view lib-src/emacs.csh @ 4600:dcfd965d65a1

Correct invalid-sequence-coding-system spec, Roman-alphabet languages. I had been testing with the Cyrillic language environments, and I have code in my own init file that does something similar, so I hadn't noticed that this had gone wrong. lisp/ChangeLog addition: 2009-02-04 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * mule/latin.el: Specify windows-1250 as the invalid-sequence-coding-system for the iso-8859-2 languages; actually *use* the invalid-sequence-coding-system for German and the other iso-8859-1 language environments.
author Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
date Wed, 04 Feb 2009 13:12:21 +0000
parents 376386a54a3c
children 06dd936cde16
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# This defines a csh command named `edit' which resumes an
# existing Emacs or starts a new one if none exists.
# One way or another, any arguments are passed to Emacs to specify files
# (provided you have loaded `resume.el').
# - Michael DeCorte

# These are the possible values of $whichjob
# 1 = new ordinary emacs (the -nw is so that it doesn't try to do X)
# 2 = resume emacs
# 3 = new emacs under X (-i is so that you get a reasonable icon)
# 4 = resume emacs under X
# 5 = new emacs under suntools
# 6 = resume emacs under suntools
# 7 = new emacs under X and suntools - doesn't make any sense, so use X
# 8 = resume emacs under X and suntools - doesn't make any sense, so use X
set EMACS_PATTERN="^\[[0-9]\]  . Stopped ............ $EMACS"

alias edit 'set emacs_command=("emacs -nw \!*" "fg %emacs" "emacs -i \!* &"\
 "emacsclient \!* &" "emacstool \!* &" "emacsclient \!* &" "emacs -i \!* &"\
 "emacsclient \!* &") ; \
 jobs >! $HOME/.jobs; grep "$EMACS_PATTERN" < $HOME/.jobs >& /dev/null; \
 @ isjob = ! $status; \
 @ whichjob = 1 + $isjob + $?DISPLAY * 2 + $?WINDOW_PARENT * 4; \
 test -S ~/.emacs_server && emacsclient \!* \
 || echo `pwd` \!* >! ~/.emacs_args && eval $emacs_command[$whichjob]'