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Incremental search on a slow terminal uses a modified style of display that is designed to take less time. Instead of redisplaying the buffer at each place the search gets to, it creates a new single-line window and uses that to display the line that the search has found. The single-line window comes into play as soon as point moves outside of the text that is already on the screen.
When you terminate the search, the single-line window is removed. Emacs then redisplays the window in which the search was done, to show its new position of point.
The slow terminal style of display is used when the terminal baud rate is
less than or equal to the value of the variable search-slow-speed
,
initially 1200. See also the discussion of the variable baud-rate
(voir Customization of Display).
The number of lines to use in slow terminal search display is controlled by
the variable search-slow-window-lines
. Its normal value is 1.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.