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![]() This merges branch 'line-numbers'. * src/buffer.c (disable_line_numbers_overlay_at_eob): New function. * src/lisp.h (disable_line_numbers_overlay_at_eob): Add prototype. * src/dispextern.h (struct it): New members pt_lnum, lnum, lnum_bytepos, lnum_width, and lnum_pixel_width. * src/indent.c (line_number_display_width): New function, refactored from line-number width calculations in vertical-motion. (Fvertical_motion): Call line_number_display_width when the width of line-number display is needed. (Fline_number_display_width): New defun. (syms_of_indent): Defsubr it. * src/indent.c (Fvertical_motion): Help C-n/C-p estimate correctly the width used up by line numbers by looking near the window-start point. If window-start is outside of the accessible portion, temporarily widen the buffer. * src/term.c (produce_glyphs): Adjust tab stops for the horizontal space taken by the line-number display. * src/xdisp.c (display_count_lines_logically) (display_count_lines_visually, maybe_produce_line_number) (should_produce_line_number, row_text_area_empty): New functions. (try_window_reusing_current_matrix): Don't use this method when display-line-numbers is in effect. (try_window_id, try_cursor_movement): Disable these optimizations when the line-number-current-line face is different from line-number face and for relative line numbers. (try_window_id, redisplay_window, try_cursor_movement): For visual line-number display, disable the same redisplay optimizations as for relative. (x_produce_glyphs): Adjust tab stops for the horizontal space taken by the line-number display. (hscroll_window_tree): Adjust hscroll calculations to line-number display. (DISP_INFINITY): Renamed from INFINITY to avoid clashes with math.h; all users changed. (set_cursor_from_row): Fix calculation of cursor X coordinate in R2L rows with display-produced glyphs at the beginning. (display_line): Use should_produce_line_number to determine whether a line number should be produced for each glyph row, and maybe_produce_line_number to produce line numbers. Don't display line numbers in the minibuffer and in tooltip frames. Call row_text_area_empty to verify that a glyph row's text area is devoid of any glyphs that came from a buffer or a string. This fixes a bug with empty-lines indication disappearing when line numbers or line-prefix are displayed. (syms_of_xdisp) <display-line-numbers, display-line-numbers-widen> <display-line-number-width>: New buffer-local variables. <display-line-numbers-current-absolute>: New variable. * lisp/cus-start.el (standard): Provide customization forms for display-line-numbers and its sub-features. * lisp/faces.el (line-number, line-number-current-line): New faces. * lisp/frame.el: Add display-line-numbers, display-line-numbers-widen, display-line-numbers-current-absolute, and display-line-number-width to the list of variables that should trigger redisplay of the current buffer. * lisp/menu-bar.el (menu-bar-showhide-menu): Add menu-bar item to turn display-line-numbers on and off. (toggle-display-line-numbers): New function. * lisp/simple.el (last--line-number-width): New internal variable. (line-move-visual): Use it to adjust temporary-goal-column when line-number display changes its width. * doc/emacs/basic.texi (Position Info): Add cross-reference to "Display Custom", for line-number display. * doc/emacs/custom.texi (Init Rebinding): * doc/emacs/modes.texi (Minor Modes): Remove references to linum-mode. * doc/emacs/display.texi (Display Custom): Describe the line-number display. * doc/lispref/display.texi (Size of Displayed Text): Document line-number-display-width. * etc/NEWS: Document display-line-numbers and its customizations. |
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README |
Copyright (C) 2001-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc. See the end of the file for license conditions. This directory tree holds version 26.0.50 of GNU Emacs, the extensible, customizable, self-documenting real-time display editor. The file INSTALL in this directory says how to build and install GNU Emacs on various systems, once you have unpacked or checked out the entire Emacs file tree. See the file etc/NEWS for information on new features and other user-visible changes in recent versions of Emacs. The file etc/PROBLEMS contains information on many common problems that occur in building, installing and running Emacs. The file CONTRIBUTE contains information on contributing to Emacs as a developer. You may encounter bugs in this release. If you do, please report them; your bug reports are valuable contributions to the FSF, since they allow us to notice and fix problems on machines we don't have, or in code we don't use often. Please send bug reports to the mailing list bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org. If possible, use M-x report-emacs-bug. See the "Bugs" section of the Emacs manual for more information on how to report bugs. (The file 'BUGS' in this directory explains how you can find and read that section using the Info files that come with Emacs.) For a list of mailing lists related to Emacs, see <http://savannah.gnu.org/mail/?group=emacs>. For the complete list of GNU mailing lists, see <http://lists.gnu.org/>. The 'etc' subdirectory contains several other files, named in capital letters, which you might consider looking at when installing GNU Emacs. The file 'configure' is a shell script to acclimate Emacs to the oddities of your processor and operating system. It creates the file 'Makefile' (a script for the 'make' program), which automates the process of building and installing Emacs. See INSTALL for more detailed information. The file 'configure.ac' is the input used by the autoconf program to construct the 'configure' script. The shell script 'autogen.sh' generates 'configure' and other files by running Autoconf, which in turn uses GNU m4. If you want to use it, you will need to install recent versions of these build tools. This should be needed only if you edit files like 'configure.ac' that specify Emacs's autobuild procedure. The file 'Makefile.in' is a template used by 'configure' to create 'Makefile'. The file 'make-dist' is a shell script to build a distribution tar file from the current Emacs tree, containing only those files appropriate for distribution. If you make extensive changes to Emacs, this script will help you distribute your version to others. There are several subdirectories: 'src' holds the C code for Emacs (the Emacs Lisp interpreter and its primitives, the redisplay code, and some basic editing functions). 'lisp' holds the Emacs Lisp code for Emacs (most everything else). 'leim' holds the original source files for the generated files in lisp/leim. These form the library of Emacs input methods, required to type international characters that can't be directly produced by your keyboard. 'lib' holds source code for libraries used by Emacs and its utilities 'lib-src' holds the source code for some utility programs for use by or with Emacs, like movemail and etags. 'etc' holds miscellaneous architecture-independent data files Emacs uses, like the tutorial text and tool bar images. The contents of the 'lisp', 'leim', 'info', and 'doc' subdirectories are architecture-independent too. 'info' holds the Info documentation tree for Emacs. 'doc/emacs' holds the source code for the Emacs Manual. If you modify the manual sources, you will need the 'makeinfo' program to produce an updated manual. 'makeinfo' is part of the GNU Texinfo package; you need a suitably recent version of Texinfo. 'doc/lispref' holds the source code for the Emacs Lisp reference manual. 'doc/lispintro' holds the source code for the Introduction to Programming in Emacs Lisp manual. 'msdos' holds configuration files for compiling Emacs under MS-DOS. 'nextstep' holds instructions and some other files for compiling the Nextstep port of Emacs, for GNUstep and macOS Cocoa. 'nt' holds code and documentation for building Emacs on MS-Windows. 'test' holds tests for various aspects of Emacs's functionality. Building Emacs on non-Posix platforms requires tools that aren't part of the standard distribution of the OS. The platform-specific README files and installation instructions should list the required tools. NOTE ON COPYRIGHT YEARS In copyright notices where the copyright holder is the Free Software Foundation, then where a range of years appears, this is an inclusive range that applies to every year in the range. For example: 2005-2008 represents the years 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.