[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [Plus haut] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Table des matières] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
If the value of the variable require-final-newline
is t
,
saving or writing a file silently puts a newline at the end if there isn't
already one there. If the value is visit
, Emacs adds a newline at
the end of any file that doesn't have one, just after it visits the file.
(This marks the buffer as modified, and you can undo it.) If the value is
visit-save
, that means to add newlines both on visiting and on
saving. If the value is nil
, Emacs leaves the end of the file
unchanged; if it's neither nil
nor t
, Emacs asks you whether
to add a newline. The default is nil
.
Many major modes are designed for specific kinds of files that are always
supposed to end in newlines. These major modes set the variable
require-final-newline
according to
mode-require-final-newline
. By setting the latter variable, you can
control how these modes handle final newlines.
When Emacs saves a file, it invokes the fsync
system call to force
the data immediately out to disk. This is important for safety if the
system crashes or in case of power outage. However, it can be disruptive on
laptops using power saving, because it requires the disk to spin up each
time you save a file. Setting write-region-inhibit-fsync
to a
non-nil
value disables this synchronization. Be careful—this means
increased risk of data loss.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.