Mercurial > emacs
changeset 36790:d91ec7a1c11e
Format Faces: Update info on `fixed' face
since we do support variable width now.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 14 Mar 2001 01:25:42 +0000 |
parents | f71fe44b07ea |
children | 308577404dc3 |
files | man/text.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 18 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/text.texi Wed Mar 14 01:23:52 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/text.texi Wed Mar 14 01:25:42 2001 +0000 @@ -1897,23 +1897,27 @@ The @code{excerpt} face is intended for quotations. This face is the same as @code{italic} unless you customize it (@pxref{Face Customization}). - The @code{fixed} face is meant to say, ``Use a fixed-width font for this -part of the text.'' Emacs currently supports only fixed-width fonts; -therefore, the @code{fixed} annotation is not necessary now. However, -we plan to support variable width fonts in future Emacs versions, and -other systems that display text/enriched format may not use a -fixed-width font as the default. So if you specifically want a certain -part of the text to use a fixed-width font, you should specify the + The @code{fixed} face means, ``Use a fixed-width font for this part +of the text.'' This makes a visible difference only if you have +specified a variable-width font in the default face; however, even if +the default font is fixed-width, applying the @code{fixed} face to a +part of the text will cause that part of the text to appear in a +fixed-width font, if the file is ever displayed with a variable-width +default font. This applies to Emacs and to other systems that display +text/enriched format. So if you specifically want a certain part of +the text to use a fixed-width font, you should specify the @code{fixed} face for that part. - The @code{fixed} face is normally defined to use a different font from -the default. However, different systems have different fonts installed, -so you may need to customize this. + The @code{fixed} face is normally set up to use a different font +from the default, even if the default face is also fixed-width. +Different systems have different fonts installed, so you may need to +customize this. @xref{Face Customization}. - If your terminal cannot display different faces, you will not be able -to see them, but you can still edit documents containing faces. You can -even add faces and colors to documents. They will be visible when the -file is viewed on a terminal that can display them. + If your terminal cannot display different faces, you will not be +able to see them, but you can still edit documents containing faces, +and even add faces and colors to documents. The faces you specify +will be visible when the file is viewed on a terminal that can display +them. @node Format Colors @subsection Colors in Formatted Text