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You can specify text justification for each cell. The justification is remembered independently for each cell and the subsequent editing of cell contents is subject to the specified justification.
The command table-justify
ask you to specify what to justify: a cell,
a column, or a row. If you select cell justification, this command sets the
justification only for the current cell. Selecting column or row
justification sets the justification for all the cells within a column or
row respectively. The command then ask you which kind of justification to
apply: left
, center
, right
, top
, middle
,
bottom
, or none
. Horizontal justification and vertical
justification are specified independently. The options left
,
center
, and right
specify horizontal justification while the
options top
, middle
, bottom
, and none
specify
vertical justification. The vertical justification none
effectively
removes vertical justification. Horizontal justification must be one of
left
, center
, or right
.
Justification information is stored in the buffer as a part of text
property. Therefore, this information is ephemeral and does not survive
through the loss of the buffer (closing the buffer and revisiting the buffer
erase any previous text properties). To countermand for this, the command
table-recognize
and other recognition commands (voir la section Table Recognition) are equipped with a convenience feature (turned on by
default). During table recognition, the contents of a cell are examined to
determine which justification was originally applied to the cell and then
applies this justification to the cell. This is a speculative algorithm and
is therefore not perfect, however, the justification is deduced correctly
most of the time. To disable this feature, customize the variable
table-detect-cell-alignment
and set it to nil
.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.