@c -*-texinfo-*-
@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
-@c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+@c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
@node Calendar, System Interface, Display, Top
@chapter Customizing the Calendar and Diary
* Daylight Savings:: Changing the default.
* Diary Customizing:: Defaults you can set.
* Hebrew/Islamic Entries:: How to obtain them.
-* Fancy Diary Display:: Enhancing the diary display, sorting entries,
+* Fancy Diary Display:: Enhancing the diary display, sorting entries,
using included diary files.
* Sexp Diary Entries:: Fancy things you can do.
* Appt Customizing:: Customizing appointment reminders.
@code{t}, calling up the calendar automatically displays the diary
entries for the current date as well. The diary dates appear only if
the current date is visible. If you add both of the following lines to
-your @file{.emacs} file:@refill
+your init file:@refill
@example
(setq view-diary-entries-initially t)
@code{t} in order to mark any dates with diary entries. This takes
effect whenever the calendar window contents are recomputed. There are
two ways of marking these dates: by changing the face (@pxref{Faces}),
-if the display supports that, or by placing a plus sign (@samp{+})
-beside the date otherwise.
+or by placing a plus sign (@samp{+}) beside the date.
@vindex mark-holidays-in-calendar
Similarly, setting the variable @code{mark-holidays-in-calendar} to
variable @code{diary-entry-marker} specifies how to mark a date that has
diary entries. The calendar creates faces named @code{holiday-face} and
@code{diary-face} for these purposes; those symbols are the default
-values of these variables, when Emacs supports multiple faces on your
-terminal.
+values of these variables.
@vindex calendar-load-hook
The variable @code{calendar-load-hook} is a normal hook run when the
date. Its value should be a character to insert next to the date or a
face name to use for displaying the date. A face named
@code{calendar-today-face} is provided for this purpose; that symbol is
-the default for this variable when Emacs supports multiple faces on your
-terminal.
+the default for this variable.
@vindex today-invisible-calendar-hook
@noindent
A similar normal hook, @code{today-invisible-calendar-hook} is run if
the current date is @emph{not} visible in the window.
+@vindex calendar-move-hook
+ Starting in Emacs 21, each of the calendar cursor motion commands
+runs the hook @code{calendar-move-hook} after it moves the cursor.
+
@node Holiday Customizing
@section Customizing the Holidays
well as entries based on the world-standard Gregorian calendar.
However, because recognition of such entries is time-consuming and most
people don't use them, you must explicitly enable their use. If you
-want the diary to recognize Hebrew-date diary entries, for example,
+want the diary to recognize Hebrew-date diary entries, for example,
you must do this:
@vindex nongregorian-diary-listing-hook
@noindent
and would appear in the diary for any date that corresponds to Heshvan 25
-on the Hebrew calendar. And here is Islamic-date diary entry that matches
+on the Hebrew calendar. And here is an Islamic-date diary entry that matches
Dhu al-Qada 25:
@smallexample
selected date.
@item i h y
Add a diary entry for the day of the Hebrew year corresponding to the
-selected date (@code{insert-yearly-hebrew-diary-entry}). This diary
+selected date (@code{insert-yearly-hebrew-diary-entry}). This diary
entry matches any date which has the same Hebrew month and day-within-month
as the selected date.
@item i i d
These commands work much like the corresponding commands for ordinary
diary entries: they apply to the date that point is on in the calendar
window, and what they do is insert just the date portion of a diary entry
-at the end of your diary file. You must then insert the rest of the
+at the end of your diary file. You must then insert the rest of the
diary entry.
@node Fancy Diary Display
As with simple diary display, you can print a hard copy of the buffer
with @code{print-diary-entries}. To print a hard copy of a day-by-day
-diary for a week by positioning point on Sunday of that week, type
-@kbd{7 d} and then do @kbd{M-x print-diary-entries}. As usual, the
+diary for a week, position point on Sunday of that week, type
+@kbd{7 d}, and then do @kbd{M-x print-diary-entries}. As usual, the
inclusion of the holidays slows down the display slightly; you can speed
things up by setting the variable @code{holidays-in-diary-buffer} to
@code{nil}.
@cindex sorting diary entries
If you use the fancy diary display, you can use the normal hook
@code{list-diary-entries-hook} to sort each day's diary entries by their
-time of day. Here's how
+time of day. Here's how:
@findex sort-diary-entries
@example
@noindent
and the fancy diary will show
@smallexample
-Ruth & Ed's anniversary
+Ed's anniversary
@end smallexample
@noindent
both on December 15 and on December 22.
@noindent
on the last Monday of every month.
- The generality of sexp diary entries lets you specify any diary entry
-that you can describe algorithmically. A sexp diary entry contains an
-expression that computes whether the entry applies to any given date.
-If its value is non-@code{nil}, the entry applies to that date;
-otherwise, it does not. The expression can use the variable @code{date}
-to find the date being considered; its value is a list (@var{month}
-@var{day} @var{year}) that refers to the Gregorian calendar.
+ The generality of sexp diary entries lets you specify any diary
+entry that you can describe algorithmically. A sexp diary entry
+contains an expression that computes whether the entry applies to any
+given date. If its value is non-@code{nil}, the entry applies to that
+date; otherwise, it does not. The expression can use the variable
+@code{date} to find the date being considered; its value is a list
+(@var{month} @var{day} @var{year}) that refers to the Gregorian
+calendar.
+
+ The sexp diary entry applies to a date when the expression's value
+is non-@code{nil}, but some values have more specific meanings. If
+the value is a string, that string is a description of the event which
+occurs on that date. The value can also have the form
+@code{(@var{mark} . @var{string})}; then @var{mark} specifies how to
+mark the date in the calendar, and @var{string} is the description of
+the event. If @var{mark} is a single-character string, that character
+appears next to the date in the calendar. If @var{mark} is a face
+name, the date is displayed in that face. If @var{mark} is
+@code{nil}, that specifies no particular highlighting for the date.
Suppose you get paid on the 21st of the month if it is a weekday, and
on the Friday before if the 21st is on a weekend. Here is how to write
@var{month}, @var{year}.)
@end table
+ All the functions documented above take an optional argument
+@var{mark} which specifies how to mark the date in the calendar display.
+If one of these functions decides that it applies to a certain date,
+it returns a value that contains @var{mark}.
+
@node Appt Customizing
@section Customizing Appointment Reminders
The number of seconds to display an appointment message. The default
is 5 seconds.
@end table
+
+@ignore
+ arch-tag: 8e50c766-4703-4888-a421-af15244cca7e
+@end ignore