Mercurial > emacs
view lispref/index.unperm @ 35926:d2997845573f
(hi-lock-mode): Toggling hi-lock-mode now affects all
buffers. When hi-lock turned on rather than only checking current
buffer for regexps, all buffers are checked. Moved activation of
font-lock to hi-lock-refontify. When font-lock turned off rather
than removing added highlighting just in current buffer, remove it
in all buffers. Changed edit menu text from "Automatic
Highlighting" to "Regexp Highlighting" Documentation for
highlighting phrases, minor documentation changes.
(hi-lock-set-file-patterns): Execute only if there are new or
existing file patterns.
(hi-lock-refontify): Assume font-lock-fontify-buffer will first
unfontify and, if a support mode is active, will not refontify the
whole buffer. If necessary, turn on font lock. (Removed
font-lock-unfontify and font-lock support-mode-specific calls,
such as lazy-lock-fontify-window.)
(hi-lock-find-patterns): Do not turn on hi-lock-mode even if
patterns are found. Not useful now since find-file-hook is removed
if hi-lock is off, but may be needed for per-buffer hi-lock
activation.
(hi-lock-face-phrase-buffer): New function. Also added related
menu item and keybinding.
(highlight-phrase): New alias, to hi-lock-face-phrase-buffer.
(hi-lock-process-phrase): New function.
(hi-lock-line-face-buffer): Doc fixes.
(hi-lock-face-buffer): Doc fixes.
(hi-lock-unface-buffer): Doc fixes.
author | Gerd Moellmann <gerd@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 06 Feb 2001 15:43:37 +0000 |
parents | 3fdcd0afea4b |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
@c -*-texinfo-*- @setfilename ../info/index @c Indexing guidelines @c I assume that all indexes will be combinded. @c Therefore, if a generated findex and permutations @c cover the ways an index user would look up the entry, @c then no cindex is added. @c Concept index (cindex) entries will also be permuted. Therefore, they @c have no commas and few irrelevant connectives in them. @c I tried to include words in a cindex that give the context of the entry, @c particularly if there is more than one entry for the same concept. @c For example, "nil in keymap" @c Similarly for explicit findex and vindex entries, e.g. "print example". @c Error codes are given cindex entries, e.g. "end-of-file error". @c pindex is used for .el files and Unix programs @node Index, New Symbols, Standard Hooks, Top @unnumbered Index @c Print the indices @printindex fn