GNU Emacs NEWS -- history of user-visible changes. 27 Nov 1993 Copyright (C) 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc. See the end for copying conditions. Please send Emacs bug reports to bug-gnu-emacs@prep.ai.mit.edu. For older news, see the file ONEWS. For Lisp changes in Emacs 19, see the file LNEWS. Changes in 19.22. * The mouse click M-mouse-2 now inserts the current secondary selection (from Emacs or any other X client) where you click. It does not move point. This command is called mouse-yank-secondary. mouse-kill-secondary no longer has a key binding by default. Clicking M-mouse-3 (mouse-secondary-save-then-kill) twice may be a convenient enough way of killing the secondary selection. Or perhaps there should be a keyboard binding for killing the secondary selection. Any suggestions? * New packages: ** `icomplete' provides character-by-character information about what you could complete if you type TAB. ** `avoid' moves the mouse away from point so that it doesn't hide your typing. ** `shadowfile' helps you update files that are supposed to be stored identically in different places (perhaps on different machines). * C-h p now knows about four additional keywords: data, faces, mouse, and matching. * The key for starting an inferior Lisp process, in Lisp mode, is now C-c C-z instead of C-c C-l. * When the VC commands ask whether to save the buffer, if you say no, they signal an error. This is so that you won't operate on the wrong data. * ISO Accents mode now supports `"s' as a way of typing German sharp s. * By default, comint buffers (including Shell mode and debuggers) no longer try to scroll to keep the cursor on the bottom line. This feature was added in 19.21 but did not work smoothly enough. * Emacs now handles the window manager "delete window" operation. * Display of buffers with text properties is much faster now. * The feature previously announced whereby `insert' does not inherit text properties from surrounding text was not fully implemented before; but now it is. use `insert-and-inherit' if you wish to inherit sticky properties from the surrounding text. * The functions next-property-change, previous-property-change, next-single-property-change, and previous-single-property-change now take one additional optional argument LIMIT that is a position at which to stop scanning. If scan ends without finding the property change sought, these functions return the specified limit. The value returned by previous-single-property-change and previous-property-change, when they do find a change, is now one greater than what it used to be. It is the position between the two characters whose properties differ, which is one greater than the position of the first character found (while scanning back) with different properties. User editing changes in version 19.21. * ISO Accents mode supports four additional characters: A-with-ring (entered as /A), AE ligature (entered as /E), and their lower-case equivalents. User editing changes in version 19.20. (See following page for Lisp programming changes.) Note that some of these changes were made subsequent to the Emacs 19.20 editions of the Emacs manual and Emacs Lisp manual; therefore, if you have those editions, do read this page. * Dragging with mouse button 1 now puts the selected region in the kill ring so you can paste it into other X applications. * Double and triple clicks with button 1 now behave as in xterm, selecting the word or line surrounding where you click. If you drag after the last click, you can select a range of words or lines. * You can use button 3 to extend a mouse-selected region, as in xterm. This works for regions selected either by dragging Mouse-1 or by multiple-clicking Mouse-1. Clicking Mouse-3 moves the end of the region that is (initially) nearer to where you click. If the selection was first made by multiple-clicking Mouse-1, and thus consists of entire words or lines, Mouse-3 preserves that state. As before, clicking Mouse-3 again in the same place kills the region thus selected. * The secondary selection commands, M-Mouse-1 and M-Mouse-3, have been likewise modified. * You can now search for strings and regexps using the Edit menu bar menu. * You can now access bookmarks using the Bookmark submenu in the File menu in the menu bar. * ISO Accents mode, a buffer-local minor mode, provides a convenient way to type certain non-ASCII characters. It makes the characters `, ', ", ^, ~ and / serve as modifiers for the following letter. ` and ' add accents, " adds an umlaut or diaresis, ^ adds a circumflex, ~ adds a tilde, and / adds a slash to the following letter. If the following character is not a letter, or cannot be modified as requested, then both characters stand for themselves. If you duplicate the modifier accent character, that enters the corresponding ISO non-spacing accent character (thus, '' enters the ISO acute-accent character). To enter a modifier character itself, type it followed by a space. This feature can be used whenever a key sequence is expected: for ordinary insertion, for searching, and for certain command arguments. A few special combinations: ~c => c with cedilla ~d => d with stroke ~< => left guillemet ~> => right guillemet * iso-transl.el is a new library that replaces iso-insert.el. It defines C-x 8 as an insertion prefix for the ISO characters between 128 and 255, much like iso-insert, except that iso-transl works even in searches and help commands--wherever a key sequence is expected. To define case-conversion for these characters for ISO 8859/1, load the library iso-syntax. (This is not new.) * M-TAB in Text mode now runs the command ispell-complete-word which performs completion using the spelling dictionary. The spelling correction submenu now includes this command and another command which completes a word fragment (that is, it doesn't assume that the text to be completed starts at the beginning of a word. * In incremental search, you can use M-y to yank the most recent kill into the search string. * The new function ispell-message checks the spelling of a message you are about to send or post. It ignores text cited from other messages. To automatically check all your outgoing messages, include the following line in your .emacs file: (setq news-inews-hook (setq mail-send-hook 'ispell-message)) * There is now a separate minibuffer history list for the names of extended commands. This history list is used by M-x when reading the command name. The motivation for this is to prevent command names from appearing in the history used for other minibuffer arguments. Note that the history list for entire commands that use the minibuffer is a separate feature. That history list records a command with all its arguments, and you must use C-x ESC ESC to access it. * You can use the new command C-x v ~ VERSION RET to examine a specified version of a file that is maintained with version control. * In Indented Text mode, only blank lines now separate paragraphs. Indented lines continue the paragraph that is in progress. This makes the user option variable adaptive-fill-mode have its intended effect. * Local variable specifications in files for variables whose names end in `-hook' and `-function' are now controlled by the variable `enable-local-eval', just like the `eval' variable. * C-x r j (jump-to-register) when restoring a frame configuration now makes all unwanted frames (existing frames not mentioned in the configuration) invisible. If you want to delete these unwanted frames, use a prefix argument for C-x r j. * You can customize the calendar to display weeks beginning on Monday: set the variable `calendar-week-start-day' to 1. * Rmail changes. If you save messages to a file in Unix format while viewing a message with its whole header, this now copies to the file the entire header of each message copied. * Comint mode changes. C-c C-e shows as much output as possible in the window. C-c RET copies an old input (the one at point) and places the copy after the latest prompt. C-c C-p and C-c C-n move through the buffer, stopping at places where the subshell prompted for input. C-c C-h lists the input history in a `*Help*' buffer. There are new menu bar items for completion/input/output/signal commands. Input behaviour is configurable. Variables control whether some windows showing the buffer scroll to the bottom before insertion. These are `comint-scroll-to-bottom-on-input' and `before-change-function'. By default, insertion causes the selected window to scroll to the bottom before insertion occurs. Subprocess output now keeps point at the end of the buffer in each window individually if point was already at the end of the buffer in that window. If `comint-scroll-show-maximum-output' is non-nil (which is the default), then scrolling due to arrival of output tries to place the last line of text at the bottom line of the window, so as to show as much useful text as possible. (This mimics the scrolling behavior of many terminals.) By setting `comint-scroll-to-bottom-on-output', you can opt for having point jump to the end of the buffer whenever output arrives--no matter where in the buffer point was before. If the value is `this', point jumps in the selected window. If the value is `all', point jumps in each window that shows the comint buffer. If the value is `other', point jumps in all nonselected windows that show the current buffer. The default value is nil, which means point does not jump to the end. Input history insertion is configurable. A variable controls whether only the first instance of successive identical inputs is stored in the input history. This is `comint-input-ignoredups'. Completion (bound to TAB) is now more general. Depending on context, completion now operates on the input history, on command names, or (as before) on filenames. Filename completion is configurable. Variables control whether file/directory suffix characters are added (`comint-completion-addsuffix'), whether shortest completion is acceptable when no further unambiguous completion is possible (`comint-completion-recexact'), and the timing of completion candidate listing (`comint-completion-autolist'). Comint mode now provides history expansion. Insert input using `!' and `^', in the same syntax that typical shells use; then type TAB. This searches the comint input history for a matching element, performs substitution if necessary, and places the result in the comint buffer in place of the original input. History references in the input may be expanded before insertion into the input ring, or on input to the interpreter (and therefore visibly). The variable `comint-input-autoexpand' specifies which. You can make the SPC key perform history expansion by binding SPC to the command `comint-magic-space'. The command `comint-dynamic-complete-variable' does variable name completion using the environment variables as set within Emacs. The variables controlling filename completion apply to variable name completion too. This command is normally available through the menu bar. * Shell mode Paragraph motion and marking commands (default bindings M-{, M-}, M-h) operate on output groups (i.e., shell prompt plus associated shell output). TAB now completes commands, as well as file names and expand history. Commands are searched for along the path that Emacs has on startup. C-c C-f now moves forward a command (`shell-forward-command') and C-c C-b now moves backward a command (`shell-backward-command'). Command completion is configurable. The variables controlling filename completion in comint mode apply, together with a variable controlling whether to restrict possible completions to only files that are executable (`shell-command-execonly'). The input history is initialised from the file name given in the variable `shell-input-ring-file-name'--normally `.history' in your home directory. Directory tracking is more robust. It can cope with command sequences and forked commands, and can detect the failure of directory changing commands in most circumstances. It's still not infallible, of course. You can now configure the behaviour of `pushd'. Variables control whether `pushd' behaves like `cd' if no argument is given (`shell-pushd-tohome'), pop rather than rotate with a numeric argument (`shell-pushd-dextract'), and only add directories to the directory stack if they are not already on it (`shell-pushd-dunique'). The configuration you choose should match the underlying shell, of course. Emacs Lisp programming changes in Emacs 19.20. * A new function `remove-hook' is now used to remove a hook that you might have added with `add-hook'. * There is now a Lisp pretty-printer in the library `pp'. * The partial Common Lisp support has been entirely reimplemented. * When you insert text using `insert', `insert-before-markers' or `insert-buffer-substring', text properties are no longer inherited from the surrounding text. When you want to inherit text properties, use the new functions `insert-and-inherit' or `insert-before-markers-and-inherit'. The self-inserting character command does do inheritance. * Frame creation hooks. The function make-frame now runs the normal hooks before-make-frame-hook and after-make-frame-hook. * You can now use function-key-map to make a key an alias for other key sequences that can vary depending on circumstances. To do this, give the key a definition in function-key-map which is a function rather than a specific expansion key sequence. If the function reads input itself, it can have the effect of altering the event that follows. For example, here's how to define C-c h to turn the character that follows into a hyper character: (define-key function-key-map "\C-ch" 'hyperify) (defun hyperify (prompt) (let ((e (if prompt (message "%s%s" prompt (single-key-description (read-event))) (vector (if (numberp e) (logior (lsh 1 20) e) (if (memq 'hyper (event-modifiers e)) e (add-event-modifier "H-" e)))))) (defun add-event-modifier (string e) (let ((symbol (if (symbolp e) e (car e)))) (setq symbol (intern (concat string (symbol-name symbol)))) (if (symbolp e) symbol (cons symbol (cdr e))))) The character translation function gets one argument, which is the prompt that was specified in read-key-sequence--or nil if the key sequence is being read by the editor command loop. In most cases you can just ignore the prompt value. * Changes for reading and writing text properties. New low-level Lisp features make it possible to write Lisp programs to save text properties in files, and read text properties from files. You can program any file format you like. The variable `write-region-annotation-functions' should contain a list of functions to be run by `write-region' to encode text properties in some fashion as annotations to the text that is written. Each function in the list is called with two arguments: the start and end of the region to be written. These functions should not alter the contents of the buffer. Instead, they should return lists indicating annotations to write in the file in addition to the text in the buffer. Each function should return a list of elements of the form (POSITION . STRING), where POSITION is an integer specifying the relative position in the text to be written, and STRING is the annotation to add there. Each list returned by one of these functions must be already sorted in increasing order by POSITION. If there is more than one function, `write-region' merges the lists destructively into one sorted list. When `write-region' actually writes the text from the buffer to the file, it intermixes the specified annotations at the corresponding positions. All this takes place without modifying the buffer. The variable `after-insert-file-functions' should contain a list of functions to be run each time a file's contents have been inserted into a buffer. Each function receives one argument, the length of the inserted text; point indicates the start of that text. The function should make whatever changes it wants to make, then return the updated length of the inserted text, as it stands after those changes. The value returned by one function is used as the argument to the next. These functions should always return with point at the beginning of the inserted text. The intended use of `after-insert-file-functions' is for converting some sort of textual annotations into actual text properties. But many other uses may be possible. We now invite users to begin implementing Lisp programs to store and retrieve text properties in files, using these new primitive features, and thus to experiment with various data formats and find good ones. We suggest not trying to handle arbitrary Lisp objects as property names or property values--because a program that general is probably difficult to write, and slow. Instead, choose a set of possible data types that are reasonably flexible, and not too hard to encode. * Comint completion. Currently comint-dynamic-complete-command (and associated variable comint-after-partial-pathname-command) are set by default to complete a filename. Other comint-mode users should have their own functions to achieve this. For example, gud-mode could complete debugger commands. A completion function is provided solely for this reason (comint-dynamic-simple-complete). Other comint-mode users should bind comint-dynamic-complete (shell-mode does already). * Comint history reference expansion Currently comint-input-autoexpand is 'history, which means only expand history on insertion to comint-input-ring. For non-shell modes, this is a strange default, since non-shells will not understand history references. Perhaps it would be better for the variable to be 'input, which means expand on RET. The value 'history might possibly be wrong even for shells, since the expansion will be done both by comint and the underlying shell (except sh, of course). It would be better for expansion to be done by one or the other, not both since they may (ahem) disagree. Since it is silly to put a literal history reference into comint-input-ring, perhaps it would be better for the variable to be 'input too. The reason the variable is not 'input by default is that I was attempting to adhere to The Principle of Least Astonishment. I didn't want to shock users by having their input change in front of their eyes. * Argument delimiters and Comint mode. Currently comint-delimiter-argument-list is '(), which means no strings are to be treated as delimiters and arguments. In shell-mode, this variable is set to shell-delimiter-argument-list, '("|" "&" "<" ">" "(" ")" ";"). Other comint-mode users should set this variable too. For example, a lisp-type mode might want to set this to '("." "(" ")") or some such. * Comint output hook. There is now a hook, comint-output-filter-hook, that is run-hooks'ed by the output filter, comint-output-filter. This is useful for scrolling (see below), but also things like processing output for specific text, output hilighting, etc. So that such output processing may be done efficiently, there is a new variable, comint-last-output-start, that records the position of the start of the lastest output inserted into the buffer (effectively the previous value of process-mark). Output processing functions should process the text between comint-last-output-start (or perhaps the beginning of the line that the position lies on) and process-mark. * Comint scrolling. There is now automatic scrolling of process windows. Currently comint-scroll-show-maximum-output is t, which means when scrolling output put process-mark at the bottom of the window. There is a good case for it to be t, since the user is likely to want to see as much output as possible. But, then again, there is a comint-show-maximum-output command. * Comint history retrieval. The input following point is not deleted when moving around the input history (with M-p etc.). Emacs maintainers may not like this. However, I feel this is a useful feature. The simple remedy is to put end-of-line in before delete-region in comint-previous-matching-input. The input history retrieval commands still wrap-around the input ring, unlike Emacs command history. Changes in version 19.19. * The new package bookmark.el records named bookmarks: positions that you can jump to. Bookmarks are saved automatically between Emacs sessions. * Another simpler package saveplace.el records your position in each file when you kill its buffer (or kill Emacs), and jumps to the same position when you visit the file again (even in another Emacs session). Use `toggle-save-place' to turn on place-saving in a given file; use (setq-default save-place t) to turn it on for all files. * In Outline mode, you can now customize how to compute the level of a heading line. Set `outline-level' to a function of no arguments which returns the level, assuming point is at the beginning of a heading line. * You can now specify the prefix key to use for Outline minor mode. (The default is C-c.) Set the variable outline-minor-mode-prefix to the key sequence you want to use (as a string or vector). * In Bibtex mode, C-c e has been changed to C-c C-b. This is because C-c followed by a letter is reserved for users. * The `mod' function is no longer an alias for `%', but is a separate function that yields a result with the same sign as the divisor. `floor' now takes an optional second argument, which divides the first argument before the floor is taken. * `%' no longer allows floating point arguments, since the results were often inconsistent with integer `%'. Changes in version 19.18. * Typing C-z in an iconified Emacs frame now deiconifies it. * hilit19 is a new library for automatic highlighting of parts of the text in the buffer, based on its meaning and context. * Killing no longer sends the killed text to the X clipboard. And large strings are not put in the cut buffer either. The variable x-cut-buffer-max specifies the maximum number of characters to put in the cut buffer. * The new command C-x 5 o (other-frame) selects different frames, successively, in cyclic order. It does for frames what C-x o does for windows. * The command M-ESC (eval-expression) has its own command history. * The commands M-! and M-| for running shell commands have their own command history. * If the directory containing the Emacs executable has a sibling named `lisp', that `lisp' directory is added to the end of `load-path' (provided you don't override the normal value with the EMACSLOADPATH environment variable). This feature may make it easier to move an installed Emacs from place to place. * M-x validate-tex-buffer now records the locations of mismatches found in the `*Occur*' buffer. You can go to that buffer and type C-c C-c to visit a particular mismatch. * There are new commands in Shell mode. C-c C-n and C-c C-p move point to the next or previous shell input line. C-c C-d is now another way to send an end-of-file to the subshell. * Changes to calendar/diary. Time zone data is now determined automatically, including the start/stop days and times of daylight savings time. The code now works correctly almost anywhere in the world. The format of the holiday specifications has changed and IS NO LONGER COMPATIBLE with the old (version 18) format. See the documentation of the variable calendar-holidays for details of the new, improved format. The hook `diary-display-hook' has been split into two: diary-display-hook which should be used ONLY for the display and `diary-hook' which should be used for appointment notification. If diary-display-hook is nil (the default), simple-diary-display is used. This allows the diary hooks to be correctly set with add-hook. The forms used for dates in diary entries and general display are no longer autoloaded, but set at load time; this means they will be set correctly based on values you assign to various variables. * The functions x-rebind-key and x-rebind-keys have been deleted, because you can accomplish the same job by binding keys to keyboard macros. * Emacs now distinguishes double and triple drag events and double and triple button-down events. These work analogously to double and triple click events. Double drag events, if not defined, convert to ordinary click events. Double down events, if not defined, convert first to ordinary down events, which are then discarded if not defined. Triple events that are not defined convert to the corresponding double event; if that is also not defined, it may convert further. * The new function event-click-count returns the number of clicks, from an event which is a list. It is 1 for an ordinary click, drag, or button-down event, 2 for a double event, and 3 or more for a triple event. * The new function previous-frame is like next-frame, but moves around through the set of existing frames in the opposite order. * The post-command-hook now runs even after commands that get an error and return to top level. As a consequence of the same change, this hook also runs before Emacs reads the first command. That might sound paradoxical, as if this hook were the same as the pre-command-hook. Actually, they are not similar; the latter runs before *execution* of a command, but after it has been read. * You can turn off the text property hooks that run when point moves to certain places in the buffer, by binding inhibit-point-motion-hooks to a non-nil value. * Inserting a string with no text properties into the buffer normally inherits the properties of the preceding character. You can now control this inheritence by setting the front-sticky and rear-nonsticky properties of a character. If you make a character's front-sticky property t, then insertion before the character inherits its properties. If you make the rear-nonsticky property t, then insertion after the character does not inherit its properties. You can regard characters as normally being rear-sticky and not front-sticky, and this is why insertion normally inherits from the previous character. If neither side of an insertion is suitably sticky, then the inserted text gets no properties. If both sides are sticky, then the inserted text gets the properties of both sides, with the previous character's properties taking precedence when both sides have a property in common. You can also specify stickiness for individual properties. To do so, use a list of property names as the value of the front-sticky property or the rear-nonsticky property. For example, if a character has a rear-nonsticky property whose value is (face read-only), then insertion after the character will not inherit its face property or read-only property (if any), but will inherit any other properties. The merging of properties when both sides of the insertion are sticky takes place one property at a time. If the preceding character is rear-sticky for the property, and the property is non-nil, it dominates. Otherwise, the following character's property value is used if it is front-sticky for that property. * If you give a character a non-nil `invisible' text property, the character does not appear on the screen. This works much like selective display. The details of this feature are likely to change in future Emacs versions. * In Info, when you go to a node, it runs the normal hook Info-selection-hook. * You can use the new function `invocation-directory' to get the name of the directory containing the Emacs executable that was run. * Entry to the minibuffer runs the normal hook minibuffer-setup-hook. * The new function minibuffer-window-active-p takes one argument, a minibuffer window, and returns t if the window is currently active. Changes in version 19.17. * When Emacs displays a list of completions in a buffer, you can select a completion by clicking mouse button 2 on that completion. * Use the command `list-faces-display' to display a list of all the currently defined faces, showing what they look like. * Menu bar items from local maps now come after the usual items. * The Help menu bar item always comes last in the menu bar. * If you enable Font-Lock mode on a buffer containing a program (certain languages such as C and Lisp are supported), everything you type is automatically given a face property appropriate to its syntactic role. For example, there are faces for comments, string constants, names of functions being defined, and so on. * Dunnet, an adventure game, is now available. * Several major modes now have their own menu bar items, including Dired, Rmail, and Sendmail. We would like to add suitable menu bar items to other major modes. * The key binding C-x a C-h has been eliminated. This is because it got in the way of the general feature of typing C-h after a prefix character. If you want to run inverse-add-global-abbrev, you can use C-x a - or C-x a i g instead. * If you set the variable `rmail-mail-new-frame' to a non-nil value, all the Rmail commands to send mail make a new frame to do it in. When you send the message, or use the menu bar command not to send it, that frame is deleted. * In Rmail, the o and C-o commands are now almost interchangeable. Both commands check the format of the file you specify, and append the message to it in Rmail format if it is an Rmail file, and in inbox file format otherwise. C-o and o are different only when you specify a new file. * The function `copy-face' now takes an optional fourth argument NEW-FRAME. If you specify this, it copies the definition of face OLD-FACE on frame FRAME to face NEW-NAME on frame NEW-FRAME. * A local map can now cancel out one of the global map's menu items. Just define that subcommand of the menu item with `undefined' as the definition. For example, this cancels out the `Buffers' item for the current major mode: (local-set-key [menu-bar buffer] 'undefined) * To put global items at the end of the menu bar, use the new variable `menu-bar-final-items'. It should be a list of symbols--event types bound in the menu bar. The menu bar items for these symbols are moved to the end. * The list returned by `buffer-local-variables' now contains cons-cell elements of the form (SYMBOL . VALUE) only for buffer-local variables that have values. For unbound buffer-local variables, the variable name (symbol) appears directly as an element of the list. * The `modification-hooks' property of a character no longer affects insertion; it runs only for deletion and modification of the character. To detect insertion, use `insert-in-front-hooks' and `insert-behind-hooks' properties. The former runs when text is inserted immediately preceding the character that has the property; the latter runs when text is inserted immediately following the character. * Buffer modification now runs hooks belonging to overlays as well as hooks belonging to characters. If an overlay has a `modification-hooks' property, it applies to any change to text in the overlay, and any insertion within the overlay. If the overlay has a `insert-in-front-hooks' property, it runs for insertion at the beginning boundary of the overlay. If the overlay has an `insert-behind-hooks' property, it runs for insertion at the end boundary of the overlay. The values of these properties should be lists of functions. Each function is called, receiving as arguments the overlay in question, followed by the bounds of the range being modified. * The new `-name NAME' option directs Emacs to search for its X resources using the name `NAME', and sets the title of the initial frame. This argument was added for consistency with other X clients. * The new `-xrm DATABASE' option tells Emacs to treat the string DATABASE as the text of an X resource database. Emacs searches DATABASE for resource values, in addition to the usual places. This argument was added for consistency with other X clients. * Emacs now searches for X resources in the files specified by the XFILESEARCHPATH, XUSERFILESEARCHPATH, and XAPPLRESDIR environment variables, emulating the functionality provided by programs written using Xt. Because of this change, Emacs will now notice system-wide application defaults files, as other X clients do. XFILESEARCHPATH and XUSERFILESEARCHPATH should be a list of file names separated by colons; XAPPLRESDIR should be a list of directory names separated by colons. Emacs searches for X resources + specified on the command line, with the `-xrm RESOURCESTRING' option, + then in the value of the XENVIRONMENT environment variable, - or if that is unset, in the file named ~/.Xdefaults-HOSTNAME if it exists (where HOSTNAME is the hostname of the machine Emacs is running on), + then in the screen-specific and server-wide resource properties provided by the server, - or if those properties are unset, in the file named ~/.Xdefaults if it exists, + then in the files listed in XUSERFILESEARCHPATH, - or in files named LANG/Emacs in directories listed in XAPPLRESDIR (where LANG is the value of the LANG environment variable), if the LANG environment variable is set, - or in files named Emacs in the directories listed in XAPPLRESDIR - or in ~/LANG/Emacs (if the LANG environment variable is set), - or in ~/Emacs, + then in the files listed in XFILESEARCHPATH. The paths in the variables XFILESEARCHPATH, XUSERFILESEARCHPATH, and XAPPLRESDIR may contain %-escapes (like the control strings passed to the the Emacs lisp `format' function or C printf function), which Emacs expands. %N is replaced by the string "Emacs" wherever it occurs. %T is replaced by "app-defaults" wherever it occurs. %S is replaced by the empty string wherever it occurs. %L and %l are replaced by the value of the LANG environment variable; if LANG is not set, Emacs does not use that directory or file name at all. %C is replaced by the value of the resource named "customization" (class "Customization"), as retrieved from the server's resource properties or the user's ~/.Xdefaults file, or the empty string if that resource doesn't exist. So, for example, if XFILESEARCHPATH is set to the value "/usr/lib/X11/%L/%T/%N%C:/usr/lib/X11/%T/%N%C:/usr/lib/X11/%T/%N", and the LANG environment variable is set to "english", and the customization resource is the string "-color", then, in the last step of the process described above, Emacs checks for resources in the first of the following files that is present and readable: /usr/lib/X11/english/app-defaults/Emacs-color /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/Emacs-color /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/Emacs If the LANG environment variable is not set, then Emacs never uses the first element of the path, "/usr/lib/X11/%L/%T/%N%C", because it contains the %L escape. If XFILESEARCHPATH is unset, Emacs uses the default value "/usr/lib/X11/%L/app-defaults/Emacs%C:\ /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/Emacs%C:\ /usr/lib/X11/%L/app-defaults/Emacs:\ /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/Emacs" This feature was added for consistency with other X applications. * The new function `text-property-any' scans the region of text from START to END to see if any character's property PROP is `eq' to VALUE. If so, it returns the position of the first such character. Otherwise, it returns nil. The optional fifth argument, OBJECT, specifies the string or buffer to be examined. * The new function `text-property-not-all' scans the region of text from START to END to see if any character's property PROP is not `eq' to VALUE. If so, it returns the position of the first such character. Otherwise, it returns nil. The optional fifth argument, OBJECT, specifies the string or buffer to be examined. * The function `delete-windows-on' now takes an optional second argument FRAME, which specifies which frames it should affect. + If FRAME is nil or omitted, then `delete-windows-on' deletes windows showing BUFFER (its first argument) on all frames. + If FRAME is t, then `delete-windows-on' only deletes windows on the selected frame; other frames are unaffected. + If FRAME is a frame, then `delete-windows-on' only deletes windows on the given frame; other frames are unaffected. Changes in version 19.16. * When dragging the mouse to select a region, Emacs now highlights the region as you drag (if Transient Mark mode is enabled). If you continue the drag beyond the boundaries of the window, Emacs scrolls the window at a steady rate until you either move the mouse back into the window or release the button. * RET now exits `query-replace' and `query-replace-regexp'; this makes it more consistent with the incremental search facility, which uses RET to end the search. * In C mode, C-c C-u now runs c-up-conditional. C-c C-n and C-c C-p now run new commands that move forward and back over balanced sets of C conditionals (c-forward-conditional and c-backward-conditional). * The Edit entry in the menu bar has a new alternative: "Choose Next Paste". It gives you a menu showing the various strings in the kill ring; click on one to select it as the text to be yanked ("pasted") the next time you yank. * If you enable Transient Mark mode and set `mark-even-if-inactive' to non-nil, then the region is highlighted in a transient fashion just as normally in Transient Mark mode, but the mark really remains active all the time; commands that use the region can be used even if the region highlighting turns off. * If you type C-h after a prefix key, it displays the bindings that start with that prefix. * The VC package now searches for version control commands in the directories named by the variable `vc-path'; its value should be a list of strings. * If you are visiting a file that has locks registered under RCS, VC now displays each lock's owner and version number in the mode line after the string `RCS'. If there are no locks, VC displays the head version number. * When using X, if you load the `paren' library, Emacs automatically underlines or highlights the matching paren whenever point is next to the outside of a paren. When point is before an open-paren, this shows the matching close; when point is after a close-paren, this shows the matching open. * The new function `define-key-after' is like `define-key', but takes an extra argument AFTER. It places the newly defined binding after the binding for the event AFTER. * `accessible-keymaps' now takes an optional second argument, PREFIX. If PREFIX is non-nil, it means the value should include only maps for keys that start with PREFIX. `describe-bindings' also accepts an optional argument PREFIX which means to describe only the keys that start with PREFIX. * The variable `prefix-help-command' hold a command to run to display help whenever the character `help-char' follows a prefix key and does not have a key binding in that context. * Emacs now detects double- and triple-mouse clicks. A single mouse click produces a pair events of the form: (down-mouse-N POSITION) (mouse-N POSITION) Clicking the same mouse button again, soon thereafter and at the same location, produces another pair of events of the form: (down-mouse-N POSITION) (double-mouse-N POSITION 2) Another click will produce an event pair of the form: (down-mouse-N POSITION) (triple-mouse-N POSITION 3) All the POSITIONs in such a sequence would be identical, except for their timestamps. To count as double- and triple-clicks, mouse clicks must be at the same location as the first click, and the number of milliseconds between the first release and the second must be less than the value of the lisp variable `double-click-time'. Setting `double-click-time' to nil disables multi-click detection. Setting it to t removes the time limit; Emacs then detects multi-clicks by position only. If `read-key-sequence' finds no binding for a double-click event, but the corresponding single-click event would be bound, `read-key-sequence' demotes it to a single-click. Similarly, it demotes unbound triple-clicks to double- or single-clicks. This means you don't have to distinguish between single- and multi-clicks if you don't want to. Emacs reports all clicks after the third as `triple-mouse-N' clicks, but increments the click count after POSITION. For example, a fourth click, soon after the third and at the same location, produces a pair of events of the form: (down-mouse-N POSITION) (triple-mouse-N POSITION 4) * The way Emacs reports positions of mouse events has changed slightly. If a mouse event includes a position list of the form: (WINDOW (PLACE-SYMBOL) (COLUMN . ROW) TIMESTAMP) this denotes exactly the same position as the list: (WINDOW PLACE-SYMBOL (COLUMN . ROW) TIMESTAMP) That is, the event occurred over a non-textual area of the frame, specified by PLACE-SYMBOL, a symbol like `mode-line' or `vertical-scroll-bar'. Enclosing PLACE-SYMBOL in a singleton list does not change the position denoted, but the `read-key-sequence' function uses the presence or absence of the singleton list to tell whether or not it should prefix the event with its place symbol. Normally, `read-key-sequence' prefixes mouse events occuring over non-textual areas with their PLACE-SYMBOLs, to select the sub-keymap appropriate for the event; for example, clicking on the mode line produces a sequence like [mode-line (mouse-1 POSN)] However, if lisp code elects to unread the resulting key sequence by placing it in the `unread-command-events' variable, it is important that `read-key-sequence' not insert the prefix symbol again; that would produce a malformed key sequence like [mode-line mode-line (mouse-1 POSN)] For this reason, `read-key-sequence' encloses the event's PLACE-SYMBOL in a singleton list when it first inserts the prefix, but doesn't insert the prefix when processing events whose PLACE-SYMBOLs are already thus enclosed. Changes in version 19.15. * `make-frame-visible', which uniconified frames, is now a command, and thus may be bound to a key. This makes sense because frames respond to user input while iconified. * You can now use Meta mouse clicks to set and use the "secondary selection". You can drag M-Mouse-1 across the region you want to select. Or you can press M-Mouse-1 at one end and M-Mouse-3 at the other (this also copies the text to the kill ring). Repeating M-Mouse-3 again at the same place kills that text. M-Mouse-2 kills the secondary selection. Setting the secondary selection does not move point or the mark. It is possible to make a secondary selection that does not all fit on the screen, by using M-Mouse-1 at one end, scrolling, then using M-Mouse-3 at the other end. Emacs has only one secondary selection at any time. Starting to set a new one cancels any previous one. The secondary selection displays using a face named `secondary-selection'. * There's a new way to request use of Supercite (sc.el). Do this: (add-hook 'mail-citation-hook 'sc-cite-original) Currently this works with Rmail. In the future, other Emacs based mail-readers should be modified to understand this hook also. In the mean time, you should keep doing what you have done in the past for those other mail readers. * When a regular expression contains `\(...\)' inside a repetition operator such as `*' or `+', and you ask about the range that was matched using `match-beginning' and `match-end', the range you get corresponds to the *last* repetition *only*. In Emacs 18, you would get a range corresponding to all the repetitions. If you want to get a range corresponding to all the repetitions, put a `\(...\)' grouping *outside* the repetition operator. This is the syntax that corresponds logically to the desired result, and it works the same in Emacs 18 and Emacs 19. (This change actually took place earlier, but we didn't know about it and thus didn't document it.) Changes in version 19.14. * To modify read-only text, bind the variable `inhibit-read-only' to a non-nil value. If the value is t, then all reasons that might make text read-only are inhibited (including `read-only' text properties). If the value is a list, then a `read-only' property is inhibited if it is `memq' in the list. * If you call `get-buffer-window' passing t as its second argument, it will only search for windows on visible frames. Previously, passing t as the secord argument caused `get-buffer-window' to search all frames, visible or not. * If you call `other-buffer' with a nil or omitted second argument, it will ignore buffers displayed windows on any visible frame, not just the selected frame. * You can specify a window or a frame for C-x # to use when selects a server buffer. Set the variable server-window to the window or frame that you want. * The command M-( now inserts spaces outside the open-parentheses in some cases--depending on the syntax classes of the surrounding characters. If the variable `parens-dont-require-spaces' is non-nil, it inhibits insertion of these spaces. * The GUD package now supports the debugger known as xdb on HP/UX systems. Use M-x xdb. The variable `gud-xdb-directories' lets you specify a list of directories to search for source code. * If you are using the mailabbrev package, you should note that its function for defining an alias is now called `define-mail-abbrev'. This package no longer contains a definition for `define-mail-alias'; that name is used only in mailaliases. * Inserted characters now inherit the properties of the text before them, by default, rather than those of the following text. * The function `insert-file-contents' now takes optional arguments BEG and END that specify which part of the file to insert. BEG defaults to 0 (the beginning of the file), and END defaults to the end of the file. If you specify BEG or END, then the argument VISIT must be nil. Changes in version 19.13. * Magic file names can now handle the `load' operation. * Bibtex mode now sets up special entries in the menu bar. * The incremental search commands C-w and C-y, which copy text from the buffer into the search string, now convert it to lower case if you are in a case-insensitive search. This is to avoid making the search a case-sensitive one. * GNUS now knows your time zone automatically if Emacs does. * Hide-ifdef mode no longer defines keys of the form C-c LETTER, since those keys are reserved for users. Those commands have been moved to C-c M-LETTER. We may move them again for greater consistency with other modes. Changes in version 19.12. * You can now make many of the sort commands ignore case by setting `sort-fold-case' to a non-nil value. Changes in version 19.11. * Supercite is installed. * `write-file-hooks' functions that return non-nil are responsible for making a backup file if you want that to be done. To do so, execute the following code: (or buffer-backed-up (backup-buffer)) You might wish to save the file modes value returned by `backup-buffer' and use that to set the mode bits of the file that you write. This is what `basic-save-buffer' does when it writes a file in the usual way. (This is not actually new, but wasn't documented before.) Changes in version 19.10. * The command `repeat-complex-command' is now on C-x ESC ESC. It used to be bound to C-x ESC. The reason for this change is to make function keys work after C-x. * The variable `highlight-nonselected-windows' now controls whether the region is highlighted in windows other than the selected window (in Transient Mark mode only, of course, and currently only when using X). Changes in version 19.8. * It is now simpler to tell Emacs to display accented characters under X windows. M-x standard-display-european toggles the display of buffer text according to the ISO Latin-1 standard. With a prefix argument, this command enables European character display iff the argument is positive. * The `-i' command-line argument tells Emacs to use a picture of the GNU gnu as its icon, instead of letting the window manager choose an icon for it. This option used to insert a file into the current buffer; use `-insert' to do that now. * The `configure' script now supports `--prefix' and `--exec-prefix' options. The `--prefix=PREFIXDIR' option specifies where the installation process should put emacs and its data files. This defaults to `/usr/local'. - Emacs (and the other utilities users run) go in PREFIXDIR/bin (unless the `--exec-prefix' option says otherwise). - The architecture-independent files go in PREFIXDIR/lib/emacs/VERSION (where VERSION is the version number of Emacs, like `19.7'). - The architecture-dependent files go in PREFIXDIR/lib/emacs/VERSION/CONFIGURATION (where CONFIGURATION is the configuration name, like mips-dec-ultrix4.2), unless the `--exec-prefix' option says otherwise. The `--exec-prefix=EXECDIR' option allows you to specify a separate portion of the directory tree for installing architecture-specific files, like executables and utility programs. If specified, - Emacs (and the other utilities users run) go in EXECDIR/bin, and - The architecture-dependent files go in EXECDIR/lib/emacs/VERSION/CONFIGURATION. EXECDIR/bin should be a directory that is normally in users' PATHs. * When running under X Windows, the new lisp function `x-list-fonts' allows code to find out which fonts are available from the X server. The first argument PATTERN is a string, perhaps with wildcard characters; the * character matches any substring, and the ? character matches any single character. PATTERN is case-insensitive. If the optional arguments FACE and FRAME are specified, then `x-list-fonts' returns only fonts the same size as FACE on FRAME. Changes in version 19. * When you kill buffers, Emacs now returns memory to the operating system, thus reducing the size of the Emacs process. All the space that you free up by killing buffers can now be reused for other buffers no matter what their sizes, or reused by other processes if Emacs doesn't need it. * Emacs now does garbage collection and auto saving while it is waiting for input, which often avoids the need to do these things while you are typing. The variable `auto-save-timeout' says how many seconds Emacs should wait, after you stop typing, before it does an auto save and a garbage collection. * If auto saving detects that a buffer has shrunk greatly, it refrains from auto saving that buffer and displays a warning. Now it also turns off Auto Save mode in that buffer, so that you won't get the same warning again. If you reenable Auto Save mode in that buffer, Emacs will start saving it again with no further warnings. * A new minor mode called Line Number mode displays the current line number in the mode line, updating it as necessary when you move point. However, if the buffer is very large (larger than the value of `line-number-display-limit'), then the line number doesn't appear. This is because computing the line number can be painfully slow if the buffer is very large. * You can quit while Emacs is waiting to read or write files. * The arrow keys now have default bindings to move in the appropriate directions. * You can suppress next-line's habit of inserting a newline when called at the end of a buffer by setting next-line-add-newlines to nil (it defaults to t). * You can now get back recent minibuffer inputs conveniently. While in the minibuffer, type M-p to fetch the next earlier minibuffer input, and use M-n to fetch the next later input. There are also commands to search forward or backward through the history for history elements that match a regular expression. M-r searches older elements in the history, while M-s searches newer elements. By special dispensation, these commands can always use the minibuffer to read their arguments even though you are already in the minibuffer when you issue them. The history feature is available for all uses of the minibuffer, but there are separate history lists for different kinds of input. For example, there is a list for file names, used by all the commands that read file names. There is a list for arguments of commands like `query-replace'. There are also very specific history lists, such as the one that `compile' uses for compilation commands. * You can now display text in a mixture of fonts and colors, using the "face" feature, together with the overlay and text property features. See the Emacs Lisp manual for details. The Emacs Users Manual describes how to change the colors and font of standard predefined faces. * You can refer to files on other machines using special file name syntax: /HOST:FILENAME /USER@HOST:FILENAME When you do this, Emacs uses the FTP program to read and write files on the specified host. It logs in through FTP using your user name or the name USER. It may ask you for a password from time to time; this is used for logging in on HOST. * Some C-x key bindings have been moved onto new prefix keys. C-x r is a prefix for registers and rectangles. C-x n is a prefix for narrowing. C-x a is a prefix for abbrev commands. C-x r C-SPC C-x r SPC point-to-register (Was C-x /) C-x r j jump-to-register (Was C-x j) C-x r s copy-to-register (Was C-x x) C-x r i insert-register (Was C-x g) C-x r r copy-rectangle-to-register (Was C-x r) C-x r k kill-rectangle C-x r y yank-rectangle C-x r o open-rectangle C-x r f frame-configuration-to-register (This saves the state of all windows in all frames.) C-x r w window-configuration-to-register (This saves the state of all windows in the selected frame.) (Use C-x r j to restore a configuration saved with C-x r f or C-x r w.) C-x n n narrow-to-region (Was C-x n) C-x n p narrow-to-page (Was C-x p) C-x n w widen (Was C-x w) C-x a l add-mode-abbrev (Was C-x C-a) C-x a g add-global-abbrev (Was C-x +) C-x a i l inverse-add-mode-abbrev (Was C-x C-h) C-x a i g inverse-add-global-abbrev (Was C-x -) C-x a e expand-abbrev (Was C-x ') (The old key bindings C-x /, C-x j, C-x x and C-x g have not yet been removed.) * You can put a file name in a register to be able to visit the file quickly. Do this: (set-register ?CHAR '(file . NAME)) where NAME is the file name as a string. Then C-x r j CHAR finds that file. This is useful for files that you need to visit frequently, but that you don't want to keep in buffers all the time. * The keys M-g (fill-region) and C-x a (append-to-buffer) have been eliminated. * The new command `string-rectangle' inserts a specified string on each line of the region-rectangle. * C-x 4 r is now `find-file-read-only-other-window'. * C-x 4 C-o is now `display-buffer', which displays a specified buffer in another window without selecting it. * Picture mode has been substantially improved. The picture editing commands now arrange for automatic horizontal scrolling to keep point visible when editing a wide buffer with truncate-lines on. Picture-mode initialization now does a better job of rebinding standard commands; it finds not just their normal keybindings, but any function keys attached to them. * If you enable Transient Mark mode, then the mark becomes "inactive" after every command that modifies the buffer. While the mark is active, the region is highlighted (under X, at least). Most commands that use the mark give an error if the mark is inactive, but you can use C-x C-x to make it active again. This feature is also sometimes known as "Zmacs mode". * Outline mode is now available as a minor mode. This minor mode can combine with any major mode; it substitutes the C-c commands of Outline mode for those of the major mode. Use M-x outline-minor-mode to enable and disable the new mode. M-x outline-mode is unchanged; it still switches to Outline mode as a major mode. * The default setting of `version-control' comes from the environment variable VERSION_CONTROL. * The user option for controlling whether files can set local variables is now called `enable-local-variables'. A value of t means local-variables lists are obeyed; nil means they are ignored; anything else means query the user. The user option for controlling use of the `eval' local variable is now called is `enable-local-eval'; its values are interpreted like those of `enable-local-variables'. * X Window System changes: C-x 5 C-f and C-x 5 b switch to a specified file or buffer in a new frame. Likewise, C-x 5 m starts outgoing mail in another frame, and C-x 5 . finds a tag in another frame. When you are using X, C-z now iconifies the selected frame. Emacs can now exchange text with other X applications. Killing or copying text in Emacs now makes that text available for pasting into other X applications. The Emacs yanking commands now insert the latest selection set by other applications, and add the text to the kill ring. The Emacs commands for selecting and inserting text with the mouse now use the kill ring in the same way the keyboard killing and yanking commands do. The option to specify the title for the initial frame is now `-name NAME'. There is currently no way to specify an icon title; perhaps we will add one in the future. * Undoing a deletion now puts point back where it was before the deletion. * The variables that control how much undo information to save have been renamed to `undo-limit' and `undo-strong-limit'. They used to be called `undo-threshold' and `undo-high-threshold'. * You can now use kill commands in read-only buffers. They don't actually change the buffer, and Emacs will beep and warn you that the buffer is read-only, but they do copy the text you tried to kill into the kill ring, so you can yank it into other buffers. * C-o inserts the fill-prefix on the newly created line. The command M-^ deletes the prefix (if it occurs) after the newline that it deletes. * C-M-l now runs the command `reposition-window'. It scrolls the window heuristically in a way designed to get useful information onto the screen. * C-M-r is now reverse incremental regexp search. * M-z now kills through the target character. In version 18, it killed up to but not including the target character. * M-! now runs the specified shell command asynchronously if it ends in `&' (just as the shell does). * C-h C-f and C-h C-k are new help commands that display the Info node for a given Emacs function name or key sequence, respectively. * The C-h p command system lets you find Emacs Lisp packages by topic keywords. Here is a partial list of package categories: abbrev abbreviation handling, typing shortcuts, macros bib code related to the bib bibliography processor c C and C++ language support calendar calendar and time management support comm communications, networking, remote access to files docs support for Emacs documentation emulations emulations of other editors extensions Emacs Lisp language extensions games games, jokes and amusements hardware support for interfacing with exotic hardware help support for on-line help systems i14n internationalization and alternate character-set support internal code for Emacs internals, build process, defaults languages specialized modes for editing programming languages lisp Lisp support, including Emacs Lisp local code local to your site maint maintenance aids for the Emacs development group mail modes for electronic-mail handling news support for netnews reading and posting processes process, subshell, compilation, and job control support terminals support for terminal types tex code related to the TeX formatter tools programming tools unix front-ends/assistants for, or emulators of, UNIX features vms support code for vms wp word processing More will be added soon. * The command to split a window into two side-by-side windows is now C-x 3. It was C-x 5. * M-. (find-tag) no longer has any effect on what M-, will do subsequently. You can no longer use M-, to find the next similar tag; you must use M-. with a prefix argument, instead. The motive for this change is so that you can more reliably use M-, to resume a suspended `tags-search' or `tags-query-replace'. * C-x s (`save-some-buffers') now gives you more options when it asks whether to save a particular buffer. In addition to `y' or `n', you can answer `!' to save all the remaining buffers, `.' to save this buffer but not save any others, ESC to stop saving and exit the command, and C-h to get help. These options are analogous to those of `query-replace'. * M-x make-symbolic-link does not expand its first argument. This lets you make a link with a target that is a relative file name. * M-x add-change-log-entry and C-x 4 a now automatically insert the name of the file and often the name of the function that you changed. They also handle grouping of entries. There is now a special major mode for editing ChangeLog files. It makes filling work conveniently. Each bunch of grouped entries is one paragraph, and each collection of entries from one person on one day is considered a page. * The `comment-region' command adds comment delimiters to the lines that start in the region, thus commenting them out. With a negative argument, it deletes comment delimiters from the lines in the region--this cancels the effect of `comment-region' without an argument. With a positive argument, `comment-region' adds comment delimiters but duplicates the last character of the comment start sequence as many times as the argument specifies. This is a way of calling attention to the comment. In Lisp, you should use an argument at least two, because the indentation convention for single semicolon comments does not leave them at the beginning of a line. * If `split-window-keep-point' is non-nil, C-x 2 tries to avoid shifting any text on the screen by putting point in whichever window happens to contain the screen line the cursor is already on. The default is that `split-window-keep-point' is non-nil on slow terminals. * M-x super-apropos is like M-x apropos except that it searches both Lisp symbol names and documentation strings for matches. It describes every symbol that has a match in either the symbol's name or its documentation. Both M-x apropos and M-x super-apropos take an optional second argument DO-ALL which controls the more expensive part of the job. This includes looking up and printing the key bindings of all commands. It also includes checking documentation strings in super-apropos. DO-ALL is nil by default; use a prefix arg to make it non-nil. * M-x revert-buffer no longer offers to revert from a recent auto-save file unless you give it a prefix argument. Otherwise it always reverts from the real file regardless of whether there has been an auto-save since thenm. (Reverting from the auto-save file is no longer very useful now that the undo capacity is larger.) * M-x recover-file no longer turns off Auto Save mode when it reads the last Auto Save file. * M-x rename-buffer, if you give it a prefix argument, avoids errors by modifying the new name to make it unique. * M-x rename-uniquely renames the current buffer to a similar name with a numeric suffix added to make it both different and unique. One use of this command is for creating multiple shell buffers. If you rename your shell buffer, and then do M-x shell again, it makes a new shell buffer. This method is also good for mail buffers, compilation buffers, and any Emacs feature which creates a special buffer with a particular name. * M-x compare-windows with a prefix argument ignores changes in whitespace. If `compare-ignore-case' is non-nil, then differences in case are also ignored. * `backward-paragraph' is now bound to M-{ by default, and `forward-paragraph' to M-}. Originally, these commands were bound to M-[ and M-], but they were running into conflicts with the use of function keys. On many terminals, function keys send a sequence beginning ESC-[, so many users have defined this as a prefix key. * C-x C-u (upcase-region) and C-x C-l (downcase-region) are now disabled by default; these commands seem to be often hit by accident, and can be quite destructive if their effects are not noticed immediately. * The function `erase-buffer' is now interactive, but disabled by default. * When visiting a new file, Emacs attempts to abbreviate the file's path using the symlinks listed in `directory-abbrev-alist'. * When you visit the same file in under two names that translate into the same name once symbolic links are handled, Emacs warns you that you have two buffers for the same file. * If you wish to avoid visiting the same file in two buffers under different names, set the variable `find-file-existing-other-name' non-nil. Then `find-file' uses the existing buffer visiting the file, no matter which of the file's names you specify. * If you set `find-file-visit-truename' non-nil, then the file name recorded for a buffer is the file's truename (in which all symbolic links have been removed), rather than the name you specify. Setting `find-file-visit-truename' also implies the effect of `find-file-existing-other-name'. * C-x C-v now inserts the entire current file name in the minibuffer. This is convenient if you made a small mistake in typing it. Point goes after the last slash, before the last file name component, so if you want to replace it entirely, you can use C-k right away to delete it. * Commands such as C-M-f in Lisp mode now ignore parentheses within comments. * C-x q now uses ESC to terminate all iterations of the keyboard macro, rather than C-d as before. * Use the command `setenv' to set an individual environment variable for Emacs subprocesses. Specify a variable name and a value, both as strings. This command applies only to subprocesses yet to be started. * Use `rot13-other-window' to examine a buffer with rot13. This command does not change the text in the buffer. Instead, it creates a window with a funny display table that applies the code when displaying the text. * The command `M-x version' now prints the current Emacs version; The `version' command is an alias for the `emacs-version' command. * More complex changes in existing packages. ** `fill-nonuniform-paragraphs' is a new command, much like `fill-individual-paragraphs' except that only separator lines separate paragraphs. Since this means that the lines of one paragraph may have different amounts of indentation, the fill prefix used is the smallest amount of indentation of any of the lines of the paragraph. ** Filling is now partially controlled by a new minor mode, Adaptive Fill mode. When this mode is enabled (and it is enabled by default), if you use M-x fill-region-as-paragraph on an indented paragraph and you don't have a fill prefix, it uses the indentation of the second line of the paragraph as the fill prefix. Adaptive Fill mode doesn't have much effect on M-q in most major modes, because an indented line will probably count as a paragraph starter and thus each line of an indented paragraph will be considered a paragraph of its own. ** M-q in C mode now runs `c-fill-paragraph', which is designed for filling C comments. (We assume you don't want to fill the code in a C program.) ** M-$ now runs the Ispell program instead of the Unix spell program. M-$ starts an Ispell process the first time you use it. But the process stays alive, so that subsequent uses of M-$ run very fast. If you want to get rid of the process, use M-x kill-ispell. To check the entire current buffer, use M-x ispell-buffer. Use M-x ispell-region to check just the current region. Ispell commands often involve interactive replacement of words. You can interrupt the interactive replacement with C-g. You can restart it again afterward with C-u M-$. During interactive replacement, you can type the following characters: a Accept this word this time. DIGIT Replace the word (this time) with one of the displayed near-misses. The digit you use says which near-miss to use. i Insert this word in your private dictionary so that Ispell will consider it correct it from now on. r Replace the word this time with a string typed by you. When the Ispell process starts, it reads your private dictionary which is the file `~/ispell.words'. If you "insert" words with the `i' command, these words are added to that file, but not right away--only at the end of the interactive replacement process. Use M-x reload-ispell to reload your private dictionary from `~/ispell.words' if you edit it outside of Ispell. * Changes in existing modes. ** gdb-mode has been replaced by gud-mode. The package gud.el (Grand Unified Debugger) replaces gdb.el in Emacs 19. It provides a gdb.el-like interface to any of three debuggers; gdb itself, the sdb debugger supported on some Unix systems, or the dbx debugger on Berkeley systems. You start it up with one of the commands M-x gdb, M-x sdb, or M-x dbx. Each entry point finishes by executing a hook; gdb-mode-hook, sdb-mode-hook or dbx-mode-hook respectively. These bindings have changed: C-x C-a > gud-down (was M-d) C-x C-a < gud-up (was M-u) C-x C-a C-r gud-cont (was M-c) C-x C-a C-n gud-next (was M-n) C-x C-a C-s gud-step (was M-s) C-x C-a C-i gud-stepi (was M-i) C-x C-a C-l gud-recenter (was C-l) C-d comint-delchar-or-maybe-eof (was C-c C-d) These bindings have been removed: C-c C-r (was comint-show-output; now gud-cont) Since GUD mode uses comint, it uses comint's input history commands, superseding C-c C-y (copy-last-shell-input): M-p comint-next-input M-n comint-previous-input M-r comint-previous-similar-input M-s comint-next-similar-input M-C-r comint-previous-input-matching The C-x C-a bindings are also active in source files. ** The old TeX mode bindings of M-{ and M-} have been moved to C-c { and C-c }. (These commands are `up-list' and `tex-insert-braces'; they are the TeX equivalents of M-( and M-).) This is because M-{ and M-} are now globally defined commands. ** Changes in Mail mode. `%' is now a word-separator character in Mail mode. `mail-signature', if non-nil, tells M-x mail to insert your `.signature' file automatically. If you don't want your signature in a particular message, just delete it before you send the message. You can specify the text to insert at the beginning of each line when you use C-c C-y to yank the message you are replying to. Set `mail-yank-prefix' to the desired string. A value of `nil' (the default) means to use indentation, as in Emacs 18. If you use just C-u as the prefix argument to C-c C-y, then it does not insert anything at the beginning of the lines, regardless of the value of `mail-yank-prefix'. If you like, you can expand mail aliases as abbrevs, as soon as you type them in. To enable this feature, execute the following: (add-hook 'mail-setup-hook 'mail-abbrevs-setup) This can go in your .emacs file. Word abbrevs don't expand unless you insert a word-separator character afterward. Any mail aliases that you didn't expand at insertion time are expanded subsequently when you send the message. ** Changes in Rmail. Rmail by default gets new mail only from the system inbox file, not from `~/mbox'. In Rmail, you can retry sending a message that failed by typing `M-m' on the failure message. By contrast, another new command M-x rmail-resend is used for forwarding a message and marking it as "resent from" you with header fields "Resent-From:" and "Resent-To:". `e' is now the command to edit a message. To expunge, type `x'. We know this will surprise people some of the time, but the surprise will not be disastrous--if you type `e' meaning to expunge, just turn off editing with C-c C-c and then type `x'. Another new Rmail command is `<', which moves to the first message. This is for symmetry with `>'. Use the `b' command to bury the Rmail buffer and its summary buffer, if any, removing both of them from display on the screen. The variable `rmail-output-file-alist' now controls the default for the file to output a message to. In the Rmail summary buffer, all cursor motion commands select the message you move to. It's really neat when you use incremental search. You can now issue most Rmail commands from an Rmail summary buffer. The commands do the same thing in that buffer that they do in the Rmail buffer. They apply to the message that is selected in the Rmail buffer, which is always the one described by the current summary line. Conversely, motion and deletion commands in the Rmail buffer also update the summary buffer. If you set the variable `rmail-redisplay-summary' to a non-nil value, then they bring the summary buffer (if one exists) back onto the screen. C-M-t is a new command to make a summary by topic. It uses regexp matching against just the subjects of the messages to decide which messages to show in the summary. You can easily convert an Rmail file to system mailbox format with the command `unrmail'. This command reads two arguments, the name of the Rmail file to convert, and the name of the new mailbox file. (This command does not change the Rmail file itself.) Rmail now handles Content Length fields in messages. ** `mail-extract-address-components' unpacks mail addresses. It takes an address as a string (the contents of the From field, for example) and returns a list of the form (FULL-NAME CANONICAL-ADDRESS). ** Changes in C mode and C-related commands. *** M-x c-up-conditional In C mode, `c-up-conditional' moves back to the containing preprocessor conditional, setting the mark where point was previously. A prefix argument acts as a repeat count. With a negative argument, this command moves forward to the end of the containing preprocessor conditional. When going backwards, `#elif' acts like `#else' followed by `#if'. When going forwards, `#elif' is ignored. *** In C mode, M-a and M-e are now defined as `c-beginning-of-statement' and `c-end-of-statement'. *** In C mode, M-x c-backslash-region is a new command to insert or align `\' characters at the ends of the lines of the region, except for the last such line. This is useful after writing or editing a C macro definition. If a line already ends in `\', this command adjusts the amount of whitespace before it. Otherwise, it inserts a new `\'. ** New features in info. When Info looks for an Info file, it searches the directories in `Info-directory-list'. This makes it easy to install the Info files that come with various packages. You can specify the path with the environment variable INFOPATH. There are new commands in Info mode. `]' now moves forward a node, going up and down levels as needed. `[' is similar but moves backward. These two commands try to traverse the entire Info tree, node by node. They are the equivalent of reading a printed manual sequentially. `<' moves to the top node of the current Info file. `>' moves to the last node of the file. SPC scrolls through the current node; at the end, it advances to the next node in depth-first order (like `]'). DEL scrolls backwards in the current node; at the end, it moves to the previous node in depth-first order (like `['). After a menu select, the info `up' command now restores point in the menu. The combination of this and the previous two changes means that repeated SPC keystrokes do the right (depth-first traverse forward) thing. `i STRING RET' moves to the node associated with STRING in the index or indices of this manual. If there is more than one match for STRING, the `i' command finds the first match. `,' finds the next match for the string in the previous `i' command If you click the middle mouse button near a cross-reference, menu item or node pointer while in Info, you will go to the node which is referenced. ** Changes in M-x compile. You can repeat any previous compilation command conveniently using the minibuffer history commands, while in the minibuffer entering the compilation command. While a compilation is going on, the string `Compiling' appears in the mode line. When this string disappears, that tells you the compilation is finished. The buffer of compiler messages is in Compilation mode. This mode provides the keys SPC and DEL to scroll by screenfuls, and M-n and M-p to move to the next or previous error message. You can also use C-c C-c on any error message to find the corresponding source code. Emacs 19 has a more general parser for compiler messages. For example, it can understand messages from lint, and from certain C compilers whose error message format is unusual. Also, it only parses until it sees the error message you want; you never have to wait a long time to see the first error, no matter how big the buffer is. ** M-x diff and M-x diff-backup. This new command compares two files, displaying the differences in an Emacs buffer. The options for the `diff' program come from the variable `diff-switches', whose value should be a string. The buffer of differences has Compilation mode as its major mode, so you can use C-x ` to visit successive changed locations in the two source files, or you can move to a particular hunk of changes and type C-c C-c to move to the corresponding source. You can also use the other special commands of Compilation mode: SPC and DEL for scrolling, and M-n and M-p for cursor motion. M-x diff-backup compares a file with its most recent backup. If you specify the name of a backup file, `diff-backup' compares it with the source file that it is a backup of. ** The View commands (such as M-x view-buffer and M-x view-file) no longer use recursive edits; instead, they switch temporarily to a different major mode (View mode) specifically designed for moving around through a buffer without editing it. ** Changes in incremental search. *** The character to terminate an incremental search is now RET. This is for compatibility with the way most other arguments are read. To search for a newline in an incremental search, type LFD (also known as C-j). *** Incremental search now maintains a ring of previous search strings. Use M-p and M-n to move through the ring to pick a search string to reuse. These commands leave the selected search ring element in the minibuffer, where you can edit it. Type C-s or C-r to finish editing and search for the chosen string. *** If you type an upper case letter in incremental search, that turns off case-folding, so that you get a case-sensitive search. *** If you type a space during regexp incremental search, it matches any sequence of whitespace characters. If you want to match just a space, type C-q SPC. *** Incremental search is now implemented as a major mode. When you type C-s, it switches temporarily to a different keymap which defines each key to do what it ought to do for incremental search. This has next to no effect on the user-visible behavior of searching, but makes it easier to customize that behavior. Emacs 19 eliminates the old variables `search-...-char' that used to be the way to specify the characters to use for various special purposes in incremental search. Instead, you can define the meaning of a character in incremental search by modifying `isearch-mode-map'. ** New commands in Buffer Menu mode. The command C-o now displays the current line's buffer in another window but does not select it. This is like the existing command `o' which selects the current line's buffer in another window. The command % toggles the read-only flag of the current line's buffer. The way to switch to a set of several buffers, including those marked with m, is now v. The q command simply quits, replacing the buffer menu buffer with the buffer that was displayed previously. * New major modes and packages. ** The news reader GNUS is now installed. ** There is a new interface for version control systems, called VC. It works with both RCS and SCCS; in fact, you don't really have to know which one of them is being used, because it automatically deals with either one. Most of the time, the only command you have to know about is C-x C-q. This command normally toggles the read-only flag of the current buffer. If the buffer is visiting a file that is maintained with a version control system, the command still toggles read-only, but does so by checking the file in or checking it out. When you check a file in, VC asks you for a log entry by popping up a buffer. Edit the entry there, then type C-c C-c when it is ready. That's when the actual checkin happens. If you change your mind about the checkin, simply switch buffers and don't ever go back to the log buffer. To start using version control for a file, use the command C-x v v. This works like C-x C-q (performing the next logical version-control operation needed to change the file's writeability) but it will also perform initial checkin on an unregistered file. By default, VC uses RCS if RCS is installed on your machine; otherwise, SCCS. If you want to make the choice explicitly, you can do it by setting `vc-default-back-end' to the symbol `RCS' or the symbol `SCCS'. You can tell when a file you visit is maintained with version control because either `RCS' or `SCCS' appears in the mode line. ** A new Calendar mode has been added, the work of Edward M. Reingold. The mode can display the Gregorian calendar and a variety of other calendars at any date, and interacts with a diary facility similar to the UNIX `calendar' utility. ** There is a new major mode for editing binary files: Hexl mode. To use it, use M-x hexl-find-file instead of C-x C-f to visit the file. This command converts the file's contents to hexadecimal and lets you edit the translation. When you save the file, it is converted automatically back to binary. You can also use M-x hexl-mode to translate an existing buffer into hex. Do this if you have already visited a binary file. Hexl mode has a few other commands: C-M-d insert a byte with a code typed in decimal. C-M-o insert a byte with a code typed in octal. C-M-x insert a byte with a code typed in hex. C-x [ move to the beginning of a 1k-byte "page". C-x ] move to the end of a 1k-byte "page". M-g go to an address specified in hex. M-j go to an address specified in decimal. C-c C-c leave hexl mode and go back to the previous major mode. ** Miscellaneous new major modes include Awk mode, Icon mode, Makefile mode, Perl mode and SGML mode. ** Edebug, a new source-level debugger for Emacs Lisp functions. To use Edebug, use the command M-x edebug-defun to "evaluate" a function definition in an Emacs Lisp file. We put "evaluate" in quotation marks because it doesn't just evaluate the function, it also inserts additional information to support source-level debugging. You must also do (setq debugger 'edebug-debug) to cause errors and single-stepping to use Edebug instead of the usual Emacs Lisp debugger. For more information, see the Edebug manual, which should be included in the Emacs distribution. ** C++ mode is like C mode, except that it understands C++ comment syntax and certain other differences between C and C++. It also has a command `fill-c++-comment' which fills a paragraph made of comment lines. The command `comment-region' is useful in C++ mode for commenting out several consecutive lines, or removing the commenting out of such lines. ** A new package for merging two variants of the same text. It's not unusual for programmers to get their signals crossed and modify the same program in two different directions. Then somebody has to merge the two versions. The command `emerge-files' makes this easier. `emerge-files' reads two file names and compares them. Then it displays three buffers: one for each file, and one for the differences. If the original version of the file is available, you can make things even easier using `emerge-files-with-ancestor'. It reads three file names--variant 1, variant 2, and the common ancestor--and uses diff3 to compare them. You control the merging interactively. The main loop of Emerge consists of showing you one set of differences, asking you what to do about them, and doing it. You have a choice of two modes for giving directions to Emerge: "fast" mode and "edit" mode. In Fast mode, Emerge commands are single characters, and ordinary Emacs commands are disabled. This makes Emerge operations fast, but prevents you from doing more than selecting the A or the B version of differences. In Edit mode, all emerge commands use the C-c prefix, and the usual Emacs commands are available. This allows editing the merge buffer, but slows down Emerge operations. Edit and fast modes are indicated by `F' and `E' in the minor modes in the mode line. The Emerge commands are: p go to the previous difference n go to the next difference a select the A version of this difference b select the B version of this difference j go to a particular difference (prefix argument specifies which difference) (0j suppresses display of the flags) q quit - finish the merge* f go into fast mode e go into edit mode l recenter (C-l) all three windows* - and 0 through 9 prefix numeric arguments d a select the A version as the default from here down in the merge buffer* d b select the B version as the default from here down in the merge buffer* c a copy the A version of the difference into the kill ring c b copy the B version of the difference into the kill ring i a insert the A version of the difference at the point i b insert the B version of the difference at the point m put the point and mark around the difference region ^ scroll-down (like M-v) the three windows* v scroll-up (like C-v) the three windows* < scroll-left (like C-x <) the three windows* > scroll-right (like C-x >) the three windows* | reset horizontal scroll on the three windows* x 1 shrink the merge window to one line (use C-u l to restore it to full size) x a find the difference containing a location in the A buffer* x b find the difference containing a location in the B buffer* x c combine the two versions of this difference* x C combine the two versions of this difference, using a register's value as the template* x d find the difference containing a location in the merge buffer* x f show the files/buffers Emerge is operating on in Help window (use C-u l to restore windows) x j join this difference with the following one (C-u x j joins this difference with the previous one) x l show line numbers of points in A, B, and merge buffers x m change major mode of merge buffer* x s split this difference into two differences (first position the point in all three buffers to the places to split the difference) x t trim identical lines off top and bottom of difference (such lines occur when the A and B versions are identical but differ from the ancestor version) x x set the template for the x c command* Normally, the merged output goes back in the first file specified. If you use a prefix argument, Emerge reads another file name to use for the output file. Once Emerge has prepared the buffer of differences, it runs the hooks in `emerge-startup-hooks'. ** Asm mode is a new major mode for editing files of assembler code. It defines these commands: TAB tab-to-tab-stop. LFD Insert a newline and then indent using tab-to-tab-stop. : Insert a colon and then remove the indentation from before the label preceding colon. Then tab-to-tab-stop. ; Insert or align a comment. ** Two-column mode lets you conveniently edit two side-by-side columns of text. It works using two side-by-side windows, each showing its own buffer. Here are three ways to enter two-column mode: C-x 6 2 makes the current buffer into the left-hand buffer. In the right-hand window it puts a buffer whose name is based on the current buffer's name. C-x 6 b BUFFER RET makes the current buffer into the left-hand buffer, and uses buffer BUFFER as the right-hand buffer. C-x 6 s splits the current buffer, which contains two-column text, into two side-by-side buffers. The old current buffer becomes the left-hand buffer, but the text in the right column is moved into the right-hand buffer. The current column specifies the split point. Splitting starts with the current line and continues to the end of the buffer. C-x 6 s takes a prefix argument which specifies how many characters before point constitute the column separator. (The default argument is 1, as usual, so by default the column separator is the character before point.) Lines that don't have the column separator at the proper place remain unsplit; they stay in the left-hand buffer, and the right-hand buffer gets an empty line to correspond. You can scroll both buffers together using C-x 6 SPC (scroll up), C-x 6 DEL (scroll down), and C-x 6 RET (scroll up one line). C-x 6 C-l recenters both buffers together. If you want to make a line which will span both columns, put it in the left-hand buffer, with an empty line in the corresponding place in the right-hand buffer. When you have edited both buffers as you wish, merge them with C-x 6 1. This copies the text from the right-hand buffer as a second column in the other buffer. To go back to two-column editing, use C-x 6 s. Use C-x 6 d to disassociate the two buffers, leaving each as it stands. (If the other buffer, the one that was not current when you type C-x 6 d, is empty, C-x 6 d kills it.) ** You can supply command arguments such as files to visit to an Emacs that is already running. To do this, you must do this in your .emacs file: (add-hook 'suspend-hook 'resume-suspend-hook) Also you must use the shellscript emacs.csh or emacs.sh, found in the etc subdirectory. ** Shell mode has been completely replaced. The basic idea is the same, but there are new commands available in this mode. TAB now completes the file name before point in the shell buffer. To get a list of all possible completions, type M-?. There is a new convenient history mechanism for repeating previous commands. Use the command M-p to recall the last command; it copies the text of that command to the place where you are editing. If you repeat M-p, it replaces the copied command with the previous command. M-n is similar but goes in the opposite direction towards the present. When you find the command you wanted, you can edit it, or just resubmit it by typing RET. You can also use M-r and M-s to search for (respectively) earlier or later inputs starting with a given string. First type the string, then type M-r to yank a previous input from the history which starts with that string. You can repeat M-r to find successively earlier inputs starting with the same string. You can start moving in the opposite direction (toward more recent inputs) by typing M-s instead of M-r. As long as you don't use any commands except M-r and M-s, they keep using the same string that you had entered initially. C-c C-o kills the last batch of output from a shell command. This is useful if a shell command spews out lots of output that just gets in the way. C-c C-r scrolls to display the beginning of the last batch of output at the top of the window; it also moves the cursor there. C-a on a line that starts with a shell prompt moves to the end of the prompt, not to the very beginning of the line. C-d typed at the end of the shell buffer sends EOF to the subshell. At any other position in the buffer, it deletes a character as usual. If Emacs gets confused while trying to track changes in the shell's current directory, type M-x dirs to re-synchronize. M-x send-invisible reads a line of text without echoing it, and sends it to the shell. If you accidentally suspend your process, use M-x comint-continue-subjob to continue it. ** There is now a convenient way to enable flow control on terminals where you can't win without it. Suppose you want to do this on VT-100 and H19 terminals; put the following in your `.emacs' file: (enable-flow-control-on "vt100" "h19") When flow control is enabled, you must type C-\ to get the effect of a C-s, and type C-^ to get the effect of a C-q. The function `enable-flow-control' enables flow control unconditionally. * Changes in Dired Dired has many new features which allow you to do these things: - Rename, copy, or make links to many files at once. - Make distinguishable types of marks for different operations. - Display contents of subdirectories in the same Dired buffer as the parent directory. ** Setting and Clearing Marks There are now two kinds of marker that you can put on a file in Dired: `D' for deletion, and `*' for any other kind of operation. The `x' command deletes only files marked with `D', and most other Dired commands operate only on the files marked with `*'. To mark files with `D' (also called "flagging" the files), you can use `d' as usual. Here are some commands for marking with `*' (and also for unmarking): *** `m' marks the current file with `*', for an operation other than deletion. *** `*' marks all executable files. With a prefix argument, it unmarks all those files. *** `@' marks all symbolic links. With a prefix argument, it unmarks all those files. *** `/' marks all directory files except `.' and `..'. With a prefix argument, it unmarks all those files. *** M-DEL removes a specific or all marks from every file. With an argument, queries for each marked file. Type your help character, usually C-h, at that time for help. *** `c' replaces all marks that use the character OLD with marks that use the character NEW. You can use almost any character as a mark character by means of this command, to distinguish various classes of files. If OLD is ` ', then the command operates on all unmarked files; if NEW is ` ', then the command unmarks the files it acts on. ** Operating on Multiple Files The Dired commands to operate directly on files (rename them, copy them, and so on) have been generalized to work on multiple files. There are also some additional commands in this series. All of these commands use the same convention to decide which files to manipulate: - If you give the command a numeric prefix argument @var{n}, it operates on the next @var{n} files, starting with the current file. - Otherwise, if there are marked files, the commands operate on all the marked files. - Otherwise, the command operates on the current file only. These are the commands: *** `C' copies the specified files. You must specify a directory to copy into, or (if copying a single file) a new name. If `dired-copy-preserve-time' is non-`nil', then copying sets the modification time of the new file to be the same as that of the old file. *** `R' renames the specified files. You must specify a directory to rename into, or (if renaming a single file) a new name. Dired automatically changes the visited file name of buffers associated with renamed files so that they refer to the new names. *** `H' makes hard links to the specified files. You must specify a directory to make the links in, or (if making just one link) the name to give the link. *** `S' makes symbolic links to the specified files. You must specify a directory to make the links in, or (if making just one link) the name to give the link. *** `M' changes the mode of the specified files. This calls the `chmod' program, so you can describe the desired mode change with any argument that `chmod' would handle. *** `G' changes the group of the specified files. *** `O' changes the owner of the specified files. (On normal systems, only the superuser can do this.) The variable `dired-chown-program' specifies the name of the program to use to do the work (different systems put `chown' in different places. *** `Z' compresses or uncompresses the specified files. *** `L' loads the specified Emacs Lisp files. *** `B' byte compiles the specified Emacs Lisp files. *** `P' prints the specified files. It uses the variables `lpr-command' and `lpr-switches' just as `lpr-file' does. ** Shell Commands in Dired `!' reads a shell command string in the minibuffer and runs the shell command on all the specified files. There are two ways of applying a shell command to multiple files: - If you use `*' in the command, then the shell command runs just once, with the list of file names substituted for the `*'. Thus, `! tar cf foo.tar * RET' runs `tar' on the entire list of file names, putting them into one tar file `foo.tar'. The file names are inserted in the order that they appear in the Dired buffer. - If the command string doesn't contain `*', then it runs once for each file, with the file name attached at the end. For example, `! uudecode RET' runs `uudecode' on each file. To run the shell command once for each file but without being limited to putting the file name inserted in the middle, use a shell loop. For example, this shell command would run `uuencode' on each of the specified files, writing the output into a corresponding `.uu' file: for file in *; uuencode $file $file >$file.uu; done The working directory for the shell command is the top level directory of the Dired buffer. ** Regular Expression File Name Substitution *** `% m REGEXP RET' marks all files whose names match the regular expression REGEXP. Only the non-directory part of the file name is used in matching. Use `^' and `$' to anchor matches. Exclude subdirs by hiding them. *** `% d REGEXP RET' flags for deletion all files whose names match the regular expression REGEXP. *** `% R', `% C', `% H', `% S' These four commands rename, copy, make hard links and make soft links, in each case computing the new name by regular expression substitution from the name of the old file. They effectively perform `query-replace-regexp' on the selected file names in the Dired buffer. The commands read two arguments: a regular expression, and a substitution pattern. Each selected file name is matched against the regular expression, and then the part which matched is replaced with the substitution pattern. You can use `\&' and `\DIGIT' in the substitution pattern to refer to all or part of the old file name. If the regular expression matches more than once in a file name, only the first match is replaced. Normally, the replacement process does not consider the directory names; it operates on the file name within the directory. If you specify a prefix argument of zero, then replacement affects entire file name. To apply the command to all files matching the same regexp that you use in the command, mark those files with `% m REGEXP RET', then use the same regular expression in `% R'. To make this easier, `% R' uses as a default the last regular expression specified in a `%' command. ** Dired Case Conversion *** `% u' renames each of the selected files to an upper case name. *** `% l' renames each of the selected files to a lower case name. ** File Comparison with Dired *** `=' compares the current file with another file (the file at the mark), by running the `diff' program. The file at the mark is given to `diff' first. *** `M-=' compares the current file with its backup file. If there are several numerical backups, it uses the most recent one. If this file is a backup, it is compared with its original. The backup file is the first file given to `diff'. ** Subdirectories in Dired You can display more than one directory in one Dired buffer. The simplest way to do this is to specify the options `-lR' for running `ls'. That produces a recursive directory listing showing all subdirectories, all within the same Dired buffer. You can also insert the contents of a particular subdirectory with the `i' command. Use this command on the line that describes a file which is a directory. Inserted subdirectory contents follow the top-level directory of the Dired buffer, just as they do in `ls -lR' output. If the subdirectory's contents are already present in the buffer, the `i' command just moves to it (type `l' to refresh it). It sets the Emacs mark before moving, so C-x C-x takes you back to the old position in the buffer. When you have subdirectories in the Dired buffer, you can use the page motion commands C-x [ and C-x ] to move by entire directories. The following commands move up and down in the tree of directories in one Dired buffer: *** C-M-u Go up to the parent directory's headerline. *** C-M-d Go down in the tree, to the first subdirectory's headerline. *** C-M-n Go to next subdirectory headerline, regardless of level. *** C-M-p Go to previous subdirectory headerline, regardless of level. ** Hiding Subdirectories "Hiding" a subdirectory means to make it invisible, except for its headerline. Files inside a hidden subdirectory are never considered by Dired. For example, the commands to operate on marked files ignore files in hidden directories even if they are marked. *** `$' hides or unhides the current subdirectory and move to next subdirectory. A prefix argument serves as a repeat count. *** `M-$' hides all subdirectories, leaving only their header lines. Or, if at least one subdirectory is currently hidden, it makes everything visible again. You can use this command to get an overview in very deep directory trees or to move quickly to subdirectories far away. ** Editing the Dired Buffer *** `l' updates the specified files in a Dired buffer. This means reading their current status from the file system and changing the buffer to reflect it properly. If you use this command on a subdirectory header line, it updates the contents of the subdirectory. *** `g' updates the entire contents of the Dired buffer. It preserves all marks except for those on files that have vanished. Hidden subdirectories are updated but remain hidden. *** `k' kills all marked lines (not the files). With a prefix argument, it kills that many lines starting with the current line. This command does not delete files; it just deletes text from the Dired buffer. If you kill the line for a file that is a directory, then its contents are also deleted from the buffer. Typing `C-u k' on the header line for a subdirectory is another way to delete a subdirectory from the Dired buffer. ** `find' and Dired. To search for files with names matching a wildcard pattern use `find-name-dired'. Its arguments are DIRECTORY and PATTERN. It selects all the files in DIRECTORY or its subdirectories whose own names match PATTERN. The files thus selected are displayed in a Dired buffer in which the ordinary Dired commands are available. If you want to test the contents of files, rather than their names, use `find-grep-dired'. This command takes two minibuffer arguments, DIRECTORY and REGEXP; it selects all the files in DIRECTORY or its subdirectories that contain a match for REGEXP. It works by running `find' and `grep'. The most general command in this series is `find-dired', which lets you specify any condition that `find' can test. It takes two minibuffer arguments, DIRECTORY and FIND-ARGS; it runs `find' in DIRECTORY with using FIND-ARGS as the arguments to `find' specifying which files to accept. To use this command, you need to know how to use `find'. * New amusements and novelties. ** `M-x mpuz' displays a multiplication puzzle, in which each letter stands for a digit, and you must determine which digit. The puzzles are determined randomly, so they are always different. ** `M-x gomoku' plays the game Gomoku with you. It needs more work. ** `M-x spook' adds a line of randomly chosen keywords to an outgoing mail message. The keywords are chosen from a list of words that suggest you are discussing something subversive. The idea is that the NSA reads all messages that contain keywords suggesting they might be interested, and that adding these lines could help to overload them. I would guess that they have modified their program by now to ignore these lines of keywords; perhaps the program can be updated if some clever hacker can determine what criterion they actually use now. * Installation changes ** The configure script has been provided to help with the installation process. It takes the place of editing the Makefiles and src/config.h, and can often guess the appropriate operating system to use for a particular machine type. See INSTALL for a more detailed description of the steps required for installation. ** If you create a Lisp file named `site-start.el', Emacs loads the file whenever it starts up. ** A new Lisp variable, `data-directory', indicates the directory containing the DOC file, tutorial, copying agreement, and other familiar `etc' files. The value of `data-directory' is a simple string. The default should be set at build time, and the person installing Emacs should place all the data files in this directory. The `help.el' functions that look for docstrings and information files check this variable. All Emacs Lisp packages should also be coded so that they refer to `data-directory' to find data files. ** The PURESIZE definition has been moved from config.h to its own file, puresize.h. Since almost every file of C source in the distribution depends on config.h, but only alloc.c and data.c depend on puresize.h, this means that changing the value of PURESIZE causes only those two files to be recompiled. ** The makefile at the top of the Emacs source tree now supports a `dist' target, which creates a compressed tar file suitable for distribution, using the contents of the source tree. Object files, old file versions, executables, DOC files, and other architecture-specific or easy-to-recreate files are not included in the tar file. For older news, see the file ONEWS. For Lisp changes in Emacs 19, see the file news.texi. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright information: Copyright (C) 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved, thus giving the recipient permission to redistribute in turn. Permission is granted to distribute modified versions of this document, or of portions of it, under the above conditions, provided also that they carry prominent notices stating who last changed them. Local variables: mode: text end: