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If a number is the first non-whitespace in the line, Fortran indentation assumes it is a line number and moves it to columns 0 through 4. (Columns always count from 0 in GNU Emacs.)
Line numbers of four digits or less are normally indented one space. The
variable fortran-line-number-indent
controls this; it specifies the
maximum indentation a line number can have. The default value of the
variable is 1. Fortran mode tries to prevent line number digits passing
column 4, reducing the indentation below the specified maximum if
necessary. If fortran-line-number-indent
has the value 5, line
numbers are right-justified to end in column 4.
Simply inserting a line number is enough to indent it according to these
rules. As each digit is inserted, the indentation is recomputed. To turn
off this feature, set the variable fortran-electric-line-number
to
nil
.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.