Mercurial > emacs
view etc/LPF @ 67969:3ca8b2234237
* mh-customize.el: Sync docstrings with manual for faces and sort them
alphabetically.
(mh-faces): Move below mh-hooks. (mh-folder-faces, mh-index-faces,
mh-letter-faces)
(mh-show-faces, mh-speed-faces): Delete. Organize faces like hooks.
(mh-speed-update-interval): Fix group (mh-speedbar, not mh-speed).
(facemenu-unlisted-faces): Might as well ignore all MH-E faces.
(mh-folder-body-face, mh-folder-cur-msg-face)
(mh-folder-cur-msg-number-face, mh-folder-date-face)
(mh-folder-followup-face, mh-folder-msg-number-face)
(mh-folder-deleted-face, mh-folder-refiled-face)
(mh-folder-subject-face, mh-folder-address-face)
(mh-folder-scan-format-face, mh-folder-to-face) (mh-index-folder-face,
mh-show-cc-face, mh-show-date-face) (mh-show-header-face,
mh-show-pgg-good-face) (mh-show-pgg-unknown-face,
mh-show-pgg-bad-face)
(mh-show-to-face, mh-show-from-face, mh-show-subject-face): Delete.
(mh-folder-cur-msg): Unused. Delete.
(mh-folder-address): Use defface; inherit from mh-folder-subject.
(mh-folder-body, mh-folder-cur-msg-number, mh-folder-date): Inherit
from mh-folder-msg-number.
(mh-folder-deleted): Use defface. Inherit from mh-folder-msg-number.
(mh-folder-sent-to-me-hint): New face. Inherit from mh-folder-date.
(mh-folder-sent-to-me-sender): Rename from mh-folder-scan-format. Use
defface. Inherit from mh-folder-followup.
(mh-show-xface): Inherit from mh-show-from and highlight.
(bw-face-generation, bw-toggle-faces)
(bw-new-face-to-old, bw-old-face-to-new): New (tempoarary) variables,
functions for toggling between old and new faces.
* mh-e.el (font-lock-auto-fontify, font-lock-defaults): Hide in
eval-when-compile. We should probably do this throughout.
(mh-scan-good-msg-regexp, mh-scan-deleted-msg-regexp)
(mh-scan-refiled-msg-regexp, mh-scan-cur-msg-number-regexp)
(mh-scan-date-regexp, mh-scan-rcpt-regexp, mh-scan-body-regexp)
(mh-scan-subject-regexp): Sync docstrings with manual
(mh-scan-format-regexp): Rename to mh-scan-sent-to-me-sender-regexp.
Drop date parenthesized expression. Make expression more like the
others (anchored at the beginning of line). Sync docstrings with
manual.
(mh-folder-font-lock-keywords): Use faces directly rather than -face
variables. Use mh-scan-sent-to-me-sender-regexp instead of
mh-scan-format-regexp, and within that expression, use faces
mh-folder-sent-to-me-hint and mh-folder-sent-to-me-sender instead of
mh-folder-date-face and mh-folder-scan-format-face which were
misleading.
* mh-mime.el (mh-mime-security-button-face): Use faces directly rather
than -face variables.
* mh-utils.el (mh-show-font-lock-keywords): Use faces directly rather
than -face variables.
(mh-face-foreground-compat, mh-face-background-compat): New macros.
(mh-face-display-function): Use mh-face-foreground-compat and
mh-face-background-compat to use inherited attributes of mh-show-xface
on Emacs 22 while still working on Emacs 21.
author | Bill Wohler <wohler@newt.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 01 Jan 2006 18:51:18 +0000 |
parents | 885f63d7c285 |
children |
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Protect Your Freedom to Write Programs Join the League for Programming Freedom (Version of February 3, 1994) Ten years ago, programmers were allowed to write programs using all the techniques they knew, and providing whatever features they felt were useful. This is no longer the case. New monopolies, known as software patents and interface copyrights, have taken away our freedom of expression and our ability to do a good job. "Look and feel" lawsuits attempt to monopolize well-known command languages; some have succeeded. Copyrights on command languages enforce gratuitous incompatibility, close opportunities for competition, and stifle incremental improvements. Software patents are even more dangerous; they make every design decision in the development of a program carry a risk of a lawsuit, with draconian pretrial seizure. It is difficult and expensive to find out whether the techniques you consider using are patented; it is impossible to find out whether they will be patented in the future. The League for Programming Freedom is a grass-roots organization of professors, students, businessmen, programmers and users dedicated to bringing back the freedom to write programs. The League is not opposed to the legal system that Congress expressly established for software--copyright on individual programs. Our aim is to reverse the recent changes that prevent programmers from doing their work. The League works to abolish the new monopolies by publishing articles, talking with public officials, denouncing egregious offenders, and filing amicus curiae briefs, most notably against Lotus in its suit against Borland. We testified twice at the recent Patent Office hearings on software patents. We welcome suggestions for other activities, as well as help in carrying them out. (Added 2003) The League for Programming Freedom is inactive nowadays, though its web site www.programming-freedom.org is still maintained. It would be very useful to find a person who could take the initiative to get the LPF operating again. It will be a substantial job, requiring persistence and working with a lawyer. If you want to do it, please write to rms@gnu.org.