# HG changeset patch # User Richard M. Stallman # Date 1046105400 0 # Node ID 64f6bc336d1bfdd57de388d69f310af2a255acd3 # Parent 10a8aba3dfc79dcd33130d4e669fccd0063574d0 Give example of using special-display-buffer-names to specify frame parameters. diff -r 10a8aba3dfc7 -r 64f6bc336d1b lispref/windows.texi --- a/lispref/windows.texi Mon Feb 24 16:48:54 2003 +0000 +++ b/lispref/windows.texi Mon Feb 24 16:50:00 2003 +0000 @@ -960,11 +960,22 @@ By default, special display means to give the buffer a dedicated frame. If an element is a list, instead of a string, then the @sc{car} of the -list is the buffer name, and the rest of the list says how to create the -frame. There are two possibilities for the rest of the list. It can be -an alist, specifying frame parameters, or it can contain a function and -arguments to give to it. (The function's first argument is always the -buffer to be displayed; the arguments from the list come after that.) +list is the buffer name, and the rest of the list says how to create +the frame. There are two possibilities for the rest of the list (its +@sc{cdr}). It can be an alist, specifying frame parameters, or it can +contain a function and arguments to give to it. (The function's first +argument is always the buffer to be displayed; the arguments from the +list come after that.) + +For example: + +@example +(("myfile" (minibuffer) (menu-bar-lines . 0))) +@end example + +@noindent +specifies to display a buffer named @samp{myfile} in a dedicated frame +with specified @code{minibuffer} and @code{menu-bar-lines} parameters. @end defopt @defopt special-display-regexps