Mercurial > emacs
changeset 59928:99e841fd7de9
(Colors): Mention 16-, 88- and 256-color modes.
Impove docs of list-colors-display.
author | Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 05 Feb 2005 13:44:46 +0000 |
parents | 30ef6c521f51 |
children | e5a5ea742cc3 |
files | man/cmdargs.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/man/cmdargs.texi Sat Feb 05 13:19:39 2005 +0000 +++ b/man/cmdargs.texi Sat Feb 05 13:44:46 2005 +0000 @@ -874,6 +874,9 @@ parts of the Emacs display. To find out what colors are available on your system, type @kbd{M-x list-colors-display}, or press @kbd{C-Mouse-2} and select @samp{Display Colors} from the pop-up menu. +(A particular window system might support many more colors, but the +list displayed by @code{list-colors-display} shows their portable +subset that can be safely used on any display supported by Emacs.) If you do not specify colors, on windowed displays the default for the background is white and the default for all other colors is black. On a monochrome display, the foreground is black, the background is white, @@ -947,7 +950,9 @@ Use color mode for @var{num} colors. If @var{num} is -1, turn off color support (equivalent to @samp{never}); if it is 0, use the default color support for this terminal (equivalent to @samp{auto}); -otherwise use an appropriate standard mode for @var{num} colors. If +otherwise use an appropriate standard mode for @var{num} colors. +Depending on your terminal's capabilities, Emacs might be able to turn +on a color mode for 8, 16, 88, or 256 as the value of @var{num}. If there is no mode that supports @var{num} colors, Emacs acts as if @var{num} were 0, i.e.@: it uses the terminal's default color support mode.