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1 GNU Emacs NEWS -- history of user-visible changes.
2
3 Copyright (C) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007
4 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 See the end of the file for license conditions.
6
7 Please send Emacs bug reports to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org.
8 If possible, use M-x report-emacs-bug.
9
10 This file is about changes in Emacs version 22.
11
12 See files NEWS.21, NEWS.20, NEWS.19, NEWS.18, and NEWS.1-17 for changes
13 in older Emacs versions.
14
15 You can narrow news to a specific version by calling `view-emacs-news'
16 with a prefix argument or by typing C-u C-h C-n.
17 \f
18 * About external Lisp packages
19
20 When you upgrade to Emacs 22 from a previous version, some older
21 versions of external Lisp packages are known to behave badly.
22 So in general, it is recommended that you upgrade to the latest
23 versions of any external Lisp packages that you are using.
24
25 You should also be aware that many Lisp packages have been included
26 with Emacs 22 (see the extensive list below), and you should remove
27 any older versions of these packages to ensure that the Emacs 22
28 version is used. You can use M-x list-load-path-shadows to find such
29 older packages.
30
31 Some specific packages that are known to cause problems are given
32 below. Emacs tries to warn you about these through `bad-packages-alist'.
33
34 ** Semantic (used by CEDET, ECB, JDEE): upgrade to latest version.
35
36 ** cua.el, cua-mode.el: remove old versions.
37
38 \f
39 * Installation Changes in Emacs 22.2
40
41 ** Emacs is now licensed under the GNU GPL version 3 (or later).
42
43 ** Support for GNU/kFreeBSD (GNU userland and FreeBSD kernel) was added.
44
45 * Changes in Emacs 22.2
46
47 ** In Image mode, whenever the displayed image is wider and/or higher
48 than the window, the usual keys for moving the cursor cause the image
49 to be scrolled horizontally or vertically instead.
50
51 ** Scrollbars follow the system theme on Windows XP and later.
52 Windows XP introduced themed scrollbars, but applications have to take
53 special steps to use them. Emacs now has the appropriate resources linked
54 in to make it use the scrollbars from the system theme.
55
56 ** focus-follows-mouse defaults to nil on MS Windows.
57 Previously this variable was incorrectly documented as having no effect
58 on MS Windows, and the default was inappropriate for the majority of
59 Windows installations. Users of software which modifies the behaviour of
60 Windows to cause focus to follow the mouse will now need to explicitly set
61 this variable.
62
63 ** `bad-packages-alist' will warn about external packages that are known
64 to cause problems in this version of Emacs.
65
66 ** The values of `dired-recursive-deletes' and `dired-recursive-copies'
67 have been changed to `top'. This means that the user is asked once,
68 before deleting/copying the indicated directory recursively.
69
70 ** `browse-url-emacs' loads a URL into an Emacs buffer. Handy for *.el URLs.
71
72 ** The command gdba has been removed as gdb works now for those cases where it
73 was needed. In text command mode, if you have problems before execution has
74 started, use M-x gud-gdb.
75
76 ** desktop.el now detects conflicting uses of the desktop file.
77 When loading the desktop, desktop.el can now detect that the file is already
78 in use. The default behavior is to ask the user what to do, but you can
79 customize it with the new option `desktop-load-locked-desktop'. When saving,
80 desktop.el warns about attempts to overwrite a desktop file if it determines
81 that the desktop being saved is not an update of the one on disk.
82
83 * New Modes and Packages in Emacs 22.2
84
85 ** bibtex-style-mode helps you write BibTeX's *.bst files.
86
87 ** The new package css-mode.el provides a major mode for editing CSS files.
88
89 ** The new package vera-mode.el provides a major mode for editing Vera files.
90
91 ** The new package socks.el implements the SOCKS v5 protocol.
92
93 ** VC
94
95 *** VC backends can provide completion of revision names.
96
97 *** VC backends can provide extra menu entries to be added to the "Version Control" menu.
98 This can be used to add menu entries for backend specific functions.
99
100 *** VC has some support for Mercurial (Hg).
101
102 *** VC has some support for Monotone (Mtn).
103
104 *** VC has some support for Bazaar (Bzr).
105
106 *** VC has some support for Git.
107
108 * Lisp Changes in Emacs 22.2.
109
110 ** Frame-local variables are deprecated and are slated for removal.
111 Use frame parameters instead.
112
113 ** The function invisible-p returns non-nil if the character
114 after a specified position is invisible.
115
116 +++
117 ** inhibit-modification-hooks is bound to t while running modification hooks.
118 As a happy consequence, after-change-functions and before-change-functions
119 are not bound to nil any more while running an (after|before)-change-function.
120
121 ** New function `window-full-width-p' returns t if a window is as wide
122 as its frame.
123
124 ** The new function `image-refresh' refreshes all images associated
125 with a given image specification.
126
127 ** The new function `combine-and-quote-strings' concatenates a list of strings
128 using a specified separator. If a string contains double quotes, they
129 are escaped in the output.
130
131 ** The new function `split-string-and-unquote' performs the inverse operation to
132 `combine-and-quote-strings', i.e. splits a single string into a list
133 of strings, undoing any quoting added by `combine-and-quote-strings'.
134 (For some separator/string combinations, the original strings cannot
135 be recovered.)
136
137 \f
138 * Installation Changes in Emacs 22.1
139
140 ** You can build Emacs with Gtk+ widgets by specifying `--with-x-toolkit=gtk'
141 when you run configure. This requires Gtk+ 2.4 or newer. This port
142 provides a way to display multilingual text in menus (with some caveats).
143
144 ** The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual is now part of the distribution.
145
146 The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual in Info format is built as part of the
147 Emacs build procedure and installed together with the Emacs User
148 Manual. A menu item was added to the menu bar to make it easily
149 accessible (Help->More Manuals->Emacs Lisp Reference).
150
151 ** The Introduction to Programming in Emacs Lisp manual is now part of
152 the distribution.
153
154 This manual is now part of the standard distribution and is installed,
155 together with the Emacs User Manual, into the Info directory. A menu
156 item was added to the menu bar to make it easily accessible
157 (Help->More Manuals->Introduction to Emacs Lisp).
158
159 ** Leim is now part of the Emacs distribution.
160 You no longer need to download a separate tarball in order to build
161 Emacs with Leim.
162
163 ** Support for MacOS X was added.
164 See the files mac/README and mac/INSTALL for build instructions.
165
166 ** Mac OS 9 port now uses the Carbon API by default. You can also
167 create a non-Carbon build by specifying `NonCarbon' as a target. See
168 the files mac/README and mac/INSTALL for build instructions.
169
170 ** Support for a Cygwin build of Emacs was added.
171
172 ** Support for GNU/Linux systems on X86-64 machines was added.
173
174 ** Support for GNU/Linux systems on S390 machines was added.
175
176 ** Support for GNU/Linux systems on Tensilica Xtensa machines was added.
177
178 ** Support for FreeBSD/Alpha has been added.
179
180 ** New translations of the Emacs Tutorial are available in the
181 following languages: Brasilian Portuguese, Bulgarian, Chinese (both
182 with simplified and traditional characters), French, Russian, and
183 Italian. Type `C-u C-h t' to choose one of them in case your language
184 setup doesn't automatically select the right one.
185
186 ** New translations of the Emacs reference card are available in the
187 Brasilian Portuguese and Russian. The corresponding PostScript files
188 are also included.
189
190 ** A French translation of the `Emacs Survival Guide' is available.
191
192 ** Emacs now supports new configure options `--program-prefix',
193 `--program-suffix' and `--program-transform-name' that affect the names of
194 installed programs.
195
196 ** By default, Emacs now uses a setgid helper program to update game
197 scores. The directory ${localstatedir}/games/emacs is the normal
198 place for game scores to be stored. You can control this with the
199 configure option `--with-game-dir'. The specific user that Emacs uses
200 to own the game scores is controlled by `--with-game-user'. If access
201 to a game user is not available, then scores will be stored separately
202 in each user's home directory.
203
204 ** Emacs now includes support for loading image libraries on demand.
205 (Currently this feature is only used on MS Windows.) You can configure
206 the supported image types and their associated dynamic libraries by
207 setting the variable `image-library-alist'.
208
209 ** Emacs can now be built without sound support.
210
211 ** Emacs Lisp source files are compressed by default if `gzip' is available.
212
213 ** All images used in Emacs have been consolidated in etc/images and subdirs.
214 See also the changes to `find-image', documented below.
215
216 ** Emacs comes with a new set of icons.
217 These icons are displayed on the taskbar and/or titlebar when Emacs
218 runs in a graphical environment. Source files for these icons can be
219 found in etc/images/icons. (You can't change the icons displayed by
220 Emacs by changing these files directly. On X, the icon is compiled
221 into the Emacs executable; see gnu.h in the source tree. On MS
222 Windows, see nt/icons/emacs.ico.)
223
224 ** The `emacsserver' program has been removed, replaced with Lisp code.
225
226 ** The `yow' program has been removed.
227 Use the corresponding Emacs feature instead.
228
229 ** The Emacs terminal emulation in term.el uses a different terminfo name.
230 The Emacs terminal emulation in term.el now uses "eterm-color" as its
231 terminfo name, since term.el now supports color.
232
233 ** The script etc/emacs-buffer.gdb can be used with gdb to retrieve the
234 contents of buffers from a core dump and save them to files easily, should
235 Emacs crash.
236
237 ** Building with -DENABLE_CHECKING does not automatically build with union
238 types any more. Add -DUSE_LISP_UNION_TYPE if you want union types.
239
240 ** When pure storage overflows while dumping, Emacs now prints how
241 much pure storage it will approximately need.
242
243 \f
244 * Startup Changes in Emacs 22.1
245
246 ** Init file changes
247 If the init file ~/.emacs does not exist, Emacs will try
248 ~/.emacs.d/init.el or ~/.emacs.d/init.elc. Likewise, if the shell init file
249 ~/.emacs_SHELL is not found, Emacs will try ~/.emacs.d/init_SHELL.sh.
250
251 ** Emacs can now be invoked in full-screen mode on a windowed display.
252 When Emacs is invoked on a window system, the new command-line options
253 `--fullwidth', `--fullheight', and `--fullscreen' produce a frame
254 whose width, height, or both width and height take up the entire
255 screen size. (For now, this does not work with some window managers.)
256
257 ** Emacs now displays a splash screen by default even if command-line
258 arguments were given. The new command-line option --no-splash
259 disables the splash screen; see also the variable
260 `inhibit-splash-screen' (which is also aliased as
261 `inhibit-startup-message').
262
263 ** New user option `inhibit-startup-buffer-menu'.
264 When loading many files, for instance with `emacs *', Emacs normally
265 displays a buffer menu. This option turns the buffer menu off.
266
267 ** New command line option -nbc or --no-blinking-cursor disables
268 the blinking cursor on graphical terminals.
269
270 ** The option --script FILE runs Emacs in batch mode and loads FILE.
271 It is useful for writing Emacs Lisp shell script files, because they
272 can start with this line:
273
274 #!/usr/bin/emacs --script
275
276 ** The -f option, used from the command line to call a function,
277 now reads arguments for the function interactively if it is
278 an interactively callable function.
279
280 ** The option --directory DIR now modifies `load-path' immediately.
281 Directories are added to the front of `load-path' in the order they
282 appear on the command line. For example, with this command line:
283
284 emacs -batch -L .. -L /tmp --eval "(require 'foo)"
285
286 Emacs looks for library `foo' in the parent directory, then in /tmp, then
287 in the other directories in `load-path'. (-L is short for --directory.)
288
289 ** When you specify a frame size with --geometry, the size applies to
290 all frames you create. A position specified with --geometry only
291 affects the initial frame.
292
293 ** Emacs built for MS-Windows now behaves like Emacs on X does,
294 with respect to its frame position: if you don't specify a position
295 (in your .emacs init file, in the Registry, or with the --geometry
296 command-line option), Emacs leaves the frame position to the Windows'
297 window manager.
298
299 ** The command line option --no-windows has been changed to
300 --no-window-system. The old one still works, but is deprecated.
301
302 ** If the environment variable DISPLAY specifies an unreachable X display,
303 Emacs will now startup as if invoked with the --no-window-system option.
304
305 ** Emacs now reads the standard abbrevs file ~/.abbrev_defs
306 automatically at startup, if it exists. When Emacs offers to save
307 modified buffers, it saves the abbrevs too if they have changed. It
308 can do this either silently or asking for confirmation first,
309 according to the value of `save-abbrevs'.
310
311 ** New command line option -Q or --quick.
312 This is like using -q --no-site-file, but in addition it also disables
313 the fancy startup screen.
314
315 ** New command line option -D or --basic-display.
316 Disables the menu-bar, the tool-bar, the scroll-bars, tool tips, and
317 the blinking cursor.
318
319 ** The default is now to use a bitmap as the icon.
320 The command-line options --icon-type, -i have been replaced with
321 options --no-bitmap-icon, -nbi to turn the bitmap icon off.
322
323 ** If the environment variable EMAIL is defined, Emacs now uses its value
324 to compute the default value of `user-mail-address', in preference to
325 concatenation of `user-login-name' with the name of your host machine.
326
327 \f
328 * Incompatible Editing Changes in Emacs 22.1
329
330 ** You can now follow links by clicking Mouse-1 on the link.
331
332 See below for more details.
333
334 ** When the undo information of the current command gets really large
335 (beyond the value of `undo-outer-limit'), Emacs discards it and warns
336 you about it.
337
338 ** When Emacs prompts for file names, SPC no longer completes the file name.
339 This is so filenames with embedded spaces could be input without the
340 need to quote the space with a C-q. The underlying changes in the
341 keymaps that are active in the minibuffer are described below under
342 "New keymaps for typing file names".
343
344 If you want the old behavior back, add these two key bindings to your
345 ~/.emacs init file:
346
347 (define-key minibuffer-local-filename-completion-map
348 " " 'minibuffer-complete-word)
349 (define-key minibuffer-local-must-match-filename-map
350 " " 'minibuffer-complete-word)
351
352 ** The completion commands TAB, SPC and ? in the minibuffer apply only
353 to the text before point. If there is text in the buffer after point,
354 it remains unchanged.
355
356 ** In incremental search, C-w is changed. M-%, C-M-w and C-M-y are special.
357
358 See below under "incremental search changes".
359
360 ** M-g is now a prefix key.
361 M-g g and M-g M-g run goto-line.
362 M-g n and M-g M-n run next-error (like C-x `).
363 M-g p and M-g M-p run previous-error.
364
365 ** C-u M-g M-g switches to the most recent previous buffer,
366 and goes to the specified line in that buffer.
367
368 When goto-line starts to execute, if there's a number in the buffer at
369 point then it acts as the default argument for the minibuffer.
370
371 ** M-o now is the prefix key for setting text properties;
372 M-o M-o requests refontification.
373
374 ** C-x C-f RET (find-file), typing nothing in the minibuffer, is no longer
375 a special case.
376
377 Since the default input is the current directory, this has the effect
378 of specifying the current directory. Normally that means to visit the
379 directory with Dired.
380
381 You can get the old behavior by typing C-x C-f M-n RET, which fetches
382 the actual file name into the minibuffer.
383
384 ** In Dired's ! command (dired-do-shell-command), `*' and `?' now
385 control substitution of the file names only when they are surrounded
386 by whitespace. This means you can now use them as shell wildcards
387 too. If you want to use just plain `*' as a wildcard, type `*""'; the
388 doublequotes make no difference in the shell, but they prevent
389 special treatment in `dired-do-shell-command'.
390
391 ** The info-search bindings on C-h C-f, C-h C-k and C-h C-i
392 have been moved to C-h F, C-h K and C-h S.
393
394 ** `apply-macro-to-region-lines' now operates on all lines that begin
395 in the region, rather than on all complete lines in the region.
396
397 ** line-move-ignore-invisible now defaults to t.
398
399 ** Adaptive filling misfeature removed.
400 It no longer treats `NNN.' or `(NNN)' as a prefix.
401
402 ** The old bindings C-M-delete and C-M-backspace have been deleted,
403 since there are situations where one or the other will shut down
404 the operating system or your X server.
405
406 ** The register compatibility key bindings (deprecated since Emacs 19)
407 have been removed:
408 C-x / point-to-register (Use: C-x r SPC)
409 C-x j jump-to-register (Use: C-x r j)
410 C-x x copy-to-register (Use: C-x r s)
411 C-x g insert-register (Use: C-x r i)
412
413 \f
414 * Editing Changes in Emacs 22.1
415
416 ** The max size of buffers and integers has been doubled.
417 On 32bit machines, it is now 256M (i.e. 268435455).
418
419 ** !MEM FULL! at the start of the mode line indicates that Emacs
420 cannot get any more memory for Lisp data. This often means it could
421 crash soon if you do things that use more memory. On most systems,
422 killing buffers will get out of this state. If killing buffers does
423 not make !MEM FULL! disappear, you should save your work and start
424 a new Emacs.
425
426 ** `undo-only' does an undo which does not redo any previous undo.
427
428 ** Yanking text now discards certain text properties that can
429 be inconvenient when you did not expect them. The variable
430 `yank-excluded-properties' specifies which ones. Insertion
431 of register contents and rectangles also discards these properties.
432
433 ** New command `kill-whole-line' kills an entire line at once.
434 By default, it is bound to C-S-<backspace>.
435
436 ** M-SPC (just-one-space) when given a numeric argument N
437 converts whitespace around point to N spaces.
438
439 ** You can now switch buffers in a cyclic order with C-x C-left
440 (previous-buffer) and C-x C-right (next-buffer). C-x left and
441 C-x right can be used as well. The functions keep a different buffer
442 cycle for each frame, using the frame-local buffer list.
443
444 ** C-x 5 C-o displays a specified buffer in another frame
445 but does not switch to that frame. It's the multi-frame
446 analogue of C-x 4 C-o.
447
448 ** `special-display-buffer-names' and `special-display-regexps' now
449 understand two new boolean pseudo-frame-parameters `same-frame' and
450 `same-window'.
451
452 ** New commands to operate on pairs of open and close characters:
453 `insert-pair', `delete-pair', `raise-sexp'.
454
455 ** M-x setenv now expands environment variable references.
456
457 Substrings of the form `$foo' and `${foo}' in the specified new value
458 now refer to the value of environment variable foo. To include a `$'
459 in the value, use `$$'.
460
461 ** The default values of paragraph-start and indent-line-function have
462 been changed to reflect those used in Text mode rather than those used
463 in Paragraph-Indent Text mode.
464
465 ** The default for the paper size (variable ps-paper-type) is taken
466 from the locale.
467
468 ** Help command changes:
469
470 *** Changes in C-h bindings:
471
472 C-h e displays the *Messages* buffer.
473
474 C-h d runs apropos-documentation.
475
476 C-h r visits the Emacs Manual in Info.
477
478 C-h followed by a control character is used for displaying files
479 that do not change:
480
481 C-h C-f displays the FAQ.
482 C-h C-e displays the PROBLEMS file.
483
484 The info-search bindings on C-h C-f, C-h C-k and C-h C-i
485 have been moved to C-h F, C-h K and C-h S.
486
487 C-h c, C-h k, C-h w, and C-h f now handle remapped interactive commands.
488 - C-h c and C-h k report the actual command (after possible remapping)
489 run by the key sequence.
490 - C-h w and C-h f on a command which has been remapped now report the
491 command it is remapped to, and the keys which can be used to run
492 that command.
493
494 For example, if C-k is bound to kill-line, and kill-line is remapped
495 to new-kill-line, these commands now report:
496 - C-h c and C-h k C-k reports:
497 C-k runs the command new-kill-line
498 - C-h w and C-h f kill-line reports:
499 kill-line is remapped to new-kill-line which is on C-k, <deleteline>
500 - C-h w and C-h f new-kill-line reports:
501 new-kill-line is on C-k
502
503 *** The apropos commands now accept a list of words to match.
504 When more than one word is specified, at least two of those words must
505 be present for an item to match. Regular expression matching is still
506 available.
507
508 *** The new option `apropos-sort-by-scores' causes the matching items
509 to be sorted according to their score. The score for an item is a
510 number calculated to indicate how well the item matches the words or
511 regular expression that you entered to the apropos command. The best
512 match is listed first, and the calculated score is shown for each
513 matching item.
514
515 *** Help commands `describe-function' and `describe-key' now show function
516 arguments in lowercase italics on displays that support it. To change the
517 default, customize face `help-argument-name' or redefine the function
518 `help-default-arg-highlight'.
519
520 *** C-h v and C-h f commands now include a hyperlink to the C source for
521 variables and functions defined in C (if the C source is available).
522
523 *** Help mode now only makes hyperlinks for faces when the face name is
524 preceded or followed by the word `face'. It no longer makes
525 hyperlinks for variables without variable documentation, unless
526 preceded by one of the words `variable' or `option'. It now makes
527 hyperlinks to Info anchors (or nodes) if the anchor (or node) name is
528 enclosed in single quotes and preceded by `info anchor' or `Info
529 anchor' (in addition to earlier `info node' and `Info node'). In
530 addition, it now makes hyperlinks to URLs as well if the URL is
531 enclosed in single quotes and preceded by `URL'.
532
533 *** The new command `describe-char' (C-u C-x =) pops up a buffer with
534 description various information about a character, including its
535 encodings and syntax, its text properties, how to input, overlays, and
536 widgets at point. You can get more information about some of them, by
537 clicking on mouse-sensitive areas or moving there and pressing RET.
538
539 *** The command `list-text-properties-at' has been deleted because
540 C-u C-x = gives the same information and more.
541
542 *** New command `display-local-help' displays any local help at point
543 in the echo area. It is bound to `C-h .'. It normally displays the
544 same string that would be displayed on mouse-over using the
545 `help-echo' property, but, in certain cases, it can display a more
546 keyboard oriented alternative.
547
548 *** New user option `help-at-pt-display-when-idle' allows you to
549 automatically show the help provided by `display-local-help' on
550 point-over, after suitable idle time. The amount of idle time is
551 determined by the user option `help-at-pt-timer-delay' and defaults
552 to one second. This feature is turned off by default.
553
554 ** Mark command changes:
555
556 *** A prefix argument is no longer required to repeat a jump to a
557 previous mark if you set `set-mark-command-repeat-pop' to t. I.e. C-u
558 C-SPC C-SPC C-SPC ... cycles through the mark ring. Use C-u C-u C-SPC
559 to set the mark immediately after a jump.
560
561 *** Marking commands extend the region when invoked multiple times.
562
563 If you type C-M-SPC (mark-sexp), M-@ (mark-word), M-h
564 (mark-paragraph), or C-M-h (mark-defun) repeatedly, the marked region
565 extends each time, so you can mark the next two sexps with M-C-SPC
566 M-C-SPC, for example. This feature also works for
567 mark-end-of-sentence, if you bind that to a key. It also extends the
568 region when the mark is active in Transient Mark mode, regardless of
569 the last command. To start a new region with one of marking commands
570 in Transient Mark mode, you can deactivate the active region with C-g,
571 or set the new mark with C-SPC.
572
573 *** Some commands do something special in Transient Mark mode when the
574 mark is active--for instance, they limit their operation to the
575 region. Even if you don't normally use Transient Mark mode, you might
576 want to get this behavior from a particular command. There are two
577 ways you can enable Transient Mark mode and activate the mark, for one
578 command only.
579
580 One method is to type C-SPC C-SPC; this enables Transient Mark mode
581 and sets the mark at point. The other method is to type C-u C-x C-x.
582 This enables Transient Mark mode temporarily but does not alter the
583 mark or the region.
584
585 After these commands, Transient Mark mode remains enabled until you
586 deactivate the mark. That typically happens when you type a command
587 that alters the buffer, but you can also deactivate the mark by typing
588 C-g.
589
590 *** Movement commands `beginning-of-buffer', `end-of-buffer',
591 `beginning-of-defun', `end-of-defun' do not set the mark if the mark
592 is already active in Transient Mark mode.
593
594 *** M-h (mark-paragraph) now accepts a prefix arg.
595
596 With positive arg, M-h marks the current and the following paragraphs;
597 if the arg is negative, it marks the current and the preceding
598 paragraphs.
599
600 ** Incremental Search changes:
601
602 *** M-% typed in isearch mode invokes `query-replace' or
603 `query-replace-regexp' (depending on search mode) with the current
604 search string used as the string to replace.
605
606 *** C-w in incremental search now grabs either a character or a word,
607 making the decision in a heuristic way. This new job is done by the
608 command `isearch-yank-word-or-char'. To restore the old behavior,
609 bind C-w to `isearch-yank-word' in `isearch-mode-map'.
610
611 *** C-y in incremental search now grabs the next line if point is already
612 at the end of a line.
613
614 *** C-M-w deletes and C-M-y grabs a character in isearch mode.
615 Another method to grab a character is to enter the minibuffer by `M-e'
616 and to type `C-f' at the end of the search string in the minibuffer.
617
618 *** Vertical scrolling is now possible within incremental search.
619 To enable this feature, customize the new user option
620 `isearch-allow-scroll'. User written commands which satisfy stringent
621 constraints can be marked as "scrolling commands". See the Emacs manual
622 for details.
623
624 *** Isearch no longer adds `isearch-resume' commands to the command
625 history by default. To enable this feature, customize the new
626 user option `isearch-resume-in-command-history'.
627
628 ** Replace command changes:
629
630 *** When used interactively, the commands `query-replace-regexp' and
631 `replace-regexp' allow \,expr to be used in a replacement string,
632 where expr is an arbitrary Lisp expression evaluated at replacement
633 time. `\#' in a replacement string now refers to the count of
634 replacements already made by the replacement command. All regular
635 expression replacement commands now allow `\?' in the replacement
636 string to specify a position where the replacement string can be
637 edited for each replacement. `query-replace-regexp-eval' is now
638 deprecated since it offers no additional functionality.
639
640 *** query-replace uses isearch lazy highlighting when the new user option
641 `query-replace-lazy-highlight' is non-nil.
642
643 *** The current match in query-replace is highlighted in new face
644 `query-replace' which by default inherits from isearch face.
645
646 *** New user option `query-replace-skip-read-only': when non-nil,
647 `query-replace' and related functions simply ignore
648 a match if part of it has a read-only property.
649
650 ** Local variables lists:
651
652 *** If the local variables list contains any variable-value pairs that
653 are not known to be safe, Emacs shows a prompt asking whether to apply
654 the local variables list as a whole. In earlier versions, a prompt
655 was only issued for variables explicitly marked as risky (for the
656 definition of risky variables, see `risky-local-variable-p').
657
658 At the prompt, you can choose to save the contents of this local
659 variables list to `safe-local-variable-values'. This new customizable
660 option is a list of variable-value pairs that are known to be safe.
661 Variables can also be marked as safe with the existing
662 `safe-local-variable' property (see `safe-local-variable-p').
663 However, risky variables will not be added to
664 `safe-local-variable-values' in this way.
665
666 *** The variable `enable-local-variables' controls how local variable
667 lists are handled. t, the default, specifies the standard querying
668 behavior. :safe means use only safe values, and ignore the rest.
669 :all means set all variables, whether or not they are safe.
670 nil means ignore them all. Anything else means always query.
671
672 *** The variable `safe-local-eval-forms' specifies a list of forms that
673 are ok to evaluate when they appear in an `eval' local variables
674 specification. Normally Emacs asks for confirmation before evaluating
675 such a form, but if the form appears in this list, no confirmation is
676 needed.
677
678 *** If a function has a non-nil `safe-local-eval-function' property,
679 that means it is ok to evaluate some calls to that function when it
680 appears in an `eval' local variables specification. If the property
681 is t, then any form calling that function with constant arguments is
682 ok. If the property is a function or list of functions, they are called
683 with the form as argument, and if any returns t, the form is ok to call.
684
685 If the form is not "ok to call", that means Emacs asks for
686 confirmation as before.
687
688 *** In processing a local variables list, Emacs strips the prefix and
689 suffix from every line before processing all the lines.
690
691 *** Text properties in local variables.
692
693 A file local variables list cannot specify a string with text
694 properties--any specified text properties are discarded.
695
696 ** File operation changes:
697
698 *** Unquoted `$' in file names do not signal an error any more when
699 the corresponding environment variable does not exist.
700 Instead, the `$ENVVAR' text is left as is, so that `$$' quoting
701 is only rarely needed.
702
703 *** C-x C-f RET, typing nothing in the minibuffer, is no longer a special case.
704
705 Since the default input is the current directory, this has the effect
706 of specifying the current directory. Normally that means to visit the
707 directory with Dired.
708
709 *** C-x s (save-some-buffers) now offers an option `d' to diff a buffer
710 against its file, so you can see what changes you would be saving.
711
712 *** Auto Compression mode is now enabled by default.
713
714 *** If the user visits a file larger than `large-file-warning-threshold',
715 Emacs asks for confirmation.
716
717 *** The commands copy-file, rename-file, make-symbolic-link and
718 add-name-to-file, when given a directory as the "new name" argument,
719 convert it to a file name by merging in the within-directory part of
720 the existing file's name. (This is the same convention that shell
721 commands cp, mv, and ln follow.) Thus, M-x copy-file RET ~/foo RET
722 /tmp RET copies ~/foo to /tmp/foo.
723
724 *** require-final-newline now has two new possible values:
725
726 `visit' means add a newline (as an undoable change) if it's needed
727 when visiting the file.
728
729 `visit-save' means add a newline (as an undoable change) if it's
730 needed when visiting the file, and also add a newline if it's needed
731 when saving the file.
732
733 *** The new option mode-require-final-newline controls how certain
734 major modes enable require-final-newline. Any major mode that's
735 designed for a kind of file that should normally end in a newline
736 sets require-final-newline based on mode-require-final-newline.
737 So you can customize mode-require-final-newline to control what these
738 modes do.
739
740 *** When you are root, and you visit a file whose modes specify
741 read-only, the Emacs buffer is now read-only too. Type C-x C-q if you
742 want to make the buffer writable. (As root, you can in fact alter the
743 file.)
744
745 *** find-file-read-only visits multiple files in read-only mode,
746 when the file name contains wildcard characters.
747
748 *** find-alternate-file replaces the current file with multiple files,
749 when the file name contains wildcard characters. It now asks if you
750 wish save your changes and not just offer to kill the buffer.
751
752 *** When used interactively, `format-write-file' now asks for confirmation
753 before overwriting an existing file, unless a prefix argument is
754 supplied. This behavior is analogous to `write-file'.
755
756 *** The variable `auto-save-file-name-transforms' now has a third element that
757 controls whether or not the function `make-auto-save-file-name' will
758 attempt to construct a unique auto-save name (e.g. for remote files).
759
760 *** The new option `write-region-inhibit-fsync' disables calls to fsync
761 in `write-region'. This can be useful on laptops to avoid spinning up
762 the hard drive upon each file save. Enabling this variable may result
763 in data loss, use with care.
764
765 ** Minibuffer changes:
766
767 *** The completion commands TAB, SPC and ? in the minibuffer apply only
768 to the text before point. If there is text in the buffer after point,
769 it remains unchanged.
770
771 *** The new file-name-shadow-mode is turned ON by default, so that when
772 entering a file name, any prefix which Emacs will ignore is dimmed.
773
774 *** There's a new face `minibuffer-prompt'.
775 Emacs adds this face to the list of text properties stored in the
776 variable `minibuffer-prompt-properties', which is used to display the
777 prompt string.
778
779 *** Enhanced visual feedback in `*Completions*' buffer.
780
781 Completions lists use faces to highlight what all completions
782 have in common and where they begin to differ.
783
784 The common prefix shared by all possible completions uses the face
785 `completions-common-part', while the first character that isn't the
786 same uses the face `completions-first-difference'. By default,
787 `completions-common-part' inherits from `default', and
788 `completions-first-difference' inherits from `bold'. The idea of
789 `completions-common-part' is that you can use it to make the common
790 parts less visible than normal, so that the rest of the differing
791 parts is, by contrast, slightly highlighted.
792
793 Above fontification is always done when listing completions is
794 triggered at minibuffer. If you want to fontify completions whose
795 listing is triggered at the other normal buffer, you have to pass
796 the common prefix of completions to `display-completion-list' as
797 its second argument.
798
799 *** File-name completion can now ignore specified directories.
800 If an element of the list in `completion-ignored-extensions' ends in a
801 slash `/', it indicates a subdirectory that should be ignored when
802 completing file names. Elements of `completion-ignored-extensions'
803 which do not end in a slash are never considered when a completion
804 candidate is a directory.
805
806 *** New user option `history-delete-duplicates'.
807 If set to t when adding a new history element, all previous identical
808 elements are deleted from the history list.
809
810 ** Redisplay changes:
811
812 *** The new face `mode-line-inactive' is used to display the mode line
813 of non-selected windows. The `mode-line' face is now used to display
814 the mode line of the currently selected window.
815
816 The new variable `mode-line-in-non-selected-windows' controls whether
817 the `mode-line-inactive' face is used.
818
819 *** The mode line position information now comes before the major mode.
820 When the file is maintained under version control, that information
821 appears between the position information and the major mode.
822
823 *** You can now customize the use of window fringes. To control this
824 for all frames, use M-x fringe-mode or the Show/Hide submenu of the
825 top-level Options menu, or customize the `fringe-mode' variable. To
826 control this for a specific frame, use the command M-x
827 set-fringe-style.
828
829 *** Angle icons in the fringes can indicate the buffer boundaries. In
830 addition, up and down arrow bitmaps in the fringe indicate which ways
831 the window can be scrolled.
832
833 This behavior is activated by setting the buffer-local variable
834 `indicate-buffer-boundaries' to a non-nil value. The default value of
835 this variable is found in `default-indicate-buffer-boundaries'.
836
837 If value is `left' or `right', both angle and arrow bitmaps are
838 displayed in the left or right fringe, resp.
839
840 The value can also be an alist which specifies the presence and
841 position of each bitmap individually.
842
843 For example, ((top . left) (t . right)) places the top angle bitmap
844 in left fringe, the bottom angle bitmap in right fringe, and both
845 arrow bitmaps in right fringe. To show just the angle bitmaps in the
846 left fringe, but no arrow bitmaps, use ((top . left) (bottom . left)).
847
848 *** On window systems, lines which are exactly as wide as the window
849 (not counting the final newline character) are no longer broken into
850 two lines on the display (with just the newline on the second line).
851 Instead, the newline now "overflows" into the right fringe, and the
852 cursor will be displayed in the fringe when positioned on that newline.
853
854 The new user option 'overflow-newline-into-fringe' can be set to nil to
855 revert to the old behavior of continuing such lines.
856
857 *** A window can now have individual fringe and scroll-bar settings,
858 in addition to the individual display margin settings.
859
860 Such individual settings are now preserved when windows are split
861 horizontally or vertically, a saved window configuration is restored,
862 or when the frame is resized.
863
864 *** When a window has display margin areas, the fringes are now
865 displayed between the margins and the buffer's text area, rather than
866 outside those margins.
867
868 *** New face `escape-glyph' highlights control characters and escape glyphs.
869
870 *** Non-breaking space and hyphens are now displayed with a special
871 face, either nobreak-space or escape-glyph. You can turn this off or
872 specify a different mode by setting the variable `nobreak-char-display'.
873
874 *** The parameters of automatic hscrolling can now be customized.
875 The variable `hscroll-margin' determines how many columns away from
876 the window edge point is allowed to get before automatic hscrolling
877 will horizontally scroll the window. The default value is 5.
878
879 The variable `hscroll-step' determines how many columns automatic
880 hscrolling scrolls the window when point gets too close to the
881 window edge. If its value is zero, the default, Emacs scrolls the
882 window so as to center point. If its value is an integer, it says how
883 many columns to scroll. If the value is a floating-point number, it
884 gives the fraction of the window's width to scroll the window.
885
886 The variable `automatic-hscrolling' was renamed to
887 `auto-hscroll-mode'. The old name is still available as an alias.
888
889 *** Moving or scrolling through images (and other lines) taller than
890 the window now works sensibly, by automatically adjusting the window's
891 vscroll property.
892
893 *** Preemptive redisplay now adapts to current load and bandwidth.
894
895 To avoid preempting redisplay on fast computers, networks, and displays,
896 the arrival of new input is now performed at regular intervals during
897 redisplay. The new variable `redisplay-preemption-period' specifies
898 the period; the default is to check for input every 0.1 seconds.
899
900 *** The %c and %l constructs are now ignored in frame-title-format.
901 Due to technical limitations in how Emacs interacts with windowing
902 systems, these constructs often failed to render properly, and could
903 even cause Emacs to crash.
904
905 *** If value of `auto-resize-tool-bars' is `grow-only', the tool bar
906 will expand as needed, but not contract automatically. To contract
907 the tool bar, you must type C-l.
908
909 *** New customize option `overline-margin' controls the space between
910 overline and text.
911
912 *** New variable `x-underline-at-descent-line' controls the relative
913 position of the underline. When set, it overrides the
914 `x-use-underline-position-properties' variables.
915
916 ** New faces:
917
918 *** `mode-line-highlight' is the standard face indicating mouse sensitive
919 elements on mode-line (and header-line) like `highlight' face on text
920 areas.
921
922 *** `mode-line-buffer-id' is the standard face for buffer identification
923 parts of the mode line.
924
925 *** `shadow' face defines the appearance of the "shadowed" text, i.e.
926 the text which should be less noticeable than the surrounding text.
927 This can be achieved by using shades of grey in contrast with either
928 black or white default foreground color. This generic shadow face
929 allows customization of the appearance of shadowed text in one place,
930 so package-specific faces can inherit from it.
931
932 *** `vertical-border' face is used for the vertical divider between windows.
933
934 ** Font-Lock (syntax highlighting) changes:
935
936 *** All modes now support using M-x font-lock-mode to toggle
937 fontification, even those such as Occur, Info, and comint-derived
938 modes that do their own fontification in a special way.
939
940 The variable `Info-fontify' is no longer applicable; to disable
941 fontification in Info, remove `turn-on-font-lock' from
942 `Info-mode-hook'.
943
944 *** New standard font-lock face `font-lock-comment-delimiter-face'.
945
946 *** New standard font-lock face `font-lock-preprocessor-face'.
947
948 *** Easy to overlook single character negation can now be font-locked.
949 You can use the new variable `font-lock-negation-char-face' and the face of
950 the same name to customize this. Currently the cc-modes, sh-script-mode,
951 cperl-mode and make-mode support this.
952
953 *** Font-Lock mode: in major modes such as Lisp mode, where some Emacs
954 features assume that an open-paren in column 0 is always outside of
955 any string or comment, Font-Lock now highlights any such open-paren in
956 bold-red if it is inside a string or a comment, to indicate that it
957 can cause trouble. You should rewrite the string or comment so that
958 the open-paren is not in column 0.
959
960 *** M-o now is the prefix key for setting text properties;
961 M-o M-o requests refontification.
962
963 *** The default settings for JIT stealth lock parameters are changed.
964 The default value for the user option jit-lock-stealth-time is now nil
965 instead of 3. This setting of jit-lock-stealth-time disables stealth
966 fontification: on today's machines, it may be a bug in font lock
967 patterns if fontification otherwise noticeably degrades interactivity.
968 If you find movement in infrequently visited buffers sluggish (and the
969 major mode maintainer has no better idea), customizing
970 jit-lock-stealth-time to a non-nil value will let Emacs fontify
971 buffers in the background when it considers the system to be idle.
972 jit-lock-stealth-nice is now 0.5 instead of 0.125 which is supposed to
973 cause less load than the old defaults.
974
975 *** jit-lock can now be delayed with `jit-lock-defer-time'.
976
977 If this variable is non-nil, its value should be the amount of Emacs
978 idle time in seconds to wait before starting fontification. For
979 example, if you set `jit-lock-defer-time' to 0.25, fontification will
980 only happen after 0.25s of idle time.
981
982 *** contextual refontification is now separate from stealth fontification.
983
984 jit-lock-defer-contextually is renamed jit-lock-contextually and
985 jit-lock-context-time determines the delay after which contextual
986 refontification takes place.
987
988 *** lazy-lock is considered obsolete.
989
990 The `lazy-lock' package is superseded by `jit-lock' and is considered
991 obsolete. `jit-lock' is activated by default; if you wish to continue
992 using `lazy-lock', activate it in your ~/.emacs like this:
993 (setq font-lock-support-mode 'lazy-lock-mode)
994
995 If you invoke `lazy-lock-mode' directly rather than through
996 `font-lock-support-mode', it now issues a warning:
997 "Use font-lock-support-mode rather than calling lazy-lock-mode"
998
999 ** Menu support:
1000
1001 *** A menu item "Show/Hide" was added to the top-level menu "Options".
1002 This menu allows you to turn various display features on and off (such
1003 as the fringes, the tool bar, the speedbar, and the menu bar itself).
1004 You can also move the vertical scroll bar to either side here or turn
1005 it off completely. There is also a menu-item to toggle displaying of
1006 current date and time, current line and column number in the mode-line.
1007
1008 *** Speedbar has moved from the "Tools" top level menu to "Show/Hide".
1009
1010 *** The menu item "Open File..." has been split into two items, "New File..."
1011 and "Open File...". "Open File..." now opens only existing files. This is
1012 to support existing GUI file selection dialogs better.
1013
1014 *** The file selection dialog for Gtk+, Mac, W32 and Motif/LessTif can be
1015 disabled by customizing the variable `use-file-dialog'.
1016
1017 *** The pop up menus for Lucid now stay up if you do a fast click and can
1018 be navigated with the arrow keys (like Gtk+, Mac and W32).
1019
1020 *** The menu bar for Motif/LessTif/Lucid/Gtk+ can be navigated with keys.
1021 Pressing F10 shows the first menu in the menu bar. Navigation is done with
1022 the arrow keys, select with the return key and cancel with the escape keys.
1023
1024 *** The Lucid menus can display multilingual text in your locale. You have
1025 to explicitly specify a fontSet resource for this to work, for example
1026 `-xrm "Emacs*fontSet: -*-helvetica-medium-r-*--*-120-*-*-*-*-*-*,*"'.
1027
1028 *** Dialogs for Lucid/Athena and LessTif/Motif now pop down on pressing
1029 ESC, like they do for Gtk+, Mac and W32.
1030
1031 *** For the Gtk+ version, you can make Emacs use the old file dialog
1032 by setting the variable `x-gtk-use-old-file-dialog' to t. Default is to use
1033 the new dialog.
1034
1035 *** You can exit dialog windows and menus by typing C-g.
1036
1037 ** Buffer Menu changes:
1038
1039 *** The new options `buffers-menu-show-directories' and
1040 `buffers-menu-show-status' let you control how buffers are displayed
1041 in the menu dropped down when you click "Buffers" from the menu bar.
1042
1043 `buffers-menu-show-directories' controls whether the menu displays
1044 leading directories as part of the file name visited by the buffer.
1045 If its value is `unless-uniquify', the default, directories are
1046 shown unless uniquify-buffer-name-style' is non-nil. The value of nil
1047 and t turn the display of directories off and on, respectively.
1048
1049 `buffers-menu-show-status' controls whether the Buffers menu includes
1050 the modified and read-only status of the buffers. By default it is
1051 t, and the status is shown.
1052
1053 Setting these variables directly does not take effect until next time
1054 the Buffers menu is regenerated.
1055
1056 *** New command `Buffer-menu-toggle-files-only' toggles display of file
1057 buffers only in the Buffer Menu. It is bound to T in Buffer Menu
1058 mode.
1059
1060 *** `buffer-menu' and `list-buffers' now list buffers whose names begin
1061 with a space, when those buffers are visiting files. Normally buffers
1062 whose names begin with space are omitted.
1063
1064 ** Mouse changes:
1065
1066 *** You can now follow links by clicking Mouse-1 on the link.
1067
1068 Traditionally, Emacs uses a Mouse-1 click to set point and a Mouse-2
1069 click to follow a link, whereas most other applications use a Mouse-1
1070 click for both purposes, depending on whether you click outside or
1071 inside a link. Now the behavior of a Mouse-1 click has been changed
1072 to match this context-sensitive dual behavior. (If you prefer the old
1073 behavior, set the user option `mouse-1-click-follows-link' to nil.)
1074
1075 Depending on the current mode, a Mouse-2 click in Emacs can do much
1076 more than just follow a link, so the new Mouse-1 behavior is only
1077 activated for modes which explicitly mark a clickable text as a "link"
1078 (see the new function `mouse-on-link-p' for details). The Lisp
1079 packages that are included in release 22.1 have been adapted to do
1080 this, but external packages may not yet support this. However, there
1081 is no risk in using such packages, as the worst thing that could
1082 happen is that you get the original Mouse-1 behavior when you click
1083 on a link, which typically means that you set point where you click.
1084
1085 If you want to get the original Mouse-1 action also inside a link, you
1086 just need to press the Mouse-1 button a little longer than a normal
1087 click (i.e. press and hold the Mouse-1 button for half a second before
1088 you release it).
1089
1090 Dragging the Mouse-1 inside a link still performs the original
1091 drag-mouse-1 action, typically copy the text.
1092
1093 You can customize the new Mouse-1 behavior via the new user options
1094 `mouse-1-click-follows-link' and `mouse-1-click-in-non-selected-windows'.
1095
1096 *** If you set the new variable `mouse-autoselect-window' to a non-nil
1097 value, windows are automatically selected as you move the mouse from
1098 one Emacs window to another, even within a frame. A minibuffer window
1099 can be selected only when it is active.
1100
1101 *** On X, when the window manager requires that you click on a frame to
1102 select it (give it focus), the selected window and cursor position
1103 normally changes according to the mouse click position. If you set
1104 the variable x-mouse-click-focus-ignore-position to t, the selected
1105 window and cursor position do not change when you click on a frame
1106 to give it focus.
1107
1108 *** Emacs normally highlights mouse sensitive text whenever the mouse
1109 is over the text. By setting the new variable `mouse-highlight', you
1110 can optionally enable mouse highlighting only after you move the
1111 mouse, so that highlighting disappears when you press a key. You can
1112 also disable mouse highlighting.
1113
1114 *** You can now customize if selecting a region by dragging the mouse
1115 shall not copy the selected text to the kill-ring by setting the new
1116 variable mouse-drag-copy-region to nil.
1117
1118 *** Under X, mouse-wheel-mode is turned on by default.
1119
1120 *** Emacs ignores mouse-2 clicks while the mouse wheel is being moved.
1121
1122 People tend to push the mouse wheel (which counts as a mouse-2 click)
1123 unintentionally while turning the wheel, so these clicks are now
1124 ignored. You can customize this with the mouse-wheel-click-event and
1125 mouse-wheel-inhibit-click-time variables.
1126
1127 *** mouse-wheels can now scroll a specific fraction of the window
1128 (rather than a fixed number of lines) and the scrolling is `progressive'.
1129
1130 ** Multilingual Environment (Mule) changes:
1131
1132 *** You can disable character translation for a file using the -*-
1133 construct. Include `enable-character-translation: nil' inside the
1134 -*-...-*- to disable any character translation that may happen by
1135 various global and per-coding-system translation tables. You can also
1136 specify it in a local variable list at the end of the file. For
1137 shortcut, instead of using this long variable name, you can append the
1138 character "!" at the end of coding-system name specified in -*-
1139 construct or in a local variable list. For example, if a file has the
1140 following header, it is decoded by the coding system `iso-latin-1'
1141 without any character translation:
1142 ;; -*- coding: iso-latin-1!; -*-
1143
1144 *** Language environment and various default coding systems are setup
1145 more correctly according to the current locale name. If the locale
1146 name doesn't specify a charset, the default is what glibc defines.
1147 This change can result in using the different coding systems as
1148 default in some locale (e.g. vi_VN).
1149
1150 *** The keyboard-coding-system is now automatically set based on your
1151 current locale settings if you are not using a window system. This
1152 can mean that the META key doesn't work but generates non-ASCII
1153 characters instead, depending on how the terminal (or terminal
1154 emulator) works. Use `set-keyboard-coding-system' (or customize
1155 keyboard-coding-system) if you prefer META to work (the old default)
1156 or if the locale doesn't describe the character set actually generated
1157 by the keyboard. See Info node `Unibyte Mode'.
1158
1159 *** The new command `set-file-name-coding-system' (C-x RET F) sets
1160 coding system for encoding and decoding file names. A new menu item
1161 (Options->Mule->Set Coding Systems->For File Name) invokes this
1162 command.
1163
1164 *** The new command `revert-buffer-with-coding-system' (C-x RET r)
1165 revisits the current file using a coding system that you specify.
1166
1167 *** New command `recode-region' decodes the region again by a specified
1168 coding system.
1169
1170 *** The new command `recode-file-name' changes the encoding of the name
1171 of a file.
1172
1173 *** New command `ucs-insert' inserts a character specified by its
1174 unicode.
1175
1176 *** New command quail-show-key shows what key (or key sequence) to type
1177 in the current input method to input a character at point.
1178
1179 *** Limited support for character `unification' has been added.
1180 Emacs now knows how to translate between different representations of
1181 the same characters in various Emacs charsets according to standard
1182 Unicode mappings. This applies mainly to characters in the ISO 8859
1183 sets plus some other 8-bit sets, but can be extended. For instance,
1184 translation works amongst the Emacs ...-iso8859-... charsets and the
1185 mule-unicode-... ones.
1186
1187 By default this translation happens automatically on encoding.
1188 Self-inserting characters are translated to make the input conformant
1189 with the encoding of the buffer in which it's being used, where
1190 possible.
1191
1192 You can force a more complete unification with the user option
1193 unify-8859-on-decoding-mode. That maps all the Latin-N character sets
1194 into Unicode characters (from the latin-iso8859-1 and
1195 mule-unicode-0100-24ff charsets) on decoding. Note that this mode
1196 will often effectively clobber data with an iso-2022 encoding.
1197
1198 *** New language environments (set up automatically according to the
1199 locale): Belarusian, Bulgarian, Chinese-EUC-TW, Croatian, Esperanto,
1200 French, Georgian, Italian, Latin-7, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malayalam,
1201 Russian, Russian, Slovenian, Swedish, Tajik, Tamil, UTF-8,Ukrainian,
1202 Welsh,Latin-6, Windows-1255.
1203
1204 *** New input methods: latin-alt-postfix, latin-postfix, latin-prefix,
1205 belarusian, bulgarian-bds, bulgarian-phonetic, chinese-sisheng (for
1206 Chinese Pinyin characters), croatian, dutch, georgian, latvian-keyboard,
1207 lithuanian-numeric, lithuanian-keyboard, malayalam-inscript, rfc1345,
1208 russian-computer, sgml, slovenian, tamil-inscript, ukrainian-computer,
1209 ucs, vietnamese-telex, welsh.
1210
1211 *** There is support for decoding Greek and Cyrillic characters into
1212 either Unicode (the mule-unicode charsets) or the iso-8859 charsets,
1213 when possible. The latter are more space-efficient.
1214 This is controlled by user option utf-fragment-on-decoding.
1215
1216 *** Improved Thai support. A new minor mode `thai-word-mode' (which is
1217 automatically activated if you select Thai as a language
1218 environment) changes key bindings of most word-oriented commands to
1219 versions which recognize Thai words. Affected commands are
1220 M-f (forward-word)
1221 M-b (backward-word)
1222 M-d (kill-word)
1223 M-DEL (backward-kill-word)
1224 M-t (transpose-words)
1225 M-q (fill-paragraph)
1226
1227 *** Indian support has been updated.
1228 The in-is13194 coding system is now Unicode-based. CDAC fonts are
1229 assumed. There is a framework for supporting various Indian scripts,
1230 but currently only Devanagari, Malayalam and Tamil are supported.
1231
1232 *** The utf-8/16 coding systems have been enhanced.
1233 By default, untranslatable utf-8 sequences are simply composed into
1234 single quasi-characters. User option `utf-translate-cjk-mode' (it is
1235 turned on by default) arranges to translate many utf-8 CJK character
1236 sequences into real Emacs characters in a similar way to the Mule-UCS
1237 system. As this loads a fairly big data on demand, people who are not
1238 interested in CJK characters may want to customize it to nil.
1239 You can augment/amend the CJK translation via hash tables
1240 `ucs-mule-cjk-to-unicode' and `ucs-unicode-to-mule-cjk'. The utf-8
1241 coding system now also encodes characters from most of Emacs's
1242 one-dimensional internal charsets, specifically the ISO-8859 ones.
1243 The utf-16 coding system is affected similarly.
1244
1245 *** A UTF-7 coding system is available in the library `utf-7'.
1246
1247 *** A new coding system `euc-tw' has been added for traditional Chinese
1248 in CNS encoding; it accepts both Big 5 and CNS as input; on saving,
1249 Big 5 is then converted to CNS.
1250
1251 *** Many new coding systems are available in the `code-pages' library.
1252 These include complete versions of most of those in codepage.el, based
1253 on Unicode mappings. `codepage-setup' is now obsolete and is used
1254 only in the MS-DOS port of Emacs. All coding systems defined in
1255 `code-pages' are auto-loaded.
1256
1257 *** New variable `utf-translate-cjk-unicode-range' controls which
1258 Unicode characters to translate in `utf-translate-cjk-mode'.
1259
1260 *** iso-10646-1 (`Unicode') fonts can be used to display any range of
1261 characters encodable by the utf-8 coding system. Just specify the
1262 fontset appropriately.
1263
1264 ** Customize changes:
1265
1266 *** Custom themes are collections of customize options. Create a
1267 custom theme with M-x customize-create-theme. Use M-x load-theme to
1268 load and enable a theme, and M-x disable-theme to disable it. Use M-x
1269 enable-theme to enable a disabled theme.
1270
1271 *** The commands M-x customize-face and M-x customize-face-other-window
1272 now look at the character after point. If a face or faces are
1273 specified for that character, the commands by default customize those
1274 faces.
1275
1276 *** The face-customization widget has been reworked to be less confusing.
1277 In particular, when you enable a face attribute using the corresponding
1278 check-box, there's no longer a redundant `*' option in value selection
1279 for that attribute; the values you can choose are only those which make
1280 sense for the attribute. When an attribute is de-selected by unchecking
1281 its check-box, then the (now ignored, but still present temporarily in
1282 case you re-select the attribute) value is hidden.
1283
1284 *** When you set or reset a variable's value in a Customize buffer,
1285 the previous value becomes the "backup value" of the variable.
1286 You can go back to that backup value by selecting "Use Backup Value"
1287 under the "[State]" button.
1288
1289 ** Dired mode:
1290
1291 *** In Dired's ! command (dired-do-shell-command), `*' and `?' now
1292 control substitution of the file names only when they are surrounded
1293 by whitespace. This means you can now use them as shell wildcards
1294 too. If you want to use just plain `*' as a wildcard, type `*""'; the
1295 double quotes make no difference in the shell, but they prevent
1296 special treatment in `dired-do-shell-command'.
1297
1298 *** The Dired command `dired-goto-file' is now bound to j, not M-g.
1299 This is to avoid hiding the global key binding of M-g.
1300
1301 *** New faces dired-header, dired-mark, dired-marked, dired-flagged,
1302 dired-ignored, dired-directory, dired-symlink, dired-warning
1303 introduced for Dired mode instead of font-lock faces.
1304
1305 *** New Dired command `dired-compare-directories' marks files
1306 with different file attributes in two dired buffers.
1307
1308 *** New Dired command `dired-do-touch' (bound to T) changes timestamps
1309 of marked files with the value entered in the minibuffer.
1310
1311 *** In Dired, the w command now stores the current line's file name
1312 into the kill ring. With a zero prefix arg, it stores the absolute file name.
1313
1314 *** In Dired-x, Omitting files is now a minor mode, dired-omit-mode.
1315
1316 The mode toggling command is bound to M-o. A new command
1317 dired-mark-omitted, bound to * O, marks omitted files. The variable
1318 dired-omit-files-p is obsoleted, use the mode toggling function
1319 instead.
1320
1321 *** The variables dired-free-space-program and dired-free-space-args
1322 have been renamed to directory-free-space-program and
1323 directory-free-space-args, and they now apply whenever Emacs puts a
1324 directory listing into a buffer.
1325
1326 ** Comint changes:
1327
1328 *** The new INSIDE_EMACS environment variable is set to "t" in subshells
1329 running inside Emacs. This supersedes the EMACS environment variable,
1330 which will be removed in a future Emacs release. Programs that need
1331 to know whether they are started inside Emacs should check INSIDE_EMACS
1332 instead of EMACS.
1333
1334 *** The comint prompt can now be made read-only, using the new user
1335 option `comint-prompt-read-only'. This is not enabled by default,
1336 except in IELM buffers. The read-only status of IELM prompts can be
1337 controlled with the new user option `ielm-prompt-read-only', which
1338 overrides `comint-prompt-read-only'.
1339
1340 The new commands `comint-kill-whole-line' and `comint-kill-region'
1341 support editing comint buffers with read-only prompts.
1342
1343 `comint-kill-whole-line' is like `kill-whole-line', but ignores both
1344 read-only and field properties. Hence, it always kill entire
1345 lines, including any prompts.
1346
1347 `comint-kill-region' is like `kill-region', except that it ignores
1348 read-only properties, if it is safe to do so. This means that if any
1349 part of a prompt is deleted, then the entire prompt must be deleted
1350 and that all prompts must stay at the beginning of a line. If this is
1351 not the case, then `comint-kill-region' behaves just like
1352 `kill-region' if read-only properties are involved: it copies the text
1353 to the kill-ring, but does not delete it.
1354
1355 *** The new command `comint-insert-previous-argument' in comint-derived
1356 modes (shell-mode, etc.) inserts arguments from previous command lines,
1357 like bash's `ESC .' binding. It is bound by default to `C-c .', but
1358 otherwise behaves quite similarly to the bash version.
1359
1360 *** `comint-use-prompt-regexp-instead-of-fields' has been renamed
1361 `comint-use-prompt-regexp'. The old name has been kept as an alias,
1362 but declared obsolete.
1363
1364 ** M-x Compile changes:
1365
1366 *** M-x compile has become more robust and reliable
1367
1368 Quite a few more kinds of messages are recognized. Messages that are
1369 recognized as warnings or informational come in orange or green, instead of
1370 red. Informational messages are by default skipped with `next-error'
1371 (controlled by `compilation-skip-threshold').
1372
1373 Location data is collected on the fly as the *compilation* buffer changes.
1374 This means you could modify messages to make them point to different files.
1375 This also means you can not go to locations of messages you may have deleted.
1376
1377 The variable `compilation-error-regexp-alist' has now become customizable. If
1378 you had added your own regexps to this, you'll probably need to include a
1379 leading `^', otherwise they'll match anywhere on a line. There is now also a
1380 `compilation-mode-font-lock-keywords' and it nicely handles all the checks
1381 that configure outputs and -o options so you see at a glance where you are.
1382
1383 The new file etc/compilation.txt gives examples of each type of message.
1384
1385 *** New user option `compilation-environment'.
1386 This option allows you to specify environment variables for inferior
1387 compilation processes without affecting the environment that all
1388 subprocesses inherit.
1389
1390 *** New user option `compilation-disable-input'.
1391 If this is non-nil, send end-of-file as compilation process input.
1392
1393 *** New options `next-error-highlight' and `next-error-highlight-no-select'
1394 specify the method of highlighting of the corresponding source line
1395 in new face `next-error'.
1396
1397 *** A new minor mode `next-error-follow-minor-mode' can be used in
1398 compilation-mode, grep-mode, occur-mode, and diff-mode (i.e. all the
1399 modes that can use `next-error'). In this mode, cursor motion in the
1400 buffer causes automatic display in another window of the corresponding
1401 matches, compilation errors, etc. This minor mode can be toggled with
1402 C-c C-f.
1403
1404 *** When the left fringe is displayed, an arrow points to current message in
1405 the compilation buffer.
1406
1407 *** The new variable `compilation-context-lines' controls lines of leading
1408 context before the current message. If nil and the left fringe is displayed,
1409 it doesn't scroll the compilation output window. If there is no left fringe,
1410 no arrow is displayed and a value of nil means display the message at the top
1411 of the window.
1412
1413 ** Occur mode changes:
1414
1415 *** The new command `multi-occur' is just like `occur', except it can
1416 search multiple buffers. There is also a new command
1417 `multi-occur-in-matching-buffers' which allows you to specify the
1418 buffers to search by their filenames or buffer names. Internally,
1419 Occur mode has been rewritten, and now uses font-lock, among other
1420 changes.
1421
1422 *** You can now use next-error (C-x `) and previous-error to advance to
1423 the next/previous matching line found by M-x occur.
1424
1425 *** In the *Occur* buffer, `o' switches to it in another window, and
1426 C-o displays the current line's occurrence in another window without
1427 switching to it.
1428
1429 ** Grep changes:
1430
1431 *** Grep has been decoupled from compilation mode setup.
1432
1433 There's a new separate package grep.el, with its own submenu and
1434 customization group.
1435
1436 *** `grep-find' is now also available under the name `find-grep' where
1437 people knowing `find-grep-dired' would probably expect it.
1438
1439 *** New commands `lgrep' (local grep) and `rgrep' (recursive grep) are
1440 more user-friendly versions of `grep' and `grep-find', which prompt
1441 separately for the regular expression to match, the files to search,
1442 and the base directory for the search. Case sensitivity of the
1443 search is controlled by the current value of `case-fold-search'.
1444
1445 These commands build the shell commands based on the new variables
1446 `grep-template' (lgrep) and `grep-find-template' (rgrep).
1447
1448 The files to search can use aliases defined in `grep-files-aliases'.
1449
1450 Subdirectories listed in `grep-find-ignored-directories' such as those
1451 typically used by various version control systems, like CVS and arch,
1452 are automatically skipped by `rgrep'.
1453
1454 *** The grep commands provide highlighting support.
1455
1456 Hits are fontified in green, and hits in binary files in orange. Grep buffers
1457 can be saved and automatically revisited.
1458
1459 *** New option `grep-highlight-matches' highlights matches in *grep*
1460 buffer. It uses a special feature of some grep programs which accept
1461 --color option to output markers around matches. When going to the next
1462 match with `next-error' the exact match is highlighted in the source
1463 buffer. Otherwise, if `grep-highlight-matches' is nil, the whole
1464 source line is highlighted.
1465
1466 *** New key bindings in grep output window:
1467 SPC and DEL scrolls window up and down. C-n and C-p moves to next and
1468 previous match in the grep window. RET jumps to the source line of
1469 the current match. `n' and `p' shows next and previous match in
1470 other window, but does not switch buffer. `{' and `}' jumps to the
1471 previous or next file in the grep output. TAB also jumps to the next
1472 file.
1473
1474 *** M-x grep now tries to avoid appending `/dev/null' to the command line
1475 by using GNU grep `-H' option instead. M-x grep automatically
1476 detects whether this is possible or not the first time it is invoked.
1477 When `-H' is used, the grep command line supplied by the user is passed
1478 unchanged to the system to execute, which allows more complicated
1479 command lines to be used than was possible before.
1480
1481 *** The new variables `grep-window-height' and `grep-scroll-output' override
1482 the corresponding compilation mode settings, for grep commands only.
1483
1484 ** Cursor display changes:
1485
1486 *** Emacs can produce an underscore-like (horizontal bar) cursor.
1487 The underscore cursor is set by putting `(cursor-type . hbar)' in
1488 default-frame-alist. It supports variable heights, like the `bar'
1489 cursor does.
1490
1491 *** The variable `cursor-in-non-selected-windows' can now be set to any
1492 of the recognized cursor types.
1493
1494 *** Display of hollow cursors now obeys the buffer-local value (if any)
1495 of `cursor-in-non-selected-windows' in the buffer that the cursor
1496 appears in.
1497
1498 *** On text terminals, the variable `visible-cursor' controls whether Emacs
1499 uses the "very visible" cursor (the default) or the normal cursor.
1500
1501 *** The X resource cursorBlink can be used to turn off cursor blinking.
1502
1503 *** On X, MS Windows, and Mac OS, the blinking cursor's "off" state is
1504 now controlled by the variable `blink-cursor-alist'.
1505
1506 ** X Windows Support:
1507
1508 *** Emacs now supports drag and drop for X. Dropping a file on a window
1509 opens it, dropping text inserts the text. Dropping a file on a dired
1510 buffer copies or moves the file to that directory.
1511
1512 *** Under X11, it is possible to swap Alt and Meta (and Super and Hyper).
1513 The new variables `x-alt-keysym', `x-hyper-keysym', `x-meta-keysym',
1514 and `x-super-keysym' can be used to choose which keysyms Emacs should
1515 use for the modifiers. For example, the following two lines swap
1516 Meta and Alt:
1517 (setq x-alt-keysym 'meta)
1518 (setq x-meta-keysym 'alt)
1519
1520 *** The X resource useXIM can be used to turn off use of XIM, which can
1521 speed up Emacs with slow networking to the X server.
1522
1523 If the configure option `--without-xim' was used to turn off use of
1524 XIM by default, the X resource useXIM can be used to turn it on.
1525
1526 *** The new variable `x-select-request-type' controls how Emacs
1527 requests X selection. The default value is nil, which means that
1528 Emacs requests X selection with types COMPOUND_TEXT and UTF8_STRING,
1529 and use the more appropriately result.
1530
1531 *** The scrollbar under LessTif or Motif has a smoother drag-scrolling.
1532 On the other hand, the size of the thumb does not represent the actual
1533 amount of text shown any more (only a crude approximation of it).
1534
1535 ** Xterm support:
1536
1537 *** If you enable Xterm Mouse mode, Emacs will respond to mouse clicks
1538 on the mode line, header line and display margin, when run in an xterm.
1539
1540 *** Improved key bindings support when running in an xterm.
1541 When Emacs is running in an xterm more key bindings are available.
1542 The following should work:
1543 {C,S,C-S,A}-{right,left,up,down,prior,next,delete,insert,F1-12}.
1544 These key bindings work on xterm from X.org 6.8 (and later versions),
1545 they might not work on some older versions of xterm, or on some
1546 proprietary versions.
1547 The various keys generated by xterm when the "modifyOtherKeys"
1548 resource is set are also supported.
1549
1550 ** Character terminal color support changes:
1551
1552 *** The new command-line option --color=MODE lets you specify a standard
1553 mode for a tty color support. It is meant to be used on character
1554 terminals whose capabilities are not set correctly in the terminal
1555 database, or with terminal emulators which support colors, but don't
1556 set the TERM environment variable to a name of a color-capable
1557 terminal. "emacs --color" uses the same color commands as GNU `ls'
1558 when invoked with "ls --color", so if your terminal can support colors
1559 in "ls --color", it will support "emacs --color" as well. See the
1560 user manual for the possible values of the MODE parameter.
1561
1562 *** Emacs now supports several character terminals which provide more
1563 than 8 colors. For example, for `xterm', 16-color, 88-color, and
1564 256-color modes are supported. Emacs automatically notes at startup
1565 the extended number of colors, and defines the appropriate entries for
1566 all of these colors.
1567
1568 *** Emacs now uses the full range of available colors for the default
1569 faces when running on a color terminal, including 16-, 88-, and
1570 256-color xterms. This means that when you run "emacs -nw" on an
1571 88-color or 256-color xterm, you will see essentially the same face
1572 colors as on X.
1573
1574 *** There's a new support for colors on `rxvt' terminal emulator.
1575
1576 ** ebnf2ps changes:
1577
1578 *** New option `ebnf-arrow-extra-width' which specify extra width for arrow
1579 shape drawing.
1580 The extra width is used to avoid that the arrowhead and the terminal border
1581 overlap. It depends on `ebnf-arrow-shape' and `ebnf-line-width'.
1582
1583 *** New option `ebnf-arrow-scale' which specify the arrow scale.
1584 Values lower than 1.0, shrink the arrow.
1585 Values greater than 1.0, expand the arrow.
1586 \f
1587 * New Modes and Packages in Emacs 22.1
1588
1589 ** CUA mode is now part of the Emacs distribution.
1590
1591 The new cua package provides CUA-like keybindings using C-x for
1592 cut (kill), C-c for copy, C-v for paste (yank), and C-z for undo.
1593 With cua, the region can be set and extended using shifted movement
1594 keys (like pc-selection-mode) and typed text replaces the active
1595 region (like delete-selection-mode). Do not enable these modes with
1596 cua-mode. Customize the variable `cua-mode' to enable cua.
1597
1598 The cua-selection-mode enables the CUA keybindings for the region but
1599 does not change the bindings for C-z/C-x/C-c/C-v. It can be used as a
1600 replacement for pc-selection-mode.
1601
1602 In addition, cua provides unified rectangle support with visible
1603 rectangle highlighting: Use C-return to start a rectangle, extend it
1604 using the movement commands (or mouse-3), and cut or copy it using C-x
1605 or C-c (using C-w and M-w also works).
1606
1607 Use M-o and M-c to `open' or `close' the rectangle, use M-b or M-f, to
1608 fill it with blanks or another character, use M-u or M-l to upcase or
1609 downcase the rectangle, use M-i to increment the numbers in the
1610 rectangle, use M-n to fill the rectangle with a numeric sequence (such
1611 as 10 20 30...), use M-r to replace a regexp in the rectangle, and use
1612 M-' or M-/ to restrict command on the rectangle to a subset of the
1613 rows. See the commentary in cua-base.el for more rectangle commands.
1614
1615 Cua also provides unified support for registers: Use a numeric
1616 prefix argument between 0 and 9, i.e. M-0 .. M-9, for C-x, C-c, and
1617 C-v to cut or copy into register 0-9, or paste from register 0-9.
1618
1619 The last text deleted (not killed) is automatically stored in
1620 register 0. This includes text deleted by typing text.
1621
1622 Finally, cua provides a global mark which is set using S-C-space.
1623 When the global mark is active, any text which is cut or copied is
1624 automatically inserted at the global mark position. See the
1625 commentary in cua-base.el for more global mark related commands.
1626
1627 The features of cua also works with the standard Emacs bindings for
1628 kill, copy, yank, and undo. If you want to use cua mode, but don't
1629 want the C-x, C-c, C-v, and C-z bindings, you can customize the
1630 `cua-enable-cua-keys' variable.
1631
1632 Note: This version of cua mode is not backwards compatible with older
1633 versions of cua.el and cua-mode.el. To ensure proper operation, you
1634 must remove older versions of cua.el or cua-mode.el as well as the
1635 loading and customization of those packages from the .emacs file.
1636
1637 ** Tramp is now part of the distribution.
1638
1639 This package is similar to Ange-FTP: it allows you to edit remote
1640 files. But whereas Ange-FTP uses FTP to access the remote host,
1641 Tramp uses a shell connection. The shell connection is always used
1642 for filename completion and directory listings and suchlike, but for
1643 the actual file transfer, you can choose between the so-called
1644 `inline' methods (which transfer the files through the shell
1645 connection using base64 or uu encoding) and the `out-of-band' methods
1646 (which invoke an external copying program such as `rcp' or `scp' or
1647 `rsync' to do the copying).
1648
1649 Shell connections can be acquired via `rsh', `ssh', `telnet' and also
1650 `su' and `sudo'. Ange-FTP is still supported via the `ftp' method.
1651
1652 If you want to disable Tramp you should set
1653
1654 (setq tramp-default-method "ftp")
1655
1656 Removing Tramp, and re-enabling Ange-FTP, can be achieved by M-x
1657 tramp-unload-tramp.
1658
1659 ** The image-dired.el package allows you to easily view, tag and in
1660 other ways manipulate image files and their thumbnails, using dired as
1661 the main interface. Image-Dired provides functionality to generate
1662 simple image galleries.
1663
1664 ** Image files are normally visited in Image mode, which lets you toggle
1665 between viewing the image and viewing the text using C-c C-c.
1666
1667 ** The new python.el package is used to edit Python and Jython programs.
1668
1669 ** The URL package (which had been part of W3) is now part of Emacs.
1670
1671 ** Calc is now part of the Emacs distribution.
1672
1673 Calc is an advanced desk calculator and mathematical tool written in
1674 Emacs Lisp. The prefix for Calc has been changed to `C-x *' and Calc
1675 can be started with `C-x * *'. The Calc manual is separate from the
1676 Emacs manual; within Emacs, type "C-h i m calc RET" to read the
1677 manual. A reference card is available in `etc/calccard.tex' and
1678 `etc/calccard.ps'.
1679
1680 ** Org mode is now part of the Emacs distribution
1681
1682 Org mode is a mode for keeping notes, maintaining ToDo lists, and
1683 doing project planning with a fast and effective plain-text system.
1684 It also contains a plain-text table editor with spreadsheet-like
1685 capabilities.
1686
1687 The Org mode table editor can be integrated into any major mode by
1688 activating the minor mode, Orgtbl mode.
1689
1690 The documentation for org-mode is in a separate manual; within Emacs,
1691 type "C-h i m org RET" to read that manual. A reference card is
1692 available in `etc/orgcard.tex' and `etc/orgcard.ps'.
1693
1694 ** ERC is now part of the Emacs distribution.
1695
1696 ERC is a powerful, modular, and extensible IRC client for Emacs.
1697
1698 To see what modules are available, type
1699 M-x customize-option erc-modules RET.
1700
1701 To start an IRC session with ERC, type M-x erc, and follow the prompts
1702 for server, port, and nick.
1703
1704 ** Rcirc is now part of the Emacs distribution.
1705
1706 Rcirc is an Internet relay chat (IRC) client. It supports
1707 simultaneous connections to multiple IRC servers. Each discussion
1708 takes place in its own buffer. For each connection you can join
1709 several channels (many-to-many) and participate in private
1710 (one-to-one) chats. Both channel and private chats are contained in
1711 separate buffers.
1712
1713 To start an IRC session using the default parameters, type M-x irc.
1714 If you type C-u M-x irc, it prompts you for the server, nick, port and
1715 startup channel parameters before connecting.
1716
1717 ** The new package ibuffer provides a powerful, completely
1718 customizable replacement for buff-menu.el.
1719
1720 ** Newsticker is now part of the Emacs distribution.
1721
1722 Newsticker asynchronously retrieves headlines (RSS) from a list of news
1723 sites, prepares these headlines for reading, and allows for loading the
1724 corresponding articles in a web browser. Its documentation is in a
1725 separate manual.
1726
1727 ** The wdired.el package allows you to use normal editing commands on Dired
1728 buffers to change filenames, permissions, etc...
1729
1730 ** Ido mode is now part of the Emacs distribution.
1731
1732 The ido (interactively do) package is an extension of the iswitchb
1733 package to do interactive opening of files and directories in addition
1734 to interactive buffer switching. Ido is a superset of iswitchb (with
1735 a few exceptions), so don't enable both packages.
1736
1737 ** The new global minor mode `file-name-shadow-mode' modifies the way
1738 filenames being entered by the user in the minibuffer are displayed, so
1739 that it's clear when part of the entered filename will be ignored due to
1740 Emacs' filename parsing rules. The ignored portion can be made dim,
1741 invisible, or otherwise less visually noticeable. The display method can
1742 be displayed by customizing the variable `file-name-shadow-properties'.
1743
1744 ** Emacs' keyboard macro facilities have been enhanced by the new
1745 kmacro package.
1746
1747 Keyboard macros are now defined and executed via the F3 and F4 keys:
1748 F3 starts a macro, F4 ends the macro, and pressing F4 again executes
1749 the last macro. While defining the macro, F3 inserts a counter value
1750 which automatically increments every time the macro is executed.
1751
1752 There is now a keyboard macro ring which stores the most recently
1753 defined macros.
1754
1755 The C-x C-k sequence is now a prefix for the kmacro keymap which
1756 defines bindings for moving through the keyboard macro ring,
1757 C-x C-k C-p and C-x C-k C-n, editing the last macro C-x C-k C-e,
1758 manipulating the macro counter and format via C-x C-k C-c,
1759 C-x C-k C-a, and C-x C-k C-f. See the commentary in kmacro.el
1760 for more commands.
1761
1762 The original macro bindings C-x (, C-x ), and C-x e are still
1763 available, but they now interface to the keyboard macro ring too.
1764
1765 The C-x e command now automatically terminates the current macro
1766 before calling it, if used while defining a macro.
1767
1768 In addition, when ending or calling a macro with C-x e, the macro can
1769 be repeated immediately by typing just the `e'. You can customize
1770 this behavior via the variables kmacro-call-repeat-key and
1771 kmacro-call-repeat-with-arg.
1772
1773 Keyboard macros can now be debugged and edited interactively.
1774 C-x C-k SPC steps through the last keyboard macro one key sequence
1775 at a time, prompting for the actions to take.
1776
1777 ** The new keypad setup package provides several common bindings for
1778 the numeric keypad which is available on most keyboards. The numeric
1779 keypad typically has the digits 0 to 9, a decimal point, keys marked
1780 +, -, /, and *, an Enter key, and a NumLock toggle key. The keypad
1781 package only controls the use of the digit and decimal keys.
1782
1783 By customizing the variables `keypad-setup', `keypad-shifted-setup',
1784 `keypad-numlock-setup', and `keypad-numlock-shifted-setup', or by
1785 using the function `keypad-setup', you can rebind all digit keys and
1786 the decimal key of the keypad in one step for each of the four
1787 possible combinations of the Shift key state (not pressed/pressed) and
1788 the NumLock toggle state (off/on).
1789
1790 The choices for the keypad keys in each of the above states are:
1791 `Plain numeric keypad' where the keys generates plain digits,
1792 `Numeric keypad with decimal key' where the character produced by the
1793 decimal key can be customized individually (for internationalization),
1794 `Numeric Prefix Arg' where the keypad keys produce numeric prefix args
1795 for Emacs editing commands, `Cursor keys' and `Shifted Cursor keys'
1796 where the keys work like (shifted) arrow keys, home/end, etc., and
1797 `Unspecified/User-defined' where the keypad keys (kp-0, kp-1, etc.)
1798 are left unspecified and can be bound individually through the global
1799 or local keymaps.
1800
1801 ** The printing package is now part of the Emacs distribution.
1802
1803 If you enable the printing package by including (require 'printing) in
1804 the .emacs file, the normal Print item on the File menu is replaced
1805 with a Print sub-menu which allows you to preview output through
1806 ghostview, use ghostscript to print (if you don't have a PostScript
1807 printer) or send directly to printer a PostScript code generated by
1808 `ps-print' package. Use M-x pr-help for more information.
1809
1810 ** The new package longlines.el provides a minor mode for editing text
1811 files composed of long lines, based on the `use-hard-newlines'
1812 mechanism. The long lines are broken up by inserting soft newlines,
1813 which are automatically removed when saving the file to disk or
1814 copying into the kill ring, clipboard, etc. By default, Longlines
1815 mode inserts soft newlines automatically during editing, a behavior
1816 referred to as "soft word wrap" in other text editors. This is
1817 similar to Refill mode, but more reliable. To turn the word wrap
1818 feature off, set `longlines-auto-wrap' to nil.
1819
1820 ** SES mode (ses-mode) is a new major mode for creating and editing
1821 spreadsheet files. Besides the usual Emacs features (intuitive command
1822 letters, undo, cell formulas in Lisp, plaintext files, etc.) it also offers
1823 viral immunity and import/export of tab-separated values.
1824
1825 ** The new package table.el implements editable, WYSIWYG, embedded
1826 `text tables' in Emacs buffers. It simulates the effect of putting
1827 these tables in a special major mode. The package emulates WYSIWYG
1828 table editing available in modern word processors. The package also
1829 can generate a table source in typesetting and markup languages such
1830 as latex and html from the visually laid out text table.
1831
1832 ** Filesets are collections of files. You can define a fileset in
1833 various ways, such as based on a directory tree or based on
1834 program files that include other program files.
1835
1836 Once you have defined a fileset, you can perform various operations on
1837 all the files in it, such as visiting them or searching and replacing
1838 in them.
1839
1840 ** The minor mode Reveal mode makes text visible on the fly as you
1841 move your cursor into hidden regions of the buffer.
1842 It should work with any package that uses overlays to hide parts
1843 of a buffer, such as outline-minor-mode, hs-minor-mode, hide-ifdef-mode, ...
1844
1845 There is also Global Reveal mode which affects all buffers.
1846
1847 ** New minor mode, Visible mode, toggles invisibility in the current buffer.
1848 When enabled, it makes all invisible text visible. When disabled, it
1849 restores the previous value of `buffer-invisibility-spec'.
1850
1851 ** The new package flymake.el does on-the-fly syntax checking of program
1852 source files. See the Flymake's Info manual for more details.
1853
1854 ** savehist saves minibuffer histories between sessions.
1855 To use this feature, turn on savehist-mode in your `.emacs' file.
1856
1857 ** The ruler-mode.el library provides a minor mode for displaying an
1858 "active" ruler in the header line. You can use the mouse to visually
1859 change the `fill-column', `window-margins' and `tab-stop-list'
1860 settings.
1861
1862 ** The file t-mouse.el is now part of Emacs and provides access to mouse
1863 events from the console. It still requires gpm to work but has been updated
1864 for Emacs 22. In particular, the mode-line is now position sensitive.
1865
1866 ** The new package scroll-lock.el provides the Scroll Lock minor mode
1867 for pager-like scrolling. Keys which normally move point by line or
1868 paragraph will scroll the buffer by the respective amount of lines
1869 instead and point will be kept vertically fixed relative to window
1870 boundaries during scrolling.
1871
1872 ** The new global minor mode `size-indication-mode' (off by default)
1873 shows the size of accessible part of the buffer on the mode line.
1874
1875 ** The new package conf-mode.el handles thousands of configuration files, with
1876 varying syntaxes for comments (;, #, //, /* */ or !), assignment (var = value,
1877 var : value, var value or keyword var value) and sections ([section] or
1878 section { }). Many files under /etc/, or with suffixes like .cf through
1879 .config, .properties (Java), .desktop (KDE/Gnome), .ini and many others are
1880 recognized.
1881
1882 ** GDB-Script-mode is used for files like .gdbinit.
1883
1884 ** The new package dns-mode.el adds syntax highlighting of DNS master files.
1885 It is a modern replacement for zone-mode.el, which is now obsolete.
1886
1887 ** `cfengine-mode' is a major mode for editing GNU Cfengine
1888 configuration files.
1889
1890 ** The TCL package tcl-mode.el was replaced by tcl.el.
1891 This was actually done in Emacs-21.1, and was not documented.
1892 \f
1893 * Changes in Specialized Modes and Packages in Emacs 22.1:
1894
1895 ** Changes in Dired
1896
1897 *** Bindings for Image-Dired added.
1898 Several new keybindings, all starting with the C-t prefix, have been
1899 added to Dired. They are all bound to commands in Image-Dired. As a
1900 starting point, mark some image files in a dired buffer and do C-t d
1901 to display thumbnails of them in a separate buffer.
1902
1903 ** Info mode changes
1904
1905 *** Images in Info pages are supported.
1906
1907 Info pages show embedded images, in Emacs frames with image support.
1908 Info documentation that includes images, processed with makeinfo
1909 version 4.7 or newer, compiles to Info pages with embedded images.
1910
1911 *** `Info-index' offers completion.
1912
1913 *** http and ftp links in Info are now operational: they look like cross
1914 references and following them calls `browse-url'.
1915
1916 *** isearch in Info uses Info-search and searches through multiple nodes.
1917
1918 Before leaving the initial Info node isearch fails once with the error
1919 message [initial node], and with subsequent C-s/C-r continues through
1920 other nodes. When isearch fails for the rest of the manual, it wraps
1921 around the whole manual to the top/final node. The user option
1922 `Info-isearch-search' controls whether to use Info-search for isearch,
1923 or the default isearch search function that wraps around the current
1924 Info node.
1925
1926 *** New search commands: `Info-search-case-sensitively' (bound to S),
1927 `Info-search-backward', and `Info-search-next' which repeats the last
1928 search without prompting for a new search string.
1929
1930 *** New command `info-apropos' searches the indices of the known
1931 Info files on your system for a string, and builds a menu of the
1932 possible matches.
1933
1934 *** New command `Info-history-forward' (bound to r and new toolbar icon)
1935 moves forward in history to the node you returned from after using
1936 `Info-history-back' (renamed from `Info-last').
1937
1938 *** New command `Info-history' (bound to L) displays a menu of visited nodes.
1939
1940 *** New command `Info-toc' (bound to T) creates a node with table of contents
1941 from the tree structure of menus of the current Info file.
1942
1943 *** New command `Info-copy-current-node-name' (bound to w) copies
1944 the current Info node name into the kill ring. With a zero prefix
1945 arg, puts the node name inside the `info' function call.
1946
1947 *** New face `info-xref-visited' distinguishes visited nodes from unvisited
1948 and a new option `Info-fontify-visited-nodes' to control this.
1949
1950 *** A numeric prefix argument of `info' selects an Info buffer
1951 with the number appended to the `*info*' buffer name (e.g. "*info*<2>").
1952
1953 *** Info now hides node names in menus and cross references by default.
1954
1955 If you prefer the old behavior, you can set the new user option
1956 `Info-hide-note-references' to nil.
1957
1958 *** The default value for `Info-scroll-prefer-subnodes' is now nil.
1959
1960 ** Emacs server changes
1961
1962 *** You can have several Emacs servers on the same machine.
1963
1964 % emacs --eval '(setq server-name "foo")' -f server-start &
1965 % emacs --eval '(setq server-name "bar")' -f server-start &
1966 % emacsclient -s foo file1
1967 % emacsclient -s bar file2
1968
1969 *** The `emacsclient' command understands the options `--eval' and
1970 `--display' which tell Emacs respectively to evaluate the given Lisp
1971 expression and to use the given display when visiting files.
1972
1973 *** User option `server-mode' can be used to start a server process.
1974
1975 ** Locate changes
1976
1977 *** By default, reverting the *Locate* buffer now just runs the last
1978 `locate' command back over again without offering to update the locate
1979 database (which normally only works if you have root privileges). If
1980 you prefer the old behavior, set the new customizable option
1981 `locate-update-when-revert' to t.
1982
1983 ** Desktop package
1984
1985 *** Desktop saving is now a minor mode, `desktop-save-mode'.
1986
1987 *** The variable `desktop-enable' is obsolete.
1988
1989 Customize `desktop-save-mode' to enable desktop saving.
1990
1991 *** Buffers are saved in the desktop file in the same order as that in the
1992 buffer list.
1993
1994 *** The desktop package can be customized to restore only some buffers
1995 immediately, remaining buffers are restored lazily (when Emacs is
1996 idle).
1997
1998 *** New command line option --no-desktop
1999
2000 *** New commands:
2001 - desktop-revert reverts to the last loaded desktop.
2002 - desktop-change-dir kills current desktop and loads a new.
2003 - desktop-save-in-desktop-dir saves desktop in the directory from which
2004 it was loaded.
2005 - desktop-lazy-complete runs the desktop load to completion.
2006 - desktop-lazy-abort aborts lazy loading of the desktop.
2007
2008 *** New customizable variables:
2009 - desktop-save. Determines whether the desktop should be saved when it is
2010 killed.
2011 - desktop-file-name-format. Format in which desktop file names should be saved.
2012 - desktop-path. List of directories in which to lookup the desktop file.
2013 - desktop-locals-to-save. List of local variables to save.
2014 - desktop-globals-to-clear. List of global variables that `desktop-clear' will clear.
2015 - desktop-clear-preserve-buffers-regexp. Regexp identifying buffers that `desktop-clear'
2016 should not delete.
2017 - desktop-restore-eager. Number of buffers to restore immediately. Remaining buffers are
2018 restored lazily (when Emacs is idle).
2019 - desktop-lazy-verbose. Verbose reporting of lazily created buffers.
2020 - desktop-lazy-idle-delay. Idle delay before starting to create buffers.
2021
2022 *** New hooks:
2023 - desktop-after-read-hook run after a desktop is loaded.
2024 - desktop-no-desktop-file-hook run when no desktop file is found.
2025
2026 ** Recentf changes
2027
2028 The recent file list is now automatically cleaned up when recentf mode is
2029 enabled. The new option `recentf-auto-cleanup' controls when to do
2030 automatic cleanup.
2031
2032 The ten most recent files can be quickly opened by using the shortcut
2033 keys 1 to 9, and 0, when the recent list is displayed in a buffer via
2034 the `recentf-open-files', or `recentf-open-more-files' commands.
2035
2036 The `recentf-keep' option replaces `recentf-keep-non-readable-files-p'
2037 and provides a more general mechanism to customize which file names to
2038 keep in the recent list.
2039
2040 With the more advanced option `recentf-filename-handlers', you can
2041 specify functions that successively transform recent file names. For
2042 example, if set to `file-truename' plus `abbreviate-file-name', the
2043 same file will not be in the recent list with different symbolic
2044 links, and the file name will be abbreviated.
2045
2046 To follow naming convention, `recentf-menu-append-commands-flag'
2047 replaces the misnamed option `recentf-menu-append-commands-p'. The
2048 old name remains available as alias, but has been marked obsolete.
2049
2050 ** Auto-Revert changes
2051
2052 *** You can now use Auto Revert mode to `tail' a file.
2053
2054 If point is at the end of a file buffer before reverting, Auto Revert
2055 mode keeps it at the end after reverting. Similarly if point is
2056 displayed at the end of a file buffer in any window, it stays at the end
2057 of the buffer in that window. This allows you to "tail" a file: just
2058 put point at the end of the buffer and it stays there. This rule
2059 applies to file buffers. For non-file buffers, the behavior can be mode
2060 dependent.
2061
2062 If you are sure that the file will only change by growing at the end,
2063 then you can tail the file more efficiently by using the new minor
2064 mode Auto Revert Tail mode. The function `auto-revert-tail-mode'
2065 toggles this mode.
2066
2067 *** Auto Revert mode is now more careful to avoid excessive reverts and
2068 other potential problems when deciding which non-file buffers to
2069 revert. This matters especially if Global Auto Revert mode is enabled
2070 and `global-auto-revert-non-file-buffers' is non-nil. Auto Revert
2071 mode only reverts a non-file buffer if the buffer has a non-nil
2072 `revert-buffer-function' and a non-nil `buffer-stale-function', which
2073 decides whether the buffer should be reverted. Currently, this means
2074 that auto reverting works for Dired buffers (although this may not
2075 work properly on all operating systems) and for the Buffer Menu.
2076
2077 *** If the new user option `auto-revert-check-vc-info' is non-nil, Auto
2078 Revert mode reliably updates version control info (such as the version
2079 control number in the mode line), in all version controlled buffers in
2080 which it is active. If the option is nil, the default, then this info
2081 only gets updated whenever the buffer gets reverted.
2082
2083 ** Changes in Shell Mode
2084
2085 *** Shell output normally scrolls so that the input line is at the
2086 bottom of the window -- thus showing the maximum possible text. (This
2087 is similar to the way sequential output to a terminal works.)
2088
2089 ** Changes in Hi Lock
2090
2091 *** hi-lock-mode now only affects a single buffer, and a new function
2092 `global-hi-lock-mode' enables Hi Lock in all buffers. By default, if
2093 hi-lock-mode is used in what appears to be the initialization file, a
2094 warning message suggests to use global-hi-lock-mode instead. However,
2095 if the new variable `hi-lock-archaic-interface-deduce' is non-nil,
2096 using hi-lock-mode in an initialization file will turn on Hi Lock in all
2097 buffers and no warning will be issued (for compatibility with the
2098 behavior in older versions of Emacs).
2099
2100 ** Changes in Allout
2101
2102 *** Topic cryptography added, enabling easy gpg topic encryption and
2103 decryption. Per-topic basis enables interspersing encrypted-text and
2104 clear-text within a single file to your heart's content, using symmetric
2105 and/or public key modes. Time-limited key caching, user-provided
2106 symmetric key hinting and consistency verification, auto-encryption of
2107 pending topics on save, and more, make it easy to use encryption in
2108 powerful ways. Encryption behavior customization is collected in the
2109 allout-encryption customization group.
2110
2111 *** Default command prefix was changed to "\C-c " (control-c space), to
2112 avoid intruding on user's keybinding space. Customize the
2113 `allout-command-prefix' variable to your preference.
2114
2115 *** Some previously rough topic-header format edge cases are reconciled.
2116 Level 1 topics use the mode's comment format, and lines starting with the
2117 asterisk - for instance, the comment close of some languages (eg, c's "*/"
2118 or mathematica's "*)") - at the beginning of line are no longer are
2119 interpreted as level 1 topics in those modes.
2120
2121 *** Many or most commonly occurring "accidental" topics are disqualified.
2122 Text in item bodies that looks like a low-depth topic is no longer mistaken
2123 for one unless its first offspring (or that of its next sibling with
2124 offspring) is only one level deeper.
2125
2126 For example, pasting some text with a bunch of leading asterisks into a
2127 topic that's followed by a level 3 or deeper topic will not cause the
2128 pasted text to be mistaken for outline structure.
2129
2130 The same constraint is applied to any level 2 or 3 topics.
2131
2132 This settles an old issue where typed or pasted text needed to be carefully
2133 reviewed, and sometimes doctored, to avoid accidentally disrupting the
2134 outline structure. Now that should be generally unnecessary, as the most
2135 prone-to-occur accidents are disqualified.
2136
2137 *** Allout now refuses to create "containment discontinuities", where a
2138 topic is shifted deeper than the offspring-depth of its container. On the
2139 other hand, allout now operates gracefully with existing containment
2140 discontinuities, revealing excessively contained topics rather than either
2141 leaving them hidden or raising an error.
2142
2143 *** Navigation within an item is easier. Repeated beginning-of-line and
2144 end-of-line key commands (usually, ^A and ^E) cycle through the
2145 beginning/end-of-line and then beginning/end of topic, etc. See new
2146 customization vars `allout-beginning-of-line-cycles' and
2147 `allout-end-of-line-cycles'.
2148
2149 *** New or revised allout-mode activity hooks enable creation of
2150 cooperative enhancements to allout mode without changes to the mode,
2151 itself.
2152
2153 See `allout-exposure-change-hook', `allout-structure-added-hook',
2154 `allout-structure-deleted-hook', and `allout-structure-shifted-hook'.
2155
2156 `allout-exposure-change-hook' replaces the existing
2157 `allout-view-change-hook', which is being deprecated. Both are still
2158 invoked, but `allout-view-change-hook' will eventually be ignored.
2159 `allout-exposure-change-hook' is called with explicit arguments detailing
2160 the specifics of each change (as are the other new hooks), making it easier
2161 to use than the old version.
2162
2163 There is a new mode deactivation hook, `allout-mode-deactivate-hook', for
2164 coordinating with deactivation of allout-mode. Both that and the mode
2165 activation hook, `allout-mode-hook' are now run after the `allout-mode'
2166 variable is changed, rather than before.
2167
2168 *** Allout now uses text overlay's `invisible' property for concealed text,
2169 instead of selective-display. This simplifies the code, in particular
2170 avoiding the need for kludges for isearch dynamic-display, discretionary
2171 handling of edits of concealed text, undo concerns, etc.
2172
2173 *** There are many other fixes and refinements, including:
2174
2175 - repaired inhibition of inadvertent edits to concealed text, without
2176 inhibiting undo; we now reveal undo changes within concealed text.
2177 - auto-fill-mode is now left inactive when allout-mode starts, if it
2178 already was inactive. also, `allout-inhibit-auto-fill' custom
2179 configuration variable makes it easy to disable auto fill in allout
2180 outlines in general or on a per-buffer basis.
2181 - allout now tolerates fielded text in outlines without disruption.
2182 - hot-spot navigation now is modularized with a new function,
2183 `allout-hotspot-key-handler', enabling easier use and enhancement of
2184 the functionality in allout addons.
2185 - repaired retention of topic body hanging indent upon topic depth shifts
2186 - bulleting variation is simpler and more accommodating, both in the
2187 default behavior and in ability to vary when creating new topics
2188 - mode deactivation now does cleans up effectively, more properly
2189 restoring affected variables and hooks to former state, removing
2190 overlays, etc. see `allout-add-resumptions' and
2191 `allout-do-resumptions', which replace the old `allout-resumptions'.
2192 - included a few unit-tests for interior functionality. developers can
2193 have them automatically run at the end of module load by customizing
2194 the option `allout-run-unit-tests-on-load'.
2195 - many, many other, more minor tweaks, fixes, and refinements.
2196 - version number incremented to 2.2
2197
2198 ** Hideshow mode changes
2199
2200 *** New variable `hs-set-up-overlay' allows customization of the overlay
2201 used to effect hiding for hideshow minor mode. Integration with isearch
2202 handles the overlay property `display' specially, preserving it during
2203 temporary overlay showing in the course of an isearch operation.
2204
2205 *** New variable `hs-allow-nesting' non-nil means that hiding a block does
2206 not discard the hidden state of any "internal" blocks; when the parent
2207 block is later shown, the internal blocks remain hidden. Default is nil.
2208
2209 ** FFAP changes
2210
2211 *** New ffap commands and keybindings:
2212
2213 C-x C-r (`ffap-read-only'),
2214 C-x C-v (`ffap-alternate-file'), C-x C-d (`ffap-list-directory'),
2215 C-x 4 r (`ffap-read-only-other-window'), C-x 4 d (`ffap-dired-other-window'),
2216 C-x 5 r (`ffap-read-only-other-frame'), C-x 5 d (`ffap-dired-other-frame').
2217
2218 *** FFAP accepts wildcards in a file name by default.
2219
2220 C-x C-f passes the file name to `find-file' with non-nil WILDCARDS
2221 argument, which visits multiple files, and C-x d passes it to `dired'.
2222
2223 ** Changes in Skeleton
2224
2225 *** In skeleton.el, `-' marks the `skeleton-point' without interregion interaction.
2226
2227 `@' has reverted to only setting `skeleton-positions' and no longer
2228 sets `skeleton-point'. Skeletons which used @ to mark
2229 `skeleton-point' independent of `_' should now use `-' instead. The
2230 updated `skeleton-insert' docstring explains these new features along
2231 with other details of skeleton construction.
2232
2233 *** The variables `skeleton-transformation', `skeleton-filter', and
2234 `skeleton-pair-filter' have been renamed to
2235 `skeleton-transformation-function', `skeleton-filter-function', and
2236 `skeleton-pair-filter-function'. The old names are still available
2237 as aliases.
2238
2239 ** HTML/SGML changes
2240
2241 *** Emacs now tries to set up buffer coding systems for HTML/XML files
2242 automatically.
2243
2244 *** SGML mode has indentation and supports XML syntax.
2245 The new variable `sgml-xml-mode' tells SGML mode to use XML syntax.
2246 When this option is enabled, SGML tags are inserted in XML style,
2247 i.e., there is always a closing tag.
2248 By default, its setting is inferred on a buffer-by-buffer basis
2249 from the file name or buffer contents.
2250
2251 *** The variable `sgml-transformation' has been renamed to
2252 `sgml-transformation-function'. The old name is still available as
2253 alias.
2254
2255 *** `xml-mode' is now an alias for `sgml-mode', which has XML support.
2256
2257 ** TeX modes
2258
2259 *** New major mode Doctex mode, for *.dtx files.
2260
2261 *** C-c C-c prompts for a command to run, and tries to offer a good default.
2262
2263 *** The user option `tex-start-options-string' has been replaced
2264 by two new user options: `tex-start-options', which should hold
2265 command-line options to feed to TeX, and `tex-start-commands' which should hold
2266 TeX commands to use at startup.
2267
2268 *** verbatim environments are now highlighted in courier by font-lock
2269 and super/sub-scripts are made into super/sub-scripts.
2270
2271 ** RefTeX mode changes
2272
2273 *** Changes to RefTeX's table of contents
2274
2275 The new command keys "<" and ">" in the TOC buffer promote/demote the
2276 section at point or all sections in the current region, with full
2277 support for multifile documents.
2278
2279 The new command `reftex-toc-recenter' (`C-c -') shows the current
2280 section in the TOC buffer without selecting the TOC window.
2281 Recentering can happen automatically in idle time when the option
2282 `reftex-auto-recenter-toc' is turned on. The highlight in the TOC
2283 buffer stays when the focus moves to a different window. A dedicated
2284 frame can show the TOC with the current section always automatically
2285 highlighted. The frame is created and deleted from the toc buffer
2286 with the `d' key.
2287
2288 The toc window can be split off horizontally instead of vertically.
2289 See new option `reftex-toc-split-windows-horizontally'.
2290
2291 Labels can be renamed globally from the table of contents using the
2292 key `M-%'.
2293
2294 The new command `reftex-goto-label' jumps directly to a label
2295 location.
2296
2297 *** Changes related to citations and BibTeX database files
2298
2299 Commands that insert a citation now prompt for optional arguments when
2300 called with a prefix argument. Related new options are
2301 `reftex-cite-prompt-optional-args' and `reftex-cite-cleanup-optional-args'.
2302
2303 The new command `reftex-create-bibtex-file' creates a BibTeX database
2304 with all entries referenced in the current document. The keys "e" and
2305 "E" allow to produce a BibTeX database file from entries marked in a
2306 citation selection buffer.
2307
2308 The command `reftex-citation' uses the word in the buffer before the
2309 cursor as a default search string.
2310
2311 The support for chapterbib has been improved. Different chapters can
2312 now use BibTeX or an explicit `thebibliography' environment.
2313
2314 The macros which specify the bibliography file (like \bibliography)
2315 can be configured with the new option `reftex-bibliography-commands'.
2316
2317 Support for jurabib has been added.
2318
2319 *** Global index matched may be verified with a user function.
2320
2321 During global indexing, a user function can verify an index match.
2322 See new option `reftex-index-verify-function'.
2323
2324 *** Parsing documents with many labels can be sped up.
2325
2326 Operating in a document with thousands of labels can be sped up
2327 considerably by allowing RefTeX to derive the type of a label directly
2328 from the label prefix like `eq:' or `fig:'. The option
2329 `reftex-trust-label-prefix' needs to be configured in order to enable
2330 this feature. While the speed-up is significant, this may reduce the
2331 quality of the context offered by RefTeX to describe a label.
2332
2333 *** Miscellaneous changes
2334
2335 The macros which input a file in LaTeX (like \input, \include) can be
2336 configured in the new option `reftex-include-file-commands'.
2337
2338 RefTeX supports global incremental search.
2339
2340 ** BibTeX mode
2341
2342 *** The new command `bibtex-url' browses a URL for the BibTeX entry at
2343 point (bound to C-c C-l and mouse-2, RET on clickable fields).
2344
2345 *** The new command `bibtex-entry-update' (bound to C-c C-u) updates
2346 an existing BibTeX entry by inserting fields that may occur but are not
2347 present.
2348
2349 *** New `bibtex-entry-format' option `required-fields', enabled by default.
2350
2351 *** `bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries' can take values `plain',
2352 `crossref', and `entry-class' which control the sorting scheme used
2353 for BibTeX entries. `bibtex-sort-entry-class' controls the sorting
2354 scheme `entry-class'. TAB completion for reference keys and
2355 automatic detection of duplicates does not require anymore that
2356 `bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries' is non-nil.
2357
2358 *** The new command `bibtex-complete' completes word fragment before
2359 point according to context (bound to M-tab).
2360
2361 *** In BibTeX mode the command `fill-paragraph' (M-q) fills
2362 individual fields of a BibTeX entry.
2363
2364 *** The new variable `bibtex-autofill-types' contains a list of entry
2365 types for which fields are filled automatically (if possible).
2366
2367 *** The new commands `bibtex-find-entry' and `bibtex-find-crossref'
2368 locate entries and crossref'd entries (bound to C-c C-s and C-c C-x).
2369 Crossref fields are clickable (bound to mouse-2, RET).
2370
2371 *** The new variables `bibtex-files' and `bibtex-file-path' define a set
2372 of BibTeX files that are searched for entry keys.
2373
2374 *** The new command `bibtex-validate-globally' checks for duplicate keys
2375 in multiple BibTeX files.
2376
2377 *** If the new variable `bibtex-autoadd-commas' is non-nil,
2378 automatically add missing commas at end of BibTeX fields.
2379
2380 *** The new command `bibtex-copy-summary-as-kill' pushes summary
2381 of BibTeX entry to kill ring (bound to C-c C-t).
2382
2383 *** If the new variable `bibtex-parse-keys-fast' is non-nil,
2384 use fast but simplified algorithm for parsing BibTeX keys.
2385
2386 *** The new variables bibtex-expand-strings and
2387 bibtex-autokey-expand-strings control the expansion of strings when
2388 extracting the content of a BibTeX field.
2389
2390 *** The variables `bibtex-autokey-name-case-convert' and
2391 `bibtex-autokey-titleword-case-convert' have been renamed to
2392 `bibtex-autokey-name-case-convert-function' and
2393 `bibtex-autokey-titleword-case-convert-function'. The old names are
2394 still available as aliases.
2395
2396 ** GUD changes
2397
2398 *** The new package gdb-ui.el provides an enhanced graphical interface to
2399 GDB. You can interact with GDB through the GUD buffer in the usual way, but
2400 there are also further buffers which control the execution and describe the
2401 state of your program. It can separate the input/output of your program from
2402 that of GDB and watches expressions in the speedbar. It also uses features of
2403 Emacs 21/22 such as the toolbar, and bitmaps in the fringe to indicate
2404 breakpoints.
2405
2406 To use this package just type M-x gdb. See the Emacs manual if you want the
2407 old behaviour.
2408
2409 *** GUD mode has its own tool bar for controlling execution of the inferior
2410 and other common debugger commands.
2411
2412 *** In GUD mode, when talking to GDB, C-x C-a C-j "jumps" the program
2413 counter to the specified source line (the one where point is).
2414
2415 *** The variable tooltip-gud-tips-p has been removed. GUD tooltips can now be
2416 toggled independently of normal tooltips with the minor mode
2417 `gud-tooltip-mode'.
2418
2419 *** In graphical mode, with a C program, GUD Tooltips have been extended to
2420 display the #define directive associated with an identifier when program is
2421 not executing.
2422
2423 *** GUD mode improvements for jdb:
2424
2425 **** Search for source files using jdb classpath and class information.
2426 Fast startup since there is no need to scan all source files up front.
2427 There is also no need to create and maintain lists of source
2428 directories to scan. Look at `gud-jdb-use-classpath' and
2429 `gud-jdb-classpath' customization variables documentation.
2430
2431 **** The previous method of searching for source files has been
2432 preserved in case someone still wants/needs to use it.
2433 Set `gud-jdb-use-classpath' to nil.
2434
2435 **** Supports the standard breakpoint (gud-break, gud-clear)
2436 set/clear operations from Java source files under the classpath, stack
2437 traversal (gud-up, gud-down), and run until current stack finish
2438 (gud-finish).
2439
2440 **** Supports new jdb (Java 1.2 and later) in addition to oldjdb
2441 (Java 1.1 jdb).
2442
2443 *** Added jdb Customization Variables
2444
2445 **** `gud-jdb-command-name'. What command line to use to invoke jdb.
2446
2447 **** `gud-jdb-use-classpath'. Allows selection of java source file searching
2448 method: set to t for new method, nil to scan `gud-jdb-directories' for
2449 java sources (previous method).
2450
2451 **** `gud-jdb-directories'. List of directories to scan and search for Java
2452 classes using the original gud-jdb method (if `gud-jdb-use-classpath'
2453 is nil).
2454
2455 *** Minor Improvements
2456
2457 **** The STARTTLS wrapper (starttls.el) can now use GNUTLS
2458 instead of the OpenSSL based `starttls' tool. For backwards
2459 compatibility, it prefers `starttls', but you can toggle
2460 `starttls-use-gnutls' to switch to GNUTLS (or simply remove the
2461 `starttls' tool).
2462
2463 **** Do not allow debugger output history variable to grow without bounds.
2464
2465 ** Lisp mode changes
2466
2467 *** Lisp mode now uses `font-lock-doc-face' for doc strings.
2468
2469 *** C-u C-M-q in Emacs Lisp mode pretty-prints the list after point.
2470
2471 *** New features in evaluation commands
2472
2473 **** The function `eval-defun' (C-M-x) called on defface reinitializes
2474 the face to the value specified in the defface expression.
2475
2476 **** Typing C-x C-e twice prints the value of the integer result
2477 in additional formats (octal, hexadecimal, character) specified
2478 by the new function `eval-expression-print-format'. The same
2479 function also defines the result format for `eval-expression' (M-:),
2480 `eval-print-last-sexp' (C-j) and some edebug evaluation functions.
2481
2482 ** Changes to cmuscheme
2483
2484 *** Emacs now offers to start Scheme if the user tries to
2485 evaluate a Scheme expression but no Scheme subprocess is running.
2486
2487 *** If the file ~/.emacs_NAME or ~/.emacs.d/init_NAME.scm (where NAME
2488 is the name of the Scheme interpreter) exists, its contents are sent
2489 to the Scheme subprocess upon startup.
2490
2491 *** There are new commands to instruct the Scheme interpreter to trace
2492 procedure calls (`scheme-trace-procedure') and to expand syntactic forms
2493 (`scheme-expand-current-form'). The commands actually sent to the Scheme
2494 subprocess are controlled by the user options `scheme-trace-command',
2495 `scheme-untrace-command' and `scheme-expand-current-form'.
2496
2497 ** Ewoc changes
2498
2499 *** The new function `ewoc-delete' deletes specified nodes.
2500
2501 *** `ewoc-create' now takes optional arg NOSEP, which inhibits insertion of
2502 a newline after each pretty-printed entry and after the header and footer.
2503 This allows you to create multiple-entry ewocs on a single line and to
2504 effect "invisible" nodes by arranging for the pretty-printer to not print
2505 anything for those nodes.
2506
2507 For example, these two sequences of expressions behave identically:
2508
2509 ;; NOSEP nil
2510 (defun PP (data) (insert (format "%S" data)))
2511 (ewoc-create 'PP "start\n")
2512
2513 ;; NOSEP t
2514 (defun PP (data) (insert (format "%S\n" data)))
2515 (ewoc-create 'PP "start\n\n" "\n" t)
2516
2517 ** CC mode changes
2518
2519 *** The CC Mode manual has been extensively revised.
2520 The information about using CC Mode has been separated from the larger
2521 and more difficult chapters about configuration.
2522
2523 *** New Minor Modes
2524 **** Electric Minor Mode toggles the electric action of non-alphabetic keys.
2525 The new command c-toggle-electric-mode is bound to C-c C-l. Turning the
2526 mode off can be helpful for editing chaotically indented code and for
2527 users new to CC Mode, who sometimes find electric indentation
2528 disconcerting. Its current state is displayed in the mode line with an
2529 'l', e.g. "C/al".
2530
2531 **** Subword Minor Mode makes Emacs recognize word boundaries at upper case
2532 letters in StudlyCapsIdentifiers. You enable this feature by C-c C-w. It can
2533 also be used in non-CC Mode buffers. :-) Contributed by Masatake YAMATO.
2534
2535 *** Support for the AWK language.
2536 Support for the AWK language has been introduced. The implementation is
2537 based around GNU AWK version 3.1, but it should work pretty well with
2538 any AWK. As yet, not all features of CC Mode have been adapted for AWK.
2539 Here is a summary:
2540
2541 **** Indentation Engine
2542 The CC Mode indentation engine fully supports AWK mode.
2543
2544 AWK mode handles code formatted in the conventional AWK fashion: `{'s
2545 which start actions, user-defined functions, or compound statements are
2546 placed on the same line as the associated construct; the matching `}'s
2547 are normally placed under the start of the respective pattern, function
2548 definition, or structured statement.
2549
2550 The predefined line-up functions haven't yet been adapted for AWK
2551 mode, though some of them may work serendipitously. There shouldn't
2552 be any problems writing custom indentation functions for AWK mode.
2553
2554 **** Font Locking
2555 There is a single level of font locking in AWK mode, rather than the
2556 three distinct levels the other modes have. There are several
2557 idiosyncrasies in AWK mode's font-locking due to the peculiarities of
2558 the AWK language itself.
2559
2560 **** Comment and Movement Commands
2561 These commands all work for AWK buffers. The notion of "defun" has
2562 been augmented to include AWK pattern-action pairs - the standard
2563 "defun" commands on key sequences C-M-a, C-M-e, and C-M-h use this
2564 extended definition.
2565
2566 **** "awk" style, Auto-newline Insertion and Clean-ups
2567 A new style, "awk" has been introduced, and this is now the default
2568 style for AWK code. With auto-newline enabled, the clean-up
2569 c-one-liner-defun (see above) is useful.
2570
2571 *** Font lock support.
2572 CC Mode now provides font lock support for all its languages. This
2573 supersedes the font lock patterns that have been in the core font lock
2574 package for C, C++, Java and Objective-C. Like indentation, font
2575 locking is done in a uniform way across all languages (except the new
2576 AWK mode - see below). That means that the new font locking will be
2577 different from the old patterns in various details for most languages.
2578
2579 The main goal of the font locking in CC Mode is accuracy, to provide a
2580 dependable aid in recognizing the various constructs. Some, like
2581 strings and comments, are easy to recognize while others like
2582 declarations and types can be very tricky. CC Mode can go to great
2583 lengths to recognize declarations and casts correctly, especially when
2584 the types aren't recognized by standard patterns. This is a fairly
2585 demanding analysis which can be slow on older hardware, and it can
2586 therefore be disabled by choosing a lower decoration level with the
2587 variable font-lock-maximum-decoration.
2588
2589 Note that the most demanding font lock level has been tuned with lazy
2590 fontification in mind; Just-In-Time-Lock mode should be enabled for
2591 the highest font lock level (by default, it is). Fontifying a file
2592 with several thousand lines in one go can take the better part of a
2593 minute.
2594
2595 **** The (c|c++|objc|java|idl|pike)-font-lock-extra-types variables
2596 are now used by CC Mode to recognize identifiers that are certain to
2597 be types. (They are also used in cases that aren't related to font
2598 locking.) At the maximum decoration level, types are often recognized
2599 properly anyway, so these variables should be fairly restrictive and
2600 not contain patterns for uncertain types.
2601
2602 **** Support for documentation comments.
2603 There is a "plugin" system to fontify documentation comments like
2604 Javadoc and the markup within them. It's independent of the host
2605 language, so it's possible to e.g. turn on Javadoc font locking in C
2606 buffers. See the variable c-doc-comment-style for details.
2607
2608 Currently three kinds of doc comment styles are recognized: Sun's
2609 Javadoc, Autodoc (which is used in Pike) and GtkDoc (used in C). (The
2610 last was contributed by Masatake YAMATO). This is by no means a
2611 complete list of the most common tools; if your doc comment extractor
2612 of choice is missing then please drop a note to bug-cc-mode@gnu.org.
2613
2614 **** Better handling of C++ templates.
2615 As a side effect of the more accurate font locking, C++ templates are
2616 now handled much better. The angle brackets that delimit them are
2617 given parenthesis syntax so that they can be navigated like other
2618 parens.
2619
2620 This also improves indentation of templates, although there still is
2621 work to be done in that area. E.g. it's required that multiline
2622 template clauses are written in full and then refontified to be
2623 recognized, and the indentation of nested templates is a bit odd and
2624 not as configurable as it ought to be.
2625
2626 **** Improved handling of Objective-C and CORBA IDL.
2627 Especially the support for Objective-C and IDL has gotten an overhaul.
2628 The special "@" declarations in Objective-C are handled correctly.
2629 All the keywords used in CORBA IDL, PSDL, and CIDL are recognized and
2630 handled correctly, also wrt indentation.
2631
2632 *** Changes in Key Sequences
2633 **** c-toggle-auto-hungry-state is no longer bound to C-c C-t.
2634
2635 **** c-toggle-hungry-state is no longer bound to C-c C-d.
2636 This binding has been taken over by c-hungry-delete-forwards.
2637
2638 **** c-toggle-auto-state (C-c C-t) has been renamed to c-toggle-auto-newline.
2639 c-toggle-auto-state remains as an alias.
2640
2641 **** The new commands c-hungry-backspace and c-hungry-delete-forwards
2642 have key bindings C-c C-DEL (or C-c DEL, for the benefit of TTYs) and
2643 C-c C-d (or C-c C-<delete> or C-c <delete>) respectively. These
2644 commands delete entire blocks of whitespace with a single
2645 key-sequence. [N.B. "DEL" is the <backspace> key.]
2646
2647 **** The new command c-toggle-electric-mode is bound to C-c C-l.
2648
2649 **** The new command c-subword-mode is bound to C-c C-w.
2650
2651 *** C-c C-s (`c-show-syntactic-information') now highlights the anchor
2652 position(s).
2653
2654 *** New syntactic symbols in IDL mode.
2655 The top level constructs "module" and "composition" (from CIDL) are
2656 now handled like "namespace" in C++: They are given syntactic symbols
2657 module-open, module-close, inmodule, composition-open,
2658 composition-close, and incomposition.
2659
2660 *** New functions to do hungry delete without enabling hungry delete mode.
2661 The new functions `c-hungry-backspace' and `c-hungry-delete-forward'
2662 provide hungry deletion without having to toggle a mode. They are
2663 bound to C-c C-DEL and C-c C-d (and several variants, for the benefit
2664 of different keyboard setups. See "Changes in key sequences" above).
2665
2666 *** Better control over `require-final-newline'.
2667
2668 The variable `c-require-final-newline' specifies which of the modes
2669 implemented by CC mode should insert final newlines. Its value is a
2670 list of modes, and only those modes should do it. By default the list
2671 includes C, C++ and Objective-C modes.
2672
2673 Whichever modes are in this list will set `require-final-newline'
2674 based on `mode-require-final-newline'.
2675
2676 *** Format change for syntactic context elements.
2677
2678 The elements in the syntactic context returned by `c-guess-basic-syntax'
2679 and stored in `c-syntactic-context' has been changed somewhat to allow
2680 attaching more information. They are now lists instead of single cons
2681 cells. E.g. a line that previously had the syntactic analysis
2682
2683 ((inclass . 11) (topmost-intro . 13))
2684
2685 is now analyzed as
2686
2687 ((inclass 11) (topmost-intro 13))
2688
2689 In some cases there are more than one position given for a syntactic
2690 symbol.
2691
2692 This change might affect code that calls `c-guess-basic-syntax'
2693 directly, and custom lineup functions if they use
2694 `c-syntactic-context'. However, the argument given to lineup
2695 functions is still a single cons cell with nil or an integer in the
2696 cdr.
2697
2698 *** API changes for derived modes.
2699
2700 There have been extensive changes "under the hood" which can affect
2701 derived mode writers. Some of these changes are likely to cause
2702 incompatibilities with existing derived modes, but on the other hand
2703 care has now been taken to make it possible to extend and modify CC
2704 Mode with less risk of such problems in the future.
2705
2706 **** New language variable system.
2707 These are variables whose values vary between CC Mode's different
2708 languages. See the comment blurb near the top of cc-langs.el.
2709
2710 **** New initialization functions.
2711 The initialization procedure has been split up into more functions to
2712 give better control: `c-basic-common-init', `c-font-lock-init', and
2713 `c-init-language-vars'.
2714
2715 *** Changes in analysis of nested syntactic constructs.
2716 The syntactic analysis engine has better handling of cases where
2717 several syntactic constructs appear nested on the same line. They are
2718 now handled as if each construct started on a line of its own.
2719
2720 This means that CC Mode now indents some cases differently, and
2721 although it's more consistent there might be cases where the old way
2722 gave results that's more to one's liking. So if you find a situation
2723 where you think that the indentation has become worse, please report
2724 it to bug-cc-mode@gnu.org.
2725
2726 **** New syntactic symbol substatement-label.
2727 This symbol is used when a label is inserted between a statement and
2728 its substatement. E.g:
2729
2730 if (x)
2731 x_is_true:
2732 do_stuff();
2733
2734 *** Better handling of multiline macros.
2735
2736 **** Syntactic indentation inside macros.
2737 The contents of multiline #define's are now analyzed and indented
2738 syntactically just like other code. This can be disabled by the new
2739 variable `c-syntactic-indentation-in-macros'. A new syntactic symbol
2740 `cpp-define-intro' has been added to control the initial indentation
2741 inside `#define's.
2742
2743 **** New lineup function `c-lineup-cpp-define'.
2744
2745 Now used by default to line up macro continuation lines. The behavior
2746 of this function closely mimics the indentation one gets if the macro
2747 is indented while the line continuation backslashes are temporarily
2748 removed. If syntactic indentation in macros is turned off, it works
2749 much line `c-lineup-dont-change', which was used earlier, but handles
2750 empty lines within the macro better.
2751
2752 **** Automatically inserted newlines continues the macro if used within one.
2753 This applies to the newlines inserted by the auto-newline mode, and to
2754 `c-context-line-break' and `c-context-open-line'.
2755
2756 **** Better alignment of line continuation backslashes.
2757 `c-backslash-region' tries to adapt to surrounding backslashes. New
2758 variable `c-backslash-max-column' puts a limit on how far out
2759 backslashes can be moved.
2760
2761 **** Automatic alignment of line continuation backslashes.
2762 This is controlled by the new variable `c-auto-align-backslashes'. It
2763 affects `c-context-line-break', `c-context-open-line' and newlines
2764 inserted in Auto-Newline mode.
2765
2766 **** Line indentation works better inside macros.
2767 Regardless whether syntactic indentation and syntactic indentation
2768 inside macros are enabled or not, line indentation now ignores the
2769 line continuation backslashes. This is most noticeable when syntactic
2770 indentation is turned off and there are empty lines (save for the
2771 backslash) in the macro.
2772
2773 *** indent-for-comment is more customizable.
2774 The behavior of M-; (indent-for-comment) is now configurable through
2775 the variable `c-indent-comment-alist'. The indentation behavior is
2776 based on the preceding code on the line, e.g. to get two spaces after
2777 #else and #endif but indentation to `comment-column' in most other
2778 cases (something which was hardcoded earlier).
2779
2780 *** New function `c-context-open-line'.
2781 It's the open-line equivalent of `c-context-line-break'.
2782
2783 *** New clean-ups
2784
2785 **** `comment-close-slash'.
2786 With this clean-up, a block (i.e. c-style) comment can be terminated by
2787 typing a slash at the start of a line.
2788
2789 **** `c-one-liner-defun'
2790 This clean-up compresses a short enough defun (for example, an AWK
2791 pattern/action pair) onto a single line. "Short enough" is configurable.
2792
2793 *** New lineup functions
2794
2795 **** `c-lineup-string-cont'
2796 This lineup function lines up a continued string under the one it
2797 continues. E.g:
2798
2799 result = prefix + "A message "
2800 "string."; <- c-lineup-string-cont
2801
2802 **** `c-lineup-cascaded-calls'
2803 Lines up series of calls separated by "->" or ".".
2804
2805 **** `c-lineup-knr-region-comment'
2806 Gives (what most people think is) better indentation of comments in
2807 the "K&R region" between the function header and its body.
2808
2809 **** `c-lineup-gcc-asm-reg'
2810 Provides better indentation inside asm blocks.
2811
2812 **** `c-lineup-argcont'
2813 Lines up continued function arguments after the preceding comma.
2814
2815 *** Added toggle for syntactic indentation.
2816 The function `c-toggle-syntactic-indentation' can be used to toggle
2817 syntactic indentation.
2818
2819 *** Better caching of the syntactic context.
2820 CC Mode caches the positions of the opening parentheses (of any kind)
2821 of the lists surrounding the point. Those positions are used in many
2822 places as anchor points for various searches. The cache is now
2823 improved so that it can be reused to a large extent when the point is
2824 moved. The less it moves, the less needs to be recalculated.
2825
2826 The effect is that CC Mode should be fast most of the time even when
2827 opening parens are hung (i.e. aren't in column zero). It's typically
2828 only the first time after the point is moved far down in a complex
2829 file that it'll take noticeable time to find out the syntactic
2830 context.
2831
2832 *** Statements are recognized in a more robust way.
2833 Statements are recognized most of the time even when they occur in an
2834 "invalid" context, e.g. in a function argument. In practice that can
2835 happen when macros are involved.
2836
2837 *** Improved the way `c-indent-exp' chooses the block to indent.
2838 It now indents the block for the closest sexp following the point
2839 whose closing paren ends on a different line. This means that the
2840 point doesn't have to be immediately before the block to indent.
2841 Also, only the block and the closing line is indented; the current
2842 line is left untouched.
2843
2844 ** Changes in Makefile mode
2845
2846 *** Makefile mode has submodes for automake, gmake, makepp, BSD make and imake.
2847
2848 The former two couldn't be differentiated before, and the latter three
2849 are new. Font-locking is robust now and offers new customizable
2850 faces.
2851
2852 *** The variable `makefile-query-one-target-method' has been renamed
2853 to `makefile-query-one-target-method-function'. The old name is still
2854 available as alias.
2855
2856 ** Sql changes
2857
2858 *** The variable `sql-product' controls the highlighting of different
2859 SQL dialects. This variable can be set globally via Customize, on a
2860 buffer-specific basis via local variable settings, or for the current
2861 session using the new SQL->Product submenu. (This menu replaces the
2862 SQL->Highlighting submenu.)
2863
2864 The following values are supported:
2865
2866 ansi ANSI Standard (default)
2867 db2 DB2
2868 informix Informix
2869 ingres Ingres
2870 interbase Interbase
2871 linter Linter
2872 ms Microsoft
2873 mysql MySQL
2874 oracle Oracle
2875 postgres Postgres
2876 solid Solid
2877 sqlite SQLite
2878 sybase Sybase
2879
2880 The current product name will be shown on the mode line following the
2881 SQL mode indicator.
2882
2883 The technique of setting `sql-mode-font-lock-defaults' directly in
2884 your `.emacs' will no longer establish the default highlighting -- Use
2885 `sql-product' to accomplish this.
2886
2887 ANSI keywords are always highlighted.
2888
2889 *** The function `sql-add-product-keywords' can be used to add
2890 font-lock rules to the product specific rules. For example, to have
2891 all identifiers ending in `_t' under MS SQLServer treated as a type,
2892 you would use the following line in your .emacs file:
2893
2894 (sql-add-product-keywords 'ms
2895 '(("\\<\\w+_t\\>" . font-lock-type-face)))
2896
2897 *** Oracle support includes keyword highlighting for Oracle 9i.
2898
2899 Most SQL and PL/SQL keywords are implemented. SQL*Plus commands are
2900 highlighted in `font-lock-doc-face'.
2901
2902 *** Microsoft SQLServer support has been significantly improved.
2903
2904 Keyword highlighting for SqlServer 2000 is implemented.
2905 sql-interactive-mode defaults to use osql, rather than isql, because
2906 osql flushes its error stream more frequently. Thus error messages
2907 are displayed when they occur rather than when the session is
2908 terminated.
2909
2910 If the username and password are not provided to `sql-ms', osql is
2911 called with the `-E' command line argument to use the operating system
2912 credentials to authenticate the user.
2913
2914 *** Postgres support is enhanced.
2915 Keyword highlighting of Postgres 7.3 is implemented. Prompting for
2916 the username and the pgsql `-U' option is added.
2917
2918 *** MySQL support is enhanced.
2919 Keyword highlighting of MySql 4.0 is implemented.
2920
2921 *** Imenu support has been enhanced to locate tables, views, indexes,
2922 packages, procedures, functions, triggers, sequences, rules, and
2923 defaults.
2924
2925 *** Added SQL->Start SQLi Session menu entry which calls the
2926 appropriate `sql-interactive-mode' wrapper for the current setting of
2927 `sql-product'.
2928
2929 *** sql.el supports the SQLite interpreter--call 'sql-sqlite'.
2930
2931 ** Fortran mode changes
2932
2933 *** F90 mode and Fortran mode have support for `hs-minor-mode' (hideshow).
2934 It cannot deal with every code format, but ought to handle a sizeable
2935 majority.
2936
2937 *** F90 mode and Fortran mode have new navigation commands
2938 `f90-end-of-block', `f90-beginning-of-block', `f90-next-block',
2939 `f90-previous-block', `fortran-end-of-block',
2940 `fortran-beginning-of-block'.
2941
2942 *** Fortran mode does more font-locking by default. Use level 3
2943 highlighting for the old default.
2944
2945 *** Fortran mode has a new variable `fortran-directive-re'.
2946 Adapt this to match the format of any compiler directives you use.
2947 Lines that match are never indented, and are given distinctive font-locking.
2948
2949 *** The new function `f90-backslash-not-special' can be used to change
2950 the syntax of backslashes in F90 buffers.
2951
2952 ** Miscellaneous programming mode changes
2953
2954 *** In sh-script, a continuation line is only indented if the backslash was
2955 preceded by a SPC or a TAB.
2956
2957 *** Perl mode has a new variable `perl-indent-continued-arguments'.
2958
2959 *** The old Octave mode bindings C-c f and C-c i have been changed
2960 to C-c C-f and C-c C-i. The C-c C-i subcommands now have duplicate
2961 bindings on control characters--thus, C-c C-i C-b is the same as
2962 C-c C-i b, and so on.
2963
2964 *** Prolog mode has a new variable `prolog-font-lock-keywords'
2965 to support use of font-lock.
2966
2967 ** VC Changes
2968
2969 *** New backends for Subversion and Meta-CVS.
2970
2971 *** The new variable `vc-cvs-global-switches' specifies switches that
2972 are passed to any CVS command invoked by VC.
2973
2974 These switches are used as "global options" for CVS, which means they
2975 are inserted before the command name. For example, this allows you to
2976 specify a compression level using the `-z#' option for CVS.
2977
2978 *** The key C-x C-q only changes the read-only state of the buffer
2979 (toggle-read-only). It no longer checks files in or out.
2980
2981 We made this change because we held a poll and found that many users
2982 were unhappy with the previous behavior. If you do prefer this
2983 behavior, you can bind `vc-toggle-read-only' to C-x C-q in your
2984 `.emacs' file:
2985
2986 (global-set-key "\C-x\C-q" 'vc-toggle-read-only)
2987
2988 The function `vc-toggle-read-only' will continue to exist.
2989
2990 *** VC-Annotate mode enhancements
2991
2992 In VC-Annotate mode, you can now use the following key bindings for
2993 enhanced functionality to browse the annotations of past revisions, or
2994 to view diffs or log entries directly from vc-annotate-mode:
2995
2996 P: annotates the previous revision
2997 N: annotates the next revision
2998 J: annotates the revision at line
2999 A: annotates the revision previous to line
3000 D: shows the diff of the revision at line with its previous revision
3001 L: shows the log of the revision at line
3002 W: annotates the workfile (most up to date) version
3003
3004 ** pcl-cvs changes
3005
3006 *** In pcl-cvs mode, there is a new `d y' command to view the diffs
3007 between the local version of the file and yesterday's head revision
3008 in the repository.
3009
3010 *** In pcl-cvs mode, there is a new `d r' command to view the changes
3011 anyone has committed to the repository since you last executed
3012 `checkout', `update' or `commit'. That means using cvs diff options
3013 -rBASE -rHEAD.
3014
3015 ** Diff changes
3016
3017 *** M-x diff uses Diff mode instead of Compilation mode.
3018
3019 *** Diff mode key bindings changed.
3020
3021 These are the new bindings:
3022
3023 C-c C-e diff-ediff-patch (old M-A)
3024 C-c C-n diff-restrict-view (old M-r)
3025 C-c C-r diff-reverse-direction (old M-R)
3026 C-c C-u diff-context->unified (old M-U)
3027 C-c C-w diff-refine-hunk (old C-c C-r)
3028
3029 To convert unified to context format, use C-u C-c C-u.
3030 In addition, C-c C-u now operates on the region
3031 in Transient Mark mode when the mark is active.
3032
3033 ** EDiff changes.
3034
3035 *** When comparing directories.
3036 Typing D brings up a buffer that lists the differences between the contents of
3037 directories. Now it is possible to use this buffer to copy the missing files
3038 from one directory to another.
3039
3040 *** When comparing files or buffers.
3041 Typing the = key now offers to perform the word-by-word comparison of the
3042 currently highlighted regions in an inferior Ediff session. If you answer 'n'
3043 then it reverts to the old behavior and asks the user to select regions for
3044 comparison.
3045
3046 *** The new command `ediff-backup' compares a file with its most recent
3047 backup using `ediff'. If you specify the name of a backup file,
3048 `ediff-backup' compares it with the file of which it is a backup.
3049
3050 ** Etags changes.
3051
3052 *** New regular expressions features
3053
3054 **** New syntax for regular expressions, multi-line regular expressions.
3055
3056 The syntax --ignore-case-regexp=/regex/ is now undocumented and retained
3057 only for backward compatibility. The new equivalent syntax is
3058 --regex=/regex/i. More generally, it is --regex=/TAGREGEX/TAGNAME/MODS,
3059 where `/TAGNAME' is optional, as usual, and MODS is a string of 0 or
3060 more characters among `i' (ignore case), `m' (multi-line) and `s'
3061 (single-line). The `m' and `s' modifiers behave as in Perl regular
3062 expressions: `m' allows regexps to match more than one line, while `s'
3063 (which implies `m') means that `.' matches newlines. The ability to
3064 span newlines allows writing of much more powerful regular expressions
3065 and rapid prototyping for tagging new languages.
3066
3067 **** Regular expressions can use char escape sequences as in GCC.
3068
3069 The escaped character sequence \a, \b, \d, \e, \f, \n, \r, \t, \v,
3070 respectively, stand for the ASCII characters BEL, BS, DEL, ESC, FF, NL,
3071 CR, TAB, VT.
3072
3073 **** Regular expressions can be bound to a given language.
3074
3075 The syntax --regex={LANGUAGE}REGEX means that REGEX is used to make tags
3076 only for files of language LANGUAGE, and ignored otherwise. This is
3077 particularly useful when storing regexps in a file.
3078
3079 **** Regular expressions can be read from a file.
3080
3081 The --regex=@regexfile option means read the regexps from a file, one
3082 per line. Lines beginning with space or tab are ignored.
3083
3084 *** New language parsing features
3085
3086 **** New language HTML.
3087
3088 Tags are generated for `title' as well as `h1', `h2', and `h3'. Also,
3089 when `name=' is used inside an anchor and whenever `id=' is used.
3090
3091 **** New language PHP.
3092
3093 Functions, classes and defines are tags. If the --members option is
3094 specified to etags, variables are tags also.
3095
3096 **** New language Lua.
3097
3098 All functions are tagged.
3099
3100 **** The `::' qualifier triggers C++ parsing in C file.
3101
3102 Previously, only the `template' and `class' keywords had this effect.
3103
3104 **** The GCC __attribute__ keyword is now recognized and ignored.
3105
3106 **** In C and derived languages, etags creates tags for #undef
3107
3108 **** In Makefiles, constants are tagged.
3109
3110 If you want the old behavior instead, thus avoiding to increase the
3111 size of the tags file, use the --no-globals option.
3112
3113 **** In Perl, packages are tags.
3114
3115 Subroutine tags are named from their package. You can jump to sub tags
3116 as you did before, by the sub name, or additionally by looking for
3117 package::sub.
3118
3119 **** In Prolog, etags creates tags for rules in addition to predicates.
3120
3121 **** New default keywords for TeX.
3122
3123 The new keywords are def, newcommand, renewcommand, newenvironment and
3124 renewenvironment.
3125
3126 *** Honor #line directives.
3127
3128 When Etags parses an input file that contains C preprocessor's #line
3129 directives, it creates tags using the file name and line number
3130 specified in those directives. This is useful when dealing with code
3131 created from Cweb source files. When Etags tags the generated file, it
3132 writes tags pointing to the source file.
3133
3134 *** New option --parse-stdin=FILE.
3135
3136 This option is mostly useful when calling etags from programs. It can
3137 be used (only once) in place of a file name on the command line. Etags
3138 reads from standard input and marks the produced tags as belonging to
3139 the file FILE.
3140
3141 *** The --members option is now the default.
3142
3143 Use --no-members if you want the old default behaviour of not tagging
3144 struct members in C, members variables in C++ and variables in PHP.
3145
3146 ** Ctags changes.
3147
3148 *** Ctags now allows duplicate tags
3149
3150 ** Rmail changes
3151
3152 *** Support for `movemail' from GNU mailutils was added to Rmail.
3153
3154 This version of `movemail' allows you to read mail from a wide range of
3155 mailbox formats, including remote POP3 and IMAP4 mailboxes with or
3156 without TLS encryption. If GNU mailutils is installed on the system
3157 and its version of `movemail' can be found in exec-path, it will be
3158 used instead of the native one.
3159
3160 *** The new commands rmail-end-of-message and rmail-summary end-of-message,
3161 by default bound to `/', go to the end of the current mail message in
3162 Rmail and Rmail summary buffers.
3163
3164 *** Rmail now displays 5-digit message ids in its summary buffer.
3165
3166 ** Gnus package
3167
3168 *** Gnus now includes Sieve and PGG
3169
3170 Sieve is a library for managing Sieve scripts. PGG is a library to handle
3171 PGP/MIME.
3172
3173 *** There are many news features, bug fixes and improvements.
3174
3175 See the file GNUS-NEWS or the node "Oort Gnus" in the Gnus manual for details.
3176
3177 ** MH-E changes.
3178
3179 Upgraded to MH-E version 8.0.3. There have been major changes since
3180 version 5.0.2; see MH-E-NEWS for details.
3181
3182 ** Miscellaneous mail changes
3183
3184 *** The new variable `mail-default-directory' specifies
3185 `default-directory' for mail buffers. This directory is used for
3186 auto-save files of mail buffers. It defaults to "~/".
3187
3188 *** The mode line can indicate new mail in a directory or file.
3189
3190 See the documentation of the user option `display-time-mail-directory'.
3191
3192 ** Calendar changes
3193
3194 *** There is a new calendar package, icalendar.el, that can be used to
3195 convert Emacs diary entries to/from the iCalendar format.
3196
3197 *** The new package cal-html.el writes HTML files with calendar and
3198 diary entries.
3199
3200 *** The new functions `diary-from-outlook', `diary-from-outlook-gnus',
3201 and `diary-from-outlook-rmail' can be used to import diary entries
3202 from Outlook-format appointments in mail messages. The variable
3203 `diary-outlook-formats' can be customized to recognize additional
3204 formats.
3205
3206 *** The procedure for activating appointment reminders has changed:
3207 use the new function `appt-activate'. The new variable
3208 `appt-display-format' controls how reminders are displayed, replacing
3209 `appt-issue-message', `appt-visible', and `appt-msg-window'.
3210
3211 *** The function `simple-diary-display' now by default sets a header line.
3212 This can be controlled through the variables `diary-header-line-flag'
3213 and `diary-header-line-format'.
3214
3215 *** Diary sexp entries can have custom marking in the calendar.
3216 Diary sexp functions which only apply to certain days (such as
3217 `diary-block' or `diary-cyclic') now take an optional parameter MARK,
3218 which is the name of a face or a single-character string indicating
3219 how to highlight the day in the calendar display. Specifying a
3220 single-character string as @var{mark} places the character next to the
3221 day in the calendar. Specifying a face highlights the day with that
3222 face. This lets you have different colors or markings for vacations,
3223 appointments, paydays or anything else using a sexp.
3224
3225 *** The meanings of C-x < and C-x > have been interchanged.
3226 < means to scroll backward in time, and > means to scroll forward.
3227
3228 *** You can now use < and >, instead of C-x < and C-x >, to scroll
3229 the calendar left or right.
3230
3231 *** The new function `calendar-goto-day-of-year' (g D) prompts for a
3232 year and day number, and moves to that date. Negative day numbers
3233 count backward from the end of the year.
3234
3235 *** The new Calendar function `calendar-goto-iso-week' (g w)
3236 prompts for a year and a week number, and moves to the first
3237 day of that ISO week.
3238
3239 *** The functions `holiday-easter-etc' and `holiday-advent' now take
3240 optional arguments, in order to only report on the specified holiday
3241 rather than all. This makes customization of variables such as
3242 `christian-holidays' simpler.
3243
3244 *** The new variable `calendar-minimum-window-height' affects the
3245 window generated by the function `generate-calendar-window'.
3246
3247 ** Speedbar changes
3248
3249 *** Speedbar items can now be selected by clicking mouse-1, based on
3250 the `mouse-1-click-follows-link' mechanism.
3251
3252 *** The new command `speedbar-toggle-line-expansion', bound to SPC,
3253 contracts or expands the line under the cursor.
3254
3255 *** New command `speedbar-create-directory', bound to `M'.
3256
3257 *** The new commands `speedbar-expand-line-descendants' and
3258 `speedbar-contract-line-descendants', bound to `[' and `]'
3259 respectively, expand and contract the line under cursor with all of
3260 its descendents.
3261
3262 *** The new user option `speedbar-use-tool-tips-flag', if non-nil,
3263 means to display tool-tips for speedbar items.
3264
3265 *** The new user option `speedbar-query-confirmation-method' controls
3266 how querying is performed for file operations. A value of 'always
3267 means to always query before file operations; 'none-but-delete means
3268 to not query before any file operations, except before a file
3269 deletion.
3270
3271 *** The new user option `speedbar-select-frame-method' specifies how
3272 to select a frame for displaying a file opened with the speedbar. A
3273 value of 'attached means to use the attached frame (the frame that
3274 speedbar was started from.) A number such as 1 or -1 means to pass
3275 that number to `other-frame'.
3276
3277 *** SPC and DEL are no longer bound to scroll up/down in the speedbar
3278 keymap.
3279
3280 *** The frame management code in speedbar.el has been split into a new
3281 `dframe' library. Emacs Lisp code that makes use of the speedbar
3282 should use `dframe-attached-frame' instead of
3283 `speedbar-attached-frame', `dframe-timer' instead of `speedbar-timer',
3284 `dframe-close-frame' instead of `speedbar-close-frame', and
3285 `dframe-activity-change-focus-flag' instead of
3286 `speedbar-activity-change-focus-flag'. The variables
3287 `speedbar-update-speed' and `speedbar-navigating-speed' are also
3288 obsolete; use `dframe-update-speed' instead.
3289
3290 ** battery.el changes
3291
3292 *** display-battery-mode replaces display-battery.
3293
3294 *** battery.el now works on recent versions of OS X.
3295
3296 ** Games
3297
3298 *** The game `mpuz' is enhanced.
3299
3300 `mpuz' now allows the 2nd factor not to have two identical digits. By
3301 default, all trivial operations involving whole lines are performed
3302 automatically. The game uses faces for better visual feedback.
3303
3304 ** Obsolete and deleted packages
3305
3306 *** fast-lock.el and lazy-lock.el are obsolete. Use jit-lock.el instead.
3307
3308 *** iso-acc.el is now obsolete. Use one of the latin input methods instead.
3309
3310 *** zone-mode.el is now obsolete. Use dns-mode.el instead.
3311
3312 *** cplus-md.el has been deleted.
3313
3314 ** Miscellaneous
3315
3316 *** The variable `woman-topic-at-point' is renamed
3317 to `woman-use-topic-at-point' and behaves differently: if this
3318 variable is non-nil, the `woman' command uses the word at point
3319 automatically, without asking for a confirmation. Otherwise, the word
3320 at point is suggested as default, but not inserted at the prompt.
3321
3322 *** You can now customize `fill-nobreak-predicate' to control where
3323 filling can break lines. The value is now normally a list of
3324 functions, but it can also be a single function, for compatibility.
3325
3326 Emacs provide two predicates, `fill-single-word-nobreak-p' and
3327 `fill-french-nobreak-p', for use as the value of
3328 `fill-nobreak-predicate'.
3329
3330 *** M-x view-file and commands that use it now avoid interfering
3331 with special modes such as Tar mode.
3332
3333 *** `global-whitespace-mode' is a new alias for `whitespace-global-mode'.
3334
3335 *** The saveplace.el package now filters out unreadable files.
3336
3337 When you exit Emacs, the saved positions in visited files no longer
3338 include files that aren't readable, e.g. files that don't exist.
3339 Customize the new option `save-place-forget-unreadable-files' to nil
3340 to get the old behavior. The new options `save-place-save-skipped'
3341 and `save-place-skip-check-regexp' allow further fine-tuning of this
3342 feature.
3343
3344 *** Commands `winner-redo' and `winner-undo', from winner.el, are now
3345 bound to C-c <left> and C-c <right>, respectively. This is an
3346 incompatible change.
3347
3348 *** The type-break package now allows `type-break-file-name' to be nil
3349 and if so, doesn't store any data across sessions. This is handy if
3350 you don't want the `.type-break' file in your home directory or are
3351 annoyed by the need for interaction when you kill Emacs.
3352
3353 *** `ps-print' can now print characters from the mule-unicode charsets.
3354
3355 Printing text with characters from the mule-unicode-* sets works with
3356 `ps-print', provided that you have installed the appropriate BDF
3357 fonts. See the file INSTALL for URLs where you can find these fonts.
3358
3359 *** New command `strokes-global-set-stroke-string'.
3360 This is like `strokes-global-set-stroke', but it allows you to bind
3361 the stroke directly to a string to insert. This is convenient for
3362 using strokes as an input method.
3363
3364 *** In Outline mode, `hide-body' no longer hides lines at the top
3365 of the file that precede the first header line.
3366
3367 *** `hide-ifdef-mode' now uses overlays rather than selective-display
3368 to hide its text. This should be mostly transparent but slightly
3369 changes the behavior of motion commands like C-e and C-p.
3370
3371 *** In Artist mode the variable `artist-text-renderer' has been
3372 renamed to `artist-text-renderer-function'. The old name is still
3373 available as alias.
3374
3375 *** In Enriched mode, `set-left-margin' and `set-right-margin' are now
3376 by default bound to `C-c [' and `C-c ]' instead of the former `C-c C-l'
3377 and `C-c C-r'.
3378
3379 *** `partial-completion-mode' now handles partial completion on directory names.
3380
3381 *** You can now disable pc-selection-mode after enabling it.
3382
3383 M-x pc-selection-mode behaves like a proper minor mode, and with no
3384 argument it toggles the mode. Turning off PC-Selection mode restores
3385 the global key bindings that were replaced by turning on the mode.
3386
3387 *** `uniquify-strip-common-suffix' tells uniquify to prefer
3388 `file|dir1' and `file|dir2' to `file|dir1/subdir' and `file|dir2/subdir'.
3389
3390 *** New user option `add-log-always-start-new-record'.
3391
3392 When this option is enabled, M-x add-change-log-entry always
3393 starts a new record regardless of when the last record is.
3394
3395 *** M-x compare-windows now can automatically skip non-matching text to
3396 resync points in both windows.
3397
3398 *** PO translation files are decoded according to their MIME headers
3399 when Emacs visits them.
3400
3401 *** Telnet now prompts you for a port number with C-u M-x telnet.
3402
3403 *** calculator.el now has radix grouping mode.
3404
3405 To enable this, set `calculator-output-radix' non-nil. In this mode a
3406 separator character is used every few digits, making it easier to see
3407 byte boundaries etc. For more info, see the documentation of the
3408 variable `calculator-radix-grouping-mode'.
3409
3410 *** LDAP support now defaults to ldapsearch from OpenLDAP version 2.
3411
3412 *** The terminal emulation code in term.el has been improved; it can
3413 run most curses applications now.
3414
3415 *** Support for `magic cookie' standout modes has been removed.
3416
3417 Emacs still works on terminals that require magic cookies in order to
3418 use standout mode, but they can no longer display mode-lines in
3419 inverse-video.
3420
3421 \f
3422 * Changes in Emacs 22.1 on non-free operating systems
3423
3424 ** The HOME directory defaults to Application Data under the user profile.
3425
3426 If you used a previous version of Emacs without setting the HOME
3427 environment variable and a `.emacs' was saved, then Emacs will continue
3428 using C:/ as the default HOME. But if you are installing Emacs afresh,
3429 the default location will be the "Application Data" (or similar
3430 localized name) subdirectory of your user profile. A typical location
3431 of this directory is "C:\Documents and Settings\USERNAME\Application Data",
3432 where USERNAME is your user name.
3433
3434 This change means that users can now have their own `.emacs' files on
3435 shared computers, and the default HOME directory is less likely to be
3436 read-only on computers that are administered by someone else.
3437
3438 ** Images are now supported on MS Windows.
3439
3440 PBM and XBM images are supported out of the box. Other image formats
3441 depend on external libraries. All of these libraries have been ported
3442 to Windows, and can be found in both source and binary form at
3443 http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/. Note that libpng also depends on
3444 zlib, and tiff depends on the version of jpeg that it was compiled
3445 against. For additional information, see nt/INSTALL.
3446
3447 ** Sound is now supported on MS Windows.
3448
3449 WAV format is supported on all versions of Windows, other formats such
3450 as AU, AIFF and MP3 may be supported in the more recent versions of
3451 Windows, or when other software provides hooks into the system level
3452 sound support for those formats.
3453
3454 ** Tooltips now work on MS Windows.
3455
3456 See the Emacs 21.1 NEWS entry for tooltips for details.
3457
3458 ** Pointing devices with more than 3 buttons are now supported on MS Windows.
3459
3460 The new variable `w32-pass-extra-mouse-buttons-to-system' controls
3461 whether Emacs should handle the extra buttons itself (the default), or
3462 pass them to Windows to be handled with system-wide functions.
3463
3464 ** Passing resources on the command line now works on MS Windows.
3465
3466 You can use --xrm to pass resource settings to Emacs, overriding any
3467 existing values. For example:
3468
3469 emacs --xrm "Emacs.Background:red" --xrm "Emacs.Geometry:100x20"
3470
3471 will start up Emacs on an initial frame of 100x20 with red background,
3472 irrespective of geometry or background setting on the Windows registry.
3473
3474 ** Emacs takes note of colors defined in Control Panel on MS-Windows.
3475
3476 The Control Panel defines some default colors for applications in much
3477 the same way as wildcard X Resources do on X. Emacs now adds these
3478 colors to the colormap prefixed by System (eg SystemMenu for the
3479 default Menu background, SystemMenuText for the foreground), and uses
3480 some of them to initialize some of the default faces.
3481 `list-colors-display' shows the list of System color names, in case
3482 you wish to use them in other faces.
3483
3484 ** Running in a console window in Windows now uses the console size.
3485
3486 Previous versions of Emacs erred on the side of having a usable Emacs
3487 through telnet, even though that was inconvenient if you use Emacs in
3488 a local console window with a scrollback buffer. The default value of
3489 w32-use-full-screen-buffer is now nil, which favors local console
3490 windows. Recent versions of Windows telnet also work well with this
3491 setting. If you are using an older telnet server then Emacs detects
3492 that the console window dimensions that are reported are not sane, and
3493 defaults to 80x25. If you use such a telnet server regularly at a size
3494 other than 80x25, you can still manually set
3495 w32-use-full-screen-buffer to t.
3496
3497 ** Different shaped mouse pointers are supported on MS Windows.
3498
3499 The mouse pointer changes shape depending on what is under the pointer.
3500
3501 ** On MS Windows, the "system caret" now follows the cursor.
3502
3503 This enables Emacs to work better with programs that need to track the
3504 cursor, for example screen magnifiers and text to speech programs.
3505 When such a program is in use, the system caret is made visible
3506 instead of Emacs drawing its own cursor. This seems to be required by
3507 some programs. The new variable w32-use-visible-system-caret allows
3508 the caret visibility to be manually toggled.
3509
3510 ** On MS Windows NT/W2K/XP, Emacs uses Unicode for clipboard operations.
3511
3512 Those systems use Unicode internally, so this allows Emacs to share
3513 multilingual text with other applications. On other versions of
3514 MS Windows, Emacs now uses the appropriate locale coding-system, so
3515 the clipboard should work correctly for your local language without
3516 any customizations.
3517
3518 ** On Mac OS, `keyboard-coding-system' changes based on the keyboard script.
3519
3520 ** The variable `mac-keyboard-text-encoding' and the constants
3521 `kTextEncodingMacRoman', `kTextEncodingISOLatin1', and
3522 `kTextEncodingISOLatin2' are obsolete.
3523
3524 ** The variable `mac-command-key-is-meta' is obsolete. Use
3525 `mac-command-modifier' and `mac-option-modifier' instead.
3526 \f
3527 * Incompatible Lisp Changes in Emacs 22.1
3528
3529 ** Mode line display ignores text properties as well as the
3530 :propertize and :eval forms in the value of a variable whose
3531 `risky-local-variable' property is nil.
3532
3533 The function `comint-send-input' now accepts 3 optional arguments:
3534
3535 (comint-send-input &optional no-newline artificial)
3536
3537 Callers sending input not from the user should use bind the 3rd
3538 argument `artificial' to a non-nil value, to prevent Emacs from
3539 deleting the part of subprocess output that matches the input.
3540
3541 ** The `read-file-name' function now returns a null string if the
3542 user just types RET.
3543
3544 ** The variables post-command-idle-hook and post-command-idle-delay have
3545 been removed. Use run-with-idle-timer instead.
3546
3547 ** A hex or octal escape in a string constant forces the string to
3548 be multibyte or unibyte, respectively.
3549
3550 ** The explicit method of creating a display table element by
3551 combining a face number and a character code into a numeric
3552 glyph code is deprecated.
3553
3554 Instead, the new functions `make-glyph-code', `glyph-char', and
3555 `glyph-face' must be used to create and decode glyph codes in
3556 display tables.
3557
3558 ** `suppress-keymap' now works by remapping `self-insert-command' to
3559 the command `undefined'. (In earlier Emacs versions, it used
3560 `substitute-key-definition' to rebind self inserting characters to
3561 `undefined'.)
3562
3563 ** The third argument of `accept-process-output' is now milliseconds.
3564 It used to be microseconds.
3565
3566 ** The function find-operation-coding-system may be called with a cons
3567 (FILENAME . BUFFER) in the second argument if the first argument
3568 OPERATION is `insert-file-contents', and thus a function registered in
3569 `file-coding-system-alist' is also called with such an argument.
3570
3571 ** When Emacs receives a USR1 or USR2 signal, this generates
3572 input events: sigusr1 or sigusr2. Use special-event-map to
3573 handle these events.
3574
3575 ** The variable `memory-full' now remains t until
3576 there is no longer a shortage of memory.
3577
3578 ** Support for Mocklisp has been removed.
3579
3580 \f
3581 * Lisp Changes in Emacs 22.1
3582
3583 ** General Lisp changes:
3584
3585 *** New syntax: \s now stands for the SPACE character.
3586
3587 `?\s' is a new way to write the space character. You must make sure
3588 it is not followed by a dash, since `?\s-...' indicates the "super"
3589 modifier. However, it would be strange to write a character constant
3590 and a following symbol (beginning with `-') with no space between
3591 them.
3592
3593 `\s' stands for space in strings, too, but it is not really meant for
3594 strings; it is easier and nicer just to write a space.
3595
3596 *** New syntax: \uXXXX and \UXXXXXXXX specify Unicode code points in hex.
3597
3598 For instance, you can use "\u0428" to specify a string consisting of
3599 CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER SHA, or `"U0001D6E2" to specify one consisting
3600 of MATHEMATICAL ITALIC CAPITAL ALPHA (the latter is greater than
3601 #xFFFF and thus needs the longer syntax).
3602
3603 This syntax works for both character constants and strings.
3604
3605 *** New function `unsafep' determines whether a Lisp form is safe.
3606
3607 It returns nil if the given Lisp form can't possibly do anything
3608 dangerous; otherwise it returns a reason why the form might be unsafe
3609 (calls unknown function, alters global variable, etc.).
3610
3611 *** The function `eql' is now available without requiring the CL package.
3612
3613 *** The new function `memql' is like `memq', but uses `eql' for comparison,
3614 that is, floats are compared by value and other elements with `eq'.
3615
3616 *** New functions `string-or-null-p' and `booleanp'.
3617
3618 `string-or-null-p' returns non-nil if OBJECT is a string or nil.
3619 `booleanp' returns non-nil if OBJECT is t or nil.
3620
3621 *** `makehash' is now obsolete. Use `make-hash-table' instead.
3622
3623 *** Minor change in the function `format'.
3624
3625 Some flags that were accepted but not implemented (such as "*") are no
3626 longer accepted.
3627
3628 *** `add-to-list' takes an optional third argument, APPEND.
3629
3630 If APPEND is non-nil, the new element gets added at the end of the
3631 list instead of at the beginning. This change actually occurred in
3632 Emacs 21.1, but was not documented then.
3633
3634 *** New function `add-to-ordered-list' is like `add-to-list' but
3635 associates a numeric ordering of each element added to the list.
3636
3637 *** New function `add-to-history' adds an element to a history list.
3638
3639 Lisp packages should use this function to add elements to their
3640 history lists.
3641
3642 If `history-delete-duplicates' is non-nil, it removes duplicates of
3643 the new element from the history list it updates.
3644
3645 *** New function `copy-tree' makes a copy of a tree.
3646
3647 It recursively copies through both CARs and CDRs.
3648
3649 *** New function `delete-dups' deletes `equal' duplicate elements from a list.
3650
3651 It modifies the list destructively, like `delete'. Of several `equal'
3652 occurrences of an element in the list, the one that's kept is the
3653 first one.
3654
3655 *** New function `rassq-delete-all'.
3656
3657 (rassq-delete-all VALUE ALIST) deletes, from ALIST, each element whose
3658 CDR is `eq' to the specified value.
3659
3660 *** Functions `get' and `plist-get' no longer give errors for bad plists.
3661
3662 They return nil for a malformed property list or if the list is
3663 cyclic.
3664
3665 *** New functions `lax-plist-get' and `lax-plist-put'.
3666
3667 They are like `plist-get' and `plist-put', except that they compare
3668 the property name using `equal' rather than `eq'.
3669
3670 *** The function `number-sequence' makes a list of equally-separated numbers.
3671
3672 For instance, (number-sequence 4 9) returns (4 5 6 7 8 9). By
3673 default, the separation is 1, but you can specify a different
3674 separation as the third argument. (number-sequence 1.5 6 2) returns
3675 (1.5 3.5 5.5).
3676
3677 *** New variables `most-positive-fixnum' and `most-negative-fixnum'.
3678
3679 They hold the largest and smallest possible integer values.
3680
3681 *** The function `expt' handles negative exponents differently.
3682 The value for `(expt A B)', if both A and B are integers and B is
3683 negative, is now a float. For example: (expt 2 -2) => 0.25.
3684
3685 *** The function `atan' now accepts an optional second argument.
3686
3687 When called with 2 arguments, as in `(atan Y X)', `atan' returns the
3688 angle in radians between the vector [X, Y] and the X axis. (This is
3689 equivalent to the standard C library function `atan2'.)
3690
3691 *** New macro `with-case-table'
3692
3693 This executes the body with the case table temporarily set to a given
3694 case table.
3695
3696 *** New macro `with-local-quit' temporarily allows quitting.
3697
3698 A quit inside the body of `with-local-quit' is caught by the
3699 `with-local-quit' form itself, but another quit will happen later once
3700 the code that has inhibited quitting exits.
3701
3702 This is for use around potentially blocking or long-running code
3703 inside timer functions and `post-command-hook' functions.
3704
3705 *** New macro `define-obsolete-function-alias'.
3706
3707 This combines `defalias' and `make-obsolete'.
3708
3709 *** New macro `eval-at-startup' specifies expressions to
3710 evaluate when Emacs starts up. If this is done after startup,
3711 it evaluates those expressions immediately.
3712
3713 This is useful in packages that can be preloaded.
3714
3715 *** New function `macroexpand-all' expands all macros in a form.
3716
3717 It is similar to the Common-Lisp function of the same name.
3718 One difference is that it guarantees to return the original argument
3719 if no expansion is done, which can be tested using `eq'.
3720
3721 *** A function or macro's doc string can now specify the calling pattern.
3722
3723 You put this info in the doc string's last line. It should be
3724 formatted so as to match the regexp "\n\n(fn .*)\\'". If you don't
3725 specify this explicitly, Emacs determines it from the actual argument
3726 names. Usually that default is right, but not always.
3727
3728 *** New variable `print-continuous-numbering'.
3729
3730 When this is non-nil, successive calls to print functions use a single
3731 numbering scheme for circular structure references. This is only
3732 relevant when `print-circle' is non-nil.
3733
3734 When you bind `print-continuous-numbering' to t, you should
3735 also bind `print-number-table' to nil.
3736
3737 *** `list-faces-display' takes an optional argument, REGEXP.
3738
3739 If it is non-nil, the function lists only faces matching this regexp.
3740
3741 *** New hook `command-error-function'.
3742
3743 By setting this variable to a function, you can control
3744 how the editor command loop shows the user an error message.
3745
3746 *** `debug-on-entry' accepts primitive functions that are not special forms.
3747
3748 ** Lisp code indentation features:
3749
3750 *** The `defmacro' form can contain indentation and edebug declarations.
3751
3752 These declarations specify how to indent the macro calls in Lisp mode
3753 and how to debug them with Edebug. You write them like this:
3754
3755 (defmacro NAME LAMBDA-LIST [DOC-STRING] [DECLARATION ...] ...)
3756
3757 DECLARATION is a list `(declare DECLARATION-SPECIFIER ...)'. The
3758 possible declaration specifiers are:
3759
3760 (indent INDENT)
3761 Set NAME's `lisp-indent-function' property to INDENT.
3762
3763 (edebug DEBUG)
3764 Set NAME's `edebug-form-spec' property to DEBUG. (This is
3765 equivalent to writing a `def-edebug-spec' for the macro,
3766 but this is cleaner.)
3767
3768 *** cl-indent now allows customization of Indentation of backquoted forms.
3769
3770 See the new user option `lisp-backquote-indentation'.
3771
3772 *** cl-indent now handles indentation of simple and extended `loop' forms.
3773
3774 The new user options `lisp-loop-keyword-indentation',
3775 `lisp-loop-forms-indentation', and `lisp-simple-loop-indentation' can
3776 be used to customize the indentation of keywords and forms in loop
3777 forms.
3778
3779 ** Variable aliases:
3780
3781 *** New function: defvaralias ALIAS-VAR BASE-VAR [DOCSTRING]
3782
3783 This function defines the symbol ALIAS-VAR as a variable alias for
3784 symbol BASE-VAR. This means that retrieving the value of ALIAS-VAR
3785 returns the value of BASE-VAR, and changing the value of ALIAS-VAR
3786 changes the value of BASE-VAR.
3787
3788 DOCSTRING, if present, is the documentation for ALIAS-VAR; else it has
3789 the same documentation as BASE-VAR.
3790
3791 *** The macro `define-obsolete-variable-alias' combines `defvaralias' and
3792 `make-obsolete-variable'.
3793
3794 *** New function: indirect-variable VARIABLE
3795
3796 This function returns the variable at the end of the chain of aliases
3797 of VARIABLE. If VARIABLE is not a symbol, or if VARIABLE is not
3798 defined as an alias, the function returns VARIABLE.
3799
3800 It might be noteworthy that variables aliases work for all kinds of
3801 variables, including buffer-local and frame-local variables.
3802
3803 ** defcustom changes:
3804
3805 *** The package-version keyword has been added to provide
3806 `customize-changed-options' functionality to packages in the future.
3807 Developers who make use of this keyword must also update the new
3808 variable `customize-package-emacs-version-alist'.
3809
3810 *** The new customization type `float' requires a floating point number.
3811
3812 ** String changes:
3813
3814 *** A hex escape in a string constant forces the string to be multibyte.
3815
3816 *** An octal escape in a string constant forces the string to be unibyte.
3817
3818 *** New function `string-to-multibyte' converts a unibyte string to a
3819 multibyte string with the same individual character codes.
3820
3821 *** `split-string' now includes null substrings in the returned list if
3822 the optional argument SEPARATORS is non-nil and there are matches for
3823 SEPARATORS at the beginning or end of the string. If SEPARATORS is
3824 nil, or if the new optional third argument OMIT-NULLS is non-nil, all
3825 empty matches are omitted from the returned list.
3826
3827 *** The new function `assoc-string' replaces `assoc-ignore-case' and
3828 `assoc-ignore-representation', which are still available, but have
3829 been declared obsolete.
3830
3831 *** New function `substring-no-properties' returns a substring without
3832 text properties.
3833
3834 ** Displaying warnings to the user.
3835
3836 See the functions `warn' and `display-warning', or the Lisp Manual.
3837 If you want to be sure the warning will not be overlooked, this
3838 facility is much better than using `message', since it displays
3839 warnings in a separate window.
3840
3841 ** Progress reporters.
3842
3843 These provide a simple and uniform way for commands to present
3844 progress messages for the user.
3845
3846 See the new functions `make-progress-reporter',
3847 `progress-reporter-update', `progress-reporter-force-update',
3848 `progress-reporter-done', and `dotimes-with-progress-reporter'.
3849
3850 ** Buffer positions:
3851
3852 *** Function `compute-motion' now calculates the usable window
3853 width if the WIDTH argument is nil. If the TOPOS argument is nil,
3854 the usable window height and width is used.
3855
3856 *** The `line-move', `scroll-up', and `scroll-down' functions will now
3857 modify the window vscroll to scroll through display rows that are
3858 taller that the height of the window, for example in the presence of
3859 large images. To disable this feature, bind the new variable
3860 `auto-window-vscroll' to nil.
3861
3862 *** The argument to `forward-word', `backward-word' is optional.
3863
3864 It defaults to 1.
3865
3866 *** Argument to `forward-to-indentation' and `backward-to-indentation' is optional.
3867
3868 It defaults to 1.
3869
3870 *** `field-beginning' and `field-end' take new optional argument, LIMIT.
3871
3872 This argument tells them not to search beyond LIMIT. Instead they
3873 give up and return LIMIT.
3874
3875 *** New function `window-line-height' is an efficient way to get
3876 information about a specific text line in a window provided that the
3877 window's display is up-to-date.
3878
3879 *** New function `line-number-at-pos' returns the line number of a position.
3880
3881 It an optional buffer position argument that defaults to point.
3882
3883 *** Function `pos-visible-in-window-p' now returns the pixel coordinates
3884 and partial visibility state of the corresponding row, if the PARTIALLY
3885 arg is non-nil.
3886
3887 *** New functions `posn-at-point' and `posn-at-x-y' return
3888 click-event-style position information for a given visible buffer
3889 position or for a given window pixel coordinate.
3890
3891 *** New function `mouse-on-link-p' tests if a position is in a clickable link.
3892
3893 This is the function used by the new `mouse-1-click-follows-link'
3894 functionality.
3895
3896 ** Text modification:
3897
3898 *** The new function `buffer-chars-modified-tick' returns a buffer's
3899 tick counter for changes to characters. Each time text in that buffer
3900 is inserted or deleted, the character-change counter is updated to the
3901 tick counter (`buffer-modified-tick'). Text property changes leave it
3902 unchanged.
3903
3904 *** The new function `insert-for-yank' normally works like `insert', but
3905 removes the text properties in the `yank-excluded-properties' list
3906 and handles the `yank-handler' text property.
3907
3908 *** The new function `insert-buffer-substring-as-yank' is like
3909 `insert-for-yank' except that it gets the text from another buffer as
3910 in `insert-buffer-substring'.
3911
3912 *** The new function `insert-buffer-substring-no-properties' is like
3913 `insert-buffer-substring', but removes all text properties from the
3914 inserted substring.
3915
3916 *** The new function `filter-buffer-substring' extracts a buffer
3917 substring, passes it through a set of filter functions, and returns
3918 the filtered substring. Use it instead of `buffer-substring' or
3919 `delete-and-extract-region' when copying text into a user-accessible
3920 data structure, such as the kill-ring, X clipboard, or a register.
3921
3922 The list of filter function is specified by the new variable
3923 `buffer-substring-filters'. For example, Longlines mode adds to
3924 `buffer-substring-filters' to remove soft newlines from the copied
3925 text.
3926
3927 *** Function `translate-region' accepts also a char-table as TABLE
3928 argument.
3929
3930 *** The new translation table `translation-table-for-input'
3931 is used for customizing self-insertion. The character to
3932 be inserted is translated through it.
3933
3934 *** Text clones.
3935
3936 The new function `text-clone-create'. Text clones are chunks of text
3937 that are kept identical by transparently propagating changes from one
3938 clone to the other.
3939
3940 *** The function `insert-string' is now obsolete.
3941
3942 ** Filling changes.
3943
3944 *** In determining an adaptive fill prefix, Emacs now tries the function in
3945 `adaptive-fill-function' _before_ matching the buffer line against
3946 `adaptive-fill-regexp' rather than _after_ it.
3947
3948 ** Atomic change groups.
3949
3950 To perform some changes in the current buffer "atomically" so that
3951 they either all succeed or are all undone, use `atomic-change-group'
3952 around the code that makes changes. For instance:
3953
3954 (atomic-change-group
3955 (insert foo)
3956 (delete-region x y))
3957
3958 If an error (or other nonlocal exit) occurs inside the body of
3959 `atomic-change-group', it unmakes all the changes in that buffer that
3960 were during the execution of the body. The change group has no effect
3961 on any other buffers--any such changes remain.
3962
3963 If you need something more sophisticated, you can directly call the
3964 lower-level functions that `atomic-change-group' uses. Here is how.
3965
3966 To set up a change group for one buffer, call `prepare-change-group'.
3967 Specify the buffer as argument; it defaults to the current buffer.
3968 This function returns a "handle" for the change group. You must save
3969 the handle to activate the change group and then finish it.
3970
3971 Before you change the buffer again, you must activate the change
3972 group. Pass the handle to `activate-change-group' afterward to
3973 do this.
3974
3975 After you make the changes, you must finish the change group. You can
3976 either accept the changes or cancel them all. Call
3977 `accept-change-group' to accept the changes in the group as final;
3978 call `cancel-change-group' to undo them all.
3979
3980 You should use `unwind-protect' to make sure the group is always
3981 finished. The call to `activate-change-group' should be inside the
3982 `unwind-protect', in case the user types C-g just after it runs.
3983 (This is one reason why `prepare-change-group' and
3984 `activate-change-group' are separate functions.) Once you finish the
3985 group, don't use the handle again--don't try to finish the same group
3986 twice.
3987
3988 To make a multibuffer change group, call `prepare-change-group' once
3989 for each buffer you want to cover, then use `nconc' to combine the
3990 returned values, like this:
3991
3992 (nconc (prepare-change-group buffer-1)
3993 (prepare-change-group buffer-2))
3994
3995 You can then activate the multibuffer change group with a single call
3996 to `activate-change-group', and finish it with a single call to
3997 `accept-change-group' or `cancel-change-group'.
3998
3999 Nested use of several change groups for the same buffer works as you
4000 would expect. Non-nested use of change groups for the same buffer
4001 will lead to undesirable results, so don't let it happen; the first
4002 change group you start for any given buffer should be the last one
4003 finished.
4004
4005 ** Buffer-related changes:
4006
4007 *** The new function `buffer-local-value' returns the buffer-local
4008 binding of VARIABLE (a symbol) in buffer BUFFER. If VARIABLE does not
4009 have a buffer-local binding in buffer BUFFER, it returns the default
4010 value of VARIABLE instead.
4011
4012 *** `list-buffers-noselect' now takes an additional argument, BUFFER-LIST.
4013
4014 If it is non-nil, it specifies which buffers to list.
4015
4016 *** `kill-buffer-hook' is now a permanent local.
4017
4018 *** The function `frame-or-buffer-changed-p' now lets you maintain
4019 various status records in parallel.
4020
4021 It takes a variable (a symbol) as argument. If the variable is non-nil,
4022 then its value should be a vector installed previously by
4023 `frame-or-buffer-changed-p'. If the frame names, buffer names, buffer
4024 order, or their read-only or modified flags have changed, since the
4025 time the vector's contents were recorded by a previous call to
4026 `frame-or-buffer-changed-p', then the function returns t. Otherwise
4027 it returns nil.
4028
4029 On the first call to `frame-or-buffer-changed-p', the variable's
4030 value should be nil. `frame-or-buffer-changed-p' stores a suitable
4031 vector into the variable and returns t.
4032
4033 If the variable is itself nil, then `frame-or-buffer-changed-p' uses,
4034 for compatibility, an internal variable which exists only for this
4035 purpose.
4036
4037 *** The function `read-buffer' follows the convention for reading from
4038 the minibuffer with a default value: if DEF is non-nil, the minibuffer
4039 prompt provided in PROMPT is edited to show the default value provided
4040 in DEF before the terminal colon and space.
4041
4042 ** Searching and matching changes:
4043
4044 *** New function `looking-back' checks whether a regular expression matches
4045 the text before point. Specifying the LIMIT argument bounds how far
4046 back the match can start; this is a way to keep it from taking too long.
4047
4048 *** The new variable `search-spaces-regexp' controls how to search
4049 for spaces in a regular expression. If it is non-nil, it should be a
4050 regular expression, and any series of spaces stands for that regular
4051 expression. If it is nil, spaces stand for themselves.
4052
4053 Spaces inside of constructs such as `[..]' and inside loops such as
4054 `*', `+', and `?' are never replaced with `search-spaces-regexp'.
4055
4056 *** New regular expression operators, `\_<' and `\_>'.
4057
4058 These match the beginning and end of a symbol. A symbol is a
4059 non-empty sequence of either word or symbol constituent characters, as
4060 specified by the syntax table.
4061
4062 *** `skip-chars-forward' and `skip-chars-backward' now handle
4063 character classes such as `[:alpha:]', along with individual
4064 characters and ranges.
4065
4066 *** In `replace-match', the replacement text no longer inherits
4067 properties from surrounding text.
4068
4069 *** The list returned by `(match-data t)' now has the buffer as a final
4070 element, if the last match was on a buffer. `set-match-data'
4071 accepts such a list for restoring the match state.
4072
4073 *** Functions `match-data' and `set-match-data' now have an optional
4074 argument `reseat'. When non-nil, all markers in the match data list
4075 passed to these functions will be reseated to point to nowhere.
4076
4077 *** rx.el has new corresponding `symbol-start' and `symbol-end' elements.
4078
4079 *** The default value of `sentence-end' is now defined using the new
4080 variable `sentence-end-without-space', which contains such characters
4081 that end a sentence without following spaces.
4082
4083 The function `sentence-end' should be used to obtain the value of the
4084 variable `sentence-end'. If the variable `sentence-end' is nil, then
4085 this function returns the regexp constructed from the variables
4086 `sentence-end-without-period', `sentence-end-double-space' and
4087 `sentence-end-without-space'.
4088
4089 ** Undo changes:
4090
4091 *** `buffer-undo-list' allows programmable elements.
4092
4093 These elements have the form (apply FUNNAME . ARGS), where FUNNAME is
4094 a symbol other than t or nil. That stands for a high-level change
4095 that should be undone by evaluating (apply FUNNAME ARGS).
4096
4097 These entries can also have the form (apply DELTA BEG END FUNNAME . ARGS)
4098 which indicates that the change which took place was limited to the
4099 range BEG...END and increased the buffer size by DELTA.
4100
4101 *** If the buffer's undo list for the current command gets longer than
4102 `undo-outer-limit', garbage collection empties it. This is to prevent
4103 it from using up the available memory and choking Emacs.
4104
4105 ** Killing and yanking changes:
4106
4107 *** New `yank-handler' text property can be used to control how
4108 previously killed text on the kill ring is reinserted.
4109
4110 The value of the `yank-handler' property must be a list with one to four
4111 elements with the following format:
4112 (FUNCTION PARAM NOEXCLUDE UNDO).
4113
4114 The `insert-for-yank' function looks for a yank-handler property on
4115 the first character on its string argument (typically the first
4116 element on the kill-ring). If a `yank-handler' property is found,
4117 the normal behavior of `insert-for-yank' is modified in various ways:
4118
4119 When FUNCTION is present and non-nil, it is called instead of `insert'
4120 to insert the string. FUNCTION takes one argument--the object to insert.
4121 If PARAM is present and non-nil, it replaces STRING as the object
4122 passed to FUNCTION (or `insert'); for example, if FUNCTION is
4123 `yank-rectangle', PARAM should be a list of strings to insert as a
4124 rectangle.
4125 If NOEXCLUDE is present and non-nil, the normal removal of the
4126 `yank-excluded-properties' is not performed; instead FUNCTION is
4127 responsible for removing those properties. This may be necessary
4128 if FUNCTION adjusts point before or after inserting the object.
4129 If UNDO is present and non-nil, it is a function that will be called
4130 by `yank-pop' to undo the insertion of the current object. It is
4131 called with two arguments, the start and end of the current region.
4132 FUNCTION can set `yank-undo-function' to override the UNDO value.
4133
4134 *** The functions `kill-new', `kill-append', and `kill-region' now have an
4135 optional argument to specify the `yank-handler' text property to put on
4136 the killed text.
4137
4138 *** The function `yank-pop' will now use a non-nil value of the variable
4139 `yank-undo-function' (instead of `delete-region') to undo the previous
4140 `yank' or `yank-pop' command (or a call to `insert-for-yank'). The function
4141 `insert-for-yank' automatically sets that variable according to the UNDO
4142 element of the string argument's `yank-handler' text property if present.
4143
4144 *** The function `insert-for-yank' now supports strings where the
4145 `yank-handler' property does not span the first character of the
4146 string. The old behavior is available if you call
4147 `insert-for-yank-1' instead.
4148
4149 ** Syntax table changes:
4150
4151 *** The new function `syntax-ppss' provides an efficient way to find the
4152 current syntactic context at point.
4153
4154 *** The new function `syntax-after' returns the syntax code
4155 of the character after a specified buffer position, taking account
4156 of text properties as well as the character code.
4157
4158 *** `syntax-class' extracts the class of a syntax code (as returned
4159 by `syntax-after').
4160
4161 *** The macro `with-syntax-table' no longer copies the syntax table.
4162
4163 ** File operation changes:
4164
4165 *** New vars `exec-suffixes' and `load-suffixes' used when
4166 searching for an executable or an Emacs Lisp file.
4167
4168 *** New function `locate-file' searches for a file in a list of directories.
4169 `locate-file' accepts a name of a file to search (a string), and two
4170 lists: a list of directories to search in and a list of suffixes to
4171 try; typical usage might use `exec-path' and `load-path' for the list
4172 of directories, and `exec-suffixes' and `load-suffixes' for the list
4173 of suffixes. The function also accepts a predicate argument to
4174 further filter candidate files.
4175
4176 One advantage of using this function is that the list of suffixes in
4177 `exec-suffixes' is OS-dependant, so this function will find
4178 executables without polluting Lisp code with OS dependencies.
4179
4180 *** The new function `file-remote-p' tests a file name and returns
4181 non-nil if it specifies a remote file (one that Emacs accesses using
4182 its own special methods and not directly through the file system).
4183 The value in that case is an identifier for the remote file system.
4184
4185 *** The new hook `before-save-hook' is invoked by `basic-save-buffer'
4186 before saving buffers. This allows packages to perform various final
4187 tasks. For example, it can be used by the copyright package to make
4188 sure saved files have the current year in any copyright headers.
4189
4190 *** `file-chase-links' now takes an optional second argument LIMIT which
4191 specifies the maximum number of links to chase through. If after that
4192 many iterations the file name obtained is still a symbolic link,
4193 `file-chase-links' returns it anyway.
4194
4195 *** Functions `file-name-sans-extension' and `file-name-extension' now
4196 ignore the leading dots in file names, so that file names such as
4197 `.emacs' are treated as extensionless.
4198
4199 *** If `buffer-save-without-query' is non-nil in some buffer,
4200 `save-some-buffers' will always save that buffer without asking (if
4201 it's modified).
4202
4203 *** `buffer-auto-save-file-format' is the new name for what was
4204 formerly called `auto-save-file-format'. It is now a permanent local.
4205
4206 *** `visited-file-modtime' and `calendar-time-from-absolute' now return
4207 a list of two integers, instead of a cons.
4208
4209 *** The precedence of file name handlers has been changed.
4210
4211 Instead of choosing the first handler that matches,
4212 `find-file-name-handler' now gives precedence to a file name handler
4213 that matches nearest the end of the file name. More precisely, the
4214 handler whose (match-beginning 0) is the largest is chosen. In case
4215 of ties, the old "first matched" rule applies.
4216
4217 *** A file name handler can declare which operations it handles.
4218
4219 You do this by putting an `operation' property on the handler name
4220 symbol. The property value should be a list of the operations that
4221 the handler really handles. It won't be called for any other
4222 operations.
4223
4224 This is useful for autoloaded handlers, to prevent them from being
4225 autoloaded when not really necessary.
4226
4227 *** The function `make-auto-save-file-name' is now handled by file
4228 name handlers. This will be exploited for remote files mainly.
4229
4230 *** The function `file-name-completion' accepts an optional argument
4231 PREDICATE, and rejects completion candidates that don't satisfy PREDICATE.
4232
4233 *** The new primitive `set-file-times' sets a file's access and
4234 modification times. Magic file name handlers can handle this
4235 operation.
4236
4237 ** Input changes:
4238
4239 *** Functions `y-or-n-p', `read-char', `read-key-sequence' and the like, that
4240 display a prompt but don't use the minibuffer, now display the prompt
4241 using the text properties (esp. the face) of the prompt string.
4242
4243 *** The functions `read-event', `read-char', and `read-char-exclusive'
4244 have a new optional argument SECONDS. If non-nil, this specifies a
4245 maximum time to wait for input, in seconds. If no input arrives after
4246 this time elapses, the functions stop waiting and return nil.
4247
4248 *** An interactive specification can now use the code letter `U' to get
4249 the up-event that was discarded in case the last key sequence read for a
4250 previous `k' or `K' argument was a down-event; otherwise nil is used.
4251
4252 *** The new interactive-specification `G' reads a file name
4253 much like `F', but if the input is a directory name (even defaulted),
4254 it returns just the directory name.
4255
4256 *** (while-no-input BODY...) runs BODY, but only so long as no input
4257 arrives. If the user types or clicks anything, BODY stops as if a
4258 quit had occurred. `while-no-input' returns the value of BODY, if BODY
4259 finishes. It returns nil if BODY was aborted by a quit, and t if
4260 BODY was aborted by arrival of input.
4261
4262 *** `recent-keys' now returns the last 300 keys.
4263
4264 ** Minibuffer changes:
4265
4266 *** The new function `minibufferp' returns non-nil if its optional
4267 buffer argument is a minibuffer. If the argument is omitted, it
4268 defaults to the current buffer.
4269
4270 *** New function `minibuffer-selected-window' returns the window which
4271 was selected when entering the minibuffer.
4272
4273 *** The `read-file-name' function now takes an additional argument which
4274 specifies a predicate which the file name read must satisfy. The
4275 new variable `read-file-name-predicate' contains the predicate argument
4276 while reading the file name from the minibuffer; the predicate in this
4277 variable is used by read-file-name-internal to filter the completion list.
4278
4279 *** The new variable `read-file-name-function' can be used by Lisp code
4280 to override the built-in `read-file-name' function.
4281
4282 *** The new variable `read-file-name-completion-ignore-case' specifies
4283 whether completion ignores case when reading a file name with the
4284 `read-file-name' function.
4285
4286 *** The new function `read-directory-name' is for reading a directory name.
4287
4288 It is like `read-file-name' except that the defaulting works better
4289 for directories, and completion inside it shows only directories.
4290
4291 *** The new variable `history-add-new-input' specifies whether to add new
4292 elements in history. If set to nil, minibuffer reading functions don't
4293 add new elements to the history list, so it is possible to do this
4294 afterwards by calling `add-to-history' explicitly.
4295
4296 ** Completion changes:
4297
4298 *** The new function `minibuffer-completion-contents' returns the contents
4299 of the minibuffer just before point. That is what completion commands
4300 operate on.
4301
4302 *** The functions `all-completions' and `try-completion' now accept lists
4303 of strings as well as hash-tables additionally to alists, obarrays
4304 and functions. Furthermore, the function `test-completion' is now
4305 exported to Lisp. The keys in alists and hash tables can be either
4306 strings or symbols, which are automatically converted with to strings.
4307
4308 *** The new macro `dynamic-completion-table' supports using functions
4309 as a dynamic completion table.
4310
4311 (dynamic-completion-table FUN)
4312
4313 FUN is called with one argument, the string for which completion is required,
4314 and it should return an alist containing all the intended possible
4315 completions. This alist can be a full list of possible completions so that FUN
4316 can ignore the value of its argument. If completion is performed in the
4317 minibuffer, FUN will be called in the buffer from which the minibuffer was
4318 entered. `dynamic-completion-table' then computes the completion.
4319
4320 *** The new macro `lazy-completion-table' initializes a variable
4321 as a lazy completion table.
4322
4323 (lazy-completion-table VAR FUN)
4324
4325 If the completion table VAR is used for the first time (e.g., by passing VAR
4326 as an argument to `try-completion'), the function FUN is called with no
4327 arguments. FUN must return the completion table that will be stored in VAR.
4328 If completion is requested in the minibuffer, FUN will be called in the buffer
4329 from which the minibuffer was entered. The return value of
4330 `lazy-completion-table' must be used to initialize the value of VAR.
4331
4332 ** Abbrev changes:
4333
4334 *** `define-abbrev' now accepts an optional argument SYSTEM-FLAG.
4335
4336 If non-nil, this marks the abbrev as a "system" abbrev, which means
4337 that it won't be stored in the user's abbrevs file if he saves the
4338 abbrevs. Major modes that predefine some abbrevs should always
4339 specify this flag.
4340
4341 *** The new function `copy-abbrev-table' copies an abbrev table.
4342
4343 It returns a new abbrev table that is a copy of a given abbrev table.
4344
4345 ** Enhancements to keymaps.
4346
4347 *** Cleaner way to enter key sequences.
4348
4349 You can enter a constant key sequence in a more natural format, the
4350 same one used for saving keyboard macros, using the macro `kbd'. For
4351 example,
4352
4353 (kbd "C-x C-f") => "\^x\^f"
4354
4355 Actually, this format has existed since Emacs 20.1.
4356
4357 *** Interactive commands can be remapped through keymaps.
4358
4359 This is an alternative to using `defadvice' or `substitute-key-definition'
4360 to modify the behavior of a key binding using the normal keymap
4361 binding and lookup functionality.
4362
4363 When a key sequence is bound to a command, and that command is
4364 remapped to another command, that command is run instead of the
4365 original command.
4366
4367 Example:
4368 Suppose that minor mode `my-mode' has defined the commands
4369 `my-kill-line' and `my-kill-word', and it wants C-k (and any other key
4370 bound to `kill-line') to run the command `my-kill-line' instead of
4371 `kill-line', and likewise it wants to run `my-kill-word' instead of
4372 `kill-word'.
4373
4374 Instead of rebinding C-k and the other keys in the minor mode map,
4375 command remapping allows you to directly map `kill-line' into
4376 `my-kill-line' and `kill-word' into `my-kill-word' using `define-key':
4377
4378 (define-key my-mode-map [remap kill-line] 'my-kill-line)
4379 (define-key my-mode-map [remap kill-word] 'my-kill-word)
4380
4381 When `my-mode' is enabled, its minor mode keymap is enabled too. So
4382 when the user types C-k, that runs the command `my-kill-line'.
4383
4384 Only one level of remapping is supported. In the above example, this
4385 means that if `my-kill-line' is remapped to `other-kill', then C-k still
4386 runs `my-kill-line'.
4387
4388 The following changes have been made to provide command remapping:
4389
4390 - Command remappings are defined using `define-key' with a prefix-key
4391 `remap', i.e. `(define-key MAP [remap CMD] DEF)' remaps command CMD
4392 to definition DEF in keymap MAP. The definition is not limited to
4393 another command; it can be anything accepted for a normal binding.
4394
4395 - The new function `command-remapping' returns the binding for a
4396 remapped command in the current keymaps, or nil if not remapped.
4397
4398 - `key-binding' now remaps interactive commands unless the optional
4399 third argument NO-REMAP is non-nil.
4400
4401 - `where-is-internal' now returns nil for a remapped command (e.g.
4402 `kill-line', when `my-mode' is enabled), and the actual key binding for
4403 the command it is remapped to (e.g. C-k for my-kill-line).
4404 It also has a new optional fifth argument, NO-REMAP, which inhibits
4405 remapping if non-nil (e.g. it returns "C-k" for `kill-line', and
4406 "<kill-line>" for `my-kill-line').
4407
4408 - The new variable `this-original-command' contains the original
4409 command before remapping. It is equal to `this-command' when the
4410 command was not remapped.
4411
4412 *** The definition of a key-binding passed to define-key can use XEmacs-style
4413 key-sequences, such as [(control a)].
4414
4415 *** New keymaps for typing file names
4416
4417 Two new keymaps, `minibuffer-local-filename-completion-map' and
4418 `minibuffer-local-must-match-filename-map', apply whenever
4419 Emacs reads a file name in the minibuffer. These key maps override
4420 the usual binding of SPC to `minibuffer-complete-word' (so that file
4421 names with embedded spaces could be typed without the need to quote
4422 the spaces).
4423
4424 *** New function `current-active-maps' returns a list of currently
4425 active keymaps.
4426
4427 *** New function `describe-buffer-bindings' inserts the list of all
4428 defined keys and their definitions.
4429
4430 *** New function `keymap-prompt' returns the prompt string of a keymap.
4431
4432 *** If text has a `keymap' property, that keymap takes precedence
4433 over minor mode keymaps.
4434
4435 *** The `keymap' property now also works at the ends of overlays and
4436 text properties, according to their stickiness. This also means that it
4437 works with empty overlays. The same hold for the `local-map' property.
4438
4439 *** `key-binding' will now look up mouse-specific bindings. The
4440 keymaps consulted by `key-binding' will get adapted if the key
4441 sequence is started with a mouse event. Instead of letting the click
4442 position be determined from the key sequence itself, it is also
4443 possible to specify it with an optional argument explicitly.
4444
4445 *** `define-key-after' now accepts keys longer than 1.
4446
4447 *** (map-keymap FUNCTION KEYMAP) applies the function to each binding
4448 in the keymap.
4449
4450 *** New variable `emulation-mode-map-alists'.
4451
4452 Lisp packages using many minor mode keymaps can now maintain their own
4453 keymap alist separate from `minor-mode-map-alist' by adding their
4454 keymap alist to this list.
4455
4456 *** Dense keymaps now handle inheritance correctly.
4457
4458 Previously a dense keymap would hide all of the simple-char key
4459 bindings of the parent keymap.
4460
4461 ** Enhancements to process support
4462
4463 *** Adaptive read buffering of subprocess output.
4464
4465 On some systems, when Emacs reads the output from a subprocess, the
4466 output data is read in very small blocks, potentially resulting in
4467 very poor performance. This behavior can be remedied to some extent
4468 by setting the new variable `process-adaptive-read-buffering' to a
4469 non-nil value (the default), as it will automatically delay reading
4470 from such processes, allowing them to produce more output before
4471 Emacs tries to read it.
4472
4473 *** Processes now have an associated property list where programs can
4474 maintain process state and other per-process related information.
4475
4476 Use the new functions `process-get' and `process-put' to access, add,
4477 and modify elements on this property list. Use the new functions
4478 `process-plist' and `set-process-plist' to access and replace the
4479 entire property list of a process.
4480
4481 *** Function `list-processes' now has an optional argument; if non-nil,
4482 it lists only the processes whose query-on-exit flag is set.
4483
4484 *** New fns `set-process-query-on-exit-flag' and `process-query-on-exit-flag'.
4485
4486 These replace the old function `process-kill-without-query'. That
4487 function is still supported, but new code should use the new
4488 functions.
4489
4490 *** The new function `call-process-shell-command'.
4491
4492 This executes a shell command synchronously in a separate process.
4493
4494 *** The new function `process-file' is similar to `call-process', but
4495 obeys file handlers. The file handler is chosen based on
4496 `default-directory'.
4497
4498 *** Function `signal-process' now accepts a process object or process
4499 name in addition to a process id to identify the signaled process.
4500
4501 *** Function `accept-process-output' has a new optional fourth arg
4502 JUST-THIS-ONE. If non-nil, only output from the specified process
4503 is handled, suspending output from other processes. If value is an
4504 integer, also inhibit running timers. This feature is generally not
4505 recommended, but may be necessary for specific applications, such as
4506 speech synthesis.
4507
4508 *** A process filter function gets the output as multibyte string
4509 if the process specifies t for its filter's multibyteness.
4510
4511 That multibyteness is decided by the value of
4512 `default-enable-multibyte-characters' when the process is created, and
4513 you can change it later with `set-process-filter-multibyte'.
4514
4515 *** The new function `set-process-filter-multibyte' sets the
4516 multibyteness of the strings passed to the process's filter.
4517
4518 *** The new function `process-filter-multibyte-p' returns the
4519 multibyteness of the strings passed to the process's filter.
4520
4521 *** If a process's coding system is `raw-text' or `no-conversion' and its
4522 buffer is multibyte, the output of the process is at first converted
4523 to multibyte by `string-to-multibyte' then inserted in the buffer.
4524 Previously, it was converted to multibyte by `string-as-multibyte',
4525 which was not compatible with the behavior of file reading.
4526
4527 ** Enhanced networking support.
4528
4529 *** The new `make-network-process' function makes network connections.
4530 It allows opening of stream and datagram connections to a server, as well as
4531 create a stream or datagram server inside Emacs.
4532
4533 - A server is started using :server t arg.
4534 - Datagram connection is selected using :type 'datagram arg.
4535 - A server can open on a random port using :service t arg.
4536 - Local sockets are supported using :family 'local arg.
4537 - IPv6 is supported (when available). You may explicitly select IPv6
4538 using :family 'ipv6 arg.
4539 - Non-blocking connect is supported using :nowait t arg.
4540 - The process' property list can be initialized using :plist PLIST arg;
4541 a copy of the server process' property list is automatically inherited
4542 by new client processes created to handle incoming connections.
4543
4544 To test for the availability of a given feature, use featurep like this:
4545 (featurep 'make-network-process '(:type datagram))
4546 (featurep 'make-network-process '(:family ipv6))
4547
4548 *** The old `open-network-stream' now uses `make-network-process'.
4549
4550 *** `process-contact' has an optional KEY argument.
4551
4552 Depending on this argument, you can get the complete list of network
4553 process properties or a specific property. Using :local or :remote as
4554 the KEY, you get the address of the local or remote end-point.
4555
4556 An Inet address is represented as a 5 element vector, where the first
4557 4 elements contain the IP address and the fifth is the port number.
4558
4559 *** New functions `stop-process' and `continue-process'.
4560
4561 These functions stop and restart communication through a network
4562 connection. For a server process, no connections are accepted in the
4563 stopped state. For a client process, no input is received in the
4564 stopped state.
4565
4566 *** New function `format-network-address'.
4567
4568 This function reformats the Lisp representation of a network address
4569 to a printable string. For example, an IP address A.B.C.D and port
4570 number P is represented as a five element vector [A B C D P], and the
4571 printable string returned for this vector is "A.B.C.D:P". See the doc
4572 string for other formatting options.
4573
4574 *** New function `network-interface-list'.
4575
4576 This function returns a list of network interface names and their
4577 current network addresses.
4578
4579 *** New function `network-interface-info'.
4580
4581 This function returns the network address, hardware address, current
4582 status, and other information about a specific network interface.
4583
4584 *** New functions `process-datagram-address', `set-process-datagram-address'.
4585
4586 These functions are used with datagram-based network processes to get
4587 and set the current address of the remote partner.
4588
4589 *** Deleting a network process with `delete-process' calls the sentinel.
4590
4591 The status message passed to the sentinel for a deleted network
4592 process is "deleted". The message passed to the sentinel when the
4593 connection is closed by the remote peer has been changed to
4594 "connection broken by remote peer".
4595
4596 ** Using window objects:
4597
4598 *** You can now make a window as short as one line.
4599
4600 A window that is just one line tall does not display either a mode
4601 line or a header line, even if the variables `mode-line-format' and
4602 `header-line-format' call for them. A window that is two lines tall
4603 cannot display both a mode line and a header line at once; if the
4604 variables call for both, only the mode line actually appears.
4605
4606 *** The new function `window-inside-edges' returns the edges of the
4607 actual text portion of the window, not including the scroll bar or
4608 divider line, the fringes, the display margins, the header line and
4609 the mode line.
4610
4611 *** The new functions `window-pixel-edges' and `window-inside-pixel-edges'
4612 return window edges in units of pixels, rather than columns and lines.
4613
4614 *** New function `window-body-height'.
4615
4616 This is like `window-height' but does not count the mode line or the
4617 header line.
4618
4619 *** The new function `adjust-window-trailing-edge' moves the right
4620 or bottom edge of a window. It does not move other window edges.
4621
4622 *** The new macro `with-selected-window' temporarily switches the
4623 selected window without impacting the order of `buffer-list'.
4624 It saves and restores the current buffer, too.
4625
4626 *** `select-window' takes an optional second argument NORECORD.
4627
4628 This is like `switch-to-buffer'.
4629
4630 *** `save-selected-window' now saves and restores the selected window
4631 of every frame. This way, it restores everything that can be changed
4632 by calling `select-window'. It also saves and restores the current
4633 buffer.
4634
4635 *** `set-window-buffer' has an optional argument KEEP-MARGINS.
4636
4637 If non-nil, that says to preserve the window's current margin, fringe,
4638 and scroll-bar settings.
4639
4640 *** The new function `window-tree' returns a frame's window tree.
4641
4642 *** The functions `get-lru-window' and `get-largest-window' take an optional
4643 argument `dedicated'. If non-nil, those functions do not ignore
4644 dedicated windows.
4645
4646 ** Customizable fringe bitmaps
4647
4648 *** There are new display properties, `left-fringe' and `right-fringe',
4649 that can be used to show a specific bitmap in the left or right fringe
4650 bitmap of the display line.
4651
4652 Format is `display (left-fringe BITMAP [FACE])', where BITMAP is a
4653 symbol identifying a fringe bitmap, either built-in or defined with
4654 `define-fringe-bitmap', and FACE is an optional face name to be used
4655 for displaying the bitmap instead of the default `fringe' face.
4656 When specified, FACE is automatically merged with the `fringe' face.
4657
4658 *** New buffer-local variables `fringe-indicator-alist' and
4659 `fringe-cursor-alist' maps between logical (internal) fringe indicator
4660 and cursor symbols and the actual fringe bitmaps to be displayed.
4661 This decouples the logical meaning of the fringe indicators from the
4662 physical appearance, as well as allowing different fringe bitmaps to
4663 be used in different windows showing different buffers.
4664
4665 *** New function `define-fringe-bitmap' can now be used to create new
4666 fringe bitmaps, as well as change the built-in fringe bitmaps.
4667
4668 *** New function `destroy-fringe-bitmap' deletes a fringe bitmap
4669 or restores a built-in one to its default value.
4670
4671 *** New function `set-fringe-bitmap-face' specifies the face to be
4672 used for a specific fringe bitmap. The face is automatically merged
4673 with the `fringe' face, so normally, the face should only specify the
4674 foreground color of the bitmap.
4675
4676 *** New function `fringe-bitmaps-at-pos' returns the current fringe
4677 bitmaps in the display line at a given buffer position.
4678
4679 ** Other window fringe features:
4680
4681 *** Controlling the default left and right fringe widths.
4682
4683 The default left and right fringe widths for all windows of a frame
4684 can now be controlled by setting the `left-fringe' and `right-fringe'
4685 frame parameters to an integer value specifying the width in pixels.
4686 Setting the width to 0 effectively removes the corresponding fringe.
4687
4688 The actual default fringe widths for the frame may deviate from the
4689 specified widths, since the combined fringe widths must match an
4690 integral number of columns. The extra width is distributed evenly
4691 between the left and right fringe. To force a specific fringe width,
4692 specify the width as a negative integer (if both widths are negative,
4693 only the left fringe gets the specified width).
4694
4695 Setting the width to nil (the default), restores the default fringe
4696 width which is the minimum number of pixels necessary to display any
4697 of the currently defined fringe bitmaps. The width of the built-in
4698 fringe bitmaps is 8 pixels.
4699
4700 *** Per-window fringe and scrollbar settings
4701
4702 **** Windows can now have their own individual fringe widths and
4703 position settings.
4704
4705 To control the fringe widths of a window, either set the buffer-local
4706 variables `left-fringe-width', `right-fringe-width', or call
4707 `set-window-fringes'.
4708
4709 To control the fringe position in a window, that is, whether fringes
4710 are positioned between the display margins and the window's text area,
4711 or at the edges of the window, either set the buffer-local variable
4712 `fringes-outside-margins' or call `set-window-fringes'.
4713
4714 The function `window-fringes' can be used to obtain the current
4715 settings. To make `left-fringe-width', `right-fringe-width', and
4716 `fringes-outside-margins' take effect, you must set them before
4717 displaying the buffer in a window, or use `set-window-buffer' to force
4718 an update of the display margins.
4719
4720 **** Windows can now have their own individual scroll-bar settings
4721 controlling the width and position of scroll-bars.
4722
4723 To control the scroll-bar of a window, either set the buffer-local
4724 variables `scroll-bar-mode' and `scroll-bar-width', or call
4725 `set-window-scroll-bars'. The function `window-scroll-bars' can be
4726 used to obtain the current settings. To make `scroll-bar-mode' and
4727 `scroll-bar-width' take effect, you must set them before displaying
4728 the buffer in a window, or use `set-window-buffer' to force an update
4729 of the display margins.
4730
4731 ** Redisplay features:
4732
4733 *** `sit-for' can now be called with args (SECONDS &optional NODISP).
4734
4735 *** Iconifying or deiconifying a frame no longer makes sit-for return.
4736
4737 *** New function `redisplay' causes an immediate redisplay if no input is
4738 available, equivalent to (sit-for 0). The call (redisplay t) forces
4739 an immediate redisplay even if input is pending.
4740
4741 *** New function `force-window-update' can initiate a full redisplay of
4742 one or all windows. Normally, this is not needed as changes in window
4743 contents are detected automatically. However, certain implicit
4744 changes to mode lines, header lines, or display properties may require
4745 forcing an explicit window update.
4746
4747 *** (char-displayable-p CHAR) returns non-nil if Emacs ought to be able
4748 to display CHAR. More precisely, if the selected frame's fontset has
4749 a font to display the character set that CHAR belongs to.
4750
4751 Fontsets can specify a font on a per-character basis; when the fontset
4752 does that, this value cannot be accurate.
4753
4754 *** You can define multiple overlay arrows via the new
4755 variable `overlay-arrow-variable-list'.
4756
4757 It contains a list of variables which contain overlay arrow position
4758 markers, including the original `overlay-arrow-position' variable.
4759
4760 Each variable on this list can have individual `overlay-arrow-string'
4761 and `overlay-arrow-bitmap' properties that specify an overlay arrow
4762 string (for non-window terminals) or fringe bitmap (for window
4763 systems) to display at the corresponding overlay arrow position.
4764 If either property is not set, the default `overlay-arrow-string' or
4765 'overlay-arrow-fringe-bitmap' will be used.
4766
4767 *** New `line-height' and `line-spacing' properties for newline characters
4768
4769 A newline can now have `line-height' and `line-spacing' text or overlay
4770 properties that control the height of the corresponding display row.
4771
4772 If the `line-height' property value is t, the newline does not
4773 contribute to the height of the display row; instead the height of the
4774 newline glyph is reduced. Also, a `line-spacing' property on this
4775 newline is ignored. This can be used to tile small images or image
4776 slices without adding blank areas between the images.
4777
4778 If the `line-height' property value is a positive integer, the value
4779 specifies the minimum line height in pixels. If necessary, the line
4780 height it increased by increasing the line's ascent.
4781
4782 If the `line-height' property value is a float, the minimum line
4783 height is calculated by multiplying the default frame line height by
4784 the given value.
4785
4786 If the `line-height' property value is a cons (FACE . RATIO), the
4787 minimum line height is calculated as RATIO * height of named FACE.
4788 RATIO is int or float. If FACE is t, it specifies the current face.
4789
4790 If the `line-height' property value is a cons (nil . RATIO), the line
4791 height is calculated as RATIO * actual height of the line's contents.
4792
4793 If the `line-height' value is a cons (HEIGHT . TOTAL), HEIGHT specifies
4794 the line height as described above, while TOTAL is any of the forms
4795 described above and specifies the total height of the line, causing a
4796 varying number of pixels to be inserted after the line to make it line
4797 exactly that many pixels high.
4798
4799 If the `line-spacing' property value is an positive integer, the value
4800 is used as additional pixels to insert after the display line; this
4801 overrides the default frame `line-spacing' and any buffer local value of
4802 the `line-spacing' variable.
4803
4804 If the `line-spacing' property is a float or cons, the line spacing
4805 is calculated as specified above for the `line-height' property.
4806
4807 *** The buffer local `line-spacing' variable can now have a float value,
4808 which is used as a height relative to the default frame line height.
4809
4810 *** Enhancements to stretch display properties
4811
4812 The display property stretch specification form `(space PROPS)', where
4813 PROPS is a property list, now allows pixel based width and height
4814 specifications, as well as enhanced horizontal text alignment.
4815
4816 The value of these properties can now be a (primitive) expression
4817 which is evaluated during redisplay. The following expressions
4818 are supported:
4819
4820 EXPR ::= NUM | (NUM) | UNIT | ELEM | POS | IMAGE | FORM
4821 NUM ::= INTEGER | FLOAT | SYMBOL
4822 UNIT ::= in | mm | cm | width | height
4823 ELEM ::= left-fringe | right-fringe | left-margin | right-margin
4824 | scroll-bar | text
4825 POS ::= left | center | right
4826 FORM ::= (NUM . EXPR) | (OP EXPR ...)
4827 OP ::= + | -
4828
4829 The form `NUM' specifies a fractional width or height of the default
4830 frame font size. The form `(NUM)' specifies an absolute number of
4831 pixels. If a symbol is specified, its buffer-local variable binding
4832 is used. The `in', `mm', and `cm' units specifies the number of
4833 pixels per inch, milli-meter, and centi-meter, resp. The `width' and
4834 `height' units correspond to the width and height of the current face
4835 font. An image specification corresponds to the width or height of
4836 the image.
4837
4838 The `left-fringe', `right-fringe', `left-margin', `right-margin',
4839 `scroll-bar', and `text' elements specify to the width of the
4840 corresponding area of the window.
4841
4842 The `left', `center', and `right' positions can be used with :align-to
4843 to specify a position relative to the left edge, center, or right edge
4844 of the text area. One of the above window elements (except `text')
4845 can also be used with :align-to to specify that the position is
4846 relative to the left edge of the given area. Once the base offset for
4847 a relative position has been set (by the first occurrence of one of
4848 these symbols), further occurrences of these symbols are interpreted as
4849 the width of the area.
4850
4851 For example, to align to the center of the left-margin, use
4852 :align-to (+ left-margin (0.5 . left-margin))
4853
4854 If no specific base offset is set for alignment, it is always relative
4855 to the left edge of the text area. For example, :align-to 0 in a
4856 header line aligns with the first text column in the text area.
4857
4858 The value of the form `(NUM . EXPR)' is the value of NUM multiplied by
4859 the value of the expression EXPR. For example, (2 . in) specifies a
4860 width of 2 inches, while (0.5 . IMAGE) specifies half the width (or
4861 height) of the specified image.
4862
4863 The form `(+ EXPR ...)' adds up the value of the expressions.
4864 The form `(- EXPR ...)' negates or subtracts the value of the expressions.
4865
4866 *** Normally, the cursor is displayed at the end of any overlay and
4867 text property string that may be present at the current window
4868 position. The cursor can now be placed on any character of such
4869 strings by giving that character a non-nil `cursor' text property.
4870
4871 *** The display space :width and :align-to text properties are now
4872 supported on text terminals.
4873
4874 *** Support for displaying image slices
4875
4876 **** New display property (slice X Y WIDTH HEIGHT) can be used with
4877 an image property to display only a specific slice of the image.
4878
4879 **** Function `insert-image' has new optional fourth arg to
4880 specify image slice (X Y WIDTH HEIGHT).
4881
4882 **** New function `insert-sliced-image' inserts a given image as a
4883 specified number of evenly sized slices (rows x columns).
4884
4885 *** Images can now have an associated image map via the :map property.
4886
4887 An image map is an alist where each element has the format (AREA ID PLIST).
4888 An AREA is specified as either a rectangle, a circle, or a polygon:
4889 A rectangle is a cons (rect . ((X0 . Y0) . (X1 . Y1))) specifying the
4890 pixel coordinates of the upper left and bottom right corners.
4891 A circle is a cons (circle . ((X0 . Y0) . R)) specifying the center
4892 and the radius of the circle; R can be a float or integer.
4893 A polygon is a cons (poly . [X0 Y0 X1 Y1 ...]) where each pair in the
4894 vector describes one corner in the polygon.
4895
4896 When the mouse pointer is above a hot-spot area of an image, the
4897 PLIST of that hot-spot is consulted; if it contains a `help-echo'
4898 property it defines a tool-tip for the hot-spot, and if it contains
4899 a `pointer' property, it defines the shape of the mouse cursor when
4900 it is over the hot-spot. See the variable `void-area-text-pointer'
4901 for possible pointer shapes.
4902
4903 When you click the mouse when the mouse pointer is over a hot-spot,
4904 an event is composed by combining the ID of the hot-spot with the
4905 mouse event, e.g. [area4 mouse-1] if the hot-spot's ID is `area4'.
4906
4907 *** The function `find-image' now searches in etc/images/ and etc/.
4908 The new variable `image-load-path' is a list of locations in which to
4909 search for image files. The default is to search in etc/images, then
4910 in etc/, and finally in the directories specified by `load-path'.
4911 Subdirectories of etc/ and etc/images are not recursively searched; if
4912 you put an image file in a subdirectory, you have to specify it
4913 explicitly; for example, if an image is put in etc/images/foo/bar.xpm:
4914
4915 (defimage foo-image '((:type xpm :file "foo/bar.xpm")))
4916
4917 Note that all images formerly located in the lisp directory have been
4918 moved to etc/images.
4919
4920 *** New function `image-load-path-for-library' returns a suitable
4921 search path for images relative to library. This function is useful in
4922 external packages to save users from having to update
4923 `image-load-path'.
4924
4925 *** The new variable `max-image-size' defines the maximum size of
4926 images that Emacs will load and display.
4927
4928 *** The new variable `display-mm-dimensions-alist' can be used to
4929 override incorrect graphical display dimensions returned by functions
4930 `display-mm-height' and `display-mm-width'.
4931
4932 ** Mouse pointer features:
4933
4934 *** The mouse pointer shape in void text areas (i.e. after the end of a
4935 line or below the last line in the buffer) of the text window is now
4936 controlled by the new variable `void-text-area-pointer'. The default
4937 is to use the `arrow' (non-text) pointer. Other choices are `text'
4938 (or nil), `hand', `vdrag', `hdrag', `modeline', and `hourglass'.
4939
4940 *** The mouse pointer shape over an image can now be controlled by the
4941 :pointer image property.
4942
4943 *** The mouse pointer shape over ordinary text or images can now be
4944 controlled/overridden via the `pointer' text property.
4945
4946 ** Mouse event enhancements:
4947
4948 *** All mouse events now include a buffer position regardless of where
4949 you clicked. For mouse clicks in window margins and fringes, this is
4950 a sensible buffer position corresponding to the surrounding text.
4951
4952 *** Mouse events for clicks on window fringes now specify `left-fringe'
4953 or `right-fringe' as the area.
4954
4955 *** Mouse events include actual glyph column and row for all event types
4956 and all areas.
4957
4958 *** Mouse events can now indicate an image object clicked on.
4959
4960 *** Mouse events include relative X and Y pixel coordinates relative to
4961 the top left corner of the object (image or character) clicked on.
4962
4963 *** Mouse events include the pixel width and height of the object
4964 (image or character) clicked on.
4965
4966 *** Function `mouse-set-point' now works for events outside text area.
4967
4968 *** `posn-point' now returns buffer position for non-text area events.
4969
4970 *** New function `posn-area' returns window area clicked on (nil means
4971 text area).
4972
4973 *** New function `posn-actual-col-row' returns the actual glyph coordinates
4974 of the mouse event position.
4975
4976 *** New functions 'posn-object', 'posn-object-x-y', 'posn-object-width-height'.
4977
4978 These return the image or string object of a mouse click, the X and Y
4979 pixel coordinates relative to the top left corner of that object, and
4980 the total width and height of that object.
4981
4982 ** Text property and overlay changes:
4983
4984 *** Arguments for `remove-overlays' are now optional, so that you can
4985 remove all overlays in the buffer with just (remove-overlays).
4986
4987 *** New variable `char-property-alias-alist'.
4988
4989 This variable allows you to create alternative names for text
4990 properties. It works at the same level as `default-text-properties',
4991 although it applies to overlays as well. This variable was introduced
4992 to implement the `font-lock-face' property.
4993
4994 *** New function `get-char-property-and-overlay' accepts the same
4995 arguments as `get-char-property' and returns a cons whose car is the
4996 return value of `get-char-property' called with those arguments and
4997 whose cdr is the overlay in which the property was found, or nil if
4998 it was found as a text property or not found at all.
4999
5000 *** The new function `remove-list-of-text-properties'.
5001
5002 It is like `remove-text-properties' except that it takes a list of
5003 property names as argument rather than a property list.
5004
5005 ** Face changes
5006
5007 *** The variable `facemenu-unlisted-faces' has been removed.
5008 Emacs has a lot more faces than in the past, and nearly all of them
5009 needed to be excluded. The new variable `facemenu-listed-faces' lists
5010 the faces to include in the face menu.
5011
5012 *** The new face attribute condition `min-colors' can be used to tailor
5013 the face color to the number of colors supported by a display, and
5014 define the foreground and background colors accordingly so that they
5015 look best on a terminal that supports at least this many colors. This
5016 is now the preferred method for defining default faces in a way that
5017 makes a good use of the capabilities of the display.
5018
5019 *** New function `display-supports-face-attributes-p' can be used to test
5020 whether a given set of face attributes is actually displayable.
5021
5022 A new predicate `supports' has also been added to the `defface' face
5023 specification language, which can be used to do this test for faces
5024 defined with `defface'.
5025
5026 *** The special treatment of faces whose names are of the form `fg:COLOR'
5027 or `bg:COLOR' has been removed. Lisp programs should use the
5028 `defface' facility for defining faces with specific colors, or use
5029 the feature of specifying the face attributes :foreground and :background
5030 directly in the `face' property instead of using a named face.
5031
5032 *** The first face specification element in a defface can specify
5033 `default' instead of frame classification. Then its attributes act as
5034 defaults that apply to all the subsequent cases (and can be overridden
5035 by them).
5036
5037 *** The function `face-differs-from-default-p' now truly checks
5038 whether the given face displays differently from the default face or
5039 not (previously it did only a very cursory check).
5040
5041 *** `face-attribute', `face-foreground', `face-background', `face-stipple'.
5042
5043 These now accept a new optional argument, INHERIT, which controls how
5044 face inheritance is used when determining the value of a face
5045 attribute.
5046
5047 *** New functions `face-attribute-relative-p' and `merge-face-attribute'
5048 help with handling relative face attributes.
5049
5050 *** The priority of faces in an :inherit attribute face list is reversed.
5051
5052 If a face contains an :inherit attribute with a list of faces, earlier
5053 faces in the list override later faces in the list; in previous
5054 releases of Emacs, the order was the opposite. This change was made
5055 so that :inherit face lists operate identically to face lists in text
5056 `face' properties.
5057
5058 *** The variable `face-font-rescale-alist' specifies how much larger
5059 (or smaller) font we should use. For instance, if the value is
5060 '((SOME-FONTNAME-PATTERN . 1.3)) and a face requests a font of 10
5061 point, we actually use a font of 13 point if the font matches
5062 SOME-FONTNAME-PATTERN.
5063
5064 *** On terminals, faces with the :inverse-video attribute are displayed
5065 with swapped foreground and background colors even when one of them is
5066 not specified. In previous releases of Emacs, if either foreground
5067 or background color was unspecified, colors were not swapped. This
5068 was inconsistent with the face behavior under X.
5069
5070 *** `set-fontset-font', `fontset-info', `fontset-font' now operate on
5071 the default fontset if the argument NAME is nil..
5072
5073 ** Font-Lock changes:
5074
5075 *** New special text property `font-lock-face'.
5076
5077 This property acts like the `face' property, but it is controlled by
5078 M-x font-lock-mode. It is not, strictly speaking, a builtin text
5079 property. Instead, it is implemented inside font-core.el, using the
5080 new variable `char-property-alias-alist'.
5081
5082 *** font-lock can manage arbitrary text-properties beside `face'.
5083
5084 **** the FACENAME returned in `font-lock-keywords' can be a list of the
5085 form (face FACE PROP1 VAL1 PROP2 VAL2 ...) so you can set other
5086 properties than `face'.
5087
5088 **** `font-lock-extra-managed-props' can be set to make sure those
5089 extra properties are automatically cleaned up by font-lock.
5090
5091 *** jit-lock obeys a new text-property `jit-lock-defer-multiline'.
5092
5093 If a piece of text with that property gets contextually refontified
5094 (see `jit-lock-defer-contextually'), then all of that text will
5095 be refontified. This is useful when the syntax of a textual element
5096 depends on text several lines further down (and when `font-lock-multiline'
5097 is not appropriate to solve that problem). For example in Perl:
5098
5099 s{
5100 foo
5101 }{
5102 bar
5103 }e
5104
5105 Adding/removing the last `e' changes the `bar' from being a piece of
5106 text to being a piece of code, so you'd put a `jit-lock-defer-multiline'
5107 property over the second half of the command to force (deferred)
5108 refontification of `bar' whenever the `e' is added/removed.
5109
5110 *** `font-lock-extend-region-functions' makes it possible to alter the way
5111 the fontification region is chosen. This can be used to prevent rounding
5112 up to whole lines, or to extend the region to include all related lines
5113 of multiline constructs so that such constructs get properly recognized.
5114
5115 ** Major mode mechanism changes:
5116
5117 *** New variable `magic-mode-alist' determines major mode for a file by
5118 looking at the file contents. It takes precedence over `auto-mode-alist'.
5119
5120 *** New variable `magic-fallback-mode-alist' determines major mode for a file by
5121 looking at the file contents. It is handled after `auto-mode-alist',
5122 only if `auto-mode-alist' (and `magic-mode-alist') says nothing about the file.
5123
5124 *** XML or SGML major mode is selected when file starts with an `<?xml'
5125 or `<!DOCTYPE' declaration.
5126
5127 *** An interpreter magic line (if present) takes precedence over the
5128 file name when setting the major mode.
5129
5130 *** If new variable `auto-mode-case-fold' is set to a non-nil value,
5131 Emacs will perform a second case-insensitive search through
5132 `auto-mode-alist' if the first case-sensitive search fails. This
5133 means that a file FILE.TXT is opened in text-mode, and a file
5134 PROG.HTML is opened in html-mode. Note however, that independent of
5135 this setting, *.C files are usually recognized as C++ files. It also
5136 has no effect on systems with case-insensitive file names.
5137
5138 *** All major mode functions should now run the new normal hook
5139 `after-change-major-mode-hook', at their very end, after the mode
5140 hooks. `run-mode-hooks' does this automatically.
5141
5142 *** Major modes can define `eldoc-documentation-function'
5143 locally to provide Eldoc functionality by some method appropriate to
5144 the language.
5145
5146 *** Use the new function `run-mode-hooks' to run the major mode's mode hook.
5147
5148 *** The new function `run-mode-hooks' and the new macro `delay-mode-hooks'
5149 are used by `define-derived-mode' to make sure the mode hook for the
5150 parent mode is run at the end of the child mode.
5151
5152 *** `define-derived-mode' by default creates a new empty abbrev table.
5153 It does not copy abbrevs from the parent mode's abbrev table.
5154
5155 *** If a major mode function has a non-nil `no-clone-indirect'
5156 property, `clone-indirect-buffer' signals an error if you use
5157 it in that buffer.
5158
5159 ** Minor mode changes:
5160
5161 *** `define-minor-mode' now accepts arbitrary additional keyword arguments
5162 and simply passes them to `defcustom', if applicable.
5163
5164 *** `define-globalized-minor-mode'.
5165
5166 This is a new name for what was formerly called
5167 `easy-mmode-define-global-mode'. The old name remains as an alias.
5168
5169 *** `minor-mode-list' now holds a list of minor mode commands.
5170
5171 ** Command loop changes:
5172
5173 *** The new function `called-interactively-p' does what many people
5174 have mistakenly believed `interactive-p' to do: it returns t if the
5175 calling function was called through `call-interactively'.
5176
5177 Only use this when you cannot solve the problem by adding a new
5178 INTERACTIVE argument to the command.
5179
5180 *** The function `commandp' takes an additional optional argument.
5181
5182 If it is non-nil, then `commandp' checks for a function that could be
5183 called with `call-interactively', and does not return t for keyboard
5184 macros.
5185
5186 *** When a command returns, the command loop moves point out from
5187 within invisible text, in the same way it moves out from within text
5188 covered by an image or composition property.
5189
5190 This makes it generally unnecessary to mark invisible text as intangible.
5191 This is particularly good because the intangible property often has
5192 unexpected side-effects since the property applies to everything
5193 (including `goto-char', ...) whereas this new code is only run after
5194 `post-command-hook' and thus does not care about intermediate states.
5195
5196 *** If a command sets `transient-mark-mode' to `only', that
5197 enables Transient Mark mode for the following command only.
5198 During that following command, the value of `transient-mark-mode'
5199 is `identity'. If it is still `identity' at the end of the command,
5200 the next return to the command loop changes to nil.
5201
5202 *** Both the variable and the function `disabled-command-hook' have
5203 been renamed to `disabled-command-function'. The variable
5204 `disabled-command-hook' has been kept as an obsolete alias.
5205
5206 *** `emacsserver' now runs `pre-command-hook' and `post-command-hook'
5207 when it receives a request from emacsclient.
5208
5209 *** `current-idle-time' reports how long Emacs has been idle.
5210
5211 ** Lisp file loading changes:
5212
5213 *** `load-history' can now have elements of the form (t . FUNNAME),
5214 which means FUNNAME was previously defined as an autoload (before the
5215 current file redefined it).
5216
5217 *** `load-history' now records (defun . FUNNAME) when a function is
5218 defined. For a variable, it records just the variable name.
5219
5220 *** The function `symbol-file' can now search specifically for function,
5221 variable or face definitions.
5222
5223 *** `provide' and `featurep' now accept an optional second argument
5224 to test/provide subfeatures. Also `provide' now checks `after-load-alist'
5225 and runs any code associated with the provided feature.
5226
5227 *** The variable `recursive-load-depth-limit' has been deleted.
5228 Emacs now signals an error if the same file is loaded with more
5229 than 3 levels of nesting.
5230
5231 ** Byte compiler changes:
5232
5233 *** The byte compiler now displays the actual line and character
5234 position of errors, where possible. Additionally, the form of its
5235 warning and error messages have been brought into line with GNU standards
5236 for these. As a result, you can use next-error and friends on the
5237 compilation output buffer.
5238
5239 *** The new macro `with-no-warnings' suppresses all compiler warnings
5240 inside its body. In terms of execution, it is equivalent to `progn'.
5241
5242 *** You can avoid warnings for possibly-undefined symbols with a
5243 simple convention that the compiler understands. (This is mostly
5244 useful in code meant to be portable to different Emacs versions.)
5245 Write forms like the following, or code that macroexpands into such
5246 forms:
5247
5248 (if (fboundp 'foo) <then> <else>)
5249 (if (boundp 'foo) <then> <else)
5250
5251 In the first case, using `foo' as a function inside the <then> form
5252 won't produce a warning if it's not defined as a function, and in the
5253 second case, using `foo' as a variable won't produce a warning if it's
5254 unbound. The test must be in exactly one of the above forms (after
5255 macro expansion), but such tests can be nested. Note that `when' and
5256 `unless' expand to `if', but `cond' doesn't.
5257
5258 *** `(featurep 'xemacs)' is treated by the compiler as nil. This
5259 helps to avoid noisy compiler warnings in code meant to run under both
5260 Emacs and XEmacs and can sometimes make the result significantly more
5261 efficient. Since byte code from recent versions of XEmacs won't
5262 generally run in Emacs and vice versa, this optimization doesn't lose
5263 you anything.
5264
5265 *** The local variable `no-byte-compile' in Lisp files is now obeyed.
5266
5267 *** When a Lisp file uses CL functions at run-time, compiling the file
5268 now issues warnings about these calls, unless the file performs
5269 (require 'cl) when loaded.
5270
5271 ** Frame operations:
5272
5273 *** New functions `frame-current-scroll-bars' and `window-current-scroll-bars'.
5274
5275 These functions return the current locations of the vertical and
5276 horizontal scroll bars in a frame or window.
5277
5278 *** The new function `modify-all-frames-parameters' modifies parameters
5279 for all (existing and future) frames.
5280
5281 *** The new frame parameter `tty-color-mode' specifies the mode to use
5282 for color support on character terminal frames. Its value can be a
5283 number of colors to support, or a symbol. See the Emacs Lisp
5284 Reference manual for more detailed documentation.
5285
5286 *** When using non-toolkit scroll bars with the default width,
5287 the `scroll-bar-width' frame parameter value is nil.
5288
5289 ** Mode line changes:
5290
5291 *** New function `format-mode-line'.
5292
5293 This returns the mode line or header line of the selected (or a
5294 specified) window as a string with or without text properties.
5295
5296 *** The new mode-line construct `(:propertize ELT PROPS...)' can be
5297 used to add text properties to mode-line elements.
5298
5299 *** The new `%i' and `%I' constructs for `mode-line-format' can be used
5300 to display the size of the accessible part of the buffer on the mode
5301 line.
5302
5303 *** Mouse-face on mode-line (and header-line) is now supported.
5304
5305 ** Menu manipulation changes:
5306
5307 *** To manipulate the File menu using easy-menu, you must specify the
5308 proper name "file". In previous Emacs versions, you had to specify
5309 "files", even though the menu item itself was changed to say "File"
5310 several versions ago.
5311
5312 *** The dummy function keys made by easy-menu are now always lower case.
5313 If you specify the menu item name "Ada", for instance, it uses `ada'
5314 as the "key" bound by that key binding.
5315
5316 This is relevant only if Lisp code looks for the bindings that were
5317 made with easy-menu.
5318
5319 *** `easy-menu-define' now allows you to use nil for the symbol name
5320 if you don't need to give the menu a name. If you install the menu
5321 into other keymaps right away (MAPS is non-nil), it usually doesn't
5322 need to have a name.
5323
5324 ** Mule changes:
5325
5326 *** Already true in Emacs 21.1, but not emphasized clearly enough:
5327
5328 Multibyte buffers can now faithfully record all 256 character codes
5329 from 0 to 255. As a result, most of the past reasons to use unibyte
5330 buffers no longer exist. We only know of three reasons to use them
5331 now:
5332
5333 1. If you prefer to use unibyte text all of the time.
5334
5335 2. For reading files into temporary buffers, when you want to avoid
5336 the time it takes to convert the format.
5337
5338 3. For binary files where format conversion would be pointless and
5339 wasteful.
5340
5341 *** The new variable `auto-coding-functions' lets you specify functions
5342 to examine a file being visited and deduce the proper coding system
5343 for it. (If the coding system is detected incorrectly for a specific
5344 file, you can put a `coding:' tags to override it.)
5345
5346 *** The new variable `ascii-case-table' stores the case table for the
5347 ascii character set. Language environments (such as Turkish) may
5348 alter the case correspondences of ASCII characters. This variable
5349 saves the original ASCII case table before any such changes.
5350
5351 *** The new function `merge-coding-systems' fills in unspecified aspects
5352 of one coding system from another coding system.
5353
5354 *** New coding system property `mime-text-unsuitable' indicates that
5355 the coding system's `mime-charset' is not suitable for MIME text
5356 parts, e.g. utf-16.
5357
5358 *** New function `decode-coding-inserted-region' decodes a region as if
5359 it is read from a file without decoding.
5360
5361 *** New CCL functions `lookup-character' and `lookup-integer' access
5362 hash tables defined by the Lisp function `define-translation-hash-table'.
5363
5364 *** New function `quail-find-key' returns a list of keys to type in the
5365 current input method to input a character.
5366
5367 *** `set-buffer-file-coding-system' now takes an additional argument,
5368 NOMODIFY. If it is non-nil, it means don't mark the buffer modified.
5369
5370 ** Operating system access:
5371
5372 *** The new primitive `get-internal-run-time' returns the processor
5373 run time used by Emacs since start-up.
5374
5375 *** Functions `user-uid' and `user-real-uid' now return floats if the
5376 user UID doesn't fit in a Lisp integer. Function `user-full-name'
5377 accepts a float as UID parameter.
5378
5379 *** New function `locale-info' accesses locale information.
5380
5381 *** On MS Windows, locale-coding-system is used to interact with the OS.
5382 The Windows specific variable w32-system-coding-system, which was
5383 formerly used for that purpose is now an alias for locale-coding-system.
5384
5385 *** New function `redirect-debugging-output' can be used to redirect
5386 debugging output on the stderr file handle to a file.
5387
5388 ** GC changes:
5389
5390 *** New variable `gc-cons-percentage' automatically grows the GC cons threshold
5391 as the heap size increases.
5392
5393 *** New variables `gc-elapsed' and `gcs-done' provide extra information
5394 on garbage collection.
5395
5396 *** The normal hook `post-gc-hook' is run at the end of garbage collection.
5397
5398 The hook is run with GC inhibited, so use it with care.
5399
5400 ** Miscellaneous:
5401
5402 *** A number of hooks have been renamed to better follow the conventions:
5403
5404 `find-file-hooks' to `find-file-hook',
5405 `find-file-not-found-hooks' to `find-file-not-found-functions',
5406 `write-file-hooks' to `write-file-functions',
5407 `write-contents-hooks' to `write-contents-functions',
5408 `x-lost-selection-hooks' to `x-lost-selection-functions',
5409 `x-sent-selection-hooks' to `x-sent-selection-functions',
5410 `delete-frame-hook' to `delete-frame-functions'.
5411
5412 In each case the old name remains as an alias for the moment.
5413
5414 *** Variable `local-write-file-hooks' is marked obsolete.
5415
5416 Use the LOCAL arg of `add-hook'.
5417
5418 *** New function `x-send-client-message' sends a client message when
5419 running under X.
5420 \f
5421 * New Packages for Lisp Programming in Emacs 22.1
5422
5423 ** The new library button.el implements simple and fast `clickable
5424 buttons' in Emacs buffers. Buttons are much lighter-weight than the
5425 `widgets' implemented by widget.el, and can be used by lisp code that
5426 doesn't require the full power of widgets. Emacs uses buttons for
5427 such things as help and apropos buffers.
5428
5429 ** The new library tree-widget.el provides a widget to display a set
5430 of hierarchical data as an outline. For example, the tree-widget is
5431 well suited to display a hierarchy of directories and files.
5432
5433 ** The new library bindat.el provides functions to unpack and pack
5434 binary data structures, such as network packets, to and from Lisp
5435 data structures.
5436
5437 ** master-mode.el implements a minor mode for scrolling a slave
5438 buffer without leaving your current buffer, the master buffer.
5439
5440 It can be used by sql.el, for example: the SQL buffer is the master
5441 and its SQLi buffer is the slave. This allows you to scroll the SQLi
5442 buffer containing the output from the SQL buffer containing the
5443 commands.
5444
5445 This is how to use sql.el and master.el together: the variable
5446 sql-buffer contains the slave buffer. It is a local variable in the
5447 SQL buffer.
5448
5449 (add-hook 'sql-mode-hook
5450 (function (lambda ()
5451 (master-mode t)
5452 (master-set-slave sql-buffer))))
5453 (add-hook 'sql-set-sqli-hook
5454 (function (lambda ()
5455 (master-set-slave sql-buffer))))
5456
5457 ** The new library benchmark.el does timing measurements on Lisp code.
5458
5459 This includes measuring garbage collection time.
5460
5461 ** The new library testcover.el does test coverage checking.
5462
5463 This is so you can tell whether you've tested all paths in your Lisp
5464 code. It works with edebug.
5465
5466 The function `testcover-start' instruments all functions in a given
5467 file. Then test your code. The function `testcover-mark-all' adds
5468 overlay "splotches" to the Lisp file's buffer to show where coverage
5469 is lacking. The command `testcover-next-mark' (bind it to a key!)
5470 will move point forward to the next spot that has a splotch.
5471
5472 Normally, a red splotch indicates the form was never completely
5473 evaluated; a brown splotch means it always evaluated to the same
5474 value. The red splotches are skipped for forms that can't possibly
5475 complete their evaluation, such as `error'. The brown splotches are
5476 skipped for forms that are expected to always evaluate to the same
5477 value, such as (setq x 14).
5478
5479 For difficult cases, you can add do-nothing macros to your code to
5480 help out the test coverage tool. The macro `noreturn' suppresses a
5481 red splotch. It is an error if the argument to `noreturn' does
5482 return. The macro `1value' suppresses a brown splotch for its argument.
5483 This macro is a no-op except during test-coverage -- then it signals
5484 an error if the argument actually returns differing values.
5485
5486
5487 \f
5488 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
5489 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
5490
5491 GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
5492 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
5493 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option)
5494 any later version.
5495
5496 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
5497 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
5498 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
5499 GNU General Public License for more details.
5500
5501 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
5502 along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
5503 Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
5504 Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
5505
5506 \f
5507 Local variables:
5508 mode: outline
5509 paragraph-separate: "[ \f]*$"
5510 end:
5511
5512 arch-tag: 1aca9dfa-2ac4-4d14-bebf-0007cee12793