Mercurial > emacs
annotate etc/FAQ @ 8958:24e6be28b6ea
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| author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Wed, 21 Sep 1994 03:40:21 +0000 |
| parents | 507f64624555 |
| children | b097ca448b38 |
| rev | line source |
|---|---|
| 1736 | 1 GNU Emacs FAQ: Introduction |
| 2 | |
| 3 [To find what has changed, see the "Changes" posting.] | |
| 4 | |
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5 [The FAQ post date slipped big-time this time. Now that school is over |
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6 with and I can get on with the rest of my life, posting should become a |
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Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
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7 lot more regular. - sbyrnes] |
| 597 | 8 |
| 9 This is the introduction to a list of frequently asked questions (FAQ) about | |
| 10 GNU Emacs with answers. This article contains a listing of the questions; | |
| 11 subsequent articles contain the questions and answers. | |
| 134 | 12 |
| 1736 | 13 The FAQ list is posted to reduce the noise level in the `gnu.emacs.help' |
| 14 newsgroup (which is also the `help-gnu-emacs' mailing list) which results from | |
| 15 the repetition of frequently asked questions, wrong answers to these questions, | |
| 597 | 16 corrections to the wrong answers, corrections to the corrections, debate, name |
| 17 calling, etc. Also, it serves as a repository of the canonical "best" answers | |
| 18 to these questions. However, if you know a better answer or even a slight | |
| 1736 | 19 change that improves an answer, please tell us! |
| 134 | 20 |
| 1736 | 21 If you know the answer of a question is in the FAQ list, please reply to the |
| 597 | 22 question by e-mail instead of posting. Help reduce noise! |
| 134 | 23 |
| 1736 | 24 The FAQ list is crossposted to `comp.emacs' because some sites do not receive |
| 25 the `gnu.*' newsgroups. The FAQ list is also crossposted to `news.answers'. | |
| 597 | 26 |
| 27 Please suggest new questions, answers, wording changes, deletions, etc. The | |
| 28 most helpful form for suggestions is a context diff (ie., the output of `diff | |
| 1736 | 29 -c'). Include `FAQ' in the subject of messages sent to us about the FAQ list. |
| 597 | 30 |
| 1736 | 31 Please do not send questions to us just because you do not want to disturb a |
| 32 lot of people and you think we would know the answer. We do not have time to | |
| 597 | 33 answer questions individually. :-( |
| 134 | 34 |
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Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
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35 Full instructions for getting the latest FAQ are in question 22. Also |
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Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
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36 see the `Introduction to news.answers' posting in the `news.answers' |
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Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
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37 newsgroup, or send e-mail to `mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu' with `help' on |
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38 a body line, or use FTP, WAIS, or Prospero to rtfm.mit.edu. [Note: in |
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Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
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39 Sep 1994, this seems no longer to be true--rms.] |
| 134 | 40 |
| 1736 | 41 These ideas have already been suggested, but we have not had time to |
| 42 implement them: | |
| 597 | 43 |
| 44 * A Texinfo version. | |
| 1736 | 45 * Marking questions in the table of contents that have been changed |
| 46 recently. | |
| 134 | 47 |
| 48 -- | |
| 1736 | 49 Steven Byrnes <sbyrnes@rice.edu> (and Joe Wells <jbw@cs.bu.edu>) |
| 597 | 50 |
| 1736 | 51 E-mail lpf@uunet.uu.net for details about the League for Programming Freedom. |
| 52 | |
| 597 | 53 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 54 | |
| 1736 | 55 GNU Emacs FAQ: Table of Contents |
| 56 | |
| 57 Notation Used in FAQ | |
| 58 | |
| 59 1: What do these mean: C-h, M-C-a, RET, "ESC a", etc.? | |
| 60 2: What does "M-x command" mean? | |
| 61 3: How do I read topic XXX in the on-line manual? | |
| 62 4: What do these mean: etc/SERVICE, src/config.h, lisp/default.el? | |
| 63 5: What are FSF, LPF, OSF, GNU, RMS, FTP, and GPL? | |
| 64 | |
| 65 General Questions | |
| 66 | |
| 67 6: What is the LPF and why should I join it? | |
| 68 7: What is the real legal meaning of the GNU copyleft? | |
| 69 8: What are appropriate messages for gnu.emacs.help, gnu.emacs.bug, | |
| 70 comp.emacs, etc.? | |
| 71 9: Where can I get old postings to gnu.emacs.help and other GNU groups? | |
| 72 10: Where should I report bugs and other problems with GNU Emacs? | |
| 73 11: How do I unsubscribe to this mailing list? | |
| 74 12: What is the current address of the FSF? | |
| 597 | 75 |
| 1736 | 76 On-line Help, Printed Manuals, Other Sources of Help |
| 77 | |
| 78 13: I'm just starting GNU Emacs; how do I do basic editing? | |
| 79 14: How do I find out how to do something in GNU Emacs? | |
| 80 15: How do I get a printed copy of the GNU Emacs manual? | |
| 81 16: Where can I get documentation on GNU Emacs Lisp? | |
| 82 17: How do I install a piece of Texinfo documentation? | |
| 83 18: How do I print a Texinfo file? | |
| 84 19: Can I view Info files without using GNU Emacs? | |
| 85 20: What informational files are available for GNU Emacs? | |
| 86 21: Where can I get help in installing GNU Emacs? | |
| 87 22: Where can I get the latest version of this document (the FAQ list)? | |
| 88 | |
| 89 Status of Emacs | |
| 90 | |
| 91 23: Where does the name "Emacs" come from? | |
| 92 24: What is the latest version of GNU Emacs? | |
| 93 25: When will GNU Emacs 19 be available? | |
| 94 26: What is different about GNU Emacs 19? | |
| 95 27: What variants of GNU Emacs exist? | |
| 597 | 96 |
| 1736 | 97 Common Things People Want To Do |
| 98 | |
| 99 28: How do I set up a .emacs file properly? | |
| 100 29: How do I debug a .emacs file? | |
| 101 30: How do I make Emacs display the current line (or column) number? | |
| 102 31: How do I turn on Abbrevs by default just in mode XXX? | |
| 103 32: How do I turn on Auto-Fill mode by default? | |
| 104 33: How do I make Emacs use a certain major mode for certain files? | |
| 105 34: How do I search for, delete, or replace unprintable (8-bit or control) | |
| 106 characters? | |
| 107 35: How can I highlight a region of text in Emacs? | |
| 108 36: How do I control Emacs's case-sensitivity when searching/replacing? | |
| 109 37: How do I make Emacs wrap words for me? | |
| 110 38: Where can I get a better spelling checker for Emacs? | |
| 111 39: How can I spell-check TeX or *roff documents? | |
| 112 40: How do I change load-path? | |
| 113 41: How do I use an already running Emacs from another window? | |
| 114 42: How do I make Emacs recognize my compiler's funny error messages? | |
| 115 43: How do I indent switch statements like this? | |
| 116 44: How can I make Emacs automatically scroll horizontally? | |
| 117 45: How do I make Emacs "typeover" or "overwrite" instead of inserting? | |
| 118 46: How do I stop Emacs from beeping on a terminal? | |
| 119 47: How do I turn down the bell volume in Emacs running under X Windows? | |
| 120 48: How do I tell Emacs to automatically indent a new line to the | |
| 121 indentation of the previous line? | |
| 122 49: How do I show which parenthesis matches the one I'm looking at? | |
| 123 50: In C mode, can I show just the lines that will be left after #ifdef | |
| 124 commands are handled by the compiler? | |
| 125 51: Is there an equivalent to the `.' (dot) command of vi? | |
| 126 52: What are the valid X resource settings (ie., stuff in .Xdefaults)? | |
| 127 53: How do I execute a piece of Emacs Lisp code? | |
| 128 54: How do I change Emacs's idea of the tab character's length? | |
| 129 55: How do I insert `>' at the beginning of every line? | |
| 130 56: How do I insert `_^H' before each character in a paragraph to get an | |
| 131 underlined paragraph? | |
| 132 57: How do I repeat a command as many times as possible? | |
| 133 58: How do I make Emacs behave like this: when I go up or down, the cursor | |
| 134 should stay in the same column even if the line is too short? | |
| 135 59: How do I tell Emacs to iconify itself? | |
| 136 60: How do I use regexps (regular expressions) in Emacs? | |
| 137 61: How do I perform a replace operation across more than one file? | |
| 138 62: Where is the documentation for `etags'? | |
| 139 | |
| 140 Bugs/Problems | |
| 597 | 141 |
| 1736 | 142 63: Does Emacs have problems with files larger than 8 megabytes? |
| 143 64: Why can't Emacs find files in current directory on startup? | |
| 144 65: How do I get rid of the ^M junk in my Shell buffer? | |
| 145 66: Why do I get `Process shell exited abnormally with code 1'? | |
| 146 67: Why can't I cut from Emacs and paste in other X programs? | |
| 147 68: Where is the termcap/terminfo entry for terminal type `emacs'? | |
| 148 69: Why does Emacs spontaneously start displaying `I-search:' and beeping? | |
| 149 70: Why can't Emacs talk to certain hosts (or certain hostnames)? | |
| 150 71: Why does Emacs say `Error in init file'? | |
| 151 72: Why does Emacs ignore my X resources (my .Xdefaults file)? | |
| 152 73: Why does Emacs take 20 seconds to visit a file? | |
| 153 74: How do I edit a file with a `$' in its name? | |
| 154 75: Why does Shell mode lose track of the shell's current directory? | |
| 155 76: Why doesn't my change to load-path work? | |
| 156 77: Why does the cursor always go to the wrong column when I move up or | |
| 157 down one line? | |
| 158 78: Why does Emacs hang with message `Unknown XMenu error' with X11R4? | |
| 159 79: Why doesn't display-time show the load average in the mode line | |
| 160 anymore? | |
| 161 80: Why does ispell sometimes ignore the local dictionary? | |
| 162 81: Why does Ispell treat each line as a single word? | |
| 163 82: Are there any security risks in GNU Emacs? | |
| 164 | |
| 165 Difficulties Building/Installing/Porting Emacs | |
| 166 | |
| 167 83: What should I do if I have trouble building Emacs? | |
| 168 84: How do I stop Emacs from failing when the executable is stripped? | |
| 169 85: Why does linking Emacs with -lX11 fail? | |
| 170 86: Why does Emacs 18.55 say `Fatal error (6).Abort' under SunOS 4.1? | |
| 171 | |
| 172 Finding/Getting Emacs and Related Packages | |
| 597 | 173 |
| 1736 | 174 87: Where can I get GNU Emacs on the net (or by snail mail)? |
| 175 88: How do I find a GNU Emacs Lisp package that does XXX? | |
| 176 89: Where can I get GNU Emacs Lisp packages that don't come with Emacs? | |
| 177 90: How do I submit code to the Emacs Lisp Archive? | |
| 178 91: Where can I get other up-to-date GNU stuff? | |
| 179 92: Where can I get an Emacs with better mouse and X window support? | |
| 180 93: What is the difference between GNU Emacs and Epoch? | |
| 181 94: What is the difference between GNU Emacs and Lucid GNU Emacs? | |
| 182 95: Where can I get the "unofficial HP GNU Emacs"? | |
| 183 96: Where can I get Emacs for my PC running MS-DOS? | |
| 184 97: Where can I get Emacs for my PC running Windows? | |
| 185 98: Where can I get Emacs for my PC running OS/2? | |
| 186 99: Where can I get Emacs for my Atari ST? | |
| 187 100: Where can I get Emacs for my Amiga? | |
| 188 101: Where can I get Emacs for my Apple computer? | |
| 189 102: Where can I get Emacs with NeWS support? | |
| 190 103: Where do I get Emacs that runs on VMS under DECwindows? | |
| 191 104: Where can I get modes for Lex, Yacc/Bison, Bourne Shell, Csh, C++, | |
| 192 Objective C, Pascal, Awk? | |
| 193 105: What is the IP address of XXX.YYY.ZZZ? | |
| 194 | |
| 195 Major Emacs Lisp Packages, Emacs Extensions, and Related Programs | |
| 597 | 196 |
| 1736 | 197 106: VM (View Mail) -- another mail reader within Emacs |
| 198 107: Supercite -- mail and news citation package within Emacs | |
| 199 108: GNUS -- news reader within Emacs | |
| 200 109: Calc -- poor man's Mathematica within Emacs | |
| 201 110: Calendar/Diary -- calendar manager within Emacs | |
| 202 111: Ange-FTP -- transparent FTP access for Emacs's file access routines | |
| 203 112: VIP -- vi emulation for Emacs | |
| 204 113: Dired -- better directory editor for Emacs | |
| 205 114: AUC TeX -- enhanced LaTeX mode with debugging facilities | |
| 206 115: Hyperbole -- extensible hypertext management system within Emacs | |
| 207 116: Byte Compiler -- enhanced version of Emacs's byte compiler | |
| 208 117: comint -- hugely enhanced shell mode and other derived modes | |
| 209 118: BBDB -- personal info rolodex integrated with mail/news readers | |
| 210 119: Ispell -- spell checker in C with interface for Emacs | |
| 211 120: Epoch -- enhanced GNU Emacs with better X interface | |
| 212 121: Lucid GNU Emacs -- alternative Emacs 19 with better X interface | |
| 213 122: Demacs -- GNU Emacs altered to run on MS-DOS on 386/486 machines | |
| 214 123: Freemacs -- a small Emacs for MS-DOS | |
| 215 124: Patch -- program to apply "diffs" for updating files | |
| 134 | 216 |
| 1736 | 217 Changing Key Bindings and Handling Key Binding Problems |
| 218 | |
| 219 125: How do I bind keys (including function keys) to commands? | |
| 220 126: Why does Emacs say `Key sequence XXX uses invalid prefix characters'? | |
| 221 127: Why doesn't this [terminal or window-system setup] code work in my | |
| 597 | 222 .emacs file, but it works just fine after Emacs starts up? |
| 1736 | 223 128: How do I use function keys under X Windows? |
| 224 129: How do I tell what characters my function or arrow keys emit? | |
| 225 130: How do I set the X key "translations" for Emacs? | |
| 226 131: How do I handle C-s and C-q being used for flow control? | |
| 227 132: How do I use commands bound to C-s and C-q (or any key) if these keys | |
| 597 | 228 are filtered out? |
| 1736 | 229 133: Why does the `BackSpace' key invoke help? |
| 230 134: Why doesn't Emacs look at the stty settings for Backspace vs. Delete? | |
| 231 135: Why don't the arrow keys work? | |
| 232 136: How do I "swap" two keys? | |
| 233 137: How do I produce C-XXX with my keyboard? | |
| 234 138: What if I don't have a Meta key? | |
| 235 139: What if I don't have an Escape key? | |
| 236 140: How do I type DEL on PC terminal emulators? | |
| 237 141: Can I make my `Compose Character' key behave like a Meta key? | |
| 238 142: How do I bind a combination of modifier key and function key? | |
| 239 143: Why doesn't my Meta key work in an xterm window? | |
| 240 144: Why doesn't my ExtendChar key work as a Meta key under HP-UX 8.0? | |
| 241 145: Where can I get key bindings to make Emacs emulate WordStar? | |
| 242 146: Where can I get an XEDIT emulator for Emacs? | |
| 597 | 243 |
| 1736 | 244 Using Emacs with Alternate Character Sets |
| 597 | 245 |
| 1736 | 246 147: How do I make Emacs display 8-bit characters? |
| 247 148: How do I input 8-bit characters? | |
| 248 149: Where can I get an Emacs that can handle kanji characters? | |
| 249 150: Where can I get an Emacs that can handle Chinese? | |
| 250 151: Where is an Emacs that can handle Semitic (right-to-left) alphabets? | |
| 597 | 251 |
| 1736 | 252 Mail and News |
| 597 | 253 |
| 1736 | 254 152: How do I change the included text prefix in mail/news followups? |
| 255 153: How do I save a copy of outgoing mail? | |
| 256 154: Why doesn't Emacs expand my aliases when sending mail? | |
| 257 155: Why does RMAIL think all my saved messages are one big message? | |
| 258 156: How can I sort the messages in my RMAIL folder? | |
| 259 157: Why does RMAIL need to write to /usr/spool/mail? | |
| 260 158: How do I recover my mail files after RMAIL munges their format? | |
| 261 159: How do I make Emacs automatically start my mail/news reader? | |
| 262 160: How do I read news under Emacs? | |
| 263 161: Why does `rnews' say "No News is good news" when there is news? | |
| 264 162: Why doesn't GNUS work anymore via NNTP? | |
| 265 163: How do I view text with embedded underlining (eg., ClariNews)? | |
| 266 164: When I try to post a long article in GNUS (about 10K or longer), I get | |
| 267 the error, "Writing to process: no more processes, nntpd" | |
| 268 165: How do I save all the items of a multi-part posting in GNUS? | |
| 269 166: Why does GNUS put the subjects in replies beyond the 80th column? | |
| 270 167: Why is GNUS so slow to start up? | |
| 271 168: How do I catch up all newsgroups in GNUS? | |
| 272 169: Why can't I kill in GNUS on the Newsgroups/Keywords/Control line? | |
| 273 170: How do I get rid of flashing messages in GNUS for slow connections? | |
| 274 171: Why is catch up slow in Gnews/GNUS? | |
| 275 172: Why does GNUS hang for a long time when posting? | |
| 276 173: Why don't my news postings in GNUS get past the local machine? | |
| 277 174: Why is the GNUS-generated `Date:' header invalid? | |
| 278 175: Why doesn't GNUS generate the `Lines:' header? | |
| 279 176: Why do I get "Cannot open load file" "nntp" when compiling GNUS? | |
| 280 177: How do I kill all articles in GNUS but those matching a pattern? | |
| 597 | 281 |
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282 |
| 1736 | 283 GNU Emacs FAQ: Notation/General/Help/Status |
| 284 | |
| 285 If you are viewing this text in a GNU Emacs Buffer, you can type "M-2 C-x $" to | |
| 286 get an overview of just the questions. Then, when you want to look at the text | |
| 287 of the answers, just type "C-x $". | |
| 288 | |
| 289 To search for a question numbered XXX, type "M-C-s ^XXX:", followed by a C-r if | |
| 290 that doesn't work, then type ESC to end the search. | |
| 291 | |
| 292 A `+' in the 78th column means something was inserted on the line. A `-' means | |
| 293 something was deleted and a `!' means some combination of insertions and | |
| 294 deletions occurred. | |
| 295 | |
| 296 Full instructions for getting the latest FAQ are in question 22. Also see the | |
| 297 `Introduction to news.answers' posting in the `news.answers' newsgroup, or send | |
| 298 e-mail to `mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu' with `help' on a body line, or use FTP, | |
| 299 WAIS, or Prospero to rtfm.mit.edu. | |
| 134 | 300 |
| 301 | |
| 302 | |
| 1736 | 303 Notation Used in FAQ |
| 134 | 304 |
| 1736 | 305 Skip this section and then come back if you don't understand some of the |
| 306 later answers. | |
| 307 | |
| 308 1: What do these mean: C-h, M-C-a, RET, "ESC a", etc.? | |
| 309 | |
| 310 C-x means press the `x' key while holding down the Control key. M-x means | |
| 311 press the `x' key while holding down the Meta key. M-C-x means press the | |
| 312 `x' key while holding down both the Control key and the Meta key. C-M-a | |
| 313 is a synonym for M-C-a. RET, LFD, DEL, ESC, and TAB respectively refer to | |
| 314 pressing the Return, Linefeed (aka Newline), Delete, Escape, and Tab keys | |
| 315 and are equivalent to C-m, C-j, C-?, C-[, and C-i. SPC means press the | |
| 316 Space bar. | |
| 317 | |
| 318 I put any key sequence that is longer than one key (and some single-key | |
| 319 sequences) inside double quotes or on a line by itself. Any real spaces | |
| 320 in such a key sequence should be ignored; only SPC really means press the | |
| 321 space key. | |
| 322 | |
| 323 The ASCII code sent by C-x (except for C-?) is the value that would be | |
| 324 sent by pressing just `x' minus 96 (or 64 for uppercase `X') and will be | |
| 325 from 0 to 31. The ASCII code sent by M-x is the sum of 128 and the ASCII | |
| 326 code that would be sent by pressing just the `x' key. Essentially, the | |
| 327 Control key turns off bits 5 and 6 and the Meta key turns on bit 7. | |
| 328 | |
| 329 For further information, see `Characters' and `Keys' in the online manual. | |
| 330 | |
| 331 NOTE: C-? (aka DEL) is ASCII code 127. It is a misnomer to call C-? a | |
| 332 "control" key, since 127 has both bits 5 and 6 turned ON. Also, on very | |
| 333 few keyboards does Control-? generate ASCII code 127. | |
| 334 | |
| 335 2: What does "M-x command" mean? | |
| 134 | 336 |
| 337 "M-x command" means type M-x, then type the name of the command, then | |
| 338 type RET. | |
| 339 | |
| 1736 | 340 M-x (by default) invokes the command `execute-extended-command'. This |
| 341 command allows you to run any Emacs command if you can remember the | |
| 342 command's name. If you can't remember the command's name, you can type | |
| 343 TAB and SPC for completion, and "?" for a list of possibilities. An Emacs | |
| 344 "command" is any "interactive" Emacs function. | |
| 134 | 345 |
| 346 NOTE: Your system administrator may have bound other key sequences to | |
| 1736 | 347 invoke execute-extended-command. A function key labeled `Do' is a good |
| 134 | 348 candidate for this. |
| 349 | |
| 1736 | 350 To run non-interactive Emacs functions, see question 53. |
| 351 | |
| 352 3: How do I read topic XXX in the on-line manual? | |
| 353 | |
| 354 When I refer you to topic XXX in the on-line manual, you can read this | |
| 355 manual node inside Emacs (assuming nothing is broken) by typing this: | |
| 356 | |
| 357 C-h i m emacs RET m XXX RET | |
| 358 | |
| 359 This invokes the Info facility. If you don't already know how to use | |
| 360 Info, type "?" from within Info. | |
| 361 | |
| 362 If I refer you to topic XXX:YYY, you need to type this: | |
| 363 | |
| 364 C-h i m emacs RET m XXX RET m YYY RET | |
| 365 | |
| 366 WARNING: Your system administrator may not have installed the Info files, | |
| 367 or may have installed them properly. In this case you should complain. | |
| 368 | |
| 369 4: What do these mean: etc/SERVICE, src/config.h, lisp/default.el? | |
| 370 | |
| 371 These are files that come with GNU Emacs. The GNU Emacs distribution is | |
| 372 divided into subdirectories; the important ones are `etc', `lisp', and | |
| 373 `src'. | |
| 134 | 374 |
| 375 If you use GNU Emacs, but don't know where it is kept on your system, | |
| 376 start Emacs, then type "C-h v exec-directory RET". The directory name | |
| 1736 | 377 displayed by this will be the full pathname of the installed `etc' |
| 378 directory. | |
| 134 | 379 |
| 380 Some of these files are available individually via FTP or e-mail, see | |
| 1736 | 381 question 20. All are available in the source distribution. |
| 382 | |
| 383 5: What are FSF, LPF, OSF, GNU, RMS, FTP, and GPL? | |
| 134 | 384 |
| 385 FSF == Free Software Foundation | |
| 386 LPF == League for Programming Freedom | |
| 387 OSF == Open Software Foundation | |
| 388 GNU == GNU's Not Unix | |
| 597 | 389 RMS == Richard Matthew Stallman |
| 134 | 390 FTP == File Transfer Protocol |
| 391 GPL == GNU General Public Licence | |
| 392 | |
| 597 | 393 NOTE: Avoid confusing the FSF, the LPF, and the OSF. The LPF opposes |
| 394 look-and-feel copyrights and software patents. The FSF aims to make high | |
| 395 quality free software available for everyone. The OSF is a commercial | |
| 396 organization which wants to provide an alternative, standardized version | |
| 397 of Unix not controlled by AT&T. | |
| 398 | |
| 399 NOTE: The word "free" in the title of the Free Software Foundation refers | |
| 400 to "freedom", not "zero dollars". Anyone can charge any price for | |
| 401 GPL-covered software that they want to. However, in practice, the freedom | |
| 402 enforced by the GPL leads to low prices, because you can always get the | |
| 403 software for less money from someone else, because everyone has the right | |
| 404 to resell or give away GPL-covered software. | |
| 134 | 405 |
| 406 | |
| 407 | |
| 1736 | 408 General Questions |
| 134 | 409 |
| 1736 | 410 6: What is the LPF and why should I join it? |
| 411 | |
| 412 The LPF opposes the expanding danger of software patents and look-and-feel | |
| 413 copyrights. To get more information, feel free to contact the LPF via | |
| 414 e-mail or otherwise. {You may also contact me, jbw@cs.bu.edu; I will be | |
| 415 happy to talk with you about the LPF.} Here is the contact information: | |
| 416 | |
| 417 E-mail address: league@prep.ai.mit.edu | |
| 418 Phone number: (617) 243-4091 | |
| 419 Postal address: | |
| 420 League for Programming Freedom | |
| 421 1 Kendall Square, Number 143 | |
| 422 Post Office Box 9171 | |
| 423 Cambridge, MA 02139, USA | |
| 424 | |
| 425 Papers describing the LPF's views are available on the internet and also | |
| 426 from the LPF: | |
| 427 | |
| 428 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 429 /prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/lpf/ | |
| 430 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/lpf/ | |
| 431 Anonymous UUCP: | |
| 432 osu-cis!~/lpf/* | |
| 433 | |
| 434 7: What is the real legal meaning of the GNU copyleft? | |
| 435 | |
| 436 The real legal meaning of the GNU General Public Licence (copyleft) is | |
| 437 however it is interpreted by a judge. There has never been a copyright | |
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438 infringement case involving the GPL to set any precedents. Please take any |
| 1736 | 439 discussion regarding this issue to the newsgroup gnu.misc.discuss, which |
| 440 was created to hold the extensive flame wars on the subject. | |
| 441 | |
| 442 RMS writes: | |
| 443 | |
| 444 The legal meaning of the GNU copyleft is less important than the spirit, | |
| 445 which is that Emacs is a free software project and that work pertaining | |
| 446 to Emacs should also be free software. "Free" means that all users have | |
| 447 the freedom to study, share, change and improve Emacs. To make sure | |
| 448 everyone has this freedom, pass along source code when you distribute | |
| 449 any version of Emacs or a related program, and give the recipients the | |
| 450 same freedom that you enjoyed. | |
| 451 | |
| 452 8: What are appropriate messages for gnu.emacs.help, gnu.emacs.bug, | |
| 453 comp.emacs, etc.? | |
| 454 | |
| 455 The file etc/MAILINGLISTS discusses the purpose of each GNU mailing-list. | |
| 456 (See question 20 on how to get a copy.) For those which are gatewayed | |
| 457 with newsgroups, it lists both the newsgroup name and the mailing list | |
| 458 address. | |
| 459 | |
| 460 comp.emacs is for discussion of Emacs programs in general. This | |
| 461 includes GNU Emacs along with various other implementations like JOVE, | |
| 462 MicroEmacs, Freemacs, MG, Unipress, CCA, Epsilon, etc. | |
| 463 | |
| 464 Many people post GNU Emacs questions to comp.emacs because they don't | |
| 465 receive any of the gnu.* newsgroups. Arguments have been made both for | |
| 466 and against posting GNU-Emacs-specific material to comp.emacs. You have | |
| 467 to decide for yourself. | |
| 468 | |
| 469 Messages advocating "non-free" software are considered unacceptable on any | |
| 470 of the gnu.* newsgroups except for gnu.misc.discuss, which was created to | |
| 471 hold the extensive flame-wars on the subject. "non-free" software | |
| 472 includes any software for which the end user can't freely modify the | |
| 473 source code and exchange enhancements. Be careful to remove the gnu.* | |
| 474 groups from the `Newsgroups:' line when posting a followup that recommends | |
| 475 such software. | |
| 476 | |
| 477 gnu.emacs.bug is a place where bug reports appear, but avoid posting bug | |
| 478 reports to this newsgroup, instead see question 10. | |
| 479 | |
| 480 9: Where can I get old postings to gnu.emacs.help and other GNU groups? | |
| 481 | |
| 482 The FSF has maintained archives of all of the GNU mailing lists for many | |
| 483 years, although there may be some unintentional gaps in coverage. The | |
| 484 archive is not particularly well organized or easy to retrieve individual | |
| 485 postings from, but pretty much everything is there. | |
| 486 | |
| 487 Anonymous FTP: | |
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488 /prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/gnu/MailingListArchives/ |
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489 |
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490 There is a WAIS database named `comp.emacs' on wais.oit.unc.edu that |
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491 makes available the last few days of articles in comp.emacs. |
| 1736 | 492 |
| 493 10: Where should I report bugs and other problems with GNU Emacs? | |
| 494 | |
| 495 The correct way to report GNU Emacs bugs is by e-mail to | |
| 496 bug-gnu-emacs@prep.ai.mit.edu. Anything sent here also appears in the | |
| 497 newsgroup gnu.emacs.bug, but please use e-mail instead of news to submit | |
| 498 the bug report. This way a reliable return address is available so you | |
| 499 can be contacted for further details. | |
| 500 | |
| 501 RMS explains: | |
| 502 | |
| 503 Sending bug reports to help-gnu-emacs (which has the effect of posting | |
| 504 on gnu.emacs.help) is undesirable because it takes the time of an | |
| 505 unnecessarily large group of people, most of whom are just users and | |
| 506 have no idea how to fix these problem. bug-gnu-emacs reaches a much | |
| 507 smaller group of people who are more likely to know what to do and have | |
| 508 expressed a wish to receive more messages about Emacs than the others. | |
| 509 | |
| 510 However, RMS says there are circumstances when it is okay to post to | |
| 511 gnu.emacs.help: | |
| 512 | |
| 513 If you have reported a bug and you don't hear about a possible fix, then | |
| 514 after a suitable delay (such as a week) it is okay to post on | |
| 515 gnu.emacs.help asking if anyone can help you. | |
| 516 | |
| 517 If you are unsure whether you have a bug, RMS describes how to tell: | |
| 518 | |
| 519 ... if Emacs crashes, that is a bug. If Emacs gets compilation errors | |
| 520 while building, that is a bug. If Emacs crashes while building, that is | |
| 521 a bug. If Lisp code does not do what the documentation says it does, | |
| 522 that is a bug. | |
| 523 | |
| 524 11: How do I unsubscribe to this mailing list? | |
| 525 | |
| 526 If you are receiving a GNU mailing list named `XXX', you might be able | |
| 527 to unsubscribe to it by sending a request to the address | |
| 528 `XXX-request@prep.ai.mit.edu'. However, this will not work if you are | |
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529 not listed on the main mailing list, but instead receive the mail from a |
| 1736 | 530 distribution point. In that case, you will have to track down at which |
| 531 distribution point you are listed. Inspecting the `Received:' headers | |
| 532 on the mail messages may help, along with liberal use of the `EXPN' or | |
| 533 `VRFY' sendmail commands through `telnet <site-address> smtp'. Ask your | |
| 534 postmaster for help. | |
| 535 | |
| 536 12: What is the current address of the FSF? | |
| 537 | |
| 538 E-mail address: gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu | |
| 539 Phone number: (617) 876-3296 | |
| 540 Postal address: | |
| 541 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | |
| 542 675 Massachusetts Avenue | |
| 543 Cambridge, MA 02139, USA | |
| 544 | |
| 545 | |
| 546 | |
| 547 On-line Help, Printed Manuals, Other Sources of Help | |
| 548 | |
| 549 13: I'm just starting GNU Emacs; how do I do basic editing? | |
| 134 | 550 |
| 551 Type "C-h t" to invoke the self-paced tutorial. Typing just C-h is | |
| 552 how to enter the help system. | |
| 553 | |
| 1736 | 554 WARNING: Your system administrator may have changed C-h to act like DEL to |
| 555 deal local keyboards. You can use M-x help-for-help instead to invoke | |
| 556 help. To discover what key (if any) invokes help on your system, type | |
| 557 "M-x where-is RET help-for-help RET". This will print a comma-separated | |
| 558 list of key sequences in the echo area. Ignore the last character in each | |
| 559 key sequence listed. Each of the resulting key sequences invokes help. | |
| 560 | |
| 561 NOTE: Emacs's help facility works best if help is invoked by a single key | |
| 562 whose value should be stored in the variable help-char. Andrew | |
| 563 Arensburger <arensb@kong.gsfc.nasa.gov> wrote a patch that allows the help | |
| 564 facility to work properly when invoked by multiple character sequences. | |
| 565 | |
| 566 14: How do I find out how to do something in GNU Emacs? | |
| 134 | 567 |
| 568 There are several methods for finding out how to do things in Emacs. | |
| 569 | |
| 1736 | 570 * The complete text of the Emacs manual is available online via the Info |
| 571 hypertext reader. Type "C-h i" to invoke Info. | |
| 572 | |
| 573 * You can order a hardcopy of the manual from the FSF. See question 15. | |
| 574 | |
| 575 * You can get a printed reference card listing commands and keys to invoke | |
| 597 | 576 them. You can order one from the FSF for $1 (or 10 for $5), or you can |
| 577 print your own from the etc/refcard.tex file in the Emacs distribution. | |
| 1736 | 578 {Are PostScript versions of this available for FTP?} |
| 579 | |
| 580 * You can list all of the commands whose names contain a certain word | |
| 581 (actually which match a regular expression) using "C-h a" | |
| 582 (M-x command-apropos). | |
| 583 | |
| 584 * You can list all of the functions and variables whose names contain a | |
| 585 certain word using M-x apropos. | |
| 586 | |
| 587 * There are many other commands in Emacs for getting help and information. | |
| 597 | 588 To get a list of these commands, type "C-h C-h C-h". |
| 589 | |
| 590 NOTE: You may find that command-apropos and apropos are extremely slow | |
| 591 on your system. This will be fixed in Emacs 19. If you can't wait that | |
| 1736 | 592 long, there is a fast-apropos.el file available in the Emacs Lisp |
| 593 Archive (see question 89) that contains the fix. | |
| 594 | |
| 595 15: How do I get a printed copy of the GNU Emacs manual? | |
| 134 | 596 |
| 597 You can order a printed copy of the GNU Emacs manual from the FSF for | |
| 1736 | 598 $20. For 6 or more manuals the price is $13 each. The price may be |
| 599 tax-deductible as a business expense. | |
| 600 | |
| 601 The full TeX source for the manual also comes in the `man' directory of | |
| 597 | 602 the Emacs distribution, if you're daring enough to try to print out this |
| 1736 | 603 300 page manual yourself (see question 18). |
| 597 | 604 |
| 605 If you absolutely have to print your own copy, and you don't have TeX, you | |
| 1736 | 606 can get a PostScript version via anonymous FTP: |
| 607 | |
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608 /cs.ubc.ca:pub/archive/gnu/manuals_ps/emacs-18.57.ps.Z ! |
| 1736 | 609 |
| 610 which site requests that you please CONFINE ANY MAJOR FTPING TO LATE | |
| 611 EVENINGS OR EARLY MORNINGS OUR TIME (pacific time zone, GMT-8)). A DVI | |
| 612 version is also available via FTP: | |
| 613 | |
| 614 /prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/emacs-manual-6.0.dvi.Z | |
| 597 | 615 |
| 616 If you don't have TeX you can convert the Texinfo sources into | |
| 1736 | 617 {t,n,ps}roff format with the `texi2roff' program, which is available via |
| 618 anonymous FTP: | |
| 619 | |
| 620 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/texi2roff/texi2roff.shar.Z | |
| 621 | |
| 622 See also question 14 for how to view the manual online. | |
| 623 | |
| 624 16: Where can I get documentation on GNU Emacs Lisp? | |
| 625 | |
| 626 Within Emacs, you can type "C-h f" to get the documentation for a | |
| 627 function, "C-h v" for a variable. | |
| 628 | |
| 629 For more information, obtain the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual for Emacs | |
| 630 18 under Unix. It is available from the FSF for $50 (or 5 for $200). The | |
| 631 latest revision available for FTP is edition 1.03 dated 28 January 1991. | |
| 632 | |
| 633 For online use, a set of pregenerated Info files is available with the | |
| 634 Texinfo source for the Emacs Lisp manual via anonymous FTP: | |
| 635 | |
| 636 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/emacs/ | |
| 637 /prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/elisp-manual-1.03.tar.Z | |
| 638 | |
| 639 (You can also create the Info files from the Texinfo source.) See | |
| 640 question 17 for details on how to install these files online. | |
| 641 | |
| 642 If you are daring enough to try to print this 550 page manual out | |
| 643 yourself, for instructions see question 18. | |
| 644 | |
| 645 Also, as a popular USENET saying goes, "Use the Force, Read the Source". | |
| 646 | |
| 647 17: How do I install a piece of Texinfo documentation? | |
| 648 | |
| 649 First create Info files from the Texinfo files with the `makeinfo' | |
| 650 program. makeinfo is available as part of the latest Texinfo package: | |
| 651 | |
| 652 /prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/texinfo-2.14.tar.Z | |
| 597 | 653 |
| 654 For information about the Texinfo format, read the Texinfo manual which | |
| 655 comes with Emacs. This manual also comes installed in Info format, so you | |
| 656 can read it online. | |
| 657 | |
| 658 Neither texinfo-format-buffer nor the makeinfo program install the | |
| 659 resulting Info files in Emacs's Info tree. To install Info files: | |
| 660 | |
| 1736 | 661 1. Move the files to the `info' directory in the installed Emacs |
| 662 distribution. See question 4 if you don't know where that | |
| 597 | 663 is. |
| 664 | |
| 665 2. Edit the file info/dir in the installed Emacs distribution, and add a | |
| 666 line for the top level node in the Info package that you are | |
| 667 installing. Follow the examples are already in this file. The format | |
| 668 is: | |
| 669 | |
| 670 * Topic: (relative-pathname). Short description of topic. | |
| 671 | |
| 672 If you want to install Info files and you don't have the necessary | |
| 1736 | 673 privileges, you have several options: |
| 674 | |
| 675 * Info files don't actually need to be installed before being used. You | |
| 597 | 676 can feed a file name to the Info-goto-node command (invoked by pressing |
| 677 "g" in Info mode) by typing the name of the file in parentheses. This | |
| 1736 | 678 goes to the node named `Top' in that file. For example, to view a Info |
| 679 file named `XXX' in your home directory, you can type this: | |
| 597 | 680 |
| 681 C-h i g (~/XXX) RET | |
| 682 | |
| 1736 | 683 * You can create your own Info directory. You can tell Emacs where the |
| 597 | 684 Info directory is by setting the value of the variable Info-directory |
| 685 to its pathname. For example, to use a private Info directory which | |
| 1736 | 686 is a subdirectory of your home directory named `Info', you could do |
| 597 | 687 this: |
| 688 | |
| 689 (setq Info-directory (expand-file-name "~/Info")) | |
| 690 | |
| 1736 | 691 You will need a top-level Info file named `dir' in this directory. |
| 597 | 692 You can include the system-wide Info directory in your private Info |
| 693 directory with symbolic links or by copying it. | |
| 694 | |
| 1736 | 695 * You can use an enhanced version of lisp/info.el that handles multiple |
| 696 Info directories. Then you can more easily use a mix of private and | |
| 697 shared Info files. Dave Gillespie <daveg@synaptics.com, | |
| 698 daveg@csvax.cs.caltech.edu> has written one such enhancement and I | |
| 699 believe there are others. Dave's info.el also handles compressed Info | |
| 700 files. | |
| 701 | |
| 702 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 703 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:modes/info.el.Z | |
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704 /ftp.uu.net:languages/emacs-lisp/modes/info.el.Z ! |
| 1736 | 705 |
| 706 According to Jay Bourland <jayb@math.stanford.edu>, a version of Dave's | |
| 707 info.el comes with `xinfo' (see question 19). | |
| 708 | |
| 709 18: How do I print a Texinfo file? | |
| 710 | |
| 711 NOTE: You can't get nice printed output from Info files; you must still | |
| 712 have the original Texinfo source file for the manual you want to print. | |
| 597 | 713 |
| 714 1. Make sure the first line of the Texinfo file looks like this: | |
| 715 | |
| 716 \input texinfo | |
| 717 | |
| 1736 | 718 You may need to alter `texinfo' to the full pathname of the |
| 597 | 719 texinfo.tex file, which comes with Emacs as man/texinfo.tex (or copy |
| 720 or link it into the current directory). | |
| 721 | |
| 722 2. tex XXX.texinfo | |
| 723 | |
| 724 3. texindex XXX.?? | |
| 725 | |
| 1736 | 726 The `texindex' program comes with Emacs as man/texindex.c. |
| 597 | 727 |
| 728 4. tex XXX.texinfo | |
| 729 | |
| 730 5. Print the DVI file XXX.dvi in the normal way for printing DVI files | |
| 731 at your site. | |
| 732 | |
| 733 To get more general instructions, retrieve the latest Texinfo package | |
| 1736 | 734 mentioned in question 17. |
| 735 | |
| 736 19: Can I view Info files without using GNU Emacs? | |
| 597 | 737 |
| 738 Yes, the `info', `xinfo', and `ivinfo' programs do this. info uses | |
| 1736 | 739 curses, xinfo uses standard X11 libraries, and ivinfo uses InterViews. |
| 740 You can get info as part of the latest Texinfo package (see question | |
| 741 17). xinfo is available separately: | |
| 742 | |
| 743 /prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/xinfo-1.01.01.tar.Z | |
| 744 /export.lcs.mit.edu: | |
| 745 | |
| 746 ivinfo is available in a comp.sources.misc archive or from Tom Horsley | |
| 747 <tom@ssd.csd.harris.com>. For ivinfo, you need Stanford's InterViews C++ | |
| 748 X library, available via anonymous FTP (interviews.stanford.edu). | |
| 749 | |
| 750 20: What informational files are available for GNU Emacs? | |
| 597 | 751 |
| 752 This isn't a frequently asked question, but it should be! A variety of | |
| 753 informational files about GNU Emacs and relevant aspects of the GNU | |
| 754 project are available for you to read. | |
| 134 | 755 |
| 1736 | 756 The following files are available in the `etc' directory of the GNU |
| 134 | 757 Emacs distribution, and also the latest versions are available |
| 1736 | 758 individually via anonymous FTP (prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/gnu/GNUinfo/): |
| 597 | 759 |
| 760 APPLE -- Why the FSF doen't support GNU Emacs on Apple computers | |
| 134 | 761 DISTRIB -- GNU Emacs Availability Information, |
| 762 including the popular "Free Software Foundation Order Form" | |
| 763 FTP -- How to get GNU Software by Internet FTP or by UUCP | |
| 764 GNU -- The GNU Manifesto | |
| 765 INTERVIEW -- Richard Stallman discusses his public-domain | |
| 766 UNIX-compatible software system | |
| 767 with BYTE editors | |
| 768 MACHINES -- Status of GNU Emacs on Various Machines and Systems | |
| 769 MAILINGLISTS -- GNU Project Electronic Mailing Lists | |
| 770 SERVICE -- GNU Service Directory | |
| 1736 | 771 SUN-SUPPORT -- including "Using Emacstool with GNU Emacs" |
| 772 | |
| 773 These files are available in the `etc' directory of the GNU Emacs | |
| 134 | 774 distribution: |
| 775 | |
| 776 DIFF -- Differences between GNU Emacs and Twenex Emacs | |
| 777 CCADIFF -- Differences between GNU Emacs and CCA Emacs | |
| 778 GOSDIFF -- Differences between GNU Emacs and Gosling (Unipress??) Emacs | |
| 779 COPYING -- GNU Emacs General Public License | |
| 780 NEWS -- GNU Emacs News, a history of user-visible changes | |
| 597 | 781 LPF -- Why you should join the League for Programming Freedom |
| 782 FAQ -- GNU Emacs Frequently Asked Questions (You're reading it) | |
| 783 OPTIONS -- a complete explanation of startup option handling | |
| 784 | |
| 785 These files are available via anonymous FTP (prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/gnu/): | |
| 786 | |
| 787 tasks -- GNU Task List | |
| 788 standards.text -- GNU Coding Standards | |
| 134 | 789 |
| 790 In addition, all of the above files are available directly from the FSF | |
| 791 via e-mail. Of course, please try to get them from a local source | |
| 792 first. | |
| 793 | |
| 597 | 794 These additional files are available from the FSF via e-mail: |
| 795 | |
| 796 * GNU's Bulletin, June, 1991 -- this file includes: | |
| 797 GNU'S Who | |
| 798 What Is the Free Software Foundation? | |
| 799 What Is Copyleft? | |
| 800 A Small Way to Help Free Software | |
| 801 GNUs Flashes (important recent developments for project GNU) | |
| 802 Free Software Support (and how to get it!) | |
| 803 Copyrighted Programming Languages | |
| 804 AT&T Threatens Users of X Windows (and other software patent threats) | |
| 805 Project Gutenberg | |
| 806 GNU Project Status Report | |
| 807 GNU in Japan | |
| 808 GNU Wish List | |
| 809 Help Keep Government Software Free | |
| 810 GNU Software Available Now | |
| 811 Contents of the Emacs Tape | |
| 812 Contents of the Compiler Tape | |
| 813 Contents of the X11 Tapes | |
| 814 VMS Emacs and Compiler Tapes | |
| 815 GNU Documentation | |
| 816 How to Get GNU Software | |
| 817 Free Software for Microcomputers | |
| 818 GNU Software on Apple computers | |
| 819 GNU Software on the Amiga | |
| 820 GNU Software on the Atari | |
| 821 GNUish MS-DOS project | |
| 822 Freemacs, an Extensible Editor for MS-DOS | |
| 823 GNU in Japan | |
| 824 FSF Order Form | |
| 825 Thank GNUs | |
| 826 * Legal issues about contributing code to GNU | |
| 827 * GNU Project Status Report | |
| 828 | |
| 1736 | 829 A collection of past GNU's Bulletins is available via anonymous FTP: |
| 830 | |
| 831 /ftp.funet.fi:pub/gnu/Bulletins/ | |
| 832 | |
| 833 21: Where can I get help in installing GNU Emacs? | |
| 834 | |
| 835 Look in etc/SERVICE for names of companies and individuals who will sell | |
| 836 you this type of service. An up-to-date version of the SERVICE file is | |
| 837 available on prep.ai.mit.edu (also see question 20). | |
| 838 | |
| 839 22: Where can I get the latest version of this document (the FAQ list)? | |
| 597 | 840 |
| 841 The GNU Emacs FAQ is available in several ways: | |
| 842 | |
| 1736 | 843 * Via USENET. If you can read news, the FAQ should be available in your |
| 844 news spool, in both the gnu.emacs.help and comp.emacs newsgroups. Every | |
| 845 news reader of which I know will allow you to read any news article that | |
| 846 is still in the news spool, even if you have read the article before. | |
| 847 You may need to read the instructions for your news reader to discover | |
| 848 how to do this. In `rn', this command will do this for you at the | |
| 849 article selection level: | |
| 850 | |
| 851 ?GNU Emacs FAQ?rc:m | |
| 852 | |
| 853 In GNUS, you should type "C-u G" from the *Subject* buffer or "C-u SPC" | |
| 854 from the *Newsgroup* buffer to view all articles in a newsgroup. | |
| 855 | |
| 856 The FAQ articles' message IDs are: | |
| 857 | |
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863 <GNU-Emacs-FAQ-5.1993.05.04.025218@rice.edu> ! |
| 1736 | 864 |
| 865 If you are viewing this in the GNUS *Article* buffer, you can move point | |
| 866 within one of the above message IDs and type "r" to fetch the referenced | |
| 867 article. Type "o" in the *Article* buffer to restore the previous | |
| 868 contents. If this text is not in the GNUS *Article* buffer, use M-r | |
| 869 from the *Subject* buffer instead. | |
| 870 | |
| 871 If the FAQ articles have expired and been deleted from your news spool, | |
| 872 it might (or might not) do some good to complain to your news | |
| 873 administrator, because the most recent FAQ should not expire before | |
|
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874 July 3, 1993. ! |
| 1736 | 875 |
| 876 * Via anonymous FTP. You can fetch the FAQ articles via anonymous FTP | |
| 877 | |
| 878 /rtfm.mit.edu:pub/usenet/news.answers/GNU-Emacs-FAQ/ part* | |
| 879 | |
| 880 * Via e-mail. You can send the following magical incantation in the body | |
| 881 of a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu: | |
| 882 | |
| 883 send usenet/news.answers/GNU-Emacs-FAQ/part0 | |
| 884 send usenet/news.answers/GNU-Emacs-FAQ/part1 | |
| 885 send usenet/news.answers/GNU-Emacs-FAQ/part2 | |
| 886 send usenet/news.answers/GNU-Emacs-FAQ/part3 | |
| 887 send usenet/news.answers/GNU-Emacs-FAQ/part4 | |
| 888 send usenet/news.answers/GNU-Emacs-FAQ/part5 | |
| 889 | |
| 890 * Via WAIS. The GNU Emacs FAQ is available via WAIS indexed on a | |
| 891 per-question basis from the `faq' database on bigbird.bu.edu on the | |
| 892 non-standard IP port number of 2210. This is probably the best way to | |
| 893 find out if there is something in the FAQ related to your question. I | |
| 894 use this myself to answer questions I see posted on gnu.emacs.help. | |
| 895 | |
| 896 The articles of the GNU Emacs FAQ are also available from the `usenet' | |
| 897 database on rtfm.mit.edu (on the standard IP port: 210), along with a | |
| 898 lot of other FAQ articles. However, these are all indexed at the whole | |
| 899 article level instead of at the question level. This is a better place | |
| 900 to look if you want to fetch the entire FAQ. | |
| 901 | |
| 902 * In the GNU Emacs distribution. Since GNU Emacs 18.56, the latest | |
| 903 available version of the FAQ at the time of release has been part of the | |
|
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904 GNU Emacs distribution as file etc/FAQ. 18.59 is the latest version, |
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905 and it was released in October 1992. |
| 1736 | 906 |
| 907 * There is an old version of the FAQ list available for FTP in the GNU | |
| 908 archives at MIT: | |
| 909 | |
| 910 /prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/GNUinfo/FAQ.emacs | |
| 911 | |
| 912 * As the very last resort, you can e-mail a request to | |
| 913 gnu-emacs-faq-maintainers@bigbird.bu.edu. Don't do this unless you have | |
| 914 made a serious effort to obtain the FAQ list via one of the methods | |
| 915 listed above. | |
| 916 | |
| 597 | 917 |
| 918 | |
| 1736 | 919 Status of Emacs |
| 597 | 920 |
| 1736 | 921 23: Where does the name "Emacs" come from? |
| 922 | |
| 923 Emacs originally was an acronym for Editor MACroS. RMS says he "picked | |
| 924 the name `Emacs' because `E' was not in use as an abbreviation on ITS at | |
| 925 the time.". The first Emacs was a set of macros written in 1976 at MIT by | |
| 926 RMS for the editor TECO (Text Editor and COrrector (originally Tape Editor | |
| 927 and COrrector)) under ITS on a PDP-10. RMS had already extended TECO with | |
| 928 a "real-time" full screen mode with active keys. Emacs was started by Guy | |
| 929 Steele <gls@think.com> as a project to unify the many divergent TECO | |
| 930 command sets and keybindings at MIT. | |
| 931 | |
| 932 Many people have told me that TECO code looks a lot like line noise. See | |
| 933 alt.lang.teco if you are interested. I think someone has written a TECO | |
|
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934 implementation in Emacs Lisp. It would be an interesting project to run |
| 1736 | 935 the original TECO Emacs inside of GNU Emacs. |
| 936 | |
| 937 24: What is the latest version of GNU Emacs? | |
| 938 | |
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939 GNU Emacs 18.59 is the current version. Fixes from 18.57 include better |
| 1736 | 940 mail address parsing, an X visual bell speedup, a call-process |
| 941 enhancement, a regexp matching change, the ability to apply a numeric | |
| 942 argument to a self-inserting digit, getting X resource values from the | |
| 943 RESOURCE_MANAGER property, more reliable shell mode job control, and a | |
| 944 change to copy-keymap. Also, support has been added for many new system | |
| 945 types. Fixes from 18.55 include the removal of arbitrary limits on the | |
| 946 undo facility. | |
| 947 | |
| 948 According to the January 1992 GNU's Bulletin, "Emacs 18 maintenance | |
| 949 continues for simple bug fixes.". | |
| 950 | |
| 951 To visit a file with information about what has changed in recent | |
| 952 versions, type "C-h n". | |
| 953 | |
| 954 25: When will GNU Emacs 19 be available? | |
| 955 | |
|
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956 Richard Stallman recently (February 19, 1993) posted in gnu.emacs.help ! |
|
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957 the following: ! |
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958 ! |
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959 People should keep in mind that the successor of Emacs 18 does not ! |
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960 come from Lucid. Its is GNU Emacs 19. I still can't say exactly when ! |
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961 public release is going to be, but we are about to start testing at a ! |
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962 number of sites. ! |
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963 ! |
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964 GNU Emacs 19 will support a broad spectrum of machines, like Emacs ! |
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965 18. Ensuring this is the purpose of the testing we are about to do. ! |
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966 ! |
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967 (Please don't volunteer; we have enough pretesters, and if more people ! |
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968 offer, dealing with those messages will slow things down.) ! |
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969 ! |
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970 Once we make sure it is indeed working reliably on various different ! |
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971 systems, we will have a public beta test release. ! |
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972 ! |
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973 Emacs 19 does support adding properties to ranges of text, and using ! |
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974 these to switch fonts. In the future, the Epoch people will help ! |
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975 merge support for variable-width fonts. ! |
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976 ! |
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977 Meanwhile, I have almost finished updating the Emacs Lisp manual. Its ! |
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978 next edition will describe Emacs 19. There will be an announcement ! |
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979 when we know when this edition will be available. ! |
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980 |
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981 Lucid has released Lucid GNU Emacs 19.6, which is based on an early ! |
| 1736 | 982 unreleased version of GNU Emacs 19. This will be similar to Emacs 19 when |
| 983 it finally arrives, but they are not the same. See question 121. | |
| 984 | |
| 985 Work has begun on features for Emacs 20. | |
| 986 | |
| 987 26: What is different about GNU Emacs 19? | |
| 988 | |
| 989 From the January 1992 GNU's Bulletin: | |
| 990 | |
| 991 Version 19 will enter beta test late this year. Among its new features | |
| 992 are: before and after change hooks, source-level debugging of Emacs Lisp | |
| 993 programs, X selection processing (including clipboard selections), | |
| 994 scrollbars, support for European character sets, floating point numbers, | |
| 995 per-buffer mouse commands, X resource manager interfacing, | |
| 996 mouse-tracking, Lisp-level binding of function keys, multiple X windows | |
| 997 (`screens' to Emacs), a new input system, and buffer allocation, which | |
| 998 uses a new mechanism capable of returning storage to the system when a | |
| 999 buffer is killed. | |
| 1000 | |
| 1001 The input stream is now a sequence of Lisp objects, instead of a | |
| 1002 sequence of characters. This allows a reasonable representation for | |
| 1003 mouse clicks, function keys, menu selections, etc. | |
| 597 | 1004 |
| 1005 Thanks go to Alan Carroll and the people who worked on Epoch for | |
| 1736 | 1006 generating initial feedback to a multi-windowed Emacs, and to Eric |
| 1007 Raymond for help in polishing the Emacs 19 Lisp libraries. | |
| 1008 | |
| 1009 The June 1991 GNU's bulletin had this to say about future plans for Emacs: | |
| 597 | 1010 |
| 1011 Features being considered for later releases of Emacs include: | |
| 1012 associating property lists with regions of text in a buffer; multiple | |
| 1013 fonts, color, and pixmaps defined by those properties; different | |
| 1014 visibility conditions for the regions, and for various windows showing | |
| 1015 one buffer; hooks to be run if point or mouse moves outside a certain | |
| 1016 range; incrementally saving undo history in a file; static menu bars; | |
| 1017 and better pop-up menus. | |
| 1018 | |
| 1736 | 1019 Mention of this feature disappeared in the January 1992 GNU's bulletin: |
| 1020 | |
| 1021 Emacs 19 supports two styles of multiple windows, one with a separate | |
| 1022 screen for the minibuffer, and another with a minibuffer attached to | |
| 1023 each screen. | |
| 1024 | |
| 1025 Mention of these two proposed features disappeared in the January 1991 | |
| 1026 GNU's bulletin: | |
| 597 | 1027 |
| 1028 * Incremental syntax analysis for various programming languages (Leif). | |
| 134 | 1029 * A more sophisticated emacsclient/server model, which would provide |
| 1030 network transparent Emacs widget functionality. | |
| 1031 | |
| 1736 | 1032 27: What variants of GNU Emacs exist? |
| 1033 | |
| 1034 * Nemacs (Nihongo Emacs), which can handle Japanese text, is derived from | |
| 1035 GNU Emacs 18.55. See question 149. | |
| 1036 | |
| 1037 * Demacs, which can run under MS-DOS on 386 machines, is derived from | |
| 1038 Nemacs. See question 122. | |
| 1039 | |
| 1040 * Epoch, which has better X support, is derived from GNU Emacs 18.58. | |
| 1041 See question 120 and 92. | |
| 1042 | |
| 1043 * Nepoch (Nihongo Epoch), which can handle Japanese text, is derived from | |
| 1044 Epoch. | |
| 1045 | |
| 1046 * Mule (the MULtilingual Enhancement of GNU Emacs) can handle many | |
| 1047 character sets simultaneously. It is derived from Emacs 18.58. It is | |
| 1048 available for FTP: | |
| 1049 | |
| 1050 /sh.wide.ad.jp:/JAPAN/mule/ | |
| 1051 /etlport.etl.go.jp:/pub/mule/ | |
| 1052 | |
| 1053 * Lucid GNU Emacs is derived from an early unreleased version of GNU Emacs | |
| 1054 19. See question 121 and 92. | |
| 1055 | |
| 1056 | |
| 1057 | |
| 1058 GNU Emacs FAQ: Common Requests/Problems | |
| 1059 | |
| 1060 If you are viewing this text in a GNU Emacs Buffer, you can type "M-2 C-x $" to | |
| 1061 get an overview of just the questions. Then, when you want to look at the text | |
| 1062 of the answers, just type "C-x $". | |
| 1063 | |
| 1064 To search for a question numbered XXX, type "M-C-s ^XXX:", followed by a C-r if | |
| 1065 that doesn't work, then type ESC to end the search. | |
| 1066 | |
| 1067 A `+' in the 78th column means something was inserted on the line. A `-' means | |
| 1068 something was deleted and a `!' means some combination of insertions and | |
| 1069 deletions occurred. | |
| 1070 | |
| 1071 Full instructions for getting the latest FAQ are in question 22. Also see the | |
| 1072 `Introduction to news.answers' posting in the `news.answers' newsgroup, or send | |
| 1073 e-mail to `mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu' with `help' on a body line, or use FTP, | |
| 1074 WAIS, or Prospero to rtfm.mit.edu. | |
| 1075 | |
| 1076 | |
| 1077 | |
| 1078 Common Things People Want To Do | |
| 1079 | |
| 1080 28: How do I set up a .emacs file properly? | |
| 1081 | |
| 1082 See `Init File' in the on-line manual. | |
| 1083 | |
| 1084 WARNING: In general, new Emacs users should not have .emacs files, because | |
| 1085 it causes confusing non-standard behavior. Then they send questions to | |
| 1086 help-gnu-emacs asking why Emacs isn't behaving as documented. :-) | |
| 1087 | |
| 1088 29: How do I debug a .emacs file? | |
| 1089 | |
| 1090 First start Emacs with the `-q' command line option. Then, in the | |
| 1091 *scratch* buffer, type the following: | |
| 1092 | |
| 1093 (setq debug-on-error t) LFD | |
| 1094 (load-file "~/.emacs") LFD | |
| 1095 | |
| 1096 (Type LFD by pressing C-j.) | |
| 1097 | |
| 1098 If you have an error in your .emacs file, this will invoke the debugger | |
| 1099 when the error occurs. If you don't know how to use the debugger do | |
| 1100 (setq stack-trace-on-error t) instead. | |
| 1101 | |
| 1102 WARNING: this will not discover errors caused by trying to do something | |
| 1103 that requires the terminal/window-system initialization code to have | |
| 1104 been loaded. See question 127. | |
| 1105 | |
| 1106 30: How do I make Emacs display the current line (or column) number? | |
| 1107 | |
| 1108 To find out what line of the buffer you are on right now, do "M-x | |
| 1109 what-line". Use "M-x goto-line" to go to a specific line. To find the | |
| 1110 current column number, type "M-ESC (current-column)". | |
| 1111 | |
| 1112 Typing "C-x l" will also tell you what line you are on, provided the | |
| 1113 buffer isn't separated into "pages" with C-l characters. In that case, it | |
| 1114 will only tell you what line of the current "page" you are on. WARNING: | |
| 1115 "C-x l" gives the wrong value when point is at the beginning of a line. | |
| 1116 | |
| 1117 There is no "correct" way to constantly display the current (or total) | |
| 1118 line (or column) number on the mode line in Emacs 18, or to display the | |
| 1119 line numbers next to the lines like vi can. Emacs is not a line-oriented | |
| 1120 editor, and really has no idea what "lines" of the buffer are displayed in | |
| 1121 the window. It would require a lot of work at the C code level to make | |
| 1122 Emacs keep track of this. It would not be that hard to get the column | |
| 1123 number, but it would still require changes at the C code level. | |
| 1124 | |
| 1125 None of the vi emulation modes provide the `set number' capability of vi | |
| 1126 (as far as I know). | |
| 1127 | |
| 1128 Emacs 19 will probably be able to show the line number on the mode-line, | |
| 1129 but probably very inefficiently. | |
| 1130 | |
| 1131 People have written various kludges to display line numbers. One is | |
| 1132 `display-line-numbers' by Wayne Mesard <wmesard@tofu.oracle.com, | |
| 1133 Mesard@bbn.com>. Look in the Lisp Code Directory. (See question | |
| 1134 88.) | |
| 1135 | |
| 1136 31: How do I turn on Abbrevs by default just in mode XXX? | |
| 1137 | |
| 1138 Put this in your .emacs file: | |
| 1139 | |
| 1140 (condition-case () | |
| 1141 (read-abbrev-file nil t) | |
| 1142 (file-error nil)) | |
| 1143 | |
| 1144 (setq XXX-mode-hook | |
| 1145 (function | |
| 1146 (lambda () | |
| 1147 (setq abbrev-mode t)))) | |
| 1148 | |
| 1149 32: How do I turn on Auto-Fill mode by default? | |
| 1150 | |
| 1151 To turn on Auto-Fill mode just once for one buffer, use "M-x | |
| 1152 auto-fill-mode". To turn it on for every buffer in, for example, Text | |
| 1153 mode, do this: | |
| 1154 | |
| 1155 (setq text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill) | |
| 1156 | |
| 1157 If you want Auto-Fill mode on in all major modes, do this: | |
| 1158 | |
| 1159 (setq-default auto-fill-hook 'do-auto-fill) | |
| 1160 | |
| 1161 33: How do I make Emacs use a certain major mode for certain files? | |
| 1162 | |
| 1163 If you want to use XXX mode for all files which end with the extension | |
| 1164 `.YYY', this will do it for you: | |
| 1165 | |
| 1166 (setq auto-mode-alist (cons '("\\.YYY\\'" . XXX-mode) auto-mode-alist)) | |
| 1167 | |
| 1168 Otherwise put this somewhere in the first line of any file you want to | |
| 1169 edit in XXX mode: | |
| 1170 | |
| 1171 -*-XXX-*- | |
| 1172 | |
| 1173 34: How do I search for, delete, or replace unprintable (8-bit or control) | |
| 1174 characters? | |
| 1175 | |
| 1176 To search for a single character that appears in the buffer as, for | |
| 1177 example, `\237', you can type "C-s C-q 2 3 7". (This assumes the value of | |
| 1178 search-quote-char is 17 (ie., C-q).) Searching for ALL unprintable | |
| 1179 characters is best done with a "regexp" search. The easiest regexp to use | |
| 1180 for the unprintable chars is the complement of the regexp for the | |
| 1181 printable chars. | |
| 1182 | |
| 1183 Regexp for the printable chars: [\t\n\r\f -~] | |
| 1184 | |
| 1185 Regexp for the unprintable chars: [^\t\n\r\f -~] | |
| 1186 | |
| 1187 To type some of these special characters in an interactive argument to | |
| 1188 isearch-forward-regexp or re-search-forward, you need to use C-q. (`\t', | |
| 1189 `\n', `\r', and `\f' stand respectively for TAB, LFD, RET, and C-l.) So, | |
| 1190 to search for unprintable characters using re-search-forward: | |
| 1191 | |
| 1192 M-x re-search-forward RET [^ TAB C-q LFD C-q RET C-q C-l SPC -~] RET | |
| 1193 | |
| 1194 Using isearch-forward-regexp: | |
| 1195 | |
| 1196 M-C-s [^ TAB RET C-q RET C-q C-l SPC -~] | |
| 1197 | |
| 1198 To delete all unprintable characters, simply use a replace-regexp: | |
| 1199 | |
| 1200 M-x replace-regexp RET [^ TAB C-q LFD C-q RET C-q C-l SPC -~] RET RET | |
| 1201 | |
| 1202 Replacing is similar to the above. {I need to write the text for this | |
| 1203 part of the answer!} | |
| 1204 | |
| 1205 Notes: | |
| 1206 | |
| 1207 * With isearch, you can type RET to get a quoted LFD (not a quoted RET). | |
| 1208 | |
| 1209 * You don't need to quote TAB with either isearch or typing something in | |
| 1210 the minibuffer. | |
| 1211 | |
| 1212 Here are the Emacs Lisp forms of the above regexps: | |
| 1213 | |
| 1214 ;; regexp matching all printable characters: | |
| 1215 "[\t\n\r\f -~]" | |
| 1216 | |
| 1217 ;; regexp matching all unprintable characters: | |
| 1218 "[^\t\n\r\f -~]" | |
| 1219 | |
| 1220 35: How can I highlight a region of text in Emacs? | |
| 1221 | |
| 1222 There are ways to get highlighting (reverse video, inverse video) in GNU | |
|
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1223 Emacs 18.59, but either they require patching the C code of Emacs and |
| 1736 | 1224 rebuilding, or they are slow and the highlighting disappears if you scroll |
| 1225 or redraw the screen and it can not follow the point. Howard Gayle's | |
| 1226 patches for 8-bit output appear to allow highlighting (see question | |
| 1227 ^8-bit-output). Another patch for highlighting is by Kenichi Handa | |
| 1228 <handa@etl.go.jp>. There is a patch for use with X by Andy Norman | |
| 1229 <ange@hplb.hpl.hp.com> (and modified for 18.57 by Matthieu Herrb | |
| 1230 <matthieu@laas.fr>), which is available for FTP: | |
| 1231 | |
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1232 /laas.laas.fr:pub/emacs/patch-X11-18.55 |
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1233 /laas.laas.fr:pub/emacs/patch-X11-18.57 |
| 1736 | 1234 |
| 1235 You can highlight regions in a variety of ways in Epoch and Lucid Emacs. | |
| 1236 GNU Emacs 19 may not be able to just temporarily highlight a region. | |
| 1237 | |
| 1238 Similar comments apply to displaying text in different fonts, except that | |
| 1239 it is even harder. | |
| 1240 | |
| 1241 36: How do I control Emacs's case-sensitivity when searching/replacing? | |
| 1242 | |
| 1243 For searching, the value of the variable case-fold-search determines | |
| 1244 whether they are case sensitive: | |
| 1245 | |
| 1246 (setq case-fold-search nil) ; make searches case sensitive | |
| 1247 (setq case-fold-search t) ; make searches case insensitive | |
| 1248 | |
| 1249 Similarly, for replacing the variable case-replace determines whether | |
| 1250 replacements preserve case. | |
| 1251 | |
| 1252 To change the case sensitivity just for one major mode, use the major | |
| 1253 mode's hook. For example: | |
| 1254 | |
| 1255 (setq XXX-mode-hook | |
| 1256 (function | |
| 1257 (lambda () | |
| 1258 (setq case-fold-search nil)))) | |
| 1259 | |
| 1260 37: How do I make Emacs wrap words for me? | |
| 1261 | |
| 1262 M-x auto-fill-mode. The default maximum line width is 74, determined by | |
| 1263 the variable fill-column. To find how to turn this on automatically see | |
| 1264 question 32. | |
| 1265 | |
| 1266 38: Where can I get a better spelling checker for Emacs? | |
| 1267 | |
| 1268 Use Ispell. See question 119. | |
| 1269 | |
| 1270 39: How can I spell-check TeX or *roff documents? | |
| 1271 | |
| 1272 If you want to spell-check TeX or *roff documents with Ispell, you need to | |
| 1273 arrange for a filter program that understands how to strip TeX or *roff | |
| 1274 formatting commands to be run. In the TeX distribution, there are several | |
| 1275 different programs named `detex', all with incompatible options, and a | |
| 1276 very old pair of programs named `detex' and `delatex', which should | |
| 1277 probably be avoided. The most useful one for Ispell is `detex' by Daniel | |
| 1278 Trinkle. A more recent version is available via FTP: | |
| 1279 | |
|
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1280 /arthur.cs.purdue.edu:pub/trinkle/detex-2.4.tar |
| 1736 | 1281 |
| 1282 Raphael Cerf <cerf@clipper.ens.fr> recently released a program for this | |
| 1283 named `xetal': | |
| 1284 | |
| 1285 /spi.ens.fr:pub/unix/tex/ | |
| 1286 | |
| 1287 There is a program that comes with Unix named `deroff' for stripping | |
| 1288 formatting commands from *roff files. | |
| 1289 | |
| 1290 Here is an example of code you can put in a .emacs file to use these | |
| 1291 programs: | |
| 1292 | |
| 1293 ;; Based on suggestions by David G. Grubbs <dgg@ksr.com> and Paul Palmer | |
| 1294 ;; <palmerp@math.orst.edu>. | |
| 1295 | |
| 1296 ;; Assuming the use of detex 2.3 by Daniel Trinkle: | |
| 1297 ;; -w means one word per line. | |
| 1298 ;; -n means don't expand \input or \include commands. | |
| 1299 ;; -l means force LaTeX mode. | |
| 1300 | |
| 1301 (require 'ispell) ; for the make-variable-buffer-local statements | |
| 1302 (setq plain-TeX-mode-hook | |
| 1303 (function | |
| 1304 (lambda () | |
| 1305 (setq ispell-filter-hook "detex") | |
| 1306 (setq ispell-filter-hook-args '("-nw"))))) | |
| 1307 (setq LaTeX-mode-hook | |
| 1308 (function | |
| 1309 (lambda () | |
| 1310 (setq ispell-filter-hook "detex") | |
| 1311 (setq ispell-filter-hook-args '("-lnw"))))) | |
| 1312 (setq nroff-mode-hook | |
| 1313 (function | |
| 1314 (lambda () | |
| 1315 (setq ispell-filter-hook "deroff") | |
| 1316 (setq ispell-filter-hook-args '("-w"))))) | |
| 1317 | |
| 1318 You will have to adjust the arguments for programs other than Trinkle's | |
| 1319 detex or for other versions of deroff. Experiment running the command | |
| 1320 from the shell to find the correct options. If you don't have a filter | |
| 1321 that knows how to output one word per line, you must pipe its output | |
| 1322 through another filter to break up the output. | |
| 1323 | |
| 1324 40: How do I change load-path? | |
| 1325 | |
| 1326 In general, you should only *add* to the load-path. You can add | |
| 1327 directory /XXX/YYY to the load path like this: | |
| 1328 | |
| 1329 (setq load-path (append load-path '("/XXX/YYY/"))) | |
| 1330 | |
| 1331 To do this relative to your home directory: | |
| 1332 | |
| 1333 (setq load-path (append load-path (list (expand-file-name "~/YYY/")))) | |
| 1334 | |
| 1335 41: How do I use an already running Emacs from another window? | |
| 1336 | |
| 1337 The `emacsclient' program is for editing a file using an already running | |
| 1338 Emacs rather than starting up a new Emacs. It does this by sending a | |
| 1339 request to the already running Emacs, which must be expecting the request. | |
| 1340 | |
| 1341 * Setup | |
| 1342 | |
| 1343 Emacs must have executed the `server-start' function for emacsclient to | |
| 1344 work. This can be done either by a command line option: | |
| 1345 | |
| 1346 emacs -f server-start | |
| 1347 | |
| 1348 or by invoking server-start from the .emacs file: | |
| 1349 | |
| 1350 (if (some conditions are met) (server-start)) | |
| 1351 | |
| 1352 When this is done, Emacs starts a subprocess running a program called | |
| 1353 `server'. `server' creates a Unix domain socket in the user's home | |
| 1354 directory named `.emacs_server'. | |
| 1355 | |
| 1356 To get your news reader, mail reader, etc., to invoke emacsclient, try | |
| 1357 setting the environment variable EDITOR (or sometimes VISUAL) to the | |
| 1358 value `emacsclient'. You may have to specify the full pathname of the | |
| 1359 emacsclient program instead. Examples: | |
| 1360 | |
| 1361 # csh commands: | |
| 1362 setenv EDITOR emacsclient | |
| 1363 setenv EDITOR /usr/local/emacs/etc/emacsclient # using full pathname | |
| 1364 | |
| 1365 # sh command: | |
| 1366 EDITOR=emacsclient export EDITOR | |
| 1367 | |
| 1368 * Normal use | |
| 1369 | |
| 1370 When emacsclient is run, it connects to the `.emacs_server' socket and | |
| 1371 passes its command line options to `server'. When `server' receives | |
| 1372 these requests, it sends this information on the the Emacs process, | |
| 1373 which at the next opportunity will visit the files specified. (Line | |
| 1374 numbers can be specified just like with Emacs.) The user will have to | |
| 1375 switch to the Emacs window by hand. When the user is done editing a | |
| 1376 file, the user can type "C-x #" to indicate this. This will switch to | |
| 1377 another buffer created at the request of emacsclient if there are any. | |
| 1378 When "C-x #" has been invoked on all of the files that the emacsclient | |
| 1379 requested to be edited, Emacs will send notification of this to `server' | |
| 1380 which will pass this on to the emacsclient, which will then exit. | |
| 1381 | |
| 1382 NOTE: `emacsclient' and `server' must be running on machines which share | |
| 1383 the same filesystem for this to work. The pathnames that emacsclient | |
| 1384 specifies should be correct for the filesystem that the Emacs process | |
| 1385 sees. The Emacs process should not be suspended at the time emacsclient | |
| 1386 is invoked. emacsclient should either be invoked from another X window or | |
| 1387 from a shell window inside Emacs itself. | |
| 1388 | |
| 1389 There is an enhanced version of emacsclient/server called `gnuserv' by | |
| 1390 Andy Norman <ange@hplb.hpl.hp.com> which is available in the Emacs Lisp | |
| 1391 Archive. gnuserv uses Internet domain sockets, so it can work across most | |
| 1392 network connections. It also supports the execution of arbitrary Emacs | |
| 1393 Lisp forms and also does not require the client program to wait for | |
| 1394 completion. It is available via anonymous FTP (Emacs Lisp Archive: | |
| 1395 packages/gnuserv.shar). | |
| 1396 | |
| 1397 42: How do I make Emacs recognize my compiler's funny error messages? | |
| 1398 | |
| 1399 Write a program which runs the compiler as a child and filters its output, | |
| 1400 rearranging as necessary. Install with same name as compiler somewhere in | |
| 1401 path. | |
| 1402 | |
| 1403 Keith Moore <moore@cs.utk.edu> wrote one such for a C compiler under AIX. | |
| 1404 Available via FTP: | |
| 1405 | |
| 1406 /cs.utk.edu:readonly/aixcc.lex | |
| 1407 | |
| 1408 Jim Frost <jimf@saber.com> wrote another for the IBM xlc compiler on the | |
| 1409 RS/6000. (I don't know if these are both for the same compiler.) | |
| 1410 Johnathan Vail <vail@tegra.COM> wrote something for a High C compiler | |
| 1411 (`hc', which is one of the compilers on the RS/6000, although I think | |
| 1412 Johnathan wrote his program for hc on a different computer). | |
| 1413 | |
| 1414 43: How do I indent switch statements like this? | |
| 1415 | |
| 1416 Many people want to indent their switch statements like this: | |
| 1417 | |
| 1418 f() | |
| 1419 { | |
| 1420 switch(x) { | |
| 1421 case A: | |
| 1422 x1; | |
| 1423 break; | |
| 1424 case B: | |
| 1425 x2; | |
| 1426 break; | |
| 1427 default: | |
| 1428 x3; | |
| 1429 } | |
| 1430 } | |
| 1431 | |
| 1432 I don't believe there is any way to do this exactly without modifying the | |
| 1433 Lisp code in c-mode.el. You can set c-indent-level to 4 and | |
| 1434 c-label-offset to -2, but this has bad effects elsewhere. {Anyone have a | |
| 1435 solution?} | |
| 1436 | |
| 1437 44: How can I make Emacs automatically scroll horizontally? | |
| 1438 | |
| 1439 There is no completely correct way of doing this that does not involve | |
| 1440 rewriting all commands or writing your own top-level command loop (not a | |
| 1441 completely bad idea). Wayne Mesard <wmesard@pescadero.stanford.edu> has | |
| 1442 written a particularly advanced kludge called `hscroll.el' that checks | |
| 1443 once a second to make sure point is visible. | |
| 1444 | |
| 1445 45: How do I make Emacs "typeover" or "overwrite" instead of inserting? | |
| 1446 | |
| 1447 M-x overwrite-mode (a minor mode). | |
| 1448 | |
| 1449 46: How do I stop Emacs from beeping on a terminal? | |
| 1450 | |
| 1451 Martin R. Frank <martin@cc.gatech.edu> writes: | |
| 1452 | |
| 1453 Tell Emacs to use the 'visible bell' instead of the audible bell, and | |
| 1454 set the visible bell to nothing. | |
| 1455 | |
| 1456 Put this in your TERMCAP environment variable: | |
| 1457 | |
| 1458 ... :vb=: ... | |
| 1459 | |
| 1460 And evaluate this: | |
| 1461 | |
| 1462 (setq visible-bell t) | |
| 1463 | |
| 1464 47: How do I turn down the bell volume in Emacs running under X Windows? | |
| 1465 | |
| 1466 Under versions of Emacs before 18.58, the bell volume was annoying loud | |
|
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1467 and difficult to turn off. So upgrading to 18.58 or higher will reduce |
| 1736 | 1468 the volume. If you want to turn it off completely, use `xset'. There is |
| 1469 no way to turn the bell off just for Emacs without affecting all other | |
| 1470 programs. | |
| 1471 | |
| 1472 Under Epoch you can do: | |
| 1473 | |
| 1474 (setq epoch::bell-volume 20) | |
| 1475 | |
| 1476 Stu Grossman <grossman@sunburn.stanford.edu> wrote a patch that allows the | |
| 1477 bell volume to be adjusted from inside Emacs just for Emacs. | |
| 1478 | |
| 1479 48: How do I tell Emacs to automatically indent a new line to the | |
| 1480 indentation of the previous line? | |
| 1481 | |
| 1482 One solution is Indented Text Mode (M-x indented-text-mode). | |
| 1483 | |
| 1484 If you have Auto-Fill mode on (a minor mode, see question 32), you can | |
| 1485 tell Emacs to prefix every line with a certain character sequence, the | |
| 1486 "fill prefix". Type the prefix at the beginning of a line, position point | |
| 1487 after it, and then type "C-x ." (set-fill-prefix) to set the fill prefix. | |
| 1488 Thereafter, auto-filling will automatically put the fill prefix at the | |
| 1489 beginning of new lines, and M-q (fill-paragraph) will maintain any fill | |
| 1490 prefix when refilling the paragraph. | |
| 1491 | |
| 1492 NOTE: If you have paragraphs with different levels of indentation, you | |
| 1493 will have to set the fill prefix to the correct value each time you move | |
| 1494 to a new paragraph. To avoid this hassle, try one of the many packages | |
| 1495 available from the Emacs Lisp Archive. Look up `fill' and `indent' in the | |
| 1496 Lisp Code Directory for guidance. | |
| 1497 | |
| 1498 49: How do I show which parenthesis matches the one I'm looking at? | |
| 1499 | |
| 1500 If you're looking at a right parenthesis (or brace or bracket) you can | |
| 1501 delete it and reinsert it. Emacs will blink the cursor on the matching | |
| 1502 parenthesis. | |
| 1503 | |
| 1504 M-C-f (forward-sexp) and M-C-b (backward-sexp) will skip over balanced | |
| 1505 parentheses, so you can see which parentheses match. (You can train it to | |
| 1506 skip over balanced brackets and braces at the same time by modifying the | |
| 1507 syntax table.) | |
| 1508 | |
| 1509 Here is some Emacs Lisp that will make the % key show the matching | |
| 1510 parenthesis, like in vi. In addition, if the cursor isn't over a | |
| 1511 parenthesis, it simply inserts a % like normal. | |
| 1512 | |
| 1513 ;; By an unknown contributor | |
| 1514 | |
| 1515 (global-set-key "%" 'match-paren) | |
| 1516 | |
| 1517 (defun match-paren (arg) | |
| 1518 "Go to the matching parenthesis if on parenthesis otherwise insert %." | |
| 1519 (interactive "p") | |
| 1520 (cond ((looking-at "\\s\(") (forward-list 1) (backward-char 1)) | |
| 1521 ((looking-at "\\s\)") (forward-char 1) (backward-list 1)) | |
| 1522 (t (self-insert-command (or arg 1))))) | |
| 1523 | |
| 1524 50: In C mode, can I show just the lines that will be left after #ifdef | |
| 1525 commands are handled by the compiler? | |
| 1526 | |
| 1527 M-x hide-ifdef-mode. (This is a minor mode.) | |
| 1528 | |
| 1529 You may have to (load "hideif") first. If you want to do this regularly, | |
| 1530 put this in your .emacs file: | |
| 1531 | |
| 1532 (autoload 'hide-ifdef-mode "hideif" nil t) | |
| 1533 | |
| 1534 {Yes, I know, this should be in lisp/loaddefs.el already.} | |
| 1535 | |
| 1536 51: Is there an equivalent to the `.' (dot) command of vi? | |
| 1537 | |
| 1538 (`.' is the redo command in vi. It redoes the last insertion/deletion.) | |
| 1539 | |
| 1540 No, not really. | |
| 1541 | |
| 1542 You can type "C-x ESC" (repeat-complex-command) to reinvoke commands that | |
| 1543 used the minibuffer to get arguments. In repeat-complex-command you can | |
| 1544 type M-p and M-n to scan through all the different complex commands you've | |
| 1545 typed. | |
| 1546 | |
| 1547 To repeat something on each line I recommend using keyboard macros. | |
| 1548 | |
| 1549 52: What are the valid X resource settings (ie., stuff in .Xdefaults)? | |
| 1550 | |
| 1551 See the Emacs man page, or the etc/OPTIONS file. Ignore the information | |
| 1552 in etc/XDOC which is way out of date. | |
| 1553 | |
| 1554 53: How do I execute a piece of Emacs Lisp code? | |
| 1555 | |
| 1556 There are a number of ways to execute (called "evaluate") an Emacs Lisp | |
| 1557 "form": | |
| 1558 | |
| 1559 * If you want it evaluated every time you run Emacs, put it in a file | |
| 1560 named `.emacs' in your home directory. | |
| 1561 | |
| 1562 * You can type the form in the *scratch* buffer, and then type LFD (or | |
| 1563 C-j) after it. The result of evaluating the form will be inserted in | |
| 1564 the buffer. | |
| 1565 | |
| 1566 * In Emacs-Lisp mode, typing M-C-x evaluates a top-level form before or | |
| 1567 around point. | |
| 1568 | |
| 1569 * Typing "C-x C-e" in any buffer evaluates the Lisp form immediately | |
| 1570 before point and prints its value in the echo area. | |
| 1571 | |
| 1572 * Typing M-ESC or M-x eval-expression allows you to type a Lisp form in | |
| 1573 the minibuffer which will be evaluated. | |
| 1574 | |
| 1575 * You can use M-x load-file to have Emacs evaluate all the Lisp forms in | |
| 1576 a file. (To do this from Lisp use the function `load' instead.) | |
| 1577 | |
| 1578 These functions are also used for evaluating Lisp forms: | |
| 1579 | |
| 1580 load-library, eval-region, eval-current-buffer, require, autoload | |
| 1581 | |
| 1582 54: How do I change Emacs's idea of the tab character's length? | |
| 1583 | |
| 1584 Example: (setq default-tab-width 10). | |
| 1585 | |
| 1586 55: How do I insert `>' at the beginning of every line? | |
| 1587 | |
| 1588 Type "M-x replace-regexp RET ^ RET > RET". | |
| 1589 | |
| 1590 To do this only in the region, type "C-x n M-x replace-regexp RET ^ RET | |
| 1591 > RET C-x w". | |
| 1592 | |
| 1593 WARNING: The command narrow-to-region (C-x n) is disabled by default | |
| 1594 because it can be very confusing (ie., "Oh no! Where did my file go?"). | |
| 1595 | |
| 1596 56: How do I insert `_^H' before each character in a paragraph to get an | |
| 1597 underlined paragraph? | |
| 1598 | |
| 1599 M-x underline-region. | |
| 1600 | |
| 1601 57: How do I repeat a command as many times as possible? | |
| 1602 | |
| 1603 Use "C-x (" and "C-x )" to make a keyboard macro that invokes the command | |
| 1604 and then type "M-0 C-x e". | |
| 1605 | |
| 1606 WARNING: any messages your command prints in the echo area will be | |
| 1607 suppressed. | |
| 1608 | |
| 1609 58: How do I make Emacs behave like this: when I go up or down, the cursor | |
| 1610 should stay in the same column even if the line is too short? | |
| 1611 | |
| 1612 M-x picture-mode. (This is a minor mode, in theory anyway ...) | |
| 1613 | |
| 1614 59: How do I tell Emacs to iconify itself? | |
| 1615 | |
| 1616 You need to modify C source and recompile. Either that or get Epoch or | |
| 1617 Lucid Emacs instead. Patches have been written by Robert Forsman | |
| 1618 <thoth@reef.cis.ufl.edu> and Johan Vromans <jv@mh.nl> to allow Emacs to | |
| 1619 iconify itself and by Matt Wette <mwette@mr-ed.jpl.nasa.gov> and | |
| 1620 Manavendra K. Thakur <thakur@zerkalo.harvard.edu> (for 18.57, plus icon | |
| 1621 geometry) to allow Emacs to start up iconified. I don't know which of | |
| 1622 these patches work together. | |
| 1623 | |
| 1624 Anonymous FTP: | |
|
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1625 /csi.jpl.nasa.gov:pub/emax.patch1 (Matt Wette) |
| 1736 | 1626 /ftp.eu.net:gnu/emacs/FP-Xfun.Z (Johan Vromans) |
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1627 /ftp.urc.tue.nl:/pub/tex/emacs/FP-Xfun (Johan Vromans) |
| 1736 | 1628 |
| 1629 60: How do I use regexps (regular expressions) in Emacs? | |
| 1630 | |
| 1631 See `Regexps' in the online manual. | |
| 1632 | |
| 1633 WARNING: The "or" operator is `\|', not `|', and the grouping operators | |
| 1634 are `\(' and `\)'. Also, the string syntax for a backslash is "\\". | |
| 1635 Thus, the string syntax for a regular expression like xxx\(foo\|bar\) is | |
| 1636 "xxx\\(foo\\|bar\\)". Notice the duplicated backslashes! | |
| 1637 | |
| 1638 WARNING: Unlike in Unix grep, sed, etc., a complement character set | |
| 1639 ([^...]) can match a newline character (LFD aka C-j aka \n), unless | |
| 1640 newline is mentioned as one of the characters not to match. | |
| 1641 | |
| 1642 WARNING: The character syntax regexps (eg. `\sw') are not meaningful | |
| 1643 inside character set regexps (eg. `[aeiou]'). (This is actually typical | |
| 1644 for regexp syntax.) | |
| 1645 | |
| 1646 61: How do I perform a replace operation across more than one file? | |
| 1647 | |
| 1648 The "tags" feature of Emacs includes the command tags-query-replace which | |
| 1649 performs a query-replace across all the files mentioned in the TAGS file. | |
| 1650 See `Tags:Tags Search' in the online manual. | |
| 1651 | |
| 1652 In addition, Martin Boyer has written a package named global-replace which | |
| 1653 will perform a query-replace across all the files mentioned in the | |
| 1654 *compilation* buffer (usually done after a `grep'), which is available via | |
| 1655 anonymous FTP: | |
| 1656 | |
| 1657 /ireq-robot.hydro.qc.ca:pub/emacs/lisp/compile.el.Z | |
| 1658 /ireq-robot.hydro.qc.ca:pub/emacs/lisp/global-replace.el.Z | |
| 1659 /ireq-robot.hydro.qc.ca:pub/emacs/lisp/query.el.Z | |
| 1660 | |
| 1661 62: Where is the documentation for `etags'? | |
| 1662 | |
| 1663 `etags' takes options just like a prior version of ctags, so your ctags | |
|
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1664 manual (if any) may be useful. Eoin Woods, in comp.emacs, writes the ! |
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1665 following: ! |
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1666 ! |
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1667 From reading the source (!) the way I use it is: ! |
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1668 ! |
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1669 for f in `find <args>` ! |
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1670 do ! |
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1671 etags -at -f ETAGS $f ! |
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1672 done ! |
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1673 ! |
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1674 The "-t" option means to create tags for typedefs as well as functions. ! |
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1675 The "-a" option tells it to append to the output file. If you have a ! |
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1676 small number of files (up to a few hundred I think) you can use it ! |
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1677 direct as: ! |
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1678 ! |
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1679 etags -f ETAGS file1 file2 file3 ... filen ! |
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1680 ! |
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1681 The option list is: ! |
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1682 ! |
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1683 -f file - Specify the output file name (Default is "TAGS") ! |
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1684 -a - Append to the output file. (Default is to rewrite it) ! |
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1685 -t - Create tags for typedefs (default is just functions) ! |
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1686 -u - Update the output file. Do not re-create it. ! |
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1687 -w - Suppress warnings ! |
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1688 -v - Create vgrind style indexed output (What is vgrind??) ! |
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1689 -x - Create cxref style output (default is Emacs Tags) ! |
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1690 -e - Emacs tags style output (the default the way I ! |
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1691 compile it) ! |
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1692 ! |
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1693 Having got it working, it works fine! ! |
| 1736 | 1694 |
| 1695 | |
| 1696 | |
| 1697 Bugs/Problems | |
| 1698 | |
| 1699 63: Does Emacs have problems with files larger than 8 megabytes? | |
| 1700 | |
| 1701 Most installed versions of GNU Emacs will use 24-bit signed integers (and | |
| 1702 24-bit pointers) internally. This limits the file size that Emacs can | |
| 1703 handle to 8,388,607 bytes (2^23 - 1). | |
| 1704 | |
| 1705 Leonard N. Zubkoff <lnz@lucid.com> suggests putting the following two | |
| 1706 lines in src/config.h before compiling Emacs to allow for 26-bit integers | |
| 1707 and pointers (and thus filesizes of up to 33,554,431 bytes): | |
| 1708 | |
| 1709 #define VALBITS 26 | |
| 1710 #define GCTYPEBITS 5 | |
| 1711 | |
| 1712 WARNING: This method may result in `ILLEGAL DATATYPE' and other random | |
| 1713 errors on some machines. | |
| 1714 | |
| 1715 David Gillespie <daveg@csvax.cs.caltech.edu> gives an explanation of why | |
| 1716 Emacs uses 24 bit integers and pointers: | |
| 1717 | |
| 1718 Emacs is largely written in a dialect of Lisp; Lisp is a freely-typed | |
| 1719 language in the sense that you can put any value of any type into any | |
| 1720 variable, or return it from a function, and so on. So each value must | |
| 1721 carry a "tag" along with it identifying what kind of thing it is, eg., | |
| 1722 integer, pointer to a list, pointer to an editing buffer, and so on. | |
| 1723 Emacs uses standard 32-bit integers for data objects, taking the top 8 | |
| 1724 bits for the tag and the bottom 24 bits for the value. So integers (and | |
| 1725 pointers) are somewhat restricted compared to true C integers and | |
| 1726 pointers. | |
| 1727 | |
| 1728 Emacs uses 8-bit tags because that's a little faster on byte-oriented | |
| 1729 machines, but there are only really enough tags to require 6 bits. | |
| 1730 | |
| 1731 64: Why can't Emacs find files in current directory on startup? | |
| 1732 | |
|
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1733 The PWD bug has been fixed as of GNU Emacs 18.59. Read on if you are |
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1734 running an older version of Emacs. |
| 1736 | 1735 |
| 1736 Most likely, you have an environment variable named PWD that is set to a | |
| 1737 value other than the name of your current directory. This is most | |
| 1738 likely caused by using two different shell programs. `ksh' and (some | |
| 1739 versions of) `csh' set and maintain the value of the PWD environment | |
| 1740 variable, but `sh' doesn't. If you start sh from ksh, change your | |
| 1741 current directory inside sh, and then start Emacs from inside sh, PWD | |
|
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1742 will have the wrong value but Emacs will use this value. An invalid |
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1743 setting for PWD can also be a problem if you use X Windows and csh on an |
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1744 RS/6000. See the etc/OPTIONS file for more details. |
| 1736 | 1745 |
| 1746 Perhaps an easier solution is not to use two shells. The `chsh' program | |
| 1747 can often be used to change one's default login shell. | |
| 1748 | |
| 1749 You may have PWD set for other reasons. Another possibility is that you | |
| 1750 are setting default-directory from your .emacs file. | |
| 1751 | |
| 1752 Here is a fix by Jim Blandy <jimb@occs.cs.oberlin.edu>: | |
| 1753 | |
| 1754 >--- emacs/jjj/emacs-18.58/lisp/startup.el Tue Jan 15 23:19:04 1991 | |
| 1755 >+++ startup.el Mon Apr 20 00:21:01 1992 | |
| 1756 >@@ -81,5 +81,7 @@ | |
| 1757 > ;; In presence of symlinks, switch to cleaner form of default directory. | |
| 1758 > (if (and (not (eq system-type 'vax-vms)) | |
| 1759 >- (getenv "PWD")) | |
| 1760 >+ (getenv "PWD") | |
| 1761 >+ (equal (nthcdr 10 (file-attributes default-directory)) | |
| 1762 >+ (nthcdr 10 (file-attributes (getenv "PWD"))))) | |
| 1763 > (setq default-directory (file-name-as-directory (getenv "PWD")))) | |
| 1764 > (unwind-protect | |
| 1765 | |
| 1766 65: How do I get rid of the ^M junk in my Shell buffer? | |
| 1767 | |
| 1768 For tcsh, put this in your `.cshrc' (or `.tcshrc') file: | |
| 1769 | |
| 1770 if ($?EMACS) then | |
| 1771 if ("$EMACS" == t) then | |
| 1772 if ($?tcsh) unset edit | |
| 1773 stty nl | |
| 1774 endif | |
| 1775 endif | |
| 1776 | |
| 1777 Or put this in your .emacs_tcsh file: | |
| 1778 | |
| 1779 unset edit | |
| 1780 stty nl | |
| 1781 | |
| 1782 Alternatively, use csh in your Shell buffers instead of tcsh. One way | |
| 1783 is: | |
| 1784 | |
| 1785 (setq explicit-shell-file-name "/bin/csh") | |
| 1786 | |
| 1787 and another is to do this in your .cshrc (or .tcshrc) file: | |
| 1788 | |
| 1789 setenv ESHELL /bin/csh | |
| 1790 | |
| 1791 (You must start Emacs over again with the environment variable properly | |
| 1792 set for this to take effect.) | |
| 1793 | |
| 1794 66: Why do I get `Process shell exited abnormally with code 1'? | |
| 1795 | |
| 1796 The most likely reason for this message is that the `env' program is not | |
| 1797 properly installed. This program should be compiled (for the correct | |
| 1798 architecture!) and installed with execute permission for everyone in | |
| 1799 Emacs's program directory, which is normally /usr/local/emacs/etc. You | |
| 1800 can find what this directory is at your site by inspecting the value of | |
| 1801 the variable exec-directory by typing "C-h v exec-directory RET". `env' | |
| 1802 should also be for the correct architecture (check using `file' command). | |
| 1803 | |
| 1804 You should also check for other programs named `env' in your path (eg., | |
| 1805 SunOS has a program named /usr/bin/env). I don't understand why this can | |
| 1806 cause a failure and I don't know a general solution for working around the | |
| 1807 problem in this case. | |
| 1808 | |
| 1809 The `make clean' command will remove `env' and other vital programs, so be | |
| 1810 careful when using it. | |
| 1811 | |
| 1812 It has been reported that this sometimes happened when Emacs was started | |
| 1813 as an X client from an xterm window (ie. had a controlling tty) but the | |
| 1814 xterm was later terminated. | |
| 1815 | |
| 1816 See also etc/PROBLEMS for other possible causes of this message. | |
| 1817 | |
| 1818 67: Why can't I cut from Emacs and paste in other X programs? | |
| 1819 | |
| 1820 Emacs stores things you "cut" in the X "cut buffers". It also pastes from | |
| 1821 the cut buffer `CUT_BUFFER0'. This is obsolete. Most modern X programs | |
| 1822 now expect to work with "selections" instead of cut buffers, although some | |
| 1823 like `xterm' will try to use the cut buffers if the selection is null. | |
| 1824 | |
| 1825 Emacs 18.58 contains a "fix" that makes xterm work by default. This | |
| 1826 "fix" is that Emacs clears the `PRIMARY' selection when it stores | |
| 1827 something in the cut buffer. By making the selection null, xterm will | |
| 1828 then fetch from the cut buffer when you try to paste. | |
| 1829 | |
| 1830 For versions of Emacs prior to 18.58, you can make pasting from Emacs into | |
| 1831 xterm work with the following X resources: | |
| 1832 | |
| 1833 ! Solution by Thomas Narten, should work under X11R3 and later GNU | |
| 1834 ! Emacs only copies to CUT_BUFFER0. xterm by default wants to paste | |
| 1835 ! from the PRIMARY selection. | |
| 1836 XTerm*VT100.Translations: #override \ | |
| 1837 ~Meta <Btn2Up>: insert-selection(CUT_BUFFER0,PRIMARY) | |
| 1838 | |
| 1839 You may have problems copying between Emacs and programs other than xterm | |
| 1840 that won't store cut text in the cut buffers or look in the cut buffers | |
| 1841 for text to paste (for backwards compatibility with obsolete applications | |
| 1842 like Emacs :-). The best workaround is to use the `xcutsel' program as an | |
| 1843 intermediary. | |
| 1844 | |
| 1845 This problem does not exist for Epoch or Lucid Emacs. | |
| 1846 | |
| 1847 68: Where is the termcap/terminfo entry for terminal type `emacs'? | |
| 1848 | |
| 1849 The termcap entry for terminal type `emacs' is ordinarily put in the | |
| 1850 TERMCAP environment variable of subshells. It may help in certain | |
| 1851 situations (eg., using rlogin from shell buffer) to add an entry for | |
| 1852 `emacs' to the system-wide termcap file. Here is a correct termcap entry | |
| 1853 for `emacs': | |
| 1854 | |
| 1855 emacs:tc=unknown: | |
| 1856 | |
| 1857 To make a terminfo entry for `emacs', use `tic' or `captoinfo'. You need | |
| 1858 to generate /usr/lib/terminfo/e/emacs. It may work to simply copy | |
| 1859 /usr/lib/terminfo/d/dumb to /usr/lib/terminfo/e/emacs. | |
| 1860 | |
| 1861 Having a termcap/terminfo entry will not enable the use of full screen | |
| 1862 programs in shell buffers. Use M-x terminal-emulator for that instead. | |
| 1863 | |
| 1864 A workaround to the problem of missing termcap/terminfo entries is to | |
| 1865 change terminal type `emacs' to type `dumb' or `unknown' in your shell | |
| 1866 start up file. `csh' users could put this in their .cshrc files: | |
| 1867 | |
| 1868 if ("$term" == emacs) set term=dumb | |
| 1869 | |
| 1870 69: Why does Emacs spontaneously start displaying `I-search:' and beeping? | |
| 1871 | |
| 1872 Your terminal (or something between your terminal and the computer) is | |
| 1873 sending C-s and C-q for flow control, and Emacs is receiving these | |
| 1874 characters and interpreting them as commands. (The C-s character normally | |
| 1875 invokes the isearch-forward command.) For possible solutions, see | |
| 1876 question 131. | |
| 1877 | |
| 1878 70: Why can't Emacs talk to certain hosts (or certain hostnames)? | |
| 1879 | |
| 1880 The problem may be that Emacs is linked with a wimpier version of | |
| 1881 gethostbyname than the rest of the programs on the machine. This is often | |
| 1882 manifested as a message on startup of `X server not responding. Check | |
| 1883 your DISPLAY environment variable.' or a message of `Unknown host' from | |
| 1884 open-network-stream. | |
| 1885 | |
| 1886 On a Sun, this may be because Emacs had to be linked with the static C | |
| 1887 library. The version of gethostbyname in the static C library may only | |
| 1888 look in /etc/hosts and the NIS (YP) maps, while the version in the dynamic | |
| 1889 C library may be smart enough to check DNS in addition to or instead of | |
| 1890 NIS. On a Motorola Delta running System V R3.6, the version of | |
| 1891 gethosbyname in the standard library works, but the one that works with | |
| 1892 NIS doesn't (the one you get with -linet). Other operating systems have | |
| 1893 similar problems. | |
| 1894 | |
| 1895 Try these options: | |
| 1896 | |
| 1897 * Explicitly add the host you want to communicate with to /etc/hosts. | |
| 1898 | |
| 1899 * Relink Emacs with this line in src/config.h: | |
| 1900 | |
| 1901 #define LIBS_SYSTEM -lresolv | |
| 1902 | |
| 1903 * Replace gethostbyname and friends in libc.a with more useful versions | |
| 1904 such as the ones in libresolv.a. Then relink Emacs. | |
| 1905 | |
| 1906 * If you are actually running NIS, make sure that `ypbind' is properly | |
| 1907 told to do DNS lookups with the correct command line switch. | |
| 1908 | |
| 1909 * Use tcp.el and tcp.c from GNUS. This has the additional advantage that | |
| 1910 you can use numeric IP addresses instead of names. open-network-stream | |
| 1911 currently can't handle numeric addresses. Brian Thomson | |
| 1912 <thomson@hub.toronto.edu> has a enhancement to open-network-stream to | |
| 1913 allow it to handle numeric addresses. | |
| 1914 | |
| 1915 71: Why does Emacs say `Error in init file'? | |
| 1916 | |
| 1917 An error occurred while loading either your .emacs file or the system-wide | |
| 1918 lisp/default.el file. For information on how to debug your .emacs file, | |
| 1919 see question 29. | |
| 1920 | |
| 1921 It may be the case that you may need to load some package first, or use a | |
| 1922 hook that will be evaluated after the package is loaded. A common case of | |
| 1923 this is explained in question 127. | |
| 1924 | |
| 1925 72: Why does Emacs ignore my X resources (my .Xdefaults file)? | |
| 1926 | |
| 1927 * Try compiling Emacs with the XBACKWARDS macro defined. There is a bug | |
| 1928 in some implementations of XGetDefault, which do not correspond to the | |
| 1929 documentation or the header files. | |
| 1930 | |
| 1931 * Make sure you are either using the class name of `Emacs' (oops, | |
| 1932 apparently this is buggy in Emacs 18.58!) or the correct instance name. | |
| 1933 The instance name is normally the same as the name of the file Emacs is | |
| 1934 in (ie., the last part of argv[0]), but this can be overridden by -rn | |
| 1935 command line option or the WM_RES_NAME environment variable. | |
| 1936 | |
| 1937 WARNING: Reports say using the class name fails in Emacs 18.58. | |
| 1938 | |
| 1939 WARNING: The advice the man page gives to use `emacs' is often wrong. | |
| 1940 | |
| 1941 WARNING: Older versions of Emacs got the class name wrong. | |
| 1942 | |
| 1943 * Emacs currently ignores the -xrm command line argument. | |
| 1944 | |
| 1945 * Emacs does not yet handle X11R5 screen-specific resources. | |
| 1946 | |
| 1947 * Emacs has a bug where it ignores color specifications if running on a | |
| 1948 1-bit display (ie. a non-color display). | |
| 1949 | |
| 1950 * I don't think Emacs will use either of the application-specific resource | |
| 1951 files. Thus these environment variables don't affect it: XAPPLRESDIR, | |
| 1952 XUSERFILESEARCHPATH, XFILESEARCHPATH. {Correct?} | |
| 1953 | |
| 1954 73: Why does Emacs take 20 seconds to visit a file? | |
| 1955 | |
| 1956 The usual cause is that the master lock file, `!!!SuperLock!!!' has been | |
| 1957 left in the lock directory somehow. Delete it. | |
| 1958 | |
| 1959 Mark Meuer <meuer@geom.umn.edu> says that NeXT NFS has a bug where an | |
| 1960 exclusive create succeeds but returns an error status. This can cause the | |
| 1961 same problem. Since Emacs's file locking doesn't work over NFS anyway, | |
| 1962 the best solution is to recompile Emacs with CLASH_DETECTION undefined. | |
| 1963 | |
| 1964 74: How do I edit a file with a `$' in its name? | |
| 1965 | |
| 1966 When entering a filename in the minibuffer, Emacs will attempt to expand | |
| 1967 a `$' followed by a word as an environment variable. To suppress this | |
| 1968 behavior, type "$$" instead. | |
| 1969 | |
| 1970 75: Why does Shell mode lose track of the shell's current directory? | |
| 1971 | |
| 1972 Emacs has no way of knowing when the shell actually changes its directory. | |
| 1973 This is an intrinsic limitation of Unix. So it tries to guess by | |
| 1974 recognizing `cd' commands. If you type `cd' followed by a directory name | |
| 1975 with a variable reference (`cd $HOME/bin') or with a shell metacharacter | |
| 1976 (`cd ../lib*'), Emacs will fail to correctly guess the shell's new current | |
| 1977 directory. A huge variety of fixes and enhancements to Shell mode for | |
| 1978 this problem have been written to handle this problem. Check the Lisp | |
| 1979 Code Directory (see question 88). | |
| 1980 | |
| 1981 76: Why doesn't my change to load-path work? | |
| 1982 | |
| 1983 If you added a directory name containing a tilde (~) to your load-path, | |
| 1984 expecting the tilde to be interpreted as your home directory, then you | |
| 1985 need to do something like this: | |
| 1986 | |
| 1987 (setq load-path (mapcar 'expand-file-name load-path)) | |
| 1988 | |
| 1989 77: Why does the cursor always go to the wrong column when I move up or | |
| 1990 down one line? | |
| 1991 | |
| 1992 You have inadvertently typed "C-x C-n" (set-goal-column) which sets the | |
| 1993 "goal column" to the column where the cursor was. To undo this type | |
| 1994 "C-u C-x C-n". | |
| 1995 | |
| 1996 If you make this mistake frequently, you might want to unbind or disable | |
| 1997 this command by doing one of these two: | |
| 1998 | |
| 1999 (define-key ctl-x-map "\C-n" nil) | |
| 2000 (put 'set-goal-column 'disabled t) | |
| 2001 | |
| 2002 78: Why does Emacs hang with message `Unknown XMenu error' with X11R4? | |
| 2003 | |
| 2004 Many different X errors can produce this message. Here is the solution | |
| 2005 to one problem: | |
| 2006 | |
| 2007 X11 Release 4 (and later, including OpenWindows) enforces some conditions | |
| 2008 in the X protocol that were previously allowed to pass unnoticed. You | |
| 2009 need to put the X11R4 server into X11R3 bug compatibility mode for Emacs's | |
| 2010 Xmenu code to work. You can do this with the command `xset bc'. | |
| 2011 | |
| 2012 79: Why doesn't display-time show the load average in the mode line | |
| 2013 anymore? | |
| 2014 | |
| 2015 In GNU Emacs 18.56, a change was made in the display-time code. | |
| 2016 Formerly, in version 18.55, Emacs used a program named `loadst' to | |
| 2017 notify Emacs of the change in time every minute. loadst also sent Emacs | |
| 2018 the system load average if it was installed with sufficient privilege to | |
| 2019 get that information (or was on a system where no such privilege was | |
| 2020 needed). Emacs then displayed this information in the mode line. | |
| 2021 | |
| 2022 In version 18.56, this code was changed to use a program named `wakeup'. | |
| 2023 wakeup doesn't send Emacs any information, it's only purpose is to send | |
| 2024 Emacs *something* every minute, thus invoking the filter function in | |
| 2025 Emacs once a minute. The filter function in Emacs does all the work of | |
| 2026 finding the time, date, and load average. However, getting the load | |
| 2027 average requires the privilege to read kernel memory on most systems. | |
| 2028 Since giving Emacs this privilege would destroy any security a system | |
| 2029 might have, for almost everyone this is not an option. In addition, | |
| 2030 Emacs does not have the code built into it to get this information on | |
| 2031 the systems which have special system calls for this purpose, even | |
| 2032 though loadst had code for this. | |
| 2033 | |
| 2034 The solution I use is to get the files lisp/display-time.el and | |
| 2035 etc/loadst.c from version 18.55 and use those with 18.58. (I have heard | |
| 2036 a rumor that loadst disappeared because of the legal action Unipress | |
| 2037 threatened against IBM.) | |
| 2038 | |
| 2039 WARNING: Do not install Emacs setgid kmem unless you wish to destroy | |
| 2040 any security your system might have!!!!!!!!!! | |
| 2041 | |
| 2042 If you are using Emacs 18.55 or earlier, or already using the solution I | |
| 2043 describe above, read further: | |
| 2044 | |
| 2045 The most likely cause of the problem is that `loadst' can't read the | |
| 2046 special file /dev/kmem. To properly install loadst, it should be either | |
| 2047 setuid to the owner of /dev/kmem, or is should be setgid to the group to | |
| 2048 which /dev/kmem belongs. In either case, /dev/kmem should be readable by | |
| 2049 its owner or its group, respectively. Assuming the existence of a group | |
| 2050 named `kmem', here is an example of how to do this: | |
| 2051 | |
| 2052 chgrp kmem /dev/kmem | |
| 2053 chmod g+r /dev/kmem | |
| 2054 chgrp kmem /usr/local/emacs/etc/loadst | |
| 2055 chmod g+s /usr/local/emacs/etc/loadst | |
| 2056 | |
| 2057 Another possibility is that your version of Unix doesn't have the load | |
| 2058 average data available in /dev/kmem. Your version of Unix might have a | |
| 2059 special system call to retrieve this information (eg., inq_stats under | |
| 2060 UMAX), and loadst might not have been enhanced to cope with this. | |
| 2061 | |
| 2062 80: Why does ispell sometimes ignore the local dictionary? | |
| 2063 | |
| 2064 You need to update the version of Ispell to 2.0.02. (Or you can switch to | |
| 2065 version 3.0 which is still in beta-testing.) A patch is available via | |
| 2066 anonymous FTP: | |
| 2067 | |
| 2068 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/ispell/patch2.Z | |
| 2069 | |
| 2070 You also need to change a line in ispell.el from: | |
| 2071 | |
| 2072 (defconst ispell-version "2.0.01") ; Check against output of "ispell -v". | |
| 2073 | |
| 2074 to: | |
| 2075 | |
| 2076 (defconst ispell-version "2.0.02") ; Check against output of "ispell -v". | |
| 2077 | |
| 2078 81: Why does Ispell treat each line as a single word? | |
| 2079 | |
| 2080 Ispell expects to get its input one word per line. The ispell filter, | |
| 2081 which is specified by the variables ispell-filter-hook and | |
| 2082 ispell-filter-hook-args, should output at most one word per line. | |
| 2083 | |
| 2084 82: Are there any security risks in GNU Emacs? | |
| 2085 | |
| 2086 * the `movemail' incident (No, this is not a risk.) | |
| 2087 | |
| 2088 Cliff Stoll in his book `The Cuckoo's Egg' describes this in chapter 4. | |
| 2089 The site at LBL had installed the `etc/movemail' program setuid root. | |
| 2090 Since `movemail' had not been designed for this situation, a security | |
|
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|
2091 hole was created and users could get root privileges. |
| 1736 | 2092 |
| 2093 `movemail' has since been changed so that even if it is installed setuid | |
| 2094 root this security hole will not be a result. | |
| 2095 | |
| 2096 I have heard unverified reports that the Internet worm took advantage of | |
| 2097 this configuration problem. | |
| 2098 | |
| 2099 * the file-local-variable feature (Yes, a risk, but easy to change.) | |
| 2100 | |
| 2101 There is an Emacs feature that allows the setting of local values for | |
| 2102 variables when editing a file by including specially formatted text near | |
| 2103 the end of the file. This feature also includes the ability to have | |
| 2104 arbitrary Emacs Lisp code evaluated when the file is visited. | |
| 2105 Obviously, there is a potential for Trojan horses to exploit this | |
| 2106 feature. | |
| 2107 | |
| 2108 If you set the variable inhibit-local-variables to a non-nil value, | |
| 2109 Emacs will display the special local variable settings of a file that | |
| 2110 you visit and ask you if you really want them. This variable is not | |
| 2111 mentioned in the manual. | |
| 2112 | |
| 2113 It is wise to do this in lisp/site-init.el before building Emacs: | |
| 2114 | |
| 2115 (setq inhibit-local-variables t) | |
| 2116 | |
| 2117 If Emacs has already been built, the expression can be put in | |
| 2118 lisp/default.el instead, or an individual can put it in their own .emacs | |
| 2119 file. | |
| 2120 | |
| 2121 The ability to exploit this feature by sending e-mail to an RMAIL user | |
| 2122 was fixed sometime after Emacs 18.52. However, any new package that | |
| 2123 uses find-file or find-file-noselect has to be careful about this. | |
| 2124 | |
| 2125 For more information, see `File Variables' in the online manual (which, | |
| 2126 incidentally, does not describe how to disable the feature). | |
| 2127 | |
| 2128 There is a new variable in Emacs 18.58 named ignore-local-eval which | |
| 2129 turns out to be useless as currently implemented. Ignore it. | |
| 2130 | |
| 2131 * synthetic X events (Yes, a risk, use MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 or better.) | |
| 2132 | |
| 2133 Emacs accepts synthetic X events generated by the SendEvent request as | |
| 2134 though they were regular events. As a result, if you are using the | |
| 2135 trivial host-based authentication, other users who can open X | |
|
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|
2136 connections to your X workstation can make your Emacs process do |
|
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|
2137 anything, including run other processes with your privileges. |
| 1736 | 2138 |
| 2139 The only fix for this is to prevent other users from being able to open | |
| 2140 X connections. The standard way to prevent this is to use a real | |
| 2141 authentication mechanism, such as MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1. If using the | |
| 2142 `xauth' program has any effect, then you are probably using | |
| 2143 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1. Your site may be using a superior authentication | |
| 2144 method; ask your system administrator. | |
| 2145 | |
| 2146 If real authentication is not a possibility, you may be satisfied by | |
| 2147 just allowing hosts access for brief intervals while you start your X | |
| 2148 programs, then removing the access. This reduces the risk somewhat by | |
| 2149 narrowing the time window when hostile users would have access, but DOES | |
| 2150 NOT ELIMINATE THE RISK. | |
| 2151 | |
| 2152 Lucid GNU Emacs does not accept synthetic X events unless you set a | |
| 2153 variable. | |
| 2154 | |
| 2155 * autosave file permissions (Yes, a risk, hard to work around.) | |
| 2156 | |
| 2157 The file permissions for autosave files are determined solely by the | |
| 2158 Emacs process's `umask' value. The permissions of the file being | |
| 2159 autosaved are not used. The easiest workaround is to keep sensitive | |
| 2160 files in protected directories. Sebastian Kremer has written an | |
| 2161 enhanced version of the autosave file name picking code that can avoid | |
| 2162 this problem by keeping autosave files in a protected directory. {FTP | |
| 2163 information please?} This problem will be fixed in Emacs 19. | |
| 2164 | |
| 2165 | |
| 2166 | |
| 2167 Difficulties Building/Installing/Porting Emacs | |
| 2168 | |
| 2169 83: What should I do if I have trouble building Emacs? | |
| 2170 | |
| 2171 First look in the file etc/PROBLEMS to see if there is already a solution | |
| 2172 for your problem. Next check the FAQ (you're reading it). If you don't | |
| 2173 find a solution, then report your problem via e-mail to | |
| 2174 bug-gnu-emacs@prep.ai.mit.edu. Please do not post it to gnu.emacs.help or | |
| 2175 e-mail it to help-gnu-emacs@prep.ai.mit.edu. For further guidelines, see | |
| 2176 question 8. | |
| 2177 | |
| 2178 84: How do I stop Emacs from failing when the executable is stripped? | |
| 2179 | |
| 2180 Don't do that. | |
| 2181 | |
| 2182 This problem has been reported on SGI Indigo machines running Irix 4.0.* | |
| 2183 and RS/6000 machines. Scott Henry <scotth@hoshi.corp.SGi.COM> posted a | |
| 2184 patch that fixes the problem for Irix. | |
| 2185 | |
| 2186 85: Why does linking Emacs with -lX11 fail? | |
| 2187 | |
| 2188 Emacs needs to be linked with the static version of the X11 library, | |
| 2189 libX11.a. This may be missing. | |
| 2190 | |
| 2191 Under OpenWindows, you may need to use `add_services' to add the | |
| 2192 `OpenWindows Programmers' optional software category from the CD-ROM. | |
| 2193 | |
| 2194 Under HP-UX 8.0, you may need to run `update' again to load the | |
| 2195 X11-PRG `fileset'. This may be missing even if you specified `all | |
| 2196 filesets' the first time. If libcurses.a is missing, you may need to load | |
| 2197 the `Berkeley Development Option' {???}. | |
| 2198 | |
| 2199 If you are building the MIT X11 sources, you may need to modify your | |
| 2200 `site.cf' file to get static versions of the libraries. (Info from David | |
| 2201 Zuhn <zoo@cygnus.com>.) | |
| 2202 | |
| 2203 Other systems may have similar problems. You can always define | |
| 2204 CANNOT_DUMP and link with the shared libraries instead. | |
| 2205 | |
| 2206 To get the Xmenu stuff to work, you need to find a copy of MIT's | |
| 2207 liboldX.a. | |
| 2208 | |
| 2209 86: Why does Emacs 18.55 say `Fatal error (6).Abort' under SunOS 4.1? | |
| 2210 | |
| 2211 I had hoped this question would go away after Emacs 18.57 was released, | |
| 2212 but people continue to compile 18.55. Easiest solution: upgrade. | |
| 2213 | |
| 2214 This is a result of the SunOS localtime/tzsetwall malloc bug, which was | |
| 2215 (finally!) fixed in SunOS 4.1.2. If you actually need the full | |
| 2216 explanation, send me e-mail. If you absolutely must compile Emacs 18.55 | |
| 2217 (eg., you are compiling Nemacs), the easiest workaround was to put | |
| 2218 `#define SYSTEM_MALLOC' in src/config.h. | |
| 2219 | |
| 2220 | |
| 2221 | |
| 2222 GNU Emacs FAQ: Getting Emacs/Packages | |
| 2223 | |
| 2224 If you are viewing this text in a GNU Emacs Buffer, you can type "M-2 C-x $" to | |
| 2225 get an overview of just the questions. Then, when you want to look at the text | |
| 2226 of the answers, just type "C-x $". | |
| 2227 | |
| 2228 To search for a question numbered XXX, type "M-C-s ^XXX:", followed by a C-r if | |
| 2229 that doesn't work, then type ESC to end the search. | |
| 2230 | |
| 2231 A `+' in the 78th column means something was inserted on the line. A `-' means | |
| 2232 something was deleted and a `!' means some combination of insertions and | |
| 2233 deletions occurred. | |
| 2234 | |
| 2235 Full instructions for getting the latest FAQ are in question 22. Also see the | |
| 2236 `Introduction to news.answers' posting in the `news.answers' newsgroup, or send | |
| 2237 e-mail to `mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu' with `help' on a body line, or use FTP, | |
| 2238 WAIS, or Prospero to rtfm.mit.edu. | |
| 2239 | |
| 2240 | |
| 2241 | |
| 2242 Finding/Getting Emacs and Related Packages | |
| 2243 | |
| 2244 87: Where can I get GNU Emacs on the net (or by snail mail)? | |
| 2245 | |
| 2246 Look in the files etc/DISTRIB and etc/FTP for information on nearby | |
| 2247 archive sites. If you don't already have GNU Emacs, see question 20 | |
| 2248 for how to get these two files. | |
| 2249 | |
| 2250 The latest version is always available via anonymous FTP at MIT: | |
| 2251 | |
|
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2252 /prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/emacs-18.59.tar.Z |
| 1736 | 2253 |
| 2254 See question 91. | |
| 2255 | |
| 2256 88: How do I find a GNU Emacs Lisp package that does XXX? | |
| 2257 | |
| 2258 A listing of Emacs Lisp packages, called the Lisp Code Directory, is being | |
| 2259 maintained by Dave Brennan <brennan@hal.com> and Dave Sill <de5@ornl.gov>. | |
| 2260 You can search through this list to find if someone has written something | |
| 2261 that fits your needs. | |
| 2262 | |
| 2263 This list is file LCD-datafile.Z in the Emacs Lisp Archive. (See | |
| 2264 question 89 for methods for getting this file.) The files lispdir.el.Z | |
| 2265 and lispdir.doc.Z in the archive contain information to help you use the | |
| 2266 list. Once you have installed lispdir.el and LCD-datafile, then you can | |
| 2267 use the "M-x lisp-dir-apropos" command to look things up in the database. | |
| 2268 For example, the command "M-x lisp-dir-apropos RET ange-ftp RET" produces | |
| 2269 this (outdated) output: | |
| 2270 | |
| 2271 GNU Emacs Lisp Code Apropos -- "ange-ftp" | |
| 2272 | |
| 2273 ange-ftp (3.112) 91-08-12 | |
| 2274 Andy Norman, <ange@hplb.hpl.hp.com> | |
| 2275 archive.cis.ohio-state.edu: | |
| 2276 /pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/as-is/ange-ftp.el.Z | |
| 2277 transparent FTP Support for GNU Emacs | |
| 2278 | |
| 2279 89: Where can I get GNU Emacs Lisp packages that don't come with Emacs? | |
| 2280 | |
| 2281 First, check the Lisp Code Directory to find the name of the package you | |
| 2282 are looking for. (See question 88). Then check local archives and | |
| 2283 the Emacs Lisp Archive to find a copy of the relevant files. Then, if | |
| 2284 you still haven't found it, you can send e-mail to the author asking for | |
| 2285 a copy. | |
| 2286 | |
| 2287 You can access the Emacs Lisp Archive via anonymous FTP: | |
| 2288 | |
| 2289 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:/pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/ | |
| 2290 | |
| 2291 Fetch the file README first. | |
| 2292 | |
| 2293 NOTE: The archive maintainers do not have time to answer individual | |
| 2294 requests for packages or the list of packages in the archive. If you | |
| 2295 cannot use FTP or UUCP to access the archive yourself, try to find a | |
| 2296 friend who can, but please don't ask the maintainers. | |
| 2297 | |
| 2298 NOTE: Any files with names ending in `.Z' are compressed, and you should | |
| 2299 use `binary' mode in FTP to retrieve them. You should also use binary | |
| 2300 mode whenever you retrieve any files with names ending in `.elc'. | |
| 2301 | |
| 2302 90: How do I submit code to the Emacs Lisp Archive? | |
| 2303 | |
| 2304 Submissions should be mailed to elisp-archive@cis.ohio-state.edu. The | |
| 2305 lispdir.el package has a function named submit-lcd-entry which will help | |
| 2306 you with this. Mail messages (submissions) are automatically saved and | |
| 2307 periodically archived. Urgent mail may be sent directly to Dave Sill | |
| 2308 <de5@ornl.gov> or Dave Brennan <brennan@hal.com> or should contain the | |
| 2309 string `urgent' in the subject. The incoming ftp directory is no longer | |
| 2310 available at the request of Ohio State. {Is this still true?} | |
| 2311 | |
| 2312 However, if someone has a submission with multiple files (which would be | |
| 2313 archived as a tar file) or binary files, then FTP transfer is preferred | |
| 2314 and can be arranged via an anonymous FTP site. This is faster than | |
| 2315 uudecoding, unsharing, etc., and re-packaging files. | |
| 2316 | |
| 2317 Before submitting anything, please read the file guidelines.Z, which is | |
| 2318 available in the archive. Whenever possible, submissions should contain a | |
| 2319 complete LCD entry since this helps reduce administrative overhead for the | |
| 2320 maintainers. You can include an entry in this format: | |
| 2321 | |
| 2322 ;; LCD Archive Entry: | |
| 2323 ;; package name|author's name|email address | |
| 2324 ;; |description | |
| 2325 ;; |date|version|archive path | |
| 2326 | |
| 2327 For example: | |
| 2328 | |
| 2329 ;; LCD Archive Entry: | |
| 2330 ;; tex-complete|Sebastian Kremer|sk@thp.Uni-Koeln.DE | |
| 2331 ;; |Minibuffer name completion for editing [La]TeX. | |
|
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2332 ;; |91-03-26|$Revision: 1.5 $|~/packages/tex-complete.el.Z ! |
| 1736 | 2333 |
| 2334 Dave Brennan has software which automatically looks for data in this | |
| 2335 format. The format is fairly flexible. The entry ends when a line is | |
| 2336 reached with a different prefix or the seventh field terminator is | |
| 2337 seen. | |
| 2338 | |
| 2339 If you are submitting a multi-file submission you should include a file | |
| 2340 named "LCD-entry" which contains the archive entry, instead of placing | |
| 2341 it in one or more of the individual files. | |
| 2342 | |
| 2343 91: Where can I get other up-to-date GNU stuff? | |
| 2344 | |
| 2345 The most up-to-date official GNU stuff is normally kept on prep.ai.mit.edu | |
| 2346 and is available for anonymous FTP in the pub/gnu directory. See the | |
| 2347 files etc/DISTRIB and etc/FTP for more information. (To get copies of | |
| 2348 these files, see question 20.) | |
| 2349 | |
| 2350 The following sites are all mirror images of the GNU distribution area: | |
| 2351 | |
| 2352 /prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/ | |
| 2353 /ftp.uu.net:packages/gnu/ | |
| 2354 /src.doc.ic.ac.uk:gnu/ (available via FTP, NIFTP, FTAM) | |
| 2355 /ftp.win.tue.nl:pub/gnu/ | |
| 2356 /utsun.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp:ftpsync/prep/ | |
| 2357 /nic.funet.fi:pub/gnu/ | |
| 2358 | |
| 2359 The directory at ftp.uu.net is a mirror of prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu, | |
| 2360 except that files larger than 1 megabyte {right?} are automatically | |
| 2361 split into multiple parts. If you have trouble transferring large | |
| 2362 files, you should try here. A file normally named `XXX' is split into | |
| 2363 files XXX-split/part[0-9][0-9], and there will be a file named | |
| 2364 XXX-split/README which contains the list of parts (especially helpful | |
| 2365 when FTP-ing by e-mail), their checksums, and reassembly instructions. | |
| 2366 Some of the other mirror sites may have the same property. {Can someone | |
| 2367 check this out? Thanks!} | |
| 2368 | |
| 2369 Information was provided by Lee McLoughlin <lmjm@doc.ic.ac.uk>, Jonathan | |
| 2370 R. Ferro <jf41+@ANDREW.CMU.EDU>, Arjan de Vet <devet@win.tue.nl>, and | |
| 2371 Simon Marshall <S.Marshall@sequent.cc.hull.ac.uk>. | |
| 2372 | |
| 2373 92: Where can I get an Emacs with better mouse and X window support? | |
| 134 | 2374 |
| 2375 Emacs 18 has some limited X Window System support, but there are | |
| 2376 problems. Emacs 19 will have amazing mouse and window support. Right | |
| 1736 | 2377 now, there are Epoch which is derived from GNU Emacs 18.58 and Lucid GNU |
| 2378 Emacs which is derived from an early unreleased version of GNU Emacs 19, | |
| 2379 both of which have greatly improved mouse and window support. See | |
| 2380 questions 120 and 121. | |
| 2381 | |
| 2382 The HP unofficial GNU Emacs also has nice mouse support. See question | |
| 2383 95. | |
| 597 | 2384 |
| 2385 There are numerous Emacs Lisp packages that have been written to extend | |
| 2386 Emacs 18's mouse handling capabilities. Some of these packages also have | |
| 1736 | 2387 patches to the C code to provide enhanced capabilities. Look up `mouse' |
| 2388 in the Lisp Code Directory (see question 88). | |
| 2389 | |
| 2390 There is a package called BAM (Born Again Menus) which provides menus for | |
| 2391 GNU Emacs via an external C program. It does not provide mouse support in | |
| 2392 the Emacs window such as scrollbars, cut-and-paste, etc. | |
| 2393 | |
| 2394 NOTE: Epoch only works with the X Window System; it works on ordinary | |
| 2395 terminals by invoking regular GNU Emacs. Lucid Emacs does not currently | |
| 2396 work on ordinary terminals, although there are plans to fix this. | |
| 2397 | |
| 2398 93: What is the difference between GNU Emacs and Epoch? | |
| 2399 | |
| 2400 Marc Andreessen <marca@ncsa.uiuc.edu> writes: | |
| 2401 | |
| 2402 Epoch is GNU Emacs on steroids: an adaptation of GNU Emacs with lots of | |
| 2403 additional support for features made possible by the X11 windowing | |
| 2404 system. These features include multiple editing windows, arbitrary | |
| 2405 colors and fonts (fixed-width and proportional), selectable zones per | |
| 2406 buffer with arbitrary display styles (font, color, underline, stipple, | |
| 2407 pixmap), an optional separate minibuffer window, improved keyboard and | |
| 2408 mouse handling, full 8-bit character set support, and more. | |
| 2409 | |
| 2410 94: What is the difference between GNU Emacs and Lucid GNU Emacs? | |
| 2411 | |
| 2412 This information is condensed from the release notice: | |
| 2413 | |
| 2414 Lucid GNU Emacs is based on an early version of GNU Emacs version 19 | |
| 2415 with many enhancements. It currently requires X Windows to run. For | |
| 2416 information on where to get Lucid GNU Emacs see 121. X Windows support | |
| 2417 is greatly enhanced over GNU Emacs version 18, including support for | |
| 2418 multiple X Windows (a.k.a. screens in Emacs), Zmacs/Lispm style region | |
| 2419 highlighting, a customizable, Motif-like menubar, more powerful keymap | |
| 2420 support (allowing different actions to be associated with Backspace, | |
| 2421 Control-h, etc.), flexible text attribute (e.g. font, color) support on | |
| 2422 regional and screen-local basis through X resources and/or lisp, and | |
| 2423 support for the X11 selection mechanism. Some other features include | |
| 2424 run-time computation of the load-path, support for floating point | |
| 2425 numbers, native timer support, and sound file support on Sun | |
| 2426 SPARCstations. To build Lucid GNU Emacs, an ANSI C compiler (e.g. gcc) | |
| 2427 is required. | |
| 2428 | |
| 2429 95: Where can I get the "unofficial HP GNU Emacs"? | |
| 2430 | |
| 2431 The unofficial HP GNU Emacs is available via anonymous FTP: | |
| 2432 | |
|
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2433 /ee.utah.edu:HUGE/ (PLEASE FTP DURING NON-WORK HOURS!!!) |
| 1736 | 2434 |
| 2435 and takes about 35 megabytes of disk space to build. It is useful for | |
| 2436 non-HP machines, but some of the added features will only work under | |
| 2437 HP-UX. | |
| 597 | 2438 |
| 2439 You will need to get patches to work with HP-UX 8.0 or on 700 series | |
| 2440 machines via e-mail from Darryl Okahata <darrylo@sr.hp.com>. | |
| 2441 | |
| 1736 | 2442 96: Where can I get Emacs for my PC running MS-DOS? |
| 2443 | |
| 2444 * Demacs | |
| 2445 | |
| 2446 For 386 or 486 PCs running MS-DOS, there is a version of GNU Emacs | |
| 2447 called Demacs. To get Demacs see question 122. | |
| 2448 | |
| 2449 From the announcement message: | |
| 2450 | |
| 2451 Demacs is almost a full set of GNU Emacs but does not support some | |
| 2452 features: asynchronous process, locking a file, etc. | |
| 2453 | |
| 2454 Demacs provides following DOS specific features: | |
| 2455 | |
| 2456 * File type: text or binary file translation. | |
| 2457 * "8-bit clean" display mode. | |
| 2458 * 8086 software interrupt call by int86 lisp function. | |
| 2459 * Machine specific features such as function key support. | |
| 2460 * File name completion with drive name. | |
| 2461 * Child process (suspend-emacs, call-process). | |
| 2462 * Enhanced dired mode which can work without 'ls.exe'. | |
| 2463 | |
| 2464 To our regret `shell-mode' does not work, but `compile' command works | |
| 2465 properly. | |
| 2466 | |
| 2467 Demacs was developed using an MS-DOS version of gcc called djgpp by | |
| 2468 D. J. Delorie <dj@ctron.com> which can compile and run large programs | |
| 2469 under MS-DOS, but not under MS Windows. Demacs was derived from Nemacs | |
| 2470 rather than straight from GNU Emacs. | |
| 597 | 2471 |
| 2472 There are a variety of other Emacses for MS-DOS including among them the | |
| 2473 following. | |
| 2474 | |
| 1736 | 2475 * Freemacs |
| 2476 | |
| 2477 Russ Nelson <nelson@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>, the author, describes | |
| 2478 Freemacs: | |
| 2479 | |
| 2480 * Freemacs is free, and it was designed from the start to be | |
| 2481 programmable. | |
| 2482 * Freemacs is the only IBM-PC editor that tries to be like GNU Emacs. | |
| 2483 * Freemacs can only edit files less than 64K in length. | |
| 2484 * Freemacs doesn't have undo. | |
| 2485 | |
| 2486 Carl Witty <cwitty@cs.stanford.edu> reviews Freemacs: | |
| 2487 | |
| 2488 Better is Freemacs, which follows the tradition of ITS and GNU Emacs | |
| 2489 by having an full, turing-complete extension language which is | |
| 2490 incompatible with everything else. In fact, it's even closer to ITS | |
| 2491 Emacs than GNU Emacs is, because Mint (Freemacs' extension language) | |
| 2492 is absolutely illegible without weeks of study, much like TECO. | |
| 2493 | |
| 2494 To get Freemacs see question 123. | |
| 2495 | |
| 2496 * MicroEmacs | |
| 2497 | |
| 2498 MicroEmacs is a descendant of Microemacs {originally by Dave Conroy?}. | |
| 2499 It is programmable in a BASIC-like language. Many of the keybindings | |
|
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2500 are different from GNU Emacs. The author is Daniel Lawrence - |
|
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2501 <dan@mdbs.uucp, mdbs!dan@ee.ecn.purdue.edu>. The latest version is 3.12 ! |
| 1736 | 2502 and it is available via anonymous FTP: |
| 2503 | |
|
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2504 /midas.mgmt.purdue.edu:dist/uemacs312/ (outside business hours) ! |
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2505 ! |
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2506 Version 3.12 includes Windows and Windows NT versions and a DOS ! |
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2507 protected mode (DMPI) version. ! |
| 1736 | 2508 |
| 2509 * JOVE | |
| 2510 | |
| 2511 Another Emacs for small machines is JOVE (Jonathan's Own Version of | |
| 2512 Emacs). The latest official version is 4.14. There appears to be a | |
| 2513 newer version. People rumored to be working on JOVE include Mark Moraes | |
| 2514 <moraes@cs.toronto.edu> and Bill Marsh <bmarsh@cod.nosc.mil>. It is | |
| 2515 available via anonymous FTP: | |
| 2516 | |
|
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2517 /cs.toronto.edu:/pub/moraes/jove4.14.7.tar.Z |
| 1736 | 2518 |
| 2519 * MG | |
| 2520 | |
| 2521 MG is another descendant of Microemacs. MG used to stand for | |
| 2522 MicroGNUEmacs, but now just stands for MG. The look-and-feel of MG is | |
| 2523 intended to be close to that of GNU Emacs. It is rumored that MG can | |
| 2524 not correctly edit files larger than memory. The current version is | |
| 2525 rumored to be 2. There is a version 3 in beta which works on the Amiga. | |
| 2526 It is also available via anonymous FTP: | |
| 2527 | |
| 2528 /ftp.white.toronto.edu:pub/mg/ | |
| 2529 /wuarchive.wustl.edu:/mirrors/unix-c/editors/ | |
| 2530 /procyon.cis.ksu.edu: (source and executable) | |
| 2531 | |
| 2532 97: Where can I get Emacs for my PC running Windows? | |
| 2533 | |
| 2534 I believe that no version of GNU Emacs runs under Windows. Pierre Perret | |
| 2535 <pap@myths.az05.bull.com> has ported MicroEMACS 3.11c to Windows. | |
| 597 | 2536 |
| 2537 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 1736 | 2538 /ftp.cica.indiana.edu:pub/pc/win3/util/mewin10.zip |
| 2539 /ftp.cica.indiana.edu:pub/pc/win3/util/mewin10s.zip | |
| 2540 /ftp.cica.indiana.edu:pub/pc/win3/util/mewri.zip | |
| 2541 | |
| 2542 98: Where can I get Emacs for my PC running OS/2? | |
| 2543 | |
| 2544 From the OS/2 Programmer's FAQ: | |
| 2545 | |
| 2546 GNU Emacs 18.58 is available. It requires you to have EMX installed | |
| 2547 on your machine, but it comes with all the EMX files you will need. | |
| 2548 Emacs is available on ftp-os2 in /pub/os2/2.0/gnu/emacs. (If you want | |
| 2549 to recompile emacs, you will need the full EMX distribution see | |
| 2550 question 1.2.) | |
| 2551 | |
| 2552 The above quote may be out of date. See the latest OS/2 Programmer's FAQ | |
| 2553 {perhaps in comp.os.os2.misc?} for the latest news. Anonymous FTP info: | |
| 2554 | |
| 2555 /ftp-os2.nmsu.edu:pub/os2/2.0/gnu/emacs/ | |
| 2556 ("ftp-os2" was formerly named "hobbes") | |
| 2557 | |
| 2558 Thanks go to Stephen Simpson <simpson@symcom.math.uiuc.edu>, Jonathan | |
| 2559 Miller <jem+@andrew.cmu.edu>, Terry Kane <terryk@cc.gatech.edu>, J. D. | |
| 2560 Baldwin <baldwin@csservera.usna.navy.mil>, and Ken Bass | |
| 2561 <kbass@gmuvax2.gmu.edu>. | |
| 2562 | |
| 2563 99: Where can I get Emacs for my Atari ST? | |
| 2564 | |
| 2565 Emacs 18.57 is the latest version for TOS. Stefan Mueller-Pfeiffer | |
| 2566 <iff327@zam001.zam.kfa-juelich.de> says: | |
| 2567 | |
| 2568 There is also a version for MiNT, the multitasking enhancement for | |
| 2569 ATARI's TOS, which behaves almost like EMACS on a "real computer". This | |
| 2570 port was done by Erling Henanger <erlingh@idt.unit.no>. | |
| 2571 | |
| 2572 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2573 /atari.archive.umich.edu:atari/gnustuff/tos/ (TOS Emacs 18.57) | |
| 2574 /atari.archive.umich.edu:atari/new/mntemacs.zoo (MiNT Emacs) | |
| 2575 /cs.uni-sb.de:/pub/atari/emacs/ | |
| 2576 | |
| 2577 100: Where can I get Emacs for my Amiga? | |
| 597 | 2578 |
| 2579 All of the files are lharc-ed. | |
| 2580 | |
| 2581 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 1736 | 2582 /oes.orst.edu:/pub/almanac/comp/amiga/software/gnuemacs-1.10/ |
| 597 | 2583 |
| 2584 Via e-mail: | |
| 1736 | 2585 To: almanac@oes.orst.edu |
| 597 | 2586 body: |
| 2587 mode uuencode | |
| 2588 send computer amiga software gnuemacs <file> | |
| 2589 <file> is replaced by one of the following: | |
| 2590 Required: d1.lzh d2.lzh | |
| 2591 Recommended: d3_info.lzh d3_infolisp.lzh | |
| 2592 Optional: d3_autoloaded.lzh d3_entertainmentetc.lzh | |
| 1736 | 2593 d3_entertainmentlisp.lzh d4_src.lzh d5_languagelisp.lzh |
| 2594 d5_viclone.lzh d6_gnulibsrc.lzh d6_mailpackage.lzh | |
| 2595 d6_mathpackage.lzh d6_misc.lzh d6_textformat.lzh | |
| 597 | 2596 The `d#' at the beginning of each file is its disk number, which is |
| 2597 referred to by the documentation. | |
| 2598 | |
| 1736 | 2599 101: Where can I get Emacs for my Apple computer? |
| 597 | 2600 |
| 2601 The FSF is a participant in a boycott of Apple because of Apple's "look | |
| 2602 and feel" copyright suits. See the file etc/APPLE for more details. | |
| 2603 Because of this boycott, the FSF doesn't include support in GNU software | |
| 2604 for Apple computers such as the Macintosh. | |
| 2605 | |
| 2606 Please don't help people port or develop software for Apple computers. | |
| 2607 | |
| 1736 | 2608 102: Where can I get Emacs with NeWS support? |
| 2609 | |
| 2610 Chris Maio's NeWS support package for GNU Emacs is available via anonymous | |
| 2611 FTP: | |
| 2612 | |
| 2613 /columbia.edu:pub/ps-emacs.tar.Z | |
| 2614 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/emacs/ps-emacs.tar.Z | |
| 2615 | |
| 2616 and via e-mail: | |
| 2617 | |
| 2618 To: archive-server@columbia.edu | |
| 2619 body: send NeWS emacs-support | |
| 2620 | |
| 2621 103: Where do I get Emacs that runs on VMS under DECwindows? | |
| 597 | 2622 |
| 2623 Hal R. Brand <BRAND@addvax.llnl.gov> is said to have a VMS save set with a | |
| 2624 ready-to-run VMS version of Emacs 18.55 for X Windows. It is available | |
| 1736 | 2625 via anonymous FTP (addvax.llnl.gov). It is possible that the VMS versions |
| 2626 of Emacs at other sites have X support compiled in. See etc/FTP for | |
| 2627 locations. | |
| 597 | 2628 |
| 2629 Johan Vromans <jv@mh.nl> writes: | |
| 2630 | |
| 2631 Getting Emacs to run on VMS with DECwindows requires a number of changes | |
| 2632 to the sources. Fortunately this has been done already. Joshua Marantz | |
| 2633 <josh@viewlogic.com> did most of the work for Emacs 18.52, and the mods | |
| 2634 were ported to 18.55 by Johan Vromans <jv@mh.nl>. Also included is the | |
| 2635 handling of DEC's LK201 keyboard. You need to apply the changes to a | |
| 2636 fresh Emacs 18.55 distribution on a Unix system, and then you can copy | |
| 2637 the sources to VMS to perform the compile/link/build. | |
| 2638 | |
| 2639 The set of changes have been posted a number of times three times the | |
| 2640 last 12 months, so they should be widely available. | |
| 2641 | |
| 1736 | 2642 Richard Levitte <levitte@e.kth.se> tells us that there are patches for |
|
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2643 Emacs 18.57, 18.58, and 18.59 available via e-mail: ! |
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2644 |
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2645 To: EMACS-FILESERV@e.kth.se ! |
| 1736 | 2646 body: SEND EMACS-1857-PATCHES |
| 2647 or: SEND EMACS-1858-PATCHES | |
|
2703
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2648 or: SEND EMACS-1859-PATCHES + |
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2649 + |
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2650 or via anonymous ftp at: + |
|
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2651 + |
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2652 /lucy.merrimack.edu:emacs-1859-patches.share + |
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2653 + |
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2654 The set of patches weighs in at around 2.7 MB. + |
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2655 |
| 1736 | 2656 104: Where can I get modes for Lex, Yacc/Bison, Bourne Shell, Csh, C++, |
| 2657 Objective C, Pascal, Awk? | |
| 2658 | |
| 2659 As usual, look in the Lisp Code Directory (see question 88). For C++, | |
| 2660 if you use lisp-dir-apropos, you must specify the pattern like this: | |
| 2661 | |
| 2662 M-x lisp-dir-apropos RET c\+\+ RET | |
| 2663 | |
| 2664 105: What is the IP address of XXX.YYY.ZZZ? | |
| 2665 | |
| 2666 If you are at a site with a deficient nameserver, you may need to know | |
| 2667 the IP address of a host to FTP files from it. You can get this | |
| 2668 information in two ways: | |
| 2669 | |
| 2670 * By telnet: | |
| 2671 | |
| 2672 telnet nic.ddn.mil hostnames (or `telnet 192.112.36.5 101') | |
| 2673 hname XXX.YYY.ZZZ | |
| 2674 | |
| 2675 * By e-mail: | |
| 2676 | |
| 2677 To: service@nic.ddn.mil | |
| 2678 Subject: host XXX.YYY.ZZZ | |
| 2679 or: whois XXX.YYY.ZZZ | |
| 2680 or: help | |
| 2681 | |
| 2682 or: | |
| 2683 | |
| 2684 To: resolve@cs.widener.edu | |
| 2685 body: site XXX.YYY.ZZZ | |
| 2686 | |
| 2687 Information from Brendan Kehoe <brendan@cs.widener.edu>. | |
| 134 | 2688 |
| 2689 | |
| 2690 | |
| 1736 | 2691 |
| 2692 Major Emacs Lisp Packages, Emacs Extensions, and Related Programs | |
| 134 | 2693 |
| 1736 | 2694 This section lists version numbers, FTP sites, mailing lists, newsgroups, |
| 2695 and other information for many important packages, extensions, and related | |
| 2696 programs. There is some overlap with the Lisp Code Directory, but these | |
| 2697 entries give more detailed information. | |
| 2698 | |
| 2699 If you know of any other packages that are so substantial that they | |
| 2700 deserve to be mentioned here, please tell me. Having its own mailing list | |
| 2701 or newsgroup or more than half a megabyte of source code are good signs. | |
| 2702 | |
| 2703 106: VM (View Mail) -- another mail reader within Emacs | |
| 2704 | |
| 2705 Author: Kyle Jones <kyle@uunet.uu.net> | |
| 2706 Latest released version: 4.41 | |
| 2707 Beta test version: 5.32 | |
| 2708 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2709 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/packages/vm-4.41.tar.Z | |
| 2710 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/as-is/timer.shar.Z | |
| 2711 /ftp.uu.net:mail/vm-4.41.tar.Z | |
| 2712 /ftp.uu.net:mail/vm-5.32beta.tar.Z | |
| 2713 Newsgroups and mailing lists: | |
| 2714 Info-VM: | |
| 2715 gnu.emacs.vm.info | |
| 2716 info-vm-request@uunet.uu.net (for subscriptions) | |
| 2717 info-vm@uunet.uu.net (for submissions) | |
| 2718 Bug-VM: | |
| 2719 gnu.emacs.vm.bug | |
| 2720 bug-vm-request@uunet.uu.net (for subscriptions) | |
| 2721 bug-vm@uunet.uu.net (for submissions) | |
| 2722 | |
| 2723 107: Supercite -- mail and news citation package within Emacs | |
| 2724 | |
| 2725 Author: Barry Warsaw <bwarsaw@cen.com> | |
| 2726 Mailing list: supercite-request@anthem.nlm.nih.gov (for subscriptions) | |
| 2727 supercite@anthem.nlm.nih.gov (for submissions) | |
|
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2728 Latest version: 2.3 ! |
| 1736 | 2729 Anonymous FTP: |
|
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2730 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/packages/sc-2.3.tar.Z ! |
|
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2731 /ftp.cme.nist.gov:pub/gnu/sc2.3.tar.Z ! |
| 1736 | 2732 Via e-mail: |
| 2733 To: library@cme.nist.gov | |
| 2734 Subject: help | |
| 2735 NOTE: Superyank is an old version of Supercite. | |
| 2736 | |
| 2737 108: GNUS -- news reader within Emacs | |
| 2738 | |
| 2739 Author: Masanobu Umeda <umerin@mse.kyutech.ac.jp> | |
| 2740 Latest official version: 3.13 | |
| 2741 Unofficial test version: 3.14.1 | |
| 2742 Anonymous FTP: | |
|
2703
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2743 /aun.uninett.no:pub/gnus-3.14.1.tar.Z - |
| 1736 | 2744 /wnoc-fuk.wide.ad.jp:pub/GNU/etc/gnus-3.14.1.tar.Z |
| 2745 /liasun3.epfl.ch:pub/gnu/emacs/gnus-3.14.1.tar.Z | |
| 2746 /aix370.rrz.uni-koeln.de:/pub/gnu/emacs/gnus-3.14.1.tar.Z | |
| 2747 /funet.fi:/networking/news/gnus-3.14.1.tar.Z | |
| 2748 /src.doc.ic.ac.uk:/gnu/EmacsBits/gnus/gnus-3.14.1.tar.Z | |
| 2749 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/packages/gnus-3.13.tar.Z | |
| 2750 Newsgroups and mailing lists: | |
| 2751 English-only: | |
| 2752 gnu.emacs.gnus | |
| 2753 info-gnus-english-request@cis.ohio-state.edu (for subscriptions) | |
| 2754 info-gnus-english@cis.ohio-state.edu (for submissions) | |
| 2755 Japanese (and some English): | |
| 2756 info-gnus-request@flab.fujitsu.co.jp (for subscriptions) | |
| 2757 info-gnus@flab.fujitsu.co.jp (for submissions) | |
| 2758 | |
| 2759 109: Calc -- poor man's Mathematica within Emacs | |
| 2760 | |
| 2761 Author: Dave Gillespie <daveg@csvax.cs.caltech.edu> | |
| 2762 Latest released version: 2.02 | |
| 2763 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2764 /csvax.cs.caltech.edu:pub/calc-2.02.tar.Z | |
| 2765 /prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/calc-2.02.tar.Z | |
| 2766 NOTE: Unlike Wolfram Research, Dave has never threatened to sue anyone | |
| 2767 for having a program with a similar command language to Calc. :-) | |
| 2768 | |
| 2769 110: Calendar/Diary -- calendar manager within Emacs | |
| 2770 | |
| 2771 Author: Edward M. Reingold <reingold@cs.uiuc.edu> | |
| 2772 Latest version: 4.02 | |
| 2773 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2774 /emr.cs.uiuc.edu:pub/emacs/calendar {???} | |
| 2775 Via e-mail: | |
| 2776 To: reingold@cs.uiuc.edu | |
| 2777 Subject: send-emacs-cal | |
| 2778 Put your best internet e-mail address in the body. | |
| 2779 | |
| 2780 111: Ange-FTP -- transparent FTP access for Emacs's file access routines | |
| 2781 | |
| 2782 Author: Andy Norman <ange@hplb.hpl.hp.com> | |
| 2783 Latest official version: 4.20 | |
| 2784 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2785 /alpha.gnu.ai.mit.edu:ange-ftp/ange-ftp.tar.Z | |
| 2786 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/packages/ange-ftp.tar.Z | |
|
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2787 /ugle.unit.no:pub/gnu/emacs-lisp/ange-ftp.tar.Z |
| 1736 | 2788 Mailing lists: |
| 2789 ange-ftp-lovers-request@anorman.hpl.hp.com (for subscriptions) | |
| 2790 Ange-FTP Lovers: | |
| 2791 ange-ftp-lovers@anorman.hpl.hp.com (for submissions) | |
| 2792 /ftp.reed.edu:pub/mailing-lists/ange-ftp/ (archives) | |
| 2793 Ange-FTP Announcements: | |
| 2794 ange-ftp-lovers-announce@anorman.hpl.hp.com | |
| 2795 NOTE: now with support for accessing VMS, CMS, and MTS systems | |
| 2796 | |
| 2797 112: VIP -- vi emulation for Emacs | |
| 2798 | |
| 2799 Author: Aamod Sane <sane@cs.uiuc.edu> | |
| 2800 Latest released version: 4.3 | |
| 2801 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2802 /cs.uiuc.edu:pub/vip4.3.tar.Z | |
| 2803 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/modes/vip-mode.tar.Z | |
| 2804 NOTE: This version much more closely emulates vi than the one | |
| 2805 distributed with Emacs. | |
| 2806 | |
| 2807 113: Dired -- better directory editor for Emacs | |
| 2808 | |
| 2809 Author: Sebastian Kremer <sk@thp.uni-koeln.de> | |
| 2810 Latest released version: 5.239 | |
| 2811 Anonymous FTP: /ftp.cs.buffalo.edu:pub/Emacs/diredall.tar.Z | |
| 2812 /ftp.uni-koeln.de:pub/gnu/emacs/diredall.tar.Z | |
| 2813 NOTE: This is a huge improvement over the Dired distributed with Emacs. | |
| 2814 This version will be in Emacs 19. | |
| 2815 | |
| 2816 114: AUC TeX -- enhanced LaTeX mode with debugging facilities | |
| 2817 | |
| 2818 Author: Kresten Krab Thorup <krab@iesd.auc.dk> | |
| 2819 Latest released version: 6.1 {???} | |
| 2820 Anonymous FTP: | |
|
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2821 /iesd.auc.dk:pub/emacs-lisp/auctex_6_1d.tar.Z |
|
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2822 /iesd.auc.dk:pub/emacs-lisp/auctex.tar.Z |
| 1736 | 2823 Mailing list: |
| 2824 auc-tex-request@iesd.auc.dk (for subscriptions) | |
| 2825 auc-tex@iesd.auc.dk (for submissions) | |
| 2826 auc-tex_mgr@iesd.auc.dk (auc-tex development team) | |
| 2827 | |
| 2828 115: Hyperbole -- extensible hypertext management system within Emacs | |
| 2829 | |
| 2830 Author: Bob Weiner <rsw@cs.brown.edu> | |
| 2831 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2832 /wilma.cs.brown.edu:pub/hyperbole/ h*.tar.Z | |
| 2833 Mailing lists: | |
| 2834 hyperbole-announce -- Hyperbole release announcements only. | |
| 2835 Subscriptions: | |
| 2836 To: hyperbole-request@cs.brown.edu | |
| 2837 Subject: Add <mailbox@domain.name> to hyperbole-announce | |
| 2838 hyperbole -- Hyperbole discussion. | |
| 2839 Subscriptions: | |
| 2840 To: hyperbole-request@cs.brown.edu | |
| 2841 Subject: Add <mailbox@domain.name> to hyperbole | |
| 2842 Submissions: | |
| 2843 hyperbole@cs.brown.edu | |
| 2844 NOTE: Any member of the hyperbole mailing list is automatically a | |
| 2845 member of the hyperbole-announce mailing list. | |
| 2846 NOTE: No .UUCP or ! addresses are allowed on these mailing lists. | |
| 2847 | |
| 2848 116: Byte Compiler -- enhanced version of Emacs's byte compiler | |
| 2849 | |
| 2850 Author: Jamie Zawinski <jwz@lucid.com>, | |
| 2851 Hallvard B. Furuseth <hallvard@ifi.uio.no> | |
| 2852 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2853 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/packages/bytecomp.tar.Z | |
| 2854 /ftp.uu.net:languages/elisp/packages/bytecomp.tar.Z | |
| 2855 /src.doc.ic.ac.uk:gnu/EmacsBits/elisp-archive/packages/bytecomp.tar.Z | |
| 2856 | |
| 2857 117: comint -- hugely enhanced shell mode and other derived modes | |
| 2858 | |
| 2859 Author: Olin Shivers <Olin.Shivers@cs.cmu.edu> | |
| 2860 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2861 /cs.cmu.edu:/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/shivers/lib/emacs/ | |
| 2862 {comint,cmu{tex,shell,scheme,lisp},ml}.el | |
| 2863 (anonymous password must contain `@', | |
| 2864 cannot cd to intermediate directories) | |
| 2865 | |
| 2866 118: BBDB -- personal info rolodex integrated with mail/news readers | |
| 2867 | |
| 2868 Author: Jamie Zawinski <jwz@lucid.com> | |
| 2869 Latest released version: 1.47 | |
| 2870 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2871 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:pub/gnu/emacs/elisp-archive/packages/bbdb.tar.Z | |
| 2872 Mailing list: | |
| 2873 info-bbdb-request@lucid.com (for subscriptions) | |
| 2874 info-bbdb@lucid.com | |
| 2875 bbdb-announce-request@lucid.com (to be informed of new releases) | |
| 2876 Note: BBDB does not work with VM 4. It does work with VM 5, RMAIL, GNUS, | |
| 2877 and MH-E. | |
| 2878 | |
| 2879 119: Ispell -- spell checker in C with interface for Emacs | |
| 2880 | |
| 2881 Author: Geoff Kuenning <geoff@itcorp.com> | |
| 2882 Latest released version: 2.0.02 | |
| 2883 Beta test version: 3.0 (9 patches) | |
| 2884 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2885 /archive.cis.ohio-state.edu:/pub/gnu/ispell/ (version 2.0.02) | |
| 2886 /ftp.cs.ucla.edu:/pub/ispell/ (version 3.0, patches, dictionaries) | |
| 2887 /argus.math.orst.edu:pub/ispell/ (version 3.0, patches, dictionaries) | |
| 2888 /ftp.th-darmstadt.de:pub/dicts/ispell/ (mirror of argus) | |
| 2889 NOTE: Do not send mail to Geoff asking him to send you the latest | |
| 2890 version of Ispell. He does not have free e-mail. | |
| 2891 | |
| 2892 120: Epoch -- enhanced GNU Emacs with better X interface | |
| 2893 | |
| 2894 Latest released version: 4.2 | |
| 2895 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2896 /cs.uiuc.edu:pub/epoch-files/epoch/epoch-4.2.tar.Z | |
| 2897 /cs.uiuc.edu:pub/epoch-files/epoch/epoch-diff-4.1-4.2.tar.Z | |
| 2898 /src.doc.ic.ac.uk:gnu/epoch/ | |
| 2899 /aix370.rrz.uni-koeln.de:gnu/emacs/epoch/ | |
| 2900 Newsgroup and mailing lists: | |
| 2901 Epoch: | |
| 2902 gnu.emacs.epoch | |
| 2903 epoch-request@cs.uiuc.edu (for subscriptions) | |
| 2904 epoch@cs.uiuc.edu (for submissions) | |
| 2905 Epoch-Design: | |
| 2906 epoch-design-request@cs.uiuc.edu (for subscriptions) | |
| 2907 epoch-design@cs.uiuc.edu (for submissions) | |
| 2908 FAQ list: | |
| 2909 Maintainer: Marc Andreessen <marca@ncsa.uiuc.edu> | |
| 2910 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2911 /rtfm.mit.edu:pub/usenet/news.answers/epoch-faq | |
| 2912 /ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu:outgoing/marca/epoch/Epoch.FAQ | |
| 2913 | |
| 2914 121: Lucid GNU Emacs -- alternative Emacs 19 with better X interface | |
| 2915 | |
| 2916 Primary Maintainer: Jamie Zawinski <jwz@lucid.com> | |
| 2917 Other Developers: Eric Benson <eb@lucid.com> | |
| 2918 Matthieu Devin <devin@lucid.com> | |
| 2919 Harlan Sexton <hbs@lucid.com> | |
|
2703
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Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
1736
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changeset
|
2920 Latest released version: 19.6 ! |
| 1736 | 2921 Anonymous FTP: |
|
2703
8ea617fb9603
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
1736
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changeset
|
2922 /labrea.stanford.edu:pub/gnu/lucid/lemacs-19.6.tar.Z (source) ! |
|
8ea617fb9603
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
1736
diff
changeset
|
2923 /labrea.stanford.edu:pub/gnu/lucid/lemacs-19.6-sun4.tar.Z (Sun4binaries) ! |
| 1736 | 2924 Newsgroup and mailing lists: |
| 2925 Bugs: | |
|
2703
8ea617fb9603
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
1736
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changeset
|
2926 alt.lucid-emacs.bug + |
| 1736 | 2927 bug-lucid-emacs-request@lucid.com (for subscriptions) |
| 2928 bug-lucid-emacs@lucid.com (for submissions) | |
| 2929 Help: | |
|
2703
8ea617fb9603
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
1736
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|
2930 alt.lucid-emacs.help + |
| 1736 | 2931 help-lucid-emacs-request@lucid.com (for subscriptions) |
| 2932 help-lucid-emacs@lucid.com (for submissions) | |
| 2933 | |
| 2934 122: Demacs -- GNU Emacs altered to run on MS-DOS on 386/486 machines | |
| 2935 | |
| 2936 Authors: Manabu Higashida <manabu@sigmath.osaka-u.ac.jp> | |
| 2937 HIRANO Satoshi <hirano@tkl.iis.u-tokyo.ac.jp> | |
| 2938 Latest released version: 1.2.0 | |
| 2939 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 2940 /utsun.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp:GNU/demacs/ (nearest to U.S.A.) | |
| 2941 /ftp.sigmath.osaka-u.ac.jp:pub/Msdos/Demacs/ | |
| 2942 /wnoc-fuk.wide.ad.jp:pub/msdos/Demacs/ | |
| 2943 /ftp.3com.com:pub/gnu/msdos/demacs/ | |
| 2944 /mindseye.berkeley.edu:pub/kanji/demacs/ | |
| 2945 /ftp.hawaii.edu:pub/editors/demacs.tar.Z | |
| 2946 /ftp.math.ksu.edu:pub/pc/demacs/ | |
| 2947 /wsmr-simtel20.army.mil:pd1:<msdos.demacs> {ange-ftp syntax?} | |
| 2948 /ftp.uni-koeln.de:msdos/gnuprogs/dem120e.zip (executables, lisp-code, doc) | |
| 2949 (PLEASE USE ONLY OUTSIDE WORKING HOURS!) | |
| 2950 /ftp.uni-koeln.de:msdos/gnuprogs/dem120s.zip (sources, diffs) | |
| 2951 (PLEASE USE ONLY OUTSIDE WORKING HOURS!) | |
| 2952 /ftp.lysator.liu.se:pub/msdos/gnu/emacs/ | |
| 2953 /mizar.docs.uu.se:pub/gnu/demacs/ | |
| 2954 /iamsun.unibe.ch:PC/demacs/ | |
| 2955 /flop.informatik.tu-muenchen.de:outgoing/demacs.tar | |
| 2956 /ftp.funet.fi:pub/gnu/emacs/demacs/ | |
| 2957 /garbo.uwasa.fi:pc/editor/dem120e.zip | |
| 2958 /garbo.uwasa.fi:pc/editor/dem120s.zip | |
| 2959 /ftp.win.tue.nl:pub/gnu/demacs/ | |
| 2960 /ugle.unit.no:pub/gnu/Demacs/ | |
| 2961 {Does anyone know which sites have the Kanji version?} | |
| 2962 Via e-mail: | |
| 2963 From garbo.uwasa.fi: | |
| 2964 To: mailserv@garbo.uwasa.fi | |
| 2965 Subject: garbo-request | |
| 2966 Body: send pc/editor/dem120e.zip | |
| 2967 send pc/editor/dem120s.zip | |
| 2968 quit | |
| 2969 Downloading: | |
| 2970 EXEC-PC (Milwaukee, WI) 414-789-4210 (2400 bps) | |
| 2971 in the Mahoney MS-DOS file area in its Editors/wordprocessors | |
| 2972 library (F), named GNUEMACS.ZIP | |
| 2973 Channel 1 (Cambridge, MA) 617-345-8873 (9600 bps) | |
| 2974 in the New Uploads file area, named GNUEMACS.ZIP | |
| 2975 NOTE: Use the -d option of [pk]unzip for all .zip archives. Some sites | |
| 2976 have Demacs lharc'ed. If you need to find programs to unpack lharc and | |
| 2977 zip format archives, Chris Dean <ctdean@talaris.com> points out that you | |
| 2978 should see the comp.compression FAQ, available for FTP: | |
| 2979 /rtfm.mit.edu:pub/usenet/comp.compression/ | |
| 2980 Mailing list: | |
| 2981 NOTE: There is no mailing list for Demacs. However, there is a list | |
| 2982 for DJGPP, which is the environment that Demacs runs in. Many | |
| 2983 Demacs problems are actually issues with DJGPP. | |
| 2984 DJGPP: | |
| 2985 Subscriptions: | |
| 2986 To: listserv@sun.soe.clarkson.edu | |
| 2987 body: add <your-address> djgpp | |
| 2988 or put `help' in the body. | |
| 2989 If this fails, mail to djgpp-request@sun.soe.clarkson.edu. | |
| 2990 Submissions: | |
| 2991 djgpp@sun.soe.clarkson.edu | |
| 2992 FAQ list: | |
| 2993 Maintainer: Dave Steibel <steibel@cs.umbc.edu> | |
| 2994 Anonymous FTP: algol.cs.umbc.edu:pub/demacs/demacs.faq | |
| 2995 | |
| 2996 123: Freemacs -- a small Emacs for MS-DOS | |
| 2997 | |
| 2998 Author: Russ Nelson <nelson@sun.soe.clarkson.edu> | |
| 2999 Latest released version: 1.6a | |
| 3000 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 3001 /simtel20.army.mil:PD:<MSDOS.FREEMACS> {ange-ftp syntax?} | |
| 3002 /grape.ecs.clarkson.edu:pub/msdos/freemacs/ | |
| 3003 Via e-mail: | |
| 3004 To: archive-server@sun.soe.clarkson.edu | |
| 3005 body: help | |
| 3006 Via snail mail: | |
| 3007 address: Russell Nelson, 11 Grant St., Potsdam, NY 13676 | |
| 3008 Send $15 copying fee, and specify preferred floppy disk format: | |
| 3009 5.25", 360K, or 3.50", 720K | |
| 3010 Mailing lists: | |
| 3011 Subscriptions: | |
| 3012 To: listserv@sun.soe.clarkson.edu | |
| 3013 body: add <your-address> <name-of-list> | |
| 3014 or put `help' in the body. | |
| 3015 List distribution addresses: | |
| 3016 freemacs-announce@sun.soe.clarkson.edu | |
| 3017 freemacs-help@sun.soe.clarkson.edu | |
| 3018 freemacs-workers@sun.soe.clarkson.edu (send bug reports here) | |
| 3019 | |
| 3020 124: Patch -- program to apply "diffs" for updating files | |
| 3021 | |
| 3022 Author: Larry Wall <lwall@netlabs.com> | |
| 3023 Latest version: 2.0 patchlevel 12u8 | |
| 3024 (This is the version that supports the new unified diff format.) | |
| 3025 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 3026 /prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/patch-2.0.12u8.tar.Z | |
| 3027 /prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/patch-2.0.12g8.tar.Z (GNU version) | |
| 3028 | |
| 3029 | |
| 3030 | |
| 3031 GNU Emacs FAQ: Keybindings/Output | |
| 3032 | |
| 3033 If you are viewing this text in a GNU Emacs Buffer, you can type "M-2 C-x $" to | |
| 3034 get an overview of just the questions. Then, when you want to look at the text | |
| 3035 of the answers, just type "C-x $". | |
| 3036 | |
| 3037 To search for a question numbered XXX, type "M-C-s ^XXX:", followed by a C-r if | |
| 3038 that doesn't work, then type ESC to end the search. | |
| 3039 | |
| 3040 A `+' in the 78th column means something was inserted on the line. A `-' means | |
| 3041 something was deleted and a `!' means some combination of insertions and | |
| 3042 deletions occurred. | |
| 3043 | |
| 3044 Full instructions for getting the latest FAQ are in question 22. Also see the | |
| 3045 `Introduction to news.answers' posting in the `news.answers' newsgroup, or send | |
| 3046 e-mail to `mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu' with `help' on a body line, or use FTP, | |
| 3047 WAIS, or Prospero to rtfm.mit.edu. | |
| 3048 | |
| 3049 | |
| 3050 | |
| 3051 Changing Key Bindings and Handling Key Binding Problems | |
| 3052 | |
| 3053 125: How do I bind keys (including function keys) to commands? | |
| 3054 | |
| 3055 1. Find out what character sequence is generated by the keystroke sequence | |
| 3056 you wish to bind to a command. See question 129 for how to do this. | |
| 3057 Keep in mind that the character sequences generated by a keystroke | |
| 3058 sequence varies from one terminal to another. You may also get | |
| 3059 different results depending on what type of machine you are running on | |
| 3060 (see question 128). For example, these keystrokes may generate these | |
| 3061 character sequences: | |
| 3062 | |
| 3063 F1 ---> ESC [ 2 2 4 z | |
| 3064 Shift-R10 ---> ESC O t | |
| 3065 L7 ---> ESC [ 3 1 ~ | |
| 3066 Remove ---> C-@ | |
| 3067 | |
| 3068 2. Figure out what the Emacs Lisp syntax is for this character sequence. | |
| 3069 Inside an Emacs Lisp string, RET, LFD, DEL, ESC, SPC, and TAB are | |
| 3070 specified with `\r', `\n', `\C-?', `\e', ` ', and `\t'. C-x is | |
| 3071 specified by `\C-x'. M-x is specified the same was as "ESC x". | |
| 3072 (Control characters may also be specified as themselves, but I don't | |
| 3073 recommend it.) An Emacs Lisp string begins and ends with the double | |
| 3074 quote character, `"'. Here are some examples: | |
| 3075 | |
| 3076 ESC [ D ---> "\e[D" | |
| 3077 ESC [ 2 2 7 z ---> "\e[227z" | |
| 3078 ESC [ 1 8 ~ ---> "\e[18~" | |
| 3079 C-M-r ---> "\e\C-r" | |
| 3080 | |
| 3081 3. If some prefix of the character sequence is already bound, you must | |
| 3082 unbind it by binding it to `nil'. For example: | |
| 3083 | |
| 3084 (global-set-key "\e[" nil) | |
| 3085 | |
| 3086 4. Pick a command to bind your key sequence to. A command can be a | |
| 3087 "symbol" with a function definition, or a "lambda list", or a string | |
| 3088 (which is treated as a macro). For example: | |
| 3089 | |
| 3090 (global-set-key "\e[D" 'backward-char) | |
| 3091 (global-set-key "\e[227~" "\exgoto-line\r") ; macro | |
| 3092 | |
| 3093 See `Key Bindings' and `Rebinding' in the online manual. | |
| 3094 | |
| 3095 In Emacs 19 (including Lucid Emacs), you can bind function key F24 like | |
| 3096 this: | |
| 3097 | |
| 3098 (global-set-key 'f24 'some-command) | |
| 3099 | |
| 3100 126: Why does Emacs say `Key sequence XXX uses invalid prefix characters'? | |
| 3101 | |
| 3102 A prefix of the character sequence you were trying to bind was already | |
| 3103 bound. Usually, the sequence is "ESC [", in which case you should | |
| 3104 evaluate this form first: | |
| 134 | 3105 |
| 3106 (define-key esc-map "[" nil) | |
| 3107 | |
| 1736 | 3108 NOTE: By default, "ESC [" is bound to backward-paragraph, and if you do |
| 597 | 3109 this you will lose this key binding. For most people, this is not a |
| 3110 problem. | |
| 3111 | |
| 1736 | 3112 See question 125. |
| 3113 | |
| 3114 127: Why doesn't this [terminal or window-system setup] code work in my | |
| 134 | 3115 .emacs file, but it works just fine after Emacs starts up? |
| 3116 | |
| 3117 This is because you're trying to do something in your .emacs file that | |
| 3118 needs to be postponed until after the terminal/window-system setup code | |
| 3119 is loaded. This is a result of the order in which things are done | |
| 1736 | 3120 during the startup of Emacs. For more details see question 135. |
| 134 | 3121 |
| 3122 In order to postpone the execution of Emacs Lisp code until after the | |
| 3123 terminal/window-system setup, set the value of the variable | |
| 3124 term-setup-hook or window-setup-hook to be a function which does what | |
| 3125 you want. | |
| 3126 | |
| 597 | 3127 See etc/OPTIONS for a complete explanation of what Emacs does every time |
| 3128 it is started. | |
| 134 | 3129 |
| 3130 Here is a simple example of how to set term-setup-hook: | |
| 3131 | |
| 3132 (setq term-setup-hook | |
| 3133 (function | |
| 3134 (lambda () | |
| 597 | 3135 (cond ((string-match "\\`vt220" (or (getenv "TERM") "")) |
| 3136 ;; Make vt220's "Do" key behave like M-x: | |
| 3137 (define-key CSI-map "29~" 'execute-extended-command)) | |
| 3138 )))) | |
| 3139 | |
| 1736 | 3140 128: How do I use function keys under X Windows? |
| 597 | 3141 |
| 3142 This depends on whether you are running Emacs inside a terminal emulator | |
| 3143 window, or whether you are allowing Emacs to create its own X window. | |
| 3144 You can tell which you are doing by noticing whether Emacs creates a new | |
| 3145 window when you start it. | |
| 3146 | |
| 3147 If you are running Emacs inside a terminal emulator window, then it | |
| 3148 behaves exactly as it does on any other tty. In this case, for function | |
| 3149 keys to be useful, they must generate character sequences that are sent | |
| 1736 | 3150 to the programs running inside the window as input. The `xterm' program |
| 597 | 3151 has two different sets of character sequences that it generates when |
| 3152 function keys are pressed, depending on the sunFunctionKeys X resource | |
| 3153 and the -sf and +sf command line options. (To find out what these key | |
| 1736 | 3154 sequences are, see question 129.) In addition, with xterm, |
| 597 | 3155 you can override what key sequence a specific function key (or any other |
| 1736 | 3156 key) will generate with the `translations' resource. This, for example: |
| 597 | 3157 |
| 3158 XTerm.VT100.Translations: #override \ | |
| 3159 <KeyPress>F1: string(0x1b) string("[xyzzy") | |
| 3160 | |
| 3161 makes the function key F1 generate the character sequence "ESC [xyzzy". | |
| 3162 | |
| 3163 On the other hand, if Emacs is managing its own X window, the following | |
| 3164 description applies. Emacs receives `KeyPress' events from the X server | |
| 3165 when a key is pressed while the keyboard focus is in its window. The | |
| 1736 | 3166 KeyPress event contains an X "keysym" code, which is simply an arbitrary |
| 597 | 3167 number corresponding to the name of the keysym, and information on which |
| 3168 "modifiers" such as `control' and `shift' are active. For example, the | |
| 3169 `Tab' keysym is 0xff09. (Generally, a key on the keyboard will generate a | |
| 3170 keysym whose name is the same as the label on the key, ie. the `Tab' key | |
| 3171 will normally generate the `Tab' keysym. This can be changed with the | |
| 3172 xmodmap program.) Emacs recognizes all the keysyms that correspond to | |
| 3173 standard ASCII characters and internally uses the ASCII character instead. | |
| 3174 | |
| 3175 (WARNING: I am about to describe a gross, disgusting hack to you, have | |
| 3176 your barf bag ready.) | |
| 3177 | |
| 3178 When Emacs receives the X keysym of one of the arrow keys, it behaves | |
| 3179 the same as if it had received a letter key with the control modifier | |
| 3180 down as follows (this is hard-coded): | |
| 3181 | |
| 3182 Up becomes C-p | |
| 3183 Down becomes C-n | |
| 3184 Right becomes C-f | |
| 3185 Left becomes C-b | |
| 3186 | |
| 3187 The way Emacs treats other keysyms depends on what kind of machine it was | |
| 1736 | 3188 compiled on. The type of the display machine is irrelevant! Function |
| 597 | 3189 keys are mapped internally to escape sequences, while other keys are |
| 3190 completely ignored. | |
| 3191 | |
| 3192 1. If compiled on a Sun, Emacs recognizes these X keysyms that | |
| 3193 are normally on a Sun keyboard: | |
| 3194 | |
| 3195 F1 through F9 | |
| 3196 L1 through L10 (same as F11 through F20) | |
| 3197 R1 through R15 (same as F21 through F35) | |
| 1736 | 3198 (The keys labelled R8, R10, R12, and R14 usually are mapped to the |
| 597 | 3199 X keysyms Up, Left, Right, and Down.) |
| 1736 | 3200 Break (the `Alternate' key is given this keysym) |
| 597 | 3201 |
|
3591
507f64624555
Apply typo patches from Paul Eggert.
Jim Blandy <jimb@redhat.com>
parents:
2703
diff
changeset
|
3202 These keys work like Sun function keys. When Emacs receives the |
| 597 | 3203 keysym, it will internally use character sequences that look like "ESC |
| 3204 [ ### z", where ### is replaced by a number. The character sequences | |
| 3205 are identical to those generated by Sun's keyboard under SunView. Any | |
| 3206 function key not listed above generates "ESC [ - 1 z". | |
| 3207 | |
| 3208 In order to use these key sequences, they should be bound to commands | |
| 3209 using the standard key binding methods, just as if Emacs were running | |
| 3210 on a regular terminal. | |
| 3211 | |
| 3212 WARNING: F11 and L1 are the same keysym in X, as are F12 and L2, etc. | |
| 3213 {Yes, this is stupid. Complain to the X consortium.} | |
| 3214 | |
| 3215 2. If not compiled on a Sun, the function keys will appear to Emacs in a | |
| 3216 way remarkably similar to the keys of a DEC LK201 keyboard (used on | |
| 3217 some VT series terminals). These X keysyms will be recognized: | |
| 3218 | |
| 3219 F1 through F20 | |
| 3220 Help (treated same as F15) | |
| 1736 | 3221 Menu (treated same as F16, is the LK201 `Do' key) |
| 597 | 3222 Find |
| 1736 | 3223 Insert (LK201 `Insert Here' key) |
| 597 | 3224 Select |
| 1736 | 3225 Prior (LK201 `Prev Screen' key *** ONLY IN 18.58 AND LATER ***) |
| 3226 Next (LK201 `Next Screen' key *** ONLY IN 18.58 AND LATER ***) | |
| 3227 | |
| 3228 And finally, the LK201 key labelled `Remove' (or `Delete') is often | |
| 3229 mapped to the Delete keysym which generates the DEL character (C-?) | |
| 3230 instead of the key sequence given by the LK201 `Remove' key. It may | |
| 3231 also be mapped to some other keysym, such as `_Remove', in which case | |
| 3232 you can't use it from within Emacs at all. | |
| 597 | 3233 |
| 3234 Each function key will be internally converted to a character sequence | |
| 3235 that looks like "ESC [ ## ~", where ## is replaced by a number. The | |
| 3236 character sequences are identical to those generated by a LK201 | |
| 3237 keyboard. Any function key not listed above generates "ESC [ - 1 ~". | |
| 134 | 3238 |
| 3239 For the complete list of the numbers which are generated by the function | |
| 597 | 3240 keys, look in the file src/x11term.c at the definitions of the function |
| 1736 | 3241 stringFuncVal. |
| 597 | 3242 |
| 3243 If you are running Emacs on a Sun machine, even if your X display is | |
| 3244 running on a non-Sun machine (eg., an X terminal), you get the setup | |
| 3245 described above for Suns. The determining factor is what type of | |
| 3246 machine Emacs is running (was compiled) on, not what type of machine | |
| 3247 your X display is on. | |
| 3248 | |
| 1736 | 3249 If you have function keys not listed above on your keyboard, you can use |
| 3250 `xmodmap' to change their keysym assignments to get keys that Emacs will | |
| 3251 recognize, but that may screw up other programs. | |
| 597 | 3252 |
| 3253 X resources are not used by Emacs to affect the key sequences generated. | |
| 1736 | 3254 In particular, there are no X key "translations" for Emacs. |
| 597 | 3255 |
| 3256 If you have function keys not listed above and you don't want to use | |
| 3257 xmodmap to change their names, you might want to make a modification to | |
| 1736 | 3258 your Emacs. Johan Vromans <jv@mh.nl> has made available a patch for Emacs |
| 3259 that adds the x-rebind-key function of Epoch to Emacs 18.58. This allows | |
| 3260 another layer of key rebinding before Emacs even sees the keys, and in | |
| 3261 this layer you can rebind all of the keys and modifier combinations as | |
| 3262 well. | |
| 3263 | |
| 3264 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 3265 /ftp.eu.net:gnu/emacs/FP-Xfun.Z | |
| 3266 /ftp.urc.tue.nl:pub/tex/emacs/FP-Xfun | |
| 3267 | |
| 3268 Johan Vromans explains what this buys for you: | |
| 597 | 3269 |
| 3270 After implementing this, all keyboard keys can be configured to send | |
| 1736 | 3271 user definable sequences, eg., |
| 134 | 3272 |
| 3273 (x-rebind-key "KP_F1" 0 "\033OP") | |
| 3274 | |
| 597 | 3275 This will have the keypad key PF1 send the sequence "ESC O P", just like |
| 3276 an ordinary VT series terminal. | |
| 3277 | |
| 1736 | 3278 129: How do I tell what characters my function or arrow keys emit? |
| 134 | 3279 |
| 3280 Use this function by Randal L. Schwartz <merlyn@iwarp.intel.com>: | |
| 3281 | |
| 3282 (defun see-chars () | |
| 3283 "Displays characters typed, terminated by a 3-second timeout." | |
| 3284 (interactive) | |
| 3285 (let ((chars "") | |
| 3286 (inhibit-quit t)) | |
| 3287 (message "Enter characters, terminated by 3-second timeout.") | |
| 3288 (while (not (sit-for 3)) | |
| 3289 (setq chars (concat chars (list (read-char))) | |
| 3290 quit-flag nil)) ; quit-flag maybe set by C-g | |
| 3291 (message "Characters entered: %s" (key-description chars)))) | |
| 3292 | |
| 597 | 3293 Alternatively, use the "C-h l" view-lossage command, which will display |
| 1736 | 3294 the last 100 characters Emacs has seen in its input stream. Kevin |
| 3295 Gallagher <kgallagh@digi.lonestar.org> suggests typing some unique string | |
| 3296 like "wxyz", typing the key in question, then typing "C-h l". The | |
| 3297 characters that appear between "wxyz" and "C-h l" were generated by the | |
| 3298 key. | |
| 3299 | |
| 3300 130: How do I set the X key "translations" for Emacs? | |
| 3301 | |
| 3302 Sorry, you can't; there are no "translations" to be set. Emacs is not | |
| 3303 written using the Xt library. The only way to affect the behavior of keys | |
| 3304 within Emacs is through `xmodmap' (outside Emacs) or `define-key' (inside | |
| 3305 Emacs). | |
| 3306 | |
| 3307 131: How do I handle C-s and C-q being used for flow control? | |
| 3308 | |
| 3309 C-s and C-q are used in the XON/XOFF flow control protocol. This screws | |
| 3310 up Emacs because it binds these characters to commands. Also, by default | |
| 3311 Emacs will not honor them as flow control characters and may overwhelm | |
| 3312 output buffers. Sometimes, intermediate software using XON/XOFF flow | |
| 3313 control will prevent Emacs from ever seeing C-s and C-q. | |
| 3314 | |
| 3315 Possible solutions: | |
| 3316 | |
| 3317 * Disable the use of C-s and C-q for flow control. | |
| 3318 | |
| 3319 You need to determine what is the cause of the flow control. | |
| 3320 | |
| 3321 * your terminal | |
| 3322 | |
| 3323 Your terminal may use XON/XOFF flow control to have time to display | |
| 3324 all the characters it receives. For example, VT series terminals do | |
| 3325 this. It may be possible to turn this off from a setup menu. For | |
| 3326 example, on a VT220 you may select `No XOFF' in the setup menu. This | |
| 3327 is also true for some terminal emulation programs on PCs. | |
| 3328 | |
| 3329 When you turn off flow control at the terminal, you will also need to | |
| 3330 turn it off at the other end, which might be at the computer you are | |
| 3331 logged in to or at some terminal server in between. | |
| 3332 | |
| 3333 If you turn off flow control, characters may be lost; using a printer | |
| 3334 connected to the terminal may fail. You may be able to get around | |
| 3335 this problem by modifying the `termcap' entry for your terminal to | |
| 3336 include extra NUL padding characters. | |
| 3337 | |
| 3338 * a modem | |
| 3339 | |
| 3340 If you are using a dialup connection, the modems may be using XON/XOFF | |
| 3341 flow control. I don't know how to get around this. | |
| 3342 | |
| 3343 * a router or terminal server | |
| 3344 | |
| 3345 Some network box between the terminal and your computer may be using | |
| 3346 XON/XOFF flow control. It may be possible to make it use some other | |
| 3347 kind of flow control. You will probably have to ask your local | |
| 3348 network experts for help with this. | |
| 3349 | |
| 3350 * tty and/or pty devices | |
| 3351 | |
| 3352 If your connection to Emacs goes through multiple tty and/or pty | |
| 3353 devices, they may be using XON/XOFF flow control even when it is not | |
| 3354 necessary. | |
| 3355 | |
| 3356 Eirik Fuller <eirik@theory.tn.cornell.edu> writes: | |
| 3357 | |
| 3358 Some versions of `rlogin' (and possibly telnet) do not pass flow | |
| 3359 control characters to the remote system to which they connect. On | |
| 3360 such systems, Emacs on the remote system cannot disable flow control | |
| 3361 on the local system. Sometimes `rlogin -8' will avoid this problem. | |
| 3362 | |
| 3363 One way to cure this is to disable flow control on the local host | |
| 3364 (the one running rlogin, not the one running rlogind) using the stty | |
| 3365 command, before starting the rlogin process. On many systems, `stty | |
| 3366 start u stop u' will do this. | |
| 3367 | |
| 3368 Some versions of `tcsh' will prevent even this from working. One | |
| 3369 way around this is to start another shell before starting rlogin, | |
| 3370 and issue the stty command to disable flow control from that shell. | |
| 3371 | |
| 3372 Use `stty -ixon' instead of `stty start u stop u' on some systems. | |
| 3373 | |
| 3374 * Make Emacs speak the XON/XOFF flow control protocol. | |
| 3375 | |
| 3376 You can make Emacs treat C-s and C-q as flow control characters by | |
| 3377 evaluating this form: | |
| 3378 | |
| 3379 (set-input-mode nil t) | |
| 3380 | |
| 3381 If you are fixing this for yourself, simply put the form in your .emacs | |
| 3382 file. If you are fixing this for your entire site, the best place to | |
| 3383 put it is unclear. I don't know if this has any effect when used in | |
| 3384 lisp/site-init.el when building Emacs; I've never tried that. {Can | |
| 3385 someone tell me whether it works?} Putting things in users' .emacs files | |
| 3386 has a number of problems. | |
| 3387 | |
| 3388 Putting this form in lisp/default.el has the problem that if the user's | |
| 3389 .emacs file has an error, this will prevent lisp/default.el from being | |
| 3390 loaded and Emacs may be unusable for the user, even for correcting their | |
| 3391 .emacs file (unless they're smart enough to move it to another name). A | |
| 3392 possible solution is to initially disable C-s and C-q by setting | |
| 3393 keyboard-translate-table in lisp/site-init.el, either with swap-keys | |
| 3394 (see question 136) or with the following form: | |
| 3395 | |
| 3396 ;; by Roger Crew <crew@cs.stanford.edu>: | |
| 3397 (setq keyboard-translate-table | |
| 3398 "\C-@\C-a\C-b\C-c\C-d\C-e\C-f\C-g\C-h\C-i\C-j\C-k\C-l\C-m\C-n\C-o\C-p\C-^\C-r\C-\\\C-t\C-u\C-v\C-w\C-x\C-y\C-z\C-[\C-s\C-]\C-q\C-_") | |
| 3399 | |
| 3400 This will at least prevent Emacs from being confused by the flow control | |
| 3401 characters, even if lisp/default.el cannot be loaded. Then, in | |
| 3402 lisp/default.el, enable XON/XOFF flow control with set-input-mode. | |
| 3403 | |
| 3404 For further discussion of this issue, read the file PROBLEMS in the | |
| 597 | 3405 Emacs distribution. |
| 3406 | |
| 1736 | 3407 132: How do I use commands bound to C-s and C-q (or any key) if these keys |
| 134 | 3408 are filtered out? |
| 3409 | |
| 3410 I suggest swapping C-s with C-\ and C-q with C-^: | |
| 3411 | |
| 3412 (swap-keys ?\C-s ?\C-\\) | |
| 3413 (swap-keys ?\C-q ?\C-^) | |
| 3414 | |
| 1736 | 3415 See question 136 for the implementation of swap-keys. This method |
| 3416 has the advantage that it simultaneously swaps the characters everywhere | |
| 3417 throughout Emacs, while just switching the keybindings will miss important | |
| 3418 places where the character codes are stored (eg., the search-repeat-char | |
| 3419 variable, major mode keymaps, etc.). | |
| 3420 | |
| 3421 To do this for an entire site, you may want to swap the keys in | |
| 3422 lisp/default.el. If only some of your users are connecting through | |
| 3423 XON/XOFF flow-controlled connections, you will want to do this | |
| 3424 conditionally. I suggest pre-swapping them in lisp/site-init.el when | |
| 3425 Emacs is built, and then in lisp/default.el, if it is determined to be | |
| 3426 safe, they can be reenabled (being careful not to screw up any other key | |
| 3427 mappings users might have established using keyboard-translate-table). | |
| 3428 See question 131 for an easy way to pre-swap these keys. | |
| 3429 | |
| 3430 WARNING: If you do this for an entire site, the users will be confused by | |
| 3431 the disparity between what the documentation says and how Emacs actually | |
| 3432 behaves. | |
| 3433 | |
| 3434 133: Why does the `BackSpace' key invoke help? | |
| 3435 | |
| 3436 The BackSpace key (on every keyboard I've used) generates ASCII code 8. | |
| 3437 C-h sends the same code. In Emacs by default C-h invokes help-command. | |
| 3438 This is intended to be easy to remember since the first letter of "help" | |
| 3439 is "h". The easiest solution to this problem is to use C-h (and | |
| 3440 BackSpace) for help and DEL (the Delete key) for deleting the previous | |
| 3441 character. | |
| 3442 | |
| 3443 For many people this solution may be problematic: | |
| 3444 | |
| 3445 * They normally use BackSpace outside of Emacs for deleting the previous | |
| 3446 character typed. This can be solved by making DEL be the command for | |
| 3447 deleting the previous character outside of Emacs. This command will do | |
| 3448 this on many Unix systems: | |
| 3449 | |
| 3450 stty erase '^?' | |
| 3451 | |
| 3452 * The person may prefer using the BackSpace key for deleting the previous | |
| 3453 character because it is more conveniently located on their keyboard or | |
| 3454 because they don't even have a separate Delete key. In this case, the | |
| 3455 BackSpace key should be made to behave like Delete. There are several | |
| 3456 methods. | |
| 3457 | |
| 3458 * Under X Windows, the easiest solution is to change the BackSpace key | |
| 3459 into a Delete key like this: | |
| 3460 | |
| 3461 xmodmap -e "keysym BackSpace = Delete" | |
| 3462 | |
| 3463 * Some terminals (eg., VT3## terminals) allow the character generated by | |
| 3464 the BackSpace key to be changed from a setup menu. | |
| 3465 | |
| 3466 * You may be able to get a keyboard that is completely programmable. | |
| 3467 | |
| 3468 * Under X or on a dumb terminal, it is possible to swap the BackSpace | |
| 3469 and Delete keys inside Emacs: | |
| 3470 | |
| 3471 (swap-keys ?\C-h ?\C-?) | |
| 3472 | |
| 3473 See question 136 for the implementation of swap-keys. | |
| 3474 | |
| 3475 * Another approach is to switch keybindings and put help on "C-x h" | |
| 3476 instead: | |
| 3477 | |
| 3478 (global-set-key "\C-h" 'delete-backward-char) | |
| 3479 (global-set-key "\C-xh" 'help-command) ; override mark-whole-buffer | |
| 3480 | |
| 3481 Other popular key bindings for help are M-? and "C-x ?". | |
| 3482 | |
| 3483 WARNING: Don't try to bind DEL to help-command, because there are many | |
| 3484 modes that have local bindings of DEL that will interfere. | |
| 3485 | |
| 3486 134: Why doesn't Emacs look at the stty settings for Backspace vs. Delete? | |
| 3487 | |
| 3488 Good question! | |
| 3489 | |
| 3490 135: Why don't the arrow keys work? | |
| 3491 | |
| 3492 When Emacs starts up, it doesn't know anything about arrow keys at all | |
| 3493 (except when running under X, see question 128). During the process of | |
| 3494 starting up, Emacs will load a terminal-specific initialization file for | |
| 3495 your terminal type (as determined by the environment variable TERM), if | |
| 3496 one exists. This file has the responsibility for enabling the arrow keys. | |
| 3497 | |
| 3498 There are several things that can go wrong: | |
| 3499 | |
| 3500 1. There is no initialization file for your terminal. | |
| 3501 | |
| 3502 You can determine this by looking in the lisp/term directory. If your | |
| 3503 terminal type (as determined by the TERM environment variable) is | |
| 3504 xxx-yy-z, then the first of these files in the lisp/term directory will | |
| 3505 be loaded as the terminal-specific initialization file: xxx-yy-z.el, | |
| 3506 xxx-yy.el, or xxx.el. | |
| 3507 | |
| 3508 There are two major cases of this problem: | |
| 3509 | |
| 3510 * Your terminal type is very similar to one that has an init file. | |
| 3511 | |
| 3512 In this case, there are several techniques suggested by Colin Jensen | |
| 3513 <cjensen@ampex.com>, Ben Liblit <Liblit@cs.psu.edu>, and Marc | |
| 3514 Auslander <marc@watson.ibm.com>: | |
| 3515 | |
| 3516 A. Add a symbolic link in lisp/term for your terminal type that | |
| 3517 points to the similar type. For example, you could make VT102 | |
| 3518 terminals work with this command: | |
| 3519 | |
| 3520 ln -s vt100.el vt102.el | |
| 3521 | |
| 3522 This fixes things for everyone on the system who uses the terminal | |
| 3523 type. | |
| 3524 | |
| 3525 B. If you can't do the solution in part A, you can add code to your | |
| 3526 term-setup-hook that loads the correct file like this: | |
| 3527 | |
| 3528 (setq term-setup-hook | |
| 3529 (function | |
| 3530 (lambda () | |
| 3531 (cond ((equal "vt102" (or (getenv "TERM") "")) | |
| 3532 (load (concat term-file-prefix "vt100"))) | |
| 3533 (;; Code for other terminal types goes here ... | |
| 3534 ))))) | |
| 3535 | |
| 3536 C. If you use `tset' to set your TERM environment variable when you | |
| 3537 login, you can use the `-m' switch to tell tset to use a terminal | |
| 3538 type known by Emacs instead of another similar one. For example, | |
| 3539 specifying this: | |
| 3540 | |
| 3541 tset ... -m 'dec-vt220:vt220' ... | |
| 3542 | |
| 3543 will make tset say you are on a `vt220' instead of a `dec-vt220'. | |
| 3544 | |
| 3545 D. Interactively, you can type "M-x load-library RET term/vt100" to | |
| 3546 load the terminal-specific initialization files for VT100 | |
| 3547 terminals. | |
| 3548 | |
| 3549 * Your terminal type is not similar to one that has an init file. | |
| 3550 | |
| 3551 One can be made for your terminal, or you can just add code to your | |
| 3552 own .emacs to handle this problem for yourself. For example, if your | |
| 3553 terminal's arrow keys send these character sequences: | |
| 3554 | |
| 3555 Up: ESC [ A | |
| 3556 Down: ESC [ B | |
| 3557 Right: ESC [ C | |
| 3558 Left: ESC [ D | |
| 3559 | |
| 3560 then you can bind these keys to the appropriate commands with code in | |
| 3561 your .emacs like this: | |
| 3562 | |
| 3563 (setq term-setup-hook | |
| 3564 (function | |
| 3565 (lambda () | |
| 3566 (cond ((string-match "\\`xyzzy" (or (getenv "TERM") "")) | |
| 3567 ;; First, must unmap the binding for left bracket | |
| 3568 (or (keymapp (lookup-key global-map "\e\[")) | |
| 3569 (define-key global-map "\e\[" nil)) | |
| 3570 ;; Enable terminal type xyzzy's arrow keys: | |
| 3571 (define-key global-map "\e\[A" 'previous-line) | |
| 3572 (define-key global-map "\e\[B" 'next-line) | |
| 3573 (define-key global-map "\e\[C" 'forward-char) | |
| 3574 (define-key global-map "\e\[D" 'backward-char)) | |
| 3575 ((string-match "\\`abcde" (or (getenv "TERM") "")) | |
| 3576 ;; Do something different for terminal type abcde | |
| 3577 ;; ..... | |
| 3578 ))))) | |
| 3579 | |
| 3580 NOTE: You may have to restart Emacs to get changes to take effect. | |
| 3581 | |
| 3582 NOTE: Your arrow keys may send sequences beginning with "ESC O" when | |
| 3583 Emacs is running, even if they send sequences beginning with "ESC [" at | |
| 3584 all other times. This is because Emacs uses any command there may be | |
| 3585 in your terminal's termcap entry for putting the terminal into | |
| 3586 "Application Keypad Mode". Just map these sequences the same way as | |
| 3587 above. | |
| 3588 | |
| 3589 The next two cases are problems even if there is a initialization file for | |
| 3590 your terminal type. | |
| 3591 | |
| 3592 2. The initialization file for your terminal doesn't bind arrow keys. | |
| 3593 | |
| 3594 If your terminal type is `xterm', you will have to bind the arrow keys | |
| 3595 as in part 1 above, since the xterm.el file doesn't do anything useful. | |
| 3596 There may be other terminal types with the same problem. | |
| 3597 | |
| 3598 3. Your terminal's arrow keys send individual control characters. | |
| 3599 | |
| 3600 For example, the arrow keys on an ADM-3 send C-h, C-j, C-k, and C-l. | |
| 3601 | |
| 3602 There is not much Emacs can do in this situation, since all the control | |
| 3603 characters except for C-^ and C-\ are already used as Emacs commands. | |
| 3604 It may be possible to convince the terminal to send something else when | |
| 3605 you press the arrow keys; it is worth investigating. | |
| 3606 | |
| 3607 You have to make the hard choices of how to rebind keys to commands to | |
| 3608 make things work the way you want. Another alternative is to start | |
| 3609 learning the standard Emacs keybindings for moving point around: C-b, | |
| 3610 C-f, C-p, and C-n. Personally, I no longer use the arrow keys when | |
| 3611 editing because I have switched keyboards so many times. | |
| 3612 | |
| 3613 4. Your terminal's arrow keys send sequences beginning with "ESC [". | |
| 3614 | |
| 3615 Due to an extremely poor design decision (ie., these sequences are ANSI | |
| 3616 standard), none of the the terminal-specific initialization files that | |
| 3617 are distributed with Emacs will bind these character sequences to the | |
| 3618 appropriate commands by default. (This also applies to any other | |
| 3619 function keys which generate character sequences starting with "ESC | |
| 3620 [".) This is because it was deemed far more important to preserve the | |
| 3621 binding of M-[ to the backward-paragraph command. It appears that this | |
| 3622 will change in Emacs 19. | |
| 3623 | |
| 3624 Some of the terminal-specific initialization files that come with Emacs | |
| 3625 provide a command enable-arrow-keys that will fix this problem. To get | |
| 3626 this automatically invoked, put this in your .emacs: | |
| 3627 | |
| 3628 (setq term-setup-hook | |
| 3629 (function | |
| 3630 (lambda () | |
| 3631 (if (fboundp 'enable-arrow-keys) (enable-arrow-keys))))) | |
| 3632 | |
| 3633 We put this in our lisp/default.el file, so users don't have to worry | |
| 3634 about it: | |
| 3635 | |
| 3636 ;; don't override a user's term-setup-hook | |
| 3637 (or term-setup-hook | |
| 3638 (setq term-setup-hook | |
| 3639 (function | |
| 3640 (lambda () | |
| 3641 (and (fboundp 'enable-arrow-keys) | |
| 3642 ;; don't override a user key mapping | |
| 3643 (eq 'backward-paragraph (lookup-key esc-map "[")) | |
| 3644 (enable-arrow-keys)))))) | |
| 3645 | |
| 3646 If your terminal type is `sun', you should put this in your .emacs | |
| 3647 instead (or in addition to the above): | |
| 3648 | |
| 3649 (setq sun-esc-bracket t) | |
| 3650 | |
| 3651 It is possible that the terminal-specific initialization file for your | |
| 3652 terminal type was written locally and does not follow the rule | |
| 3653 mentioned above. In this case you may need to inspect it to find out | |
| 3654 how to enable the arrow keys. (Actually, if it was written locally, it | |
| 3655 probably enables the arrow keys by default.) | |
| 3656 | |
| 3657 136: How do I "swap" two keys? | |
| 134 | 3658 |
| 3659 When Emacs receives a character, you can make Emacs behave as though it | |
| 3660 received another character by setting the value of | |
| 597 | 3661 keyboard-translate-table. The following Emacs Lisp will do this for you, |
| 3662 allowing you to "swap" keys. After arranging for this Lisp to be | |
| 3663 evaluated by Emacs, you can evaluate `(swap-keys ?A ?B)' to swap A and B. | |
| 134 | 3664 |
| 3665 (defun swap-keys (key1 key2) | |
| 3666 "Swap keys KEY1 and KEY2 using map-key." | |
| 597 | 3667 (map-key key1 key2) |
| 134 | 3668 (map-key key2 key1)) |
| 3669 | |
| 597 | 3670 (defun map-key (from to) |
| 3671 "Make key FROM behave as though key TO was typed instead." | |
| 3672 (setq keyboard-translate-table | |
| 3673 (concat keyboard-translate-table | |
| 3674 (let* ((i (length keyboard-translate-table)) | |
| 3675 (j from) | |
| 3676 (k i) | |
| 3677 (str (make-string (max 0 (- j (1- i))) ?X))) | |
| 3678 (while (<= k j) | |
| 3679 (aset str (- k i) k) | |
| 3680 (setq k (1+ k))) | |
| 3681 str))) | |
| 3682 (aset keyboard-translate-table from to) | |
| 3683 (let ((i (1- (length keyboard-translate-table)))) | |
| 3684 (while (and (>= i 0) (eq (aref keyboard-translate-table i) i)) | |
| 3685 (setq i (1- i))) | |
| 3686 (setq keyboard-translate-table | |
| 3687 (if (eq i -1) | |
| 3688 nil | |
| 3689 (substring keyboard-translate-table 0 (1+ i)))))) | |
| 3690 | |
| 1736 | 3691 NOTE: You must evaluate the definition of these functions before calling |
| 3692 them! For example, list the function definitions before their use in your | |
| 3693 .emacs file. | |
| 3694 | |
| 3695 NOTE: These functions take two numbers as arguments. The example above, | |
| 3696 `(swap-keys ?A ?B)' is actually `(swap-keys 65 66)', because `?A' is | |
| 3697 merely notation for 65, the ASCII value of `A'. | |
| 3698 | |
| 3699 NOTE: These functions only work for single characters. You cannot swap | |
| 3700 two multi-character sequences. | |
| 3701 | |
| 3702 137: How do I produce C-XXX with my keyboard? | |
| 3703 | |
| 3704 For C-@ and C-^, often you can just type Control-2 and Control-6. For | |
| 3705 C-_, you may have to hold down the shift key, typing Control-Shift-Hyphen. | |
| 3706 C-@ can often be generated by typing Control-Space. C-@ is often called | |
| 3707 the NUL character, and has ASCII value 0. C-_ can often be generated by | |
| 3708 typing Control-7 or Control-/. C-? (aka DEL) may be generated by typing | |
| 3709 Shift-BackSpace or Control-BackSpace or a key labelled Delete or Del. | |
| 3710 | |
| 3711 Try Control with all of the digits on your keyboard to see what gets | |
| 3712 generated. | |
| 3713 | |
| 3714 138: What if I don't have a Meta key? | |
| 3715 | |
| 3716 Instead of typing M-a, you can type "ESC a" instead. In fact, Emacs | |
| 3717 converts M-a internally into "ESC a" anyway (depending on the value of | |
| 3718 meta-prefix-char). | |
| 3719 | |
| 3720 139: What if I don't have an Escape key? | |
| 3721 | |
| 3722 Type C-[ instead. This should send ASCII code 27 just like an Escape | |
| 3723 key would. Try also C-;. | |
| 3724 | |
| 3725 140: How do I type DEL on PC terminal emulators? | |
| 3726 | |
| 3727 Some IBM PC compatibles do not have a key labeled `Del' or `Delete' {is | |
| 3728 this true?}. Those that do generally have it in an inconvenient location. | |
| 3729 (Also, in some terminal emulators, the `Del' key does not transmit DEL.) | |
| 3730 The result is the standard "BackSpace invoking help" problem (see question | |
| 3731 133). | |
| 3732 | |
| 3733 The usual solution, suggested by Michael Covington | |
| 3734 <mcovingt@aisun1.ai.uga.edu>, is to somehow tell the terminal emulator | |
| 3735 program that BackSpace should transmit DEL. Read the program's manual. | |
| 3736 Shift-BackSpace or Control-BackSpace may send DEL. The `Del' key may only | |
| 3737 send DEL if the NumLock key hasn't been pressed. | |
| 3738 | |
| 3739 141: Can I make my `Compose Character' key behave like a Meta key? | |
| 597 | 3740 |
| 3741 On a dumb terminal such as a VT220, no. It is rumored that certain VT220 | |
| 1736 | 3742 clones could have their Compose key configured this way. If you're using |
| 3743 X, you might be able to do this with the `xmodmap' program (this is | |
| 3744 what I do). | |
| 3745 | |
| 3746 142: How do I bind a combination of modifier key and function key? | |
| 3747 | |
| 3748 Unless you're using Emacs under emacstool (or xvetool?), have a working | |
| 3749 version of x-rebind-key (see question 128), or are using Emacs 19 (Lucid | |
| 3750 Emacs), you can't do this with Emacs alone. | |
| 3751 | |
| 3752 If you are using emacstool, Emacs sees different character sequences for | |
| 3753 the combination of a modifier and a function key from what it sees for the | |
| 3754 function key alone. See etc/emacstool.1 for more information. Since | |
| 3755 Emacs sees different character sequences, you can bind these different | |
| 3756 sequences to different commands. | |
| 597 | 3757 |
| 3758 If you are running Emacs inside a terminal emulator window like xterm, you | |
| 3759 can modify its translation tables to make it generate different character | |
| 3760 sequences for the combination of a modifier and a function key. For | |
| 3761 example, this X resource setting: | |
| 3762 | |
| 3763 XTerm.VT100.Translations: #override \ | |
| 3764 Shift<KeyPress>F1: string(0x1b) string("[xyzzy") | |
| 3765 | |
| 3766 makes Shift-F1 generate the character sequence "ESC [ xyzzy". You can | |
| 1736 | 3767 bind these character sequences in Emacs as normal. Nick Ruprecht |
| 3768 <ruprecht@informatik.uni-freiburg.de> has written an extensive X | |
| 3769 translation mapping for xterm that does this. {Does this have an FTP | |
| 3770 site?} | |
| 3771 | |
| 3772 If you have x-rebind-key, you can have any arbitrary combination of | |
| 3773 modifiers with a key replaced by any sequence of "normal" characters. For | |
| 3774 example, this makes Shift-Return behave as though you had typed "C-x C-e" | |
| 3775 (example from Jerry Graves): | |
| 3776 | |
| 3777 (x-rebind-key "Return" 'shift "\C-x\C-e") | |
| 3778 | |
| 3779 In Emacs 19 (Lucid Emacs), you can bind Meta-Left-Arrow like this (example | |
| 3780 from Jamie Zawinski): | |
| 3781 | |
| 3782 (global-set-key '(meta left) 'backward-word) | |
| 3783 | |
| 3784 With the last two methods, use `xmodmap' and `xev' to discover the keysym | |
| 3785 and modifier names. | |
| 3786 | |
| 3787 143: Why doesn't my Meta key work in an xterm window? | |
| 597 | 3788 |
| 3789 Try all of these methods before asking for further help: | |
| 3790 | |
| 1736 | 3791 * You may have big problems using `mwm' as your window manager. {Does |
| 3792 anyone know a good generic solution to allow the use of the Meta key in | |
| 3793 Emacs with mwm?} | |
| 3794 | |
| 3795 * For X11R4: Make sure it really is a Meta key. Use `xev' to find out | |
| 597 | 3796 what keysym your Meta key generates. It should be either Meta_L or |
| 3797 Meta_R. If it isn't, use xmodmap to fix the situation. | |
| 3798 | |
| 3799 * Make sure the pty the xterm is using is passing 8 bit characters. | |
| 1736 | 3800 `stty -a' (or `stty everything') should show `cs8' somewhere. If it |
| 3801 shows `cs7' instead, use `stty cs8 -istrip' (or `stty pass8') to fix | |
| 597 | 3802 it. |
| 3803 | |
| 3804 * If there is an rlogin connection between the xterm and the Emacs, the | |
| 1736 | 3805 `-8' argument may need to be given to rlogin to make it pass all 8 |
| 597 | 3806 bits of every character. |
| 3807 | |
| 1736 | 3808 * If the Emacs is running under Ultrix, it is reported that evaluating |
| 3809 (set-input-mode t nil) helps. | |
| 597 | 3810 |
| 3811 * If all else fails, you can make xterm generate "ESC W" when you type | |
| 3812 M-W, which is the same conversion Emacs would make if it got the M-W | |
| 3813 anyway. In X11R4, the following resource specification will do this: | |
| 3814 | |
| 3815 XTerm.VT100.EightBitInput: false | |
| 3816 | |
| 3817 (This changes the behavior of the insert-eight-bit action.) | |
| 3818 | |
| 3819 With older xterms, you can specify this behavior with a translation: | |
| 3820 | |
| 3821 XTerm.VT100.Translations: #override \ | |
| 3822 Meta<KeyPress>: string(0x1b) insert() | |
| 3823 | |
| 1736 | 3824 You might have to replace `Meta' with `Alt'. |
| 3825 | |
| 3826 144: Why doesn't my ExtendChar key work as a Meta key under HP-UX 8.0? | |
| 597 | 3827 |
| 3828 This is a result of an internationalization extension in X11R4 and the | |
| 3829 fact that HP is now using this extension. Emacs assumes that | |
| 3830 XLookupString returns the same result regardless of the Meta key state | |
| 3831 which is no longer necessarily true. Until Emacs is fixed, the temporary | |
| 3832 kludge is to run this command after each time the X server is started but | |
| 3833 preferably before any xterm clients are: | |
| 3834 | |
| 3835 xmodmap -e 'remove mod1 = Mode_switch' | |
| 3836 | |
| 3837 NOTE: This will disable the use of the extra keysyms systemwide, which | |
| 3838 may be undesirable if you actually intend to use them. | |
| 3839 | |
| 1736 | 3840 145: Where can I get key bindings to make Emacs emulate WordStar? |
| 3841 | |
| 3842 There is a package `wordstar' by Jim Frost <jimf@saber.com> and | |
| 3843 `ws-mode.el' by Juergen Nickelsen <nickel@cs.tu-berlin.de>. Check in the | |
| 3844 Emacs Lisp Archive (see question 89). | |
| 3845 | |
| 3846 146: Where can I get an XEDIT emulator for Emacs? | |
| 3847 | |
| 3848 This question comes up once every couple of months. I have never seen a | |
| 3849 positive reply, so I presume no one has ever written one. | |
| 3850 | |
| 3851 | |
| 3852 | |
| 3853 Using Emacs with Alternate Character Sets | |
| 3854 | |
| 3855 147: How do I make Emacs display 8-bit characters? | |
| 3856 | |
| 3857 There is a patch called the `8-bit ctl-arrow patch' that allows Emacs to | |
| 3858 display characters with codes from 128 to 255. {The original appears to | |
| 3859 have been by Kenneth Cline <cline@proof.ergo.cs.cmu.edu>.} Partially based | |
| 3860 on Johan Widen's earlier work, Johan Vromans <jv@mh.nl> has updated this | |
| 3861 patch for Emacs 18.58 along with some other 8-bit improvements. | |
| 3862 | |
| 3863 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 3864 /ftp.eu.net:gnu/emacs/FP-EightBit.Z | |
|
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3865 /ftp.urc.tue.nl:/pub/tex/emacs/FP-EightBit |
| 1736 | 3866 /cs.purdue.edu:pub/ygz/cemacs.tar.Z:cemacs/8bit-patch-18.57 |
| 3867 /sics.se:archive/emacs-18.55-8bit-diff | |
| 3868 /laas.laas.fr:pub/emacs/patch-8bit-18.55 | |
| 3869 /laas.laas.fr:pub/emacs/patch-8bit-18.57 | |
| 3870 | |
| 3871 Via e-mail: | |
| 3872 To: mail-server@sics.se | |
| 3873 body: send emacs-18.55-8bit-diff | |
| 3874 | |
| 3875 Anders Edenbrandt <anderse@dna.lth.se> has produced a more comprehensive | |
|
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3876 patch for Emacs 18.59 that allows for 8-bit input and output. |
| 1736 | 3877 |
| 3878 Anonymous FTP: | |
|
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3879 /ftp.efd.lth.se:pub/gnu/emacs_8-bit.patch |
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3880 |
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3881 In the words of the author: |
|
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3882 |
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3883 With these patches, Emacs becomes fully 8-bit operational. There is |
|
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3884 support for displaying 8-bit characters, as well as for entering such |
|
3591
507f64624555
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3885 characters from the keyboard. In addition, upcase/lowcase translation |
|
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3886 is supported, accented characters are recognized as "letters" (important |
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3887 when doing 'forward-word', for example), and text with 8-bit characters |
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3888 can be sorted correctly. |
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3889 |
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3890 A Meta-shift key can still be used, provided that you run in an |
|
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3891 environment where it is possible to distinguish between a character |
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3892 entered using the Meta-shift key and one entered directly. The diffs |
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3893 include patches to make this work under SunView (with emacstool) as |
|
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3894 well as under X. If you can't use a Meta-shift key, you have to enter |
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3895 Meta-commands with the ESC-prefix. |
| 1736 | 3896 |
| 3897 The most comprehensive patches for 8-bit output are by Howard Gayle | |
| 3898 (originally for Emacs 18.55. These patches allow displaying any arbitrary | |
| 3899 string for a given 8-bit character (except TAB and C-j). Also supported | |
| 3900 is defining the sorting order and the uppercase and lowercase | |
| 3901 translations. It is reported that the 8-bit character support in Emacs 19 | |
| 3902 is largely based on these patches. Thomas Bellman | |
|
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3903 <Bellman@lysator.liu.se> has updated these patches for Emacs 18.59. |
| 1736 | 3904 |
| 3905 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 3906 /sics.se:archive/emacs-gayle.tar.Z (patches for 18.55) | |
|
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3907 /ftp.lysator.liu.se:pub/emacs/gayle-18.58.diff.tar.Z (patches) |
|
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3908 /ftp.lysator.liu.se:pub/emacs/emacs-18.59-gayle.tar.Z (patched Emacs) |
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3909 |
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3910 Epoch's 8-bit character support is based on Anders Edenbrandt's patches. |
| 1736 | 3911 Lucid Emacs has the ctl-arrow patch installed. Nemacs displays 8-bit |
| 3912 characters, and it may be useful for displaying the 8-bit ISO-8859 | |
| 3913 alphabet, but I don't know for sure (see question 149). | |
| 3914 | |
| 3915 148: How do I input 8-bit characters? | |
| 3916 | |
| 3917 Minor modes for ISO Latin-1 that allow one to easily input this character | |
| 3918 set have been written by several people. Such modes have been written by | |
| 3919 Matthieu Herrb <matthieu@laas.fr> (laas.laas.fr:pub/emacs/iso-latin-1.el), | |
| 3920 Johan Vromans <jv@mh.nl> {FTP site??}, and Marc Shapiro | |
| 3921 <shapiro@sor.inria.fr> {FTP site??}. | |
| 3922 | |
| 3923 These approaches differ from the one taken by Anders Edenbrandt in that | |
| 3924 his method uses direct 8-bit input, while these methods use a compose | |
| 3925 sequence for 8-bit characters. {I have heard conflicting reports on | |
| 3926 whether this results in losing the Meta key. Perhaps this depends on | |
| 3927 whether Emacs is running under X. Can someone resolve this?} | |
| 3928 | |
| 3929 Karl Heuer <karl@haddock.ima.isc.com> is said to have a patch to allow | |
| 3930 8-bit input. Georg-Wilhelm Koltermann <gwk@crmunich0.cray.com> also has a | |
| 3931 patch for either 18.57 or 18.58 that allows 8-bit input. | |
| 3932 | |
| 3933 Epoch comes with a patch that allows it to input 8-bit characters, but it | |
| 3934 is not enabled by default. {Is this right?} | |
| 3935 | |
| 3936 Jamie Zawinski says: | |
| 3937 | |
| 3938 Lucid GNU Emacs allows the input of any ISO-8859/1 keysyms that your | |
| 3939 keyboard generates (see xmodmap), and contains a package that implements | |
| 3940 a DEC/OpenWindows-like "Compose" key for systems which don't have one. | |
| 3941 | |
| 3942 149: Where can I get an Emacs that can handle kanji characters? | |
| 3943 | |
| 3944 Nemacs 3.3.2 (Nihongo GNU Emacs) is a modified version of GNU Emacs 18.55 | |
| 3945 that handles kanji characters. It is available via anonymous FTP: | |
| 3946 | |
| 3947 /crl.nmsu.edu:pub/misc/nemacs-3.3.2.tar.Z | |
|
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3948 /miki.cs.titech.ac.jp:JAPAN/nemacs/nemacs-3.3.2.tar.Z |
| 1736 | 3949 |
| 3950 You might also need files for "wnn", a kanji input method | |
| 3951 (wnn-4.0.3{-README,.tar.Z} {on which machine?}). You need a terminal (or | |
| 3952 terminal emulator) that can display text encoded in JIS, Shift-JIS, or EUC | |
| 3953 (Extended Unix Code), or the ability to run Nemacs as a direct X Window | |
| 3954 client. | |
| 3955 | |
| 3956 150: Where can I get an Emacs that can handle Chinese? | |
| 3957 | |
| 3958 `cemacs' by Stephen G. Simpson <simpson@math.psu.edu> is a patch to Emacs | |
| 3959 18.57 (the ctl-arrow patch) and some Emacs Lisp code that combined with | |
| 3960 Cxterm allows using Chinese characters. It is available via anonymous | |
| 3961 FTP: | |
| 3962 | |
| 3963 /crl.nmsu.edu:pub/chinese/cemacs.tar.Z | |
| 3964 /cs.purdue.edu:pub/ygz/cemacs.tar.Z | |
| 3965 | |
| 3966 Cxterm is available from the same place: | |
| 3967 | |
| 3968 /cs.purdue.edu:pub/ygz/cxterm-11.5.1.tar.Z | |
| 3969 | |
| 3970 151: Where is an Emacs that can handle Semitic (right-to-left) alphabets? | |
| 3971 | |
| 3972 Joel M. Hoffman <joel@wam.umd.edu> writes: | |
| 3973 | |
| 3974 A couple of years ago a wrote a hebrew.el file that allows right-to-left | |
| 3975 editing of Hebrew. I relied on the hardware to display the Hebrew | |
| 3976 letters, given the right codes, but not for any right-to-left support; | |
| 3977 the hardware also doesn't have to send any specific char. codes. Emacs | |
| 3978 keeps track of when the user is typing Hebrew vs. English. (The VT-* | |
| 3979 terminals in Israel contain built-in support for Hebrew.) | |
| 3980 | |
| 3981 To get it to work I had to modify only a few lines of GNU Emacs's source | |
| 3982 code --- just enough to make it 8-bit clean. | |
| 3983 | |
| 3984 [and in a separate message:] | |
| 3985 | |
| 3986 It doesn't produce time-order ["sefer" format] (I wouldn't recommend | |
| 3987 trying that with emacs, because converting time-order to screen-order | |
| 3988 with arbitrarily long lines is a bit tricky), but I also concocted a | |
| 3989 quick filter to convert screen-order into time-order. I'll be happy to | |
| 3990 send you the requisite files if you want them. If you're using it for | |
| 3991 anything large, however, you'll want something that works better. | |
| 3992 | |
| 3993 Joel Hoffman has also written a "bi-directional bi-lingual Emacs-like" | |
| 3994 editor for MS-DOS named Ibelbe (Itty Bitty Emacs-Like Bidirectional | |
| 3995 Editor). Ibelbe is written in Turbo Pascal and comes with source code. | |
| 3996 Here is the description: | |
| 3997 | |
| 3998 Ibelbe looks like emacs (it even has a minibuffer and filename | |
| 3999 completion), and fully supports both right-to-left and left-to-right | |
| 4000 editing. Other than an EGA monitor or better, no special hardware is | |
| 4001 required. You will need an EGA Hebrew font to use Ibelbe with Hebrew. | |
| 4002 | |
| 4003 Anonymous FTP: | |
| 4004 /israel.nysernet.org:israel/msdos/ibelbe.zip | |
| 4005 /israel.nysernet.org:israel/msdos/hebfont.zip | |
| 4006 | |
| 4007 Joseph Friedman <yossi@deshaw.com, yossi@Neon.Stanford.EDU> has written | |
| 4008 patches for Emacs 18.55 and 18.58 that provide Semitic language support | |
| 4009 under X Windows. | |
| 4010 | |
| 4011 Warren Burstein <warren@itex.jct.ac.il> says he has mapped 7-bit keys by | |
| 4012 modifying self-insert-command "for Hebrew input on 7-bit keyboards". | |
| 4013 | |
| 4014 A good suggestion is to query archie for files named with `hebrew'. | |
| 4015 | |
| 4016 GNU Emacs FAQ: Mail and News | |
| 4017 | |
| 4018 This portion of the GNU Emacs FAQ list is cross-posted to `gnu.emacs.gnus' | |
| 4019 because many of the questions herein deal with GNUS. See `gnu.emacs.help' for | |
| 4020 the rest of the FAQ list. | |
| 4021 | |
| 4022 If you are viewing this text in a GNU Emacs Buffer, you can type "M-2 C-x $" to | |
| 4023 get an overview of just the questions. Then, when you want to look at the text | |
| 4024 of the answers, just type "C-x $". | |
| 4025 | |
| 4026 To search for a question numbered XXX, type "M-C-s ^XXX:", followed by a C-r if | |
| 4027 that doesn't work, then type ESC to end the search. | |
| 4028 | |
| 4029 A `+' in the 78th column means something was inserted on the line. A `-' means | |
| 4030 something was deleted and a `!' means some combination of insertions and | |
| 4031 deletions occurred. | |
| 4032 | |
| 4033 Full instructions for getting the latest FAQ are in question 22. Also see the | |
| 4034 `Introduction to news.answers' posting in the `news.answers' newsgroup, or send | |
| 4035 e-mail to `mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu' with `help' on a body line, or use FTP, | |
| 4036 WAIS, or Prospero to rtfm.mit.edu. | |
| 134 | 4037 |
| 4038 | |
| 597 | 4039 |
| 1736 | 4040 Mail and News |
| 134 | 4041 |
| 1736 | 4042 152: How do I change the included text prefix in mail/news followups? |
| 4043 | |
| 4044 Many people want Emacs to prefix included text with something like ` > ' | |
| 4045 instead of with three spaces. One way is to change the code of the | |
| 4046 function `mail-yank-original' in lisp/sendmail.el that prefixes with | |
| 4047 spaces. A more flexible solution is to use Supercite, which provides wide | |
| 4048 configurability in how you format included text in replies. See question | |
| 4049 107. Both of these solutions work for RMAIL and GNUS. | |
| 4050 | |
| 4051 A related problem is how to prevent Emacs from including various headers | |
| 4052 of the replied-to message. For this, you should set the value of | |
| 4053 mail-yank-ignored-headers, which takes a regexp value. | |
| 4054 | |
| 4055 153: How do I save a copy of outgoing mail? | |
| 4056 | |
| 4057 Two methods: | |
| 4058 | |
| 4059 1. (setq mail-self-blind t) will result in a `BCC:' header line with your | |
| 4060 address being added to mail composition buffers. This will cause the | |
| 4061 mail system to send a copy of the mail back to you. | |
| 4062 | |
| 4063 2. (setq mail-archive-file-name (expand-file-name "~/outgoing")) will | |
| 4064 result in an `FCC:' header line with the pathname of ~/outgoing being | |
| 4065 added to mail composition buffers. When you send the mail, Emacs will | |
| 4066 save a copy of the mail in the file ~/outgoing and then strip off the | |
| 4067 `FCC:' line before actually sending. | |
| 4068 | |
| 4069 WARNING: There is a bug in Emacs 18.58 that prevents mail readers such | |
| 4070 as RMAIL from reading the saved mail messages individually. See | |
| 4071 question 155. | |
| 4072 | |
| 4073 WARNING: If you are visiting the file ~/outgoing at the time you send | |
| 4074 the mail, this can cause a variety of horrible problems. Jamie | |
| 4075 Zawinski has written a solution for this. | |
| 4076 | |
| 4077 It does not work to put `set record filename' in the .mailrc file. | |
| 4078 | |
| 4079 154: Why doesn't Emacs expand my aliases when sending mail? | |
| 4080 | |
| 4081 * You must separate multiple addresses in the headers of the mail buffer | |
| 597 | 4082 with commas. This is because Emacs supports RFC822 standard addresses |
| 4083 like this one: | |
| 4084 | |
| 1736 | 4085 To: Willy Smith <wks@xpnsv.lwyrs.com> |
| 4086 | |
| 4087 However, you do not need to separate addresses with commas in your | |
| 4088 .mailrc file. | |
| 4089 | |
| 4090 WARNING: Emacs breaks up aliases in the .mailrc file into multiple | |
| 4091 addresses both on commas and on whitespace, regardless of any use of | |
| 4092 quotes. This is probably a bug. You can get around this by directly | |
| 4093 setting the value of mail-aliases. | |
| 4094 | |
| 4095 * Emacs normally only reads the `.mailrc' file once per session, when you | |
| 597 | 4096 start to compose your first mail message. If you edit .mailrc, you can |
| 4097 type "M-ESC (build-mail-aliases) RET" to make Emacs reread .mailrc. | |
| 4098 (You have to include the parentheses where they are shown!) | |
| 4099 | |
| 4100 * Emacs does not interpret vendor-specific additions to the format of the | |
| 1736 | 4101 .mailrc file such as the `source' command. It also ignores any `set' |
| 4102 commands. The only commands it looks at are `alias' and `group' | |
| 4103 commands. | |
| 4104 | |
| 4105 155: Why does RMAIL think all my saved messages are one big message? | |
| 4106 | |
| 4107 There is a bug for FCC-ed messages in Emacs 18.58 where it adds a timezone | |
| 4108 on the "From " line after the year instead of before the year. (Before it | |
| 4109 didn't add the timezone at all.) This is incompatible with the standard | |
| 4110 format for the "From " line, and RMAIL in particular can no longer | |
| 4111 distinguish between the messages. Karl Berry <karl@cs.umb.edu>, Felix Lee | |
| 4112 <flee@cs.psu.edu>, Nick Gianniotis <nico@japan.sbi.com> and many | |
| 4113 others have all posted patches for this. Karl's is the simplest and just | |
| 4114 stops Emacs from adding the timezone: | |
| 4115 | |
| 4116 >*** ./ORIG/sendmail.el Tue Jan 28 16:22:56 1992 | |
| 4117 >--- ./sendmail.el Thu May 14 18:23:48 1992 | |
| 4118 >*************** | |
| 4119 >*** 285,287 **** | |
| 4120 > (insert "\nFrom " (user-login-name) " " | |
| 4121 >! (current-time-string) " " timezone "\n") | |
| 4122 > (insert-buffer-substring rmailbuf) | |
| 4123 >--- 285,287 ---- | |
| 4124 > (insert "\nFrom " (user-login-name) " " | |
| 4125 >! (current-time-string) "\n") | |
| 4126 > (insert-buffer-substring rmailbuf) | |
| 4127 | |
| 4128 156: How can I sort the messages in my RMAIL folder? | |
| 4129 | |
| 4130 Use rmailsort.el by Masanobu Umeda. | |
| 4131 | |
| 4132 157: Why does RMAIL need to write to /usr/spool/mail? | |
| 4133 | |
| 4134 This is the behavior of the `movemail' program which RMAIL uses. This | |
| 4135 indicates that movemail is configured to use lock files. | |
| 4136 | |
| 4137 RMS writes: | |
| 4138 | |
| 4139 Certain systems require lock files to interlock access to mail files. | |
| 4140 On these systems, movemail must write lock files, or you risk losing | |
| 4141 mail. You simply must arrange to let movemail write them. | |
| 4142 | |
| 4143 Other systems use the flock system call to interlock access. On these | |
| 4144 systems, you should configure movemail to use flock. | |
| 4145 | |
| 4146 158: How do I recover my mail files after RMAIL munges their format? | |
| 597 | 4147 |
| 4148 Users who just want to try RMAIL out to see how it works end up trapped | |
| 1736 | 4149 using it because saved mail in their `mbox' file has been converted into |
| 597 | 4150 an incompatible format (BABYL) that only RMAIL understands. RMAIL |
| 1736 | 4151 provides no obvious way to reverse this transformation. Kyle Jones has |
| 4152 aptly named this "the great Emacs Mail Eating Monster". To convert a mail | |
| 597 | 4153 file back to standard Unix format, there are several methods: |
| 4154 | |
| 4155 * Use the rmail-output ("C-o") command within RMAIL on each message in the | |
| 4156 file. First use M-x rmail or M-x rmail-input to visit the RMAIL file in | |
| 4157 Rmail mode. Type "1 j" to go to the first message. Use the C-o command | |
| 4158 to output the message to a Unix format file. Type "n" to go to the next | |
| 4159 message. Repeat. | |
| 4160 | |
| 4161 * If the file contains hundreds of messages, you may not want to repeat | |
| 4162 this for all of them. Instead of the above, after getting to the first | |
| 4163 message type this (where "mbox" is the file you want to put the messages | |
| 4164 in): | |
| 4165 | |
| 4166 C-x ( C-o mbox RET M-s ^From: RET M-0 C-x ) | |
| 4167 | |
| 4168 (The rmail-search command ("M-s") is used instead of just "n" because it | |
| 4169 is the only command which will cause an error when it reaches the last | |
| 4170 message in the file, which is necessary to terminate the keyboard macro. | |
| 4171 This will fail if there are messages in the file that don't have a | |
| 4172 `From:' header. This assumes rmail-delete-after-output is nil.) | |
| 4173 | |
| 4174 It is wise to save a copy of the RMAIL file first, in case you make a | |
| 4175 mistake. | |
| 4176 | |
| 4177 * There are software packages available for converting files or even | |
| 4178 entire directories of BABYL files to standard Unix format. These are | |
| 4179 helpful in this situation, but are intended mainly for people who have | |
| 4180 used RMAIL for a long time and are converting to some other mail reader. | |
| 4181 Lookup `rmail', `vm', and `babyl' in the Emacs Lisp Archive (see | |
| 1736 | 4182 question 89). |
| 597 | 4183 |
| 4184 You may wish to disable RMAIL to avoid accidentally destroying your mbox | |
| 4185 file (I have this in my .emacs): | |
| 4186 | |
| 4187 (put 'rmail 'disabled t) ; avoid mbox destruction | |
| 4188 | |
| 1736 | 4189 159: How do I make Emacs automatically start my mail/news reader? |
| 4190 | |
| 4191 Example: | |
| 4192 | |
| 4193 emacs -f gnus | |
| 4194 | |
| 4195 Also: | |
| 4196 | |
| 4197 alias gnus 'emacs -f gnus' | |
| 4198 | |
| 4199 It is probably unwise to automatically start your mail or news reader from | |
| 4200 your .emacs file. This would cause problems if you needed to run two | |
| 4201 copies of Emacs at one time. Also, this would make it difficult for you | |
| 4202 to start Emacs quickly when you needed to. | |
| 4203 | |
| 4204 160: How do I read news under Emacs? | |
| 597 | 4205 |
| 4206 There are at least three news reading packages that operate inside Emacs. | |
| 1736 | 4207 `rnews' comes with Emacs. GNUS and Gnews come separately. rnews will |
| 597 | 4208 be replaced by GNUS in Emacs 19. |
| 4209 | |
| 4210 rnews works only with a local news spool directory. Both GNUS and Gnews | |
| 4211 handle reading news remotely via NNTP in addition to reading from a local | |
| 4212 news spool. GNUS supports reading mail stored in MH folders or articles | |
| 4213 saved by GNUS. | |
| 4214 | |
| 1736 | 4215 Gnews is styled after `rn' and seems to work like RMAIL. GNUS feels more |
| 597 | 4216 like VM. People have complained that GNUS uses a lot of CPU time (it |
| 4217 does). Some people have complained that Gnews is slower than GNUS. | |
| 4218 | |
| 1736 | 4219 For more information about GNUS, see question 108. |
| 597 | 4220 |
| 4221 Gnews was written by Matthew P. Wiener <weemba@libra.wistar.upenn.edu>. | |
| 4222 The latest version seems to be 2.0, posted October 3, 1988. Matthew | |
| 4223 posted some fixes on October 26, 1988. Gnews does not appear to have been | |
| 4224 supported after this date. In particular, it has been reported that Gnews | |
| 4225 does not work with Emacs 18.57. There is a newsgroup for Gnews called | |
| 134 | 4226 gnu.emacs.gnews. |
| 4227 | |
| 1736 | 4228 161: Why does `rnews' say "No News is good news" when there is news? |
| 4229 | |
| 4230 rnews doesn't speak NNTP. You may need to use GNUS or Gnews. | |
| 4231 | |
| 4232 162: Why doesn't GNUS work anymore via NNTP? | |
| 4233 | |
| 4234 There is a bug in NNTP version 1.5.10, such that when multiple requests | |
| 4235 are sent to the NNTP server, the server only handles the first one before | |
| 4236 blocking waiting for more input which never comes. NNTP version 1.5.11 | |
| 4237 claims to fix this. | |
| 4238 | |
| 4239 You can work around the bug inside Emacs like this: | |
| 4240 | |
| 4241 (setq nntp-maximum-request 1) | |
| 4242 | |
| 4243 I also have a patch for NNTP 1.5.10 by Mike Pelletier | |
| 4244 <stealth@engin.umich.edu> that is based on the timeout code that was in | |
| 4245 1.5.9. However, please try to upgrade to 1.5.11 first. | |
| 4246 | |
| 4247 You can find out what version of NNTP your news server is running by | |
| 4248 telnetting to the NNTP port (usually 119) on the news server machine (ie., | |
| 4249 `telnet server-machine 119'). The server should give its version number | |
| 4250 in the welcome message. Type `quit' to get out. | |
| 4251 | |
| 4252 163: How do I view text with embedded underlining (eg., ClariNews)? | |
| 4253 | |
| 4254 Underlining appears like this: | |
| 4255 | |
| 4256 _^Hu_^Hn_^Hd_^He_^Hr_^Hl_^Hi_^Hn_^Hi_^Hn_^Hg | |
| 4257 | |
| 4258 You can destructively remove underlining with M-x ununderline-region. | |
| 4259 | |
| 4260 For ClariNews articles, clari-clean.el by David N. Blank-Edelman | |
| 4261 <dnb@meshugge.media.mit.edu> will remove both underlining and overstriking | |
| 4262 automatically. | |
| 4263 | |
| 4264 164: When I try to post a long article in GNUS (about 10K or longer), I get | |
| 4265 the error, "Writing to process: no more processes, nntpd" | |
| 4266 | |
|
2703
8ea617fb9603
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Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
1736
diff
changeset
|
4267 Upgrade to Emacs 18.58 or higher. |
| 1736 | 4268 |
| 4269 165: How do I save all the items of a multi-part posting in GNUS? | |
| 4270 | |
| 4271 Use gnus-mark.el by Jamie Zawinski <jwz@lucid.com>. | |
| 4272 | |
| 4273 166: Why does GNUS put the subjects in replies beyond the 80th column? | |
| 4274 | |
| 4275 This is a feature. If you set gnus-thread-hide-subject to non-nil, GNUS | |
| 4276 will only display the subject of the first posting in a thread, even if | |
| 4277 some of the replies use different subjects. It hides the subjects by | |
| 4278 putting them past the edge of the window and setting truncate lines to t. | |
| 4279 | |
| 4280 If your screen looks messed up, then for some reason truncate-lines in | |
| 4281 your `*Subject*' buffer has been set to nil. It should be set to t. | |
| 4282 | |
| 4283 (I have an enhancement to GNUS 3.13 that will make it only hide the subject | |
| 4284 of a posting when it is unchanged from the followed-up-to posting. Thus, | |
| 4285 you can use the subject hiding feature and still know when someone changes | |
| 4286 the subject. (I have forgotten who originally gave me the idea for this.)) | |
| 4287 | |
| 4288 167: Why is GNUS so slow to start up? | |
| 4289 | |
| 4290 GNUS does several things that take quadratic time of the number of | |
| 4291 newsgroups that are listed in .newsrc. The quick fix for this is to | |
| 4292 remove all the newsgroups in which you have no interest from your .newrc | |
| 4293 file by using GNUS's C-k command in the `*Newsgroup*' buffer after | |
| 4294 displaying all newsgroups with the L command. If you were to directly | |
| 4295 edit your .newsrc to remove the newsgroups, GNUS would add them back. | |
| 4296 | |
| 4297 GNUS uses a quadratic algorithm to check for duplicates when the .newsrc | |
| 4298 file is newer than the .newsrc.el file (ie., you edited your .newsrc). | |
| 4299 GNUS uses a quadratic algorithm to check for new newsgroups every time it | |
| 4300 connects to the news server. {There may be other quadratic algorithms | |
| 4301 that I am not aware of.} | |
| 4302 | |
| 4303 You can speed up GNUS by using the C-k command in the *Newsgroup* buffer | |
| 4304 to remove newsgroups from your .newsrc file. | |
| 4305 | |
| 4306 Of course, GNUS will run faster if you make sure it is byte-compiled. | |
| 4307 | |
| 4308 Felix Lee wrote some enhancements called `gnus-speedups.el' that fix some | |
| 4309 of the problems. See the Emacs Lisp Archive. | |
| 4310 | |
| 4311 168: How do I catch up all newsgroups in GNUS? | |
| 4312 | |
| 4313 In the `*Newsgroup*' buffer, type the following magical incantation: | |
| 4314 | |
| 4315 M-< C-x ( C-@ c y C-u C-@ C-e C-f C-f M-0 C-x ) | |
| 4316 | |
| 4317 Leave off the "M-<" if you only want to catch up from point to the end of | |
| 4318 the `*Newsgroup' buffer. | |
| 4319 | |
| 4320 169: Why can't I kill in GNUS on the Newsgroups/Keywords/Control line? | |
| 4321 | |
| 4322 GNUS 3.14.1 will complain that the `Newsgroups:', `Keywords:', and | |
| 4323 `Control:' headers are `Unknown header field's. | |
| 4324 | |
| 4325 For the `Newsgroups:' header, there is an easy workaround: kill on the | |
| 4326 `Xref' header instead, which will be present on any cross-posted article. | |
| 4327 | |
| 4328 If you really want to kill on one of these headers, you can do it like | |
| 4329 this: | |
| 4330 | |
| 4331 (gnus-kill nil "^Newsgroups: .*\\(bad\\.group\\|worse\\.group\\)") | |
| 4332 | |
| 4333 Various people (eg., Greg Holley <holley@acuson.com>) have posted | |
| 4334 solutions to allow more efficient killing on these headers than the | |
| 4335 preceding solution. Masanobu Umeda plans to fix this problem. | |
| 4336 | |
| 4337 170: How do I get rid of flashing messages in GNUS for slow connections? | |
| 4338 | |
| 4339 GNUS outputs "NNTP: Reading..." message and then clears them, over and | |
| 4340 over. In version 3.14.1 there is a variable named nntp-debug-read that | |
| 4341 can help. Johan Vromans <jv@mh.nl> wrote a fix. Others have also written | |
| 4342 fixes. | |
| 4343 | |
| 4344 171: Why is catch up slow in Gnews/GNUS? | |
| 4345 | |
| 4346 Because GNUS is marking crosspostings read. {I think it should do this at | |
| 4347 the time the article is read to spread out the load. Maybe someone will | |
| 4348 write the code to do this.} | |
| 4349 | |
| 4350 172: Why does GNUS hang for a long time when posting? | |
| 4351 | |
| 4352 David Lawrence <tale@uunet.uu.net> explains: | |
| 4353 | |
| 4354 The problem is almost always interaction between NNTP and C News. NNTP | |
| 4355 POST asks C News's inews to not background itself but rather hang around | |
| 4356 and give its exit status so it knows whether the post was successful. | |
| 4357 (That wait will on some systems not return the exit status of the | |
| 4358 waited for job is a different sort of problem.) It ends up taking a | |
| 4359 long time because inews is calling relaynews, which often waits for | |
| 4360 another relaynews to free the lock on the news system so it can file the | |
| 4361 article. | |
| 4362 | |
| 4363 My preferred solution is to change inews to not call relaynews, but | |
| 4364 rather use newsspool. This loses some error-catching functionality, but | |
| 4365 is for the most part safe as inews will detect a lot of the errors on | |
| 4366 its own. The C News folks have sped up inews, too, so speed should look | |
| 4367 better to most folks as that update propagates around. | |
| 4368 | |
| 4369 173: Why don't my news postings in GNUS get past the local machine? | |
| 4370 | |
| 4371 Three possible reasons: local distribution, C News date problem (see | |
| 4372 question 174, and the path problem. This piece of code may fix the path | |
| 4373 problem for you: | |
| 4374 | |
| 4375 (setq gnus-use-generic-path t) | |
| 4376 | |
| 4377 174: Why is the GNUS-generated `Date:' header invalid? | |
| 4378 | |
| 4379 GNUS generates `Date:' headers without time zones. C-News's `inews' | |
| 4380 doesn't replace it with a valid header, but will generate it if not | |
| 4381 already there. If it is invalid, the article will not be forwarded | |
| 4382 properly. Quick fix: | |
| 4383 | |
| 4384 (defun gnus-inews-date () nil) | |
| 4385 | |
|
2703
8ea617fb9603
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
1736
diff
changeset
|
4386 This is not fixed as of GNUS 3.14.1. |
| 1736 | 4387 |
| 4388 175: Why doesn't GNUS generate the `Lines:' header? | |
| 4389 | |
| 4390 GNUS was written for B news, which would generate the `Lines:' header. C | |
| 4391 news doesn't. There is a comment in C news's `inews' that you can | |
| 4392 uncomment to enable this functionality. Or you can have GNUS generate the | |
| 4393 header, for example: | |
| 4394 | |
| 4395 ;; idea by jbryans@beach.csulb.edu (Jack Bryans) | |
| 4396 (defun add-lines-header () | |
| 4397 ;; Count the number of lines in the current posting and insert the | |
| 4398 ;; header line Lines into the message. | |
| 4399 (save-excursion | |
| 4400 (goto-char (point-min)) | |
| 4401 (if (search-forward "\n\n") ;; ***** I suspect this is wrong ***** | |
| 4402 (let ((lines (count-lines (point) (point-max)))) | |
| 4403 (forward-line -1) | |
| 4404 (insert-string "Lines: " lines "\n"))))) | |
| 4405 | |
| 4406 Mike Williams <mike-w@cs.aukuni.ac.nz> has written something similar. | |
| 4407 | |
| 4408 Ronald Florence <ron@mlfarm.com> has a patch for GNUS that makes it | |
| 4409 calculate the `Lines:' header for incoming articles when necessary that | |
| 4410 works for sites with local news spools. | |
| 4411 | |
| 4412 David Lawrence <tale@uunet.uu.net> says that GNUS 3.14.1 generates Lines | |
| 4413 if gnus-news-system is Cnews. | |
| 4414 | |
| 4415 176: Why do I get "Cannot open load file" "nntp" when compiling GNUS? | |
| 4416 | |
| 4417 Specifically, the error message is this: | |
| 4418 | |
| 4419 Error occurred processing gnus.el: File error (("Cannot open load file" "nntp")) | |
| 4420 | |
| 4421 This means that nntp.el is not in Emacs's load-path, which is easy to | |
| 4422 happen when compiling using the Makefile. | |
| 4423 | |
| 4424 Easiest solution: set EMACSLOADPATH in Makefile (idea from Glenn Gribble | |
| 4425 <glenn@netcom.com>): | |
| 4426 | |
| 4427 EMACSLOADPATH=/usr/local/emacs/lisp:. | |
| 4428 ELC= env EMACSLOADPATH=$(EMACSLOADPATH) emacs -batch -f batch-byte-compile | |
| 4429 | |
| 4430 Another solution, in hack.el put this: | |
| 4431 | |
| 4432 (defun gross-hack () (setq load-path (cons "/directory" load-path))) | |
| 4433 | |
| 4434 Then in Makefile: | |
| 4435 | |
| 4436 ELC= emacs -batch -l hack.el -f gross-hack -f batch-byte-compile | |
| 4437 | |
| 4438 177: How do I kill all articles in GNUS but those matching a pattern? | |
| 4439 | |
| 4440 Example: | |
| 4441 | |
| 4442 ;; kill everything | |
| 4443 (gnus-kill "subject" "" nil nil) | |
| 4444 ;; then restore stuff by our favorite poster | |
| 4445 (gnus-kill "from" "good-guy" | |
| 4446 (function | |
| 4447 (lambda () | |
| 4448 (if (eq ?X (char-after (save-excursion | |
| 4449 (beginning-of-line 1) | |
| 4450 (point)))) | |
| 4451 (gnus-Subject-clear-mark-forward 1)))) | |
| 4452 t) | |
| 4453 | |
| 4454 | |
| 4455 | |
| 4456 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| 4457 Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992 Joseph Brian Wells | |
| 4458 Copyright (C) 1992, 1993 Steven Byrnes | |
| 4459 | |
| 4460 This list of frequently asked questions about GNU Emacs with answers | |
| 4461 ("FAQ") may be translated into other languages, transformed into other | |
| 4462 formats (e.g. Texinfo, Info, WWW, WAIS, etc.), and updated with new | |
| 4463 information. The same conditions apply to any derivative of the FAQ as | |
| 4464 apply to the FAQ itself. Every copy of the FAQ must include this notice | |
| 4465 or an approved translation, information on who is currently maintaining | |
| 4466 the FAQ and how to contact them (including their e-mail address), and | |
| 4467 information on where the latest version of the FAQ is archived (including | |
| 4468 FTP information). The FAQ may be copied and redistributed under these | |
| 4469 conditions, except that the FAQ may not be embedded in a larger literary | |
| 4470 work unless that work itself allows free copying and redistribution. |
