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Emacs has many settings which have values that you can specify in order to customize various commands. Many are documented in this manual. Most settings are user options—that is to say, Lisp variables (voir la section Variables)—so their names appear in the Variable Index (@pxref{Variable Index}). The other settings are faces and their attributes (voir la section Using Multiple Typefaces).
You can browse interactively through settings and change them using M-x customize. This command creates a customization buffer, which offers commands to navigate through a logically organized structure of the Emacs settings; you can also use it to edit and set their values, and to save settings permanently in your ‘~/.emacs’ file (voir la section The Init File, ‘~/.emacs’).
The appearance of the example buffers in this section is typically different under a graphical display, since faces are then used to indicate buttons, links and editable fields.
57.2.1 Customization Groups | How settings are classified in a structure. | |
57.2.2 Browsing and Searching for Options and Faces | Browsing and searching for settings. | |
57.2.3 Changing a Variable | How to edit an option's value and set the option. | |
57.2.4 Saving Customizations | Specifying the file for saving customizations. | |
57.2.5 Customizing Faces | How to edit the attributes of a face. | |
57.2.6 Customizing Specific Items | Making a customization buffer for specific variables, faces, or groups. | |
57.2.7 Customization Themes | How to define collections of customized options that can be loaded andunloaded together. |
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.