the UofI and Sun) |
314 from the University of Illinois on top of this integrated platform. Through | 314 that the right thing to do was to push for an integration of both |
315 the last two years, SunPro has been actively supporting this product and has | 315 Lucid Emacs and Epoch, and to get the deliverables that Sun was asking |
316 been investing a comparable amount of effort into it as Lucid has. | 316 from the University of Illinois on top of this integrated platform. |
317 Substantial portions of the current code have originated under the support | 317 Until 1994, Sun and Lucid both actively supported XEmacs as part of |
318 of SunPro, either directly in SunPro, or in the University of Illinois but | 318 their product suite and invested a comparable amount of effort into |
319 paid for by us. This code was kept away from Lucid for a while, but later | 319 it. Substantial portions of the current code have originated under |
320 was made available to them. Initially Lucid didn't know that we were | 320 the support of Sun, either directly within Sun, or at UofI but paid |
321 supporting UofI, but later we were open about it. | 321 for by Sun. This code was kept away from Lucid for a while, but later |
322 | 322 was made available to them. Initially Lucid didn't know that Sun was |
323 Eventually, all development source trees were synched up. Currently, there | 323 supporting UofI, but later Sun was open about it. |
324 is basically no difference in the source trees between what is at the | 324 |
325 University of Illinois and SunPro. | 325 Around 1992 DevPro-originated code started showing up in Lucid Emacs, |
326 | 326 starting with the infusion of the Epoch redisplay code. The separate |
327 SunPro originally called the integrated product ERA, for "Emacs Rewritten | 327 code bases at Lucid, Sun, and the University of Illinois were merged, |
328 Again". At some point, SunPro and Lucid came to an agreement to find a name | 328 allowing a single XEmacs to evolve from that point on. |
329 for the product that was not specific to either company. An additional | 329 |
330 constraint that Lucid placed on the name was that it must contain the word | 330 Sun originally called the integrated product "ERA", for "Emacs |
331 "Emacs" in it -- thus "ERA" was not acceptable. The agreed-upon name was | 331 Rewritten Again". Sun and Lucid eventually came to an agreement to |
332 "XEmacs", and this is what the product has been called starting with the | 332 find a name for the product that was not specific to either company. |
333 19.11 release. | 333 An additional constraint that Lucid placed on the name was that it |
334 must contain the word "Emacs" in it -- thus "ERA" was not | |
335 acceptable. The tentatively agreed-upon name was "XEmacs", and this | |
336 has been the name of the program since version 19.11.) | |
337 | |
338 As of 1997, Sun is shipping XEmacs as part of its Developer Products | |
339 integrated programming environment "Sun WorkShop". Sun is | |
340 continuing to support XEmacs development, with focus on | |
341 internationalization and quality improvement. | |
334 | 342 |
335 | 343 |
336 * What's Different? | 344 * What's Different? |
337 =================== | 345 =================== |
338 | 346 |
339 | 347 |
340 ** Differences between XEmacs and FSF GNU Emacs 19 | 348 ** Differences between XEmacs and FSF GNU Emacs 19 |
341 ================================================== | 349 ================================================== |
350 In XEmacs 20, characters are first-class objects. Characters can be | |
351 converted to integers, but are not integers. FSF 19, XEmacs 19, and Mule | |
352 represent them as integers. | |
342 | 353 |
343 In XEmacs, events are first-class objects. FSF 19 represents them as | 354 In XEmacs, events are first-class objects. FSF 19 represents them as |
344 integers, which obscures the differences between a key gesture and the | 355 integers, which obscures the differences between a key gesture and the |
345 ancient ASCII code used to represent a particular overlapping subset of them. | 356 ancient ASCII code used to represent a particular overlapping subset of them. |
346 | 357 |
415 | 426 |
416 NOTE: All timestamps are measured as milliseconds since Emacs started. | 427 NOTE: All timestamps are measured as milliseconds since Emacs started. |
417 | 428 |
418 key_press_event | 429 key_press_event |
419 event_channel A token representing which keyboard generated it. | 430 event_channel A token representing which keyboard generated it. |
420 For this kind of event, this is a frame object. | 431 For this kind of event, this is a console object. |
421 (This is for eventual support of multiple displays.) | |
422 timestamp When it happened | 432 timestamp When it happened |
423 key What keysym this is; an integer or a symbol. | 433 key What keysym this is; a character or a symbol. |
424 If this is an integer, it will be in the printing | 434 If it is a character, it will be a printing |
425 ASCII range: >32 and <127. | 435 ASCII character. |
426 modifiers Bucky-bits on that key: control, meta, etc. | 436 modifiers Bucky-bits on that key: control, meta, etc. |
427 For most keys, Shift is not a bit; that is implicit | 437 For most keys, Shift is not a bit; that is implicit |
428 in the keyboard layout. | 438 in the keyboard layout. |
429 | 439 |
430 button_press_event | 440 button_press_event |
1426 minimal base and a set of optional packages (which will include TM, | 1436 minimal base and a set of optional packages (which will include TM, |
1427 EFS, and Auc-TeX, as well as all of the large packages currently | 1437 EFS, and Auc-TeX, as well as all of the large packages currently |
1428 distributed with XEmacs). There will also still be a full distribution | 1438 distributed with XEmacs). There will also still be a full distribution |
1429 that includes all the optional packages. | 1439 that includes all the optional packages. |
1430 | 1440 |
1431 In the longer term, we are also working on a separate branch of XEmacs that | 1441 We are working on improving the Mule support in future releases: |
1432 includes full Asian-language ("MULE") support. This work is currently in | 1442 |
1433 beta and is being supported by Sun Microsystems. | 1443 -- Other input methods, such as wnn, will be supported. |
1444 | |
1445 -- More user-level documentation on using Mule. | |
1446 | |
1447 ** Major Differences Between 19.14 and 20.0 | |
1448 | |
1449 XEmacs 20.0 is the first public release to have support for MULE | |
1450 (Multi-Lingual Emacs). The --with-mule configuration flag must be | |
1451 used to enable Mule support. | |
1452 | |
1453 Many bugs have been fixed. An effort has been made to eradicate all | |
1454 XEmacs crashes, although we are not quite done yet. The overall | |
1455 quality of XEmacs should be higher than any previous release. XEmacs | |
1456 now compiles with nary a warning with some compilers. | |
1457 | |
1458 -- Multiple character sets can be displayed in a buffer. The file | |
1459 mule-doc/demo in the distribution contains a greeting in many | |
1460 different languages. | |
1461 | |
1462 -- Although the Mule work is for all languages, particular effort has | |
1463 been invested in Japanese, with particular focus on Japanese users | |
1464 of Sun WorkShop. Many menubar labels have been translated into | |
1465 Japanese. Martin usually runs XEmacs in a Japanese language | |
1466 environment. Some of the other contributors are Japanese, most | |
1467 importantly Morioka Tomohiko, author of the TM package, providing | |
1468 MIME support for Mail and News. | |
1469 | |
1470 -- Input for complex Asian languages is supported via XIM, a mechanism | |
1471 introduced in X11R5 to allow applications to get localized input | |
1472 without knowledge of the language. The way XIM works is that when | |
1473 the locale has a complex character set, such as Japanese, and extra | |
1474 minibuffer-like status window appears attached to various | |
1475 application windows, and indicates the status of the input method. | |
1476 Composed input in XEmacs should work the same as with other | |
1477 applications. If Motif and Mule support is configured into XEmacs, | |
1478 then XIM support is automatically configured in as well. | |
1479 | |
1480 -- TM (Tools for Mime) now comes with XEmacs. This provides MIME | |
1481 (Multi-purpose Internet Multi-media Extensions?) support for Mail | |
1482 and News. The primary author is Morioka Tomohiko. | |
1483 | |
1484 -- Japanese input can also be input using the `canna' input method. | |
1485 This support was contributed by Morioka Tomohiko. Setting up canna | |
1486 usually requires more user effort (and better knowledge of Japanese!) | |
1487 than XIM, but provides a better-integrated input method. | |
1488 | |
1489 -- A mini-tutorial on using Mule: | |
1490 | |
1491 -- Every time data passes between XEmacs and the rest of the | |
1492 environment, via file or process input or output, XEmacs must | |
1493 convert between its internal multi-character representation and | |
1494 the external representation (`coding system'). Many | |
1495 difficulties with Mule are related to controlling these coding | |
1496 system conversions. | |
1497 | |
1498 -- file-coding-system, file-coding-system-for-read, | |
1499 overriding-file-coding-system, and file-coding-system-alist | |
1500 are used to determine the coding systems used on file input | |
1501 and output. | |
1502 | |
1503 -- For each process, (set-process-input-coding-system) and | |
1504 (set-process-output-coding-system) determine the coding | |
1505 system used for I/O from the process. | |
1506 | |
1507 -- Many other things are encoded using pathname-coding-system: | |
1508 -- file and directory names | |
1509 -- window manager properties: window title, icon name | |
1510 -- process names and process arguments | |
1511 -- XIM input. | |
1512 | |
1513 -- In many cases, you will want to have the same values for all | |
1514 the above variables in many cases. For example, in a | |
1515 Japanese environment, you will want to use the 'euc-japan | |
1516 coding system consistently, except when running certain | |
1517 processes that do byte-oriented, rather than | |
1518 character-oriented I/O, such as gzip, or when processing Mail | |
1519 or News, where ISO2022-based coding systems are the norm, | |
1520 since they support multiple character sets. | |
1521 | |
1522 -- To add support for a new language or character set, start by | |
1523 trying to copy code in japanese-hooks.el. | |
1524 | |
1525 -- The traditional pre-Mule data conversion is equivalent to the | |
1526 'binary coding system under Mule. In this case all characters | |
1527 are treated as iso8859-1 (i.e. characters for English + Western | |
1528 European languages). | |
1529 | |
1530 -- many fileio-related commands such as find-file and write-file | |
1531 take an extra argument, coding-system, which specifies the | |
1532 encoding to be used with the file on disk. For example, here is | |
1533 a command that converts from the Japanese EUC to ISO2022 format: | |
1534 | |
1535 xemacs -batch -eval '(progn (find-file | |
1536 "locale-start.el.euc" (quote euc-japan)) (write-file | |
1537 "locale-start.el" nil (quote iso-2022-8-unix)))' | |
1538 | |
1539 Interactively, you can be prompted for a coding system by | |
1540 providing a prefix argument to the fileio command. In | |
1541 particular, C-u C-x C-f is a useful sequence to edit a file | |
1542 using a particular coding system. | |
1543 | |
1544 -- In an Asian locale (i.e. if $LANG is set to ja, ko, or zh), | |
1545 XEmacs automatically sets up a language environment assuming | |
1546 that the operating system encodes information in the national | |
1547 version of EUC, which supports English and the national | |
1548 language, but typically no other character sets. | |
1549 | |
1550 -- Command line processing should work much better now - no more order | |
1551 dependencies. | |
1552 | |
1553 -- Many many package upgraded (thanks go to countless maintainers): | |
1554 | |
1555 -- ediff 2.64 (Michael Kifer) | |
1556 -- w3 3.0.51 (Bill Perry) | |
1557 -- ilisp 5.8 | |
1558 -- VM 5.97 (Kyle Jones) | |
1559 -- etags 11.78 (Francesco Potorti`) | |
1560 -- ksh-mode.el 2.9 | |
1561 -- vhdl-mode.el 2.73 (Rod Whitby) | |
1562 -- id-select.el (Bob Weiner) | |
1563 -- EDT/TPU emulation modes should work now for the first time. | |
1564 -- viper 2.92 (Michael Kifer) is now the `official' vi emulator for XEmacs. | |
1565 -- big-menubar should work much better now. | |
1566 -- mode-motion+.el 3.16 | |
1567 -- backup-dir 2.0 (Greg Klanderman) | |
1568 -- ps-print.el-3.05 (Jacques Duthen Prestataire) | |
1569 -- lazy-lock-1.15 | |
1570 -- reporter 3.3 | |
1571 -- hm--html-menus 5.0 (Heiko Muenkel) | |
1572 -- cc-mode 4.322 (Barry Warsaw) | |
1573 -- elp 2.37 (Barry Warsaw) | |
1574 | |
1575 | |
1576 -- Many new packages have been added: | |
1577 -- m4-mode 1.8 (Andrew Csillag) | |
1578 -- crisp.el - crisp/brief emulation (Gary D. Foster) | |
1579 -- Johan Vroman's iso-acc.el has been ported to XEmacs by Alexandre Oliva | |
1580 -- psgml-1.01 | |
1581 -- python-mode.el 2.83 (Barry Warsaw) | |
1582 -- vrml-mode.el (Ben Wing) | |
1583 -- enriched.el, face-menu.el (Michael Sperber) | |
1584 | |
1585 -- New function x-keysym-on-keyboard-p helps determine keyboard | |
1586 characteristics for key rebinding: | |
1587 | |
1588 x-keysym-on-keyboard-p: (KEYSYM &optional DEVICE) | |
1589 -- a built-in function. | |
1590 Return true if KEYSYM names a key on the keyboard of DEVICE. | |
1591 More precisely, return true if pressing a physical key | |
1592 on the keyboard of DEVICE without any modifier keys generates KEYSYM. | |
1593 Valid keysyms are listed in the files /usr/include/X11/keysymdef.h and in | |
1594 /usr/lib/X11/XKeysymDB, or whatever the equivalents are on your system. | |
1595 | |
1596 -- Installed info files are now compressed (support courtesy of Joseph J Nuspl) | |
1597 | |
1598 -- (load-average) works on Solaris, even if you're not root. Thanks to | |
1599 Hrvoje Niksic. | |
1600 | |
1601 -- OffiX drag-and-drop support added | |
1602 | |
1603 -- lots of syncing with 19.34 elisp files, most by Steven Baur | |
1434 | 1604 |
1435 | 1605 |
1436 ** Major Differences Between 19.13 and 19.14 | 1606 ** Major Differences Between 19.13 and 19.14 |
1437 ============================================ | 1607 ============================================ |
1438 | 1608 |