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Emacs has the ability to hide lines indented more than a certain number of columns (you specify how many columns). You can use this to get an overview of a part of a program.
To hide lines in the current buffer, type C-x $
(set-selective-display
) with a numeric argument n. Then lines
with at least n columns of indentation disappear from the screen. The
only indication of their presence is that three dots (‘…’) appear
at the end of each visible line that is followed by one or more hidden ones.
The commands C-n and C-p move across the hidden lines as if they were not there.
The hidden lines are still present in the buffer, and most editing commands see them as usual, so you may find point in the middle of the hidden text. When this happens, the cursor appears at the end of the previous line, after the three dots. If point is at the end of the visible line, before the newline that ends it, the cursor appears before the three dots.
To make all lines visible again, type C-x $ with no argument.
If you set the variable selective-display-ellipses
to nil
, the
three dots do not appear at the end of a line that precedes hidden lines.
Then there is no visible indication of the hidden lines. This variable
becomes local automatically when set.
See also Outline Mode for another way to hide part of the text in a buffer.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.