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As an alternative to continuation, Emacs can display long lines by truncation. This means that all the characters that do not fit in the width of the screen or window do not appear at all. On graphical displays, a small straight arrow in the fringe indicates truncation at either end of the line. On text-only terminals, ‘$’ appears in the first column when there is text truncated to the left, and in the last column when there is text truncated to the right.
Horizontal scrolling automatically causes line truncation (@pxref{Horizontal
Scrolling}). You can explicitly enable line truncation for a particular
buffer with the command M-x toggle-truncate-lines. This works by
locally changing the variable truncate-lines
. If that variable is
non-nil
, long lines are truncated; if it is nil
, they are
continued onto multiple screen lines. Setting the variable
truncate-lines
in any way makes it local to the current buffer; until
that time, the default value is in effect. The default value is normally
nil
.
If the variable truncate-partial-width-windows
is non-nil
, it
forces truncation rather than continuation in any window less than the full
width of the screen or frame, regardless of the value of
truncate-lines
. For information about side-by-side windows, see
Splitting Windows. See also (elisp)Display section `Display' dans The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
If the variable overflow-newline-into-fringe
is non-nil
on a
graphical display, then Emacs does not continue or truncate a line which is
exactly as wide as the window. Instead, the newline overflows into the
right fringe, and the cursor appears in the fringe when positioned on that
newline.
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 23 Février 2009 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.