25852
|
1 .TH EMACS 1 "1995 December 7"
|
|
2 .UC 4
|
|
3 .SH NAME
|
|
4 emacs \- GNU project Emacs
|
|
5 .SH SYNOPSIS
|
|
6 .B emacs
|
|
7 [
|
|
8 .I command-line switches
|
|
9 ] [
|
|
10 .I files ...
|
|
11 ]
|
|
12 .br
|
|
13 .SH DESCRIPTION
|
|
14 .I GNU Emacs
|
|
15 is a version of
|
|
16 .I Emacs,
|
|
17 written by the author of the original (PDP-10)
|
|
18 .I Emacs,
|
|
19 Richard Stallman.
|
|
20 .br
|
|
21 The primary documentation of GNU Emacs is in the GNU Emacs Manual,
|
|
22 which you can read on line using Info, a subsystem of Emacs. Please
|
|
23 look there for complete and up-to-date documentation. This man page
|
|
24 is updated only when someone volunteers to do so; the Emacs
|
|
25 maintainers' priority goal is to minimize the amount of time this man
|
|
26 page takes away from other more useful projects.
|
|
27 .br
|
|
28 The user functionality of GNU Emacs encompasses
|
|
29 everything other
|
|
30 .I Emacs
|
|
31 editors do, and it is easily extensible since its
|
|
32 editing commands are written in Lisp.
|
|
33 .PP
|
|
34 .I Emacs
|
|
35 has an extensive interactive help facility,
|
|
36 but the facility assumes that you know how to manipulate
|
|
37 .I Emacs
|
|
38 windows and buffers.
|
|
39 CTRL-h (backspace
|
|
40 or CTRL-h) enters the Help facility. Help Tutorial (CTRL-h t)
|
|
41 requests an interactive tutorial which can teach beginners the fundamentals
|
|
42 of
|
|
43 .I Emacs
|
|
44 in a few minutes.
|
|
45 Help Apropos (CTRL-h a) helps you
|
|
46 find a command given its functionality, Help Character (CTRL-h c)
|
|
47 describes a given character's effect, and Help Function (CTRL-h f)
|
|
48 describes a given Lisp function specified by name.
|
|
49 .PP
|
|
50 .I Emacs's
|
|
51 Undo can undo several steps of modification to your buffers, so it is
|
|
52 easy to recover from editing mistakes.
|
|
53 .PP
|
|
54 .I GNU Emacs's
|
|
55 many special packages handle mail reading (RMail) and sending (Mail),
|
|
56 outline editing (Outline), compiling (Compile), running subshells
|
|
57 within
|
|
58 .I Emacs
|
|
59 windows (Shell), running a Lisp read-eval-print loop
|
|
60 (Lisp-Interaction-Mode), and automated psychotherapy (Doctor).
|
|
61 .PP
|
|
62 There is an extensive reference manual, but
|
|
63 users of other Emacses
|
|
64 should have little trouble adapting even
|
|
65 without a copy. Users new to
|
|
66 .I Emacs
|
|
67 will be able
|
|
68 to use basic features fairly rapidly by studying the tutorial and
|
|
69 using the self-documentation features.
|
|
70 .PP
|
|
71 .SM Emacs Options
|
|
72 .PP
|
|
73 The following options are of general interest:
|
|
74 .TP 8
|
|
75 .I file
|
|
76 Edit
|
|
77 .I file.
|
|
78 .TP
|
|
79 .BI \+ number
|
|
80 Go to the line specified by
|
|
81 .I number
|
|
82 (do not insert a space between the "+" sign and
|
|
83 the number).
|
|
84 .TP
|
|
85 .B \-q
|
|
86 Do not load an init file.
|
|
87 .TP
|
|
88 .BI \-u " user"
|
|
89 Load
|
|
90 .I user's
|
|
91 init file.
|
|
92 .TP
|
|
93 .BI \-t " file"
|
|
94 Use specified
|
|
95 .I file
|
|
96 as the terminal instead of using stdin/stdout.
|
|
97 This must be the first argument specified in the command line.
|
|
98 .PP
|
|
99 The following options are lisp-oriented
|
|
100 (these options are processed in the order encountered):
|
|
101 .TP 8
|
|
102 .BI \-f " function"
|
|
103 Execute the lisp function
|
|
104 .I function.
|
|
105 .TP
|
|
106 .BI \-l " file"
|
|
107 Load the lisp code in the file
|
|
108 .I file.
|
|
109 .PP
|
|
110 The following options are useful when running
|
|
111 .I Emacs
|
|
112 as a batch editor:
|
|
113 .TP 8
|
|
114 .BI \-batch
|
|
115 Edit in batch mode. The editor will send messages to stderr. This
|
|
116 option must be the first in the argument list. You must use -l and -f
|
|
117 options to specify files to execute and functions to call.
|
|
118 .TP
|
|
119 .B \-kill
|
|
120 Exit
|
|
121 .I Emacs
|
|
122 while in batch mode.
|
|
123 .\" START DELETING HERE IF YOU'RE NOT USING X
|
|
124 .PP
|
|
125 .SM Using Emacs with X
|
|
126 .PP
|
|
127 .I Emacs
|
|
128 has been tailored to work well with the X window system.
|
|
129 If you run
|
|
130 .I Emacs
|
|
131 from under X windows, it will create its own X window to
|
|
132 display in. You will probably want to start the editor
|
|
133 as a background process
|
|
134 so that you can continue using your original window.
|
|
135 .PP
|
|
136 .I Emacs
|
|
137 can be started with the following X switches:
|
|
138 .TP 8
|
|
139 .BI \-name " name"
|
|
140 Specifies the name which should be assigned to the initial
|
|
141 .I Emacs
|
|
142 window. This controls looking up X resources as well as the window title.
|
|
143 .TP 8
|
|
144 .BI \-title " name"
|
|
145 Specifies the title for the initial X window.
|
|
146 .TP 8
|
|
147 .B \-r
|
|
148 Display the
|
|
149 .I Emacs
|
|
150 window in reverse video.
|
|
151 .TP
|
|
152 .B \-i
|
|
153 Use the "kitchen sink" bitmap icon when iconifying the
|
|
154 .I Emacs
|
|
155 window.
|
|
156 .TP
|
|
157 .BI \-font " font, " \-fn " font"
|
|
158 Set the
|
|
159 .I Emacs
|
|
160 window's font to that specified by
|
|
161 .I font.
|
|
162 You will find the various
|
|
163 .I X
|
|
164 fonts in the
|
|
165 .I /usr/lib/X11/fonts
|
|
166 directory.
|
|
167 Note that
|
|
168 .I Emacs
|
|
169 will only accept fixed width fonts.
|
|
170 Under the X11 Release 4 font-naming conventions, any font with the
|
|
171 value "m" or "c" in the eleventh field of the font name is a fixed
|
|
172 width font. Furthermore, fonts whose name are of the form
|
|
173 .IR width x height
|
|
174 are generally fixed width, as is the font
|
|
175 .IR fixed .
|
|
176 See
|
|
177 .IR xlsfonts (1)
|
|
178 for more information.
|
|
179
|
|
180 When you specify a font, be sure to put a space between the
|
|
181 switch and the font name.
|
|
182 .TP
|
30349
|
183 .BI \-bw " pixels"
|
25852
|
184 Set the
|
|
185 .I Emacs
|
|
186 window's border width to the number of pixels specified by
|
|
187 .I pixels.
|
|
188 Defaults to one pixel on each side of the window.
|
|
189 .TP
|
|
190 .BI \-ib " pixels"
|
|
191 Set the window's internal border width to the number of pixels specified
|
|
192 by
|
|
193 .I pixels.
|
|
194 Defaults to one pixel of padding on each side of the window.
|
|
195 .PP
|
|
196 .TP 8
|
|
197 .BI \-geometry " geometry"
|
|
198 Set the
|
|
199 .I Emacs
|
|
200 window's width, height, and position as specified. The geometry
|
|
201 specification is in the standard X format; see
|
|
202 .IR X (1)
|
|
203 for more information.
|
|
204 The width and height are specified in characters; the default is 80 by
|
|
205 24.
|
|
206 .PP
|
|
207 .TP 8
|
|
208 .BI \-fg " color"
|
|
209 On color displays, sets the color of the text.
|
|
210
|
|
211 See the file
|
|
212 .I /usr/lib/X11/rgb.txt
|
|
213 for a list of valid
|
|
214 color names.
|
|
215 .TP
|
|
216 .BI \-bg " color"
|
|
217 On color displays,
|
|
218 sets the color of the window's background.
|
|
219 .TP
|
|
220 .BI \-bd " color"
|
|
221 On color displays,
|
|
222 sets the color of the window's border.
|
|
223 .TP
|
|
224 .BI \-cr " color"
|
|
225 On color displays,
|
|
226 sets the color of the window's text cursor.
|
|
227 .TP
|
|
228 .BI \-ms " color"
|
|
229 On color displays,
|
|
230 sets the color of the window's mouse cursor.
|
|
231 .TP
|
|
232 .BI \-d " displayname, " \-display " displayname"
|
|
233 Create the
|
|
234 .I Emacs
|
|
235 window on the display specified by
|
|
236 .IR displayname .
|
|
237 Must be the first option specified in the command line.
|
|
238 .TP
|
|
239 .B \-nw
|
|
240 Tells
|
|
241 .I Emacs
|
|
242 not to use its special interface to X. If you use this
|
|
243 switch when invoking
|
|
244 .I Emacs
|
|
245 from an
|
|
246 .IR xterm (1)
|
|
247 window, display is done in that window.
|
|
248 This must be the first option specified in the command line.
|
|
249 .PP
|
|
250 You can set
|
|
251 .I X
|
|
252 default values for your
|
|
253 .I Emacs
|
|
254 windows in your
|
|
255 .I \.Xresources
|
|
256 file (see
|
|
257 .IR xrdb (1)).
|
|
258 Use the following format:
|
|
259 .IP
|
|
260 emacs.keyword:value
|
|
261 .PP
|
|
262 where
|
|
263 .I value
|
|
264 specifies the default value of
|
|
265 .I keyword.
|
|
266 .I Emacs
|
|
267 lets you set default values for the following keywords:
|
|
268 .TP 8
|
|
269 .B font (\fPclass\fB Font)
|
|
270 Sets the window's text font.
|
|
271 .TP
|
|
272 .B reverseVideo (\fPclass\fB ReverseVideo)
|
|
273 If
|
|
274 .I reverseVideo's
|
|
275 value is set to
|
|
276 .I on,
|
|
277 the window will be displayed in reverse video.
|
|
278 .TP
|
|
279 .B bitmapIcon (\fPclass\fB BitmapIcon)
|
|
280 If
|
|
281 .I bitmapIcon's
|
|
282 value is set to
|
|
283 .I on,
|
|
284 the window will iconify into the "kitchen sink."
|
|
285 .TP
|
|
286 .B borderWidth (\fPclass\fB BorderWidth)
|
|
287 Sets the window's border width in pixels.
|
|
288 .TP
|
|
289 .B internalBorder (\fPclass\fB BorderWidth)
|
|
290 Sets the window's internal border width in pixels.
|
|
291 .TP
|
|
292 .B foreground (\fPclass\fB Foreground)
|
|
293 For color displays,
|
|
294 sets the window's text color.
|
|
295 .TP
|
|
296 .B background (\fPclass\fB Background)
|
|
297 For color displays,
|
|
298 sets the window's background color.
|
|
299 .TP
|
|
300 .B borderColor (\fPclass\fB BorderColor)
|
|
301 For color displays,
|
|
302 sets the color of the window's border.
|
|
303 .TP
|
|
304 .B cursorColor (\fPclass\fB Foreground)
|
|
305 For color displays,
|
|
306 sets the color of the window's text cursor.
|
|
307 .TP
|
|
308 .B pointerColor (\fPclass\fB Foreground)
|
|
309 For color displays,
|
|
310 sets the color of the window's mouse cursor.
|
|
311 .TP
|
|
312 .B geometry (\fPclass\fB Geometry)
|
|
313 Sets the geometry of the
|
|
314 .I Emacs
|
|
315 window (as described above).
|
|
316 .TP
|
|
317 .B title (\fPclass\fB Title)
|
|
318 Sets the title of the
|
|
319 .I Emacs
|
|
320 window.
|
|
321 .TP
|
|
322 .B iconName (\fPclass\fB Title)
|
|
323 Sets the icon name for the
|
|
324 .I Emacs
|
|
325 window icon.
|
|
326 .PP
|
|
327 If you try to set color values while using a black and white display,
|
|
328 the window's characteristics will default as follows:
|
|
329 the foreground color will be set to black,
|
|
330 the background color will be set to white,
|
|
331 the border color will be set to grey,
|
|
332 and the text and mouse cursors will be set to black.
|
|
333 .PP
|
|
334 .SM Using the Mouse
|
|
335 .PP
|
|
336 The following lists the mouse button bindings for the
|
|
337 .I Emacs
|
|
338 window under X11.
|
|
339
|
|
340 .in +\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
341 .ta \w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
342 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
343 MOUSE BUTTON FUNCTION
|
|
344 .br
|
|
345 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
346 left Set point.
|
|
347 .br
|
|
348 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
349 middle Paste text.
|
|
350 .br
|
|
351 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
352 right Cut text into X cut buffer.
|
|
353 .br
|
|
354 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
355 SHIFT-middle Cut text into X cut buffer.
|
|
356 .br
|
|
357 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
358 SHIFT-right Paste text.
|
|
359 .br
|
|
360 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
361 CTRL-middle Cut text into X cut buffer and kill it.
|
|
362 .br
|
|
363 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
364 CTRL-right Select this window, then split it into
|
|
365 two windows. Same as typing CTRL-x 2.
|
|
366 .\" START DELETING HERE IF YOU'RE NOT USING X MENUS
|
|
367 .br
|
|
368 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
369 CTRL-SHIFT-left X buffer menu--hold the buttons and keys
|
|
370 down, wait for menu to appear, select
|
|
371 buffer, and release. Move mouse out of
|
|
372 menu and release to cancel.
|
|
373 .br
|
|
374 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
375 CTRL-SHIFT-middle X help menu--pop up index card menu for
|
|
376 Emacs help.
|
|
377 .\" STOP DELETING HERE IF YOU'RE NOT USING X MENUS
|
|
378 .br
|
|
379 .ti -\w'CTRL-SHIFT-middle'u+4n
|
|
380 CTRL-SHIFT-right Select window with mouse, and delete all
|
|
381 other windows. Same as typing CTRL-x 1.
|
|
382 .\" STOP DELETING HERE IF YOU'RE NOT USING X
|
|
383 .PP
|
|
384 .SH MANUALS
|
|
385 You can order printed copies of the GNU Emacs Manual from the Free
|
|
386 Software Foundation, which develops GNU software. See the file ORDERS
|
|
387 for ordering information.
|
|
388 .br
|
|
389 Your local Emacs maintainer might also have copies available. As
|
|
390 with all software and publications from FSF, everyone is permitted to
|
|
391 make and distribute copies of the Emacs manual. The TeX source to the
|
|
392 manual is also included in the Emacs source distribution.
|
|
393 .PP
|
|
394 .SH FILES
|
|
395 /usr/local/info - files for the Info documentation browser
|
|
396 (a subsystem of Emacs) to refer to. Currently not much of Unix
|
|
397 is documented here, but the complete text of the Emacs reference
|
|
398 manual is included in a convenient tree structured form.
|
|
399
|
|
400 /usr/local/share/emacs/$VERSION/src - C source files and object files
|
|
401
|
|
402 /usr/local/share/emacs/$VERSION/lisp - Lisp source files and compiled files
|
|
403 that define most editing commands. Some are preloaded;
|
|
404 others are autoloaded from this directory when used.
|
|
405
|
|
406 /usr/local/share/emacs/$VERSION/etc - various programs that are used with
|
|
407 GNU Emacs, and some files of information.
|
|
408
|
|
409 /usr/local/share/emacs/$VERSION/etc/DOC.* - contains the documentation
|
|
410 strings for the Lisp primitives and preloaded Lisp functions
|
|
411 of GNU Emacs. They are stored here to reduce the size of
|
|
412 Emacs proper.
|
|
413
|
|
414 /usr/local/share/emacs/$VERSION/etc/OTHER.EMACSES discusses GNU Emacs
|
|
415 vs. other versions of Emacs.
|
|
416 .br
|
|
417 /usr/local/share/emacs/$VERSION/etc/SERVICE lists people offering
|
|
418 various services to assist users of GNU Emacs, including education,
|
|
419 troubleshooting, porting and customization.
|
|
420 .br
|
|
421 These files also have information useful to anyone wishing to write
|
|
422 programs in the Emacs Lisp extension language, which has not yet been fully
|
|
423 documented.
|
|
424
|
|
425 /usr/local/com/emacs/lock - holds lock files that are made for all
|
|
426 files being modified in Emacs, to prevent simultaneous modification
|
|
427 of one file by two users.
|
|
428
|
|
429 .\" START DELETING HERE IF YOU'RE NOT USING X
|
|
430 /usr/lib/X11/rgb.txt - list of valid X color names.
|
|
431 .\" STOP DELETING HERE IF YOU'RE NOT USING X
|
|
432 .PP
|
|
433 .SH BUGS
|
|
434 There is a mailing list, bug-gnu-emacs@prep.ai.mit.edu on the internet
|
|
435 (ucbvax!prep.ai.mit.edu!bug-gnu-emacs on UUCPnet), for reporting Emacs
|
|
436 bugs and fixes. But before reporting something as a bug, please try
|
|
437 to be sure that it really is a bug, not a misunderstanding or a
|
|
438 deliberate feature. We ask you to read the section ``Reporting Emacs
|
|
439 Bugs'' near the end of the reference manual (or Info system) for hints
|
|
440 on how and when to report bugs. Also, include the version number of
|
|
441 the Emacs you are running in \fIevery\fR bug report that you send in.
|
|
442
|
|
443 Do not expect a personal answer to a bug report. The purpose of reporting
|
|
444 bugs is to get them fixed for everyone in the next release, if possible.
|
|
445 For personal assistance, look in the SERVICE file (see above) for
|
|
446 a list of people who offer it.
|
|
447
|
|
448 Please do not send anything but bug reports to this mailing list.
|
|
449 Send requests to be added to mailing lists to the special list
|
|
450 info-gnu-emacs-request@prep.ai.mit.edu (or the corresponding UUCP
|
|
451 address). For more information about Emacs mailing lists, see the
|
|
452 file /usr/local/emacs/etc/MAILINGLISTS. Bugs tend actually to be
|
|
453 fixed if they can be isolated, so it is in your interest to report
|
|
454 them in such a way that they can be easily reproduced.
|
|
455 .PP
|
|
456 Bugs that I know about are: shell will not work with programs
|
|
457 running in Raw mode on some Unix versions.
|
|
458 .SH UNRESTRICTIONS
|
|
459 .PP
|
|
460 .I Emacs
|
|
461 is free; anyone may redistribute copies of
|
|
462 .I Emacs
|
|
463 to
|
|
464 anyone under the terms stated in the
|
|
465 .I Emacs
|
|
466 General Public License,
|
|
467 a copy of which accompanies each copy of
|
|
468 .I Emacs
|
|
469 and which also
|
|
470 appears in the reference manual.
|
|
471 .PP
|
|
472 Copies of
|
|
473 .I Emacs
|
|
474 may sometimes be received packaged with distributions of Unix systems,
|
|
475 but it is never included in the scope of any license covering those
|
|
476 systems. Such inclusion violates the terms on which distribution
|
|
477 is permitted. In fact, the primary purpose of the General Public
|
|
478 License is to prohibit anyone from attaching any other restrictions
|
|
479 to redistribution of
|
|
480 .I Emacs.
|
|
481 .PP
|
|
482 Richard Stallman encourages you to improve and extend
|
|
483 .I Emacs,
|
|
484 and urges that
|
|
485 you contribute your extensions to the GNU library. Eventually GNU
|
|
486 (Gnu's Not Unix) will be a complete replacement for Berkeley
|
|
487 Unix.
|
|
488 Everyone will be free to use, copy, study and change the GNU system.
|
|
489 .SH SEE ALSO
|
|
490 X(1), xlsfonts(1), xterm(1), xrdb(1)
|
|
491 .SH AUTHORS
|
|
492 .PP
|
|
493 .I Emacs
|
|
494 was written by Richard Stallman and the Free Software Foundation.
|
|
495 Joachim Martillo and Robert Krawitz added the X features.
|