Mercurial > emacs
annotate etc/ONEWS.2 @ 67313:2ae99b10dd40
* mh-comp.el (mh-forward): Went over all uses of the word "RANGE" in
the docstrings and made usage consistent. Generally speaking,
"messages in range" and "range of messages" is redundant and just
"range" can be used in most circumstances. Also ensured that
mh-interactive-range was mentioned in all interactive functions that
use a range which describes the range argument for both users and
programmers.
* mh-e.el (mh-delete-msg-no-motion, mh-refile-msg)
(mh-refile-or-write-again, mh-rescan-folder, mh-undo)
(mh-visit-folder, mh-scan-folder, mh-regenerate-headers)
(mh-notate-user-sequences, mh-delete-msg-from-seq, mh-catchup): Ditto.
* mh-funcs.el (mh-copy-msg, mh-pack-folder, mh-pack-folder-1): Ditto.
* mh-junk.el (mh-junk-blacklist, mh-junk-whitelist): Ditto.
* mh-print.el (mh-ps-print-range, mh-ps-print-msg)
(mh-ps-print-msg-file, mh-print-msg): Ditto.
* mh-seq.el (mh-put-msg-in-seq, mh-range-to-msg-list)
(mh-narrow-to-range, mh-toggle-tick): Ditto.
author | Bill Wohler <wohler@newt.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 04 Dec 2005 22:34:49 +0000 |
parents | 695cf19ef79e |
children | 375f2633d815 |
rev | line source |
---|---|
33149 | 1 GNU Emacs NEWS -- history of user-visible changes. 26-Mar-1986 |
2 Copyright (C) 1986 Richard M. Stallman. | |
3 See the end for copying conditions. | |
4 | |
33644 | 5 For older news, see the file ONEWS.1. |
33149 | 6 |
7 Changes in Emacs 17 | |
8 | |
9 * Frustrated? | |
10 | |
11 Try M-x doctor. | |
12 | |
13 * Bored? | |
14 | |
15 Try M-x hanoi. | |
16 | |
17 * Brain-damaged? | |
18 | |
19 Try M-x yow. | |
20 | |
21 * Sun3, Tahoe, Apollo, HP9000s300, Celerity, NCR Tower 32, | |
22 Sequent, Stride, Encore, Plexus and AT&T 7300 machines supported. | |
23 | |
24 The Tahoe, Sun3, Sequent and Celerity use 4.2. In regard to the | |
25 Apollo, see the file APOLLO in this directory. NCR Tower32, | |
26 HP9000s300, Stride and Nu run forms of System V. System V rel 2 also | |
27 works on Vaxes now. See etc/MACHINES. | |
28 | |
29 * System V Unix supported, including subprocesses. | |
30 | |
31 It should be possible now to bring up Emacs on a machine running | |
32 mere unameliorated system V Unix with no major work; just possible bug | |
33 fixes. But you can expect to find a handful of those on any machine | |
34 that Emacs has not been run on before. | |
35 | |
36 * Berkeley 4.1 Unix supported. | |
37 | |
38 See etc/MACHINES. | |
39 | |
40 * Portable `alloca' provided. | |
41 | |
42 Emacs can now run on machines that do not and cannot support the library | |
43 subroutine `alloca' in the canonical fashion, using an `alloca' emulation | |
44 written in C. | |
45 | |
46 * On-line manual. | |
47 | |
48 Info now contains an Emacs manual, with essentially the same text | |
49 as in the printed manual. | |
50 | |
51 The manual can now be printed with a standard TeX. | |
52 | |
53 Nicely typeset and printed copies of the manual are available | |
54 from the Free Software Foundation. | |
55 | |
56 * Backup file version numbers. | |
57 | |
58 Emacs now supports version numbers in backup files. | |
59 | |
60 The first time you save a particular file in one editing session, | |
61 the old file is copied or renamed to serve as a backup file. | |
62 In the past, the name for the backup file was made by appending `~' | |
63 to the end of the original file name. | |
64 | |
65 Now the backup file name can instead be made by appending ".~NN~" to | |
66 the original file name, where NN stands for a numeric version. Each | |
67 time this is done, the new version number is one higher than the | |
68 highest previously used. | |
69 | |
70 Thus, the active, current file does not have a version number. | |
71 Only the backups have them. | |
72 | |
73 This feature is controlled by the variable `version-control'. If it | |
74 is `nil', as normally, then numbered backups are made only for files | |
75 that already have numbered backups. Backup names with just `~' are | |
76 used for files that have no numbered backups. | |
77 | |
78 If `version-control' is `never', then the backup file's name is | |
79 made with just `~' in any case. | |
80 | |
81 If `version-control' is not `nil' or `never', numbered backups are | |
82 made unconditionally. | |
83 | |
84 To prevent unlimited consumption of disk space, Emacs can delete | |
85 old backup versions automatically. Generally Emacs keeps the first | |
86 few backups and the latest few backups, deleting any in between. | |
87 This happens every time a new backup is made. The two variables that | |
88 control the deletion are `kept-old-versions' and `kept-new-versions'. | |
89 Their values are, respectively, the number of oldest backups to keep | |
90 and the number of newest ones to keep, each time a new backup is made. | |
91 The value of `kept-new-versions' includes the backup just created. | |
92 By default, both values are 2. | |
93 | |
94 If `trim-versions-without-asking' is non-`nil', the excess middle versions | |
95 are deleted without a murmur. If it is `nil', the default, then you | |
96 are asked whether the excess middle versions should really be deleted. | |
97 | |
98 Dired has a new command `.' which marks for deletion all but the latest | |
99 and oldest few of every numeric series of backups. `kept-old-versions' | |
100 controls the number of oldest versions to keep, and `dired-kept-versions' | |
101 controls the number of latest versions to keep. A numeric argument to | |
102 the `.' command, if positive, specifies the number of latest versions | |
103 to keep, overriding `dired-kept-versions'. A negative argument specifies | |
104 the number of oldest versions to keep, using minus the argument to override | |
105 `kept-old-versions'. | |
106 | |
107 * Immediate conflict detection. | |
108 | |
109 Emacs now locks the files it is modifying, so that if | |
110 you start to modify within Emacs a file that is being | |
111 modified in another Emacs, you get an immediate warning. | |
112 | |
113 The warning gives you three choices: | |
114 1. Give up, and do not make any changes. | |
115 2. Make changes anyway at your own risk. | |
116 3. Make changes anyway, and record yourself as | |
117 the person locking the file (instead of whoever | |
118 was previously recorded.) | |
119 | |
120 Just visiting a file does not lock it. It is locked | |
121 when you try to change the buffer that is visiting the file. | |
122 Saving the file unlocks it until you make another change. | |
123 | |
124 Locking is done by writing a lock file in a special designated | |
125 directory. If such a directory is not provided and told to | |
126 Emacs as part of configuring it for your machine, the lock feature | |
127 is turned off. | |
128 | |
129 * M-x recover-file. | |
130 | |
131 This command is used to get a file back from an auto-save | |
132 (after a system crash, for example). It takes a file name | |
133 as argument and visits that file, but gets the data from the | |
134 file's last auto save rather than from the file itself. | |
135 | |
136 * M-x normal-mode. | |
137 | |
138 This command resets the current buffer's major mode and local | |
139 variables to be as specified by the visit filename, the -*- line | |
140 and/or the Local Variables: block at the end of the buffer. | |
141 It is the same thing normally done when a file is first visited. | |
142 | |
143 * Echo area messages disappear shortly if minibuffer is in use. | |
144 | |
145 Any message in the echo area disappears after 2 seconds | |
146 if the minibuffer is active. This allows the minibuffer | |
147 to become visible again. | |
148 | |
149 * C-z on System V runs a subshell. | |
150 | |
151 On systems which do not allow programs to be suspended, the C-z command | |
152 forks a subshell that talks directly to the terminal, and then waits | |
153 for the subshell to exit. This gets almost the effect of suspending | |
154 in that you can run other programs and then return to Emacs. However, | |
155 you cannot log out from the subshell. | |
156 | |
157 * C-c is always a prefix character. | |
158 | |
159 Also, subcommands of C-c which are letters are always | |
160 reserved for the user. No standard Emacs major mode | |
161 defines any of them. | |
162 | |
163 * Picture mode C-c commands changed. | |
164 | |
165 The old C-c k command is now C-c C-w. | |
166 The old C-c y command is now C-c C-x. | |
167 | |
168 * Shell mode commands changed. | |
169 | |
170 All the special commands of Shell mode are now moved onto | |
171 the C-c prefix. Most are not changed aside from that. | |
172 Thus, the old Shell mode C-c command (kill current job) | |
173 is now C-c C-c; the old C-z (suspend current job) is now C-c C-z, | |
174 etc. | |
175 | |
176 The old C-x commands are now C-c commands. C-x C-k (kill output) | |
177 is now C-c C-o, and C-x C-v (show output) is now C-c C-r. | |
178 | |
179 The old M-= (copy previous input) command is now C-c C-y. | |
180 | |
181 * Shell mode recognizes aliases for `pushd', `popd' and `cd'. | |
182 | |
183 Shell mode now uses the variable `shell-pushd-regexp' as a | |
184 regular expression to recognize any command name that is | |
185 equivalent to a `pushd' command. By default it is set up | |
186 to recognize just `pushd' itself. If you use aliases for | |
187 `pushd', change the regexp to recognize them as well. | |
188 | |
189 There are also `shell-popd-regexp' to recognize commands | |
190 with the effect of a `popd', and `shell-cd-regexp' to recognize | |
191 commands with the effect of a `cd'. | |
192 | |
193 * "Exit" command in certain modes now C-c C-c. | |
194 | |
195 These include electric buffer menu mode, electric command history | |
196 mode, Info node edit mode, and Rmail edit mode. In all these | |
197 modes, the command to exit used to be just C-c. | |
198 | |
199 * Outline mode changes. | |
200 | |
201 Lines that are not heading lines are now called "body" lines. | |
202 The command `hide-text' is renamed to `hide-body'. | |
203 The key M-H is renamed to C-c C-h. | |
204 The key M-S is renamed to C-c C-s. | |
205 The key M-s is renamed to C-c C-i. | |
206 | |
207 Changes of line visibility are no longer undoable. As a result, | |
208 they no longer use up undo memory and no longer interfere with | |
209 undoing earlier commands. | |
210 | |
211 * Rmail changes. | |
212 | |
213 The s and q commands now both expunge deleted messages before saving; | |
214 use C-x C-s to save without expunging. | |
215 | |
216 The u command now undeletes the current message if it is deleted; | |
217 otherwise, it backs up as far as necessary to reach a deleted message, | |
218 and undeletes that one. The u command in the summary behaves likewise, | |
219 but considers only messages listed in the summary. The M-u command | |
220 has been eliminated. | |
221 | |
222 The o and C-o keys' meanings are interchanged. | |
223 o now outputs to an Rmail file, and C-o to a Unix mail file. | |
224 | |
225 The F command (rmail-find) is renamed to M-s (rmail-search). | |
226 Various new commands and features exist; see the Emacs manual. | |
227 | |
228 * Local bindings described first in describe-bindings. | |
229 | |
230 * [...], {...} now balance in Fundamental mode. | |
231 | |
232 * Nroff mode and TeX mode. | |
233 | |
234 The are two new major modes for editing nroff input and TeX input. | |
235 See the Emacs manual for full information. | |
236 | |
237 * New C indentation style variable `c-brace-imaginary-offset'. | |
238 | |
239 The value of `c-brace-imaginary-offset', normally zero, controls the | |
240 indentation of a statement inside a brace-group where the open-brace | |
241 is not the first thing on a line. The value says where the open-brace | |
242 is imagined to be, relative to the first nonblank character on the line. | |
243 | |
244 * Dired improvements. | |
245 | |
246 Dired now normally keeps the cursor at the beginning of the file name, | |
247 not at the beginning of the line. The most used motion commands are | |
248 redefined in Dired to position the cursor this way. | |
249 | |
250 `n' and `p' are now equivalent in dired to `C-n' and `C-p'. | |
251 | |
252 If any files to be deleted cannot be deleted, their names are | |
253 printed in an error message. | |
254 | |
255 If the `v' command is invoked on a file which is a directory, | |
256 dired is run on that directory. | |
257 | |
258 * `visit-tag-table' renamed `visit-tags-table'. | |
259 | |
260 This is so apropos of `tags' finds everything you need to | |
261 know about in connection with Tags. | |
262 | |
263 * `mh-e' library uses C-c as prefix. | |
264 | |
265 All the special commands of `mh-rmail' now are placed on a | |
266 C-c prefix rather than on the C-x prefix. This is for | |
267 consistency with other special modes with their own commands. | |
268 | |
269 * M-$ or `spell-word' checks word before point. | |
270 | |
271 It used to check the word after point. | |
272 | |
273 * Quitting during autoloading no longer causes trouble. | |
274 | |
275 Now, when a file is autoloaded, all function redefinitions | |
276 and `provide' calls are recorded and are undone if you quit | |
277 before the file is finished loading. | |
278 | |
279 As a result, it no longer happens that some of the entry points | |
280 which are normally autoloading have been defined already, but the | |
281 entire file is not really present to support them. | |
282 | |
283 * `else' can now be indented correctly in C mode. | |
284 | |
285 TAB in C mode now knows which `if' statement an `else' matches | |
286 up with, and can indent the `else' correctly under the `if', | |
287 even if the `if' contained such things as another `if' statement, | |
288 or a `while' or `for' statement, with no braces around it. | |
289 | |
290 * `batch-byte-compile' | |
291 | |
292 Runs byte-compile-file on the files specified on the command line. | |
293 All the rest of the command line arguments are taken as files to | |
294 compile (or, if directories, to do byte-recompile-directory on). | |
295 Must be used only with -batch, and kills emacs on completion. | |
296 Each file will be processed even if an error occurred previously. | |
297 For example, invoke `emacs -batch -f batch-byte-compile *.el'. | |
298 | |
299 * `-batch' changes. | |
300 | |
301 `-batch' now implies `-q': no init file is loaded by Emacs when | |
302 `-batch' is used. Also, no `term/TERMTYPE.el' file is loaded. Auto | |
303 saving is not done except in buffers in which it is explicitly | |
304 requested. Also, many echo-area printouts describing what is going on | |
305 are inhibited in batch mode, so that the only output you get is the | |
306 output you program specifically. | |
307 | |
308 One echo-area message that is not suppressed is the one that says | |
309 that a file is being loaded. That is because you can prevent this | |
310 message by passing `t' as the third argument to `load'. | |
311 | |
312 * Display of search string in incremental search. | |
313 | |
314 Now, when you type C-s or C-r to reuse the previous search | |
315 string, that search string is displayed immediately in the echo area. | |
316 | |
317 Three dots are displayed after the search string while search | |
318 is actually going on. | |
319 | |
320 * View commands. | |
321 | |
322 The commands C-x ], C-x [, C-x /, C-x j and C-x o are now | |
323 available inside `view-buffer' and `view-file', with their | |
324 normal meanings. | |
325 | |
326 * Full-width windows preferred. | |
327 | |
328 The ``other-window'' commands prefer other full width windows, | |
329 and will split only full width windows. | |
330 | |
331 * M-x rename-file can copy if necessary. | |
332 | |
333 When used between different file systems, since actual renaming does | |
334 not work, the old file will be copied and deleted. | |
335 | |
336 * Within C-x ESC, you can pick the command to repeat. | |
337 | |
338 While editing a previous command to be repeated, inside C-x ESC, | |
339 you can now use the commands M-p and M-n to pick an earlier or | |
340 later command to repeat. M-n picks the next earlier command | |
341 and M-p picks the next later one. The new command appears in | |
342 the minibuffer, and you can go ahead and edit it, and repeat it | |
343 when you exit the minibuffer. | |
344 | |
345 Using M-n or M-p within C-x ESC is like having used a different | |
346 numeric argument when you ran C-x ESC in the first place. | |
347 | |
348 The command you finally execute using C-x ESC is added to the | |
349 front of the command history, unless it is identical with the | |
350 first thing in the command history. | |
351 | |
352 * Use C-c C-c to exit from editing within Info. | |
353 | |
354 It used to be C-z for this. Somehow this use of C-z was | |
355 left out when all the others were moved. The intention is that | |
356 C-z should always suspend Emacs. | |
357 | |
358 * Default arg to C-x < and C-x > now window width minus 2. | |
359 | |
360 These commands, which scroll the current window horizontally | |
361 by a specified number of columns, now scroll a considerable | |
362 distance rather than a single column if used with no argument. | |
363 | |
364 * Auto Save Files Deleted. | |
365 | |
366 The default value of `delete-auto-save-files' is now `t', so that | |
367 when you save a file for real, its auto save file is deleted. | |
368 | |
369 * Rnews changes. | |
370 | |
371 The N, P and J keys in Rnews are renamed to M-n, M-p and M-j. | |
372 These keys move among newsgroups. | |
373 | |
374 The n and p keys for moving sequentially between news articles now | |
375 accept repeat count arguments, and the + and - keys, made redundant by | |
376 this change, are eliminated. | |
377 | |
378 The s command for outputting the current article to a file | |
379 is renamed as o, to be compatible with Rmail. | |
380 | |
381 * Sendmail changes. | |
382 | |
383 If you have a ~/.mailrc file, Emacs searches it for mailing address | |
384 aliases, and these aliases are expanded when you send mail in Emacs. | |
385 | |
386 Fcc fields can now be used in the headers in the *mail* buffer | |
387 to specify files in which copies of the message should be put. | |
388 The message is written into those files in Unix mail file format. | |
389 The message as sent does not contain any Fcc fields in its header. | |
390 You can use any number of Fcc fields, but only one file name in each one. | |
391 The variable `mail-archive-file-name', if non-`nil', can be a string | |
392 which is a file name; an Fcc to that file will be inserted in every | |
393 message when you begin to compose it. | |
394 | |
395 A new command C-c q now exists in Mail mode. It fills the | |
396 paragraphs of an old message that had been inserted with C-c y. | |
397 | |
398 When the *mail* buffer is put in Mail mode, text-mode-hook | |
399 is now run in addition to mail-mode-hook. text-mode-hook | |
400 is run first. | |
401 | |
402 The new variable `mail-header-separator' now specifies the string | |
403 to use on the line that goes between the headers and the message text. | |
404 By default it is still "--text follows this line--". | |
405 | |
406 * Command history truncated automatically. | |
407 | |
408 Just before each garbage collection, all but the last 30 elements | |
409 of the command history are discarded. | |
410 | |
411 Incompatible Lisp Programming Changes in Emacs 17 | |
412 | |
413 * `"e' no longer supported. | |
414 | |
415 This feature, which allowed Lisp functions to take arguments | |
416 that were not evaluated, has been eliminated, because it is | |
417 inescapably hard to make the compiler work properly with such | |
418 functions. | |
419 | |
420 You should use macros instead. A simple way to change any | |
421 code that uses `"e' is to replace | |
422 | |
423 (defun foo ("e x y z) ... | |
424 | |
425 with | |
426 | |
427 (defmacro foo (x y z) | |
428 (list 'foo-1 (list 'quote x) (list 'quote y) (list 'quote z))) | |
429 | |
430 (defun foo-1 (x y z) ... | |
431 | |
432 * Functions `region-to-string' and `region-around-match' removed. | |
433 | |
434 These functions were made for compatibility with Gosling Emacs, but it | |
435 turns out to be undesirable to use them in GNU Emacs because they use | |
436 the mark. They have been eliminated from Emacs proper, but are | |
437 present in mlsupport.el for the sake of converted mocklisp programs. | |
438 | |
439 If you were using `region-to-string', you should instead use | |
440 `buffer-substring'; then you can pass the bounds as arguments and | |
441 can avoid setting the mark. | |
442 | |
443 If you were using `region-around-match', you can use instead | |
444 the two functions `match-beginning' and `match-end'. These give | |
445 you one bound at a time, as a numeric value, without changing | |
446 point or the mark. | |
447 | |
448 * Function `function-type' removed. | |
449 | |
450 This just appeared not to be very useful. It can easily be written in | |
451 Lisp if you happen to want it. Just use `symbol-function' to get the | |
452 function definition of a symbol, and look at its data type or its car | |
453 if it is a list. | |
454 | |
455 * Variable `buffer-number' removed. | |
456 | |
457 You can still use the function `buffer-number' to find out | |
458 a buffer's unique number (assigned in order of creation). | |
459 | |
460 * Variable `executing-macro' renamed `executing-kbd-macro'. | |
461 | |
462 This variable is the currently executing keyboard macro, as | |
463 a string, or `nil' when no keyboard macro is being executed. | |
464 | |
465 * Loading term/$TERM. | |
466 | |
467 The library term/$TERM (where $TERM get replaced by your terminal | |
468 type), which is done by Emacs automatically when it starts up, now | |
469 happens after the user's .emacs file is loaded. | |
470 | |
471 In previous versions of Emacs, these files had names of the form | |
472 term-$TERM; thus, for example, term-vt100.el, but now they live | |
473 in a special subdirectory named term, and have names like | |
474 term/vt100.el. | |
475 | |
476 * `command-history' format changed. | |
477 | |
478 The elements of this list are now Lisp expressions which can | |
479 be evaluated directly to repeat a command. | |
480 | |
481 * Unused editing commands removed. | |
482 | |
483 The functions `forward-to-word', `backward-to-word', | |
484 `upcase-char', `mark-beginning-of-buffer' and `mark-end-of-buffer' | |
49600
23a1cea22d13
Trailing whitespace deleted.
Juanma Barranquero <lekktu@gmail.com>
parents:
33644
diff
changeset
|
485 have been removed. Their definitions can be found in file |
33149 | 486 lisp/unused.el if you need them. |
487 | |
488 Upward Compatible Lisp Programming Changes in Emacs 17 | |
489 | |
490 * You can now continue after errors and quits. | |
491 | |
492 When the debugger is entered because of a C-g, due to | |
493 a non-`nil' value of `debug-on-quit', the `c' command in the debugger | |
494 resumes execution of the code that was running when the quit happened. | |
495 Use the `q' command to go ahead and quit. | |
496 | |
497 The same applies to some kinds of errors, but not all. Errors | |
498 signaled with the Lisp function `signal' can be continued; the `c' | |
499 command causes `signal' to return. The `r' command causes `signal' to | |
500 return the value you specify. The `c' command is equivalent to `r' | |
501 with the value `nil'. | |
502 | |
503 For a `wrong-type-argument' error, the value returned with the `r' | |
504 command is used in place of the invalid argument. If this new value | |
505 is not valid, another error occurs. | |
506 | |
507 Errors signaled with the function `error' cannot be continued. | |
508 If you try to continue, the error just happens again. | |
509 | |
510 * `dot' renamed `point'. | |
511 | |
512 The word `dot' has been replaced with `point' in all | |
513 function and variable names, including: | |
514 | |
515 point, point-min, point-max, | |
516 point-marker, point-min-marker, point-max-marker, | |
517 window-point, set-window-point, | |
518 point-to-register, register-to-point, | |
519 exchange-point-and-mark. | |
520 | |
521 The old names are still supported, for now. | |
522 | |
523 * `string-match' records position of end of match. | |
524 | |
525 After a successful call to `string-match', `(match-end 0)' will | |
526 return the index in the string of the first character after the match. | |
527 Also, `match-begin' and `match-end' with nonzero arguments can be | |
528 used to find the indices of beginnings and ends of substrings matched | |
529 by subpatterns surrounded by parentheses. | |
530 | |
531 * New function `insert-before-markers'. | |
532 | |
533 This function is just like `insert' except in the handling of any | |
534 relocatable markers that are located at the point of insertion. | |
535 With `insert', such markers end up pointing before the inserted text. | |
536 With `insert-before-markers', they end up pointing after the inserted | |
537 text. | |
538 | |
539 * New function `copy-alist'. | |
540 | |
541 This function takes one argument, a list, and makes a disjoint copy | |
542 of the alist structure. The list itself is copied, and each element | |
543 that is a cons cell is copied, but the cars and cdrs of elements | |
544 remain shared with the original argument. | |
545 | |
546 This is what it takes to get two alists disjoint enough that changes | |
547 in one do not change the result of `assq' on the other. | |
548 | |
549 * New function `copy-keymap'. | |
550 | |
551 This function takes a keymap as argument and returns a new keymap | |
552 containing initially the same bindings. Rebindings in either one of | |
553 them will not alter the bindings in the other. | |
554 | |
555 * New function `copy-syntax-table'. | |
556 | |
557 This function takes a syntax table as argument and returns a new | |
558 syntax table containing initially the same syntax settings. Changes | |
559 in either one of them will not alter the other. | |
560 | |
561 * Randomizing the random numbers. | |
562 | |
563 `(random t)' causes the random number generator's seed to be set | |
564 based on the current time and Emacs's process id. | |
565 | |
566 * Third argument to `modify-syntax-entry'. | |
567 | |
568 The optional third argument to `modify-syntax-entry', if specified | |
569 should be a syntax table. The modification is made in that syntax table | |
570 rather than in the current syntax table. | |
571 | |
572 * New function `run-hooks'. | |
573 | |
574 This function takes any number of symbols as arguments. | |
575 It processes the symbols in order. For each symbol which | |
576 has a value (as a variable) that is non-nil, the value is | |
577 called as a function, with no arguments. | |
578 | |
579 This is useful in major mode commands. | |
580 | |
581 * Second arg to `switch-to-buffer'. | |
582 | |
583 If this function is given a non-`nil' second argument, then the | |
584 selection being done is not recorded on the selection history. | |
585 The buffer's position in the history remains unchanged. This | |
586 feature is used by the view commands, so that the selection history | |
587 after exiting from viewing is the same as it was before. | |
588 | |
589 * Second arg to `display-buffer' and `pop-to-buffer'. | |
590 | |
591 These two functions both accept an optional second argument which | |
592 defaults to `nil'. If the argument is not `nil', it means that | |
593 another window (not the selected one) must be found or created to | |
594 display the specified buffer in, even if it is already shown in | |
595 the selected window. | |
596 | |
597 This feature is used by `switch-to-buffer-other-window'. | |
598 | |
599 * New variable `completion-ignore-case'. | |
600 | |
601 If this variable is non-`nil', completion allows strings | |
602 in different cases to be considered matching. The global value | |
603 is `nil' | |
604 | |
605 This variable exists for the sake of commands that are completing | |
606 an argument in which case is not significant. It is possible | |
607 to change the value globally, but you might not like the consequences | |
608 in the many situations (buffer names, command names, file names) | |
609 where case makes a difference. | |
610 | |
611 * Major modes related to Text mode call text-mode-hook, then their own hooks. | |
612 | |
613 For example, turning on Outline mode first calls the value of | |
614 `text-mode-hook' as a function, if it exists and is non-`nil', | |
615 and then does likewise for the variable `outline-mode-hook'. | |
616 | |
617 * Defining new command line switches. | |
618 | |
619 You can define a new command line switch in your .emacs file | |
620 by putting elements on the value of `command-switch-alist'. | |
621 Each element of this list should look like | |
622 (SWITCHSTRING . FUNCTION) | |
623 where SWITCHSTRING is a string containing the switch to be | |
624 defined, such as "-foo", and FUNCTION is a function to be called | |
625 if such an argument is found in the command line. FUNCTION | |
626 receives the command line argument, a string, as its argument. | |
627 | |
628 To implement a switch that uses up one or more following arguments, | |
629 use the fact that the remaining command line arguments are kept | |
630 as a list in the variable `command-line-args'. FUNCTION can | |
631 examine this variable, and do | |
632 (setq command-line-args (cdr command-line-args) | |
633 to "use up" an argument. | |
634 | |
635 * New variable `load-in-progress'. | |
636 | |
637 This variable is non-`nil' when a file of Lisp code is being read | |
638 and executed by `load'. | |
639 | |
640 * New variable `print-length'. | |
641 | |
642 The value of this variable is normally `nil'. It may instead be | |
643 a number; in that case, when a list is printed by `prin1' or | |
644 `princ' only that many initial elements are printed; the rest are | |
645 replaced by `...'. | |
646 | |
647 * New variable `find-file-not-found-hook'. | |
648 | |
649 If `find-file' or any of its variants is used on a nonexistent file, | |
650 the value of `find-file-not-found-hook' is called (if it is not `nil') | |
651 with no arguments, after creating an empty buffer. The file's name | |
652 can be found as the value of `buffer-file-name'. | |
653 | |
654 * Processes without buffers. | |
655 | |
656 In the function `start-process', you can now specify `nil' as | |
657 the process's buffer. You can also set a process's buffer to `nil' | |
658 using `set-process-buffer'. | |
659 | |
660 The reason you might want to do this is to prevent the process | |
661 from being killed because any particular buffer is killed. | |
662 When a process has a buffer, killing that buffer kills the | |
663 process too. | |
664 | |
665 When a process has no buffer, its output is lost unless it has a | |
666 filter, and no indication of its being stopped or killed is given | |
667 unless it has a sentinel. | |
668 | |
669 * New function `user-variable-p'. `v' arg prompting changed. | |
670 | |
671 This function takes a symbol as argument and returns `t' if | |
672 the symbol is defined as a user option variable. This means | |
673 that it has a `variable-documentation' property whose value is | |
674 a string starting with `*'. | |
675 | |
676 Code `v' in an interactive arg reading string now accepts | |
677 user variables only, and completion is limited to the space of | |
678 user variables. | |
679 | |
680 The function `read-variable' also now accepts and completes | |
681 over user variables only. | |
682 | |
683 * CBREAK mode input is the default in Unix 4.3 bsd. | |
684 | |
685 In Berkeley 4.3 Unix, there are sufficient features for Emacs to | |
686 work fully correctly using CBREAK mode and not using SIGIO. | |
687 Therefore, this mode is the default when running under 4.3. | |
688 This mode corresponds to `nil' as the first argument to | |
689 `set-input-mode'. You can still select either mode by calling | |
690 that function. | |
691 | |
692 * Information on memory usage. | |
693 | |
694 The new variable `data-bytes-used' contains the number | |
695 of bytes of impure space allocated in Emacs. | |
696 `data-bytes-free' contains the number of additional bytes | |
697 Emacs could allocate. Note that space formerly allocated | |
698 and freed again still counts as `used', since it is still | |
699 in Emacs's address space. | |
700 | |
701 * No limit on size of output from `format'. | |
702 | |
703 The string output from `format' used to be truncated to | |
704 100 characters in length. Now it can have any length. | |
705 | |
706 * New errors `void-variable' and `void-function' replace `void-symbol'. | |
707 | |
708 This change makes it possible to have error messages that | |
709 clearly distinguish undefined variables from undefined functions. | |
710 It also allows `condition-case' to handle one case without the other. | |
711 | |
712 * `replace-match' handling of `\'. | |
713 | |
714 In `replace-match', when the replacement is not literal, | |
715 `\' in the replacement string is always treated as an | |
716 escape marker. The only two special `\' constructs | |
717 are `\&' and `\DIGIT', so `\' followed by anything other than | |
718 `&' or a digit has no effect. `\\' is necessary to include | |
719 a `\' in the replacement text. | |
720 | |
721 This level of escaping is comparable with what goes on in | |
722 a regular expression. It is over and above the level of `\' | |
723 escaping that goes on when strings are read in Lisp syntax. | |
724 | |
725 * New error `invalid-regexp'. | |
726 | |
727 A regexp search signals this type of error if the argument does | |
728 not meet the rules for regexp syntax. | |
729 | |
730 * `kill-emacs' with argument. | |
731 | |
732 If the argument is a number, it is returned as the exit status code | |
733 of the Emacs process. If the argument is a string, its contents | |
734 are stuffed as pending terminal input, to be read by another program | |
735 after Emacs is dead. | |
736 | |
737 * New fifth argument to `subst-char-in-region'. | |
738 | |
739 This argument is optional and defaults to `nil'. If it is not `nil', | |
740 then the substitutions made by this function are not recorded | |
741 in the Undo mechanism. | |
742 | |
743 This feature should be used with great care. It is now used | |
744 by Outline mode to make lines visible or invisible. | |
745 | |
746 * ` *Backtrace*' buffer renamed to `*Backtrace*'. | |
747 | |
748 As a result, you can now reselect this buffer easily if you switch to | |
749 another while in the debugger. | |
750 | |
751 Exiting from the debugger kills the `*Backtrace*' buffer, so you will | |
752 not try to give commands in it when no longer really in the debugger. | |
753 | |
754 * New function `switch-to-buffer-other-window'. | |
755 | |
756 This is the new primitive to select a specified buffer (the | |
757 argument) in another window. It is not quite the same as | |
758 `pop-to-buffer', because it is guaranteed to create another | |
759 window (assuming there is room on the screen) so that it can | |
760 leave the current window's old buffer displayed as well. | |
761 | |
762 All functions to select a buffer in another window should | |
763 do so by calling this new function. | |
764 | |
765 * New variable `minibuffer-help-form'. | |
766 | |
767 At entry to the minibuffer, the variable `help-form' is bound | |
768 to the value of `minibuffer-help-form'. | |
769 | |
770 `help-form' is expected at all times to contain either `nil' | |
771 or an expression to be executed when C-h is typed (overriding | |
772 teh definition of C-h as a command). `minibuffer-help-form' | |
773 can be used to provide a different default way of handling | |
774 C-h while in the minibuffer. | |
775 | |
776 * New \{...} documentation construct. | |
777 | |
778 It is now possible to set up the documentation string for | |
779 a major mode in such a way that it always describes the contents | |
780 of the major mode's keymap, as it has been customized. | |
781 To do this, include in the documentation string the characters `\{' | |
782 followed by the name of the variable containing the keymap, | |
783 terminated with `}'. (The `\' at the beginning probably needs to | |
784 be quoted with a second `\', to include it in the doc string.) | |
785 This construct is normally used on a line by itself, with no blank | |
786 lines before or after. | |
787 | |
788 For example, the documentation string for the function `c-mode' contains | |
789 ... | |
790 Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only. | |
791 Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back. | |
792 \\{c-mode-map} | |
793 Variables controlling indentation style: | |
794 ... | |
795 | |
796 * New character syntax class "punctuation". | |
797 | |
798 Punctuation characters behave like whitespace in word and | |
799 list parsing, but can be distinguished in regexps and in the | |
800 function `char-syntax'. Punctuation syntax is represented by | |
801 a period in `modify-syntax-entry'. | |
802 | |
803 * `auto-mode-alist' no longer needs entries for backup-file names, | |
804 | |
805 Backup suffixes of all kinds are now stripped from a file's name | |
806 before searching `auto-mode-alist'. | |
807 | |
808 Changes in Emacs 16 | |
809 | |
810 * No special code for Ambassadors, VT-100's and Concept-100's. | |
811 | |
812 Emacs now controls these terminals based on the termcap entry, like | |
813 all other terminals. Formerly it did not refer to the termcap entries | |
814 for those terminal types, and often the termcap entries for those | |
815 terminals are wrong or inadequate. If you experience worse behavior | |
816 on these terminals than in version 15, you can probably correct it by | |
817 fixing up the termcap entry. See ./TERMS for more info. | |
818 | |
819 See ./TERMS in any case if you find that some terminal does not work | |
820 right with Emacs now. | |
821 | |
822 * Minibuffer default completion character is TAB (and not ESC). | |
823 | |
824 So that ESC can be used in minibuffer for more useful prefix commands. | |
825 | |
826 * C-z suspends Emacs in all modes. | |
827 | |
828 Formerly, C-z was redefined for other purposes by certain modes, | |
829 such as Buffer Menu mode. Now other keys are used for those purposes, | |
830 to keep the meaning of C-z uniform. | |
831 | |
832 * C-x ESC (repeat-complex-command) allows editing the command it repeats. | |
833 | |
834 Instead of asking for confirmation to re-execute a command from the | |
835 command history, the command is placed, in its Lisp form, into the | |
836 minibuffer for editing. You can confirm by typing RETURN, change some | |
837 arguments and then confirm, or abort with C-g. | |
838 | |
839 * Incremental search does less redisplay on slow terminals. | |
840 | |
841 If the terminal baud rate is <= the value of `isearch-slow-speed', | |
842 incremental searching outside the text on the screen creates | |
843 a single-line window and uses that to display the line on which | |
844 a match has been found. Exiting or quitting the search restores | |
845 the previous window configuration and redisplays the window you | |
846 were searching in. | |
847 | |
848 The initial value of `isearch-slow-speed' is 1200. | |
849 | |
850 This feature is courtesy of crl@purdue. | |
851 | |
852 * Recursive minibuffers not allowed. | |
853 | |
854 If the minibuffer window is selected, most commands that would | |
855 use the minibuffer gets an error instead. (Specific commands | |
856 may override this feature and therefore still be allowed.) | |
857 | |
858 Strictly speaking, recursive entry to the minibuffer is still | |
859 possible, because you can switch to another window after | |
860 entering the minibuffer, and then minibuffer-using commands | |
861 are allowed. This is still allowed by a deliberate decision: | |
862 if you know enough to switch windows while in the minibuffer, | |
863 you can probably understand recursive minibuffers. | |
864 | |
865 This may be overridden by binding the variable | |
866 `enable-recursive-minibuffers' to t. | |
867 | |
868 * New major mode Emacs-Lisp mode, for editing Lisp code to run in Emacs. | |
869 | |
870 The mode in which emacs lisp files is edited is now called emacs-lisp-mode | |
871 and is distinct from lisp-mode. The latter is intended for use with | |
872 lisps external to emacs. | |
873 | |
874 The hook which is funcalled (if non-nil) on entry to elisp-mode is now | |
875 called emacs-lisp-mode-hook. A consequence of this changes is that | |
876 .emacs init files which set the value of lisp-mode-hook may need to be | |
877 changed to use the new names. | |
878 | |
879 * Correct matching of parentheses is checked on insertion. | |
880 | |
881 When you insert a close-paren, the matching open-paren | |
882 is checked for validity. The close paren must be the kind | |
883 of close-paren that the open-paren says it should match. | |
884 Otherwise, a warning message is printed. close-paren immediately | |
49600
23a1cea22d13
Trailing whitespace deleted.
Juanma Barranquero <lekktu@gmail.com>
parents:
33644
diff
changeset
|
885 preceded by quoting backslash syntax character is not matched. |
33149 | 886 |
887 This feature was originally written by shane@mit-ajax. | |
888 | |
889 * M-x list-command-history | |
890 * M-x command-history-mode | |
891 * M-x electric-command-history | |
892 | |
893 `list-command-history' displays forms from the command history subject | |
894 to user controlled filtering and limit on number of forms. It leaves | |
895 the buffer in `command-history-mode'. M-x command-history-mode | |
896 recomputes the command history each time it is invoked via | |
897 `list-command-history'. It is like Emacs-Lisp mode except that characters | |
898 don't insert themselves and provision is made for re-evaluating an | |
899 expression from the list. `electric-command-history' pops up a type | |
900 out window with the command history displayed. If the very next | |
901 character is Space, the window goes away and the previous window | |
902 configuration is restored. Otherwise you can move around in the | |
903 history and select an expression for evaluation *inside* the buffer | |
904 which invoked `electric-command-history'. The original window | |
905 configuration is restored on exit unless the command selected changes | |
906 it. | |
907 | |
908 * M-x edit-picture | |
909 | |
910 Enters a temporary major mode (the previous major mode is remembered | |
911 and can is restored on exit) designed for editing pictures and tables. | |
912 Printing characters replace rather than insert themselves with motion | |
913 afterwards that is user controlled (you can specify any of the 8 | |
914 compass directions). Special commands for movement are provided. | |
915 Special commands for hacking tabs and tab stops are provided. Special | |
916 commands for killing rectangles and overlaying them are provided. See | |
917 the documentation of function edit-picture for more details. | |
918 | |
919 Calls value of `edit-picture-hook' on entry if non-nil. | |
920 | |
921 * Stupid C-s/C-q `flow control' supported. | |
922 | |
923 Do (set-input-mode nil t) to tell Emacs to use CBREAK mode and interpret | |
924 C-s and C-q as flow control commands. (set-input-mode t nil) switches | |
925 back to interrupt-driven input. (set-input-mode nil nil) uses CBREAK | |
926 mode but no `flow control'; this may make it easier to run Emacs under | |
927 certain debuggers that have trouble dealing with inferiors that use SIGIO. | |
928 | |
929 CBREAK mode has certain inherent disadvantages, which are why it is | |
930 not the default: | |
931 | |
932 Meta-keys are ignored; CBREAK mode discards the 8th bit of | |
933 input characters. | |
934 | |
935 Control-G as keyboard input discards buffered output, | |
936 and therefore can cause incorrect screen updating. | |
937 | |
938 The use of `flow control' has its own additional disadvantage: the | |
939 characters C-s and C-q are not available as editing commands. You can | |
940 partially compensate for this by setting up a keyboard-translate-table | |
941 (see file ONEWS) that maps two other characters (such as C-^ and C-\) into | |
942 C-s and C-q. Of course, C-^ and C-\ are commonly used as escape | |
943 characters in remote-terminal programs. You really can't win except | |
944 by getting rid of this sort of `flow control.' | |
945 | |
946 The configuration switch CBREAK_INPUT is now eliminated. | |
947 INTERRUPT_INPUT exists only to specify the default mode of operation; | |
948 #define it to make interrupt-driven input the default. | |
949 | |
950 * Completion of directory names provides a slash. | |
951 | |
952 If file name completion yields the name of a directory, | |
953 a slash is appended to it. | |
954 | |
955 * Undo can clear modified-flag. | |
956 | |
957 If you undo changes in a buffer back to a state in which the | |
958 buffer was not considered "modified", then it is labelled as | |
959 once again "unmodified". | |
960 | |
961 * M-x run-lisp. | |
962 | |
963 This command creates an inferior Lisp process whose input and output | |
964 appear in the Emacs buffer named `*lisp*'. That buffer uses a major mode | |
965 called inferior-lisp-mode, which has many of the commands of lisp-mode | |
966 and those of shell-mode. Calls the value of shell-mode-hook and | |
967 lisp-mode-hook, in that order, if non-nil. | |
968 | |
969 Meanwhile, in lisp-mode, the command C-M-x is defined to | |
970 send the current defun as input to the `*lisp*' subprocess. | |
971 | |
972 * Mode line says `Narrow' when buffer is clipped. | |
973 | |
974 If a buffer has a clipping restriction (made by `narrow-to-region') | |
975 then its mode line contains the word `Narrow' after the major and | |
976 minor modes. | |
977 | |
978 * Mode line says `Abbrev' when abbrev mode is on. | |
979 | |
980 * add-change-log-entry takes prefix argument | |
981 | |
982 Giving a prefix argument makes it prompt for login name, full name, | |
983 and site name, with defaults. Otherwise the defaults are used | |
984 with no confirmation. | |
985 | |
986 * M-x view-buffer and M-x view-file | |
987 | |
988 view-buffer selects the named buffer, view-file finds the named file; the | |
989 resulting buffer is placed into view-mode (a recursive edit). The normal | |
990 emacs commands are not available. Instead a set of special commands is | |
991 provided which faclitate moving around in the buffer, searching and | |
992 scrolling by screenfuls. Exiting view-mode returns to the buffer in which | |
993 the view-file or view-buffer command was given. | |
994 Type ? or h when viewing for a complete list of view commands. | |
995 Each calls value of `view-hook' if non-nil on entry. | |
996 | |
997 written by shane@mit-ajax. | |
998 | |
999 * New key commands in dired. | |
1000 | |
1001 `v' views (like more) the file on the current line. | |
1002 `#' marks auto-save files for deletion. | |
1003 `~' marks backup files for deletion. | |
1004 `r' renames a file and updates the directory listing if the | |
1005 file is renamed to same directory. | |
1006 `c' copies a file and updates the directory listing if the file is | |
1007 copied to the same directory. | |
1008 | |
1009 * New function `electric-buffer-list'. | |
1010 | |
1011 This pops up a buffer describing the set of emacs buffers. | |
1012 Immediately typing space makes the buffer list go away and returns | |
1013 to the buffer and window which were previously selected. | |
1014 | |
1015 Otherwise one may use the c-p and c-n commands to move around in the | |
1016 buffer-list buffer and type Space or C-z to select the buffer on the | |
1017 cursor's line. There are a number of other commands which are the same | |
1018 as those of buffer-menu-mode. | |
1019 | |
1020 This is a useful thing to bind to c-x c-b in your `.emacs' file if the | |
1021 rather non-standard `electric' behaviour of the buffer list suits your taste. | |
1022 Type C-h after invoking electric-buffer-list for more information. | |
1023 | |
1024 Calls value of `electric-buffer-menu-mode-hook' if non-nil on entry. | |
1025 Calls value of `after-electric-buffer-menu' on exit (select) if non-nil. | |
1026 | |
1027 Changes in version 16 for mail reading and sending | |
1028 | |
1029 * sendmail prefix character is C-c (and not C-z). New command C-c w. | |
1030 | |
1031 For instance C-c C-c (or C-c C-s) sends mail now rather than C-z C-z. | |
1032 C-c w inserts your `signature' (contents of ~/.signature) at the end | |
1033 of mail. | |
1034 | |
1035 * New feature in C-c y command in sending mail. | |
1036 | |
1037 C-c y is the command to insert the message being replied to. | |
1038 Normally it deletes most header fields and indents everything | |
1039 by three spaces. | |
1040 | |
1041 Now, C-c y does not delete header fields or indent. | |
1042 C-c y with any other numeric argument does delete most header | |
1043 fields, but indents by the amount specified in the argument. | |
1044 | |
1045 * C-r command in Rmail edits current message. | |
1046 | |
1047 It does this by switching to a different major mode | |
1048 which is nearly the same as Text mode. The only difference | |
1049 between it and text mode are the two command C-c and C-]. | |
1050 C-c is defined to switch back to Rmail mode, and C-] | |
1051 is defined to restore the original contents of the message | |
1052 and then switch back to Rmail mode. | |
1053 | |
1054 C-c and C-] are the only ways "back into Rmail", but you | |
1055 can switch to other buffers and edit them as usual. | |
1056 C-r in Rmail changes only the handling of the Rmail buffer. | |
1057 | |
1058 * Rmail command `t' toggles header display. | |
1059 | |
1060 Normally Rmail reformats messages to hide most header fields. | |
1061 `t' switches to display of all the header fields of the | |
1062 current message, as long as it remains current. | |
1063 Another `t' switches back to the usual display. | |
1064 | |
1065 * Rmail command '>' goes to the last message. | |
1066 | |
1067 * Rmail commands `a' and `k' set message attributes. | |
1068 `a' adds an attribute and `k' removes one. You specify | |
1069 the attrbute by name. You can specify either a built-in | |
1070 flag such as "deleted" or "filed", or a user-defined keyword | |
1071 (anything not recognized as built-in). | |
1072 | |
1073 * Rmail commands `l' and `L' summarize by attributes. | |
1074 | |
1075 These commands create a summary with one line per message, | |
1076 like `h', but they list only some of the messages. You | |
1077 specify which attribute (for `l') or attributes (for `L') | |
1078 the messages should have. | |
1079 | |
1080 * Rmail can parse mmdf mail files. | |
1081 | |
1082 * Interface to MH mail system. | |
1083 | |
1084 mh-e is a front end for GNU emacs and the MH mail system. It | |
1085 provides a friendly and convient interface to the MH commands. | |
1086 | |
1087 To read mail, invoke mh-rmail. This will inc new mail and display the | |
1088 scan listing on the screen. To see a summary of the mh-e commands, | |
1089 type ?. Help is available through the usual facilities. | |
1090 | |
1091 To send mail, invoke mh-smail. | |
1092 | |
1093 mh-e requires a copy of MH.5 that has been compiled with the MHE | |
1094 compiler switch. | |
1095 | |
1096 From larus@berkeley. | |
1097 | |
1098 New hooks and parameters in version 16 | |
1099 | |
1100 * New variable `blink-matching-paren-distance'. | |
1101 | |
1102 This is the maximum number of characters to search for | |
1103 an open-paren to match an inserted close-paren. | |
1104 The matching open-paren is shown and checked if it is found | |
1105 within this distance. | |
1106 | |
1107 `nil' means search all the way to the beginning of the buffer. | |
1108 In this case, a warning message is printed if no matching | |
1109 open-paren is found. | |
1110 | |
1111 This feature was originally written by shane@mit-ajax. | |
1112 | |
1113 * New variable `find-file-run-dired' | |
1114 | |
1115 If nil, find-file will report an error if an attempt to visit a | |
1116 directory is detected; otherwise, it runs dired on that directory. | |
1117 The default is t. | |
1118 | |
1119 * Variable `dired-listing-switches' holds switches given to `ls' by dired. | |
1120 | |
1121 The value should be a string containing `-' followed by letters. | |
1122 The letter `l' had better be included and letter 'F' had better be excluded! | |
1123 The default is "-al". | |
1124 | |
1125 This feature was originally written by shane@mit-ajax. | |
1126 | |
1127 * New variable `display-time-day-and-date'. | |
1128 | |
1129 If this variable is set non-`nil', the function M-x display-time | |
1130 displays the day and date, as well as the time. | |
1131 | |
1132 * New parameter `c-continued-statement-indent'. | |
1133 | |
1134 This controls the extra indentation given to a line | |
1135 that continues a C statement started on the previous line. | |
1136 By default it is 2, which is why you would see | |
1137 | |
1138 if (foo) | |
1139 bar (); | |
1140 | |
1141 | |
1142 * Changed meaning of `c-indent-level'. | |
1143 | |
1144 The value of `c-brace-offset' used to be | |
1145 subtracted from the value of `c-indent-level' whenever | |
1146 that value was used. Now it is not. | |
1147 | |
1148 As a result, `c-indent-level' is now the offset of | |
1149 statements within a block, relative to the line containing | |
1150 the open-brace that starts the block. | |
1151 | |
1152 * turn-on-auto-fill is useful value for text-mode-hook. | |
1153 | |
1154 (setq text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill) | |
1155 is all you have to do to make sure Auto Fill mode is turned | |
1156 on whenever you enter Text mode. | |
1157 | |
1158 * Parameter explicit-shell-file-name for M-x shell. | |
1159 | |
1160 This variable, if non-nil, specifies the file name to use | |
1161 for the shell to run if you do M-x shell. | |
1162 | |
1163 Changes in version 16 affecting Lisp programming: | |
1164 | |
1165 * Documentation strings adapt to customization. | |
1166 | |
1167 Often the documentation string for a command wants to mention | |
1168 another command. Simply stating the other command as a | |
1169 character sequence has a disadvantage: if the user customizes | |
1170 Emacs by moving that function to a different command, the | |
1171 cross reference in the documentation becomes wrong. | |
1172 | |
1173 A new feature allows you to write the documentation string | |
1174 using a function name, and the command to run that function | |
1175 is looked up when the documentation is printed. | |
1176 | |
1177 If a documentation string contains `\[' (two characters) then | |
1178 the following text, up to the next `]', is taken as a function name. | |
1179 Instead of printing that function name, the command that runs it is printed. | |
1180 (M-x is used to construct a command if no shorter one exists.) | |
1181 | |
1182 For example, instead of putting `C-n' in a documentation string | |
1183 to refer to the C-n command, put in `\[next-line]'. (In practice | |
1184 you will need to quote the backslash with another backslash, | |
1185 due to the syntax for strings in Lisp and C.) | |
1186 | |
1187 To include the literal characters `\[' in a documentation string, | |
1188 precede them with `\='. To include the characters `\=', precede | |
1189 them with `\='. For example, "\\=\\= is the way to quote \\=\\[" | |
1190 will come out as `\= is the way to quote \['. | |
1191 | |
1192 The new function `substitute-command-keys' takes a string possibly | |
1193 contaning \[...] constructs and replaces those constructs with | |
1194 the key sequences they currently stand for. | |
1195 | |
1196 * Primitives `find-line-comment' and `find-line-comment-body' flushed. | |
1197 | |
1198 Search for the value of `comment-start-skip' if you want to find | |
1199 whether and where a line has a comment. | |
1200 | |
1201 * New function `auto-save-file-name-p' | |
1202 | |
1203 Should return non-`nil' iff given a string which is the name of an | |
1204 auto-save file (sans directory name). If you redefine | |
1205 `make-auto-save-file-name', you should redefine this accordingly. By | |
1206 default, this function returns `t' for filenames beginning with | |
1207 character `#'. | |
1208 | |
1209 * The value of `exec-directory' now ends in a slash. | |
1210 | |
1211 This is to be compatible with most directory names in GNU Emacs. | |
1212 | |
1213 * Dribble files and termscript files. | |
1214 | |
1215 (open-dribble-file FILE) opens a dribble file named FILE. When a | |
1216 dribble file is open, every character Emacs reads from the terminal is | |
1217 written to the dribble file. | |
1218 | |
1219 (open-termscript FILE) opens a termscript file named FILE. When a | |
1220 termscript file is open, all characters sent to the terminal by Emacs | |
1221 are also written in the termscript file. | |
1222 | |
1223 The two of these together are very useful for debugging Emacs problems | |
1224 in redisplay. | |
1225 | |
1226 * Upper case command characters by default are same as lower case. | |
1227 | |
1228 If a character in a command is an upper case letter, and is not defined, | |
1229 Emacs uses the definition of the corresponding lower case letter. | |
1230 For example, if C-x U is not directly undefined, it is treated as | |
1231 a synonym for C-x u (undo). | |
1232 | |
1233 * Undefined function errors versus undefined variable errors. | |
1234 | |
1235 Void-symbol errors now say "boundp" if the symbol's value was void | |
1236 or "fboundp" if the function definition was void. | |
1237 | |
1238 * New function `bury-buffer'. | |
1239 | |
1240 The new function `bury-buffer' takes one argument, a buffer object, | |
1241 and puts that buffer at the end of the internal list of buffers. | |
1242 So it is the least preferred candidate for use as the default value | |
1243 of C-x b, or for other-buffer to return. | |
1244 | |
1245 * Already-displayed buffers have low priority for display. | |
1246 | |
1247 When a buffer is chosen automatically for display, or to be the | |
1248 default in C-x b, buffers already displayed in windows have lower | |
1249 priority than buffers not currently visible. | |
1250 | |
1251 * `set-window-start' accepts a third argument NOFORCE. | |
1252 | |
1253 This argument, if non-nil, prevents the window's force_start flag | |
1254 from being set. Setting the force_start flag causes the next | |
1255 redisplay to insist on starting display at the specified starting | |
1256 point, even if dot must be moved to get it onto the screen. | |
1257 | |
1258 * New function `send-string-to-terminal'. | |
1259 | |
1260 This function takes one argument, a string, and outputs its contents | |
1261 to the terminal exactly as specified: control characters, escape | |
1262 sequences, and all. | |
1263 | |
1264 * Keypad put in command mode. | |
1265 | |
1266 The terminal's keypad is now put into command mode, as opposed to | |
1267 numeric mode, while Emacs is running. This is done by means of the | |
1268 termcap `ks' and `ke' strings. | |
1269 | |
1270 * New function `generate-new-buffer' | |
1271 | |
1272 This function takes a string as an argument NAME and looks for a | |
1273 creates and returns a buffer called NAME if one did not already exist. | |
1274 Otherwise, it successively tries appending suffixes of the form "<1>", | |
1275 "<2>" etc to NAME until it creates a string which does not name an | |
1276 existing buffer. A new buffer with that name is the created and returned. | |
1277 | |
1278 * New function `prin1-to-string' | |
1279 This function takes one argument, a lisp object, and returns a string | |
1280 containing that object's printed representation, such as `prin1' | |
1281 would output. | |
1282 | |
1283 * New function `read-from-minibuffer' | |
1284 Lets you supply a prompt, initial-contents, a keymap, and specify | |
1285 whether the result should be interpreted as a string or a lisp object. | |
1286 | |
1287 Old functions `read-minibuffer', `eval-minibuffer', `read-string' all | |
1288 take second optional string argument which is initial contents of | |
49600
23a1cea22d13
Trailing whitespace deleted.
Juanma Barranquero <lekktu@gmail.com>
parents:
33644
diff
changeset
|
1289 minibuffer. |
33149 | 1290 |
1291 * minibuffer variable names changed (names of keymaps) | |
1292 | |
1293 minibuf-local-map -> minibuffer-local-map | |
1294 minibuf-local-ns-map -> minibuffer-local-ns-map | |
1295 minibuf-local-completion-map -> minibuffer-local-completion-map | |
1296 minibuf-local-must-match-map -> minibuffer-local-must-match-map | |
1297 | |
1298 Changes in version 16 affecting configuring and building Emacs | |
1299 | |
1300 * Configuration switch VT100_INVERSE eliminated. | |
1301 | |
1302 You can control the use of inverse video on any terminal by setting | |
1303 the variable `inverse-video', or by changing the termcap entry. If | |
1304 you like, set `inverse-video' in your `.emacs' file based on | |
1305 examination of (getenv "TERM"). | |
1306 | |
1307 * New switch `-batch' makes Emacs run noninteractively. | |
1308 | |
1309 If the switch `-batch' is used, Emacs treats its standard output | |
1310 and input like ordinary files (even if they are a terminal). | |
1311 It does not display buffers or windows; the only output to standard output | |
1312 is what would appear as messages in the echo area, and each | |
1313 message is followed by a newline. | |
1314 | |
1315 The terminal modes are not changed, so that C-z and C-c retain | |
1316 their normal Unix meanings. Emacs does still read commands from | |
1317 the terminal, but the idea of `-batch' is that you use it with | |
1318 other command line arguments that tell Emacs a complete task to perform, | |
1319 including killing itself. `-kill' used as the last argument is a good | |
1320 way to accomplish this. | |
1321 | |
1322 The Lisp variable `noninteractive' is now defined, to be `nil' | |
1323 except when `-batch' has been specified. | |
1324 | |
1325 * Emacs can be built with output redirected to a file. | |
1326 | |
1327 This is because -batch (see above) is now used in building Emacs. | |
1328 | |
1329 For older news, see the file ONEWS.1. | |
1330 | |
1331 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
1332 Copyright information: | |
1333 | |
1334 Copyright (C) 1985 Richard M. Stallman | |
1335 | |
1336 Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies | |
1337 of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the | |
1338 copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved, | |
1339 thus giving the recipient permission to redistribute in turn. | |
1340 | |
1341 Permission is granted to distribute modified versions | |
1342 of this document, or of portions of it, | |
1343 under the above conditions, provided also that they | |
1344 carry prominent notices stating who last changed them. | |
1345 | |
1346 Local variables: | |
1347 mode: text | |
1348 end: | |
52401 | 1349 |
1350 arch-tag: 33dc900d-9c58-473b-87c9-b6d7222323ea |