Mercurial > emacs
view etc/emacs.bash @ 89794:0a96859927ce
(iso-2022-jp): Exclude japanese-jisx0212.
(japanese-ucs-cp932-to-jis-map): Fix previous change.
(japanese-ucs-jis-to-cp932-map): Likewise.
(iso-2022-jp-2004, euc-jis-2004, japanese-shift-jis-2004): New
coding systems.
(iso-2022-jp-3, euc-jisx0213, shift_jis-2004): New coding system
aliases.
("Japanese"): Add new charsets and coding system.s
author | Kenichi Handa <handa@m17n.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 03 Feb 2004 04:39:16 +0000 |
parents | 375f2633d815 |
children | 68c22ea6027c |
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# This defines a bash command named `edit' which contacts/resumes an # existing emacs or starts a new one if none exists. # # One way or another, any arguments are passed to emacs to specify files # (provided you have loaded `resume.el'). # # This function assumes the emacs program is named `emacs' and is somewhere # in your load path. If either of these is not true, the most portable # (and convenient) thing to do is to make an alias called emacs which # refers to the real program, e.g. # # alias emacs=/usr/local/bin/gemacs # # Written by Noah Friedman. function edit () { local windowsys="${WINDOW_PARENT+sun}" windowsys="${windowsys:-${DISPLAY+x}}" if [ -n "${windowsys:+set}" ]; then # Do not just test if these files are sockets. On some systems # ordinary files or fifos are used instead. Just see if they exist. if [ -e "${HOME}/.emacs_server" -o -e "/tmp/esrv${UID}-"* ]; then emacsclient "$@" return $? else echo "edit: starting emacs in background..." 1>&2 fi case "${windowsys}" in x ) (emacs "$@" &) ;; sun ) (emacstool "$@" &) ;; esac else if jobs %emacs 2> /dev/null ; then echo "$(pwd)" "$@" >| ${HOME}/.emacs_args && fg %emacs else emacs "$@" fi fi }