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A window in Emacs is the physical area of the screen in which a buffer is displayed. The term is also used to refer to a Lisp object that represents that screen area in Emacs Lisp. It should be clear from the context which is meant.
Emacs groups windows into frames. A frame represents an area of screen available for Emacs to use. Each frame always contains at least one window, but you can subdivide it vertically or horizontally into multiple nonoverlapping Emacs windows.
In each frame, at any time, one and only one window is designated as
selected within the frame. The frame's cursor appears in that window,
but the other windows have “non-selected” cursors, normally less visible.
At any time, one frame is the selected frame; and the window selected within
that frame is the selected window. The selected window's buffer is
usually the current buffer (except when set-buffer
has been used).
Voir la section The Current Buffer.
If this variable is nil
, Emacs displays only one cursor, in the
selected window. Other windows have no cursor at all.
For practical purposes, a window exists only while it is displayed in a frame. Once removed from the frame, the window is effectively deleted and should not be used, even though there may still be references to it from other Lisp objects. Restoring a saved window configuration is the only way for a window no longer on the screen to come back to life. (Voir la section Deleting Windows.)
Each window has the following attributes:
Users create multiple windows so they can look at several buffers at once. Lisp libraries use multiple windows for a variety of reasons, but most often to display related information. In Rmail, for example, you can move through a summary buffer in one window while the other window shows messages one at a time as they are reached.
The meaning of “window” in Emacs is similar to what it means in the context of general-purpose window systems such as X, but not identical. The X Window System places X windows on the screen; Emacs uses one or more X windows as frames, and subdivides them into Emacs windows. When you use Emacs on a character-only terminal, Emacs treats the whole terminal screen as one frame.
Most window systems support arbitrarily located overlapping windows. In contrast, Emacs windows are tiled; they never overlap, and together they fill the whole screen or frame. Because of the way in which Emacs creates new windows and resizes them, not all conceivable tilings of windows on an Emacs frame are actually possible. Voir la section Splitting Windows, and The Size of a Window.
Voir la section Emacs Display, for information on how the contents of the window's buffer are displayed in the window.
This function returns t
if object is a window.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 13 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.