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1 ;;; loaddefs.el --- automatically extracted autoloads
2 ;;
3 ;;; Code:
4 \f
5 ;;;### (autoloads (5x5-crack 5x5-crack-xor-mutate 5x5-crack-mutating-best
6 ;;;;;; 5x5-crack-mutating-current 5x5-crack-randomly 5x5) "5x5"
7 ;;;;;; "play/5x5.el" (14247 4566))
8 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/5x5.el
9
10 (autoload (quote 5x5) "5x5" "\
11 Play 5x5.
12
13 The object of 5x5 is very simple, by moving around the grid and flipping
14 squares you must fill the grid.
15
16 5x5 keyboard bindings are:
17 \\<5x5-mode-map>
18 Flip \\[5x5-flip-current]
19 Move up \\[5x5-up]
20 Move down \\[5x5-down]
21 Move left \\[5x5-left]
22 Move right \\[5x5-right]
23 Start new game \\[5x5-new-game]
24 New game with random grid \\[5x5-randomize]
25 Random cracker \\[5x5-crack-randomly]
26 Mutate current cracker \\[5x5-crack-mutating-current]
27 Mutate best cracker \\[5x5-crack-mutating-best]
28 Mutate xor cracker \\[5x5-crack-xor-mutate]
29 Quit current game \\[5x5-quit-game]" t nil)
30
31 (autoload (quote 5x5-crack-randomly) "5x5" "\
32 Attempt to crack 5x5 using random solutions." t nil)
33
34 (autoload (quote 5x5-crack-mutating-current) "5x5" "\
35 Attempt to crack 5x5 by mutating the current solution." t nil)
36
37 (autoload (quote 5x5-crack-mutating-best) "5x5" "\
38 Attempt to crack 5x5 by mutating the best solution." t nil)
39
40 (autoload (quote 5x5-crack-xor-mutate) "5x5" "\
41 Attempt to crack 5x5 by xor the current and best solution and then
42 mutating the result." t nil)
43
44 (autoload (quote 5x5-crack) "5x5" "\
45 Attempt to find a solution for 5x5.
46
47 5x5-crack takes the argument BREEDER which should be a function that takes
48 two parameters, the first will be a grid vector array that is the current
49 solution and the second will be the best solution so far. The function
50 should return a grid vector array that is the new solution." t nil)
51
52 ;;;***
53 \f
54 ;;;### (autoloads (ada-mode ada-add-extensions) "ada-mode" "progmodes/ada-mode.el"
55 ;;;;;; (14360 11474))
56 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ada-mode.el
57
58 (autoload (quote ada-add-extensions) "ada-mode" "\
59 Define SPEC and BODY as being valid extensions for Ada files.
60 Going from body to spec with `ff-find-other-file' used these
61 extensions.
62 SPEC and BODY are two regular expressions that must match against the file
63 name" nil nil)
64
65 (autoload (quote ada-mode) "ada-mode" "\
66 Ada mode is the major mode for editing Ada code.
67
68 Bindings are as follows: (Note: 'LFD' is control-j.)
69
70 Indent line '\\[ada-tab]'
71 Indent line, insert newline and indent the new line. '\\[newline-and-indent]'
72
73 Re-format the parameter-list point is in '\\[ada-format-paramlist]'
74 Indent all lines in region '\\[ada-indent-region]'
75
76 Adjust case of identifiers and keywords in region '\\[ada-adjust-case-region]'
77 Adjust case of identifiers and keywords in buffer '\\[ada-adjust-case-buffer]'
78
79 Fill comment paragraph, justify and append postfix '\\[fill-paragraph]'
80
81 Next func/proc/task '\\[ada-next-procedure]' Previous func/proc/task '\\[ada-previous-procedure]'
82 Next package '\\[ada-next-package]' Previous package '\\[ada-previous-package]'
83
84 Goto matching start of current 'end ...;' '\\[ada-move-to-start]'
85 Goto end of current block '\\[ada-move-to-end]'
86
87 Comments are handled using standard GNU Emacs conventions, including:
88 Start a comment '\\[indent-for-comment]'
89 Comment region '\\[comment-region]'
90 Uncomment region '\\[ada-uncomment-region]'
91 Continue comment on next line '\\[indent-new-comment-line]'
92
93 If you use imenu.el:
94 Display index-menu of functions & procedures '\\[imenu]'
95
96 If you use find-file.el:
97 Switch to other file (Body <-> Spec) '\\[ff-find-other-file]'
98 or '\\[ff-mouse-find-other-file]
99 Switch to other file in other window '\\[ada-ff-other-window]'
100 or '\\[ff-mouse-find-other-file-other-window]
101 If you use this function in a spec and no body is available, it gets created with body stubs.
102
103 If you use ada-xref.el:
104 Goto declaration: '\\[ada-point-and-xref]' on the identifier
105 or '\\[ada-goto-declaration]' with point on the identifier
106 Complete identifier: '\\[ada-complete-identifier]'" t nil)
107
108 ;;;***
109 \f
110 ;;;### (autoloads (ada-header) "ada-stmt" "progmodes/ada-stmt.el"
111 ;;;;;; (14360 11651))
112 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ada-stmt.el
113
114 (autoload (quote ada-header) "ada-stmt" "\
115 Insert a descriptive header at the top of the file." t nil)
116
117 ;;;***
118 \f
119 ;;;### (autoloads (change-log-merge add-log-current-defun change-log-mode
120 ;;;;;; add-change-log-entry-other-window add-change-log-entry find-change-log
121 ;;;;;; prompt-for-change-log-name add-log-mailing-address add-log-full-name)
122 ;;;;;; "add-log" "add-log.el" (14460 35756))
123 ;;; Generated autoloads from add-log.el
124
125 (defvar add-log-full-name nil "\
126 *Full name of user, for inclusion in ChangeLog daily headers.
127 This defaults to the value returned by the function `user-full-name'.")
128
129 (defvar add-log-mailing-address nil "\
130 *Electronic mail address of user, for inclusion in ChangeLog daily headers.
131 This defaults to the value of `user-mail-address'.")
132
133 (autoload (quote prompt-for-change-log-name) "add-log" "\
134 Prompt for a change log name." nil nil)
135
136 (autoload (quote find-change-log) "add-log" "\
137 Find a change log file for \\[add-change-log-entry] and return the name.
138
139 Optional arg FILE-NAME specifies the file to use.
140 If FILE-NAME is nil, use the value of `change-log-default-name'.
141 If 'change-log-default-name' is nil, behave as though it were 'ChangeLog'
142 \(or whatever we use on this operating system).
143
144 If 'change-log-default-name' contains a leading directory component, then
145 simply find it in the current directory. Otherwise, search in the current
146 directory and its successive parents for a file so named.
147
148 Once a file is found, `change-log-default-name' is set locally in the
149 current buffer to the complete file name." nil nil)
150
151 (autoload (quote add-change-log-entry) "add-log" "\
152 Find change log file and add an entry for today.
153 Optional arg WHOAMI (interactive prefix) non-nil means prompt for user
154 name and site.
155
156 Second arg is FILE-NAME of change log. If nil, uses `change-log-default-name'.
157 Third arg OTHER-WINDOW non-nil means visit in other window.
158 Fourth arg NEW-ENTRY non-nil means always create a new entry at the front;
159 never append to an existing entry. Option `add-log-keep-changes-together'
160 otherwise affects whether a new entry is created.
161
162 Today's date is calculated according to `change-log-time-zone-rule' if
163 non-nil, otherwise in local time." t nil)
164
165 (autoload (quote add-change-log-entry-other-window) "add-log" "\
166 Find change log file in other window and add an entry for today.
167 Optional arg WHOAMI (interactive prefix) non-nil means prompt for user
168 name and site.
169 Second optional arg FILE-NAME is file name of change log.
170 If nil, use `change-log-default-name'.
171
172 Affected by the same options as `add-change-log-entry'." t nil)
173 (define-key ctl-x-4-map "a" 'add-change-log-entry-other-window)
174
175 (autoload (quote change-log-mode) "add-log" "\
176 Major mode for editing change logs; like Indented Text Mode.
177 Prevents numeric backups and sets `left-margin' to 8 and `fill-column' to 74.
178 New log entries are usually made with \\[add-change-log-entry] or \\[add-change-log-entry-other-window].
179 Each entry behaves as a paragraph, and the entries for one day as a page.
180 Runs `change-log-mode-hook'." t nil)
181
182 (defvar add-log-lisp-like-modes (quote (emacs-lisp-mode lisp-mode scheme-mode dsssl-mode lisp-interaction-mode)) "\
183 *Modes that look like Lisp to `add-log-current-defun'.")
184
185 (defvar add-log-c-like-modes (quote (c-mode c++-mode c++-c-mode objc-mode)) "\
186 *Modes that look like C to `add-log-current-defun'.")
187
188 (defvar add-log-tex-like-modes (quote (TeX-mode plain-TeX-mode LaTeX-mode plain-tex-mode latex-mode)) "\
189 *Modes that look like TeX to `add-log-current-defun'.")
190
191 (autoload (quote add-log-current-defun) "add-log" "\
192 Return name of function definition point is in, or nil.
193
194 Understands C, Lisp, LaTeX (\"functions\" are chapters, sections, ...),
195 Texinfo (@node titles), Perl, and Fortran.
196
197 Other modes are handled by a heuristic that looks in the 10K before
198 point for uppercase headings starting in the first column or
199 identifiers followed by `:' or `=', see variables
200 `add-log-current-defun-header-regexp' and
201 `add-log-current-defun-function'
202
203 Has a preference of looking backwards." nil nil)
204
205 (autoload (quote change-log-merge) "add-log" "\
206 Merge the contents of ChangeLog file OTHER-LOG with this buffer.
207 Both must be found in Change Log mode (since the merging depends on
208 the appropriate motion commands).
209
210 Entries are inserted in chronological order.
211
212 Both the current and old-style time formats for entries are supported,
213 so this command could be used to convert old-style logs by merging
214 with an empty log." t nil)
215
216 ;;;***
217 \f
218 ;;;### (autoloads (defadvice ad-add-advice ad-default-compilation-action
219 ;;;;;; ad-redefinition-action) "advice" "emacs-lisp/advice.el" (14410
220 ;;;;;; 19111))
221 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/advice.el
222
223 (defvar ad-redefinition-action (quote warn) "\
224 *Defines what to do with redefinitions during Advice de/activation.
225 Redefinition occurs if a previously activated function that already has an
226 original definition associated with it gets redefined and then de/activated.
227 In such a case we can either accept the current definition as the new
228 original definition, discard the current definition and replace it with the
229 old original, or keep it and raise an error. The values `accept', `discard',
230 `error' or `warn' govern what will be done. `warn' is just like `accept' but
231 it additionally prints a warning message. All other values will be
232 interpreted as `error'.")
233
234 (defvar ad-default-compilation-action (quote maybe) "\
235 *Defines whether to compile advised definitions during activation.
236 A value of `always' will result in unconditional compilation, `never' will
237 always avoid compilation, `maybe' will compile if the byte-compiler is already
238 loaded, and `like-original' will compile if the original definition of the
239 advised function is compiled or a built-in function. Every other value will
240 be interpreted as `maybe'. This variable will only be considered if the
241 COMPILE argument of `ad-activate' was supplied as nil.")
242
243 (autoload (quote ad-add-advice) "advice" "\
244 Add a piece of ADVICE to FUNCTION's list of advices in CLASS.
245 If FUNCTION already has one or more pieces of advice of the specified
246 CLASS then POSITION determines where the new piece will go. The value
247 of POSITION can either be `first', `last' or a number where 0 corresponds
248 to `first'. Numbers outside the range will be mapped to the closest
249 extreme position. If there was already a piece of ADVICE with the same
250 name, then the position argument will be ignored and the old advice
251 will be overwritten with the new one.
252 If the FUNCTION was not advised already, then its advice info will be
253 initialized. Redefining a piece of advice whose name is part of the cache-id
254 will clear the cache." nil nil)
255
256 (autoload (quote defadvice) "advice" "\
257 Define a piece of advice for FUNCTION (a symbol).
258 The syntax of `defadvice' is as follows:
259
260 (defadvice FUNCTION (CLASS NAME [POSITION] [ARGLIST] FLAG...)
261 [DOCSTRING] [INTERACTIVE-FORM]
262 BODY... )
263
264 FUNCTION ::= Name of the function to be advised.
265 CLASS ::= `before' | `around' | `after' | `activation' | `deactivation'.
266 NAME ::= Non-nil symbol that names this piece of advice.
267 POSITION ::= `first' | `last' | NUMBER. Optional, defaults to `first',
268 see also `ad-add-advice'.
269 ARGLIST ::= An optional argument list to be used for the advised function
270 instead of the argument list of the original. The first one found in
271 before/around/after-advices will be used.
272 FLAG ::= `protect'|`disable'|`activate'|`compile'|`preactivate'|`freeze'.
273 All flags can be specified with unambiguous initial substrings.
274 DOCSTRING ::= Optional documentation for this piece of advice.
275 INTERACTIVE-FORM ::= Optional interactive form to be used for the advised
276 function. The first one found in before/around/after-advices will be used.
277 BODY ::= Any s-expression.
278
279 Semantics of the various flags:
280 `protect': The piece of advice will be protected against non-local exits in
281 any code that precedes it. If any around-advice of a function is protected
282 then automatically all around-advices will be protected (the complete onion).
283
284 `activate': All advice of FUNCTION will be activated immediately if
285 FUNCTION has been properly defined prior to this application of `defadvice'.
286
287 `compile': In conjunction with `activate' specifies that the resulting
288 advised function should be compiled.
289
290 `disable': The defined advice will be disabled, hence, it will not be used
291 during activation until somebody enables it.
292
293 `preactivate': Preactivates the advised FUNCTION at macro-expansion/compile
294 time. This generates a compiled advised definition according to the current
295 advice state that will be used during activation if appropriate. Only use
296 this if the `defadvice' gets actually compiled.
297
298 `freeze': Expands the `defadvice' into a redefining `defun/defmacro' according
299 to this particular single advice. No other advice information will be saved.
300 Frozen advices cannot be undone, they behave like a hard redefinition of
301 the advised function. `freeze' implies `activate' and `preactivate'. The
302 documentation of the advised function can be dumped onto the `DOC' file
303 during preloading.
304
305 See Info node `(elisp)Advising Functions' for comprehensive documentation." nil (quote macro))
306
307 ;;;***
308 \f
309 ;;;### (autoloads (align-unhighlight-rule align-highlight-rule align-current
310 ;;;;;; align-entire align-regexp align) "align" "align.el" (14463
311 ;;;;;; 7197))
312 ;;; Generated autoloads from align.el
313
314 (autoload (quote align) "align" "\
315 Attempt to align a region based on a set of alignment rules.
316 BEG and END mark the region. If BEG and END are specifically set to
317 nil (this can only be done programmatically), the beginning and end of
318 the current alignment section will be calculated based on the location
319 of point, and the value of `align-region-separate' (or possibly each
320 rule's `separate' attribute).
321
322 If SEPARATE is non-nil, it overrides the value of
323 `align-region-separate' for all rules, except those that have their
324 `separate' attribute set.
325
326 RULES and EXCLUDE-RULES, if either is non-nil, will replace the
327 default rule lists defined in `align-rules-list' and
328 `align-exclude-rules-list'. See `align-rules-list' for more details
329 on the format of these lists." t nil)
330
331 (autoload (quote align-regexp) "align" "\
332 Align the current region using an ad-hoc rule read from the minibuffer.
333 BEG and END mark the limits of the region. This function will prompt
334 for the REGEXP to align with. If no prefix arg was specified, you
335 only need to supply the characters to be lined up and any preceding
336 whitespace is replaced. If a prefix arg was specified, the full
337 regexp with parenthesized whitespace should be supplied; it will also
338 prompt for which parenthesis GROUP within REGEXP to modify, the amount
339 of SPACING to use, and whether or not to REPEAT the rule throughout
340 the line. See `align-rules-list' for more information about these
341 options.
342
343 For example, let's say you had a list of phone numbers, and wanted to
344 align them so that the opening parentheses would line up:
345
346 Fred (123) 456-7890
347 Alice (123) 456-7890
348 Mary-Anne (123) 456-7890
349 Joe (123) 456-7890
350
351 There is no predefined rule to handle this, but you could easily do it
352 using a REGEXP like \"(\". All you would have to do is to mark the
353 region, call `align-regexp' and type in that regular expression." t nil)
354
355 (autoload (quote align-entire) "align" "\
356 Align the selected region as if it were one alignment section.
357 BEG and END mark the extent of the region. If RULES or EXCLUDE-RULES
358 is set to a list of rules (see `align-rules-list'), it can be used to
359 override the default alignment rules that would have been used to
360 align that section." t nil)
361
362 (autoload (quote align-current) "align" "\
363 Call `align' on the current alignment section.
364 This function assumes you want to align only the current section, and
365 so saves you from having to specify the region. If RULES or
366 EXCLUDE-RULES is set to a list of rules (see `align-rules-list'), it
367 can be used to override the default alignment rules that would have
368 been used to align that section." t nil)
369
370 (autoload (quote align-highlight-rule) "align" "\
371 Highlight the whitespace which a given rule would have modified.
372 BEG and END mark the extent of the region. TITLE identifies the rule
373 that should be highlighted. If RULES or EXCLUDE-RULES is set to a
374 list of rules (see `align-rules-list'), it can be used to override the
375 default alignment rules that would have been used to identify the text
376 to be colored." t nil)
377
378 (autoload (quote align-unhighlight-rule) "align" "\
379 Remove any highlighting that was added by `align-highlight-rule'." t nil)
380
381 ;;;***
382 \f
383 ;;;### (autoloads (ange-ftp-hook-function ange-ftp-reread-dir) "ange-ftp"
384 ;;;;;; "ange-ftp.el" (14460 38616))
385 ;;; Generated autoloads from ange-ftp.el
386 (defalias 'ange-ftp-re-read-dir 'ange-ftp-reread-dir)
387
388 (autoload (quote ange-ftp-reread-dir) "ange-ftp" "\
389 Reread remote directory DIR to update the directory cache.
390 The implementation of remote ftp file names caches directory contents
391 for speed. Therefore, when new remote files are created, Emacs
392 may not know they exist. You can use this command to reread a specific
393 directory, so that Emacs will know its current contents." t nil)
394
395 (autoload (quote ange-ftp-hook-function) "ange-ftp" nil nil nil)
396
397 (or (assoc "^/[^/:]*[^/:.]:" file-name-handler-alist) (setq file-name-handler-alist (cons (quote ("^/[^/:]*[^/:.]:" . ange-ftp-hook-function)) file-name-handler-alist)))
398
399 (or (assoc "^/[^/:]*\\'" file-name-handler-alist) (setq file-name-handler-alist (cons (quote ("^/[^/:]*\\'" . ange-ftp-completion-hook-function)) file-name-handler-alist)))
400
401 ;;;***
402 \f
403 ;;;### (autoloads (antlr-set-tabs antlr-mode) "antlr-mode" "progmodes/antlr-mode.el"
404 ;;;;;; (14431 34774))
405 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/antlr-mode.el
406
407 (autoload (quote antlr-mode) "antlr-mode" "\
408 Major mode for editing ANTLR grammar files.
409 \\{antlr-mode-map}" t nil)
410
411 (autoload (quote antlr-set-tabs) "antlr-mode" "\
412 Use ANTLR's convention for TABs according to `antlr-tab-offset-alist'.
413 Used in `antlr-mode'. Also a useful function in `java-mode-hook'." nil nil)
414
415 ;;;***
416 \f
417 ;;;### (autoloads (appt-make-list appt-delete appt-add appt-display-diary
418 ;;;;;; appt-display-duration appt-msg-window appt-display-mode-line
419 ;;;;;; appt-visible appt-audible appt-message-warning-time appt-issue-message)
420 ;;;;;; "appt" "calendar/appt.el" (14432 37852))
421 ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/appt.el
422
423 (defvar appt-issue-message t "\
424 *Non-nil means check for appointments in the diary buffer.
425 To be detected, the diary entry must have the time
426 as the first thing on a line.")
427
428 (defvar appt-message-warning-time 12 "\
429 *Time in minutes before an appointment that the warning begins.")
430
431 (defvar appt-audible t "\
432 *Non-nil means beep to indicate appointment.")
433
434 (defvar appt-visible t "\
435 *Non-nil means display appointment message in echo area.")
436
437 (defvar appt-display-mode-line t "\
438 *Non-nil means display minutes to appointment and time on the mode line.")
439
440 (defvar appt-msg-window t "\
441 *Non-nil means display appointment message in another window.")
442
443 (defvar appt-display-duration 10 "\
444 *The number of seconds an appointment message is displayed.")
445
446 (defvar appt-display-diary t "\
447 *Non-nil means to display the next days diary on the screen.
448 This will occur at midnight when the appointment list is updated.")
449
450 (autoload (quote appt-add) "appt" "\
451 Add an appointment for the day at TIME and issue MESSAGE.
452 The time should be in either 24 hour format or am/pm format." t nil)
453
454 (autoload (quote appt-delete) "appt" "\
455 Delete an appointment from the list of appointments." t nil)
456
457 (autoload (quote appt-make-list) "appt" nil nil nil)
458
459 ;;;***
460 \f
461 ;;;### (autoloads (apropos-documentation apropos-value apropos apropos-command
462 ;;;;;; apropos-variable apropos-mode) "apropos" "apropos.el" (14411
463 ;;;;;; 43647))
464 ;;; Generated autoloads from apropos.el
465
466 (autoload (quote apropos-mode) "apropos" "\
467 Major mode for following hyperlinks in output of apropos commands.
468
469 \\{apropos-mode-map}" t nil)
470
471 (autoload (quote apropos-variable) "apropos" "\
472 Show user variables that match REGEXP.
473 With optional prefix ARG or if `apropos-do-all' is non-nil, also show
474 normal variables." t nil)
475
476 (fset (quote command-apropos) (quote apropos-command))
477
478 (autoload (quote apropos-command) "apropos" "\
479 Show commands (interactively callable functions) that match REGEXP.
480 With optional prefix ARG, or if `apropos-do-all' is non-nil, also show
481 noninteractive functions.
482
483 If VAR-PREDICATE is non-nil, show only variables, and only those that
484 satisfy the predicate VAR-PREDICATE." t nil)
485
486 (autoload (quote apropos) "apropos" "\
487 Show all bound symbols whose names match REGEXP.
488 With optional prefix ARG or if `apropos-do-all' is non-nil, also show unbound
489 symbols and key bindings, which is a little more time-consuming.
490 Returns list of symbols and documentation found." t nil)
491
492 (autoload (quote apropos-value) "apropos" "\
493 Show all symbols whose value's printed image matches REGEXP.
494 With optional prefix ARG or if `apropos-do-all' is non-nil, also looks
495 at the function and at the names and values of properties.
496 Returns list of symbols and values found." t nil)
497
498 (autoload (quote apropos-documentation) "apropos" "\
499 Show symbols whose documentation contain matches for REGEXP.
500 With optional prefix ARG or if `apropos-do-all' is non-nil, also use
501 documentation that is not stored in the documentation file and show key
502 bindings.
503 Returns list of symbols and documentation found." t nil)
504
505 ;;;***
506 \f
507 ;;;### (autoloads (archive-mode) "arc-mode" "arc-mode.el" (14447
508 ;;;;;; 15307))
509 ;;; Generated autoloads from arc-mode.el
510
511 (autoload (quote archive-mode) "arc-mode" "\
512 Major mode for viewing an archive file in a dired-like way.
513 You can move around using the usual cursor motion commands.
514 Letters no longer insert themselves.
515 Type `e' to pull a file out of the archive and into its own buffer;
516 or click mouse-2 on the file's line in the archive mode buffer.
517
518 If you edit a sub-file of this archive (as with the `e' command) and
519 save it, the contents of that buffer will be saved back into the
520 archive.
521
522 \\{archive-mode-map}" nil nil)
523
524 ;;;***
525 \f
526 ;;;### (autoloads (array-mode) "array" "array.el" (14460 38616))
527 ;;; Generated autoloads from array.el
528
529 (autoload (quote array-mode) "array" "\
530 Major mode for editing arrays.
531
532 Array mode is a specialized mode for editing arrays. An array is
533 considered to be a two-dimensional set of strings. The strings are
534 NOT recognized as integers or real numbers.
535
536 The array MUST reside at the top of the buffer.
537
538 TABs are not respected, and may be converted into spaces at any time.
539 Setting the variable 'array-respect-tabs to non-nil will prevent TAB conversion,
540 but will cause many functions to give errors if they encounter one.
541
542 Upon entering array mode, you will be prompted for the values of
543 several variables. Others will be calculated based on the values you
544 supply. These variables are all local the the buffer. Other buffer
545 in array mode may have different values assigned to the variables.
546 The variables are:
547
548 Variables you assign:
549 array-max-row: The number of rows in the array.
550 array-max-column: The number of columns in the array.
551 array-columns-per-line: The number of columns in the array per line of buffer.
552 array-field-width: The width of each field, in characters.
553 array-rows-numbered: A logical variable describing whether to ignore
554 row numbers in the buffer.
555
556 Variables which are calculated:
557 array-line-length: The number of characters in a buffer line.
558 array-lines-per-row: The number of buffer lines used to display each row.
559
560 The following commands are available (an asterisk indicates it may
561 take a numeric prefix argument):
562
563 * \\<array-mode-map>\\[array-forward-column] Move forward one column.
564 * \\[array-backward-column] Move backward one column.
565 * \\[array-next-row] Move down one row.
566 * \\[array-previous-row] Move up one row.
567
568 * \\[array-copy-forward] Copy the current field into the column to the right.
569 * \\[array-copy-backward] Copy the current field into the column to the left.
570 * \\[array-copy-down] Copy the current field into the row below.
571 * \\[array-copy-up] Copy the current field into the row above.
572
573 * \\[array-copy-column-forward] Copy the current column into the column to the right.
574 * \\[array-copy-column-backward] Copy the current column into the column to the left.
575 * \\[array-copy-row-down] Copy the current row into the row below.
576 * \\[array-copy-row-up] Copy the current row into the row above.
577
578 \\[array-fill-rectangle] Copy the field at mark into every cell with row and column
579 between that of point and mark.
580
581 \\[array-what-position] Display the current array row and column.
582 \\[array-goto-cell] Go to a particular array cell.
583
584 \\[array-make-template] Make a template for a new array.
585 \\[array-reconfigure-rows] Reconfigure the array.
586 \\[array-expand-rows] Expand the array (remove row numbers and
587 newlines inside rows)
588
589 \\[array-display-local-variables] Display the current values of local variables.
590
591 Entering array mode calls the function `array-mode-hook'." t nil)
592
593 ;;;***
594 \f
595 ;;;### (autoloads (asm-mode) "asm-mode" "progmodes/asm-mode.el" (14286
596 ;;;;;; 393))
597 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/asm-mode.el
598
599 (autoload (quote asm-mode) "asm-mode" "\
600 Major mode for editing typical assembler code.
601 Features a private abbrev table and the following bindings:
602
603 \\[asm-colon] outdent a preceding label, tab to next tab stop.
604 \\[tab-to-tab-stop] tab to next tab stop.
605 \\[asm-newline] newline, then tab to next tab stop.
606 \\[asm-comment] smart placement of assembler comments.
607
608 The character used for making comments is set by the variable
609 `asm-comment-char' (which defaults to `?\\;').
610
611 Alternatively, you may set this variable in `asm-mode-set-comment-hook',
612 which is called near the beginning of mode initialization.
613
614 Turning on Asm mode runs the hook `asm-mode-hook' at the end of initialization.
615
616 Special commands:
617 \\{asm-mode-map}
618 " t nil)
619
620 ;;;***
621 \f
622 ;;;### (autoloads (auto-show-mode auto-show-mode) "auto-show" "auto-show.el"
623 ;;;;;; (14292 6861))
624 ;;; Generated autoloads from auto-show.el
625
626 (defvar auto-show-mode nil "\
627 Obsolete.")
628
629 (autoload (quote auto-show-mode) "auto-show" "\
630 This command is obsolete." t nil)
631
632 ;;;***
633 \f
634 ;;;### (autoloads (auto-insert-mode define-auto-insert auto-insert)
635 ;;;;;; "autoinsert" "autoinsert.el" (14410 18534))
636 ;;; Generated autoloads from autoinsert.el
637
638 (autoload (quote auto-insert) "autoinsert" "\
639 Insert default contents into a new file if `auto-insert' is non-nil.
640 Matches the visited file name against the elements of `auto-insert-alist'." t nil)
641
642 (autoload (quote define-auto-insert) "autoinsert" "\
643 Associate CONDITION with (additional) ACTION in `auto-insert-alist'.
644 Optional AFTER means to insert action after all existing actions for CONDITION,
645 or if CONDITION had no actions, after all other CONDITIONs." nil nil)
646
647 (autoload (quote auto-insert-mode) "autoinsert" "\
648 Toggle Auto-insert mode.
649 With prefix ARG, turn Auto-insert mode on if and only if ARG is positive.
650 Returns the new status of Auto-insert mode (non-nil means on).
651
652 When Auto-insert mode is enabled, when new files are created you can
653 insert a template for the file depending on the mode of the buffer." t nil)
654
655 ;;;***
656 \f
657 ;;;### (autoloads (batch-update-autoloads update-autoloads-from-directories
658 ;;;;;; update-file-autoloads) "autoload" "emacs-lisp/autoload.el"
659 ;;;;;; (14398 37513))
660 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/autoload.el
661
662 (autoload (quote update-file-autoloads) "autoload" "\
663 Update the autoloads for FILE in `generated-autoload-file'
664 \(which FILE might bind in its local variables)." t nil)
665
666 (autoload (quote update-autoloads-from-directories) "autoload" "\
667 Update loaddefs.el with all the current autoloads from DIRS, and no old ones.
668 This uses `update-file-autoloads' (which see) do its work." t nil)
669
670 (autoload (quote batch-update-autoloads) "autoload" "\
671 Update loaddefs.el autoloads in batch mode.
672 Calls `update-autoloads-from-directories' on the command line arguments." nil nil)
673
674 ;;;***
675 \f
676 ;;;### (autoloads (global-auto-revert-mode turn-on-auto-revert-mode
677 ;;;;;; auto-revert-mode) "autorevert" "autorevert.el" (14450 26108))
678 ;;; Generated autoloads from autorevert.el
679
680 (defvar auto-revert-mode nil "\
681 *Non-nil when Auto-Revert Mode is active.
682
683 Never set this variable directly, use the command `auto-revert-mode'
684 instead.")
685
686 (autoload (quote auto-revert-mode) "autorevert" "\
687 Toggle reverting buffer when file on disk changes.
688
689 With arg, turn Auto Revert mode on if and only if arg is positive.
690 This is a minor mode that affects only the current buffer.
691 Use `global-auto-revert-mode' to automatically revert all buffers." t nil)
692
693 (autoload (quote turn-on-auto-revert-mode) "autorevert" "\
694 Turn on Auto-Revert Mode.
695
696 This function is designed to be added to hooks, for example:
697 (add-hook 'c-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-revert-mode)" nil nil)
698
699 (autoload (quote global-auto-revert-mode) "autorevert" "\
700 Revert any buffer when file on disk change.
701
702 With arg, turn Auto Revert mode on globally if and only if arg is positive.
703 This is a minor mode that affects all buffers.
704 Use `auto-revert-mode' to revert a particular buffer." t nil)
705
706 ;;;***
707 \f
708 ;;;### (autoloads (mouse-avoidance-mode) "avoid" "avoid.el" (14263
709 ;;;;;; 35271))
710 ;;; Generated autoloads from avoid.el
711
712 (autoload (quote mouse-avoidance-mode) "avoid" "\
713 Set cursor avoidance mode to MODE.
714 MODE should be one of the symbols `banish', `exile', `jump', `animate',
715 `cat-and-mouse', `proteus', or `none'.
716
717 If MODE is nil, toggle mouse avoidance between `none` and `banish'
718 modes. Positive numbers and symbols other than the above are treated
719 as equivalent to `banish'; negative numbers and `-' are equivalent to `none'.
720
721 Effects of the different modes:
722 * banish: Move the mouse to the upper-right corner on any keypress.
723 * exile: Move the mouse to the corner only if the cursor gets too close,
724 and allow it to return once the cursor is out of the way.
725 * jump: If the cursor gets too close to the mouse, displace the mouse
726 a random distance & direction.
727 * animate: As `jump', but shows steps along the way for illusion of motion.
728 * cat-and-mouse: Same as `animate'.
729 * proteus: As `animate', but changes the shape of the mouse pointer too.
730
731 Whenever the mouse is moved, the frame is also raised.
732
733 \(see `mouse-avoidance-threshold' for definition of \"too close\",
734 and `mouse-avoidance-nudge-dist' and `mouse-avoidance-nudge-var' for
735 definition of \"random distance\".)" t nil)
736
737 ;;;***
738 \f
739 ;;;### (autoloads (awk-mode) "awk-mode" "progmodes/awk-mode.el" (13549
740 ;;;;;; 39413))
741 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/awk-mode.el
742
743 (autoload (quote awk-mode) "awk-mode" "\
744 Major mode for editing AWK code.
745 This is much like C mode except for the syntax of comments. It uses
746 the same keymap as C mode and has the same variables for customizing
747 indentation. It has its own abbrev table and its own syntax table.
748
749 Turning on AWK mode calls the value of the variable `awk-mode-hook'
750 with no args, if that value is non-nil." t nil)
751
752 ;;;***
753 \f
754 ;;;### (autoloads (backquote) "backquote" "emacs-lisp/backquote.el"
755 ;;;;;; (14455 30228))
756 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/backquote.el
757
758 (autoload (quote backquote) "backquote" "\
759 Argument STRUCTURE describes a template to build.
760
761 The whole structure acts as if it were quoted except for certain
762 places where expressions are evaluated and inserted or spliced in.
763
764 For example:
765
766 b => (ba bb bc) ; assume b has this value
767 `(a b c) => (a b c) ; backquote acts like quote
768 `(a ,b c) => (a (ba bb bc) c) ; insert the value of b
769 `(a ,@b c) => (a ba bb bc c) ; splice in the value of b
770
771 Vectors work just like lists. Nested backquotes are permitted." nil (quote macro))
772
773 (defalias (quote \`) (symbol-function (quote backquote)))
774
775 ;;;***
776 \f
777 ;;;### (autoloads (display-battery battery) "battery" "battery.el"
778 ;;;;;; (14422 6418))
779 ;;; Generated autoloads from battery.el
780
781 (autoload (quote battery) "battery" "\
782 Display battery status information in the echo area.
783 The text being displayed in the echo area is controlled by the variables
784 `battery-echo-area-format' and `battery-status-function'." t nil)
785
786 (autoload (quote display-battery) "battery" "\
787 Display battery status information in the mode line.
788 The text beeing displayed in the mode line is controlled by the variables
789 `battery-mode-line-format' and `battery-status-function'.
790 The mode line will be updated automatically every `battery-update-interval'
791 seconds." t nil)
792
793 ;;;***
794 \f
795 ;;;### (autoloads (bibtex-mode) "bibtex" "textmodes/bibtex.el" (14397
796 ;;;;;; 43573))
797 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/bibtex.el
798
799 (autoload (quote bibtex-mode) "bibtex" "\
800 Major mode for editing BibTeX files.
801
802 To submit a problem report, enter \\[bibtex-submit-bug-report] from a
803 BibTeX mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
804 version information already added. You just need to add a description
805 of the problem, including a reproducable test case and send the
806 message.
807
808
809 General information on working with BibTeX mode:
810
811 You should use commands as \\[bibtex-Book] to get a template for a
812 specific entry. You should then fill in all desired fields using
813 \\[bibtex-next-field] to jump from field to field. After having filled
814 in all desired fields in the entry, you should clean the new entry
815 with command \\[bibtex-clean-entry].
816
817 Some features of BibTeX mode are available only by setting variable
818 bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries to t. However, then BibTeX mode will
819 work with buffer containing only valid (syntactical correct) entries
820 and with entries being sorted. This is usually the case, if you have
821 created a buffer completely with BibTeX mode and finished every new
822 entry with \\[bibtex-clean-entry].
823
824 For third party BibTeX buffers, please call the function
825 `bibtex-convert-alien' to fully take advantage of all features of
826 BibTeX mode.
827
828
829 Special information:
830
831 A command such as \\[bibtex-Book] will outline the fields for a BibTeX book entry.
832
833 The optional fields start with the string OPT, and are thus ignored by BibTeX.
834 Alternatives from which only one is required start with the string ALT.
835 The OPT or ALT string may be removed from a field with \\[bibtex-remove-OPT-or-ALT].
836 \\[bibtex-make-field] inserts a new field after the current one.
837 \\[bibtex-kill-field] kills the current field entirely.
838 \\[bibtex-yank] will yank the last recently killed field after the
839 current field.
840 \\[bibtex-remove-delimiters] removes the double-quotes or braces around the text of the current field.
841 \\[bibtex-empty-field] replaces the text of the current field with the default \"\" or {}.
842
843 The command \\[bibtex-clean-entry] cleans the current entry, i.e. it removes OPT/ALT
844 from all non-empty optional or alternative fields, checks that no required
845 fields are empty, and does some formatting dependent on the value of
846 bibtex-entry-format.
847 Note: some functions in BibTeX mode depend on entries being in a special
848 format (all fields beginning on separate lines), so it is usually a bad
849 idea to remove `realign' from bibtex-entry-format.
850
851 Use \\[bibtex-find-text] to position the cursor at the end of the current field.
852 Use \\[bibtex-next-field] to move to end of the next field.
853
854 The following may be of interest as well:
855
856 Functions:
857 bibtex-entry
858 bibtex-kill-entry
859 bibtex-yank-pop
860 bibtex-pop-previous
861 bibtex-pop-next
862 bibtex-complete-string
863 bibtex-complete-key
864 bibtex-print-help-message
865 bibtex-generate-autokey
866 bibtex-beginning-of-entry
867 bibtex-end-of-entry
868 bibtex-reposition-window
869 bibtex-mark-entry
870 bibtex-ispell-abstract
871 bibtex-ispell-entry
872 bibtex-narrow-to-entry
873 bibtex-sort-buffer
874 bibtex-validate
875 bibtex-count
876 bibtex-fill-entry
877 bibtex-reformat
878 bibtex-convert-alien
879
880 Variables:
881 bibtex-field-delimiters
882 bibtex-include-OPTcrossref
883 bibtex-include-OPTkey
884 bibtex-user-optional-fields
885 bibtex-entry-format
886 bibtex-sort-ignore-string-entries
887 bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries
888 bibtex-entry-field-alist
889 bibtex-predefined-strings
890 bibtex-string-files
891
892 ---------------------------------------------------------
893 Entry to BibTeX mode calls the value of `bibtex-mode-hook' if that value is
894 non-nil.
895
896 \\{bibtex-mode-map}" t nil)
897
898 ;;;***
899 \f
900 ;;;### (autoloads (blackbox) "blackbox" "play/blackbox.el" (13229
901 ;;;;;; 27947))
902 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/blackbox.el
903
904 (autoload (quote blackbox) "blackbox" "\
905 Play blackbox. Optional prefix argument is the number of balls;
906 the default is 4.
907
908 What is blackbox?
909
910 Blackbox is a game of hide and seek played on an 8 by 8 grid (the
911 Blackbox). Your opponent (Emacs, in this case) has hidden several
912 balls (usually 4) within this box. By shooting rays into the box and
913 observing where they emerge it is possible to deduce the positions of
914 the hidden balls. The fewer rays you use to find the balls, the lower
915 your score.
916
917 Overview of play:
918
919 \\<blackbox-mode-map>To play blackbox, type \\[blackbox]. An optional prefix argument
920 specifies the number of balls to be hidden in the box; the default is
921 four.
922
923 The cursor can be moved around the box with the standard cursor
924 movement keys.
925
926 To shoot a ray, move the cursor to the edge of the box and press SPC.
927 The result will be determined and the playfield updated.
928
929 You may place or remove balls in the box by moving the cursor into the
930 box and pressing \\[bb-romp].
931
932 When you think the configuration of balls you have placed is correct,
933 press \\[bb-done]. You will be informed whether you are correct or
934 not, and be given your score. Your score is the number of letters and
935 numbers around the outside of the box plus five for each incorrectly
936 placed ball. If you placed any balls incorrectly, they will be
937 indicated with `x', and their actual positions indicated with `o'.
938
939 Details:
940
941 There are three possible outcomes for each ray you send into the box:
942
943 Detour: the ray is deflected and emerges somewhere other than
944 where you sent it in. On the playfield, detours are
945 denoted by matching pairs of numbers -- one where the
946 ray went in, and the other where it came out.
947
948 Reflection: the ray is reflected and emerges in the same place
949 it was sent in. On the playfield, reflections are
950 denoted by the letter `R'.
951
952 Hit: the ray strikes a ball directly and is absorbed. It does
953 not emerge from the box. On the playfield, hits are
954 denoted by the letter `H'.
955
956 The rules for how balls deflect rays are simple and are best shown by
957 example.
958
959 As a ray approaches a ball it is deflected ninety degrees. Rays can
960 be deflected multiple times. In the diagrams below, the dashes
961 represent empty box locations and the letter `O' represents a ball.
962 The entrance and exit points of each ray are marked with numbers as
963 described under \"Detour\" above. Note that the entrance and exit
964 points are always interchangeable. `*' denotes the path taken by the
965 ray.
966
967 Note carefully the relative positions of the ball and the ninety
968 degree deflection it causes.
969
970 1
971 - * - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
972 - * - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
973 1 * * - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - O - - - - O -
974 - - O - - - - - - - O - - - - - - - * * * * - -
975 - - - - - - - - - - - * * * * * 2 3 * * * - - * - -
976 - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - O - * - -
977 - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - - * * - -
978 - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - - * - O -
979 2 3
980
981 As mentioned above, a reflection occurs when a ray emerges from the same point
982 it was sent in. This can happen in several ways:
983
984
985 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
986 - - - - O - - - - - O - O - - - - - - - - - - -
987 R * * * * - - - - - - - * - - - - O - - - - - - -
988 - - - - O - - - - - - * - - - - R - - - - - - - -
989 - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - - - - - -
990 - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - - - - - -
991 - - - - - - - - R * * * * - - - - - - - - - - - -
992 - - - - - - - - - - - - O - - - - - - - - - - -
993
994 In the first example, the ray is deflected downwards by the upper
995 ball, then left by the lower ball, and finally retraces its path to
996 its point of origin. The second example is similar. The third
997 example is a bit anomalous but can be rationalized by realizing the
998 ray never gets a chance to get into the box. Alternatively, the ray
999 can be thought of as being deflected downwards and immediately
1000 emerging from the box.
1001
1002 A hit occurs when a ray runs straight into a ball:
1003
1004 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
1005 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - O - - -
1006 - - - - - - - - - - - - O - - - H * * * * - - - -
1007 - - - - - - - - H * * * * O - - - - - - * - - - -
1008 - - - - - - - - - - - - O - - - - - - O - - - -
1009 H * * * O - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
1010 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
1011 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
1012
1013 Be sure to compare the second example of a hit with the first example of
1014 a reflection." t nil)
1015
1016 ;;;***
1017 \f
1018 ;;;### (autoloads (bookmark-menu-delete bookmark-menu-rename bookmark-menu-locate
1019 ;;;;;; bookmark-menu-jump bookmark-menu-insert bookmark-bmenu-list
1020 ;;;;;; bookmark-load bookmark-save bookmark-write bookmark-delete
1021 ;;;;;; bookmark-insert bookmark-rename bookmark-insert-location
1022 ;;;;;; bookmark-relocate bookmark-jump bookmark-set) "bookmark"
1023 ;;;;;; "bookmark.el" (14419 37278))
1024 ;;; Generated autoloads from bookmark.el
1025 (define-key ctl-x-map "rb" 'bookmark-jump)
1026 (define-key ctl-x-map "rm" 'bookmark-set)
1027 (define-key ctl-x-map "rl" 'bookmark-bmenu-list)
1028
1029 (defvar bookmark-map nil "\
1030 Keymap containing bindings to bookmark functions.
1031 It is not bound to any key by default: to bind it
1032 so that you have a bookmark prefix, just use `global-set-key' and bind a
1033 key of your choice to `bookmark-map'. All interactive bookmark
1034 functions have a binding in this keymap.")
1035
1036 (define-prefix-command (quote bookmark-map))
1037
1038 (define-key bookmark-map "x" (quote bookmark-set))
1039
1040 (define-key bookmark-map "m" (quote bookmark-set))
1041
1042 (define-key bookmark-map "j" (quote bookmark-jump))
1043
1044 (define-key bookmark-map "g" (quote bookmark-jump))
1045
1046 (define-key bookmark-map "i" (quote bookmark-insert))
1047
1048 (define-key bookmark-map "e" (quote edit-bookmarks))
1049
1050 (define-key bookmark-map "f" (quote bookmark-insert-location))
1051
1052 (define-key bookmark-map "r" (quote bookmark-rename))
1053
1054 (define-key bookmark-map "d" (quote bookmark-delete))
1055
1056 (define-key bookmark-map "l" (quote bookmark-load))
1057
1058 (define-key bookmark-map "w" (quote bookmark-write))
1059
1060 (define-key bookmark-map "s" (quote bookmark-save))
1061
1062 (add-hook (quote kill-emacs-hook) (function (lambda nil (and (featurep (quote bookmark)) bookmark-alist (bookmark-time-to-save-p t) (bookmark-save)))))
1063
1064 (autoload (quote bookmark-set) "bookmark" "\
1065 Set a bookmark named NAME inside a file.
1066 If name is nil, then the user will be prompted.
1067 With prefix arg, will not overwrite a bookmark that has the same name
1068 as NAME if such a bookmark already exists, but instead will \"push\"
1069 the new bookmark onto the bookmark alist. Thus the most recently set
1070 bookmark with name NAME would be the one in effect at any given time,
1071 but the others are still there, should you decide to delete the most
1072 recent one.
1073
1074 To yank words from the text of the buffer and use them as part of the
1075 bookmark name, type C-w while setting a bookmark. Successive C-w's
1076 yank successive words.
1077
1078 Typing C-u inserts the name of the last bookmark used in the buffer
1079 \(as an aid in using a single bookmark name to track your progress
1080 through a large file). If no bookmark was used, then C-u inserts the
1081 name of the file being visited.
1082
1083 Use \\[bookmark-delete] to remove bookmarks (you give it a name,
1084 and it removes only the first instance of a bookmark with that name from
1085 the list of bookmarks.)" t nil)
1086
1087 (autoload (quote bookmark-jump) "bookmark" "\
1088 Jump to bookmark BOOKMARK (a point in some file).
1089 You may have a problem using this function if the value of variable
1090 `bookmark-alist' is nil. If that happens, you need to load in some
1091 bookmarks. See help on function `bookmark-load' for more about
1092 this.
1093
1094 If the file pointed to by BOOKMARK no longer exists, you will be asked
1095 if you wish to give the bookmark a new location, and bookmark-jump
1096 will then jump to the new location, as well as recording it in place
1097 of the old one in the permanent bookmark record." t nil)
1098
1099 (autoload (quote bookmark-relocate) "bookmark" "\
1100 Relocate BOOKMARK to another file (reading file name with minibuffer).
1101 This makes an already existing bookmark point to that file, instead of
1102 the one it used to point at. Useful when a file has been renamed
1103 after a bookmark was set in it." t nil)
1104
1105 (autoload (quote bookmark-insert-location) "bookmark" "\
1106 Insert the name of the file associated with BOOKMARK.
1107 Optional second arg NO-HISTORY means don't record this in the
1108 minibuffer history list `bookmark-history'." t nil)
1109
1110 (defalias (quote bookmark-locate) (quote bookmark-insert-location))
1111
1112 (autoload (quote bookmark-rename) "bookmark" "\
1113 Change the name of OLD bookmark to NEW name.
1114 If called from keyboard, prompt for OLD and NEW. If called from
1115 menubar, select OLD from a menu and prompt for NEW.
1116
1117 If called from Lisp, prompt for NEW if only OLD was passed as an
1118 argument. If called with two strings, then no prompting is done. You
1119 must pass at least OLD when calling from Lisp.
1120
1121 While you are entering the new name, consecutive C-w's insert
1122 consecutive words from the text of the buffer into the new bookmark
1123 name." t nil)
1124
1125 (autoload (quote bookmark-insert) "bookmark" "\
1126 Insert the text of the file pointed to by bookmark BOOKMARK.
1127 You may have a problem using this function if the value of variable
1128 `bookmark-alist' is nil. If that happens, you need to load in some
1129 bookmarks. See help on function `bookmark-load' for more about
1130 this." t nil)
1131
1132 (autoload (quote bookmark-delete) "bookmark" "\
1133 Delete BOOKMARK from the bookmark list.
1134 Removes only the first instance of a bookmark with that name. If
1135 there are one or more other bookmarks with the same name, they will
1136 not be deleted. Defaults to the \"current\" bookmark (that is, the
1137 one most recently used in this file, if any).
1138 Optional second arg BATCH means don't update the bookmark list buffer,
1139 probably because we were called from there." t nil)
1140
1141 (autoload (quote bookmark-write) "bookmark" "\
1142 Write bookmarks to a file (reading the file name with the minibuffer).
1143 Don't use this in Lisp programs; use `bookmark-save' instead." t nil)
1144
1145 (autoload (quote bookmark-save) "bookmark" "\
1146 Save currently defined bookmarks.
1147 Saves by default in the file defined by the variable
1148 `bookmark-default-file'. With a prefix arg, save it in file FILE
1149 \(second argument).
1150
1151 If you are calling this from Lisp, the two arguments are PREFIX-ARG
1152 and FILE, and if you just want it to write to the default file, then
1153 pass no arguments. Or pass in nil and FILE, and it will save in FILE
1154 instead. If you pass in one argument, and it is non-nil, then the
1155 user will be interactively queried for a file to save in.
1156
1157 When you want to load in the bookmarks from a file, use
1158 `bookmark-load', \\[bookmark-load]. That function will prompt you
1159 for a file, defaulting to the file defined by variable
1160 `bookmark-default-file'." t nil)
1161
1162 (autoload (quote bookmark-load) "bookmark" "\
1163 Load bookmarks from FILE (which must be in bookmark format).
1164 Appends loaded bookmarks to the front of the list of bookmarks. If
1165 optional second argument OVERWRITE is non-nil, existing bookmarks are
1166 destroyed. Optional third arg NO-MSG means don't display any messages
1167 while loading.
1168
1169 If you load a file that doesn't contain a proper bookmark alist, you
1170 will corrupt Emacs's bookmark list. Generally, you should only load
1171 in files that were created with the bookmark functions in the first
1172 place. Your own personal bookmark file, `~/.emacs.bmk', is
1173 maintained automatically by Emacs; you shouldn't need to load it
1174 explicitly.
1175
1176 If you load a file containing bookmarks with the same names as
1177 bookmarks already present in your Emacs, the new bookmarks will get
1178 unique numeric suffixes \"<2>\", \"<3>\", ... following the same
1179 method buffers use to resolve name collisions." t nil)
1180
1181 (autoload (quote bookmark-bmenu-list) "bookmark" "\
1182 Display a list of existing bookmarks.
1183 The list is displayed in a buffer named `*Bookmark List*'.
1184 The leftmost column displays a D if the bookmark is flagged for
1185 deletion, or > if it is flagged for displaying." t nil)
1186
1187 (defalias (quote list-bookmarks) (quote bookmark-bmenu-list))
1188
1189 (defalias (quote edit-bookmarks) (quote bookmark-bmenu-list))
1190
1191 (autoload (quote bookmark-menu-insert) "bookmark" "\
1192 Insert the text of the file pointed to by bookmark BOOKMARK.
1193 You may have a problem using this function if the value of variable
1194 `bookmark-alist' is nil. If that happens, you need to load in some
1195 bookmarks. See help on function `bookmark-load' for more about
1196 this.
1197
1198 Warning: this function only takes an EVENT as argument. Use the
1199 corresponding bookmark function from Lisp (the one without the
1200 \"-menu-\" in its name)." t nil)
1201
1202 (autoload (quote bookmark-menu-jump) "bookmark" "\
1203 Jump to bookmark BOOKMARK (a point in some file).
1204 You may have a problem using this function if the value of variable
1205 `bookmark-alist' is nil. If that happens, you need to load in some
1206 bookmarks. See help on function `bookmark-load' for more about
1207 this.
1208
1209 Warning: this function only takes an EVENT as argument. Use the
1210 corresponding bookmark function from Lisp (the one without the
1211 \"-menu-\" in its name)." t nil)
1212
1213 (autoload (quote bookmark-menu-locate) "bookmark" "\
1214 Insert the name of the file associated with BOOKMARK.
1215 \(This is not the same as the contents of that file).
1216
1217 Warning: this function only takes an EVENT as argument. Use the
1218 corresponding bookmark function from Lisp (the one without the
1219 \"-menu-\" in its name)." t nil)
1220
1221 (autoload (quote bookmark-menu-rename) "bookmark" "\
1222 Change the name of OLD-BOOKMARK to NEWNAME.
1223 If called from keyboard, prompts for OLD-BOOKMARK and NEWNAME.
1224 If called from menubar, OLD-BOOKMARK is selected from a menu, and
1225 prompts for NEWNAME.
1226 If called from Lisp, prompts for NEWNAME if only OLD-BOOKMARK was
1227 passed as an argument. If called with two strings, then no prompting
1228 is done. You must pass at least OLD-BOOKMARK when calling from Lisp.
1229
1230 While you are entering the new name, consecutive C-w's insert
1231 consecutive words from the text of the buffer into the new bookmark
1232 name.
1233
1234 Warning: this function only takes an EVENT as argument. Use the
1235 corresponding bookmark function from Lisp (the one without the
1236 \"-menu-\" in its name)." t nil)
1237
1238 (autoload (quote bookmark-menu-delete) "bookmark" "\
1239 Delete the bookmark named NAME from the bookmark list.
1240 Removes only the first instance of a bookmark with that name. If
1241 there are one or more other bookmarks with the same name, they will
1242 not be deleted. Defaults to the \"current\" bookmark (that is, the
1243 one most recently used in this file, if any).
1244
1245 Warning: this function only takes an EVENT as argument. Use the
1246 corresponding bookmark function from Lisp (the one without the
1247 \"-menu-\" in its name)." t nil)
1248
1249 (defvar menu-bar-bookmark-map (make-sparse-keymap "Bookmark functions"))
1250
1251 (defalias (quote menu-bar-bookmark-map) (symbol-value (quote menu-bar-bookmark-map)))
1252
1253 (define-key menu-bar-bookmark-map [load] (quote ("Load a Bookmark File..." . bookmark-load)))
1254
1255 (define-key menu-bar-bookmark-map [write] (quote ("Save Bookmarks As..." . bookmark-write)))
1256
1257 (define-key menu-bar-bookmark-map [save] (quote ("Save Bookmarks" . bookmark-save)))
1258
1259 (define-key menu-bar-bookmark-map [edit] (quote ("Edit Bookmark List" . bookmark-bmenu-list)))
1260
1261 (define-key menu-bar-bookmark-map [delete] (quote ("Delete Bookmark" . bookmark-menu-delete)))
1262
1263 (define-key menu-bar-bookmark-map [rename] (quote ("Rename Bookmark" . bookmark-menu-rename)))
1264
1265 (define-key menu-bar-bookmark-map [locate] (quote ("Insert Location" . bookmark-menu-locate)))
1266
1267 (define-key menu-bar-bookmark-map [insert] (quote ("Insert Contents" . bookmark-menu-insert)))
1268
1269 (define-key menu-bar-bookmark-map [set] (quote ("Set Bookmark" . bookmark-set)))
1270
1271 (define-key menu-bar-bookmark-map [jump] (quote ("Jump to Bookmark" . bookmark-menu-jump)))
1272
1273 ;;;***
1274 \f
1275 ;;;### (autoloads (browse-url-generic browse-url-mail browse-url-mmm
1276 ;;;;;; browse-url-lynx-emacs browse-url-lynx-xterm browse-url-w3-gnudoit
1277 ;;;;;; browse-url-w3 browse-url-iximosaic browse-url-cci browse-url-grail
1278 ;;;;;; browse-url-mosaic browse-url-netscape browse-url-at-mouse
1279 ;;;;;; browse-url-at-point browse-url browse-url-of-region browse-url-of-dired-file
1280 ;;;;;; browse-url-of-buffer browse-url-of-file browse-url-generic-program
1281 ;;;;;; browse-url-save-file browse-url-netscape-display browse-url-new-window-p
1282 ;;;;;; browse-url-browser-function) "browse-url" "browse-url.el"
1283 ;;;;;; (14454 73))
1284 ;;; Generated autoloads from browse-url.el
1285
1286 (defvar browse-url-browser-function (if (eq system-type (quote windows-nt)) (quote browse-url-default-windows-browser) (quote browse-url-netscape)) "\
1287 *Function to display the current buffer in a WWW browser.
1288 This is used by the `browse-url-at-point', `browse-url-at-mouse', and
1289 `browse-url-of-file' commands.
1290
1291 If the value is not a function it should be a list of pairs
1292 \(REGEXP . FUNCTION). In this case the function called will be the one
1293 associated with the first REGEXP which matches the current URL. The
1294 function is passed the URL and any other args of `browse-url'. The last
1295 regexp should probably be \".\" to specify a default browser.")
1296
1297 (defvar browse-url-new-window-p nil "\
1298 *If non-nil, always open a new browser window with appropriate browsers.
1299 Passing an interactive argument to \\[browse-url], or specific browser
1300 commands reverses the effect of this variable. Requires Netscape version
1301 1.1N or later or XMosaic version 2.5 or later if using those browsers.")
1302
1303 (defvar browse-url-netscape-display nil "\
1304 *The X display for running Netscape, if not same as Emacs'.")
1305
1306 (defvar browse-url-save-file nil "\
1307 *If non-nil, save the buffer before displaying its file.
1308 Used by the `browse-url-of-file' command.")
1309
1310 (defvar browse-url-generic-program nil "\
1311 *The name of the browser program used by `browse-url-generic'.")
1312
1313 (autoload (quote browse-url-of-file) "browse-url" "\
1314 Ask a WWW browser to display FILE.
1315 Display the current buffer's file if FILE is nil or if called
1316 interactively. Turn the filename into a URL with function
1317 `browse-url-file-url'. Pass the URL to a browser using the
1318 `browse-url' function then run `browse-url-of-file-hook'." t nil)
1319
1320 (autoload (quote browse-url-of-buffer) "browse-url" "\
1321 Ask a WWW browser to display BUFFER.
1322 Display the current buffer if BUFFER is nil. Display only the
1323 currently visible part of BUFFER (from a temporary file) if buffer is
1324 narrowed." t nil)
1325
1326 (autoload (quote browse-url-of-dired-file) "browse-url" "\
1327 In Dired, ask a WWW browser to display the file named on this line." t nil)
1328
1329 (autoload (quote browse-url-of-region) "browse-url" "\
1330 Ask a WWW browser to display the current region." t nil)
1331
1332 (autoload (quote browse-url) "browse-url" "\
1333 Ask a WWW browser to load URL.
1334 Prompts for a URL, defaulting to the URL at or before point. Variable
1335 `browse-url-browser-function' says which browser to use." t nil)
1336
1337 (autoload (quote browse-url-at-point) "browse-url" "\
1338 Ask a WWW browser to load the URL at or before point.
1339 Doesn't let you edit the URL like `browse-url'. Variable
1340 `browse-url-browser-function' says which browser to use." t nil)
1341
1342 (autoload (quote browse-url-at-mouse) "browse-url" "\
1343 Ask a WWW browser to load a URL clicked with the mouse.
1344 The URL is the one around or before the position of the mouse click
1345 but point is not changed. Doesn't let you edit the URL like
1346 `browse-url'. Variable `browse-url-browser-function' says which browser
1347 to use." t nil)
1348
1349 (autoload (quote browse-url-netscape) "browse-url" "\
1350 Ask the Netscape WWW browser to load URL.
1351
1352 Default to the URL around or before point. The strings in variable
1353 `browse-url-netscape-arguments' are also passed to Netscape.
1354
1355 When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-p' is
1356 non-nil, load the document in a new Netscape window, otherwise use a
1357 random existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses
1358 the effect of `browse-url-new-window-p'.
1359
1360 When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
1361 used instead of `browse-url-new-window-p'." t nil)
1362
1363 (autoload (quote browse-url-mosaic) "browse-url" "\
1364 Ask the XMosaic WWW browser to load URL.
1365
1366 Default to the URL around or before point. The strings in variable
1367 `browse-url-mosaic-arguments' are also passed to Mosaic and the
1368 program is invoked according to the variable
1369 `browse-url-mosaic-program'.
1370
1371 When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-p' is
1372 non-nil, load the document in a new Mosaic window, otherwise use a
1373 random existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses
1374 the effect of `browse-url-new-window-p'.
1375
1376 When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
1377 used instead of `browse-url-new-window-p'." t nil)
1378
1379 (defvar browse-url-grail (concat (or (getenv "GRAILDIR") "~/.grail") "/user/rcgrail.py") "\
1380 Location of Grail remote control client script `rcgrail.py'.
1381 Typically found in $GRAILDIR/rcgrail.py, or ~/.grail/user/rcgrail.py.")
1382
1383 (autoload (quote browse-url-grail) "browse-url" "\
1384 Ask the Grail WWW browser to load URL.
1385 Default to the URL around or before point. Runs the program in the
1386 variable `browse-url-grail'." t nil)
1387
1388 (autoload (quote browse-url-cci) "browse-url" "\
1389 Ask the XMosaic WWW browser to load URL.
1390 Default to the URL around or before point.
1391
1392 This function only works for XMosaic version 2.5 or later. You must
1393 select `CCI' from XMosaic's File menu, set the CCI Port Address to the
1394 value of variable `browse-url-CCI-port', and enable `Accept requests'.
1395
1396 When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-p' is
1397 non-nil, load the document in a new browser window, otherwise use a
1398 random existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses
1399 the effect of `browse-url-new-window-p'.
1400
1401 When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
1402 used instead of `browse-url-new-window-p'." t nil)
1403
1404 (autoload (quote browse-url-iximosaic) "browse-url" "\
1405 Ask the IXIMosaic WWW browser to load URL.
1406 Default to the URL around or before point." t nil)
1407
1408 (autoload (quote browse-url-w3) "browse-url" "\
1409 Ask the w3 WWW browser to load URL.
1410 Default to the URL around or before point.
1411
1412 When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-p' is
1413 non-nil, load the document in a new window. A non-nil interactive
1414 prefix argument reverses the effect of `browse-url-new-window-p'.
1415
1416 When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
1417 used instead of `browse-url-new-window-p'." t nil)
1418
1419 (autoload (quote browse-url-w3-gnudoit) "browse-url" "\
1420 Ask another Emacs running gnuserv to load the URL using the W3 browser.
1421 The `browse-url-gnudoit-program' program is used with options given by
1422 `browse-url-gnudoit-args'. Default to the URL around or before point." t nil)
1423
1424 (autoload (quote browse-url-lynx-xterm) "browse-url" "\
1425 Ask the Lynx WWW browser to load URL.
1426 Default to the URL around or before point. A new Lynx process is run
1427 in an Xterm window using the Xterm program named by `browse-url-xterm-program'
1428 with possible additional arguments `browse-url-xterm-args'." t nil)
1429
1430 (autoload (quote browse-url-lynx-emacs) "browse-url" "\
1431 Ask the Lynx WWW browser to load URL.
1432 Default to the URL around or before point. With a prefix argument, run
1433 a new Lynx process in a new buffer.
1434
1435 When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-p' is
1436 non-nil, load the document in a new lynx in a new term window,
1437 otherwise use any existing one. A non-nil interactive prefix argument
1438 reverses the effect of `browse-url-new-window-p'.
1439
1440 When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
1441 used instead of `browse-url-new-window-p'." t nil)
1442
1443 (autoload (quote browse-url-mmm) "browse-url" "\
1444 Ask the MMM WWW browser to load URL.
1445 Default to the URL around or before point." t nil)
1446
1447 (autoload (quote browse-url-mail) "browse-url" "\
1448 Open a new mail message buffer within Emacs.
1449 Default to using the mailto: URL around or before point as the
1450 recipient's address. Supplying a non-nil interactive prefix argument
1451 will cause the mail to be composed in another window rather than the
1452 current one.
1453
1454 When called interactively, if variable `browse-url-new-window-p' is
1455 non-nil use `compose-mail-other-window', otherwise `compose-mail'. A
1456 non-nil interactive prefix argument reverses the effect of
1457 `browse-url-new-window-p'.
1458
1459 When called non-interactively, optional second argument NEW-WINDOW is
1460 used instead of `browse-url-new-window-p'." t nil)
1461
1462 (autoload (quote browse-url-generic) "browse-url" "\
1463 Ask the WWW browser defined by `browse-url-generic-program' to load URL.
1464 Default to the URL around or before point. A fresh copy of the
1465 browser is started up in a new process with possible additional arguments
1466 `browse-url-generic-args'. This is appropriate for browsers which
1467 don't offer a form of remote control." t nil)
1468
1469 ;;;***
1470 \f
1471 ;;;### (autoloads (snarf-bruces bruce) "bruce" "play/bruce.el" (13607
1472 ;;;;;; 42538))
1473 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/bruce.el
1474
1475 (autoload (quote bruce) "bruce" "\
1476 Adds that special touch of class to your outgoing mail." t nil)
1477
1478 (autoload (quote snarf-bruces) "bruce" "\
1479 Return a vector containing the lines from `bruce-phrases-file'." nil nil)
1480
1481 ;;;***
1482 \f
1483 ;;;### (autoloads (bs-show bs-customize bs-cycle-previous bs-cycle-next)
1484 ;;;;;; "bs" "bs.el" (14440 44552))
1485 ;;; Generated autoloads from bs.el
1486
1487 (autoload (quote bs-cycle-next) "bs" "\
1488 Select next buffer defined by buffer cycling.
1489 The buffers taking part in buffer cycling are defined
1490 by buffer configuration `bs-cycle-configuration-name'." t nil)
1491
1492 (autoload (quote bs-cycle-previous) "bs" "\
1493 Select previous buffer defined by buffer cycling.
1494 The buffers taking part in buffer cycling are defined
1495 by buffer configuration `bs-cycle-configuration-name'." t nil)
1496
1497 (autoload (quote bs-customize) "bs" "\
1498 Customization of group bs for Buffer Selection Menu." t nil)
1499
1500 (autoload (quote bs-show) "bs" "\
1501 Make a menu of buffers so you can manipulate buffer list or buffers itself.
1502 \\<bs-mode-map>
1503 There are many key commands similar to `Buffer-menu-mode' for
1504 manipulating buffer list and buffers itself.
1505 User can move with [up] or [down], select a buffer
1506 by \\[bs-select] or [SPC]
1507
1508 Type \\[bs-kill] to leave Buffer Selection Menu without a selection.
1509 Type \\[bs-help] after invocation to get help on commands available.
1510 With prefix argument ARG show a different buffer list. Function
1511 `bs--configuration-name-for-prefix-arg' determine accordingly
1512 name of buffer configuration." t nil)
1513
1514 ;;;***
1515 \f
1516 ;;;### (autoloads (batch-byte-recompile-directory batch-byte-compile
1517 ;;;;;; display-call-tree byte-compile compile-defun byte-compile-file
1518 ;;;;;; byte-recompile-directory byte-force-recompile) "bytecomp"
1519 ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/bytecomp.el" (14456 31103))
1520 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/bytecomp.el
1521
1522 (autoload (quote byte-force-recompile) "bytecomp" "\
1523 Recompile every `.el' file in DIRECTORY that already has a `.elc' file.
1524 Files in subdirectories of DIRECTORY are processed also." t nil)
1525
1526 (autoload (quote byte-recompile-directory) "bytecomp" "\
1527 Recompile every `.el' file in DIRECTORY that needs recompilation.
1528 This is if a `.elc' file exists but is older than the `.el' file.
1529 Files in subdirectories of DIRECTORY are processed also.
1530
1531 If the `.elc' file does not exist, normally the `.el' file is *not* compiled.
1532 But a prefix argument (optional second arg) means ask user,
1533 for each such `.el' file, whether to compile it. Prefix argument 0 means
1534 don't ask and compile the file anyway.
1535
1536 A nonzero prefix argument also means ask about each subdirectory.
1537
1538 If the third argument FORCE is non-nil,
1539 recompile every `.el' file that already has a `.elc' file." t nil)
1540
1541 (autoload (quote byte-compile-file) "bytecomp" "\
1542 Compile a file of Lisp code named FILENAME into a file of byte code.
1543 The output file's name is made by appending `c' to the end of FILENAME.
1544 With prefix arg (noninteractively: 2nd arg), load the file after compiling.
1545 The value is t if there were no errors, nil if errors." t nil)
1546
1547 (autoload (quote compile-defun) "bytecomp" "\
1548 Compile and evaluate the current top-level form.
1549 Print the result in the minibuffer.
1550 With argument, insert value in current buffer after the form." t nil)
1551
1552 (autoload (quote byte-compile) "bytecomp" "\
1553 If FORM is a symbol, byte-compile its function definition.
1554 If FORM is a lambda or a macro, byte-compile it as a function." nil nil)
1555
1556 (autoload (quote display-call-tree) "bytecomp" "\
1557 Display a call graph of a specified file.
1558 This lists which functions have been called, what functions called
1559 them, and what functions they call. The list includes all functions
1560 whose definitions have been compiled in this Emacs session, as well as
1561 all functions called by those functions.
1562
1563 The call graph does not include macros, inline functions, or
1564 primitives that the byte-code interpreter knows about directly (eq,
1565 cons, etc.).
1566
1567 The call tree also lists those functions which are not known to be called
1568 \(that is, to which no calls have been compiled), and which cannot be
1569 invoked interactively." t nil)
1570
1571 (autoload (quote batch-byte-compile) "bytecomp" "\
1572 Run `byte-compile-file' on the files remaining on the command line.
1573 Use this from the command line, with `-batch';
1574 it won't work in an interactive Emacs.
1575 Each file is processed even if an error occurred previously.
1576 For example, invoke \"emacs -batch -f batch-byte-compile $emacs/ ~/*.el\"" nil nil)
1577
1578 (autoload (quote batch-byte-recompile-directory) "bytecomp" "\
1579 Runs `byte-recompile-directory' on the dirs remaining on the command line.
1580 Must be used only with `-batch', and kills Emacs on completion.
1581 For example, invoke `emacs -batch -f batch-byte-recompile-directory .'." nil nil)
1582
1583 ;;;***
1584 \f
1585 ;;;### (autoloads nil "cal-dst" "calendar/cal-dst.el" (12984 38822))
1586 ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/cal-dst.el
1587
1588 (put (quote calendar-daylight-savings-starts) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
1589
1590 (put (quote calendar-daylight-savings-ends) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
1591
1592 ;;;***
1593 \f
1594 ;;;### (autoloads (list-yahrzeit-dates) "cal-hebrew" "calendar/cal-hebrew.el"
1595 ;;;;;; (13997 6729))
1596 ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/cal-hebrew.el
1597
1598 (autoload (quote list-yahrzeit-dates) "cal-hebrew" "\
1599 List Yahrzeit dates for *Gregorian* DEATH-DATE from START-YEAR to END-YEAR.
1600 When called interactively from the calendar window, the date of death is taken
1601 from the cursor position." t nil)
1602
1603 ;;;***
1604 \f
1605 ;;;### (autoloads (calendar solar-holidays islamic-holidays christian-holidays
1606 ;;;;;; hebrew-holidays other-holidays local-holidays oriental-holidays
1607 ;;;;;; general-holidays holidays-in-diary-buffer diary-list-include-blanks
1608 ;;;;;; nongregorian-diary-marking-hook mark-diary-entries-hook nongregorian-diary-listing-hook
1609 ;;;;;; diary-display-hook diary-hook list-diary-entries-hook print-diary-entries-hook
1610 ;;;;;; american-calendar-display-form european-calendar-display-form
1611 ;;;;;; european-date-diary-pattern american-date-diary-pattern european-calendar-style
1612 ;;;;;; abbreviated-calendar-year sexp-diary-entry-symbol diary-include-string
1613 ;;;;;; islamic-diary-entry-symbol hebrew-diary-entry-symbol diary-nonmarking-symbol
1614 ;;;;;; diary-file calendar-move-hook today-invisible-calendar-hook
1615 ;;;;;; today-visible-calendar-hook initial-calendar-window-hook
1616 ;;;;;; calendar-load-hook all-islamic-calendar-holidays all-christian-calendar-holidays
1617 ;;;;;; all-hebrew-calendar-holidays mark-holidays-in-calendar view-calendar-holidays-initially
1618 ;;;;;; calendar-remove-frame-by-deleting mark-diary-entries-in-calendar
1619 ;;;;;; number-of-diary-entries view-diary-entries-initially calendar-offset
1620 ;;;;;; calendar-week-start-day) "calendar" "calendar/calendar.el"
1621 ;;;;;; (14393 15349))
1622 ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/calendar.el
1623
1624 (defvar calendar-week-start-day 0 "\
1625 *The day of the week on which a week in the calendar begins.
1626 0 means Sunday (default), 1 means Monday, and so on.")
1627
1628 (defvar calendar-offset 0 "\
1629 *The offset of the principal month from the center of the calendar window.
1630 0 means the principal month is in the center (default), -1 means on the left,
1631 +1 means on the right. Larger (or smaller) values push the principal month off
1632 the screen.")
1633
1634 (defvar view-diary-entries-initially nil "\
1635 *Non-nil means display current date's diary entries on entry.
1636 The diary is displayed in another window when the calendar is first displayed,
1637 if the current date is visible. The number of days of diary entries displayed
1638 is governed by the variable `number-of-diary-entries'.")
1639
1640 (defvar number-of-diary-entries 1 "\
1641 *Specifies how many days of diary entries are to be displayed initially.
1642 This variable affects the diary display when the command M-x diary is used,
1643 or if the value of the variable `view-diary-entries-initially' is t. For
1644 example, if the default value 1 is used, then only the current day's diary
1645 entries will be displayed. If the value 2 is used, then both the current
1646 day's and the next day's entries will be displayed.
1647
1648 The value can also be a vector such as [0 2 2 2 2 4 1]; this value
1649 says to display no diary entries on Sunday, the display the entries
1650 for the current date and the day after on Monday through Thursday,
1651 display Friday through Monday's entries on Friday, and display only
1652 Saturday's entries on Saturday.
1653
1654 This variable does not affect the diary display with the `d' command
1655 from the calendar; in that case, the prefix argument controls the
1656 number of days of diary entries displayed.")
1657
1658 (defvar mark-diary-entries-in-calendar nil "\
1659 *Non-nil means mark dates with diary entries, in the calendar window.
1660 The marking symbol is specified by the variable `diary-entry-marker'.")
1661
1662 (defvar calendar-remove-frame-by-deleting nil "\
1663 *Determine how the calendar mode removes a frame no longer needed.
1664 If nil, make an icon of the frame. If non-nil, delete the frame.")
1665
1666 (defvar view-calendar-holidays-initially nil "\
1667 *Non-nil means display holidays for current three month period on entry.
1668 The holidays are displayed in another window when the calendar is first
1669 displayed.")
1670
1671 (defvar mark-holidays-in-calendar nil "\
1672 *Non-nil means mark dates of holidays in the calendar window.
1673 The marking symbol is specified by the variable `calendar-holiday-marker'.")
1674
1675 (defvar all-hebrew-calendar-holidays nil "\
1676 *If nil, show only major holidays from the Hebrew calendar.
1677 This means only those Jewish holidays that appear on secular calendars.
1678
1679 If t, show all the holidays that would appear in a complete Hebrew calendar.")
1680
1681 (defvar all-christian-calendar-holidays nil "\
1682 *If nil, show only major holidays from the Christian calendar.
1683 This means only those Christian holidays that appear on secular calendars.
1684
1685 If t, show all the holidays that would appear in a complete Christian
1686 calendar.")
1687
1688 (defvar all-islamic-calendar-holidays nil "\
1689 *If nil, show only major holidays from the Islamic calendar.
1690 This means only those Islamic holidays that appear on secular calendars.
1691
1692 If t, show all the holidays that would appear in a complete Islamic
1693 calendar.")
1694
1695 (defvar calendar-load-hook nil "\
1696 *List of functions to be called after the calendar is first loaded.
1697 This is the place to add key bindings to `calendar-mode-map'.")
1698
1699 (defvar initial-calendar-window-hook nil "\
1700 *List of functions to be called when the calendar window is first opened.
1701 The functions invoked are called after the calendar window is opened, but
1702 once opened is never called again. Leaving the calendar with the `q' command
1703 and reentering it will cause these functions to be called again.")
1704
1705 (defvar today-visible-calendar-hook nil "\
1706 *List of functions called whenever the current date is visible.
1707 This can be used, for example, to replace today's date with asterisks; a
1708 function `calendar-star-date' is included for this purpose:
1709 (setq today-visible-calendar-hook 'calendar-star-date)
1710 It can also be used to mark the current date with `calendar-today-marker';
1711 a function is also provided for this:
1712 (setq today-visible-calendar-hook 'calendar-mark-today)
1713
1714 The corresponding variable `today-invisible-calendar-hook' is the list of
1715 functions called when the calendar function was called when the current
1716 date is not visible in the window.
1717
1718 Other than the use of the provided functions, the changing of any
1719 characters in the calendar buffer by the hooks may cause the failure of the
1720 functions that move by days and weeks.")
1721
1722 (defvar today-invisible-calendar-hook nil "\
1723 *List of functions called whenever the current date is not visible.
1724
1725 The corresponding variable `today-visible-calendar-hook' is the list of
1726 functions called when the calendar function was called when the current
1727 date is visible in the window.
1728
1729 Other than the use of the provided functions, the changing of any
1730 characters in the calendar buffer by the hooks may cause the failure of the
1731 functions that move by days and weeks.")
1732
1733 (defvar calendar-move-hook nil "\
1734 *List of functions called whenever the cursor moves in the calendar.
1735
1736 For example,
1737
1738 (add-hook 'calendar-move-hook (lambda () (view-diary-entries 1)))
1739
1740 redisplays the diary for whatever date the cursor is moved to.")
1741
1742 (defvar diary-file "~/diary" "\
1743 *Name of the file in which one's personal diary of dates is kept.
1744
1745 The file's entries are lines in any of the forms
1746
1747 MONTH/DAY
1748 MONTH/DAY/YEAR
1749 MONTHNAME DAY
1750 MONTHNAME DAY, YEAR
1751 DAYNAME
1752
1753 at the beginning of the line; the remainder of the line is the diary entry
1754 string for that date. MONTH and DAY are one or two digit numbers, YEAR is
1755 a number and may be written in full or abbreviated to the final two digits.
1756 If the date does not contain a year, it is generic and applies to any year.
1757 DAYNAME entries apply to any date on which is on that day of the week.
1758 MONTHNAME and DAYNAME can be spelled in full, abbreviated to three
1759 characters (with or without a period), capitalized or not. Any of DAY,
1760 MONTH, or MONTHNAME, YEAR can be `*' which matches any day, month, or year,
1761 respectively.
1762
1763 The European style (in which the day precedes the month) can be used
1764 instead, if you execute `european-calendar' when in the calendar, or set
1765 `european-calendar-style' to t in your .emacs file. The European forms are
1766
1767 DAY/MONTH
1768 DAY/MONTH/YEAR
1769 DAY MONTHNAME
1770 DAY MONTHNAME YEAR
1771 DAYNAME
1772
1773 To revert to the default American style from the European style, execute
1774 `american-calendar' in the calendar.
1775
1776 A diary entry can be preceded by the character
1777 `diary-nonmarking-symbol' (ordinarily `&') to make that entry
1778 nonmarking--that is, it will not be marked on dates in the calendar
1779 window but will appear in a diary window.
1780
1781 Multiline diary entries are made by indenting lines after the first with
1782 either a TAB or one or more spaces.
1783
1784 Lines not in one the above formats are ignored. Here are some sample diary
1785 entries (in the default American style):
1786
1787 12/22/1988 Twentieth wedding anniversary!!
1788 &1/1. Happy New Year!
1789 10/22 Ruth's birthday.
1790 21: Payday
1791 Tuesday--weekly meeting with grad students at 10am
1792 Supowit, Shen, Bitner, and Kapoor to attend.
1793 1/13/89 Friday the thirteenth!!
1794 &thu 4pm squash game with Lloyd.
1795 mar 16 Dad's birthday
1796 April 15, 1989 Income tax due.
1797 &* 15 time cards due.
1798
1799 If the first line of a diary entry consists only of the date or day name with
1800 no trailing blanks or punctuation, then that line is not displayed in the
1801 diary window; only the continuation lines is shown. For example, the
1802 single diary entry
1803
1804 02/11/1989
1805 Bill Blattner visits Princeton today
1806 2pm Cognitive Studies Committee meeting
1807 2:30-5:30 Lizzie at Lawrenceville for `Group Initiative'
1808 4:00pm Jamie Tappenden
1809 7:30pm Dinner at George and Ed's for Alan Ryan
1810 7:30-10:00pm dance at Stewart Country Day School
1811
1812 will appear in the diary window without the date line at the beginning. This
1813 facility allows the diary window to look neater, but can cause confusion if
1814 used with more than one day's entries displayed.
1815
1816 Diary entries can be based on Lisp sexps. For example, the diary entry
1817
1818 %%(diary-block 11 1 1990 11 10 1990) Vacation
1819
1820 causes the diary entry \"Vacation\" to appear from November 1 through November
1821 10, 1990. Other functions available are `diary-float', `diary-anniversary',
1822 `diary-cyclic', `diary-day-of-year', `diary-iso-date', `diary-french-date',
1823 `diary-hebrew-date', `diary-islamic-date', `diary-mayan-date',
1824 `diary-chinese-date', `diary-coptic-date', `diary-ethiopic-date',
1825 `diary-persian-date', `diary-yahrzeit', `diary-sunrise-sunset',
1826 `diary-phases-of-moon', `diary-parasha', `diary-omer', `diary-rosh-hodesh',
1827 and `diary-sabbath-candles'. See the documentation for the function
1828 `list-sexp-diary-entries' for more details.
1829
1830 Diary entries based on the Hebrew and/or the Islamic calendar are also
1831 possible, but because these are somewhat slow, they are ignored
1832 unless you set the `nongregorian-diary-listing-hook' and the
1833 `nongregorian-diary-marking-hook' appropriately. See the documentation
1834 for these functions for details.
1835
1836 Diary files can contain directives to include the contents of other files; for
1837 details, see the documentation for the variable `list-diary-entries-hook'.")
1838
1839 (defvar diary-nonmarking-symbol "&" "\
1840 *Symbol indicating that a diary entry is not to be marked in the calendar.")
1841
1842 (defvar hebrew-diary-entry-symbol "H" "\
1843 *Symbol indicating a diary entry according to the Hebrew calendar.")
1844
1845 (defvar islamic-diary-entry-symbol "I" "\
1846 *Symbol indicating a diary entry according to the Islamic calendar.")
1847
1848 (defvar diary-include-string "#include" "\
1849 *The string indicating inclusion of another file of diary entries.
1850 See the documentation for the function `include-other-diary-files'.")
1851
1852 (defvar sexp-diary-entry-symbol "%%" "\
1853 *The string used to indicate a sexp diary entry in diary-file.
1854 See the documentation for the function `list-sexp-diary-entries'.")
1855
1856 (defvar abbreviated-calendar-year t "\
1857 *Interpret a two-digit year DD in a diary entry as either 19DD or 20DD.
1858 For the Gregorian calendar; similarly for the Hebrew and Islamic calendars.
1859 If this variable is nil, years must be written in full.")
1860
1861 (defvar european-calendar-style nil "\
1862 *Use the European style of dates in the diary and in any displays.
1863 If this variable is t, a date 1/2/1990 would be interpreted as February 1,
1864 1990. The accepted European date styles are
1865
1866 DAY/MONTH
1867 DAY/MONTH/YEAR
1868 DAY MONTHNAME
1869 DAY MONTHNAME YEAR
1870 DAYNAME
1871
1872 Names can be capitalized or not, written in full, or abbreviated to three
1873 characters with or without a period.")
1874
1875 (defvar american-date-diary-pattern (quote ((month "/" day "[^/0-9]") (month "/" day "/" year "[^0-9]") (monthname " *" day "[^,0-9]") (monthname " *" day ", *" year "[^0-9]") (dayname "\\W"))) "\
1876 *List of pseudo-patterns describing the American patterns of date used.
1877 See the documentation of `diary-date-forms' for an explanation.")
1878
1879 (defvar european-date-diary-pattern (quote ((day "/" month "[^/0-9]") (day "/" month "/" year "[^0-9]") (backup day " *" monthname "\\W+\\<\\([^*0-9]\\|\\([0-9]+[:aApP]\\)\\)") (day " *" monthname " *" year "[^0-9]") (dayname "\\W"))) "\
1880 *List of pseudo-patterns describing the European patterns of date used.
1881 See the documentation of `diary-date-forms' for an explanation.")
1882
1883 (defvar european-calendar-display-form (quote ((if dayname (concat dayname ", ")) day " " monthname " " year)) "\
1884 *Pseudo-pattern governing the way a date appears in the European style.
1885 See the documentation of calendar-date-display-form for an explanation.")
1886
1887 (defvar american-calendar-display-form (quote ((if dayname (concat dayname ", ")) monthname " " day ", " year)) "\
1888 *Pseudo-pattern governing the way a date appears in the American style.
1889 See the documentation of `calendar-date-display-form' for an explanation.")
1890
1891 (defvar print-diary-entries-hook (quote lpr-buffer) "\
1892 *List of functions called after a temporary diary buffer is prepared.
1893 The buffer shows only the diary entries currently visible in the diary
1894 buffer. The default just does the printing. Other uses might include, for
1895 example, rearranging the lines into order by day and time, saving the buffer
1896 instead of deleting it, or changing the function used to do the printing.")
1897
1898 (defvar list-diary-entries-hook nil "\
1899 *List of functions called after diary file is culled for relevant entries.
1900 It is to be used for diary entries that are not found in the diary file.
1901
1902 A function `include-other-diary-files' is provided for use as the value of
1903 this hook. This function enables you to use shared diary files together
1904 with your own. The files included are specified in the diary file by lines
1905 of the form
1906
1907 #include \"filename\"
1908
1909 This is recursive; that is, #include directives in files thus included are
1910 obeyed. You can change the \"#include\" to some other string by changing
1911 the variable `diary-include-string'. When you use `include-other-diary-files'
1912 as part of the list-diary-entries-hook, you will probably also want to use the
1913 function `mark-included-diary-files' as part of `mark-diary-entries-hook'.
1914
1915 For example, you could use
1916
1917 (setq list-diary-entries-hook
1918 '(include-other-diary-files sort-diary-entries))
1919 (setq diary-display-hook 'fancy-diary-display)
1920
1921 in your `.emacs' file to cause the fancy diary buffer to be displayed with
1922 diary entries from various included files, each day's entries sorted into
1923 lexicographic order.")
1924
1925 (defvar diary-hook nil "\
1926 *List of functions called after the display of the diary.
1927 Can be used for appointment notification.")
1928
1929 (defvar diary-display-hook nil "\
1930 *List of functions that handle the display of the diary.
1931 If nil (the default), `simple-diary-display' is used. Use `ignore' for no
1932 diary display.
1933
1934 Ordinarily, this just displays the diary buffer (with holidays indicated in
1935 the mode line), if there are any relevant entries. At the time these
1936 functions are called, the variable `diary-entries-list' is a list, in order
1937 by date, of all relevant diary entries in the form of ((MONTH DAY YEAR)
1938 STRING), where string is the diary entry for the given date. This can be
1939 used, for example, a different buffer for display (perhaps combined with
1940 holidays), or produce hard copy output.
1941
1942 A function `fancy-diary-display' is provided as an alternative
1943 choice for this hook; this function prepares a special noneditable diary
1944 buffer with the relevant diary entries that has neat day-by-day arrangement
1945 with headings. The fancy diary buffer will show the holidays unless the
1946 variable `holidays-in-diary-buffer' is set to nil. Ordinarily, the fancy
1947 diary buffer will not show days for which there are no diary entries, even
1948 if that day is a holiday; if you want such days to be shown in the fancy
1949 diary buffer, set the variable `diary-list-include-blanks' to t.")
1950
1951 (defvar nongregorian-diary-listing-hook nil "\
1952 *List of functions called for listing diary file and included files.
1953 As the files are processed for diary entries, these functions are used to cull
1954 relevant entries. You can use either or both of `list-hebrew-diary-entries'
1955 and `list-islamic-diary-entries'. The documentation for these functions
1956 describes the style of such diary entries.")
1957
1958 (defvar mark-diary-entries-hook nil "\
1959 *List of functions called after marking diary entries in the calendar.
1960
1961 A function `mark-included-diary-files' is also provided for use as the
1962 mark-diary-entries-hook; it enables you to use shared diary files together
1963 with your own. The files included are specified in the diary file by lines
1964 of the form
1965 #include \"filename\"
1966 This is recursive; that is, #include directives in files thus included are
1967 obeyed. You can change the \"#include\" to some other string by changing the
1968 variable `diary-include-string'. When you use `mark-included-diary-files' as
1969 part of the mark-diary-entries-hook, you will probably also want to use the
1970 function `include-other-diary-files' as part of `list-diary-entries-hook'.")
1971
1972 (defvar nongregorian-diary-marking-hook nil "\
1973 *List of functions called for marking diary file and included files.
1974 As the files are processed for diary entries, these functions are used to cull
1975 relevant entries. You can use either or both of `mark-hebrew-diary-entries'
1976 and `mark-islamic-diary-entries'. The documentation for these functions
1977 describes the style of such diary entries.")
1978
1979 (defvar diary-list-include-blanks nil "\
1980 *If nil, do not include days with no diary entry in the list of diary entries.
1981 Such days will then not be shown in the fancy diary buffer, even if they
1982 are holidays.")
1983
1984 (defvar holidays-in-diary-buffer t "\
1985 *Non-nil means include holidays in the diary display.
1986 The holidays appear in the mode line of the diary buffer, or in the
1987 fancy diary buffer next to the date. This slows down the diary functions
1988 somewhat; setting it to nil makes the diary display faster.")
1989
1990 (put (quote general-holidays) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
1991
1992 (defvar general-holidays (quote ((holiday-fixed 1 1 "New Year's Day") (holiday-float 1 1 3 "Martin Luther King Day") (holiday-fixed 2 2 "Groundhog Day") (holiday-fixed 2 14 "Valentine's Day") (holiday-float 2 1 3 "President's Day") (holiday-fixed 3 17 "St. Patrick's Day") (holiday-fixed 4 1 "April Fools' Day") (holiday-float 5 0 2 "Mother's Day") (holiday-float 5 1 -1 "Memorial Day") (holiday-fixed 6 14 "Flag Day") (holiday-float 6 0 3 "Father's Day") (holiday-fixed 7 4 "Independence Day") (holiday-float 9 1 1 "Labor Day") (holiday-float 10 1 2 "Columbus Day") (holiday-fixed 10 31 "Halloween") (holiday-fixed 11 11 "Veteran's Day") (holiday-float 11 4 4 "Thanksgiving"))) "\
1993 *General holidays. Default value is for the United States.
1994 See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
1995
1996 (put (quote oriental-holidays) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
1997
1998 (defvar oriental-holidays (quote ((if (fboundp (quote atan)) (holiday-chinese-new-year)))) "\
1999 *Oriental holidays.
2000 See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
2001
2002 (put (quote local-holidays) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2003
2004 (defvar local-holidays nil "\
2005 *Local holidays.
2006 See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
2007
2008 (put (quote other-holidays) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2009
2010 (defvar other-holidays nil "\
2011 *User defined holidays.
2012 See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
2013
2014 (put (quote hebrew-holidays-1) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2015
2016 (defvar hebrew-holidays-1 (quote ((holiday-rosh-hashanah-etc) (if all-hebrew-calendar-holidays (holiday-julian 11 (let* ((m displayed-month) (y displayed-year) (year)) (increment-calendar-month m y -1) (let ((year (extract-calendar-year (calendar-julian-from-absolute (calendar-absolute-from-gregorian (list m 1 y)))))) (if (zerop (% (1+ year) 4)) 22 21))) "\"Tal Umatar\" (evening)")))))
2017
2018 (put (quote hebrew-holidays-2) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2019
2020 (defvar hebrew-holidays-2 (quote ((if all-hebrew-calendar-holidays (holiday-hanukkah) (holiday-hebrew 9 25 "Hanukkah")) (if all-hebrew-calendar-holidays (holiday-hebrew 10 (let ((h-year (extract-calendar-year (calendar-hebrew-from-absolute (calendar-absolute-from-gregorian (list displayed-month 28 displayed-year)))))) (if (= (% (calendar-absolute-from-hebrew (list 10 10 h-year)) 7) 6) 11 10)) "Tzom Teveth")) (if all-hebrew-calendar-holidays (holiday-hebrew 11 15 "Tu B'Shevat")))))
2021
2022 (put (quote hebrew-holidays-3) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2023
2024 (defvar hebrew-holidays-3 (quote ((if all-hebrew-calendar-holidays (holiday-hebrew 11 (let ((m displayed-month) (y displayed-year)) (increment-calendar-month m y 1) (let* ((h-year (extract-calendar-year (calendar-hebrew-from-absolute (calendar-absolute-from-gregorian (list m (calendar-last-day-of-month m y) y))))) (s-s (calendar-hebrew-from-absolute (if (= (% (calendar-absolute-from-hebrew (list 7 1 h-year)) 7) 6) (calendar-dayname-on-or-before 6 (calendar-absolute-from-hebrew (list 11 17 h-year))) (calendar-dayname-on-or-before 6 (calendar-absolute-from-hebrew (list 11 16 h-year)))))) (day (extract-calendar-day s-s))) day)) "Shabbat Shirah")))))
2025
2026 (put (quote hebrew-holidays-4) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2027
2028 (defvar hebrew-holidays-4 (quote ((holiday-passover-etc) (if (and all-hebrew-calendar-holidays (let* ((m displayed-month) (y displayed-year) (year)) (increment-calendar-month m y -1) (let ((year (extract-calendar-year (calendar-julian-from-absolute (calendar-absolute-from-gregorian (list m 1 y)))))) (= 21 (% year 28))))) (holiday-julian 3 26 "Kiddush HaHamah")) (if all-hebrew-calendar-holidays (holiday-tisha-b-av-etc)))))
2029
2030 (put (quote hebrew-holidays) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2031
2032 (defvar hebrew-holidays (append hebrew-holidays-1 hebrew-holidays-2 hebrew-holidays-3 hebrew-holidays-4) "\
2033 *Jewish holidays.
2034 See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
2035
2036 (put (quote christian-holidays) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2037
2038 (defvar christian-holidays (quote ((if all-christian-calendar-holidays (holiday-fixed 1 6 "Epiphany")) (holiday-easter-etc) (if all-christian-calendar-holidays (holiday-greek-orthodox-easter)) (if all-christian-calendar-holidays (holiday-fixed 8 15 "Assumption")) (if all-christian-calendar-holidays (holiday-advent)) (holiday-fixed 12 25 "Christmas") (if all-christian-calendar-holidays (holiday-julian 12 25 "Eastern Orthodox Christmas")))) "\
2039 *Christian holidays.
2040 See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
2041
2042 (put (quote islamic-holidays) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2043
2044 (defvar islamic-holidays (quote ((holiday-islamic 1 1 (format "Islamic New Year %d" (let ((m displayed-month) (y displayed-year)) (increment-calendar-month m y 1) (extract-calendar-year (calendar-islamic-from-absolute (calendar-absolute-from-gregorian (list m (calendar-last-day-of-month m y) y))))))) (if all-islamic-calendar-holidays (holiday-islamic 1 10 "Ashura")) (if all-islamic-calendar-holidays (holiday-islamic 3 12 "Mulad-al-Nabi")) (if all-islamic-calendar-holidays (holiday-islamic 7 26 "Shab-e-Mi'raj")) (if all-islamic-calendar-holidays (holiday-islamic 8 15 "Shab-e-Bara't")) (holiday-islamic 9 1 "Ramadan Begins") (if all-islamic-calendar-holidays (holiday-islamic 9 27 "Shab-e Qadr")) (if all-islamic-calendar-holidays (holiday-islamic 10 1 "Id-al-Fitr")) (if all-islamic-calendar-holidays (holiday-islamic 12 10 "Id-al-Adha")))) "\
2045 *Islamic holidays.
2046 See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
2047
2048 (put (quote solar-holidays) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2049
2050 (defvar solar-holidays (quote ((if (fboundp (quote atan)) (solar-equinoxes-solstices)) (if (progn (require (quote cal-dst)) t) (funcall (quote holiday-sexp) calendar-daylight-savings-starts (quote (format "Daylight Savings Time Begins %s" (if (fboundp (quote atan)) (solar-time-string (/ calendar-daylight-savings-starts-time (float 60)) calendar-standard-time-zone-name) ""))))) (funcall (quote holiday-sexp) calendar-daylight-savings-ends (quote (format "Daylight Savings Time Ends %s" (if (fboundp (quote atan)) (solar-time-string (/ calendar-daylight-savings-ends-time (float 60)) calendar-daylight-time-zone-name) "")))))) "\
2051 *Sun-related holidays.
2052 See the documentation for `calendar-holidays' for details.")
2053
2054 (put (quote calendar-holidays) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
2055
2056 (defvar calendar-setup nil "\
2057 The frame set up of the calendar.
2058 The choices are `one-frame' (calendar and diary together in one separate,
2059 dedicated frame), `two-frames' (calendar and diary in separate, dedicated
2060 frames), `calendar-only' (calendar in a separate, dedicated frame); with
2061 any other value the current frame is used.")
2062
2063 (autoload (quote calendar) "calendar" "\
2064 Choose between the one frame, two frame, or basic calendar displays.
2065 The original function `calendar' has been renamed `calendar-basic-setup'." t nil)
2066
2067 ;;;***
2068 \f
2069 ;;;### (autoloads nil "cc-langs" "progmodes/cc-langs.el" (14419 57707))
2070 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cc-langs.el
2071
2072 (defvar c-mode-syntax-table nil "\
2073 Syntax table used in c-mode buffers.")
2074
2075 (defvar c++-mode-syntax-table nil "\
2076 Syntax table used in c++-mode buffers.")
2077
2078 (defvar objc-mode-syntax-table nil "\
2079 Syntax table used in objc-mode buffers.")
2080
2081 (defvar java-mode-syntax-table nil "\
2082 Syntax table used in java-mode buffers.")
2083
2084 (defvar idl-mode-syntax-table nil "\
2085 Syntax table used in idl-mode buffers.")
2086
2087 (defvar pike-mode-syntax-table nil "\
2088 Syntax table used in pike-mode buffers.")
2089
2090 ;;;***
2091 \f
2092 ;;;### (autoloads (pike-mode idl-mode java-mode objc-mode c++-mode
2093 ;;;;;; c-mode c-initialize-cc-mode) "cc-mode" "progmodes/cc-mode.el"
2094 ;;;;;; (14419 57707))
2095 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cc-mode.el
2096
2097 (autoload (quote c-initialize-cc-mode) "cc-mode" nil nil nil)
2098
2099 (autoload (quote c-mode) "cc-mode" "\
2100 Major mode for editing K&R and ANSI C code.
2101 To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from a
2102 c-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with version
2103 information already added. You just need to add a description of the
2104 problem, including a reproducible test case and send the message.
2105
2106 To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
2107
2108 The hook variable `c-mode-hook' is run with no args, if that value is
2109 bound and has a non-nil value. Also the hook `c-mode-common-hook' is
2110 run first.
2111
2112 Key bindings:
2113 \\{c-mode-map}" t nil)
2114
2115 (autoload (quote c++-mode) "cc-mode" "\
2116 Major mode for editing C++ code.
2117 To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from a
2118 c++-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
2119 version information already added. You just need to add a description
2120 of the problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the
2121 message.
2122
2123 To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
2124
2125 The hook variable `c++-mode-hook' is run with no args, if that
2126 variable is bound and has a non-nil value. Also the hook
2127 `c-mode-common-hook' is run first.
2128
2129 Key bindings:
2130 \\{c++-mode-map}" t nil)
2131
2132 (autoload (quote objc-mode) "cc-mode" "\
2133 Major mode for editing Objective C code.
2134 To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from an
2135 objc-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
2136 version information already added. You just need to add a description
2137 of the problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the
2138 message.
2139
2140 To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
2141
2142 The hook variable `objc-mode-hook' is run with no args, if that value
2143 is bound and has a non-nil value. Also the hook `c-mode-common-hook'
2144 is run first.
2145
2146 Key bindings:
2147 \\{objc-mode-map}" t nil)
2148
2149 (autoload (quote java-mode) "cc-mode" "\
2150 Major mode for editing Java code.
2151 To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from a
2152 java-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
2153 version information already added. You just need to add a description
2154 of the problem, including a reproducible test case and send the
2155 message.
2156
2157 To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
2158
2159 The hook variable `java-mode-hook' is run with no args, if that value
2160 is bound and has a non-nil value. Also the common hook
2161 `c-mode-common-hook' is run first. Note that this mode automatically
2162 sets the \"java\" style before calling any hooks so be careful if you
2163 set styles in `c-mode-common-hook'.
2164
2165 Key bindings:
2166 \\{java-mode-map}" t nil)
2167
2168 (autoload (quote idl-mode) "cc-mode" "\
2169 Major mode for editing CORBA's IDL code.
2170 To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from an
2171 idl-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
2172 version information already added. You just need to add a description
2173 of the problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the
2174 message.
2175
2176 To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
2177
2178 The hook variable `idl-mode-hook' is run with no args, if that
2179 variable is bound and has a non-nil value. Also the hook
2180 `c-mode-common-hook' is run first.
2181
2182 Key bindings:
2183 \\{idl-mode-map}" t nil)
2184
2185 (autoload (quote pike-mode) "cc-mode" "\
2186 Major mode for editing Pike code.
2187 To submit a problem report, enter `\\[c-submit-bug-report]' from an
2188 idl-mode buffer. This automatically sets up a mail buffer with
2189 version information already added. You just need to add a description
2190 of the problem, including a reproducible test case, and send the
2191 message.
2192
2193 To see what version of CC Mode you are running, enter `\\[c-version]'.
2194
2195 The hook variable `pike-mode-hook' is run with no args, if that value
2196 is bound and has a non-nil value. Also the common hook
2197 `c-mode-common-hook' is run first.
2198
2199 Key bindings:
2200 \\{pike-mode-map}" t nil)
2201
2202 ;;;***
2203 \f
2204 ;;;### (autoloads (c-set-offset c-add-style c-set-style) "cc-styles"
2205 ;;;;;; "progmodes/cc-styles.el" (14419 57707))
2206 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cc-styles.el
2207
2208 (autoload (quote c-set-style) "cc-styles" "\
2209 Set CC Mode variables to use one of several different indentation styles.
2210 STYLENAME is a string representing the desired style from the list of
2211 styles described in the variable `c-style-alist'. See that variable
2212 for details of setting up styles.
2213
2214 The variable `c-indentation-style' always contains the buffer's current
2215 style name.
2216
2217 If the optional argument DONT-OVERRIDE is non-nil, no style variables
2218 that already have values will be overridden. I.e. in the case of
2219 `c-offsets-alist', syntactic symbols will only be added, and in the
2220 case of all other style variables, only those set to `set-from-style'
2221 will be reassigned.
2222
2223 Obviously, specifying DONT-OVERRIDE is useful mainly when the initial
2224 style is chosen for a CC Mode buffer by a major mode. Since this is
2225 done internally by CC Mode, there's hardly ever a reason to use it." t nil)
2226
2227 (autoload (quote c-add-style) "cc-styles" "\
2228 Adds a style to `c-style-alist', or updates an existing one.
2229 STYLE is a string identifying the style to add or update. DESCRIP is
2230 an association list describing the style and must be of the form:
2231
2232 ([BASESTYLE] (VARIABLE . VALUE) [(VARIABLE . VALUE) ...])
2233
2234 See the variable `c-style-alist' for the semantics of BASESTYLE,
2235 VARIABLE and VALUE. This function also sets the current style to
2236 STYLE using `c-set-style' if the optional SET-P flag is non-nil." t nil)
2237
2238 (autoload (quote c-set-offset) "cc-styles" "\
2239 Change the value of a syntactic element symbol in `c-offsets-alist'.
2240 SYMBOL is the syntactic element symbol to change and OFFSET is the new
2241 offset for that syntactic element. The optional argument is not used
2242 and exists only for compatibility reasons." t nil)
2243
2244 ;;;***
2245 \f
2246 ;;;### (autoloads nil "cc-vars" "progmodes/cc-vars.el" (14419 57707))
2247 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cc-vars.el
2248
2249 (defconst c-emacs-features (let ((infodock-p (boundp (quote infodock-version))) (comments (let ((table (copy-syntax-table)) entry) (modify-syntax-entry 97 ". 12345678" table) (cond ((arrayp table) (setq entry (aref table 97)) (if (consp entry) (setq entry (car entry)))) ((fboundp (quote get-char-table)) (setq entry (get-char-table 97 table))) ((and (fboundp (quote char-table-p)) (char-table-p table)) (setq entry (car (char-table-range table [97])))) (t (error "CC Mode is incompatible with this version of Emacs"))) (if (= (logand (lsh entry -16) 255) 255) (quote 8-bit) (quote 1-bit))))) (if infodock-p (list comments (quote infodock)) (list comments))) "\
2250 A list of features extant in the Emacs you are using.
2251 There are many flavors of Emacs out there, each with different
2252 features supporting those needed by CC Mode. Here's the current
2253 supported list, along with the values for this variable:
2254
2255 XEmacs 19, 20, 21: (8-bit)
2256 Emacs 19, 20: (1-bit)
2257
2258 Infodock (based on XEmacs) has an additional symbol on this list:
2259 `infodock'.")
2260
2261 ;;;***
2262 \f
2263 ;;;### (autoloads (ccl-execute-with-args check-ccl-program define-ccl-program
2264 ;;;;;; declare-ccl-program ccl-dump ccl-compile) "ccl" "international/ccl.el"
2265 ;;;;;; (14236 19568))
2266 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/ccl.el
2267
2268 (autoload (quote ccl-compile) "ccl" "\
2269 Return a compiled code of CCL-PROGRAM as a vector of integer." nil nil)
2270
2271 (autoload (quote ccl-dump) "ccl" "\
2272 Disassemble compiled CCL-CODE." nil nil)
2273
2274 (autoload (quote declare-ccl-program) "ccl" "\
2275 Declare NAME as a name of CCL program.
2276
2277 This macro exists for backward compatibility. In the old version of
2278 Emacs, to compile a CCL program which calls another CCL program not
2279 yet defined, it must be declared as a CCL program in advance. But,
2280 now CCL program names are resolved not at compile time but before
2281 execution.
2282
2283 Optional arg VECTOR is a compiled CCL code of the CCL program." nil (quote macro))
2284
2285 (autoload (quote define-ccl-program) "ccl" "\
2286 Set NAME the compiled code of CCL-PROGRAM.
2287 CCL-PROGRAM is `eval'ed before being handed to the CCL compiler `ccl-compile'.
2288 The compiled code is a vector of integers." nil (quote macro))
2289
2290 (autoload (quote check-ccl-program) "ccl" "\
2291 Check validity of CCL-PROGRAM.
2292 If CCL-PROGRAM is a symbol denoting a CCL program, return
2293 CCL-PROGRAM, else return nil.
2294 If CCL-PROGRAM is a vector and optional arg NAME (symbol) is supplied,
2295 register CCL-PROGRAM by name NAME, and return NAME." nil (quote macro))
2296
2297 (autoload (quote ccl-execute-with-args) "ccl" "\
2298 Execute CCL-PROGRAM with registers initialized by the remaining args.
2299 The return value is a vector of resulting CCL registers." nil nil)
2300
2301 ;;;***
2302 \f
2303 ;;;### (autoloads (checkdoc-minor-mode checkdoc-ispell-defun checkdoc-ispell-comments
2304 ;;;;;; checkdoc-ispell-continue checkdoc-ispell-start checkdoc-ispell-message-text
2305 ;;;;;; checkdoc-ispell-message-interactive checkdoc-ispell-interactive
2306 ;;;;;; checkdoc-ispell-current-buffer checkdoc-ispell checkdoc-defun
2307 ;;;;;; checkdoc-eval-defun checkdoc-message-text checkdoc-rogue-spaces
2308 ;;;;;; checkdoc-continue checkdoc-start checkdoc-current-buffer
2309 ;;;;;; checkdoc-eval-current-buffer checkdoc-message-interactive
2310 ;;;;;; checkdoc-interactive checkdoc) "checkdoc" "emacs-lisp/checkdoc.el"
2311 ;;;;;; (14456 31049))
2312 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/checkdoc.el
2313
2314 (autoload (quote checkdoc) "checkdoc" "\
2315 Interactivly check the entire buffer for style errors.
2316 The current status of the ckeck will be displayed in a buffer which
2317 the users will view as each check is completed." t nil)
2318
2319 (autoload (quote checkdoc-interactive) "checkdoc" "\
2320 Interactively check the current buffer for doc string errors.
2321 Prefix argument START-HERE will start the checking from the current
2322 point, otherwise the check starts at the beginning of the current
2323 buffer. Allows navigation forward and backwards through document
2324 errors. Does not check for comment or space warnings.
2325 Optional argument SHOWSTATUS indicates that we should update the
2326 checkdoc status window instead of the usual behavior." t nil)
2327
2328 (autoload (quote checkdoc-message-interactive) "checkdoc" "\
2329 Interactively check the current buffer for message string errors.
2330 Prefix argument START-HERE will start the checking from the current
2331 point, otherwise the check starts at the beginning of the current
2332 buffer. Allows navigation forward and backwards through document
2333 errors. Does not check for comment or space warnings.
2334 Optional argument SHOWSTATUS indicates that we should update the
2335 checkdoc status window instead of the usual behavior." t nil)
2336
2337 (autoload (quote checkdoc-eval-current-buffer) "checkdoc" "\
2338 Evaluate and check documentation for the current buffer.
2339 Evaluation is done first because good documentation for something that
2340 doesn't work is just not useful. Comments, doc strings, and rogue
2341 spacing are all verified." t nil)
2342
2343 (autoload (quote checkdoc-current-buffer) "checkdoc" "\
2344 Check current buffer for document, comment, error style, and rogue spaces.
2345 With a prefix argument (in Lisp, the argument TAKE-NOTES),
2346 store all errors found in a warnings buffer,
2347 otherwise stop after the first error." t nil)
2348
2349 (autoload (quote checkdoc-start) "checkdoc" "\
2350 Start scanning the current buffer for documentation string style errors.
2351 Only documentation strings are checked.
2352 Use `checkdoc-continue' to continue checking if an error cannot be fixed.
2353 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES means to collect all the warning messages into
2354 a separate buffer." t nil)
2355
2356 (autoload (quote checkdoc-continue) "checkdoc" "\
2357 Find the next doc string in the current buffer which has a style error.
2358 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES means to continue through the whole buffer and
2359 save warnings in a separate buffer. Second optional argument START-POINT
2360 is the starting location. If this is nil, `point-min' is used instead." t nil)
2361
2362 (autoload (quote checkdoc-rogue-spaces) "checkdoc" "\
2363 Find extra spaces at the end of lines in the current file.
2364 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES non-nil means to save warnings in a
2365 separate buffer. Otherwise print a message. This returns the error
2366 if there is one.
2367 Optional argument INTERACT permits more interactive fixing." t nil)
2368
2369 (autoload (quote checkdoc-message-text) "checkdoc" "\
2370 Scan the buffer for occurrences of the error function, and verify text.
2371 Optional argument TAKE-NOTES causes all errors to be logged." t nil)
2372
2373 (autoload (quote checkdoc-eval-defun) "checkdoc" "\
2374 Evaluate the current form with `eval-defun' and check its documentation.
2375 Evaluation is done first so the form will be read before the
2376 documentation is checked. If there is a documentation error, then the display
2377 of what was evaluated will be overwritten by the diagnostic message." t nil)
2378
2379 (autoload (quote checkdoc-defun) "checkdoc" "\
2380 Examine the doc string of the function or variable under point.
2381 Call `error' if the doc string has problems. If NO-ERROR is
2382 non-nil, then do not call error, but call `message' instead.
2383 If the doc string passes the test, then check the function for rogue white
2384 space at the end of each line." t nil)
2385
2386 (autoload (quote checkdoc-ispell) "checkdoc" "\
2387 Check the style and spelling of everything interactively.
2388 Calls `checkdoc' with spell-checking turned on.
2389 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc'" t nil)
2390
2391 (autoload (quote checkdoc-ispell-current-buffer) "checkdoc" "\
2392 Check the style and spelling of the current buffer.
2393 Calls `checkdoc-current-buffer' with spell-checking turned on.
2394 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-current-buffer'" t nil)
2395
2396 (autoload (quote checkdoc-ispell-interactive) "checkdoc" "\
2397 Check the style and spelling of the current buffer interactively.
2398 Calls `checkdoc-interactive' with spell-checking turned on.
2399 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-interactive'" t nil)
2400
2401 (autoload (quote checkdoc-ispell-message-interactive) "checkdoc" "\
2402 Check the style and spelling of message text interactively.
2403 Calls `checkdoc-message-interactive' with spell-checking turned on.
2404 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-message-interactive'" t nil)
2405
2406 (autoload (quote checkdoc-ispell-message-text) "checkdoc" "\
2407 Check the style and spelling of message text interactively.
2408 Calls `checkdoc-message-text' with spell-checking turned on.
2409 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-message-text'" t nil)
2410
2411 (autoload (quote checkdoc-ispell-start) "checkdoc" "\
2412 Check the style and spelling of the current buffer.
2413 Calls `checkdoc-start' with spell-checking turned on.
2414 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-start'" t nil)
2415
2416 (autoload (quote checkdoc-ispell-continue) "checkdoc" "\
2417 Check the style and spelling of the current buffer after point.
2418 Calls `checkdoc-continue' with spell-checking turned on.
2419 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-continue'" t nil)
2420
2421 (autoload (quote checkdoc-ispell-comments) "checkdoc" "\
2422 Check the style and spelling of the current buffer's comments.
2423 Calls `checkdoc-comments' with spell-checking turned on.
2424 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-comments'" t nil)
2425
2426 (autoload (quote checkdoc-ispell-defun) "checkdoc" "\
2427 Check the style and spelling of the current defun with Ispell.
2428 Calls `checkdoc-defun' with spell-checking turned on.
2429 Prefix argument TAKE-NOTES is the same as for `checkdoc-defun'" t nil)
2430
2431 (autoload (quote checkdoc-minor-mode) "checkdoc" "\
2432 Toggle Checkdoc minor mode, a mode for checking Lisp doc strings.
2433 With prefix ARG, turn Checkdoc minor mode on iff ARG is positive.
2434
2435 In Checkdoc minor mode, the usual bindings for `eval-defun' which is
2436 bound to \\<checkdoc-minor-keymap> \\[checkdoc-eval-defun] and `checkdoc-eval-current-buffer' are overridden to include
2437 checking of documentation strings.
2438
2439 \\{checkdoc-minor-keymap}" t nil)
2440
2441 ;;;***
2442 \f
2443 ;;;### (autoloads (encode-hz-buffer encode-hz-region decode-hz-buffer
2444 ;;;;;; decode-hz-region setup-chinese-cns-environment setup-chinese-big5-environment
2445 ;;;;;; setup-chinese-gb-environment) "china-util" "language/china-util.el"
2446 ;;;;;; (13774 37678))
2447 ;;; Generated autoloads from language/china-util.el
2448
2449 (autoload (quote setup-chinese-gb-environment) "china-util" "\
2450 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Chinese GB2312 users." t nil)
2451
2452 (autoload (quote setup-chinese-big5-environment) "china-util" "\
2453 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Chinese Big5 users." t nil)
2454
2455 (autoload (quote setup-chinese-cns-environment) "china-util" "\
2456 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Chinese CNS11643 family users." t nil)
2457
2458 (autoload (quote decode-hz-region) "china-util" "\
2459 Decode HZ/ZW encoded text in the current region.
2460 Return the length of resulting text." t nil)
2461
2462 (autoload (quote decode-hz-buffer) "china-util" "\
2463 Decode HZ/ZW encoded text in the current buffer." t nil)
2464
2465 (autoload (quote encode-hz-region) "china-util" "\
2466 Encode the text in the current region to HZ.
2467 Return the length of resulting text." t nil)
2468
2469 (autoload (quote encode-hz-buffer) "china-util" "\
2470 Encode the text in the current buffer to HZ." t nil)
2471
2472 ;;;***
2473 \f
2474 ;;;### (autoloads (command-history list-command-history repeat-matching-complex-command)
2475 ;;;;;; "chistory" "chistory.el" (14447 15307))
2476 ;;; Generated autoloads from chistory.el
2477
2478 (autoload (quote repeat-matching-complex-command) "chistory" "\
2479 Edit and re-evaluate complex command with name matching PATTERN.
2480 Matching occurrences are displayed, most recent first, until you select
2481 a form for evaluation. If PATTERN is empty (or nil), every form in the
2482 command history is offered. The form is placed in the minibuffer for
2483 editing and the result is evaluated." t nil)
2484
2485 (autoload (quote list-command-history) "chistory" "\
2486 List history of commands typed to minibuffer.
2487 The number of commands listed is controlled by `list-command-history-max'.
2488 Calls value of `list-command-history-filter' (if non-nil) on each history
2489 element to judge if that element should be excluded from the list.
2490
2491 The buffer is left in Command History mode." t nil)
2492
2493 (autoload (quote command-history) "chistory" "\
2494 Examine commands from `command-history' in a buffer.
2495 The number of commands listed is controlled by `list-command-history-max'.
2496 The command history is filtered by `list-command-history-filter' if non-nil.
2497 Use \\<command-history-map>\\[command-history-repeat] to repeat the command on the current line.
2498
2499 Otherwise much like Emacs-Lisp Mode except that there is no self-insertion
2500 and digits provide prefix arguments. Tab does not indent.
2501 \\{command-history-map}
2502
2503 This command always recompiles the Command History listing
2504 and runs the normal hook `command-history-hook'." t nil)
2505
2506 ;;;***
2507 \f
2508 ;;;### (autoloads nil "cl" "emacs-lisp/cl.el" (14432 37868))
2509 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/cl.el
2510
2511 (defvar custom-print-functions nil "\
2512 This is a list of functions that format user objects for printing.
2513 Each function is called in turn with three arguments: the object, the
2514 stream, and the print level (currently ignored). If it is able to
2515 print the object it returns true; otherwise it returns nil and the
2516 printer proceeds to the next function on the list.
2517
2518 This variable is not used at present, but it is defined in hopes that
2519 a future Emacs interpreter will be able to use it.")
2520
2521 ;;;***
2522 \f
2523 ;;;### (autoloads (common-lisp-indent-function) "cl-indent" "emacs-lisp/cl-indent.el"
2524 ;;;;;; (14454 136))
2525 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/cl-indent.el
2526
2527 (autoload (quote common-lisp-indent-function) "cl-indent" nil nil nil)
2528
2529 ;;;***
2530 \f
2531 ;;;### (autoloads (c-macro-expand) "cmacexp" "progmodes/cmacexp.el"
2532 ;;;;;; (14368 26241))
2533 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cmacexp.el
2534
2535 (autoload (quote c-macro-expand) "cmacexp" "\
2536 Expand C macros in the region, using the C preprocessor.
2537 Normally display output in temp buffer, but
2538 prefix arg means replace the region with it.
2539
2540 `c-macro-preprocessor' specifies the preprocessor to use.
2541 Prompt for arguments to the preprocessor (e.g. `-DDEBUG -I ./include')
2542 if the user option `c-macro-prompt-flag' is non-nil.
2543
2544 Noninteractive args are START, END, SUBST.
2545 For use inside Lisp programs, see also `c-macro-expansion'." t nil)
2546
2547 ;;;***
2548 \f
2549 ;;;### (autoloads (run-scheme) "cmuscheme" "cmuscheme.el" (13569
2550 ;;;;;; 34340))
2551 ;;; Generated autoloads from cmuscheme.el
2552
2553 (autoload (quote run-scheme) "cmuscheme" "\
2554 Run an inferior Scheme process, input and output via buffer *scheme*.
2555 If there is a process already running in `*scheme*', switch to that buffer.
2556 With argument, allows you to edit the command line (default is value
2557 of `scheme-program-name'). Runs the hooks `inferior-scheme-mode-hook'
2558 \(after the `comint-mode-hook' is run).
2559 \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the process buffer for a list of commands.)" t nil)
2560 (add-hook 'same-window-buffer-names "*scheme*")
2561
2562 ;;;***
2563 \f
2564 ;;;### (autoloads (codepage-setup cp-supported-codepages cp-offset-for-codepage
2565 ;;;;;; cp-language-for-codepage cp-charset-for-codepage cp-make-coding-systems-for-codepage)
2566 ;;;;;; "codepage" "international/codepage.el" (14124 8038))
2567 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/codepage.el
2568
2569 (autoload (quote cp-make-coding-systems-for-codepage) "codepage" "\
2570 Create a coding system to convert IBM CODEPAGE into charset ISO-NAME
2571 whose first character is at offset OFFSET from the beginning of 8-bit
2572 ASCII table.
2573
2574 The created coding system has the usual 3 subsidiary systems: for Unix-,
2575 DOS- and Mac-style EOL conversion. However, unlike built-in coding
2576 systems, the Mac-style EOL conversion is currently not supported by the
2577 decoder and encoder created by this function." nil nil)
2578
2579 (autoload (quote cp-charset-for-codepage) "codepage" "\
2580 Return the charset for which there is a translation table to DOS CODEPAGE.
2581 CODEPAGE must be the name of a DOS codepage, a string." nil nil)
2582
2583 (autoload (quote cp-language-for-codepage) "codepage" "\
2584 Return the name of the MULE language environment for CODEPAGE.
2585 CODEPAGE must be the name of a DOS codepage, a string." nil nil)
2586
2587 (autoload (quote cp-offset-for-codepage) "codepage" "\
2588 Return the offset to be used in setting up coding systems for CODEPAGE.
2589 CODEPAGE must be the name of a DOS codepage, a string." nil nil)
2590
2591 (autoload (quote cp-supported-codepages) "codepage" "\
2592 Return an alist of supported codepages.
2593
2594 Each association in the alist has the form (NNN . CHARSET), where NNN is the
2595 codepage number, and CHARSET is the MULE charset which is the closest match
2596 for the character set supported by that codepage.
2597
2598 A codepage NNN is supported if a variable called `cpNNN-decode-table' exists,
2599 is a vector, and has a charset property." nil nil)
2600
2601 (autoload (quote codepage-setup) "codepage" "\
2602 Create a coding system cpCODEPAGE to support the IBM codepage CODEPAGE.
2603
2604 These coding systems are meant for encoding and decoding 8-bit non-ASCII
2605 characters used by the IBM codepages, typically in conjunction with files
2606 read/written by MS-DOS software, or for display on the MS-DOS terminal." t nil)
2607
2608 ;;;***
2609 \f
2610 ;;;### (autoloads (comint-redirect-results-list-from-process comint-redirect-results-list
2611 ;;;;;; comint-redirect-send-command-to-process comint-redirect-send-command
2612 ;;;;;; comint-run make-comint) "comint" "comint.el" (14411 60193))
2613 ;;; Generated autoloads from comint.el
2614
2615 (autoload (quote make-comint) "comint" "\
2616 Make a comint process NAME in a buffer, running PROGRAM.
2617 The name of the buffer is made by surrounding NAME with `*'s.
2618 PROGRAM should be either a string denoting an executable program to create
2619 via `start-process', or a cons pair of the form (HOST . SERVICE) denoting a TCP
2620 connection to be opened via `open-network-stream'. If there is already a
2621 running process in that buffer, it is not restarted. Optional third arg
2622 STARTFILE is the name of a file to send the contents of to the process.
2623
2624 If PROGRAM is a string, any more args are arguments to PROGRAM." nil nil)
2625
2626 (autoload (quote comint-run) "comint" "\
2627 Run PROGRAM in a comint buffer and switch to it.
2628 The buffer name is made by surrounding the file name of PROGRAM with `*'s.
2629 The file name is used to make a symbol name, such as `comint-sh-hook', and any
2630 hooks on this symbol are run in the buffer.
2631 See `make-comint' and `comint-exec'." t nil)
2632
2633 (autoload (quote comint-redirect-send-command) "comint" "\
2634 Send COMMAND to process in current buffer, with output to OUTPUT-BUFFER.
2635 With prefix arg, echo output in process buffer.
2636
2637 If NO-DISPLAY is non-nil, do not show the output buffer." t nil)
2638
2639 (autoload (quote comint-redirect-send-command-to-process) "comint" "\
2640 Send COMMAND to PROCESS, with output to OUTPUT-BUFFER.
2641 With prefix arg, echo output in process buffer.
2642
2643 If NO-DISPLAY is non-nil, do not show the output buffer." t nil)
2644
2645 (autoload (quote comint-redirect-results-list) "comint" "\
2646 Send COMMAND to current process.
2647 Return a list of expressions in the output which match REGEXP.
2648 REGEXP-GROUP is the regular expression group in REGEXP to use." nil nil)
2649
2650 (autoload (quote comint-redirect-results-list-from-process) "comint" "\
2651 Send COMMAND to PROCESS.
2652 Return a list of expressions in the output which match REGEXP.
2653 REGEXP-GROUP is the regular expression group in REGEXP to use." nil nil)
2654
2655 ;;;***
2656 \f
2657 ;;;### (autoloads (compare-windows) "compare-w" "compare-w.el" (14220
2658 ;;;;;; 18289))
2659 ;;; Generated autoloads from compare-w.el
2660
2661 (autoload (quote compare-windows) "compare-w" "\
2662 Compare text in current window with text in next window.
2663 Compares the text starting at point in each window,
2664 moving over text in each one as far as they match.
2665
2666 This command pushes the mark in each window
2667 at the prior location of point in that window.
2668 If both windows display the same buffer,
2669 the mark is pushed twice in that buffer:
2670 first in the other window, then in the selected window.
2671
2672 A prefix arg means ignore changes in whitespace.
2673 The variable `compare-windows-whitespace' controls how whitespace is skipped.
2674 If `compare-ignore-case' is non-nil, changes in case are also ignored." t nil)
2675
2676 ;;;***
2677 \f
2678 ;;;### (autoloads (next-error compilation-minor-mode compilation-shell-minor-mode
2679 ;;;;;; compilation-mode grep-find grep compile compilation-search-path
2680 ;;;;;; compilation-ask-about-save compilation-window-height compilation-mode-hook)
2681 ;;;;;; "compile" "progmodes/compile.el" (14440 46010))
2682 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/compile.el
2683
2684 (defvar compilation-mode-hook nil "\
2685 *List of hook functions run by `compilation-mode' (see `run-hooks').")
2686
2687 (defvar compilation-window-height nil "\
2688 *Number of lines in a compilation window. If nil, use Emacs default.")
2689
2690 (defvar compilation-process-setup-function nil "\
2691 *Function to call to customize the compilation process.
2692 This functions is called immediately before the compilation process is
2693 started. It can be used to set any variables or functions that are used
2694 while processing the output of the compilation process.")
2695
2696 (defvar compilation-buffer-name-function nil "\
2697 Function to compute the name of a compilation buffer.
2698 The function receives one argument, the name of the major mode of the
2699 compilation buffer. It should return a string.
2700 nil means compute the name with `(concat \"*\" (downcase major-mode) \"*\")'.")
2701
2702 (defvar compilation-finish-function nil "\
2703 Function to call when a compilation process finishes.
2704 It is called with two arguments: the compilation buffer, and a string
2705 describing how the process finished.")
2706
2707 (defvar compilation-finish-functions nil "\
2708 Functions to call when a compilation process finishes.
2709 Each function is called with two arguments: the compilation buffer,
2710 and a string describing how the process finished.")
2711
2712 (defvar compilation-ask-about-save t "\
2713 *Non-nil means \\[compile] asks which buffers to save before compiling.
2714 Otherwise, it saves all modified buffers without asking.")
2715
2716 (defvar compilation-search-path (quote (nil)) "\
2717 *List of directories to search for source files named in error messages.
2718 Elements should be directory names, not file names of directories.
2719 nil as an element means to try the default directory.")
2720
2721 (autoload (quote compile) "compile" "\
2722 Compile the program including the current buffer. Default: run `make'.
2723 Runs COMMAND, a shell command, in a separate process asynchronously
2724 with output going to the buffer `*compilation*'.
2725
2726 You can then use the command \\[next-error] to find the next error message
2727 and move to the source code that caused it.
2728
2729 Interactively, prompts for the command if `compilation-read-command' is
2730 non-nil; otherwise uses `compile-command'. With prefix arg, always prompts.
2731
2732 To run more than one compilation at once, start one and rename the
2733 `*compilation*' buffer to some other name with \\[rename-buffer].
2734 Then start the next one.
2735
2736 The name used for the buffer is actually whatever is returned by
2737 the function in `compilation-buffer-name-function', so you can set that
2738 to a function that generates a unique name." t nil)
2739
2740 (autoload (quote grep) "compile" "\
2741 Run grep, with user-specified args, and collect output in a buffer.
2742 While grep runs asynchronously, you can use \\[next-error] (M-x next-error),
2743 or \\<compilation-minor-mode-map>\\[compile-goto-error] in the grep output buffer, to go to the lines
2744 where grep found matches.
2745
2746 This command uses a special history list for its arguments, so you can
2747 easily repeat a grep command.
2748
2749 A prefix argument says to default the argument based upon the current
2750 tag the cursor is over, substituting it into the last grep command
2751 in the grep command history (or into `grep-command'
2752 if that history list is empty)." t nil)
2753
2754 (autoload (quote grep-find) "compile" "\
2755 Run grep via find, with user-specified args COMMAND-ARGS.
2756 Collect output in a buffer.
2757 While find runs asynchronously, you can use the \\[next-error] command
2758 to find the text that grep hits refer to.
2759
2760 This command uses a special history list for its arguments, so you can
2761 easily repeat a find command." t nil)
2762
2763 (autoload (quote compilation-mode) "compile" "\
2764 Major mode for compilation log buffers.
2765 \\<compilation-mode-map>To visit the source for a line-numbered error,
2766 move point to the error message line and type \\[compile-goto-error].
2767 To kill the compilation, type \\[kill-compilation].
2768
2769 Runs `compilation-mode-hook' with `run-hooks' (which see)." t nil)
2770
2771 (autoload (quote compilation-shell-minor-mode) "compile" "\
2772 Toggle compilation shell minor mode.
2773 With arg, turn compilation mode on if and only if arg is positive.
2774 See `compilation-mode'.
2775 Turning the mode on runs the normal hook `compilation-shell-minor-mode-hook'." t nil)
2776
2777 (autoload (quote compilation-minor-mode) "compile" "\
2778 Toggle compilation minor mode.
2779 With arg, turn compilation mode on if and only if arg is positive.
2780 See `compilation-mode'.
2781 Turning the mode on runs the normal hook `compilation-minor-mode-hook'." t nil)
2782
2783 (autoload (quote next-error) "compile" "\
2784 Visit next compilation error message and corresponding source code.
2785
2786 If all the error messages parsed so far have been processed already,
2787 the message buffer is checked for new ones.
2788
2789 A prefix arg specifies how many error messages to move;
2790 negative means move back to previous error messages.
2791 Just C-u as a prefix means reparse the error message buffer
2792 and start at the first error.
2793
2794 \\[next-error] normally uses the most recently started compilation or
2795 grep buffer. However, it can operate on any buffer with output from
2796 the \\[compile] and \\[grep] commands, or, more generally, on any
2797 buffer in Compilation mode or with Compilation Minor mode enabled. To
2798 specify use of a particular buffer for error messages, type
2799 \\[next-error] in that buffer.
2800
2801 Once \\[next-error] has chosen the buffer for error messages,
2802 it stays with that buffer until you use it in some other buffer which
2803 uses Compilation mode or Compilation Minor mode.
2804
2805 See variables `compilation-parse-errors-function' and
2806 `compilation-error-regexp-alist' for customization ideas." t nil)
2807 (define-key ctl-x-map "`" 'next-error)
2808
2809 ;;;***
2810 \f
2811 ;;;### (autoloads (partial-completion-mode) "complete" "complete.el"
2812 ;;;;;; (14393 17619))
2813 ;;; Generated autoloads from complete.el
2814
2815 (autoload (quote partial-completion-mode) "complete" "\
2816 Toggle Partial Completion mode.
2817 With prefix ARG, turn Partial Completion mode on if ARG is positive.
2818
2819 When Partial Completion mode is enabled, TAB (or M-TAB if `PC-meta-flag' is
2820 nil) is enhanced so that if some string is divided into words and each word is
2821 delimited by a character in `PC-word-delimiters', partial words are completed
2822 as much as possible.
2823
2824 For example, M-x p-c-m expands to M-x partial-completion-mode since no other
2825 command begins with that sequence of characters, and
2826 \\[find-file] f_b.c TAB might complete to foo_bar.c if that file existed and no
2827 other file in that directory begin with that sequence of characters.
2828
2829 Unless `PC-disable-includes' is non-nil, the \"<...>\" sequence is interpreted
2830 specially in \\[find-file]. For example,
2831 \\[find-file] <sys/time.h> RET finds the file /usr/include/sys/time.h.
2832 See also the variable `PC-include-file-path'." t nil)
2833
2834 ;;;***
2835 \f
2836 ;;;### (autoloads (dynamic-completion-mode) "completion" "completion.el"
2837 ;;;;;; (13884 8101))
2838 ;;; Generated autoloads from completion.el
2839
2840 (autoload (quote dynamic-completion-mode) "completion" "\
2841 Enable dynamic word-completion." t nil)
2842
2843 ;;;***
2844 \f
2845 ;;;### (autoloads (decompose-composite-char compose-last-chars compose-chars-after
2846 ;;;;;; find-composition compose-chars decompose-string compose-string
2847 ;;;;;; decompose-region compose-region) "composite" "composite.el"
2848 ;;;;;; (14422 57499))
2849 ;;; Generated autoloads from composite.el
2850
2851 (defconst reference-point-alist (quote ((tl . 0) (tc . 1) (tr . 2) (Bl . 3) (Bc . 4) (Br . 5) (bl . 6) (bc . 7) (br . 8) (cl . 9) (cc . 10) (cr . 11) (top-left . 0) (top-center . 1) (top-right . 2) (base-left . 3) (base-center . 4) (base-right . 5) (bottom-left . 6) (bottom-center . 7) (bottom-right . 8) (center-left . 9) (center-center . 10) (center-right . 11) (ml . 3) (mc . 10) (mr . 5) (mid-left . 3) (mid-center . 10) (mid-right . 5))) "\
2852 Alist of symbols vs integer codes of glyph reference points.
2853 A glyph reference point symbol is to be used to specify a composition
2854 rule in COMPONENTS argument to such functions as `compose-region' and
2855 `make-composition'.
2856
2857 Meanings of glyph reference point codes are as follows:
2858
2859 0----1----2 <---- ascent 0:tl or top-left
2860 | | 1:tc or top-center
2861 | | 2:tr or top-right
2862 | | 3:Bl or base-left 9:cl or center-left
2863 9 10 11 <---- center 4:Bc or base-center 10:cc or center-center
2864 | | 5:Br or base-right 11:cr or center-right
2865 --3----4----5-- <-- baseline 6:bl or bottom-left
2866 | | 7:bc or bottom-center
2867 6----7----8 <---- descent 8:br or bottom-right
2868
2869 Glyph reference point symbols are to be used to specify composition
2870 rule of the form (GLOBAL-REF-POINT . NEW-REF-POINT), where
2871 GLOBAL-REF-POINT is a reference point in the overall glyphs already
2872 composed, and NEW-REF-POINT is a reference point in the new glyph to
2873 be added.
2874
2875 For instance, if GLOBAL-REF-POINT is `br' (bottom-right) and
2876 NEW-REF-POINT is `tl' (top-left), the overall glyph is updated as
2877 follows (the point `*' corresponds to both reference points):
2878
2879 +-------+--+ <--- new ascent
2880 | | |
2881 | global| |
2882 | glyph | |
2883 -- | | |-- <--- baseline (doesn't change)
2884 +----+--*--+
2885 | | new |
2886 | |glyph|
2887 +----+-----+ <--- new descent
2888 ")
2889
2890 (autoload (quote compose-region) "composite" "\
2891 Compose characters in the current region.
2892
2893 When called from a program, expects these four arguments.
2894
2895 First two arguments START and END are positions (integers or markers)
2896 specifying the region.
2897
2898 Optional 3rd argument COMPONENTS, if non-nil, is a character or a
2899 sequence (vector, list, or string) of integers.
2900
2901 If it is a character, it is an alternate character to display instead
2902 of the text in the region.
2903
2904 If it is a string, the elements are alternate characters.
2905
2906 If it is a vector or list, it is a sequence of alternate characters and
2907 composition rules, where (2N)th elements are characters and (2N+1)th
2908 elements are composition rules to specify how to compose (2N+2)th
2909 elements with previously composed N glyphs.
2910
2911 A composition rule is a cons of global and new glyph reference point
2912 symbols. See the documentation of `reference-point-alist' for more
2913 detail.
2914
2915 Optional 4th argument MODIFICATION-FUNC is a function to call to
2916 adjust the composition when it gets invalid because of a change of
2917 text in the composition." t nil)
2918
2919 (autoload (quote decompose-region) "composite" "\
2920 Decompose text in the current region.
2921
2922 When called from a program, expects two arguments,
2923 positions (integers or markers) specifying the region." t nil)
2924
2925 (autoload (quote compose-string) "composite" "\
2926 Compose characters in string STRING.
2927
2928 The return value is STRING where `composition' property is put on all
2929 the characters in it.
2930
2931 Optional 2nd and 3rd arguments START and END specify the range of
2932 STRING to be composed. They defaults to the beginning and the end of
2933 STRING respectively.
2934
2935 Optional 4th argument COMPONENTS, if non-nil, is a character or a
2936 sequence (vector, list, or string) of integers. See the function
2937 `compose-region' for more detail.
2938
2939 Optional 5th argument MODIFICATION-FUNC is a function to call to
2940 adjust the composition when it gets invalid because of a change of
2941 text in the composition." nil nil)
2942
2943 (autoload (quote decompose-string) "composite" "\
2944 Return STRING where `composition' property is removed." nil nil)
2945
2946 (autoload (quote compose-chars) "composite" "\
2947 Return a string from arguments in which all characters are composed.
2948 For relative composition, arguments are characters.
2949 For rule-based composition, Mth (where M is odd) arguments are
2950 characters, and Nth (where N is even) arguments are composition rules.
2951 A composition rule is a cons of glyph reference points of the form
2952 \(GLOBAL-REF-POINT . NEW-REF-POINT). See the documentation of
2953 `reference-point-alist' for more detail." nil nil)
2954
2955 (autoload (quote find-composition) "composite" "\
2956 Return information about a composition at or nearest to buffer position POS.
2957
2958 If the character at POS has `composition' property, the value is a list
2959 of FROM, TO, and VALID-P.
2960
2961 FROM and TO specify the range of text that has the same `composition'
2962 property, VALID-P is non-nil if and only if this composition is valid.
2963
2964 If there's no composition at POS, and the optional 2nd argument LIMIT
2965 is non-nil, search for a composition toward LIMIT.
2966
2967 If no composition is found, return nil.
2968
2969 Optional 3rd argument STRING, if non-nil, is a string to look for a
2970 composition in; nil means the current buffer.
2971
2972 If a valid composition is found and the optional 4th argument DETAIL-P
2973 is non-nil, the return value is a list of FROM, TO, COMPONENTS,
2974 RELATIVE-P, MOD-FUNC, and WIDTH.
2975
2976 COMPONENTS is a vector of integers, the meaning depends on RELATIVE-P.
2977
2978 RELATIVE-P is t if the composition method is relative, else nil.
2979
2980 If RELATIVE-P is t, COMPONENTS is a vector of characters to be
2981 composed. If RELATIVE-P is nil, COMPONENTS is a vector of characters
2982 and composition rules as described in `compose-region'.
2983
2984 MOD-FUNC is a modification function of the composition.
2985
2986 WIDTH is a number of columns the composition occupies on the screen." nil nil)
2987 (put 'composition-function-table 'char-table-extra-slots 0)
2988
2989 (defvar composition-function-table (make-char-table (quote composition-function-table)) "\
2990 Char table of patterns and functions to make a composition.
2991
2992 Each element is nil or an alist of PATTERNs vs FUNCs, where PATTERNs
2993 are regular expressions and FUNCs are functions. FUNC is responsible
2994 for composing text matching the corresponding PATTERN. FUNC is called
2995 with three arguments FROM, TO, and PATTERN. See the function
2996 `compose-chars-after' for more detail.
2997
2998 This table is looked up by the first character of a composition when
2999 the composition gets invalid after a change in a buffer.")
3000
3001 (autoload (quote compose-chars-after) "composite" "\
3002 Compose characters in current buffer after position POS.
3003
3004 It looks up the char-table `composition-function-table' (which see) by
3005 a character after POS. If non-nil value is found, the format of the
3006 value should be an alist of PATTERNs vs FUNCs, where PATTERNs are
3007 regular expressions and FUNCs are functions. If the text after POS
3008 matches one of PATTERNs, call the corresponding FUNC with three
3009 arguments POS, TO, and PATTERN, where TO is the end position of text
3010 matching PATTERN, and return what FUNC returns. Otherwise, return
3011 nil.
3012
3013 FUNC is responsible for composing the text properly. The return value
3014 is:
3015 nil -- if no characters were composed.
3016 CHARS (integer) -- if CHARS characters were composed.
3017
3018 Optional 2nd arg LIMIT, if non-nil, limits the matching of text.
3019
3020 This function is the default value of `compose-chars-after-function'." nil nil)
3021
3022 (autoload (quote compose-last-chars) "composite" "\
3023 Compose last characters.
3024 The argument is a parameterized event of the form (compose-last-chars N),
3025 where N is the number of characters before point to compose.
3026 This function is intended to be used from input methods.
3027 The global keymap binds special event `compose-last-chars' to this
3028 function. Input method may generate an event (compose-last-chars N)
3029 after a sequence character events." t nil)
3030 (global-set-key [compose-last-chars] 'compose-last-chars)
3031
3032 (autoload (quote decompose-composite-char) "composite" "\
3033 Convert CHAR to string.
3034 This is only for backward compatibility with Emacs 20.4 and the earlier.
3035
3036 If optional 2nd arg TYPE is non-nil, it is `string', `list', or
3037 `vector'. In this case, CHAR is converted string, list of CHAR, or
3038 vector of CHAR respectively." nil nil)
3039
3040 ;;;***
3041 \f
3042 ;;;### (autoloads (shuffle-vector cookie-snarf cookie-insert cookie)
3043 ;;;;;; "cookie1" "play/cookie1.el" (13538 26685))
3044 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/cookie1.el
3045
3046 (autoload (quote cookie) "cookie1" "\
3047 Return a random phrase from PHRASE-FILE. When the phrase file
3048 is read in, display STARTMSG at beginning of load, ENDMSG at end." nil nil)
3049
3050 (autoload (quote cookie-insert) "cookie1" "\
3051 Insert random phrases from PHRASE-FILE; COUNT of them. When the phrase file
3052 is read in, display STARTMSG at beginning of load, ENDMSG at end." nil nil)
3053
3054 (autoload (quote cookie-snarf) "cookie1" "\
3055 Reads in the PHRASE-FILE, returns it as a vector of strings.
3056 Emit STARTMSG and ENDMSG before and after. Caches the result; second
3057 and subsequent calls on the same file won't go to disk." nil nil)
3058
3059 (autoload (quote shuffle-vector) "cookie1" "\
3060 Randomly permute the elements of VECTOR (all permutations equally likely)" nil nil)
3061
3062 ;;;***
3063 \f
3064 ;;;### (autoloads (copyright copyright-update) "copyright" "emacs-lisp/copyright.el"
3065 ;;;;;; (14454 138))
3066 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/copyright.el
3067
3068 (autoload (quote copyright-update) "copyright" "\
3069 Update the copyright notice at the beginning of the buffer to indicate
3070 the current year. If optional prefix ARG is given replace the years in the
3071 notice rather than adding the current year after them. If necessary and
3072 `copyright-current-gpl-version' is set, the copying permissions following the
3073 copyright, if any, are updated as well." t nil)
3074
3075 (autoload (quote copyright) "copyright" "\
3076 Insert a copyright by $ORGANIZATION notice at cursor." t nil)
3077
3078 ;;;***
3079 \f
3080 ;;;### (autoloads (cperl-mode) "cperl-mode" "progmodes/cperl-mode.el"
3081 ;;;;;; (14456 48530))
3082 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cperl-mode.el
3083
3084 (autoload (quote cperl-mode) "cperl-mode" "\
3085 Major mode for editing Perl code.
3086 Expression and list commands understand all C brackets.
3087 Tab indents for Perl code.
3088 Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
3089 Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
3090
3091 Various characters in Perl almost always come in pairs: {}, (), [],
3092 sometimes <>. When the user types the first, she gets the second as
3093 well, with optional special formatting done on {}. (Disabled by
3094 default.) You can always quote (with \\[quoted-insert]) the left
3095 \"paren\" to avoid the expansion. The processing of < is special,
3096 since most the time you mean \"less\". Cperl mode tries to guess
3097 whether you want to type pair <>, and inserts is if it
3098 appropriate. You can set `cperl-electric-parens-string' to the string that
3099 contains the parenths from the above list you want to be electrical.
3100 Electricity of parenths is controlled by `cperl-electric-parens'.
3101 You may also set `cperl-electric-parens-mark' to have electric parens
3102 look for active mark and \"embrace\" a region if possible.'
3103
3104 CPerl mode provides expansion of the Perl control constructs:
3105
3106 if, else, elsif, unless, while, until, continue, do,
3107 for, foreach, formy and foreachmy.
3108
3109 and POD directives (Disabled by default, see `cperl-electric-keywords'.)
3110
3111 The user types the keyword immediately followed by a space, which
3112 causes the construct to be expanded, and the point is positioned where
3113 she is most likely to want to be. eg. when the user types a space
3114 following \"if\" the following appears in the buffer: if () { or if ()
3115 } { } and the cursor is between the parentheses. The user can then
3116 type some boolean expression within the parens. Having done that,
3117 typing \\[cperl-linefeed] places you - appropriately indented - on a
3118 new line between the braces (if you typed \\[cperl-linefeed] in a POD
3119 directive line, then appropriate number of new lines is inserted).
3120
3121 If CPerl decides that you want to insert \"English\" style construct like
3122
3123 bite if angry;
3124
3125 it will not do any expansion. See also help on variable
3126 `cperl-extra-newline-before-brace'. (Note that one can switch the
3127 help message on expansion by setting `cperl-message-electric-keyword'
3128 to nil.)
3129
3130 \\[cperl-linefeed] is a convenience replacement for typing carriage
3131 return. It places you in the next line with proper indentation, or if
3132 you type it inside the inline block of control construct, like
3133
3134 foreach (@lines) {print; print}
3135
3136 and you are on a boundary of a statement inside braces, it will
3137 transform the construct into a multiline and will place you into an
3138 appropriately indented blank line. If you need a usual
3139 `newline-and-indent' behaviour, it is on \\[newline-and-indent],
3140 see documentation on `cperl-electric-linefeed'.
3141
3142 Use \\[cperl-invert-if-unless] to change a construction of the form
3143
3144 if (A) { B }
3145
3146 into
3147
3148 B if A;
3149
3150 \\{cperl-mode-map}
3151
3152 Setting the variable `cperl-font-lock' to t switches on font-lock-mode
3153 \(even with older Emacsen), `cperl-electric-lbrace-space' to t switches
3154 on electric space between $ and {, `cperl-electric-parens-string' is
3155 the string that contains parentheses that should be electric in CPerl
3156 \(see also `cperl-electric-parens-mark' and `cperl-electric-parens'),
3157 setting `cperl-electric-keywords' enables electric expansion of
3158 control structures in CPerl. `cperl-electric-linefeed' governs which
3159 one of two linefeed behavior is preferable. You can enable all these
3160 options simultaneously (recommended mode of use) by setting
3161 `cperl-hairy' to t. In this case you can switch separate options off
3162 by setting them to `null'. Note that one may undo the extra
3163 whitespace inserted by semis and braces in `auto-newline'-mode by
3164 consequent \\[cperl-electric-backspace].
3165
3166 If your site has perl5 documentation in info format, you can use commands
3167 \\[cperl-info-on-current-command] and \\[cperl-info-on-command] to access it.
3168 These keys run commands `cperl-info-on-current-command' and
3169 `cperl-info-on-command', which one is which is controlled by variable
3170 `cperl-info-on-command-no-prompt' and `cperl-clobber-lisp-bindings'
3171 \(in turn affected by `cperl-hairy').
3172
3173 Even if you have no info-format documentation, short one-liner-style
3174 help is available on \\[cperl-get-help], and one can run perldoc or
3175 man via menu.
3176
3177 It is possible to show this help automatically after some idle time.
3178 This is regulated by variable `cperl-lazy-help-time'. Default with
3179 `cperl-hairy' (if the value of `cperl-lazy-help-time' is nil) is 5
3180 secs idle time . It is also possible to switch this on/off from the
3181 menu, or via \\[cperl-toggle-autohelp]. Requires `run-with-idle-timer'.
3182
3183 Use \\[cperl-lineup] to vertically lineup some construction - put the
3184 beginning of the region at the start of construction, and make region
3185 span the needed amount of lines.
3186
3187 Variables `cperl-pod-here-scan', `cperl-pod-here-fontify',
3188 `cperl-pod-face', `cperl-pod-head-face' control processing of pod and
3189 here-docs sections. With capable Emaxen results of scan are used
3190 for indentation too, otherwise they are used for highlighting only.
3191
3192 Variables controlling indentation style:
3193 `cperl-tab-always-indent'
3194 Non-nil means TAB in CPerl mode should always reindent the current line,
3195 regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
3196 `cperl-indent-left-aligned-comments'
3197 Non-nil means that the comment starting in leftmost column should indent.
3198 `cperl-auto-newline'
3199 Non-nil means automatically newline before and after braces,
3200 and after colons and semicolons, inserted in Perl code. The following
3201 \\[cperl-electric-backspace] will remove the inserted whitespace.
3202 Insertion after colons requires both this variable and
3203 `cperl-auto-newline-after-colon' set.
3204 `cperl-auto-newline-after-colon'
3205 Non-nil means automatically newline even after colons.
3206 Subject to `cperl-auto-newline' setting.
3207 `cperl-indent-level'
3208 Indentation of Perl statements within surrounding block.
3209 The surrounding block's indentation is the indentation
3210 of the line on which the open-brace appears.
3211 `cperl-continued-statement-offset'
3212 Extra indentation given to a substatement, such as the
3213 then-clause of an if, or body of a while, or just a statement continuation.
3214 `cperl-continued-brace-offset'
3215 Extra indentation given to a brace that starts a substatement.
3216 This is in addition to `cperl-continued-statement-offset'.
3217 `cperl-brace-offset'
3218 Extra indentation for line if it starts with an open brace.
3219 `cperl-brace-imaginary-offset'
3220 An open brace following other text is treated as if it the line started
3221 this far to the right of the actual line indentation.
3222 `cperl-label-offset'
3223 Extra indentation for line that is a label.
3224 `cperl-min-label-indent'
3225 Minimal indentation for line that is a label.
3226
3227 Settings for K&R and BSD indentation styles are
3228 `cperl-indent-level' 5 8
3229 `cperl-continued-statement-offset' 5 8
3230 `cperl-brace-offset' -5 -8
3231 `cperl-label-offset' -5 -8
3232
3233 CPerl knows several indentation styles, and may bulk set the
3234 corresponding variables. Use \\[cperl-set-style] to do this. Use
3235 \\[cperl-set-style-back] to restore the memorized preexisting values
3236 \(both available from menu).
3237
3238 If `cperl-indent-level' is 0, the statement after opening brace in
3239 column 0 is indented on
3240 `cperl-brace-offset'+`cperl-continued-statement-offset'.
3241
3242 Turning on CPerl mode calls the hooks in the variable `cperl-mode-hook'
3243 with no args.
3244
3245 DO NOT FORGET to read micro-docs (available from `Perl' menu)
3246 or as help on variables `cperl-tips', `cperl-problems',
3247 `cperl-non-problems', `cperl-praise', `cperl-speed'." t nil)
3248
3249 ;;;***
3250 \f
3251 ;;;### (autoloads (cpp-parse-edit cpp-highlight-buffer) "cpp" "progmodes/cpp.el"
3252 ;;;;;; (13826 9529))
3253 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cpp.el
3254
3255 (autoload (quote cpp-highlight-buffer) "cpp" "\
3256 Highlight C code according to preprocessor conditionals.
3257 This command pops up a buffer which you should edit to specify
3258 what kind of highlighting to use, and the criteria for highlighting.
3259 A prefix arg suppresses display of that buffer." t nil)
3260
3261 (autoload (quote cpp-parse-edit) "cpp" "\
3262 Edit display information for cpp conditionals." t nil)
3263
3264 ;;;***
3265 \f
3266 ;;;### (autoloads (crisp-mode crisp-mode) "crisp" "emulation/crisp.el"
3267 ;;;;;; (14302 38178))
3268 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/crisp.el
3269
3270 (defvar crisp-mode nil "\
3271 Track status of CRiSP emulation mode.
3272 A value of nil means CRiSP mode is not enabled. A value of t
3273 indicates CRiSP mode is enabled.
3274
3275 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
3276 use either M-x customize or the function `crisp-mode'.")
3277
3278 (custom-add-to-group (quote crisp) (quote crisp-mode) (quote custom-variable))
3279
3280 (custom-add-load (quote crisp-mode) (quote crisp))
3281
3282 (autoload (quote crisp-mode) "crisp" "\
3283 Toggle CRiSP emulation minor mode.
3284 With ARG, turn CRiSP mode on if ARG is positive, off otherwise." t nil)
3285
3286 ;;;***
3287 \f
3288 ;;;### (autoloads (customize-menu-create custom-menu-create custom-save-all
3289 ;;;;;; customize-save-customized custom-file customize-browse custom-buffer-create-other-window
3290 ;;;;;; custom-buffer-create customize-apropos-groups customize-apropos-faces
3291 ;;;;;; customize-apropos-options customize-apropos customize-saved
3292 ;;;;;; customize-customized customize-face-other-window customize-face
3293 ;;;;;; customize-option-other-window customize-changed-options customize-option
3294 ;;;;;; customize-group-other-window customize-group customize customize-save-variable
3295 ;;;;;; customize-set-variable customize-set-value) "cus-edit" "cus-edit.el"
3296 ;;;;;; (14456 48948))
3297 ;;; Generated autoloads from cus-edit.el
3298 (add-hook 'same-window-regexps "\\`\\*Customiz.*\\*\\'")
3299
3300 (autoload (quote customize-set-value) "cus-edit" "\
3301 Set VARIABLE to VALUE. VALUE is a Lisp object.
3302
3303 If VARIABLE has a `variable-interactive' property, that is used as if
3304 it were the arg to `interactive' (which see) to interactively read the value.
3305
3306 If VARIABLE has a `custom-type' property, it must be a widget and the
3307 `:prompt-value' property of that widget will be used for reading the value.
3308
3309 If given a prefix (or a COMMENT argument), also prompt for a comment." t nil)
3310
3311 (autoload (quote customize-set-variable) "cus-edit" "\
3312 Set the default for VARIABLE to VALUE. VALUE is a Lisp object.
3313
3314 If VARIABLE has a `custom-set' property, that is used for setting
3315 VARIABLE, otherwise `set-default' is used.
3316
3317 The `customized-value' property of the VARIABLE will be set to a list
3318 with a quoted VALUE as its sole list member.
3319
3320 If VARIABLE has a `variable-interactive' property, that is used as if
3321 it were the arg to `interactive' (which see) to interactively read the value.
3322
3323 If VARIABLE has a `custom-type' property, it must be a widget and the
3324 `:prompt-value' property of that widget will be used for reading the value.
3325
3326 If given a prefix (or a COMMENT argument), also prompt for a comment." t nil)
3327
3328 (autoload (quote customize-save-variable) "cus-edit" "\
3329 Set the default for VARIABLE to VALUE, and save it for future sessions.
3330 If VARIABLE has a `custom-set' property, that is used for setting
3331 VARIABLE, otherwise `set-default' is used.
3332
3333 The `customized-value' property of the VARIABLE will be set to a list
3334 with a quoted VALUE as its sole list member.
3335
3336 If VARIABLE has a `variable-interactive' property, that is used as if
3337 it were the arg to `interactive' (which see) to interactively read the value.
3338
3339 If VARIABLE has a `custom-type' property, it must be a widget and the
3340 `:prompt-value' property of that widget will be used for reading the value.
3341
3342 If given a prefix (or a COMMENT argument), also prompt for a comment." t nil)
3343
3344 (autoload (quote customize) "cus-edit" "\
3345 Select a customization buffer which you can use to set user options.
3346 User options are structured into \"groups\".
3347 Initially the top-level group `Emacs' and its immediate subgroups
3348 are shown; the contents of those subgroups are initially hidden." t nil)
3349
3350 (autoload (quote customize-group) "cus-edit" "\
3351 Customize GROUP, which must be a customization group." t nil)
3352
3353 (autoload (quote customize-group-other-window) "cus-edit" "\
3354 Customize GROUP, which must be a customization group." t nil)
3355
3356 (defalias (quote customize-variable) (quote customize-option))
3357
3358 (autoload (quote customize-option) "cus-edit" "\
3359 Customize SYMBOL, which must be a user option variable." t nil)
3360
3361 (autoload (quote customize-changed-options) "cus-edit" "\
3362 Customize all user option variables changed in Emacs itself.
3363 This includes new user option variables and faces, and new
3364 customization groups, as well as older options and faces whose default
3365 values have changed since the previous major Emacs release.
3366
3367 With argument SINCE-VERSION (a string), customize all user option
3368 variables that were added (or their meanings were changed) since that
3369 version." t nil)
3370
3371 (defalias (quote customize-variable-other-window) (quote customize-option-other-window))
3372
3373 (autoload (quote customize-option-other-window) "cus-edit" "\
3374 Customize SYMBOL, which must be a user option variable.
3375 Show the buffer in another window, but don't select it." t nil)
3376
3377 (autoload (quote customize-face) "cus-edit" "\
3378 Customize SYMBOL, which should be a face name or nil.
3379 If SYMBOL is nil, customize all faces." t nil)
3380
3381 (autoload (quote customize-face-other-window) "cus-edit" "\
3382 Show customization buffer for FACE in other window." t nil)
3383
3384 (autoload (quote customize-customized) "cus-edit" "\
3385 Customize all user options set since the last save in this session." t nil)
3386
3387 (autoload (quote customize-saved) "cus-edit" "\
3388 Customize all already saved user options." t nil)
3389
3390 (autoload (quote customize-apropos) "cus-edit" "\
3391 Customize all user options matching REGEXP.
3392 If ALL is `options', include only options.
3393 If ALL is `faces', include only faces.
3394 If ALL is `groups', include only groups.
3395 If ALL is t (interactively, with prefix arg), include options which are not
3396 user-settable, as well as faces and groups." t nil)
3397
3398 (autoload (quote customize-apropos-options) "cus-edit" "\
3399 Customize all user options matching REGEXP.
3400 With prefix arg, include options which are not user-settable." t nil)
3401
3402 (autoload (quote customize-apropos-faces) "cus-edit" "\
3403 Customize all user faces matching REGEXP." t nil)
3404
3405 (autoload (quote customize-apropos-groups) "cus-edit" "\
3406 Customize all user groups matching REGEXP." t nil)
3407
3408 (autoload (quote custom-buffer-create) "cus-edit" "\
3409 Create a buffer containing OPTIONS.
3410 Optional NAME is the name of the buffer.
3411 OPTIONS should be an alist of the form ((SYMBOL WIDGET)...), where
3412 SYMBOL is a customization option, and WIDGET is a widget for editing
3413 that option." nil nil)
3414
3415 (autoload (quote custom-buffer-create-other-window) "cus-edit" "\
3416 Create a buffer containing OPTIONS.
3417 Optional NAME is the name of the buffer.
3418 OPTIONS should be an alist of the form ((SYMBOL WIDGET)...), where
3419 SYMBOL is a customization option, and WIDGET is a widget for editing
3420 that option." nil nil)
3421
3422 (autoload (quote customize-browse) "cus-edit" "\
3423 Create a tree browser for the customize hierarchy." t nil)
3424
3425 (defvar custom-file nil "\
3426 File used for storing customization information.
3427 The default is nil, which means to use your init file
3428 as specified by `user-init-file'. If you specify some other file,
3429 you need to explicitly load that file for the settings to take effect.
3430
3431 When you change this variable, look in the previous custom file
3432 \(usually your init file) for the forms `(custom-set-variables ...)'
3433 and `(custom-set-faces ...)', and copy them (whichever ones you find)
3434 to the new custom file. This will preserve your existing customizations.")
3435
3436 (autoload (quote customize-save-customized) "cus-edit" "\
3437 Save all user options which have been set in this session." t nil)
3438
3439 (autoload (quote custom-save-all) "cus-edit" "\
3440 Save all customizations in `custom-file'." nil nil)
3441
3442 (autoload (quote custom-menu-create) "cus-edit" "\
3443 Create menu for customization group SYMBOL.
3444 The menu is in a format applicable to `easy-menu-define'." nil nil)
3445
3446 (autoload (quote customize-menu-create) "cus-edit" "\
3447 Return a customize menu for customization group SYMBOL.
3448 If optional NAME is given, use that as the name of the menu.
3449 Otherwise the menu will be named `Customize'.
3450 The format is suitable for use with `easy-menu-define'." nil nil)
3451
3452 ;;;***
3453 \f
3454 ;;;### (autoloads (custom-set-faces custom-declare-face) "cus-face"
3455 ;;;;;; "cus-face.el" (14398 37486))
3456 ;;; Generated autoloads from cus-face.el
3457
3458 (autoload (quote custom-declare-face) "cus-face" "\
3459 Like `defface', but FACE is evaluated as a normal argument." nil nil)
3460
3461 (autoload (quote custom-set-faces) "cus-face" "\
3462 Initialize faces according to user preferences.
3463 The arguments should be a list where each entry has the form:
3464
3465 (FACE SPEC [NOW [COMMENT]])
3466
3467 SPEC is stored as the saved value for FACE.
3468 If NOW is present and non-nil, FACE is created now, according to SPEC.
3469 COMMENT is a string comment about FACE.
3470
3471 See `defface' for the format of SPEC." nil nil)
3472
3473 ;;;***
3474 \f
3475 ;;;### (autoloads (global-cwarn-mode turn-on-cwarn-mode cwarn-mode)
3476 ;;;;;; "cwarn" "progmodes/cwarn.el" (14431 15379))
3477 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/cwarn.el
3478
3479 (autoload (quote cwarn-mode) "cwarn" "\
3480 Minor mode that hightlight suspicious C and C++ constructions.
3481
3482 Note, in addition to enabling this minor mode, the major mode must
3483 be included in the variable `cwarn-configuration'. By default C and
3484 C++ modes are included.
3485
3486 With ARG, turn CWarn mode on if and only if arg is positive." t nil)
3487
3488 (autoload (quote turn-on-cwarn-mode) "cwarn" "\
3489 Turn on CWarn mode.
3490
3491 This function is designed to be added to hooks, for example:
3492 (add-hook 'c-mode-hook 'turn-on-cwarn-mode)" nil nil)
3493
3494 (autoload (quote global-cwarn-mode) "cwarn" "\
3495 Hightlight suspicious C and C++ constructions in all buffers.
3496
3497 With ARG, turn CWarn mode on globally if and only if arg is positive." t nil)
3498
3499 ;;;***
3500 \f
3501 ;;;### (autoloads (standard-display-cyrillic-translit cyrillic-encode-alternativnyj-char
3502 ;;;;;; cyrillic-encode-koi8-r-char setup-cyrillic-alternativnyj-environment
3503 ;;;;;; setup-cyrillic-koi8-environment setup-cyrillic-iso-environment)
3504 ;;;;;; "cyril-util" "language/cyril-util.el" (13774 37678))
3505 ;;; Generated autoloads from language/cyril-util.el
3506
3507 (autoload (quote setup-cyrillic-iso-environment) "cyril-util" "\
3508 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Cyrillic ISO-8859-5 users." t nil)
3509
3510 (autoload (quote setup-cyrillic-koi8-environment) "cyril-util" "\
3511 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Cyrillic KOI8 users." t nil)
3512
3513 (autoload (quote setup-cyrillic-alternativnyj-environment) "cyril-util" "\
3514 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Cyrillic ALTERNATIVNYJ users." t nil)
3515
3516 (autoload (quote cyrillic-encode-koi8-r-char) "cyril-util" "\
3517 Return KOI8-R external character code of CHAR if appropriate." nil nil)
3518
3519 (autoload (quote cyrillic-encode-alternativnyj-char) "cyril-util" "\
3520 Return ALTERNATIVNYJ external character code of CHAR if appropriate." nil nil)
3521
3522 (autoload (quote standard-display-cyrillic-translit) "cyril-util" "\
3523 Display a cyrillic buffer using a transliteration.
3524 For readability, the table is slightly
3525 different from the one used for the input method `cyrillic-translit'.
3526
3527 The argument is a string which specifies which language you are using;
3528 that affects the choice of transliterations slightly.
3529 Possible values are listed in 'cyrillic-language-alist'.
3530 If the argument is t, we use the default cyrillic transliteration.
3531 If the argument is nil, we return the display table to its standard state." t nil)
3532
3533 ;;;***
3534 \f
3535 ;;;### (autoloads (dabbrev-expand dabbrev-completion) "dabbrev" "dabbrev.el"
3536 ;;;;;; (14385 24830))
3537 ;;; Generated autoloads from dabbrev.el
3538
3539 (define-key esc-map "/" (quote dabbrev-expand))
3540
3541 (define-key esc-map [67108911] (quote dabbrev-completion))
3542
3543 (autoload (quote dabbrev-completion) "dabbrev" "\
3544 Completion on current word.
3545 Like \\[dabbrev-expand] but finds all expansions in the current buffer
3546 and presents suggestions for completion.
3547
3548 With a prefix argument, it searches all buffers accepted by the
3549 function pointed out by `dabbrev-friend-buffer-function' to find the
3550 completions.
3551
3552 If the prefix argument is 16 (which comes from C-u C-u),
3553 then it searches *all* buffers.
3554
3555 With no prefix argument, it reuses an old completion list
3556 if there is a suitable one already." t nil)
3557
3558 (autoload (quote dabbrev-expand) "dabbrev" "\
3559 Expand previous word \"dynamically\".
3560
3561 Expands to the most recent, preceding word for which this is a prefix.
3562 If no suitable preceding word is found, words following point are
3563 considered. If still no suitable word is found, then look in the
3564 buffers accepted by the function pointed out by variable
3565 `dabbrev-friend-buffer-function'.
3566
3567 A positive prefix argument, N, says to take the Nth backward *distinct*
3568 possibility. A negative argument says search forward.
3569
3570 If the cursor has not moved from the end of the previous expansion and
3571 no argument is given, replace the previously-made expansion
3572 with the next possible expansion not yet tried.
3573
3574 The variable `dabbrev-backward-only' may be used to limit the
3575 direction of search to backward if set non-nil.
3576
3577 See also `dabbrev-abbrev-char-regexp' and \\[dabbrev-completion]." t nil)
3578
3579 ;;;***
3580 \f
3581 ;;;### (autoloads (dcl-mode) "dcl-mode" "progmodes/dcl-mode.el" (13706
3582 ;;;;;; 38927))
3583 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/dcl-mode.el
3584
3585 (autoload (quote dcl-mode) "dcl-mode" "\
3586 Major mode for editing DCL-files.
3587
3588 This mode indents command lines in blocks. (A block is commands between
3589 THEN-ELSE-ENDIF and between lines matching dcl-block-begin-regexp and
3590 dcl-block-end-regexp.)
3591
3592 Labels are indented to a fixed position unless they begin or end a block.
3593 Whole-line comments (matching dcl-comment-line-regexp) are not indented.
3594 Data lines are not indented.
3595
3596 Key bindings:
3597
3598 \\{dcl-mode-map}
3599 Commands not usually bound to keys:
3600
3601 \\[dcl-save-nondefault-options] Save changed options
3602 \\[dcl-save-all-options] Save all options
3603 \\[dcl-save-option] Save any option
3604 \\[dcl-save-mode] Save buffer mode
3605
3606 Variables controlling indentation style and extra features:
3607
3608 dcl-basic-offset
3609 Extra indentation within blocks.
3610
3611 dcl-continuation-offset
3612 Extra indentation for continued lines.
3613
3614 dcl-margin-offset
3615 Indentation for the first command line in a file or SUBROUTINE.
3616
3617 dcl-margin-label-offset
3618 Indentation for a label.
3619
3620 dcl-comment-line-regexp
3621 Lines matching this regexp will not be indented.
3622
3623 dcl-block-begin-regexp
3624 dcl-block-end-regexp
3625 Regexps that match command lines that begin and end, respectively,
3626 a block of commmand lines that will be given extra indentation.
3627 Command lines between THEN-ELSE-ENDIF are always indented; these variables
3628 make it possible to define other places to indent.
3629 Set to nil to disable this feature.
3630
3631 dcl-calc-command-indent-function
3632 Can be set to a function that customizes indentation for command lines.
3633 Two such functions are included in the package:
3634 dcl-calc-command-indent-multiple
3635 dcl-calc-command-indent-hang
3636
3637 dcl-calc-cont-indent-function
3638 Can be set to a function that customizes indentation for continued lines.
3639 One such function is included in the package:
3640 dcl-calc-cont-indent-relative (set by default)
3641
3642 dcl-tab-always-indent
3643 If t, pressing TAB always indents the current line.
3644 If nil, pressing TAB indents the current line if point is at the left
3645 margin.
3646
3647 dcl-electric-characters
3648 Non-nil causes lines to be indented at once when a label, ELSE or ENDIF is
3649 typed.
3650
3651 dcl-electric-reindent-regexps
3652 Use this variable and function dcl-electric-character to customize
3653 which words trigger electric indentation.
3654
3655 dcl-tempo-comma
3656 dcl-tempo-left-paren
3657 dcl-tempo-right-paren
3658 These variables control the look of expanded templates.
3659
3660 dcl-imenu-generic-expression
3661 Default value for imenu-generic-expression. The default includes
3662 SUBROUTINE labels in the main listing and sub-listings for
3663 other labels, CALL, GOTO and GOSUB statements.
3664
3665 dcl-imenu-label-labels
3666 dcl-imenu-label-goto
3667 dcl-imenu-label-gosub
3668 dcl-imenu-label-call
3669 Change the text that is used as sub-listing labels in imenu.
3670
3671 Loading this package calls the value of the variable
3672 `dcl-mode-load-hook' with no args, if that value is non-nil.
3673 Turning on DCL mode calls the value of the variable `dcl-mode-hook'
3674 with no args, if that value is non-nil.
3675
3676
3677 The following example uses the default values for all variables:
3678
3679 $! This is a comment line that is not indented (it matches
3680 $! dcl-comment-line-regexp)
3681 $! Next follows the first command line. It is indented dcl-margin-offset.
3682 $ i = 1
3683 $ ! Other comments are indented like command lines.
3684 $ ! A margin label indented dcl-margin-label-offset:
3685 $ label:
3686 $ if i.eq.1
3687 $ then
3688 $ ! Lines between THEN-ELSE and ELSE-ENDIF are
3689 $ ! indented dcl-basic-offset
3690 $ loop1: ! This matches dcl-block-begin-regexp...
3691 $ ! ...so this line is indented dcl-basic-offset
3692 $ text = \"This \" + - ! is a continued line
3693 \"lined up with the command line\"
3694 $ type sys$input
3695 Data lines are not indented at all.
3696 $ endloop1: ! This matches dcl-block-end-regexp
3697 $ endif
3698 $
3699 " t nil)
3700
3701 ;;;***
3702 \f
3703 ;;;### (autoloads (cancel-debug-on-entry debug-on-entry debug) "debug"
3704 ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/debug.el" (14432 49602))
3705 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/debug.el
3706
3707 (setq debugger (quote debug))
3708
3709 (autoload (quote debug) "debug" "\
3710 Enter debugger. To return, type \\<debugger-mode-map>`\\[debugger-continue]'.
3711 Arguments are mainly for use when this is called from the internals
3712 of the evaluator.
3713
3714 You may call with no args, or you may pass nil as the first arg and
3715 any other args you like. In that case, the list of args after the
3716 first will be printed into the backtrace buffer." t nil)
3717
3718 (autoload (quote debug-on-entry) "debug" "\
3719 Request FUNCTION to invoke debugger each time it is called.
3720 If you tell the debugger to continue, FUNCTION's execution proceeds.
3721 This works by modifying the definition of FUNCTION,
3722 which must be written in Lisp, not predefined.
3723 Use \\[cancel-debug-on-entry] to cancel the effect of this command.
3724 Redefining FUNCTION also cancels it." t nil)
3725
3726 (autoload (quote cancel-debug-on-entry) "debug" "\
3727 Undo effect of \\[debug-on-entry] on FUNCTION.
3728 If argument is nil or an empty string, cancel for all functions." t nil)
3729
3730 ;;;***
3731 \f
3732 ;;;### (autoloads (decipher-mode decipher) "decipher" "play/decipher.el"
3733 ;;;;;; (13875 47403))
3734 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/decipher.el
3735
3736 (autoload (quote decipher) "decipher" "\
3737 Format a buffer of ciphertext for cryptanalysis and enter Decipher mode." t nil)
3738
3739 (autoload (quote decipher-mode) "decipher" "\
3740 Major mode for decrypting monoalphabetic substitution ciphers.
3741 Lower-case letters enter plaintext.
3742 Upper-case letters are commands.
3743
3744 The buffer is made read-only so that normal Emacs commands cannot
3745 modify it.
3746
3747 The most useful commands are:
3748 \\<decipher-mode-map>
3749 \\[decipher-digram-list] Display a list of all digrams & their frequency
3750 \\[decipher-frequency-count] Display the frequency of each ciphertext letter
3751 \\[decipher-adjacency-list] Show adjacency list for current letter (lists letters appearing next to it)
3752 \\[decipher-make-checkpoint] Save the current cipher alphabet (checkpoint)
3753 \\[decipher-restore-checkpoint] Restore a saved cipher alphabet (checkpoint)" t nil)
3754
3755 ;;;***
3756 \f
3757 ;;;### (autoloads (delimit-columns-rectangle delimit-columns-region)
3758 ;;;;;; "delim-col" "delim-col.el" (14345 52903))
3759 ;;; Generated autoloads from delim-col.el
3760
3761 (autoload (quote delimit-columns-region) "delim-col" "\
3762 Prettify all columns in a text region.
3763
3764 START and END delimits the text region." t nil)
3765
3766 (autoload (quote delimit-columns-rectangle) "delim-col" "\
3767 Prettify all columns in a text rectangle.
3768
3769 START and END delimits the corners of text rectangle." t nil)
3770
3771 ;;;***
3772 \f
3773 ;;;### (autoloads (delphi-mode) "delphi" "progmodes/delphi.el" (14266
3774 ;;;;;; 16343))
3775 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/delphi.el
3776
3777 (autoload (quote delphi-mode) "delphi" "\
3778 Major mode for editing Delphi code. \\<delphi-mode-map>
3779 \\[delphi-tab] - Indents the current line for Delphi code.
3780 \\[delphi-find-unit] - Search for a Delphi source file.
3781 \\[delphi-fill-comment] - Fill the current comment.
3782 \\[delphi-new-comment-line] - If in a // comment, do a new comment line.
3783
3784 M-x indent-region also works for indenting a whole region.
3785
3786 Customization:
3787
3788 `delphi-indent-level' (default 3)
3789 Indentation of Delphi statements with respect to containing block.
3790 `delphi-compound-block-indent' (default 0)
3791 Extra indentation for blocks in compound statements.
3792 `delphi-case-label-indent' (default 0)
3793 Extra indentation for case statement labels.
3794 `delphi-tab-always-indents' (default t)
3795 Non-nil means TAB in Delphi mode should always reindent the current line,
3796 regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
3797 `delphi-newline-always-indents' (default t)
3798 Non-nil means NEWLINE in Delphi mode should always reindent the current
3799 line, insert a blank line and move to the default indent column of the
3800 blank line.
3801 `delphi-search-path' (default .)
3802 Directories to search when finding external units.
3803 `delphi-verbose' (default nil)
3804 If true then delphi token processing progress is reported to the user.
3805
3806 Coloring:
3807
3808 `delphi-comment-face' (default font-lock-comment-face)
3809 Face used to color delphi comments.
3810 `delphi-string-face' (default font-lock-string-face)
3811 Face used to color delphi strings.
3812 `delphi-keyword-face' (default font-lock-keyword-face)
3813 Face used to color delphi keywords.
3814 `delphi-other-face' (default nil)
3815 Face used to color everything else.
3816
3817 Turning on Delphi mode calls the value of the variable delphi-mode-hook with
3818 no args, if that value is non-nil." t nil)
3819
3820 ;;;***
3821 \f
3822 ;;;### (autoloads (delete-selection-mode delete-selection-mode) "delsel"
3823 ;;;;;; "delsel.el" (14410 18534))
3824 ;;; Generated autoloads from delsel.el
3825
3826 (defalias (quote pending-delete-mode) (quote delete-selection-mode))
3827
3828 (autoload (quote delete-selection-mode) "delsel" "\
3829 Toggle Delete Selection mode.
3830 With prefix ARG, turn Delete Selection mode on if and only if ARG is
3831 positive.
3832
3833 When Delete Selection mode is enabled, Transient Mark mode is also
3834 enabled and typed text replaces the selection if the selection is
3835 active. Otherwise, typed text is just inserted at point regardless of
3836 any selection." t nil)
3837
3838 (defvar delete-selection-mode nil "\
3839 Toggle Delete Selection mode.
3840 See command `delete-selection-mode'.
3841 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
3842 use either \\[customize] or the function `delete-selection-mode'.")
3843
3844 (custom-add-to-group (quote editing-basics) (quote delete-selection-mode) (quote custom-variable))
3845
3846 (custom-add-load (quote delete-selection-mode) (quote delsel))
3847
3848 ;;;***
3849 \f
3850 ;;;### (autoloads (derived-mode-init-mode-variables define-derived-mode)
3851 ;;;;;; "derived" "derived.el" (14410 18534))
3852 ;;; Generated autoloads from derived.el
3853
3854 (autoload (quote define-derived-mode) "derived" "\
3855 Create a new mode as a variant of an existing mode.
3856
3857 The arguments to this command are as follow:
3858
3859 CHILD: the name of the command for the derived mode.
3860 PARENT: the name of the command for the parent mode (e.g. `text-mode').
3861 NAME: a string which will appear in the status line (e.g. \"Hypertext\")
3862 DOCSTRING: an optional documentation string--if you do not supply one,
3863 the function will attempt to invent something useful.
3864 BODY: forms to execute just before running the
3865 hooks for the new mode.
3866
3867 Here is how you could define LaTeX-Thesis mode as a variant of LaTeX mode:
3868
3869 (define-derived-mode LaTeX-thesis-mode LaTeX-mode \"LaTeX-Thesis\")
3870
3871 You could then make new key bindings for `LaTeX-thesis-mode-map'
3872 without changing regular LaTeX mode. In this example, BODY is empty,
3873 and DOCSTRING is generated by default.
3874
3875 On a more complicated level, the following command uses `sgml-mode' as
3876 the parent, and then sets the variable `case-fold-search' to nil:
3877
3878 (define-derived-mode article-mode sgml-mode \"Article\"
3879 \"Major mode for editing technical articles.\"
3880 (setq case-fold-search nil))
3881
3882 Note that if the documentation string had been left out, it would have
3883 been generated automatically, with a reference to the keymap." nil (quote macro))
3884
3885 (autoload (quote derived-mode-init-mode-variables) "derived" "\
3886 Initialise variables for a new MODE.
3887 Right now, if they don't already exist, set up a blank keymap, an
3888 empty syntax table, and an empty abbrev table -- these will be merged
3889 the first time the mode is used." nil nil)
3890
3891 ;;;***
3892 \f
3893 ;;;### (autoloads (desktop-load-default desktop-read) "desktop" "desktop.el"
3894 ;;;;;; (13897 58892))
3895 ;;; Generated autoloads from desktop.el
3896
3897 (autoload (quote desktop-read) "desktop" "\
3898 Read the Desktop file and the files it specifies.
3899 This is a no-op when Emacs is running in batch mode." t nil)
3900
3901 (autoload (quote desktop-load-default) "desktop" "\
3902 Load the `default' start-up library manually.
3903 Also inhibit further loading of it. Call this from your `.emacs' file
3904 to provide correct modes for autoloaded files." nil nil)
3905
3906 ;;;***
3907 \f
3908 ;;;### (autoloads (devanagari-decode-itrans-region devanagari-encode-itrans-region
3909 ;;;;;; in-is13194-devanagari-pre-write-conversion devanagari-decompose-to-is13194-region
3910 ;;;;;; in-is13194-devanagari-post-read-conversion devanagari-compose-from-is13194-region
3911 ;;;;;; devanagari-compose-region devanagari-compose-string devanagari-decompose-region
3912 ;;;;;; devanagari-decompose-string char-to-glyph-devanagari indian-to-devanagari-string
3913 ;;;;;; devanagari-to-indian-region indian-to-devanagari-region devanagari-to-indian
3914 ;;;;;; indian-to-devanagari setup-devanagari-environment) "devan-util"
3915 ;;;;;; "language/devan-util.el" (14423 51006))
3916 ;;; Generated autoloads from language/devan-util.el
3917
3918 (autoload (quote setup-devanagari-environment) "devan-util" "\
3919 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for languages using Devanagari." t nil)
3920
3921 (autoload (quote indian-to-devanagari) "devan-util" "\
3922 Convert IS 13194 character CHAR to Devanagari basic characters.
3923 If CHAR is not IS 13194, return CHAR as is." nil nil)
3924
3925 (autoload (quote devanagari-to-indian) "devan-util" "\
3926 Convert Devanagari basic character CHAR to IS 13194 characters.
3927 If CHAR is not Devanagari basic character, return CHAR as is." nil nil)
3928
3929 (autoload (quote indian-to-devanagari-region) "devan-util" "\
3930 Convert IS 13194 characters in region to Devanagari basic characters.
3931 When called from a program, expects two arguments,
3932 positions (integers or markers) specifying the region." t nil)
3933
3934 (autoload (quote devanagari-to-indian-region) "devan-util" "\
3935 Convert Devanagari basic characters in region to Indian characters.
3936 When called from a program, expects two arguments,
3937 positions (integers or markers) specifying the region." t nil)
3938
3939 (autoload (quote indian-to-devanagari-string) "devan-util" "\
3940 Convert Indian characters in STRING to Devanagari Basic characters." nil nil)
3941
3942 (autoload (quote char-to-glyph-devanagari) "devan-util" "\
3943 Convert Devanagari characters in STRING to Devanagari glyphs.
3944 Ligatures and special rules are processed." nil nil)
3945
3946 (autoload (quote devanagari-decompose-string) "devan-util" "\
3947 Decompose Devanagari string STR" nil nil)
3948
3949 (autoload (quote devanagari-decompose-region) "devan-util" nil t nil)
3950
3951 (autoload (quote devanagari-compose-string) "devan-util" nil nil nil)
3952
3953 (autoload (quote devanagari-compose-region) "devan-util" nil t nil)
3954
3955 (autoload (quote devanagari-compose-from-is13194-region) "devan-util" "\
3956 Compose IS 13194 characters in the region to Devanagari characters." t nil)
3957
3958 (autoload (quote in-is13194-devanagari-post-read-conversion) "devan-util" nil nil nil)
3959
3960 (autoload (quote devanagari-decompose-to-is13194-region) "devan-util" "\
3961 Decompose Devanagari characters in the region to IS 13194 characters." t nil)
3962
3963 (autoload (quote in-is13194-devanagari-pre-write-conversion) "devan-util" nil nil nil)
3964
3965 (autoload (quote devanagari-encode-itrans-region) "devan-util" nil t nil)
3966
3967 (autoload (quote devanagari-decode-itrans-region) "devan-util" nil t nil)
3968
3969 ;;;***
3970 \f
3971 ;;;### (autoloads (diary-mail-entries diary) "diary-lib" "calendar/diary-lib.el"
3972 ;;;;;; (14368 20344))
3973 ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/diary-lib.el
3974
3975 (autoload (quote diary) "diary-lib" "\
3976 Generate the diary window for ARG days starting with the current date.
3977 If no argument is provided, the number of days of diary entries is governed
3978 by the variable `number-of-diary-entries'. This function is suitable for
3979 execution in a `.emacs' file." t nil)
3980
3981 (autoload (quote diary-mail-entries) "diary-lib" "\
3982 Send a mail message showing diary entries for next NDAYS days.
3983 If no prefix argument is given, NDAYS is set to `diary-mail-days'.
3984
3985 You can call `diary-mail-entries' every night using an at/cron job.
3986 For example, this script will run the program at 2am daily. Since
3987 `emacs -batch' does not load your `.emacs' file, you must ensure that
3988 all relevant variables are set, as done here.
3989
3990 #!/bin/sh
3991 # diary-rem.sh -- repeatedly run the Emacs diary-reminder
3992 emacs -batch \\
3993 -eval \"(setq diary-mail-days 3 \\
3994 european-calendar-style t \\
3995 diary-mail-addr \\\"user@host.name\\\" )\" \\
3996 -l diary-lib -f diary-mail-entries
3997 at -f diary-rem.sh 0200 tomorrow
3998
3999 You may have to tweak the syntax of the `at' command to suit your
4000 system. Alternatively, you can specify a cron entry:
4001 0 1 * * * diary-rem.sh
4002 to run it every morning at 1am." t nil)
4003
4004 ;;;***
4005 \f
4006 ;;;### (autoloads (diff-backup diff diff-command diff-switches) "diff"
4007 ;;;;;; "diff.el" (14280 10414))
4008 ;;; Generated autoloads from diff.el
4009
4010 (defvar diff-switches "-c" "\
4011 *A string or list of strings specifying switches to be be passed to diff.")
4012
4013 (defvar diff-command "diff" "\
4014 *The command to use to run diff.")
4015
4016 (autoload (quote diff) "diff" "\
4017 Find and display the differences between OLD and NEW files.
4018 Interactively the current buffer's file name is the default for NEW
4019 and a backup file for NEW is the default for OLD.
4020 With prefix arg, prompt for diff switches." t nil)
4021
4022 (autoload (quote diff-backup) "diff" "\
4023 Diff this file with its backup file or vice versa.
4024 Uses the latest backup, if there are several numerical backups.
4025 If this file is a backup, diff it with its original.
4026 The backup file is the first file given to `diff'." t nil)
4027
4028 ;;;***
4029 \f
4030 ;;;### (autoloads (diff-minor-mode diff-mode) "diff-mode" "diff-mode.el"
4031 ;;;;;; (14419 37278))
4032 ;;; Generated autoloads from diff-mode.el
4033
4034 (autoload (quote diff-mode) "diff-mode" "\
4035 Major mode for viewing/editing context diffs.
4036 Supports unified and context diffs as well as (to a lesser extent) normal diffs.
4037 When the buffer is read-only, the ESC prefix is not necessary.
4038 This mode runs `diff-mode-hook'.
4039 \\{diff-mode-map}" t nil)
4040
4041 (autoload (quote diff-minor-mode) "diff-mode" "\
4042 Minor mode for viewing/editing context diffs.
4043 \\{diff-minor-mode-map}" t nil)
4044
4045 ;;;***
4046 \f
4047 ;;;### (autoloads (dired-noselect dired-other-frame dired-other-window
4048 ;;;;;; dired dired-copy-preserve-time dired-dwim-target dired-keep-marker-symlink
4049 ;;;;;; dired-keep-marker-hardlink dired-keep-marker-copy dired-keep-marker-rename
4050 ;;;;;; dired-trivial-filenames dired-ls-F-marks-symlinks dired-listing-switches)
4051 ;;;;;; "dired" "dired.el" (14447 15307))
4052 ;;; Generated autoloads from dired.el
4053
4054 (defvar dired-listing-switches "-al" "\
4055 *Switches passed to `ls' for dired. MUST contain the `l' option.
4056 May contain all other options that don't contradict `-l';
4057 may contain even `F', `b', `i' and `s'. See also the variable
4058 `dired-ls-F-marks-symlinks' concerning the `F' switch.")
4059
4060 (defvar dired-chown-program (if (memq system-type (quote (hpux dgux usg-unix-v irix linux gnu/linux))) "chown" (if (file-exists-p "/usr/sbin/chown") "/usr/sbin/chown" "/etc/chown")) "\
4061 Name of chown command (usually `chown' or `/etc/chown').")
4062
4063 (defvar dired-ls-F-marks-symlinks nil "\
4064 *Informs dired about how `ls -lF' marks symbolic links.
4065 Set this to t if `ls' (or whatever program is specified by
4066 `insert-directory-program') with `-lF' marks the symbolic link
4067 itself with a trailing @ (usually the case under Ultrix).
4068
4069 Example: if `ln -s foo bar; ls -F bar' gives `bar -> foo', set it to
4070 nil (the default), if it gives `bar@ -> foo', set it to t.
4071
4072 Dired checks if there is really a @ appended. Thus, if you have a
4073 marking `ls' program on one host and a non-marking on another host, and
4074 don't care about symbolic links which really end in a @, you can
4075 always set this variable to t.")
4076
4077 (defvar dired-trivial-filenames "^\\.\\.?$\\|^#" "\
4078 *Regexp of files to skip when finding first file of a directory.
4079 A value of nil means move to the subdir line.
4080 A value of t means move to first file.")
4081
4082 (defvar dired-keep-marker-rename t "\
4083 *Controls marking of renamed files.
4084 If t, files keep their previous marks when they are renamed.
4085 If a character, renamed files (whether previously marked or not)
4086 are afterward marked with that character.")
4087
4088 (defvar dired-keep-marker-copy 67 "\
4089 *Controls marking of copied files.
4090 If t, copied files are marked if and as the corresponding original files were.
4091 If a character, copied files are unconditionally marked with that character.")
4092
4093 (defvar dired-keep-marker-hardlink 72 "\
4094 *Controls marking of newly made hard links.
4095 If t, they are marked if and as the files linked to were marked.
4096 If a character, new links are unconditionally marked with that character.")
4097
4098 (defvar dired-keep-marker-symlink 89 "\
4099 *Controls marking of newly made symbolic links.
4100 If t, they are marked if and as the files linked to were marked.
4101 If a character, new links are unconditionally marked with that character.")
4102
4103 (defvar dired-dwim-target nil "\
4104 *If non-nil, dired tries to guess a default target directory.
4105 This means: if there is a dired buffer displayed in the next window,
4106 use its current subdir, instead of the current subdir of this dired buffer.
4107
4108 The target is used in the prompt for file copy, rename etc.")
4109
4110 (defvar dired-copy-preserve-time t "\
4111 *If non-nil, Dired preserves the last-modified time in a file copy.
4112 \(This works on only some systems.)")
4113 (define-key ctl-x-map "d" 'dired)
4114
4115 (autoload (quote dired) "dired" "\
4116 \"Edit\" directory DIRNAME--delete, rename, print, etc. some files in it.
4117 Optional second argument SWITCHES specifies the `ls' options used.
4118 \(Interactively, use a prefix argument to be able to specify SWITCHES.)
4119 Dired displays a list of files in DIRNAME (which may also have
4120 shell wildcards appended to select certain files). If DIRNAME is a cons,
4121 its first element is taken as the directory name and the rest as an explicit
4122 list of files to make directory entries for.
4123 \\<dired-mode-map>You can move around in it with the usual commands.
4124 You can flag files for deletion with \\[dired-flag-file-deletion] and then
4125 delete them by typing \\[dired-do-flagged-delete].
4126 Type \\[describe-mode] after entering dired for more info.
4127
4128 If DIRNAME is already in a dired buffer, that buffer is used without refresh." t nil)
4129 (define-key ctl-x-4-map "d" 'dired-other-window)
4130
4131 (autoload (quote dired-other-window) "dired" "\
4132 \"Edit\" directory DIRNAME. Like `dired' but selects in another window." t nil)
4133 (define-key ctl-x-5-map "d" 'dired-other-frame)
4134
4135 (autoload (quote dired-other-frame) "dired" "\
4136 \"Edit\" directory DIRNAME. Like `dired' but makes a new frame." t nil)
4137
4138 (autoload (quote dired-noselect) "dired" "\
4139 Like `dired' but returns the dired buffer as value, does not select it." nil nil)
4140
4141 ;;;***
4142 \f
4143 ;;;### (autoloads (dired-do-query-replace dired-do-search dired-hide-all
4144 ;;;;;; dired-hide-subdir dired-tree-down dired-tree-up dired-kill-subdir
4145 ;;;;;; dired-mark-subdir-files dired-goto-subdir dired-prev-subdir
4146 ;;;;;; dired-insert-subdir dired-maybe-insert-subdir dired-downcase
4147 ;;;;;; dired-upcase dired-do-symlink-regexp dired-do-hardlink-regexp
4148 ;;;;;; dired-do-copy-regexp dired-do-rename-regexp dired-do-rename
4149 ;;;;;; dired-do-hardlink dired-do-symlink dired-do-copy dired-create-directory
4150 ;;;;;; dired-rename-file dired-copy-file dired-relist-file dired-remove-file
4151 ;;;;;; dired-add-file dired-do-redisplay dired-do-load dired-do-byte-compile
4152 ;;;;;; dired-do-compress dired-compress-file dired-do-kill-lines
4153 ;;;;;; dired-do-shell-command dired-do-print dired-do-chown dired-do-chgrp
4154 ;;;;;; dired-do-chmod dired-backup-diff dired-diff) "dired-aux"
4155 ;;;;;; "dired-aux.el" (14419 37278))
4156 ;;; Generated autoloads from dired-aux.el
4157
4158 (autoload (quote dired-diff) "dired-aux" "\
4159 Compare file at point with file FILE using `diff'.
4160 FILE defaults to the file at the mark.
4161 The prompted-for file is the first file given to `diff'.
4162 With prefix arg, prompt for second argument SWITCHES,
4163 which is options for `diff'." t nil)
4164
4165 (autoload (quote dired-backup-diff) "dired-aux" "\
4166 Diff this file with its backup file or vice versa.
4167 Uses the latest backup, if there are several numerical backups.
4168 If this file is a backup, diff it with its original.
4169 The backup file is the first file given to `diff'.
4170 With prefix arg, prompt for argument SWITCHES which is options for `diff'." t nil)
4171
4172 (autoload (quote dired-do-chmod) "dired-aux" "\
4173 Change the mode of the marked (or next ARG) files.
4174 This calls chmod, thus symbolic modes like `g+w' are allowed." t nil)
4175
4176 (autoload (quote dired-do-chgrp) "dired-aux" "\
4177 Change the group of the marked (or next ARG) files." t nil)
4178
4179 (autoload (quote dired-do-chown) "dired-aux" "\
4180 Change the owner of the marked (or next ARG) files." t nil)
4181
4182 (autoload (quote dired-do-print) "dired-aux" "\
4183 Print the marked (or next ARG) files.
4184 Uses the shell command coming from variables `lpr-command' and
4185 `lpr-switches' as default." t nil)
4186
4187 (autoload (quote dired-do-shell-command) "dired-aux" "\
4188 Run a shell command COMMAND on the marked files.
4189 If no files are marked or a specific numeric prefix arg is given,
4190 the next ARG files are used. Just \\[universal-argument] means the current file.
4191 The prompt mentions the file(s) or the marker, as appropriate.
4192
4193 If there is output, it goes to a separate buffer.
4194
4195 Normally the command is run on each file individually.
4196 However, if there is a `*' in the command then it is run
4197 just once with the entire file list substituted there.
4198
4199 If there is no `*', but a `?' in the command then it is still run
4200 on each file individually but with the filename substituted there
4201 instead of att the end of the command.
4202
4203 No automatic redisplay of dired buffers is attempted, as there's no
4204 telling what files the command may have changed. Type
4205 \\[dired-do-redisplay] to redisplay the marked files.
4206
4207 The shell command has the top level directory as working directory, so
4208 output files usually are created there instead of in a subdir.
4209
4210 In a noninteractive call (from Lisp code), you must specify
4211 the list of file names explicitly with the FILE-LIST argument." t nil)
4212
4213 (autoload (quote dired-do-kill-lines) "dired-aux" "\
4214 Kill all marked lines (not the files).
4215 With a prefix argument, kill that many lines starting with the current line.
4216 \(A negative argument kills lines before the current line.)
4217 To kill an entire subdirectory, go to its directory header line
4218 and use this command with a prefix argument (the value does not matter)." t nil)
4219
4220 (autoload (quote dired-compress-file) "dired-aux" nil nil nil)
4221
4222 (autoload (quote dired-do-compress) "dired-aux" "\
4223 Compress or uncompress marked (or next ARG) files." t nil)
4224
4225 (autoload (quote dired-do-byte-compile) "dired-aux" "\
4226 Byte compile marked (or next ARG) Emacs Lisp files." t nil)
4227
4228 (autoload (quote dired-do-load) "dired-aux" "\
4229 Load the marked (or next ARG) Emacs Lisp files." t nil)
4230
4231 (autoload (quote dired-do-redisplay) "dired-aux" "\
4232 Redisplay all marked (or next ARG) files.
4233 If on a subdir line, redisplay that subdirectory. In that case,
4234 a prefix arg lets you edit the `ls' switches used for the new listing." t nil)
4235
4236 (autoload (quote dired-add-file) "dired-aux" nil nil nil)
4237
4238 (autoload (quote dired-remove-file) "dired-aux" nil nil nil)
4239
4240 (autoload (quote dired-relist-file) "dired-aux" nil nil nil)
4241
4242 (autoload (quote dired-copy-file) "dired-aux" nil nil nil)
4243
4244 (autoload (quote dired-rename-file) "dired-aux" nil nil nil)
4245
4246 (autoload (quote dired-create-directory) "dired-aux" "\
4247 Create a directory called DIRECTORY." t nil)
4248
4249 (autoload (quote dired-do-copy) "dired-aux" "\
4250 Copy all marked (or next ARG) files, or copy the current file.
4251 This normally preserves the last-modified date when copying.
4252 When operating on just the current file, you specify the new name.
4253 When operating on multiple or marked files, you specify a directory,
4254 and new copies of these files are made in that directory
4255 with the same names that the files currently have." t nil)
4256
4257 (autoload (quote dired-do-symlink) "dired-aux" "\
4258 Make symbolic links to current file or all marked (or next ARG) files.
4259 When operating on just the current file, you specify the new name.
4260 When operating on multiple or marked files, you specify a directory
4261 and new symbolic links are made in that directory
4262 with the same names that the files currently have." t nil)
4263
4264 (autoload (quote dired-do-hardlink) "dired-aux" "\
4265 Add names (hard links) current file or all marked (or next ARG) files.
4266 When operating on just the current file, you specify the new name.
4267 When operating on multiple or marked files, you specify a directory
4268 and new hard links are made in that directory
4269 with the same names that the files currently have." t nil)
4270
4271 (autoload (quote dired-do-rename) "dired-aux" "\
4272 Rename current file or all marked (or next ARG) files.
4273 When renaming just the current file, you specify the new name.
4274 When renaming multiple or marked files, you specify a directory." t nil)
4275
4276 (autoload (quote dired-do-rename-regexp) "dired-aux" "\
4277 Rename marked files containing REGEXP to NEWNAME.
4278 As each match is found, the user must type a character saying
4279 what to do with it. For directions, type \\[help-command] at that time.
4280 NEWNAME may contain \\=\\<n> or \\& as in `query-replace-regexp'.
4281 REGEXP defaults to the last regexp used.
4282
4283 With a zero prefix arg, renaming by regexp affects the absolute file name.
4284 Normally, only the non-directory part of the file name is used and changed." t nil)
4285
4286 (autoload (quote dired-do-copy-regexp) "dired-aux" "\
4287 Copy all marked files containing REGEXP to NEWNAME.
4288 See function `dired-do-rename-regexp' for more info." t nil)
4289
4290 (autoload (quote dired-do-hardlink-regexp) "dired-aux" "\
4291 Hardlink all marked files containing REGEXP to NEWNAME.
4292 See function `dired-do-rename-regexp' for more info." t nil)
4293
4294 (autoload (quote dired-do-symlink-regexp) "dired-aux" "\
4295 Symlink all marked files containing REGEXP to NEWNAME.
4296 See function `dired-do-rename-regexp' for more info." t nil)
4297
4298 (autoload (quote dired-upcase) "dired-aux" "\
4299 Rename all marked (or next ARG) files to upper case." t nil)
4300
4301 (autoload (quote dired-downcase) "dired-aux" "\
4302 Rename all marked (or next ARG) files to lower case." t nil)
4303
4304 (autoload (quote dired-maybe-insert-subdir) "dired-aux" "\
4305 Insert this subdirectory into the same dired buffer.
4306 If it is already present, just move to it (type \\[dired-do-redisplay] to refresh),
4307 else inserts it at its natural place (as `ls -lR' would have done).
4308 With a prefix arg, you may edit the ls switches used for this listing.
4309 You can add `R' to the switches to expand the whole tree starting at
4310 this subdirectory.
4311 This function takes some pains to conform to `ls -lR' output." t nil)
4312
4313 (autoload (quote dired-insert-subdir) "dired-aux" "\
4314 Insert this subdirectory into the same dired buffer.
4315 If it is already present, overwrites previous entry,
4316 else inserts it at its natural place (as `ls -lR' would have done).
4317 With a prefix arg, you may edit the `ls' switches used for this listing.
4318 You can add `R' to the switches to expand the whole tree starting at
4319 this subdirectory.
4320 This function takes some pains to conform to `ls -lR' output." t nil)
4321
4322 (autoload (quote dired-prev-subdir) "dired-aux" "\
4323 Go to previous subdirectory, regardless of level.
4324 When called interactively and not on a subdir line, go to this subdir's line." t nil)
4325
4326 (autoload (quote dired-goto-subdir) "dired-aux" "\
4327 Go to end of header line of DIR in this dired buffer.
4328 Return value of point on success, otherwise return nil.
4329 The next char is either \\n, or \\r if DIR is hidden." t nil)
4330
4331 (autoload (quote dired-mark-subdir-files) "dired-aux" "\
4332 Mark all files except `.' and `..' in current subdirectory.
4333 If the Dired buffer shows multiple directories, this command
4334 marks the files listed in the subdirectory that point is in." t nil)
4335
4336 (autoload (quote dired-kill-subdir) "dired-aux" "\
4337 Remove all lines of current subdirectory.
4338 Lower levels are unaffected." t nil)
4339
4340 (autoload (quote dired-tree-up) "dired-aux" "\
4341 Go up ARG levels in the dired tree." t nil)
4342
4343 (autoload (quote dired-tree-down) "dired-aux" "\
4344 Go down in the dired tree." t nil)
4345
4346 (autoload (quote dired-hide-subdir) "dired-aux" "\
4347 Hide or unhide the current subdirectory and move to next directory.
4348 Optional prefix arg is a repeat factor.
4349 Use \\[dired-hide-all] to (un)hide all directories." t nil)
4350
4351 (autoload (quote dired-hide-all) "dired-aux" "\
4352 Hide all subdirectories, leaving only their header lines.
4353 If there is already something hidden, make everything visible again.
4354 Use \\[dired-hide-subdir] to (un)hide a particular subdirectory." t nil)
4355
4356 (autoload (quote dired-do-search) "dired-aux" "\
4357 Search through all marked files for a match for REGEXP.
4358 Stops when a match is found.
4359 To continue searching for next match, use command \\[tags-loop-continue]." t nil)
4360
4361 (autoload (quote dired-do-query-replace) "dired-aux" "\
4362 Do `query-replace-regexp' of FROM with TO, on all marked files.
4363 Third arg DELIMITED (prefix arg) means replace only word-delimited matches.
4364 If you exit (\\[keyboard-quit] or ESC), you can resume the query replace
4365 with the command \\[tags-loop-continue]." t nil)
4366
4367 ;;;***
4368 \f
4369 ;;;### (autoloads (dired-jump) "dired-x" "dired-x.el" (14460 38616))
4370 ;;; Generated autoloads from dired-x.el
4371
4372 (autoload (quote dired-jump) "dired-x" "\
4373 Jump to dired buffer corresponding to current buffer.
4374 If in a file, dired the current directory and move to file's line.
4375 If in dired already, pop up a level and goto old directory's line.
4376 In case the proper dired file line cannot be found, refresh the dired
4377 buffer and try again." t nil)
4378
4379 ;;;***
4380 \f
4381 ;;;### (autoloads (dirtrack) "dirtrack" "dirtrack.el" (14032 30315))
4382 ;;; Generated autoloads from dirtrack.el
4383
4384 (autoload (quote dirtrack) "dirtrack" "\
4385 Determine the current directory by scanning the process output for a prompt.
4386 The prompt to look for is the first item in `dirtrack-list'.
4387
4388 You can toggle directory tracking by using the function `dirtrack-toggle'.
4389
4390 If directory tracking does not seem to be working, you can use the
4391 function `dirtrack-debug-toggle' to turn on debugging output.
4392
4393 You can enable directory tracking by adding this function to
4394 `comint-output-filter-functions'.
4395 " nil nil)
4396
4397 ;;;***
4398 \f
4399 ;;;### (autoloads (disassemble) "disass" "emacs-lisp/disass.el" (13776
4400 ;;;;;; 9615))
4401 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/disass.el
4402
4403 (autoload (quote disassemble) "disass" "\
4404 Print disassembled code for OBJECT in (optional) BUFFER.
4405 OBJECT can be a symbol defined as a function, or a function itself
4406 \(a lambda expression or a compiled-function object).
4407 If OBJECT is not already compiled, we compile it, but do not
4408 redefine OBJECT if it is a symbol." t nil)
4409
4410 ;;;***
4411 \f
4412 ;;;### (autoloads (standard-display-european create-glyph standard-display-underline
4413 ;;;;;; standard-display-graphic standard-display-g1 standard-display-ascii
4414 ;;;;;; standard-display-default standard-display-8bit describe-current-display-table
4415 ;;;;;; describe-display-table set-display-table-slot display-table-slot
4416 ;;;;;; make-display-table) "disp-table" "disp-table.el" (14353 44070))
4417 ;;; Generated autoloads from disp-table.el
4418
4419 (autoload (quote make-display-table) "disp-table" "\
4420 Return a new, empty display table." nil nil)
4421
4422 (autoload (quote display-table-slot) "disp-table" "\
4423 Return the value of the extra slot in DISPLAY-TABLE named SLOT.
4424 SLOT may be a number from 0 to 5 inclusive, or a slot name (symbol).
4425 Valid symbols are `truncation', `wrap', `escape', `control',
4426 `selective-display', and `vertical-border'." nil nil)
4427
4428 (autoload (quote set-display-table-slot) "disp-table" "\
4429 Set the value of the extra slot in DISPLAY-TABLE named SLOT to VALUE.
4430 SLOT may be a number from 0 to 5 inclusive, or a name (symbol).
4431 Valid symbols are `truncation', `wrap', `escape', `control',
4432 `selective-display', and `vertical-border'." nil nil)
4433
4434 (autoload (quote describe-display-table) "disp-table" "\
4435 Describe the display table DT in a help buffer." nil nil)
4436
4437 (autoload (quote describe-current-display-table) "disp-table" "\
4438 Describe the display table in use in the selected window and buffer." t nil)
4439
4440 (autoload (quote standard-display-8bit) "disp-table" "\
4441 Display characters in the range L to H literally." nil nil)
4442
4443 (autoload (quote standard-display-default) "disp-table" "\
4444 Display characters in the range L to H using the default notation." nil nil)
4445
4446 (autoload (quote standard-display-ascii) "disp-table" "\
4447 Display character C using printable string S." nil nil)
4448
4449 (autoload (quote standard-display-g1) "disp-table" "\
4450 Display character C as character SC in the g1 character set.
4451 This function assumes that your terminal uses the SO/SI characters;
4452 it is meaningless for an X frame." nil nil)
4453
4454 (autoload (quote standard-display-graphic) "disp-table" "\
4455 Display character C as character GC in graphics character set.
4456 This function assumes VT100-compatible escapes; it is meaningless for an
4457 X frame." nil nil)
4458
4459 (autoload (quote standard-display-underline) "disp-table" "\
4460 Display character C as character UC plus underlining." nil nil)
4461
4462 (autoload (quote create-glyph) "disp-table" nil nil nil)
4463
4464 (autoload (quote standard-display-european) "disp-table" "\
4465 Semi-obsolete way to toggle display of ISO 8859 European characters.
4466
4467 This function is semi-obsolete; if you want to do your editing with
4468 unibyte characters, it is better to `set-language-environment' coupled
4469 with either the `--unibyte' option or the EMACS_UNIBYTE environment
4470 variable, or else customize `enable-multibyte-characters'.
4471
4472 With prefix argument, this command enables European character display
4473 if arg is positive, disables it otherwise. Otherwise, it toggles
4474 European character display.
4475
4476 When this mode is enabled, characters in the range of 160 to 255
4477 display not as octal escapes, but as accented characters. Codes 146
4478 and 160 display as apostrophe and space, even though they are not the
4479 ASCII codes for apostrophe and space.
4480
4481 Enabling European character display with this command noninteractively
4482 from Lisp code also selects Latin-1 as the language environment, and
4483 selects unibyte mode for all Emacs buffers (both existing buffers and
4484 those created subsequently). This provides increased compatibility
4485 for users who call this function in `.emacs'." nil nil)
4486
4487 ;;;***
4488 \f
4489 ;;;### (autoloads (dissociated-press) "dissociate" "play/dissociate.el"
4490 ;;;;;; (13229 28172))
4491 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/dissociate.el
4492
4493 (autoload (quote dissociated-press) "dissociate" "\
4494 Dissociate the text of the current buffer.
4495 Output goes in buffer named *Dissociation*,
4496 which is redisplayed each time text is added to it.
4497 Every so often the user must say whether to continue.
4498 If ARG is positive, require ARG chars of continuity.
4499 If ARG is negative, require -ARG words of continuity.
4500 Default is 2." t nil)
4501
4502 ;;;***
4503 \f
4504 ;;;### (autoloads (doctor) "doctor" "play/doctor.el" (13556 41573))
4505 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/doctor.el
4506
4507 (autoload (quote doctor) "doctor" "\
4508 Switch to *doctor* buffer and start giving psychotherapy." t nil)
4509
4510 ;;;***
4511 \f
4512 ;;;### (autoloads (double-mode double-mode) "double" "double.el"
4513 ;;;;;; (14288 20375))
4514 ;;; Generated autoloads from double.el
4515
4516 (defvar double-mode nil "\
4517 Toggle Double mode.
4518 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
4519 use either \\[customize] or the function `double-mode'.")
4520
4521 (custom-add-to-group (quote double) (quote double-mode) (quote custom-variable))
4522
4523 (custom-add-load (quote double-mode) (quote double))
4524
4525 (autoload (quote double-mode) "double" "\
4526 Toggle Double mode.
4527 With prefix arg, turn Double mode on iff arg is positive.
4528
4529 When Double mode is on, some keys will insert different strings
4530 when pressed twice. See variable `double-map' for details." t nil)
4531
4532 ;;;***
4533 \f
4534 ;;;### (autoloads (dunnet) "dunnet" "play/dunnet.el" (13607 44546))
4535 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/dunnet.el
4536
4537 (autoload (quote dunnet) "dunnet" "\
4538 Switch to *dungeon* buffer and start game." t nil)
4539
4540 ;;;***
4541 \f
4542 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-earcon-display) "earcon" "gnus/earcon.el"
4543 ;;;;;; (14030 48685))
4544 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/earcon.el
4545
4546 (autoload (quote gnus-earcon-display) "earcon" "\
4547 Play sounds in message buffers." t nil)
4548
4549 ;;;***
4550 \f
4551 ;;;### (autoloads (define-minor-mode) "easy-mmode" "emacs-lisp/easy-mmode.el"
4552 ;;;;;; (14398 37514))
4553 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/easy-mmode.el
4554
4555 (defalias (quote easy-mmode-define-minor-mode) (quote define-minor-mode))
4556
4557 (autoload (quote define-minor-mode) "easy-mmode" "\
4558 Define a new minor mode MODE.
4559 This function defines the associated control variable, keymap,
4560 toggle command, and hooks (see `easy-mmode-define-toggle').
4561
4562 DOC is the documentation for the mode toggle command.
4563 Optional INIT-VALUE is the initial value of the mode's variable.
4564 Optional LIGHTER is displayed in the mode-bar when the mode is on.
4565 Optional KEYMAP is the default (defvar) keymap bound to the mode keymap.
4566 If it is a list, it is passed to `easy-mmode-define-keymap'
4567 in order to build a valid keymap.
4568 BODY contains code that will be executed each time the mode is (dis)activated.
4569 It will be executed after any toggling but before running the hooks." nil (quote macro))
4570
4571 ;;;***
4572 \f
4573 ;;;### (autoloads (easy-menu-change easy-menu-create-menu easy-menu-do-define
4574 ;;;;;; easy-menu-define) "easymenu" "emacs-lisp/easymenu.el" (14385
4575 ;;;;;; 24854))
4576 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/easymenu.el
4577
4578 (autoload (quote easy-menu-define) "easymenu" "\
4579 Define a menu bar submenu in maps MAPS, according to MENU.
4580 The menu keymap is stored in symbol SYMBOL, both as its value
4581 and as its function definition. DOC is used as the doc string for SYMBOL.
4582
4583 The first element of MENU must be a string. It is the menu bar item name.
4584 It may be followed by the following keyword argument pairs
4585
4586 :filter FUNCTION
4587
4588 FUNCTION is a function with one argument, the menu. It returns the actual
4589 menu displayed.
4590
4591 :visible INCLUDE
4592
4593 INCLUDE is an expression; this menu is only visible if this
4594 expression has a non-nil value. `:include' is an alias for `:visible'.
4595
4596 :active ENABLE
4597
4598 ENABLE is an expression; the menu is enabled for selection
4599 whenever this expression's value is non-nil.
4600
4601 The rest of the elements in MENU, are menu items.
4602
4603 A menu item is usually a vector of three elements: [NAME CALLBACK ENABLE]
4604
4605 NAME is a string--the menu item name.
4606
4607 CALLBACK is a command to run when the item is chosen,
4608 or a list to evaluate when the item is chosen.
4609
4610 ENABLE is an expression; the item is enabled for selection
4611 whenever this expression's value is non-nil.
4612
4613 Alternatively, a menu item may have the form:
4614
4615 [ NAME CALLBACK [ KEYWORD ARG ] ... ]
4616
4617 Where KEYWORD is one of the symbols defined below.
4618
4619 :keys KEYS
4620
4621 KEYS is a string; a complex keyboard equivalent to this menu item.
4622 This is normally not needed because keyboard equivalents are usually
4623 computed automatically.
4624 KEYS is expanded with `substitute-command-keys' before it is used.
4625
4626 :key-sequence KEYS
4627
4628 KEYS is nil a string or a vector; nil or a keyboard equivalent to this
4629 menu item.
4630 This is a hint that will considerably speed up Emacs first display of
4631 a menu. Use `:key-sequence nil' when you know that this menu item has no
4632 keyboard equivalent.
4633
4634 :active ENABLE
4635
4636 ENABLE is an expression; the item is enabled for selection
4637 whenever this expression's value is non-nil.
4638
4639 :included INCLUDE
4640
4641 INCLUDE is an expression; this item is only visible if this
4642 expression has a non-nil value.
4643
4644 :suffix NAME
4645
4646 NAME is a string; the name of an argument to CALLBACK.
4647
4648 :style STYLE
4649
4650 STYLE is a symbol describing the type of menu item. The following are
4651 defined:
4652
4653 toggle: A checkbox.
4654 Prepend the name with `(*) ' or `( ) ' depending on if selected or not.
4655 radio: A radio button.
4656 Prepend the name with `[X] ' or `[ ] ' depending on if selected or not.
4657 button: Surround the name with `[' and `]'. Use this for an item in the
4658 menu bar itself.
4659 anything else means an ordinary menu item.
4660
4661 :selected SELECTED
4662
4663 SELECTED is an expression; the checkbox or radio button is selected
4664 whenever this expression's value is non-nil.
4665
4666 A menu item can be a string. Then that string appears in the menu as
4667 unselectable text. A string consisting solely of hyphens is displayed
4668 as a solid horizontal line.
4669
4670 A menu item can be a list with the same format as MENU. This is a submenu." nil (quote macro))
4671
4672 (autoload (quote easy-menu-do-define) "easymenu" nil nil nil)
4673
4674 (autoload (quote easy-menu-create-menu) "easymenu" "\
4675 Create a menu called MENU-NAME with items described in MENU-ITEMS.
4676 MENU-NAME is a string, the name of the menu. MENU-ITEMS is a list of items
4677 possibly preceded by keyword pairs as described in `easy-menu-define'." nil nil)
4678
4679 (autoload (quote easy-menu-change) "easymenu" "\
4680 Change menu found at PATH as item NAME to contain ITEMS.
4681 PATH is a list of strings for locating the menu that
4682 should contain a submenu named NAME.
4683 ITEMS is a list of menu items, as in `easy-menu-define'.
4684 These items entirely replace the previous items in that submenu.
4685
4686 If the menu located by PATH has no submenu named NAME, add one.
4687 If the optional argument BEFORE is present, add it just before
4688 the submenu named BEFORE, otherwise add it at the end of the menu.
4689
4690 Either call this from `menu-bar-update-hook' or use a menu filter,
4691 to implement dynamic menus." nil nil)
4692
4693 ;;;***
4694 \f
4695 ;;;### (autoloads (electric-buffer-list) "ebuff-menu" "ebuff-menu.el"
4696 ;;;;;; (13778 5499))
4697 ;;; Generated autoloads from ebuff-menu.el
4698
4699 (autoload (quote electric-buffer-list) "ebuff-menu" "\
4700 Pops up a buffer describing the set of Emacs buffers.
4701 Vaguely like ITS lunar select buffer; combining typeoutoid buffer
4702 listing with menuoid buffer selection.
4703
4704 If the very next character typed is a space then the buffer list
4705 window disappears. Otherwise, one may move around in the buffer list
4706 window, marking buffers to be selected, saved or deleted.
4707
4708 To exit and select a new buffer, type a space when the cursor is on
4709 the appropriate line of the buffer-list window. Other commands are
4710 much like those of buffer-menu-mode.
4711
4712 Calls value of `electric-buffer-menu-mode-hook' on entry if non-nil.
4713
4714 \\{electric-buffer-menu-mode-map}" t nil)
4715
4716 ;;;***
4717 \f
4718 ;;;### (autoloads (Electric-command-history-redo-expression) "echistory"
4719 ;;;;;; "echistory.el" (14447 15307))
4720 ;;; Generated autoloads from echistory.el
4721
4722 (autoload (quote Electric-command-history-redo-expression) "echistory" "\
4723 Edit current history line in minibuffer and execute result.
4724 With prefix arg NOCONFIRM, execute current line as-is without editing." t nil)
4725
4726 ;;;***
4727 \f
4728 ;;;### (autoloads (edebug-eval-top-level-form def-edebug-spec edebug-all-forms
4729 ;;;;;; edebug-all-defs) "edebug" "emacs-lisp/edebug.el" (14460 38617))
4730 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/edebug.el
4731
4732 (defvar edebug-all-defs nil "\
4733 *If non-nil, evaluation of any defining forms will instrument for Edebug.
4734 This applies to `eval-defun', `eval-region', `eval-buffer', and
4735 `eval-current-buffer'. `eval-region' is also called by
4736 `eval-last-sexp', and `eval-print-last-sexp'.
4737
4738 You can use the command `edebug-all-defs' to toggle the value of this
4739 variable. You may wish to make it local to each buffer with
4740 \(make-local-variable 'edebug-all-defs) in your
4741 `emacs-lisp-mode-hook'.")
4742
4743 (defvar edebug-all-forms nil "\
4744 *Non-nil evaluation of all forms will instrument for Edebug.
4745 This doesn't apply to loading or evaluations in the minibuffer.
4746 Use the command `edebug-all-forms' to toggle the value of this option.")
4747
4748 (autoload (quote def-edebug-spec) "edebug" "\
4749 Set the `edebug-form-spec' property of SYMBOL according to SPEC.
4750 Both SYMBOL and SPEC are unevaluated. The SPEC can be 0, t, a symbol
4751 \(naming a function), or a list." nil (quote macro))
4752
4753 (defalias (quote edebug-defun) (quote edebug-eval-top-level-form))
4754
4755 (autoload (quote edebug-eval-top-level-form) "edebug" "\
4756 Evaluate a top level form, such as a defun or defmacro.
4757 This is like `eval-defun', but the code is always instrumented for Edebug.
4758 Print its name in the minibuffer and leave point where it is,
4759 or if an error occurs, leave point after it with mark at the original point." t nil)
4760
4761 ;;;***
4762 \f
4763 ;;;### (autoloads (ediff-documentation ediff-version ediff-revision
4764 ;;;;;; ediff-patch-buffer ediff-patch-file run-ediff-from-cvs-buffer
4765 ;;;;;; ediff-merge-revisions-with-ancestor ediff-merge-revisions
4766 ;;;;;; ediff-merge-buffers-with-ancestor ediff-merge-buffers ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor
4767 ;;;;;; ediff-merge-files ediff-regions-linewise ediff-regions-wordwise
4768 ;;;;;; ediff-windows-linewise ediff-windows-wordwise ediff-merge-directory-revisions-with-ancestor
4769 ;;;;;; ediff-merge-directory-revisions ediff-merge-directories-with-ancestor
4770 ;;;;;; ediff-merge-directories ediff-directories3 ediff-directory-revisions
4771 ;;;;;; ediff-directories ediff-buffers3 ediff-buffers ediff-files3
4772 ;;;;;; ediff-files) "ediff" "ediff.el" (14398 37488))
4773 ;;; Generated autoloads from ediff.el
4774
4775 (autoload (quote ediff-files) "ediff" "\
4776 Run Ediff on a pair of files, FILE-A and FILE-B." t nil)
4777
4778 (autoload (quote ediff-files3) "ediff" "\
4779 Run Ediff on three files, FILE-A, FILE-B, and FILE-C." t nil)
4780
4781 (defalias (quote ediff3) (quote ediff-files3))
4782
4783 (defalias (quote ediff) (quote ediff-files))
4784
4785 (autoload (quote ediff-buffers) "ediff" "\
4786 Run Ediff on a pair of buffers, BUFFER-A and BUFFER-B." t nil)
4787
4788 (defalias (quote ebuffers) (quote ediff-buffers))
4789
4790 (autoload (quote ediff-buffers3) "ediff" "\
4791 Run Ediff on three buffers, BUFFER-A, BUFFER-B, and BUFFER-C." t nil)
4792
4793 (defalias (quote ebuffers3) (quote ediff-buffers3))
4794
4795 (autoload (quote ediff-directories) "ediff" "\
4796 Run Ediff on a pair of directories, DIR1 and DIR2, comparing files that have
4797 the same name in both. The third argument, REGEXP, is a regular expression
4798 that can be used to filter out certain file names." t nil)
4799
4800 (defalias (quote edirs) (quote ediff-directories))
4801
4802 (autoload (quote ediff-directory-revisions) "ediff" "\
4803 Run Ediff on a directory, DIR1, comparing its files with their revisions.
4804 The second argument, REGEXP, is a regular expression that filters the file
4805 names. Only the files that are under revision control are taken into account." t nil)
4806
4807 (defalias (quote edir-revisions) (quote ediff-directory-revisions))
4808
4809 (autoload (quote ediff-directories3) "ediff" "\
4810 Run Ediff on three directories, DIR1, DIR2, and DIR3, comparing files that
4811 have the same name in all three. The last argument, REGEXP, is a regular
4812 expression that can be used to filter out certain file names." t nil)
4813
4814 (defalias (quote edirs3) (quote ediff-directories3))
4815
4816 (autoload (quote ediff-merge-directories) "ediff" "\
4817 Run Ediff on a pair of directories, DIR1 and DIR2, merging files that have
4818 the same name in both. The third argument, REGEXP, is a regular expression
4819 that can be used to filter out certain file names." t nil)
4820
4821 (defalias (quote edirs-merge) (quote ediff-merge-directories))
4822
4823 (autoload (quote ediff-merge-directories-with-ancestor) "ediff" "\
4824 Merge files in directories DIR1 and DIR2 using files in ANCESTOR-DIR as ancestors.
4825 Ediff merges files that have identical names in DIR1, DIR2. If a pair of files
4826 in DIR1 and DIR2 doesn't have an ancestor in ANCESTOR-DIR, Ediff will merge
4827 without ancestor. The fourth argument, REGEXP, is a regular expression that
4828 can be used to filter out certain file names." t nil)
4829
4830 (autoload (quote ediff-merge-directory-revisions) "ediff" "\
4831 Run Ediff on a directory, DIR1, merging its files with their revisions.
4832 The second argument, REGEXP, is a regular expression that filters the file
4833 names. Only the files that are under revision control are taken into account." t nil)
4834
4835 (defalias (quote edir-merge-revisions) (quote ediff-merge-directory-revisions))
4836
4837 (autoload (quote ediff-merge-directory-revisions-with-ancestor) "ediff" "\
4838 Run Ediff on a directory, DIR1, merging its files with their revisions and ancestors.
4839 The second argument, REGEXP, is a regular expression that filters the file
4840 names. Only the files that are under revision control are taken into account." t nil)
4841
4842 (defalias (quote edir-merge-revisions-with-ancestor) (quote ediff-merge-directory-revisions-with-ancestor))
4843
4844 (defalias (quote edirs-merge-with-ancestor) (quote ediff-merge-directories-with-ancestor))
4845
4846 (autoload (quote ediff-windows-wordwise) "ediff" "\
4847 Compare WIND-A and WIND-B, which are selected by clicking, wordwise.
4848 With prefix argument, DUMB-MODE, or on a non-windowing display, works as
4849 follows:
4850 If WIND-A is nil, use selected window.
4851 If WIND-B is nil, use window next to WIND-A." t nil)
4852
4853 (autoload (quote ediff-windows-linewise) "ediff" "\
4854 Compare WIND-A and WIND-B, which are selected by clicking, linewise.
4855 With prefix argument, DUMB-MODE, or on a non-windowing display, works as
4856 follows:
4857 If WIND-A is nil, use selected window.
4858 If WIND-B is nil, use window next to WIND-A." t nil)
4859
4860 (autoload (quote ediff-regions-wordwise) "ediff" "\
4861 Run Ediff on a pair of regions in two different buffers.
4862 Regions (i.e., point and mark) are assumed to be set in advance.
4863 This function is effective only for relatively small regions, up to 200
4864 lines. For large regions, use `ediff-regions-linewise'." t nil)
4865
4866 (autoload (quote ediff-regions-linewise) "ediff" "\
4867 Run Ediff on a pair of regions in two different buffers.
4868 Regions (i.e., point and mark) are assumed to be set in advance.
4869 Each region is enlarged to contain full lines.
4870 This function is effective for large regions, over 100-200
4871 lines. For small regions, use `ediff-regions-wordwise'." t nil)
4872
4873 (defalias (quote ediff-merge) (quote ediff-merge-files))
4874
4875 (autoload (quote ediff-merge-files) "ediff" "\
4876 Merge two files without ancestor." t nil)
4877
4878 (autoload (quote ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor) "ediff" "\
4879 Merge two files with ancestor." t nil)
4880
4881 (defalias (quote ediff-merge-with-ancestor) (quote ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor))
4882
4883 (autoload (quote ediff-merge-buffers) "ediff" "\
4884 Merge buffers without ancestor." t nil)
4885
4886 (autoload (quote ediff-merge-buffers-with-ancestor) "ediff" "\
4887 Merge buffers with ancestor." t nil)
4888
4889 (autoload (quote ediff-merge-revisions) "ediff" "\
4890 Run Ediff by merging two revisions of a file.
4891 The file is the optional FILE argument or the file visited by the current
4892 buffer." t nil)
4893
4894 (autoload (quote ediff-merge-revisions-with-ancestor) "ediff" "\
4895 Run Ediff by merging two revisions of a file with a common ancestor.
4896 The file is the the optional FILE argument or the file visited by the current
4897 buffer." t nil)
4898
4899 (autoload (quote run-ediff-from-cvs-buffer) "ediff" "\
4900 Run Ediff-merge on appropriate revisions of the selected file.
4901 First run after `M-x cvs-update'. Then place the cursor on a line describing a
4902 file and then run `run-ediff-from-cvs-buffer'." t nil)
4903
4904 (autoload (quote ediff-patch-file) "ediff" "\
4905 Run Ediff by patching SOURCE-FILENAME.
4906 If optional PATCH-BUF is given, use the patch in that buffer
4907 and don't ask the user.
4908 If prefix argument, then: if even argument, assume that the patch is in a
4909 buffer. If odd -- assume it is in a file." t nil)
4910
4911 (autoload (quote ediff-patch-buffer) "ediff" "\
4912 Run Ediff by patching BUFFER-NAME." t nil)
4913
4914 (defalias (quote epatch) (quote ediff-patch-file))
4915
4916 (defalias (quote epatch-buffer) (quote ediff-patch-buffer))
4917
4918 (autoload (quote ediff-revision) "ediff" "\
4919 Run Ediff by comparing versions of a file.
4920 The file is an optional FILE argument or the file visited by the current
4921 buffer. Use `vc.el' or `rcs.el' depending on `ediff-version-control-package'." t nil)
4922
4923 (defalias (quote erevision) (quote ediff-revision))
4924
4925 (autoload (quote ediff-version) "ediff" "\
4926 Return string describing the version of Ediff.
4927 When called interactively, displays the version." t nil)
4928
4929 (autoload (quote ediff-documentation) "ediff" "\
4930 Display Ediff's manual.
4931 With optional NODE, goes to that node." t nil)
4932
4933 ;;;***
4934 \f
4935 ;;;### (autoloads nil "ediff-hook" "ediff-hook.el" (14367 2123))
4936 ;;; Generated autoloads from ediff-hook.el
4937
4938 (defvar ediff-window-setup-function)
4939
4940 (progn (defun ediff-xemacs-init-menus nil (if (featurep (quote menubar)) (progn (add-submenu (quote ("Tools")) ediff-menu "OO-Browser...") (add-submenu (quote ("Tools")) ediff-merge-menu "OO-Browser...") (add-submenu (quote ("Tools")) epatch-menu "OO-Browser...") (add-submenu (quote ("Tools")) ediff-misc-menu "OO-Browser...") (add-menu-button (quote ("Tools")) ["-------" nil nil] "OO-Browser...")))))
4941
4942 (cond ((string-match "XEmacs" emacs-version) (defvar ediff-menu (quote ("Compare" ["Two Files..." ediff-files t] ["Two Buffers..." ediff-buffers t] ["Three Files..." ediff-files3 t] ["Three Buffers..." ediff-buffers3 t] "---" ["Two Directories..." ediff-directories t] ["Three Directories..." ediff-directories3 t] "---" ["File with Revision..." ediff-revision t] ["Directory Revisions..." ediff-directory-revisions t] "---" ["Windows Word-by-word..." ediff-windows-wordwise t] ["Windows Line-by-line..." ediff-windows-linewise t] "---" ["Regions Word-by-word..." ediff-regions-wordwise t] ["Regions Line-by-line..." ediff-regions-linewise t]))) (defvar ediff-merge-menu (quote ("Merge" ["Files..." ediff-merge-files t] ["Files with Ancestor..." ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor t] ["Buffers..." ediff-merge-buffers t] ["Buffers with Ancestor..." ediff-merge-buffers-with-ancestor t] "---" ["Directories..." ediff-merge-directories t] ["Directories with Ancestor..." ediff-merge-directories-with-ancestor t] "---" ["Revisions..." ediff-merge-revisions t] ["Revisions with Ancestor..." ediff-merge-revisions-with-ancestor t] ["Directory Revisions..." ediff-merge-directory-revisions t] ["Directory Revisions with Ancestor..." ediff-merge-directory-revisions-with-ancestor t]))) (defvar epatch-menu (quote ("Apply Patch" ["To a file..." ediff-patch-file t] ["To a buffer..." ediff-patch-buffer t]))) (defvar ediff-misc-menu (quote ("Ediff Miscellanea" ["Ediff Manual..." ediff-documentation t] ["Customize Ediff..." ediff-customize t] ["List Ediff Sessions..." ediff-show-registry t] ["Use separate frame for Ediff control buffer..." ediff-toggle-multiframe :style toggle :selected (if (and (featurep (quote ediff-util)) (boundp (quote ediff-window-setup-function))) (eq ediff-window-setup-function (quote ediff-setup-windows-multiframe)))] ["Use a toolbar with Ediff control buffer" ediff-toggle-use-toolbar :style toggle :selected (if (featurep (quote ediff-tbar)) (ediff-use-toolbar-p))]))) (if (and (featurep (quote menubar)) (not (featurep (quote infodock))) (not (featurep (quote ediff-hook)))) (ediff-xemacs-init-menus))) ((featurep (quote menu-bar)) (defvar menu-bar-ediff-misc-menu (make-sparse-keymap "Ediff Miscellanea")) (fset (quote menu-bar-ediff-misc-menu) (symbol-value (quote menu-bar-ediff-misc-menu))) (defvar menu-bar-epatch-menu (make-sparse-keymap "Apply Patch")) (fset (quote menu-bar-epatch-menu) (symbol-value (quote menu-bar-epatch-menu))) (defvar menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu (make-sparse-keymap "Merge")) (fset (quote menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu) (symbol-value (quote menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu))) (defvar menu-bar-ediff-menu (make-sparse-keymap "Compare")) (fset (quote menu-bar-ediff-menu) (symbol-value (quote menu-bar-ediff-menu))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [window] (quote ("This Window and Next Window" . compare-windows))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-windows-linewise] (quote ("Windows Line-by-line..." . ediff-windows-linewise))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-windows-wordwise] (quote ("Windows Word-by-word..." . ediff-windows-wordwise))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [separator-ediff-windows] (quote ("--"))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-regions-linewise] (quote ("Regions Line-by-line..." . ediff-regions-linewise))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-regions-wordwise] (quote ("Regions Word-by-word..." . ediff-regions-wordwise))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [separator-ediff-regions] (quote ("--"))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-dir-revision] (quote ("Directory Revisions..." . ediff-directory-revisions))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-revision] (quote ("File with Revision..." . ediff-revision))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [separator-ediff-directories] (quote ("--"))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-directories3] (quote ("Three Directories..." . ediff-directories3))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-directories] (quote ("Two Directories..." . ediff-directories))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [separator-ediff-files] (quote ("--"))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-buffers3] (quote ("Three Buffers..." . ediff-buffers3))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-files3] (quote ("Three Files..." . ediff-files3))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-buffers] (quote ("Two Buffers..." . ediff-buffers))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-menu [ediff-files] (quote ("Two Files..." . ediff-files))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [ediff-merge-dir-revisions-with-ancestor] (quote ("Directory Revisions with Ancestor..." . ediff-merge-directory-revisions-with-ancestor))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [ediff-merge-dir-revisions] (quote ("Directory Revisions..." . ediff-merge-directory-revisions))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [ediff-merge-revisions-with-ancestor] (quote ("Revisions with Ancestor..." . ediff-merge-revisions-with-ancestor))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [ediff-merge-revisions] (quote ("Revisions..." . ediff-merge-revisions))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [separator-ediff-merge] (quote ("--"))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [ediff-merge-directories-with-ancestor] (quote ("Directories with Ancestor..." . ediff-merge-directories-with-ancestor))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [ediff-merge-directories] (quote ("Directories..." . ediff-merge-directories))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [separator-ediff-merge-dirs] (quote ("--"))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [ediff-merge-buffers-with-ancestor] (quote ("Buffers with Ancestor..." . ediff-merge-buffers-with-ancestor))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [ediff-merge-buffers] (quote ("Buffers..." . ediff-merge-buffers))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor] (quote ("Files with Ancestor..." . ediff-merge-files-with-ancestor))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-merge-menu [ediff-merge-files] (quote ("Files..." . ediff-merge-files))) (define-key menu-bar-epatch-menu [ediff-patch-buffer] (quote ("To a Buffer..." . ediff-patch-buffer))) (define-key menu-bar-epatch-menu [ediff-patch-file] (quote ("To a File..." . ediff-patch-file))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-misc-menu [emultiframe] (quote ("Toggle use of separate control buffer frame..." . ediff-toggle-multiframe))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-misc-menu [eregistry] (quote ("List Ediff Sessions..." . ediff-show-registry))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-misc-menu [ediff-cust] (quote ("Customize Ediff..." . ediff-customize))) (define-key menu-bar-ediff-misc-menu [ediff-doc] (quote ("Ediff Manual..." . ediff-documentation)))))
4943
4944 ;;;***
4945 \f
4946 ;;;### (autoloads (ediff-show-registry) "ediff-mult" "ediff-mult.el"
4947 ;;;;;; (14398 37488))
4948 ;;; Generated autoloads from ediff-mult.el
4949
4950 (autoload (quote ediff-show-registry) "ediff-mult" "\
4951 Display Ediff's registry." t nil)
4952
4953 (defalias (quote eregistry) (quote ediff-show-registry))
4954
4955 ;;;***
4956 \f
4957 ;;;### (autoloads (ediff-toggle-use-toolbar ediff-toggle-multiframe)
4958 ;;;;;; "ediff-util" "ediff-util.el" (14367 2134))
4959 ;;; Generated autoloads from ediff-util.el
4960
4961 (autoload (quote ediff-toggle-multiframe) "ediff-util" "\
4962 Switch from multiframe display to single-frame display and back.
4963 To change the default, set the variable `ediff-window-setup-function',
4964 which see." t nil)
4965
4966 (autoload (quote ediff-toggle-use-toolbar) "ediff-util" "\
4967 Enable or disable Ediff toolbar.
4968 Works only in versions of Emacs that support toolbars.
4969 To change the default, set the variable `ediff-use-toolbar-p', which see." t nil)
4970
4971 ;;;***
4972 \f
4973 ;;;### (autoloads (format-kbd-macro read-kbd-macro edit-named-kbd-macro
4974 ;;;;;; edit-last-kbd-macro edit-kbd-macro) "edmacro" "edmacro.el"
4975 ;;;;;; (13957 59893))
4976 ;;; Generated autoloads from edmacro.el
4977 (define-key ctl-x-map "\C-k" 'edit-kbd-macro)
4978
4979 (defvar edmacro-eight-bits nil "\
4980 *Non-nil if edit-kbd-macro should leave 8-bit characters intact.
4981 Default nil means to write characters above \\177 in octal notation.")
4982
4983 (autoload (quote edit-kbd-macro) "edmacro" "\
4984 Edit a keyboard macro.
4985 At the prompt, type any key sequence which is bound to a keyboard macro.
4986 Or, type `C-x e' or RET to edit the last keyboard macro, `C-h l' to edit
4987 the last 100 keystrokes as a keyboard macro, or `M-x' to edit a macro by
4988 its command name.
4989 With a prefix argument, format the macro in a more concise way." t nil)
4990
4991 (autoload (quote edit-last-kbd-macro) "edmacro" "\
4992 Edit the most recently defined keyboard macro." t nil)
4993
4994 (autoload (quote edit-named-kbd-macro) "edmacro" "\
4995 Edit a keyboard macro which has been given a name by `name-last-kbd-macro'." t nil)
4996
4997 (autoload (quote read-kbd-macro) "edmacro" "\
4998 Read the region as a keyboard macro definition.
4999 The region is interpreted as spelled-out keystrokes, e.g., \"M-x abc RET\".
5000 See documentation for `edmacro-mode' for details.
5001 Leading/trailing \"C-x (\" and \"C-x )\" in the text are allowed and ignored.
5002 The resulting macro is installed as the \"current\" keyboard macro.
5003
5004 In Lisp, may also be called with a single STRING argument in which case
5005 the result is returned rather than being installed as the current macro.
5006 The result will be a string if possible, otherwise an event vector.
5007 Second argument NEED-VECTOR means to return an event vector always." t nil)
5008
5009 (autoload (quote format-kbd-macro) "edmacro" "\
5010 Return the keyboard macro MACRO as a human-readable string.
5011 This string is suitable for passing to `read-kbd-macro'.
5012 Second argument VERBOSE means to put one command per line with comments.
5013 If VERBOSE is `1', put everything on one line. If VERBOSE is omitted
5014 or nil, use a compact 80-column format." nil nil)
5015
5016 ;;;***
5017 \f
5018 ;;;### (autoloads (edt-emulation-on) "edt" "emulation/edt.el" (13271
5019 ;;;;;; 33724))
5020 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/edt.el
5021
5022 (autoload (quote edt-emulation-on) "edt" "\
5023 Turn on EDT Emulation." t nil)
5024
5025 ;;;***
5026 \f
5027 ;;;### (autoloads (electric-helpify with-electric-help) "ehelp" "ehelp.el"
5028 ;;;;;; (13116 19762))
5029 ;;; Generated autoloads from ehelp.el
5030
5031 (autoload (quote with-electric-help) "ehelp" "\
5032 Pop up an \"electric\" help buffer.
5033 The arguments are THUNK &optional BUFFER NOERASE MINHEIGHT.
5034 THUNK is a function of no arguments which is called to initialize the
5035 contents of BUFFER. BUFFER defaults to `*Help*'. BUFFER will be
5036 erased before THUNK is called unless NOERASE is non-nil. THUNK will
5037 be called while BUFFER is current and with `standard-output' bound to
5038 the buffer specified by BUFFER.
5039
5040 If THUNK returns nil, we display BUFFER starting at the top, and
5041 shrink the window to fit. If THUNK returns non-nil, we don't do those things.
5042
5043 After THUNK has been called, this function \"electrically\" pops up a window
5044 in which BUFFER is displayed and allows the user to scroll through that buffer
5045 in electric-help-mode. The window's height will be at least MINHEIGHT if
5046 this value is non-nil.
5047
5048 If THUNK returns nil, we display BUFFER starting at the top, and
5049 shrink the window to fit. If THUNK returns non-nil, we don't do those
5050 things.
5051
5052 When the user exits (with `electric-help-exit', or otherwise) the help
5053 buffer's window disappears (i.e., we use `save-window-excursion')
5054 BUFFER is put into `default-major-mode' (or `fundamental-mode') when we exit." nil nil)
5055
5056 (autoload (quote electric-helpify) "ehelp" nil nil nil)
5057
5058 ;;;***
5059 \f
5060 ;;;### (autoloads (turn-on-eldoc-mode eldoc-mode eldoc-mode) "eldoc"
5061 ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/eldoc.el" (13881 39947))
5062 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/eldoc.el
5063
5064 (defvar eldoc-mode nil "\
5065 *If non-nil, show the defined parameters for the elisp function near point.
5066
5067 For the emacs lisp function at the beginning of the sexp which point is
5068 within, show the defined parameters for the function in the echo area.
5069 This information is extracted directly from the function or macro if it is
5070 in pure lisp. If the emacs function is a subr, the parameters are obtained
5071 from the documentation string if possible.
5072
5073 If point is over a documented variable, print that variable's docstring
5074 instead.
5075
5076 This variable is buffer-local.")
5077
5078 (autoload (quote eldoc-mode) "eldoc" "\
5079 *Enable or disable eldoc mode.
5080 See documentation for the variable of the same name for more details.
5081
5082 If called interactively with no prefix argument, toggle current condition
5083 of the mode.
5084 If called with a positive or negative prefix argument, enable or disable
5085 the mode, respectively." t nil)
5086
5087 (autoload (quote turn-on-eldoc-mode) "eldoc" "\
5088 Unequivocally turn on eldoc-mode (see variable documentation)." t nil)
5089
5090 ;;;***
5091 \f
5092 ;;;### (autoloads (elide-head) "elide-head" "elide-head.el" (14460
5093 ;;;;;; 38616))
5094 ;;; Generated autoloads from elide-head.el
5095
5096 (autoload (quote elide-head) "elide-head" "\
5097 Hide header material in buffer according to `elide-head-headers-to-hide'.
5098
5099 The header is made invisible with an overlay. With a prefix arg, show
5100 an elided material again.
5101
5102 This is suitable as an entry on `find-file-hooks' or appropriate mode hooks." t nil)
5103
5104 ;;;***
5105 \f
5106 ;;;### (autoloads (elint-initialize) "elint" "emacs-lisp/elint.el"
5107 ;;;;;; (13363 2909))
5108 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/elint.el
5109
5110 (autoload (quote elint-initialize) "elint" "\
5111 Initialize elint." t nil)
5112
5113 ;;;***
5114 \f
5115 ;;;### (autoloads (elp-submit-bug-report elp-results elp-instrument-package
5116 ;;;;;; elp-instrument-list elp-restore-function elp-instrument-function)
5117 ;;;;;; "elp" "emacs-lisp/elp.el" (13578 6553))
5118 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/elp.el
5119
5120 (autoload (quote elp-instrument-function) "elp" "\
5121 Instrument FUNSYM for profiling.
5122 FUNSYM must be a symbol of a defined function." t nil)
5123
5124 (autoload (quote elp-restore-function) "elp" "\
5125 Restore an instrumented function to its original definition.
5126 Argument FUNSYM is the symbol of a defined function." t nil)
5127
5128 (autoload (quote elp-instrument-list) "elp" "\
5129 Instrument for profiling, all functions in `elp-function-list'.
5130 Use optional LIST if provided instead." t nil)
5131
5132 (autoload (quote elp-instrument-package) "elp" "\
5133 Instrument for profiling, all functions which start with PREFIX.
5134 For example, to instrument all ELP functions, do the following:
5135
5136 \\[elp-instrument-package] RET elp- RET" t nil)
5137
5138 (autoload (quote elp-results) "elp" "\
5139 Display current profiling results.
5140 If `elp-reset-after-results' is non-nil, then current profiling
5141 information for all instrumented functions are reset after results are
5142 displayed." t nil)
5143
5144 (autoload (quote elp-submit-bug-report) "elp" "\
5145 Submit via mail, a bug report on elp." t nil)
5146
5147 ;;;***
5148 \f
5149 ;;;### (autoloads (report-emacs-bug) "emacsbug" "mail/emacsbug.el"
5150 ;;;;;; (13649 21996))
5151 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/emacsbug.el
5152
5153 (autoload (quote report-emacs-bug) "emacsbug" "\
5154 Report a bug in GNU Emacs.
5155 Prompts for bug subject. Leaves you in a mail buffer." t nil)
5156
5157 ;;;***
5158 \f
5159 ;;;### (autoloads (emerge-merge-directories emerge-revisions-with-ancestor
5160 ;;;;;; emerge-revisions emerge-files-with-ancestor-remote emerge-files-remote
5161 ;;;;;; emerge-files-with-ancestor-command emerge-files-command emerge-buffers-with-ancestor
5162 ;;;;;; emerge-buffers emerge-files-with-ancestor emerge-files) "emerge"
5163 ;;;;;; "emerge.el" (14345 52903))
5164 ;;; Generated autoloads from emerge.el
5165
5166 (defvar menu-bar-emerge-menu (make-sparse-keymap "Emerge"))
5167
5168 (fset (quote menu-bar-emerge-menu) (symbol-value (quote menu-bar-emerge-menu)))
5169
5170 (define-key menu-bar-emerge-menu [emerge-merge-directories] (quote ("Merge Directories..." . emerge-merge-directories)))
5171
5172 (define-key menu-bar-emerge-menu [emerge-revisions-with-ancestor] (quote ("Revisions with Ancestor..." . emerge-revisions-with-ancestor)))
5173
5174 (define-key menu-bar-emerge-menu [emerge-revisions] (quote ("Revisions..." . emerge-revisions)))
5175
5176 (define-key menu-bar-emerge-menu [emerge-files-with-ancestor] (quote ("Files with Ancestor..." . emerge-files-with-ancestor)))
5177
5178 (define-key menu-bar-emerge-menu [emerge-files] (quote ("Files..." . emerge-files)))
5179
5180 (define-key menu-bar-emerge-menu [emerge-buffers-with-ancestor] (quote ("Buffers with Ancestor..." . emerge-buffers-with-ancestor)))
5181
5182 (define-key menu-bar-emerge-menu [emerge-buffers] (quote ("Buffers..." . emerge-buffers)))
5183
5184 (autoload (quote emerge-files) "emerge" "\
5185 Run Emerge on two files." t nil)
5186
5187 (autoload (quote emerge-files-with-ancestor) "emerge" "\
5188 Run Emerge on two files, giving another file as the ancestor." t nil)
5189
5190 (autoload (quote emerge-buffers) "emerge" "\
5191 Run Emerge on two buffers." t nil)
5192
5193 (autoload (quote emerge-buffers-with-ancestor) "emerge" "\
5194 Run Emerge on two buffers, giving another buffer as the ancestor." t nil)
5195
5196 (autoload (quote emerge-files-command) "emerge" nil nil nil)
5197
5198 (autoload (quote emerge-files-with-ancestor-command) "emerge" nil nil nil)
5199
5200 (autoload (quote emerge-files-remote) "emerge" nil nil nil)
5201
5202 (autoload (quote emerge-files-with-ancestor-remote) "emerge" nil nil nil)
5203
5204 (autoload (quote emerge-revisions) "emerge" "\
5205 Emerge two RCS revisions of a file." t nil)
5206
5207 (autoload (quote emerge-revisions-with-ancestor) "emerge" "\
5208 Emerge two RCS revisions of a file, with another revision as ancestor." t nil)
5209
5210 (autoload (quote emerge-merge-directories) "emerge" nil t nil)
5211
5212 ;;;***
5213 \f
5214 ;;;### (autoloads (encoded-kbd-mode) "encoded-kb" "international/encoded-kb.el"
5215 ;;;;;; (14232 6060))
5216 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/encoded-kb.el
5217
5218 (autoload (quote encoded-kbd-mode) "encoded-kb" "\
5219 Toggle Encoded-kbd minor mode.
5220 With arg, turn Encoded-kbd mode on if and only if arg is positive.
5221
5222 You should not turn this mode on manually, instead use the command
5223 \\[set-keyboard-coding-system] which turns on or off this mode
5224 automatically.
5225
5226 In Encoded-kbd mode, a text sent from keyboard is accepted
5227 as a multilingual text encoded in a coding system set by
5228 \\[set-keyboard-coding-system]." nil nil)
5229
5230 ;;;***
5231 \f
5232 ;;;### (autoloads (enriched-decode enriched-encode enriched-mode)
5233 ;;;;;; "enriched" "enriched.el" (14263 35403))
5234 ;;; Generated autoloads from enriched.el
5235
5236 (autoload (quote enriched-mode) "enriched" "\
5237 Minor mode for editing text/enriched files.
5238 These are files with embedded formatting information in the MIME standard
5239 text/enriched format.
5240 Turning the mode on runs `enriched-mode-hook'.
5241
5242 More information about Enriched mode is available in the file
5243 etc/enriched.doc in the Emacs distribution directory.
5244
5245 Commands:
5246
5247 \\<enriched-mode-map>\\{enriched-mode-map}" t nil)
5248
5249 (autoload (quote enriched-encode) "enriched" nil nil nil)
5250
5251 (autoload (quote enriched-decode) "enriched" nil nil nil)
5252
5253 ;;;***
5254 \f
5255 ;;;### (autoloads (setenv) "env" "env.el" (13582 12516))
5256 ;;; Generated autoloads from env.el
5257
5258 (autoload (quote setenv) "env" "\
5259 Set the value of the environment variable named VARIABLE to VALUE.
5260 VARIABLE should be a string. VALUE is optional; if not provided or is
5261 `nil', the environment variable VARIABLE will be removed.
5262
5263 Interactively, a prefix argument means to unset the variable.
5264 Interactively, the current value (if any) of the variable
5265 appears at the front of the history list when you type in the new value.
5266
5267 This function works by modifying `process-environment'." t nil)
5268
5269 ;;;***
5270 \f
5271 ;;;### (autoloads (complete-tag select-tags-table tags-apropos list-tags
5272 ;;;;;; tags-query-replace tags-search tags-loop-continue next-file
5273 ;;;;;; pop-tag-mark find-tag-regexp find-tag-other-frame find-tag-other-window
5274 ;;;;;; find-tag find-tag-noselect tags-table-files visit-tags-table
5275 ;;;;;; find-tag-default-function find-tag-hook tags-add-tables tags-table-list)
5276 ;;;;;; "etags" "progmodes/etags.el" (14411 46114))
5277 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/etags.el
5278
5279 (defvar tags-file-name nil "\
5280 *File name of tags table.
5281 To switch to a new tags table, setting this variable is sufficient.
5282 If you set this variable, do not also set `tags-table-list'.
5283 Use the `etags' program to make a tags table file.")
5284 (put 'tags-file-name 'variable-interactive "fVisit tags table: ")
5285
5286 (defvar tags-table-list nil "\
5287 *List of file names of tags tables to search.
5288 An element that is a directory means the file \"TAGS\" in that directory.
5289 To switch to a new list of tags tables, setting this variable is sufficient.
5290 If you set this variable, do not also set `tags-file-name'.
5291 Use the `etags' program to make a tags table file.")
5292
5293 (defvar tags-add-tables (quote ask-user) "\
5294 *Control whether to add a new tags table to the current list.
5295 t means do; nil means don't (always start a new list).
5296 Any other value means ask the user whether to add a new tags table
5297 to the current list (as opposed to starting a new list).")
5298
5299 (defvar find-tag-hook nil "\
5300 *Hook to be run by \\[find-tag] after finding a tag. See `run-hooks'.
5301 The value in the buffer in which \\[find-tag] is done is used,
5302 not the value in the buffer \\[find-tag] goes to.")
5303
5304 (defvar find-tag-default-function nil "\
5305 *A function of no arguments used by \\[find-tag] to pick a default tag.
5306 If nil, and the symbol that is the value of `major-mode'
5307 has a `find-tag-default-function' property (see `put'), that is used.
5308 Otherwise, `find-tag-default' is used.")
5309
5310 (autoload (quote visit-tags-table) "etags" "\
5311 Tell tags commands to use tags table file FILE.
5312 FILE should be the name of a file created with the `etags' program.
5313 A directory name is ok too; it means file TAGS in that directory.
5314
5315 Normally \\[visit-tags-table] sets the global value of `tags-file-name'.
5316 With a prefix arg, set the buffer-local value instead.
5317 When you find a tag with \\[find-tag], the buffer it finds the tag
5318 in is given a local value of this variable which is the name of the tags
5319 file the tag was in." t nil)
5320
5321 (autoload (quote tags-table-files) "etags" "\
5322 Return a list of files in the current tags table.
5323 Assumes the tags table is the current buffer. The file names are returned
5324 as they appeared in the `etags' command that created the table, usually
5325 without directory names." nil nil)
5326
5327 (autoload (quote find-tag-noselect) "etags" "\
5328 Find tag (in current tags table) whose name contains TAGNAME.
5329 Returns the buffer containing the tag's definition and moves its point there,
5330 but does not select the buffer.
5331 The default for TAGNAME is the expression in the buffer near point.
5332
5333 If second arg NEXT-P is t (interactively, with prefix arg), search for
5334 another tag that matches the last tagname or regexp used. When there are
5335 multiple matches for a tag, more exact matches are found first. If NEXT-P
5336 is the atom `-' (interactively, with prefix arg that is a negative number
5337 or just \\[negative-argument]), pop back to the previous tag gone to.
5338
5339 If third arg REGEXP-P is non-nil, treat TAGNAME as a regexp.
5340
5341 A marker representing the point when this command is onvoked is pushed
5342 onto a ring and may be popped back to with \\[pop-tag-mark].
5343 Contrast this with the ring of marks gone to by the command.
5344
5345 See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'." t nil)
5346
5347 (autoload (quote find-tag) "etags" "\
5348 Find tag (in current tags table) whose name contains TAGNAME.
5349 Select the buffer containing the tag's definition, and move point there.
5350 The default for TAGNAME is the expression in the buffer around or before point.
5351
5352 If second arg NEXT-P is t (interactively, with prefix arg), search for
5353 another tag that matches the last tagname or regexp used. When there are
5354 multiple matches for a tag, more exact matches are found first. If NEXT-P
5355 is the atom `-' (interactively, with prefix arg that is a negative number
5356 or just \\[negative-argument]), pop back to the previous tag gone to.
5357
5358 If third arg REGEXP-P is non-nil, treat TAGNAME as a regexp.
5359
5360 A marker representing the point when this command is onvoked is pushed
5361 onto a ring and may be popped back to with \\[pop-tag-mark].
5362 Contrast this with the ring of marks gone to by the command.
5363
5364 See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'." t nil)
5365 (define-key esc-map "." 'find-tag)
5366
5367 (autoload (quote find-tag-other-window) "etags" "\
5368 Find tag (in current tags table) whose name contains TAGNAME.
5369 Select the buffer containing the tag's definition in another window, and
5370 move point there. The default for TAGNAME is the expression in the buffer
5371 around or before point.
5372
5373 If second arg NEXT-P is t (interactively, with prefix arg), search for
5374 another tag that matches the last tagname or regexp used. When there are
5375 multiple matches for a tag, more exact matches are found first. If NEXT-P
5376 is negative (interactively, with prefix arg that is a negative number or
5377 just \\[negative-argument]), pop back to the previous tag gone to.
5378
5379 If third arg REGEXP-P is non-nil, treat TAGNAME as a regexp.
5380
5381 A marker representing the point when this command is onvoked is pushed
5382 onto a ring and may be popped back to with \\[pop-tag-mark].
5383 Contrast this with the ring of marks gone to by the command.
5384
5385 See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'." t nil)
5386 (define-key ctl-x-4-map "." 'find-tag-other-window)
5387
5388 (autoload (quote find-tag-other-frame) "etags" "\
5389 Find tag (in current tags table) whose name contains TAGNAME.
5390 Select the buffer containing the tag's definition in another frame, and
5391 move point there. The default for TAGNAME is the expression in the buffer
5392 around or before point.
5393
5394 If second arg NEXT-P is t (interactively, with prefix arg), search for
5395 another tag that matches the last tagname or regexp used. When there are
5396 multiple matches for a tag, more exact matches are found first. If NEXT-P
5397 is negative (interactively, with prefix arg that is a negative number or
5398 just \\[negative-argument]), pop back to the previous tag gone to.
5399
5400 If third arg REGEXP-P is non-nil, treat TAGNAME as a regexp.
5401
5402 A marker representing the point when this command is onvoked is pushed
5403 onto a ring and may be popped back to with \\[pop-tag-mark].
5404 Contrast this with the ring of marks gone to by the command.
5405
5406 See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'." t nil)
5407 (define-key ctl-x-5-map "." 'find-tag-other-frame)
5408
5409 (autoload (quote find-tag-regexp) "etags" "\
5410 Find tag (in current tags table) whose name matches REGEXP.
5411 Select the buffer containing the tag's definition and move point there.
5412
5413 If second arg NEXT-P is t (interactively, with prefix arg), search for
5414 another tag that matches the last tagname or regexp used. When there are
5415 multiple matches for a tag, more exact matches are found first. If NEXT-P
5416 is negative (interactively, with prefix arg that is a negative number or
5417 just \\[negative-argument]), pop back to the previous tag gone to.
5418
5419 If third arg OTHER-WINDOW is non-nil, select the buffer in another window.
5420
5421 A marker representing the point when this command is onvoked is pushed
5422 onto a ring and may be popped back to with \\[pop-tag-mark].
5423 Contrast this with the ring of marks gone to by the command.
5424
5425 See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'." t nil)
5426 (define-key esc-map [?\C-.] 'find-tag-regexp)
5427 (define-key esc-map "*" 'pop-tag-mark)
5428
5429 (autoload (quote pop-tag-mark) "etags" "\
5430 Pop back to where \\[find-tag] was last invoked.
5431
5432 This is distinct from invoking \\[find-tag] with a negative argument
5433 since that pops a stack of markers at which tags were found, not from
5434 where they were found." t nil)
5435
5436 (autoload (quote next-file) "etags" "\
5437 Select next file among files in current tags table.
5438
5439 A first argument of t (prefix arg, if interactive) initializes to the
5440 beginning of the list of files in the tags table. If the argument is
5441 neither nil nor t, it is evalled to initialize the list of files.
5442
5443 Non-nil second argument NOVISIT means use a temporary buffer
5444 to save time and avoid uninteresting warnings.
5445
5446 Value is nil if the file was already visited;
5447 if the file was newly read in, the value is the filename." t nil)
5448
5449 (autoload (quote tags-loop-continue) "etags" "\
5450 Continue last \\[tags-search] or \\[tags-query-replace] command.
5451 Used noninteractively with non-nil argument to begin such a command (the
5452 argument is passed to `next-file', which see).
5453
5454 Two variables control the processing we do on each file: the value of
5455 `tags-loop-scan' is a form to be executed on each file to see if it is
5456 interesting (it returns non-nil if so) and `tags-loop-operate' is a form to
5457 evaluate to operate on an interesting file. If the latter evaluates to
5458 nil, we exit; otherwise we scan the next file." t nil)
5459 (define-key esc-map "," 'tags-loop-continue)
5460
5461 (autoload (quote tags-search) "etags" "\
5462 Search through all files listed in tags table for match for REGEXP.
5463 Stops when a match is found.
5464 To continue searching for next match, use command \\[tags-loop-continue].
5465
5466 See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'." t nil)
5467
5468 (autoload (quote tags-query-replace) "etags" "\
5469 Query-replace-regexp FROM with TO through all files listed in tags table.
5470 Third arg DELIMITED (prefix arg) means replace only word-delimited matches.
5471 If you exit (\\[keyboard-quit] or ESC), you can resume the query-replace
5472 with the command \\[tags-loop-continue].
5473
5474 See documentation of variable `tags-file-name'." t nil)
5475
5476 (autoload (quote list-tags) "etags" "\
5477 Display list of tags in file FILE.
5478 This searches only the first table in the list, and no included tables.
5479 FILE should be as it appeared in the `etags' command, usually without a
5480 directory specification." t nil)
5481
5482 (autoload (quote tags-apropos) "etags" "\
5483 Display list of all tags in tags table REGEXP matches." t nil)
5484
5485 (autoload (quote select-tags-table) "etags" "\
5486 Select a tags table file from a menu of those you have already used.
5487 The list of tags tables to select from is stored in `tags-table-set-list';
5488 see the doc of that variable if you want to add names to the list." t nil)
5489
5490 (autoload (quote complete-tag) "etags" "\
5491 Perform tags completion on the text around point.
5492 Completes to the set of names listed in the current tags table.
5493 The string to complete is chosen in the same way as the default
5494 for \\[find-tag] (which see)." t nil)
5495
5496 ;;;***
5497 \f
5498 ;;;### (autoloads (ethio-write-file ethio-find-file ethio-java-to-fidel-buffer
5499 ;;;;;; ethio-fidel-to-java-buffer ethio-tex-to-fidel-buffer ethio-fidel-to-tex-buffer
5500 ;;;;;; ethio-input-special-character ethio-replace-space ethio-modify-vowel
5501 ;;;;;; ethio-fidel-to-sera-marker ethio-fidel-to-sera-mail ethio-fidel-to-sera-mail-or-marker
5502 ;;;;;; ethio-fidel-to-sera-buffer ethio-fidel-to-sera-region ethio-sera-to-fidel-marker
5503 ;;;;;; ethio-sera-to-fidel-mail ethio-sera-to-fidel-mail-or-marker
5504 ;;;;;; ethio-sera-to-fidel-buffer ethio-sera-to-fidel-region setup-ethiopic-environment-internal
5505 ;;;;;; setup-ethiopic-environment) "ethio-util" "language/ethio-util.el"
5506 ;;;;;; (14180 44101))
5507 ;;; Generated autoloads from language/ethio-util.el
5508
5509 (autoload (quote setup-ethiopic-environment) "ethio-util" "\
5510 Setup multilingual environment for Ethiopic." nil nil)
5511
5512 (autoload (quote setup-ethiopic-environment-internal) "ethio-util" nil nil nil)
5513
5514 (autoload (quote ethio-sera-to-fidel-region) "ethio-util" "\
5515 Convert the characters in region from SERA to FIDEL.
5516 The variable `ethio-primary-language' specifies the primary language
5517 and `ethio-secondary-language' specifies the secondary.
5518
5519 If the 3rd parameter SECONDARY is given and non-nil, assume the region
5520 begins begins with the secondary language; otherwise with the primary
5521 language.
5522
5523 If the 4th parameter FORCE is given and non-nil, perform conversion
5524 even if the buffer is read-only.
5525
5526 See also the descriptions of the variables
5527 `ethio-use-colon-for-colon' and
5528 `ethio-use-three-dot-question'." t nil)
5529
5530 (autoload (quote ethio-sera-to-fidel-buffer) "ethio-util" "\
5531 Convert the current buffer from SERA to FIDEL.
5532
5533 The variable `ethio-primary-language' specifies the primary
5534 language and `ethio-secondary-language' specifies the secondary.
5535
5536 If the 1st optional parameter SECONDARY is non-nil, assume the buffer
5537 begins with the secondary language; otherwise with the primary
5538 language.
5539
5540 If the 2nd optional parametr FORCE is non-nil, perform conversion even if the
5541 buffer is read-only.
5542
5543 See also the descriptions of the variables
5544 `ethio-use-colon-for-colon' and
5545 `ethio-use-three-dot-question'." t nil)
5546
5547 (autoload (quote ethio-sera-to-fidel-mail-or-marker) "ethio-util" "\
5548 Execute ethio-sera-to-fidel-mail or ethio-sera-to-fidel-marker depending on the current major mode.
5549 If in rmail-mode or in mail-mode, execute the former; otherwise latter." t nil)
5550
5551 (autoload (quote ethio-sera-to-fidel-mail) "ethio-util" "\
5552 Convert SERA to FIDEL to read/write mail and news.
5553
5554 If the buffer contains the markers \"<sera>\" and \"</sera>\",
5555 convert the segments between them into FIDEL.
5556
5557 If invoked interactively and there is no marker, convert the subject field
5558 and the body into FIDEL using `ethio-sera-to-fidel-region'." t nil)
5559
5560 (autoload (quote ethio-sera-to-fidel-marker) "ethio-util" "\
5561 Convert the regions surrounded by \"<sera>\" and \"</sera>\" from SERA to FIDEL.
5562 Assume that each region begins with `ethio-primary-language'.
5563 The markers \"<sera>\" and \"</sera>\" themselves are not deleted." t nil)
5564
5565 (autoload (quote ethio-fidel-to-sera-region) "ethio-util" "\
5566 Replace all the FIDEL characters in the region to the SERA format.
5567 The variable `ethio-primary-language' specifies the primary
5568 language and `ethio-secondary-language' specifies the secondary.
5569
5570 If the 3dr parameter SECONDARY is given and non-nil, try to convert
5571 the region so that it begins in the secondary language; otherwise with
5572 the primary language.
5573
5574 If the 4th parameter FORCE is given and non-nil, convert even if the
5575 buffer is read-only.
5576
5577 See also the descriptions of the variables
5578 `ethio-use-colon-for-colon', `ethio-use-three-dot-question',
5579 `ethio-quote-vowel-always' and `ethio-numeric-reduction'." t nil)
5580
5581 (autoload (quote ethio-fidel-to-sera-buffer) "ethio-util" "\
5582 Replace all the FIDEL characters in the current buffer to the SERA format.
5583 The variable `ethio-primary-language' specifies the primary
5584 language and `ethio-secondary-language' specifies the secondary.
5585
5586 If the 1st optional parameter SECONDARY is non-nil, try to convert the
5587 region so that it begins in the secondary language; otherwise with the
5588 primary language.
5589
5590 If the 2nd optional parameter FORCE is non-nil, convert even if the
5591 buffer is read-only.
5592
5593 See also the descriptions of the variables
5594 `ethio-use-colon-for-colon', `ethio-use-three-dot-question',
5595 `ethio-quote-vowel-always' and `ethio-numeric-reduction'." t nil)
5596
5597 (autoload (quote ethio-fidel-to-sera-mail-or-marker) "ethio-util" "\
5598 Execute ethio-fidel-to-sera-mail or ethio-fidel-to-sera-marker depending on the current major mode.
5599 If in rmail-mode or in mail-mode, execute the former; otherwise latter." t nil)
5600
5601 (autoload (quote ethio-fidel-to-sera-mail) "ethio-util" "\
5602 Convert FIDEL to SERA to read/write mail and news.
5603
5604 If the body contains at least one Ethiopic character,
5605 1) insert the string \"<sera>\" at the beginning of the body,
5606 2) insert \"</sera>\" at the end of the body, and
5607 3) convert the body into SERA.
5608
5609 The very same procedure applies to the subject field, too." t nil)
5610
5611 (autoload (quote ethio-fidel-to-sera-marker) "ethio-util" "\
5612 Convert the regions surrounded by \"<sera>\" and \"</sera>\" from FIDEL to SERA.
5613 The markers \"<sera>\" and \"</sera>\" themselves are not deleted." t nil)
5614
5615 (autoload (quote ethio-modify-vowel) "ethio-util" "\
5616 Modify the vowel of the FIDEL that is under the cursor." t nil)
5617
5618 (autoload (quote ethio-replace-space) "ethio-util" "\
5619 Replace ASCII spaces with Ethiopic word separators in the region.
5620
5621 In the specified region, replace word separators surrounded by two
5622 Ethiopic characters, depending on the first parameter CH, which should
5623 be 1, 2, or 3.
5624
5625 If CH = 1, word separator will be replaced with an ASCII space.
5626 If CH = 2, with two ASCII spaces.
5627 If CH = 3, with the Ethiopic colon-like word separator.
5628
5629 The second and third parameters BEGIN and END specify the region." t nil)
5630
5631 (autoload (quote ethio-input-special-character) "ethio-util" "\
5632 Allow the user to input special characters." t nil)
5633
5634 (autoload (quote ethio-fidel-to-tex-buffer) "ethio-util" "\
5635 Convert each fidel characters in the current buffer into a fidel-tex command.
5636 Each command is always surrounded by braces." t nil)
5637
5638 (autoload (quote ethio-tex-to-fidel-buffer) "ethio-util" "\
5639 Convert fidel-tex commands in the current buffer into fidel chars." t nil)
5640
5641 (autoload (quote ethio-fidel-to-java-buffer) "ethio-util" "\
5642 Convert Ethiopic characters into the Java escape sequences.
5643
5644 Each escape sequence is of the form uXXXX, where XXXX is the
5645 character's codepoint (in hex) in Unicode.
5646
5647 If `ethio-java-save-lowercase' is non-nil, use [0-9a-f].
5648 Otherwise, [0-9A-F]." nil nil)
5649
5650 (autoload (quote ethio-java-to-fidel-buffer) "ethio-util" "\
5651 Convert the Java escape sequences into corresponding Ethiopic characters." nil nil)
5652
5653 (autoload (quote ethio-find-file) "ethio-util" "\
5654 Transcribe file content into Ethiopic dependig on filename suffix." nil nil)
5655
5656 (autoload (quote ethio-write-file) "ethio-util" "\
5657 Transcribe Ethiopic characters in ASCII depending on the file extension." nil nil)
5658
5659 ;;;***
5660 \f
5661 ;;;### (autoloads (eudc-load-eudc eudc-query-form eudc-expand-inline
5662 ;;;;;; eudc-get-phone eudc-get-email eudc-set-server) "eudc" "net/eudc.el"
5663 ;;;;;; (14463 3149))
5664 ;;; Generated autoloads from net/eudc.el
5665
5666 (autoload (quote eudc-set-server) "eudc" "\
5667 Set the directory server to SERVER using PROTOCOL.
5668 Unless NO-SAVE is non-nil, the server is saved as the default
5669 server for future sessions." t nil)
5670
5671 (autoload (quote eudc-get-email) "eudc" "\
5672 Get the email field of NAME from the directory server." t nil)
5673
5674 (autoload (quote eudc-get-phone) "eudc" "\
5675 Get the phone field of NAME from the directory server." t nil)
5676
5677 (autoload (quote eudc-expand-inline) "eudc" "\
5678 Query the directory server, and expand the query string before point.
5679 The query string consists of the buffer substring from the point back to
5680 the preceding comma, colon or beginning of line.
5681 The variable `eudc-inline-query-format' controls how to associate the
5682 individual inline query words with directory attribute names.
5683 After querying the server for the given string, the expansion specified by
5684 `eudc-inline-expansion-format' is inserted in the buffer at point.
5685 If REPLACE is non nil, then this expansion replaces the name in the buffer.
5686 `eudc-expansion-overwrites-query' being non nil inverts the meaning of REPLACE.
5687 Multiple servers can be tried with the same query until one finds a match,
5688 see `eudc-inline-expansion-servers'" t nil)
5689
5690 (autoload (quote eudc-query-form) "eudc" "\
5691 Display a form to query the directory server.
5692 If given a non-nil argument GET-FIELDS-FROM-SERVER, the function first
5693 queries the server for the existing fields and displays a corresponding form." t nil)
5694
5695 (autoload (quote eudc-load-eudc) "eudc" "\
5696 Load the Emacs Unified Directory Client.
5697 This does nothing except loading eudc by autoload side-effect." t nil)
5698
5699 (cond ((not (string-match "XEmacs" emacs-version)) (defvar eudc-tools-menu (make-sparse-keymap "Directory Search")) (fset (quote eudc-tools-menu) (symbol-value (quote eudc-tools-menu))) (define-key eudc-tools-menu [phone] (quote ("Get Phone" . eudc-get-phone))) (define-key eudc-tools-menu [email] (quote ("Get Email" . eudc-get-email))) (define-key eudc-tools-menu [separator-eudc-email] (quote ("--"))) (define-key eudc-tools-menu [expand-inline] (quote ("Expand Inline Query" . eudc-expand-inline))) (define-key eudc-tools-menu [query] (quote ("Query with Form" . eudc-query-form))) (define-key eudc-tools-menu [separator-eudc-query] (quote ("--"))) (define-key eudc-tools-menu [new] (quote ("New Server" . eudc-set-server))) (define-key eudc-tools-menu [load] (quote ("Load Hotlist of Servers" . eudc-load-eudc)))) (t (let ((menu (quote ("Directory Search" ["Load Hotlist of Servers" eudc-load-eudc t] ["New Server" eudc-set-server t] ["---" nil nil] ["Query with Form" eudc-query-form t] ["Expand Inline Query" eudc-expand-inline t] ["---" nil nil] ["Get Email" eudc-get-email t] ["Get Phone" eudc-get-phone t])))) (if (not (featurep (quote eudc-autoloads))) (if (string-match "XEmacs" emacs-version) (if (and (featurep (quote menubar)) (not (featurep (quote infodock)))) (add-submenu (quote ("Tools")) menu)) (require (quote easymenu)) (cond ((fboundp (quote easy-menu-add-item)) (easy-menu-add-item nil (quote ("tools")) (easy-menu-create-menu (car menu) (cdr menu)))) ((fboundp (quote easy-menu-create-keymaps)) (define-key global-map [menu-bar tools eudc] (cons "Directory Search" (easy-menu-create-keymaps "Directory Search" (cdr menu)))))))))))
5700
5701 ;;;***
5702 \f
5703 ;;;### (autoloads (eudc-display-jpeg-as-button eudc-display-jpeg-inline
5704 ;;;;;; eudc-display-sound eudc-display-url eudc-display-generic-binary)
5705 ;;;;;; "eudc-bob" "net/eudc-bob.el" (14461 51599))
5706 ;;; Generated autoloads from net/eudc-bob.el
5707
5708 (autoload (quote eudc-display-generic-binary) "eudc-bob" "\
5709 Display a button for unidentified binary DATA." nil nil)
5710
5711 (autoload (quote eudc-display-url) "eudc-bob" "\
5712 Display URL and make it clickable." nil nil)
5713
5714 (autoload (quote eudc-display-sound) "eudc-bob" "\
5715 Display a button to play the sound DATA." nil nil)
5716
5717 (autoload (quote eudc-display-jpeg-inline) "eudc-bob" "\
5718 Display the JPEG DATA inline at point if possible." nil nil)
5719
5720 (autoload (quote eudc-display-jpeg-as-button) "eudc-bob" "\
5721 Display a button for the JPEG DATA." nil nil)
5722
5723 ;;;***
5724 \f
5725 ;;;### (autoloads (eudc-try-bbdb-insert eudc-insert-record-at-point-into-bbdb)
5726 ;;;;;; "eudc-export" "net/eudc-export.el" (14460 58168))
5727 ;;; Generated autoloads from net/eudc-export.el
5728
5729 (autoload (quote eudc-insert-record-at-point-into-bbdb) "eudc-export" "\
5730 Insert record at point into the BBDB database.
5731 This function can only be called from a directory query result buffer." t nil)
5732
5733 (autoload (quote eudc-try-bbdb-insert) "eudc-export" "\
5734 Call `eudc-insert-record-at-point-into-bbdb' if on a record." t nil)
5735
5736 ;;;***
5737 \f
5738 ;;;### (autoloads (eudc-edit-hotlist) "eudc-hotlist" "net/eudc-hotlist.el"
5739 ;;;;;; (14460 58176))
5740 ;;; Generated autoloads from net/eudc-hotlist.el
5741
5742 (autoload (quote eudc-edit-hotlist) "eudc-hotlist" "\
5743 Edit the hotlist of directory servers in a specialized buffer." t nil)
5744
5745 ;;;***
5746 \f
5747 ;;;### (autoloads (executable-self-display executable-set-magic)
5748 ;;;;;; "executable" "progmodes/executable.el" (13940 33734))
5749 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/executable.el
5750
5751 (autoload (quote executable-set-magic) "executable" "\
5752 Set this buffer's interpreter to INTERPRETER with optional ARGUMENT.
5753 The variables `executable-magicless-file-regexp', `executable-prefix',
5754 `executable-insert', `executable-query' and `executable-chmod' control
5755 when and how magic numbers are inserted or replaced and scripts made
5756 executable." t nil)
5757
5758 (autoload (quote executable-self-display) "executable" "\
5759 Turn a text file into a self-displaying Un*x command.
5760 The magic number of such a command displays all lines but itself." t nil)
5761
5762 ;;;***
5763 \f
5764 ;;;### (autoloads (expand-jump-to-next-slot expand-jump-to-previous-slot
5765 ;;;;;; expand-add-abbrevs) "expand" "expand.el" (14443 18506))
5766 ;;; Generated autoloads from expand.el
5767
5768 (autoload (quote expand-add-abbrevs) "expand" "\
5769 Add a list of abbrev to abbrev table TABLE.
5770 ABBREVS is a list of abbrev definitions; each abbrev description entry
5771 has the form (ABBREV EXPANSION ARG).
5772
5773 ABBREV is the abbreviation to replace.
5774
5775 EXPANSION is the replacement string or a function which will make the
5776 expansion. For example you, could use the DMacros or skeleton packages
5777 to generate such functions.
5778
5779 ARG is an optional argument which can be a number or a list of
5780 numbers. If ARG is a number, point is placed ARG chars from the
5781 beginning of the expanded text.
5782
5783 If ARG is a list of numbers, point is placed according to the first
5784 member of the list, but you can visit the other specified positions
5785 cyclicaly with the functions `expand-jump-to-previous-slot' and
5786 `expand-jump-to-next-slot'.
5787
5788 If ARG is omitted, point is placed at the end of the expanded text." nil nil)
5789
5790 (autoload (quote expand-jump-to-previous-slot) "expand" "\
5791 Move the cursor to the previous slot in the last abbrev expansion.
5792 This is used only in conjunction with `expand-add-abbrevs'." t nil)
5793
5794 (autoload (quote expand-jump-to-next-slot) "expand" "\
5795 Move the cursor to the next slot in the last abbrev expansion.
5796 This is used only in conjunction with `expand-add-abbrevs'." t nil)
5797 (define-key ctl-x-map "ap" 'expand-jump-to-previous-slot)
5798 (define-key ctl-x-map "an" 'expand-jump-to-next-slot)
5799
5800 ;;;***
5801 \f
5802 ;;;### (autoloads (f90-mode) "f90" "progmodes/f90.el" (14398 36512))
5803 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/f90.el
5804
5805 (autoload (quote f90-mode) "f90" "\
5806 Major mode for editing Fortran 90 code in free format.
5807
5808 \\[f90-indent-new-line] corrects current indentation and creates new indented line.
5809 \\[f90-indent-line] indents the current line correctly.
5810 \\[f90-indent-subprogram] indents the current subprogram.
5811
5812 Type `? or `\\[help-command] to display a list of built-in abbrevs for F90 keywords.
5813
5814 Key definitions:
5815 \\{f90-mode-map}
5816
5817 Variables controlling indentation style and extra features:
5818
5819 f90-do-indent
5820 Extra indentation within do blocks. (default 3)
5821 f90-if-indent
5822 Extra indentation within if/select case/where/forall blocks. (default 3)
5823 f90-type-indent
5824 Extra indentation within type/interface/block-data blocks. (default 3)
5825 f90-program-indent
5826 Extra indentation within program/module/subroutine/function blocks.
5827 (default 2)
5828 f90-continuation-indent
5829 Extra indentation applied to continuation lines. (default 5)
5830 f90-comment-region
5831 String inserted by \\[f90-comment-region] at start of each line in
5832 region. (default \"!!!$\")
5833 f90-indented-comment-re
5834 Regexp determining the type of comment to be intended like code.
5835 (default \"!\")
5836 f90-directive-comment-re
5837 Regexp of comment-like directive like \"!HPF\\\\$\", not to be indented.
5838 (default \"!hpf\\\\$\")
5839 f90-break-delimiters
5840 Regexp holding list of delimiters at which lines may be broken.
5841 (default \"[-+*/><=,% \\t]\")
5842 f90-break-before-delimiters
5843 Non-nil causes `f90-do-auto-fill' to break lines before delimiters.
5844 (default t)
5845 f90-beginning-ampersand
5846 Automatic insertion of & at beginning of continuation lines. (default t)
5847 f90-smart-end
5848 From an END statement, check and fill the end using matching block start.
5849 Allowed values are 'blink, 'no-blink, and nil, which determine
5850 whether to blink the matching beginning.) (default 'blink)
5851 f90-auto-keyword-case
5852 Automatic change of case of keywords. (default nil)
5853 The possibilities are 'downcase-word, 'upcase-word, 'capitalize-word.
5854 f90-leave-line-no
5855 Do not left-justify line numbers. (default nil)
5856 f90-startup-message
5857 Set to nil to inhibit message first time F90 mode is used. (default t)
5858 f90-keywords-re
5859 List of keywords used for highlighting/upcase-keywords etc.
5860
5861 Turning on F90 mode calls the value of the variable `f90-mode-hook'
5862 with no args, if that value is non-nil." t nil)
5863
5864 ;;;***
5865 \f
5866 ;;;### (autoloads (list-colors-display facemenu-read-color list-text-properties-at
5867 ;;;;;; facemenu-remove-special facemenu-remove-all facemenu-remove-face-props
5868 ;;;;;; facemenu-set-read-only facemenu-set-intangible facemenu-set-invisible
5869 ;;;;;; facemenu-set-face-from-menu facemenu-set-background facemenu-set-foreground
5870 ;;;;;; facemenu-set-face) "facemenu" "facemenu.el" (14412 8701))
5871 ;;; Generated autoloads from facemenu.el
5872 (define-key global-map "\M-g" 'facemenu-keymap)
5873 (autoload 'facemenu-keymap "facemenu" "Keymap for face-changing commands." t 'keymap)
5874
5875 (defvar facemenu-face-menu (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Face"))) (define-key map "o" (cons "Other..." (quote facemenu-set-face))) map) "\
5876 Menu keymap for faces.")
5877
5878 (defalias (quote facemenu-face-menu) facemenu-face-menu)
5879
5880 (defvar facemenu-foreground-menu (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Foreground Color"))) (define-key map "o" (cons "Other..." (quote facemenu-set-foreground))) map) "\
5881 Menu keymap for foreground colors.")
5882
5883 (defalias (quote facemenu-foreground-menu) facemenu-foreground-menu)
5884
5885 (defvar facemenu-background-menu (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Background Color"))) (define-key map "o" (cons "Other..." (quote facemenu-set-background))) map) "\
5886 Menu keymap for background colors")
5887
5888 (defalias (quote facemenu-background-menu) facemenu-background-menu)
5889
5890 (defvar facemenu-special-menu (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Special"))) (define-key map [115] (cons "Remove Special" (quote facemenu-remove-special))) (define-key map [116] (cons "Intangible" (quote facemenu-set-intangible))) (define-key map [118] (cons "Invisible" (quote facemenu-set-invisible))) (define-key map [114] (cons "Read-Only" (quote facemenu-set-read-only))) map) "\
5891 Menu keymap for non-face text-properties.")
5892
5893 (defalias (quote facemenu-special-menu) facemenu-special-menu)
5894
5895 (defvar facemenu-justification-menu (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Justification"))) (define-key map [99] (cons "Center" (quote set-justification-center))) (define-key map [98] (cons "Full" (quote set-justification-full))) (define-key map [114] (cons "Right" (quote set-justification-right))) (define-key map [108] (cons "Left" (quote set-justification-left))) (define-key map [117] (cons "Unfilled" (quote set-justification-none))) map) "\
5896 Submenu for text justification commands.")
5897
5898 (defalias (quote facemenu-justification-menu) facemenu-justification-menu)
5899
5900 (defvar facemenu-indentation-menu (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap "Indentation"))) (define-key map [decrease-right-margin] (cons "Indent Right Less" (quote decrease-right-margin))) (define-key map [increase-right-margin] (cons "Indent Right More" (quote increase-right-margin))) (define-key map [decrease-left-margin] (cons "Indent Less" (quote decrease-left-margin))) (define-key map [increase-left-margin] (cons "Indent More" (quote increase-left-margin))) map) "\
5901 Submenu for indentation commands.")
5902
5903 (defalias (quote facemenu-indentation-menu) facemenu-indentation-menu)
5904
5905 (defvar facemenu-menu nil "\
5906 Facemenu top-level menu keymap.")
5907
5908 (setq facemenu-menu (make-sparse-keymap "Text Properties"))
5909
5910 (let ((map facemenu-menu)) (define-key map [dc] (cons "Display Colors" (quote list-colors-display))) (define-key map [df] (cons "Display Faces" (quote list-faces-display))) (define-key map [dp] (cons "List Properties" (quote list-text-properties-at))) (define-key map [ra] (cons "Remove Text Properties" (quote facemenu-remove-all))) (define-key map [rm] (cons "Remove Face Properties" (quote facemenu-remove-face-props))) (define-key map [s1] (list "-----------------")))
5911
5912 (let ((map facemenu-menu)) (define-key map [in] (cons "Indentation" (quote facemenu-indentation-menu))) (define-key map [ju] (cons "Justification" (quote facemenu-justification-menu))) (define-key map [s2] (list "-----------------")) (define-key map [sp] (cons "Special Properties" (quote facemenu-special-menu))) (define-key map [bg] (cons "Background Color" (quote facemenu-background-menu))) (define-key map [fg] (cons "Foreground Color" (quote facemenu-foreground-menu))) (define-key map [fc] (cons "Face" (quote facemenu-face-menu))))
5913
5914 (defalias (quote facemenu-menu) facemenu-menu)
5915
5916 (autoload (quote facemenu-set-face) "facemenu" "\
5917 Add FACE to the region or next character typed.
5918 It will be added to the top of the face list; any faces lower on the list that
5919 will not show through at all will be removed.
5920
5921 Interactively, the face to be used is read with the minibuffer.
5922
5923 If the region is active and there is no prefix argument,
5924 this command sets the region to the requested face.
5925
5926 Otherwise, this command specifies the face for the next character
5927 inserted. Moving point or switching buffers before
5928 typing a character to insert cancels the specification." t nil)
5929
5930 (autoload (quote facemenu-set-foreground) "facemenu" "\
5931 Set the foreground color of the region or next character typed.
5932 The color is prompted for. A face named `fg:color' is used (or created).
5933 If the region is active, it will be set to the requested face. If
5934 it is inactive (even if mark-even-if-inactive is set) the next
5935 character that is typed (via `self-insert-command') will be set to
5936 the selected face. Moving point or switching buffers before
5937 typing a character cancels the request." t nil)
5938
5939 (autoload (quote facemenu-set-background) "facemenu" "\
5940 Set the background color of the region or next character typed.
5941 The color is prompted for. A face named `bg:color' is used (or created).
5942 If the region is active, it will be set to the requested face. If
5943 it is inactive (even if mark-even-if-inactive is set) the next
5944 character that is typed (via `self-insert-command') will be set to
5945 the selected face. Moving point or switching buffers before
5946 typing a character cancels the request." t nil)
5947
5948 (autoload (quote facemenu-set-face-from-menu) "facemenu" "\
5949 Set the face of the region or next character typed.
5950 This function is designed to be called from a menu; the face to use
5951 is the menu item's name.
5952
5953 If the region is active and there is no prefix argument,
5954 this command sets the region to the requested face.
5955
5956 Otherwise, this command specifies the face for the next character
5957 inserted. Moving point or switching buffers before
5958 typing a character to insert cancels the specification." t nil)
5959
5960 (autoload (quote facemenu-set-invisible) "facemenu" "\
5961 Make the region invisible.
5962 This sets the `invisible' text property; it can be undone with
5963 `facemenu-remove-special'." t nil)
5964
5965 (autoload (quote facemenu-set-intangible) "facemenu" "\
5966 Make the region intangible: disallow moving into it.
5967 This sets the `intangible' text property; it can be undone with
5968 `facemenu-remove-special'." t nil)
5969
5970 (autoload (quote facemenu-set-read-only) "facemenu" "\
5971 Make the region unmodifiable.
5972 This sets the `read-only' text property; it can be undone with
5973 `facemenu-remove-special'." t nil)
5974
5975 (autoload (quote facemenu-remove-face-props) "facemenu" "\
5976 Remove `face' and `mouse-face' text properties." t nil)
5977
5978 (autoload (quote facemenu-remove-all) "facemenu" "\
5979 Remove all text properties from the region." t nil)
5980
5981 (autoload (quote facemenu-remove-special) "facemenu" "\
5982 Remove all the \"special\" text properties from the region.
5983 These special properties include `invisible', `intangible' and `read-only'." t nil)
5984
5985 (autoload (quote list-text-properties-at) "facemenu" "\
5986 Pop up a buffer listing text-properties at LOCATION." t nil)
5987
5988 (autoload (quote facemenu-read-color) "facemenu" "\
5989 Read a color using the minibuffer." nil nil)
5990
5991 (autoload (quote list-colors-display) "facemenu" "\
5992 Display names of defined colors, and show what they look like.
5993 If the optional argument LIST is non-nil, it should be a list of
5994 colors to display. Otherwise, this command computes a list
5995 of colors that the current display can handle." t nil)
5996
5997 ;;;***
5998 \f
5999 ;;;### (autoloads (turn-on-fast-lock fast-lock-mode) "fast-lock"
6000 ;;;;;; "fast-lock.el" (14263 35417))
6001 ;;; Generated autoloads from fast-lock.el
6002
6003 (autoload (quote fast-lock-mode) "fast-lock" "\
6004 Toggle Fast Lock mode.
6005 With arg, turn Fast Lock mode on if and only if arg is positive and the buffer
6006 is associated with a file. Enable it automatically in your `~/.emacs' by:
6007
6008 (setq font-lock-support-mode 'fast-lock-mode)
6009
6010 If Fast Lock mode is enabled, and the current buffer does not contain any text
6011 properties, any associated Font Lock cache is used if its timestamp matches the
6012 buffer's file, and its `font-lock-keywords' match those that you are using.
6013
6014 Font Lock caches may be saved:
6015 - When you save the file's buffer.
6016 - When you kill an unmodified file's buffer.
6017 - When you exit Emacs, for all unmodified or saved buffers.
6018 Depending on the value of `fast-lock-save-events'.
6019 See also the commands `fast-lock-read-cache' and `fast-lock-save-cache'.
6020
6021 Use \\[font-lock-fontify-buffer] to fontify the buffer if the cache is bad.
6022
6023 Various methods of control are provided for the Font Lock cache. In general,
6024 see variable `fast-lock-cache-directories' and function `fast-lock-cache-name'.
6025 For saving, see variables `fast-lock-minimum-size', `fast-lock-save-events',
6026 `fast-lock-save-others' and `fast-lock-save-faces'." t nil)
6027
6028 (autoload (quote turn-on-fast-lock) "fast-lock" "\
6029 Unconditionally turn on Fast Lock mode." nil nil)
6030
6031 (when (fboundp (quote add-minor-mode)) (defvar fast-lock-mode nil) (add-minor-mode (quote fast-lock-mode) nil))
6032
6033 ;;;***
6034 \f
6035 ;;;### (autoloads (feedmail-queue-reminder feedmail-run-the-queue
6036 ;;;;;; feedmail-run-the-queue-global-prompt feedmail-run-the-queue-no-prompts)
6037 ;;;;;; "feedmail" "mail/feedmail.el" (14415 45092))
6038 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/feedmail.el
6039
6040 (autoload (quote feedmail-run-the-queue-no-prompts) "feedmail" "\
6041 Like feedmail-run-the-queue, but suppress confirmation prompts." t nil)
6042
6043 (autoload (quote feedmail-run-the-queue-global-prompt) "feedmail" "\
6044 Like feedmail-run-the-queue, but with a global confirmation prompt.
6045 This is generally most useful if run non-interactively, since you can
6046 bail out with an appropriate answer to the global confirmation prompt." t nil)
6047
6048 (autoload (quote feedmail-run-the-queue) "feedmail" "\
6049 Visit each message in the feedmail queue directory and send it out.
6050 Return value is a list of three things: number of messages sent, number of
6051 messages skipped, and number of non-message things in the queue (commonly
6052 backup file names and the like)." t nil)
6053
6054 (autoload (quote feedmail-queue-reminder) "feedmail" "\
6055 Perform some kind of reminder activity about queued and draft messages.
6056 Called with an optional symbol argument which says what kind of event
6057 is triggering the reminder activity. The default is 'on-demand, which
6058 is what you typically would use if you were putting this in your emacs start-up
6059 or mail hook code. Other recognized values for WHAT-EVENT (these are passed
6060 internally by feedmail):
6061
6062 after-immediate (a message has just been sent in immediate mode)
6063 after-queue (a message has just been queued)
6064 after-draft (a message has just been placed in the draft directory)
6065 after-run (the queue has just been run, possibly sending messages)
6066
6067 WHAT-EVENT is used as a key into the table feedmail-queue-reminder-alist. If
6068 the associated value is a function, it is called without arguments and is expected
6069 to perform the reminder activity. You can supply your own reminder functions
6070 by redefining feedmail-queue-reminder-alist. If you don't want any reminders,
6071 you can set feedmail-queue-reminder-alist to nil." t nil)
6072
6073 ;;;***
6074 \f
6075 ;;;### (autoloads (dired-at-point ffap-at-mouse ffap-menu find-file-at-point
6076 ;;;;;; ffap-next) "ffap" "ffap.el" (14412 8705))
6077 ;;; Generated autoloads from ffap.el
6078
6079 (autoload (quote ffap-next) "ffap" "\
6080 Search buffer for next file or URL, and run ffap.
6081 Optional argument BACK says to search backwards.
6082 Optional argument WRAP says to try wrapping around if necessary.
6083 Interactively: use a single prefix to search backwards,
6084 double prefix to wrap forward, triple to wrap backwards.
6085 Actual search is done by `ffap-next-guess'." t nil)
6086
6087 (autoload (quote find-file-at-point) "ffap" "\
6088 Find FILENAME, guessing a default from text around point.
6089 If `ffap-url-regexp' is not nil, the FILENAME may also be an URL.
6090 With a prefix, this command behaves exactly like `ffap-file-finder'.
6091 If `ffap-require-prefix' is set, the prefix meaning is reversed.
6092 See also the variables `ffap-dired-wildcards', `ffap-newfile-prompt',
6093 and the functions `ffap-file-at-point' and `ffap-url-at-point'.
6094
6095 See <ftp://ftp.mathcs.emory.edu/pub/mic/emacs/> for latest version." t nil)
6096 (defalias 'ffap 'find-file-at-point)
6097
6098 (autoload (quote ffap-menu) "ffap" "\
6099 Put up a menu of files and urls mentioned in this buffer.
6100 Then set mark, jump to choice, and try to fetch it. The menu is
6101 cached in `ffap-menu-alist', and rebuilt by `ffap-menu-rescan'.
6102 The optional RESCAN argument (a prefix, interactively) forces
6103 a rebuild. Searches with `ffap-menu-regexp'." t nil)
6104
6105 (autoload (quote ffap-at-mouse) "ffap" "\
6106 Find file or url guessed from text around mouse click.
6107 Interactively, calls `ffap-at-mouse-fallback' if no guess is found.
6108 Return value:
6109 * if a guess string is found, return it (after finding it)
6110 * if the fallback is called, return whatever it returns
6111 * otherwise, nil" t nil)
6112
6113 (autoload (quote dired-at-point) "ffap" "\
6114 Start Dired, defaulting to file at point. See `ffap'." t nil)
6115
6116 ;;;***
6117 \f
6118 ;;;### (autoloads (file-cache-minibuffer-complete) "filecache" "filecache.el"
6119 ;;;;;; (14332 47695))
6120 ;;; Generated autoloads from filecache.el
6121
6122 (autoload (quote file-cache-minibuffer-complete) "filecache" "\
6123 Complete a filename in the minibuffer using a preloaded cache.
6124 Filecache does two kinds of substitution: it completes on names in
6125 the cache, and, once it has found a unique name, it cycles through
6126 the directories that the name is available in. With a prefix argument,
6127 the name is considered already unique; only the second substitution
6128 \(directories) is done." t nil)
6129 (define-key minibuffer-local-completion-map [C-tab] 'file-cache-minibuffer-complete)
6130 (define-key minibuffer-local-map [C-tab] 'file-cache-minibuffer-complete)
6131 (define-key minibuffer-local-must-match-map [C-tab] 'file-cache-minibuffer-complete)
6132
6133 ;;;***
6134 \f
6135 ;;;### (autoloads (find-grep-dired find-name-dired find-dired find-grep-options
6136 ;;;;;; find-ls-option) "find-dired" "find-dired.el" (14345 52903))
6137 ;;; Generated autoloads from find-dired.el
6138
6139 (defvar find-ls-option (if (eq system-type (quote berkeley-unix)) (quote ("-ls" . "-gilsb")) (quote ("-exec ls -ld {} \\;" . "-ld"))) "\
6140 *Description of the option to `find' to produce an `ls -l'-type listing.
6141 This is a cons of two strings (FIND-OPTION . LS-SWITCHES). FIND-OPTION
6142 gives the option (or options) to `find' that produce the desired output.
6143 LS-SWITCHES is a list of `ls' switches to tell dired how to parse the output.")
6144
6145 (defvar find-grep-options (if (or (eq system-type (quote berkeley-unix)) (string-match "solaris2" system-configuration) (string-match "irix" system-configuration)) "-s" "-q") "\
6146 *Option to grep to be as silent as possible.
6147 On Berkeley systems, this is `-s'; on Posix, and with GNU grep, `-q' does it.
6148 On other systems, the closest you can come is to use `-l'.")
6149
6150 (autoload (quote find-dired) "find-dired" "\
6151 Run `find' and go into Dired mode on a buffer of the output.
6152 The command run (after changing into DIR) is
6153
6154 find . \\( ARGS \\) -ls
6155
6156 except that the variable `find-ls-option' specifies what to use
6157 as the final argument." t nil)
6158
6159 (autoload (quote find-name-dired) "find-dired" "\
6160 Search DIR recursively for files matching the globbing pattern PATTERN,
6161 and run dired on those files.
6162 PATTERN is a shell wildcard (not an Emacs regexp) and need not be quoted.
6163 The command run (after changing into DIR) is
6164
6165 find . -name 'PATTERN' -ls" t nil)
6166
6167 (autoload (quote find-grep-dired) "find-dired" "\
6168 Find files in DIR containing a regexp ARG and start Dired on output.
6169 The command run (after changing into DIR) is
6170
6171 find . -exec grep -s ARG {} \\; -ls
6172
6173 Thus ARG can also contain additional grep options." t nil)
6174
6175 ;;;***
6176 \f
6177 ;;;### (autoloads (ff-mouse-find-other-file-other-window ff-mouse-find-other-file
6178 ;;;;;; ff-find-other-file ff-get-other-file) "find-file" "find-file.el"
6179 ;;;;;; (13670 3046))
6180 ;;; Generated autoloads from find-file.el
6181
6182 (autoload (quote ff-get-other-file) "find-file" "\
6183 Find the header or source file corresponding to this file.
6184 See also the documentation for `ff-find-other-file;.
6185
6186 If optional IN-OTHER-WINDOW is non-nil, find the file in another window." t nil)
6187
6188 (autoload (quote ff-find-other-file) "find-file" "\
6189 Find the header or source file corresponding to this file.
6190 Being on a `#include' line pulls in that file.
6191
6192 If optional IN-OTHER-WINDOW is non-nil, find the file in the other window.
6193 If optional IGNORE-INCLUDE is non-nil, ignore being on `#include' lines.
6194
6195 Variables of interest include:
6196
6197 - ff-case-fold-search
6198 Non-nil means ignore cases in matches (see case-fold-search).
6199 If you have extensions in different cases, you will want this to be nil.
6200
6201 - ff-always-in-other-window
6202 If non-nil, always open the other file in another window, unless an
6203 argument is given to ff-find-other-file.
6204
6205 - ff-ignore-include
6206 If non-nil, ignores #include lines.
6207
6208 - ff-always-try-to-create
6209 If non-nil, always attempt to create the other file if it was not found.
6210
6211 - ff-quiet-mode
6212 If non-nil, traces which directories are being searched.
6213
6214 - ff-special-constructs
6215 A list of regular expressions specifying how to recognise special
6216 constructs such as include files etc, and an associated method for
6217 extracting the filename from that construct.
6218
6219 - ff-other-file-alist
6220 Alist of extensions to find given the current file's extension.
6221
6222 - ff-search-directories
6223 List of directories searched through with each extension specified in
6224 ff-other-file-alist that matches this file's extension.
6225
6226 - ff-pre-find-hooks
6227 List of functions to be called before the search for the file starts.
6228
6229 - ff-pre-load-hooks
6230 List of functions to be called before the other file is loaded.
6231
6232 - ff-post-load-hooks
6233 List of functions to be called after the other file is loaded.
6234
6235 - ff-not-found-hooks
6236 List of functions to be called if the other file could not be found.
6237
6238 - ff-file-created-hooks
6239 List of functions to be called if the other file has been created." t nil)
6240
6241 (autoload (quote ff-mouse-find-other-file) "find-file" "\
6242 Visit the file you click on." t nil)
6243
6244 (autoload (quote ff-mouse-find-other-file-other-window) "find-file" "\
6245 Visit the file you click on." t nil)
6246
6247 ;;;***
6248 \f
6249 ;;;### (autoloads (find-function-setup-keys find-variable-at-point
6250 ;;;;;; find-function-at-point find-function-on-key find-variable-other-frame
6251 ;;;;;; find-variable-other-window find-variable find-variable-noselect
6252 ;;;;;; find-function-other-frame find-function-other-window find-function
6253 ;;;;;; find-function-noselect) "find-func" "emacs-lisp/find-func.el"
6254 ;;;;;; (14398 37514))
6255 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/find-func.el
6256
6257 (autoload (quote find-function-noselect) "find-func" "\
6258 Return a pair (BUFFER . POINT) pointing to the definition of FUNCTION.
6259
6260 Finds the Emacs Lisp library containing the definition of FUNCTION
6261 in a buffer and the point of the definition. The buffer is
6262 not selected.
6263
6264 If the file where FUNCTION is defined is not known, then it is
6265 searched for in `find-function-source-path' if non nil, otherwise
6266 in `load-path'." nil nil)
6267
6268 (autoload (quote find-function) "find-func" "\
6269 Find the definition of the FUNCTION near point.
6270
6271 Finds the Emacs Lisp library containing the definition of the function
6272 near point (selected by `function-at-point') in a buffer and
6273 places point before the definition. Point is saved in the buffer if
6274 it is one of the current buffers.
6275
6276 The library where FUNCTION is defined is searched for in
6277 `find-function-source-path', if non nil, otherwise in `load-path'.
6278 See also `find-function-recenter-line' and `find-function-after-hook'." t nil)
6279
6280 (autoload (quote find-function-other-window) "find-func" "\
6281 Find, in another window, the definition of FUNCTION near point.
6282
6283 See `find-function' for more details." t nil)
6284
6285 (autoload (quote find-function-other-frame) "find-func" "\
6286 Find, in ananother frame, the definition of FUNCTION near point.
6287
6288 See `find-function' for more details." t nil)
6289
6290 (autoload (quote find-variable-noselect) "find-func" "\
6291 Return a pair `(buffer . point)' pointing to the definition of SYMBOL.
6292
6293 Finds the Emacs Lisp library containing the definition of SYMBOL
6294 in a buffer and the point of the definition. The buffer is
6295 not selected.
6296
6297 The library where VARIABLE is defined is searched for in
6298 `find-function-source-path', if non nil, otherwise in `load-path'." nil nil)
6299
6300 (autoload (quote find-variable) "find-func" "\
6301 Find the definition of the VARIABLE near point.
6302
6303 Finds the Emacs Lisp library containing the definition of the variable
6304 near point (selected by `variable-at-point') in a buffer and
6305 places point before the definition. Point is saved in the buffer if
6306 it is one of the current buffers.
6307
6308 The library where VARIABLE is defined is searched for in
6309 `find-function-source-path', if non nil, otherwise in `load-path'.
6310 See also `find-function-recenter-line' and `find-function-after-hook'." t nil)
6311
6312 (autoload (quote find-variable-other-window) "find-func" "\
6313 Find, in another window, the definition of VARIABLE near point.
6314
6315 See `find-variable' for more details." t nil)
6316
6317 (autoload (quote find-variable-other-frame) "find-func" "\
6318 Find, in annother frame, the definition of VARIABLE near point.
6319
6320 See `find-variable' for more details." t nil)
6321
6322 (autoload (quote find-function-on-key) "find-func" "\
6323 Find the function that KEY invokes. KEY is a string.
6324 Point is saved if FUNCTION is in the current buffer." t nil)
6325
6326 (autoload (quote find-function-at-point) "find-func" "\
6327 Find directly the function at point in the other window." t nil)
6328
6329 (autoload (quote find-variable-at-point) "find-func" "\
6330 Find directly the function at point in the other window." t nil)
6331
6332 (autoload (quote find-function-setup-keys) "find-func" "\
6333 Define some key bindings for the find-function family of functions." nil nil)
6334
6335 ;;;***
6336 \f
6337 ;;;### (autoloads (enable-flow-control-on enable-flow-control) "flow-ctrl"
6338 ;;;;;; "flow-ctrl.el" (12550 54450))
6339 ;;; Generated autoloads from flow-ctrl.el
6340
6341 (autoload (quote enable-flow-control) "flow-ctrl" "\
6342 Toggle flow control handling.
6343 When handling is enabled, user can type C-s as C-\\, and C-q as C-^.
6344 With arg, enable flow control mode if arg is positive, otherwise disable." t nil)
6345
6346 (autoload (quote enable-flow-control-on) "flow-ctrl" "\
6347 Enable flow control if using one of a specified set of terminal types.
6348 Use `(enable-flow-control-on \"vt100\" \"h19\")' to enable flow control
6349 on VT-100 and H19 terminals. When flow control is enabled,
6350 you must type C-\\ to get the effect of a C-s, and type C-^
6351 to get the effect of a C-q." nil nil)
6352
6353 ;;;***
6354 \f
6355 ;;;### (autoloads (flyspell-mode-off flyspell-mode) "flyspell" "textmodes/flyspell.el"
6356 ;;;;;; (14218 4428))
6357 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/flyspell.el
6358
6359 (autoload (quote flyspell-mode) "flyspell" "\
6360 Minor mode performing on-the-fly spelling checking.
6361 Ispell is automatically spawned on background for each entered words.
6362 The default flyspell behavior is to highlight incorrect words.
6363 With no argument, this command toggles Flyspell mode.
6364 With a prefix argument ARG, turn Flyspell minor mode on iff ARG is positive.
6365
6366 Bindings:
6367 \\[ispell-word]: correct words (using Ispell).
6368 \\[flyspell-auto-correct-word]: automatically correct word.
6369 \\[flyspell-correct-word] (or mouse-2): popup correct words.
6370
6371 Hooks:
6372 flyspell-mode-hook is run after flyspell is entered.
6373
6374 Remark:
6375 `flyspell-mode' uses `ispell-mode'. Thus all Ispell options are
6376 valid. For instance, a personal dictionary can be used by
6377 invoking `ispell-change-dictionary'.
6378
6379 Consider using the `ispell-parser' to check your text. For instance
6380 consider adding:
6381 \(add-hook 'tex-mode-hook (function (lambda () (setq ispell-parser 'tex))))
6382 in your .emacs file.
6383
6384 flyspell-region checks all words inside a region.
6385
6386 flyspell-buffer checks the whole buffer." t nil)
6387
6388 (autoload (quote flyspell-mode-off) "flyspell" "\
6389 Turn Flyspell mode off." nil nil)
6390
6391 ;;;***
6392 \f
6393 ;;;### (autoloads (follow-delete-other-windows-and-split follow-mode
6394 ;;;;;; turn-off-follow-mode turn-on-follow-mode) "follow" "follow.el"
6395 ;;;;;; (14392 8455))
6396 ;;; Generated autoloads from follow.el
6397
6398 (autoload (quote turn-on-follow-mode) "follow" "\
6399 Turn on Follow mode. Please see the function `follow-mode'." t nil)
6400
6401 (autoload (quote turn-off-follow-mode) "follow" "\
6402 Turn off Follow mode. Please see the function `follow-mode'." t nil)
6403
6404 (autoload (quote follow-mode) "follow" "\
6405 Minor mode that combines windows into one tall virtual window.
6406
6407 The feeling of a \"virtual window\" has been accomplished by the use
6408 of two major techniques:
6409
6410 * The windows always displays adjacent sections of the buffer.
6411 This means that whenever one window is moved, all the
6412 others will follow. (Hence the name Follow Mode.)
6413
6414 * Should the point (cursor) end up outside a window, another
6415 window displaying that point is selected, if possible. This
6416 makes it possible to walk between windows using normal cursor
6417 movement commands.
6418
6419 Follow mode comes to its prime when used on a large screen and two
6420 side-by-side window are used. The user can, with the help of Follow
6421 mode, use two full-height windows as though they would have been
6422 one. Imagine yourself editing a large function, or section of text,
6423 and being able to use 144 lines instead of the normal 72... (your
6424 mileage may vary).
6425
6426 To split one large window into two side-by-side windows, the commands
6427 `\\[split-window-horizontally]' or `M-x follow-delete-other-windows-and-split' can be used.
6428
6429 Only windows displayed in the same frame follow each-other.
6430
6431 If the variable `follow-intercept-processes' is non-nil, Follow mode
6432 will listen to the output of processes and redisplay accordingly.
6433 \(This is the default.)
6434
6435 When Follow mode is switched on, the hook `follow-mode-hook'
6436 is called. When turned off, `follow-mode-off-hook' is called.
6437
6438 Keys specific to Follow mode:
6439 \\{follow-mode-map}" t nil)
6440
6441 (autoload (quote follow-delete-other-windows-and-split) "follow" "\
6442 Create two side by side windows and enter Follow Mode.
6443
6444 Execute this command to display as much as possible of the text
6445 in the selected window. All other windows, in the current
6446 frame, are deleted and the selected window is split in two
6447 side-by-side windows. Follow Mode is activated, hence the
6448 two windows always will display two successive pages.
6449 \(If one window is moved, the other one will follow.)
6450
6451 If ARG is positive, the leftmost window is selected. If it negative,
6452 the rightmost is selected. If ARG is nil, the leftmost window is
6453 selected if the original window is the first one in the frame.
6454
6455 To bind this command to a hotkey, place the following line
6456 in your `~/.emacs' file, replacing [f7] by your favourite key:
6457 (global-set-key [f7] 'follow-delete-other-windows-and-split)" t nil)
6458
6459 ;;;***
6460 \f
6461 ;;;### (autoloads (font-lock-fontify-buffer global-font-lock-mode
6462 ;;;;;; global-font-lock-mode font-lock-remove-keywords font-lock-add-keywords
6463 ;;;;;; turn-on-font-lock font-lock-mode) "font-lock" "font-lock.el"
6464 ;;;;;; (14424 65029))
6465 ;;; Generated autoloads from font-lock.el
6466
6467 (defvar font-lock-mode-hook nil "\
6468 Function or functions to run on entry to Font Lock mode.")
6469
6470 (autoload (quote font-lock-mode) "font-lock" "\
6471 Toggle Font Lock mode.
6472 With arg, turn Font Lock mode on if and only if arg is positive.
6473
6474 When Font Lock mode is enabled, text is fontified as you type it:
6475
6476 - Comments are displayed in `font-lock-comment-face';
6477 - Strings are displayed in `font-lock-string-face';
6478 - Certain other expressions are displayed in other faces according to the
6479 value of the variable `font-lock-keywords'.
6480
6481 You can enable Font Lock mode in any major mode automatically by turning on in
6482 the major mode's hook. For example, put in your ~/.emacs:
6483
6484 (add-hook 'c-mode-hook 'turn-on-font-lock)
6485
6486 Alternatively, you can use Global Font Lock mode to automagically turn on Font
6487 Lock mode in buffers whose major mode supports it and whose major mode is one
6488 of `font-lock-global-modes'. For example, put in your ~/.emacs:
6489
6490 (global-font-lock-mode t)
6491
6492 There are a number of support modes that may be used to speed up Font Lock mode
6493 in various ways, specified via the variable `font-lock-support-mode'. Where
6494 major modes support different levels of fontification, you can use the variable
6495 `font-lock-maximum-decoration' to specify which level you generally prefer.
6496 When you turn Font Lock mode on/off the buffer is fontified/defontified, though
6497 fontification occurs only if the buffer is less than `font-lock-maximum-size'.
6498
6499 For example, to specify that Font Lock mode use use Lazy Lock mode as a support
6500 mode and use maximum levels of fontification, put in your ~/.emacs:
6501
6502 (setq font-lock-support-mode 'lazy-lock-mode)
6503 (setq font-lock-maximum-decoration t)
6504
6505 To add your own highlighting for some major mode, and modify the highlighting
6506 selected automatically via the variable `font-lock-maximum-decoration', you can
6507 use `font-lock-add-keywords'.
6508
6509 To fontify a buffer, without turning on Font Lock mode and regardless of buffer
6510 size, you can use \\[font-lock-fontify-buffer].
6511
6512 To fontify a block (the function or paragraph containing point, or a number of
6513 lines around point), perhaps because modification on the current line caused
6514 syntactic change on other lines, you can use \\[font-lock-fontify-block].
6515
6516 See the variable `font-lock-defaults-alist' for the Font Lock mode default
6517 settings. You can set your own default settings for some mode, by setting a
6518 buffer local value for `font-lock-defaults', via its mode hook." t nil)
6519
6520 (autoload (quote turn-on-font-lock) "font-lock" "\
6521 Turn on Font Lock mode conditionally.
6522 Turn on only if the terminal can display it." nil nil)
6523
6524 (autoload (quote font-lock-add-keywords) "font-lock" "\
6525 Add highlighting KEYWORDS for MODE.
6526 MODE should be a symbol, the major mode command name, such as `c-mode'
6527 or nil. If nil, highlighting keywords are added for the current buffer.
6528 KEYWORDS should be a list; see the variable `font-lock-keywords'.
6529 By default they are added at the beginning of the current highlighting list.
6530 If optional argument APPEND is `set', they are used to replace the current
6531 highlighting list. If APPEND is any other non-nil value, they are added at the
6532 end of the current highlighting list.
6533
6534 For example:
6535
6536 (font-lock-add-keywords 'c-mode
6537 '((\"\\\\\\=<\\\\(FIXME\\\\):\" 1 font-lock-warning-face prepend)
6538 (\"\\\\\\=<\\\\(and\\\\|or\\\\|not\\\\)\\\\\\=>\" . font-lock-keyword-face)))
6539
6540 adds two fontification patterns for C mode, to fontify `FIXME:' words, even in
6541 comments, and to fontify `and', `or' and `not' words as keywords.
6542
6543 Note that some modes have specialised support for additional patterns, e.g.,
6544 see the variables `c-font-lock-extra-types', `c++-font-lock-extra-types',
6545 `objc-font-lock-extra-types' and `java-font-lock-extra-types'." nil nil)
6546
6547 (autoload (quote font-lock-remove-keywords) "font-lock" "\
6548 Remove highlighting KEYWORDS for MAJOR-MODE.
6549
6550 MAJOR-MODE should be a symbol, the major mode command name, such as `c-mode'
6551 or nil. If nil, highlighting keywords are removed for the current buffer." nil nil)
6552
6553 (autoload (quote global-font-lock-mode) "font-lock" "\
6554 Toggle Global Font Lock mode.
6555 With prefix ARG, turn Global Font Lock mode on if and only if ARG is positive.
6556 Displays a message saying whether the mode is on or off if MESSAGE is non-nil.
6557 Returns the new status of Global Font Lock mode (non-nil means on).
6558
6559 When Global Font Lock mode is enabled, Font Lock mode is automagically
6560 turned on in a buffer if its major mode is one of `font-lock-global-modes'." t nil)
6561
6562 (defvar global-font-lock-mode nil "\
6563 Toggle Global Font Lock mode.
6564 When Global Font Lock mode is enabled, Font Lock mode is automagically
6565 turned on in a buffer if its major mode is one of `font-lock-global-modes'.
6566 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
6567 use either \\[customize] or the function `global-font-lock-mode'.")
6568
6569 (custom-add-to-group (quote font-lock) (quote global-font-lock-mode) (quote custom-variable))
6570
6571 (custom-add-load (quote global-font-lock-mode) (quote font-lock))
6572
6573 (autoload (quote font-lock-fontify-buffer) "font-lock" "\
6574 Fontify the current buffer the way the function `font-lock-mode' would." t nil)
6575
6576 ;;;***
6577 \f
6578 ;;;### (autoloads (create-fontset-from-fontset-spec) "fontset" "international/fontset.el"
6579 ;;;;;; (14423 50991))
6580 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/fontset.el
6581
6582 (autoload (quote create-fontset-from-fontset-spec) "fontset" "\
6583 Create a fontset from fontset specification string FONTSET-SPEC.
6584 FONTSET-SPEC is a string of the format:
6585 FONTSET-NAME,CHARSET-NAME0:FONT-NAME0,CHARSET-NAME1:FONT-NAME1, ...
6586 Any number of SPACE, TAB, and NEWLINE can be put before and after commas.
6587
6588 Optional 2nd argument STYLE-VARIANT is a list of font styles
6589 \(e.g. bold, italic) or the symbol t to specify all available styles.
6590 If this argument is specified, fontsets which differs from
6591 FONTSET-NAME in styles are also created. An element of STYLE-VARIANT
6592 may be cons of style and a font name. In this case, the style variant
6593 fontset uses the font for ASCII character set.
6594
6595 If this function attempts to create already existing fontset, error is
6596 signaled unless the optional 3rd argument NOERROR is non-nil.
6597
6598 It returns a name of the created fontset." nil nil)
6599
6600 ;;;***
6601 \f
6602 ;;;### (autoloads (footnote-mode) "footnote" "mail/footnote.el" (14423
6603 ;;;;;; 51009))
6604 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/footnote.el
6605
6606 (autoload (quote footnote-mode) "footnote" "\
6607 Toggle footnote minor mode.
6608 \\<message-mode-map>
6609 key binding
6610 --- -------
6611
6612 \\[Footnote-renumber-footnotes] Footnote-renumber-footnotes
6613 \\[Footnote-goto-footnote] Footnote-goto-footnote
6614 \\[Footnote-delete-footnote] Footnote-delete-footnote
6615 \\[Footnote-cycle-style] Footnote-cycle-style
6616 \\[Footnote-back-to-message] Footnote-back-to-message
6617 \\[Footnote-add-footnote] Footnote-add-footnote
6618 " t nil)
6619
6620 ;;;***
6621 \f
6622 ;;;### (autoloads (forms-find-file-other-window forms-find-file forms-mode)
6623 ;;;;;; "forms" "forms.el" (14381 57540))
6624 ;;; Generated autoloads from forms.el
6625
6626 (autoload (quote forms-mode) "forms" "\
6627 Major mode to visit files in a field-structured manner using a form.
6628
6629 Commands: Equivalent keys in read-only mode:
6630 TAB forms-next-field TAB
6631 C-c TAB forms-next-field
6632 C-c < forms-first-record <
6633 C-c > forms-last-record >
6634 C-c ? describe-mode ?
6635 C-c C-k forms-delete-record
6636 C-c C-q forms-toggle-read-only q
6637 C-c C-o forms-insert-record
6638 C-c C-l forms-jump-record l
6639 C-c C-n forms-next-record n
6640 C-c C-p forms-prev-record p
6641 C-c C-r forms-search-reverse r
6642 C-c C-s forms-search-forward s
6643 C-c C-x forms-exit x
6644 " t nil)
6645
6646 (autoload (quote forms-find-file) "forms" "\
6647 Visit a file in Forms mode." t nil)
6648
6649 (autoload (quote forms-find-file-other-window) "forms" "\
6650 Visit a file in Forms mode in other window." t nil)
6651
6652 ;;;***
6653 \f
6654 ;;;### (autoloads (fortran-mode fortran-tab-mode-default) "fortran"
6655 ;;;;;; "progmodes/fortran.el" (14454 142))
6656 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/fortran.el
6657
6658 (defvar fortran-tab-mode-default nil "\
6659 *Default tabbing/carriage control style for empty files in Fortran mode.
6660 A value of t specifies tab-digit style of continuation control.
6661 A value of nil specifies that continuation lines are marked
6662 with a character in column 6.")
6663
6664 (autoload (quote fortran-mode) "fortran" "\
6665 Major mode for editing Fortran code.
6666 \\[fortran-indent-line] indents the current Fortran line correctly.
6667 DO statements must not share a common CONTINUE.
6668
6669 Type ;? or ;\\[help-command] to display a list of built-in abbrevs for
6670 Fortran keywords.
6671
6672 Key definitions:
6673 \\{fortran-mode-map}
6674
6675 Variables controlling indentation style and extra features:
6676
6677 `comment-start'
6678 Normally nil in Fortran mode. If you want to use comments
6679 starting with `!', set this to the string \"!\".
6680 `fortran-do-indent'
6681 Extra indentation within do blocks. (default 3)
6682 `fortran-if-indent'
6683 Extra indentation within if blocks. (default 3)
6684 `fortran-structure-indent'
6685 Extra indentation within structure, union, map and interface blocks.
6686 (default 3)
6687 `fortran-continuation-indent'
6688 Extra indentation applied to continuation statements. (default 5)
6689 `fortran-comment-line-extra-indent'
6690 Amount of extra indentation for text within full-line comments. (default 0)
6691 `fortran-comment-indent-style'
6692 nil means don't change indentation of text in full-line comments,
6693 fixed means indent that text at `fortran-comment-line-extra-indent' beyond
6694 the value of `fortran-minimum-statement-indent-fixed' (for fixed
6695 format continuation style) or `fortran-minimum-statement-indent-tab'
6696 (for TAB format continuation style).
6697 relative means indent at `fortran-comment-line-extra-indent' beyond the
6698 indentation for a line of code.
6699 (default 'fixed)
6700 `fortran-comment-indent-char'
6701 Single-character string to be inserted instead of space for
6702 full-line comment indentation. (default \" \")
6703 `fortran-minimum-statement-indent-fixed'
6704 Minimum indentation for Fortran statements in fixed format mode. (def.6)
6705 `fortran-minimum-statement-indent-tab'
6706 Minimum indentation for Fortran statements in TAB format mode. (default 9)
6707 `fortran-line-number-indent'
6708 Maximum indentation for line numbers. A line number will get
6709 less than this much indentation if necessary to avoid reaching
6710 column 5. (default 1)
6711 `fortran-check-all-num-for-matching-do'
6712 Non-nil causes all numbered lines to be treated as possible \"continue\"
6713 statements. (default nil)
6714 `fortran-blink-matching-if'
6715 Non-nil causes \\[fortran-indent-line] on an ENDIF statement to blink on
6716 matching IF. Also, from an ENDDO statement, blink on matching DO [WHILE]
6717 statement. (default nil)
6718 `fortran-continuation-string'
6719 Single-character string to be inserted in column 5 of a continuation
6720 line. (default \"$\")
6721 `fortran-comment-region'
6722 String inserted by \\[fortran-comment-region] at start of each line in
6723 region. (default \"c$$$\")
6724 `fortran-electric-line-number'
6725 Non-nil causes line number digits to be moved to the correct column
6726 as typed. (default t)
6727 `fortran-break-before-delimiters'
6728 Non-nil causes lines to be broken before delimiters.
6729 (default t)
6730
6731 Turning on Fortran mode calls the value of the variable `fortran-mode-hook'
6732 with no args, if that value is non-nil." t nil)
6733
6734 ;;;***
6735 \f
6736 ;;;### (autoloads (generic-mode define-generic-mode) "generic" "generic.el"
6737 ;;;;;; (13973 3308))
6738 ;;; Generated autoloads from generic.el
6739
6740 (autoload (quote define-generic-mode) "generic" "\
6741 Create a new generic mode with NAME.
6742
6743 Args: (NAME COMMENT-LIST KEYWORD-LIST FONT-LOCK-LIST AUTO-MODE-LIST
6744 FUNCTION-LIST &optional DESCRIPTION)
6745
6746 NAME should be a symbol; its string representation is used as the function
6747 name. If DESCRIPTION is provided, it is used as the docstring for the new
6748 function.
6749
6750 COMMENT-LIST is a list, whose entries are either a single character,
6751 a one or two character string or a cons pair. If the entry is a character
6752 or a one-character string, it is added to the mode's syntax table with
6753 comment-start syntax. If the entry is a cons pair, the elements of the
6754 pair are considered to be comment-start and comment-end respectively.
6755 Note that Emacs has limitations regarding comment characters.
6756
6757 KEYWORD-LIST is a list of keywords to highlight with `font-lock-keyword-face'.
6758 Each keyword should be a string.
6759
6760 FONT-LOCK-LIST is a list of additional expressions to highlight. Each entry
6761 in the list should have the same form as an entry in `font-lock-defaults-alist'
6762
6763 AUTO-MODE-LIST is a list of regular expressions to add to auto-mode-alist.
6764 These regexps are added to auto-mode-alist as soon as `define-generic-mode'
6765 is called; any old regexps with the same name are removed.
6766
6767 FUNCTION-LIST is a list of functions to call to do some additional setup.
6768
6769 See the file generic-x.el for some examples of `define-generic-mode'." nil nil)
6770
6771 (autoload (quote generic-mode) "generic" "\
6772 Basic comment and font-lock functionality for `generic' files.
6773 \(Files which are too small to warrant their own mode, but have
6774 comment characters, keywords, and the like.)
6775
6776 To define a generic-mode, use the function `define-generic-mode'.
6777 Some generic modes are defined in `generic-x.el'." t nil)
6778
6779 ;;;***
6780 \f
6781 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus gnus-other-frame gnus-slave gnus-no-server
6782 ;;;;;; gnus-slave-no-server) "gnus" "gnus/gnus.el" (14030 49411))
6783 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus.el
6784
6785 (autoload (quote gnus-slave-no-server) "gnus" "\
6786 Read network news as a slave, without connecting to local server." t nil)
6787
6788 (autoload (quote gnus-no-server) "gnus" "\
6789 Read network news.
6790 If ARG is a positive number, Gnus will use that as the
6791 startup level. If ARG is nil, Gnus will be started at level 2.
6792 If ARG is non-nil and not a positive number, Gnus will
6793 prompt the user for the name of an NNTP server to use.
6794 As opposed to `gnus', this command will not connect to the local server." t nil)
6795
6796 (autoload (quote gnus-slave) "gnus" "\
6797 Read news as a slave." t nil)
6798
6799 (autoload (quote gnus-other-frame) "gnus" "\
6800 Pop up a frame to read news." t nil)
6801
6802 (autoload (quote gnus) "gnus" "\
6803 Read network news.
6804 If ARG is non-nil and a positive number, Gnus will use that as the
6805 startup level. If ARG is non-nil and not a positive number, Gnus will
6806 prompt the user for the name of an NNTP server to use." t nil)
6807
6808 ;;;***
6809 \f
6810 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-agent-batch gnus-agent-batch-fetch gnus-agentize
6811 ;;;;;; gnus-plugged gnus-unplugged) "gnus-agent" "gnus/gnus-agent.el"
6812 ;;;;;; (14030 49649))
6813 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-agent.el
6814
6815 (autoload (quote gnus-unplugged) "gnus-agent" "\
6816 Start Gnus unplugged." t nil)
6817
6818 (autoload (quote gnus-plugged) "gnus-agent" "\
6819 Start Gnus plugged." t nil)
6820
6821 (autoload (quote gnus-agentize) "gnus-agent" "\
6822 Allow Gnus to be an offline newsreader.
6823 The normal usage of this command is to put the following as the
6824 last form in your `.gnus.el' file:
6825
6826 \(gnus-agentize)
6827
6828 This will modify the `gnus-before-startup-hook', `gnus-post-method',
6829 and `message-send-mail-function' variables, and install the Gnus
6830 agent minor mode in all Gnus buffers." t nil)
6831
6832 (autoload (quote gnus-agent-batch-fetch) "gnus-agent" "\
6833 Start Gnus and fetch session." t nil)
6834
6835 (autoload (quote gnus-agent-batch) "gnus-agent" nil t nil)
6836
6837 ;;;***
6838 \f
6839 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-audio-play) "gnus-audio" "gnus/gnus-audio.el"
6840 ;;;;;; (14030 49288))
6841 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-audio.el
6842
6843 (autoload (quote gnus-audio-play) "gnus-audio" "\
6844 Play a sound through the speaker." t nil)
6845
6846 ;;;***
6847 \f
6848 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-cache-generate-nov-databases gnus-cache-generate-active
6849 ;;;;;; gnus-jog-cache) "gnus-cache" "gnus/gnus-cache.el" (14030
6850 ;;;;;; 49293))
6851 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-cache.el
6852
6853 (autoload (quote gnus-jog-cache) "gnus-cache" "\
6854 Go through all groups and put the articles into the cache.
6855
6856 Usage:
6857 $ emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs -l gnus -f gnus-jog-cache" t nil)
6858
6859 (autoload (quote gnus-cache-generate-active) "gnus-cache" "\
6860 Generate the cache active file." t nil)
6861
6862 (autoload (quote gnus-cache-generate-nov-databases) "gnus-cache" "\
6863 Generate NOV files recursively starting in DIR." t nil)
6864
6865 ;;;***
6866 \f
6867 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-fetch-group-other-frame gnus-fetch-group)
6868 ;;;;;; "gnus-group" "gnus/gnus-group.el" (14177 56552))
6869 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-group.el
6870
6871 (autoload (quote gnus-fetch-group) "gnus-group" "\
6872 Start Gnus if necessary and enter GROUP.
6873 Returns whether the fetching was successful or not." t nil)
6874
6875 (autoload (quote gnus-fetch-group-other-frame) "gnus-group" "\
6876 Pop up a frame and enter GROUP." t nil)
6877
6878 ;;;***
6879 \f
6880 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-batch-score) "gnus-kill" "gnus/gnus-kill.el"
6881 ;;;;;; (14030 49328))
6882 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-kill.el
6883
6884 (defalias (quote gnus-batch-kill) (quote gnus-batch-score))
6885
6886 (autoload (quote gnus-batch-score) "gnus-kill" "\
6887 Run batched scoring.
6888 Usage: emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs -l gnus -f gnus-batch-score" t nil)
6889
6890 ;;;***
6891 \f
6892 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-change-server) "gnus-move" "gnus/gnus-move.el"
6893 ;;;;;; (14030 49334))
6894 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-move.el
6895
6896 (autoload (quote gnus-change-server) "gnus-move" "\
6897 Move from FROM-SERVER to TO-SERVER.
6898 Update the .newsrc.eld file to reflect the change of nntp server." t nil)
6899
6900 ;;;***
6901 \f
6902 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-mule-initialize gnus-mule-add-group) "gnus-mule"
6903 ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-mule.el" (14092 5540))
6904 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-mule.el
6905
6906 (autoload (quote gnus-mule-add-group) "gnus-mule" "\
6907 Specify that articles of news group NAME are encoded in CODING-SYSTEM.
6908 All news groups deeper than NAME are also the target.
6909 If CODING-SYSTEM is a cons, the car and cdr part are regarded as
6910 coding-system for reading and writing respectively." nil nil)
6911
6912 (autoload (quote gnus-mule-initialize) "gnus-mule" "\
6913 Do several settings for GNUS to enable automatic code conversion." nil nil)
6914
6915 ;;;***
6916 \f
6917 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-batch-brew-soup) "gnus-soup" "gnus/gnus-soup.el"
6918 ;;;;;; (14030 49357))
6919 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-soup.el
6920
6921 (autoload (quote gnus-batch-brew-soup) "gnus-soup" "\
6922 Brew a SOUP packet from groups mention on the command line.
6923 Will use the remaining command line arguments as regular expressions
6924 for matching on group names.
6925
6926 For instance, if you want to brew on all the nnml groups, as well as
6927 groups with \"emacs\" in the name, you could say something like:
6928
6929 $ emacs -batch -f gnus-batch-brew-soup ^nnml \".*emacs.*\"
6930
6931 Note -- this function hasn't been implemented yet." t nil)
6932
6933 ;;;***
6934 \f
6935 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-update-format) "gnus-spec" "gnus/gnus-spec.el"
6936 ;;;;;; (14030 49359))
6937 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-spec.el
6938
6939 (autoload (quote gnus-update-format) "gnus-spec" "\
6940 Update the format specification near point." t nil)
6941
6942 ;;;***
6943 \f
6944 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-declare-backend gnus-unload) "gnus-start"
6945 ;;;;;; "gnus/gnus-start.el" (14345 52937))
6946 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-start.el
6947
6948 (autoload (quote gnus-unload) "gnus-start" "\
6949 Unload all Gnus features." t nil)
6950
6951 (autoload (quote gnus-declare-backend) "gnus-start" "\
6952 Declare backend NAME with ABILITIES as a Gnus backend." nil nil)
6953
6954 ;;;***
6955 \f
6956 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-add-configuration) "gnus-win" "gnus/gnus-win.el"
6957 ;;;;;; (14030 49407))
6958 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/gnus-win.el
6959
6960 (autoload (quote gnus-add-configuration) "gnus-win" "\
6961 Add the window configuration CONF to `gnus-buffer-configuration'." nil nil)
6962
6963 ;;;***
6964 \f
6965 ;;;### (autoloads (gomoku) "gomoku" "play/gomoku.el" (13940 33566))
6966 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/gomoku.el
6967
6968 (autoload (quote gomoku) "gomoku" "\
6969 Start a Gomoku game between you and Emacs.
6970 If a game is in progress, this command allow you to resume it.
6971 If optional arguments N and M are given, an N by M board is used.
6972 If prefix arg is given for N, M is prompted for.
6973
6974 You and Emacs play in turn by marking a free square. You mark it with X
6975 and Emacs marks it with O. The winner is the first to get five contiguous
6976 marks horizontally, vertically or in diagonal.
6977
6978 You play by moving the cursor over the square you choose and hitting
6979 \\<gomoku-mode-map>\\[gomoku-human-plays].
6980 Use \\[describe-mode] for more info." t nil)
6981
6982 ;;;***
6983 \f
6984 ;;;### (autoloads (goto-address goto-address-at-point goto-address-at-mouse)
6985 ;;;;;; "goto-addr" "goto-addr.el" (14385 24830))
6986 ;;; Generated autoloads from goto-addr.el
6987
6988 (autoload (quote goto-address-at-mouse) "goto-addr" "\
6989 Send to the e-mail address or load the URL clicked with the mouse.
6990 Send mail to address at position of mouse click. See documentation for
6991 `goto-address-find-address-at-point'. If no address is found
6992 there, then load the URL at or before the position of the mouse click." t nil)
6993
6994 (autoload (quote goto-address-at-point) "goto-addr" "\
6995 Send to the e-mail address or load the URL at point.
6996 Send mail to address at point. See documentation for
6997 `goto-address-find-address-at-point'. If no address is found
6998 there, then load the URL at or before point." t nil)
6999
7000 (autoload (quote goto-address) "goto-addr" "\
7001 Sets up goto-address functionality in the current buffer.
7002 Allows user to use mouse/keyboard command to click to go to a URL
7003 or to send e-mail.
7004 By default, goto-address binds to mouse-2 and C-c RET.
7005
7006 Also fontifies the buffer appropriately (see `goto-address-fontify-p' and
7007 `goto-address-highlight-p' for more information)." t nil)
7008
7009 ;;;***
7010 \f
7011 ;;;### (autoloads (gs-load-image) "gs" "gs.el" (14300 2906))
7012 ;;; Generated autoloads from gs.el
7013
7014 (autoload (quote gs-load-image) "gs" "\
7015 Load a PS image for display on FRAME.
7016 SPEC is an image specification, IMG-HEIGHT and IMG-WIDTH are width
7017 and height of the image in pixels. WINDOW-AND-PIXMAP-ID is a string of
7018 the form \"WINDOW-ID PIXMAP-ID\". Value is non-nil if successful." nil nil)
7019
7020 ;;;***
7021 \f
7022 ;;;### (autoloads (jdb pdb perldb xdb dbx sdb gdb) "gud" "gud.el"
7023 ;;;;;; (14369 61534))
7024 ;;; Generated autoloads from gud.el
7025
7026 (autoload (quote gdb) "gud" "\
7027 Run gdb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
7028 The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
7029 and source-file directory for your debugger." t nil)
7030
7031 (autoload (quote sdb) "gud" "\
7032 Run sdb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
7033 The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
7034 and source-file directory for your debugger." t nil)
7035
7036 (autoload (quote dbx) "gud" "\
7037 Run dbx on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
7038 The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
7039 and source-file directory for your debugger." t nil)
7040
7041 (autoload (quote xdb) "gud" "\
7042 Run xdb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
7043 The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
7044 and source-file directory for your debugger.
7045
7046 You can set the variable 'gud-xdb-directories' to a list of program source
7047 directories if your program contains sources from more than one directory." t nil)
7048
7049 (autoload (quote perldb) "gud" "\
7050 Run perldb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*.
7051 The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
7052 and source-file directory for your debugger." t nil)
7053
7054 (autoload (quote pdb) "gud" "\
7055 Run pdb on program FILE in buffer `*gud-FILE*'.
7056 The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory
7057 and source-file directory for your debugger." t nil)
7058
7059 (autoload (quote jdb) "gud" "\
7060 Run jdb with command line COMMAND-LINE in a buffer. The buffer is named
7061 \"*gud*\" if no initial class is given or \"*gud-<initial-class-basename>*\"
7062 if there is. If the \"-classpath\" switch is given, omit all whitespace
7063 between it and it's value." t nil)
7064 (add-hook 'same-window-regexps "\\*gud-.*\\*\\(\\|<[0-9]+>\\)")
7065
7066 ;;;***
7067 \f
7068 ;;;### (autoloads (handwrite) "handwrite" "play/handwrite.el" (14033
7069 ;;;;;; 23942))
7070 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/handwrite.el
7071
7072 (autoload (quote handwrite) "handwrite" "\
7073 Turns the buffer into a \"handwritten\" document.
7074 The functions `handwrite-10pt', `handwrite-11pt', `handwrite-12pt'
7075 and `handwrite-13pt' set up for various sizes of output.
7076
7077 Variables: handwrite-linespace (default 12)
7078 handwrite-fontsize (default 11)
7079 handwrite-numlines (default 60)
7080 handwrite-pagenumbering (default nil)" t nil)
7081
7082 ;;;***
7083 \f
7084 ;;;### (autoloads (hanoi-unix-64 hanoi-unix hanoi) "hanoi" "play/hanoi.el"
7085 ;;;;;; (14268 8415))
7086 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/hanoi.el
7087
7088 (autoload (quote hanoi) "hanoi" "\
7089 Towers of Hanoi diversion. Use NRINGS rings." t nil)
7090
7091 (autoload (quote hanoi-unix) "hanoi" "\
7092 Towers of Hanoi, UNIX doomsday version.
7093 Displays 32-ring towers that have been progressing at one move per
7094 second since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 GMT.
7095
7096 Repent before ring 31 moves." t nil)
7097
7098 (autoload (quote hanoi-unix-64) "hanoi" "\
7099 Like hanoi-unix, but pretend to have a 64-bit clock.
7100 This is, necessarily (as of emacs 20.3), a crock. When the
7101 current-time interface is made s2G-compliant, hanoi.el will need
7102 to be updated." t nil)
7103
7104 ;;;***
7105 \f
7106 ;;;### (autoloads (three-step-help) "help-macro" "help-macro.el"
7107 ;;;;;; (14264 39262))
7108 ;;; Generated autoloads from help-macro.el
7109
7110 (defvar three-step-help nil "\
7111 *Non-nil means give more info about Help command in three steps.
7112 The three steps are simple prompt, prompt with all options,
7113 and window listing and describing the options.
7114 A value of nil means skip the middle step, so that
7115 \\[help-command] \\[help-command] gives the window that lists the options.")
7116
7117 ;;;***
7118 \f
7119 ;;;### (autoloads (Helper-help Helper-describe-bindings) "helper"
7120 ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/helper.el" (12536 45574))
7121 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/helper.el
7122
7123 (autoload (quote Helper-describe-bindings) "helper" "\
7124 Describe local key bindings of current mode." t nil)
7125
7126 (autoload (quote Helper-help) "helper" "\
7127 Provide help for current mode." t nil)
7128
7129 ;;;***
7130 \f
7131 ;;;### (autoloads (hexlify-buffer hexl-find-file hexl-mode) "hexl"
7132 ;;;;;; "hexl.el" (14335 43064))
7133 ;;; Generated autoloads from hexl.el
7134
7135 (autoload (quote hexl-mode) "hexl" "\
7136 \\<hexl-mode-map>A mode for editing binary files in hex dump format.
7137 This is not an ordinary major mode; it alters some aspects
7138 if the current mode's behavior, but not all; also, you can exit
7139 Hexl mode and return to the previous mode using `hexl-mode-exit'.
7140
7141 This function automatically converts a buffer into the hexl format
7142 using the function `hexlify-buffer'.
7143
7144 Each line in the buffer has an \"address\" (displayed in hexadecimal)
7145 representing the offset into the file that the characters on this line
7146 are at and 16 characters from the file (displayed as hexadecimal
7147 values grouped every 16 bits) and as their ASCII values.
7148
7149 If any of the characters (displayed as ASCII characters) are
7150 unprintable (control or meta characters) they will be replaced as
7151 periods.
7152
7153 If `hexl-mode' is invoked with an argument the buffer is assumed to be
7154 in hexl format.
7155
7156 A sample format:
7157
7158 HEX ADDR: 0001 0203 0405 0607 0809 0a0b 0c0d 0e0f ASCII-TEXT
7159 -------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------
7160 00000000: 5468 6973 2069 7320 6865 786c 2d6d 6f64 This is hexl-mod
7161 00000010: 652e 2020 4561 6368 206c 696e 6520 7265 e. Each line re
7162 00000020: 7072 6573 656e 7473 2031 3620 6279 7465 presents 16 byte
7163 00000030: 7320 6173 2068 6578 6164 6563 696d 616c s as hexadecimal
7164 00000040: 2041 5343 4949 0a61 6e64 2070 7269 6e74 ASCII.and print
7165 00000050: 6162 6c65 2041 5343 4949 2063 6861 7261 able ASCII chara
7166 00000060: 6374 6572 732e 2020 416e 7920 636f 6e74 cters. Any cont
7167 00000070: 726f 6c20 6f72 206e 6f6e 2d41 5343 4949 rol or non-ASCII
7168 00000080: 2063 6861 7261 6374 6572 730a 6172 6520 characters.are
7169 00000090: 6469 7370 6c61 7965 6420 6173 2070 6572 displayed as per
7170 000000a0: 696f 6473 2069 6e20 7468 6520 7072 696e iods in the prin
7171 000000b0: 7461 626c 6520 6368 6172 6163 7465 7220 table character
7172 000000c0: 7265 6769 6f6e 2e0a region..
7173
7174 Movement is as simple as movement in a normal emacs text buffer. Most
7175 cursor movement bindings are the same (ie. Use \\[hexl-backward-char], \\[hexl-forward-char], \\[hexl-next-line], and \\[hexl-previous-line]
7176 to move the cursor left, right, down, and up).
7177
7178 Advanced cursor movement commands (ala \\[hexl-beginning-of-line], \\[hexl-end-of-line], \\[hexl-beginning-of-buffer], and \\[hexl-end-of-buffer]) are
7179 also supported.
7180
7181 There are several ways to change text in hexl mode:
7182
7183 ASCII characters (character between space (0x20) and tilde (0x7E)) are
7184 bound to self-insert so you can simply type the character and it will
7185 insert itself (actually overstrike) into the buffer.
7186
7187 \\[hexl-quoted-insert] followed by another keystroke allows you to insert the key even if
7188 it isn't bound to self-insert. An octal number can be supplied in place
7189 of another key to insert the octal number's ASCII representation.
7190
7191 \\[hexl-insert-hex-char] will insert a given hexadecimal value (if it is between 0 and 0xFF)
7192 into the buffer at the current point.
7193
7194 \\[hexl-insert-octal-char] will insert a given octal value (if it is between 0 and 0377)
7195 into the buffer at the current point.
7196
7197 \\[hexl-insert-decimal-char] will insert a given decimal value (if it is between 0 and 255)
7198 into the buffer at the current point.
7199
7200 \\[hexl-mode-exit] will exit hexl-mode.
7201
7202 Note: saving the file with any of the usual Emacs commands
7203 will actually convert it back to binary format while saving.
7204
7205 You can use \\[hexl-find-file] to visit a file in Hexl mode.
7206
7207 \\[describe-bindings] for advanced commands." t nil)
7208
7209 (autoload (quote hexl-find-file) "hexl" "\
7210 Edit file FILENAME in hexl-mode.
7211 Switch to a buffer visiting file FILENAME, creating one in none exists." t nil)
7212
7213 (autoload (quote hexlify-buffer) "hexl" "\
7214 Convert a binary buffer to hexl format.
7215 This discards the buffer's undo information." t nil)
7216
7217 ;;;***
7218 \f
7219 ;;;### (autoloads (hide-ifdef-lines hide-ifdef-read-only hide-ifdef-initially
7220 ;;;;;; hide-ifdef-mode) "hideif" "progmodes/hideif.el" (14392 886))
7221 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/hideif.el
7222
7223 (defvar hide-ifdef-mode nil "\
7224 Non-nil when hide-ifdef-mode is activated.")
7225
7226 (autoload (quote hide-ifdef-mode) "hideif" "\
7227 Toggle Hide-Ifdef mode. This is a minor mode, albeit a large one.
7228 With ARG, turn Hide-Ifdef mode on if arg is positive, off otherwise.
7229 In Hide-Ifdef mode, code within #ifdef constructs that the C preprocessor
7230 would eliminate may be hidden from view. Several variables affect
7231 how the hiding is done:
7232
7233 hide-ifdef-env
7234 An association list of defined and undefined symbols for the
7235 current buffer. Initially, the global value of `hide-ifdef-env'
7236 is used.
7237
7238 hide-ifdef-define-alist
7239 An association list of defined symbol lists.
7240 Use `hide-ifdef-set-define-alist' to save the current `hide-ifdef-env'
7241 and `hide-ifdef-use-define-alist' to set the current `hide-ifdef-env'
7242 from one of the lists in `hide-ifdef-define-alist'.
7243
7244 hide-ifdef-lines
7245 Set to non-nil to not show #if, #ifdef, #ifndef, #else, and
7246 #endif lines when hiding.
7247
7248 hide-ifdef-initially
7249 Indicates whether `hide-ifdefs' should be called when Hide-Ifdef mode
7250 is activated.
7251
7252 hide-ifdef-read-only
7253 Set to non-nil if you want to make buffers read only while hiding.
7254 After `show-ifdefs', read-only status is restored to previous value.
7255
7256 \\{hide-ifdef-mode-map}" t nil)
7257
7258 (defvar hide-ifdef-initially nil "\
7259 *Non-nil means call `hide-ifdefs' when Hide-Ifdef mode is first activated.")
7260
7261 (defvar hide-ifdef-read-only nil "\
7262 *Set to non-nil if you want buffer to be read-only while hiding text.")
7263
7264 (defvar hide-ifdef-lines nil "\
7265 *Non-nil means hide the #ifX, #else, and #endif lines.")
7266
7267 ;;;***
7268 \f
7269 ;;;### (autoloads (hs-minor-mode hs-hide-comments-when-hiding-all)
7270 ;;;;;; "hideshow" "progmodes/hideshow.el" (14454 151))
7271 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/hideshow.el
7272
7273 (defvar hs-hide-comments-when-hiding-all t "\
7274 *Hide the comments too when you do an `hs-hide-all'.")
7275
7276 (defvar hs-special-modes-alist (quote ((c-mode "{" "}" "/[*/]" nil hs-c-like-adjust-block-beginning) (c++-mode "{" "}" "/[*/]" nil hs-c-like-adjust-block-beginning) (bibtex-mode ("^@\\S(*\\(\\s(\\)" 1)) (java-mode "{" "}" "/[*/]" nil hs-c-like-adjust-block-beginning))) "\
7277 *Alist for initializing the hideshow variables for different modes.
7278 Each element has the form
7279 (MODE START END COMMENT-START FORWARD-SEXP-FUNC ADJUST-BEG-FUNC).
7280
7281 If non-nil, hideshow will use these values as regexps to define blocks
7282 and comments, respectively for major mode MODE.
7283
7284 START, END and COMMENT-START are regular expressions. A block is
7285 defined as text surrounded by START and END.
7286
7287 As a special case, START may be a list of the form (COMPLEX-START
7288 MDATA-SELECTOR), where COMPLEX-START is a regexp w/ multiple parts and
7289 MDATA-SELECTOR an integer that specifies which sub-match is the proper
7290 place to adjust point, before calling `hs-forward-sexp-func'. For
7291 example, see the `hs-special-modes-alist' entry for `bibtex-mode'.
7292
7293 For some major modes, `forward-sexp' does not work properly. In those
7294 cases, FORWARD-SEXP-FUNC specifies another function to use instead.
7295
7296 See the documentation for `hs-adjust-block-beginning' to see what is the
7297 use of ADJUST-BEG-FUNC.
7298
7299 If any of the elements is left nil or omitted, hideshow tries to guess
7300 appropriate values. The regexps should not contain leading or trailing
7301 whitespace. Case does not matter.")
7302
7303 (autoload (quote hs-minor-mode) "hideshow" "\
7304 Toggle hideshow minor mode.
7305 With ARG, turn hideshow minor mode on if ARG is positive, off otherwise.
7306 When hideshow minor mode is on, the menu bar is augmented with hideshow
7307 commands and the hideshow commands are enabled.
7308 The value '(hs . t) is added to `buffer-invisibility-spec'.
7309 Last, the normal hook `hs-minor-mode-hook' is run; see `run-hooks'.
7310
7311 The main commands are: `hs-hide-all', `hs-show-all', `hs-hide-block',
7312 `hs-show-block', `hs-hide-level' and `hs-show-region'. There is also
7313 `hs-hide-initial-comment-block' and `hs-mouse-toggle-hiding'.
7314
7315 Turning hideshow minor mode off reverts the menu bar and the
7316 variables to default values and disables the hideshow commands.
7317
7318 Key bindings:
7319 \\{hs-minor-mode-map}" t nil)
7320
7321 ;;;***
7322 \f
7323 ;;;### (autoloads (global-highlight-changes highlight-compare-with-file
7324 ;;;;;; highlight-changes-rotate-faces highlight-changes-previous-change
7325 ;;;;;; highlight-changes-next-change highlight-changes-mode highlight-changes-remove-highlight)
7326 ;;;;;; "hilit-chg" "hilit-chg.el" (14288 22009))
7327 ;;; Generated autoloads from hilit-chg.el
7328
7329 (defvar highlight-changes-mode nil)
7330
7331 (autoload (quote highlight-changes-remove-highlight) "hilit-chg" "\
7332 Remove the change face from the region.
7333 This allows you to manually remove highlighting from uninteresting changes." t nil)
7334
7335 (autoload (quote highlight-changes-mode) "hilit-chg" "\
7336 Toggle (or initially set) Highlight Changes mode.
7337
7338 Without an argument,
7339 if Highlight Changes mode is not enabled, then enable it (to either active
7340 or passive as determined by variable highlight-changes-initial-state);
7341 otherwise, toggle between active and passive states.
7342
7343 With an argument,
7344 if just C-u or a positive argument, set state to active;
7345 with a zero argument, set state to passive;
7346 with a negative argument, disable Highlight Changes mode completely.
7347
7348 Active state - means changes are shown in a distinctive face.
7349 Passive state - means changes are kept and new ones recorded but are
7350 not displayed in a different face.
7351
7352 Functions:
7353 \\[highlight-changes-next-change] - move point to beginning of next change
7354 \\[highlight-changes-previous-change] - move to beginning of previous change
7355 \\[highlight-compare-with-file] - mark text as changed by comparing this
7356 buffer with the contents of a file
7357 \\[highlight-changes-remove-highlight] - remove the change face from the region
7358 \\[highlight-changes-rotate-faces] - rotate different \"ages\" of changes through
7359 various faces.
7360
7361
7362 Hook variables:
7363 highlight-changes-enable-hook - when Highlight Changes mode enabled.
7364 highlight-changes-toggle-hook - when entering active or passive state
7365 highlight-changes-disable-hook - when turning off Highlight Changes mode.
7366 " t nil)
7367
7368 (autoload (quote highlight-changes-next-change) "hilit-chg" "\
7369 Move to the beginning of the next change, if in Highlight Changes mode." t nil)
7370
7371 (autoload (quote highlight-changes-previous-change) "hilit-chg" "\
7372 Move to the beginning of the previous change, if in Highlight Changes mode." t nil)
7373
7374 (autoload (quote highlight-changes-rotate-faces) "hilit-chg" "\
7375 Rotate the faces used by Highlight Changes mode.
7376
7377 Current changes will be display in the face described by the first element
7378 of highlight-changes-face-list, those (older) changes will be shown in the
7379 face described by the second element, and so on. Very old changes remain
7380 shown in the last face in the list.
7381
7382 You can automatically rotate colours when the buffer is saved
7383 by adding this to local-write-file-hooks, by evaling (in the
7384 buffer to be saved):
7385 (add-hook 'local-write-file-hooks 'highlight-changes-rotate-faces)
7386 " t nil)
7387
7388 (autoload (quote highlight-compare-with-file) "hilit-chg" "\
7389 Compare this buffer with a file, and highlight differences.
7390
7391 The current buffer must be an unmodified buffer visiting a file,
7392 and not in read-only mode.
7393
7394 If the backup filename exists, it is used as the default
7395 when called interactively.
7396
7397 If a buffer is visiting the file being compared against, it also will
7398 have its differences highlighted. Otherwise, the file is read in
7399 temporarily but the buffer is deleted.
7400
7401 If a buffer is read-only, differences will be highlighted but no property
7402 changes made, so \\[highlight-changes-next-change] and
7403 \\[highlight-changes-previous-change] will not work." t nil)
7404
7405 (autoload (quote global-highlight-changes) "hilit-chg" "\
7406 Turn on or off global Highlight Changes mode.
7407
7408 When called interactively:
7409 - if no prefix, toggle global Highlight Changes mode on or off
7410 - if called with a positive prefix (or just C-u) turn it on in active mode
7411 - if called with a zero prefix turn it on in passive mode
7412 - if called with a negative prefix turn it off
7413
7414 When called from a program:
7415 - if ARG is nil or omitted, turn it off
7416 - if ARG is 'active, turn it on in active mode
7417 - if ARG is 'passive, turn it on in passive mode
7418 - otherwise just turn it on
7419
7420 When global Highlight Changes mode is enabled, Highlight Changes mode is turned
7421 on for future \"suitable\" buffers (and for \"suitable\" existing buffers if
7422 variable `highlight-changes-global-changes-existing-buffers' is non-nil).
7423 \"Suitablity\" is determined by variable `highlight-changes-global-modes'." t nil)
7424
7425 ;;;***
7426 \f
7427 ;;;### (autoloads (make-hippie-expand-function hippie-expand hippie-expand-only-buffers
7428 ;;;;;; hippie-expand-ignore-buffers hippie-expand-max-buffers hippie-expand-no-restriction
7429 ;;;;;; hippie-expand-dabbrev-as-symbol hippie-expand-dabbrev-skip-space
7430 ;;;;;; hippie-expand-verbose hippie-expand-try-functions-list) "hippie-exp"
7431 ;;;;;; "hippie-exp.el" (14398 37488))
7432 ;;; Generated autoloads from hippie-exp.el
7433
7434 (defvar hippie-expand-try-functions-list (quote (try-complete-file-name-partially try-complete-file-name try-expand-all-abbrevs try-expand-list try-expand-line try-expand-dabbrev try-expand-dabbrev-all-buffers try-expand-dabbrev-from-kill try-complete-lisp-symbol-partially try-complete-lisp-symbol)) "\
7435 The list of expansion functions tried in order by `hippie-expand'.
7436 To change the behavior of `hippie-expand', remove, change the order of,
7437 or insert functions in this list.")
7438
7439 (defvar hippie-expand-verbose t "\
7440 *Non-nil makes `hippie-expand' output which function it is trying.")
7441
7442 (defvar hippie-expand-dabbrev-skip-space nil "\
7443 *Non-nil means tolerate trailing spaces in the abbreviation to expand.")
7444
7445 (defvar hippie-expand-dabbrev-as-symbol t "\
7446 *Non-nil means expand as symbols, i.e. syntax `_' is considered a letter.")
7447
7448 (defvar hippie-expand-no-restriction t "\
7449 *Non-nil means that narrowed buffers are widened during search.")
7450
7451 (defvar hippie-expand-max-buffers nil "\
7452 *The maximum number of buffers (apart from the current) searched.
7453 If nil, all buffers are searched.")
7454
7455 (defvar hippie-expand-ignore-buffers (quote ("^ \\*.*\\*$" dired-mode)) "\
7456 *A list specifying which buffers not to search (if not current).
7457 Can contain both regexps matching buffer names (as strings) and major modes
7458 \(as atoms)")
7459
7460 (defvar hippie-expand-only-buffers nil "\
7461 *A list specifying the only buffers to search (in addition to current).
7462 Can contain both regexps matching buffer names (as strings) and major modes
7463 \(as atoms). If non-NIL, this variable overrides the variable
7464 `hippie-expand-ignore-buffers'.")
7465
7466 (autoload (quote hippie-expand) "hippie-exp" "\
7467 Try to expand text before point, using multiple methods.
7468 The expansion functions in `hippie-expand-try-functions-list' are
7469 tried in order, until a possible expansion is found. Repeated
7470 application of `hippie-expand' inserts successively possible
7471 expansions.
7472 With a positive numeric argument, jumps directly to the ARG next
7473 function in this list. With a negative argument or just \\[universal-argument],
7474 undoes the expansion." t nil)
7475
7476 (autoload (quote make-hippie-expand-function) "hippie-exp" "\
7477 Construct a function similar to `hippie-expand'.
7478 Make it use the expansion functions in TRY-LIST. An optional second
7479 argument VERBOSE non-nil makes the function verbose." nil (quote macro))
7480
7481 ;;;***
7482 \f
7483 ;;;### (autoloads (hl-line-mode hl-line-mode) "hl-line" "hl-line.el"
7484 ;;;;;; (14454 80))
7485 ;;; Generated autoloads from hl-line.el
7486
7487 (defvar hl-line-mode nil "\
7488 Toggle Hl-Line mode.
7489 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
7490 use either \\[customize] or the function `hl-line-mode'.")
7491
7492 (custom-add-to-group (quote hl-line) (quote hl-line-mode) (quote custom-variable))
7493
7494 (custom-add-load (quote hl-line-mode) (quote hl-line))
7495
7496 (autoload (quote hl-line-mode) "hl-line" "\
7497 Global minor mode to highlight the line about point in the current window.
7498
7499 With ARG, turn Hl-Line mode on if ARG is positive, off otherwise.
7500 Uses functions `hl-line-unhighlight' and `hl-line-highlight' on
7501 `pre-command-hook' and `post-command-hook'." t nil)
7502
7503 ;;;***
7504 \f
7505 ;;;### (autoloads (list-holidays) "holidays" "calendar/holidays.el"
7506 ;;;;;; (13462 53924))
7507 ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/holidays.el
7508
7509 (autoload (quote list-holidays) "holidays" "\
7510 Display holidays for years Y1 to Y2 (inclusive).
7511
7512 The optional list of holidays L defaults to `calendar-holidays'. See the
7513 documentation for that variable for a description of holiday lists.
7514
7515 The optional LABEL is used to label the buffer created." t nil)
7516
7517 ;;;***
7518 \f
7519 ;;;### (autoloads (hscroll-global-mode hscroll-mode turn-on-hscroll)
7520 ;;;;;; "hscroll" "hscroll.el" (14454 81))
7521 ;;; Generated autoloads from hscroll.el
7522
7523 (autoload (quote turn-on-hscroll) "hscroll" "\
7524 This function is obsolete." nil nil)
7525
7526 (autoload (quote hscroll-mode) "hscroll" "\
7527 This function is absolete." t nil)
7528
7529 (autoload (quote hscroll-global-mode) "hscroll" "\
7530 This function is absolete." t nil)
7531
7532 ;;;***
7533 \f
7534 ;;;### (autoloads (icomplete-minibuffer-setup icomplete-mode) "icomplete"
7535 ;;;;;; "icomplete.el" (14440 64840))
7536 ;;; Generated autoloads from icomplete.el
7537
7538 (autoload (quote icomplete-mode) "icomplete" "\
7539 Activate incremental minibuffer completion for this Emacs session.
7540 Deactivates with negative universal argument." t nil)
7541
7542 (autoload (quote icomplete-minibuffer-setup) "icomplete" "\
7543 Run in minibuffer on activation to establish incremental completion.
7544 Usually run by inclusion in `minibuffer-setup-hook'." nil nil)
7545
7546 ;;;***
7547 \f
7548 ;;;### (autoloads (icon-mode) "icon" "progmodes/icon.el" (13549 39403))
7549 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/icon.el
7550
7551 (autoload (quote icon-mode) "icon" "\
7552 Major mode for editing Icon code.
7553 Expression and list commands understand all Icon brackets.
7554 Tab indents for Icon code.
7555 Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
7556 Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
7557 \\{icon-mode-map}
7558 Variables controlling indentation style:
7559 icon-tab-always-indent
7560 Non-nil means TAB in Icon mode should always reindent the current line,
7561 regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
7562 icon-auto-newline
7563 Non-nil means automatically newline before and after braces
7564 inserted in Icon code.
7565 icon-indent-level
7566 Indentation of Icon statements within surrounding block.
7567 The surrounding block's indentation is the indentation
7568 of the line on which the open-brace appears.
7569 icon-continued-statement-offset
7570 Extra indentation given to a substatement, such as the
7571 then-clause of an if or body of a while.
7572 icon-continued-brace-offset
7573 Extra indentation given to a brace that starts a substatement.
7574 This is in addition to `icon-continued-statement-offset'.
7575 icon-brace-offset
7576 Extra indentation for line if it starts with an open brace.
7577 icon-brace-imaginary-offset
7578 An open brace following other text is treated as if it were
7579 this far to the right of the start of its line.
7580
7581 Turning on Icon mode calls the value of the variable `icon-mode-hook'
7582 with no args, if that value is non-nil." t nil)
7583
7584 ;;;***
7585 \f
7586 ;;;### (autoloads (idlwave-shell) "idlw-shell" "progmodes/idlw-shell.el"
7587 ;;;;;; (14454 157))
7588 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/idlw-shell.el
7589
7590 (autoload (quote idlwave-shell) "idlw-shell" "\
7591 Run an inferior IDL, with I/O through buffer `(idlwave-shell-buffer)'.
7592 If buffer exists but shell process is not running, start new IDL.
7593 If buffer exists and shell process is running, just switch to the buffer.
7594
7595 When called with a prefix ARG, or when `idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame'
7596 is non-nil, the shell buffer and the source buffers will be in
7597 separate frames.
7598
7599 The command to run comes from variable `idlwave-shell-explicit-file-name'.
7600
7601 The buffer is put in `idlwave-shell-mode', providing commands for sending
7602 input and controlling the IDL job. See help on `idlwave-shell-mode'.
7603 See also the variable `idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern'.
7604
7605 \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the shell buffer for a list of commands.)" t nil)
7606
7607 ;;;***
7608 \f
7609 ;;;### (autoloads (idlwave-mode) "idlwave" "progmodes/idlwave.el"
7610 ;;;;;; (14454 157))
7611 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/idlwave.el
7612
7613 (autoload (quote idlwave-mode) "idlwave" "\
7614 Major mode for editing IDL and WAVE CL .pro files.
7615
7616 The main features of this mode are
7617
7618 1. Indentation and Formatting
7619 --------------------------
7620 Like other Emacs programming modes, C-j inserts a newline and indents.
7621 TAB is used for explicit indentation of the current line.
7622
7623 To start a continuation line, use \\[idlwave-split-line]. This function can also
7624 be used in the middle of a line to split the line at that point.
7625 When used inside a long constant string, the string is split at
7626 that point with the `+' concatenation operator.
7627
7628 Comments are indented as follows:
7629
7630 `;;;' Indentation remains unchanged.
7631 `;;' Indent like the surrounding code
7632 `;' Indent to a minimum column.
7633
7634 The indentation of comments starting in column 0 is never changed.
7635
7636 Use \\[idlwave-fill-paragraph] to refill a paragraph inside a comment. The indentation
7637 of the second line of the paragraph relative to the first will be
7638 retained. Use \\[idlwave-auto-fill-mode] to toggle auto-fill mode for these comments.
7639 When the variable `idlwave-fill-comment-line-only' is nil, code
7640 can also be auto-filled and auto-indented (not recommended).
7641
7642 To convert pre-existing IDL code to your formatting style, mark the
7643 entire buffer with \\[mark-whole-buffer] and execute \\[idlwave-expand-region-abbrevs].
7644 Then mark the entire buffer again followed by \\[indent-region] (`indent-region').
7645
7646 2. Routine Info
7647 ------------
7648 IDLWAVE displays information about the calling sequence and the accepted
7649 keyword parameters of a procedure or function with \\[idlwave-routine-info].
7650 \\[idlwave-find-module] jumps to the source file of a module.
7651 These commands know about system routines, all routines in idlwave-mode
7652 buffers and (when the idlwave-shell is active) about all modules
7653 currently compiled under this shell. Use \\[idlwave-update-routine-info] to update this
7654 information, which is also used for completion (see next item).
7655
7656 3. Completion
7657 ----------
7658 \\[idlwave-complete] completes the names of procedures, functions and
7659 keyword parameters. It is context sensitive and figures out what
7660 is expected at point (procedure/function/keyword). Lower case
7661 strings are completed in lower case, other strings in mixed or
7662 upper case.
7663
7664 4. Code Templates and Abbreviations
7665 --------------------------------
7666 Many Abbreviations are predefined to expand to code fragments and templates.
7667 The abbreviations start generally with a `\\`. Some examples
7668
7669 \\pr PROCEDURE template
7670 \\fu FUNCTION template
7671 \\c CASE statement template
7672 \\f FOR loop template
7673 \\r REPEAT Loop template
7674 \\w WHILE loop template
7675 \\i IF statement template
7676 \\elif IF-ELSE statement template
7677 \\b BEGIN
7678
7679 For a full list, use \\[idlwave-list-abbrevs]. Some templates also have
7680 direct keybindings - see the list of keybindings below.
7681
7682 \\[idlwave-doc-header] inserts a documentation header at the beginning of the
7683 current program unit (pro, function or main). Change log entries
7684 can be added to the current program unit with \\[idlwave-doc-modification].
7685
7686 5. Automatic Case Conversion
7687 -------------------------
7688 The case of reserved words and some abbrevs is controlled by
7689 `idlwave-reserved-word-upcase' and `idlwave-abbrev-change-case'.
7690
7691 6. Automatic END completion
7692 ------------------------
7693 If the variable `idlwave-expand-generic-end' is non-nil, each END typed
7694 will be converted to the specific version, like ENDIF, ENDFOR, etc.
7695
7696 7. Hooks
7697 -----
7698 Loading idlwave.el runs `idlwave-load-hook'.
7699 Turning on `idlwave-mode' runs `idlwave-mode-hook'.
7700
7701 8. Documentation and Customization
7702 -------------------------------
7703 Info documentation for this package is available. Use \\[idlwave-info]
7704 to display (complain to your sysadmin if that does not work).
7705 For Postscript and HTML versions of the documentation, check IDLWAVE's
7706 homepage at `http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/~dominik/Tools/idlwave'.
7707 IDLWAVE has customize support - see the group `idlwave'.
7708
7709 9. Keybindings
7710 -----------
7711 Here is a list of all keybindings of this mode.
7712 If some of the key bindings below show with ??, use \\[describe-key]
7713 followed by the key sequence to see what the key sequence does.
7714
7715 \\{idlwave-mode-map}" t nil)
7716
7717 ;;;***
7718 \f
7719 ;;;### (autoloads (ielm) "ielm" "ielm.el" (13638 47263))
7720 ;;; Generated autoloads from ielm.el
7721 (add-hook 'same-window-buffer-names "*ielm*")
7722
7723 (autoload (quote ielm) "ielm" "\
7724 Interactively evaluate Emacs Lisp expressions.
7725 Switches to the buffer `*ielm*', or creates it if it does not exist." t nil)
7726
7727 ;;;***
7728 \f
7729 ;;;### (autoloads (defimage remove-images insert-image put-image
7730 ;;;;;; create-image image-type-available-p image-type-from-file-header
7731 ;;;;;; image-type-from-data) "image" "image.el" (14446 11796))
7732 ;;; Generated autoloads from image.el
7733
7734 (autoload (quote image-type-from-data) "image" "\
7735 Determine the image type from image data DATA.
7736 Value is a symbol specifying the image type or nil if type cannot
7737 be determined." nil nil)
7738
7739 (autoload (quote image-type-from-file-header) "image" "\
7740 Determine the type of image file FILE from its first few bytes.
7741 Value is a symbol specifying the image type, or nil if type cannot
7742 be determined." nil nil)
7743
7744 (autoload (quote image-type-available-p) "image" "\
7745 Value is non-nil if image type TYPE is available.
7746 Image types are symbols like `xbm' or `jpeg'." nil nil)
7747
7748 (autoload (quote create-image) "image" "\
7749 Create an image.
7750 FILE-OR-DATA is an image file name or image data.
7751 Optional TYPE is a symbol describing the image type. If TYPE is omitted
7752 or nil, try to determine the image type from its first few bytes
7753 of image data. If that doesn't work, and FILE-OR-DATA is a file name,
7754 use its file extension.as image type.
7755 Optional DATA-P non-nil means FILE-OR-DATA is a string containing image data.
7756 Optional PROPS are additional image attributes to assign to the image,
7757 like, e.g. `:heuristic-mask t'.
7758 Value is the image created, or nil if images of type TYPE are not supported." nil nil)
7759
7760 (autoload (quote put-image) "image" "\
7761 Put image IMAGE in front of POS in the current buffer.
7762 IMAGE must be an image created with `create-image' or `defimage'.
7763 IMAGE is displayed by putting an overlay into the current buffer with a
7764 `before-string' STRING that has a `display' property whose value is the
7765 image.
7766 POS may be an integer or marker.
7767 AREA is where to display the image. AREA nil or omitted means
7768 display it in the text area, a value of `left-margin' means
7769 display it in the left marginal area, a value of `right-margin'
7770 means display it in the right marginal area." nil nil)
7771
7772 (autoload (quote insert-image) "image" "\
7773 Insert IMAGE into current buffer at point.
7774 IMAGE is displayed by inserting STRING into the current buffer
7775 with a `display' property whose value is the image.
7776 AREA is where to display the image. AREA nil or omitted means
7777 display it in the text area, a value of `left-margin' means
7778 display it in the left marginal area, a value of `right-margin'
7779 means display it in the right marginal area." nil nil)
7780
7781 (autoload (quote remove-images) "image" "\
7782 Remove images between START and END in BUFFER.
7783 Remove only images that were put in BUFFER with calls to `put-image'.
7784 BUFFER nil or omitted means use the current buffer." nil nil)
7785
7786 (autoload (quote defimage) "image" "\
7787 Define SYMBOL as an image.
7788
7789 SPECS is a list of image specifications. DOC is an optional
7790 documentation string.
7791
7792 Each image specification in SPECS is a property list. The contents of
7793 a specification are image type dependent. All specifications must at
7794 least contain the properties `:type TYPE' and either `:file FILE' or
7795 `:data DATA', where TYPE is a symbol specifying the image type,
7796 e.g. `xbm', FILE is the file to load the image from, and DATA is a
7797 string containing the actual image data. The first image
7798 specification whose TYPE is supported, and FILE exists, is used to
7799 define SYMBOL.
7800
7801 Example:
7802
7803 (defimage test-image ((:type xpm :file \"~/test1.xpm\")
7804 (:type xbm :file \"~/test1.xbm\")))" nil (quote macro))
7805
7806 ;;;***
7807 \f
7808 ;;;### (autoloads (imenu imenu-add-menubar-index imenu-add-to-menubar
7809 ;;;;;; imenu-sort-function) "imenu" "imenu.el" (14315 33489))
7810 ;;; Generated autoloads from imenu.el
7811
7812 (defvar imenu-sort-function nil "\
7813 *The function to use for sorting the index mouse-menu.
7814
7815 Affects only the mouse index menu.
7816
7817 Set this to nil if you don't want any sorting (faster).
7818 The items in the menu are then presented in the order they were found
7819 in the buffer.
7820
7821 Set it to `imenu--sort-by-name' if you want alphabetic sorting.
7822
7823 The function should take two arguments and return t if the first
7824 element should come before the second. The arguments are cons cells;
7825 \(NAME . POSITION). Look at `imenu--sort-by-name' for an example.")
7826
7827 (defvar imenu-generic-expression nil "\
7828 The regex pattern to use for creating a buffer index.
7829
7830 If non-nil this pattern is passed to `imenu--generic-function'
7831 to create a buffer index.
7832
7833 The value should be an alist with elements that look like this:
7834 (MENU-TITLE REGEXP INDEX)
7835 or like this:
7836 (MENU-TITLE REGEXP INDEX FUNCTION ARGUMENTS...)
7837 with zero or more ARGUMENTS. The former format creates a simple element in
7838 the index alist when it matches; the latter creates a special element
7839 of the form (NAME FUNCTION POSITION-MARKER ARGUMENTS...)
7840 with FUNCTION and ARGUMENTS beiong copied from `imenu-generic-expression'.
7841
7842 MENU-TITLE is a string used as the title for the submenu or nil if the
7843 entries are not nested.
7844
7845 REGEXP is a regexp that should match a construct in the buffer that is
7846 to be displayed in the menu; i.e., function or variable definitions,
7847 etc. It contains a substring which is the name to appear in the
7848 menu. See the info section on Regexps for more information.
7849
7850 INDEX points to the substring in REGEXP that contains the name (of the
7851 function, variable or type) that is to appear in the menu.
7852
7853 The variable is buffer-local.
7854
7855 The variable `imenu-case-fold-search' determines whether or not the
7856 regexp matches are case sensitive. and `imenu-syntax-alist' can be
7857 used to alter the syntax table for the search.
7858
7859 For example, see the value of `lisp-imenu-generic-expression' used by
7860 `lisp-mode' and `emacs-lisp-mode' with `imenu-syntax-alist' set
7861 locally to give the characters which normally have \"punctuation\"
7862 syntax \"word\" syntax during matching.")
7863
7864 (make-variable-buffer-local (quote imenu-generic-expression))
7865
7866 (defvar imenu-create-index-function (quote imenu-default-create-index-function) "\
7867 The function to use for creating a buffer index.
7868
7869 It should be a function that takes no arguments and returns an index
7870 of the current buffer as an alist.
7871
7872 Simple elements in the alist look like (INDEX-NAME . INDEX-POSITION).
7873 Special elements look like (INDEX-NAME INDEX-POSITION FUNCTION ARGUMENTS...).
7874 A nested sub-alist element looks like (INDEX-NAME SUB-ALIST).
7875 The function `imenu--subalist-p' tests an element and returns t
7876 if it is a sub-alist.
7877
7878 This function is called within a `save-excursion'.
7879
7880 The variable is buffer-local.")
7881
7882 (make-variable-buffer-local (quote imenu-create-index-function))
7883
7884 (defvar imenu-prev-index-position-function (quote beginning-of-defun) "\
7885 Function for finding the next index position.
7886
7887 If `imenu-create-index-function' is set to
7888 `imenu-default-create-index-function', then you must set this variable
7889 to a function that will find the next index, looking backwards in the
7890 file.
7891
7892 The function should leave point at the place to be connected to the
7893 index and it should return nil when it doesn't find another index.
7894
7895 This variable is local in all buffers.")
7896
7897 (make-variable-buffer-local (quote imenu-prev-index-position-function))
7898
7899 (defvar imenu-extract-index-name-function nil "\
7900 Function for extracting the index item name, given a position.
7901
7902 This function is called after `imenu-prev-index-position-function'
7903 finds a position for an index item, with point at that position.
7904 It should return the name for that index item.
7905
7906 This variable is local in all buffers.")
7907
7908 (make-variable-buffer-local (quote imenu-extract-index-name-function))
7909
7910 (defvar imenu-name-lookup-function nil "\
7911 Function to compare string with index item.
7912
7913 This function will be called with two strings, and should return
7914 non-nil if they match.
7915
7916 If nil, comparison is done with `string='.
7917 Set this to some other function for more advanced comparisons,
7918 such as \"begins with\" or \"name matches and number of
7919 arguments match\".
7920
7921 This variable is local in all buffers.")
7922
7923 (make-variable-buffer-local (quote imenu-name-lookup-function))
7924
7925 (defvar imenu-default-goto-function (quote imenu-default-goto-function) "\
7926 The default function called when selecting an Imenu item.
7927 The function in this variable is called when selecting a normal index-item.")
7928
7929 (make-variable-buffer-local (quote imenu-default-goto-function))
7930
7931 (make-variable-buffer-local (quote imenu-case-fold-search))
7932
7933 (autoload (quote imenu-add-to-menubar) "imenu" "\
7934 Add an `imenu' entry to the menu bar for the current buffer.
7935 NAME is a string used to name the menu bar item.
7936 See the command `imenu' for more information." t nil)
7937
7938 (autoload (quote imenu-add-menubar-index) "imenu" "\
7939 Add an Imenu \"Index\" entry on the menu bar for the current buffer.
7940
7941 A trivial interface to `imenu-add-to-menubar' suitable for use in a hook." t nil)
7942
7943 (autoload (quote imenu) "imenu" "\
7944 Jump to a place in the buffer chosen using a buffer menu or mouse menu.
7945 INDEX-ITEM specifies the position. See `imenu-choose-buffer-index'
7946 for more information." t nil)
7947
7948 ;;;***
7949 \f
7950 ;;;### (autoloads (inferior-lisp) "inf-lisp" "progmodes/inf-lisp.el"
7951 ;;;;;; (13898 16429))
7952 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/inf-lisp.el
7953
7954 (defvar inferior-lisp-filter-regexp "\\`\\s *\\(:\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)\\)?\\s *\\'" "\
7955 *What not to save on inferior Lisp's input history.
7956 Input matching this regexp is not saved on the input history in Inferior Lisp
7957 mode. Default is whitespace followed by 0 or 1 single-letter colon-keyword
7958 \(as in :a, :c, etc.)")
7959
7960 (defvar inferior-lisp-program "lisp" "\
7961 *Program name for invoking an inferior Lisp with for Inferior Lisp mode.")
7962
7963 (defvar inferior-lisp-load-command "(load \"%s\")\n" "\
7964 *Format-string for building a Lisp expression to load a file.
7965 This format string should use `%s' to substitute a file name
7966 and should result in a Lisp expression that will command the inferior Lisp
7967 to load that file. The default works acceptably on most Lisps.
7968 The string \"(progn (load \\\"%s\\\" :verbose nil :print t) (values))\\n\"
7969 produces cosmetically superior output for this application,
7970 but it works only in Common Lisp.")
7971
7972 (defvar inferior-lisp-prompt "^[^> \n]*>+:? *" "\
7973 Regexp to recognise prompts in the Inferior Lisp mode.
7974 Defaults to \"^[^> \\n]*>+:? *\", which works pretty good for Lucid, kcl,
7975 and franz. This variable is used to initialize `comint-prompt-regexp' in the
7976 Inferior Lisp buffer.
7977
7978 More precise choices:
7979 Lucid Common Lisp: \"^\\\\(>\\\\|\\\\(->\\\\)+\\\\) *\"
7980 franz: \"^\\\\(->\\\\|<[0-9]*>:\\\\) *\"
7981 kcl: \"^>+ *\"
7982
7983 This is a fine thing to set in your .emacs file.")
7984
7985 (defvar inferior-lisp-mode-hook (quote nil) "\
7986 *Hook for customising Inferior Lisp mode.")
7987
7988 (autoload (quote inferior-lisp) "inf-lisp" "\
7989 Run an inferior Lisp process, input and output via buffer `*inferior-lisp*'.
7990 If there is a process already running in `*inferior-lisp*', just switch
7991 to that buffer.
7992 With argument, allows you to edit the command line (default is value
7993 of `inferior-lisp-program'). Runs the hooks from
7994 `inferior-lisp-mode-hook' (after the `comint-mode-hook' is run).
7995 \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the process buffer for a list of commands.)" t nil)
7996 (add-hook 'same-window-buffer-names "*inferior-lisp*")
7997
7998 (defalias (quote run-lisp) (quote inferior-lisp))
7999
8000 ;;;***
8001 \f
8002 ;;;### (autoloads (Info-speedbar-browser Info-goto-emacs-key-command-node
8003 ;;;;;; Info-goto-emacs-command-node info-standalone info info-other-window)
8004 ;;;;;; "info" "info.el" (14412 8715))
8005 ;;; Generated autoloads from info.el
8006
8007 (autoload (quote info-other-window) "info" "\
8008 Like `info' but show the Info buffer in another window." t nil)
8009 (add-hook 'same-window-buffer-names "*info*")
8010
8011 (autoload (quote info) "info" "\
8012 Enter Info, the documentation browser.
8013 Optional argument FILE specifies the file to examine;
8014 the default is the top-level directory of Info.
8015 Called from a program, FILE may specify an Info node of the form
8016 `(FILENAME)NODENAME'.
8017
8018 In interactive use, a prefix argument directs this command
8019 to read a file name from the minibuffer.
8020
8021 The search path for Info files is in the variable `Info-directory-list'.
8022 The top-level Info directory is made by combining all the files named `dir'
8023 in all the directories in that path." t nil)
8024
8025 (autoload (quote info-standalone) "info" "\
8026 Run Emacs as a standalone Info reader.
8027 Usage: emacs -f info-standalone [filename]
8028 In standalone mode, \\<Info-mode-map>\\[Info-exit] exits Emacs itself." nil nil)
8029
8030 (autoload (quote Info-goto-emacs-command-node) "info" "\
8031 Go to the Info node in the Emacs manual for command COMMAND.
8032 The command is found by looking up in Emacs manual's Command Index
8033 or in another manual found via COMMAND's `info-file' property or
8034 the variable `Info-file-list-for-emacs'." t nil)
8035
8036 (autoload (quote Info-goto-emacs-key-command-node) "info" "\
8037 Go to the Info node in the Emacs manual the command bound to KEY, a string.
8038 Interactively, if the binding is execute-extended-command, a command is read.
8039 The command is found by looking up in Emacs manual's Command Index
8040 or in another manual found via COMMAND's `info-file' property or
8041 the variable `Info-file-list-for-emacs'." t nil)
8042
8043 (autoload (quote Info-speedbar-browser) "info" "\
8044 Initialize speedbar to display an info node browser.
8045 This will add a speedbar major display mode." t nil)
8046
8047 ;;;***
8048 \f
8049 ;;;### (autoloads (info-complete-file info-complete-symbol info-lookup-file
8050 ;;;;;; info-lookup-symbol info-lookup-reset) "info-look" "info-look.el"
8051 ;;;;;; (14272 15606))
8052 ;;; Generated autoloads from info-look.el
8053
8054 (autoload (quote info-lookup-reset) "info-look" "\
8055 Throw away all cached data.
8056 This command is useful if the user wants to start at the beginning without
8057 quitting Emacs, for example, after some Info documents were updated on the
8058 system." t nil)
8059
8060 (autoload (quote info-lookup-symbol) "info-look" "\
8061 Display the definition of SYMBOL, as found in the relevant manual.
8062 When this command is called interactively, it reads SYMBOL from the minibuffer.
8063 In the minibuffer, use M-n to yank the default argument value
8064 into the minibuffer so you can edit it.
8065 The default symbol is the one found at point.
8066
8067 With prefix arg a query for the symbol help mode is offered." t nil)
8068
8069 (autoload (quote info-lookup-file) "info-look" "\
8070 Display the documentation of a file.
8071 When this command is called interactively, it reads FILE from the minibuffer.
8072 In the minibuffer, use M-n to yank the default file name
8073 into the minibuffer so you can edit it.
8074 The default file name is the one found at point.
8075
8076 With prefix arg a query for the file help mode is offered." t nil)
8077
8078 (autoload (quote info-complete-symbol) "info-look" "\
8079 Perform completion on symbol preceding point." t nil)
8080
8081 (autoload (quote info-complete-file) "info-look" "\
8082 Perform completion on file preceding point." t nil)
8083
8084 ;;;***
8085 \f
8086 ;;;### (autoloads (batch-info-validate Info-validate Info-split Info-tagify)
8087 ;;;;;; "informat" "informat.el" (14281 34724))
8088 ;;; Generated autoloads from informat.el
8089
8090 (autoload (quote Info-tagify) "informat" "\
8091 Create or update Info file tag table in current buffer or in a region." t nil)
8092
8093 (autoload (quote Info-split) "informat" "\
8094 Split an info file into an indirect file plus bounded-size subfiles.
8095 Each subfile will be up to 50,000 characters plus one node.
8096
8097 To use this command, first visit a large Info file that has a tag
8098 table. The buffer is modified into a (small) indirect info file which
8099 should be saved in place of the original visited file.
8100
8101 The subfiles are written in the same directory the original file is
8102 in, with names generated by appending `-' and a number to the original
8103 file name. The indirect file still functions as an Info file, but it
8104 contains just the tag table and a directory of subfiles." t nil)
8105
8106 (autoload (quote Info-validate) "informat" "\
8107 Check current buffer for validity as an Info file.
8108 Check that every node pointer points to an existing node." t nil)
8109
8110 (autoload (quote batch-info-validate) "informat" "\
8111 Runs `Info-validate' on the files remaining on the command line.
8112 Must be used only with -batch, and kills Emacs on completion.
8113 Each file will be processed even if an error occurred previously.
8114 For example, invoke \"emacs -batch -f batch-info-validate $info/ ~/*.info\"" nil nil)
8115
8116 ;;;***
8117 \f
8118 ;;;### (autoloads (isearch-process-search-multibyte-characters isearch-toggle-input-method
8119 ;;;;;; isearch-toggle-specified-input-method) "isearch-x" "international/isearch-x.el"
8120 ;;;;;; (13770 35556))
8121 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/isearch-x.el
8122
8123 (autoload (quote isearch-toggle-specified-input-method) "isearch-x" "\
8124 Select an input method and turn it on in interactive search." t nil)
8125
8126 (autoload (quote isearch-toggle-input-method) "isearch-x" "\
8127 Toggle input method in interactive search." t nil)
8128
8129 (autoload (quote isearch-process-search-multibyte-characters) "isearch-x" nil nil nil)
8130
8131 ;;;***
8132 \f
8133 ;;;### (autoloads (iso-accents-mode) "iso-acc" "international/iso-acc.el"
8134 ;;;;;; (14388 10886))
8135 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/iso-acc.el
8136
8137 (autoload (quote iso-accents-mode) "iso-acc" "\
8138 Toggle ISO Accents mode, in which accents modify the following letter.
8139 This permits easy insertion of accented characters according to ISO-8859-1.
8140 When Iso-accents mode is enabled, accent character keys
8141 \(`, ', \", ^, / and ~) do not self-insert; instead, they modify the following
8142 letter key so that it inserts an ISO accented letter.
8143
8144 You can customize ISO Accents mode to a particular language
8145 with the command `iso-accents-customize'.
8146
8147 Special combinations: ~c gives a c with cedilla,
8148 ~d gives an Icelandic eth (d with dash).
8149 ~t gives an Icelandic thorn.
8150 \"s gives German sharp s.
8151 /a gives a with ring.
8152 /e gives an a-e ligature.
8153 ~< and ~> give guillemots.
8154 ~! gives an inverted exclamation mark.
8155 ~? gives an inverted question mark.
8156
8157 With an argument, a positive argument enables ISO Accents mode,
8158 and a negative argument disables it." t nil)
8159
8160 ;;;***
8161 \f
8162 ;;;### (autoloads (iso-cvt-define-menu iso-cvt-write-only iso-cvt-read-only
8163 ;;;;;; iso-iso2duden iso-iso2gtex iso-gtex2iso iso-tex2iso iso-iso2tex
8164 ;;;;;; iso-german iso-spanish) "iso-cvt" "international/iso-cvt.el"
8165 ;;;;;; (13768 42838))
8166 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/iso-cvt.el
8167
8168 (autoload (quote iso-spanish) "iso-cvt" "\
8169 Translate net conventions for Spanish to ISO 8859-1.
8170 The region between FROM and TO is translated using the table TRANS-TAB.
8171 Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (so that the function can can be used in
8172 `format-alist')." t nil)
8173
8174 (autoload (quote iso-german) "iso-cvt" "\
8175 Translate net conventions for German to ISO 8859-1.
8176 The region between FROM and TO is translated using the table TRANS-TAB.
8177 Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (so that the function can can be used in
8178 `format-alist')." t nil)
8179
8180 (autoload (quote iso-iso2tex) "iso-cvt" "\
8181 Translate ISO 8859-1 characters to TeX sequences.
8182 The region between FROM and TO is translated using the table TRANS-TAB.
8183 Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (so that the function can can be used in
8184 `format-alist')." t nil)
8185
8186 (autoload (quote iso-tex2iso) "iso-cvt" "\
8187 Translate TeX sequences to ISO 8859-1 characters.
8188 The region between FROM and TO is translated using the table TRANS-TAB.
8189 Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (so that the function can can be used in
8190 `format-alist')." t nil)
8191
8192 (autoload (quote iso-gtex2iso) "iso-cvt" "\
8193 Translate German TeX sequences to ISO 8859-1 characters.
8194 The region between FROM and TO is translated using the table TRANS-TAB.
8195 Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (so that the function can can be used in
8196 `format-alist')." t nil)
8197
8198 (autoload (quote iso-iso2gtex) "iso-cvt" "\
8199 Translate ISO 8859-1 characters to German TeX sequences.
8200 The region between FROM and TO is translated using the table TRANS-TAB.
8201 Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (so that the function can can be used in
8202 `format-alist')." t nil)
8203
8204 (autoload (quote iso-iso2duden) "iso-cvt" "\
8205 Translate ISO 8859-1 characters to German TeX sequences.
8206 The region between FROM and TO is translated using the table TRANS-TAB.
8207 Optional arg BUFFER is ignored (so that the function can can be used in
8208 `format-alist')." t nil)
8209
8210 (autoload (quote iso-cvt-read-only) "iso-cvt" "\
8211 Warn that format is read-only." t nil)
8212
8213 (autoload (quote iso-cvt-write-only) "iso-cvt" "\
8214 Warn that format is write-only." t nil)
8215
8216 (autoload (quote iso-cvt-define-menu) "iso-cvt" "\
8217 Add submenus to the Files menu, to convert to and from various formats." t nil)
8218
8219 ;;;***
8220 \f
8221 ;;;### (autoloads nil "iso-transl" "international/iso-transl.el"
8222 ;;;;;; (14164 4477))
8223 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/iso-transl.el
8224 (or key-translation-map (setq key-translation-map (make-sparse-keymap)))
8225 (define-key key-translation-map "\C-x8" 'iso-transl-ctl-x-8-map)
8226 (autoload 'iso-transl-ctl-x-8-map "iso-transl" "Keymap for C-x 8 prefix." t 'keymap)
8227
8228 ;;;***
8229 \f
8230 ;;;### (autoloads (ispell-message ispell-minor-mode ispell-complete-word-interior-frag
8231 ;;;;;; ispell-complete-word ispell-continue ispell-buffer ispell-comments-and-strings
8232 ;;;;;; ispell-region ispell-change-dictionary ispell-kill-ispell
8233 ;;;;;; ispell-help ispell-word ispell-dictionary-alist ispell-local-dictionary-alist
8234 ;;;;;; ispell-personal-dictionary) "ispell" "textmodes/ispell.el"
8235 ;;;;;; (14457 51532))
8236 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/ispell.el
8237
8238 (defconst ispell-xemacsp (string-match "Lucid\\|XEmacs" emacs-version) "\
8239 Non nil if using XEmacs.")
8240
8241 (defconst ispell-version18p (string-match "18\\.[0-9]+\\.[0-9]+" emacs-version) "\
8242 Non nil if using emacs version 18.")
8243
8244 (defconst ispell-version20p (string-match "20\\.[0-9]+\\.[0-9]+" emacs-version) "\
8245 Non nil if using emacs version 20.")
8246
8247 (defvar ispell-personal-dictionary nil "\
8248 *File name of your personal spelling dictionary, or nil.
8249 If nil, the default personal dictionary, \"~/.ispell_DICTNAME\" is used,
8250 where DICTNAME is the name of your default dictionary.")
8251
8252 (defvar ispell-local-dictionary-alist nil "\
8253 *Contains local or customized dictionary definitions.
8254 See `ispell-dictionary-alist'.")
8255
8256 (setq ispell-dictionary-alist-1 (quote ((nil "[A-Za-z]" "[^A-Za-z]" "[']" nil ("-B") nil iso-8859-1) ("american" "[A-Za-z]" "[^A-Za-z]" "[']" nil ("-B") nil iso-8859-1) ("brasiliano" "[A-Z\301\311\315\323\332\300\310\314\322\331\303\325\307\334\302\312\324a-z\341\351\355\363\372\340\350\354\362\371\343\365\347\374\342\352\364]" "[^A-Z\301\311\315\323\332\300\310\314\322\331\303\325\307\334\302\312\324a-z\341\351\355\363\372\340\350\354\362\371\343\365\347\374\342\352\364]" "[']" nil ("-d" "brasileiro") nil iso-8859-1) ("british" "[A-Za-z]" "[^A-Za-z]" "[']" nil ("-B" "-d" "british") nil iso-8859-1) ("castellano" "[A-Z\301\311\315\321\323\332\334a-z\341\351\355\361\363\372\374]" "[^A-Z\301\311\315\321\323\332\334a-z\341\351\355\361\363\372\374]" "[---]" nil ("-B" "-d" "castellano") "~tex" iso-8859-1) ("castellano8" "[A-Z\301\311\315\321\323\332\334a-z\341\351\355\361\363\372\374]" "[^A-Z\301\311\315\321\323\332\334a-z\341\351\355\361\363\372\374]" "[---]" nil ("-B" "-d" "castellano") "~latin1" iso-8859-1))))
8257
8258 (setq ispell-dictionary-alist-2 (quote (("czech" "[A-Za-z\301\311\314\315\323\332\331\335\256\251\310\330\317\253\322\341\351\354\355\363\372\371\375\276\271\350\370\357\273\362]" "[^A-Za-z\301\311\314\315\323\332\331\335\256\251\310\330\317\253\322\341\351\354\355\363\372\371\375\276\271\350\370\357\273\362]" "" nil ("-B" "-d" "czech") nil iso-8859-2) ("dansk" "[A-Z\306\330\305a-z\346\370\345]" "[^A-Z\306\330\305a-z\346\370\345]" "[']" nil ("-C") nil iso-8859-1) ("deutsch" "[a-zA-Z\"]" "[^a-zA-Z\"]" "[']" t ("-C") "~tex" iso-8859-1) ("deutsch8" "[a-zA-Z\304\326\334\344\366\337\374]" "[^a-zA-Z\304\326\334\344\366\337\374]" "[']" t ("-C" "-d" "deutsch") "~latin1" iso-8859-1) ("english" "[A-Za-z]" "[^A-Za-z]" "[']" nil ("-B") nil iso-8859-1))))
8259
8260 (setq ispell-dictionary-alist-3 (quote (("esperanto" "[A-Za-z\246\254\266\274\306\330\335\336\346\370\375\376]" "[^A-Za-z\246\254\266\274\306\330\335\336\346\370\375\376]" "[-']" t ("-C") "~latin3" iso-8859-1) ("esperanto-tex" "[A-Za-z^\\]" "[^A-Za-z^\\]" "[-'`\"]" t ("-C" "-d" "esperanto") "~tex" iso-8859-1) ("francais7" "[A-Za-z]" "[^A-Za-z]" "[`'^---]" t nil nil iso-8859-1) ("francais" "[A-Za-z\300\302\306\307\310\311\312\313\316\317\324\331\333\334\340\342\347\350\351\352\353\356\357\364\371\373\374]" "[^A-Za-z\300\302\306\307\310\311\312\313\316\317\324\331\333\334\340\342\347\350\351\352\353\356\357\364\371\373\374]" "[---']" t nil "~list" iso-8859-1))))
8261
8262 (setq ispell-dictionary-alist-4 (quote (("francais-tex" "[A-Za-z\300\302\306\307\310\311\312\313\316\317\324\331\333\334\340\342\347\350\351\352\353\356\357\364\371\373\374\\]" "[^A-Za-z\300\302\306\307\310\311\312\313\316\317\324\331\333\334\340\342\347\350\351\352\353\356\357\364\371\373\374\\]" "[---'^`\"]" t nil "~tex" iso-8859-1) ("nederlands" "[A-Za-z\300-\305\307\310-\317\322-\326\331-\334\340-\345\347\350-\357\361\362-\366\371-\374]" "[^A-Za-z\300-\305\307\310-\317\322-\326\331-\334\340-\345\347\350-\357\361\362-\366\371-\374]" "[']" t ("-C") nil iso-8859-1) ("nederlands8" "[A-Za-z\300-\305\307\310-\317\322-\326\331-\334\340-\345\347\350-\357\361\362-\366\371-\374]" "[^A-Za-z\300-\305\307\310-\317\322-\326\331-\334\340-\345\347\350-\357\361\362-\366\371-\374]" "[']" t ("-C") nil iso-8859-1))))
8263
8264 (setq ispell-dictionary-alist-5 (quote (("norsk" "[A-Za-z\305\306\307\310\311\322\324\330\345\346\347\350\351\362\364\370]" "[^A-Za-z\305\306\307\310\311\322\324\330\345\346\347\350\351\362\364\370]" "[\"]" nil ("-d" "norsk") "~list" iso-8859-1) ("norsk7-tex" "[A-Za-z{}\\'^`]" "[^A-Za-z{}\\'^`]" "[\"]" nil ("-d" "norsk") "~plaintex" iso-8859-1) ("polish" "[A-Za-z\241\243\246\254\257\261\263\266\274\277\306\312\321\323\346\352\361\363]" "[^A-Za-z\241\243\246\254\257\261\263\266\274\277\306\312\321\323\346\352\361\363]" "" nil ("-d" "polish") nil iso-8859-2))))
8265
8266 (setq ispell-dictionary-alist-6 (quote (("russian" "[\341\342\367\347\344\345\263\366\372\351\352\353\354\355\356\357\360\362\363\364\365\346\350\343\376\373\375\370\371\377\374\340\361\301\302\327\307\304\305\243\326\332\311\312\313\314\315\316\317\320\322\323\324\325\306\310\303\336\333\335\330\331\337\334\300\321]" "[^\341\342\367\347\344\345\263\366\372\351\352\353\354\355\356\357\360\362\363\364\365\346\350\343\376\373\375\370\371\377\374\340\361\301\302\327\307\304\305\243\326\332\311\312\313\314\315\316\317\320\322\323\324\325\306\310\303\336\333\335\330\331\337\334\300\321]" "" nil ("-d" "russian") nil koi8-r) ("svenska" "[A-Za-z\345\344\366\351\340\374\350\346\370\347\305\304\326\311\300\334\310\306\330\307]" "[^A-Za-z\345\344\366\351\340\374\350\346\370\347\305\304\326\311\300\334\310\306\330\307]" "[']" nil ("-C") "~list" iso-8859-1))))
8267
8268 (defvar ispell-dictionary-alist (append ispell-local-dictionary-alist ispell-dictionary-alist-1 ispell-dictionary-alist-2 ispell-dictionary-alist-3 ispell-dictionary-alist-4 ispell-dictionary-alist-5 ispell-dictionary-alist-6) "\
8269 An alist of dictionaries and their associated parameters.
8270
8271 Each element of this list is also a list:
8272
8273 \(DICTIONARY-NAME CASECHARS NOT-CASECHARS OTHERCHARS MANY-OTHERCHARS-P
8274 ISPELL-ARGS EXTENDED-CHARACTER-MODE CHARACTER-SET)
8275
8276 DICTIONARY-NAME is a possible string value of variable `ispell-dictionary',
8277 nil means the default dictionary.
8278
8279 CASECHARS is a regular expression of valid characters that comprise a
8280 word.
8281
8282 NOT-CASECHARS is the opposite regexp of CASECHARS.
8283
8284 OTHERCHARS is a regexp of characters in the NOT-CASECHARS set but which can be
8285 used to construct words in some special way. If OTHERCHARS characters follow
8286 and precede characters from CASECHARS, they are parsed as part of a word,
8287 otherwise they become word-breaks. As an example in English, assume the
8288 regular expression \"[']\" for OTHERCHARS. Then \"they're\" and
8289 \"Steven's\" are parsed as single words including the \"'\" character, but
8290 \"Stevens'\" does not include the quote character as part of the word.
8291 If you want OTHERCHARS to be empty, use the empty string.
8292 Hint: regexp syntax requires the hyphen to be declared first here.
8293
8294 MANY-OTHERCHARS-P is non-nil when multiple OTHERCHARS are allowed in a word.
8295 Otherwise only a single OTHERCHARS character is allowed to be part of any
8296 single word.
8297
8298 ISPELL-ARGS is a list of additional arguments passed to the ispell
8299 subprocess.
8300
8301 EXTENDED-CHARACTER-MODE should be used when dictionaries are used which
8302 have been configured in an Ispell affix file. (For example, umlauts
8303 can be encoded as \\\"a, a\\\", \"a, ...) Defaults are ~tex and ~nroff
8304 in English. This has the same effect as the command-line `-T' option.
8305 The buffer Major Mode controls Ispell's parsing in tex or nroff mode,
8306 but the dictionary can control the extended character mode.
8307 Both defaults can be overruled in a buffer-local fashion. See
8308 `ispell-parsing-keyword' for details on this.
8309
8310 CHARACTER-SET used for languages with multibyte characters.
8311
8312 Note that the CASECHARS and OTHERCHARS slots of the alist should
8313 contain the same character set as casechars and otherchars in the
8314 LANGUAGE.aff file (e.g., english.aff).")
8315
8316 (defvar ispell-menu-map nil "\
8317 Key map for ispell menu.")
8318
8319 (defvar ispell-menu-xemacs nil "\
8320 Spelling menu for XEmacs.
8321 If nil when package is loaded, a standard menu will be set,
8322 and added as a submenu of the \"Edit\" menu.")
8323
8324 (defvar ispell-menu-map-needed (and (not ispell-menu-map) (not ispell-version18p) (not ispell-xemacsp) (quote reload)))
8325
8326 (if ispell-menu-map-needed (let ((dicts (reverse (cons (cons "default" nil) ispell-dictionary-alist))) (path (and (boundp (quote ispell-library-path)) ispell-library-path)) name load-dict) (setq ispell-menu-map (make-sparse-keymap "Spell")) (while dicts (setq name (car (car dicts)) load-dict (car (cdr (member "-d" (nth 5 (car dicts))))) dicts (cdr dicts)) (cond ((not (stringp name)) (define-key ispell-menu-map (vector (quote default)) (cons "Select Default Dict" (list (quote lambda) nil (quote (interactive)) (list (quote ispell-change-dictionary) "default"))))) ((or (not path) (file-exists-p (concat path "/" name ".hash")) (file-exists-p (concat path "/" name ".has")) (and load-dict (or (file-exists-p (concat path "/" load-dict ".hash")) (file-exists-p (concat path "/" load-dict ".has"))))) (define-key ispell-menu-map (vector (intern name)) (cons (concat "Select " (capitalize name)) (list (quote lambda) nil (quote (interactive)) (list (quote ispell-change-dictionary) name)))))))))
8327
8328 (if ispell-menu-map-needed (progn (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-change-dictionary] (quote ("Change Dictionary" . ispell-change-dictionary))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-kill-ispell] (quote ("Kill Process" . ispell-kill-ispell))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-pdict-save] (quote ("Save Dictionary" lambda nil (interactive) (ispell-pdict-save t t)))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-complete-word] (quote ("Complete Word" . ispell-complete-word))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-complete-word-interior-frag] (quote ("Complete Word Frag" . ispell-complete-word-interior-frag)))))
8329
8330 (if ispell-menu-map-needed (progn (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-continue] (quote ("Continue Check" . ispell-continue))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-word] (quote ("Check Word" . ispell-word))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-comments-and-strings] (quote ("Check Comments" . ispell-comments-and-strings))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-region] (quote ("Check Region" . ispell-region))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-buffer] (quote ("Check Buffer" . ispell-buffer)))))
8331
8332 (if ispell-menu-map-needed (progn (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-message] (quote ("Check Message" . ispell-message))) (define-key ispell-menu-map [ispell-help] (quote ("Help" lambda nil (interactive) (describe-function (quote ispell-help))))) (put (quote ispell-region) (quote menu-enable) (quote mark-active)) (fset (quote ispell-menu-map) (symbol-value (quote ispell-menu-map)))))
8333
8334 (defvar ispell-skip-region-alist (quote ((ispell-words-keyword forward-line) (ispell-dictionary-keyword forward-line) (ispell-pdict-keyword forward-line) (ispell-parsing-keyword forward-line) ("^---*BEGIN PGP [A-Z ]*--*" . "^---*END PGP [A-Z ]*--*") ("^---* \\(Start of \\)?[Ff]orwarded [Mm]essage" . "^---* End of [Ff]orwarded [Mm]essage") ("\\(/\\|\\(\\(\\w\\|-\\)+[.:@]\\)\\)\\(\\w\\|-\\)*\\([.:/@]+\\(\\w\\|-\\|~\\)+\\)+"))) "\
8335 Alist expressing beginning and end of regions not to spell check.
8336 The alist key must be a regular expression.
8337 Valid forms include:
8338 (KEY) - just skip the key.
8339 (KEY . REGEXP) - skip to the end of REGEXP. REGEXP may be string or symbol.
8340 (KEY REGEXP) - skip to end of REGEXP. REGEXP must be a string.
8341 (KEY FUNCTION ARGS) - FUNCTION called with ARGS returns end of region.")
8342
8343 (defvar ispell-tex-skip-alists (quote ((("\\\\addcontentsline" ispell-tex-arg-end 2) ("\\\\add\\(tocontents\\|vspace\\)" ispell-tex-arg-end) ("\\\\\\([aA]lph\\|arabic\\)" ispell-tex-arg-end) ("\\\\bibliographystyle" ispell-tex-arg-end) ("\\\\makebox" ispell-tex-arg-end 0) ("\\\\document\\(class\\|style\\)" . "\\\\begin[ \n]*{[ \n]*document[ \n]*}")) (("\\(figure\\|table\\)\\*?" ispell-tex-arg-end 0) ("list" ispell-tex-arg-end 2) ("program" . "\\\\end[ \n]*{[ \n]*program[ \n]*}") ("verbatim\\*?" . "\\\\end[ \n]*{[ \n]*verbatim\\*?[ \n]*}")))) "\
8344 *Lists of regions to be skipped in TeX mode.
8345 First list is used raw.
8346 Second list has key placed inside \\begin{}.
8347
8348 Delete or add any regions you want to be automatically selected
8349 for skipping in latex mode.")
8350
8351 (define-key esc-map "$" (quote ispell-word))
8352
8353 (autoload (quote ispell-word) "ispell" "\
8354 Check spelling of word under or before the cursor.
8355 If the word is not found in dictionary, display possible corrections
8356 in a window allowing you to choose one.
8357
8358 If optional argument FOLLOWING is non-nil or if `ispell-following-word'
8359 is non-nil when called interactively, then the following word
8360 \(rather than preceding) is checked when the cursor is not over a word.
8361 When the optional argument QUIETLY is non-nil or `ispell-quietly' is non-nil
8362 when called interactively, non-corrective messages are suppressed.
8363
8364 With a prefix argument (or if CONTINUE is non-nil),
8365 resume interrupted spell-checking of a buffer or region.
8366
8367 Word syntax described by `ispell-dictionary-alist' (which see).
8368
8369 This will check or reload the dictionary. Use \\[ispell-change-dictionary]
8370 or \\[ispell-region] to update the Ispell process.
8371
8372 return values:
8373 nil word is correct or spelling is accpeted.
8374 0 word is inserted into buffer-local definitions.
8375 \"word\" word corrected from word list.
8376 \(\"word\" arg) word is hand entered.
8377 quit spell session exited." t nil)
8378
8379 (autoload (quote ispell-help) "ispell" "\
8380 Display a list of the options available when a misspelling is encountered.
8381
8382 Selections are:
8383
8384 DIGIT: Replace the word with a digit offered in the *Choices* buffer.
8385 SPC: Accept word this time.
8386 `i': Accept word and insert into private dictionary.
8387 `a': Accept word for this session.
8388 `A': Accept word and place in `buffer-local dictionary'.
8389 `r': Replace word with typed-in value. Rechecked.
8390 `R': Replace word with typed-in value. Query-replaced in buffer. Rechecked.
8391 `?': Show these commands.
8392 `x': Exit spelling buffer. Move cursor to original point.
8393 `X': Exit spelling buffer. Leaves cursor at the current point, and permits
8394 the aborted check to be completed later.
8395 `q': Quit spelling session (Kills ispell process).
8396 `l': Look up typed-in replacement in alternate dictionary. Wildcards okay.
8397 `u': Like `i', but the word is lower-cased first.
8398 `m': Place typed-in value in personal dictionary, then recheck current word.
8399 `C-l': redraws screen
8400 `C-r': recursive edit
8401 `C-z': suspend emacs or iconify frame" nil nil)
8402
8403 (autoload (quote ispell-kill-ispell) "ispell" "\
8404 Kill current Ispell process (so that you may start a fresh one).
8405 With NO-ERROR, just return non-nil if there was no Ispell running." t nil)
8406
8407 (autoload (quote ispell-change-dictionary) "ispell" "\
8408 Change `ispell-dictionary' (q.v.) to DICT and kill old Ispell process.
8409 A new one will be started as soon as necessary.
8410
8411 By just answering RET you can find out what the current dictionary is.
8412
8413 With prefix argument, set the default directory." t nil)
8414
8415 (autoload (quote ispell-region) "ispell" "\
8416 Interactively check a region for spelling errors.
8417 Return nil if spell session is quit,
8418 otherwise returns shift offset amount for last line processed." t nil)
8419
8420 (autoload (quote ispell-comments-and-strings) "ispell" "\
8421 Check comments and strings in the current buffer for spelling errors." t nil)
8422
8423 (autoload (quote ispell-buffer) "ispell" "\
8424 Check the current buffer for spelling errors interactively." t nil)
8425
8426 (autoload (quote ispell-continue) "ispell" "\
8427 Continue a halted spelling session beginning with the current word." t nil)
8428
8429 (autoload (quote ispell-complete-word) "ispell" "\
8430 Try to complete the word before or under point (see `lookup-words')
8431 If optional INTERIOR-FRAG is non-nil then the word may be a character
8432 sequence inside of a word.
8433
8434 Standard ispell choices are then available." t nil)
8435
8436 (autoload (quote ispell-complete-word-interior-frag) "ispell" "\
8437 Completes word matching character sequence inside a word." t nil)
8438
8439 (autoload (quote ispell-minor-mode) "ispell" "\
8440 Toggle Ispell minor mode.
8441 With prefix arg, turn Ispell minor mode on iff arg is positive.
8442
8443 In Ispell minor mode, pressing SPC or RET
8444 warns you if the previous word is incorrectly spelled.
8445
8446 All the buffer-local variables and dictionaries are ignored -- to read
8447 them into the running ispell process, type \\[ispell-word] SPC." t nil)
8448
8449 (autoload (quote ispell-message) "ispell" "\
8450 Check the spelling of a mail message or news post.
8451 Don't check spelling of message headers except the Subject field.
8452 Don't check included messages.
8453
8454 To abort spell checking of a message region and send the message anyway,
8455 use the `x' command. (Any subsequent regions will be checked.)
8456 The `X' command aborts the message send so that you can edit the buffer.
8457
8458 To spell-check whenever a message is sent, include the appropriate lines
8459 in your .emacs file:
8460 (add-hook 'message-send-hook 'ispell-message) ;; GNUS 5
8461 (add-hook 'news-inews-hook 'ispell-message) ;; GNUS 4
8462 (add-hook 'mail-send-hook 'ispell-message)
8463 (add-hook 'mh-before-send-letter-hook 'ispell-message)
8464
8465 You can bind this to the key C-c i in GNUS or mail by adding to
8466 `news-reply-mode-hook' or `mail-mode-hook' the following lambda expression:
8467 (function (lambda () (local-set-key \"\\C-ci\" 'ispell-message)))" t nil)
8468
8469 ;;;***
8470 \f
8471 ;;;### (autoloads (iswitchb-buffer-other-frame iswitchb-display-buffer
8472 ;;;;;; iswitchb-buffer-other-window iswitchb-buffer iswitchb-default-keybindings
8473 ;;;;;; iswitchb-read-buffer) "iswitchb" "iswitchb.el" (14384 5061))
8474 ;;; Generated autoloads from iswitchb.el
8475
8476 (autoload (quote iswitchb-read-buffer) "iswitchb" "\
8477 Replacement for the built-in `read-buffer'.
8478 Return the name of a buffer selected.
8479 PROMPT is the prompt to give to the user. DEFAULT if given is the default
8480 buffer to be selected, which will go to the front of the list.
8481 If REQUIRE-MATCH is non-nil, an existing-buffer must be selected." nil nil)
8482
8483 (autoload (quote iswitchb-default-keybindings) "iswitchb" "\
8484 Set up default keybindings for `iswitchb-buffer'.
8485 Call this function to override the normal bindings. This function also
8486 adds a hook to the minibuffer." t nil)
8487
8488 (autoload (quote iswitchb-buffer) "iswitchb" "\
8489 Switch to another buffer.
8490
8491 The buffer name is selected interactively by typing a substring. The
8492 buffer is displayed according to `iswitchb-default-method' -- the
8493 default is to show it in the same window, unless it is already visible
8494 in another frame.
8495 For details of keybindings, do `\\[describe-function] iswitchb'." t nil)
8496
8497 (autoload (quote iswitchb-buffer-other-window) "iswitchb" "\
8498 Switch to another buffer and show it in another window.
8499 The buffer name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
8500 For details of keybindings, do `\\[describe-function] iswitchb'." t nil)
8501
8502 (autoload (quote iswitchb-display-buffer) "iswitchb" "\
8503 Display a buffer in another window but don't select it.
8504 The buffer name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
8505 For details of keybindings, do `\\[describe-function] iswitchb'." t nil)
8506
8507 (autoload (quote iswitchb-buffer-other-frame) "iswitchb" "\
8508 Switch to another buffer and show it in another frame.
8509 The buffer name is selected interactively by typing a substring.
8510 For details of keybindings, do `\\[describe-function] iswitchb'." t nil)
8511
8512 ;;;***
8513 \f
8514 ;;;### (autoloads (read-hiragana-string japanese-zenkaku-region japanese-hankaku-region
8515 ;;;;;; japanese-hiragana-region japanese-katakana-region japanese-zenkaku
8516 ;;;;;; japanese-hankaku japanese-hiragana japanese-katakana setup-japanese-environment-internal
8517 ;;;;;; setup-japanese-environment) "japan-util" "language/japan-util.el"
8518 ;;;;;; (14348 33291))
8519 ;;; Generated autoloads from language/japan-util.el
8520
8521 (autoload (quote setup-japanese-environment) "japan-util" "\
8522 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Japanese." t nil)
8523
8524 (autoload (quote setup-japanese-environment-internal) "japan-util" nil nil nil)
8525
8526 (autoload (quote japanese-katakana) "japan-util" "\
8527 Convert argument to Katakana and return that.
8528 The argument may be a character or string. The result has the same type.
8529 The argument object is not altered--the value is a copy.
8530 Optional argument HANKAKU t means to convert to `hankaku' Katakana
8531 (`japanese-jisx0201-kana'), in which case return value
8532 may be a string even if OBJ is a character if two Katakanas are
8533 necessary to represent OBJ." nil nil)
8534
8535 (autoload (quote japanese-hiragana) "japan-util" "\
8536 Convert argument to Hiragana and return that.
8537 The argument may be a character or string. The result has the same type.
8538 The argument object is not altered--the value is a copy." nil nil)
8539
8540 (autoload (quote japanese-hankaku) "japan-util" "\
8541 Convert argument to `hankaku' and return that.
8542 The argument may be a character or string. The result has the same type.
8543 The argument object is not altered--the value is a copy.
8544 Optional argument ASCII-ONLY non-nil means to return only ASCII character." nil nil)
8545
8546 (autoload (quote japanese-zenkaku) "japan-util" "\
8547 Convert argument to `zenkaku' and return that.
8548 The argument may be a character or string. The result has the same type.
8549 The argument object is not altered--the value is a copy." nil nil)
8550
8551 (autoload (quote japanese-katakana-region) "japan-util" "\
8552 Convert Japanese `hiragana' chars in the region to `katakana' chars.
8553 Optional argument HANKAKU t means to convert to `hankaku katakana' character
8554 of which charset is `japanese-jisx0201-kana'." t nil)
8555
8556 (autoload (quote japanese-hiragana-region) "japan-util" "\
8557 Convert Japanese `katakana' chars in the region to `hiragana' chars." t nil)
8558
8559 (autoload (quote japanese-hankaku-region) "japan-util" "\
8560 Convert Japanese `zenkaku' chars in the region to `hankaku' chars.
8561 `Zenkaku' chars belong to `japanese-jisx0208'
8562 `Hankaku' chars belong to `ascii' or `japanese-jisx0201-kana'.
8563 Optional argument ASCII-ONLY non-nil means to convert only to ASCII char." t nil)
8564
8565 (autoload (quote japanese-zenkaku-region) "japan-util" "\
8566 Convert hankaku' chars in the region to Japanese `zenkaku' chars.
8567 `Zenkaku' chars belong to `japanese-jisx0208'
8568 `Hankaku' chars belong to `ascii' or `japanese-jisx0201-kana'.
8569 Optional argument KATAKANA-ONLY non-nil means to convert only KATAKANA char." t nil)
8570
8571 (autoload (quote read-hiragana-string) "japan-util" "\
8572 Read a Hiragana string from the minibuffer, prompting with string PROMPT.
8573 If non-nil, second arg INITIAL-INPUT is a string to insert before reading." nil nil)
8574
8575 ;;;***
8576 \f
8577 ;;;### (autoloads (turn-on-jit-lock jit-lock-mode) "jit-lock" "jit-lock.el"
8578 ;;;;;; (14275 59802))
8579 ;;; Generated autoloads from jit-lock.el
8580
8581 (autoload (quote jit-lock-mode) "jit-lock" "\
8582 Toggle Just-in-time Lock mode.
8583 With arg, turn Just-in-time Lock mode on if and only if arg is positive.
8584 Enable it automatically by customizing group `font-lock'.
8585
8586 When Just-in-time Lock mode is enabled, fontification is different in the
8587 following ways:
8588
8589 - Demand-driven buffer fontification triggered by Emacs C code.
8590 This means initial fontification of the whole buffer does not occur.
8591 Instead, fontification occurs when necessary, such as when scrolling
8592 through the buffer would otherwise reveal unfontified areas. This is
8593 useful if buffer fontification is too slow for large buffers.
8594
8595 - Stealthy buffer fontification if `jit-lock-stealth-time' is non-nil.
8596 This means remaining unfontified areas of buffers are fontified if Emacs has
8597 been idle for `jit-lock-stealth-time' seconds, while Emacs remains idle.
8598 This is useful if any buffer has any deferred fontification.
8599
8600 - Deferred context fontification if `jit-lock-defer-contextually' is
8601 non-nil. This means fontification updates the buffer corresponding to
8602 true syntactic context, after `jit-lock-stealth-time' seconds of Emacs
8603 idle time, while Emacs remains idle. Otherwise, fontification occurs
8604 on modified lines only, and subsequent lines can remain fontified
8605 corresponding to previous syntactic contexts. This is useful where
8606 strings or comments span lines.
8607
8608 Stealth fontification only occurs while the system remains unloaded.
8609 If the system load rises above `jit-lock-stealth-load' percent, stealth
8610 fontification is suspended. Stealth fontification intensity is controlled via
8611 the variable `jit-lock-stealth-nice' and `jit-lock-stealth-lines'." t nil)
8612
8613 (autoload (quote turn-on-jit-lock) "jit-lock" "\
8614 Unconditionally turn on Just-in-time Lock mode." nil nil)
8615
8616 ;;;***
8617 \f
8618 ;;;### (autoloads (auto-compression-mode) "jka-compr" "jka-compr.el"
8619 ;;;;;; (14440 46009))
8620 ;;; Generated autoloads from jka-compr.el
8621
8622 (defvar auto-compression-mode nil "\
8623 Toggle automatic file compression and uncompression.
8624 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
8625 use either \\[customize] or the function `auto-compression-mode'.")
8626
8627 (custom-add-to-group (quote jka-compr) (quote auto-compression-mode) (quote custom-variable))
8628
8629 (custom-add-load (quote auto-compression-mode) (quote jka-compr))
8630 (defun auto-compression-mode (&optional arg)
8631 "\
8632 Toggle automatic file compression and uncompression.
8633 With prefix argument ARG, turn auto compression on if positive, else off.
8634 Returns the new status of auto compression (non-nil means on)."
8635 (interactive "P")
8636 (if (not (fboundp 'jka-compr-installed-p))
8637 (progn
8638 (require 'jka-compr)
8639 ;; That turned the mode on, so make it initially off.
8640 (toggle-auto-compression)))
8641 (toggle-auto-compression arg t))
8642
8643 ;;;***
8644 \f
8645 ;;;### (autoloads (kinsoku) "kinsoku" "international/kinsoku.el"
8646 ;;;;;; (13866 35434))
8647 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/kinsoku.el
8648
8649 (autoload (quote kinsoku) "kinsoku" "\
8650 Go to a line breaking position near point by doing `kinsoku' processing.
8651 LINEBEG is a buffer position we can't break a line before.
8652
8653 `Kinsoku' processing is to prohibit specific characters to be placed
8654 at beginning of line or at end of line. Characters not to be placed
8655 at beginning and end of line have character category `>' and `<'
8656 respectively. This restriction is dissolved by making a line longer or
8657 shorter.
8658
8659 `Kinsoku' is a Japanese word which originally means ordering to stay
8660 in one place, and is used for the text processing described above in
8661 the context of text formatting." nil nil)
8662
8663 ;;;***
8664 \f
8665 ;;;### (autoloads (kkc-region) "kkc" "international/kkc.el" (13810
8666 ;;;;;; 39823))
8667 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/kkc.el
8668
8669 (autoload (quote kkc-region) "kkc" "\
8670 Convert Kana string in the current region to Kanji-Kana mixed string.
8671 Users can select a desirable conversion interactively.
8672 When called from a program, expects two arguments,
8673 positions FROM and TO (integers or markers) specifying the target region.
8674 When it returns, the point is at the tail of the selected conversion,
8675 and the return value is the length of the conversion." t nil)
8676
8677 ;;;***
8678 \f
8679 ;;;### (autoloads (setup-korean-environment-internal setup-korean-environment)
8680 ;;;;;; "korea-util" "language/korea-util.el" (14293 47672))
8681 ;;; Generated autoloads from language/korea-util.el
8682
8683 (defvar default-korean-keyboard (if (string-match "3" (or (getenv "HANGUL_KEYBOARD_TYPE") "")) "3" "") "\
8684 *The kind of Korean keyboard for Korean input method.
8685 \"\" for 2, \"3\" for 3.")
8686
8687 (autoload (quote setup-korean-environment) "korea-util" "\
8688 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Korean." t nil)
8689
8690 (autoload (quote setup-korean-environment-internal) "korea-util" nil nil nil)
8691
8692 ;;;***
8693 \f
8694 ;;;### (autoloads (lm lm-test-run) "landmark" "play/landmark.el"
8695 ;;;;;; (14256 23599))
8696 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/landmark.el
8697
8698 (defalias (quote landmark-repeat) (quote lm-test-run))
8699
8700 (autoload (quote lm-test-run) "landmark" "\
8701 Run 100 Lm games, each time saving the weights from the previous game." t nil)
8702
8703 (defalias (quote landmark) (quote lm))
8704
8705 (autoload (quote lm) "landmark" "\
8706 Start or resume an Lm game.
8707 If a game is in progress, this command allows you to resume it.
8708 Here is the relation between prefix args and game options:
8709
8710 prefix arg | robot is auto-started | weights are saved from last game
8711 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
8712 none / 1 | yes | no
8713 2 | yes | yes
8714 3 | no | yes
8715 4 | no | no
8716
8717 You start by moving to a square and typing \\[lm-start-robot],
8718 if you did not use a prefix arg to ask for automatic start.
8719 Use \\[describe-mode] for more info." t nil)
8720
8721 ;;;***
8722 \f
8723 ;;;### (autoloads (lao-composition-function lao-transcribe-roman-to-lao-string
8724 ;;;;;; lao-transcribe-single-roman-syllable-to-lao lao-compose-string
8725 ;;;;;; setup-lao-environment) "lao-util" "language/lao-util.el"
8726 ;;;;;; (14423 51007))
8727 ;;; Generated autoloads from language/lao-util.el
8728
8729 (autoload (quote setup-lao-environment) "lao-util" "\
8730 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Lao." t nil)
8731
8732 (autoload (quote lao-compose-string) "lao-util" nil nil nil)
8733
8734 (autoload (quote lao-transcribe-single-roman-syllable-to-lao) "lao-util" "\
8735 Transcribe a Romanized Lao syllable in the region FROM and TO to Lao string.
8736 Only the first syllable is transcribed.
8737 The value has the form: (START END LAO-STRING), where
8738 START and END are the beggining and end positions of the Roman Lao syllable,
8739 LAO-STRING is the Lao character transcription of it.
8740
8741 Optional 3rd arg STR, if non-nil, is a string to search for Roman Lao
8742 syllable. In that case, FROM and TO are indexes to STR." nil nil)
8743
8744 (autoload (quote lao-transcribe-roman-to-lao-string) "lao-util" "\
8745 Transcribe Romanized Lao string STR to Lao character string." nil nil)
8746
8747 (autoload (quote lao-composition-function) "lao-util" "\
8748 Compose Lao text in the region FROM and TO.
8749 The text matches the regular expression PATTERN.
8750 Optional 4th argument STRING, if non-nil, is a string containing text
8751 to compose.
8752
8753 The return value is number of composed characters." nil nil)
8754
8755 ;;;***
8756 \f
8757 ;;;### (autoloads (turn-on-lazy-lock lazy-lock-mode) "lazy-lock"
8758 ;;;;;; "lazy-lock.el" (14263 35461))
8759 ;;; Generated autoloads from lazy-lock.el
8760
8761 (autoload (quote lazy-lock-mode) "lazy-lock" "\
8762 Toggle Lazy Lock mode.
8763 With arg, turn Lazy Lock mode on if and only if arg is positive. Enable it
8764 automatically in your `~/.emacs' by:
8765
8766 (setq font-lock-support-mode 'lazy-lock-mode)
8767
8768 When Lazy Lock mode is enabled, fontification can be lazy in a number of ways:
8769
8770 - Demand-driven buffer fontification if `lazy-lock-minimum-size' is non-nil.
8771 This means initial fontification does not occur if the buffer is greater than
8772 `lazy-lock-minimum-size' characters in length. Instead, fontification occurs
8773 when necessary, such as when scrolling through the buffer would otherwise
8774 reveal unfontified areas. This is useful if buffer fontification is too slow
8775 for large buffers.
8776
8777 - Deferred scroll fontification if `lazy-lock-defer-on-scrolling' is non-nil.
8778 This means demand-driven fontification does not occur as you scroll.
8779 Instead, fontification is deferred until after `lazy-lock-defer-time' seconds
8780 of Emacs idle time, while Emacs remains idle. This is useful if
8781 fontification is too slow to keep up with scrolling.
8782
8783 - Deferred on-the-fly fontification if `lazy-lock-defer-on-the-fly' is non-nil.
8784 This means on-the-fly fontification does not occur as you type. Instead,
8785 fontification is deferred until after `lazy-lock-defer-time' seconds of Emacs
8786 idle time, while Emacs remains idle. This is useful if fontification is too
8787 slow to keep up with your typing.
8788
8789 - Deferred context fontification if `lazy-lock-defer-contextually' is non-nil.
8790 This means fontification updates the buffer corresponding to true syntactic
8791 context, after `lazy-lock-defer-time' seconds of Emacs idle time, while Emacs
8792 remains idle. Otherwise, fontification occurs on modified lines only, and
8793 subsequent lines can remain fontified corresponding to previous syntactic
8794 contexts. This is useful where strings or comments span lines.
8795
8796 - Stealthy buffer fontification if `lazy-lock-stealth-time' is non-nil.
8797 This means remaining unfontified areas of buffers are fontified if Emacs has
8798 been idle for `lazy-lock-stealth-time' seconds, while Emacs remains idle.
8799 This is useful if any buffer has any deferred fontification.
8800
8801 Basic Font Lock mode on-the-fly fontification behaviour fontifies modified
8802 lines only. Thus, if `lazy-lock-defer-contextually' is non-nil, Lazy Lock mode
8803 on-the-fly fontification may fontify differently, albeit correctly. In any
8804 event, to refontify some lines you can use \\[font-lock-fontify-block].
8805
8806 Stealth fontification only occurs while the system remains unloaded.
8807 If the system load rises above `lazy-lock-stealth-load' percent, stealth
8808 fontification is suspended. Stealth fontification intensity is controlled via
8809 the variable `lazy-lock-stealth-nice' and `lazy-lock-stealth-lines', and
8810 verbosity is controlled via the variable `lazy-lock-stealth-verbose'." t nil)
8811
8812 (autoload (quote turn-on-lazy-lock) "lazy-lock" "\
8813 Unconditionally turn on Lazy Lock mode." nil nil)
8814
8815 ;;;***
8816 \f
8817 ;;;### (autoloads (ledit-from-lisp-mode ledit-mode) "ledit" "ledit.el"
8818 ;;;;;; (14280 10549))
8819 ;;; Generated autoloads from ledit.el
8820
8821 (defconst ledit-save-files t "\
8822 *Non-nil means Ledit should save files before transferring to Lisp.")
8823
8824 (defconst ledit-go-to-lisp-string "%?lisp" "\
8825 *Shell commands to execute to resume Lisp job.")
8826
8827 (defconst ledit-go-to-liszt-string "%?liszt" "\
8828 *Shell commands to execute to resume Lisp compiler job.")
8829
8830 (autoload (quote ledit-mode) "ledit" "\
8831 \\<ledit-mode-map>Major mode for editing text and stuffing it to a Lisp job.
8832 Like Lisp mode, plus these special commands:
8833 \\[ledit-save-defun] -- record defun at or after point
8834 for later transmission to Lisp job.
8835 \\[ledit-save-region] -- record region for later transmission to Lisp job.
8836 \\[ledit-go-to-lisp] -- transfer to Lisp job and transmit saved text.
8837 \\[ledit-go-to-liszt] -- transfer to Liszt (Lisp compiler) job
8838 and transmit saved text.
8839 \\{ledit-mode-map}
8840 To make Lisp mode automatically change to Ledit mode,
8841 do (setq lisp-mode-hook 'ledit-from-lisp-mode)" t nil)
8842
8843 (autoload (quote ledit-from-lisp-mode) "ledit" nil nil nil)
8844
8845 ;;;***
8846 \f
8847 ;;;### (autoloads (life) "life" "play/life.el" (13578 3356))
8848 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/life.el
8849
8850 (autoload (quote life) "life" "\
8851 Run Conway's Life simulation.
8852 The starting pattern is randomly selected. Prefix arg (optional first
8853 arg non-nil from a program) is the number of seconds to sleep between
8854 generations (this defaults to 1)." t nil)
8855
8856 ;;;***
8857 \f
8858 ;;;### (autoloads (unload-feature) "loadhist" "loadhist.el" (13935
8859 ;;;;;; 16155))
8860 ;;; Generated autoloads from loadhist.el
8861
8862 (autoload (quote unload-feature) "loadhist" "\
8863 Unload the library that provided FEATURE, restoring all its autoloads.
8864 If the feature is required by any other loaded code, and optional FORCE
8865 is nil, raise an error." t nil)
8866
8867 ;;;***
8868 \f
8869 ;;;### (autoloads (locate-with-filter locate) "locate" "locate.el"
8870 ;;;;;; (14396 4034))
8871 ;;; Generated autoloads from locate.el
8872
8873 (autoload (quote locate) "locate" "\
8874 Run the program `locate', putting results in `*Locate*' buffer.
8875 With prefix arg, prompt for the locate command to run." t nil)
8876
8877 (autoload (quote locate-with-filter) "locate" "\
8878 Run the locate command with a filter.
8879
8880 The filter is a regular expression. Only results matching the filter are
8881 shown; this is often useful to constrain a big search." t nil)
8882
8883 ;;;***
8884 \f
8885 ;;;### (autoloads (print-region lpr-region print-buffer lpr-buffer
8886 ;;;;;; lpr-command lpr-switches printer-name) "lpr" "lpr.el" (14440
8887 ;;;;;; 46009))
8888 ;;; Generated autoloads from lpr.el
8889
8890 (defvar printer-name (if (memq system-type (quote (ms-dos windows-nt))) "PRN") "\
8891 *The name of a local printer to which data is sent for printing.
8892 \(Note that PostScript files are sent to `ps-printer-name', which see.)
8893
8894 On Unix-like systems, a string value should be a name understood by
8895 lpr's -P option; otherwise the value should be nil.
8896
8897 On MS-DOS and MS-Windows systems, a string value is taken as the name of
8898 a printer device or port, provided `lpr-command' is set to \"\".
8899 Typical non-default settings would be \"LPT1\" to \"LPT3\" for parallel
8900 printers, or \"COM1\" to \"COM4\" or \"AUX\" for serial printers, or
8901 \"//hostname/printer\" for a shared network printer. You can also set
8902 it to the name of a file, in which case the output gets appended to that
8903 file. If you want to discard the printed output, set this to \"NUL\".")
8904
8905 (defvar lpr-switches nil "\
8906 *List of strings to pass as extra options for the printer program.
8907 It is recommended to set `printer-name' instead of including an explicit
8908 switch on this list.
8909 See `lpr-command'.")
8910
8911 (defvar lpr-command (cond ((memq system-type (quote (ms-dos windows-nt))) "") ((memq system-type (quote (usg-unix-v dgux hpux irix))) "lp") (t "lpr")) "\
8912 *Name of program for printing a file.
8913
8914 On MS-DOS and MS-Windows systems, if the value is an empty string then
8915 Emacs will write directly to the printer port named by `printer-name'.
8916 The programs `print' and `nprint' (the standard print programs on
8917 Windows NT and Novell Netware respectively) are handled specially, using
8918 `printer-name' as the destination for output; any other program is
8919 treated like `lpr' except that an explicit filename is given as the last
8920 argument.")
8921
8922 (autoload (quote lpr-buffer) "lpr" "\
8923 Print buffer contents without pagination or page headers.
8924 See the variables `lpr-switches' and `lpr-command'
8925 for customization of the printer command." t nil)
8926
8927 (autoload (quote print-buffer) "lpr" "\
8928 Paginate and print buffer contents.
8929
8930 The variable `lpr-headers-switches' controls how to paginate.
8931 If it is nil (the default), we run the `pr' program (or whatever program
8932 `lpr-page-header-program' specifies) to paginate.
8933 `lpr-page-header-switches' specifies the switches for that program.
8934
8935 Otherwise, the switches in `lpr-headers-switches' are used
8936 in the print command itself; we expect them to request pagination.
8937
8938 See the variables `lpr-switches' and `lpr-command'
8939 for further customization of the printer command." t nil)
8940
8941 (autoload (quote lpr-region) "lpr" "\
8942 Print region contents without pagination or page headers.
8943 See the variables `lpr-switches' and `lpr-command'
8944 for customization of the printer command." t nil)
8945
8946 (autoload (quote print-region) "lpr" "\
8947 Paginate and print the region contents.
8948
8949 The variable `lpr-headers-switches' controls how to paginate.
8950 If it is nil (the default), we run the `pr' program (or whatever program
8951 `lpr-page-header-program' specifies) to paginate.
8952 `lpr-page-header-switches' specifies the switches for that program.
8953
8954 Otherwise, the switches in `lpr-headers-switches' are used
8955 in the print command itself; we expect them to request pagination.
8956
8957 See the variables `lpr-switches' and `lpr-command'
8958 for further customization of the printer command." t nil)
8959
8960 ;;;***
8961 \f
8962 ;;;### (autoloads nil "ls-lisp" "ls-lisp.el" (14425 19316))
8963 ;;; Generated autoloads from ls-lisp.el
8964
8965 (defvar ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards t "\
8966 *Non-nil means file patterns are treated as shell wildcards.
8967 nil means they are treated as Emacs regexps (for backward compatibility).
8968 This variable is checked by \\[insert-directory] only when `ls-lisp.el'
8969 package is used.")
8970
8971 ;;;***
8972 \f
8973 ;;;### (autoloads (phases-of-moon) "lunar" "calendar/lunar.el" (13462
8974 ;;;;;; 53924))
8975 ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/lunar.el
8976
8977 (autoload (quote phases-of-moon) "lunar" "\
8978 Display the quarters of the moon for last month, this month, and next month.
8979 If called with an optional prefix argument, prompts for month and year.
8980
8981 This function is suitable for execution in a .emacs file." t nil)
8982
8983 ;;;***
8984 \f
8985 ;;;### (autoloads (m4-mode) "m4-mode" "progmodes/m4-mode.el" (13962
8986 ;;;;;; 30919))
8987 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/m4-mode.el
8988
8989 (autoload (quote m4-mode) "m4-mode" "\
8990 A major mode to edit m4 macro files.
8991 \\{m4-mode-map}
8992 " t nil)
8993
8994 ;;;***
8995 \f
8996 ;;;### (autoloads (apply-macro-to-region-lines kbd-macro-query insert-kbd-macro
8997 ;;;;;; name-last-kbd-macro) "macros" "macros.el" (13229 28845))
8998 ;;; Generated autoloads from macros.el
8999
9000 (autoload (quote name-last-kbd-macro) "macros" "\
9001 Assign a name to the last keyboard macro defined.
9002 Argument SYMBOL is the name to define.
9003 The symbol's function definition becomes the keyboard macro string.
9004 Such a \"function\" cannot be called from Lisp, but it is a valid editor command." t nil)
9005
9006 (autoload (quote insert-kbd-macro) "macros" "\
9007 Insert in buffer the definition of kbd macro NAME, as Lisp code.
9008 Optional second arg KEYS means also record the keys it is on
9009 \(this is the prefix argument, when calling interactively).
9010
9011 This Lisp code will, when executed, define the kbd macro with the same
9012 definition it has now. If you say to record the keys, the Lisp code
9013 will also rebind those keys to the macro. Only global key bindings
9014 are recorded since executing this Lisp code always makes global
9015 bindings.
9016
9017 To save a kbd macro, visit a file of Lisp code such as your `~/.emacs',
9018 use this command, and then save the file." t nil)
9019
9020 (autoload (quote kbd-macro-query) "macros" "\
9021 Query user during kbd macro execution.
9022 With prefix argument, enters recursive edit, reading keyboard
9023 commands even within a kbd macro. You can give different commands
9024 each time the macro executes.
9025 Without prefix argument, asks whether to continue running the macro.
9026 Your options are: \\<query-replace-map>
9027 \\[act] Finish this iteration normally and continue with the next.
9028 \\[skip] Skip the rest of this iteration, and start the next.
9029 \\[exit] Stop the macro entirely right now.
9030 \\[recenter] Redisplay the screen, then ask again.
9031 \\[edit] Enter recursive edit; ask again when you exit from that." t nil)
9032
9033 (autoload (quote apply-macro-to-region-lines) "macros" "\
9034 For each complete line between point and mark, move to the beginning
9035 of the line, and run the last keyboard macro.
9036
9037 When called from lisp, this function takes two arguments TOP and
9038 BOTTOM, describing the current region. TOP must be before BOTTOM.
9039 The optional third argument MACRO specifies a keyboard macro to
9040 execute.
9041
9042 This is useful for quoting or unquoting included text, adding and
9043 removing comments, or producing tables where the entries are regular.
9044
9045 For example, in Usenet articles, sections of text quoted from another
9046 author are indented, or have each line start with `>'. To quote a
9047 section of text, define a keyboard macro which inserts `>', put point
9048 and mark at opposite ends of the quoted section, and use
9049 `\\[apply-macro-to-region-lines]' to mark the entire section.
9050
9051 Suppose you wanted to build a keyword table in C where each entry
9052 looked like this:
9053
9054 { \"foo\", foo_data, foo_function },
9055 { \"bar\", bar_data, bar_function },
9056 { \"baz\", baz_data, baz_function },
9057
9058 You could enter the names in this format:
9059
9060 foo
9061 bar
9062 baz
9063
9064 and write a macro to massage a word into a table entry:
9065
9066 \\C-x (
9067 \\M-d { \"\\C-y\", \\C-y_data, \\C-y_function },
9068 \\C-x )
9069
9070 and then select the region of un-tablified names and use
9071 `\\[apply-macro-to-region-lines]' to build the table from the names.
9072 " t nil)
9073 (define-key ctl-x-map "q" 'kbd-macro-query)
9074
9075 ;;;***
9076 \f
9077 ;;;### (autoloads (what-domain mail-extract-address-components) "mail-extr"
9078 ;;;;;; "mail/mail-extr.el" (14281 39314))
9079 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mail-extr.el
9080
9081 (autoload (quote mail-extract-address-components) "mail-extr" "\
9082 Given an RFC-822 address ADDRESS, extract full name and canonical address.
9083 Returns a list of the form (FULL-NAME CANONICAL-ADDRESS).
9084 If no name can be extracted, FULL-NAME will be nil.
9085
9086 If the optional argument ALL is non-nil, then ADDRESS can contain zero
9087 or more recipients, separated by commas, and we return a list of
9088 the form ((FULL-NAME CANONICAL-ADDRESS) ...) with one element for
9089 each recipient. If ALL is nil, then if ADDRESS contains more than
9090 one recipients, all but the first is ignored.
9091
9092 ADDRESS may be a string or a buffer. If it is a buffer, the visible
9093 (narrowed) portion of the buffer will be interpreted as the address.
9094 (This feature exists so that the clever caller might be able to avoid
9095 consing a string.)" nil nil)
9096
9097 (autoload (quote what-domain) "mail-extr" "\
9098 Convert mail domain DOMAIN to the country it corresponds to." t nil)
9099
9100 ;;;***
9101 \f
9102 ;;;### (autoloads (mail-hist-put-headers-into-history mail-hist-keep-history
9103 ;;;;;; mail-hist-enable mail-hist-define-keys) "mail-hist" "mail/mail-hist.el"
9104 ;;;;;; (14075 51598))
9105 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mail-hist.el
9106
9107 (autoload (quote mail-hist-define-keys) "mail-hist" "\
9108 Define keys for accessing mail header history. For use in hooks." nil nil)
9109
9110 (autoload (quote mail-hist-enable) "mail-hist" nil nil nil)
9111
9112 (defvar mail-hist-keep-history t "\
9113 *Non-nil means keep a history for headers and text of outgoing mail.")
9114
9115 (autoload (quote mail-hist-put-headers-into-history) "mail-hist" "\
9116 Put headers and contents of this message into mail header history.
9117 Each header has its own independent history, as does the body of the
9118 message.
9119
9120 This function normally would be called when the message is sent." nil nil)
9121
9122 ;;;***
9123 \f
9124 ;;;### (autoloads (mail-fetch-field mail-unquote-printable-region
9125 ;;;;;; mail-unquote-printable mail-quote-printable mail-file-babyl-p
9126 ;;;;;; mail-use-rfc822) "mail-utils" "mail/mail-utils.el" (14263
9127 ;;;;;; 33297))
9128 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mail-utils.el
9129
9130 (defvar mail-use-rfc822 nil "\
9131 *If non-nil, use a full, hairy RFC822 parser on mail addresses.
9132 Otherwise, (the default) use a smaller, somewhat faster, and
9133 often correct parser.")
9134
9135 (autoload (quote mail-file-babyl-p) "mail-utils" nil nil nil)
9136
9137 (autoload (quote mail-quote-printable) "mail-utils" "\
9138 Convert a string to the \"quoted printable\" Q encoding.
9139 If the optional argument WRAPPER is non-nil,
9140 we add the wrapper characters =?ISO-8859-1?Q?....?=." nil nil)
9141
9142 (autoload (quote mail-unquote-printable) "mail-utils" "\
9143 Undo the \"quoted printable\" encoding.
9144 If the optional argument WRAPPER is non-nil,
9145 we expect to find and remove the wrapper characters =?ISO-8859-1?Q?....?=." nil nil)
9146
9147 (autoload (quote mail-unquote-printable-region) "mail-utils" "\
9148 Undo the \"quoted printable\" encoding in buffer from BEG to END.
9149 If the optional argument WRAPPER is non-nil,
9150 we expect to find and remove the wrapper characters =?ISO-8859-1?Q?....?=." t nil)
9151
9152 (autoload (quote mail-fetch-field) "mail-utils" "\
9153 Return the value of the header field whose type is FIELD-NAME.
9154 The buffer is expected to be narrowed to just the header of the message.
9155 If second arg LAST is non-nil, use the last field of type FIELD-NAME.
9156 If third arg ALL is non-nil, concatenate all such fields with commas between.
9157 If 4th arg LIST is non-nil, return a list of all such fields." nil nil)
9158
9159 ;;;***
9160 \f
9161 ;;;### (autoloads (define-mail-abbrev build-mail-abbrevs mail-abbrevs-setup)
9162 ;;;;;; "mailabbrev" "mail/mailabbrev.el" (13640 6539))
9163 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mailabbrev.el
9164
9165 (autoload (quote mail-abbrevs-setup) "mailabbrev" "\
9166 Initialize use of the `mailabbrev' package." nil nil)
9167
9168 (autoload (quote build-mail-abbrevs) "mailabbrev" "\
9169 Read mail aliases from personal mail alias file and set `mail-abbrevs'.
9170 By default this is the file specified by `mail-personal-alias-file'." nil nil)
9171
9172 (autoload (quote define-mail-abbrev) "mailabbrev" "\
9173 Define NAME as a mail alias abbrev that translates to DEFINITION.
9174 If DEFINITION contains multiple addresses, separate them with commas." t nil)
9175
9176 ;;;***
9177 \f
9178 ;;;### (autoloads (mail-complete define-mail-alias expand-mail-aliases
9179 ;;;;;; mail-complete-style) "mailalias" "mail/mailalias.el" (13996
9180 ;;;;;; 15646))
9181 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mailalias.el
9182
9183 (defvar mail-complete-style (quote angles) "\
9184 *Specifies how \\[mail-complete] formats the full name when it completes.
9185 If `nil', they contain just the return address like:
9186 king@grassland.com
9187 If `parens', they look like:
9188 king@grassland.com (Elvis Parsley)
9189 If `angles', they look like:
9190 Elvis Parsley <king@grassland.com>")
9191
9192 (autoload (quote expand-mail-aliases) "mailalias" "\
9193 Expand all mail aliases in suitable header fields found between BEG and END.
9194 If interactive, expand in header fields.
9195 Suitable header fields are `To', `From', `CC' and `BCC', `Reply-to', and
9196 their `Resent-' variants.
9197
9198 Optional second arg EXCLUDE may be a regular expression defining text to be
9199 removed from alias expansions." t nil)
9200
9201 (autoload (quote define-mail-alias) "mailalias" "\
9202 Define NAME as a mail alias that translates to DEFINITION.
9203 This means that sending a message to NAME will actually send to DEFINITION.
9204
9205 Normally, the addresses in DEFINITION must be separated by commas.
9206 If FROM-MAILRC-FILE is non-nil, then addresses in DEFINITION
9207 can be separated by spaces; an address can contain spaces
9208 if it is quoted with double-quotes." t nil)
9209
9210 (autoload (quote mail-complete) "mailalias" "\
9211 Perform completion on header field or word preceding point.
9212 Completable headers are according to `mail-complete-alist'. If none matches
9213 current header, calls `mail-complete-function' and passes prefix arg if any." t nil)
9214
9215 ;;;***
9216 \f
9217 ;;;### (autoloads (makefile-mode) "make-mode" "progmodes/make-mode.el"
9218 ;;;;;; (14410 18641))
9219 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/make-mode.el
9220
9221 (autoload (quote makefile-mode) "make-mode" "\
9222 Major mode for editing Makefiles.
9223 This function ends by invoking the function(s) `makefile-mode-hook'.
9224
9225 \\{makefile-mode-map}
9226
9227 In the browser, use the following keys:
9228
9229 \\{makefile-browser-map}
9230
9231 Makefile mode can be configured by modifying the following variables:
9232
9233 makefile-browser-buffer-name:
9234 Name of the macro- and target browser buffer.
9235
9236 makefile-target-colon:
9237 The string that gets appended to all target names
9238 inserted by `makefile-insert-target'.
9239 \":\" or \"::\" are quite common values.
9240
9241 makefile-macro-assign:
9242 The string that gets appended to all macro names
9243 inserted by `makefile-insert-macro'.
9244 The normal value should be \" = \", since this is what
9245 standard make expects. However, newer makes such as dmake
9246 allow a larger variety of different macro assignments, so you
9247 might prefer to use \" += \" or \" := \" .
9248
9249 makefile-tab-after-target-colon:
9250 If you want a TAB (instead of a space) to be appended after the
9251 target colon, then set this to a non-nil value.
9252
9253 makefile-browser-leftmost-column:
9254 Number of blanks to the left of the browser selection mark.
9255
9256 makefile-browser-cursor-column:
9257 Column in which the cursor is positioned when it moves
9258 up or down in the browser.
9259
9260 makefile-browser-selected-mark:
9261 String used to mark selected entries in the browser.
9262
9263 makefile-browser-unselected-mark:
9264 String used to mark unselected entries in the browser.
9265
9266 makefile-browser-auto-advance-after-selection-p:
9267 If this variable is set to a non-nil value the cursor
9268 will automagically advance to the next line after an item
9269 has been selected in the browser.
9270
9271 makefile-pickup-everything-picks-up-filenames-p:
9272 If this variable is set to a non-nil value then
9273 `makefile-pickup-everything' also picks up filenames as targets
9274 (i.e. it calls `makefile-pickup-filenames-as-targets'), otherwise
9275 filenames are omitted.
9276
9277 makefile-cleanup-continuations-p:
9278 If this variable is set to a non-nil value then Makefile mode
9279 will assure that no line in the file ends with a backslash
9280 (the continuation character) followed by any whitespace.
9281 This is done by silently removing the trailing whitespace, leaving
9282 the backslash itself intact.
9283 IMPORTANT: Please note that enabling this option causes Makefile mode
9284 to MODIFY A FILE WITHOUT YOUR CONFIRMATION when \"it seems necessary\".
9285
9286 makefile-browser-hook:
9287 A function or list of functions to be called just before the
9288 browser is entered. This is executed in the makefile buffer.
9289
9290 makefile-special-targets-list:
9291 List of special targets. You will be offered to complete
9292 on one of those in the minibuffer whenever you enter a `.'.
9293 at the beginning of a line in Makefile mode." t nil)
9294
9295 ;;;***
9296 \f
9297 ;;;### (autoloads (make-command-summary) "makesum" "makesum.el" (13229
9298 ;;;;;; 28917))
9299 ;;; Generated autoloads from makesum.el
9300
9301 (autoload (quote make-command-summary) "makesum" "\
9302 Make a summary of current key bindings in the buffer *Summary*.
9303 Previous contents of that buffer are killed first." t nil)
9304
9305 ;;;***
9306 \f
9307 ;;;### (autoloads (man-follow man) "man" "man.el" (14252 7234))
9308 ;;; Generated autoloads from man.el
9309
9310 (defalias (quote manual-entry) (quote man))
9311
9312 (autoload (quote man) "man" "\
9313 Get a Un*x manual page and put it in a buffer.
9314 This command is the top-level command in the man package. It runs a Un*x
9315 command to retrieve and clean a manpage in the background and places the
9316 results in a Man mode (manpage browsing) buffer. See variable
9317 `Man-notify-method' for what happens when the buffer is ready.
9318 If a buffer already exists for this man page, it will display immediately." t nil)
9319
9320 (autoload (quote man-follow) "man" "\
9321 Get a Un*x manual page of the item under point and put it in a buffer." t nil)
9322
9323 ;;;***
9324 \f
9325 ;;;### (autoloads (unbold-region bold-region message-news-other-frame
9326 ;;;;;; message-news-other-window message-mail-other-frame message-mail-other-window
9327 ;;;;;; message-bounce message-resend message-forward message-recover
9328 ;;;;;; message-supersede message-cancel-news message-followup message-wide-reply
9329 ;;;;;; message-reply message-news message-mail message-mode message-signature-file
9330 ;;;;;; message-signature message-indent-citation-function message-cite-function
9331 ;;;;;; message-yank-prefix message-citation-line-function message-send-mail-function
9332 ;;;;;; message-user-organization-file message-signature-separator
9333 ;;;;;; message-from-style) "message" "gnus/message.el" (14030 49419))
9334 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/message.el
9335
9336 (defvar message-from-style (quote default) "\
9337 *Specifies how \"From\" headers look.
9338
9339 If `nil', they contain just the return address like:
9340 king@grassland.com
9341 If `parens', they look like:
9342 king@grassland.com (Elvis Parsley)
9343 If `angles', they look like:
9344 Elvis Parsley <king@grassland.com>
9345
9346 Otherwise, most addresses look like `angles', but they look like
9347 `parens' if `angles' would need quoting and `parens' would not.")
9348
9349 (defvar message-signature-separator "^-- *$" "\
9350 Regexp matching the signature separator.")
9351
9352 (defvar message-user-organization-file "/usr/lib/news/organization" "\
9353 *Local news organization file.")
9354
9355 (defvar message-send-mail-function (quote message-send-mail-with-sendmail) "\
9356 Function to call to send the current buffer as mail.
9357 The headers should be delimited by a line whose contents match the
9358 variable `mail-header-separator'.
9359
9360 Legal values include `message-send-mail-with-sendmail' (the default),
9361 `message-send-mail-with-mh', `message-send-mail-with-qmail' and
9362 `smtpmail-send-it'.")
9363
9364 (defvar message-citation-line-function (quote message-insert-citation-line) "\
9365 *Function called to insert the \"Whomever writes:\" line.")
9366
9367 (defvar message-yank-prefix "> " "\
9368 *Prefix inserted on the lines of yanked messages.
9369 nil means use indentation.")
9370
9371 (defvar message-cite-function (quote message-cite-original) "\
9372 *Function for citing an original message.
9373 Predefined functions include `message-cite-original' and
9374 `message-cite-original-without-signature'.
9375 Note that `message-cite-original' uses `mail-citation-hook' if that is non-nil.")
9376
9377 (defvar message-indent-citation-function (quote message-indent-citation) "\
9378 *Function for modifying a citation just inserted in the mail buffer.
9379 This can also be a list of functions. Each function can find the
9380 citation between (point) and (mark t). And each function should leave
9381 point and mark around the citation text as modified.")
9382
9383 (defvar message-signature t "\
9384 *String to be inserted at the end of the message buffer.
9385 If t, the `message-signature-file' file will be inserted instead.
9386 If a function, the result from the function will be used instead.
9387 If a form, the result from the form will be used instead.")
9388
9389 (defvar message-signature-file "~/.signature" "\
9390 *File containing the text inserted at end of message buffer.")
9391
9392 (condition-case nil (define-mail-user-agent (quote message-user-agent) (quote message-mail) (quote message-send-and-exit) (quote message-kill-buffer) (quote message-send-hook)) (error nil))
9393
9394 (autoload (quote message-mode) "message" "\
9395 Major mode for editing mail and news to be sent.
9396 Like Text Mode but with these additional commands:
9397 C-c C-s message-send (send the message) C-c C-c message-send-and-exit
9398 C-c C-f move to a header field (and create it if there isn't):
9399 C-c C-f C-t move to To C-c C-f C-s move to Subject
9400 C-c C-f C-c move to Cc C-c C-f C-b move to Bcc
9401 C-c C-f C-w move to Fcc C-c C-f C-r move to Reply-To
9402 C-c C-f C-u move to Summary C-c C-f C-n move to Newsgroups
9403 C-c C-f C-k move to Keywords C-c C-f C-d move to Distribution
9404 C-c C-f C-f move to Followup-To
9405 C-c C-t message-insert-to (add a To header to a news followup)
9406 C-c C-n message-insert-newsgroups (add a Newsgroup header to a news reply)
9407 C-c C-b message-goto-body (move to beginning of message text).
9408 C-c C-i message-goto-signature (move to the beginning of the signature).
9409 C-c C-w message-insert-signature (insert `message-signature-file' file).
9410 C-c C-y message-yank-original (insert current message, if any).
9411 C-c C-q message-fill-yanked-message (fill what was yanked).
9412 C-c C-e message-elide-region (elide the text between point and mark).
9413 C-c C-z message-kill-to-signature (kill the text up to the signature).
9414 C-c C-r message-caesar-buffer-body (rot13 the message body)." t nil)
9415
9416 (autoload (quote message-mail) "message" "\
9417 Start editing a mail message to be sent.
9418 OTHER-HEADERS is an alist of header/value pairs." t nil)
9419
9420 (autoload (quote message-news) "message" "\
9421 Start editing a news article to be sent." t nil)
9422
9423 (autoload (quote message-reply) "message" "\
9424 Start editing a reply to the article in the current buffer." t nil)
9425
9426 (autoload (quote message-wide-reply) "message" "\
9427 Make a \"wide\" reply to the message in the current buffer." t nil)
9428
9429 (autoload (quote message-followup) "message" "\
9430 Follow up to the message in the current buffer.
9431 If TO-NEWSGROUPS, use that as the new Newsgroups line." t nil)
9432
9433 (autoload (quote message-cancel-news) "message" "\
9434 Cancel an article you posted." t nil)
9435
9436 (autoload (quote message-supersede) "message" "\
9437 Start composing a message to supersede the current message.
9438 This is done simply by taking the old article and adding a Supersedes
9439 header line with the old Message-ID." t nil)
9440
9441 (autoload (quote message-recover) "message" "\
9442 Reread contents of current buffer from its last auto-save file." t nil)
9443
9444 (autoload (quote message-forward) "message" "\
9445 Forward the current message via mail.
9446 Optional NEWS will use news to forward instead of mail." t nil)
9447
9448 (autoload (quote message-resend) "message" "\
9449 Resend the current article to ADDRESS." t nil)
9450
9451 (autoload (quote message-bounce) "message" "\
9452 Re-mail the current message.
9453 This only makes sense if the current message is a bounce message than
9454 contains some mail you have written which has been bounced back to
9455 you." t nil)
9456
9457 (autoload (quote message-mail-other-window) "message" "\
9458 Like `message-mail' command, but display mail buffer in another window." t nil)
9459
9460 (autoload (quote message-mail-other-frame) "message" "\
9461 Like `message-mail' command, but display mail buffer in another frame." t nil)
9462
9463 (autoload (quote message-news-other-window) "message" "\
9464 Start editing a news article to be sent." t nil)
9465
9466 (autoload (quote message-news-other-frame) "message" "\
9467 Start editing a news article to be sent." t nil)
9468
9469 (autoload (quote bold-region) "message" "\
9470 Bold all nonblank characters in the region.
9471 Works by overstriking characters.
9472 Called from program, takes two arguments START and END
9473 which specify the range to operate on." t nil)
9474
9475 (autoload (quote unbold-region) "message" "\
9476 Remove all boldness (overstruck characters) in the region.
9477 Called from program, takes two arguments START and END
9478 which specify the range to operate on." t nil)
9479
9480 ;;;***
9481 \f
9482 ;;;### (autoloads (metapost-mode metafont-mode) "meta-mode" "progmodes/meta-mode.el"
9483 ;;;;;; (13549 39401))
9484 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/meta-mode.el
9485
9486 (autoload (quote metafont-mode) "meta-mode" "\
9487 Major mode for editing Metafont sources.
9488 Special commands:
9489 \\{meta-mode-map}
9490
9491 Turning on Metafont mode calls the value of the variables
9492 `meta-common-mode-hook' and `metafont-mode-hook'." t nil)
9493
9494 (autoload (quote metapost-mode) "meta-mode" "\
9495 Major mode for editing MetaPost sources.
9496 Special commands:
9497 \\{meta-mode-map}
9498
9499 Turning on MetaPost mode calls the value of the variable
9500 `meta-common-mode-hook' and `metafont-mode-hook'." t nil)
9501
9502 ;;;***
9503 \f
9504 ;;;### (autoloads (metamail-region metamail-buffer metamail-interpret-body
9505 ;;;;;; metamail-interpret-header) "metamail" "mail/metamail.el"
9506 ;;;;;; (14345 52966))
9507 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/metamail.el
9508
9509 (autoload (quote metamail-interpret-header) "metamail" "\
9510 Interpret a header part of a MIME message in current buffer.
9511 Its body part is not interpreted at all." t nil)
9512
9513 (autoload (quote metamail-interpret-body) "metamail" "\
9514 Interpret a body part of a MIME message in current buffer.
9515 Optional argument VIEWMODE specifies the value of the
9516 EMACS_VIEW_MODE environment variable (defaulted to 1).
9517 Optional argument NODISPLAY non-nil means buffer is not
9518 redisplayed as output is inserted.
9519 Its header part is not interpreted at all." t nil)
9520
9521 (autoload (quote metamail-buffer) "metamail" "\
9522 Process current buffer through `metamail'.
9523 Optional argument VIEWMODE specifies the value of the
9524 EMACS_VIEW_MODE environment variable (defaulted to 1).
9525 Optional argument BUFFER specifies a buffer to be filled (nil
9526 means current).
9527 Optional argument NODISPLAY non-nil means buffer is not
9528 redisplayed as output is inserted." t nil)
9529
9530 (autoload (quote metamail-region) "metamail" "\
9531 Process current region through 'metamail'.
9532 Optional argument VIEWMODE specifies the value of the
9533 EMACS_VIEW_MODE environment variable (defaulted to 1).
9534 Optional argument BUFFER specifies a buffer to be filled (nil
9535 means current).
9536 Optional argument NODISPLAY non-nil means buffer is not
9537 redisplayed as output is inserted." t nil)
9538
9539 ;;;***
9540 \f
9541 ;;;### (autoloads (mh-letter-mode mh-smail-other-window mh-smail-batch
9542 ;;;;;; mh-smail) "mh-comp" "mail/mh-comp.el" (14460 38678))
9543 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mh-comp.el
9544
9545 (autoload (quote mh-smail) "mh-comp" "\
9546 Compose and send mail with the MH mail system.
9547 This function is an entry point to mh-e, the Emacs front end
9548 to the MH mail system.
9549
9550 See documentation of `\\[mh-send]' for more details on composing mail." t nil)
9551
9552 (autoload (quote mh-smail-batch) "mh-comp" "\
9553 Set up a mail composition draft with the MH mail system.
9554 This function is an entry point to mh-e, the Emacs front end
9555 to the MH mail system. This function does not prompt the user
9556 for any header fields, and thus is suitable for use by programs
9557 that want to create a mail buffer.
9558 Users should use `\\[mh-smail]' to compose mail." nil nil)
9559
9560 (autoload (quote mh-smail-other-window) "mh-comp" "\
9561 Compose and send mail in other window with the MH mail system.
9562 This function is an entry point to mh-e, the Emacs front end
9563 to the MH mail system.
9564
9565 See documentation of `\\[mh-send]' for more details on composing mail." t nil)
9566
9567 (autoload (quote mh-letter-mode) "mh-comp" "\
9568 Mode for composing letters in mh-e.\\<mh-letter-mode-map>
9569 When you have finished composing, type \\[mh-send-letter] to send the message
9570 using the MH mail handling system.
9571 See the documentation for \\[mh-edit-mhn] for information on composing MIME
9572 messages.
9573
9574 \\{mh-letter-mode-map}
9575
9576 Variables controlling this mode (defaults in parentheses):
9577
9578 mh-delete-yanked-msg-window (nil)
9579 If non-nil, \\[mh-yank-cur-msg] will delete any windows displaying
9580 the yanked message.
9581
9582 mh-yank-from-start-of-msg (t)
9583 If non-nil, \\[mh-yank-cur-msg] will include the entire message.
9584 If `body', just yank the body (no header).
9585 If nil, only the portion of the message following the point will be yanked.
9586 If there is a region, this variable is ignored.
9587
9588 mh-ins-buf-prefix (\"> \")
9589 String to insert before each non-blank line of a message as it is
9590 inserted in a draft letter.
9591
9592 mh-signature-file-name (\"~/.signature\")
9593 File to be inserted into message by \\[mh-insert-signature].
9594
9595 This command runs the normal hooks `text-mode-hook' and `mh-letter-mode-hook'." t nil)
9596
9597 ;;;***
9598 \f
9599 ;;;### (autoloads (mh-version mh-rmail) "mh-e" "mail/mh-e.el" (14376
9600 ;;;;;; 9267))
9601 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mh-e.el
9602
9603 (autoload (quote mh-rmail) "mh-e" "\
9604 Inc(orporate) new mail with MH, or, with arg, scan an MH mail folder.
9605 This function is an entry point to mh-e, the Emacs front end
9606 to the MH mail system." t nil)
9607
9608 (autoload (quote mh-version) "mh-e" "\
9609 Display version information about mh-e and the MH mail handling system." t nil)
9610
9611 ;;;***
9612 \f
9613 ;;;### (autoloads nil "mh-mime" "mail/mh-mime.el" (13833 28022))
9614 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mh-mime.el
9615
9616 (defvar mh-mime-content-types (quote (("text/plain") ("text/richtext") ("multipart/mixed") ("multipart/alternative") ("multipart/digest") ("multipart/parallel") ("message/rfc822") ("message/partial") ("message/external-body") ("application/octet-stream") ("application/postscript") ("image/jpeg") ("image/gif") ("audio/basic") ("video/mpeg"))) "\
9617 Legal MIME content types. See documentation for \\[mh-edit-mhn].")
9618
9619 ;;;***
9620 \f
9621 ;;;### (autoloads nil "mh-utils" "mail/mh-utils.el" (14457 61243))
9622 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/mh-utils.el
9623
9624 (put (quote mh-progs) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
9625
9626 (put (quote mh-lib) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
9627
9628 (put (quote mh-lib-progs) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
9629
9630 (put (quote mh-nmh-p) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
9631
9632 ;;;***
9633 \f
9634 ;;;### (autoloads (midnight-delay-set clean-buffer-list) "midnight"
9635 ;;;;;; "midnight.el" (14035 10445))
9636 ;;; Generated autoloads from midnight.el
9637
9638 (autoload (quote clean-buffer-list) "midnight" "\
9639 Kill old buffers that have not been displayed recently.
9640 The relevant variables are `clean-buffer-list-delay-general',
9641 `clean-buffer-list-delay-special', `clean-buffer-list-kill-buffer-names',
9642 `clean-buffer-list-kill-never-buffer-names',
9643 `clean-buffer-list-kill-regexps' and
9644 `clean-buffer-list-kill-never-regexps'.
9645 While processing buffers, this procedure displays messages containing
9646 the current date/time, buffer name, how many seconds ago it was
9647 displayed (can be nil if the buffer was never displayed) and its
9648 lifetime, i.e., its \"age\" when it will be purged." t nil)
9649
9650 (autoload (quote midnight-delay-set) "midnight" "\
9651 Modify `midnight-timer' according to `midnight-delay'.
9652 Sets the first argument SYMB (which must be symbol `midnight-delay')
9653 to its second argument TM." nil nil)
9654
9655 ;;;***
9656 \f
9657 ;;;### (autoloads (convert-mocklisp-buffer) "mlconvert" "emulation/mlconvert.el"
9658 ;;;;;; (12536 45574))
9659 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/mlconvert.el
9660
9661 (autoload (quote convert-mocklisp-buffer) "mlconvert" "\
9662 Convert buffer of Mocklisp code to real Lisp that GNU Emacs can run." t nil)
9663
9664 ;;;***
9665 \f
9666 ;;;### (autoloads (modula-2-mode) "modula2" "progmodes/modula2.el"
9667 ;;;;;; (13552 32940))
9668 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/modula2.el
9669
9670 (autoload (quote modula-2-mode) "modula2" "\
9671 This is a mode intended to support program development in Modula-2.
9672 All control constructs of Modula-2 can be reached by typing C-c
9673 followed by the first character of the construct.
9674 \\<m2-mode-map>
9675 \\[m2-begin] begin \\[m2-case] case
9676 \\[m2-definition] definition \\[m2-else] else
9677 \\[m2-for] for \\[m2-header] header
9678 \\[m2-if] if \\[m2-module] module
9679 \\[m2-loop] loop \\[m2-or] or
9680 \\[m2-procedure] procedure Control-c Control-w with
9681 \\[m2-record] record \\[m2-stdio] stdio
9682 \\[m2-type] type \\[m2-until] until
9683 \\[m2-var] var \\[m2-while] while
9684 \\[m2-export] export \\[m2-import] import
9685 \\[m2-begin-comment] begin-comment \\[m2-end-comment] end-comment
9686 \\[suspend-emacs] suspend Emacs \\[m2-toggle] toggle
9687 \\[m2-compile] compile \\[m2-next-error] next-error
9688 \\[m2-link] link
9689
9690 `m2-indent' controls the number of spaces for each indentation.
9691 `m2-compile-command' holds the command to compile a Modula-2 program.
9692 `m2-link-command' holds the command to link a Modula-2 program." t nil)
9693
9694 ;;;***
9695 \f
9696 ;;;### (autoloads (mouse-sel-mode) "mouse-sel" "mouse-sel.el" (14118
9697 ;;;;;; 2283))
9698 ;;; Generated autoloads from mouse-sel.el
9699
9700 (autoload (quote mouse-sel-mode) "mouse-sel" "\
9701 Toggle Mouse Sel mode.
9702 With prefix ARG, turn Mouse Sel mode on if and only if ARG is positive.
9703 Returns the new status of Mouse Sel mode (non-nil means on).
9704
9705 When Mouse Sel mode is enabled, mouse selection is enhanced in various ways:
9706
9707 - Clicking mouse-1 starts (cancels) selection, dragging extends it.
9708
9709 - Clicking or dragging mouse-3 extends the selection as well.
9710
9711 - Double-clicking on word constituents selects words.
9712 Double-clicking on symbol constituents selects symbols.
9713 Double-clicking on quotes or parentheses selects sexps.
9714 Double-clicking on whitespace selects whitespace.
9715 Triple-clicking selects lines.
9716 Quad-clicking selects paragraphs.
9717
9718 - Selecting sets the region & X primary selection, but does NOT affect
9719 the kill-ring. Because the mouse handlers set the primary selection
9720 directly, mouse-sel sets the variables interprogram-cut-function
9721 and interprogram-paste-function to nil.
9722
9723 - Clicking mouse-2 inserts the contents of the primary selection at
9724 the mouse position (or point, if mouse-yank-at-point is non-nil).
9725
9726 - Pressing mouse-2 while selecting or extending copies selection
9727 to the kill ring. Pressing mouse-1 or mouse-3 kills it.
9728
9729 - Double-clicking mouse-3 also kills selection.
9730
9731 - M-mouse-1, M-mouse-2 & M-mouse-3 work similarly to mouse-1, mouse-2
9732 & mouse-3, but operate on the X secondary selection rather than the
9733 primary selection and region." t nil)
9734
9735 ;;;***
9736 \f
9737 ;;;### (autoloads (mpuz) "mpuz" "play/mpuz.el" (14184 34750))
9738 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/mpuz.el
9739
9740 (autoload (quote mpuz) "mpuz" "\
9741 Multiplication puzzle with GNU Emacs." t nil)
9742
9743 ;;;***
9744 \f
9745 ;;;### (autoloads (msb-mode msb-mode) "msb" "msb.el" (14263 63030))
9746 ;;; Generated autoloads from msb.el
9747
9748 (defvar msb-mode nil "\
9749 Toggle msb-mode.
9750 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
9751 use either \\[customize] or the function `msb-mode'.")
9752
9753 (custom-add-to-group (quote msb) (quote msb-mode) (quote custom-variable))
9754
9755 (custom-add-load (quote msb-mode) (quote msb))
9756
9757 (autoload (quote msb-mode) "msb" "\
9758 Toggle Msb mode.
9759 With arg, turn Msb mode on if and only if arg is positive.
9760 This mode overrides the binding(s) of `mouse-buffer-menu' to provide a
9761 different buffer menu using the function `msb'." t nil)
9762
9763 ;;;***
9764 \f
9765 ;;;### (autoloads (dump-codings dump-charsets mule-diag list-input-methods
9766 ;;;;;; list-fontsets describe-fontset describe-font list-coding-categories
9767 ;;;;;; list-coding-systems describe-current-coding-system describe-current-coding-system-briefly
9768 ;;;;;; describe-coding-system list-character-sets) "mule-diag" "international/mule-diag.el"
9769 ;;;;;; (14406 33643))
9770 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/mule-diag.el
9771
9772 (autoload (quote list-character-sets) "mule-diag" "\
9773 Display a list of all character sets.
9774
9775 The ID column contains a charset identification number for internal Emacs use.
9776 The B column contains a number of bytes occupied in a buffer
9777 by any character in this character set.
9778 The W column contains a number of columns occupied on the screen
9779 by any character in this character set.
9780
9781 With prefix arg, the output format gets more cryptic,
9782 but still shows the full information." t nil)
9783
9784 (autoload (quote describe-coding-system) "mule-diag" "\
9785 Display information about CODING-SYSTEM." t nil)
9786
9787 (autoload (quote describe-current-coding-system-briefly) "mule-diag" "\
9788 Display coding systems currently used in a brief format in echo area.
9789
9790 The format is \"F[..],K[..],T[..],P>[..],P<[..], default F[..],P<[..],P<[..]\",
9791 where mnemonics of the following coding systems come in this order
9792 at the place of `..':
9793 `buffer-file-coding-system` (of the current buffer)
9794 eol-type of buffer-file-coding-system (of the current buffer)
9795 Value returned by `keyboard-coding-system'
9796 eol-type of (keyboard-coding-system)
9797 Value returned by `terminal-coding-system.
9798 eol-type of (terminal-coding-system)
9799 `process-coding-system' for read (of the current buffer, if any)
9800 eol-type of process-coding-system for read (of the current buffer, if any)
9801 `process-coding-system' for write (of the current buffer, if any)
9802 eol-type of process-coding-system for write (of the current buffer, if any)
9803 `default-buffer-file-coding-system'
9804 eol-type of default-buffer-file-coding-system
9805 `default-process-coding-system' for read
9806 eol-type of default-process-coding-system for read
9807 `default-process-coding-system' for write
9808 eol-type of default-process-coding-system" t nil)
9809
9810 (autoload (quote describe-current-coding-system) "mule-diag" "\
9811 Display coding systems currently used, in detail." t nil)
9812
9813 (autoload (quote list-coding-systems) "mule-diag" "\
9814 Display a list of all coding systems.
9815 This shows the mnemonic letter, name, and description of each coding system.
9816
9817 With prefix arg, the output format gets more cryptic,
9818 but still contains full information about each coding system." t nil)
9819
9820 (autoload (quote list-coding-categories) "mule-diag" "\
9821 Display a list of all coding categories." nil nil)
9822
9823 (autoload (quote describe-font) "mule-diag" "\
9824 Display information about fonts which partially match FONTNAME." t nil)
9825
9826 (autoload (quote describe-fontset) "mule-diag" "\
9827 Display information of FONTSET.
9828 This shows the name, size, and style of FONTSET, and the list of fonts
9829 contained in FONTSET.
9830
9831 The column WDxHT contains width and height (pixels) of each fontset
9832 \(i.e. those of ASCII font in the fontset). The letter `-' in this
9833 column means that the corresponding fontset is not yet used in any
9834 frame.
9835
9836 The O column for each font contains one of the following letters:
9837 o -- font already opened
9838 - -- font not yet opened
9839 x -- font can't be opened
9840 ? -- no font specified
9841
9842 The Charset column for each font contains a name of character set
9843 displayed (for this fontset) using that font." t nil)
9844
9845 (autoload (quote list-fontsets) "mule-diag" "\
9846 Display a list of all fontsets.
9847 This shows the name, size, and style of each fontset.
9848 With prefix arg, it also list the fonts contained in each fontset;
9849 see the function `describe-fontset' for the format of the list." t nil)
9850
9851 (autoload (quote list-input-methods) "mule-diag" "\
9852 Display information about all input methods." t nil)
9853
9854 (autoload (quote mule-diag) "mule-diag" "\
9855 Display diagnosis of the multilingual environment (Mule).
9856
9857 This shows various information related to the current multilingual
9858 environment, including lists of input methods, coding systems,
9859 character sets, and fontsets (if Emacs is running under a window
9860 system which uses fontsets)." t nil)
9861
9862 (autoload (quote dump-charsets) "mule-diag" "\
9863 Dump information about all charsets into the file `CHARSETS'.
9864 The file is saved in the directory `data-directory'." nil nil)
9865
9866 (autoload (quote dump-codings) "mule-diag" "\
9867 Dump information about all coding systems into the file `CODINGS'.
9868 The file is saved in the directory `data-directory'." nil nil)
9869
9870 ;;;***
9871 \f
9872 ;;;### (autoloads (detect-coding-with-language-environment detect-coding-with-priority
9873 ;;;;;; coding-system-equal coding-system-translation-table-for-encode
9874 ;;;;;; coding-system-translation-table-for-decode coding-system-pre-write-conversion
9875 ;;;;;; coding-system-post-read-conversion coding-system-eol-type-mnemonic
9876 ;;;;;; lookup-nested-alist set-nested-alist truncate-string-to-width
9877 ;;;;;; store-substring string-to-sequence) "mule-util" "international/mule-util.el"
9878 ;;;;;; (14423 50997))
9879 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/mule-util.el
9880
9881 (autoload (quote string-to-sequence) "mule-util" "\
9882 Convert STRING to a sequence of TYPE which contains characters in STRING.
9883 TYPE should be `list' or `vector'." nil nil)
9884
9885 (defsubst string-to-list (string) "Return a list of characters in STRING." (string-to-sequence string (quote list)))
9886
9887 (defsubst string-to-vector (string) "Return a vector of characters in STRING." (string-to-sequence string (quote vector)))
9888
9889 (autoload (quote store-substring) "mule-util" "\
9890 Embed OBJ (string or character) at index IDX of STRING." nil nil)
9891
9892 (autoload (quote truncate-string-to-width) "mule-util" "\
9893 Truncate string STR to end at column END-COLUMN.
9894 The optional 3rd arg START-COLUMN, if non-nil, specifies
9895 the starting column; that means to return the characters occupying
9896 columns START-COLUMN ... END-COLUMN of STR.
9897
9898 The optional 4th arg PADDING, if non-nil, specifies a padding character
9899 to add at the end of the result if STR doesn't reach column END-COLUMN,
9900 or if END-COLUMN comes in the middle of a character in STR.
9901 PADDING is also added at the beginning of the result
9902 if column START-COLUMN appears in the middle of a character in STR.
9903
9904 If PADDING is nil, no padding is added in these cases, so
9905 the resulting string may be narrower than END-COLUMN." nil nil)
9906
9907 (defalias (quote truncate-string) (quote truncate-string-to-width))
9908
9909 (defsubst nested-alist-p (obj) "Return t if OBJ is a nested alist.\n\nNested alist is a list of the form (ENTRY . BRANCHES), where ENTRY is\nany Lisp object, and BRANCHES is a list of cons cells of the form\n(KEY-ELEMENT . NESTED-ALIST).\n\nYou can use a nested alist to store any Lisp object (ENTRY) for a key\nsequence KEYSEQ, where KEYSEQ is a sequence of KEY-ELEMENT. KEYSEQ\ncan be a string, a vector, or a list." (and obj (listp obj) (listp (cdr obj))))
9910
9911 (autoload (quote set-nested-alist) "mule-util" "\
9912 Set ENTRY for KEYSEQ in a nested alist ALIST.
9913 Optional 4th arg LEN non-nil means the first LEN elements in KEYSEQ
9914 is considered.
9915 Optional argument BRANCHES if non-nil is branches for a keyseq
9916 longer than KEYSEQ.
9917 See the documentation of `nested-alist-p' for more detail." nil nil)
9918
9919 (autoload (quote lookup-nested-alist) "mule-util" "\
9920 Look up key sequence KEYSEQ in nested alist ALIST. Return the definition.
9921 Optional 1st argument LEN specifies the length of KEYSEQ.
9922 Optional 2nd argument START specifies index of the starting key.
9923 The returned value is normally a nested alist of which
9924 car part is the entry for KEYSEQ.
9925 If ALIST is not deep enough for KEYSEQ, return number which is
9926 how many key elements at the front of KEYSEQ it takes
9927 to reach a leaf in ALIST.
9928 Optional 3rd argument NIL-FOR-TOO-LONG non-nil means return nil
9929 even if ALIST is not deep enough." nil nil)
9930
9931 (autoload (quote coding-system-eol-type-mnemonic) "mule-util" "\
9932 Return the string indicating end-of-line format of CODING-SYSTEM." nil nil)
9933
9934 (autoload (quote coding-system-post-read-conversion) "mule-util" "\
9935 Return the value of CODING-SYSTEM's post-read-conversion property." nil nil)
9936
9937 (autoload (quote coding-system-pre-write-conversion) "mule-util" "\
9938 Return the value of CODING-SYSTEM's pre-write-conversion property." nil nil)
9939
9940 (autoload (quote coding-system-translation-table-for-decode) "mule-util" "\
9941 Return the value of CODING-SYSTEM's translation-table-for-decode property." nil nil)
9942
9943 (autoload (quote coding-system-translation-table-for-encode) "mule-util" "\
9944 Return the value of CODING-SYSTEM's translation-table-for-encode property." nil nil)
9945
9946 (autoload (quote coding-system-equal) "mule-util" "\
9947 Return t if and only if CODING-SYSTEM-1 and CODING-SYSTEM-2 are identical.
9948 Two coding systems are identical if two symbols are equal
9949 or one is an alias of the other." nil nil)
9950
9951 (autoload (quote detect-coding-with-priority) "mule-util" "\
9952 Detect a coding system of the text between FROM and TO with PRIORITY-LIST.
9953 PRIORITY-LIST is an alist of coding categories vs the corresponding
9954 coding systems ordered by priority." nil (quote macro))
9955
9956 (autoload (quote detect-coding-with-language-environment) "mule-util" "\
9957 Detect a coding system of the text between FROM and TO with LANG-ENV.
9958 The detection takes into account the coding system priorities for the
9959 language environment LANG-ENV." nil nil)
9960
9961 ;;;***
9962 \f
9963 ;;;### (autoloads (mwheel-install) "mwheel" "mwheel.el" (14378 51930))
9964 ;;; Generated autoloads from mwheel.el
9965
9966 (autoload (quote mwheel-install) "mwheel" "\
9967 Enable mouse wheel support." nil nil)
9968
9969 ;;;***
9970 \f
9971 ;;;### (autoloads (network-connection network-connection-to-service
9972 ;;;;;; whois-reverse-lookup whois finger ftp dig nslookup nslookup-host
9973 ;;;;;; route arp netstat ipconfig ping traceroute) "net-utils" "net-utils.el"
9974 ;;;;;; (14385 24830))
9975 ;;; Generated autoloads from net-utils.el
9976
9977 (autoload (quote traceroute) "net-utils" "\
9978 Run traceroute program for TARGET." t nil)
9979
9980 (autoload (quote ping) "net-utils" "\
9981 Ping HOST.
9982 If your system's ping continues until interrupted, you can try setting
9983 `ping-program-options'." t nil)
9984
9985 (autoload (quote ipconfig) "net-utils" "\
9986 Run ipconfig program." t nil)
9987
9988 (defalias (quote ifconfig) (quote ipconfig))
9989
9990 (autoload (quote netstat) "net-utils" "\
9991 Run netstat program." t nil)
9992
9993 (autoload (quote arp) "net-utils" "\
9994 Run the arp program." t nil)
9995
9996 (autoload (quote route) "net-utils" "\
9997 Run the route program." t nil)
9998
9999 (autoload (quote nslookup-host) "net-utils" "\
10000 Lookup the DNS information for HOST." t nil)
10001
10002 (autoload (quote nslookup) "net-utils" "\
10003 Run nslookup program." t nil)
10004
10005 (autoload (quote dig) "net-utils" "\
10006 Run dig program." t nil)
10007
10008 (autoload (quote ftp) "net-utils" "\
10009 Run ftp program." t nil)
10010
10011 (autoload (quote finger) "net-utils" "\
10012 Finger USER on HOST." t nil)
10013
10014 (autoload (quote whois) "net-utils" "\
10015 Send SEARCH-STRING to server defined by the `whois-server-name' variable.
10016 If `whois-guess-server' is non-nil, then try to deduce the correct server
10017 from SEARCH-STRING. With argument, prompt for whois server." t nil)
10018
10019 (autoload (quote whois-reverse-lookup) "net-utils" nil t nil)
10020
10021 (autoload (quote network-connection-to-service) "net-utils" "\
10022 Open a network connection to SERVICE on HOST." t nil)
10023
10024 (autoload (quote network-connection) "net-utils" "\
10025 Open a network connection to HOST on PORT." t nil)
10026
10027 ;;;***
10028 \f
10029 ;;;### (autoloads (nndoc-add-type) "nndoc" "gnus/nndoc.el" (14030
10030 ;;;;;; 49432))
10031 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/nndoc.el
10032
10033 (autoload (quote nndoc-add-type) "nndoc" "\
10034 Add document DEFINITION to the list of nndoc document definitions.
10035 If POSITION is nil or `last', the definition will be added
10036 as the last checked definition, if t or `first', add as the
10037 first definition, and if any other symbol, add after that
10038 symbol in the alist." nil nil)
10039
10040 ;;;***
10041 \f
10042 ;;;### (autoloads (nnfolder-generate-active-file) "nnfolder" "gnus/nnfolder.el"
10043 ;;;;;; (14030 49439))
10044 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/nnfolder.el
10045
10046 (autoload (quote nnfolder-generate-active-file) "nnfolder" "\
10047 Look for mbox folders in the nnfolder directory and make them into groups." t nil)
10048
10049 ;;;***
10050 \f
10051 ;;;### (autoloads (nnkiboze-generate-groups) "nnkiboze" "gnus/nnkiboze.el"
10052 ;;;;;; (14030 49445))
10053 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/nnkiboze.el
10054
10055 (autoload (quote nnkiboze-generate-groups) "nnkiboze" "\
10056 \"Usage: emacs -batch -l nnkiboze -f nnkiboze-generate-groups\".
10057 Finds out what articles are to be part of the nnkiboze groups." t nil)
10058
10059 ;;;***
10060 \f
10061 ;;;### (autoloads (nnml-generate-nov-databases) "nnml" "gnus/nnml.el"
10062 ;;;;;; (14030 49457))
10063 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/nnml.el
10064
10065 (autoload (quote nnml-generate-nov-databases) "nnml" "\
10066 Generate NOV databases in all nnml directories." t nil)
10067
10068 ;;;***
10069 \f
10070 ;;;### (autoloads (nnsoup-revert-variables nnsoup-set-variables nnsoup-pack-replies)
10071 ;;;;;; "nnsoup" "gnus/nnsoup.el" (14293 3539))
10072 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/nnsoup.el
10073
10074 (autoload (quote nnsoup-pack-replies) "nnsoup" "\
10075 Make an outbound package of SOUP replies." t nil)
10076
10077 (autoload (quote nnsoup-set-variables) "nnsoup" "\
10078 Use the SOUP methods for posting news and mailing mail." t nil)
10079
10080 (autoload (quote nnsoup-revert-variables) "nnsoup" "\
10081 Revert posting and mailing methods to the standard Emacs methods." t nil)
10082
10083 ;;;***
10084 \f
10085 ;;;### (autoloads (disable-command enable-command disabled-command-hook)
10086 ;;;;;; "novice" "novice.el" (13229 29111))
10087 ;;; Generated autoloads from novice.el
10088
10089 (defvar disabled-command-hook (quote disabled-command-hook) "\
10090 Function to call to handle disabled commands.
10091 If nil, the feature is disabled, i.e., all commands work normally.")
10092
10093 (autoload (quote disabled-command-hook) "novice" nil nil nil)
10094
10095 (autoload (quote enable-command) "novice" "\
10096 Allow COMMAND to be executed without special confirmation from now on.
10097 The user's .emacs file is altered so that this will apply
10098 to future sessions." t nil)
10099
10100 (autoload (quote disable-command) "novice" "\
10101 Require special confirmation to execute COMMAND from now on.
10102 The user's .emacs file is altered so that this will apply
10103 to future sessions." t nil)
10104
10105 ;;;***
10106 \f
10107 ;;;### (autoloads (nroff-mode) "nroff-mode" "textmodes/nroff-mode.el"
10108 ;;;;;; (13382 24740))
10109 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/nroff-mode.el
10110
10111 (autoload (quote nroff-mode) "nroff-mode" "\
10112 Major mode for editing text intended for nroff to format.
10113 \\{nroff-mode-map}
10114 Turning on Nroff mode runs `text-mode-hook', then `nroff-mode-hook'.
10115 Also, try `nroff-electric-mode', for automatically inserting
10116 closing requests for requests that are used in matched pairs." t nil)
10117
10118 ;;;***
10119 \f
10120 ;;;### (autoloads (octave-help) "octave-hlp" "progmodes/octave-hlp.el"
10121 ;;;;;; (13145 50478))
10122 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/octave-hlp.el
10123
10124 (autoload (quote octave-help) "octave-hlp" "\
10125 Get help on Octave symbols from the Octave info files.
10126 Look up KEY in the function, operator and variable indices of the files
10127 specified by `octave-help-files'.
10128 If KEY is not a string, prompt for it with completion." t nil)
10129
10130 ;;;***
10131 \f
10132 ;;;### (autoloads (inferior-octave) "octave-inf" "progmodes/octave-inf.el"
10133 ;;;;;; (14302 32388))
10134 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/octave-inf.el
10135
10136 (autoload (quote inferior-octave) "octave-inf" "\
10137 Run an inferior Octave process, I/O via `inferior-octave-buffer'.
10138 This buffer is put in Inferior Octave mode. See `inferior-octave-mode'.
10139
10140 Unless ARG is non-nil, switches to this buffer.
10141
10142 The elements of the list `inferior-octave-startup-args' are sent as
10143 command line arguments to the inferior Octave process on startup.
10144
10145 Additional commands to be executed on startup can be provided either in
10146 the file specified by `inferior-octave-startup-file' or by the default
10147 startup file, `~/.emacs-octave'." t nil)
10148
10149 (defalias (quote run-octave) (quote inferior-octave))
10150
10151 ;;;***
10152 \f
10153 ;;;### (autoloads (octave-mode) "octave-mod" "progmodes/octave-mod.el"
10154 ;;;;;; (14358 1330))
10155 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/octave-mod.el
10156
10157 (autoload (quote octave-mode) "octave-mod" "\
10158 Major mode for editing Octave code.
10159
10160 This mode makes it easier to write Octave code by helping with
10161 indentation, doing some of the typing for you (with Abbrev mode) and by
10162 showing keywords, comments, strings, etc. in different faces (with
10163 Font Lock mode on terminals that support it).
10164
10165 Octave itself is a high-level language, primarily intended for numerical
10166 computations. It provides a convenient command line interface for
10167 solving linear and nonlinear problems numerically. Function definitions
10168 can also be stored in files, and it can be used in a batch mode (which
10169 is why you need this mode!).
10170
10171 The latest released version of Octave is always available via anonymous
10172 ftp from bevo.che.wisc.edu in the directory `/pub/octave'. Complete
10173 source and binaries for several popular systems are available.
10174
10175 Type \\[list-abbrevs] to display the built-in abbrevs for Octave keywords.
10176
10177 Keybindings
10178 ===========
10179
10180 \\{octave-mode-map}
10181
10182 Variables you can use to customize Octave mode
10183 ==============================================
10184
10185 octave-auto-indent
10186 Non-nil means indent current line after a semicolon or space.
10187 Default is nil.
10188
10189 octave-auto-newline
10190 Non-nil means auto-insert a newline and indent after a semicolon.
10191 Default is nil.
10192
10193 octave-blink-matching-block
10194 Non-nil means show matching begin of block when inserting a space,
10195 newline or semicolon after an else or end keyword. Default is t.
10196
10197 octave-block-offset
10198 Extra indentation applied to statements in block structures.
10199 Default is 2.
10200
10201 octave-continuation-offset
10202 Extra indentation applied to Octave continuation lines.
10203 Default is 4.
10204
10205 octave-continuation-string
10206 String used for Octave continuation lines.
10207 Default is a backslash.
10208
10209 octave-mode-startup-message
10210 Nil means do not display the Octave mode startup message.
10211 Default is t.
10212
10213 octave-send-echo-input
10214 Non-nil means always display `inferior-octave-buffer' after sending a
10215 command to the inferior Octave process.
10216
10217 octave-send-line-auto-forward
10218 Non-nil means always go to the next unsent line of Octave code after
10219 sending a line to the inferior Octave process.
10220
10221 octave-send-echo-input
10222 Non-nil means echo input sent to the inferior Octave process.
10223
10224 Turning on Octave mode runs the hook `octave-mode-hook'.
10225
10226 To begin using this mode for all `.m' files that you edit, add the
10227 following lines to your `.emacs' file:
10228
10229 (autoload 'octave-mode \"octave-mod\" nil t)
10230 (setq auto-mode-alist
10231 (cons '(\"\\\\.m$\" . octave-mode) auto-mode-alist))
10232
10233 To automatically turn on the abbrev, auto-fill and font-lock features,
10234 add the following lines to your `.emacs' file as well:
10235
10236 (add-hook 'octave-mode-hook
10237 (lambda ()
10238 (abbrev-mode 1)
10239 (auto-fill-mode 1)
10240 (if (eq window-system 'x)
10241 (font-lock-mode 1))))
10242
10243 To submit a problem report, enter \\[octave-submit-bug-report] from an Octave mode buffer.
10244 This automatically sets up a mail buffer with version information
10245 already added. You just need to add a description of the problem,
10246 including a reproducible test case and send the message." t nil)
10247
10248 ;;;***
10249 \f
10250 ;;;### (autoloads (edit-options list-options) "options" "options.el"
10251 ;;;;;; (14045 29847))
10252 ;;; Generated autoloads from options.el
10253
10254 (autoload (quote list-options) "options" "\
10255 Display a list of Emacs user options, with values and documentation." t nil)
10256
10257 (autoload (quote edit-options) "options" "\
10258 Edit a list of Emacs user option values.
10259 Selects a buffer containing such a list,
10260 in which there are commands to set the option values.
10261 Type \\[describe-mode] in that buffer for a list of commands.
10262
10263 The Custom feature is intended to make this obsolete." t nil)
10264
10265 ;;;***
10266 \f
10267 ;;;### (autoloads (outline-minor-mode outline-mode) "outline" "textmodes/outline.el"
10268 ;;;;;; (14454 157))
10269 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/outline.el
10270
10271 (autoload (quote outline-mode) "outline" "\
10272 Set major mode for editing outlines with selective display.
10273 Headings are lines which start with asterisks: one for major headings,
10274 two for subheadings, etc. Lines not starting with asterisks are body lines.
10275
10276 Body text or subheadings under a heading can be made temporarily
10277 invisible, or visible again. Invisible lines are attached to the end
10278 of the heading, so they move with it, if the line is killed and yanked
10279 back. A heading with text hidden under it is marked with an ellipsis (...).
10280
10281 Commands:\\<outline-mode-map>
10282 \\[outline-next-visible-heading] outline-next-visible-heading move by visible headings
10283 \\[outline-previous-visible-heading] outline-previous-visible-heading
10284 \\[outline-forward-same-level] outline-forward-same-level similar but skip subheadings
10285 \\[outline-backward-same-level] outline-backward-same-level
10286 \\[outline-up-heading] outline-up-heading move from subheading to heading
10287
10288 \\[hide-body] make all text invisible (not headings).
10289 \\[show-all] make everything in buffer visible.
10290
10291 The remaining commands are used when point is on a heading line.
10292 They apply to some of the body or subheadings of that heading.
10293 \\[hide-subtree] hide-subtree make body and subheadings invisible.
10294 \\[show-subtree] show-subtree make body and subheadings visible.
10295 \\[show-children] show-children make direct subheadings visible.
10296 No effect on body, or subheadings 2 or more levels down.
10297 With arg N, affects subheadings N levels down.
10298 \\[hide-entry] make immediately following body invisible.
10299 \\[show-entry] make it visible.
10300 \\[hide-leaves] make body under heading and under its subheadings invisible.
10301 The subheadings remain visible.
10302 \\[show-branches] make all subheadings at all levels visible.
10303
10304 The variable `outline-regexp' can be changed to control what is a heading.
10305 A line is a heading if `outline-regexp' matches something at the
10306 beginning of the line. The longer the match, the deeper the level.
10307
10308 Turning on outline mode calls the value of `text-mode-hook' and then of
10309 `outline-mode-hook', if they are non-nil." t nil)
10310
10311 (autoload (quote outline-minor-mode) "outline" "\
10312 Toggle Outline minor mode.
10313 With arg, turn Outline minor mode on if arg is positive, off otherwise.
10314 See the command `outline-mode' for more information on this mode." t nil)
10315
10316 ;;;***
10317 \f
10318 ;;;### (autoloads (show-paren-mode show-paren-mode) "paren" "paren.el"
10319 ;;;;;; (14316 49544))
10320 ;;; Generated autoloads from paren.el
10321
10322 (defvar show-paren-mode nil "\
10323 *Toggle Show Paren mode.
10324 When Show Paren mode is enabled, any matching parenthesis is highlighted
10325 after `show-paren-delay' seconds of Emacs idle time.
10326 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
10327 use either \\[customize] or the function `show-paren-mode'.")
10328
10329 (custom-add-to-group (quote paren-showing) (quote show-paren-mode) (quote custom-variable))
10330
10331 (custom-add-load (quote show-paren-mode) (quote paren))
10332
10333 (autoload (quote show-paren-mode) "paren" "\
10334 Toggle Show Paren mode.
10335 With prefix ARG, turn Show Paren mode on if and only if ARG is positive.
10336 Returns the new status of Show Paren mode (non-nil means on).
10337
10338 When Show Paren mode is enabled, any matching parenthesis is highlighted
10339 in `show-paren-style' after `show-paren-delay' seconds of Emacs idle time." t nil)
10340
10341 ;;;***
10342 \f
10343 ;;;### (autoloads (pascal-mode) "pascal" "progmodes/pascal.el" (14263
10344 ;;;;;; 35958))
10345 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/pascal.el
10346
10347 (autoload (quote pascal-mode) "pascal" "\
10348 Major mode for editing Pascal code. \\<pascal-mode-map>
10349 TAB indents for Pascal code. Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
10350
10351 \\[pascal-complete-word] completes the word around current point with respect to position in code
10352 \\[pascal-show-completions] shows all possible completions at this point.
10353
10354 Other useful functions are:
10355
10356 \\[pascal-mark-defun] - Mark function.
10357 \\[pascal-insert-block] - insert begin ... end;
10358 \\[pascal-star-comment] - insert (* ... *)
10359 \\[pascal-comment-area] - Put marked area in a comment, fixing nested comments.
10360 \\[pascal-uncomment-area] - Uncomment an area commented with \\[pascal-comment-area].
10361 \\[pascal-beg-of-defun] - Move to beginning of current function.
10362 \\[pascal-end-of-defun] - Move to end of current function.
10363 \\[pascal-goto-defun] - Goto function prompted for in the minibuffer.
10364 \\[pascal-outline] - Enter pascal-outline-mode (see also pascal-outline).
10365
10366 Variables controlling indentation/edit style:
10367
10368 pascal-indent-level (default 3)
10369 Indentation of Pascal statements with respect to containing block.
10370 pascal-case-indent (default 2)
10371 Indentation for case statements.
10372 pascal-auto-newline (default nil)
10373 Non-nil means automatically newline after semicolons and the punctuation
10374 mark after an end.
10375 pascal-indent-nested-functions (default t)
10376 Non-nil means nested functions are indented.
10377 pascal-tab-always-indent (default t)
10378 Non-nil means TAB in Pascal mode should always reindent the current line,
10379 regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
10380 pascal-auto-endcomments (default t)
10381 Non-nil means a comment { ... } is set after the ends which ends cases and
10382 functions. The name of the function or case will be set between the braces.
10383 pascal-auto-lineup (default t)
10384 List of contexts where auto lineup of :'s or ='s should be done.
10385
10386 See also the user variables pascal-type-keywords, pascal-start-keywords and
10387 pascal-separator-keywords.
10388
10389 Turning on Pascal mode calls the value of the variable pascal-mode-hook with
10390 no args, if that value is non-nil." t nil)
10391
10392 ;;;***
10393 \f
10394 ;;;### (autoloads (pc-bindings-mode) "pc-mode" "emulation/pc-mode.el"
10395 ;;;;;; (13229 29217))
10396 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/pc-mode.el
10397
10398 (autoload (quote pc-bindings-mode) "pc-mode" "\
10399 Set up certain key bindings for PC compatibility.
10400 The keys affected are:
10401 Delete (and its variants) delete forward instead of backward.
10402 C-Backspace kills backward a word (as C-Delete normally would).
10403 M-Backspace does undo.
10404 Home and End move to beginning and end of line
10405 C-Home and C-End move to beginning and end of buffer.
10406 C-Escape does list-buffers." t nil)
10407
10408 ;;;***
10409 \f
10410 ;;;### (autoloads (pc-selection-mode pc-selection-mode) "pc-select"
10411 ;;;;;; "emulation/pc-select.el" (13674 34216))
10412 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/pc-select.el
10413
10414 (autoload (quote pc-selection-mode) "pc-select" "\
10415 Change mark behaviour to emulate Motif, MAC or MS-Windows cut and paste style.
10416
10417 This mode enables Delete Selection mode and Transient Mark mode.
10418
10419 The arrow keys (and others) are bound to new functions
10420 which modify the status of the mark.
10421
10422 The ordinary arrow keys disable the mark.
10423 The shift-arrow keys move, leaving the mark behind.
10424
10425 C-LEFT and C-RIGHT move back or forward one word, disabling the mark.
10426 S-C-LEFT and S-C-RIGHT move back or forward one word, leaving the mark behind.
10427
10428 M-LEFT and M-RIGHT move back or forward one word or sexp, disabling the mark.
10429 S-M-LEFT and S-M-RIGHT move back or forward one word or sexp, leaving the mark
10430 behind. To control wether these keys move word-wise or sexp-wise set the
10431 variable pc-select-meta-moves-sexps after loading pc-select.el but before
10432 turning pc-selection-mode on.
10433
10434 C-DOWN and C-UP move back or forward a paragraph, disabling the mark.
10435 S-C-DOWN and S-C-UP move back or forward a paragraph, leaving the mark behind.
10436
10437 HOME moves to beginning of line, disabling the mark.
10438 S-HOME moves to beginning of line, leaving the mark behind.
10439 With Ctrl or Meta, these keys move to beginning of buffer instead.
10440
10441 END moves to end of line, disabling the mark.
10442 S-END moves to end of line, leaving the mark behind.
10443 With Ctrl or Meta, these keys move to end of buffer instead.
10444
10445 PRIOR or PAGE-UP scrolls and disables the mark.
10446 S-PRIOR or S-PAGE-UP scrolls and leaves the mark behind.
10447
10448 S-DELETE kills the region (`kill-region').
10449 S-INSERT yanks text from the kill ring (`yank').
10450 C-INSERT copies the region into the kill ring (`copy-region-as-kill').
10451
10452 In addition, certain other PC bindings are imitated (to avoid this, set
10453 the variable pc-select-selection-keys-only to t after loading pc-select.el
10454 but before calling pc-selection-mode):
10455
10456 F6 other-window
10457 DELETE delete-char
10458 C-DELETE kill-line
10459 M-DELETE kill-word
10460 C-M-DELETE kill-sexp
10461 C-BACKSPACE backward-kill-word
10462 M-BACKSPACE undo" t nil)
10463
10464 (defvar pc-selection-mode nil "\
10465 Toggle PC Selection mode.
10466 Change mark behaviour to emulate Motif, MAC or MS-Windows cut and paste style,
10467 and cursor movement commands.
10468 This mode enables Delete Selection mode and Transient Mark mode.
10469 You must modify via \\[customize] for this variable to have an effect.")
10470
10471 (custom-add-to-group (quote pc-select) (quote pc-selection-mode) (quote custom-variable))
10472
10473 (custom-add-load (quote pc-selection-mode) (quote pc-select))
10474
10475 ;;;***
10476 \f
10477 ;;;### (autoloads (perl-mode) "perl-mode" "progmodes/perl-mode.el"
10478 ;;;;;; (13639 61036))
10479 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/perl-mode.el
10480
10481 (autoload (quote perl-mode) "perl-mode" "\
10482 Major mode for editing Perl code.
10483 Expression and list commands understand all Perl brackets.
10484 Tab indents for Perl code.
10485 Comments are delimited with # ... \\n.
10486 Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
10487 Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
10488 \\{perl-mode-map}
10489 Variables controlling indentation style:
10490 perl-tab-always-indent
10491 Non-nil means TAB in Perl mode should always indent the current line,
10492 regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
10493 perl-tab-to-comment
10494 Non-nil means that for lines which don't need indenting, TAB will
10495 either delete an empty comment, indent an existing comment, move
10496 to end-of-line, or if at end-of-line already, create a new comment.
10497 perl-nochange
10498 Lines starting with this regular expression are not auto-indented.
10499 perl-indent-level
10500 Indentation of Perl statements within surrounding block.
10501 The surrounding block's indentation is the indentation
10502 of the line on which the open-brace appears.
10503 perl-continued-statement-offset
10504 Extra indentation given to a substatement, such as the
10505 then-clause of an if or body of a while.
10506 perl-continued-brace-offset
10507 Extra indentation given to a brace that starts a substatement.
10508 This is in addition to `perl-continued-statement-offset'.
10509 perl-brace-offset
10510 Extra indentation for line if it starts with an open brace.
10511 perl-brace-imaginary-offset
10512 An open brace following other text is treated as if it were
10513 this far to the right of the start of its line.
10514 perl-label-offset
10515 Extra indentation for line that is a label.
10516
10517 Various indentation styles: K&R BSD BLK GNU LW
10518 perl-indent-level 5 8 0 2 4
10519 perl-continued-statement-offset 5 8 4 2 4
10520 perl-continued-brace-offset 0 0 0 0 -4
10521 perl-brace-offset -5 -8 0 0 0
10522 perl-brace-imaginary-offset 0 0 4 0 0
10523 perl-label-offset -5 -8 -2 -2 -2
10524
10525 Turning on Perl mode runs the normal hook `perl-mode-hook'." t nil)
10526
10527 ;;;***
10528 \f
10529 ;;;### (autoloads (ph-query-form ph-expand-inline ph-get-phone ph-get-email)
10530 ;;;;;; "ph" "ph.el" (13623 48480))
10531 ;;; Generated autoloads from ph.el
10532
10533 (autoload (quote ph-get-email) "ph" "\
10534 Get the email field of NAME from the PH/QI directory server." t nil)
10535
10536 (autoload (quote ph-get-phone) "ph" "\
10537 Get the phone field of NAME from the PH/QI directory server." t nil)
10538
10539 (autoload (quote ph-expand-inline) "ph" "\
10540 Query the PH server, and expand the query string before point.
10541 The query string consists of the buffer substring from the point back to
10542 the preceding comma, colon or beginning of line. If it contains more than
10543 one word, the variable `ph-inline-query-format-list' controls to map these
10544 onto CCSO database field names.
10545 After querying the server for the given string, the expansion specified by
10546 `ph-inline-expansion-format' is inserted in the buffer at point.
10547 If REPLACE is t, then this expansion replaces the name in the buffer.
10548 If `ph-expanding-overwrites-query' is t, that inverts the meaning of REPLACE." t nil)
10549
10550 (autoload (quote ph-query-form) "ph" "\
10551 Display a form to query the CCSO PH/QI nameserver.
10552 If given a non-nil argument the function first queries the server
10553 for the existing fields and displays a corresponding form." t nil)
10554
10555 ;;;***
10556 \f
10557 ;;;### (autoloads (picture-mode) "picture" "textmodes/picture.el"
10558 ;;;;;; (14348 33291))
10559 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/picture.el
10560
10561 (autoload (quote picture-mode) "picture" "\
10562 Switch to Picture mode, in which a quarter-plane screen model is used.
10563 Printing characters replace instead of inserting themselves with motion
10564 afterwards settable by these commands:
10565 C-c < Move left after insertion.
10566 C-c > Move right after insertion.
10567 C-c ^ Move up after insertion.
10568 C-c . Move down after insertion.
10569 C-c ` Move northwest (nw) after insertion.
10570 C-c ' Move northeast (ne) after insertion.
10571 C-c / Move southwest (sw) after insertion.
10572 C-c \\ Move southeast (se) after insertion.
10573 C-u C-c ` Move westnorthwest (wnw) after insertion.
10574 C-u C-c ' Move eastnortheast (ene) after insertion.
10575 C-u C-c / Move westsouthwest (wsw) after insertion.
10576 C-u C-c \\ Move eastsoutheast (ese) after insertion.
10577 The current direction is displayed in the mode line. The initial
10578 direction is right. Whitespace is inserted and tabs are changed to
10579 spaces when required by movement. You can move around in the buffer
10580 with these commands:
10581 \\[picture-move-down] Move vertically to SAME column in previous line.
10582 \\[picture-move-up] Move vertically to SAME column in next line.
10583 \\[picture-end-of-line] Move to column following last non-whitespace character.
10584 \\[picture-forward-column] Move right inserting spaces if required.
10585 \\[picture-backward-column] Move left changing tabs to spaces if required.
10586 C-c C-f Move in direction of current picture motion.
10587 C-c C-b Move in opposite direction of current picture motion.
10588 Return Move to beginning of next line.
10589 You can edit tabular text with these commands:
10590 M-Tab Move to column beneath (or at) next interesting character.
10591 `Indents' relative to a previous line.
10592 Tab Move to next stop in tab stop list.
10593 C-c Tab Set tab stops according to context of this line.
10594 With ARG resets tab stops to default (global) value.
10595 See also documentation of variable picture-tab-chars
10596 which defines \"interesting character\". You can manually
10597 change the tab stop list with command \\[edit-tab-stops].
10598 You can manipulate text with these commands:
10599 C-d Clear (replace) ARG columns after point without moving.
10600 C-c C-d Delete char at point - the command normally assigned to C-d.
10601 \\[picture-backward-clear-column] Clear (replace) ARG columns before point, moving back over them.
10602 \\[picture-clear-line] Clear ARG lines, advancing over them. The cleared
10603 text is saved in the kill ring.
10604 \\[picture-open-line] Open blank line(s) beneath current line.
10605 You can manipulate rectangles with these commands:
10606 C-c C-k Clear (or kill) a rectangle and save it.
10607 C-c C-w Like C-c C-k except rectangle is saved in named register.
10608 C-c C-y Overlay (or insert) currently saved rectangle at point.
10609 C-c C-x Like C-c C-y except rectangle is taken from named register.
10610 C-c C-r Draw a rectangular box around mark and point.
10611 \\[copy-rectangle-to-register] Copies a rectangle to a register.
10612 \\[advertised-undo] Can undo effects of rectangle overlay commands
10613 commands if invoked soon enough.
10614 You can return to the previous mode with:
10615 C-c C-c Which also strips trailing whitespace from every line.
10616 Stripping is suppressed by supplying an argument.
10617
10618 Entry to this mode calls the value of picture-mode-hook if non-nil.
10619
10620 Note that Picture mode commands will work outside of Picture mode, but
10621 they are not defaultly assigned to keys." t nil)
10622
10623 (defalias (quote edit-picture) (quote picture-mode))
10624
10625 ;;;***
10626 \f
10627 ;;;### (autoloads (pong) "pong" "play/pong.el" (14453 55473))
10628 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/pong.el
10629
10630 (autoload (quote pong) "pong" "\
10631 Play pong and waste time.
10632 This is an implementation of the classical game pong.
10633 Move left and right bats and try to bounce the ball to your opponent.
10634
10635 pong-mode keybindings:
10636 \\<pong-mode-map>
10637
10638 \\{pong-mode-map}" t nil)
10639
10640 ;;;***
10641 \f
10642 ;;;### (autoloads (pp-eval-last-sexp pp-eval-expression pp) "pp"
10643 ;;;;;; "emacs-lisp/pp.el" (13819 15860))
10644 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/pp.el
10645
10646 (autoload (quote pp) "pp" "\
10647 Output the pretty-printed representation of OBJECT, any Lisp object.
10648 Quoting characters are printed as needed to make output that `read'
10649 can handle, whenever this is possible.
10650 Output stream is STREAM, or value of `standard-output' (which see)." nil nil)
10651
10652 (autoload (quote pp-eval-expression) "pp" "\
10653 Evaluate EXPRESSION and pretty-print value into a new display buffer.
10654 If the pretty-printed value fits on one line, the message line is used
10655 instead. The value is also consed onto the front of the list
10656 in the variable `values'." t nil)
10657
10658 (autoload (quote pp-eval-last-sexp) "pp" "\
10659 Run `pp-eval-expression' on sexp before point (which see).
10660 With argument, pretty-print output into current buffer.
10661 Ignores leading comment characters." t nil)
10662
10663 ;;;***
10664 \f
10665 ;;;### (autoloads (run-prolog prolog-mode) "prolog" "progmodes/prolog.el"
10666 ;;;;;; (13446 12665))
10667 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/prolog.el
10668
10669 (autoload (quote prolog-mode) "prolog" "\
10670 Major mode for editing Prolog code for Prologs.
10671 Blank lines and `%%...' separate paragraphs. `%'s start comments.
10672 Commands:
10673 \\{prolog-mode-map}
10674 Entry to this mode calls the value of `prolog-mode-hook'
10675 if that value is non-nil." t nil)
10676
10677 (autoload (quote run-prolog) "prolog" "\
10678 Run an inferior Prolog process, input and output via buffer *prolog*." t nil)
10679
10680 ;;;***
10681 \f
10682 ;;;### (autoloads nil "ps-bdf" "ps-bdf.el" (14353 44101))
10683 ;;; Generated autoloads from ps-bdf.el
10684
10685 (defvar bdf-directory-list (if (eq system-type (quote ms-dos)) (list (expand-file-name "fonts/bdf" installation-directory)) (quote ("/usr/local/share/emacs/fonts/bdf"))) "\
10686 *List of directories to search for `BDF' font files.
10687 The default value is '(\"/usr/local/share/emacs/fonts/bdf\").")
10688
10689 ;;;***
10690 \f
10691 ;;;### (autoloads (ps-mode) "ps-mode" "progmodes/ps-mode.el" (14380
10692 ;;;;;; 3795))
10693 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/ps-mode.el
10694
10695 (autoload (quote ps-mode) "ps-mode" "\
10696 Major mode for editing PostScript with GNU Emacs.
10697
10698 Entry to this mode calls `ps-mode-hook'.
10699
10700 The following variables hold user options, and can
10701 be set through the `customize' command:
10702
10703 ps-mode-auto-indent
10704 ps-mode-tab
10705 ps-mode-paper-size
10706 ps-mode-print-function
10707 ps-run-prompt
10708 ps-run-font-lock-keywords-2
10709 ps-run-x
10710 ps-run-dumb
10711 ps-run-init
10712 ps-run-error-line-numbers
10713 ps-run-tmp-dir
10714
10715 Type \\[describe-variable] for documentation on these options.
10716
10717
10718 \\{ps-mode-map}
10719
10720
10721 When starting an interactive PostScript process with \\[ps-run-start],
10722 a second window will be displayed, and `ps-run-mode-hook' will be called.
10723 The keymap for this second window is:
10724
10725 \\{ps-run-mode-map}
10726
10727
10728 When Ghostscript encounters an error it displays an error message
10729 with a file position. Clicking mouse-2 on this number will bring
10730 point to the corresponding spot in the PostScript window, if input
10731 to the interpreter was sent from that window.
10732 Typing \\<ps-run-mode-map>\\[ps-run-goto-error] when the cursor is at the number has the same effect.
10733 " t nil)
10734
10735 ;;;***
10736 \f
10737 ;;;### (autoloads (ps-mule-begin-page ps-mule-begin-job ps-mule-initialize
10738 ;;;;;; ps-mule-plot-composition ps-mule-plot-string ps-mule-set-ascii-font
10739 ;;;;;; ps-mule-prepare-ascii-font ps-multibyte-buffer) "ps-mule"
10740 ;;;;;; "ps-mule.el" (14454 81))
10741 ;;; Generated autoloads from ps-mule.el
10742
10743 (defvar ps-multibyte-buffer nil "\
10744 *Specifies the multi-byte buffer handling.
10745
10746 Valid values are:
10747
10748 nil This is the value to use the default settings which
10749 is by default for printing buffer with only ASCII
10750 and Latin characters. The default setting can be
10751 changed by setting the variable
10752 `ps-mule-font-info-database-default' differently.
10753 The initial value of this variable is
10754 `ps-mule-font-info-database-latin' (see
10755 documentation).
10756
10757 `non-latin-printer' This is the value to use when you have a Japanese
10758 or Korean PostScript printer and want to print
10759 buffer with ASCII, Latin-1, Japanese (JISX0208 and
10760 JISX0201-Kana) and Korean characters. At present,
10761 it was not tested the Korean characters printing.
10762 If you have a korean PostScript printer, please,
10763 test it.
10764
10765 `bdf-font' This is the value to use when you want to print
10766 buffer with BDF fonts. BDF fonts include both latin
10767 and non-latin fonts. BDF (Bitmap Distribution
10768 Format) is a format used for distributing X's font
10769 source file. BDF fonts are included in
10770 `intlfonts-1.1' which is a collection of X11 fonts
10771 for all characters supported by Emacs. In order to
10772 use this value, be sure to have installed
10773 `intlfonts-1.1' and set the variable
10774 `bdf-directory-list' appropriately (see ps-bdf.el for
10775 documentation of this variable).
10776
10777 `bdf-font-except-latin' This is like `bdf-font' except that it is used
10778 PostScript default fonts to print ASCII and Latin-1
10779 characters. This is convenient when you want or
10780 need to use both latin and non-latin characters on
10781 the same buffer. See `ps-font-family',
10782 `ps-header-font-family' and `ps-font-info-database'.
10783
10784 Any other value is treated as nil.")
10785
10786 (autoload (quote ps-mule-prepare-ascii-font) "ps-mule" "\
10787 Setup special ASCII font for STRING.
10788 STRING should contain only ASCII characters." nil nil)
10789
10790 (autoload (quote ps-mule-set-ascii-font) "ps-mule" nil nil nil)
10791
10792 (autoload (quote ps-mule-plot-string) "ps-mule" "\
10793 Generate PostScript code for ploting characters in the region FROM and TO.
10794
10795 It is assumed that all characters in this region belong to the same charset.
10796
10797 Optional argument BG-COLOR specifies background color.
10798
10799 Returns the value:
10800
10801 (ENDPOS . RUN-WIDTH)
10802
10803 Where ENDPOS is the end position of the sequence and RUN-WIDTH is the width of
10804 the sequence." nil nil)
10805
10806 (autoload (quote ps-mule-plot-composition) "ps-mule" "\
10807 Generate PostScript code for ploting composition in the region FROM and TO.
10808
10809 It is assumed that all characters in this region belong to the same
10810 composition.
10811
10812 Optional argument BG-COLOR specifies background color.
10813
10814 Returns the value:
10815
10816 (ENDPOS . RUN-WIDTH)
10817
10818 Where ENDPOS is the end position of the sequence and RUN-WIDTH is the width of
10819 the sequence." nil nil)
10820
10821 (autoload (quote ps-mule-initialize) "ps-mule" "\
10822 Initialize global data for printing multi-byte characters." nil nil)
10823
10824 (autoload (quote ps-mule-begin-job) "ps-mule" "\
10825 Start printing job for multi-byte chars between FROM and TO.
10826 This checks if all multi-byte characters in the region are printable or not." nil nil)
10827
10828 (autoload (quote ps-mule-begin-page) "ps-mule" nil nil nil)
10829
10830 ;;;***
10831 \f
10832 ;;;### (autoloads (ps-extend-face ps-extend-face-list ps-setup ps-nb-pages-region
10833 ;;;;;; ps-nb-pages-buffer ps-line-lengths ps-despool ps-spool-region-with-faces
10834 ;;;;;; ps-spool-region ps-spool-buffer-with-faces ps-spool-buffer
10835 ;;;;;; ps-print-region-with-faces ps-print-region ps-print-buffer-with-faces
10836 ;;;;;; ps-print-buffer ps-print-customize ps-paper-type) "ps-print"
10837 ;;;;;; "ps-print.el" (14454 86))
10838 ;;; Generated autoloads from ps-print.el
10839
10840 (defvar ps-paper-type (quote letter) "\
10841 *Specify the size of paper to format for.
10842 Should be one of the paper types defined in `ps-page-dimensions-database', for
10843 example `letter', `legal' or `a4'.")
10844
10845 (autoload (quote ps-print-customize) "ps-print" "\
10846 Customization of ps-print group." t nil)
10847
10848 (autoload (quote ps-print-buffer) "ps-print" "\
10849 Generate and print a PostScript image of the buffer.
10850
10851 Interactively, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the command
10852 prompts the user for a file name, and saves the PostScript image
10853 in that file instead of sending it to the printer.
10854
10855 Noninteractively, the argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it
10856 is nil, send the image to the printer. If FILENAME is a string, save
10857 the PostScript image in a file with that name." t nil)
10858
10859 (autoload (quote ps-print-buffer-with-faces) "ps-print" "\
10860 Generate and print a PostScript image of the buffer.
10861 Like `ps-print-buffer', but includes font, color, and underline
10862 information in the generated image. This command works only if you
10863 are using a window system, so it has a way to determine color values." t nil)
10864
10865 (autoload (quote ps-print-region) "ps-print" "\
10866 Generate and print a PostScript image of the region.
10867 Like `ps-print-buffer', but prints just the current region." t nil)
10868
10869 (autoload (quote ps-print-region-with-faces) "ps-print" "\
10870 Generate and print a PostScript image of the region.
10871 Like `ps-print-region', but includes font, color, and underline
10872 information in the generated image. This command works only if you
10873 are using a window system, so it has a way to determine color values." t nil)
10874
10875 (autoload (quote ps-spool-buffer) "ps-print" "\
10876 Generate and spool a PostScript image of the buffer.
10877 Like `ps-print-buffer' except that the PostScript image is saved in a
10878 local buffer to be sent to the printer later.
10879
10880 Use the command `ps-despool' to send the spooled images to the printer." t nil)
10881
10882 (autoload (quote ps-spool-buffer-with-faces) "ps-print" "\
10883 Generate and spool a PostScript image of the buffer.
10884 Like `ps-spool-buffer', but includes font, color, and underline
10885 information in the generated image. This command works only if you
10886 are using a window system, so it has a way to determine color values.
10887
10888 Use the command `ps-despool' to send the spooled images to the printer." t nil)
10889
10890 (autoload (quote ps-spool-region) "ps-print" "\
10891 Generate a PostScript image of the region and spool locally.
10892 Like `ps-spool-buffer', but spools just the current region.
10893
10894 Use the command `ps-despool' to send the spooled images to the printer." t nil)
10895
10896 (autoload (quote ps-spool-region-with-faces) "ps-print" "\
10897 Generate a PostScript image of the region and spool locally.
10898 Like `ps-spool-region', but includes font, color, and underline
10899 information in the generated image. This command works only if you
10900 are using a window system, so it has a way to determine color values.
10901
10902 Use the command `ps-despool' to send the spooled images to the printer." t nil)
10903
10904 (autoload (quote ps-despool) "ps-print" "\
10905 Send the spooled PostScript to the printer.
10906
10907 Interactively, when you use a prefix argument (C-u), the command
10908 prompts the user for a file name, and saves the spooled PostScript
10909 image in that file instead of sending it to the printer.
10910
10911 Noninteractively, the argument FILENAME is treated as follows: if it
10912 is nil, send the image to the printer. If FILENAME is a string, save
10913 the PostScript image in a file with that name." t nil)
10914
10915 (autoload (quote ps-line-lengths) "ps-print" "\
10916 Display the correspondence between a line length and a font size,
10917 using the current ps-print setup.
10918 Try: pr -t file | awk '{printf \"%3d %s
10919 \", length($0), $0}' | sort -r | head" t nil)
10920
10921 (autoload (quote ps-nb-pages-buffer) "ps-print" "\
10922 Display number of pages to print this buffer, for various font heights.
10923 The table depends on the current ps-print setup." t nil)
10924
10925 (autoload (quote ps-nb-pages-region) "ps-print" "\
10926 Display number of pages to print the region, for various font heights.
10927 The table depends on the current ps-print setup." t nil)
10928
10929 (autoload (quote ps-setup) "ps-print" "\
10930 Return the current PostScript-generation setup." nil nil)
10931
10932 (autoload (quote ps-extend-face-list) "ps-print" "\
10933 Extend face in `ps-print-face-extension-alist'.
10934
10935 If optional MERGE-P is non-nil, extensions in FACE-EXTENSION-LIST are merged
10936 with face extension in `ps-print-face-extension-alist'; otherwise, overrides.
10937
10938 The elements in FACE-EXTENSION-LIST is like those for `ps-extend-face'.
10939
10940 See `ps-extend-face' for documentation." nil nil)
10941
10942 (autoload (quote ps-extend-face) "ps-print" "\
10943 Extend face in `ps-print-face-extension-alist'.
10944
10945 If optional MERGE-P is non-nil, extensions in FACE-EXTENSION list are merged
10946 with face extensions in `ps-print-face-extension-alist'; otherwise, overrides.
10947
10948 The elements of FACE-EXTENSION list have the form:
10949
10950 (FACE-NAME FOREGROUND BACKGROUND EXTENSION...)
10951
10952 FACE-NAME is a face name symbol.
10953
10954 FOREGROUND and BACKGROUND may be nil or a string that denotes the
10955 foreground and background colors respectively.
10956
10957 EXTENSION is one of the following symbols:
10958 bold - use bold font.
10959 italic - use italic font.
10960 underline - put a line under text.
10961 strikeout - like underline, but the line is in middle of text.
10962 overline - like underline, but the line is over the text.
10963 shadow - text will have a shadow.
10964 box - text will be surrounded by a box.
10965 outline - print characters as hollow outlines.
10966
10967 If EXTENSION is any other symbol, it is ignored." nil nil)
10968
10969 ;;;***
10970 \f
10971 ;;;### (autoloads (quail-update-leim-list-file quail-defrule-internal
10972 ;;;;;; quail-defrule quail-install-map quail-define-rules quail-set-keyboard-layout
10973 ;;;;;; quail-define-package quail-use-package) "quail" "international/quail.el"
10974 ;;;;;; (14423 51000))
10975 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/quail.el
10976
10977 (autoload (quote quail-use-package) "quail" "\
10978 Start using Quail package PACKAGE-NAME.
10979 The remaining arguments are libraries to be loaded before using the package." nil nil)
10980
10981 (autoload (quote quail-define-package) "quail" "\
10982 Define NAME as a new Quail package for input LANGUAGE.
10983 TITLE is a string to be displayed at mode-line to indicate this package.
10984 Optional arguments are GUIDANCE, DOCSTRING, TRANSLATION-KEYS,
10985 FORGET-LAST-SELECTION, DETERMINISTIC, KBD-TRANSLATE, SHOW-LAYOUT,
10986 CREATE-DECODE-MAP, MAXIMUM-SHORTEST, OVERLAY-PLIST,
10987 UPDATE-TRANSLATION-FUNCTION, CONVERSION-KEYS and SIMPLE.
10988
10989 GUIDANCE specifies how a guidance string is shown in echo area.
10990 If it is t, list of all possible translations for the current key is shown
10991 with the currently selected translation being highlighted.
10992 If it is an alist, the element has the form (CHAR . STRING). Each character
10993 in the current key is searched in the list and the corresponding string is
10994 shown.
10995 If it is nil, the current key is shown.
10996
10997 DOCSTRING is the documentation string of this package.
10998
10999 TRANSLATION-KEYS specifies additional key bindings used while translation
11000 region is active. It is an alist of single key character vs. corresponding
11001 command to be called.
11002
11003 FORGET-LAST-SELECTION non-nil means a selected translation is not kept
11004 for the future to translate the same key. If this flag is nil, a
11005 translation selected for a key is remembered so that it can be the
11006 first candidate when the same key is entered later.
11007
11008 DETERMINISTIC non-nil means the first candidate of translation is
11009 selected automatically without allowing users to select another
11010 translation for a key. In this case, unselected translations are of
11011 no use for an interactive use of Quail but can be used by some other
11012 programs. If this flag is non-nil, FORGET-LAST-SELECTION is also set
11013 to t.
11014
11015 KBD-TRANSLATE non-nil means input characters are translated from a
11016 user's keyboard layout to the standard keyboard layout. See the
11017 documentation of `quail-keyboard-layout' and
11018 `quail-keyboard-layout-standard' for more detail.
11019
11020 SHOW-LAYOUT non-nil means the `quail-help' command should show
11021 the user's keyboard layout visually with translated characters.
11022 If KBD-TRANSLATE is set, it is desirable to set also this flag unless
11023 this package defines no translations for single character keys.
11024
11025 CREATE-DECODE-MAP non-nil means decode map is also created. A decode
11026 map is an alist of translations and corresponding original keys.
11027 Although this map is not used by Quail itself, it can be used by some
11028 other programs. For instance, Vietnamese supporting needs this map to
11029 convert Vietnamese text to VIQR format which uses only ASCII
11030 characters to represent Vietnamese characters.
11031
11032 MAXIMUM-SHORTEST non-nil means break key sequence to get maximum
11033 length of the shortest sequence. When we don't have a translation of
11034 key \"..ABCD\" but have translations of \"..AB\" and \"CD..\", break
11035 the key at \"..AB\" and start translation of \"CD..\". Hangul
11036 packages, for instance, use this facility. If this flag is nil, we
11037 break the key just at \"..ABC\" and start translation of \"D..\".
11038
11039 OVERLAY-PLIST if non-nil is a property list put on an overlay which
11040 covers Quail translation region.
11041
11042 UPDATE-TRANSLATION-FUNCTION if non-nil is a function to call to update
11043 the current translation region according to a new translation data. By
11044 default, a translated text or a user's key sequence (if no translation
11045 for it) is inserted.
11046
11047 CONVERSION-KEYS specifies additional key bindings used while
11048 conversion region is active. It is an alist of single key character
11049 vs. corresponding command to be called.
11050
11051 If SIMPLE is non-nil, then we do not alter the meanings of
11052 commands such as C-f, C-b, C-n, C-p and TAB; they are treated as
11053 non-Quail commands." nil nil)
11054
11055 (autoload (quote quail-set-keyboard-layout) "quail" "\
11056 Set the current keyboard layout to the same as keyboard KBD-TYPE.
11057
11058 Since some Quail packages depends on a physical layout of keys (not
11059 characters generated by them), those are created by assuming the
11060 standard layout defined in `quail-keyboard-layout-standard'. This
11061 function tells Quail system the layout of your keyboard so that what
11062 you type is correctly handled." t nil)
11063
11064 (autoload (quote quail-define-rules) "quail" "\
11065 Define translation rules of the current Quail package.
11066 Each argument is a list of KEY and TRANSLATION.
11067 KEY is a string meaning a sequence of keystrokes to be translated.
11068 TRANSLATION is a character, a string, a vector, a Quail map, or a function.
11069 If it is a character, it is the sole translation of KEY.
11070 If it is a string, each character is a candidate for the translation.
11071 If it is a vector, each element (string or character) is a candidate
11072 for the translation.
11073 In these cases, a key specific Quail map is generated and assigned to KEY.
11074
11075 If TRANSLATION is a Quail map or a function symbol which returns a Quail map,
11076 it is used to handle KEY." nil (quote macro))
11077
11078 (autoload (quote quail-install-map) "quail" "\
11079 Install the Quail map MAP in the current Quail package.
11080
11081 Optional 2nd arg NAME, if non-nil, is a name of Quail package for
11082 which to install MAP.
11083
11084 The installed map can be referred by the function `quail-map'." nil nil)
11085
11086 (autoload (quote quail-defrule) "quail" "\
11087 Add one translation rule, KEY to TRANSLATION, in the current Quail package.
11088 KEY is a string meaning a sequence of keystrokes to be translated.
11089 TRANSLATION is a character, a string, a vector, a Quail map,
11090 a function, or a cons.
11091 It it is a character, it is the sole translation of KEY.
11092 If it is a string, each character is a candidate for the translation.
11093 If it is a vector, each element (string or character) is a candidate
11094 for the translation.
11095 If it is a cons, the car is one of the above and the cdr is a function
11096 to call when translating KEY (the return value is assigned to the
11097 variable `quail-current-data'). If the cdr part is not a function,
11098 the value itself is assigned to `quail-current-data'.
11099 In these cases, a key specific Quail map is generated and assigned to KEY.
11100
11101 If TRANSLATION is a Quail map or a function symbol which returns a Quail map,
11102 it is used to handle KEY.
11103
11104 Optional 3rd argument NAME, if specified, says which Quail package
11105 to define this translation rule in. The default is to define it in the
11106 current Quail package.
11107
11108 Optional 4th argument APPEND, if non-nil, appends TRANSLATION
11109 to the current translations for KEY instead of replacing them." nil nil)
11110
11111 (autoload (quote quail-defrule-internal) "quail" "\
11112 Define KEY as TRANS in a Quail map MAP." nil nil)
11113
11114 (autoload (quote quail-update-leim-list-file) "quail" "\
11115 Update entries for Quail packages in `LEIM' list file in directory DIRNAME.
11116 DIRNAME is a directory containing Emacs input methods;
11117 normally, it should specify the `leim' subdirectory
11118 of the Emacs source tree.
11119
11120 It searches for Quail packages under `quail' subdirectory of DIRNAME,
11121 and update the file \"leim-list.el\" in DIRNAME.
11122
11123 When called from a program, the remaining arguments are additional
11124 directory names to search for Quail packages under `quail' subdirectory
11125 of each directory." t nil)
11126
11127 ;;;***
11128 \f
11129 ;;;### (autoloads (quickurl-list quickurl-list-mode quickurl-edit-urls
11130 ;;;;;; quickurl-browse-url-ask quickurl-browse-url quickurl-add-url
11131 ;;;;;; quickurl-ask quickurl) "quickurl" "quickurl.el" (14388 11185))
11132 ;;; Generated autoloads from quickurl.el
11133
11134 (defconst quickurl-reread-hook-postfix "\n;; Local Variables:\n;; eval: (progn (require 'quickurl) (add-hook 'local-write-file-hooks (lambda () (quickurl-read) nil)))\n;; End:\n" "\
11135 Example `quickurl-postfix' text that adds a local variable to the
11136 `quickurl-url-file' so that if you edit it by hand it will ensure that
11137 `quickurl-urls' is updated with the new URL list.
11138
11139 To make use of this do something like:
11140
11141 (setq quickurl-postfix quickurl-reread-hook-postfix)
11142
11143 in your ~/.emacs (after loading/requiring quickurl).")
11144
11145 (autoload (quote quickurl) "quickurl" "Insert an URL based on LOOKUP.\n\nIf not supplied LOOKUP is taken to be the word at point in the current\nbuffer, this default action can be modifed via\n`quickurl-grab-lookup-function'." t nil)
11146
11147 (autoload (quote quickurl-ask) "quickurl" "\
11148 Insert an URL, with `completing-read' prompt, based on LOOKUP." t nil)
11149
11150 (autoload (quote quickurl-add-url) "quickurl" "\
11151 Allow the user to interactively add a new URL associated with WORD.
11152
11153 See `quickurl-grab-url' for details on how the default word/url combination
11154 is decided." t nil)
11155
11156 (autoload (quote quickurl-browse-url) "quickurl" "Browse the URL associated with LOOKUP.\n\nIf not supplied LOOKUP is taken to be the word at point in the\ncurrent buffer, this default action can be modifed via\n`quickurl-grab-lookup-function'." t nil)
11157
11158 (autoload (quote quickurl-browse-url-ask) "quickurl" "\
11159 Browse the URL, with `completing-read' prompt, associated with LOOKUP." t nil)
11160
11161 (autoload (quote quickurl-edit-urls) "quickurl" "\
11162 Pull `quickurl-url-file' into a buffer for hand editing." t nil)
11163
11164 (autoload (quote quickurl-list-mode) "quickurl" "\
11165 A mode for browsing the quickurl URL list.
11166
11167 The key bindings for `quickurl-list-mode' are:
11168
11169 \\{quickurl-list-mode-map}" t nil)
11170
11171 (autoload (quote quickurl-list) "quickurl" "\
11172 Display `quickurl-list' as a formatted list using `quickurl-list-mode'." t nil)
11173
11174 ;;;***
11175 \f
11176 ;;;### (autoloads (remote-compile) "rcompile" "rcompile.el" (13149
11177 ;;;;;; 16808))
11178 ;;; Generated autoloads from rcompile.el
11179
11180 (autoload (quote remote-compile) "rcompile" "\
11181 Compile the the current buffer's directory on HOST. Log in as USER.
11182 See \\[compile]." t nil)
11183
11184 ;;;***
11185 \f
11186 ;;;### (autoloads (recentf-cleanup recentf-save-list recentf-mode)
11187 ;;;;;; "recentf" "recentf.el" (14385 19861))
11188 ;;; Generated autoloads from recentf.el
11189
11190 (autoload (quote recentf-mode) "recentf" "\
11191 Toggle recentf mode.
11192 With prefix ARG, turn recentf mode on if and only if ARG is positive.
11193 Returns the new status of recentf mode (non-nil means on).
11194
11195 When recentf mode is enabled, it maintains a menu for visiting files that
11196 were operated on recently." t nil)
11197
11198 (autoload (quote recentf-save-list) "recentf" "\
11199 Save the current `recentf-list' to the file `recentf-save-file'." t nil)
11200
11201 (autoload (quote recentf-cleanup) "recentf" "\
11202 Remove all non-readable files from `recentf-list'." t nil)
11203
11204 ;;;***
11205 \f
11206 ;;;### (autoloads (clear-rectangle string-rectangle delete-whitespace-rectangle
11207 ;;;;;; open-rectangle insert-rectangle yank-rectangle kill-rectangle
11208 ;;;;;; extract-rectangle delete-extract-rectangle delete-rectangle
11209 ;;;;;; move-to-column-force) "rect" "rect.el" (14273 29571))
11210 ;;; Generated autoloads from rect.el
11211
11212 (autoload (quote move-to-column-force) "rect" "\
11213 Move point to column COLUMN rigidly in the current line.
11214 If COLUMN is within a multi-column character, replace it by
11215 spaces and tab.
11216
11217 As for `move-to-column', passing anything but nil or t in FLAG will move to
11218 the desired column only if the line is long enough." nil nil)
11219
11220 (autoload (quote delete-rectangle) "rect" "\
11221 Delete (don't save) text in the region-rectangle.
11222 The same range of columns is deleted in each line starting with the
11223 line where the region begins and ending with the line where the region
11224 ends.
11225
11226 When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
11227 With a prefix (or a FILL) argument, also fill lines where nothing has
11228 to be deleted." t nil)
11229
11230 (autoload (quote delete-extract-rectangle) "rect" "\
11231 Delete the contents of the rectangle with corners at START and END.
11232 Return it as a list of strings, one for each line of the rectangle.
11233
11234 When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
11235 With an optional FILL argument, also fill lines where nothing has to be
11236 deleted." nil nil)
11237
11238 (autoload (quote extract-rectangle) "rect" "\
11239 Return the contents of the rectangle with corners at START and END.
11240 Return it as a list of strings, one for each line of the rectangle." nil nil)
11241
11242 (autoload (quote kill-rectangle) "rect" "\
11243 Delete the region-rectangle and save it as the last killed one.
11244
11245 When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
11246 You might prefer to use `delete-extract-rectangle' from a program.
11247
11248 With a prefix (or a FILL) argument, also fill lines where nothing has to be
11249 deleted." t nil)
11250
11251 (autoload (quote yank-rectangle) "rect" "\
11252 Yank the last killed rectangle with upper left corner at point." t nil)
11253
11254 (autoload (quote insert-rectangle) "rect" "\
11255 Insert text of RECTANGLE with upper left corner at point.
11256 RECTANGLE's first line is inserted at point, its second
11257 line is inserted at a point vertically under point, etc.
11258 RECTANGLE should be a list of strings.
11259 After this command, the mark is at the upper left corner
11260 and point is at the lower right corner." nil nil)
11261
11262 (autoload (quote open-rectangle) "rect" "\
11263 Blank out the region-rectangle, shifting text right.
11264
11265 The text previously in the region is not overwritten by the blanks,
11266 but instead winds up to the right of the rectangle.
11267
11268 When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
11269 With a prefix (or a FILL) argument, fill with blanks even if there is no text
11270 on the right side of the rectangle." t nil)
11271 (defalias 'close-rectangle 'delete-whitespace-rectangle) ;; Old name
11272
11273 (autoload (quote delete-whitespace-rectangle) "rect" "\
11274 Delete all whitespace following a specified column in each line.
11275 The left edge of the rectangle specifies the position in each line
11276 at which whitespace deletion should begin. On each line in the
11277 rectangle, all continuous whitespace starting at that column is deleted.
11278
11279 When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
11280 With a prefix (or a FILL) argument, also fill too short lines." t nil)
11281
11282 (autoload (quote string-rectangle) "rect" "\
11283 Insert STRING on each line of the region-rectangle, shifting text right.
11284
11285 When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
11286 The left edge of the rectangle specifies the column for insertion.
11287 This command does not delete or overwrite any existing text." t nil)
11288
11289 (autoload (quote clear-rectangle) "rect" "\
11290 Blank out the region-rectangle.
11291 The text previously in the region is overwritten with blanks.
11292
11293 When called from a program the rectangle's corners are START and END.
11294 With a prefix (or a FILL) argument, also fill with blanks the parts of the
11295 rectangle which were empty." t nil)
11296
11297 ;;;***
11298 \f
11299 ;;;### (autoloads (reftex-mode turn-on-reftex) "reftex" "textmodes/reftex.el"
11300 ;;;;;; (14454 167))
11301 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/reftex.el
11302
11303 (autoload (quote turn-on-reftex) "reftex" "\
11304 Turn on RefTeX mode." nil nil)
11305
11306 (autoload (quote reftex-mode) "reftex" "\
11307 Minor mode with distinct support for \\label, \\ref and \\cite in LaTeX.
11308
11309 \\<reftex-mode-map>A Table of Contents of the entire (multifile) document with browsing
11310 capabilities is available with `\\[reftex-toc]'.
11311
11312 Labels can be created with `\\[reftex-label]' and referenced with `\\[reftex-reference]'.
11313 When referencing, you get a menu with all labels of a given type and
11314 context of the label definition. The selected label is inserted as a
11315 \\ref macro.
11316
11317 Citations can be made with `\\[reftex-citation]' which will use a regular expression
11318 to pull out a *formatted* list of articles from your BibTeX
11319 database. The selected citation is inserted as a \\cite macro.
11320
11321 Index entries can be made with `\\[reftex-index-selection-or-word]' which indexes the word at point
11322 or the current selection. More general index entries are created with
11323 `\\[reftex-index]'. `\\[reftex-display-index]' displays the compiled index.
11324
11325 Most command have help available on the fly. This help is accessed by
11326 pressing `?' to any prompt mentioning this feature.
11327
11328 Extensive documentation about RefTeX is available in Info format.
11329 You can view this information with `\\[reftex-info]'.
11330
11331 \\{reftex-mode-map}
11332 Under X, these and other functions will also be available as `Ref' menu
11333 on the menu bar.
11334
11335 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------" t nil)
11336
11337 ;;;***
11338 \f
11339 ;;;### (autoloads (reftex-citation) "reftex-cite" "textmodes/reftex-cite.el"
11340 ;;;;;; (14454 161))
11341 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/reftex-cite.el
11342
11343 (autoload (quote reftex-citation) "reftex-cite" "\
11344 Make a citation using BibTeX database files.
11345 After prompting for a regular expression, scans the buffers with
11346 bibtex entries (taken from the \\bibliography command) and offers the
11347 matching entries for selection. The selected entry is formated according
11348 to `reftex-cite-format' and inserted into the buffer.
11349
11350 If NO-INSERT is non-nil, nothing is inserted, only the selected key returned.
11351
11352 FORAT-KEY can be used to pre-select a citation format.
11353
11354 When called with one or two `C-u' prefixes, first rescans the document.
11355 When called with a numeric prefix, make that many citations. When
11356 called with point inside the braces of a `cite' command, it will
11357 add another key, ignoring the value of `reftex-cite-format'.
11358
11359 The regular expression uses an expanded syntax: && is interpreted as `and'.
11360 Thus, `aaaa&&bbb' matches entries which contain both `aaaa' and `bbb'.
11361 While entering the regexp, completion on knows citation keys is possible.
11362 `=' is a good regular expression to match all entries in all files." t nil)
11363
11364 ;;;***
11365 \f
11366 ;;;### (autoloads (reftex-index-phrases-mode) "reftex-index" "textmodes/reftex-index.el"
11367 ;;;;;; (14454 166))
11368 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/reftex-index.el
11369
11370 (autoload (quote reftex-index-phrases-mode) "reftex-index" "\
11371 Major mode for managing the Index phrases of a LaTeX document.
11372 This buffer was created with RefTeX.
11373
11374 To insert new phrases, use
11375 - `C-c \\' in the LaTeX document to copy selection or word
11376 - `\\[reftex-index-new-phrase]' in the phrases buffer.
11377
11378 To index phrases use one of:
11379
11380 \\[reftex-index-this-phrase] index current phrase
11381 \\[reftex-index-next-phrase] index next phrase (or N with prefix arg)
11382 \\[reftex-index-all-phrases] index all phrases
11383 \\[reftex-index-remaining-phrases] index current and following phrases
11384 \\[reftex-index-region-phrases] index the phrases in the region
11385
11386 You can sort the phrases in this buffer with \\[reftex-index-sort-phrases].
11387 To display information about the phrase at point, use \\[reftex-index-phrases-info].
11388
11389 For more information see the RefTeX User Manual.
11390
11391 Here are all local bindings.
11392
11393 \\{reftex-index-phrases-map}" t nil)
11394
11395 ;;;***
11396 \f
11397 ;;;### (autoloads (regexp-opt-depth regexp-opt) "regexp-opt" "emacs-lisp/regexp-opt.el"
11398 ;;;;;; (14334 30691))
11399 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/regexp-opt.el
11400
11401 (autoload (quote regexp-opt) "regexp-opt" "\
11402 Return a regexp to match a string in STRINGS.
11403 Each string should be unique in STRINGS and should not contain any regexps,
11404 quoted or not. If optional PAREN is non-nil, ensure that the returned regexp
11405 is enclosed by at least one regexp grouping construct.
11406 The returned regexp is typically more efficient than the equivalent regexp:
11407
11408 (let ((open-paren (if PAREN \"\\\\(\" \"\")) (close-paren (if PAREN \"\\\\)\" \"\")))
11409 (concat open-paren (mapconcat 'regexp-quote STRINGS \"\\\\|\") close-paren))
11410
11411 but typically contains more regexp grouping constructs.
11412 Use `regexp-opt-depth' to count them." nil nil)
11413
11414 (autoload (quote regexp-opt-depth) "regexp-opt" "\
11415 Return the depth of REGEXP.
11416 This means the number of regexp grouping constructs (parenthesised expressions)
11417 in REGEXP." nil nil)
11418
11419 ;;;***
11420 \f
11421 ;;;### (autoloads (repeat) "repeat" "repeat.el" (14081 4820))
11422 ;;; Generated autoloads from repeat.el
11423
11424 (autoload (quote repeat) "repeat" "\
11425 Repeat most recently executed command.
11426 With prefix arg, apply new prefix arg to that command; otherwise, use
11427 the prefix arg that was used before (if any).
11428 This command is like the `.' command in the vi editor.
11429
11430 If this command is invoked by a multi-character key sequence, it can then
11431 be repeated by repeating the final character of that sequence. This behavior
11432 can be modified by the global variable `repeat-on-final-keystroke'." t nil)
11433
11434 ;;;***
11435 \f
11436 ;;;### (autoloads (reporter-submit-bug-report) "reporter" "mail/reporter.el"
11437 ;;;;;; (14356 24412))
11438 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/reporter.el
11439
11440 (autoload (quote reporter-submit-bug-report) "reporter" "\
11441 Begin submitting a bug report via email.
11442
11443 ADDRESS is the email address for the package's maintainer. PKGNAME is
11444 the name of the package (if you want to include version numbers,
11445 you must put them into PKGNAME before calling this function).
11446
11447 VARLIST is the list of variables to dump (see `reporter-dump-state'
11448 for details). The optional argument PRE-HOOKS and POST-HOOKS are
11449 passed to `reporter-dump-state'. Optional argument SALUTATION is text
11450 to be inserted at the top of the mail buffer; in that case, point is
11451 left after that text.
11452
11453 This function prompts for a summary if `reporter-prompt-for-summary-p'
11454 is non-nil.
11455
11456 This function does not send a message; it uses the given information
11457 to initialize a a messagem, which the user can then edit and finally send
11458 \(or decline to send). The variable `mail-user-agent' controls which
11459 mail-sending package is used for editing and sending the message." nil nil)
11460
11461 ;;;***
11462 \f
11463 ;;;### (autoloads (reposition-window) "reposition" "reposition.el"
11464 ;;;;;; (13229 29317))
11465 ;;; Generated autoloads from reposition.el
11466
11467 (autoload (quote reposition-window) "reposition" "\
11468 Make the current definition and/or comment visible.
11469 Further invocations move it to the top of the window or toggle the
11470 visibility of comments that precede it.
11471 Point is left unchanged unless prefix ARG is supplied.
11472 If the definition is fully onscreen, it is moved to the top of the
11473 window. If it is partly offscreen, the window is scrolled to get the
11474 definition (or as much as will fit) onscreen, unless point is in a comment
11475 which is also partly offscreen, in which case the scrolling attempts to get
11476 as much of the comment onscreen as possible.
11477 Initially `reposition-window' attempts to make both the definition and
11478 preceding comments visible. Further invocations toggle the visibility of
11479 the comment lines.
11480 If ARG is non-nil, point may move in order to make the whole defun
11481 visible (if only part could otherwise be made so), to make the defun line
11482 visible (if point is in code and it could not be made so, or if only
11483 comments, including the first comment line, are visible), or to make the
11484 first comment line visible (if point is in a comment)." t nil)
11485 (define-key esc-map "\C-l" 'reposition-window)
11486
11487 ;;;***
11488 \f
11489 ;;;### (autoloads (resume-suspend-hook) "resume" "resume.el" (12679
11490 ;;;;;; 50658))
11491 ;;; Generated autoloads from resume.el
11492
11493 (autoload (quote resume-suspend-hook) "resume" "\
11494 Clear out the file used for transmitting args when Emacs resumes." nil nil)
11495
11496 ;;;***
11497 \f
11498 ;;;### (autoloads (make-ring ring-p) "ring" "emacs-lisp/ring.el"
11499 ;;;;;; (14283 6810))
11500 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/ring.el
11501
11502 (autoload (quote ring-p) "ring" "\
11503 Returns t if X is a ring; nil otherwise." nil nil)
11504
11505 (autoload (quote make-ring) "ring" "\
11506 Make a ring that can contain SIZE elements." nil nil)
11507
11508 ;;;***
11509 \f
11510 ;;;### (autoloads (rlogin) "rlogin" "rlogin.el" (13845 29546))
11511 ;;; Generated autoloads from rlogin.el
11512 (add-hook 'same-window-regexps "^\\*rlogin-.*\\*\\(\\|<[0-9]+>\\)")
11513
11514 (autoload (quote rlogin) "rlogin" "\
11515 Open a network login connection via `rlogin' with args INPUT-ARGS.
11516 INPUT-ARGS should start with a host name; it may also contain
11517 other arguments for `rlogin'.
11518
11519 Input is sent line-at-a-time to the remote connection.
11520
11521 Communication with the remote host is recorded in a buffer `*rlogin-HOST*'
11522 \(or `*rlogin-USER@HOST*' if the remote username differs).
11523 If a prefix argument is given and the buffer `*rlogin-HOST*' already exists,
11524 a new buffer with a different connection will be made.
11525
11526 When called from a program, if the optional second argument BUFFER is
11527 a string or buffer, it specifies the buffer to use.
11528
11529 The variable `rlogin-program' contains the name of the actual program to
11530 run. It can be a relative or absolute path.
11531
11532 The variable `rlogin-explicit-args' is a list of arguments to give to
11533 the rlogin when starting. They are added after any arguments given in
11534 INPUT-ARGS.
11535
11536 If the default value of `rlogin-directory-tracking-mode' is t, then the
11537 default directory in that buffer is set to a remote (FTP) file name to
11538 access your home directory on the remote machine. Occasionally this causes
11539 an error, if you cannot access the home directory on that machine. This
11540 error is harmless as long as you don't try to use that default directory.
11541
11542 If `rlogin-directory-tracking-mode' is neither t nor nil, then the default
11543 directory is initially set up to your (local) home directory.
11544 This is useful if the remote machine and your local machine
11545 share the same files via NFS. This is the default.
11546
11547 If you wish to change directory tracking styles during a session, use the
11548 function `rlogin-directory-tracking-mode' rather than simply setting the
11549 variable." t nil)
11550
11551 ;;;***
11552 \f
11553 ;;;### (autoloads (rmail-set-pop-password rmail-input rmail-mode
11554 ;;;;;; rmail rmail-enable-mime rmail-secondary-file-regexp rmail-secondary-file-directory
11555 ;;;;;; rmail-mail-new-frame rmail-primary-inbox-list rmail-delete-after-output
11556 ;;;;;; rmail-highlight-face rmail-highlighted-headers rmail-retry-ignored-headers
11557 ;;;;;; rmail-displayed-headers rmail-ignored-headers rmail-dont-reply-to-names)
11558 ;;;;;; "rmail" "mail/rmail.el" (14384 5882))
11559 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/rmail.el
11560
11561 (defvar rmail-dont-reply-to-names nil "\
11562 *A regexp specifying names to prune of reply to messages.
11563 A value of nil means exclude your own login name as an address
11564 plus whatever is specified by `rmail-default-dont-reply-to-names'.")
11565
11566 (defvar rmail-default-dont-reply-to-names "info-" "\
11567 A regular expression specifying part of the value of the default value of
11568 the variable `rmail-dont-reply-to-names', for when the user does not set
11569 `rmail-dont-reply-to-names' explicitly. (The other part of the default
11570 value is the user's name.)
11571 It is useful to set this variable in the site customization file.")
11572
11573 (defvar rmail-ignored-headers "^via:\\|^mail-from:\\|^origin:\\|^references:\\|^status:\\|^received:\\|^x400-originator:\\|^x400-recipients:\\|^x400-received:\\|^x400-mts-identifier:\\|^x400-content-type:\\|^\\(resent-\\|\\)message-id:\\|^summary-line:\\|^resent-date:\\|^nntp-posting-host:\\|^path:\\|^x-char.*:\\|^x-face:\\|^x-mailer:\\|^delivered-to:\\|^lines:\\|^mime-version:\\|^content-transfer-encoding:\\|^x-coding-system:\\|^return-path:\\|^errors-to:\\|^return-receipt-to:\\|^x-attribution:\\|^x-disclaimer:" "\
11574 *Regexp to match header fields that Rmail should normally hide.
11575 This variable is used for reformatting the message header,
11576 which normally happens once for each message,
11577 when you view the message for the first time in Rmail.
11578 To make a change in this variable take effect
11579 for a message that you have already viewed,
11580 go to that message and type \\[rmail-toggle-header] twice.")
11581
11582 (defvar rmail-displayed-headers nil "\
11583 *Regexp to match Header fields that Rmail should display.
11584 If nil, display all header fields except those matched by
11585 `rmail-ignored-headers'.")
11586
11587 (defvar rmail-retry-ignored-headers nil "\
11588 *Headers that should be stripped when retrying a failed message.")
11589
11590 (defvar rmail-highlighted-headers "^From:\\|^Subject:" "\
11591 *Regexp to match Header fields that Rmail should normally highlight.
11592 A value of nil means don't highlight.
11593 See also `rmail-highlight-face'.")
11594
11595 (defvar rmail-highlight-face nil "\
11596 *Face used by Rmail for highlighting headers.")
11597
11598 (defvar rmail-delete-after-output nil "\
11599 *Non-nil means automatically delete a message that is copied to a file.")
11600
11601 (defvar rmail-primary-inbox-list nil "\
11602 *List of files which are inboxes for user's primary mail file `~/RMAIL'.
11603 `nil' means the default, which is (\"/usr/spool/mail/$USER\")
11604 \(the name varies depending on the operating system,
11605 and the value of the environment variable MAIL overrides it).")
11606
11607 (defvar rmail-mail-new-frame nil "\
11608 *Non-nil means Rmail makes a new frame for composing outgoing mail.")
11609
11610 (defvar rmail-secondary-file-directory "~/" "\
11611 *Directory for additional secondary Rmail files.")
11612
11613 (defvar rmail-secondary-file-regexp "\\.xmail$" "\
11614 *Regexp for which files are secondary Rmail files.")
11615
11616 (defvar rmail-mode-hook nil "\
11617 List of functions to call when Rmail is invoked.")
11618
11619 (defvar rmail-get-new-mail-hook nil "\
11620 List of functions to call when Rmail has retrieved new mail.")
11621
11622 (defvar rmail-show-message-hook nil "\
11623 List of functions to call when Rmail displays a message.")
11624
11625 (defvar rmail-delete-message-hook nil "\
11626 List of functions to call when Rmail deletes a message.
11627 When the hooks are called, the message has been marked deleted but is
11628 still the current message in the Rmail buffer.")
11629
11630 (defvar rmail-file-coding-system nil "\
11631 Coding system used in RMAIL file.
11632
11633 This is set to nil by default.")
11634
11635 (defvar rmail-enable-mime nil "\
11636 *If non-nil, RMAIL uses MIME feature.
11637 If the value is t, RMAIL automatically shows MIME decoded message.
11638 If the value is neither t nor nil, RMAIL does not show MIME decoded message
11639 until a user explicitly requires it.")
11640
11641 (defvar rmail-show-mime-function nil "\
11642 Function to show MIME decoded message of RMAIL file.")
11643
11644 (defvar rmail-mime-feature (quote rmail-mime) "\
11645 Feature to require to load MIME support in Rmail.
11646 When starting Rmail, if `rmail-enable-mime' is non-nil,
11647 this feature is required with `require'.")
11648
11649 (defvar rmail-decode-mime-charset t "\
11650 *Non-nil means a message is decoded by MIME's charset specification.
11651 If this variable is nil, or the message has not MIME specification,
11652 the message is decoded as normal way.
11653
11654 If the variable `rmail-enable-mime' is non-nil, this variables is
11655 ignored, and all the decoding work is done by a feature specified by
11656 the variable `rmail-mime-feature'.")
11657
11658 (defvar rmail-mime-charset-pattern "^content-type:[ ]*text/plain;[ \n]*charset=\"?\\([^ \n\"]+\\)\"?" "\
11659 Regexp to match MIME-charset specification in a header of message.
11660 The first parenthesized expression should match the MIME-charset name.")
11661
11662 (autoload (quote rmail) "rmail" "\
11663 Read and edit incoming mail.
11664 Moves messages into file named by `rmail-file-name' (a babyl format file)
11665 and edits that file in RMAIL Mode.
11666 Type \\[describe-mode] once editing that file, for a list of RMAIL commands.
11667
11668 May be called with file name as argument; then performs rmail editing on
11669 that file, but does not copy any new mail into the file.
11670 Interactively, if you supply a prefix argument, then you
11671 have a chance to specify a file name with the minibuffer.
11672
11673 If `rmail-display-summary' is non-nil, make a summary for this RMAIL file." t nil)
11674
11675 (autoload (quote rmail-mode) "rmail" "\
11676 Rmail Mode is used by \\<rmail-mode-map>\\[rmail] for editing Rmail files.
11677 All normal editing commands are turned off.
11678 Instead, these commands are available:
11679
11680 \\[rmail-beginning-of-message] Move point to front of this message (same as \\[beginning-of-buffer]).
11681 \\[scroll-up] Scroll to next screen of this message.
11682 \\[scroll-down] Scroll to previous screen of this message.
11683 \\[rmail-next-undeleted-message] Move to Next non-deleted message.
11684 \\[rmail-previous-undeleted-message] Move to Previous non-deleted message.
11685 \\[rmail-next-message] Move to Next message whether deleted or not.
11686 \\[rmail-previous-message] Move to Previous message whether deleted or not.
11687 \\[rmail-first-message] Move to the first message in Rmail file.
11688 \\[rmail-last-message] Move to the last message in Rmail file.
11689 \\[rmail-show-message] Jump to message specified by numeric position in file.
11690 \\[rmail-search] Search for string and show message it is found in.
11691 \\[rmail-delete-forward] Delete this message, move to next nondeleted.
11692 \\[rmail-delete-backward] Delete this message, move to previous nondeleted.
11693 \\[rmail-undelete-previous-message] Undelete message. Tries current message, then earlier messages
11694 till a deleted message is found.
11695 \\[rmail-edit-current-message] Edit the current message. \\[rmail-cease-edit] to return to Rmail.
11696 \\[rmail-expunge] Expunge deleted messages.
11697 \\[rmail-expunge-and-save] Expunge and save the file.
11698 \\[rmail-quit] Quit Rmail: expunge, save, then switch to another buffer.
11699 \\[save-buffer] Save without expunging.
11700 \\[rmail-get-new-mail] Move new mail from system spool directory into this file.
11701 \\[rmail-mail] Mail a message (same as \\[mail-other-window]).
11702 \\[rmail-continue] Continue composing outgoing message started before.
11703 \\[rmail-reply] Reply to this message. Like \\[rmail-mail] but initializes some fields.
11704 \\[rmail-retry-failure] Send this message again. Used on a mailer failure message.
11705 \\[rmail-forward] Forward this message to another user.
11706 \\[rmail-output-to-rmail-file] Output this message to an Rmail file (append it).
11707 \\[rmail-output] Output this message to a Unix-format mail file (append it).
11708 \\[rmail-output-body-to-file] Save message body to a file. Default filename comes from Subject line.
11709 \\[rmail-input] Input Rmail file. Run Rmail on that file.
11710 \\[rmail-add-label] Add label to message. It will be displayed in the mode line.
11711 \\[rmail-kill-label] Kill label. Remove a label from current message.
11712 \\[rmail-next-labeled-message] Move to Next message with specified label
11713 (label defaults to last one specified).
11714 Standard labels: filed, unseen, answered, forwarded, deleted.
11715 Any other label is present only if you add it with \\[rmail-add-label].
11716 \\[rmail-previous-labeled-message] Move to Previous message with specified label
11717 \\[rmail-summary] Show headers buffer, with a one line summary of each message.
11718 \\[rmail-summary-by-labels] Summarize only messages with particular label(s).
11719 \\[rmail-summary-by-recipients] Summarize only messages with particular recipient(s).
11720 \\[rmail-summary-by-regexp] Summarize only messages with particular regexp(s).
11721 \\[rmail-summary-by-topic] Summarize only messages with subject line regexp(s).
11722 \\[rmail-toggle-header] Toggle display of complete header." t nil)
11723
11724 (autoload (quote rmail-input) "rmail" "\
11725 Run Rmail on file FILENAME." t nil)
11726
11727 (autoload (quote rmail-set-pop-password) "rmail" "\
11728 Set PASSWORD to be used for retrieving mail from a POP server." t nil)
11729
11730 ;;;***
11731 \f
11732 ;;;### (autoloads (rmail-edit-current-message) "rmailedit" "mail/rmailedit.el"
11733 ;;;;;; (14387 64145))
11734 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/rmailedit.el
11735
11736 (autoload (quote rmail-edit-current-message) "rmailedit" "\
11737 Edit the contents of this message." t nil)
11738
11739 ;;;***
11740 \f
11741 ;;;### (autoloads (rmail-next-labeled-message rmail-previous-labeled-message
11742 ;;;;;; rmail-read-label rmail-kill-label rmail-add-label) "rmailkwd"
11743 ;;;;;; "mail/rmailkwd.el" (12875 8164))
11744 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/rmailkwd.el
11745
11746 (autoload (quote rmail-add-label) "rmailkwd" "\
11747 Add LABEL to labels associated with current RMAIL message.
11748 Completion is performed over known labels when reading." t nil)
11749
11750 (autoload (quote rmail-kill-label) "rmailkwd" "\
11751 Remove LABEL from labels associated with current RMAIL message.
11752 Completion is performed over known labels when reading." t nil)
11753
11754 (autoload (quote rmail-read-label) "rmailkwd" nil nil nil)
11755
11756 (autoload (quote rmail-previous-labeled-message) "rmailkwd" "\
11757 Show previous message with one of the labels LABELS.
11758 LABELS should be a comma-separated list of label names.
11759 If LABELS is empty, the last set of labels specified is used.
11760 With prefix argument N moves backward N messages with these labels." t nil)
11761
11762 (autoload (quote rmail-next-labeled-message) "rmailkwd" "\
11763 Show next message with one of the labels LABELS.
11764 LABELS should be a comma-separated list of label names.
11765 If LABELS is empty, the last set of labels specified is used.
11766 With prefix argument N moves forward N messages with these labels." t nil)
11767
11768 ;;;***
11769 \f
11770 ;;;### (autoloads (set-rmail-inbox-list) "rmailmsc" "mail/rmailmsc.el"
11771 ;;;;;; (13772 51133))
11772 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/rmailmsc.el
11773
11774 (autoload (quote set-rmail-inbox-list) "rmailmsc" "\
11775 Set the inbox list of the current RMAIL file to FILE-NAME.
11776 You can specify one file name, or several names separated by commas.
11777 If FILE-NAME is empty, remove any existing inbox list." t nil)
11778
11779 ;;;***
11780 \f
11781 ;;;### (autoloads (rmail-output-body-to-file rmail-output rmail-fields-not-to-output
11782 ;;;;;; rmail-output-to-rmail-file rmail-output-file-alist) "rmailout"
11783 ;;;;;; "mail/rmailout.el" (14179 6393))
11784 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/rmailout.el
11785
11786 (defvar rmail-output-file-alist nil "\
11787 *Alist matching regexps to suggested output Rmail files.
11788 This is a list of elements of the form (REGEXP . NAME-EXP).
11789 The suggestion is taken if REGEXP matches anywhere in the message buffer.
11790 NAME-EXP may be a string constant giving the file name to use,
11791 or more generally it may be any kind of expression that returns
11792 a file name as a string.")
11793
11794 (autoload (quote rmail-output-to-rmail-file) "rmailout" "\
11795 Append the current message to an Rmail file named FILE-NAME.
11796 If the file does not exist, ask if it should be created.
11797 If file is being visited, the message is appended to the Emacs
11798 buffer visiting that file.
11799 If the file exists and is not an Rmail file, the message is
11800 appended in inbox format, the same way `rmail-output' does it.
11801
11802 The default file name comes from `rmail-default-rmail-file',
11803 which is updated to the name you use in this command.
11804
11805 A prefix argument N says to output N consecutive messages
11806 starting with the current one. Deleted messages are skipped and don't count." t nil)
11807
11808 (defvar rmail-fields-not-to-output nil "\
11809 *Regexp describing fields to exclude when outputting a message to a file.")
11810
11811 (autoload (quote rmail-output) "rmailout" "\
11812 Append this message to system-inbox-format mail file named FILE-NAME.
11813 A prefix argument N says to output N consecutive messages
11814 starting with the current one. Deleted messages are skipped and don't count.
11815 When called from lisp code, N may be omitted.
11816
11817 If the pruned message header is shown on the current message, then
11818 messages will be appended with pruned headers; otherwise, messages
11819 will be appended with their original headers.
11820
11821 The default file name comes from `rmail-default-file',
11822 which is updated to the name you use in this command.
11823
11824 The optional third argument NOATTRIBUTE, if non-nil, says not
11825 to set the `filed' attribute, and not to display a message.
11826
11827 The optional fourth argument FROM-GNUS is set when called from GNUS." t nil)
11828
11829 (autoload (quote rmail-output-body-to-file) "rmailout" "\
11830 Write this message body to the file FILE-NAME.
11831 FILE-NAME defaults, interactively, from the Subject field of the message." t nil)
11832
11833 ;;;***
11834 \f
11835 ;;;### (autoloads (rmail-sort-by-keywords rmail-sort-by-lines rmail-sort-by-correspondent
11836 ;;;;;; rmail-sort-by-recipient rmail-sort-by-author rmail-sort-by-subject
11837 ;;;;;; rmail-sort-by-date) "rmailsort" "mail/rmailsort.el" (13054
11838 ;;;;;; 26387))
11839 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/rmailsort.el
11840
11841 (autoload (quote rmail-sort-by-date) "rmailsort" "\
11842 Sort messages of current Rmail file by date.
11843 If prefix argument REVERSE is non-nil, sort them in reverse order." t nil)
11844
11845 (autoload (quote rmail-sort-by-subject) "rmailsort" "\
11846 Sort messages of current Rmail file by subject.
11847 If prefix argument REVERSE is non-nil, sort them in reverse order." t nil)
11848
11849 (autoload (quote rmail-sort-by-author) "rmailsort" "\
11850 Sort messages of current Rmail file by author.
11851 If prefix argument REVERSE is non-nil, sort them in reverse order." t nil)
11852
11853 (autoload (quote rmail-sort-by-recipient) "rmailsort" "\
11854 Sort messages of current Rmail file by recipient.
11855 If prefix argument REVERSE is non-nil, sort them in reverse order." t nil)
11856
11857 (autoload (quote rmail-sort-by-correspondent) "rmailsort" "\
11858 Sort messages of current Rmail file by other correspondent.
11859 If prefix argument REVERSE is non-nil, sort them in reverse order." t nil)
11860
11861 (autoload (quote rmail-sort-by-lines) "rmailsort" "\
11862 Sort messages of current Rmail file by number of lines.
11863 If prefix argument REVERSE is non-nil, sort them in reverse order." t nil)
11864
11865 (autoload (quote rmail-sort-by-keywords) "rmailsort" "\
11866 Sort messages of current Rmail file by labels.
11867 If prefix argument REVERSE is non-nil, sort them in reverse order.
11868 KEYWORDS is a comma-separated list of labels." t nil)
11869
11870 ;;;***
11871 \f
11872 ;;;### (autoloads (rmail-summary-line-decoder rmail-summary-by-senders
11873 ;;;;;; rmail-summary-by-topic rmail-summary-by-regexp rmail-summary-by-recipients
11874 ;;;;;; rmail-summary-by-labels rmail-summary rmail-summary-line-count-flag
11875 ;;;;;; rmail-summary-scroll-between-messages) "rmailsum" "mail/rmailsum.el"
11876 ;;;;;; (14418 7508))
11877 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/rmailsum.el
11878
11879 (defvar rmail-summary-scroll-between-messages t "\
11880 *Non-nil means Rmail summary scroll commands move between messages.")
11881
11882 (defvar rmail-summary-line-count-flag t "\
11883 *Non-nil if Rmail summary should show the number of lines in each message.")
11884
11885 (autoload (quote rmail-summary) "rmailsum" "\
11886 Display a summary of all messages, one line per message." t nil)
11887
11888 (autoload (quote rmail-summary-by-labels) "rmailsum" "\
11889 Display a summary of all messages with one or more LABELS.
11890 LABELS should be a string containing the desired labels, separated by commas." t nil)
11891
11892 (autoload (quote rmail-summary-by-recipients) "rmailsum" "\
11893 Display a summary of all messages with the given RECIPIENTS.
11894 Normally checks the To, From and Cc fields of headers;
11895 but if PRIMARY-ONLY is non-nil (prefix arg given),
11896 only look in the To and From fields.
11897 RECIPIENTS is a string of regexps separated by commas." t nil)
11898
11899 (autoload (quote rmail-summary-by-regexp) "rmailsum" "\
11900 Display a summary of all messages according to regexp REGEXP.
11901 If the regular expression is found in the header of the message
11902 \(including in the date and other lines, as well as the subject line),
11903 Emacs will list the header line in the RMAIL-summary." t nil)
11904
11905 (autoload (quote rmail-summary-by-topic) "rmailsum" "\
11906 Display a summary of all messages with the given SUBJECT.
11907 Normally checks the Subject field of headers;
11908 but if WHOLE-MESSAGE is non-nil (prefix arg given),
11909 look in the whole message.
11910 SUBJECT is a string of regexps separated by commas." t nil)
11911
11912 (autoload (quote rmail-summary-by-senders) "rmailsum" "\
11913 Display a summary of all messages with the given SENDERS.
11914 SENDERS is a string of names separated by commas." t nil)
11915
11916 (defvar rmail-summary-line-decoder (function identity) "\
11917 *Function to decode summary-line.
11918
11919 By default, `identity' is set.")
11920
11921 ;;;***
11922 \f
11923 ;;;### (autoloads (news-post-news) "rnewspost" "mail/rnewspost.el"
11924 ;;;;;; (14263 36299))
11925 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/rnewspost.el
11926
11927 (autoload (quote news-post-news) "rnewspost" "\
11928 Begin editing a new USENET news article to be posted.
11929 Type \\[describe-mode] once editing the article to get a list of commands.
11930 If NOQUERY is non-nil, we do not query before doing the work." t nil)
11931
11932 ;;;***
11933 \f
11934 ;;;### (autoloads (toggle-rot13-mode rot13-other-window) "rot13"
11935 ;;;;;; "rot13.el" (12536 45574))
11936 ;;; Generated autoloads from rot13.el
11937
11938 (autoload (quote rot13-other-window) "rot13" "\
11939 Display current buffer in rot 13 in another window.
11940 To terminate the rot13 display, delete that window." t nil)
11941
11942 (autoload (quote toggle-rot13-mode) "rot13" "\
11943 Toggle the use of rot 13 encoding for the current window." t nil)
11944
11945 ;;;***
11946 \f
11947 ;;;### (autoloads (resize-minibuffer-mode resize-minibuffer-frame-exactly
11948 ;;;;;; resize-minibuffer-frame-max-height resize-minibuffer-frame
11949 ;;;;;; resize-minibuffer-window-exactly resize-minibuffer-window-max-height
11950 ;;;;;; resize-minibuffer-mode) "rsz-mini" "rsz-mini.el" (14301 25409))
11951 ;;; Generated autoloads from rsz-mini.el
11952
11953 (defvar resize-minibuffer-mode nil "\
11954 *This variable is obsolete.")
11955
11956 (custom-add-to-group (quote resize-minibuffer) (quote resize-minibuffer-mode) (quote custom-variable))
11957
11958 (custom-add-load (quote resize-minibuffer-mode) (quote rsz-mini))
11959
11960 (defvar resize-minibuffer-window-max-height nil "\
11961 *This variable is obsolete.")
11962
11963 (defvar resize-minibuffer-window-exactly t "\
11964 *This variable is obsolete.")
11965
11966 (defvar resize-minibuffer-frame nil "\
11967 *This variable is obsolete.")
11968
11969 (defvar resize-minibuffer-frame-max-height nil "\
11970 *This variable is obsolete.")
11971
11972 (defvar resize-minibuffer-frame-exactly t "\
11973 *This variable is obsolete.")
11974
11975 (autoload (quote resize-minibuffer-mode) "rsz-mini" "\
11976 This function is obsolete." t nil)
11977
11978 ;;;***
11979 \f
11980 ;;;### (autoloads (dsssl-mode scheme-mode) "scheme" "progmodes/scheme.el"
11981 ;;;;;; (14432 37919))
11982 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/scheme.el
11983
11984 (autoload (quote scheme-mode) "scheme" "\
11985 Major mode for editing Scheme code.
11986 Editing commands are similar to those of `lisp-mode'.
11987
11988 In addition, if an inferior Scheme process is running, some additional
11989 commands will be defined, for evaluating expressions and controlling
11990 the interpreter, and the state of the process will be displayed in the
11991 modeline of all Scheme buffers. The names of commands that interact
11992 with the Scheme process start with \"xscheme-\". For more information
11993 see the documentation for xscheme-interaction-mode.
11994
11995 Commands:
11996 Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
11997 Blank lines separate paragraphs. Semicolons start comments.
11998 \\{scheme-mode-map}
11999 Entry to this mode calls the value of `scheme-mode-hook'
12000 if that value is non-nil." t nil)
12001
12002 (autoload (quote dsssl-mode) "scheme" "\
12003 Major mode for editing DSSSL code.
12004 Editing commands are similar to those of `lisp-mode'.
12005
12006 Commands:
12007 Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
12008 Blank lines separate paragraphs. Semicolons start comments.
12009 \\{scheme-mode-map}
12010 Entering this mode runs the hooks `scheme-mode-hook' and then
12011 `dsssl-mode-hook' and inserts the value of `dsssl-sgml-declaration' if
12012 that variable's value is a string." t nil)
12013
12014 ;;;***
12015 \f
12016 ;;;### (autoloads (gnus-score-mode) "score-mode" "gnus/score-mode.el"
12017 ;;;;;; (14030 49477))
12018 ;;; Generated autoloads from gnus/score-mode.el
12019
12020 (autoload (quote gnus-score-mode) "score-mode" "\
12021 Mode for editing Gnus score files.
12022 This mode is an extended emacs-lisp mode.
12023
12024 \\{gnus-score-mode-map}" t nil)
12025
12026 ;;;***
12027 \f
12028 ;;;### (autoloads (scribe-mode) "scribe" "textmodes/scribe.el" (14381
12029 ;;;;;; 55098))
12030 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/scribe.el
12031
12032 (autoload (quote scribe-mode) "scribe" "\
12033 Major mode for editing files of Scribe (a text formatter) source.
12034 Scribe-mode is similar to text-mode, with a few extra commands added.
12035 \\{scribe-mode-map}
12036
12037 Interesting variables:
12038
12039 scribe-fancy-paragraphs
12040 Non-nil makes Scribe mode use a different style of paragraph separation.
12041
12042 scribe-electric-quote
12043 Non-nil makes insert of double quote use `` or '' depending on context.
12044
12045 scribe-electric-parenthesis
12046 Non-nil makes an open-parenthesis char (one of `([<{')
12047 automatically insert its close if typed after an @Command form." t nil)
12048
12049 ;;;***
12050 \f
12051 ;;;### (autoloads (mail-other-frame mail-other-window mail mail-mode
12052 ;;;;;; mail-signature mail-personal-alias-file mail-alias-file mail-default-reply-to
12053 ;;;;;; mail-archive-file-name mail-header-separator mail-yank-ignored-headers
12054 ;;;;;; mail-interactive mail-self-blind mail-specify-envelope-from
12055 ;;;;;; mail-from-style) "sendmail" "mail/sendmail.el" (14456 32733))
12056 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/sendmail.el
12057
12058 (defvar mail-from-style (quote angles) "\
12059 *Specifies how \"From:\" fields look.
12060
12061 If `nil', they contain just the return address like:
12062 king@grassland.com
12063 If `parens', they look like:
12064 king@grassland.com (Elvis Parsley)
12065 If `angles', they look like:
12066 Elvis Parsley <king@grassland.com>
12067 If `system-default', allows the mailer to insert its default From field
12068 derived from the envelope-from address.
12069
12070 In old versions of Emacs, the `system-default' setting also caused
12071 Emacs to pass the proper email address from `user-mail-address'
12072 to the mailer to specify the envelope-from address. But that is now
12073 controlled by a separate variable, `mail-specify-envelope-from'.")
12074
12075 (defvar mail-specify-envelope-from t "\
12076 *If non-nil, specify the envelope-from address when sending mail.
12077 The value used to specify it is whatever is found in `user-mail-address'.
12078
12079 On most systems, specifying the envelope-from address
12080 is a privileged operation.")
12081
12082 (defvar mail-self-blind nil "\
12083 *Non-nil means insert BCC to self in messages to be sent.
12084 This is done when the message is initialized,
12085 so you can remove or alter the BCC field to override the default.")
12086
12087 (defvar mail-interactive nil "\
12088 *Non-nil means when sending a message wait for and display errors.
12089 nil means let mailer mail back a message to report errors.")
12090
12091 (defvar mail-yank-ignored-headers "^via:\\|^mail-from:\\|^origin:\\|^status:\\|^remailed\\|^received:\\|^message-id:\\|^summary-line:\\|^to:\\|^subject:\\|^in-reply-to:\\|^return-path:" "\
12092 *Delete these headers from old message when it's inserted in a reply.")
12093
12094 (defvar send-mail-function (quote sendmail-send-it) "\
12095 Function to call to send the current buffer as mail.
12096 The headers should be delimited by a line which is
12097 not a valid RFC822 header or continuation line.")
12098
12099 (defvar mail-header-separator "--text follows this line--" "\
12100 *Line used to separate headers from text in messages being composed.")
12101
12102 (defvar mail-archive-file-name nil "\
12103 *Name of file to write all outgoing messages in, or nil for none.
12104 This can be an inbox file or an Rmail file.")
12105
12106 (defvar mail-default-reply-to nil "\
12107 *Address to insert as default Reply-to field of outgoing messages.
12108 If nil, it will be initialized from the REPLYTO environment variable
12109 when you first send mail.")
12110
12111 (defvar mail-alias-file nil "\
12112 *If non-nil, the name of a file to use instead of `/usr/lib/aliases'.
12113 This file defines aliases to be expanded by the mailer; this is a different
12114 feature from that of defining aliases in `.mailrc' to be expanded in Emacs.
12115 This variable has no effect unless your system uses sendmail as its mailer.")
12116
12117 (defvar mail-personal-alias-file "~/.mailrc" "\
12118 *If non-nil, the name of the user's personal mail alias file.
12119 This file typically should be in same format as the `.mailrc' file used by
12120 the `Mail' or `mailx' program.
12121 This file need not actually exist.")
12122
12123 (defvar mail-signature nil "\
12124 *Text inserted at end of mail buffer when a message is initialized.
12125 If t, it means to insert the contents of the file `mail-signature-file'.
12126 If a string, that string is inserted.
12127 (To make a proper signature, the string should begin with \\n\\n-- \\n,
12128 which is the standard way to delimit a signature in a message.)
12129 Otherwise, it should be an expression; it is evaluated
12130 and should insert whatever you want to insert.")
12131
12132 (autoload (quote mail-mode) "sendmail" "\
12133 Major mode for editing mail to be sent.
12134 Like Text Mode but with these additional commands:
12135 \\[mail-send] mail-send (send the message) \\[mail-send-and-exit] mail-send-and-exit
12136 Here are commands that move to a header field (and create it if there isn't):
12137 \\[mail-to] move to To: \\[mail-subject] move to Subject:
12138 \\[mail-cc] move to CC: \\[mail-bcc] move to BCC:
12139 \\[mail-fcc] move to FCC:
12140 \\[mail-text] mail-text (move to beginning of message text).
12141 \\[mail-signature] mail-signature (insert `mail-signature-file' file).
12142 \\[mail-yank-original] mail-yank-original (insert current message, in Rmail).
12143 \\[mail-fill-yanked-message] mail-fill-yanked-message (fill what was yanked).
12144 \\[mail-sent-via] mail-sent-via (add a Sent-via field for each To or CC)." t nil)
12145
12146 (defvar sendmail-coding-system nil "\
12147 *Coding system for encoding the outgoing mail.
12148 This has higher priority than `default-buffer-file-coding-system'
12149 and `default-sendmail-coding-system',
12150 but lower priority than the local value of `buffer-file-coding-system'.
12151 See also the function `select-message-coding-system'.")
12152
12153 (defvar default-sendmail-coding-system (quote iso-latin-1) "\
12154 Default coding system for encoding the outgoing mail.
12155 This variable is used only when `sendmail-coding-system' is nil.
12156
12157 This variable is set/changed by the command set-language-environment.
12158 User should not set this variable manually,
12159 instead use sendmail-coding-system to get a constant encoding
12160 of outgoing mails regardless of the current language environment.
12161 See also the function `select-message-coding-system'.")
12162 (add-hook 'same-window-buffer-names "*mail*")
12163
12164 (autoload (quote mail) "sendmail" "\
12165 Edit a message to be sent. Prefix arg means resume editing (don't erase).
12166 When this function returns, the buffer `*mail*' is selected.
12167 The value is t if the message was newly initialized; otherwise, nil.
12168
12169 Optionally, the signature file `mail-signature-file' can be inserted at the
12170 end; see the variable `mail-signature'.
12171
12172 \\<mail-mode-map>
12173 While editing message, type \\[mail-send-and-exit] to send the message and exit.
12174
12175 Various special commands starting with C-c are available in sendmail mode
12176 to move to message header fields:
12177 \\{mail-mode-map}
12178
12179 If `mail-self-blind' is non-nil, a BCC to yourself is inserted
12180 when the message is initialized.
12181
12182 If `mail-default-reply-to' is non-nil, it should be an address (a string);
12183 a Reply-to: field with that address is inserted.
12184
12185 If `mail-archive-file-name' is non-nil, an FCC field with that file name
12186 is inserted.
12187
12188 The normal hook `mail-setup-hook' is run after the message is
12189 initialized. It can add more default fields to the message.
12190
12191 When calling from a program, the first argument if non-nil says
12192 not to erase the existing contents of the `*mail*' buffer.
12193
12194 The second through fifth arguments,
12195 TO, SUBJECT, IN-REPLY-TO and CC, specify if non-nil
12196 the initial contents of those header fields.
12197 These arguments should not have final newlines.
12198 The sixth argument REPLYBUFFER is a buffer which contains an
12199 original message being replied to, or else an action
12200 of the form (FUNCTION . ARGS) which says how to insert the original.
12201 Or it can be nil, if not replying to anything.
12202 The seventh argument ACTIONS is a list of actions to take
12203 if/when the message is sent. Each action looks like (FUNCTION . ARGS);
12204 when the message is sent, we apply FUNCTION to ARGS.
12205 This is how Rmail arranges to mark messages `answered'." t nil)
12206
12207 (autoload (quote mail-other-window) "sendmail" "\
12208 Like `mail' command, but display mail buffer in another window." t nil)
12209
12210 (autoload (quote mail-other-frame) "sendmail" "\
12211 Like `mail' command, but display mail buffer in another frame." t nil)
12212
12213 ;;;***
12214 \f
12215 ;;;### (autoloads (server-start) "server" "server.el" (14263 33343))
12216 ;;; Generated autoloads from server.el
12217
12218 (autoload (quote server-start) "server" "\
12219 Allow this Emacs process to be a server for client processes.
12220 This starts a server communications subprocess through which
12221 client \"editors\" can send your editing commands to this Emacs job.
12222 To use the server, set up the program `emacsclient' in the
12223 Emacs distribution as your standard \"editor\".
12224
12225 Prefix arg means just kill any existing server communications subprocess." t nil)
12226
12227 ;;;***
12228 \f
12229 ;;;### (autoloads (html-mode sgml-mode) "sgml-mode" "textmodes/sgml-mode.el"
12230 ;;;;;; (14363 23704))
12231 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/sgml-mode.el
12232
12233 (autoload (quote sgml-mode) "sgml-mode" "\
12234 Major mode for editing SGML documents.
12235 Makes > match <. Makes / blink matching /.
12236 Keys <, &, SPC within <>, \" and ' can be electric depending on
12237 `sgml-quick-keys'.
12238
12239 An argument of N to a tag-inserting command means to wrap it around
12240 the next N words. In Transient Mark mode, when the mark is active,
12241 N defaults to -1, which means to wrap it around the current region.
12242
12243 If you like upcased tags, put (setq sgml-transformation 'upcase) in
12244 your `.emacs' file.
12245
12246 Use \\[sgml-validate] to validate your document with an SGML parser.
12247
12248 Do \\[describe-variable] sgml- SPC to see available variables.
12249 Do \\[describe-key] on the following bindings to discover what they do.
12250 \\{sgml-mode-map}" t nil)
12251
12252 (autoload (quote html-mode) "sgml-mode" "\
12253 Major mode based on SGML mode for editing HTML documents.
12254 This allows inserting skeleton constructs used in hypertext documents with
12255 completion. See below for an introduction to HTML. Use
12256 \\[browse-url-of-buffer] to see how this comes out. See also `sgml-mode' on
12257 which this is based.
12258
12259 Do \\[describe-variable] html- SPC and \\[describe-variable] sgml- SPC to see available variables.
12260
12261 To write fairly well formatted pages you only need to know few things. Most
12262 browsers have a function to read the source code of the page being seen, so
12263 you can imitate various tricks. Here's a very short HTML primer which you
12264 can also view with a browser to see what happens:
12265
12266 <title>A Title Describing Contents</title> should be on every page. Pages can
12267 have <h1>Very Major Headlines</h1> through <h6>Very Minor Headlines</h6>
12268 <hr> Parts can be separated with horizontal rules.
12269
12270 <p>Paragraphs only need an opening tag. Line breaks and multiple spaces are
12271 ignored unless the text is <pre>preformatted.</pre> Text can be marked as
12272 <b>bold</b>, <i>italic</i> or <u>underlined</u> using the normal M-g or
12273 Edit/Text Properties/Face commands.
12274
12275 Pages can have <a name=\"SOMENAME\">named points</a> and can link other points
12276 to them with <a href=\"#SOMENAME\">see also somename</a>. In the same way <a
12277 href=\"URL\">see also URL</a> where URL is a filename relative to current
12278 directory, or absolute as in `http://www.cs.indiana.edu/elisp/w3/docs.html'.
12279
12280 Images in many formats can be inlined with <img src=\"URL\">.
12281
12282 If you mainly create your own documents, `sgml-specials' might be
12283 interesting. But note that some HTML 2 browsers can't handle `&apos;'.
12284 To work around that, do:
12285 (eval-after-load \"sgml-mode\" '(aset sgml-char-names ?' nil))
12286
12287 \\{html-mode-map}" t nil)
12288
12289 ;;;***
12290 \f
12291 ;;;### (autoloads (sh-mode) "sh-script" "progmodes/sh-script.el"
12292 ;;;;;; (14432 40418))
12293 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/sh-script.el
12294
12295 (put (quote sh-mode) (quote mode-class) (quote special))
12296
12297 (autoload (quote sh-mode) "sh-script" "\
12298 Major mode for editing shell scripts.
12299 This mode works for many shells, since they all have roughly the same syntax,
12300 as far as commands, arguments, variables, pipes, comments etc. are concerned.
12301 Unless the file's magic number indicates the shell, your usual shell is
12302 assumed. Since filenames rarely give a clue, they are not further analyzed.
12303
12304 This mode adapts to the variations between shells (see `sh-set-shell') by
12305 means of an inheritance based feature lookup (see `sh-feature'). This
12306 mechanism applies to all variables (including skeletons) that pertain to
12307 shell-specific features.
12308
12309 The default style of this mode is that of Rosenblatt's Korn shell book.
12310 The syntax of the statements varies with the shell being used. The
12311 following commands are available, based on the current shell's syntax:
12312
12313 \\[sh-case] case statement
12314 \\[sh-for] for loop
12315 \\[sh-function] function definition
12316 \\[sh-if] if statement
12317 \\[sh-indexed-loop] indexed loop from 1 to n
12318 \\[sh-while-getopts] while getopts loop
12319 \\[sh-repeat] repeat loop
12320 \\[sh-select] select loop
12321 \\[sh-until] until loop
12322 \\[sh-while] while loop
12323
12324 For sh and rc shells indentation commands are:
12325 \\[sh-show-indent] Show the variable controlling this line's indentation.
12326 \\[sh-set-indent] Set then variable controlling this line's indentation.
12327 \\[sh-learn-line-indent] Change the indentation variable so this line
12328 would indent to the way it currently is.
12329 \\[sh-learn-buffer-indent] Set the indentation variables so the
12330 buffer indents as it currently is indendeted.
12331
12332
12333 \\[backward-delete-char-untabify] Delete backward one position, even if it was a tab.
12334 \\[sh-newline-and-indent] Delete unquoted space and indent new line same as this one.
12335 \\[sh-end-of-command] Go to end of successive commands.
12336 \\[sh-beginning-of-command] Go to beginning of successive commands.
12337 \\[sh-set-shell] Set this buffer's shell, and maybe its magic number.
12338 \\[sh-execute-region] Have optional header and region be executed in a subshell.
12339
12340 \\[sh-maybe-here-document] Without prefix, following an unquoted < inserts here document.
12341 {, (, [, ', \", `
12342 Unless quoted with \\, insert the pairs {}, (), [], or '', \"\", ``.
12343
12344 If you generally program a shell different from your login shell you can
12345 set `sh-shell-file' accordingly. If your shell's file name doesn't correctly
12346 indicate what shell it is use `sh-alias-alist' to translate.
12347
12348 If your shell gives error messages with line numbers, you can use \\[executable-interpret]
12349 with your script for an edit-interpret-debug cycle." t nil)
12350
12351 (defalias (quote shell-script-mode) (quote sh-mode))
12352
12353 ;;;***
12354 \f
12355 ;;;### (autoloads (list-load-path-shadows) "shadow" "emacs-lisp/shadow.el"
12356 ;;;;;; (13667 35245))
12357 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/shadow.el
12358
12359 (autoload (quote list-load-path-shadows) "shadow" "\
12360 Display a list of Emacs Lisp files that shadow other files.
12361
12362 This function lists potential load-path problems. Directories in the
12363 `load-path' variable are searched, in order, for Emacs Lisp
12364 files. When a previously encountered file name is found again, a
12365 message is displayed indicating that the later file is \"hidden\" by
12366 the earlier.
12367
12368 For example, suppose `load-path' is set to
12369
12370 \(\"/usr/gnu/emacs/site-lisp\" \"/usr/gnu/emacs/share/emacs/19.30/lisp\")
12371
12372 and that each of these directories contains a file called XXX.el. Then
12373 XXX.el in the site-lisp directory is referred to by all of:
12374 \(require 'XXX), (autoload .... \"XXX\"), (load-library \"XXX\") etc.
12375
12376 The first XXX.el file prevents emacs from seeing the second (unless
12377 the second is loaded explicitly via load-file).
12378
12379 When not intended, such shadowings can be the source of subtle
12380 problems. For example, the above situation may have arisen because the
12381 XXX package was not distributed with versions of emacs prior to
12382 19.30. An emacs maintainer downloaded XXX from elsewhere and installed
12383 it. Later, XXX was updated and included in the emacs distribution.
12384 Unless the emacs maintainer checks for this, the new version of XXX
12385 will be hidden behind the old (which may no longer work with the new
12386 emacs version).
12387
12388 This function performs these checks and flags all possible
12389 shadowings. Because a .el file may exist without a corresponding .elc
12390 \(or vice-versa), these suffixes are essentially ignored. A file
12391 XXX.elc in an early directory (that does not contain XXX.el) is
12392 considered to shadow a later file XXX.el, and vice-versa.
12393
12394 When run interactively, the shadowings (if any) are displayed in a
12395 buffer called `*Shadows*'. Shadowings are located by calling the
12396 \(non-interactive) companion function, `find-emacs-lisp-shadows'." t nil)
12397
12398 ;;;***
12399 \f
12400 ;;;### (autoloads (shell shell-prompt-pattern) "shell" "shell.el"
12401 ;;;;;; (14263 35978))
12402 ;;; Generated autoloads from shell.el
12403
12404 (defvar shell-prompt-pattern "^[^#$%>\n]*[#$%>] *" "\
12405 Regexp to match prompts in the inferior shell.
12406 Defaults to \"^[^#$%>\\n]*[#$%>] *\", which works pretty well.
12407 This variable is used to initialise `comint-prompt-regexp' in the
12408 shell buffer.
12409
12410 The pattern should probably not match more than one line. If it does,
12411 Shell mode may become confused trying to distinguish prompt from input
12412 on lines which don't start with a prompt.
12413
12414 This is a fine thing to set in your `.emacs' file.")
12415
12416 (autoload (quote shell) "shell" "\
12417 Run an inferior shell, with I/O through buffer *shell*.
12418 If buffer exists but shell process is not running, make new shell.
12419 If buffer exists and shell process is running, just switch to buffer `*shell*'.
12420 Program used comes from variable `explicit-shell-file-name',
12421 or (if that is nil) from the ESHELL environment variable,
12422 or else from SHELL if there is no ESHELL.
12423 If a file `~/.emacs_SHELLNAME' exists, it is given as initial input
12424 (Note that this may lose due to a timing error if the shell
12425 discards input when it starts up.)
12426 The buffer is put in Shell mode, giving commands for sending input
12427 and controlling the subjobs of the shell. See `shell-mode'.
12428 See also the variable `shell-prompt-pattern'.
12429
12430 To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
12431 in the input and output to the shell, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
12432 before \\[shell]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
12433 in the shell buffer, after you start the shell.
12434 The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
12435 `default-process-coding-system'.
12436
12437 The shell file name (sans directories) is used to make a symbol name
12438 such as `explicit-csh-args'. If that symbol is a variable,
12439 its value is used as a list of arguments when invoking the shell.
12440 Otherwise, one argument `-i' is passed to the shell.
12441
12442 \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the shell buffer for a list of commands.)" t nil)
12443 (add-hook 'same-window-buffer-names "*shell*")
12444
12445 ;;;***
12446 \f
12447 ;;;### (autoloads (simula-mode) "simula" "progmodes/simula.el" (14256
12448 ;;;;;; 23740))
12449 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/simula.el
12450
12451 (autoload (quote simula-mode) "simula" "\
12452 Major mode for editing SIMULA code.
12453 \\{simula-mode-map}
12454 Variables controlling indentation style:
12455 simula-tab-always-indent
12456 Non-nil means TAB in SIMULA mode should always reindent the current line,
12457 regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used.
12458 simula-indent-level
12459 Indentation of SIMULA statements with respect to containing block.
12460 simula-substatement-offset
12461 Extra indentation after DO, THEN, ELSE, WHEN and OTHERWISE.
12462 simula-continued-statement-offset 3
12463 Extra indentation for lines not starting a statement or substatement,
12464 e.g. a nested FOR-loop. If value is a list, each line in a multiple-
12465 line continued statement will have the car of the list extra indentation
12466 with respect to the previous line of the statement.
12467 simula-label-offset -4711
12468 Offset of SIMULA label lines relative to usual indentation.
12469 simula-if-indent '(0 . 0)
12470 Extra indentation of THEN and ELSE with respect to the starting IF.
12471 Value is a cons cell, the car is extra THEN indentation and the cdr
12472 extra ELSE indentation. IF after ELSE is indented as the starting IF.
12473 simula-inspect-indent '(0 . 0)
12474 Extra indentation of WHEN and OTHERWISE with respect to the
12475 corresponding INSPECT. Value is a cons cell, the car is
12476 extra WHEN indentation and the cdr extra OTHERWISE indentation.
12477 simula-electric-indent nil
12478 If this variable is non-nil, `simula-indent-line'
12479 will check the previous line to see if it has to be reindented.
12480 simula-abbrev-keyword 'upcase
12481 Determine how SIMULA keywords will be expanded. Value is one of
12482 the symbols `upcase', `downcase', `capitalize', (as in) `abbrev-table',
12483 or nil if they should not be changed.
12484 simula-abbrev-stdproc 'abbrev-table
12485 Determine how standard SIMULA procedure and class names will be
12486 expanded. Value is one of the symbols `upcase', `downcase', `capitalize',
12487 (as in) `abbrev-table', or nil if they should not be changed.
12488
12489 Turning on SIMULA mode calls the value of the variable simula-mode-hook
12490 with no arguments, if that value is non-nil
12491
12492 Warning: simula-mode-hook should not read in an abbrev file without calling
12493 the function simula-install-standard-abbrevs afterwards, preferably not
12494 at all." t nil)
12495
12496 ;;;***
12497 \f
12498 ;;;### (autoloads (skeleton-pair-insert-maybe skeleton-insert skeleton-proxy
12499 ;;;;;; skeleton-proxy-new define-skeleton) "skeleton" "skeleton.el"
12500 ;;;;;; (13940 33497))
12501 ;;; Generated autoloads from skeleton.el
12502
12503 (defvar skeleton-filter (quote identity) "\
12504 Function for transforming a skeleton proxy's aliases' variable value.")
12505
12506 (autoload (quote define-skeleton) "skeleton" "\
12507 Define a user-configurable COMMAND that enters a statement skeleton.
12508 DOCUMENTATION is that of the command, while the variable of the same name,
12509 which contains the skeleton, has a documentation to that effect.
12510 INTERACTOR and ELEMENT ... are as defined under `skeleton-insert'." nil (quote macro))
12511
12512 (autoload (quote skeleton-proxy-new) "skeleton" "\
12513 Insert skeleton defined by variable of same name (see `skeleton-insert').
12514 Prefix ARG allows wrapping around words or regions (see `skeleton-insert').
12515 If no ARG was given, but the region is visible, ARG defaults to -1 depending
12516 on `skeleton-autowrap'. An ARG of M-0 will prevent this just for once.
12517 This command can also be an abbrev expansion (3rd and 4th columns in
12518 \\[edit-abbrevs] buffer: \"\" command-name).
12519
12520 When called as a function, optional first argument STR may also be a string
12521 which will be the value of `str' whereas the skeleton's interactor is then
12522 ignored." t nil)
12523
12524 (autoload (quote skeleton-proxy) "skeleton" "\
12525 Insert skeleton defined by variable of same name (see `skeleton-insert').
12526 Prefix ARG allows wrapping around words or regions (see `skeleton-insert').
12527 If no ARG was given, but the region is visible, ARG defaults to -1 depending
12528 on `skeleton-autowrap'. An ARG of M-0 will prevent this just for once.
12529 This command can also be an abbrev expansion (3rd and 4th columns in
12530 \\[edit-abbrevs] buffer: \"\" command-name).
12531
12532 When called as a function, optional first argument STR may also be a string
12533 which will be the value of `str' whereas the skeleton's interactor is then
12534 ignored." t nil)
12535
12536 (autoload (quote skeleton-insert) "skeleton" "\
12537 Insert the complex statement skeleton SKELETON describes very concisely.
12538
12539 With optional second argument REGIONS, wrap first interesting point
12540 \(`_') in skeleton around next REGIONS words, if REGIONS is positive.
12541 If REGIONS is negative, wrap REGIONS preceding interregions into first
12542 REGIONS interesting positions (successive `_'s) in skeleton.
12543
12544 An interregion is the stretch of text between two contiguous marked
12545 points. If you marked A B C [] (where [] is the cursor) in
12546 alphabetical order, the 3 interregions are simply the last 3 regions.
12547 But if you marked B A [] C, the interregions are B-A, A-[], []-C.
12548
12549 The optional third argument STR, if specified, is the value for the
12550 variable `str' within the skeleton. When this is non-nil, the
12551 interactor gets ignored, and this should be a valid skeleton element.
12552
12553 SKELETON is made up as (INTERACTOR ELEMENT ...). INTERACTOR may be nil if
12554 not needed, a prompt-string or an expression for complex read functions.
12555
12556 If ELEMENT is a string or a character it gets inserted (see also
12557 `skeleton-transformation'). Other possibilities are:
12558
12559 \\n go to next line and indent according to mode
12560 _ interesting point, interregion here, point after termination
12561 > indent line (or interregion if > _) according to major mode
12562 @ add position to `skeleton-positions'
12563 & do next ELEMENT if previous moved point
12564 | do next ELEMENT if previous didn't move point
12565 -num delete num preceding characters (see `skeleton-untabify')
12566 resume: skipped, continue here if quit is signaled
12567 nil skipped
12568
12569 Further elements can be defined via `skeleton-further-elements'. ELEMENT may
12570 itself be a SKELETON with an INTERACTOR. The user is prompted repeatedly for
12571 different inputs. The SKELETON is processed as often as the user enters a
12572 non-empty string. \\[keyboard-quit] terminates skeleton insertion, but
12573 continues after `resume:' and positions at `_' if any. If INTERACTOR in such
12574 a subskeleton is a prompt-string which contains a \".. %s ..\" it is
12575 formatted with `skeleton-subprompt'. Such an INTERACTOR may also be a list of
12576 strings with the subskeleton being repeated once for each string.
12577
12578 Quoted Lisp expressions are evaluated for their side-effects.
12579 Other Lisp expressions are evaluated and the value treated as above.
12580 Note that expressions may not return `t' since this implies an
12581 endless loop. Modes can define other symbols by locally setting them
12582 to any valid skeleton element. The following local variables are
12583 available:
12584
12585 str first time: read a string according to INTERACTOR
12586 then: insert previously read string once more
12587 help help-form during interaction with the user or `nil'
12588 input initial input (string or cons with index) while reading str
12589 v1, v2 local variables for memorizing anything you want
12590
12591 When done with skeleton, but before going back to `_'-point call
12592 `skeleton-end-hook' if that is non-`nil'." nil nil)
12593
12594 (autoload (quote skeleton-pair-insert-maybe) "skeleton" "\
12595 Insert the character you type ARG times.
12596
12597 With no ARG, if `skeleton-pair' is non-nil, pairing can occur. If the region
12598 is visible the pair is wrapped around it depending on `skeleton-autowrap'.
12599 Else, if `skeleton-pair-on-word' is non-nil or we are not before or inside a
12600 word, and if `skeleton-pair-filter' returns nil, pairing is performed.
12601
12602 If a match is found in `skeleton-pair-alist', that is inserted, else
12603 the defaults are used. These are (), [], {}, <> and `' for the
12604 symmetrical ones, and the same character twice for the others." t nil)
12605
12606 ;;;***
12607 \f
12608 ;;;### (autoloads (smerge-mode) "smerge-mode" "smerge-mode.el" (14415
12609 ;;;;;; 42981))
12610 ;;; Generated autoloads from smerge-mode.el
12611
12612 (autoload (quote smerge-mode) "smerge-mode" "\
12613 Minor mode to simplify editing output from the diff3 program.
12614 \\{smerge-mode-map}" t nil)
12615
12616 ;;;***
12617 \f
12618 ;;;### (autoloads (smtpmail-send-it) "smtpmail" "mail/smtpmail.el"
12619 ;;;;;; (14342 21398))
12620 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/smtpmail.el
12621
12622 (autoload (quote smtpmail-send-it) "smtpmail" nil nil nil)
12623
12624 ;;;***
12625 \f
12626 ;;;### (autoloads (snake) "snake" "play/snake.el" (13700 16733))
12627 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/snake.el
12628
12629 (autoload (quote snake) "snake" "\
12630 Play the Snake game.
12631 Move the snake around without colliding with its tail or with the border.
12632
12633 Eating dots causes the snake to get longer.
12634
12635 snake-mode keybindings:
12636 \\<snake-mode-map>
12637 \\[snake-start-game] Starts a new game of Snake
12638 \\[snake-end-game] Terminates the current game
12639 \\[snake-pause-game] Pauses (or resumes) the current game
12640 \\[snake-move-left] Makes the snake move left
12641 \\[snake-move-right] Makes the snake move right
12642 \\[snake-move-up] Makes the snake move up
12643 \\[snake-move-down] Makes the snake move down
12644
12645 " t nil)
12646
12647 ;;;***
12648 \f
12649 ;;;### (autoloads (snmpv2-mode snmp-mode) "snmp-mode" "snmp-mode.el"
12650 ;;;;;; (14082 18459))
12651 ;;; Generated autoloads from snmp-mode.el
12652
12653 (autoload (quote snmp-mode) "snmp-mode" "\
12654 Major mode for editing SNMP MIBs.
12655 Expression and list commands understand all C brackets.
12656 Tab indents for C code.
12657 Comments start with -- and end with newline or another --.
12658 Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
12659 \\{snmp-mode-map}
12660 Turning on snmp-mode runs the hooks in `snmp-common-mode-hook', then
12661 `snmp-mode-hook'." t nil)
12662
12663 (autoload (quote snmpv2-mode) "snmp-mode" "\
12664 Major mode for editing SNMPv2 MIBs.
12665 Expression and list commands understand all C brackets.
12666 Tab indents for C code.
12667 Comments start with -- and end with newline or another --.
12668 Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
12669 \\{snmp-mode-map}
12670 Turning on snmp-mode runs the hooks in `snmp-common-mode-hook',
12671 then `snmpv2-mode-hook'." t nil)
12672
12673 ;;;***
12674 \f
12675 ;;;### (autoloads (solar-equinoxes-solstices sunrise-sunset calendar-location-name
12676 ;;;;;; calendar-longitude calendar-latitude calendar-time-display-form)
12677 ;;;;;; "solar" "calendar/solar.el" (13462 53924))
12678 ;;; Generated autoloads from calendar/solar.el
12679
12680 (defvar calendar-time-display-form (quote (12-hours ":" minutes am-pm (if time-zone " (") time-zone (if time-zone ")"))) "\
12681 *The pseudo-pattern that governs the way a time of day is formatted.
12682
12683 A pseudo-pattern is a list of expressions that can involve the keywords
12684 `12-hours', `24-hours', and `minutes', all numbers in string form,
12685 and `am-pm' and `time-zone', both alphabetic strings.
12686
12687 For example, the form
12688
12689 '(24-hours \":\" minutes
12690 (if time-zone \" (\") time-zone (if time-zone \")\"))
12691
12692 would give military-style times like `21:07 (UTC)'.")
12693
12694 (defvar calendar-latitude nil "\
12695 *Latitude of `calendar-location-name' in degrees.
12696
12697 The value can be either a decimal fraction (one place of accuracy is
12698 sufficient), + north, - south, such as 40.7 for New York City, or the value
12699 can be a vector [degrees minutes north/south] such as [40 50 north] for New
12700 York City.
12701
12702 This variable should be set in `site-start'.el.")
12703
12704 (defvar calendar-longitude nil "\
12705 *Longitude of `calendar-location-name' in degrees.
12706
12707 The value can be either a decimal fraction (one place of accuracy is
12708 sufficient), + east, - west, such as -73.9 for New York City, or the value
12709 can be a vector [degrees minutes east/west] such as [73 55 west] for New
12710 York City.
12711
12712 This variable should be set in `site-start'.el.")
12713
12714 (defvar calendar-location-name (quote (let ((float-output-format "%.1f")) (format "%s%s, %s%s" (if (numberp calendar-latitude) (abs calendar-latitude) (+ (aref calendar-latitude 0) (/ (aref calendar-latitude 1) 60.0))) (if (numberp calendar-latitude) (if (> calendar-latitude 0) "N" "S") (if (equal (aref calendar-latitude 2) (quote north)) "N" "S")) (if (numberp calendar-longitude) (abs calendar-longitude) (+ (aref calendar-longitude 0) (/ (aref calendar-longitude 1) 60.0))) (if (numberp calendar-longitude) (if (> calendar-longitude 0) "E" "W") (if (equal (aref calendar-longitude 2) (quote east)) "E" "W"))))) "\
12715 *Expression evaluating to name of `calendar-longitude', `calendar-latitude'.
12716 For example, \"New York City\". Default value is just the latitude, longitude
12717 pair.
12718
12719 This variable should be set in `site-start'.el.")
12720
12721 (autoload (quote sunrise-sunset) "solar" "\
12722 Local time of sunrise and sunset for today. Accurate to a few seconds.
12723 If called with an optional prefix argument, prompt for date.
12724
12725 If called with an optional double prefix argument, prompt for longitude,
12726 latitude, time zone, and date, and always use standard time.
12727
12728 This function is suitable for execution in a .emacs file." t nil)
12729
12730 (autoload (quote solar-equinoxes-solstices) "solar" "\
12731 *local* date and time of equinoxes and solstices, if visible in the calendar window.
12732 Requires floating point." nil nil)
12733
12734 ;;;***
12735 \f
12736 ;;;### (autoloads (solitaire) "solitaire" "play/solitaire.el" (13672
12737 ;;;;;; 20348))
12738 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/solitaire.el
12739
12740 (autoload (quote solitaire) "solitaire" "\
12741 Play Solitaire.
12742
12743 To play Solitaire, type \\[solitaire].
12744 \\<solitaire-mode-map>
12745 Move around the board using the cursor keys.
12746 Move stones using \\[solitaire-move] followed by a direction key.
12747 Undo moves using \\[solitaire-undo].
12748 Check for possible moves using \\[solitaire-do-check].
12749 \(The variable `solitaire-auto-eval' controls whether to automatically
12750 check after each move or undo)
12751
12752 What is Solitaire?
12753
12754 I don't know who invented this game, but it seems to be rather old and
12755 its origin seems to be northern Africa. Here's how to play:
12756 Initially, the board will look similar to this:
12757
12758 Le Solitaire
12759 ============
12760
12761 o o o
12762
12763 o o o
12764
12765 o o o o o o o
12766
12767 o o o . o o o
12768
12769 o o o o o o o
12770
12771 o o o
12772
12773 o o o
12774
12775 Let's call the o's stones and the .'s holes. One stone fits into one
12776 hole. As you can see, all holes but one are occupied by stones. The
12777 aim of the game is to get rid of all but one stone, leaving that last
12778 one in the middle of the board if you're cool.
12779
12780 A stone can be moved if there is another stone next to it, and a hole
12781 after that one. Thus there must be three fields in a row, either
12782 horizontally or vertically, up, down, left or right, which look like
12783 this: o o .
12784
12785 Then the first stone is moved to the hole, jumping over the second,
12786 which therefore is taken away. The above thus `evaluates' to: . . o
12787
12788 That's all. Here's the board after two moves:
12789
12790 o o o
12791
12792 . o o
12793
12794 o o . o o o o
12795
12796 o . o o o o o
12797
12798 o o o o o o o
12799
12800 o o o
12801
12802 o o o
12803
12804 Pick your favourite shortcuts:
12805
12806 \\{solitaire-mode-map}" t nil)
12807
12808 ;;;***
12809 \f
12810 ;;;### (autoloads (reverse-region sort-columns sort-regexp-fields
12811 ;;;;;; sort-fields sort-numeric-fields sort-pages sort-paragraphs
12812 ;;;;;; sort-lines sort-subr) "sort" "sort.el" (13304 43541))
12813 ;;; Generated autoloads from sort.el
12814
12815 (autoload (quote sort-subr) "sort" "\
12816 General text sorting routine to divide buffer into records and sort them.
12817 Arguments are REVERSE NEXTRECFUN ENDRECFUN &optional STARTKEYFUN ENDKEYFUN.
12818
12819 We divide the accessible portion of the buffer into disjoint pieces
12820 called sort records. A portion of each sort record (perhaps all of
12821 it) is designated as the sort key. The records are rearranged in the
12822 buffer in order by their sort keys. The records may or may not be
12823 contiguous.
12824
12825 Usually the records are rearranged in order of ascending sort key.
12826 If REVERSE is non-nil, they are rearranged in order of descending sort key.
12827 The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
12828 the sort order.
12829
12830 The next four arguments are functions to be called to move point
12831 across a sort record. They will be called many times from within sort-subr.
12832
12833 NEXTRECFUN is called with point at the end of the previous record.
12834 It moves point to the start of the next record.
12835 It should move point to the end of the buffer if there are no more records.
12836 The first record is assumed to start at the position of point when sort-subr
12837 is called.
12838
12839 ENDRECFUN is called with point within the record.
12840 It should move point to the end of the record.
12841
12842 STARTKEYFUN moves from the start of the record to the start of the key.
12843 It may return either a non-nil value to be used as the key, or
12844 else the key is the substring between the values of point after
12845 STARTKEYFUN and ENDKEYFUN are called. If STARTKEYFUN is nil, the key
12846 starts at the beginning of the record.
12847
12848 ENDKEYFUN moves from the start of the sort key to the end of the sort key.
12849 ENDKEYFUN may be nil if STARTKEYFUN returns a value or if it would be the
12850 same as ENDRECFUN." nil nil)
12851
12852 (autoload (quote sort-lines) "sort" "\
12853 Sort lines in region alphabetically; argument means descending order.
12854 Called from a program, there are three arguments:
12855 REVERSE (non-nil means reverse order), BEG and END (region to sort).
12856 The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
12857 the sort order." t nil)
12858
12859 (autoload (quote sort-paragraphs) "sort" "\
12860 Sort paragraphs in region alphabetically; argument means descending order.
12861 Called from a program, there are three arguments:
12862 REVERSE (non-nil means reverse order), BEG and END (region to sort).
12863 The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
12864 the sort order." t nil)
12865
12866 (autoload (quote sort-pages) "sort" "\
12867 Sort pages in region alphabetically; argument means descending order.
12868 Called from a program, there are three arguments:
12869 REVERSE (non-nil means reverse order), BEG and END (region to sort).
12870 The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
12871 the sort order." t nil)
12872
12873 (autoload (quote sort-numeric-fields) "sort" "\
12874 Sort lines in region numerically by the ARGth field of each line.
12875 Fields are separated by whitespace and numbered from 1 up.
12876 Specified field must contain a number in each line of the region.
12877 With a negative arg, sorts by the ARGth field counted from the right.
12878 Called from a program, there are three arguments:
12879 FIELD, BEG and END. BEG and END specify region to sort." t nil)
12880
12881 (autoload (quote sort-fields) "sort" "\
12882 Sort lines in region lexicographically by the ARGth field of each line.
12883 Fields are separated by whitespace and numbered from 1 up.
12884 With a negative arg, sorts by the ARGth field counted from the right.
12885 Called from a program, there are three arguments:
12886 FIELD, BEG and END. BEG and END specify region to sort.
12887 The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
12888 the sort order." t nil)
12889
12890 (autoload (quote sort-regexp-fields) "sort" "\
12891 Sort the region lexicographically as specified by RECORD-REGEXP and KEY.
12892 RECORD-REGEXP specifies the textual units which should be sorted.
12893 For example, to sort lines RECORD-REGEXP would be \"^.*$\"
12894 KEY specifies the part of each record (ie each match for RECORD-REGEXP)
12895 is to be used for sorting.
12896 If it is \"\\\\digit\" then the digit'th \"\\\\(...\\\\)\" match field from
12897 RECORD-REGEXP is used.
12898 If it is \"\\\\&\" then the whole record is used.
12899 Otherwise, it is a regular-expression for which to search within the record.
12900 If a match for KEY is not found within a record then that record is ignored.
12901
12902 With a negative prefix arg sorts in reverse order.
12903
12904 The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
12905 the sort order.
12906
12907 For example: to sort lines in the region by the first word on each line
12908 starting with the letter \"f\",
12909 RECORD-REGEXP would be \"^.*$\" and KEY would be \"\\\\=\\<f\\\\w*\\\\>\"" t nil)
12910
12911 (autoload (quote sort-columns) "sort" "\
12912 Sort lines in region alphabetically by a certain range of columns.
12913 For the purpose of this command, the region includes
12914 the entire line that point is in and the entire line the mark is in.
12915 The column positions of point and mark bound the range of columns to sort on.
12916 A prefix argument means sort into reverse order.
12917 The variable `sort-fold-case' determines whether alphabetic case affects
12918 the sort order.
12919
12920 Note that `sort-columns' rejects text that contains tabs,
12921 because tabs could be split across the specified columns
12922 and it doesn't know how to handle that. Also, when possible,
12923 it uses the `sort' utility program, which doesn't understand tabs.
12924 Use \\[untabify] to convert tabs to spaces before sorting." t nil)
12925
12926 (autoload (quote reverse-region) "sort" "\
12927 Reverse the order of lines in a region.
12928 From a program takes two point or marker arguments, BEG and END." t nil)
12929
12930 ;;;***
12931 \f
12932 ;;;### (autoloads (speedbar-get-focus speedbar-frame-mode) "speedbar"
12933 ;;;;;; "speedbar.el" (14403 56247))
12934 ;;; Generated autoloads from speedbar.el
12935
12936 (defalias (quote speedbar) (quote speedbar-frame-mode))
12937
12938 (autoload (quote speedbar-frame-mode) "speedbar" "\
12939 Enable or disable speedbar. Positive ARG means turn on, negative turn off.
12940 nil means toggle. Once the speedbar frame is activated, a buffer in
12941 `speedbar-mode' will be displayed. Currently, only one speedbar is
12942 supported at a time.
12943 `speedbar-before-popup-hook' is called before popping up the speedbar frame.
12944 `speedbar-before-delete-hook' is called before the frame is deleted." t nil)
12945
12946 (autoload (quote speedbar-get-focus) "speedbar" "\
12947 Change frame focus to or from the speedbar frame.
12948 If the selected frame is not speedbar, then speedbar frame is
12949 selected. If the speedbar frame is active, then select the attached frame." t nil)
12950
12951 ;;;***
12952 \f
12953 ;;;### (autoloads (spell-string spell-region spell-word spell-buffer)
12954 ;;;;;; "spell" "textmodes/spell.el" (13553 46858))
12955 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/spell.el
12956
12957 (put (quote spell-filter) (quote risky-local-variable) t)
12958
12959 (autoload (quote spell-buffer) "spell" "\
12960 Check spelling of every word in the buffer.
12961 For each incorrect word, you are asked for the correct spelling
12962 and then put into a query-replace to fix some or all occurrences.
12963 If you do not want to change a word, just give the same word
12964 as its \"correct\" spelling; then the query replace is skipped." t nil)
12965
12966 (autoload (quote spell-word) "spell" "\
12967 Check spelling of word at or before point.
12968 If it is not correct, ask user for the correct spelling
12969 and `query-replace' the entire buffer to substitute it." t nil)
12970
12971 (autoload (quote spell-region) "spell" "\
12972 Like `spell-buffer' but applies only to region.
12973 Used in a program, applies from START to END.
12974 DESCRIPTION is an optional string naming the unit being checked:
12975 for example, \"word\"." t nil)
12976
12977 (autoload (quote spell-string) "spell" "\
12978 Check spelling of string supplied as argument." t nil)
12979
12980 ;;;***
12981 \f
12982 ;;;### (autoloads (snarf-spooks spook) "spook" "play/spook.el" (13607
12983 ;;;;;; 43485))
12984 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/spook.el
12985
12986 (autoload (quote spook) "spook" "\
12987 Adds that special touch of class to your outgoing mail." t nil)
12988
12989 (autoload (quote snarf-spooks) "spook" "\
12990 Return a vector containing the lines from `spook-phrases-file'." nil nil)
12991
12992 ;;;***
12993 \f
12994 ;;;### (autoloads (sql-postgres sql-mode sql-help) "sql" "progmodes/sql.el"
12995 ;;;;;; (14395 64503))
12996 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/sql.el
12997
12998 (autoload (quote sql-help) "sql" "\
12999 Show short help for the SQL modes.
13000
13001 Use an entry function to open an interactive SQL buffer. This buffer is
13002 usually named `*SQL*'. The name of the major mode is SQLi.
13003
13004 Use the following commands to start a specific SQL interpreter:
13005
13006 PostGres: \\[sql-postgres]
13007
13008 Other non-free SQL implementations are also supported:
13009
13010 MySQL: \\[sql-mysql]
13011 Solid: \\[sql-solid]
13012 Oracle: \\[sql-oracle]
13013 Informix: \\[sql-informix]
13014 Sybase: \\[sql-sybase]
13015 Ingres: \\[sql-ingres]
13016 Microsoft: \\[sql-ms]
13017
13018 But we urge you to choose a free implementation instead of these.
13019
13020 Once you have the SQLi buffer, you can enter SQL statements in the
13021 buffer. The output generated is appended to the buffer and a new prompt
13022 is generated. See the In/Out menu in the SQLi buffer for some functions
13023 that help you navigate through the buffer, the input history, etc.
13024
13025 Put a line with a call to autoload into your `~/.emacs' file for each
13026 entry function you want to use regularly:
13027
13028 \(autoload 'sql-postgres \"sql\" \"Interactive SQL mode.\" t)
13029
13030 If you have a really complex SQL statement or if you are writing a
13031 procedure, you can do this in a separate buffer. Put the new buffer in
13032 `sql-mode' by calling \\[sql-mode]. The name of this buffer can be
13033 anything. The name of the major mode is SQL.
13034
13035 In this SQL buffer (SQL mode), you can send the region or the entire
13036 buffer to the interactive SQL buffer (SQLi mode). The results are
13037 appended to the SQLi buffer without disturbing your SQL buffer." t nil)
13038
13039 (autoload (quote sql-mode) "sql" "\
13040 Major mode to edit SQL.
13041
13042 You can send SQL statements to the SQLi buffer using
13043 \\[sql-send-region]. Such a buffer must exist before you can do this.
13044 See `sql-help' on how to create SQLi buffers.
13045
13046 \\{sql-mode-map}
13047 Customization: Entry to this mode runs the `sql-mode-hook'.
13048
13049 When you put a buffer in SQL mode, the buffer stores the last SQLi
13050 buffer created as its destination in the variable `sql-buffer'. This
13051 will be the buffer \\[sql-send-region] sends the region to. If this
13052 SQLi buffer is killed, \\[sql-send-region] is no longer able to
13053 determine where the strings should be sent to. You can set the
13054 value of `sql-buffer' using \\[sql-set-sqli-buffer].
13055
13056 For information on how to create multiple SQLi buffers, see
13057 `sql-interactive-mode'." t nil)
13058
13059 (autoload (quote sql-postgres) "sql" "\
13060 Run psql by Postgres as an inferior process.
13061
13062 If buffer `*SQL*' exists but no process is running, make a new process.
13063 If buffer exists and a process is running, just switch to buffer
13064 `*SQL*'.
13065
13066 Interpreter used comes from variable `sql-postgres-program'. Login uses
13067 the variables `sql-database' and `sql-server' as default, if set.
13068
13069 The buffer is put in sql-interactive-mode, giving commands for sending
13070 input. See `sql-interactive-mode'.
13071
13072 To specify a coding system for converting non-ASCII characters
13073 in the input and output to the process, use \\[universal-coding-system-argument]
13074 before \\[sql-postgres]. You can also specify this with \\[set-buffer-process-coding-system]
13075 in the SQL buffer, after you start the process.
13076 The default comes from `process-coding-system-alist' and
13077 `default-process-coding-system'. If your output lines end with ^M,
13078 your might try undecided-dos as a coding system. If this doesn't help,
13079 Try to set `comint-output-filter-functions' like this:
13080
13081 \(setq comint-output-filter-functions (append comint-output-filter-functions
13082 '(comint-strip-ctrl-m)))
13083
13084 \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the SQL buffer for a list of commands.)" t nil)
13085
13086 ;;;***
13087 \f
13088 ;;;### (autoloads (strokes-mode strokes-load-user-strokes strokes-help
13089 ;;;;;; strokes-describe-stroke strokes-do-complex-stroke strokes-do-stroke
13090 ;;;;;; strokes-read-complex-stroke strokes-read-stroke strokes-global-set-stroke)
13091 ;;;;;; "strokes" "strokes.el" (13337 50462))
13092 ;;; Generated autoloads from strokes.el
13093
13094 (defvar strokes-mode nil "\
13095 Non-nil when `strokes' is globally enabled")
13096
13097 (autoload (quote strokes-global-set-stroke) "strokes" "\
13098 Interactively give STROKE the global binding as COMMAND.
13099 Operated just like `global-set-key', except for strokes.
13100 COMMAND is a symbol naming an interactively-callable function. STROKE
13101 is a list of sampled positions on the stroke grid as described in the
13102 documentation for the `strokes-define-stroke' function." t nil)
13103
13104 (defalias (quote global-set-stroke) (quote strokes-global-set-stroke))
13105
13106 (autoload (quote strokes-read-stroke) "strokes" "\
13107 Read a simple stroke (interactively) and return the stroke.
13108 Optional PROMPT in minibuffer displays before and during stroke reading.
13109 This function will display the stroke interactively as it is being
13110 entered in the strokes buffer if the variable
13111 `strokes-use-strokes-buffer' is non-nil.
13112 Optional EVENT is acceptable as the starting event of the stroke" nil nil)
13113
13114 (autoload (quote strokes-read-complex-stroke) "strokes" "\
13115 Read a complex stroke (interactively) and return the stroke.
13116 Optional PROMPT in minibuffer displays before and during stroke reading.
13117 Note that a complex stroke allows the user to pen-up and pen-down. This
13118 is implemented by allowing the user to paint with button1 or button2 and
13119 then complete the stroke with button3.
13120 Optional EVENT is acceptable as the starting event of the stroke" nil nil)
13121
13122 (autoload (quote strokes-do-stroke) "strokes" "\
13123 Read a simple stroke from the user and then exectute its comand.
13124 This must be bound to a mouse event." t nil)
13125
13126 (autoload (quote strokes-do-complex-stroke) "strokes" "\
13127 Read a complex stroke from the user and then exectute its command.
13128 This must be bound to a mouse event." t nil)
13129
13130 (autoload (quote strokes-describe-stroke) "strokes" "\
13131 Displays the command which STROKE maps to, reading STROKE interactively." t nil)
13132
13133 (defalias (quote describe-stroke) (quote strokes-describe-stroke))
13134
13135 (autoload (quote strokes-help) "strokes" "\
13136 Get instructional help on using the the `strokes' package." t nil)
13137
13138 (autoload (quote strokes-load-user-strokes) "strokes" "\
13139 Load user-defined strokes from file named by `strokes-file'." t nil)
13140
13141 (defalias (quote load-user-strokes) (quote strokes-load-user-strokes))
13142
13143 (autoload (quote strokes-mode) "strokes" "\
13144 Toggle strokes being enabled.
13145 With ARG, turn strokes on if and only if ARG is positive or true.
13146 Note that `strokes-mode' is a global mode. Think of it as a minor
13147 mode in all buffers when activated.
13148 By default, strokes are invoked with mouse button-2. You can define
13149 new strokes with
13150
13151 > M-x global-set-stroke
13152
13153 To use strokes for pictographic editing, such as Chinese/Japanese, use
13154 Sh-button-2, which draws strokes and inserts them. Encode/decode your
13155 strokes with
13156
13157 > M-x strokes-encode-buffer
13158 > M-x strokes-decode-buffer" t nil)
13159
13160 ;;;***
13161 \f
13162 ;;;### (autoloads (sc-cite-original) "supercite" "mail/supercite.el"
13163 ;;;;;; (14385 23097))
13164 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/supercite.el
13165
13166 (autoload (quote sc-cite-original) "supercite" "\
13167 Workhorse citing function which performs the initial citation.
13168 This is callable from the various mail and news readers' reply
13169 function according to the agreed upon standard. See `\\[sc-describe]'
13170 for more details. `sc-cite-original' does not do any yanking of the
13171 original message but it does require a few things:
13172
13173 1) The reply buffer is the current buffer.
13174
13175 2) The original message has been yanked and inserted into the
13176 reply buffer.
13177
13178 3) Verbose mail headers from the original message have been
13179 inserted into the reply buffer directly before the text of the
13180 original message.
13181
13182 4) Point is at the beginning of the verbose headers.
13183
13184 5) Mark is at the end of the body of text to be cited.
13185
13186 For Emacs 19's, the region need not be active (and typically isn't
13187 when this function is called. Also, the hook `sc-pre-hook' is run
13188 before, and `sc-post-hook' is run after the guts of this function." nil nil)
13189
13190 ;;;***
13191 \f
13192 ;;;### (autoloads (tabify untabify) "tabify" "tabify.el" (13227 8639))
13193 ;;; Generated autoloads from tabify.el
13194
13195 (autoload (quote untabify) "tabify" "\
13196 Convert all tabs in region to multiple spaces, preserving columns.
13197 Called non-interactively, the region is specified by arguments
13198 START and END, rather than by the position of point and mark.
13199 The variable `tab-width' controls the spacing of tab stops." t nil)
13200
13201 (autoload (quote tabify) "tabify" "\
13202 Convert multiple spaces in region to tabs when possible.
13203 A group of spaces is partially replaced by tabs
13204 when this can be done without changing the column they end at.
13205 Called non-interactively, the region is specified by arguments
13206 START and END, rather than by the position of point and mark.
13207 The variable `tab-width' controls the spacing of tab stops." t nil)
13208
13209 ;;;***
13210 \f
13211 ;;;### (autoloads (talk-connect) "talk" "talk.el" (13229 29630))
13212 ;;; Generated autoloads from talk.el
13213
13214 (autoload (quote talk-connect) "talk" "\
13215 Connect to display DISPLAY for the Emacs talk group." t nil)
13216
13217 ;;;***
13218 \f
13219 ;;;### (autoloads (tar-mode) "tar-mode" "tar-mode.el" (14443 40965))
13220 ;;; Generated autoloads from tar-mode.el
13221
13222 (autoload (quote tar-mode) "tar-mode" "\
13223 Major mode for viewing a tar file as a dired-like listing of its contents.
13224 You can move around using the usual cursor motion commands.
13225 Letters no longer insert themselves.
13226 Type `e' to pull a file out of the tar file and into its own buffer;
13227 or click mouse-2 on the file's line in the Tar mode buffer.
13228 Type `c' to copy an entry from the tar file into another file on disk.
13229
13230 If you edit a sub-file of this archive (as with the `e' command) and
13231 save it with Control-x Control-s, the contents of that buffer will be
13232 saved back into the tar-file buffer; in this way you can edit a file
13233 inside of a tar archive without extracting it and re-archiving it.
13234
13235 See also: variables `tar-update-datestamp' and `tar-anal-blocksize'.
13236 \\{tar-mode-map}" nil nil)
13237
13238 ;;;***
13239 \f
13240 ;;;### (autoloads (tcl-help-on-word inferior-tcl tcl-mode) "tcl"
13241 ;;;;;; "progmodes/tcl.el" (14248 50428))
13242 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/tcl.el
13243
13244 (autoload (quote tcl-mode) "tcl" "\
13245 Major mode for editing Tcl code.
13246 Expression and list commands understand all Tcl brackets.
13247 Tab indents for Tcl code.
13248 Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
13249 Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
13250
13251 Variables controlling indentation style:
13252 tcl-indent-level
13253 Indentation of Tcl statements within surrounding block.
13254 tcl-continued-indent-level
13255 Indentation of continuation line relative to first line of command.
13256
13257 Variables controlling user interaction with mode (see variable
13258 documentation for details):
13259 tcl-tab-always-indent
13260 Controls action of TAB key.
13261 tcl-auto-newline
13262 Non-nil means automatically newline before and after braces, brackets,
13263 and semicolons inserted in Tcl code.
13264 tcl-electric-hash-style
13265 Controls action of `#' key.
13266 tcl-use-hairy-comment-detector
13267 If t, use more complicated, but slower, comment detector.
13268 This variable is only used in Emacs 19.
13269 tcl-use-smart-word-finder
13270 If not nil, use a smarter, Tcl-specific way to find the current
13271 word when looking up help on a Tcl command.
13272
13273 Turning on Tcl mode calls the value of the variable `tcl-mode-hook'
13274 with no args, if that value is non-nil. Read the documentation for
13275 `tcl-mode-hook' to see what kinds of interesting hook functions
13276 already exist.
13277
13278 Commands:
13279 \\{tcl-mode-map}" t nil)
13280
13281 (autoload (quote inferior-tcl) "tcl" "\
13282 Run inferior Tcl process.
13283 Prefix arg means enter program name interactively.
13284 See documentation for function `inferior-tcl-mode' for more information." t nil)
13285
13286 (autoload (quote tcl-help-on-word) "tcl" "\
13287 Get help on Tcl command. Default is word at point.
13288 Prefix argument means invert sense of `tcl-use-smart-word-finder'." t nil)
13289
13290 ;;;***
13291 \f
13292 ;;;### (autoloads (rsh telnet) "telnet" "telnet.el" (13858 52416))
13293 ;;; Generated autoloads from telnet.el
13294 (add-hook 'same-window-regexps "\\*telnet-.*\\*\\(\\|<[0-9]+>\\)")
13295
13296 (autoload (quote telnet) "telnet" "\
13297 Open a network login connection to host named HOST (a string).
13298 Communication with HOST is recorded in a buffer `*PROGRAM-HOST*'
13299 where PROGRAM is the telnet program being used. This program
13300 is controlled by the contents of the global variable `telnet-host-properties',
13301 falling back on the value of the global variable `telnet-program'.
13302 Normally input is edited in Emacs and sent a line at a time." t nil)
13303 (add-hook 'same-window-regexps "\\*rsh-[^-]*\\*\\(\\|<[0-9]*>\\)")
13304
13305 (autoload (quote rsh) "telnet" "\
13306 Open a network login connection to host named HOST (a string).
13307 Communication with HOST is recorded in a buffer `*rsh-HOST*'.
13308 Normally input is edited in Emacs and sent a line at a time." t nil)
13309
13310 ;;;***
13311 \f
13312 ;;;### (autoloads (ansi-term term make-term) "term" "term.el" (14268
13313 ;;;;;; 17354))
13314 ;;; Generated autoloads from term.el
13315
13316 (autoload (quote make-term) "term" "\
13317 Make a term process NAME in a buffer, running PROGRAM.
13318 The name of the buffer is made by surrounding NAME with `*'s.
13319 If there is already a running process in that buffer, it is not restarted.
13320 Optional third arg STARTFILE is the name of a file to send the contents of to
13321 the process. Any more args are arguments to PROGRAM." nil nil)
13322
13323 (autoload (quote term) "term" "\
13324 Start a terminal-emulator in a new buffer." t nil)
13325
13326 (autoload (quote ansi-term) "term" "\
13327 Start a terminal-emulator in a new buffer." t nil)
13328
13329 ;;;***
13330 \f
13331 ;;;### (autoloads (terminal-emulator) "terminal" "terminal.el" (14280
13332 ;;;;;; 10588))
13333 ;;; Generated autoloads from terminal.el
13334
13335 (autoload (quote terminal-emulator) "terminal" "\
13336 Under a display-terminal emulator in BUFFER, run PROGRAM on arguments ARGS.
13337 ARGS is a list of argument-strings. Remaining arguments are WIDTH and HEIGHT.
13338 BUFFER's contents are made an image of the display generated by that program,
13339 and any input typed when BUFFER is the current Emacs buffer is sent to that
13340 program as keyboard input.
13341
13342 Interactively, BUFFER defaults to \"*terminal*\" and PROGRAM and ARGS
13343 are parsed from an input-string using your usual shell.
13344 WIDTH and HEIGHT are determined from the size of the current window
13345 -- WIDTH will be one less than the window's width, HEIGHT will be its height.
13346
13347 To switch buffers and leave the emulator, or to give commands
13348 to the emulator itself (as opposed to the program running under it),
13349 type Control-^. The following character is an emulator command.
13350 Type Control-^ twice to send it to the subprogram.
13351 This escape character may be changed using the variable `terminal-escape-char'.
13352
13353 `Meta' characters may not currently be sent through the terminal emulator.
13354
13355 Here is a list of some of the variables which control the behaviour
13356 of the emulator -- see their documentation for more information:
13357 terminal-escape-char, terminal-scrolling, terminal-more-processing,
13358 terminal-redisplay-interval.
13359
13360 This function calls the value of terminal-mode-hook if that exists
13361 and is non-nil after the terminal buffer has been set up and the
13362 subprocess started." t nil)
13363
13364 ;;;***
13365 \f
13366 ;;;### (autoloads (tetris) "tetris" "play/tetris.el" (13700 16411))
13367 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/tetris.el
13368
13369 (autoload (quote tetris) "tetris" "\
13370 Play the Tetris game.
13371 Shapes drop from the top of the screen, and the user has to move and
13372 rotate the shape to fit in with those at the bottom of the screen so
13373 as to form complete rows.
13374
13375 tetris-mode keybindings:
13376 \\<tetris-mode-map>
13377 \\[tetris-start-game] Starts a new game of Tetris
13378 \\[tetris-end-game] Terminates the current game
13379 \\[tetris-pause-game] Pauses (or resumes) the current game
13380 \\[tetris-move-left] Moves the shape one square to the left
13381 \\[tetris-move-right] Moves the shape one square to the right
13382 \\[tetris-rotate-prev] Rotates the shape clockwise
13383 \\[tetris-rotate-next] Rotates the shape anticlockwise
13384 \\[tetris-move-bottom] Drops the shape to the bottom of the playing area
13385
13386 " t nil)
13387
13388 ;;;***
13389 \f
13390 ;;;### (autoloads (tex-start-shell slitex-mode latex-mode plain-tex-mode
13391 ;;;;;; tex-mode tex-close-quote tex-open-quote tex-default-mode
13392 ;;;;;; tex-show-queue-command tex-dvi-view-command tex-alt-dvi-print-command
13393 ;;;;;; tex-dvi-print-command tex-bibtex-command latex-block-names
13394 ;;;;;; tex-start-options-string slitex-run-command latex-run-command
13395 ;;;;;; tex-run-command tex-offer-save tex-main-file tex-first-line-header-regexp
13396 ;;;;;; tex-directory tex-shell-file-name) "tex-mode" "textmodes/tex-mode.el"
13397 ;;;;;; (14365 34873))
13398 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/tex-mode.el
13399
13400 (defvar tex-shell-file-name nil "\
13401 *If non-nil, the shell file name to run in the subshell used to run TeX.")
13402
13403 (defvar tex-directory "." "\
13404 *Directory in which temporary files are written.
13405 You can make this `/tmp' if your TEXINPUTS has no relative directories in it
13406 and you don't try to apply \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer] when there are
13407 `\\input' commands with relative directories.")
13408
13409 (defvar tex-first-line-header-regexp nil "\
13410 Regexp for matching a first line which `tex-region' should include.
13411 If this is non-nil, it should be a regular expression string;
13412 if it matches the first line of the file,
13413 `tex-region' always includes the first line in the TeX run.")
13414
13415 (defvar tex-main-file nil "\
13416 *The main TeX source file which includes this buffer's file.
13417 The command `tex-file' runs TeX on the file specified by `tex-main-file'
13418 if the variable is non-nil.")
13419
13420 (defvar tex-offer-save t "\
13421 *If non-nil, ask about saving modified buffers before \\[tex-file] is run.")
13422
13423 (defvar tex-run-command "tex" "\
13424 *Command used to run TeX subjob.
13425 TeX Mode sets `tex-command' to this string.
13426 See the documentation of that variable.")
13427
13428 (defvar latex-run-command "latex" "\
13429 *Command used to run LaTeX subjob.
13430 LaTeX Mode sets `tex-command' to this string.
13431 See the documentation of that variable.")
13432
13433 (defvar slitex-run-command "slitex" "\
13434 *Command used to run SliTeX subjob.
13435 SliTeX Mode sets `tex-command' to this string.
13436 See the documentation of that variable.")
13437
13438 (defvar tex-start-options-string "\\nonstopmode\\input" "\
13439 *TeX options to use when running TeX.
13440 These precede the input file name. If nil, TeX runs without option.
13441 See the documentation of `tex-command'.")
13442
13443 (defvar latex-block-names nil "\
13444 *User defined LaTeX block names.
13445 Combined with `standard-latex-block-names' for minibuffer completion.")
13446
13447 (defvar tex-bibtex-command "bibtex" "\
13448 *Command used by `tex-bibtex-file' to gather bibliographic data.
13449 If this string contains an asterisk (`*'), that is replaced by the file name;
13450 otherwise, the file name, preceded by blank, is added at the end.")
13451
13452 (defvar tex-dvi-print-command "lpr -d" "\
13453 *Command used by \\[tex-print] to print a .dvi file.
13454 If this string contains an asterisk (`*'), that is replaced by the file name;
13455 otherwise, the file name, preceded by blank, is added at the end.")
13456
13457 (defvar tex-alt-dvi-print-command "lpr -d" "\
13458 *Command used by \\[tex-print] with a prefix arg to print a .dvi file.
13459 If this string contains an asterisk (`*'), that is replaced by the file name;
13460 otherwise, the file name, preceded by blank, is added at the end.
13461
13462 If two printers are not enough of a choice, you can set the variable
13463 `tex-alt-dvi-print-command' to an expression that asks what you want;
13464 for example,
13465
13466 (setq tex-alt-dvi-print-command
13467 '(format \"lpr -P%s\" (read-string \"Use printer: \")))
13468
13469 would tell \\[tex-print] with a prefix argument to ask you which printer to
13470 use.")
13471
13472 (defvar tex-dvi-view-command nil "\
13473 *Command used by \\[tex-view] to display a `.dvi' file.
13474 If this string contains an asterisk (`*'), that is replaced by the file name;
13475 otherwise, the file name, preceded by blank, is added at the end.
13476
13477 This can be set conditionally so that the previewer used is suitable for the
13478 window system being used. For example,
13479
13480 (setq tex-dvi-view-command
13481 (if (eq window-system 'x) \"xdvi\" \"dvi2tty * | cat -s\"))
13482
13483 would tell \\[tex-view] to use xdvi under X windows and to use dvi2tty
13484 otherwise.")
13485
13486 (defvar tex-show-queue-command "lpq" "\
13487 *Command used by \\[tex-show-print-queue] to show the print queue.
13488 Should show the queue(s) that \\[tex-print] puts jobs on.")
13489
13490 (defvar tex-default-mode (quote latex-mode) "\
13491 *Mode to enter for a new file that might be either TeX or LaTeX.
13492 This variable is used when it can't be determined whether the file
13493 is plain TeX or LaTeX or what because the file contains no commands.
13494 Normally set to either `plain-tex-mode' or `latex-mode'.")
13495
13496 (defvar tex-open-quote "``" "\
13497 *String inserted by typing \\[tex-insert-quote] to open a quotation.")
13498
13499 (defvar tex-close-quote "''" "\
13500 *String inserted by typing \\[tex-insert-quote] to close a quotation.")
13501
13502 (autoload (quote tex-mode) "tex-mode" "\
13503 Major mode for editing files of input for TeX, LaTeX, or SliTeX.
13504 Tries to determine (by looking at the beginning of the file) whether
13505 this file is for plain TeX, LaTeX, or SliTeX and calls `plain-tex-mode',
13506 `latex-mode', or `slitex-mode', respectively. If it cannot be determined,
13507 such as if there are no commands in the file, the value of `tex-default-mode'
13508 says which mode to use." t nil)
13509
13510 (defalias (quote TeX-mode) (quote tex-mode))
13511
13512 (defalias (quote plain-TeX-mode) (quote plain-tex-mode))
13513
13514 (defalias (quote LaTeX-mode) (quote latex-mode))
13515
13516 (autoload (quote plain-tex-mode) "tex-mode" "\
13517 Major mode for editing files of input for plain TeX.
13518 Makes $ and } display the characters they match.
13519 Makes \" insert `` when it seems to be the beginning of a quotation,
13520 and '' when it appears to be the end; it inserts \" only after a \\.
13521
13522 Use \\[tex-region] to run TeX on the current region, plus a \"header\"
13523 copied from the top of the file (containing macro definitions, etc.),
13524 running TeX under a special subshell. \\[tex-buffer] does the whole buffer.
13525 \\[tex-file] saves the buffer and then processes the file.
13526 \\[tex-print] prints the .dvi file made by any of these.
13527 \\[tex-view] previews the .dvi file made by any of these.
13528 \\[tex-bibtex-file] runs bibtex on the file of the current buffer.
13529
13530 Use \\[tex-validate-buffer] to check buffer for paragraphs containing
13531 mismatched $'s or braces.
13532
13533 Special commands:
13534 \\{tex-mode-map}
13535
13536 Mode variables:
13537 tex-run-command
13538 Command string used by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
13539 tex-directory
13540 Directory in which to create temporary files for TeX jobs
13541 run by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
13542 tex-dvi-print-command
13543 Command string used by \\[tex-print] to print a .dvi file.
13544 tex-alt-dvi-print-command
13545 Alternative command string used by \\[tex-print] (when given a prefix
13546 argument) to print a .dvi file.
13547 tex-dvi-view-command
13548 Command string used by \\[tex-view] to preview a .dvi file.
13549 tex-show-queue-command
13550 Command string used by \\[tex-show-print-queue] to show the print
13551 queue that \\[tex-print] put your job on.
13552
13553 Entering Plain-tex mode runs the hook `text-mode-hook', then the hook
13554 `tex-mode-hook', and finally the hook `plain-tex-mode-hook'. When the
13555 special subshell is initiated, the hook `tex-shell-hook' is run." t nil)
13556
13557 (autoload (quote latex-mode) "tex-mode" "\
13558 Major mode for editing files of input for LaTeX.
13559 Makes $ and } display the characters they match.
13560 Makes \" insert `` when it seems to be the beginning of a quotation,
13561 and '' when it appears to be the end; it inserts \" only after a \\.
13562
13563 Use \\[tex-region] to run LaTeX on the current region, plus the preamble
13564 copied from the top of the file (containing \\documentstyle, etc.),
13565 running LaTeX under a special subshell. \\[tex-buffer] does the whole buffer.
13566 \\[tex-file] saves the buffer and then processes the file.
13567 \\[tex-print] prints the .dvi file made by any of these.
13568 \\[tex-view] previews the .dvi file made by any of these.
13569 \\[tex-bibtex-file] runs bibtex on the file of the current buffer.
13570
13571 Use \\[tex-validate-buffer] to check buffer for paragraphs containing
13572 mismatched $'s or braces.
13573
13574 Special commands:
13575 \\{tex-mode-map}
13576
13577 Mode variables:
13578 latex-run-command
13579 Command string used by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
13580 tex-directory
13581 Directory in which to create temporary files for LaTeX jobs
13582 run by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
13583 tex-dvi-print-command
13584 Command string used by \\[tex-print] to print a .dvi file.
13585 tex-alt-dvi-print-command
13586 Alternative command string used by \\[tex-print] (when given a prefix
13587 argument) to print a .dvi file.
13588 tex-dvi-view-command
13589 Command string used by \\[tex-view] to preview a .dvi file.
13590 tex-show-queue-command
13591 Command string used by \\[tex-show-print-queue] to show the print
13592 queue that \\[tex-print] put your job on.
13593
13594 Entering Latex mode runs the hook `text-mode-hook', then
13595 `tex-mode-hook', and finally `latex-mode-hook'. When the special
13596 subshell is initiated, `tex-shell-hook' is run." t nil)
13597
13598 (autoload (quote slitex-mode) "tex-mode" "\
13599 Major mode for editing files of input for SliTeX.
13600 Makes $ and } display the characters they match.
13601 Makes \" insert `` when it seems to be the beginning of a quotation,
13602 and '' when it appears to be the end; it inserts \" only after a \\.
13603
13604 Use \\[tex-region] to run SliTeX on the current region, plus the preamble
13605 copied from the top of the file (containing \\documentstyle, etc.),
13606 running SliTeX under a special subshell. \\[tex-buffer] does the whole buffer.
13607 \\[tex-file] saves the buffer and then processes the file.
13608 \\[tex-print] prints the .dvi file made by any of these.
13609 \\[tex-view] previews the .dvi file made by any of these.
13610 \\[tex-bibtex-file] runs bibtex on the file of the current buffer.
13611
13612 Use \\[tex-validate-buffer] to check buffer for paragraphs containing
13613 mismatched $'s or braces.
13614
13615 Special commands:
13616 \\{tex-mode-map}
13617
13618 Mode variables:
13619 slitex-run-command
13620 Command string used by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
13621 tex-directory
13622 Directory in which to create temporary files for SliTeX jobs
13623 run by \\[tex-region] or \\[tex-buffer].
13624 tex-dvi-print-command
13625 Command string used by \\[tex-print] to print a .dvi file.
13626 tex-alt-dvi-print-command
13627 Alternative command string used by \\[tex-print] (when given a prefix
13628 argument) to print a .dvi file.
13629 tex-dvi-view-command
13630 Command string used by \\[tex-view] to preview a .dvi file.
13631 tex-show-queue-command
13632 Command string used by \\[tex-show-print-queue] to show the print
13633 queue that \\[tex-print] put your job on.
13634
13635 Entering SliTeX mode runs the hook `text-mode-hook', then the hook
13636 `tex-mode-hook', then the hook `latex-mode-hook', and finally the hook
13637 `slitex-mode-hook'. When the special subshell is initiated, the hook
13638 `tex-shell-hook' is run." t nil)
13639
13640 (autoload (quote tex-start-shell) "tex-mode" nil nil nil)
13641
13642 ;;;***
13643 \f
13644 ;;;### (autoloads (texi2info texinfo-format-region texinfo-format-buffer)
13645 ;;;;;; "texinfmt" "textmodes/texinfmt.el" (14456 53455))
13646 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/texinfmt.el
13647
13648 (autoload (quote texinfo-format-buffer) "texinfmt" "\
13649 Process the current buffer as texinfo code, into an Info file.
13650 The Info file output is generated in a buffer visiting the Info file
13651 name specified in the @setfilename command.
13652
13653 Non-nil argument (prefix, if interactive) means don't make tag table
13654 and don't split the file if large. You can use Info-tagify and
13655 Info-split to do these manually." t nil)
13656
13657 (autoload (quote texinfo-format-region) "texinfmt" "\
13658 Convert the current region of the Texinfo file to Info format.
13659 This lets you see what that part of the file will look like in Info.
13660 The command is bound to \\[texinfo-format-region]. The text that is
13661 converted to Info is stored in a temporary buffer." t nil)
13662
13663 (autoload (quote texi2info) "texinfmt" "\
13664 Convert the current buffer (written in Texinfo code) into an Info file.
13665 The Info file output is generated in a buffer visiting the Info file
13666 names specified in the @setfilename command.
13667
13668 This function automatically updates all node pointers and menus, and
13669 creates a master menu. This work is done on a temporary buffer that
13670 is automatically removed when the Info file is created. The original
13671 Texinfo source buffer is not changed.
13672
13673 Non-nil argument (prefix, if interactive) means don't split the file
13674 if large. You can use Info-split to do this manually." t nil)
13675
13676 ;;;***
13677 \f
13678 ;;;### (autoloads (texinfo-mode) "texinfo" "textmodes/texinfo.el"
13679 ;;;;;; (14302 8279))
13680 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/texinfo.el
13681
13682 (autoload (quote texinfo-mode) "texinfo" "\
13683 Major mode for editing Texinfo files.
13684
13685 It has these extra commands:
13686 \\{texinfo-mode-map}
13687
13688 These are files that are used as input for TeX to make printed manuals
13689 and also to be turned into Info files with \\[makeinfo-buffer] or
13690 the `makeinfo' program. These files must be written in a very restricted and
13691 modified version of TeX input format.
13692
13693 Editing commands are like text-mode except that the syntax table is
13694 set up so expression commands skip Texinfo bracket groups. To see
13695 what the Info version of a region of the Texinfo file will look like,
13696 use \\[makeinfo-region], which runs `makeinfo' on the current region.
13697
13698 You can show the structure of a Texinfo file with \\[texinfo-show-structure].
13699 This command shows the structure of a Texinfo file by listing the
13700 lines with the @-sign commands for @chapter, @section, and the like.
13701 These lines are displayed in another window called the *Occur* window.
13702 In that window, you can position the cursor over one of the lines and
13703 use \\[occur-mode-goto-occurrence], to jump to the corresponding spot
13704 in the Texinfo file.
13705
13706 In addition, Texinfo mode provides commands that insert various
13707 frequently used @-sign commands into the buffer. You can use these
13708 commands to save keystrokes. And you can insert balanced braces with
13709 \\[texinfo-insert-braces] and later use the command \\[up-list] to
13710 move forward past the closing brace.
13711
13712 Also, Texinfo mode provides functions for automatically creating or
13713 updating menus and node pointers. These functions
13714
13715 * insert the `Next', `Previous' and `Up' pointers of a node,
13716 * insert or update the menu for a section, and
13717 * create a master menu for a Texinfo source file.
13718
13719 Here are the functions:
13720
13721 texinfo-update-node \\[texinfo-update-node]
13722 texinfo-every-node-update \\[texinfo-every-node-update]
13723 texinfo-sequential-node-update
13724
13725 texinfo-make-menu \\[texinfo-make-menu]
13726 texinfo-all-menus-update \\[texinfo-all-menus-update]
13727 texinfo-master-menu
13728
13729 texinfo-indent-menu-description (column &optional region-p)
13730
13731 The `texinfo-column-for-description' variable specifies the column to
13732 which menu descriptions are indented.
13733
13734 Passed an argument (a prefix argument, if interactive), the
13735 `texinfo-update-node' and `texinfo-make-menu' functions do their jobs
13736 in the region.
13737
13738 To use the updating commands, you must structure your Texinfo file
13739 hierarchically, such that each `@node' line, with the exception of the
13740 Top node, is accompanied by some kind of section line, such as an
13741 `@chapter' or `@section' line.
13742
13743 If the file has a `top' node, it must be called `top' or `Top' and
13744 be the first node in the file.
13745
13746 Entering Texinfo mode calls the value of text-mode-hook, and then the
13747 value of texinfo-mode-hook." t nil)
13748
13749 ;;;***
13750 \f
13751 ;;;### (autoloads (texinfo-sequential-node-update texinfo-every-node-update
13752 ;;;;;; texinfo-update-node) "texnfo-upd" "textmodes/texnfo-upd.el"
13753 ;;;;;; (14263 36019))
13754 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/texnfo-upd.el
13755
13756 (autoload (quote texinfo-update-node) "texnfo-upd" "\
13757 Without any prefix argument, update the node in which point is located.
13758 Interactively, a prefix argument means to operate on the region.
13759
13760 The functions for creating or updating nodes and menus, and their
13761 keybindings, are:
13762
13763 texinfo-update-node (&optional beginning end) \\[texinfo-update-node]
13764 texinfo-every-node-update () \\[texinfo-every-node-update]
13765 texinfo-sequential-node-update (&optional region-p)
13766
13767 texinfo-make-menu (&optional region-p) \\[texinfo-make-menu]
13768 texinfo-all-menus-update () \\[texinfo-all-menus-update]
13769 texinfo-master-menu ()
13770
13771 texinfo-indent-menu-description (column &optional region-p)
13772
13773 The `texinfo-column-for-description' variable specifies the column to
13774 which menu descriptions are indented. Its default value is 32." t nil)
13775
13776 (autoload (quote texinfo-every-node-update) "texnfo-upd" "\
13777 Update every node in a Texinfo file." t nil)
13778
13779 (autoload (quote texinfo-sequential-node-update) "texnfo-upd" "\
13780 Update one node (or many) in a Texinfo file with sequential pointers.
13781
13782 This function causes the `Next' or `Previous' pointer to point to the
13783 immediately preceding or following node, even if it is at a higher or
13784 lower hierarchical level in the document. Continually pressing `n' or
13785 `p' takes you straight through the file.
13786
13787 Without any prefix argument, update the node in which point is located.
13788 Non-nil argument (prefix, if interactive) means update the nodes in the
13789 marked region.
13790
13791 This command makes it awkward to navigate among sections and
13792 subsections; it should be used only for those documents that are meant
13793 to be read like a novel rather than a reference, and for which the
13794 Info `g*' command is inadequate." t nil)
13795
13796 ;;;***
13797 \f
13798 ;;;### (autoloads (thai-composition-function thai-post-read-conversion
13799 ;;;;;; thai-compose-buffer thai-compose-string thai-compose-region
13800 ;;;;;; setup-thai-environment) "thai-util" "language/thai-util.el"
13801 ;;;;;; (14423 51008))
13802 ;;; Generated autoloads from language/thai-util.el
13803
13804 (autoload (quote setup-thai-environment) "thai-util" "\
13805 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Thai." t nil)
13806
13807 (autoload (quote thai-compose-region) "thai-util" "\
13808 Compose Thai characters in the region.
13809 When called from a program, expects two arguments,
13810 positions (integers or markers) specifying the region." t nil)
13811
13812 (autoload (quote thai-compose-string) "thai-util" "\
13813 Compose Thai characters in STRING and return the resulting string." nil nil)
13814
13815 (autoload (quote thai-compose-buffer) "thai-util" "\
13816 Compose Thai characters in the current buffer." t nil)
13817
13818 (autoload (quote thai-post-read-conversion) "thai-util" nil nil nil)
13819
13820 (autoload (quote thai-composition-function) "thai-util" "\
13821 Compose Thai text in the region FROM and TO.
13822 The text matches the regular expression PATTERN.
13823 Optional 4th argument STRING, if non-nil, is a string containing text
13824 to compose.
13825
13826 The return value is number of composed characters." nil nil)
13827
13828 ;;;***
13829 \f
13830 ;;;### (autoloads (thing-at-point bounds-of-thing-at-point forward-thing)
13831 ;;;;;; "thingatpt" "thingatpt.el" (13916 30234))
13832 ;;; Generated autoloads from thingatpt.el
13833
13834 (autoload (quote forward-thing) "thingatpt" "\
13835 Move forward to the end of the next THING." nil nil)
13836
13837 (autoload (quote bounds-of-thing-at-point) "thingatpt" "\
13838 Determine the start and end buffer locations for the THING at point.
13839 THING is a symbol which specifies the kind of syntactic entity you want.
13840 Possibilities include `symbol', `list', `sexp', `defun', `filename', `url',
13841 `word', `sentence', `whitespace', `line', `page' and others.
13842
13843 See the file `thingatpt.el' for documentation on how to define
13844 a symbol as a valid THING.
13845
13846 The value is a cons cell (START . END) giving the start and end positions
13847 of the textual entity that was found." nil nil)
13848
13849 (autoload (quote thing-at-point) "thingatpt" "\
13850 Return the THING at point.
13851 THING is a symbol which specifies the kind of syntactic entity you want.
13852 Possibilities include `symbol', `list', `sexp', `defun', `filename', `url',
13853 `word', `sentence', `whitespace', `line', `page' and others.
13854
13855 See the file `thingatpt.el' for documentation on how to define
13856 a symbol as a valid THING." nil nil)
13857
13858 ;;;***
13859 \f
13860 ;;;### (autoloads (tibetan-pre-write-conversion tibetan-post-read-conversion
13861 ;;;;;; tibetan-compose-buffer tibetan-decompose-buffer tibetan-composition-function
13862 ;;;;;; tibetan-compose-region tibetan-compose-string tibetan-transcription-to-tibetan
13863 ;;;;;; tibetan-tibetan-to-transcription tibetan-char-p setup-tibetan-environment)
13864 ;;;;;; "tibet-util" "language/tibet-util.el" (14423 51008))
13865 ;;; Generated autoloads from language/tibet-util.el
13866
13867 (autoload (quote setup-tibetan-environment) "tibet-util" nil t nil)
13868
13869 (autoload (quote tibetan-char-p) "tibet-util" "\
13870 Check if char CH is Tibetan character.
13871 Returns non-nil if CH is Tibetan. Otherwise, returns nil." nil nil)
13872
13873 (autoload (quote tibetan-tibetan-to-transcription) "tibet-util" "\
13874 Transcribe Tibetan string STR and return the corresponding Roman string." nil nil)
13875
13876 (autoload (quote tibetan-transcription-to-tibetan) "tibet-util" "\
13877 Convert Tibetan Roman string STR to Tibetan character string.
13878 The returned string has no composition information." nil nil)
13879
13880 (autoload (quote tibetan-compose-string) "tibet-util" "\
13881 Compose Tibetan string STR." nil nil)
13882
13883 (autoload (quote tibetan-compose-region) "tibet-util" "\
13884 Compose Tibetan text the region BEG and END." t nil)
13885
13886 (defalias (quote tibetan-decompose-region) (quote decompose-region))
13887
13888 (defalias (quote tibetan-decompose-string) (quote decompose-string))
13889
13890 (autoload (quote tibetan-composition-function) "tibet-util" nil nil nil)
13891
13892 (autoload (quote tibetan-decompose-buffer) "tibet-util" "\
13893 Decomposes Tibetan characters in the buffer into their components.
13894 See also the documentation of the function `tibetan-decompose-region'." t nil)
13895
13896 (autoload (quote tibetan-compose-buffer) "tibet-util" "\
13897 Composes Tibetan character components in the buffer.
13898 See also docstring of the function tibetan-compose-region." t nil)
13899
13900 (autoload (quote tibetan-post-read-conversion) "tibet-util" nil nil nil)
13901
13902 (autoload (quote tibetan-pre-write-conversion) "tibet-util" nil nil nil)
13903
13904 ;;;***
13905 \f
13906 ;;;### (autoloads (tildify-buffer tildify-region) "tildify" "textmodes/tildify.el"
13907 ;;;;;; (14357 30776))
13908 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/tildify.el
13909
13910 (autoload (quote tildify-region) "tildify" "\
13911 Add hard spaces in the region between BEG and END.
13912 See variables `tildify-pattern-alist', `tildify-string-alist', and
13913 `tildify-ignored-environments-alist' for information about configuration
13914 parameters.
13915 This function performs no refilling of the changed text." t nil)
13916
13917 (autoload (quote tildify-buffer) "tildify" "\
13918 Add hard spaces in the current buffer.
13919 See variables `tildify-pattern-alist', `tildify-string-alist', and
13920 `tildify-ignored-environments-alist' for information about configuration
13921 parameters.
13922 This function performs no refilling of the changed text." t nil)
13923
13924 ;;;***
13925 \f
13926 ;;;### (autoloads (display-time-mode display-time display-time-day-and-date
13927 ;;;;;; display-time-mode) "time" "time.el" (14454 121))
13928 ;;; Generated autoloads from time.el
13929
13930 (defvar display-time-mode nil "\
13931 Toggle display of time, load level, and mail flag in mode lines.
13932 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
13933 use either \\[customize] or the function `display-time-mode'.")
13934
13935 (custom-add-to-group (quote display-time) (quote display-time-mode) (quote custom-variable))
13936
13937 (custom-add-load (quote display-time-mode) (quote time))
13938
13939 (defvar display-time-day-and-date nil "\
13940 *Non-nil means \\[display-time] should display day and date as well as time.")
13941
13942 (autoload (quote display-time) "time" "\
13943 Enable display of time, load level, and mail flag in mode lines.
13944 This display updates automatically every minute.
13945 If `display-time-day-and-date' is non-nil, the current day and date
13946 are displayed as well.
13947 This runs the normal hook `display-time-hook' after each update." t nil)
13948
13949 (autoload (quote display-time-mode) "time" "\
13950 Toggle display of time, load level, and mail flag in mode lines.
13951 With a numeric arg, enable this display if arg is positive.
13952
13953 When this display is enabled, it updates automatically every minute.
13954 If `display-time-day-and-date' is non-nil, the current day and date
13955 are displayed as well.
13956 This runs the normal hook `display-time-hook' after each update." t nil)
13957
13958 ;;;***
13959 \f
13960 ;;;### (autoloads (time-stamp-toggle-active time-stamp) "time-stamp"
13961 ;;;;;; "time-stamp.el" (14277 60981))
13962 ;;; Generated autoloads from time-stamp.el
13963
13964 (autoload (quote time-stamp) "time-stamp" "\
13965 Update the time stamp string(s) in the buffer.
13966 A template in a file can be automatically updated with a new time stamp
13967 every time you save the file. Add this line to your .emacs file:
13968 (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp)
13969 Normally the template must appear in the first 8 lines of a file and
13970 look like one of the following:
13971 Time-stamp: <>
13972 Time-stamp: \" \"
13973 The time stamp is written between the brackets or quotes:
13974 Time-stamp: <1998-02-18 10:20:51 gildea>
13975 The time stamp is updated only if the variable `time-stamp-active' is non-nil.
13976 The format of the time stamp is set by the variable `time-stamp-format'.
13977 The variables `time-stamp-line-limit', `time-stamp-start', `time-stamp-end',
13978 `time-stamp-count', and `time-stamp-inserts-lines' control finding the
13979 template." t nil)
13980
13981 (autoload (quote time-stamp-toggle-active) "time-stamp" "\
13982 Toggle `time-stamp-active', setting whether \\[time-stamp] updates a buffer.
13983 With arg, turn time stamping on if and only if arg is positive." t nil)
13984
13985 ;;;***
13986 \f
13987 ;;;### (autoloads (with-timeout run-with-idle-timer add-timeout run-with-timer
13988 ;;;;;; run-at-time cancel-function-timers cancel-timer) "timer"
13989 ;;;;;; "timer.el" (13316 52821))
13990 ;;; Generated autoloads from timer.el
13991
13992 (defalias (quote disable-timeout) (quote cancel-timer))
13993
13994 (autoload (quote cancel-timer) "timer" "\
13995 Remove TIMER from the list of active timers." nil nil)
13996
13997 (autoload (quote cancel-function-timers) "timer" "\
13998 Cancel all timers scheduled by `run-at-time' which would run FUNCTION." t nil)
13999
14000 (autoload (quote run-at-time) "timer" "\
14001 Perform an action at time TIME.
14002 Repeat the action every REPEAT seconds, if REPEAT is non-nil.
14003 TIME should be a string like \"11:23pm\", nil meaning now, a number of seconds
14004 from now, a value from `current-time', or t (with non-nil REPEAT)
14005 meaning the next integral multiple of REPEAT.
14006 REPEAT may be an integer or floating point number.
14007 The action is to call FUNCTION with arguments ARGS.
14008
14009 This function returns a timer object which you can use in `cancel-timer'." t nil)
14010
14011 (autoload (quote run-with-timer) "timer" "\
14012 Perform an action after a delay of SECS seconds.
14013 Repeat the action every REPEAT seconds, if REPEAT is non-nil.
14014 SECS and REPEAT may be integers or floating point numbers.
14015 The action is to call FUNCTION with arguments ARGS.
14016
14017 This function returns a timer object which you can use in `cancel-timer'." t nil)
14018
14019 (autoload (quote add-timeout) "timer" "\
14020 Add a timer to run SECS seconds from now, to call FUNCTION on OBJECT.
14021 If REPEAT is non-nil, repeat the timer every REPEAT seconds.
14022 This function is for compatibility; see also `run-with-timer'." nil nil)
14023
14024 (autoload (quote run-with-idle-timer) "timer" "\
14025 Perform an action the next time Emacs is idle for SECS seconds.
14026 If REPEAT is non-nil, do this each time Emacs is idle for SECS seconds.
14027 SECS may be an integer or a floating point number.
14028 The action is to call FUNCTION with arguments ARGS.
14029
14030 This function returns a timer object which you can use in `cancel-timer'." t nil)
14031 (put 'with-timeout 'lisp-indent-function 1)
14032
14033 (autoload (quote with-timeout) "timer" "\
14034 Run BODY, but if it doesn't finish in SECONDS seconds, give up.
14035 If we give up, we run the TIMEOUT-FORMS and return the value of the last one.
14036 The call should look like:
14037 (with-timeout (SECONDS TIMEOUT-FORMS...) BODY...)
14038 The timeout is checked whenever Emacs waits for some kind of external
14039 event (such as keyboard input, input from subprocesses, or a certain time);
14040 if the program loops without waiting in any way, the timeout will not
14041 be detected." nil (quote macro))
14042
14043 ;;;***
14044 \f
14045 ;;;### (autoloads (batch-titdic-convert titdic-convert) "titdic-cnv"
14046 ;;;;;; "international/titdic-cnv.el" (13618 46800))
14047 ;;; Generated autoloads from international/titdic-cnv.el
14048
14049 (autoload (quote titdic-convert) "titdic-cnv" "\
14050 Convert a TIT dictionary of FILENAME into a Quail package.
14051 Optional argument DIRNAME if specified is the directory name under which
14052 the generated Quail package is saved." t nil)
14053
14054 (autoload (quote batch-titdic-convert) "titdic-cnv" "\
14055 Run `titdic-convert' on the files remaining on the command line.
14056 Use this from the command line, with `-batch';
14057 it won't work in an interactive Emacs.
14058 For example, invoke \"emacs -batch -f batch-titdic-convert XXX.tit\" to
14059 generate Quail package file \"xxx.el\" from TIT dictionary file \"XXX.tit\".
14060 To get complete usage, invoke \"emacs -batch -f batch-titdic-convert -h\"." nil nil)
14061
14062 ;;;***
14063 \f
14064 ;;;### (autoloads (tmm-prompt tmm-menubar-mouse tmm-menubar) "tmm"
14065 ;;;;;; "tmm.el" (14459 43081))
14066 ;;; Generated autoloads from tmm.el
14067 (define-key global-map "\M-`" 'tmm-menubar)
14068 (define-key global-map [f10] 'tmm-menubar)
14069 (define-key global-map [menu-bar mouse-1] 'tmm-menubar-mouse)
14070
14071 (autoload (quote tmm-menubar) "tmm" "\
14072 Text-mode emulation of looking and choosing from a menubar.
14073 See the documentation for `tmm-prompt'.
14074 X-POSITION, if non-nil, specifies a horizontal position within the menu bar;
14075 we make that menu bar item (the one at that position) the default choice." t nil)
14076
14077 (autoload (quote tmm-menubar-mouse) "tmm" "\
14078 Text-mode emulation of looking and choosing from a menubar.
14079 This command is used when you click the mouse in the menubar
14080 on a console which has no window system but does have a mouse.
14081 See the documentation for `tmm-prompt'." t nil)
14082
14083 (autoload (quote tmm-prompt) "tmm" "\
14084 Text-mode emulation of calling the bindings in keymap.
14085 Creates a text-mode menu of possible choices. You can access the elements
14086 in the menu in two ways:
14087 *) via history mechanism from minibuffer;
14088 *) Or via completion-buffer that is automatically shown.
14089 The last alternative is currently a hack, you cannot use mouse reliably.
14090
14091 MENU is like the MENU argument to `x-popup-menu': either a
14092 keymap or an alist of alists.
14093 DEFAULT-ITEM, if non-nil, specifies an initial default choice.
14094 Its value should be an event that has a binding in MENU." nil nil)
14095
14096 ;;;***
14097 \f
14098 ;;;### (autoloads (tooltip-mode tooltip-mode) "tooltip" "tooltip.el"
14099 ;;;;;; (14268 20081))
14100 ;;; Generated autoloads from tooltip.el
14101
14102 (autoload (quote tooltip-mode) "tooltip" "\
14103 Mode for tooltip display.
14104 With ARG, turn tooltip mode on if and only if ARG is positive." t nil)
14105
14106 (defvar tooltip-mode nil "\
14107 Toggle tooltip-mode.
14108 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
14109 use either \\[customize] or the function `tooltip-mode'.")
14110
14111 (custom-add-to-group (quote tooltip) (quote tooltip-mode) (quote custom-variable))
14112
14113 (custom-add-load (quote tooltip-mode) (quote tooltip))
14114
14115 ;;;***
14116 \f
14117 ;;;### (autoloads (tpu-edt-on) "tpu-edt" "emulation/tpu-edt.el" (14299
14118 ;;;;;; 63726))
14119 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/tpu-edt.el
14120
14121 (fset (quote tpu-edt-mode) (quote tpu-edt-on))
14122
14123 (fset (quote tpu-edt) (quote tpu-edt-on))
14124
14125 (autoload (quote tpu-edt-on) "tpu-edt" "\
14126 Turn on TPU/edt emulation." t nil)
14127
14128 ;;;***
14129 \f
14130 ;;;### (autoloads (tpu-set-cursor-bound tpu-set-cursor-free tpu-set-scroll-margins)
14131 ;;;;;; "tpu-extras" "emulation/tpu-extras.el" (13623 36919))
14132 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/tpu-extras.el
14133
14134 (autoload (quote tpu-set-scroll-margins) "tpu-extras" "\
14135 Set scroll margins." t nil)
14136
14137 (autoload (quote tpu-set-cursor-free) "tpu-extras" "\
14138 Allow the cursor to move freely about the screen." t nil)
14139
14140 (autoload (quote tpu-set-cursor-bound) "tpu-extras" "\
14141 Constrain the cursor to the flow of the text." t nil)
14142
14143 ;;;***
14144 \f
14145 ;;;### (autoloads (tq-create) "tq" "emacs-lisp/tq.el" (13509 34547))
14146 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/tq.el
14147
14148 (autoload (quote tq-create) "tq" "\
14149 Create and return a transaction queue communicating with PROCESS.
14150 PROCESS should be a subprocess capable of sending and receiving
14151 streams of bytes. It may be a local process, or it may be connected
14152 to a tcp server on another machine." nil nil)
14153
14154 ;;;***
14155 \f
14156 ;;;### (autoloads (trace-function-background trace-function trace-buffer)
14157 ;;;;;; "trace" "emacs-lisp/trace.el" (13607 52440))
14158 ;;; Generated autoloads from emacs-lisp/trace.el
14159
14160 (defvar trace-buffer "*trace-output*" "\
14161 *Trace output will by default go to that buffer.")
14162
14163 (autoload (quote trace-function) "trace" "\
14164 Traces FUNCTION with trace output going to BUFFER.
14165 For every call of FUNCTION Lisp-style trace messages that display argument
14166 and return values will be inserted into BUFFER. This function generates the
14167 trace advice for FUNCTION and activates it together with any other advice
14168 there might be!! The trace BUFFER will popup whenever FUNCTION is called.
14169 Do not use this to trace functions that switch buffers or do any other
14170 display oriented stuff, use `trace-function-background' instead." t nil)
14171
14172 (autoload (quote trace-function-background) "trace" "\
14173 Traces FUNCTION with trace output going quietly to BUFFER.
14174 For every call of FUNCTION Lisp-style trace messages that display argument
14175 and return values will be inserted into BUFFER. This function generates the
14176 trace advice for FUNCTION and activates it together with any other advice
14177 there might be!! Trace output will quietly go to BUFFER without changing
14178 the window or buffer configuration at all." t nil)
14179
14180 ;;;***
14181 \f
14182 ;;;### (autoloads (2C-split 2C-associate-buffer 2C-two-columns) "two-column"
14183 ;;;;;; "textmodes/two-column.el" (13940 33924))
14184 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/two-column.el
14185 (autoload '2C-command "two-column" () t 'keymap)
14186 (global-set-key "\C-x6" '2C-command)
14187 (global-set-key [f2] '2C-command)
14188
14189 (autoload (quote 2C-two-columns) "two-column" "\
14190 Split current window vertically for two-column editing.
14191 When called the first time, associates a buffer with the current
14192 buffer in two-column minor mode (see \\[describe-mode] ).
14193 Runs `2C-other-buffer-hook' in the new buffer.
14194 When called again, restores the screen layout with the current buffer
14195 first and the associated buffer to its right." t nil)
14196
14197 (autoload (quote 2C-associate-buffer) "two-column" "\
14198 Associate another buffer with this one in two-column minor mode.
14199 Can also be used to associate a just previously visited file, by
14200 accepting the proposed default buffer.
14201
14202 \(See \\[describe-mode] .)" t nil)
14203
14204 (autoload (quote 2C-split) "two-column" "\
14205 Split a two-column text at point, into two buffers in two-column minor mode.
14206 Point becomes the local value of `2C-window-width'. Only lines that
14207 have the ARG same preceding characters at that column get split. The
14208 ARG preceding characters without any leading whitespace become the local
14209 value for `2C-separator'. This way lines that continue across both
14210 columns remain untouched in the first buffer.
14211
14212 This function can be used with a prototype line, to set up things. You
14213 write the first line of each column and then split that line. E.g.:
14214
14215 First column's text sSs Second column's text
14216 \\___/\\
14217 / \\
14218 5 character Separator You type M-5 \\[2C-split] with the point here.
14219
14220 \(See \\[describe-mode] .)" t nil)
14221
14222 ;;;***
14223 \f
14224 ;;;### (autoloads (type-break-guesstimate-keystroke-threshold type-break-statistics
14225 ;;;;;; type-break type-break-mode type-break-keystroke-threshold
14226 ;;;;;; type-break-good-rest-interval type-break-interval type-break-mode)
14227 ;;;;;; "type-break" "type-break.el" (14263 36029))
14228 ;;; Generated autoloads from type-break.el
14229
14230 (defvar type-break-mode nil "\
14231 Toggle typing break mode.
14232 See the docstring for the `type-break-mode' command for more information.
14233 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
14234 use either \\[customize] or the function `type-break-mode'.")
14235
14236 (custom-add-to-group (quote type-break) (quote type-break-mode) (quote custom-variable))
14237
14238 (custom-add-load (quote type-break-mode) (quote type-break))
14239
14240 (defvar type-break-interval (* 60 60) "\
14241 *Number of seconds between scheduled typing breaks.")
14242
14243 (defvar type-break-good-rest-interval (/ type-break-interval 6) "\
14244 *Number of seconds of idle time considered to be an adequate typing rest.
14245
14246 When this variable is non-`nil', emacs checks the idle time between
14247 keystrokes. If this idle time is long enough to be considered a \"good\"
14248 rest from typing, then the next typing break is simply rescheduled for later.
14249
14250 If a break is interrupted before this much time elapses, the user will be
14251 asked whether or not really to interrupt the break.")
14252
14253 (defvar type-break-keystroke-threshold (let* ((wpm 35) (avg-word-length 5) (upper (* wpm avg-word-length (/ type-break-interval 60))) (lower (/ upper 5))) (cons lower upper)) "\
14254 *Upper and lower bound on number of keystrokes for considering typing break.
14255 This structure is a pair of numbers (MIN . MAX).
14256
14257 The first number is the minimum number of keystrokes that must have been
14258 entered since the last typing break before considering another one, even if
14259 the scheduled time has elapsed; the break is simply rescheduled until later
14260 if the minimum threshold hasn't been reached. If this first value is nil,
14261 then there is no minimum threshold; as soon as the scheduled time has
14262 elapsed, the user will always be queried.
14263
14264 The second number is the maximum number of keystrokes that can be entered
14265 before a typing break is requested immediately, pre-empting the originally
14266 scheduled break. If this second value is nil, then no pre-emptive breaks
14267 will occur; only scheduled ones will.
14268
14269 Keys with bucky bits (shift, control, meta, etc) are counted as only one
14270 keystroke even though they really require multiple keys to generate them.
14271
14272 The command `type-break-guesstimate-keystroke-threshold' can be used to
14273 guess a reasonably good pair of values for this variable.")
14274
14275 (autoload (quote type-break-mode) "type-break" "\
14276 Enable or disable typing-break mode.
14277 This is a minor mode, but it is global to all buffers by default.
14278
14279 When this mode is enabled, the user is encouraged to take typing breaks at
14280 appropriate intervals; either after a specified amount of time or when the
14281 user has exceeded a keystroke threshold. When the time arrives, the user
14282 is asked to take a break. If the user refuses at that time, emacs will ask
14283 again in a short period of time. The idea is to give the user enough time
14284 to find a good breaking point in his or her work, but be sufficiently
14285 annoying to discourage putting typing breaks off indefinitely.
14286
14287 A negative prefix argument disables this mode.
14288 No argument or any non-negative argument enables it.
14289
14290 The user may enable or disable this mode by setting the variable of the
14291 same name, though setting it in that way doesn't reschedule a break or
14292 reset the keystroke counter.
14293
14294 If the mode was previously disabled and is enabled as a consequence of
14295 calling this function, it schedules a break with `type-break-schedule' to
14296 make sure one occurs (the user can call that command to reschedule the
14297 break at any time). It also initializes the keystroke counter.
14298
14299 The variable `type-break-interval' specifies the number of seconds to
14300 schedule between regular typing breaks. This variable doesn't directly
14301 affect the time schedule; it simply provides a default for the
14302 `type-break-schedule' command.
14303
14304 If set, the variable `type-break-good-rest-interval' specifies the minimum
14305 amount of time which is considered a reasonable typing break. Whenever
14306 that time has elapsed, typing breaks are automatically rescheduled for
14307 later even if emacs didn't prompt you to take one first. Also, if a break
14308 is ended before this much time has elapsed, the user will be asked whether
14309 or not to continue.
14310
14311 The variable `type-break-keystroke-threshold' is used to determine the
14312 thresholds at which typing breaks should be considered. You can use
14313 the command `type-break-guesstimate-keystroke-threshold' to try to
14314 approximate good values for this.
14315
14316 There are several variables that affect how or when warning messages about
14317 imminent typing breaks are displayed. They include:
14318
14319 `type-break-mode-line-message-mode'
14320 `type-break-time-warning-intervals'
14321 `type-break-keystroke-warning-intervals'
14322 `type-break-warning-repeat'
14323 `type-break-warning-countdown-string'
14324 `type-break-warning-countdown-string-type'
14325
14326 There are several variables that affect if, how, and when queries to begin
14327 a typing break occur. They include:
14328
14329 `type-break-query-mode'
14330 `type-break-query-function'
14331 `type-break-query-interval'
14332
14333 Finally, the command `type-break-statistics' prints interesting things." t nil)
14334
14335 (autoload (quote type-break) "type-break" "\
14336 Take a typing break.
14337
14338 During the break, a demo selected from the functions listed in
14339 `type-break-demo-functions' is run.
14340
14341 After the typing break is finished, the next break is scheduled
14342 as per the function `type-break-schedule'." t nil)
14343
14344 (autoload (quote type-break-statistics) "type-break" "\
14345 Print statistics about typing breaks in a temporary buffer.
14346 This includes the last time a typing break was taken, when the next one is
14347 scheduled, the keystroke thresholds and the current keystroke count, etc." t nil)
14348
14349 (autoload (quote type-break-guesstimate-keystroke-threshold) "type-break" "\
14350 Guess values for the minimum/maximum keystroke threshold for typing breaks.
14351
14352 If called interactively, the user is prompted for their guess as to how
14353 many words per minute they usually type. This value should not be your
14354 maximum WPM, but your average. Of course, this is harder to gauge since it
14355 can vary considerably depending on what you are doing. For example, one
14356 tends to type less when debugging a program as opposed to writing
14357 documentation. (Perhaps a separate program should be written to estimate
14358 average typing speed.)
14359
14360 From that, this command sets the values in `type-break-keystroke-threshold'
14361 based on a fairly simple algorithm involving assumptions about the average
14362 length of words (5). For the minimum threshold, it uses about a fifth of
14363 the computed maximum threshold.
14364
14365 When called from lisp programs, the optional args WORDLEN and FRAC can be
14366 used to override the default assumption about average word length and the
14367 fraction of the maximum threshold to which to set the minimum threshold.
14368 FRAC should be the inverse of the fractional value; for example, a value of
14369 2 would mean to use one half, a value of 4 would mean to use one quarter, etc." t nil)
14370
14371 ;;;***
14372 \f
14373 ;;;### (autoloads (ununderline-region underline-region) "underline"
14374 ;;;;;; "textmodes/underline.el" (14228 39817))
14375 ;;; Generated autoloads from textmodes/underline.el
14376
14377 (autoload (quote underline-region) "underline" "\
14378 Underline all nonblank characters in the region.
14379 Works by overstriking underscores.
14380 Called from program, takes two arguments START and END
14381 which specify the range to operate on." t nil)
14382
14383 (autoload (quote ununderline-region) "underline" "\
14384 Remove all underlining (overstruck underscores) in the region.
14385 Called from program, takes two arguments START and END
14386 which specify the range to operate on." t nil)
14387
14388 ;;;***
14389 \f
14390 ;;;### (autoloads (unforward-rmail-message undigestify-rmail-message)
14391 ;;;;;; "undigest" "mail/undigest.el" (13475 35727))
14392 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/undigest.el
14393
14394 (autoload (quote undigestify-rmail-message) "undigest" "\
14395 Break up a digest message into its constituent messages.
14396 Leaves original message, deleted, before the undigestified messages." t nil)
14397
14398 (autoload (quote unforward-rmail-message) "undigest" "\
14399 Extract a forwarded message from the containing message.
14400 This puts the forwarded message into a separate rmail message
14401 following the containing message." t nil)
14402
14403 ;;;***
14404 \f
14405 ;;;### (autoloads (unrmail batch-unrmail) "unrmail" "mail/unrmail.el"
14406 ;;;;;; (13229 29740))
14407 ;;; Generated autoloads from mail/unrmail.el
14408
14409 (autoload (quote batch-unrmail) "unrmail" "\
14410 Convert Rmail files to system inbox format.
14411 Specify the input Rmail file names as command line arguments.
14412 For each Rmail file, the corresponding output file name
14413 is made by adding `.mail' at the end.
14414 For example, invoke `emacs -batch -f batch-unrmail RMAIL'." nil nil)
14415
14416 (autoload (quote unrmail) "unrmail" "\
14417 Convert Rmail file FILE to system inbox format file TO-FILE." t nil)
14418
14419 ;;;***
14420 \f
14421 ;;;### (autoloads (ask-user-about-supersession-threat ask-user-about-lock)
14422 ;;;;;; "userlock" "userlock.el" (14365 43297))
14423 ;;; Generated autoloads from userlock.el
14424
14425 (autoload (quote ask-user-about-lock) "userlock" "\
14426 Ask user what to do when he wants to edit FILE but it is locked by OPPONENT.
14427 This function has a choice of three things to do:
14428 do (signal 'file-locked (list FILE OPPONENT))
14429 to refrain from editing the file
14430 return t (grab the lock on the file)
14431 return nil (edit the file even though it is locked).
14432 You can redefine this function to choose among those three alternatives
14433 in any way you like." nil nil)
14434
14435 (autoload (quote ask-user-about-supersession-threat) "userlock" "\
14436 Ask a user who is about to modify an obsolete buffer what to do.
14437 This function has two choices: it can return, in which case the modification
14438 of the buffer will proceed, or it can (signal 'file-supersession (file)),
14439 in which case the proposed buffer modification will not be made.
14440
14441 You can rewrite this to use any criterion you like to choose which one to do.
14442 The buffer in question is current when this function is called." nil nil)
14443
14444 ;;;***
14445 \f
14446 ;;;### (autoloads (vc-annotate vc-update-change-log vc-rename-file
14447 ;;;;;; vc-cancel-version vc-revert-buffer vc-print-log vc-retrieve-snapshot
14448 ;;;;;; vc-create-snapshot vc-directory vc-resolve-conflicts vc-merge
14449 ;;;;;; vc-insert-headers vc-version-other-window vc-diff vc-register
14450 ;;;;;; vc-next-action edit-vc-file with-vc-file vc-annotate-mode-hook
14451 ;;;;;; vc-before-checkin-hook vc-checkin-hook) "vc" "vc.el" (14460
14452 ;;;;;; 19361))
14453 ;;; Generated autoloads from vc.el
14454
14455 (defvar vc-checkin-hook nil "\
14456 *Normal hook (list of functions) run after a checkin is done.
14457 See `run-hooks'.")
14458
14459 (defvar vc-before-checkin-hook nil "\
14460 *Normal hook (list of functions) run before a file gets checked in.
14461 See `run-hooks'.")
14462
14463 (defvar vc-annotate-mode-hook nil "\
14464 *Hooks to run when VC-Annotate mode is turned on.")
14465
14466 (autoload (quote with-vc-file) "vc" "\
14467 Execute BODY, checking out a writable copy of FILE first if necessary.
14468 After BODY has been executed, check-in FILE with COMMENT (a string).
14469 FILE is passed through `expand-file-name'; BODY executed within
14470 `save-excursion'. If FILE is not under version control, or locked by
14471 somebody else, signal error." nil (quote macro))
14472
14473 (autoload (quote edit-vc-file) "vc" "\
14474 Edit FILE under version control, executing BODY. Checkin with COMMENT.
14475 This macro uses `with-vc-file', passing args to it.
14476 However, before executing BODY, find FILE, and after BODY, save buffer." nil (quote macro))
14477
14478 (autoload (quote vc-next-action) "vc" "\
14479 Do the next logical checkin or checkout operation on the current file.
14480 If you call this from within a VC dired buffer with no files marked,
14481 it will operate on the file in the current line.
14482 If you call this from within a VC dired buffer, and one or more
14483 files are marked, it will accept a log message and then operate on
14484 each one. The log message will be used as a comment for any register
14485 or checkin operations, but ignored when doing checkouts. Attempted
14486 lock steals will raise an error.
14487 A prefix argument lets you specify the version number to use.
14488
14489 For RCS and SCCS files:
14490 If the file is not already registered, this registers it for version
14491 control.
14492 If the file is registered and not locked by anyone, this checks out
14493 a writable and locked file ready for editing.
14494 If the file is checked out and locked by the calling user, this
14495 first checks to see if the file has changed since checkout. If not,
14496 it performs a revert.
14497 If the file has been changed, this pops up a buffer for entry
14498 of a log message; when the message has been entered, it checks in the
14499 resulting changes along with the log message as change commentary. If
14500 the variable `vc-keep-workfiles' is non-nil (which is its default), a
14501 read-only copy of the changed file is left in place afterwards.
14502 If the file is registered and locked by someone else, you are given
14503 the option to steal the lock.
14504
14505 For CVS files:
14506 If the file is not already registered, this registers it for version
14507 control. This does a \"cvs add\", but no \"cvs commit\".
14508 If the file is added but not committed, it is committed.
14509 If your working file is changed, but the repository file is
14510 unchanged, this pops up a buffer for entry of a log message; when the
14511 message has been entered, it checks in the resulting changes along
14512 with the logmessage as change commentary. A writable file is retained.
14513 If the repository file is changed, you are asked if you want to
14514 merge in the changes into your working copy." t nil)
14515
14516 (autoload (quote vc-register) "vc" "\
14517 Register the current file into your version-control system." t nil)
14518
14519 (autoload (quote vc-diff) "vc" "\
14520 Display diffs between file versions.
14521 Normally this compares the current file and buffer with the most recent
14522 checked in version of that file. This uses no arguments.
14523 With a prefix argument, it reads the file name to use
14524 and two version designators specifying which versions to compare." t nil)
14525
14526 (autoload (quote vc-version-other-window) "vc" "\
14527 Visit version REV of the current buffer in another window.
14528 If the current buffer is named `F', the version is named `F.~REV~'.
14529 If `F.~REV~' already exists, it is used instead of being re-created." t nil)
14530
14531 (autoload (quote vc-insert-headers) "vc" "\
14532 Insert headers in a file for use with your version-control system.
14533 Headers desired are inserted at point, and are pulled from
14534 the variable `vc-header-alist'." t nil)
14535
14536 (autoload (quote vc-merge) "vc" nil t nil)
14537
14538 (autoload (quote vc-resolve-conflicts) "vc" "\
14539 Invoke ediff to resolve conflicts in the current buffer.
14540 The conflicts must be marked with rcsmerge conflict markers." t nil)
14541
14542 (autoload (quote vc-directory) "vc" nil t nil)
14543
14544 (autoload (quote vc-create-snapshot) "vc" "\
14545 Make a snapshot called NAME.
14546 The snapshot is made from all registered files at or below the current
14547 directory. For each file, the version level of its latest
14548 version becomes part of the named configuration." t nil)
14549
14550 (autoload (quote vc-retrieve-snapshot) "vc" "\
14551 Retrieve the snapshot called NAME, or latest versions if NAME is empty.
14552 When retrieving a snapshot, there must not be any locked files at or below
14553 the current directory. If none are locked, all registered files are
14554 checked out (unlocked) at their version levels in the snapshot NAME.
14555 If NAME is the empty string, all registered files that are not currently
14556 locked are updated to the latest versions." t nil)
14557
14558 (autoload (quote vc-print-log) "vc" "\
14559 List the change log of the current buffer in a window." t nil)
14560
14561 (autoload (quote vc-revert-buffer) "vc" "\
14562 Revert the current buffer's file back to the version it was based on.
14563 This asks for confirmation if the buffer contents are not identical
14564 to that version. Note that for RCS and CVS, this function does not
14565 automatically pick up newer changes found in the master file;
14566 use C-u \\[vc-next-action] RET to do so." t nil)
14567
14568 (autoload (quote vc-cancel-version) "vc" "\
14569 Get rid of most recently checked in version of this file.
14570 A prefix argument means do not revert the buffer afterwards." t nil)
14571
14572 (autoload (quote vc-rename-file) "vc" "\
14573 Rename file OLD to NEW, and rename its master file likewise." t nil)
14574
14575 (autoload (quote vc-update-change-log) "vc" "\
14576 Find change log file and add entries from recent RCS/CVS logs.
14577 Normally, find log entries for all registered files in the default
14578 directory using `rcs2log', which finds CVS logs preferentially.
14579 The mark is left at the end of the text prepended to the change log.
14580
14581 With prefix arg of C-u, only find log entries for the current buffer's file.
14582
14583 With any numeric prefix arg, find log entries for all currently visited
14584 files that are under version control. This puts all the entries in the
14585 log for the default directory, which may not be appropriate.
14586
14587 From a program, any arguments are assumed to be filenames and are
14588 passed to the `rcs2log' script after massaging to be relative to the
14589 default directory." t nil)
14590
14591 (autoload (quote vc-annotate) "vc" "\
14592 Display the result of the CVS `annotate' command using colors.
14593 New lines are displayed in red, old in blue.
14594 A prefix argument specifies a factor for stretching the time scale.
14595
14596 `vc-annotate-menu-elements' customizes the menu elements of the
14597 mode-specific menu. `vc-annotate-color-map' and
14598 `vc-annotate-very-old-color' defines the mapping of time to
14599 colors. `vc-annotate-background' specifies the background color." t nil)
14600
14601 ;;;***
14602 \f
14603 ;;;### (autoloads (vhdl-mode) "vhdl-mode" "progmodes/vhdl-mode.el"
14604 ;;;;;; (14385 10956))
14605 ;;; Generated autoloads from progmodes/vhdl-mode.el
14606
14607 (autoload (quote vhdl-mode) "vhdl-mode" "\
14608 Major mode for editing VHDL code.
14609
14610 Usage:
14611 ------
14612
14613 - TEMPLATE INSERTION (electrification): After typing a VHDL keyword and
14614 entering `\\[vhdl-electric-space]', you are prompted for arguments while a template is generated
14615 for that VHDL construct. Typing `\\[vhdl-electric-return]' or `\\[keyboard-quit]' at the first (mandatory)
14616 prompt aborts the current template generation. Optional arguments are
14617 indicated by square brackets and removed if the queried string is left empty.
14618 Prompts for mandatory arguments remain in the code if the queried string is
14619 left empty. They can be queried again by `\\[vhdl-template-search-prompt]'.
14620 Typing `\\[just-one-space]' after a keyword inserts a space without calling the template
14621 generator. Automatic template generation (i.e. electrification) can be
14622 disabled (enabled) by typing `\\[vhdl-electric-mode]' or by setting custom variable
14623 `vhdl-electric-mode' (see CUSTOMIZATION).
14624 Enabled electrification is indicated by `/e' in the modeline.
14625 Template generators can be invoked from the VHDL menu, by key bindings, by
14626 typing `C-c C-i C-c' and choosing a construct, or by typing the keyword (i.e.
14627 first word of menu entry not in parenthesis) and `\\[vhdl-electric-space]'.
14628 The following abbreviations can also be used:
14629 arch, attr, cond, conf, comp, cons, func, inst, pack, sig, var.
14630 Template styles can be customized in customization group `vhdl-electric'
14631 (see CUSTOMIZATION).
14632
14633 - HEADER INSERTION: A file header can be inserted by `\\[vhdl-template-header]'. A
14634 file footer (template at the end of the file) can be inserted by
14635 `\\[vhdl-template-footer]'. See customization group `vhdl-header'.
14636
14637 - STUTTERING: Double striking of some keys inserts cumbersome VHDL syntax
14638 elements. Stuttering can be disabled (enabled) by typing `\\[vhdl-stutter-mode]' or by
14639 variable `vhdl-stutter-mode'. Enabled stuttering is indicated by `/s' in
14640 the modeline. The stuttering keys and their effects are:
14641 ;; --> \" : \" [ --> ( -- --> comment
14642 ;;; --> \" := \" [[ --> [ --CR --> comment-out code
14643 .. --> \" => \" ] --> ) --- --> horizontal line
14644 ,, --> \" <= \" ]] --> ] ---- --> display comment
14645 == --> \" == \" '' --> \\\"
14646
14647 - WORD COMPLETION: Typing `\\[vhdl-electric-tab]' after a (not completed) word looks for a VHDL
14648 keyword or a word in the buffer that starts alike, inserts it and adjusts
14649 case. Re-typing `\\[vhdl-electric-tab]' toggles through alternative word completions.
14650 This also works in the minibuffer (i.e. in template generator prompts).
14651 Typing `\\[vhdl-electric-tab]' after `(' looks for and inserts complete parenthesized
14652 expressions (e.g. for array index ranges). All keywords as well as standard
14653 types and subprograms of VHDL have predefined abbreviations (e.g. type \"std\"
14654 and `\\[vhdl-electric-tab]' will toggle through all standard types beginning with \"std\").
14655
14656 Typing `\\[vhdl-electric-tab]' after a non-word character indents the line if at the beginning
14657 of a line (i.e. no preceding non-blank characters),and inserts a tabulator
14658 stop otherwise. `\\[tab-to-tab-stop]' always inserts a tabulator stop.
14659
14660 - COMMENTS:
14661 `--' puts a single comment.
14662 `---' draws a horizontal line for separating code segments.
14663 `----' inserts a display comment, i.e. two horizontal lines with a
14664 comment in between.
14665 `--CR' comments out code on that line. Re-hitting CR comments out
14666 following lines.
14667 `\\[vhdl-comment-uncomment-region]' comments out a region if not commented out,
14668 uncomments a region if already commented out.
14669
14670 You are prompted for comments after object definitions (i.e. signals,
14671 variables, constants, ports) and after subprogram and process specifications
14672 if variable `vhdl-prompt-for-comments' is non-nil. Comments are
14673 automatically inserted as additional labels (e.g. after begin statements) and
14674 as help comments if `vhdl-self-insert-comments' is non-nil.
14675 Inline comments (i.e. comments after a piece of code on the same line) are
14676 indented at least to `vhdl-inline-comment-column'. Comments go at maximum to
14677 `vhdl-end-comment-column'. `\\[vhdl-electric-return]' after a space in a comment will open a
14678 new comment line. Typing beyond `vhdl-end-comment-column' in a comment
14679 automatically opens a new comment line. `\\[fill-paragraph]' re-fills
14680 multi-line comments.
14681
14682 - INDENTATION: `\\[vhdl-electric-tab]' indents a line if at the beginning of the line.
14683 The amount of indentation is specified by variable `vhdl-basic-offset'.
14684 `\\[vhdl-indent-line]' always indents the current line (is bound to `TAB' if variable
14685 `vhdl-intelligent-tab' is nil). Indentation can be done for an entire region
14686 (`\\[vhdl-indent-region]') or buffer (menu). Argument and port lists are indented normally
14687 (nil) or relative to the opening parenthesis (non-nil) according to variable
14688 `vhdl-argument-list-indent'. If variable `vhdl-indent-tabs-mode' is nil,
14689 spaces are used instead of tabs. `\\[tabify]' and `\\[untabify]' allow
14690 to convert spaces to tabs and vice versa.
14691
14692 - ALIGNMENT: The alignment functions align operators, keywords, and inline
14693 comment to beautify argument lists, port maps, etc. `\\[vhdl-align-group]' aligns a group
14694 of consecutive lines separated by blank lines. `\\[vhdl-align-noindent-region]' aligns an
14695 entire region. If variable `vhdl-align-groups' is non-nil, groups of code
14696 lines separated by empty lines are aligned individually. `\\[vhdl-align-inline-comment-group]' aligns
14697 inline comments for a group of lines, and `\\[vhdl-align-inline-comment-region]' for a region.
14698 Some templates are automatically aligned after generation if custom variable
14699 `vhdl-auto-align' is non-nil.
14700 `\\[vhdl-fixup-whitespace-region]' fixes up whitespace in a region. That is, operator symbols
14701 are surrounded by one space, and multiple spaces are eliminated.
14702
14703 - PORT TRANSLATION: Generic and port clauses from entity or component
14704 declarations can be copied (`\\[vhdl-port-copy]') and pasted as entity and
14705 component declarations, as component instantiations and corresponding
14706 internal constants and signals, as a generic map with constants as actual
14707 parameters, and as a test bench (menu).
14708 A clause with several generic/port names on the same line can be flattened
14709 (`\\[vhdl-port-flatten]') so that only one name per line exists. Names for actual
14710 ports, instances, test benches, and design-under-test instances can be
14711 derived from existing names according to variables `vhdl-...-name'.
14712 Variables `vhdl-testbench-...' allow the insertion of additional templates
14713 into a test bench. New files are created for the test bench entity and
14714 architecture according to variable `vhdl-testbench-create-files'.
14715 See customization group `vhdl-port'.
14716
14717 - TEST BENCH GENERATION: See PORT TRANSLATION.
14718
14719 - KEY BINDINGS: Key bindings (`C-c ...') exist for most commands (see in
14720 menu).
14721
14722 - VHDL MENU: All commands can be invoked from the VHDL menu.
14723
14724 - FILE BROWSER: The speedbar allows browsing of directories and file contents.
14725 It can be accessed from the VHDL menu and is automatically opened if
14726 variable `vhdl-speedbar' is non-nil.
14727 In speedbar, open files and directories with `mouse-2' on the name and
14728 browse/rescan their contents with `mouse-2'/`S-mouse-2' on the `+'.
14729
14730 - DESIGN HIERARCHY BROWSER: The speedbar can also be used for browsing the
14731 hierarchy of design units contained in the source files of the current
14732 directory or in the source files/directories specified for a project (see
14733 variable `vhdl-project-alist').
14734 The speedbar can be switched between file and hierarchy browsing mode in the
14735 VHDL menu or by typing `f' and `h' in speedbar.
14736 In speedbar, open design units with `mouse-2' on the name and browse their
14737 hierarchy with `mouse-2' on the `+'. The hierarchy can be rescanned and
14738 ports directly be copied from entities by using the speedbar menu.
14739
14740 - PROJECTS: Projects can be defined in variable `vhdl-project-alist' and a
14741 current project be selected using variable `vhdl-project' (permanently) or
14742 from the menu (temporarily). For each project, a title string (for the file
14743 headers) and source files/directories (for the hierarchy browser) can be
14744 specified.
14745
14746 - SPECIAL MENUES: As an alternative to the speedbar, an index menu can
14747 be added (set variable `vhdl-index-menu' to non-nil) or made accessible
14748 as a mouse menu (e.g. add \"(global-set-key '[S-down-mouse-3] 'imenu)\" to
14749 your start-up file) for browsing the file contents. Also, a source file menu
14750 can be added (set variable `vhdl-source-file-menu' to non-nil) for browsing
14751 the current directory for VHDL source files.
14752
14753 - SOURCE FILE COMPILATION: The syntax of the current buffer can be analyzed
14754 by calling a VHDL compiler (menu, `\\[vhdl-compile]'). The compiler to be used is
14755 specified by variable `vhdl-compiler'. The available compilers are listed
14756 in variable `vhdl-compiler-alist' including all required compilation command,
14757 destination directory, and error message syntax information. New compilers
14758 can be added. Additional compile command options can be set in variable
14759 `vhdl-compiler-options'.
14760 An entire hierarchy of source files can be compiled by the `make' command
14761 (menu, `\\[vhdl-make]'). This only works if an appropriate Makefile exists.
14762 The make command itself as well as a command to generate a Makefile can also
14763 be specified in variable `vhdl-compiler-alist'.
14764
14765 - VHDL STANDARDS: The VHDL standards to be used are specified in variable
14766 `vhdl-standard'. Available standards are: VHDL'87/'93, VHDL-AMS,
14767 Math Packages.
14768
14769 - KEYWORD CASE: Lower and upper case for keywords and standardized types,
14770 attributes, and enumeration values is supported. If the variable
14771 `vhdl-upper-case-keywords' is set to non-nil, keywords can be typed in lower
14772 case and are converted into upper case automatically (not for types,
14773 attributes, and enumeration values). The case of keywords, types,
14774 attributes,and enumeration values can be fixed for an entire region (menu)
14775 or buffer (`\\[vhdl-fix-case-buffer]') according to the variables
14776 `vhdl-upper-case-{keywords,types,attributes,enum-values}'.
14777
14778 - HIGHLIGHTING (fontification): Keywords and standardized types, attributes,
14779 enumeration values, and function names (controlled by variable
14780 `vhdl-highlight-keywords'), as well as comments, strings, and template
14781 prompts are highlighted using different colors. Unit, subprogram, signal,
14782 variable, constant, parameter and generic/port names in declarations as well
14783 as labels are highlighted if variable `vhdl-highlight-names' is non-nil.
14784
14785 Additional reserved words or words with a forbidden syntax (e.g. words that
14786 should be avoided) can be specified in variable `vhdl-forbidden-words' or
14787 `vhdl-forbidden-syntax' and be highlighted in a warning color (variable
14788 `vhdl-highlight-forbidden-words'). Verilog keywords are highlighted as
14789 forbidden words if variable `vhdl-highlight-verilog-keywords' is non-nil.
14790
14791 Words with special syntax can be highlighted by specifying their syntax and
14792 color in variable `vhdl-special-syntax-alist' and by setting variable
14793 `vhdl-highlight-special-words' to non-nil. This allows to establish some
14794 naming conventions (e.g. to distinguish different kinds of signals or other
14795 objects by using name suffices) and to support them visually.
14796
14797 Variable `vhdl-highlight-case-sensitive' can be set to non-nil in order to
14798 support case-sensitive highlighting. However, keywords are then only
14799 highlighted if written in lower case.
14800
14801 Code between \"translate_off\" and \"translate_on\" pragmas is highlighted
14802 using a different background color if variable `vhdl-highlight-translate-off'
14803 is non-nil.
14804
14805 All colors can be customized by command `\\[customize-face]'.
14806 For highlighting of matching parenthesis, see customization group
14807 `paren-showing' (`\\[customize-group]').
14808
14809 - USER MODELS: VHDL models (templates) can be specified by the user and made
14810 accessible in the menu, through key bindings (`C-c C-m ...'), or by keyword
14811 electrification. See custom variable `vhdl-model-alist'.
14812
14813 - HIDE/SHOW: The code of entire VHDL design units can be hidden using the
14814 `Hide/Show' menu or by pressing `S-mouse-2' within the code (variable
14815 `vhdl-hideshow-menu').
14816
14817 - PRINTING: Postscript printing with different faces (an optimized set of
14818 faces is used if `vhdl-print-customize-faces' is non-nil) or colors
14819 (if `ps-print-color-p' is non-nil) is possible using the standard Emacs
14820 postscript printing commands. Variable `vhdl-print-two-column' defines
14821 appropriate default settings for nice landscape two-column printing. The
14822 paper format can be set by variable `ps-paper-type'. Do not forget to
14823 switch `ps-print-color-p' to nil for printing on black-and-white printers.
14824
14825 - CUSTOMIZATION: All variables can easily be customized using the `Customize'
14826 menu entry or `\\[customize-option]' (`\\[customize-group]' for groups).
14827 Some customizations only take effect after some action (read the NOTE in
14828 the variable documentation). Customization can also be done globally (i.e.
14829 site-wide, read the INSTALL file).
14830
14831 - FILE EXTENSIONS: As default, files with extensions \".vhd\" and \".vhdl\" are
14832 automatically recognized as VHDL source files. To add an extension \".xxx\",
14833 add the following line to your Emacs start-up file (`.emacs'):
14834 (setq auto-mode-alist (cons '(\"\\\\.xxx\\\\'\" . vhdl-mode) auto-mode-alist))
14835
14836 - HINTS:
14837 - Type `\\[keyboard-quit] \\[keyboard-quit]' to interrupt long operations or if Emacs hangs.
14838
14839
14840 Maintenance:
14841 ------------
14842
14843 To submit a bug report, enter `\\[vhdl-submit-bug-report]' within VHDL Mode.
14844 Add a description of the problem and include a reproducible test case.
14845
14846 Questions and enhancement requests can be sent to <vhdl-mode@geocities.com>.
14847
14848 The `vhdl-mode-announce' mailing list informs about new VHDL Mode releases.
14849 The `vhdl-mode-victims' mailing list informs about new VHDL Mode beta releases.
14850 You are kindly invited to participate in beta testing. Subscribe to above
14851 mailing lists by sending an email to <vhdl-mode@geocities.com>.
14852
14853 VHDL Mode is officially distributed on the Emacs VHDL Mode Home Page
14854 <http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Peaks/8287>, where the latest
14855 version and release notes can be found.
14856
14857
14858 Bugs and Limitations:
14859 ---------------------
14860
14861 - Re-indenting large regions or expressions can be slow.
14862 - Indentation bug in simultaneous if- and case-statements (VHDL-AMS).
14863 - Hideshow does not work under XEmacs.
14864 - Index menu and file tagging in speedbar do not work under XEmacs.
14865 - Parsing compilation error messages for Ikos and Viewlogic VHDL compilers
14866 does not work under XEmacs.
14867
14868
14869 The VHDL Mode Maintainers
14870 Reto Zimmermann and Rod Whitby
14871
14872 Key bindings:
14873 -------------
14874
14875 \\{vhdl-mode-map}" t nil)
14876
14877 ;;;***
14878 \f
14879 ;;;### (autoloads (vi-mode) "vi" "emulation/vi.el" (13229 29773))
14880 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/vi.el
14881
14882 (autoload (quote vi-mode) "vi" "\
14883 Major mode that acts like the `vi' editor.
14884 The purpose of this mode is to provide you the combined power of vi (namely,
14885 the \"cross product\" effect of commands and repeat last changes) and Emacs.
14886
14887 This command redefines nearly all keys to look like vi commands.
14888 It records the previous major mode, and any vi command for input
14889 \(`i', `a', `s', etc.) switches back to that mode.
14890 Thus, ordinary Emacs (in whatever major mode you had been using)
14891 is \"input\" mode as far as vi is concerned.
14892
14893 To get back into vi from \"input\" mode, you must issue this command again.
14894 Therefore, it is recommended that you assign it to a key.
14895
14896 Major differences between this mode and real vi :
14897
14898 * Limitations and unsupported features
14899 - Search patterns with line offset (e.g. /pat/+3 or /pat/z.) are
14900 not supported.
14901 - Ex commands are not implemented; try ':' to get some hints.
14902 - No line undo (i.e. the 'U' command), but multi-undo is a standard feature.
14903
14904 * Modifications
14905 - The stopping positions for some point motion commands (word boundary,
14906 pattern search) are slightly different from standard 'vi'.
14907 Also, no automatic wrap around at end of buffer for pattern searching.
14908 - Since changes are done in two steps (deletion then insertion), you need
14909 to undo twice to completely undo a change command. But this is not needed
14910 for undoing a repeated change command.
14911 - No need to set/unset 'magic', to search for a string with regular expr
14912 in it just put a prefix arg for the search commands. Replace cmds too.
14913 - ^R is bound to incremental backward search, so use ^L to redraw screen.
14914
14915 * Extensions
14916 - Some standard (or modified) Emacs commands were integrated, such as
14917 incremental search, query replace, transpose objects, and keyboard macros.
14918 - In command state, ^X links to the 'ctl-x-map', and ESC can be linked to
14919 esc-map or set undefined. These can give you the full power of Emacs.
14920 - See vi-com-map for those keys that are extensions to standard vi, e.g.
14921 `vi-name-last-change-or-macro', `vi-verify-spelling', `vi-locate-def',
14922 `vi-mark-region', and 'vi-quote-words'. Some of them are quite handy.
14923 - Use \\[vi-switch-mode] to switch among different modes quickly.
14924
14925 Syntax table and abbrevs while in vi mode remain as they were in Emacs." t nil)
14926
14927 ;;;***
14928 \f
14929 ;;;### (autoloads (viqr-pre-write-conversion viqr-post-read-conversion
14930 ;;;;;; viet-encode-viqr-buffer viet-encode-viqr-region viet-decode-viqr-buffer
14931 ;;;;;; viet-decode-viqr-region setup-vietnamese-environment viet-encode-viscii-char)
14932 ;;;;;; "viet-util" "language/viet-util.el" (13876 11275))
14933 ;;; Generated autoloads from language/viet-util.el
14934
14935 (autoload (quote viet-encode-viscii-char) "viet-util" "\
14936 Return VISCII character code of CHAR if appropriate." nil nil)
14937
14938 (autoload (quote setup-vietnamese-environment) "viet-util" "\
14939 Setup multilingual environment (MULE) for Vietnamese VISCII users." t nil)
14940
14941 (autoload (quote viet-decode-viqr-region) "viet-util" "\
14942 Convert `VIQR' mnemonics of the current region to Vietnamese characaters.
14943 When called from a program, expects two arguments,
14944 positions (integers or markers) specifying the stretch of the region." t nil)
14945
14946 (autoload (quote viet-decode-viqr-buffer) "viet-util" "\
14947 Convert `VIQR' mnemonics of the current buffer to Vietnamese characaters." t nil)
14948
14949 (autoload (quote viet-encode-viqr-region) "viet-util" "\
14950 Convert Vietnamese characaters of the current region to `VIQR' mnemonics.
14951 When called from a program, expects two arguments,
14952 positions (integers or markers) specifying the stretch of the region." t nil)
14953
14954 (autoload (quote viet-encode-viqr-buffer) "viet-util" "\
14955 Convert Vietnamese characaters of the current buffer to `VIQR' mnemonics." t nil)
14956
14957 (autoload (quote viqr-post-read-conversion) "viet-util" nil nil nil)
14958
14959 (autoload (quote viqr-pre-write-conversion) "viet-util" nil nil nil)
14960
14961 ;;;***
14962 \f
14963 ;;;### (autoloads (View-exit-and-edit view-mode-enter view-mode view-buffer-other-frame
14964 ;;;;;; view-buffer-other-window view-buffer view-file-other-frame
14965 ;;;;;; view-file-other-window view-file) "view" "view.el" (14256
14966 ;;;;;; 21984))
14967 ;;; Generated autoloads from view.el
14968
14969 (defvar view-mode nil "\
14970 Non-nil if View mode is enabled.
14971 Don't change this variable directly, you must change it by one of the
14972 functions that enable or disable view mode.")
14973
14974 (make-variable-buffer-local (quote view-mode))
14975
14976 (autoload (quote view-file) "view" "\
14977 View FILE in View mode, returning to previous buffer when done.
14978 Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available; instead,
14979 a special set of commands (mostly letters and punctuation)
14980 are defined for moving around in the buffer.
14981 Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
14982 For list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
14983
14984 This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'." t nil)
14985
14986 (autoload (quote view-file-other-window) "view" "\
14987 View FILE in View mode in another window.
14988 Return that window to its previous buffer when done.
14989 Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available; instead,
14990 a special set of commands (mostly letters and punctuation)
14991 are defined for moving around in the buffer.
14992 Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
14993 For list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
14994
14995 This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'." t nil)
14996
14997 (autoload (quote view-file-other-frame) "view" "\
14998 View FILE in View mode in another frame.
14999 Maybe delete other frame and/or return to previous buffer when done.
15000 Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available; instead,
15001 a special set of commands (mostly letters and punctuation)
15002 are defined for moving around in the buffer.
15003 Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
15004 For list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
15005
15006 This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'." t nil)
15007
15008 (autoload (quote view-buffer) "view" "\
15009 View BUFFER in View mode, returning to previous buffer when done.
15010 Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available; instead,
15011 a special set of commands (mostly letters and punctuation)
15012 are defined for moving around in the buffer.
15013 Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
15014 For list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
15015
15016 This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
15017
15018 Optional argument EXIT-ACTION is either nil or a function with buffer as
15019 argument. This function is called when finished viewing buffer.
15020 Use this argument instead of explicitly setting `view-exit-action'." t nil)
15021
15022 (autoload (quote view-buffer-other-window) "view" "\
15023 View BUFFER in View mode in another window.
15024 Return to previous buffer when done, unless optional NOT-RETURN is non-nil.
15025 Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available; instead,
15026 a special set of commands (mostly letters and punctuation)
15027 are defined for moving around in the buffer.
15028 Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
15029 For list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
15030
15031 This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
15032
15033 Optional argument EXIT-ACTION is either nil or a function with buffer as
15034 argument. This function is called when finished viewing buffer.
15035 Use this argument instead of explicitly setting `view-exit-action'." t nil)
15036
15037 (autoload (quote view-buffer-other-frame) "view" "\
15038 View BUFFER in View mode in another frame.
15039 Return to previous buffer when done, unless optional NOT-RETURN is non-nil.
15040 Emacs commands editing the buffer contents are not available; instead,
15041 a special set of commands (mostly letters and punctuation)
15042 are defined for moving around in the buffer.
15043 Space scrolls forward, Delete scrolls backward.
15044 For list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
15045
15046 This command runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'.
15047
15048 Optional argument EXIT-ACTION is either nil or a function with buffer as
15049 argument. This function is called when finished viewing buffer.
15050 Use this argument instead of explicitly setting `view-exit-action'." t nil)
15051
15052 (autoload (quote view-mode) "view" "\
15053 Toggle View mode, a minor mode for viewing text but not editing it.
15054 With arg, turn View mode on iff arg is positive.
15055
15056 Emacs commands that do not change the buffer contents are available as usual.
15057 Kill commands insert text in kill buffers but do not delete. Other commands
15058 \(among them most letters and punctuation) beep and tell that the buffer is
15059 read-only.
15060 \\<view-mode-map>
15061 The following additional commands are provided. Most commands take prefix
15062 arguments. Page commands default to \"page size\" lines which is almost a whole
15063 window full, or number of lines set by \\[View-scroll-page-forward-set-page-size] or \\[View-scroll-page-backward-set-page-size]. Half page commands default to
15064 and set \"half page size\" lines which initially is half a window full. Search
15065 commands default to a repeat count of one.
15066
15067 H, h, ? This message.
15068 Digits provide prefix arguments.
15069 \\[negative-argument] negative prefix argument.
15070 \\[beginning-of-buffer] move to the beginning of buffer.
15071 > move to the end of buffer.
15072 \\[View-scroll-to-buffer-end] scroll so that buffer end is at last line of window.
15073 SPC scroll forward prefix (default \"page size\") lines.
15074 DEL scroll backward prefix (default \"page size\") lines.
15075 \\[View-scroll-page-forward-set-page-size] like \\[View-scroll-page-forward] except prefix sets \"page size\".
15076 \\[View-scroll-page-backward-set-page-size] like \\[View-scroll-page-backward] except prefix sets \"page size\".
15077 \\[View-scroll-half-page-forward] scroll forward (and if prefix set) \"half page size\" lines.
15078 \\[View-scroll-half-page-backward] scroll backward (and if prefix set) \"half page size\" lines.
15079 RET, LFD scroll forward prefix (default one) line(s).
15080 y scroll backward prefix (default one) line(s).
15081 \\[View-revert-buffer-scroll-page-forward] revert-buffer if necessary and scroll forward.
15082 Use this to view a changing file.
15083 \\[what-line] prints the current line number.
15084 \\[View-goto-percent] goes prefix argument (default 100) percent into buffer.
15085 \\[View-goto-line] goes to line given by prefix argument (default first line).
15086 . set the mark.
15087 x exchanges point and mark.
15088 \\[View-back-to-mark] return to mark and pops mark ring.
15089 Mark ring is pushed at start of every successful search and when
15090 jump to line occurs. The mark is set on jump to buffer start or end.
15091 \\[point-to-register] save current position in character register.
15092 ' go to position saved in character register.
15093 s do forward incremental search.
15094 r do reverse incremental search.
15095 \\[View-search-regexp-forward] searches forward for regular expression, starting after current page.
15096 ! and @ have a special meaning at the beginning of the regexp.
15097 ! means search for a line with no match for regexp. @ means start
15098 search at beginning (end for backward search) of buffer.
15099 \\ searches backward for regular expression, starting before current page.
15100 \\[View-search-last-regexp-forward] searches forward for last regular expression.
15101 p searches backward for last regular expression.
15102 \\[View-quit] quit View mode, trying to restore window and buffer to previous state.
15103 \\[View-quit] is the normal way to leave view mode.
15104 \\[View-exit] exit View mode but stay in current buffer. Use this if you started
15105 viewing a buffer (file) and find out you want to edit it.
15106 \\[View-exit-and-edit] exit View mode and make the current buffer editable.
15107 \\[View-quit-all] quit View mode, trying to restore windows and buffer to previous state.
15108 \\[View-leave] quit View mode and maybe switch buffers, but don't kill this buffer.
15109 \\[View-kill-and-leave] quit View mode, kill current buffer and go back to other buffer.
15110
15111 The effect of \\[View-leave] , \\[View-quit] and \\[View-kill-and-leave] depends on how view-mode was entered. If it was
15112 entered by view-file, view-file-other-window or view-file-other-frame (\\[view-file],
15113 \\[view-file-other-window], \\[view-file-other-frame] or the dired mode v command), then \\[View-quit] will try to kill the
15114 current buffer. If view-mode was entered from another buffer as is done by
15115 View-buffer, View-buffer-other-window, View-buffer-other frame, View-file,
15116 View-file-other-window or View-file-other-frame then \\[view-leave] , \\[view-quit] and \\[view-kill-and-leave] will return
15117 to that buffer.
15118
15119 Entry to view-mode runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'." t nil)
15120
15121 (autoload (quote view-mode-enter) "view" "\
15122 Enter View mode and set up exit from view mode depending on optional arguments.
15123 If RETURN-TO is non-nil it is added as an element to the buffer local alist
15124 `view-return-to-alist'.
15125 Save EXIT-ACTION in buffer local variable `view-exit-action'.
15126 It should be either nil or a function that takes a buffer as argument.
15127 This function will be called by `view-mode-exit'.
15128
15129 RETURN-TO is either nil, meaning do nothing when exiting view mode, or
15130 it has the format (WINDOW OLD-WINDOW . OLD-BUF-INFO).
15131 WINDOW is a window used for viewing.
15132 OLD-WINDOW is nil or the window to select after viewing.
15133 OLD-BUF-INFO tells what to do with WINDOW when exiting. It is one of:
15134 1) nil Do nothing.
15135 2) t Delete WINDOW or, if it is the only window, its frame.
15136 3) (OLD-BUFF START POINT) Display buffer OLD-BUFF with displayed text
15137 starting at START and point at POINT in WINDOW.
15138 4) quit-window Do quit-window in WINDOW.
15139
15140 For list of all View commands, type H or h while viewing.
15141
15142 This function runs the normal hook `view-mode-hook'." nil nil)
15143
15144 (autoload (quote View-exit-and-edit) "view" "\
15145 Exit View mode and make the current buffer editable." t nil)
15146
15147 ;;;***
15148 \f
15149 ;;;### (autoloads (vip-mode) "vip" "emulation/vip.el" (13650 13703))
15150 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/vip.el
15151
15152 (autoload (quote vip-mode) "vip" "\
15153 Turn on VIP emulation of VI." t nil)
15154
15155 ;;;***
15156 \f
15157 ;;;### (autoloads (viper-mode toggle-viper-mode) "viper" "emulation/viper.el"
15158 ;;;;;; (14367 2196))
15159 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/viper.el
15160
15161 (autoload (quote toggle-viper-mode) "viper" "\
15162 Toggle Viper on/off.
15163 If Viper is enabled, turn it off. Otherwise, turn it on." t nil)
15164
15165 (autoload (quote viper-mode) "viper" "\
15166 Turn on Viper emulation of Vi." t nil)
15167
15168 ;;;***
15169 \f
15170 ;;;### (autoloads (webjump) "webjump" "webjump.el" (14223 54012))
15171 ;;; Generated autoloads from webjump.el
15172
15173 (autoload (quote webjump) "webjump" "\
15174 Jumps to a Web site from a programmable hotlist.
15175
15176 See the documentation for the `webjump-sites' variable for how to customize the
15177 hotlist.
15178
15179 Please submit bug reports and other feedback to the author, Neil W. Van Dyke
15180 <nwv@acm.org>." t nil)
15181
15182 ;;;***
15183 \f
15184 ;;;### (autoloads (which-func-mode which-func-mode-global) "which-func"
15185 ;;;;;; "which-func.el" (14281 33928))
15186 ;;; Generated autoloads from which-func.el
15187
15188 (defvar which-func-mode-global nil "\
15189 *Toggle `which-func-mode' globally.
15190 Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
15191 use either \\[customize] or the function `which-func-mode'.")
15192
15193 (custom-add-to-group (quote which-func) (quote which-func-mode-global) (quote custom-variable))
15194
15195 (custom-add-load (quote which-func-mode-global) (quote which-func))
15196
15197 (defalias (quote which-function-mode) (quote which-func-mode))
15198
15199 (autoload (quote which-func-mode) "which-func" "\
15200 Toggle Which Function mode, globally.
15201 When Which Function mode is enabled, the current function name is
15202 continuously displayed in the mode line, in certain major modes.
15203
15204 With prefix arg, turn Which Function mode on iff arg is positive,
15205 and off otherwise." t nil)
15206
15207 ;;;***
15208 \f
15209 ;;;### (autoloads (whitespace-describe whitespace-cleanup-region
15210 ;;;;;; whitespace-cleanup whitespace-region whitespace-buffer) "whitespace"
15211 ;;;;;; "whitespace.el" (14364 19064))
15212 ;;; Generated autoloads from whitespace.el
15213
15214 (autoload (quote whitespace-buffer) "whitespace" "\
15215 Find five different types of white spaces in buffer:
15216
15217 1. Leading space (empty lines at the top of a file).
15218 2. Trailing space (empty lines at the end of a file).
15219 3. Indentation space (8 or more spaces, that should be replaced with TABS).
15220 4. Spaces followed by a TAB. (Almost always, we never want that).
15221 5. Spaces or TABS at the end of a line.
15222
15223 Check for whitespace only if this buffer really contains a non-empty file
15224 and:
15225 1. the major mode is one of the whitespace-modes, or
15226 2. `whitespace-buffer' was explicitly called with a prefix argument." t nil)
15227
15228 (autoload (quote whitespace-region) "whitespace" "\
15229 Check a region specified by point and mark for whitespace errors." t nil)
15230
15231 (autoload (quote whitespace-cleanup) "whitespace" "\
15232 Cleanup the five different kinds of whitespace problems.
15233
15234 Use \\[describe-function] whitespace-describe to read a summary of the
15235 whitespace problems." t nil)
15236
15237 (autoload (quote whitespace-cleanup-region) "whitespace" "\
15238 Whitespace cleanup on a region specified by point and mark." t nil)
15239
15240 (autoload (quote whitespace-describe) "whitespace" "\
15241 A summary of whitespaces and what this library can do about them.
15242
15243 The whitespace library is intended to find and help fix five different types
15244 of whitespace problems that commonly exist in source code.
15245
15246 1. Leading space (empty lines at the top of a file).
15247 2. Trailing space (empty lines at the end of a file).
15248 3. Indentation space (8 or more spaces at beginning of line, that should be
15249 replaced with TABS).
15250 4. Spaces followed by a TAB. (Almost always, we never want that).
15251 5. Spaces or TABS at the end of a line.
15252
15253 Whitespace errors are reported in a buffer, and on the modeline.
15254
15255 Modeline will show a W:<x>!<y> to denote a particular type of whitespace,
15256 where `x' and `y' can be one (or more) of:
15257
15258 e - End-of-Line whitespace.
15259 i - Indentation whitespace.
15260 l - Leading whitespace.
15261 s - Space followed by Tab.
15262 t - Trailing whitespace.
15263
15264 If any of the whitespace checks is turned off, the modeline will display a
15265 !<y>.
15266
15267 (since (3) is the most controversial one, here is the rationale: Most
15268 terminal drivers and printer drivers have TAB configured or even
15269 hardcoded to be 8 spaces. (Some of them allow configuration, but almost
15270 always they default to 8.)
15271
15272 Changing tab-width to other than 8 and editing will cause your code to
15273 look different from within Emacs, and say, if you cat it or more it, or
15274 even print it.
15275
15276 Almost all the popular programming modes let you define an offset (like
15277 c-basic-offset or perl-indent-level) to configure the offset, so you
15278 should never have to set your tab-width to be other than 8 in all these
15279 modes. In fact, with an indent level of say, 4, 2 TABS will cause Emacs
15280 to replace your 8 spaces with one (try it). If vi users in your
15281 office complain, tell them to use vim, which distinguishes between
15282 tabstop and shiftwidth (vi equivalent of our offsets), and also ask them
15283 to set smarttab.)
15284
15285 All the above have caused (and will cause) unwanted codeline integration and
15286 merge problems.
15287
15288 whitespace.el will complain if it detects whitespaces on opening a file, and
15289 warn you on closing a file also. (if in case you had inserted any
15290 whitespaces during the process of your editing.)" t nil)
15291
15292 ;;;***
15293 \f
15294 ;;;### (autoloads (widget-minor-mode widget-browse-other-window widget-browse
15295 ;;;;;; widget-browse-at) "wid-browse" "wid-browse.el" (13218 28813))
15296 ;;; Generated autoloads from wid-browse.el
15297
15298 (autoload (quote widget-browse-at) "wid-browse" "\
15299 Browse the widget under point." t nil)
15300
15301 (autoload (quote widget-browse) "wid-browse" "\
15302 Create a widget browser for WIDGET." t nil)
15303
15304 (autoload (quote widget-browse-other-window) "wid-browse" "\
15305 Show widget browser for WIDGET in other window." t nil)
15306
15307 (autoload (quote widget-minor-mode) "wid-browse" "\
15308 Togle minor mode for traversing widgets.
15309 With arg, turn widget mode on if and only if arg is positive." t nil)
15310
15311 ;;;***
15312 \f
15313 ;;;### (autoloads (widget-delete widget-create widget-prompt-value)
15314 ;;;;;; "wid-edit" "wid-edit.el" (14375 20322))
15315 ;;; Generated autoloads from wid-edit.el
15316
15317 (autoload (quote widget-prompt-value) "wid-edit" "\
15318 Prompt for a value matching WIDGET, using PROMPT.
15319 The current value is assumed to be VALUE, unless UNBOUND is non-nil." nil nil)
15320
15321 (autoload (quote widget-create) "wid-edit" "\
15322 Create widget of TYPE.
15323 The optional ARGS are additional keyword arguments." nil nil)
15324
15325 (autoload (quote widget-delete) "wid-edit" "\
15326 Delete WIDGET." nil nil)
15327
15328 ;;;***
15329 \f
15330 ;;;### (autoloads (wordstar-mode) "ws-mode" "emulation/ws-mode.el"
15331 ;;;;;; (13415 51576))
15332 ;;; Generated autoloads from emulation/ws-mode.el
15333
15334 (autoload (quote wordstar-mode) "ws-mode" "\
15335 Major mode with WordStar-like key bindings.
15336
15337 BUGS:
15338 - Help menus with WordStar commands (C-j just calls help-for-help)
15339 are not implemented
15340 - Options for search and replace
15341 - Show markers (C-k h) is somewhat strange
15342 - Search and replace (C-q a) is only available in forward direction
15343
15344 No key bindings beginning with ESC are installed, they will work
15345 Emacs-like.
15346
15347 The key bindings are:
15348
15349 C-a backward-word
15350 C-b fill-paragraph
15351 C-c scroll-up-line
15352 C-d forward-char
15353 C-e previous-line
15354 C-f forward-word
15355 C-g delete-char
15356 C-h backward-char
15357 C-i indent-for-tab-command
15358 C-j help-for-help
15359 C-k ordstar-C-k-map
15360 C-l ws-repeat-search
15361 C-n open-line
15362 C-p quoted-insert
15363 C-r scroll-down-line
15364 C-s backward-char
15365 C-t kill-word
15366 C-u keyboard-quit
15367 C-v overwrite-mode
15368 C-w scroll-down
15369 C-x next-line
15370 C-y kill-complete-line
15371 C-z scroll-up
15372
15373 C-k 0 ws-set-marker-0
15374 C-k 1 ws-set-marker-1
15375 C-k 2 ws-set-marker-2
15376 C-k 3 ws-set-marker-3
15377 C-k 4 ws-set-marker-4
15378 C-k 5 ws-set-marker-5
15379 C-k 6 ws-set-marker-6
15380 C-k 7 ws-set-marker-7
15381 C-k 8 ws-set-marker-8
15382 C-k 9 ws-set-marker-9
15383 C-k b ws-begin-block
15384 C-k c ws-copy-block
15385 C-k d save-buffers-kill-emacs
15386 C-k f find-file
15387 C-k h ws-show-markers
15388 C-k i ws-indent-block
15389 C-k k ws-end-block
15390 C-k p ws-print-block
15391 C-k q kill-emacs
15392 C-k r insert-file
15393 C-k s save-some-buffers
15394 C-k t ws-mark-word
15395 C-k u ws-exdent-block
15396 C-k C-u keyboard-quit
15397 C-k v ws-move-block
15398 C-k w ws-write-block
15399 C-k x kill-emacs
15400 C-k y ws-delete-block
15401
15402 C-o c wordstar-center-line
15403 C-o b switch-to-buffer
15404 C-o j justify-current-line
15405 C-o k kill-buffer
15406 C-o l list-buffers
15407 C-o m auto-fill-mode
15408 C-o r set-fill-column
15409 C-o C-u keyboard-quit
15410 C-o wd delete-other-windows
15411 C-o wh split-window-horizontally
15412 C-o wo other-window
15413 C-o wv split-window-vertically
15414
15415 C-q 0 ws-find-marker-0
15416 C-q 1 ws-find-marker-1
15417 C-q 2 ws-find-marker-2
15418 C-q 3 ws-find-marker-3
15419 C-q 4 ws-find-marker-4
15420 C-q 5 ws-find-marker-5
15421 C-q 6 ws-find-marker-6
15422 C-q 7 ws-find-marker-7
15423 C-q 8 ws-find-marker-8
15424 C-q 9 ws-find-marker-9
15425 C-q a ws-query-replace
15426 C-q b ws-to-block-begin
15427 C-q c end-of-buffer
15428 C-q d end-of-line
15429 C-q f ws-search
15430 C-q k ws-to-block-end
15431 C-q l ws-undo
15432 C-q p ws-last-cursorp
15433 C-q r beginning-of-buffer
15434 C-q C-u keyboard-quit
15435 C-q w ws-last-error
15436 C-q y ws-kill-eol
15437 C-q DEL ws-kill-bol
15438 " t nil)
15439
15440 ;;;***
15441 \f
15442 ;;;### (autoloads (xterm-mouse-mode) "xt-mouse" "xt-mouse.el" (13929
15443 ;;;;;; 31250))
15444 ;;; Generated autoloads from xt-mouse.el
15445
15446 (autoload (quote xterm-mouse-mode) "xt-mouse" "\
15447 Toggle XTerm mouse mode.
15448 With prefix arg, turn XTerm mouse mode on iff arg is positive.
15449
15450 Turn it on to use emacs mouse commands, and off to use xterm mouse commands." t nil)
15451
15452 ;;;***
15453 \f
15454 ;;;### (autoloads (psychoanalyze-pinhead apropos-zippy insert-zippyism
15455 ;;;;;; yow) "yow" "play/yow.el" (13607 43571))
15456 ;;; Generated autoloads from play/yow.el
15457
15458 (autoload (quote yow) "yow" "\
15459 Return or display a random Zippy quotation. With prefix arg, insert it." t nil)
15460
15461 (autoload (quote insert-zippyism) "yow" "\
15462 Prompt with completion for a known Zippy quotation, and insert it at point." t nil)
15463
15464 (autoload (quote apropos-zippy) "yow" "\
15465 Return a list of all Zippy quotes matching REGEXP.
15466 If called interactively, display a list of matches." t nil)
15467
15468 (autoload (quote psychoanalyze-pinhead) "yow" "\
15469 Zippy goes to the analyst." t nil)
15470
15471 ;;;***
15472 \f
15473 ;;;### (autoloads (zone-mode zone-mode-update-serial-hook) "zone-mode"
15474 ;;;;;; "zone-mode.el" (13674 20513))
15475 ;;; Generated autoloads from zone-mode.el
15476
15477 (autoload (quote zone-mode-update-serial-hook) "zone-mode" "\
15478 Update the serial number in a zone if the file was modified" t nil)
15479
15480 (autoload (quote zone-mode) "zone-mode" "\
15481 A mode for editing DNS zone files.
15482
15483 Zone-mode does two things:
15484
15485 - automatically update the serial number for a zone
15486 when saving the file
15487
15488 - fontification" t nil)
15489
15490 ;;;***
15491 \f
15492 ;;; Local Variables:
15493 ;;; version-control: never
15494 ;;; no-byte-compile: t
15495 ;;; no-update-autoloads: t
15496 ;;; End:
15497 ;;; loaddefs.el ends here