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Each terminal type can have a Lisp library to be loaded into Emacs when it
is run on that type of terminal. For a terminal type named termtype,
the library is called ‘term/termtype’ and it is found by
searching the directories load-path
as usual and trying the suffixes
‘.elc’ and ‘.el’. Normally it appears in the subdirectory
‘term’ of the directory where most Emacs libraries are kept.
The usual purpose of the terminal-specific library is to map the escape
sequences used by the terminal's function keys onto more meaningful names,
using function-key-map
. See the file ‘term/lk201.el’ for an
example of how this is done. Many function keys are mapped automatically
according to the information in the Termcap data base; the terminal-specific
library needs to map only the function keys that Termcap does not specify.
When the terminal type contains a hyphen, only the part of the name before
the first hyphen is significant in choosing the library name. Thus,
terminal types ‘aaa-48’ and ‘aaa-30-rv’ both use the library
‘term/aaa’. The code in the library can use (getenv "TERM")
to
find the full terminal type name.
The library's name is constructed by concatenating the value of the variable
term-file-prefix
and the terminal type. Your ‘.emacs’ file can
prevent the loading of the terminal-specific library by setting
term-file-prefix
to nil
.
Emacs runs the hook term-setup-hook
at the end of initialization,
after both your ‘.emacs’ file and any terminal-specific library have
been read in. Add hook functions to this hook if you wish to override part
of any of the terminal-specific libraries and to define initializations for
terminals that do not have a library. Voir la section Hooks.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.