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Re: does emacs wrap lines that are exactly 80 characters long??
From: |
Arthur Davis |
Subject: |
Re: does emacs wrap lines that are exactly 80 characters long?? |
Date: |
Thu, 30 Oct 2003 12:33:51 -0500 |
Even though the extra column exists to give the long line wrap
indication (which is an improvement, I agree), emacs still displays an
additional, blank line below the 80 char line. This has always been
an irritation to me that I have just learned to ignore. However, is
there something that I can set to cause emacs to not display a new
line until it actually contains characters from a line wrap? Showing
the cursor on the first column of the new line is fine, but if I
pressed return at the end of an 80 character line, I would want the
cursor to stay put.
But regarding the quote from the original post referring to long lines
in program code, I couldn't agree more. It makes code *very*
unreadable when lines wrap 4 and 5 (or more) times in the window. A
few characters wrapped to the next line are occasionally tolerable,
but I still feel that there is rarely a time when you are unable to
keep lines within the 80 character limit, assuming you don't use
8-character tab widths.
Arthur
Christian Seberino writes:
> So if I understand you correctly, 80 char long lines WERE a problem
> in 80 char long windows PRIOR TO VERSION 21 because of the slash at the
> end??
>
> But, in current version of Emacs and beyond this is not a problem
> anymore and I don't need to have <= 79 char wide l lines??
>
> Chris
>
> Barry Margolin <barry.margolin@level3.com> wrote in message
> news:<f1Vnb.292$lK3.9@news.level3.com>...
> > In article <bf23f78f.0310291130.16f9c787@posting.google.com>,
> > Christian Seberino <seberino@spawar.navy.mil> wrote:
> > >I don't know what this means but Python style guide says to set Emacs to
> > >79
> > >character long lines....
> > >
> > > There are still many devices around that are limited to 80
> > > character lines; plus, limiting windows to 80 characters makes it
> > > possible to have several windows side-by-side. The default
> > > wrapping on such devices looks ugly. Therefore, please limit all
> > > lines to a maximum of 79 characters (Emacs wraps lines that are
> > > exactly 80 characters long). For flowing long blocks of text
> > > (docstrings or comments), limiting the length to 72 characters is
> > > recommended.
> > >
> > >I don't seem to have a problem with 80 char long lines. Maybe I'm
> > >missing something
> > >here??
> >
> > What size is your window? The comment is probably referring to Emacs being
> > used on a traditional 24x80 terminal. With a window system, you can change
> > the window size, and the wrapping will be appropriate to that size.
> >
> > Also, prior to Emacs 21, Emacs wasted a column for the "\" character that's
> > used to indicate that a line has wrapped (Emacs 21 replaced this with a
> > marker closer to the window border). So a line that's exactly the window's
> > width would be wrapped -- the first n-1 characters would be on the line,
> > then there would be a "\", and then the next line would contain the nth
> > character.
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