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