]> code.delx.au - gnu-emacs/blob - etc/NEWS
Change how /etc/NEWS presents character folding
[gnu-emacs] / etc / NEWS
1 GNU Emacs NEWS -- history of user-visible changes.
2
3 Copyright (C) 2014-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 See the end of the file for license conditions.
5
6 Please send Emacs bug reports to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org.
7 If possible, use M-x report-emacs-bug.
8
9 This file is about changes in Emacs version 25.
10
11 See file HISTORY for a list of GNU Emacs versions and release dates.
12 See files NEWS.24, NEWS.23, NEWS.22, NEWS.21, NEWS.20, NEWS.19, NEWS.18,
13 and NEWS.1-17 for changes in older Emacs versions.
14
15 You can narrow news to a specific version by calling `view-emacs-news'
16 with a prefix argument or by typing C-u C-h C-n.
17
18 Temporary note:
19 +++ indicates that all necessary documentation updates are complete.
20 (This means all relevant manuals in doc/ AND lisp doc-strings.)
21 --- means no change in the manuals is needed.
22 When you add a new item, use the appropriate mark if you are sure it applies,
23 otherwise leave it unmarked.
24
25 \f
26 * Installation Changes in Emacs 25.1
27
28 +++
29 ** Building Emacs now requires C99 or later.
30
31 +++
32 ** Building Emacs now requires GNU make, version 3.81 or later.
33
34 +++
35 ** New configure option --with-cairo.
36 This builds Emacs with Cairo drawing. As a side effect, it provides
37 support for built-in printing, when Emacs was built with GTK+.
38 Cairo drawing is an experimental feature in Emacs, and subject to
39 change in future releases.
40
41 +++
42 ** New configure option --with-modules.
43 This enables support for loading dynamic modules; see below.
44
45 ---
46 ** By default, Emacs no longer works on IRIX. We expect that Emacs
47 users are not affected by this, as SGI stopped supporting IRIX in
48 December 2013. If you are affected, please send a bug report. You
49 should be able to work around the problem either by porting the Emacs
50 undumping code to GCC under IRIX, or by configuring --with-wide-int,
51 or by sticking with Emacs 24.4.
52
53 ---
54 ** The Emacs garbage collector assumes GC_MARK_STACK == GC_MAKE_GCPROS_NOOPS.
55 The GC_MAKE_GCPROS_NOOPS stack-marking variant has been the default
56 since Emacs 24.4, and the other variants were undocumented and were
57 obstacles to maintenance and development. GC_MARK_STACK and its
58 related symbols have been removed from the C internals.
59
60 ---
61 ** 'configure' now prefers gnustep-config when configuring GNUstep.
62 If gnustep-config is not available, the old heuristics are used.
63
64 ---
65 ** 'configure' now prefers inotify to gfile for file notification,
66 unless gfile is explicitly requested via --with-file-notification='gfile'.
67
68 ---
69 ** 'configure' detects the kqueue file notification library on *BSD
70 and Mac OS X machines.
71
72 ---
73 ** The configure option '--with-pkg-config-prog' has been removed.
74 Use './configure PKG_CONFIG=/full/name/of/pkg-config' if you need to.
75
76 ---
77 ** The configure option '--with-mmdf' has been removed.
78 It was no longer useful, as it relied on libraries that are no longer
79 supported, and its presence led to confusion during configuration.
80 This affects only the 'movemail' utility; Emacs itself can still
81 process MMDF-format files as before.
82
83 +++
84 ** The configure option '--enable-silent-rules' is now the default,
85 and silent rules are now quieter. To get the old behavior where
86 'make' chatters a lot, configure with '--disable-silent-rules' or
87 build with 'make V=1'.
88
89 ---
90 ** The configure option '--with-gameuser' now allows you to specify a
91 group instead of a user if its argument is prefixed by ':' (a colon).
92 This will cause the game score files in ${localstatedir}/games/emacs
93 to be owned by that group, and the helper program for updating them to
94 be installed setgid. The option now defaults to the 'games' group.
95
96 ---
97 ** The `grep-changelog' script (and its manual page) are no longer included.
98 It has no particular connection to Emacs and has not changed in years,
99 so if you want to use it, you can always take a copy from an older Emacs.
100
101 ---
102 ** Emacs 25 comes with a new set of icons.
103 Various resolutions are available as etc/images/icons/hicolor/*/apps/emacs.png.
104 The old Emacs logo icons are available as `emacs23.png' in the same location.
105
106 ---
107 ** New make target `check-expensive' to run additional tests.
108 This includes all tests which run via "make check", plus additional
109 tests which take more time to perform.
110
111 \f
112 * Startup Changes in Emacs 25.1
113
114 +++
115 ** When Emacs is given a file as a command line argument and
116 `initial-buffer-choice' is non-nil, display both the file and
117 `initial-buffer-choice'. When Emacs is given more than one file and
118 `initial-buffer-choice' is non-nil, show `initial-buffer-choice'
119 and *Buffer List*. This makes Emacs convenient to use from the
120 command line when `initial-buffer-choice' is non-nil.
121
122 +++
123 ** The value of ‘initial-scratch-message’ is now treated as a doc string
124 and can contain escape sequences for command keys, quotes, and the like.
125
126 \f
127 * Changes in Emacs 25.1
128
129 +++
130 ** Xwidgets: a new feature for embedding native widgets inside Emacs buffers.
131 If you have gtk3 and webkitgtk3 installed, and Emacs was built with
132 xwidget support, you can access the embedded webkit browser with `M-x
133 xwidget-webkit-browse-url'. This opens a new buffer with the embedded
134 browser. The buffer will have a new mode, `xwidget-webkit-mode'
135 (similar to `image-mode'), which supports the webkit widget.
136
137 +++
138 *** New functions for xwidget-webkit mode `xwidget-webkit-insert-string',
139 `xwidget-webkit-adjust-size-dispatch', `xwidget-webkit-back',
140 `xwidget-webkit-browse-url', `xwidget-webkit-reload',
141 `xwidget-webkit-current-url', `xwidget-webkit-scroll-backward',
142 `xwidget-webkit-scroll-forward', `xwidget-webkit-scroll-down',
143 `xwidget-webkit-scroll-up'.
144
145 +++
146 ** Emacs can now load shared/dynamic libraries (modules).
147 A dynamic Emacs module is a shared library that provides additional
148 functionality for use in Emacs Lisp programs, just like a package
149 written in Emacs Lisp would. The functions `load', `require',
150 `load-file', etc. were extended to load such modules, as they do with
151 Emacs Lisp packages. The new variable `module-file-suffix' holds the
152 system-dependent value of the file-name extension (`.so' on Posix
153 hosts) of the module files.
154
155 A module should export a C-callable function named
156 `emacs_module_init', which Emacs will call as part of the call to
157 `load' or `require' which loads the module. It should also export a
158 symbol named `plugin_is_GPL_compatible' to indicate that its code is
159 released under the GPL or compatible license; Emacs will refuse to
160 load modules that don't export such a symbol.
161
162 If a module needs to call Emacs functions, it should do so through the
163 API defined and documented in the header file `emacs-module.h'. Note
164 that any module that provides Lisp-callable functions will have to use
165 Emacs functions such as `fset' and `funcall', in order to register its
166 functions with the Emacs Lisp interpreter.
167
168 Modules can create `user-ptr' Lisp objects that embed pointers to C
169 struct's defined by the module. This is useful for keeping around
170 complex data structures created by a module, to be passed back to the
171 module's functions. User-ptr objects can also have associated
172 "finalizers" -- functions to be run when the object is GC'ed; this is
173 useful for freeing any resources allocated for the underlying data
174 structure, such as memory, open file descriptors, etc. A new
175 predicate `user-ptrp' returns non-nil if its argument is a `user-ptr'
176 object.
177
178 Loadable modules in Emacs are an experimental feature, and subject to
179 change in future releases. For that reason, their support is disabled
180 by default, and must be enabled by using the `--with-modules' option
181 at configure time.
182
183 +++
184 ** Network security (TLS/SSL certificate validity and the like) is
185 added via the new Network Security Manager (NSM) and controlled via
186 the `network-security-level' variable.
187
188 +++
189 ** C-h l now also lists the commands that were run.
190
191 +++
192 ** x-select-enable-clipboard is renamed select-enable-clipboard
193 and x-select-enable-primary is renamed select-enable-primary.
194 Additionally they both now apply to all systems (OSX, GNUstep, Windows, you
195 name it), with the proviso that on some systems (e.g. Windows)
196 select-enable-primary is ineffective since the system doesn't
197 have the equivalent of a primary selection.
198
199 +++
200 ** New option `switch-to-buffer-in-dedicated-window' allows you to
201 customize how `switch-to-buffer' proceeds interactively when the
202 selected window is strongly dedicated to its buffer.
203
204 +++
205 ** The option `even-window-heights' has been renamed to
206 `even-window-sizes' and now handles window widths as well.
207
208 +++
209 ** terpri gets an optional arg ENSURE to conditionally output a newline.
210
211 +++
212 ** `insert-register' now leaves point after the inserted text
213 when called interactively. A prefix argument toggles this behavior.
214
215 +++
216 ** The new variable `term-file-aliases' replaces some files from lisp/term.
217 The function `tty-run-terminal-initialization' consults this variable
218 when deciding what terminal-specific initialization code to run.
219
220 ---
221 ** New variable `system-configuration-features', listing some of the
222 main features that Emacs was compiled with. This is mainly intended
223 for use in Emacs bug reports.
224
225 +++
226 ** A password is now hidden also when typed in batch mode. Another
227 hiding character but the default `.' can be used by let-binding the
228 variable `read-hide-char'.
229
230 +++
231 ** The Emacs pseudo-random number generator can be securely seeded.
232 On system where Emacs can access the system entropy or some other
233 cryptographically secure random stream, it now uses that when `random'
234 is called with its argument `t'. This allows cryptographically strong
235 random values; in particular, the Emacs server now uses this facility
236 to produce its authentication key.
237
238 ---
239 ** New input methods: `tamil-dvorak' and `programmer-dvorak'.
240
241 \f
242 * Editing Changes in Emacs 25.1
243
244 +++
245 ** M-x suggests shorthands and ignores obsolete commands for completion.
246
247 ** Changes in undo
248
249 +++
250 *** Successive single-char deletions are collapsed in the undo-log just like
251 successive char insertions. Which commands invoke this behavior is
252 controlled by the new `undo-auto-amalgamate' function. See the node
253 "Undo" in the ELisp manual for more details.
254
255 +++
256 *** The heuristic used to insert `undo-boundary' after each command
257 has changed, so that if a command causes changes in more than just the
258 current buffer, Emacs now calls `undo-boundary' in every buffer
259 affected by the command.
260
261 +++
262 ** New command `comment-line' bound to `C-x C-;'.
263
264 ** New and improved facilities for inserting Unicode characters
265
266 ---
267 *** Unicode names entered via C-x 8 RET now use substring completion by default.
268
269 +++
270 *** C-x 8 now has shorthands for these chars: ‐ ‑ ‒ – — ― ‘ ’ “ ” † ‡ • ′ ″
271 € № ← → ↔ − ≈ ≠ ≤ ≥. As before, you can type C-x 8 C-h to list shorthands.
272
273 +++
274 *** New minor mode electric-quote-mode for quoting ‘like this’ and “like this”
275 as you type. See also the new variable ‘text-quoting-style’.
276
277 ---
278 ** New minor mode global-eldoc-mode is enabled by default.
279
280 ---
281 ** Emacs now uses "bracketed paste mode" on text terminals that support it.
282 Bracketed paste mode causes text terminals to wrap pasted text in special
283 escape sequences that allow Emacs to tell the difference between text
284 you type and text you paste from other applications. Emacs then
285 avoids interpreting each character in the pasted text as it does with
286 keyboard input, which results in a paste experience similar to that
287 under a window system, and significant performance improvements when
288 pasting large amounts of text.
289
290 Bracketed paste mode is disabled by default, so Emacs automatically
291 enables it at startup if the terminal supports it.
292
293 +++
294 ** Emacs now supports the latest version of the UBA.
295 The Emacs implementation of the Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm (UBA)
296 was updated to support all the latest additions and changes introduced
297 in Unicode Standard versions 6.3, 7.0, and the latest Unicode 8.0.
298 This includes full support for directional isolates and the
299 Bidirectional Parentheses Algorithm (BPA) specified by these Unicode
300 standards.
301
302 +++
303 ** You can access `mouse-buffer-menu' (C-down-mouse-1) using C-f10.
304
305 +++
306 ** New buffer-local `electric-pair-local-mode'.
307
308 +++
309 ** New variable `fast-but-imprecise-scrolling' inhibits
310 fontification during full screen scrolling operations, giving less
311 hesitant operation during auto-repeat of C-v, M-v at the cost of
312 possible inaccuracies in the end position.
313
314 +++
315 ** New documentation command `describe-symbol'.
316 Works for functions, variables, faces, etc. It is bound to `C-h o' by
317 default.
318
319 +++
320 ** New function `custom-prompt-customize-unsaved-options' checks for
321 unsaved customizations and prompts user to customize (if found). It
322 is intended for adding to 'kill-emacs-query-functions'.
323
324 +++
325 ** The old `C-x w' bindings in hi-lock-mode are officially deprecated
326 in favor of the global `M-s h' bindings introduced in Emacs-23.1.
327 They'll disappear soon.
328
329 \f
330 * Changes in Specialized Modes and Packages in Emacs 25.1
331
332 ** Checkdoc
333
334 +++
335 *** New command `checkdoc-package-keywords' checks if the
336 current package keywords are recognized. Set the new option
337 `checkdoc-package-keywords-flag' to non-nil to make
338 `checkdoc-current-buffer' call this function automatically.
339
340 +++
341 *** New function `checkdoc-file' checks for style errors.
342 It's meant for use together with `compile':
343 emacs -batch --eval "(checkdoc-file \"subr.el\")"
344
345 ** Desktop
346
347 ---
348 *** The desktop format version has been upgraded from 206 to 208.
349 Although Emacs 25.1 can read a version 206 desktop, earlier Emacsen
350 cannot read a version 208 desktop. To upgrade your desktop file, you
351 must explicitly request the upgrade, by C-u M-x desktop-save. You are
352 recommended to do this as soon as you have firmly upgraded to Emacs
353 25.1 (or later). Should you ever need to downgrade your desktop file
354 to version 206, you can do this with C-u C-u M-x desktop-save.
355
356 +++
357 ** New function `bookmark-set-no-overwrite' bound to C-x r M.
358 It raises an error if a bookmark of that name already exists,
359 unlike `bookmark-set' which silently updates an existing bookmark.
360
361 ** Gnus
362
363 +++
364 *** New user options `mm-html-inhibit-images' and `mm-html-blocked-images'
365 now control how mm-* functions fetch and display images in an HTML
366 message. Gnus still uses `gnus-inhibit-images' and `gnus-blocked-images'
367 for that purpose, i.e., binds mm-html- variables with those gnus-
368 variables, but other packages do not have to bind gnus- variables now.
369
370 ---
371 *** `mm-inline-text-html-with-images' has been removed.
372 Use `mm-html-inhibit-images' instead. Note that the value is opposite
373 in meaning.
374
375 ** IMAP
376
377 ---
378 *** `imap-ssl-program' has been removed, and imap.el uses the internal
379 GnuTLS encryption functions if possible.
380
381 ** JSON
382
383 ---
384 *** `json-pretty-print' and `json-pretty-print-buffer' now maintain
385 the ordering of object keys by default.
386
387 ---
388 *** New commands `json-pretty-print-ordered' and
389 `json-pretty-print-buffer-ordered' pretty prints JSON objects with
390 object keys sorted alphabetically.
391
392 +++
393 ** Prog mode has some support for multi-mode indentation.
394 This allows better indentation support in modes that support multiple
395 programming languages in the same buffer, like literate programming
396 environments or ANTLR programs with embedded Python code.
397
398 A major mode can provide indentation context for a sub-mode through
399 the `prog-indentation-context' variable. To support this, modes that
400 provide indentation should use `prog-widen' instead of `widen' and
401 `prog-first-column' instead of a literal zero. See the node
402 "Mode-Specific Indent" in the ELisp manual for more details.
403
404 ** Prettify Symbols mode
405
406 +++
407 *** Prettify Symbols mode supports custom composition predicates. By
408 overriding the default `prettify-symbols-compose-predicate', modes can
409 specify in which contexts a symbol may be displayed as some Unicode
410 character. `prettify-symbols-default-compose-p' is the default which
411 is suitable for most programming languages such as C or Lisp (but not
412 (La)TeX).
413
414 +++
415 *** Symbols can be unprettified while point is inside them.
416 New variable `prettify-symbols-unprettify-at-point' configures this.
417
418 ** Enhanced xterm support
419
420 ---
421 *** The new variable `xterm-screen-extra-capabilities' for configuring xterm.
422 This variable tells Emacs which advanced capabilities are available in
423 the xterm terminal emulator used to display Emacs text-mode frames.
424 The default is to check each capability, and use it if available.
425 (This variable was introduced in Emacs 24.1, but was not announced in
426 its NEWS.)
427
428 ---
429 *** Killing text now also sets the CLIPBOARD/PRIMARY selection
430 in the surrounding GUI (using the OSC-52 escape sequence). This only works
431 if your xterm supports it and enables the `allowWindowOps' options (disabled
432 by default at least in Debian, for security reasons).
433
434 Similarly, you can yank the CLIPBOARD/PRIMARY selection (using the OSC-52
435 escape sequence) if your xterm has the feature enabled but for that you
436 additionally need to add `getSelection' to `xterm-extra-capabilities'.
437
438 +++
439 *** `xterm-mouse-mode' now supports mouse-tracking (if your xterm supports it).
440
441 ---
442 ** The way to turn on and off `save-place' mode has changed.
443 It is no longer sufficient to load the saveplace library and set
444 `save-place' non-nil. Instead, use the two new minor modes:
445 `save-place-mode' turns on saving last place in every file, and
446 `save-place-local-mode' does that only for the file in whose buffer it
447 is invoked. The `save-place' variable is now an obsolete alias for
448 `save-place-mode', which replaces it, and `toggle-save-place' is an
449 obsolete alias for the new `save-place-local-mode' command.
450
451 ** ERC
452
453 +++
454 *** ERC can now hide message types by network or channel.
455 `erc-hide-list' will hide all messages of the specified type, while
456 `erc-network-hide-list' and `erc-channel-hide-list' will only hide the
457 specified message types for the respective specified targets.
458
459 ---
460 *** Reconnection is now asynchronous.
461
462 ---
463 *** Nick completion is now case-insensitive again after inadvertently
464 being made case-sensitive in Emacs 24.2.
465
466 ** MPC
467
468 ---
469 *** New commands, key binds, and menu items.
470
471 **** `<' and `>' for navigating previous and next tracks in playlist
472
473 **** New play/pause command `mpc-toggle-play' bound to `s'
474
475 **** `g' bound to new command `mpc-seek-current' will navigate current
476 track.
477
478 **** New commands `mpc-toggle-{consume,repeat,single,shuffle}' for
479 toggling playback modes.
480
481 ---
482 *** Now supports connecting to a UNIX domain socket.
483
484 ---
485 *** Looks at more image file names to use as album art.
486 Case-insensitively tries for .folder.png (freedesktop) and folder.jpg
487 (XP) in addition to cover.jpg.
488
489 ---
490 *** Searches in more locations for MPD configuration files.
491 MPD supports the XDG base directory specification since version 0.17.6.
492
493 ** Midnight-mode
494
495 ---
496 *** `midnight-mode' is now a proper minor mode.
497
498 ---
499 *** clean-buffer-*-regexps can now specify buffers via predicate functions.
500
501 ** package.el
502
503 +++
504 *** New "external" package status.
505 An external package is any installed package that's not built-in and
506 not from `package-user-dir', which usually means it's from an entry in
507 `package-directory-list'. They are treated much like built-in
508 packages, in that they cannot be deleted through the package menu and
509 are not considered for upgrades.
510
511 The effect is that a user can manually place a specific version of a
512 package inside `package-directory-list' and the package menu will
513 always respect that.
514
515 +++
516 *** If a package is available on multiple archives and one has higher
517 priority (as per `package-archive-priorities') only that one is
518 listed. This can be configured with `package-menu-hide-low-priority'.
519
520 +++
521 *** `package-menu-toggle-hiding' now toggles the hiding of packages.
522 This includes the above-mentioned low-priority packages, as well as
523 available packages whose version is lower than the currently installed
524 version (which were previously impossible to display).
525 This allows users to downgrade a package if a lower version is
526 available.
527
528 ---
529 *** When filtering the package menu, keywords starting with "arc:" or
530 "status:" represent package archive or status, respectively, instead
531 of actual keywords.
532
533 ---
534 *** Most functions which involve downloading information now take an
535 ASYNC argument. If it is non-nil, package.el performs the download(s)
536 asynchronously.
537
538 ---
539 *** New variable `package-menu-async' controls whether the
540 package-menu uses asynchronous downloads.
541
542 ---
543 *** `package-install-from-buffer' and `package-install-file' work on directories.
544 This follows the same rules as installing from a .tar file, except the
545 -pkg file is optional.
546
547 ---
548 *** Packages which are dependencies of other packages cannot be deleted.
549 The FORCE argument to `package-delete' overrides this.
550
551 ---
552 *** New custom variable `package-selected-packages' tracks packages
553 which were installed by the user (as opposed to installed as
554 dependencies). This variable can also be manually customized.
555
556 ---
557 *** New command `package-install-selected-packages' installs all
558 packages from `package-selected-packages' which are currently missing.
559
560 ---
561 *** `package-install' function now takes a DONT-SELECT argument. If
562 this function is called interactively or if DONT-SELECT is nil, add the
563 package being installed to `package-selected-packages'.
564
565 ---
566 *** New command `package-autoremove' removes all packages which were
567 installed strictly as dependencies but are no longer needed.
568
569 +++
570 ** Shell
571
572 When you invoke `shell' interactively, the *shell* buffer will now
573 display in a new window. However, you can customize this behavior via
574 the `display-buffer-alist' variable. For example, to get
575 the old behavior -- *shell* buffer displays in current window -- use
576 (add-to-list 'display-buffer-alist
577 '("^\\*shell\\*$" . (display-buffer-same-window))).
578
579 ** EIEIO
580 +++
581 *** The `:protection' slot option is not obeyed any more.
582 +++
583 *** The `newname' argument to constructors is optional&deprecated.
584 If you need your objects to be named, do it by inheriting from `eieio-named'.
585 +++
586 *** The <class>-list-p and <class>-child-p functions are declared obsolete.
587 +++
588 *** The <class> variables are declared obsolete.
589 +++
590 *** The <initarg> variables are declared obsolete.
591 +++
592 *** defgeneric and defmethod are declared obsolete.
593 Use the equivalent facilities from cl-generic.el instead.
594 +++
595 *** `constructor' is now an obsolete alias for `make-instance'.
596 --- `pcase' accepts a new UPattern `eieio'.
597
598 ** ido
599
600 +++
601 *** New command `ido-bury-buffer-at-head' bound to C-S-b
602 Bury the buffer at the head of `ido-matches', analogous to how C-k
603 kills the buffer at head.
604
605 ---
606 *** A prefix argument to `ido-restrict-to-matches' will reverse its
607 meaning, and the list is restricted to those elements that do not
608 match the current input.
609
610 ** Minibuffer
611
612 +++
613 *** You can use <UP> and <DOWN> arrow keys to move through history by lines.
614 The new commands `next-line-or-history-element' and
615 `previous-line-or-history-element', bound to <UP> and <DOWN> in the
616 minibuffer, allow by-line movement through minibuffer history,
617 similarly to an ordinary buffer. Only when point moves over
618 the bottom/top of the minibuffer it goes to the next/previous history
619 element. `M-p' and `M-n' still move directly to previous/next history
620 item as before.
621
622 ** Search and Replace
623
624 +++
625 *** `isearch' and `query-replace' can now perform character folding in
626 matches. Character folding is enabled by customizing
627 `search-default-mode' to the value `character-fold-to-regexp'. You
628 can also toggle character folding in the middle of a search by typing
629 `M-s ''.
630
631 `query-replace' honors character folding this if the new variable
632 `replace-character-fold' is customized to a non-nil value. This is
633 analogous to case folding, but instead of disregarding case variants,
634 it disregards wider classes of distinctions between similar
635 characters. (Case folding is a special case of character folding.)
636 This means many characters in the search string will match entire
637 groups of characters instead of just themselves.
638
639 For instance, the " will match all variants of double quotes (like “
640 and ”), and the letter a will match all of its accented cousins, even
641 those composed of multiple characters, as well as many other symbols
642 like ℀, ℁, ⒜, and ⓐ.
643
644 +++
645 *** New user option `search-default-mode'.
646 This option specifies the default mode for Isearch. The default
647 value, nil specifies that Isearch does not fold characters when
648 searching.
649
650 +++
651 *** New function `character-fold-to-regexp' can be used
652 by searching commands to produce a regexp matching anything that
653 character-folds into STRING.
654
655 +++
656 *** The new M-s M-w key binding uses eww to search the web for the
657 text in the region. The search engine to use for this is specified by
658 the customizable variable `eww-search-prefix'.
659
660 +++
661 *** Query-replace history is enhanced.
662 When query-replace reads the FROM string from the minibuffer, typing
663 `M-p' will now show previous replacements as "FROM SEP TO", where FROM
664 and TO are the original text and its replacement, and SEP is an arrow
665 string defined by the new variable `query-replace-from-to-separator'.
666 To select a prior replacement, type `M-p' until the desired
667 replacement appears in the minibuffer, and then exit the minibuffer by
668 typing RET.
669
670 ** Calc
671 +++
672 *** If `quick-calc' is called with a prefix argument, insert the
673 result of the calculation into the current buffer.
674
675 +++
676 ** In Edebug, you can now set the initial mode with C-x C-a C-m. With
677 this you can tell Edebug not to stop at the start of the first
678 instrumented function.
679
680 ** ElDoc
681
682 +++
683 *** New minor mode `global-eldoc-mode'
684 It is turned on by default, and affects `*scratch*' and other buffers
685 whose major mode supports Emacs Lisp.
686
687 ---
688 *** `eldoc-documentation-function' now defaults to `ignore'
689
690 ---
691 *** `describe-char-eldoc' displays information about character at point,
692 and can be used as a default value of `eldoc-documentation-function'. It is
693 useful when, for example, one needs to distinguish various spaces (e.g. ] [,
694 ] [, ] [, etc.) while using mono-spaced font.
695
696 ** eww
697
698 ---
699 *** HTML can now be rendered using variable-width fonts.
700
701 +++
702 *** A new command `F' (`eww-toggle-fonts') can be used to toggle
703 whether to use variable-pitch fonts or not. The user can also
704 customize the `shr-use-fonts' variable.
705
706 +++
707 *** A new command `R' (`eww-readable') will try do identify the main
708 textual parts of a web page and display only that, leaving menus and
709 the like off the page.
710
711 +++
712 *** A new command `D' (`eww-toggle-paragraph-direction') allows you to
713 toggle the paragraph direction between left-to-right and right-to-left.
714
715 ---
716 *** You can now use several eww buffers in parallel by renaming eww
717 buffers you want to keep separate.
718
719 +++
720 *** Partial state of the eww buffers (the URIs and the titles of the
721 pages visited) is now preserved in the desktop file.
722
723 +++
724 *** `eww-after-render-hook' is now called after eww has rendered
725 the data in the buffer.
726
727 ---
728 *** The `eww-reload' command now takes a prefix to not reload via
729 the net, but just use the local copy of the HTML.
730
731 +++
732 *** The DOM shr and eww uses has been changed to the general Emacs
733 xml.el/libxml2 DOM, and a new package dom.el has been added to
734 interact with this DOM. See the Emacs Lisp manual for interface
735 details.
736
737 +++
738 *** `mailcap-mime-data' is now consulted when displaying PDF files.
739
740 +++
741 *** The new `S' command will list all eww buffers, and allow managing
742 them.
743
744 ---
745 *** https pages with valid certificates have headers marked in green, while
746 invalid certificates are marked in red.
747
748 ** Message mode
749
750 ---
751 *** text/html messages that contain inline image parts will be
752 transformed into multipart/related messages before sending.
753
754 +++
755 ** In Show Paren Mode, a parenthesis can be highlighted when point
756 stands inside it, and certain parens can be highlighted when point is
757 at BOL or EOL, or in whitespace there. To enable these, customize,
758 respectively, `show-paren-when-point-inside-paren' or
759 `show-paren-when-point-in-periphery'.
760
761 ---
762 ** If gpg2 exists on the system, it is now used as the default value
763 of `epg-gpg-program' (instead of gpg).
764
765 ** Lisp mode
766
767 ---
768 *** Strings after `:documentation' are highlighted as docstrings.
769 This enhances Lisp mode fontification to handle documentation of the
770 form `(:documentation "the doc string")' used in Common Lisp code for
771 CLOS class and slot documentation.
772
773 ** Rectangle editing
774
775 +++
776 *** Rectangle Mark mode can have corners past EOL or in the middle of a TAB.
777
778 +++
779 *** C-x C-x in rectangle-mark-mode now cycles through the four corners.
780 *** `string-rectangle' provides on-the-fly preview of the result.
781
782 +++
783 ** New font-lock functions `font-lock-ensure' and `font-lock-flush'.
784 These should be used in preference to `font-lock-fontify-buffer' when
785 called from Lisp.
786
787 ---
788 ** Macro `minibuffer-with-setup-hook' can optionally append a function
789 to `minibuffer-setup-hook'.
790
791 If the first argument of the macro is of the form `(:append FUN)',
792 then FUN will be appended to `minibuffer-setup-hook', instead of
793 prepending it.
794
795 ** cl-lib
796 +++
797 *** New functions `cl-fresh-line', `cl-digit-char-p', and `cl-parse-integer'.
798
799 ---
800 *** `pcase' accepts the new UPattern `cl-struct'.
801
802 ** Calendar and diary
803
804 +++
805 *** The default `diary-file' is now located in .emacs.d.
806
807 +++
808 *** New commands to insert diary entries with Chinese dates:
809 `diary-chinese-insert-anniversary-entry' `diary-chinese-insert-entry'
810 `diary-chinese-insert-monthly-entry', `diary-chinese-insert-yearly-entry'.
811
812 +++
813 *** The calendar can now list and mark diary entries with Chinese dates.
814 See `diary-chinese-list-entries' and `diary-chinese-mark-entries'.
815
816 ---
817 *** The option `calendar-mode-line-format' can now be nil,
818 which means to do nothing special with the mode line in calendars.
819
820 +++
821 *** New option `calendar-weekend-days'.
822 The option customizes which day headers receive the
823 `calendar-weekend-header' face.
824
825 ---
826 *** New optional args N and STRING for ‘holiday-greek-orthodox-easter’.
827
828 ---
829 *** Many items obsolete since at least version 23.1 have been removed.
830 The majority were function/variable/face aliases, too numerous to list here.
831 The remainder were:
832
833 **** Functions `calendar-one-frame-setup', `calendar-only-one-frame-setup',
834 `calendar-two-frame-setup', `european-calendar', `american-calendar'.
835
836 **** Hooks `cal-menu-load-hook', `cal-x-load-hook'.
837
838 **** Macro `calendar-for-loop'.
839
840 **** Variables `european-calendar-style', `diary-face', `hebrew-holidays-{1,4}'.
841
842 **** The nil and list forms of `diary-display-function'.
843
844 +++
845 ** New ERT function `ert-summarize-tests-batch-and-exit'.
846 If the output of ERT tests in batch mode execution can be saved to a
847 log file, then it can be passed as an argument to the above function
848 to produce a neat summary.
849
850 ---
851 ** New js.el option `js-indent-first-init'.
852
853 ** Info
854
855 ---
856 ** Info mode now displays symbol names in fixed-pitch font.
857 If you want to get the old behavior back, customize the `Info-quoted'
858 face to use the same definitions as the default face.
859
860 ---
861 *** `Info-fontify-maximum-menu-size' can be t for no limit.
862
863 +++
864 *** `info-display-manual' can now be given a prefix argument which (any
865 non-nil value) directs the command to limit the completion
866 alternatives to currently visited manuals.
867
868 ---
869 ** ntlm.el has support for NTLM2.
870
871 ** Rmail
872
873 +++
874 *** The Rmail commands `d', `C-d' and `u' take optional repeat counts
875 to delete or undelete multiple messages.
876
877 +++
878 *** Rmail can now render HTML mail messages if your Emacs was built with
879 libxml2 or if you have the Lynx browser installed. By default, Rmail
880 will display the HTML version of a mail message that has both HTML and
881 plain text parts, if display of HTML email is possible; customize the
882 `rmail-mime-prefer-html' option to `nil' if you don't want that.
883
884 +++
885 *** In the commands that make summaries by subject, recipients, or senders,
886 you can no longer use commas to separate regular expressions.
887
888 +++
889 ** SES now supports local printer functions; see `ses-define-local-printer'.
890
891 ** Shell-script Mode
892 ---
893 *** In sh-mode you can now use `sh-shell' as a file-local variable to
894 specify the type of shell in use (bash, csh, etc).
895
896 ---
897 *** New value `always' for `sh-indent-after-continuation'.
898 This provides old-style ("dumb") indentation of continued lines.
899 See the doc string of `sh-indent-after-continuation' for details.
900
901 ** TLS
902 ---
903 *** Fatal TLS errors are now silent by default.
904
905 ---
906 *** If Emacs isn't built with TLS support, an external TLS-capable
907 program is used instead. This program used to be run in --insecure
908 mode by default, but has now changed to be secure instead, and will
909 fail if you try to connect to non-verifiable hosts. This is
910 controlled by the `tls-program' variable.
911
912 ** URL
913
914 +++
915 *** The URL package accepts now the protocols "ssh", "scp" and "rsync".
916 When `url-handler-mode' is enabled, file operations for these
917 protocols as well as for "telnet" and "ftp" are passed to Tramp.
918
919 +++
920 *** The URL package allows customizing the `url-user-agent' string.
921 The new `url-user-agent' variable can be customized to be a string or
922 a function.
923
924 ---
925 *** The new interface variable `url-request-noninteractive' can be used
926 to specify that we're running in a noninteractive context, and that
927 we should not be queried about things like TLS certificate validity.
928
929 ---
930 *** `url-mime-accept-string' can now be used as in "interface"
931 variable, meaning you can bind it around an `url-retrieve' call.
932
933 ---
934 *** If URL is used with a https connection, the first callback argument
935 plist will contain a :peer element that has the output of
936 `gnutls-peer-status' (if Emacs is built with GnuTLS support).
937
938 ** Tramp
939
940 +++
941 *** New connection method "afp", which allows you to access Mac OS X
942 volumes via the Apple Filing Protocol.
943
944 +++
945 *** New connection method "nc", which allows you to access dumb
946 busyboxes.
947
948 +++
949 *** Method-specific parameters can be overwritten now with variable
950 `tramp-connection-properties'.
951
952 ---
953 *** Handler for `file-notify-valid-p' for remote machines that support
954 filesystem notifications.
955
956 ** SQL mode
957
958 ---
959 *** New user variable `sql-default-directory' enables remote
960 connections using Tramp.
961
962 ---
963 *** New command `sql-send-line-and-next'.
964 This command, bound to `C-c C-n' by default, sends the current line to
965 the SQL process and advances to the next line, skipping whitespace and
966 comments.
967
968 ---
969 *** Added support for Vertica SQL.
970
971 ** VC and related modes
972
973 +++
974 *** Basic push support, via `vc-push', bound to `C-x v P'.
975 Implemented for Bzr, Git, Hg. As part of this change, the pre-existing
976 (undocumented) command vc-hg-push now behaves slightly differently.
977
978 +++
979 *** The new command vc-region-history shows the log+diff of the active region.
980
981 +++
982 *** You can refresh the VC state of a file buffer with `M-x vc-refresh-state'.
983 This command is useful when you perform version control commands
984 outside Emacs (e.g., from the shell prompt), or if you switch the VC
985 back-end for the buffer's file, or remove it from version control.
986
987 +++
988 *** New option `vc-annotate-background-mode' controls whether
989 the color range from `vc-annotate-color-map' is applied to the
990 background or to the foreground.
991
992 +++
993 *** `compare-windows' now compares text with the most recently selected window
994 instead of the next window. If you want the previous behavior of
995 comparing with the next window, customize the new option
996 `compare-windows-get-window-function' to the value
997 `compare-windows-get-next-window'.
998
999 ---
1000 *** Two new faces `compare-windows-removed' and `compare-windows-added'
1001 replace the face `compare-windows', which is now an obsolete alias for
1002 `compare-windows-added'.
1003
1004 ---
1005 *** The VC state indicator in the mode line now has different faces
1006 corresponding to each of the possible states. See the `vc-faces'
1007 customization group.
1008
1009 ---
1010 *** `log-edit-insert-changelog' converts "(tiny change)" to
1011 "Copyright-paperwork-exempt: yes". Set `log-edit-rewrite-tiny-change'
1012 nil to disable this.
1013
1014 ---
1015 ** VHDL mode now supports VHDL'08.
1016
1017 ** Calculator
1018
1019 ---
1020 *** Decimal display mode uses "," groups, so it's more
1021 fitting for use in money calculations
1022
1023 ---
1024 *** Factorial works with non-integer inputs.
1025
1026 ** Hide-IfDef mode
1027
1028 ---
1029 *** Hide-IfDef mode now support full C/C++ expressions in macros,
1030 macro argument expansion, interactive macro evaluation and automatic
1031 scanning of #define'd symbols.
1032
1033 ---
1034 *** New command `hif-evaluate-macro', bound to `C-c @ e', displays the
1035 result of evaluating a macro.
1036
1037 ---
1038 *** New command `hif-clear-all-ifdef-define', bound to `C-c @ C', clears
1039 all defined symbols in `hide-ifdef-env'.
1040
1041 ---
1042 *** New custom variable `hide-ifdef-header-regexp' to define C/C++ header
1043 file name patterns. Defaults to files whose extension is one of `.h',
1044 `.hh', `.hpp', `.hxx', or `.h++', matched case-insensitively.
1045
1046 ---
1047 *** New custom variable `hide-ifdef-expand-reinclusion-protection' to prevent
1048 reinclusion protected (a.k.a. "idempotent") header files from being hidden.
1049 (This could happen when an idempotent header file is visited again,
1050 when its guard symbol is already defined.) Defaults to `t'.
1051
1052 ---
1053 *** New custom variable `hide-ifdef-exclude-define-regexp' to define symbol
1054 name patterns (e.g. all "FOR_DOXYGEN_ONLY_*") to be ignored when
1055 looking for macro definitions. By default, no symbols are ignored.
1056
1057 ** TeX mode
1058
1059 +++
1060 *** New custom variable `tex-print-file-extension' to help users who
1061 use PDF instead of DVI.
1062
1063 +++
1064 *** TeX mode now supports Prettify Symbols mode. When enabling
1065 `prettify-symbols-mode' in a tex-mode buffer, \alpha ... \omega, and
1066 many other math macros are displayed using unicode characters.
1067
1068 +++
1069 ** New `big-indent' style in `whitespace-mode' highlights deep indentation.
1070 By default, 32 consecutive spaces or four consecutive TABs are
1071 considered to be too deep, but the new variable
1072 `whitespace-big-indent-regexp' can be customized to change that.
1073
1074 ---
1075 ** New options in `tildify-mode'.
1076 New options `tildify-space-string', `tildify-pattern', and
1077 `tildify-foreach-region-function' variables make
1078 `tildify-string-alist', `tildify-pattern-alist', and
1079 `tildify-ignored-environments-alist' variables (as well as a few
1080 helper functions) obsolete.
1081
1082 +++
1083 ** New package Xref replaces Etags's front-end and UI
1084
1085 The new package Xref provides a generic framework and new commands to
1086 find and move to definitions of functions, macros, data structures
1087 etc., as well as go back to the location where you were before moving
1088 to a definition. It supersedes and obsoletes many Etags commands,
1089 while still using the etags.el code that reads the TAGS tables as one
1090 of its back-ends.
1091
1092 The command `xref-find-definitions' replaces `find-tag' and provides
1093 an interface to pick one definition among several.
1094 `tags-loop-continue' is now unbound. `xref-pop-marker-stack' replaces
1095 `pop-tag-mark', but has a keybinding (`M-,') different from the one
1096 `pop-tag-mark' used.
1097
1098 `xref-find-definitions-other-window' replaces `find-tag-other-window'.
1099 `xref-find-definitions-other-frame' replaces `find-tag-other-frame'.
1100 `xref-find-apropos' replaces `find-tag-regexp'.
1101
1102 As a result of this, the following commands are now obsolete:
1103 `find-tag-other-window', `find-tag-other-frame', `find-tag-regexp',
1104 `tags-apropos'.
1105
1106 `tags-loop-continue' is not obsolete because it's still useful in
1107 `tags-search' and `tags-query-replace', for which there are no direct
1108 replacements yet.
1109
1110 +++
1111 *** Variants of `tags-search' and `tags-query-replace' in Dired were also
1112 replaced by xref-style commands, see the "Dired" section below.
1113
1114 +++
1115 *** New variables
1116
1117 `find-tag-marker-ring-length' is now an obsolete alias for
1118 `xref-marker-ring-length'. `find-tag-marker-ring' is now an obsolete
1119 alias for a private variable. `xref-push-marker-stack' and
1120 `xref-pop-marker-stack' should be used instead to manipulate the stack
1121 of searches for definitions.
1122
1123 ---
1124 *** `xref-find-definitions' and `describe-function' now display
1125 information about mode local overrides (defined by cedet/mode-local.el
1126 `define-overloadable-function' `define-mode-local-overrides').
1127
1128 The framework's Lisp API is still experimental and can change in major,
1129 backward-incompatible ways.
1130
1131 ---
1132 ** New package Project
1133
1134 The new package Project provides generic infrastructure for dealing
1135 with projects. The main commands included in it are
1136 `project-find-file' and `project-find-regexp'.
1137
1138 The Lisp API of this package is still experimental.
1139
1140 ** EUDC
1141 EUDC's LDAP backend has been improved.
1142
1143 +++
1144 *** EUDC supports LDAP-over-SSL URLs (ldaps://).
1145
1146 ---
1147 *** EUDC passes LDAP passwords through a pipe to the ldapsearch
1148 subprocess instead of on the command line.
1149
1150 ---
1151 *** EUDC handles LDAP wildcards automatically so the user shouldn't
1152 need to configure this manually anymore.
1153
1154 +++
1155 *** The LDAP configuration section of EUDC's manual has been
1156 rewritten.
1157
1158 There have also been customization changes.
1159
1160 +++
1161 *** New custom variable `eudc-server-hotlist' to allow specifying
1162 multiple EUDC servers in init file.
1163
1164 +++
1165 *** Custom variable `eudc-inline-query-format' defaults to completing
1166 on email and firstname instead of surname.
1167
1168 ---
1169 *** Custom variable `eudc-expansion-overwrites-query' defaults to nil
1170 to avoid interfering with the kill ring.
1171
1172 +++
1173 *** Custom variable `eudc-inline-expansion-format' defaults to
1174 "Firstname Surname <mail-address>".
1175
1176 +++
1177 *** Custom variable `eudc-options-file' defaults to
1178 "~/.emacs.d/eudc-options".
1179
1180 ---
1181 *** New custom variable `ldap-ldapsearch-password-prompt-regexp' to
1182 allow overriding the regular expression that recognizes the ldapsearch
1183 command line's password prompt.
1184
1185 ---
1186 EUDC's BBDB backend now supports BBDB 3.
1187
1188 ---
1189 EUDC's PH backend (eudcb-ph.el) is obsolete.
1190
1191 ** Eshell
1192
1193 +++
1194 *** The new built-in command `clear' can scroll window contents out of sight.
1195 If provided with an optional non-nil argument, the scrollback contents will be cleared.
1196
1197 +++
1198 *** New buffer syntax '#<buffer-name>', which is equivalent to
1199 '#<buffer buffer-name>'. This shorthand makes interacting with
1200 buffers from eshell more convenient. Custom variable
1201 `eshell-buffer-shorthand', which has been broken for a while, has been
1202 removed.
1203
1204 +++
1205 *** By default, eshell "visual" program buffers (created by
1206 `eshell-visual-commands' and similar custom vars) are no longer killed
1207 when their processes die. This fixes issues with short-lived commands
1208 and makes visual programs more useful in general. For example, if
1209 "git log" is a visual command, it will always show the visual command
1210 buffer, even if the "git log" process dies. For the old behavior,
1211 make the new option `eshell-destroy-buffer-when-process-dies' non-nil.
1212
1213 ** Browse-url
1214
1215 ---
1216 *** Support for the Google Chrome web browser.
1217
1218 ---
1219 *** Support for the Conkeror web browser.
1220
1221 ---
1222 *** Support for several ancient browsers is now officially obsolete.
1223
1224 +++
1225 ** tar-mode: new `tar-new-entry' command, allowing for new members to
1226 be added to the archive.
1227
1228 ** Autorevert
1229
1230 ---
1231 *** Dired buffers are also auto-reverted via file notifications, if
1232 Emacs is compiled with file notification support.
1233
1234 ---
1235 *** `auto-revert-use-notify' is set to nil in `global-auto-revert-mode'.
1236 See <http://debbugs.gnu.org/22814>.
1237
1238 ** File Notifications
1239
1240 +++
1241 *** The kqueue library is integrated for *BSD and Mac OS X machines.
1242
1243 +++
1244 *** The new event `stopped' signals, that a file notification watch is
1245 not active any longer.
1246
1247 +++
1248 *** The new function `file-notify-valid-p' checks, whether a file
1249 notification descriptor still corresponds to an activate watch.
1250
1251 ** Dired
1252
1253 +++
1254 *** The command `dired-do-compress' bound to `Z' now can compress
1255 directories and decompress zip files.
1256
1257 +++
1258 *** New command `dired-do-compress-to' bound to `c' can be used to
1259 compress many marked files into a single named archive. The
1260 compression command is determined from the new
1261 `dired-compress-files-alist' variable.
1262
1263 +++
1264 *** New user interface for the `A' and `Q' commands.
1265 These keys, now bound to `dired-do-find-regexp' and
1266 `dired-do-find-regexp-and-replace', work similarly to `xref-find-apropos'
1267 and `xref-query-replace-in-results': they present the matches
1268 in the `*xref*' buffer and let you move through the matches. No need
1269 to use `tags-loop-continue' to resume the search or replace loop. The
1270 previous commands, `dired-do-search' and
1271 `dired-do-query-replace-regexp', are still available, but not bound to
1272 keys; rebind `A' and `Q' to invoke them if you want the old behavior
1273 back. We intend to obsolete the old commands in a future release.
1274
1275 ** Tabulated List Mode
1276
1277 +++
1278 *** It is now safe for a mode that derives `tabulated-list-mode' to not
1279 call `tabulated-list-init-header', in which case it will have no
1280 header.
1281
1282 +++
1283 *** `tabulated-list-print' takes a second optional argument, update,
1284 which specifies an alternative printing method which is faster when
1285 few or no entries have changed.
1286
1287 ** Obsolete packages
1288
1289 ---
1290 *** gulp.el
1291
1292 ---
1293 *** landmark.el (moved to elpa.gnu.org)
1294
1295 \f
1296 * New Modes and Packages in Emacs 25.1
1297
1298 ---
1299 ** pinentry.el allows GnuPG passphrase to be prompted through the
1300 minibuffer instead of a graphical dialog, depending on whether the gpg
1301 command is called from Emacs (i.e., INSIDE_EMACS environment variable
1302 is set). This feature requires newer versions of GnuPG (2.1.5 or
1303 later) and Pinentry (0.9.5 or later). To use this feature, add
1304 "allow-emacs-pinentry" to "~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf" and reload the
1305 configuration with "gpgconf --reload gpg-agent".
1306
1307 +++
1308 ** cl-generic.el provides CLOS-style multiple-dispatch generic functions.
1309 The main entry points are `cl-defgeneric' and `cl-defmethod'. See the
1310 node "Generic Functions" in the Emacs Lisp manual for more details.
1311
1312 ---
1313 ** scss-mode (a minor variant of css-mode) is a major mode for editing
1314 SCSS (Sassy CSS) files.
1315
1316 ---
1317 ** let-alist is a new macro (and a package) that allows one to easily
1318 let-bind the values stored in an alist.
1319
1320 ---
1321 ** `tildify-mode' allows automatic insertion of hard spaces as one
1322 types the text. Breaking line after a single-character words is
1323 forbidden by Czech and Polish typography (and may be discouraged in
1324 other languages), so `auto-tildify-mode' makes it easier to create
1325 a typographically-correct documents.
1326
1327 ---
1328 ** The `seq' library adds sequence manipulation functions and macros
1329 that complement basic functions provided by subr.el. All functions
1330 are prefixed with `seq-' and work on lists, strings and vectors.
1331 `pcase' accepts a new Upattern `seq'.
1332
1333 ---
1334 ** The `map' library provides map-manipulation functions that work on
1335 alists, hash-table and arrays. All functions are prefixed with
1336 `map-'. `pcase' accepts a new UPattern `map'.
1337
1338 ---
1339 ** The `thunk' library provides functions and macros to control the
1340 evaluation of forms.
1341
1342 ---
1343 ** js-jsx-mode (a minor variant of js-mode) provides indentation
1344 support for JSX, an XML-like syntax extension to ECMAScript.
1345
1346 \f
1347 * Incompatible Lisp Changes in Emacs 25.1
1348
1349 ---
1350 ** `setq' and `setf' must now be called with an even number of
1351 arguments. The earlier behavior of silently supplying a nil to the
1352 last variable when there was an odd number of arguments has been
1353 eliminated.
1354
1355 +++
1356 ** `syntax-begin-function' is declared obsolete.
1357 Removed font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function and the SYNTAX-BEGIN
1358 slot in font-lock-defaults.
1359
1360 +++
1361 ** The new implementation of Subword mode affects word movement everywhere.
1362 When Subword mode is turned on, `forward-word', `backward-word', and
1363 everything that uses them will move by sub-words, effectively
1364 overriding the buffer's syntax table. Lisp programs that shouldn't be
1365 affected by Subword mode should call the new functions
1366 `forward-word-strictly' and `backward-word-strictly' instead.
1367
1368 +++
1369 ** `package-initialize' now sets `package-enable-at-startup' to nil if
1370 called during startup. Users who call this function in their init
1371 file and still expect it to be run after startup should set
1372 `package-enable-at-startup' to t after the call to
1373 `package-initialize'.
1374
1375 ---
1376 ** `:global' minor mode use `setq-default' rather than `setq'.
1377 This means that you can't use `make-local-variable' and expect them to
1378 "magically" become buffer-local.
1379
1380 +++
1381 ** `track-mouse' no longer freezes the shape of the mouse pointer.
1382 The `track-mouse' form no longer refrains from changing the shape of
1383 the mouse pointer for the entire time the body of that form is
1384 executed. Lisp programs that use `track-mouse' for dragging across
1385 large portions of the Emacs display, and want to avoid changes in the
1386 pointer shape during dragging, should bind the variable `track-mouse'
1387 to the special value `dragging' in the body of the form.
1388
1389 ---
1390 ** The optional `predicate' argument of `lisp-complete-symbol' no longer
1391 has any effect. (This change was made in Emacs 24.4 but was not
1392 advertised at the time.)
1393
1394 +++
1395 ** `indirect-function' does not signal `void-function' any more.
1396 This is mostly a bug-fix, since this change was missed back in 24.4 when
1397 symbol-function was changed not to signal `void-function' any more.
1398
1399 +++
1400 *** As a consequence, the second arg of `indirect-function' is now obsolete.
1401
1402 +++
1403 ** Comint, term, and compile do not set the EMACS env var any more.
1404 Use the INSIDE_EMACS environment variable instead.
1405
1406 +++
1407 ** `save-excursion' does not save&restore the mark any more.
1408 Use `save-mark-and-excursion' if you want the old behavior.
1409
1410 +++
1411 ** `read-buffer' and `read-buffer-function' can now be called with a 4th
1412 argument (`predicate').
1413
1414 +++
1415 ** `completion-table-dynamic' by default stays in the minibuffer.
1416 The minibuffer will be the current buffer when the function is called.
1417 If you want the old behavior of calling the function in the buffer
1418 from which the minibuffer was entered, use the new argument
1419 `switch-buffer' to `completion-table-dynamic'.
1420
1421 ---
1422 ** window-configurations no longer record the buffers' marks.
1423
1424 ---
1425 ** inhibit-modification-hooks now also inhibits lock-file checks, as well as
1426 active region handling.
1427
1428 +++
1429 ** deactivate-mark is now buffer-local.
1430
1431 +++
1432 ** `cl-the' now asserts that its argument is of the given type.
1433
1434 +++
1435 ** `process-running-child-p' may now return a numeric process
1436 group ID instead of `t'.
1437
1438 +++
1439 ** Mouse click events on mode line or header line no longer include
1440 any reference to a buffer position. The 6th member of the mouse
1441 position list returned for such events is now nil.
1442
1443 ---
1444 ** Menu items in keymaps do not support the "key shortcut cache" any more.
1445 These slots used to hold key-shortcut data, but have been obsolete since
1446 Emacs-21.
1447
1448 ---
1449 ** Emacs no longer downcases the first letter of a system diagnostic
1450 when signaling a file error. For example, it now reports "Permission
1451 denied" instead of "permission denied". The old behavior was problematic
1452 in languages like German where downcasing rules depend on grammar.
1453
1454 +++
1455 ** New variable ‘text-quoting-style’ to control how Emacs translates quotes.
1456 Set it to ‘curve’ for curved single quotes ‘like this’, to ‘straight’
1457 for straight apostrophes 'like this', and to ‘grave’ for grave accent
1458 and apostrophe `like this'. The default value nil acts like ‘curve’
1459 if curved single quotes are displayable, and like ‘grave’ otherwise.
1460 The new variable affects display of diagnostics and help, but not of info.
1461
1462 +++
1463 ** substitute-command-keys now replaces quotes.
1464 That is, it converts documentation strings’ quoting style as per the
1465 value of ‘text-quoting-style’. Doc strings in source code can use
1466 either curved single quotes or grave accents and apostrophes. As
1467 before, characters preceded by \= are output as-is.
1468
1469 +++
1470 ** Message-issuing functions ‘error’, ‘message’, etc. now convert quotes.
1471 They use the new ‘format-message’ function instead of plain ‘format’,
1472 so that they now follow user preference as per ‘text-quoting-style’
1473 when processing curved single quotes, grave accents, and apostrophes
1474 in their format argument.
1475
1476 +++
1477 ** The character classes [:alpha:] and [:alnum:] in regular expressions
1478 now match multibyte characters using Unicode character properties.
1479 If you want the old behavior where they matched any character with
1480 word syntax, use `\sw' instead.
1481
1482 +++
1483 ** The character classes [:graph:] and [:print:] in regular expressions
1484 no longer match every multibyte character. Instead, Emacs now
1485 consults the Unicode character properties to determine which
1486 characters are graphic or printable. In particular, surrogates and
1487 unassigned codepoints are now rejected. If you want the old behavior,
1488 use [:multibyte:] instead.
1489
1490 +++
1491 ** The `diff' command uses the unified format now. To restore the old
1492 behavior, set `diff-switches' to `-c'.
1493
1494 ---
1495 ** `grep-template' and `grep-find-template' values don't include the
1496 --color argument anymore. It's added at the <C> place holder position
1497 dynamically. Any third-party code that changes these templates should
1498 be updated accordingly.
1499
1500 +++
1501 ** ‘(/ N)’ is now equivalent to ‘(/ 1 N)’ rather than to ‘(/ N 1)’.
1502 The new behavior is compatible with Common Lisp and with XEmacs.
1503 This change does not affect Lisp code intended to be portable to
1504 Emacs 24.2 and earlier, which did not support unary ‘/’.
1505
1506 +++
1507 ** The `default-directory' value doesn't have to end slash. To make
1508 that happen, `unhandled-file-name-directory' now defaults to calling
1509 `file-name-as-directory'.
1510
1511 \f
1512 * Lisp Changes in Emacs 25.1
1513
1514 ** pcase
1515 +++
1516 *** New UPatterns `quote', `app'.
1517 +++
1518 *** New UPatterns can be defined with `pcase-defmacro'.
1519 +++
1520 *** New vector QPattern.
1521
1522 ---
1523 ** syntax-propertize is now automatically called on-demand during forward
1524 parsing functions like `forward-sexp'.
1525
1526 +++
1527 ** New hooks `prefix-command-echo-keystrokes-functions' and
1528 `prefix-command-preserve-state-hook' allow the definition of prefix
1529 commands other than the predefined `C-u'.
1530
1531 +++
1532 ** New functions `filepos-to-bufferpos' and `bufferpos-to-filepos'.
1533 These allow conversion between buffer positions and the corresponding
1534 file byte offsets, given the file's encoding.
1535
1536 +++
1537 ** The default value of `load-read-function' is now `read'.
1538 Previously, the default value of `nil' implied using `read'.
1539
1540 +++
1541 ** New hook `pre-redisplay-functions'.
1542 It is a bit easier to use than `pre-redisplay-function'.
1543
1544 +++
1545 ** The second arg of `looking-back' should always be provided explicitly.
1546 Previously, it was an optional argument, now it's mandatory.
1547
1548 +++
1549 ** Text properties `intangible', `point-entered', and `point-left' are obsolete.
1550 Replaced by properties `cursor-intangible' and `cursor-sensor-functions',
1551 implemented by the new `cursor-intangible-mode' and
1552 `cursor-sensor-mode' minor modes.
1553
1554 +++
1555 ** `inhibit-point-motion-hooks' now defaults to `t' and is obsolete.
1556 Use the new minor modes `cursor-intangible-mode' and
1557 `cursor-sensor-mode' instead.
1558
1559 +++
1560 ** New process type `pipe', which can be used in combination with the
1561 `:stderr' keyword of make-process to handle standard error output
1562 of subprocess.
1563
1564 +++
1565 ** New function `make-process' provides an alternative interface to
1566 `start-process'. It allows programs to set process parameters such as
1567 process filter, sentinel, etc., through keyword arguments (similar to
1568 `make-network-process').
1569
1570 +++
1571 ** A new function `directory-files-recursively' returns all matching
1572 files (recursively) under a directory.
1573
1574 +++
1575 ** New variable `inhibit-message', when bound to non-nil, inhibits
1576 `message' and related functions from displaying messages in the echo
1577 area. The output is still logged to the *Messages* buffer.
1578
1579 +++
1580 ** A new text property `inhibit-read-only' can be used in read-only
1581 buffers to allow certain parts of the text to be writable.
1582
1583 +++
1584 ** A new variable `comment-end-can-be-escaped' is useful in languages
1585 such as C and C++ where line comments with escaped newlines are
1586 continued to the next line.
1587
1588 +++
1589 ** New macro `define-advice'.
1590
1591 +++
1592 ** Emacs Lisp now supports generators.
1593 See the "Generators" section of the ELisp manual for the details.
1594
1595 +++
1596 ** New finalizer facility for running code when objects become unreachable.
1597 See the "Finalizer Type" subsection in the ELisp manual for the
1598 details.
1599
1600 ---
1601 ** lexical closures can use (:documentation FORM) to build their docstring.
1602 It should be placed right where the docstring would be, and FORM is then
1603 evaluated (and should return a string) when the closure is built.
1604
1605 +++
1606 ** define-inline provides a new way to define inlinable functions.
1607
1608 +++
1609 ** New function `macroexpand-1' to perform a single step of macro expansion.
1610
1611 +++
1612 ** Some "x-*" functions were obsoleted and/or renamed:
1613 *** x-select-text is renamed gui-select-text.
1614 *** x-selection-value is renamed gui-selection-value.
1615 *** x-get-selection is renamed gui-get-selection.
1616 *** x-get-clipboard and x-clipboard-yank are marked obsolete.
1617 *** x-get-selection-value is renamed to gui-get-primary-selection.
1618 *** x-set-selection is renamed to gui-set-selection
1619
1620 +++
1621 ** New function `string-greaterp', which return the opposite result of
1622 `string-lessp'.
1623
1624 +++
1625 ** The new functions `string-collate-lessp' and `string-collate-equalp'
1626 preserve the collation order as defined by the system's locale(1)
1627 environment. For the time being this is implemented for modern POSIX
1628 systems and for MS-Windows, for other systems they fall back to their
1629 counterparts `string-lessp' and `string-equal'.
1630
1631 ---
1632 *** The ls-lisp package uses `string-collate-lessp' to sort file names.
1633 The effect is that, on systems that use ls-lisp for Dired, the default
1634 sort order of the files in Dired is now different from what it was in
1635 previous versions of Emacs. In particular, the file names are sorted
1636 disregarding punctuation, accents, and diacritics, and letter case is
1637 ignored. For example, files whose name begin with a period will no
1638 longer appear near the beginning of the directory listing. If you
1639 want the old, locale-independent sorting, customize the new option
1640 `ls-lisp-use-string-collate' to the nil value.
1641
1642 +++
1643 *** The MS-Windows specific variable `w32-collate-ignore-punctuation',
1644 if set to a non-nil value, causes the above 2 functions to ignore
1645 symbol and punctuation characters when collating strings. This
1646 emulates the behavior of modern Posix platforms when the locale's
1647 codeset is "UTF-8" (as in "en_US.UTF-8"). This is needed because
1648 MS-Windows doesn't support UTF-8 as codeset in its locales.
1649
1650 +++
1651 ** New function `alist-get', which is also a valid place (aka lvalue).
1652
1653 +++
1654 ** New function `funcall-interactively', which works like `funcall'
1655 but makes `called-interactively-p' treat the function as (you guessed it)
1656 called interactively.
1657
1658 +++
1659 ** New function `function-put' to use instead of `put' for function properties.
1660
1661 +++
1662 ** The new function `bidi-find-overridden-directionality' allows you to
1663 find characters whose directionality was, perhaps maliciously,
1664 overridden by directional override control characters. Lisp programs
1665 can use this to detect potential phishing of URLs and other links that
1666 exploits bidirectional display reordering.
1667
1668 +++
1669 ** The new function `buffer-substring-with-bidi-context' allows you to
1670 copy a portion of a buffer into a different location while preserving
1671 the visual appearance both of the copied text and the text at
1672 destination, even when the copied text includes mixed bidirectional
1673 text and directional control characters.
1674
1675 +++
1676 ** New properties that can be specified with `declare':
1677 *** (interactive-only INSTEAD), says to use INSTEAD for non-interactive use.
1678 *** (pure VAL), if VAL is non-nil, indicates the function is pure.
1679 *** (side-effect-free VAL), if VAL is non-nil, indicates the function does not
1680 have side effects.
1681
1682 +++
1683 ** New macro `with-file-modes', for evaluating expressions with default file
1684 permissions set to temporary values (e.g., for creating private files).
1685
1686 +++
1687 ** You can access the slots of structures using `cl-struct-slot-value'.
1688
1689 +++
1690 ** Function `sort' can deal with vectors.
1691
1692 ---
1693 ** Function `system-name' now returns an updated value if the current
1694 system's name has changed or if the Emacs process has changed systems,
1695 and to avoid long waits it no longer consults DNS to canonicalize the
1696 name. The variable `system-name' is now obsolete.
1697
1698 +++
1699 ** Function `write-region' no longer outputs "Wrote FILE" in batch mode.
1700
1701 ---
1702 ** If `pwd' is called with a prefix argument, insert the current default
1703 directory at point.
1704
1705 +++
1706 ** New functions return extended information about fonts and faces.
1707
1708 +++
1709 *** The function `font-info' now returns more details about a font.
1710 In particular, it now returns the average width of the font's
1711 characters, which can be used for geometry-related calculations.
1712
1713 +++
1714 *** A new function `default-font-width' returns the average width of a
1715 character in the current buffer's default font. If the default face
1716 is remapped (see `face-remapping-alist'), the value for the remapped
1717 face is returned. This function complements the existing function
1718 `default-font-height'.
1719
1720 +++
1721 *** New functions `window-font-height' and `window-font-width' return
1722 the height and average width of characters in a specified face and
1723 window. If FACE is remapped (see `face-remapping-alist'), the
1724 function returns the information for the remapped face.
1725
1726 +++
1727 *** A new function `window-max-chars-per-line' returns the maximal
1728 number of characters that can be displayed on one line. If a face
1729 and/or window are provided, these values are used for the
1730 calculation. This function is different from `window-body-width' in
1731 that it accounts for (i) continuation glyphs, (ii) the size of the
1732 font, and (iii) the specified window.
1733
1734 ---
1735 ** New utilities in subr-x.el:
1736 *** New macros `if-let' and `when-let' allow defining bindings and to
1737 execute code depending whether all values are true.
1738 *** New macros `thread-first' and `thread-last' allow threading a form
1739 as the first or last argument of subsequent forms.
1740
1741 +++
1742 ** Documentation strings now support quoting with curved single quotes
1743 ‘like-this’ in addition to the old style with grave accent and
1744 apostrophe `like-this'. The new style looks better on today's displays.
1745 In the new Electric Quote mode, you can enter curved single quotes
1746 into documentation by typing ` and '. Outside Electric Quote mode,
1747 you can enter them by typing ‘C-x 8 [’ and ‘C-x 8 ]’, or (if your Alt
1748 key works) by typing ‘A-[’ and ‘A-]’. As described above under
1749 ‘text-quoting-style’, the user can specify how to display doc string
1750 quotes.
1751
1752 +++
1753 ** New function ‘format-message’ is like ‘format’ and also converts
1754 curved single quotes, grave accents and apostrophes as per
1755 ‘text-quoting-style’.
1756
1757 +++
1758 ** show-help-function's arg is converted via substitute-command-keys
1759 before being passed to the function. Help strings, help-echo
1760 properties, etc. can therefore contain command key escapes and
1761 quotation marks.
1762
1763 +++
1764 ** Time-related changes:
1765
1766 *** Time conversion functions now accept an optional ZONE argument
1767 that specifies the time zone rules for conversion. ZONE is omitted or
1768 nil for Emacs local time, t for Universal Time, ‘wall’ for system wall
1769 clock time, or a string as in ‘set-time-zone-rule’ for a time zone
1770 rule. The affected functions are ‘current-time-string’,
1771 ‘current-time-zone’, ‘decode-time’, and ‘format-time-string’. The
1772 function ‘encode-time’, which already accepted a simple time zone rule
1773 argument, has been extended to accept all the new forms.
1774
1775 *** Time-related functions now consistently accept numbers
1776 (representing seconds since the epoch) and nil (representing the
1777 current time) as well as the usual list-of-integer representation.
1778 Affected functions include `current-time-string', `current-time-zone',
1779 `decode-time', `float-time', `format-time-string', `seconds-to-time',
1780 `time-add', `time-less-p', `time-subtract', `time-to-day-in-year',
1781 `time-to-days', and `time-to-seconds'.
1782
1783 *** The `encode-time-value' and `with-decoded-time-value' macros have
1784 been obsoleted.
1785
1786 *** `calendar-next-time-zone-transition', `time-add', and
1787 `time-subtract' no longer return time values in the obsolete and
1788 undocumented integer-pair format. Instead, they return a list of two
1789 integers.
1790
1791 +++
1792 ** New function `set-binary-mode' allows switching a standard stream
1793 of the Emacs process to binary I/O mode.
1794
1795 +++
1796 ** The new function `directory-name-p' can be used to check whether a file
1797 name (as returned from, for instance, `file-name-all-completions') is
1798 a directory file name. It returns non-nil if the last character in
1799 the name is a directory separator character (forward slash on GNU and
1800 Unix systems, forward- or backslash on MS-Windows and MS-DOS).
1801
1802 ---
1803 ** ASCII approximations to curved quotes are put in standard-display-table
1804 if the terminal cannot display curved quotes.
1805
1806 +++
1807 ** Standard output and error streams now transliterate characters via
1808 standard-display-table, and encode output using locale-coding-system.
1809 To force a specific encoding, bind `coding-system-for-write' to the
1810 coding-system of your choice when invoking functions like `prin1' and
1811 `message'.
1812
1813 +++
1814 ** New var `truncate-string-ellipsis' to choose how to indicate truncation.
1815
1816 +++
1817 ** New possible value for `system-type': `nacl'.
1818 This is used by Google's Native Client (NaCl).
1819
1820 ** Miscellaneous name change
1821
1822 ---
1823 For consistency with the usual Emacs spelling, the Lisp variable
1824 `hfy-optimisations' has been renamed to `hfy-optimizations'.
1825 The old name should still work, as an obsolescent alias.
1826
1827 ** Changes in Frame- and Window- Handling
1828
1829 +++
1830 *** Emacs can now draw horizontal scroll bars on some platforms that
1831 provide toolkit scroll bars, namely Gtk+, Lucid, Motif and Windows.
1832 Horizontal scroll bars are turned off by default.
1833
1834 **** New function `horizontal-scroll-bars-available-p' telling whether
1835 horizontal scroll bars are available on the underlying system.
1836
1837 **** New mode `horizontal-scroll-bar-mode' to toggle horizontal scroll
1838 bars on all existing and future frames.
1839
1840 **** New function `toggle-horizontal-scroll-bar' to toggle horizontal
1841 scroll bars on the selected frame.
1842
1843 **** New frame parameters `horizontal-scroll-bars' and
1844 `scroll-bar-height' to set horizontal scroll bars and their height
1845 for individual frames and in `default-frame-alist'.
1846
1847 **** New functions `frame-scroll-bar-height' and
1848 `window-scroll-bar-height' return the height of horizontal scroll
1849 bars on a specific frame or window.
1850
1851 **** `set-window-scroll-bars' now accepts five parameters where the last
1852 two specify height and type of the window's horizontal scroll bar.
1853
1854 **** `window-scroll-bars' now returns type and sizes of horizontal scroll
1855 bars too.
1856
1857 **** New buffer-local variables `horizontal-scroll-bar' and
1858 `scroll-bar-height'.
1859
1860 +++
1861 *** New functions `frame-geometry' and `frame-edges' give access to a
1862 frame's geometry.
1863
1864 +++
1865 *** New functions `mouse-absolute-pixel-position' and
1866 `set-mouse-absolute-pixel-position' get/set screen coordinates of the
1867 mouse cursor.
1868
1869 +++
1870 *** The function `window-edges' now accepts three additional arguments to
1871 retrieve body, absolute and pixel edges of the window.
1872
1873 +++
1874 *** The functions `window-inside-edges', `window-inside-pixel-edges' and
1875 `window-inside-absolute-pixel-edges' have been renamed to respectively
1876 `window-body-edges', `window-body-pixel-edges' and
1877 `window-absolute-body-pixel-edges'. The old names are kept as aliases.
1878
1879 +++
1880 *** New function `window-absolute-pixel-position' to get the screen
1881 coordinates of a visible buffer position.
1882
1883 +++
1884 *** The height of a frame's menu and tool bar are no longer counted in the
1885 frame's text height. This means that the text height stands only for
1886 the height of the frame's root window plus that of the echo area (if
1887 present). This was already the behavior for frames with external tool
1888 and menu bars (like in the Gtk builds) but has now been extended to all
1889 builds.
1890
1891 +++
1892 *** Frames now do not necessarily preserve the number of columns or lines
1893 they display when setting default font, menu bar, fringe width, or
1894 scroll bars. In particular, maximized and fullscreen frames are
1895 conceptually never resized if such settings change. For fullheight and
1896 fullwidth frames, the behavior may depend on the toolkit used.
1897 **** New option `frame-inhibit-implied-resize' if non-nil, means that
1898 setting default font, menu bar, fringe width, or scroll bars of a
1899 specific frame does not resize that frame in order to preserve the
1900 number of columns or lines it displays.
1901
1902 +++
1903 *** New function `window-preserve-size' allows you to preserve the size of
1904 a window without "fixing" it. It's supported by `fit-window-to-buffer',
1905 `temp-buffer-resize-mode' and `display-buffer'.
1906
1907 +++
1908 *** New `display-buffer' action function `display-buffer-use-some-frame'.
1909 This displays the buffer in an existing frame other than the current
1910 frame, and allows the caller to specify a frame predicate to exclude
1911 frames.
1912
1913 +++
1914 *** New minor mode `window-divider-mode' and options
1915 `window-divider-default-places', `window-divider-default-bottom-width'
1916 and `window-divider-default-right-width'.
1917
1918 ---
1919 ** Tearoff menus and detachable toolbars for Gtk+ have been removed.
1920 Those features have been deprecated in Gtk+ for a long time.
1921
1922 ** Etags
1923
1924 +++
1925 *** etags no longer qualifies class members by default.
1926
1927 By default, `etags' will not qualify class members for C-like
1928 object-oriented languages with their class names and namespaces, and
1929 will remove qualifications used explicitly in the code from the tag
1930 names it puts in TAGS files. This is so the etags.el back-end for
1931 `xref-find-definitions' is more accurate and produces less false
1932 positives.
1933
1934 Use --class-qualify (-Q) if you want the old default behavior of
1935 qualifying class members in C++, Java, and Objective C. Note that
1936 using -Q might make some class members become "unknown" to `M-.'
1937 (`xref-find-definitions'); if so, you can use `C-u M-.' to specify the
1938 qualified names by hand.
1939
1940 +++
1941 *** New language Ruby
1942
1943 Names of modules, classes, methods, functions, and constants are
1944 tagged. Overloaded operators are also tagged.
1945
1946 +++
1947 *** New language Go
1948 Names of packages, functions, and types are tagged.
1949
1950 +++
1951 *** Improved support for Lua
1952
1953 Etags now tags functions even if the "function" keyword follows some
1954 whitespace at line beginning.
1955
1956 \f
1957 * Changes in Emacs 25.1 on Non-Free Operating Systems
1958
1959 ---
1960 ** MS-Windows specific Emacs build scripts are no longer in the distribution
1961 This includes the makefile.w32-in files in various subdirectories, and
1962 the support files. The file nt/configure.bat now just tells the user
1963 to use the procedure described in nt/INSTALL, by running the Posix
1964 `configure' script in the top-level directory.
1965
1966 ---
1967 ** Building Emacs for MS-Windows requires at least Windows XP
1968 or Windows Server 2003. The built binaries still run on all versions
1969 of Windows starting with Windows 9X.
1970
1971 +++
1972 ** Emacs running on MS-Windows now supports the daemon mode.
1973
1974 ---
1975 ** The byte counts in etags-generated TAGS files are now the same on
1976 MS-Windows as they are on other platforms.
1977
1978 ---
1979 ** On OS X, configure creates a Cocoa ("Nextstep") build by default.
1980 Pass '--without-ns' to configure to create an X11 build, the old default.
1981
1982 ---
1983 ** OS X 10.5 or older is no longer supported.
1984
1985 ---
1986 ** OS X on PowerPC is no longer supported.
1987
1988 ---
1989 ** New variable `ns-use-fullscreen-animation' controls animation for
1990 non-native NS fullscreen. The default is nil. Set to t to enable
1991 animation when entering and leaving fullscreen. For native OSX fullscreen
1992 this has no effect.
1993
1994 ---
1995 ** The new function 'w32-application-type' returns the type of an
1996 MS-Windows application given the name of its executable program file.
1997
1998 ** New variable `w32-pipe-buffer-size'.
1999 It can be used to tune the size of the buffer of pipes created for
2000 communicating with subprocesses, when the program run by a subprocess
2001 exhibits unusual buffering behavior. Default is zero, which lets the
2002 OS use its default size.
2003
2004 \f
2005 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
2006 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
2007
2008 GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
2009 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
2010 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
2011 (at your option) any later version.
2012
2013 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
2014 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
2015 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
2016 GNU General Public License for more details.
2017
2018 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
2019 along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
2020
2021 \f
2022 Local variables:
2023 coding: utf-8
2024 mode: outline
2025 paragraph-separate: "[ \f]*$"
2026 end: