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The ‘.emacs’ file contains one or more Lisp function call expressions.
Each of these consists of a function name followed by arguments, all
surrounded by parentheses. For example, (setq fill-column 60)
calls
the function setq
to set the variable fill-column
(voir la section Filling Text) to 60.
You can set any Lisp variable with setq
, but with certain variables
setq
won't do what you probably want in the ‘.emacs’ file. Some
variables automatically become buffer-local when set with setq
; what
you want in ‘.emacs’ is to set the default value, using
setq-default
. Some customizable minor mode variables do special
things to enable the mode when you set them with Customize, but ordinary
setq
won't do that; to enable the mode in your ‘.emacs’ file,
call the minor mode command. The following section has examples of both of
these methods.
The second argument to setq
is an expression for the new value of the
variable. This can be a constant, a variable, or a function call
expression. In ‘.emacs’, constants are used most of the time. They
can be:
Numbers are written in decimal, with an optional initial minus sign.
Lisp string syntax is the same as C string syntax with a few extra features. Use a double-quote character to begin and end a string constant.
In a string, you can include newlines and special characters literally. But often it is cleaner to use backslash sequences for them: ‘\n’ for newline, ‘\b’ for backspace, ‘\r’ for carriage return, ‘\t’ for tab, ‘\f’ for formfeed (control-L), ‘\e’ for escape, ‘\\’ for a backslash, ‘\"’ for a double-quote, or ‘\ooo’ for the character whose octal code is ooo. Backslash and double-quote are the only characters for which backslash sequences are mandatory.
‘\C-’ can be used as a prefix for a control character, as in ‘\C-s’ for ASCII control-S, and ‘\M-’ can be used as a prefix for a Meta character, as in ‘\M-a’ for Meta-A or ‘\M-\C-a’ for Control-Meta-A.
Voir la section Non-ASCII Characters in Init Files, for information about including non-ASCII in your init file.
Lisp character constant syntax consists of a ‘?’ followed by either a
character or an escape sequence starting with ‘\’. Examples:
?x
, ?\n
, ?\"
, ?\)
. Note that strings and
characters are not interchangeable in Lisp; some contexts require one and
some contexts require the other.
Voir la section Non-ASCII Characters in Init Files, for information about binding commands to keys which send non-ASCII characters.
t
stands for `true'.
nil
stands for `false'.
Write a single-quote ('
) followed by the Lisp object you want.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.