Mercurial > emacs
view doc/emacs/anti.texi @ 100465:471df3e0268b
(w32font_has_char): Always return -1.
author | Jason Rumney <jasonr@gnu.org> |
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date | Wed, 17 Dec 2008 14:39:47 +0000 |
parents | 5ec8ed2b5b65 |
children | cb5d2387102c |
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@c This is part of the Emacs manual. @c Copyright (C) 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions. @node Antinews, Mac OS / GNUstep, X Resources, Top @appendix Emacs 22 Antinews For those users who live backwards in time, here is information about downgrading to Emacs version 22.3. We hope you will enjoy the greater simplicity that results from the absence of many Emacs @value{EMACSVER} features. @itemize @bullet @item The Fontconfig font library is no longer supported. To specify a font, you must use an XLFD (X Logical Font Descriptor). The other ways of specifying fonts---so-called ``Fontconfig'' and ``GTK'' font names---are clearly redundant, and have been removed. @item We have switched to a character representation specially designed for Emacs. Rather than forcing all the widely used scripts artificially into alignment, as Unicode does, Emacs treats them all equally, giving each one a place in the space of character codes. Thus, scripts do not need to fight over characters used in each one of them, as each has its own variant, and they all are different as far as Emacs is concerned. For example, there's a Latin-1 c-cedilla character, and there's a Latin-2 c-cedilla; searching a buffer for the Latin-1 variant will only find that variant, but not the others. This design allows us to eliminate the confusing practice in Emacs 23 whereby one character can simultaneously belong to any number of charsets. @item Emacs now uses its own special internal encoding for non-@acronym{ASCII} characters, known as @samp{emacs-mule}. This was imperative to support several different variants of the same character, each one belonging to its own script: @samp{emacs-mule} marks each character with its script, to better discern them from one another. @item For simplicity, the functions @code{encode-coding-region} and @code{decode-coding-region} no longer accept an argument saying where to store the result of their conversions. The result always replaces the original, so there's no need to look for it elsewhere. @item Emacs no longer performs font anti-aliasing. If your fonts look ugly, try choosing a larger font and increasing the screen resolution. Admittedly, this becomes difficult as you go further back in time, since available screen resolutions will decrease. @item Emacs has added support for some soon-to-be-non-obsolete platforms. These include GNU/Linux systems based on libc version 5, BSD systems based on the COFF executable format, Solaris versions less than 2.6, and many more. @item Emacs can no longer display frames on X windows and text terminals (ttys) simultaneously. If you start Emacs as an X application, the Emacs job can only create X frames; if you start Emacs on a tty, the Emacs job can only use that tty. No more confusion about which type of frame @command{emacsclient} will use in any given Emacs session! @item Emacs can no longer be started as a daemon. We decided that having an Emacs sitting silently in the background with no visual manifestation anywhere in sight is too confusing. @item Transient Mark mode is now disabled by default. Furthermore, some commands that operate specifically on the region when it is active and Transient Mark mode is enabled (such as @code{fill-paragraph} @code{ispell-word}, and @code{indent-for-tab-command}), no longer do so. @item The line motion commands, @kbd{C-n} and @kbd{C-p}, now move by logical text lines, not screen lines. Even if a long text line is continued over multiple screen lines, @kbd{C-n} and @kbd{C-p} treat it as a single line, because that's ultimately what it is. @item Visual Line mode, which provides ``word wrap'' functionality, has been removed. You can still use Long Lines mode to gain an approximation of word wrapping, though this has some drawbacks---for instance, syntax highlighting often doesn't work well on wrapped lines. @item The variable @code{shift-select-mode} has been deleted; holding @key{shift} while typing a motion command no longer creates a temporarily active region. You can still create temporarily active regions by dragging the mouse. @item @kbd{C-l} now runs @code{recenter} instead of @code{recenter-top-bottom}. This always sets the current line at the center of the window, instead of cycling through the center, top, and bottom of the window on successive invocations of @kbd{C-l}. This lets you type @kbd{C-l C-l C-l C-l} to be @emph{absolutely sure} that you have recentered the line. @item Typing @kbd{M-n} at the start of the minibuffer history list no longer attempts to generate guesses of possible minibuffer input. It instead does the straightforward thing, by issuing the message @samp{End of history; no default available}. @item Individual buffers can no longer display faces specially. The text scaling commands @kbd{C-x C-+}, @kbd{C-x C--}, and @kbd{C-x C-0} have been removed, and so has the buffer face menu bound to @kbd{S-down-mouse-1}. @item VC no longer supports fileset-based operations on distributed version control systems (DVCSs) such as Arch, Bazaar, Subversion, Mercurial, and Git. For instance, multi-file commits will be performed by committing one file at a time. As you go further back in time, we will remove DVCS support entirely, so start migrating your projects to CVS. @item To keep up with decreasing computer memory capacity and disk space, many other functions and files have been eliminated in Emacs 22.3. @end itemize @ignore arch-tag: 32932bd9-46f5-41b2-8a0e-fb0cc4caeb29 @end ignore