Remerciements
Many people have contributed code included in the Free Software Foundation's
distribution of GNU Emacs. To show our appreciation for their public
spirit, we list here in alphabetical order those who have written
substantial portions.
-
Per Abrahamsen wrote the customization buffer facilities, as well as
‘double.el’ for typing accented characters not normally available from
the keyboard, ‘xt-mouse.el’ which handles mouse commands through Xterm,
‘gnus-cus.el’ which implements customization commands for Gnus,
‘gnus-cite.el’, a citation-parsing facility for news articles and
‘cpp.el’ which hides or highlights parts of C programs according to
preprocessor conditionals.
-
Tomas Abrahamsson wrote ‘artist.el’, a package for producing
ASCII art with a mouse or with keyboard keys.
-
Jay K. Adams wrote ‘jka-compr.el’, providing automatic decompression
and recompression for compressed files.
-
Ralf Angeli wrote ‘scroll-lock.el’, a minor mode which keeps the point
vertically fixed by scrolling the window when moving up and down in the
buffer.
-
Joe Arceneaux wrote the original text property implementation, and
implemented support for X11.
-
Miles Bader wrote ‘image-file.el’, support code for visiting image
files, ‘minibuf-eldef.el’, a minor mode whereby the default value is
shown in the minibuffer prompt only when appropriate, and ‘button.el’,
the library that implements clickable buttons.
-
David Bakhash wrote ‘strokes.el’, a mode for controlling Emacs by
moving the mouse in particular patterns.
-
Eli Barzilay wrote ‘calculator.el’, a desktop calculator for Emacs.
-
Steven L. Baur wrote ‘footnote.el’ which lets you include footnotes
in email messages, and ‘gnus-audio.el’ which provides sound effects for
Gnus.
-
Alexander L. Belikoff, Sergey Berezin, David Edmondson, Andreas Fuchs, Mario
Lang, Gergely Nagy, Michael Olson, and Alex Schroeder contributed ERC, an
advanced Internet Relay Chat client.
-
Boaz Ben-Zvi wrote ‘profile.el’, to time Emacs Lisp functions.
-
Anna M. Bigatti wrote ‘cal-html.el’, which produces HTML calendars.
-
Ray Blaak wrote ‘delphi.el’, a major mode for editing Delphi (Object
Pascal) source code.
-
Jim Blandy wrote Emacs 19's input system, brought its configuration and
build process up to the GNU coding standards, and contributed to the frame
support and multi-face support. Jim also wrote ‘tvi970.el’, terminal
support for the TeleVideo 970 terminals.
-
Per Bothner wrote ‘term.el’, a terminal emulator in an Emacs buffer.
-
Terrence M. Brannon wrote ‘landmark.el’, a neural-network robot that
learns landmarks.
-
Frank Bresz wrote ‘diff.el’, a program to display
diff
output.
-
Peter Breton implemented:
- -
‘dirtrack’ which does better tracking of directory changes in shell
buffers,
- -
‘filecache.el’ which records which directories your files are in,
- -
‘locate.el’ which interfaces to the
locate
command,
- -
‘find-lisp.el’, an Emacs Lisp emulation of the
find
program,
- -
‘net-utils.el’, and
- -
the “generic mode” feature.
-
Emmanuel Briot wrote ‘xml.el’, an XML parser for Emacs.
-
Kevin Broadey wrote ‘foldout.el’, providing folding extensions to
Emacs's outline modes.
-
David M. Brown wrote ‘array.el’, for editing arrays and other tabular
data.
-
Włodek Bzyl and Ryszard Kubiak wrote ‘ogonek.el’, a package for
changing the encoding of Polish characters.
-
Bill Carpenter provided ‘feedmail.el’, a package for massaging outgoing
mail messages and sending them through various popular mailers.
-
Per Cederqvist and Inge Wallin wrote ‘ewoc.el’, an Emacs widget for
manipulating object collections.
-
Hans Chalupsky wrote ‘advice.el’, an overloading mechanism for Emacs
Lisp functions, and ‘trace.el’, a tracing facility for Emacs Lisp.
-
Chris Chase and Carsten Dominik wrote ‘idlwave.el’, an editing mode for
IDL and WAVE CL.
-
Bob Chassell wrote ‘texnfo-upd.el’ and ‘makeinfo.el’, modes and
utilities for working with Texinfo files; and ‘page-ext.el’, commands
for extended page handling.
-
Andrew Choi wrote the Macintosh support code, and contributed
‘mac-win.el’, support for the Mac window system.
-
James Clark wrote ‘sgml-mode.el’, a mode for editing SGML documents,
and contributed to Emacs's dumping procedures.
-
Mike Clarkson wrote ‘edt.el’, an emulation of DEC's EDT editor.
-
Glynn Clements provided ‘gamegrid.el’ and a couple of games that use
it, Snake and Tetris.
-
Georges Brun-Cottan and Stefan Monnier wrote ‘easy-mmode.el’, a package
for easy definition of major and minor modes.
-
Andrew Csillag wrote M4 mode (‘m4-mode.el’).
-
Doug Cutting and Jamie Zawinski wrote ‘disass.el’, a disassembler for
compiled Emacs Lisp code.
-
Mathias Dahl wrote ‘image-dired.el’, a package for viewing image files
as “thumbnails.”
-
Michael DeCorte wrote ‘emacs.csh’, a C-shell script that starts a new
Emacs job, or restarts a paused Emacs if one exists.
-
Gary Delp wrote ‘mailpost.el’, an interface between RMAIL and the
‘/usr/uci/post’ mailer.
-
Matthieu Devin wrote ‘delsel.el’, a package to make newly-typed text
replace the current selection.
-
Eric Ding contributed ‘goto-addr.el’,
-
Jan Djärv added support for the GTK+ toolkit and X drag-and-drop.
-
Carsten Dominik wrote ‘reftex.el’, a package for setting up labels and
cross-references in LaTeX documents, and ‘org.el’, a mode for
maintaining notes, todo lists, and project planning.
-
Scott Draves wrote ‘tq.el’, help functions for maintaining transaction
queues between Emacs and its subprocesses.
-
Benjamin Drieu wrote ‘pong.el’, an implementation of the classical pong
game.
-
Viktor Dukhovni wrote support for dumping under SunOS version 4.
-
John Eaton co-wrote Octave mode.
-
Rolf Ebert co-wrote Ada mode (‘ada-mode.el’).
-
Stephen Eglen implemented ‘mspools.el’, for use with Procmail, which
tells you which mail folders have mail waiting in them, and
‘iswitchb.el’, a feature for incremental reading and completion of
buffer names.
-
Torbjörn Einarsson contributed the Fortran 90 mode (‘f90.el’).
-
Tsugutomo Enami co-wrote the support for international character sets.
-
Hans Henrik Eriksen wrote ‘simula.el’, a mode for editing SIMULA 87
code.
-
Michael Ernst wrote ‘reposition.el’, a command for recentering a
function's source code and preceding comment on the screen.
-
Ata Etemadi wrote ‘cdl.el’, functions for working with Common Data
Language source code.
-
Frederick Farnbach implemented ‘morse.el’, which converts text to Morse
code.
-
Oscar Figueiredo wrote EUDC, the Emacs Unified Directory Client, which is an
interface to directory servers via LDAP, CCSO PH/QI, or BBDB; and
‘ldap.el’, the LDAP client interface.
-
Fred Fish wrote the support for dumping COFF executable files.
-
Karl Fogel wrote:
- -
‘bookmark.el’, for creating named placeholders, saving them and jumping
to them later,
- -
‘mail-hist.el’, a history mechanism for outgoing mail messages, and
- -
‘saveplace.el’, for preserving point's location in files between
editing sessions.
-
Gary Foster wrote ‘crisp.el’, the emulation for CRiSP and Brief
editors, and ‘scroll-lock.el’ (now ‘scroll-all.el’) a mode for
scrolling several buffers together.
-
Noah Friedman wrote ‘rlogin.el’, an interface to Rlogin,
‘type-break.el’, which reminds you to take periodic breaks from typing,
and
eldoc-mode
, a mode to show the defined parameters or the doc
string for the Lisp function near point. With Roland McGrath, he wrote
‘rsz-mini.el’, a minor mode to automatically resize the minibuffer to
fit the text it contains.
-
Keith Gabryelski wrote ‘hexl.el’, a mode for editing binary files.
-
Kevin Gallagher rewrote and enhanced the EDT emulation, and wrote
‘flow-ctrl.el’, a package for coping with unsuppressible XON/XOFF flow
control.
-
Kevin Gallo added multiple-frame support for Windows NT and wrote
‘w32-win.el’, support functions for the MS-Windows window system.
-
Juan León Lahoz García wrote ‘wdired.el’, a package for
performing file operations by directly editing Dired buffers.
-
Howard Gayle wrote:
- -
the C and lisp code for display tables and case tables,
- -
‘rot13.el’, a command to display the plain-text form of a buffer
encoded with the Caesar cipher,
- -
‘case-table.el’, code to extend the character set and support case
tables,
- -
much of the support for the ISO-8859 European character sets (which includes
‘iso-ascii.el’, ‘iso-insert.el’, ‘iso-swed.el’,
‘latin-1.el’, ‘iso-syntax.el’, ‘iso-transl.el’,
‘swedish.el’), and
- -
‘vt100-led.el’, a package for controlling the LED's on VT100-compatible
terminals.
-
Stephen Gildea made the Emacs quick reference card, and made many
contributions for ‘time-stamp.el’, a package for maintaining
last-change time stamps in files.
-
Julien Gilles wrote ‘gnus-ml.el’, a mailing list minor mode for Gnus.
-
David Gillespie wrote:
- -
The Common Lisp compatibility packages,
- -
Calc
, an advanced calculator and mathematical tool,
- -
‘complete.el’, a partial completion mechanism, and
- -
‘edmacro.el’, a package for editing keyboard macros.
-
Bob Glickstein contributed the ‘sregex.el’ feature, a facility for
writing regexps using a Lisp-like syntax.
-
Boris Goldowsky wrote:
- -
‘avoid.el’, a package to keep the mouse cursor out of the way of the
text cursor,
- -
‘shadowfile.el’, a package for keeping identical copies of files in
more than one place,
- -
‘format.el’, a package for reading and writing files in various
formats,
- -
‘enriched.el’, a package for saving text properties in files, and
- -
‘facemenu.el’, a package for specifying faces.
-
Michelangelo Grigni wrote ‘ffap.el’ which visits a file, taking the
file name from the buffer.
-
Odd Gripenstam wrote ‘dcl-mode.el’ for editing DCL command files.
-
Kai Großjohann and Michael Albinus wrote the Tramp package, which
provides transparent remote file editing using rcp, ssh, ftp, and other
network protocols.
-
Michael Gschwind wrote ‘iso-cvt.el’, a package to convert between the
ISO 8859-1 character set and the notations for non-ASCII
characters used by TeX and net tradition, and ‘latin-2.el’, code
which sets up case-conversion and syntax tables for the ISO Latin-2
character set.
-
Henry Guillaume wrote ‘find-file.el’, a package to visit files related
to the currently visited file.
-
Doug Gwyn wrote the portable
alloca
implementation.
-
Ken'ichi Handa implemented most of the support for international character
sets, and wrote ‘isearch-x.el’, a facility for searching
non-ASCII text. Together with Naoto Takahashi, he wrote
‘quail.el’, a simple input facility for typing non-ASCII text
from an ASCII keyboard. Ken'ichi also wrote ‘ps-bdf.el’, a
BDF font support for printing non-ASCII text on a PostScript
printer.
-
Chris Hanson wrote ‘netuname.el’, a package to use HP-UX's Remote File
Access facility from Emacs.
-
Jesper Harder wrote ‘yenc.el’, for decoding yenc encoded messages.
-
K. Shane Hartman wrote:
- -
‘chistory.el’ and ‘echistory.el’, packages for browsing command
history lists,
- -
‘electric.el’ and ‘helper.el’, providing an alternative command
loop and appropriate help facilities,
- -
‘emacsbug.el’, a package for reporting Emacs bugs,
- -
‘picture.el’, a mode for editing ASCII pictures, and
- -
‘view.el’, a package for perusing files and buffers without editing
them.
-
John Heidemann wrote ‘mouse-copy.el’ and ‘mouse-drag.el’, which
provide alternative mouse-based editing and scrolling features.
-
Jon K Hellan wrote ‘utf7.el’, support for mail-safe transformation
format of Unicode.
-
Markus Heritsch co-wrote Ada mode (‘ada-mode.el’).
-
Karl Heuer wrote the original blessmail script, implemented the
intangible
text property, and rearranged the structure of the
Lisp_Object
type to allow for more data bits.
-
Manabu Higashida ported Emacs to MS-DOS.
-
Anders Holst wrote ‘hippie-exp.el’, a versatile completion and
expansion package.
-
Kurt Hornik co-wrote Octave mode.
-
Tom Houlder wrote ‘mantemp.el’, which generates manual C++ template
instantiations.
-
Joakim Hove wrote ‘html2text.el’, a html to plain text converter.
-
Denis Howe wrote ‘browse-url.el’, a package for invoking a WWW browser
to display a URL.
-
Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen did a major redesign of the Gnus news-reader and
wrote many of its parts.
-
Andrew Innes contributed extensively to the MS-Windows support.
-
Seiichiro Inoue improved Emacs's XIM support.
-
Ulf Jasper wrote ‘icalendar.el’, a package for converting Emacs diary
entries to and from the iCalendar format, and ‘newsticker.el’, an RSS
and Atom based Newsticker.
-
Kyle Jones wrote ‘life.el’, a package to play Conway's “life” game,
and ‘mldrag.el’, a package which allows the user to resize windows by
dragging mode lines and vertical window separators with the mouse.
-
Terry Jones wrote ‘shadow.el’, a package for finding potential
load-path problems when some Lisp file “shadows” another.
-
Simon Josefsson wrote:
- -
‘dns-mode.el’, an editing mode for Domain Name System master files,
- -
‘flow-fill.el’, a package for interpreting RFC2646 formatted text in
messages,
- -
‘fringe.el’, a package for customizing the fringe,
- -
‘imap.el’, an Emacs Lisp library for talking to IMAP servers,
- -
‘nnimap’, the IMAP back-end for Gnus, and
- -
‘rfc2104.el’, a hashed message authentication facility.
-
Arne Jørgensen wrote ‘latexenc.el’, a package to automatically guess
the correct coding system in LaTeX files.
-
Tomoji Kagatani implemented ‘smtpmail.el’, used for sending out mail
with SMTP.
-
David Kaufman wrote ‘yow.c’, an essential utility program for the
hopelessly pinheaded.
-
Henry Kautz wrote ‘bib-mode.el’, a mode for maintaining bibliography
databases compatible with
refer
(the troff
version) and
lookbib
, and ‘refbib.el’, a package to convert those databases
to the format used by the LaTeX text formatting package.
-
Taichi Kawabata added support for Devanagari script and the Indian
languages.
-
Howard Kaye wrote ‘sort.el’, commands to sort text in Emacs buffers.
-
Michael Kifer wrote ‘ediff.el’, an interactive interface to the
diff
, patch
, and merge
programs, and Viper,
the newest emulation for VI.
-
Richard King wrote the first version of ‘userlock.el’ and
‘filelock.c’, which provide simple support for multiple users editing
the same file. He also wrote the initial version of ‘uniquify.el’, a
facility to make buffer names unique by adding parts of the file's name to
the buffer name.
-
Peter Kleiweg wrote ‘ps-mode.el’, a major mode for editing PostScript
files and running a PostScript interpreter interactively from within Emacs.
-
Pavel Kobiakov wrote ‘flymake.el’, a minor mode for performing
on-the-fly syntax checking.
-
Larry K. Kolodney wrote ‘cvtmail.c’, a program to convert the mail
directories used by Gosling Emacs into RMAIL format.
-
David M. Koppelman wrote ‘hi-lock.el’, a minor mode for interactive
automatic highlighting of parts of the buffer text.
-
Koseki Yoshinori wrote ‘iimage.el’, a minor mode for displaying inline
images.
-
Robert Krawitz wrote the original ‘xmenu.c’, part of Emacs's pop-up
menu support.
-
Sebastian Kremer wrote Emacs 19's
dired-mode
, with contributions by
Lawrence R. Dodd. He also wrote ‘ls-lisp.el’, a Lisp emulation of
the ls
command for platforms which don't have ls
as a standard
program.
-
Geoff Kuenning wrote Emacs 19's ‘ispell.el’, based on work by Ken
Stevens and others.
-
David Kågedal wrote ‘tempo.el’, providing support for easy
insertion of boilerplate text and other common constructions.
-
Daniel LaLiberte wrote:
- -
‘edebug.el’, a source-level debugger for Emacs Lisp,
- -
‘cl-specs.el’, specifications to help
edebug
debug code written
using David Gillespie's Common Lisp support,
- -
‘cust-print.el’, a customizable package for printing lisp objects,
- -
‘eval-reg.el’, a re-implementation of
eval-region
in Emacs Lisp,
and
- -
‘isearch.el’, Emacs's incremental search minor mode.
-
James R. Larus wrote ‘mh-e.el’, an interface to the MH mail system.
-
Vinicius Jose Latorre wrote the Emacs printing facilities, as well as:
- -
ps-print
, a package for pretty-printing Emacs buffers to PostScript
printers,
- -
‘delim-col.el’, a package to arrange text into columns,
- -
‘ebnf2ps.el’, a package that translates EBNF grammar to a syntactic
chart that can be printed to a PostScript printer.
-
Frederic Lepied contributed ‘expand.el’, which uses the abbrev
mechanism for inserting programming constructs.
-
Peter Liljenberg wrote ‘elint.el’, a Lint-style code checker for Emacs
Lisp programs.
-
Lars Lindberg wrote ‘msb.el’, which provides more flexible menus for
buffer selection, and rewrote ‘dabbrev.el’.
-
Anders Lindgren wrote ‘autorevert.el’, a package for automatically
reverting files visited by Emacs that were changed on disk; ‘cwarn.el’,
a package to highlight suspicious C and C++ constructs; and
‘follow.el’, a minor mode to synchronize windows that show the same
buffer.
-
Thomas Link wrote ‘filesets.el’, a package for handling sets of files.
-
Dave Love wrote much of the code dealing with Unicode support and Latin-N
unification. He added support for many coding systems, including those in
‘code-pages.el’ and the various UTF-7 and UTF-16 coding systems. He
also wrote:
- -
autoarg-mode
, a global minor mode whereby digit keys supply prefix
arguments, and autoarg-kp-mode
which redefines the keypad numeric
keys to digit arguments,
- -
‘autoconf.el’, a mode for editing Autoconf ‘configure.in’ files,
- -
‘cfengine.el’, a mode for editing Cfengine files,
- -
‘elide-head.el’, a package for eliding boilerplate text, such as
copyright notices, from file headers,
- -
‘hl-line.el’, a package that provides a minor mode for highlighting the
line in the current window on which point is,
- -
‘latin-8.el’ and ‘latin-9.el’, code which sets up case-conversion
and syntax tables for the ISO Latin-8 and Latin-9 character sets,
- -
‘latin1-disp.el’, a package that lets you display ISO 8859 characters
on Latin-1 terminals by setting up appropriate display tables,
- -
‘python.el’, a major mode for the Python programming language.
- -
‘refill.el’, a mode for automatic paragraph refilling, akin to typical
word processors,
- -
‘smiley-ems.el’, a facility for displaying smiley faces, and
- -
‘tool-bar.el’, a mode to control the display of the Emacs tool bar.
-
Eric Ludlam wrote the Speedbar package and the following packages:
- -
‘checkdoc.el’, for checking doc strings in Emacs Lisp programs,
- -
‘dframe.el’, providing dedicatd frame support modes, and
- -
‘ezimage.el’, a generalized way to place images over text.
-
Alan Mackenzie wrote the integrated AWK support in CC Mode.
-
Christopher J. Madsen wrote ‘decipher.el’, a package for cracking
simple substitution ciphers.
-
Neil M. Mager wrote ‘appt.el’, functions to notify users of their
appointments. It finds appointments recorded in the diary files generated
by Edward M. Reingold's
calendar
package.
-
Ken Manheimer wrote ‘allout.el’, a mode for manipulating and formatting
outlines, and ‘icomplete.el’, which provides incremental completion
feedback in the minibuffer.
-
Bill Mann wrote ‘perl-mode.el’, a mode for editing Perl code.
-
Brian Marick and Daniel LaLiberte wrote ‘hideif.el’, support for hiding
selected code within C
#ifdef
clauses.
-
Simon Marshall wrote ‘regexp-opt.el’, which generates a regular
expression from a list of strings. He also extended ‘comint.el’,
originally written by Olin Shivers.
-
Bengt Martensson, Marc Shapiro, Mike Newton, Aaron Larson, and Stefan
Schoef, wrote ‘bibtex.el’, a mode for editing BibTeX bibliography
files.
-
Charlie Martin wrote ‘autoinsert.el’, which provides automatic
mode-sensitive insertion of text into new files.
-
Thomas May wrote ‘blackbox.el’, a version of the traditional blackbox
game.
-
Roland McGrath wrote:
- -
‘compile.el’, a package for running compilations in a buffer, and then
visiting the locations reported in error messages,
- -
‘etags.el’, a package for jumping to function definitions and searching
or replacing in all the files mentioned in a ‘TAGS’ file,
- -
‘find-dired.el’, for using
dired
commands on output from the
find
program, with Sebastian Kremer,
- -
‘map-ynp.el’, a general purpose boolean question-asker,
- -
‘autoload.el’, providing semi-automatic maintenance of autoload files,
and
- -
‘upd-copyr.el’, providing semi-automatic maintenance of copyright
notices in source code.
-
David Megginson wrote ‘derived.el’, which allows one to define new
major modes by inheriting key bindings and commands from existing major
modes.
-
Will Mengarini wrote ‘repeat.el’, a command to repeat the preceding
command with its arguments.
-
Wayne Mesard wrote ‘hscroll.el’ which does horizontal scrolling
automatically.
-
Brad Miller wrote ‘gnus-gl.el’, a Gnus interface for GroupLens.
-
Richard Mlynarik wrote:
- -
‘cl-indent.el’, a package for indenting Common Lisp code,
- -
‘ebuff-menu.el’, an “electric” browser for buffer listings,
- -
‘ehelp.el’, bindings for browsing help screens,
- -
‘rfc822.el’, a parser for E-mail addresses in the RFC-822 format, used
in mail messages and news articles,
- -
‘terminal.el’, a terminal emulator for Emacs subprocesses, and
- -
‘yow.el’, an essential utility (try M-x yow).
-
Gerd Moellmann was the Emacs maintainer from the beginning of Emacs 21
development until the release of 21.1. He wrote:
- -
the new display engine for Emacs 21,
- -
the asynchronous timers facility (‘atimer.c’),
- -
the
ebrowse
C++ browser,
- -
‘jit-lock.el’, the Just-In-Time font-lock support mode,
- -
‘tooltip.el’, a package for displaying tooltips, and
- -
‘authors.el’ package for maintaining the ‘AUTHORS’ files.
-
Stefan Monnier added support for Arch, Subversion, and Meta-CVS to VC, and
re-wrote much of the Emacs server to use the built-in networking
primitives. He also wrote:
- -
PCL-CVS
, a directory-level front end to the CVS version control
system,
- -
‘reveal.el’, a minor mode for automatically revealing invisible text,
- -
‘smerge-mode.el’, a minor mode for resolving
diff3
conflicts,
and
- -
‘diff-mode.el’, a mode for viewing and editing context diffs.
-
Morioka Tomohiko wrote several packages for MIME support in Gnus and
elsewhere.
-
Sen Nagata wrote ‘crm.el’, a package for reading multiple strings with
completion, and ‘rfc2368.el’, support for
mailto:
URLs.
-
Erik Naggum wrote the time-conversion functions. He also wrote
‘disp-table.el’, a package for dealing with display tables,
‘latin-4.el’ and ‘latin-5.el’, code which sets up case-conversion
and syntax tables for the ISO Latin-4 and Latin-5 character sets,
‘mailheader.el’, a package for parsing email headers, and
‘parse-time.el’, a package for parsing time strings.
-
Thomas Neumann and Eric Raymond wrote ‘makefile.el’ (now
‘make-mode.el’), a mode for editing makefiles.
-
Thien-Thi Nguyen and Dan Nicolaescu wrote ‘hideshow.el’, a minor mode
for selectively displaying blocks of text.
-
Dan Nicolaescu wrote ‘romanian.el’, support for editing Romanian text,
and ‘iris-ansi.el’, support for running Emacs on SGI's
xwsh
and
winterm
terminal emulators.
-
Jurgen Nickelsen wrote ‘ws-mode.el’, providing WordStar emulation.
-
Hrvoje Niksic wrote ‘savehist.el’, for saving the minibuffer history
between Emacs sessions.
-
Jeff Norden wrote ‘kermit.el’, a package to help the Kermit dialup
communications program run comfortably in an Emacs shell buffer.
-
Andrew Norman wrote ‘ange-ftp.el’, providing transparent FTP support.
-
Alexandre Oliva wrote ‘gnus-mlspl.el’, a group params-based mail
splitting mechanism.
-
Takaaki Ota wrote ‘table.el’, a package for creating and editing
embedded text-based tables.
-
Pieter E. J. Pareit wrote ‘mixal-mode.el’, an editing mode for the
MIX assembly language.
-
David Pearson contributed ‘quickurl.el’, a simple method of inserting a
URL into the current buffer based on text at point; ‘5x5.el’, a game to
fill all squares on the field.
-
Jeff Peck wrote:
- -
‘emacstool.c’, support for running Emacs under SunView/Sun Windows,
- -
‘sun.el’, key bindings for sunterm keys,
- -
‘sun-curs.el’, cursor definitions for Sun Windows, and
- -
‘sun-fns.el’ and ‘sun-mouse.el’, providing mouse support for Sun
Windows.
-
Damon Anton Permezel wrote ‘hanoi.el’, an animated demonstration of the
“Towers of Hanoi” puzzle.
-
William M. Perry wrote ‘mailcap.el’, a MIME media types configuration
facility, ‘mwheel.el’, a package for supporting mouse wheels, and the
URL package.
-
Per Persson wrote ‘gnus-vm.el’, the VM interface for Gnus.
-
Jens Petersen wrote ‘find-func.el’, which makes it easy to find the
source code for an Emacs Lisp function or variable.
-
Daniel Pfeiffer wrote:
- -
‘conf-mode.el’, a major mode for editing configuration files,
- -
‘copyright.el’, a package for updating copyright notices in files,
- -
‘executable.el’, a package for executing interpreter scripts,
- -
‘sh-script.el’, a mode for editing shell scripts,
- -
‘skeleton.el’, implementing a concise language for writing statement
skeletons, and
- -
‘two-column.el’, a minor mode for simultaneous two-column editing.
Daniel also rewrote ‘apropos.el’, originally written by Joe Wells, and,
together with Jim Blandy, co-authored ‘wyse50.el’, support for Wyse 50
terminals.
-
Richard L. Pieri wrote ‘pop3.el’, a Post Office Protocol (RFC 1460)
interface for Emacs.
-
Fred Pierresteguy and Paul Reilly made Emacs work with X Toolkit widgets.
-
Christian Plaunt wrote ‘soundex.el’, an implementation of the Soundex
algorithm for comparing English words by their pronunciation.
-
David Ponce wrote:
- -
‘recentf.el’, a package that puts a menu of recently visited files in
the Emacs menu bar,
- -
‘ruler-mode.el’, a minor mode for displaying a ruler in the header
line, and
- -
‘tree-widget.el’, a package to display hierarchical data structures.
-
Francesco A. Potorti wrote ‘cmacexp.el’, providing a command which
runs the C preprocessor on a region of a file and displays the results. He
also expanded and redesigned the
etags
program.
-
Michael D. Prange and Steven A. Wood wrote ‘fortran.el’, a mode for
editing FORTRAN code.
-
Mukesh Prasad contributed ‘vmsproc.el’, a facility for running
asynchronous subprocesses on VMS.
-
Marko Rahamaa wrote ‘latin-3.el’, code which sets up case-conversion
and syntax tables for the ISO Latin-3 character set.
-
Ashwin Ram wrote ‘refer.el’, commands to look up references in
bibliography files by keyword.
-
Eric S. Raymond wrote:
- -
‘vc.el’, an interface to the RCS and SCCS source code version control
systems, with Paul Eggert,
- -
‘gud.el’, a package for running source-level debuggers like GDB and SDB
in Emacs,
- -
‘asm-mode.el’, a mode for editing assembly language code,
- -
‘AT386.el’, terminal support package for IBM's AT keyboards,
- -
‘cookie1.el’, support for “fortune-cookie” programs like
‘yow.el’ and ‘spook.el’,
- -
‘finder.el’, a package for finding Emacs Lisp packages by keyword and
topic,
- -
‘keyswap.el’, code to swap the <BS> and <DEL> keys,
- -
‘loadhist.el’, functions for loading and unloading Emacs features,
- -
‘lisp-mnt.el’, functions for working with the special headers used in
Emacs Lisp library files, and
- -
code to set and make use of the
load-history
lisp variable, which
records the source file from which each lisp function loaded into Emacs
came.
-
Edward M. Reingold wrote the extensive calendar and diary support (try
M-x calendar), with contributions from Stewart Clamen, Nachum
Dershowitz, Paul Eggert, Steve Fisk, Michael Kifer, and Lara Rios. Andy
Oram contributed to its documentation. Reingold has also contributed to
‘tex-mode.el’, a mode for editing TeX files, as have William F.
Schelter, Dick King, Stephen Gildea, Michael Prange, and Jacob Gore.
-
David Reitter wrote ‘mailclient.el’ which can send mail via the
system's designated mail client.
-
Alex Rezinsky contributed ‘which-func.el’, a mode that shows the name
of the current function in the mode line.
-
Rob Riepel contributed ‘tpu-edt.el’ and its associated files, providing
an emulation of the VMS TPU text editor emulating the VMS EDT editor, and
‘vt-control.el’, providing some control functions for the DEC VT line
of terminals.
-
Nick Roberts wrote ‘gdb-ui.el’, the graphical user interface to GDB.
-
Roland B. Roberts contributed much of the VMS support distributed with
Emacs 19, along with Joseph M. Kelsey, and ‘vms-pmail.el’, support
for using Emacs within VMS MAIL.
-
John Robinson wrote ‘bg-mouse.el’, support for the mouse on the BBN
Bitgraph terminal.
-
Danny Roozendaal implemented ‘handwrite.el’, which converts text into
“handwriting.”
-
William Rosenblatt wrote ‘float.el’, implementing a floating-point
numeric type using Lisp cons cells and integers.
-
Guillermo J. Rozas wrote ‘scheme.el’, a mode for editing Scheme and
DSSSL code, and ‘fakemail.c’, an interface to the System V mailer.
-
Ivar Rummelhoff provided ‘winner.el’, which records recent window
configurations so you can move back to them.
-
Jason Rumney has ported the Emacs 21 display engine to MS-Windows, and
contributed extensively to the MS-Windows port of Emacs.
-
Wolfgang Rupprecht contributed Emacs 19's floating-point support (including
‘float-sup.el’ and ‘floatfns.c’), and ‘sup-mouse.el’, support
for the Supdup mouse on lisp machines.
-
Kevin Ryde wrote ‘info-xref.el’, a library for checking references in
Info files.
-
James B. Salem and Brewster Kahle wrote ‘completion.el’, providing
dynamic word completion.
-
Masahiko Sato wrote ‘vip.el’, an emulation of the VI editor.
-
Holger Schauer wrote ‘fortune.el’, a package for using fortune in
message signatures.
-
William Schelter wrote ‘telnet.el’, support for
telnet
sessions
within Emacs.
-
Ralph Schleicher contributed ‘battery.el’, a package for displaying
laptop computer battery status, and ‘info-look.el’, a package for
looking up Info documentation for symbols in the buffer.
-
Michael Schmidt and Tom Perrine wrote ‘modula2.el’, a mode for editing
Modula-2 code, based on work by Mick Jordan and Peter Robinson.
-
Ronald S. Schnell wrote ‘dunnet.el’, a text adventure game.
-
Philippe Schnoebelen wrote ‘gomoku.el’, a Go Moku game played against
Emacs, and ‘mpuz.el’, a multiplication puzzle.
-
Jan Schormann wrote ‘solitaire.el’, an Emacs Lisp implementation of the
Solitaire game.
-
Alex Schroeder wrote ‘ansi-color.el’, a package for translating ANSI
color escape sequences to Emacs faces, and ‘sql.el’, a package for
interactively running an SQL interpreter in an Emacs buffer.
-
Randal Schwartz wrote ‘pp.el’, a pretty-printer for lisp objects.
-
Oliver Seidel wrote ‘todo-mode.el’, a package for maintaining
‘TODO’ list files.
-
Manuel Serrano contributed the Flyspell package that does spell checking as
you type.
-
Hovav Shacham wrote ‘windmove.el’, a set of commands for selecting
windows based on their geometrical position on the frame.
-
Stanislav Shalunov wrote ‘uce.el’, for responding to unsolicited
commercial email.
-
Richard Sharman contributed ‘hilit-chg.el’, which uses colors to show
recent editing changes.
-
Olin Shivers wrote:
- -
‘comint.el’, a library for modes running interactive command-line-
oriented subprocesses,
- -
‘cmuscheme.el’, for running inferior Scheme processes,
- -
‘inf-lisp.el’, for running inferior Lisp process, and
- -
‘shell.el’, for running inferior shells.
-
Espen Skoglund wrote ‘pascal.el’, a mode for editing Pascal code.
-
Rick Sladkey wrote ‘backquote.el’, a lisp macro for creating
mostly-constant data.
-
Lynn Slater wrote ‘help-macro.el’, a macro for writing interactive help
for key bindings.
-
Chris Smith wrote ‘icon.el’, a mode for editing Icon code.
-
David Smith wrote ‘ielm.el’, a mode for interacting with the Emacs Lisp
interpreter as a subprocess.
-
Paul D. Smith wrote ‘snmp-mode.el’.
-
William Sommerfeld wrote ‘scribe.el’, a mode for editing Scribe files,
and ‘server.el’, a package allowing programs to send files to an extant
Emacs job to be edited.
-
Andre Spiegel made many contributions to the Emacs Version Control package,
and in particular made it support multiple back ends.
-
Michael Staats wrote ‘pc-select.el’, which rebinds keys for selecting
regions to follow many other systems.
-
Richard Stallman invented Emacs, and then wrote:
- -
‘easymenu.el’, a facility for defining Emacs menus,
- -
‘menu-bar.el’, the Emacs menu bar support code,
- -
‘paren.el’, a package to make matching parentheses stand out in color,
and
- -
most of the rest of Emacs code.
-
Sam Steingold wrote ‘gulp.el’, a facility for asking package
maintainers for updated versions of their packages via e-mail, and
‘midnight.el’, a package for running a command every midnight.
-
Ake Stenhoff and Lars Lindberg wrote ‘imenu.el’, a framework for
browsing indices made from buffer contents.
-
Peter Stephenson contributed ‘vcursor.el’, which implements a “virtual
cursor” that you can move with the keyboard and use for copying text.
-
Ken Stevens wrote the initial version of ‘ispell.el’ and maintains that
package since Ispell 3.1 release.
-
Jonathan Stigelman wrote ‘hilit19.el’, a package providing automatic
highlighting in source code buffers, mail readers, and other contexts.
-
Kim F. Storm made many improvements to the Emacs display engine, process
support, and networking support. He also wrote:
- -
‘bindat.el’, a package for encoding and decoding binary data.
- -
‘cua.el’, which allows Emacs to emulate the standard CUA key bindings.
- -
‘ido.el’, a package for selecting buffers and files quickly.
- -
‘kmacro.el’, the keyboard macro facility.
-
Martin Stjernholm co-authored CC Mode, a major editing mode for C, C++,
Objective-C, Java, Pike, CORBA IDL, and AWK code.
-
Steve Strassman did not write ‘spook.el’, and even if he did, he really
didn't mean for you to use it in an anarchistic way.
-
Olaf Sylvester wrote ‘bs.el’, a package for manipulating Emacs buffers.
-
Tibor S<imko and Milan Zamazal wrote ‘slovak.el’, support for
editing text in Slovak language.
-
Naoto Takahashi wrote ‘utf-8.el’, support for encoding and decoding
UTF-8 data.
-
Luc Teirlinck wrote ‘help-at-pt.el’, providing local help through the
keyboard.
-
Jean-Philippe Theberge wrote ‘thumbs.el’, a package for viewing image
files as “thumbnails.”
-
Jens T. Berger Thielemann wrote ‘word-help.el’, which is part of the
basis for ‘info-look.el’.
-
Spencer Thomas wrote the original ‘dabbrev.el’, providing a command
which completes the partial word before point, based on other nearby words
for which it is a prefix. He also wrote the original dumping support.
-
Jim Thompson wrote ‘ps-print.el’, which converts Emacs text to
PostScript.
-
Tom Tromey and Chris Lindblad wrote ‘tcl.el’, a major mode for editing
Tcl/Tk source files and running a Tcl interpreter as an Emacs subprocess.
-
Eli Tziperman wrote ‘rmail-spam-filter.el’, a spam filter for RMAIL.
-
Daiki Ueno wrote ‘starttls.el’, support for Transport Layer Security
protocol, and the PGG package adding GnuPG and PGP support.
-
Masanobu Umeda wrote:
- -
GNUS, a feature-full reader for Usenet news,
- -
‘prolog.el’, a mode for editing Prolog code,
- -
‘rmailsort.el’, a package for sorting messages in RMAIL folders,
- -
‘metamail.el’, an interface to the Metamail program,
- -
‘gnus-kill.el’, the Kill File mode for Gnus,
- -
‘gnus-mh.el’, an mh-e interface for Gnus,
- -
‘gnus-msg.el’, a mail and post interface for Gnus,
- -
‘tcp.el’, emulation of the
open-network-stream
function for some
Emacs configurations which lack it, and
- -
‘timezone.el’, providing functions for dealing with time zones.
-
Rajesh Vaidheeswarran wrote ‘whitespace.el’, a package that detects and
cleans up excess whitespace in a file.
-
Neil W. Van Dyke wrote ‘webjump.el’, a “hot links” package.
-
Didier Verna contributed ‘rect.el’, a package of functions for
operations on rectangle regions of text.
-
Ulrik Vieth implemented ‘meta-mode.el’, for editing MetaFont code.
-
Geoffrey Voelker wrote the Windows NT support. He also wrote
‘dos-w32.el’, functions shared by the MS-DOS and MS-Windows ports of
Emacs, and ‘w32-fns.el’, MS-Windows specific support functions.
-
Johan Vromans wrote ‘forms.el’ and its associated files, a mode for
filling in forms.
-
Colin Walters wrote ‘ibuffer.el’, a Dired-like major mode for operating
on buffers.
-
Barry Warsaw wrote:
- -
‘assoc.el’, a set of utility functions for working with association
lists,
- -
‘cc-mode.el’, a major mode for editing C, C++, and Java code, based
on earlier work by Dave Detlefs, Stewart Clamen, and Richard Stallman,
- -
‘elp.el’, a new profiler for Emacs Lisp programs.
- -
‘man.el’, a mode for reading UNIX manual pages,
- -
‘regi.el’, providing an AWK-like functionality for use in lisp
programs,
- -
‘reporter.el’, providing customizable bug reporting for lisp packages,
and
- -
‘supercite.el’, a minor mode for quoting sections of mail messages and
news articles.
-
Morten Welinder introduced face support into the MS-DOS port of Emacs, and
also wrote:
- -
‘desktop.el’, facilities for saving some of Emacs's state between
sessions,
- -
‘timer.el’, the Emacs facility to run commands at a given time or
frequency, or when Emacs is idle, and its C-level support code,
- -
‘pc-win.el’, the MS-DOS “window-system” support,
- -
‘internal.el’, an “internal terminal” emulator for the MS-DOS port of
Emacs,
- -
‘arc-mode.el’, the mode for editing compressed archives,
- -
‘s-region.el’, commands for setting the region using the shift key and
motion commands, and
- -
‘dos-fns.el’, functions for use under MS-DOS.
He also helped port Emacs to MS-DOS.
-
Joseph Brian Wells wrote:
- -
‘apropos.el’, a command to find commands, functions, and variables
whose names contain matches for a regular expression,
- -
‘resume.el’, support for processing command-line arguments after
resuming a suspended Emacs job, and
- -
‘mail-extr.el’, a package for extracting names and addresses from mail
headers, with contributions from Jamie Zawinski.
-
Rodney Whitby and Reto Zimmermann wrote ‘vhdl-mode.el’, a major mode
for editing VHDL source code.
-
John Wiegley wrote ‘align.el’, a set of commands for aligning text
according to regular-expression based rules; ‘timeclock.el’, a package
for keeping track of time spent on projects; ‘pcomplete.el’, a
programmable completion facility; and
eshell
, a command shell
implemented entirely in Emacs Lisp.
-
Ed Wilkinson wrote ‘b2m.c’, a program to convert mail files from RMAIL
format to Unix
mbox
format.
-
Mike Williams wrote ‘mouse-sel.el’, providing enhanced mouse selection,
and ‘thingatpt.el’, a library of functions for finding the “thing”
(word, line, s-expression) containing point.
-
Bill Wohler wrote the Emacs interface to the MH mail system.
-
Dale R. Worley wrote ‘emerge.el’, a package for interactively merging
two versions of a file.
-
Francis J. Wright wrote
WoMan
, a package for browsing manual pages
without the man
command.
-
Tom Wurgler wrote ‘emacs-lock.el’, which makes it harder to exit with
valuable buffers unsaved.
-
Masatake Yamato wrote ‘ld-script.el’, an editing mode for GNU linker
scripts, and contributed subword handling in CC mode.
-
Jonathan Yavner wrote ‘testcover.el’, a package for keeping track of
the testing status of Emacs Lisp code, and the SES spreadsheet package.
-
Ryan Yeske wrote ‘rcirc.el’ a simple Internet Relay Chat client.
-
Ilya Zakharevich and Bob Olson contributed ‘cperl-mode.el’, a major
mode for editing Perl code. Ilya Zakharevich also wrote ‘tmm.el’, a
mode for accessing the Emacs menu bar on a text-mode terminal.
-
Milan Zamazal wrote ‘czech.el’, support for editing Czech text,
‘glasses.el’, a package for easier reading of source code which uses
illegible identifier names such as
cantReadThisVariable
, and
‘tildify.el’, commands for adding hard spaces to text, TeX, and
SGML/HTML files.
-
Victor Zandy contributed ‘zone.el’, a package for people who like to
zone out in front of Emacs.
-
Eli Zaretskii made many standard Emacs features work on MS-DOS. He also
wrote ‘tty-colors.el’, which implements transparent mapping of X colors
to tty colors, and (together with Kenichi Handa) ‘codepage.el’, a
package for editing text encoded in DOS/Windows code pages.
-
Jamie Zawinski wrote:
- -
Emacs 19's optimizing byte compiler, with Hallvard Furuseth,
- -
much of the support for faces and X selections,
- -
‘mailabbrev.el’, a package providing automatic expansion of mail
aliases, and
- -
‘tar-mode.el’, providing simple viewing and editing commands for tar
files.
-
Andrew Zhilin created the Emacs icons used beginning with Emacs 22.
-
Shenghuo Zhu wrote:
- -
‘binhex.el’, a package for reading and writing binhex files,
- -
‘mm-partial.el’, message/partial support for MIME messages,
- -
‘rfc1843.el’, an HZ decoding package,
- -
‘uudecode.el’, an Emacs Lisp decoder for uuencoded data,
- -
‘webmail.el’, an interface to Web mail.
-
Ian T. Zimmerman wrote ‘gametree.el’.
-
Neal Ziring and Felix S. T. Wu wrote ‘vi.el’, an emulation of the
VI text editor.
-
Detlev Zundel wrote ‘re-builder.el’, a package for building regexps
with visual feedback.
Others too numerous to mention have reported and fixed bugs, and added
features to many parts of Emacs. (Many are mentioned in the
‘ChangeLog’ files which are summarized in the file ‘AUTHORS’ in
the distribution.) We thank them for their generosity as well.
This list intended to mention every contributor of a major package or
feature we currently distribute; if you know of someone we have omitted,
please report that as a manual bug.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.