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1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985, 86, 87, 93, 94, 95, 1997, 2000, 2001
3 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5 @node Display, Search, Registers, Top
6 @chapter Controlling the Display
7
8 Since only part of a large buffer fits in the window, Emacs tries to
9 show a part that is likely to be interesting. Display-control commands
10 allow you to specify which part of the text you want to see, and how to
11 display it.
12
13 @menu
14 * Faces:: How to change the display style using faces.
15 * Font Lock:: Minor mode for syntactic highlighting using faces.
16 * Highlight Changes:: Using colors to show where you changed the buffer.
17 * Highlight Interactively:: Tell Emacs what text to highlight.
18 * Scrolling:: Moving text up and down in a window.
19 * Horizontal Scrolling:: Moving text left and right in a window.
20 * Fringes:: Enabling or disabling window fringes.
21 * Useless Whitespace:: Showing possibly-spurious trailing whitespace.
22 * Follow Mode:: Follow mode lets two windows scroll as one.
23 * Selective Display:: Hiding lines with lots of indentation.
24 * Optional Mode Line:: Optional mode line display features.
25 * Text Display:: How text characters are normally displayed.
26 * Display Custom:: Information on variables for customizing display.
27 * Cursor Display:: Features for displaying the cursor.
28 @end menu
29
30 @node Faces
31 @section Using Multiple Typefaces
32 @cindex faces
33
34 Emacs supports using multiple styles of displaying characters. Each
35 style is called a @dfn{face}. Each face can specify various @dfn{face
36 attributes}, such as the font family, the height, weight and slant of
37 the characters, the foreground and background color, and underlining
38 or overlining. A face does not have to specify all of these
39 attributes; often it inherits many of them from another face.
40
41 On a window system, all the Emacs face attributes are meaningful.
42 On a character terminal, only some of them work. Some character
43 terminals support inverse video, bold, and underline attributes; some
44 support colors. Character terminals generally do not support changing
45 the height and width or the font family.
46
47 Features which rely on text in multiple faces (such as Font Lock mode)
48 will also work on non-windowed terminals that can display more than one
49 face, whether by colors or underlining and emboldening. This includes
50 the console on GNU/Linux, an @code{xterm} which supports colors, the
51 MS-DOS display (@pxref{MS-DOS}), and the MS-Windows version invoked with
52 the @option{-nw} option. Emacs determines automatically whether the
53 terminal has this capability.
54
55 You control the appearance of a part of the text in the buffer by
56 specifying the face or faces to use for it. The style of display used
57 for any given character is determined by combining the attributes of
58 all the applicable faces specified for that character. Any attribute
59 that isn't specified by these faces is taken from the @code{default} face,
60 whose attributes reflect the default settings of the frame itself.
61
62 Enriched mode, the mode for editing formatted text, includes several
63 commands and menus for specifying faces for text in the buffer.
64 @xref{Format Faces}, for how to specify the font for text in the
65 buffer. @xref{Format Colors}, for how to specify the foreground and
66 background color.
67
68 @cindex face colors, setting
69 @findex set-face-foreground
70 @findex set-face-background
71 To alter the appearance of a face, use the customization buffer.
72 @xref{Face Customization}. You can also use X resources to specify
73 attributes of particular faces (@pxref{Resources}). Alternatively,
74 you can change the foreground and background colors of a specific face
75 with @kbd{M-x set-face-foreground} and @kbd{M-x set-face-background}.
76 These commands prompt in the minibuffer for a face name and a color
77 name, with completion, and then set that face to use the specified
78 color. Changing the colors of the @code{default} face also changes
79 the foreground and background colors on all frames, both existing and
80 those to be created in the future. (You can also set foreground and
81 background colors for the current frame only; see @ref{Frame
82 Parameters}.)
83
84 Emacs 21 can correctly display variable-width fonts, but Emacs
85 commands that calculate width and indentation do not know how to
86 calculate variable widths. This can sometimes lead to incorrect
87 results when you use variable-width fonts. In particular, indentation
88 commands can give inconsistent results, so we recommend you avoid
89 variable-width fonts for editing program source code. Filling will
90 sometimes make lines too long or too short. We plan to address these
91 issues in future Emacs versions.
92
93 @findex list-faces-display
94 To see what faces are currently defined, and what they look like, type
95 @kbd{M-x list-faces-display}. It's possible for a given face to look
96 different in different frames; this command shows the appearance in the
97 frame in which you type it. Here's a list of the standard defined
98 faces:
99
100 @table @code
101 @item default
102 This face is used for ordinary text that doesn't specify any other face.
103 @item mode-line
104 This face is used for the mode line of the currently selected window.
105 By default, it's drawn with shadows for a ``raised'' effect on window
106 systems, and drawn as the inverse of the default face on non-windowed
107 terminals. @xref{Display Custom}.
108 @item mode-line-inactive
109 Like @code{mode-line}, but used for mode lines of the windows other
110 than the selected one (if @code{mode-line-in-non-selected-windows} is
111 non-@code{nil}). This face inherits from @code{mode-line}, so changes
112 in that face affect mode lines in all windows.
113 @item header-line
114 Similar to @code{mode-line} for a window's header line. Most modes
115 don't use the header line, but the Info mode does.
116 @item minibuffer-prompt
117 This face is used for the prompt strings displayed in the minibuffer.
118 @item highlight
119 This face is used for highlighting portions of text, in various modes.
120 For example, mouse-sensitive text is highlighted using this face.
121 @item isearch
122 This face is used for highlighting Isearch matches.
123 @item isearch-lazy-highlight-face
124 This face is used for lazy highlighting of Isearch matches other than
125 the current one.
126 @item region
127 This face is used for displaying a selected region (when Transient Mark
128 mode is enabled---see below).
129 @item secondary-selection
130 This face is used for displaying a secondary X selection (@pxref{Secondary
131 Selection}).
132 @item bold
133 This face uses a bold variant of the default font, if it has one.
134 @item italic
135 This face uses an italic variant of the default font, if it has one.
136 @item bold-italic
137 This face uses a bold italic variant of the default font, if it has one.
138 @item underline
139 This face underlines text.
140 @item fixed-pitch
141 The basic fixed-pitch face.
142 @item fringe
143 @cindex fringe
144 The face for the fringes to the left and right of windows on graphic
145 displays. (The fringes are the narrow portions of the Emacs frame
146 between the text area and the window's right and left borders.)
147 @item scroll-bar
148 This face determines the visual appearance of the scroll bar.
149 @item border
150 This face determines the color of the frame border.
151 @item cursor
152 This face determines the color of the cursor.
153 @item mouse
154 This face determines the color of the mouse pointer.
155 @item tool-bar
156 This is the basic tool-bar face. No text appears in the tool bar, but the
157 colors of this face affect the appearance of tool bar icons.
158 @item tooltip
159 This face is used for tooltips.
160 @item menu
161 This face determines the colors and font of Emacs's menus. Setting the
162 font of LessTif/Motif menus is currently not supported; attempts to set
163 the font are ignored in this case.
164 @item trailing-whitespace
165 The face for highlighting trailing whitespace when
166 @code{show-trailing-whitespace} is non-@code{nil}; see @ref{Useless
167 Whitespace}.
168 @item variable-pitch
169 The basic variable-pitch face.
170 @end table
171
172 @cindex @code{region} face
173 When Transient Mark mode is enabled, the text of the region is
174 highlighted when the mark is active. This uses the face named
175 @code{region}; you can control the style of highlighting by changing the
176 style of this face (@pxref{Face Customization}). @xref{Transient Mark},
177 for more information about Transient Mark mode and activation and
178 deactivation of the mark.
179
180 One easy way to use faces is to turn on Font Lock mode. This minor
181 mode, which is always local to a particular buffer, arranges to
182 choose faces according to the syntax of the text you are editing. It
183 can recognize comments and strings in most languages; in several
184 languages, it can also recognize and properly highlight various other
185 important constructs. @xref{Font Lock}, for more information about
186 Font Lock mode and syntactic highlighting.
187
188 You can print out the buffer with the highlighting that appears
189 on your screen using the command @code{ps-print-buffer-with-faces}.
190 @xref{PostScript}.
191
192 @node Font Lock
193 @section Font Lock mode
194 @cindex Font Lock mode
195 @cindex mode, Font Lock
196 @cindex syntax highlighting and coloring
197
198 Font Lock mode is a minor mode, always local to a particular
199 buffer, which highlights (or ``fontifies'') using various faces
200 according to the syntax of the text you are editing. It can
201 recognize comments and strings in most languages; in several
202 languages, it can also recognize and properly highlight various other
203 important constructs---for example, names of functions being defined
204 or reserved keywords.
205
206 @findex font-lock-mode
207 @findex turn-on-font-lock
208 The command @kbd{M-x font-lock-mode} turns Font Lock mode on or off
209 according to the argument, and toggles the mode when it has no argument.
210 The function @code{turn-on-font-lock} unconditionally enables Font Lock
211 mode. This is useful in mode-hook functions. For example, to enable
212 Font Lock mode whenever you edit a C file, you can do this:
213
214 @example
215 (add-hook 'c-mode-hook 'turn-on-font-lock)
216 @end example
217
218 @findex global-font-lock-mode
219 @vindex global-font-lock-mode
220 To turn on Font Lock mode automatically in all modes which support
221 it, customize the user option @code{global-font-lock-mode} or use the
222 function @code{global-font-lock-mode} in your @file{.emacs} file, like
223 this:
224
225 @example
226 (global-font-lock-mode 1)
227 @end example
228
229 Font Lock mode uses several specifically named faces to do its job,
230 including @code{font-lock-string-face}, @code{font-lock-comment-face},
231 and others. The easiest way to find them all is to use completion
232 on the face name in @code{set-face-foreground}.
233
234 To change the colors or the fonts used by Font Lock mode to fontify
235 different parts of text, just change these faces. There are
236 two ways to do it:
237
238 @itemize @bullet
239 @item
240 Invoke @kbd{M-x set-face-foreground} or @kbd{M-x set-face-background}
241 to change the colors of a particular face used by Font Lock.
242 @xref{Faces}. The command @kbd{M-x list-faces-display} displays all
243 the faces currently known to Emacs, including those used by Font Lock.
244
245 @item
246 Customize the faces interactively with @kbd{M-x customize-face}, as
247 described in @ref{Face Customization}.
248 @end itemize
249
250 To get the full benefit of Font Lock mode, you need to choose a
251 default font which has bold, italic, and bold-italic variants; or else
252 you need to have a color or gray-scale screen.
253
254 @vindex font-lock-maximum-decoration
255 The variable @code{font-lock-maximum-decoration} specifies the
256 preferred level of fontification, for modes that provide multiple
257 levels. Level 1 is the least amount of fontification; some modes
258 support levels as high as 3. The normal default is ``as high as
259 possible.'' You can specify an integer, which applies to all modes, or
260 you can specify different numbers for particular major modes; for
261 example, to use level 1 for C/C++ modes, and the default level
262 otherwise, use this:
263
264 @example
265 (setq font-lock-maximum-decoration
266 '((c-mode . 1) (c++-mode . 1)))
267 @end example
268
269 @vindex font-lock-maximum-size
270 Fontification can be too slow for large buffers, so you can suppress
271 it. The variable @code{font-lock-maximum-size} specifies a buffer size,
272 beyond which buffer fontification is suppressed.
273
274 @c @w is used below to prevent a bad page-break.
275 @vindex font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function
276 @cindex incorrect fontification
277 @cindex parenthesis in column zero and fontification
278 @cindex brace in column zero and fontification
279 Comment and string fontification (or ``syntactic'' fontification)
280 relies on analysis of the syntactic structure of the buffer text. For
281 the sake of speed, some modes, including C mode and Lisp mode,
282 rely on a special convention: an open-parenthesis or open-brace in the
283 leftmost column always defines the @w{beginning} of a defun, and is
284 thus always outside any string or comment. (@xref{Left Margin
285 Paren}.) If you don't follow this convention, Font Lock mode can
286 misfontify the text that follows an open-parenthesis or open-brace in
287 the leftmost column that is inside a string or comment.
288
289 @cindex slow display during scrolling
290 The variable @code{font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function} (always
291 buffer-local) specifies how Font Lock mode can find a position
292 guaranteed to be outside any comment or string. In modes which use the
293 leftmost column parenthesis convention, the default value of the variable
294 is @code{beginning-of-defun}---that tells Font Lock mode to use the
295 convention. If you set this variable to @code{nil}, Font Lock no longer
296 relies on the convention. This avoids incorrect results, but the price
297 is that, in some cases, fontification for a changed text must rescan
298 buffer text from the beginning of the buffer. This can considerably
299 slow down redisplay while scrolling, particularly if you are close to
300 the end of a large buffer.
301
302 @findex font-lock-add-keywords
303 Font Lock highlighting patterns already exist for many modes, but you
304 may want to fontify additional patterns. You can use the function
305 @code{font-lock-add-keywords}, to add your own highlighting patterns for
306 a particular mode. For example, to highlight @samp{FIXME:} words in C
307 comments, use this:
308
309 @example
310 (font-lock-add-keywords
311 'c-mode
312 '(("\\<\\(FIXME\\):" 1 font-lock-warning-face t)))
313 @end example
314
315 @findex font-lock-remove-keywords
316 To remove keywords from the font-lock highlighting patterns, use the
317 function @code{font-lock-remove-keywords}.
318
319 @cindex just-in-time (JIT) font-lock
320 @cindex background syntax highlighting
321 Fontifying large buffers can take a long time. To avoid large
322 delays when a file is visited, Emacs fontifies only the visible
323 portion of a buffer. As you scroll through the buffer, each portion
324 that becomes visible is fontified as soon as it is displayed. The
325 parts of the buffer that are not displayed are fontified
326 ``stealthily'', in the background, i.e.@: when Emacs is idle. You can
327 control this background fontification, called @dfn{Just-In-Time}, or
328 @dfn{JIT} Font Lock, by customizing various options in the
329 customization group @samp{jit-lock}. @xref{Specific Customization}.
330
331 @node Highlight Changes
332 @section Highlight Changes Mode
333
334 @findex highlight-changes-mode
335 Use @kbd{M-x highlight-changes-mode} to enable a minor mode
336 that uses faces (colors, typically) to indicate which parts of
337 the buffer were changed most recently.
338
339 @node Highlight Interactively
340 @section Interactive Highlighting by Matching
341 @cindex highlighting by matching
342 @cindex interactive highlighting
343
344 It is sometimes useful to highlight the strings that match a certain
345 regular expression. For example, you might wish to see all the
346 references to a certain variable in a program source file, or highlight
347 certain parts in a voluminous output of some program, or make certain
348 cliches stand out in an article.
349
350 @findex hi-lock-mode
351 Use the @kbd{M-x hi-lock-mode} command to turn on a minor mode that
352 allows you to specify regular expressions of the text to be
353 highlighted. Hi-lock mode works like Font Lock (@pxref{Font Lock}),
354 except that it lets you specify explicitly what parts of text to
355 highlight. You control Hi-lock mode with these commands:
356
357 @table @kbd
358 @item C-x w h @var{regexp} @key{RET} @var{face} @key{RET}
359 @kindex C-x w h
360 @findex highlight-regexp
361 Highlight text that matches
362 @var{regexp} using face @var{face} (@code{highlight-regexp}).
363 By using this command more than once, you can highlight various
364 parts of the text in different ways.
365
366 @item C-x w r @var{regexp} @key{RET}
367 @kindex C-x w r
368 @findex unhighlight-regexp
369 Unhighlight @var{regexp} (@code{unhighlight-regexp}). You must enter
370 one of the regular expressions currently specified for highlighting.
371 (You can use completion, or choose from a menu, to enter one of them
372 conveniently.)
373
374 @item C-x w l @var{regexp} @key{RET} @var{face} @key{RET}
375 @kindex C-x w l
376 @findex highlight-lines-matching-regexp
377 @cindex lines, highlighting
378 @cindex highlighting lines of text
379 Highlight entire lines containing a match for @var{regexp}, using face
380 @var{face} (@code{highlight-lines-matching-regexp}).
381
382 @item C-x w b
383 @kindex C-x w b
384 @findex hi-lock-write-interactive-patterns
385 Insert all the current highlighting regexp/face pairs into the buffer
386 at point, with comment delimiters to prevent them from changing your
387 program. This key binding runs the
388 @code{hi-lock-write-interactive-patterns} command.
389
390 These patterns will be read the next time you visit the file while
391 Hi-lock mode is enabled, or whenever you use the @kbd{M-x
392 hi-lock-find-patterns} command.
393
394 @item C-x w i
395 @kindex C-x w i
396 @findex hi-lock-find-patterns
397 @vindex hi-lock-exclude-modes
398 Re-read regexp/face pairs in the current buffer
399 (@code{hi-lock-write-interactive-patterns}). The list of pairs is
400 found no matter where in the buffer it may be.
401
402 This command does nothing if the major mode is a member of the list
403 @code{hi-lock-exclude-modes}.
404 @end table
405
406 @node Scrolling
407 @section Scrolling
408
409 If a buffer contains text that is too large to fit entirely within a
410 window that is displaying the buffer, Emacs shows a contiguous portion of
411 the text. The portion shown always contains point.
412
413 @cindex scrolling
414 @dfn{Scrolling} means moving text up or down in the window so that
415 different parts of the text are visible. Scrolling forward means that text
416 moves up, and new text appears at the bottom. Scrolling backward moves
417 text down and new text appears at the top.
418
419 Scrolling happens automatically if you move point past the bottom or top
420 of the window. You can also explicitly request scrolling with the commands
421 in this section.
422
423 @table @kbd
424 @item C-l
425 Clear screen and redisplay, scrolling the selected window to center
426 point vertically within it (@code{recenter}).
427 @item C-v
428 Scroll forward (a windowful or a specified number of lines) (@code{scroll-up}).
429 @item @key{NEXT}
430 @itemx @key{PAGEDOWN}
431 Likewise, scroll forward.
432 @item M-v
433 Scroll backward (@code{scroll-down}).
434 @item @key{PRIOR}
435 @itemx @key{PAGEUP}
436 Likewise, scroll backward.
437 @item @var{arg} C-l
438 Scroll so point is on line @var{arg} (@code{recenter}).
439 @item C-M-l
440 Scroll heuristically to bring useful information onto the screen
441 (@code{reposition-window}).
442 @end table
443
444 @kindex C-l
445 @findex recenter
446 The most basic scrolling command is @kbd{C-l} (@code{recenter}) with
447 no argument. It clears the entire screen and redisplays all windows.
448 In addition, it scrolls the selected window so that point is halfway
449 down from the top of the window.
450
451 @kindex C-v
452 @kindex M-v
453 @kindex NEXT
454 @kindex PRIOR
455 @kindex PAGEDOWN
456 @kindex PAGEUP
457 @findex scroll-up
458 @findex scroll-down
459 @vindex next-screen-context-lines
460 To read the buffer a windowful at a time, use @kbd{C-v}
461 (@code{scroll-up}) with no argument. This scrolls forward by nearly
462 the whole window height. The effect is to take the two lines at the
463 bottom of the window and put them at the top, followed by nearly a
464 whole windowful of lines that were not previously visible. If point
465 was in the text that scrolled off the top, it ends up at the new top
466 of the window.
467
468 @kbd{M-v} (@code{scroll-down}) with no argument scrolls backward in
469 a similar way, also with overlap. The number of lines of overlap
470 across a @kbd{C-v} or @kbd{M-v} is controlled by the variable
471 @code{next-screen-context-lines}; by default, it is 2. The function
472 keys @key{NEXT} and @key{PRIOR}, or @key{PAGEDOWN} and @key{PAGEUP},
473 are equivalent to @kbd{C-v} and @kbd{M-v}.
474
475 The commands @kbd{C-v} and @kbd{M-v} with a numeric argument scroll
476 the text in the selected window up or down a few lines. @kbd{C-v}
477 with an argument moves the text and point up, together, that many
478 lines; it brings the same number of new lines into view at the bottom
479 of the window. @kbd{M-v} with numeric argument scrolls the text
480 downward, bringing that many new lines into view at the top of the
481 window. @kbd{C-v} with a negative argument is like @kbd{M-v} and vice
482 versa.
483
484 The names of scroll commands are based on the direction that the
485 text moves in the window. Thus, the command to scroll forward is
486 called @code{scroll-up} because it moves the text upward on the
487 screen. The keys @key{PAGEDOWN} and @key{PAGEUP} derive their names
488 and customary meanings from a different convention that developed
489 elsewhere; hence the strange result that @key{PAGEDOWN} runs
490 @code{scroll-up}.
491
492 @vindex scroll-preserve-screen-position
493 Some users like the full-screen scroll commands to keep point at the
494 same screen line. To enable this behavior, set the variable
495 @code{scroll-preserve-screen-position} to a non-@code{nil} value. This
496 mode is convenient for browsing through a file by scrolling by
497 screenfuls; if you come back to the screen where you started, point goes
498 back to the line where it started. However, this mode is inconvenient
499 when you move to the next screen in order to move point to the text
500 there.
501
502 Another way to do scrolling is with @kbd{C-l} with a numeric argument.
503 @kbd{C-l} does not clear the screen when given an argument; it only scrolls
504 the selected window. With a positive argument @var{n}, it repositions text
505 to put point @var{n} lines down from the top. An argument of zero puts
506 point on the very top line. Point does not move with respect to the text;
507 rather, the text and point move rigidly on the screen. @kbd{C-l} with a
508 negative argument puts point that many lines from the bottom of the window.
509 For example, @kbd{C-u - 1 C-l} puts point on the bottom line, and @kbd{C-u
510 - 5 C-l} puts it five lines from the bottom. @kbd{C-u C-l} scrolls to put
511 point at the center (vertically) of the selected window.
512
513 @kindex C-M-l
514 @findex reposition-window
515 The @kbd{C-M-l} command (@code{reposition-window}) scrolls the current
516 window heuristically in a way designed to get useful information onto
517 the screen. For example, in a Lisp file, this command tries to get the
518 entire current defun onto the screen if possible.
519
520 @vindex scroll-conservatively
521 Scrolling happens automatically when point moves out of the visible
522 portion of the text. Normally, automatic scrolling centers point
523 vertically within the window. However, if you set
524 @code{scroll-conservatively} to a small number @var{n}, then if you
525 move point just a little off the screen---less than @var{n}
526 lines---then Emacs scrolls the text just far enough to bring point
527 back on screen. By default, @code{scroll-conservatively} is 0.
528
529 @cindex aggressive scrolling
530 @vindex scroll-up-aggressively
531 @vindex scroll-down-aggressively
532 When the window does scroll by a longer distance, you can control
533 how aggressively it scrolls, by setting the variables
534 @code{scroll-up-aggressively} and @code{scroll-down-aggressively}.
535 The value of @code{scroll-up-aggressively} should be either
536 @code{nil}, or a fraction @var{f} between 0 and 1. A fraction
537 specifies where on the screen to put point when scrolling upward.
538 More precisely, when a window scrolls up because point is above the
539 window start, the new start position is chosen to put point @var{f}
540 part of the window height from the top. The larger @var{f}, the more
541 aggressive the scrolling.
542
543 @code{nil}, which is the default, scrolls to put point at the center.
544 So it is equivalent to .5.
545
546 Likewise, @code{scroll-down-aggressively} is used for scrolling
547 down. The value, @var{f}, specifies how far point should be placed
548 from the bottom of the window; thus, as with
549 @code{scroll-up-aggressively}, a larger value is more aggressive.
550
551 @vindex scroll-margin
552 The variable @code{scroll-margin} restricts how close point can come
553 to the top or bottom of a window. Its value is a number of screen
554 lines; if point comes within that many lines of the top or bottom of the
555 window, Emacs recenters the window. By default, @code{scroll-margin} is
556 0.
557
558 @node Horizontal Scrolling
559 @section Horizontal Scrolling
560 @cindex horizontal scrolling
561
562 @dfn{Horizontal scrolling} means shifting all the lines sideways
563 within a window---so that some of the text near the left margin is not
564 displayed at all. Emacs does this automatically in any window that
565 uses line truncation rather than continuation: whenever point moves
566 off the left or right edge of the screen, Emacs scrolls the buffer
567 horizontally to make point visible.
568
569 When a window has been scrolled horizontally, text lines are truncated
570 rather than continued (@pxref{Continuation Lines}), with a @samp{$}
571 appearing in the first column when there is text truncated to the left,
572 and in the last column when there is text truncated to the right.
573
574 You can use these commands to do explicit horizontal scrolling.
575
576 @table @kbd
577 @item C-x <
578 Scroll text in current window to the left (@code{scroll-left}).
579 @item C-x >
580 Scroll to the right (@code{scroll-right}).
581 @end table
582
583 @kindex C-x <
584 @kindex C-x >
585 @findex scroll-left
586 @findex scroll-right
587 The command @kbd{C-x <} (@code{scroll-left}) scrolls the selected
588 window to the left by @var{n} columns with argument @var{n}. This moves
589 part of the beginning of each line off the left edge of the window.
590 With no argument, it scrolls by almost the full width of the window (two
591 columns less, to be precise).
592
593 @kbd{C-x >} (@code{scroll-right}) scrolls similarly to the right. The
594 window cannot be scrolled any farther to the right once it is displayed
595 normally (with each line starting at the window's left margin);
596 attempting to do so has no effect. This means that you don't have to
597 calculate the argument precisely for @w{@kbd{C-x >}}; any sufficiently large
598 argument will restore the normal display.
599
600 If you scroll a window horizontally by hand, that sets a lower bound
601 for automatic horizontal scrolling. Automatic scrolling will continue
602 to scroll the window, but never farther to the right than the amount
603 you previously set by @code{scroll-left}.
604
605 @vindex hscroll-margin
606 The value of the variable @code{hscroll-margin} controls how close
607 to the window's edges point is allowed to get before the window will
608 be automatically scrolled. It is measured in columns. If the value
609 is 5, then moving point within 5 columns of the edge causes horizontal
610 scrolling away from that edge.
611
612 @vindex hscroll-step
613 The variable @code{hscroll-step} determines how many columns to
614 scroll the window when point gets too close to the edge. If it's
615 zero, horizontal scrolling centers point horizontally within the
616 window. If it's a positive integer, it specifies the number of
617 columns to scroll by. If it's a floating-point number, it specifies
618 the fraction of the window's width to scroll by. The default is zero.
619
620 @vindex auto-hscroll-mode
621 To disable automatic horizontal scrolling, set the variable
622 @code{auto-hscroll-mode} to @code{nil}.
623
624 @node Fringes
625 @section Window Fringes
626 @cindex fringes
627
628 On a graphical display, each Emacs window normally has narrow
629 @dfn{fringes} on the left and right edges. The fringes display
630 indications about the text in the window.
631
632 The most common use of the fringes is to indicate a continuation
633 line, when one line of text is split into multiple lines on the
634 screen. The left fringe shows a curving arrow for each screen line
635 except the first, indicating that ``this is not the real beginning.''
636 The right fringe shows a curving arrow for each screen line except the
637 last, indicating that ``this is not the real end.''
638
639 The fringes indicate line truncation with short horizontal arrows
640 meaning ``there's more text on this line which is scrolled
641 horizontally out of view;'' clicking the mouse on one of the arrows
642 scrolls the display horizontally in the direction of the arrow. The
643 fringes also indicate other things such as empty lines, or where a
644 program you are debugging is executing (@pxref{Debuggers}).
645
646 @findex set-fringe-style
647 @findex fringe-mode
648 You can enable and disable the fringes for all frames using
649 @kbd{M-x fringe-mode}. To enable and disable the fringes
650 for the selected frame, use @kbd{M-x set-fringe-style}.
651
652 @node Useless Whitespace
653 @section Useless Whitespace
654
655 @cindex trailing whitespace
656 @cindex whitespace, trailing
657 @vindex show-trailing-whitespace
658 It is easy to leave unnecessary spaces at the end of a line, or
659 empty lines at the end of a file, without realizing it. In most
660 cases, this @dfn{trailing whitespace} has no effect, but there are
661 special circumstances where it matters.
662
663 You can make trailing whitespace at the end of a line visible on the
664 screen by setting the buffer-local variable
665 @code{show-trailing-whitespace} to @code{t}. Then Emacs displays
666 trailing whitespace in the face @code{trailing-whitespace}.
667
668 This feature does not apply when point is at the end of the line
669 containing the whitespace. Strictly speaking, that is ``trailing
670 whitespace'' nonetheless, but displaying it specially in that case
671 looks ugly while you are typing in new text. In this special case,
672 the location of point is enough to show you that the spaces are
673 present.
674
675 @findex delete-trailing-whitespace
676 To delete all trailing whitespace within the current buffer's
677 accessible portion (@pxref{Narrowing}), type @kbd{M-x
678 delete-trailing-whitespace @key{RET}}. (This command does not remove
679 the form-feed characters.)
680
681 @vindex indicate-empty-lines
682 @vindex default-indicate-empty-lines
683 @cindex empty lines
684 @cindex fringes, and empty line indication
685 Emacs can indicate empty lines at the end of the buffer with a small
686 image in the left fringe of the window (@pxref{Fringes}). To enable
687 this feature, set the buffer-local variable @code{indicate-empty-lines}
688 to a non-@code{nil} value. The default value of this variable is
689 controlled by the variable @code{default-indicate-empty-lines}; by
690 setting that variable, you can enable or disable this feature for all
691 new buffers. (This feature currently doesn't work on character
692 terminals.)
693
694 @node Follow Mode
695 @section Follow Mode
696 @cindex Follow mode
697 @cindex mode, Follow
698 @findex follow-mode
699 @cindex windows, synchronizing
700 @cindex synchronizing windows
701
702 @dfn{Follow mode} is a minor mode that makes two windows showing the
703 same buffer scroll as one tall ``virtual window.'' To use Follow mode,
704 go to a frame with just one window, split it into two side-by-side
705 windows using @kbd{C-x 3}, and then type @kbd{M-x follow-mode}. From
706 then on, you can edit the buffer in either of the two windows, or scroll
707 either one; the other window follows it.
708
709 In Follow mode, if you move point outside the portion visible in one
710 window and into the portion visible in the other window, that selects
711 the other window---again, treating the two as if they were parts of
712 one large window.
713
714 To turn off Follow mode, type @kbd{M-x follow-mode} a second time.
715
716 @node Selective Display
717 @section Selective Display
718 @cindex selective display
719 @findex set-selective-display
720 @kindex C-x $
721
722 Emacs has the ability to hide lines indented more than a certain number
723 of columns (you specify how many columns). You can use this to get an
724 overview of a part of a program.
725
726 To hide lines, type @kbd{C-x $} (@code{set-selective-display}) with a
727 numeric argument @var{n}. Then lines with at least @var{n} columns of
728 indentation disappear from the screen. The only indication of their
729 presence is that three dots (@samp{@dots{}}) appear at the end of each
730 visible line that is followed by one or more hidden ones.
731
732 The commands @kbd{C-n} and @kbd{C-p} move across the hidden lines as
733 if they were not there.
734
735 The hidden lines are still present in the buffer, and most editing
736 commands see them as usual, so you may find point in the middle of the
737 hidden text. When this happens, the cursor appears at the end of the
738 previous line, after the three dots. If point is at the end of the
739 visible line, before the newline that ends it, the cursor appears before
740 the three dots.
741
742 To make all lines visible again, type @kbd{C-x $} with no argument.
743
744 @vindex selective-display-ellipses
745 If you set the variable @code{selective-display-ellipses} to
746 @code{nil}, the three dots do not appear at the end of a line that
747 precedes hidden lines. Then there is no visible indication of the
748 hidden lines. This variable becomes local automatically when set.
749
750 @node Optional Mode Line
751 @section Optional Mode Line Features
752
753 @cindex line number display
754 @cindex display of line number
755 @findex line-number-mode
756 The current line number of point appears in the mode line when Line
757 Number mode is enabled. Use the command @kbd{M-x line-number-mode} to
758 turn this mode on and off; normally it is on. The line number appears
759 before the buffer percentage @var{pos}, with the letter @samp{L} to
760 indicate what it is. @xref{Minor Modes}, for more information about
761 minor modes and about how to use this command.
762
763 @cindex narrowing, and line number display
764 If you have narrowed the buffer (@pxref{Narrowing}), the displayed
765 line number is relative to the accessible portion of the buffer.
766
767 @vindex line-number-display-limit
768 If the buffer is very large (larger than the value of
769 @code{line-number-display-limit}), then the line number doesn't appear.
770 Emacs doesn't compute the line number when the buffer is large, because
771 that would be too slow. Set it to @code{nil} to remove the limit.
772
773 @vindex line-number-display-limit-width
774 Line-number computation can also be slow if the lines in the buffer
775 are too long. For this reason, Emacs normally doesn't display line
776 numbers if the average width, in characters, of lines near point is
777 larger than the value of the variable
778 @code{line-number-display-limit-width}. The default value is 200
779 characters.
780
781 @cindex Column Number mode
782 @cindex mode, Column Number
783 @findex column-number-mode
784 You can also display the current column number by turning on Column
785 Number mode. It displays the current column number preceded by the
786 letter @samp{C}. Type @kbd{M-x column-number-mode} to toggle this mode.
787
788 @findex display-time
789 @cindex time (on mode line)
790 Emacs can optionally display the time and system load in all mode
791 lines. To enable this feature, type @kbd{M-x display-time} or customize
792 the option @code{display-time-mode}. The information added to the mode
793 line usually appears after the buffer name, before the mode names and
794 their parentheses. It looks like this:
795
796 @example
797 @var{hh}:@var{mm}pm @var{l.ll}
798 @end example
799
800 @noindent
801 @vindex display-time-24hr-format
802 Here @var{hh} and @var{mm} are the hour and minute, followed always by
803 @samp{am} or @samp{pm}. @var{l.ll} is the average number of running
804 processes in the whole system recently. (Some fields may be missing if
805 your operating system cannot support them.) If you prefer time display
806 in 24-hour format, set the variable @code{display-time-24hr-format}
807 to @code{t}.
808
809 @cindex mail (on mode line)
810 @vindex display-time-use-mail-icon
811 @vindex display-time-mail-face
812 @vindex display-time-mail-file
813 @vindex display-time-mail-directory
814 The word @samp{Mail} appears after the load level if there is mail
815 for you that you have not read yet. On a graphical display you can use
816 an icon instead of @samp{Mail} by customizing
817 @code{display-time-use-mail-icon}; this may save some space on the mode
818 line. You can customize @code{display-time-mail-face} to make the mail
819 indicator prominent. Use @code{display-time-mail-file} to specify
820 the mail file to check, or set @code{display-time-mail-directory}
821 to specify the directory to check for incoming mail (any nonempty regular
822 file in the directory is considered as ``newly arrived mail'').
823
824 @cindex mode line, 3D appearance
825 @cindex attributes of mode line, changing
826 @cindex non-integral number of lines in a window
827 By default, the mode line is drawn on graphics displays with
828 3D-style highlighting, like that of a button when it is not being
829 pressed. If you don't like this effect, you can disable the 3D
830 highlighting of the mode line, by customizing the attributes of the
831 @code{mode-line} face in your @file{.emacs} init file, like this:
832
833 @example
834 (set-face-attribute 'mode-line nil :box nil)
835 @end example
836
837 @noindent
838 Alternatively, you can turn off the box attribute in your
839 @file{.Xdefaults} file:
840
841 @example
842 Emacs.mode-line.AttributeBox: off
843 @end example
844
845 @cindex non-selected windows, mode line appearance
846 By default, the mode line of nonselected windows is displayed in a
847 different face, called @code{mode-line-inactive}. Only the selected
848 window is displayed in the @code{mode-line} face. This helps show
849 which window is selected. When the minibuffer is selected, since
850 it has no mode line, the window from which you activated the minibuffer
851 has its mode line displayed using @code{mode-line}; as a result,
852 ordinary entry to the minibuffer does not change any mode lines.
853
854 @vindex mode-line-in-non-selected-windows
855 You can disable use of @code{mode-line-inactive} by setting variable
856 @code{mode-line-in-non-selected-windows} to @code{nil}; then all mode
857 lines are displayed in the @code{mode-line} face.
858
859 @node Text Display
860 @section How Text Is Displayed
861 @cindex characters (in text)
862
863 ASCII printing characters (octal codes 040 through 0176) in Emacs
864 buffers are displayed with their graphics, as are non-ASCII multibyte
865 printing characters (octal codes above 0400).
866
867 Some ASCII control characters are displayed in special ways. The
868 newline character (octal code 012) is displayed by starting a new line.
869 The tab character (octal code 011) is displayed by moving to the next
870 tab stop column (normally every 8 columns).
871
872 Other ASCII control characters are normally displayed as a caret
873 (@samp{^}) followed by the non-control version of the character; thus,
874 control-A is displayed as @samp{^A}.
875
876 Non-ASCII characters 0200 through 0237 (octal) are displayed with
877 octal escape sequences; thus, character code 0230 (octal) is displayed
878 as @samp{\230}. The display of character codes 0240 through 0377
879 (octal) may be either as escape sequences or as graphics. They do not
880 normally occur in multibyte buffers, but if they do, they are displayed
881 as Latin-1 graphics. In unibyte mode, if you enable European display
882 they are displayed using their graphics (assuming your terminal supports
883 them), otherwise as escape sequences. @xref{Single-Byte Character
884 Support}.
885
886 @node Display Custom
887 @section Customization of Display
888
889 This section contains information for customization only. Beginning
890 users should skip it.
891
892 @vindex mode-line-inverse-video
893 The variable @code{mode-line-inverse-video} is an obsolete way of
894 controlling whether the mode line is displayed in inverse video; the
895 preferred way of doing this is to change the @code{mode-line} face.
896 @xref{Mode Line}. However, if @code{mode-line-inverse-video} has a
897 value of @code{nil}, then the @code{mode-line} face will be ignored,
898 and mode-lines will be drawn using the default text face.
899 @xref{Faces}.
900
901 @vindex inverse-video
902 If the variable @code{inverse-video} is non-@code{nil}, Emacs attempts
903 to invert all the lines of the display from what they normally are.
904
905 @vindex visible-bell
906 If the variable @code{visible-bell} is non-@code{nil}, Emacs attempts
907 to make the whole screen blink when it would normally make an audible bell
908 sound. This variable has no effect if your terminal does not have a way
909 to make the screen blink.@refill
910
911 @vindex no-redraw-on-reenter
912 When you reenter Emacs after suspending, Emacs normally clears the
913 screen and redraws the entire display. On some terminals with more than
914 one page of memory, it is possible to arrange the termcap entry so that
915 the @samp{ti} and @samp{te} strings (output to the terminal when Emacs
916 is entered and exited, respectively) switch between pages of memory so
917 as to use one page for Emacs and another page for other output. Then
918 you might want to set the variable @code{no-redraw-on-reenter}
919 non-@code{nil}; this tells Emacs to assume, when resumed, that the
920 screen page it is using still contains what Emacs last wrote there.
921
922 @vindex echo-keystrokes
923 The variable @code{echo-keystrokes} controls the echoing of multi-character
924 keys; its value is the number of seconds of pause required to cause echoing
925 to start, or zero meaning don't echo at all. @xref{Echo Area}.
926
927 @vindex ctl-arrow
928 If the variable @code{ctl-arrow} is @code{nil}, all control characters in
929 the buffer are displayed with octal escape sequences, except for newline
930 and tab. Altering the value of @code{ctl-arrow} makes it local to the
931 current buffer; until that time, the default value is in effect. The
932 default is initially @code{t}. @xref{Display Tables,, Display Tables,
933 elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
934
935 @vindex tab-width
936 Normally, a tab character in the buffer is displayed as whitespace which
937 extends to the next display tab stop position, and display tab stops come
938 at intervals equal to eight spaces. The number of spaces per tab is
939 controlled by the variable @code{tab-width}, which is made local by
940 changing it, just like @code{ctl-arrow}. Note that how the tab character
941 in the buffer is displayed has nothing to do with the definition of
942 @key{TAB} as a command. The variable @code{tab-width} must have an
943 integer value between 1 and 1000, inclusive.
944
945 @c @vindex truncate-lines @c No index entry here, because we have one
946 @c in the continuation section.
947 If the variable @code{truncate-lines} is non-@code{nil}, then each
948 line of text gets just one screen line for display; if the text line is
949 too long, display shows only the part that fits. If
950 @code{truncate-lines} is @code{nil}, then long text lines display as
951 more than one screen line, enough to show the whole text of the line.
952 @xref{Continuation Lines}. Altering the value of @code{truncate-lines}
953 makes it local to the current buffer; until that time, the default value
954 is in effect. The default is initially @code{nil}.
955
956 @c @vindex truncate-partial-width-windows @c Idx entry is in Split Windows.
957 If the variable @code{truncate-partial-width-windows} is
958 non-@code{nil}, it forces truncation rather than continuation in any
959 window less than the full width of the screen or frame, regardless of
960 the value of @code{truncate-lines}. For information about side-by-side
961 windows, see @ref{Split Window}. See also @ref{Display,, Display,
962 elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
963
964 @vindex baud-rate
965 The variable @code{baud-rate} holds the output speed of the
966 terminal, as far as Emacs knows. Setting this variable does not
967 change the speed of actual data transmission, but the value is used
968 for calculations. On terminals, it affects padding, and decisions
969 about whether to scroll part of the screen or redraw it instead.
970 It also affects the behavior of incremental search.
971
972 On window-systems, @code{baud-rate} is only used to determine how
973 frequently to look for pending input during display updating. A
974 higher value of @code{baud-rate} means that check for pending input
975 will be done less frequently.
976
977 You can customize the way any particular character code is displayed
978 by means of a display table. @xref{Display Tables,, Display Tables,
979 elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
980
981 @cindex hourglass pointer display
982 @vindex hourglass-delay
983 On a window system, Emacs can optionally display the mouse pointer
984 in a special shape to say that Emacs is busy. To turn this feature on
985 or off, customize the group @code{cursor}. You can also control the
986 amount of time Emacs must remain busy before the busy indicator is
987 displayed, by setting the variable @code{hourglass-delay}.
988
989 @findex tty-suppress-bold-inverse-default-colors
990 On some text-only terminals, bold face and inverse video together
991 result in text that is hard to read. Call the function
992 @code{tty-suppress-bold-inverse-default-colors} with a non-@code{nil}
993 argument to suppress the effect of bold-face in this case.
994
995 @node Cursor Display
996 @section Displaying the Cursor
997
998 @findex blink-cursor-mode
999 @cindex cursor, locating visually
1000 @cindex cursor, blinking
1001 You can customize the cursor's color, and whether it blinks, using
1002 the @code{cursor} Custom group (@pxref{Easy Customization}). On
1003 graphical terminals, the command @kbd{M-x blink-cursor-mode} enables
1004 or disables the blinking of the cursor. (On text terminals, the
1005 terminal itself blinks the cursor, and Emacs has no control over it.)
1006
1007 @cindex cursor in non-selected windows
1008 @vindex cursor-in-non-selected-windows
1009 Normally, the cursor appears in non-selected windows in the ``off''
1010 state, with the same appearance as when the blinking cursor blinks
1011 ``off''. For a box cursor, this is a hollow box; for a bar cursor,
1012 this is a thinner bar. To turn off cursors in non-selected windows,
1013 customize the option @code{cursor-in-non-selected-windows} and assign
1014 it a @code{nil} value.
1015
1016 @vindex x-stretch-cursor
1017 @cindex wide block cursor
1018 On graphical terminals, Emacs can optionally draw the block cursor
1019 as wide as the character under the cursor---for example, if the cursor
1020 is on a tab character, it would cover the full width occupied by that
1021 tab character. To enable this feature, set the variable
1022 @code{x-stretch-cursor} to a non-@code{nil} value.
1023
1024 @findex hl-line-mode
1025 @findex global-hl-line-mode
1026 @cindex highlight current line
1027 If you find it hard to see the cursor, you might like HL Line mode,
1028 a minor mode that highlights the line containing point. Use @kbd{M-x
1029 hl-line-mode} to enable or disable it in the current buffer. @kbd{M-x
1030 global-hl-line-mode} enables or disables the same mode globally.