Mercurial > emacs
changeset 23110:0d84817a4973
*** empty log message ***
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 26 Aug 1998 21:05:38 +0000 |
parents | f47c04fb4aab |
children | f72ce5154071 |
files | etc/FAQ lispref/commands.texi lispref/nonascii.texi |
diffstat | 3 files changed, 48 insertions(+), 42 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/etc/FAQ Wed Aug 26 20:43:57 1998 +0000 +++ b/etc/FAQ Wed Aug 26 21:05:38 1998 +0000 @@ -713,7 +713,6 @@ distribution, and also the latest versions are available individually via anonymous FTP (prep.ai.mit.edu:pub/gnu/GNUinfo/): - APPLE -- Why the FSF doesn't support GNU Emacs on Apple computers DISTRIB -- GNU Emacs Availability Information, including the popular "Free Software Foundation Order Form" FTP -- How to get GNU Software by Internet FTP or by UUCP @@ -922,31 +921,9 @@ Use "C-h v" (M-x describe-variable) to check the value of variables which you are trying to set or use. -28: How do I make Emacs display the current line (or column) number? - - To find out what line of the buffer you are on right now, do "M-x - what-line". Use "M-x goto-line" to go to a specific line. To find the - current column number, type "M-ESC (current-column)". - - If you use these commands often, you might want to bind them to a key. - See question 104 for instructions on how to do that. - - Typing "C-x l" (or M-x count-lines-page) will also tell you what line you - are on, provided the buffer isn't separated into "pages" with C-l - characters. In that case, it will only tell you what line of the current - "page" you are on. - - To have Emacs automatically display the current line number of the point - in the mode line, do "M-x line-number-mode". You can also put the form - - (setq line-number-mode t) - - in your .emacs file to achieve this whenever you start Emacs. Note that - Emacs will not display the line number if the buffer is larger than the - value of the variable line-number-display-limit. - - None of the vi emulation modes provide the `set number' capability of vi - (as far as we know). +28: How do I make Emacs display the current column number? + + Do M-x column-number-mode. 29: How do I turn on abbrevs by default just in mode XXX? @@ -971,7 +948,7 @@ If you want auto-fill mode on in all major modes, do this: - (setq-default auto-fill-hook 'do-auto-fill) + (setq-default auto-fill-function 'do-auto-fill) 31: How do I make Emacs use a certain major mode for certain files? @@ -1340,7 +1317,7 @@ * Typing "C-x C-e" in any buffer evaluates the Lisp form immediately before point and prints its value in the echo area. - * Typing M-ESC or M-x eval-expression allows you to type a Lisp form in + * Typing M-: or M-x eval-expression allows you to type a Lisp form in the minibuffer which will be evaluated. * You can use M-x load-file to have Emacs evaluate all the Lisp forms in @@ -2058,12 +2035,24 @@ 88: Where can I get Emacs for my Apple computer? - The FSF is a participant in a boycott of Apple because of Apple's "look - and feel" copyright suits. See the file etc/APPLE for more details. - Because of this boycott, the FSF doesn't include support in GNU software - for Apple computers such as the Macintosh. - - Please don't help people port or develop software for Apple computers. + There used to be a boycott of Apple because of its "look and feel" + lawsuit. The lawsuit failed, and the boycott is over. + Currently the GNU project treats Apple like other computer companies. + + Since the Mac operating system is very different from Unix and GNU, + support for it would be a big job. And this job would be tangential + to the GNU project's goals. Meanwhile, we don't have the resources + to do all we want to do on supporting Emacs for GNU-like systems. + So if we had to do work on support for the Macintosh, that would + directly harm the GNU project. + + Of course, the same is true for MSDOS and Windows NT. We decided to + incorporate support for those systems because the code was very modular, + because volunteers not only wrote all the code but also investigate + all the bugs reported on those systems, and because we hoped that we + will be able to raise funds for GNU using these versions, and in this + way these ports will make up for the effort that they took. (We still + hope so, but it has not happened yet.) 89: Where do I get Emacs that runs on VMS under DECwindows? @@ -2918,7 +2907,7 @@ * Emacs normally only reads the `.mailrc' file once per session, when you start to compose your first mail message. If you edit .mailrc, you can - type "M-ESC (build-mail-aliases) RET" to make Emacs reread .mailrc. + type "M-: (build-mail-aliases) RET" to make Emacs reread .mailrc. (You have to include the parentheses where they are shown!) * Emacs does not interpret vendor-specific additions to the format of the
--- a/lispref/commands.texi Wed Aug 26 20:43:57 1998 +0000 +++ b/lispref/commands.texi Wed Aug 26 21:05:38 1998 +0000 @@ -1846,17 +1846,22 @@ The lowest level functions for command input are those that read a single event. -@defun read-event +@defun read-event &optional prompt suppress-input-method This function reads and returns the next event of command input, waiting if necessary until an event is available. Events can come directly from the user or from a keyboard macro. -The function @code{read-event} does not display any message to indicate -it is waiting for input; use @code{message} first, if you wish to -display one. If you have not displayed a message, @code{read-event} +If @var{prompt} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a string to display in +the echo area as a prompt. Otherwise, @code{read-event} does not +display any message to indicate it is waiting for input; instead, it prompts by echoing: it displays descriptions of the events that led to or were read by the current command. @xref{The Echo Area}. +If @var{suppress-input-method} is non-@code{nil}, then the current input +method is disabled for reading this event. If you want to read an event +without input-method processing, always do it this way; don't try binding +@code{input-method-function} (see below). + If @code{cursor-in-echo-area} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{read-event} moves the cursor temporarily to the echo area, to the end of any message displayed there. Otherwise @code{read-event} does not move the cursor. @@ -1917,6 +1922,12 @@ @defvar input-method-function If this is non-@code{nil}, its value specifies the current input method function. + +@strong{Note:} Don't bind this variable with @code{let}. It is often +buffer-local, and if you bind it around reading input (which is exactly +when you @emph{would} bind it), switching buffers asynchronously while +Emacs is waiting will cause the value to be restored in the wrong +buffer. @end defvar The input method function should return a list of events which should
--- a/lispref/nonascii.texi Wed Aug 26 20:43:57 1998 +0000 +++ b/lispref/nonascii.texi Wed Aug 26 21:05:38 1998 +0000 @@ -606,6 +606,9 @@ interested in. @end defvar + The variable @code{selection-coding-system} specifies how to encode +selections for the window system. @xref{Window System Selections}. + @node Lisp and Coding Systems @subsection Coding Systems in Lisp @@ -985,8 +988,10 @@ @subsection Terminal I/O Encoding Emacs can decode keyboard input using a coding system, and encode -terminal output. This kind of decoding and encoding does not set -@code{last-coding-system-used}. +terminal output. This is useful for terminals that transmit or display +text using a particular encoding such as Latin-1. Emacs does not set +@code{last-coding-system-used} for encoding or decoding for the +terminal. @defun keyboard-coding-system @tindex keyboard-coding-system @@ -1144,4 +1149,5 @@ the @var{args}. @end defvar - + The fundamental interface to input methods is through the +variable @code{input-method-function}. @xref{Reading One Event}.