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  • Emacs Beginner's HOWTO

    Author: 2007-09-06 15:40:34 From:

    Emacs Beginner's HOWTO
      Jeremy D. Zawodny: Jeremy@Zawodny.com
      v1.12, 2001-03-25

      This document introduces Linux users to the Emacs editor. It assumes
      minimal familiarity with vi or a similar editor. The latest version of
      this document is usually available from http://www.wcnet.org/jza?
      wodn/emacs/
      ______________________________________________________________________

      Table of Contents

      1. Introduction

         1.1 Copyright
         1.2 Audience and Intent
         1.3 What is Emacs?
            1.3.1 Ports and Versions
            1.3.2 Getting Emacs

      2. Running Emacs

         2.1 Starting & Quitting Emacs
            2.1.1 What you'll see
               2.1.1.1 The Menu Bar
               2.1.1.2 The Status Bar and Mini-buffer
         2.2 Some Terminology
            2.2.1 Buffers & Files
            2.2.2 Point & Region
            2.2.3 Windows
            2.2.4 Frames
         2.3 Keyboard Basics
            2.3.1 Command Keys (Meta, Esc, Control, and Alt)
            2.3.2 Moving Around in a Buffer
            2.3.3 Essential Commands
            2.3.4 Tab Completion
         2.4 Tutorial, Help, & Info

      3. Emacs Modes

         3.1 Major vs. Minor Modes
         3.2 Programming Modes
            3.2.1 C/C++/Java
            3.2.2 Perl
            3.2.3 Python
            3.2.4 Others
         3.3 Authoring
            3.3.1 Spell-Checking (
            3.3.2 HTML (
            3.3.3 TeX (
            3.3.4 SGML (
         3.4 Other Modes
            3.4.1 Version Control (
            3.4.2 Shell Mode
            3.4.3 Telnet and FTP
            3.4.4 Man
            3.4.5 Ange-FTP

      4. Customizing Emacs

         4.1 Temporary Customization
            4.1.1 Variable Assignments
            4.1.2 File Associations
         4.2 Using a
         4.3 The Customize Package
         4.4 X Windows Display

      5. Popular Packages

         5.1 VM (Mail)
         5.2 Gnus (Mail and News)
         5.3 BBDB (A rolodex)
         5.4 AucTeX (another TeX mode)

      6. Other Resources

         6.1 Books
            6.1.1 Learning GNU Emacs
            6.1.2 Writing GNU Emacs Extensions
            6.1.3 Programming in Emacs Lisp: An Introduction
            6.1.4 The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual
         6.2 Web Sites
            6.2.1 EMACSulation
         6.3 Newsgroups
         6.4 Mailing Lists
         6.5 The Emacs Lisp Archive

      7. Credits

    ______________________________________________________________________

      1.  Introduction

      1.1.  Copyright

      Copyright ?1998 - 2001 Jeremy D. Zawodny. Permission to distribute
      and modify this document is granted under the GNU General Public
      License. An on-line copy is available at
      http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html

      1.2.  Audience and Intent

      This document is targeted at the Linux user interested in learning a
      bit about Emacs and trying it out. This actually began as the outline
      of a brief tutorial that I was to give at a Toledo Area Linux User
      Group meeting: http://www.talug.org/. It has since grown a bit as the
      result of the helpful feedback I have received from the community. See
      the Credits section for details.

      Having said that, there is virtually nothing Linux-specific in this
      document. It applies to virtually all flavors of Unix and even Emacs
      running on Microsoft Windows. But since this document is part of the
      Linux Documentation Project, I make a point of saying that it was
      developed for Linux users--because it was.

      And finally, those of you who prefer the name GNU/Linux to simply
      ``Linux'' (read http://www.gnu.org/gnu/linux-and-gnu.html to see why
      one might) are welcomed to mentally substitute GNU/Linux for all
      occurrences of Linux in this document. While I don't disagree with the
      reasoning and spirit behind that idea, I don't feel compelled to write
      GNU/Linux.

      1.3.  What is Emacs?

      Emacs is different things to different people. Depending who you ask,
      you'll could get any of the following responses:


      ? Text Editor

      ? Mail Client

      ? News Reader

      ? Word Processor

      ? Religion

      ? Integrated Development Environment

      ? Whatever you want it to be!


      But for our purposes, let's just pretend it's a text editor--an
      amazingly flexible text editor. We'll dig deeper into the question
      later on. Emacs was written by Richard Stallman (founder of the Free
      Software Foundation: http://www.fsf.org/ and the GNU project
      http://www.gnu.org/) and he still maintains it today.

      Emacs is one of the most popular and powerful text editors used on
      Linux (and Unix). It is second in popularity only to vi. It is known
      for it huge feature set, ability to be easily customized, and lack of
      bugs. It's large feature set and ability to be customized actually are
      the result of how Emacs was designed and implemented. Without going
      into all the details, I'll simply point out that Emacs isn't ``just an
      editor''. It is an editor written mostly in the programming language
      Lisp. At the core of Emacs is a full-featured Lisp interpreter written
      in C. Only the most basic and low-level pieces of Emacs are written in
      C. The majority of the editor is actually written in Lisp. So, in a
      sense, Emacs has an entire programming language ``built in'' which you
      can use to customize, extend, and change its behavior.

      Emacs is also one of the oldest editors around. The fact that is has
      been used by thousands of programmers over the past 20 (?) years means
      that there are many add-on packages available. These add-ons allow you
      to make Emacs do things that Stallman had probably never dreamed
      possible when he first began work on Emacs. More on that in a later
      section.

      There are many other web sites and documents which give a better
      overview of Emacs, its history, and related matters. Rather than
      attempt to reproduce much of that here, I suggest that you check out
      some of the places listed in Section ``Other Resources'' section of
      this document.

      1.3.1.  Ports and Versions

      It's worth pointing out that there are actually two different Emacs
      editors: GNU Emacs and XEmacs. Both come from the same heritage and
      share most of the same features. This document focuses on GNU Emacs
      (version 20.3, specifically) but much of what you'll read here will
      apply just as well to XEmacs and earlier versions of GNU Emacs.
      Throughout this document I will simply refer to ``Emacs''. When I do
      so, bear that in mind.

      1.3.2.  Getting Emacs

      Getting Emacs is easy. If you are using a popular Linux distribution
      like Debian, RedHat, Slackware, or any of the others, Emacs is
      probably an optional package that you can install from your
      distribution media. If not, you can get the Emacs source code and
      compile it yourself. Visit the GNU web site for the exact location:
      http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/emacs.html.

    2.  Running Emacs

      2.1.  Starting & Quitting Emacs

      As a new user, you'll probably want to launch Emacs just to mess
      around and try it out. Once you're into Emacs and want to exit,
      however, you may not be able to figure out what to do. So if you've
      never used Emacs before, give it a shot right now. At your shell
      prompt, type emacs and hit enter. Emacs should start up. If not, it is
      either not installed or not in your path.

      Once you've seen Emacs, you need to know how to exit. The keystrokes
      for leaving Emacs are C-x C-c. The C-x notation means hold down the
      Ctrl key and press x. In this case, you'll then need to hold down Ctrl
      and press c to finish the task.

      The keystrokes used in Emacs will likely seem odd, foreign, and maybe
      even uncomfortable to you at first--especially if you're a vi user.
      Unlike vi, Emacs doesn't have separate modes for editing text and
      issuing commands.

      To re-cap: emacs will start Emacs. C-x C-c will exit Emacs.

      2.1.1.  What you'll see

      When Emacs starts up it will consume a whole X window (or screen if
      you're running on a console instead of in the X Window System). You'll
      see a menu across the top, some text in the main part of the screen,
      and a couple of lines at the bottom.

      It will look something like this ASCII sketch:
      +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
      |Buffers Files Tools Edit Search Mule Help                             |
      |                                                                      |
      |Welcome to GNU Emacs, one component of a Linux-based GNU system.      |
      |                                                                      |
      |                                                                      |
      |                                                                      |
      | ...                                                                  |
      |                                                                      |
      |---1:---F1  *scratch*         (Lisp Interaction)--L1--All-------------|
      |For information about the GNU Project and its goals, type C-h C-p.    |
      +----------------------------------------------------------------------+

      NOTE: Emacs will usually fill the entire screen/window. I've shrunk
      the above example to save space here. You will also see a welcome
      message in Emacs when you first start it. I omitted that as well and
      substituted ``...'' instead. The welcome message simply identifies the
      exact version of Emacs you are using as well as pointing you to the
      on-line help and related items.

      2.1.1.1.  The Menu Bar

      The topmost line of the Emacs interface is a menu. If you're running
      X, you'll recognize them as traditional pull-down menus that you can
      access using your mouse. Otherwise you'll need to use keyboard
      shortcuts (not covered here) for accessing the menus.
      2.1.1.2.  The Status Bar and Mini-buffer

      Of the last two lines in the Emacs interface, the topmost one is
      essentially a status bar. It contains information about the buffer
      you're working in, which mode Emacs is in, and various other things.
      For now, just realize that it's there.

      The bottommost line is called the mini-buffer. It is separated from
      the main buffer by the status bar we just discussed. You can think of
      the mini-buffer as the Emacs ``command-line''. It is where commands
      that you give Emacs appear and it is where status messages are printed
      in response to things you do.

      You'll find that what I've called the status bar is usually referred
      to as the mode line in Emacs related documentation. It is where Emacs
      displays information about the current modes(s) you may be using as
      well as things like the current date and time, line number, file size,
      and almost anything else you might want to see there.

      2.2.  Some Terminology

      This section covers the most basic of Emacs terminology that you'll
      encounter when using and reading about Emacs.

      2.2.1.  Buffers & Files

      Unlike some editors, when you open a file in Emacs it does not stay
      ``open'' the entire time you're working with it. Instead, Emacs reads
      the file into a buffer in memory. While you're editing the buffer and
      working with the data nothing is changed on disk. Only when you
      actually save the buffer does the file on disk get updated. There are
      advantages and disadvantages to this approach but it is only important
      that you understand that it works this way.

      As a consequence, you will see the term ``buffer'' used in Emacs
      documentation, modes, packages, and so on. Just realize that buffer
      means ``a copy of the file that is currently in memory.'' Oh, it's
      worth pointing out that a buffer doesn't always have to refer to a
      specific file on disk. Often times Emacs will create buffers as the
      result of commands you run. Such buffers may contain the result of the
      command, a list of selections to pick from, and so on.

      2.2.2.  Point & Region

      In Emacs lingo, you'll often hear or see references to the point. In
      general terms the point is the cursor. The actual distinction between
      the point and cursor probably isn't important when you're first
      starting out with Emacs. But if you are curious, think about it this
      way. The cursor is the visual representation of the point. The cursor
      is always ``on'' a particular character position in the current
      buffer. The point, on the other hand, lives in the space between
      characters on in the buffer. So you might say that if the cursor is on
      the letter `h' in the word ``the'' then the point is between the `t'
      and the `h'.

      Like many modern editors, Emacs allows to perform operations (indent,
      spell-check, reformat, cut, copy, paste, ...) on a section of the
      current buffer. You can highlight (or ``mark'') a block of text using
      the keyboard or mouse and then perform operations on just the selected
      block of text. In Emacs, that block of text is called a region.

      2.2.3.  Windows

      Okay, this will be a bit confusing to anyone who has ever used a GUI
      interface before. Just remember that Emacs was developed long before
      GUI interfaces and window managers were popular.

      A window in Emacs is an area of the screen in which a buffer is
      displayed. When Emacs is first started, you have one window on your
      screen. Some Emacs functions (such as the help and documentation)
      often [temporarily] open up additional windows in your Emacs screen.

      Emacs windows have nothing to do with X windows in the GUI sense. You
      can open up additional X windows to display Emacs buffers, maybe to
      compare two files side by side. Those new X windows are referred to as
      frames in Emacs lingo. Read on.

      2.2.4.  Frames

      In Emacs, a frame is a separate X window in which an Emacs buffer is
      displayed. But both are part of the same Emacs session. The behavior
      is somewhat (but not too much) like what happens if you hit Alt+N in
      Netscape Navigator.

      2.3.  Keyboard Basics

      This section covers the basics of keyboarding for Emacs. Like every
      powerful editor, everything that you can do with Emacs is just a few
      keystrokes away.

      If you're a vi user, the notion of using the k, j, l, h keys to move
      up a line, down a line, forward by a character, and backward by a
      character probably took some getting used to. In fact, it might have
      taken you a few hours or even weeks of practice before you could
      comfortably navigate a file using the various key combinations
      available in vi.

      Emacs is no different. There are different keystrokes and commands to
      learn. Just like vi, you only need to master the basics to get a lot
      of work done. Then, as time goes on, you can slowly expand your
      knowledge and find faster ways of doing things.

      2.3.1.  Command Keys (Meta, Esc, Control, and Alt)

      As you'll soon learn, Emacs makes heavy use of multi-key combinations.
      Because it is not a modal editor like vi, you don't have to think
      about being in ``command mode'' or ``editing mode'' before you can try
      to move the cursor or execute a command. Instead, you just press the
      right combination of keys and Emacs does as told (usually).

      The keys that Emacs makes the most use of are usually abbreviated in
      the documentation as C (for Control or Ctrl) and M for (Meta). While
      most modern PC keyboards have one or more keys labeled Ctrl few have
      one labeled Meta. You'll want to mentally substitute either Esc or Alt
      for the Meta key. In most standard configurations, both Esc and Alt do
      essentially the same thing.
      So when you see a reference in any Emacs related documentation to C-x
      f it means ``press control-x and then f.'' And if you see a reference
      to something like M-x shell is means ``press alt-x and type the word
      shell''.

      A very useful command for beginners is M-x apropos or C-h a. apropos
      will search the Emacs on-line documentation for all functions and
      search for the regular expression you type. This is a great way to
      discover all commands related to frames. Simply C-h a and then frame.

      2.3.2.  Moving Around in a Buffer

      Now that you know what all those fancy abbreviations mean, here's a
      list of the most common keystrokes for moving within a buffer:

      Keystrokes  Action
      -----------------------------------
      C-p         Up one line
      C-n         Down one line
      C-f         Forward one character
      C-b         Backward one character
      C-a         Beginning of line
      C-e         End of line
      C-v         Down one page
      M-v         Up one page
      M-f         Forward one word
      M-b         Backward one word
      M-<         Beginning of buffer
      M->         End of buffer
      -----------------------------------

      And, as you might expect, the cursor keys (or arrow keys) usually work




      Keystrokes  Function           Description
      -------------------------------------------------------------------
      C-x C-s     save-buffer        Save the current buffer to disk
      C-x u       undo               Undo the last operation
      C-x C-f     find-file          Open a file from disk
      C-r         isearch-backward   Search backward for a string




      C-x r b     bookmark-jump      Jump to a bookmark.


      prompt you for input. They will always to do in the mini-buffer. This
      Emacs has literally hundreds of built-in functions available. The list

      editing features and functions that everyone should know. It also
      explains how to use the other help features in Emacs.

      I highly recommend that you spend some time going through the tutorial
      if you plan on making a serious effort to learn Emacs. As shown in the
      table above, you can enter the tutorial via C-h t. The tutorial is
      self-guided and aimed at folks who are just getting started with
      Emacs.

      If you are running Emacs in X, you will see that the rightmost menu on
      the menu bar is labeled Help. As you explore the Help menu notice that
      some items have keyboard shortcuts and those are listed right in the
      menu.

      Finally, to see the volume of documentation available with Emacs, you
      should try M-x info or C-h i which launches Info, the Emacs
      documentation browser.

    3.  Emacs Modes

      Emacs modes are different behaviors and features which you can turn on
      or off (or customize, of course) for use in different circumstances.
      Modes are what make one editor (Emacs) equally useful for writing
      documentation, programming in a variety of languages (C, C++, Perl,
      Python, Java, and many more), creating a home page, sending E-Mail,
      reading Usenet news, keeping track of your appointments, and even
      playing games.

      Emacs modes are simply libraries of Lisp code that extend, modify, or
      enhance Emacs is some way.

      3.1.  Major vs. Minor Modes

      There are fundamentally two types of modes available: Major and Minor.
      The distinction isn't the easiest thing to grasp until you've worked
      with a few of them off and on, but let's give it a shot.

      Only one major mode can be active at a given time. Many minor modes
      can be active at a given time. Major modes tend to be language or
      task-specific, while minor modes are smaller and less specific
      utilities that cut across many tasks.

      Sounds kind of abstract, so let's try an example. There's a mode that
      I use quite often when I'm writing plain old text files. It's called
      text-mode. This mode was designed for writing free form text like a
      README file. It understands how to identify words and paragraphs and
      generally makes sure that it does what I expect when I use the normal
      navigation keystrokes.

      When I'm writing text for human consumption, I typically want it to
      look good. It should be properly word-wrapped to a reasonable value
      and so on. To enable word wrapping I just turn on the auto-fill minor
      mode. This mode tries to do the Right Thing when I'm typing along and
      hit the end of the line. The fact that it is a minor mode means that
      it can work with several different major modes. My notion of the
      ``Right Thing'' to do when I hit the end of the line is different when
      I'm in text-mode than it is when I'm in java-mode for example. I don't
      want my Java code to be word-wrapped as if was English text. But I do
      want the blocks of comments in my Java code to be word wrapped! auto-
      fill mode is smart enough to figure that out.

      The authors of various Emacs modes have done a great job of making
      sure that things that should work as minor modes are minor modes.

      If you look back at that ASCII sketch of an Emacs screen, you'll
      notice that the mode line identifies the mode(s) that Emacs is in. In
      that case it was in a mode called ``Lisp Interaction'' which is the
      default mode. It's really only useful if you're going to be writing
      Lisp code. (But since most of Emacs is written in Lisp, why not?)

      3.2.  Programming Modes

      First and foremost, Emacs was designed by a programmer for
      programmers. There are high-quality modes available for almost every
      popular programming language you can think of (and even some not so
      popular ones). I only briefly describe a few of them here.

      Most programming modes share some common characteristics. Usually,
      they'll do some or all of the following:

      ? Provide color-syntax highlighting for the language.

      ? Provide automatic indentation and code formatting for the language.

      ? Provide context (language) sensitive help.

      ? Automatically interface with your debugger.

      ? Add language-specific menus to the menu bar.

      In addition, there are some non-language specific modes that help out
      with tasks that are common to programming in many languages. Things
      like interfacing to your version control software, automatically
      adding comments to your code, creating Makefiles, updating Change Logs
      and so on.

      When you add all these modes together and consider the maturity and
      stability of the Emacs code, it compares quite nicely to commercially
      marketed Integrated Development Environments (IDEs) for languages like
      C++ and Java. And, of course, it's free.

      3.2.1.  C/C++/Java

      Because the syntax of C, C++, and Java are quite similar, there is one
      Emacs mode which handles all three languages (as well as Objective-C
      and IDL). It's a very mature and complete package and it included in
      the Emacs distribution. This mode is called either cc-mode or CC Mode.

      For more details or to download a newer version, visit
      http://www.python.org/emacs/.

      3.2.2.  Perl

      There are actually two modes for editing Perl code in Emacs. The first
      is called perl-mode (as you would expect) and the second is cperl-
      mode. I don't have a good grasp of this history and why there are two
      modes (the docs don't say), but it would appear that perl-mode was the
      original mode for editing Perl code in Emacs. It seems to have fewer
      features than cperl-mode and is lacking the ability to recognize some
      of Perl's fancier language constructs.

      Personally, I use and recommend cperl-mode which seems to be quite
      actively maintained and has just about every feature I could ever
      want. You can find the latest release here: ftp://ftp.math.ohio-
      state.edu/pub/users/ilya/emacs.

      But don't take my word for it. Try them both and pick the one that
      best meets your needs.

      3.2.3.  Python

      Python (another very popular scripting language) has an Emacs mode
      available for it as well. As far as I can tell, it is not distributed
      with GNU Emacs but it distributed with XEmacs. It works quite well in
      both editors, though.

      You can get python-mode from the official Python web site
      http://www.python.org/emacs/python-mode/.

      3.2.4.  Others

      There are many many other editing modes available to help out
      programmers. Such modes help out with things like:

      ? Shell Scripts (Bash, sh, ksh, csh, ...)

      ? Awk, Sed, Tcl, ...

      ? Makefiles

      ? Change Logs

      ? Documentation

      ? Debugging

      And much more. See the last section of this document for more
      information on finding other modes and add-ins.

      3.3.  Authoring

      Fancy Emacs modes are not limited to just those who write code. Folks
      writing documentation (of any sorts) can also benefit from a wide
      selection of Emacs modes.

      3.3.1.  Spell-Checking ( ispell  mode)

      Authors of many types of documents need to spell-check once in a
      while. If you have GNU ispell installed, you can type M-x ispell and
      spell-check the current buffer. If ispell finds words that it doesn't
      know, it prompts you with a list of possible replacements and lets you
      select one (or none) of them. It's functionally equivalent to the
      spell-checkers in many popular non-free software packages.

      3.3.2.  HTML ( html-helper  mode)

      If you find yourself writing HTML files once in a while (or even a
      lot), you might want to try out html-helper-mode. It is available from
      http://www.santafe.edu/~nelson/tools/ as is the documentation and
      related stuff.

      As its name suggests, html-helper-mode provides lots of things to help
      out those folks who still write HTML by hand--the old fashioned way.

      3.3.3.  TeX ( tex-mode )

      When you're writing documents in TeX, it's often helpful to get Emacs
      to add some color and highlight the backslashes, braces and other
      characters. tex-mode takes care of that for you.

      Though I don't write much directly in TeX anymore, when I did this
      mode proved to be quite helpful in making my TeX source a bit more
      readable.

      3.3.4.  SGML ( sgml-mode )

      The document you're now reading was written in SGML (and probably
      converted to the format you're reading it in). sgml-mode provides all
      the basics for SGML documents: validation, highlighting, forward-tag,
      backward-tag, and much more. It is a standard part of Emacs.

      3.4.  Other Modes

      Of course, there are lots of other handy modes to make life easier.
      Here's just a sampling of the popular ones:

      3.4.1.  Version Control ( vc  mode)

      vc mode interfaces with most of the popular version control back-ends
      (RCS, SCCS, CVS) to make it very easy to check files in and out,
      manage releases and so on. It is a standard part of Emacs and is
      documented in the Emacs documentation.

      3.4.2.  Shell Mode

      Why switch to another X window or virtual console just to run a few
      shell commands? Do it from within Emacs and save yourself the trouble.
      :-)

      M-x shell will launch a shell within an Emacs buffer. You can do most
      things with this buffer that you could do with a normal shell prompt
      (except for running full screen programs like vi or pine) because
      Emacs is talking to your real shell behind the scenes.

      This is a standard part of Emacs, too, so you'll find it documented in
      the Emacs docs.

      3.4.3.  Telnet and FTP

      Why switch to another X window or virtual console just to run telnet
      or FTP?  Do it from within Emacs and save yourself the trouble.
      (Notice the pattern yet?)

      Just like running a shell inside of Emacs, you can telnet and ftp. Try
      M-x telnet or M-x ftp to experience it for yourself. See the
      documentation for all the gory details.

      3.4.4.  Man

      Why switch to another X window or virtual console just to read a
      manual page?  Do it from within Emacs and save yourself the trouble.
      (I promise. I'll stop.)

      Just like running a shell inside of Emacs, you can read manual pages.
      Try M-x man to experience it for yourself. See the documentation for
      more.

      3.4.5.  Ange-FTP

      To quote the ange-ftp documentation:

           This package attempts to make accessing files and directo?
           ries using FTP from within GNU Emacs as simple and transpar?
           ent as possible.  A subset of the common file-handling rou?
           tines are extended to interact with FTP.

      That means you can treat files on remote machines as if there were
      local. So if you need to edit a file on a different computer, just
      tell Emacs to open it (using a slightly different path syntax) and it
      takes care of all the details of logging in and retrieving the file.
      Then, when you save the file via C-x C-s, ange-ftp intercepts the save
      and writes the file back to the remote machine.

      The slightly different path syntax goes like this... A file named
      ``myfile'', in a ``user'''s directory, on a machine named
      ``my.host.org'' can be opened by opening (C-x f) the file:

           /user@my.host.org:~user/myfile

      This, also, is a standard part of the Emacs distribution so you can
      find it documented in the Emacs documentation.

      Thanks to Etienne Grossmann (etienne@anonimo.isr.ist.utl.pt) for the
      example above.

    4.  Customizing Emacs

      Virtually all Emacs customization is done via Lisp code. You can
      modify variables which influence the way Emacs operates or you can add
      new functions to Emacs (or override existing functions--replacing them
      with your own).

      4.1.  Temporary Customization

      While experimenting with Emacs customization, you'll probably want to
      do it in a way that is temporary. If you do something horribly wrong,
      you can just C-x C-c to exit emacs and run it again. Once you've
      figured out what changes you'd like to make permanent, you can add
      them to your very own .emacs file so that they take effect every time
      you start Emacs. This is discussed in the next section.

      4.1.1.  Variable Assignments

      The easiest customizations are accomplished by changing the value of a
      variable in Emacs. The list code to do this looks like this:

      (setq variable-name new-value)

      Where variable-name is the name of the variable and new-value is the
      value you'd like to give the variable. (In Lisp-speak, you're binding
      a variable to a value.) The setq function in lisp is analogous to the
      assignment operators (usually =) in other programming languages.

      NOTE: I'm glossing over many details here for the sake of simplicity.
      You may also see me or others use the Lisp functions set and even
      setq-default. If you're really curious, feel free to look them up in
      an Emacs Lisp reference.

      Let's look at a line from my .emacs file

      (setq-default transient-mark-mode t)

      The variable transient-mark-mode controls whether or not a region
      becomes highlighted when I mark it. In many GUI applications, if you
      click and drag the mouse to select a range of text it becomes hi-
      lighted in reverse video or some other color. Emacs will do the same
      thing it the transient-mark-mode variable is set (to a non-nil value).

      A WHAT value?

      Okay. Brief digression. Most programming languages have some notion of
      true/false values. In C/C++ a value is considered true if it is a non-
      zero value. In Perl, a non-null or non-zero value is true. In Lisp,
      the same idea applies but the names and symbols are different.

      True is usually written as t and false (or null) is written as nil.
      Like in other languages, though, any non-nill value is considered
      true.

      To get the full description of what transient-mark-mode does, you can
      use the on-line help. Type C-h v or M-x describe-variable and then
      transient-mark-mode. If you're lazy like me, you can take advantage of
      variable name completion using the Tab key. Just type part of the
      variable name and hit the Tab key. If you've typed enough of it that
      Emacs can already uniquely identify it, you'll see the whole name
      completed for you.

      Another variable that folks often set is fill-column. It tells Emacs
      how wide the screen should be for the purposes of word-wrapping (and
      auto-fill-mode respects this value). To set the value to something
      absurd, you could type:

      (setq fill-column 20)

      But that won't actually do anything. You need to tell Emacs to
      evaluate the expression you typed. To do so, put the point (cursor) at
      the end of the expression end then type C-x C-e, which calls the
      function eval-last-sexp in case you care. When you do that, notice
      that 20 (or whatever value you used) is echoed back to you in the
      mini-buffer at the bottom of the screen. That's just the return value
      from the expression you evaluated.

      Just to prove that it works, type a sentence or two. If you happen to
      have auto-fill-mode enabled (you probably don't), you'll notice the
      text wrapping at the 20 column mark. Otherwise, after you've typed
      some stuff, type M-q which calls the function fill-paragraph. It will
      then perform the word wrapping.

      4.1.2.  File Associations

      You can configure Emacs to automatically do something when you open a
      file of a particular type (just like some GUIs will automatically
      launch a specific application if you click on the icon for a
      particular file). For example, I may want Emacs to automatically
      switch to text-mode every time I open a file with a .txt extension.
      Well, that already happens. :-) So let's tell Emacs to always enter
      text-mode when you open a file named ``README''.

      (setq auto-mode-alist (cons '("README" . text-mode) auto-mode-alist))

      Huh?

      Without diving into lots of Lisp programming that you really don't
      need to know (but it wouldn't hurt you to learn), let just say that
      the variable auto-mode-alist contains a list of pairs. Each pair
      contains a regular expression and an Emacs mode name. If a file you
      open matches the regular expression (in this case, the string README)
      Emacs starts the mode you specified.

      The funny syntax above is because we're actually adding another pair
      to that mode list. You wouldn't want to just assign to auto-mode-alist
      without making sure the values that it already contains aren't lost.
      And if I wanted Emacs to automatically switch to html-helper-mode
      every time that I opened a file that ended with .html or .htm, I would
      add this to my .emacs file:

      (setq auto-mode-alist (cons '("\\.html$" . html-helper-mode) auto-mode-alist))
      (setq auto-mode-alist (cons '("\\.htm$" . html-helper-mode) auto-mode-alist))

      The possibilities are truly endless.

      4.2.  Using a .emacs  File

      After you've spent some time with Emacs and have a basic idea of what
      customization can do for you, you'll probably want to customize a few
      things permanently (or at least until you change your mind). If you
      find yourself using Emacs on a daily basis, you'll also notice that
      your .emacs file get bigger as time goes on. That's a Good Thing
      because it means you've figured out how to make Emacs work the way you
      want it do work. It's a shame that more software products don't let
      you do that.

      In case you haven't already guessed, every time you start Emacs, it
      looks for a file named .emacs in your home directory. Your .emacs file
      is where you should put any Lisp code that you want run automatically
      and that includes the sort of customization we've been dealing with
      here.

      Another example from my .emacs file:

      (setq inhibit-startup-message t)

      The inhibit-startup-message variable controls whether or not Emacs
      displays that welcome message when it starts. After a while, I got
      sick of looking at it (because I knew how to find the help and
      whatnot), so I went in search of a way to turn it off.

      As an exercise, try creating a .emacs file of your own and add that
      line to it. Then exit and start Emacs again. You should not see the
      welcome message.

      Often times when your read about an Emacs mode (or a package), the
      documentation will suggest some code to add to your .emacs file in
      order to make the mode or package work in a particular way.

      The GNU Emacs FAQ (C-h F) contains some items related to .emacs files
      that you might find useful.

      4.3.  The Customize Package

      As Emacs has grown in popularity and continued to evolved, someone
      eventually said ``there has to be a better way to let novice users
      customize their Emacs.'' And customize was born.
      Customize provides a more intuitive method of customizing parts of
      Emacs. To try it out, either visit the Customize sub-menu in your Help
      menu, or type M-x customize.

      Customize groups customization into logical groups like ``Editing'',
      ``Programming'', ``Files'', and so on. Some groups contain sub-groups.

      If you make changes using the customize interface, Emacs will save the
      changes to your .emacs file. That's rather handy, because you can
      easily inspect (and change) the changes it made for you.

      I don't use the Customize interface, so I can't say much more about
      it.

      4.4.  X Windows Display

      Like any well behaved X application, Emacs respects your X resources.
      That means you can control the initial colors, geometry, and other X
      specific things just as you could with an xterm, nxterm, or whatever.

      Here's the relevant bit of my ~/.Xdefaults file:

      emacs*Background: DarkSlateGray
      emacs*Foreground: Wheat
      emacs*pointerColor: Orchid
      emacs*cursorColor: Orchid
      emacs*bitmapIcon: on
      emacs*font: fixed
      emacs.geometry: 80x25

      See your X manual page for more details about X resources.

      Chris Gray (cgray4@po-box.mcgill.ca) also notes:

           In Debian, the ~/.Xdefaults doesn't seem to be used.  How?
           ever, Debian people can put what you have given in
           /etc/X11/Xresources/emacs and they can have the pretty col?
           ors that they had when they were using RedHat.

    5.  Popular Packages

      In addition to the many different modes available for Emacs, there are
      also many add-on packages. I call them packages because they're more
      than just new modes. They often include extra utilities or are so
      large that calling them modes just doesn't seem to do them justice. In
      still other cases, they are software which extends or integrates other
      Emacs modes and packages. The distinction isn't entirely clear, but
      that's okay.

      5.1.  VM (Mail)

      To quote the VM FAQ:

           VM (View Mail) is an Emacs subsystem that allows mail to be
           read and disposed of within Emacs. Commands exist to do the
           normal things expected of a mail user agent, such as gener?
           ating replies, saving messages to folders, deleting messages
           and so on. There are other more advanced commands that do
           tasks like bursting and creating digests, message forward?
           ing, and organizing message presentation according to vari?
           ous criteria.

      When I first began using Emacs, I tried VM out for a while. I found it
      to be a great replacement for Pine, Elm, or most any other mail
      program. But I didn't want to use separate programs to read mail and
      news. VM is actively developed and well supported today.

      It is available here: http://www.wonderworks.com/vm/.

      5.2.  Gnus (Mail and News)

      To quote the GNUS Manual:

           Gnus is a message-reading laboratory. It will let you look
           at just about anything as if it were a newsgroup. You can
           read mail with it, you can browse directories with it, you
           can ftp with it---you can even read news with it!

           Gnus tries to empower people who read news the same way
           Emacs empowers people who edit text. Gnus sets no limits to
           what the user should be allowed to do. Users are encouraged
           to extend Gnus to make it behave like they want it to
           behave. A program should not control people; people should
           be empowered to do what they want by using (or abusing) the
           program.

      GNUS is what I currently use for mail and news (as hinted above). GNUS
      is also actively developed and well supported today.

      It is available here: http://www.gnus.org/.

      5.3.  BBDB (A rolodex)

      BBDB is an Insidious Big Brother Database, a rolodex-like program for
      Emacs that works with most of the popular Emacs Mail packages (VM and
      GNUS included).

      It is available here:
      http://pweb.netcom.com/~simmonmt/bbdb/index.html.

      5.4.  AucTeX (another TeX mode)

      AucTeX is another mode for editing TeX files.

      To quote the AucTeX web site:

           AUC TeX is an extensible package that supports writing and
           formatting TeX files for most variants of GNU Emacs. Many
           different macro packages are supported, including AMS TeX,
           LaTeX, and TeXinfo.

      It is available here: http://sunsite.auc.dk/auctex/.

    6.  Other Resources

      This section covers books, web sites, newsgroups, mailing lists, and
      other places you can find more information about Emacs.

      6.1.  Books

      There are a a few really good books available for learning Emacs. In
      addition to these, you'll find that many Linux and Unix books also
      contain a chapter or two about Emacs (and vi).

      6.1.1.  Learning GNU Emacs

      Authors: Debra Cameron, Bill Rosenblatt, Eric S. Raymond

      Publisher: O'Reilly & Associates - http://www.ora.com/

      Commentary: This is probably the best book to start with. After you've
      read the HOWTO and looked through the FAQ this book serves as a
      comprehensive and very approachable tutorial.

      6.1.2.  Writing GNU Emacs Extensions

      Author: Bob Glickstein

      Publisher: O'Reilly & Associates - http://www.ora.com/

      Commentary: After you've used Emacs for a while and have decided that
      you'd like to try writing your own mode or maybe try out some advanced
      customization, this is the book for you. While it doesn't attempt to
      teach Lisp, it does contain a brief introduction to the language.

      6.1.3.  Programming in Emacs Lisp: An Introduction

      Author: Robert J. Chassell

      From the README file:

           This is an elementary introduction to programming in Emacs
           Lisp for people who are not programmers, and who are not
           necessarily interested in programming, but who do want to
           customize or extend their computing environment.

      You can retrieve the manual in its entirety via anonymous FTP from the
      GNU FTP server: ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/gnu/emacs/.

      Commentary: This a good introductory manual for Emacs Lisp--even if
      you're not a heavy-duty programmer.

      6.1.4.  The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual

      Author: Richard Stallman

      Publisher: The Free Software Foundation - http://www.fsf.org/

      You can retrieve the manual in its entirety via anonymous FTP from the
      GNU FTP server: ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/gnu/emacs/.

      Commentary: This is the definitive guide to the Emacs Lisp programming
      language.

      6.2.  Web Sites

      6.2.1.  EMACSulation

      EMACSulation is a column written by Eric Marsden that appears in the
      on-line magazine Linux Gazette located at
      http://www.linuxgazette.com/. The most recent column as of this
      writing is located at
      http://www.linuxgazette.com/issue39/marsden.html. Scan to the bottom
      of the article for links to previous ones.

      6.3.  Newsgroups

      Search you local news feed for newsgroups which contain the string
      ``emacs'' and you'll probably find many. Those which my server carries
      are:

      ? comp.emacs

      ? comp.emacs.sources

      ? gnu.emacs

      ? gnu.emacs.bug

      ? gnu.emacs.help

      ? gnu.emacs.sources

      6.4.  Mailing Lists

      There is a mailing list for GNU Emacs which is hosted by the Free
      Software Foundation. See the web site
      http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnu-emacs for more
      information.

      The only mailing list devoted to Emacs that I know of right now is the
      NT-Emacs list. It is a list for folks who are using the Micro$oft
      Windows version of Emacs. See the NT-Emacs FAQ
      http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/voelker/ntemacs.html for more
      information.

      6.5.  The Emacs Lisp Archive

      From the Emacs Lisp Archive README:

           The Emacs Lisp archives on ftp.cis.ohio-state.edu contain
           various pieces and packages of Emacs Lisp code.  Emacs Lisp
           is the language used to extend the GNU Emacs editor pub?
           lished by the Free Software Foundation.  Although much Emacs
           Lisp code is included in the GNU Emacs distribution, many
           people have written packages to interface with other sys?
           tems, to better support editing the programming language
           they use, to add new features, or to change Emacs' default
           behavior.  Most of the contents of this archive have been
           written by individuals and distributed publicly over the
           Internet through the info-emacs or info-gnu-emacs mailing
           lists or the comp.emacs, gnu.emacs, or gnu.emacs.sources
           newsgroups.

      The archives are available via anonymous FTP from ftp://ftp.cis.ohio-
      state.edu/pub/emacs-lisp/.

      NOTE: As far as I can tell, the Emacs Lisp Archive is slowly becoming
      out of date. I see very few new (or updated) packages appearing there,
      though I know they exist. They do get posted to the comp.emacs.sources
      newsgroup. (Feel free to correct me if this is wrong.)

      7.  Credits

      The following people have contributed to the success of this document.

      ? Craig Lyons Craig.Lyons@compaq.com

      ? Robert Vollmert rvollmer@gmx.net

      ? Larry Brasfield larrybr@seanet.com

      ? Etienne Grossmann etienne@anonimo.isr.ist.utl.pt

      ? Thomas Weinell kf6mli@amsat.org

      ? Adam C. Finnefrock adam@bigbro.biophys.cornell.edu

      ? Chris Gray cgray4@po-box.mcgill.ca

      ? Robert J. Chassell bob@rattlesnake.com

      ? Isaac To kkto@csis.hku.hk

      ? Matteo Valsasna valsasna@elet.polimi.it

      ? Tijs van Bakel smoke@casema.net

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