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view src/README @ 51213:791af636af55
Make (several) trivial substitutions for renamed and
new macros in dispextern.h, frame.h and window.h.
(x_draw_glyph_string_box): Adapt to per-window fringes and
scroll-bars.
(scroll_run): Adapt to new fringe position.
(glyph_rect): Use window coordinates returned from
window_from_coordinates rather than frame_to_window_pixel_xy.
(XTset_vertical_scroll_bar): Adapt to per-window fringes and
scroll-bars.
(handle_one_xevent): Simplify a USE_GTK conditional.
(x_clip_to_row): Remove superfluous whole_line_p arg and code
(fringes are now inside margins, i.e. always in the clipping area).
All callers changed.
(x_new_font): Set FRAME_COLUMN_WIDTH and FRAME_LINE_HEIGHT
directly, then call compute_fringe_widths. Don't call
frame_update_line_height.
author | Kim F. Storm <storm@cua.dk> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 24 May 2003 22:10:17 +0000 |
parents | 7ca787d18982 |
children | 68cfc1db0d26 |
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This directory contains the source files for the C component of GNU Emacs. Nothing in this directory is needed for using Emacs once it is built and installed, if the dumped Emacs (on Unix systems) or the Emacs executable and map files (on VMS systems) are copied elsewhere. See the files ../README and then ../INSTALL for installation instructions. Under GNU and Unix systems, the file `Makefile.in' is used as a template by the script `../configure' to produce `Makefile.c'. The same script then uses `cpp' to produce the machine-dependent `Makefile' from `Makefile.c'; `Makefile' is the file which actually controls the compilation of Emacs. Most of this should work transparently to the user; you should only need to run `../configure', and then type `make'. See the file VMSBUILD in this directory for instructions on compiling, linking and building Emacs on VMS. The files `*.com' and `temacs.opt' are used on VMS only. The files `vlimit.h', `ioclt.h' and `param.h' are stubs to allow compilation on VMS with the minimum amount of #ifdefs. `uaf.h' contains VMS uaf structure definitions. This is only needed if you define READ_SYSUAF. This should only be done for single-user systems where you are not overly concerned with security, since it either requires that you install Emacs with SYSPRV or make SYSUAF.DAT world readable. Otherwise, Emacs can determine information about the current user, but no one else.