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Re: XML mode in emacs


From: Ramprasad B
Subject: Re: XML mode in emacs
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2006 20:58:52 -0800 (PST)

Lennart Borgman <lennart.borgman.073@student.lu.se> wrote:

> Is there maybe something we can preview so far?

Here is the diff -u changes  that i have done since 2-3 months of taking up this job.

For the core technical changes, i approached Eric since he had replied me for helping me out in this task.

But this is wat he mailed me yesterday -

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>>> "Ramprasad" == Ramprasad B <ramprasad_i82@yahoo.com> writes:

Ramprasad> Can i know the status of the editing of GNU Emacs w32
Ramprasad> FAQ page ?

I'm sorry, I forgot completely about it; I haven't done a thing.

I'm going to be out of town for a couple of weeks soon, too, so I
won't be able to work on it then, either. I'm sorry.
---------------------------------------------------------


This is wat the status of GNU Emacs w32 FAQ page upto now.

------------------------------------------------------------
--- big.html 2006-01-14 22:09:22.000000000 -0700
+++ emacs/windows/big.html 2006-03-05 20:11:05.000000000 -0700
@@ -23,19 +23,19 @@
<hr>

<center>
-<h3><a name="TOC1">GNU Emacs FAQ For Windows 95/98/ME/NT/XP and 2000</a></h3>
-<h4><a name="TOC2">The latest version of Emacs is 21.2</a></h4>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC1">GNU Emacs FAQ For Windows 95/98/ME/NT/XP and 2000</A></H3>
+<H4><A NAME="TOC2">The latest version of Emacs is 21.3</A></H4>
</center>

<P>&nbsp;</P>
-<h3><a name="TOC3">0. Notes</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC3">0. Notes</A></H3>

<UL>
<LI>This FAQ now takes advantage of all the <a href="" >GNU mirrors</a>.</LI>
-<LI>The latest version of GNU Emacs is v21.2, see <A HREF="">The Introduction</A>, <A HREF="">Getting Emacs</A>, and <A HREF="">Installing Emacs</A>, for more details.</LI> [Again some virus scanners are having problems with Emacs - claiming the distributed binaries contain a virus].
+<LI>The latest version of GNU Emacs is v21.3, see <A HREF="">The Introduction</A>, <A HREF="">Getting Emacs</A>, and <A HREF="">Installing Emacs</A>, for more details.</LI>[Again some virus scanners are having problems with Emacs - claiming the distributed binaries contain a virus].
</UL>

-<h3><a name="TOC4"><A HREF="">1. Introduction</A></a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC4"><A HREF=""> 1. Introduction</A></A></H3>
<UL>
<LI> <A HREF="">What is Emacs?</A></LI>
<LI> <A HREF="">Which versions of Windows are supported?</A>
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@

</UL>

-<h3><a name="TOC5"><A HREF="">2. Getting Emacs</A></a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC5"><A HREF="">2. Getting Emacs</A></A></H3>
<UL>
<li> <A HREF="">Where can I get the source distribution?</A></LI>
<UL>
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@
<li> <A HREF="">What are the differences between Emacs 21.x, and 20.x</A>
</UL>

-<h3><a name="TOC6"><A HREF="">3. Installing Emacs</A>.</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC6"><A HREF="">3. Installing Emacs</A>.</A></H3>
<UL>
<li> <A HREF="">How do I unpack the distributions?</A>
<li> <A HREF="">How do I install Emacs, after unpacking?</A>
@@ -107,7 +107,7 @@
<li> <A HREF="">How does Emacs determine the name of my computer?</A>
</UL>

-<h3><a name="TOC7"><A HREF="">4. Display Settings</A></a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC7"><A HREF="">4. Display Settings</A></A></H3>
<UL>
<li><a href="">How do I change the size, position, and color attributes of Emacs?</a>
<ul>
@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@
</ul>
</UL>
</UL>
-<h3><a name="TOC8"><A HREF="">5. Fonts, and text translation</A></a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC8"><A HREF="">5. Fonts, and text translation</A></A></H3>
<UL>
<li> How do I change the <A HREF="">Font</A> Emacs uses?
<li> <A HREF="">Information on italic fonts.</A>
@@ -173,7 +173,7 @@
</ul>
</UL>

-<h3><a name="TOC9"><A HREF="">6. Printing</A></a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC9"><A HREF="">6. Printing</A></A></H3>
<UL>
<LI> <A HREF="">How do I print from Emacs?</A>
<li> <A HREF="">Printing via Ghostscript</A>
@@ -181,7 +181,7 @@
<li> <a href="">How do I print to a printer that is directly connected to a network?</a></li>
</UL>

-<h3><a name="TOC10"><A HREF="">7. Sub-processes</A></a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC10"><A HREF="">7. Sub-processes</A></A></H3>
<ul>
<li> <A HREF="">Quoting issues</A>
<li> <A HREF="">Programs reading input hang</A>
@@ -210,7 +210,7 @@
nothing happens. What could be wrong?</a>
</ul>

-<h3><a name="TOC11"><A HREF="">8. Mail, News, and Network access</A></a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC11"><A HREF="">8. Mail, News, and Network access</A></A></H3>
<ul>
<li> <A HREF="">How do I use mail with Emacs?</A>
<ul>
@@ -245,7 +245,7 @@
<li> <A HREF="">How do I use telnet with Emacs?</A>
</ul>
</ul>
-<h3><a name="TOC12"><A HREF="">9. Text, and utility, modes for Emacs</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC12"><A HREF="">9. Text, and utility, modes for Emacs</A></H3>
<ul>
<li> <A HREF="">How do I use TeX with Emacs?</A>
<ul>
@@ -273,7 +273,7 @@
</ul>


-<h3><a name="TOC13"><A HREF="">10. Developing with Emacs</A></a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC13"><A HREF="">10. Developing with Emacs</A></A></H3>
<ul>
<li> <A HREF="">How Do I Use Emacs with Microsoft Visual C++</A>
<ul>
@@ -308,7 +308,7 @@
<li> <A HREF="">How do I use python-mode with Emacs?</A>
</ul>

-<h3><a name="TOC14"><A HREF="">11. Other Unix Ports, and further information</A></a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC14"><A HREF="">11. Other Unix Ports, and further information</A></A></H3>
<ul>
<li>Further Information.
<ul>
@@ -332,7 +332,7 @@


<A NAME="whatisit" title="whatisit"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC15">What is Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC15">What is Emacs?</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -343,7 +343,7 @@
For a more detailed description, see the GNU pages at <a href="" >http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/emacs.html</a>.

<A NAME="support" title="support"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC16">Which versions of Windows are supported?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC16">Which versions of Windows are supported?</A></H3>

<p>
This port is known to run on all versions of Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows ME, Windows NT, Windows XP, and Windows 2000.
@@ -360,25 +360,26 @@


<A NAME="support-msdos" title="support-msdos"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC17">MSDOS and Windows 3.11</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC17">MSDOS and Windows 3.11</A></H3>


<p>
-Eli Zaretskii &lt;<A HREF="">eliz@is.elta.co.il</A>&gt;
+Eli Zaretskii &lt;<A HREF="">eliz@gnu.org</A>&gt;
maintains the port of GNU Emacs
for MSDOS and MS Windows. You can download precompiled versions
with the latest DJGPP archives:

<ul>
-<li><a href="">ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/emacs.README</a>
-<li><a href="">ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu</a>
+<li><a href="">ftp://ftp.delorie.com/pub/djgpp/current/v2gnu/emacs.README</a>
+<li><a href="">ftp://ftp.delorie.com/pub/djgpp/current/v2gnu/emacs19.README</a>
+<li><a href="">ftp://ftp.delorie.com/pub/djgpp/current/v2gnu/</a>
</ul>

<p>
-Eli strongly recommends that you start with the emacs.README file:
-it contains crucial info about what's in the other 10 zip files and
-how to install them and get started with Emacs on MSDOS/MS-Windows
-platforms.
+Eli strongly recommends that you start with the emacs.README and emacs19.README files:
+They include detailed instructions about the files that are parts of the package, who
+needs what files, how and where to download the package, how to install them and
+get started with Emacs on MSDOS/MS-Windows platforms.

<p>
More from Eli:
@@ -395,19 +396,19 @@
will need to download and install a DPMI host at this URL:

<p>
-<a href="">ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2misc/csdpmi3b.zip</a>
+<a href="">ftp://ftp.delorie.com/pub/djgpp/current/v2misc/csdpmi5b.zip</a>
</blockquote>


<A NAME="support-mule" title="support-mule"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC18">MULE/Meadow</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC18">MULE/Meadow</A></H3>


<p>
-Hisashi Miyashita &lt;<A HREF="">himi@bird.scphys.kyoto-u.ac.jp</A>&gt;
+Hisashi Miyashita &lt;<A HREF="">hisashi.miyashita@xemacs.org</A>&gt;
maintains
MULE, multilingual Emacs, and its descendant; Meadow. You can get
-distributions of MULE at <a href="">ftp://ftp.tokyonet.AD.JP/pub/windows/win32/mule-win32</a>.
+distributions of MULE at <a href="">ftp://ftp.m17n.org/pub/mule/Mule-UCS/</a>.
With the multilingual support now merged into NTEmacs in 20.4, it is no
longer necessary to use a special version of Emacs for other languages, but
MULE users may find upgrading to Meadow easier than to NTEmacs because of
@@ -416,7 +417,7 @@
IMEs and the special keys on Japanese keyboards.

<A NAME="support-djgpp" title="support-djgpp"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC19">DJGPP</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC19">DJGPP</A></H3>
<P>
&nbsp;There is a version of Emacs which has been compiled using the
Free compiler, DJGPP, (a version of GCC), available at
@@ -424,19 +425,16 @@
</P>

<A NAME="support-xemacs" title="support-xemacs"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC20">XEmacs</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC20">XEmacs</A></H3>


<p>
-There are a couple of XEmacs for Windows NT/9X porting projects. See
+The XEmacs for Windows NT/9X porting projects. See
the <a href="" >XEmacs FAQ
-entry</a> for more info, as well as Hrvoje Niksic's <a href="" >XEmacs on
-Windows FAQ</a>.
-
-
+entry</a>.

<A NAME="support-macos" title="support-macos"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC21">MacOS</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC21">MacOS</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -444,9 +442,9 @@
Mac. Here are the ones that I know about:

<ul>
-<li> <a href="" >Emacs 20.4</a> by Andrew Choi (reportedly stable)
+<li> <a href="" >Emacs 21</a> by Andrew Choi (reportedly stable)
<li> <a href="">Emacs 18.59</a> by Marc Parmet
-<li> <a href="" >XEmacs 19.14</a> by Pitt Jarvis (based on Parmet port)
+<li> <a href="" >XEmacs 21.5.10</a> by Pitt Jarvis (based on Parmet port)
</ul>


@@ -454,31 +452,29 @@


<A NAME="where-source" title="where-source"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC22">Where can I get the source distribution?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC22">Where can I get the source distribution?</A></H3>


<p>
-The latest source distribution can be found in <a href="">
-http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/windows/emacs/latest</a>. It is distributed in two
-formats: one large gzipped tar file (emacs*.tar.gz), and a collection of
-smaller zip files that can be copied to 1.44 Mbyte floppies
-(em-src-_?.zip).
+The latest source distribution can be found in <a href="">
+http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/emacs/windows/</a>. It is distributed as
+one large gzipped tar file (emacs*lisp.tar.gz).

<p>
In the same directory you should also find patch files that enable you
to upgrade source distributions to the latest version. These patch files
-are mirrors of the ones on the FSF server at <a href="">http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu</a>.
+are mirrors of the ones on the FSF server at <a href="">ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu</a>.

<p>
-You can also browse the source online; look in <a href="">http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/windows/emacs/latest</a>
-for a directory named "emacs-&lt;version&gt;".
+You can also browse the source online; look in <a href="">http://cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewcvs/?cvsroot=emacs</a>
+

<p>
For more information about the contents of the various files you
should read the README file contained in the FTP directory.

<A NAME="where-source-cvs" title="where-source-cvs"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC23">Can I get the source via CVS?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC23">Can I get the source via CVS?</A></H3>

<p>
&nbsp;Yes you can - Emacs sources can now be obtained via CVS. This will allow you to keep up to date with the latest bug fixes, and incremental updates.
@@ -487,27 +483,26 @@
</P>
<P>&nbsp;Once you have a working CVS setup you can find download the source :
</P>
-<P>&nbsp;Emacs CVS repository can be checked out through anonymous (pserver) CVS with the following instructions. When prompted for a password for anoncvs, simply press the Enter key.
+<P>&nbsp;Emacs CVS repository can be checked out through anonymous (pserver) CVS with the following instructions. When prompted for a password for anonymous, simply press the Enter key.
</P>
<P>&nbsp;The following commands should checkout the current version of the source:
</P>
<PRE>
-c:\>cvs -d:pserver:anoncvs@subversions.gnu.org:/cvsroot/emacs login
-c:\>cvs -d:pserver:anoncvs@subversions.gnu.org:/cvsroot/emacs checkout emacs
+c:\>cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.gnu.org:/sources/emacs login
+c:\>cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.gnu.org:/sources/emacs checkout emacs
</PRE>

<A NAME="where-precompiled" title="where-precompiled"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC24">Where can I get precompiled versions?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC24">Where can I get precompiled versions?</A></H3>


<p>
Starting with Emacs 20.4, precompiled distributions are being hosted at
-<a href="">ftp.gnu.org</a>. Distributions for the latest
+<a href="">ftp.gnu.org</a>. Distributions for the latest
version are at:

<ul>
-<li> <a href="">http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/windows/emacs</a> (top level directory)
-<li> <a href="">http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/windows/emacs/latest</a> (latest distributions)
+<li> <a href="">ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/emacs/windows/</a> (top level directory)
</ul>

<p>
@@ -530,8 +525,11 @@
<ul>

<!-- Geoff Voelker (voelker@cs.washington.edu) -->
+<!-- <li><b>West Coast, USA:</b> <br>
+<a href="">ftp://ftp.cs.washington.edu/pub/ntemacs</a> (all) -->
+
<li><b>West Coast, USA:</b> <br>
-<a href="">ftp://ftp.cs.washington.edu/pub/ntemacs</a> (all)
+<a href="">ftp://gatekeeper.dec.com/pub/GNU/windows/emacs/</a> (all)

<!-- David Wood (dwood@plugged.net.au) -->
<!-- (li)(b)Australia:(/b)(br)
@@ -539,30 +537,35 @@

<!-- Agon S. Buchholz &ltasb@mail.fachdid.fu-berlin.de&gt -->
<li><b>Germany:</b><br>
-<a href="">http://kefk.net/Open_Source/OS/Emacs/index.html</a>
+<a href="">http://www.kefk.net/Open_Source/FS/emacs/index.asp</a>

<!-- Peter Flynn (pflynn@curia.ucc.ie) -->
<li><b>Ireland:</b><br>
-<a href="">ftp://ftp.ucc.ie/pub/emacs</a> (all)
+<a href="">ftp://ftp.ucc.ie/pub/emacs/windows/</a> (all)

<!-- Chris Szurgot (szurgot@itribe.net) -->
-<li><b>East Coast, USA:</b><br>
-<a href="" >http://virtunix.itribe.net</a> (i386)
+<!-- <li><b>East Coast, USA:</b><br>
+<a href="" >http://virtunix.itribe.net</a> (i386) -->
+
+<!-- Chris Szurgot (szurgot@itribe.net) -->
+<li><b>Japan:</b><br>
+<a href="" >
+ftp://tron.um.u-tokyo.ac.jp/pub/GNU/emacs/windows/</a> (i386)

<!-- Johan Hofvander (Johan.Hofvander@sdi.slu.se) -->
<li><b>Sweden:</b><br>
<a href="">ftp://ftp.sunet.se/pub/os/Win32/ntEmacs</a> (all, including this FAQ)

<!-- Andy Cowling (arc@sequent.com) -->
-<li><b>UK:</b><br>
-<a href="" >http://www.paradiso.freeserve.co.uk/gnu/</a> (i386, including this FAQ)
+<!-- <li><b>UK:</b><br>
+<a href="" >http://www.paradiso.freeserve.co.uk/gnu/</a> (i386, including this FAQ) -->

<li><b>UK:</b><br>
-<a href="" >http://sunsite.org.uk/packages/ntemacs/</a> [<a href="">FTP</a>](no FAQ yet)
+<a href="" >http://www.sunsite.org.uk/sites/athena-dist.mit.edu/pub/gnu/windows/emacs/</a> [<a href="">FTP</a>](no FAQ yet)

<!-- Karel Sprenger (ks@ic.uva.nl) -->
<li><b>Netherlands:</b><br>
-<a href="" >http://paddington.ic.uva.nl/mirror/ntemacs</a> (all, including this FAQ)
+<a href="" >ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/emacs/windows/</a> (all, including this FAQ)

</ul>

@@ -605,7 +608,7 @@


<A NAME="compile" title="compile"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC25">I dont want the precompiled version. How do I compile Emacs myself?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC25">I dont want the precompiled version. How do I compile Emacs myself?</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -626,7 +629,7 @@


<A NAME="compile-debug" title="compile-debug"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC26">How do I use a debugger on Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC26">How do I use a debugger on Emacs?</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -661,7 +664,7 @@


<A NAME="changes21" title="changes21"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC27">What are the differences between Emacs 21.x, and 20.x</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC27">What are the differences between Emacs 21.x, and 20.x</A></H3>

<P>
There have been many changes from the older versions of Emacs, 19.x, and 20.x to the latest versions, 21.x.
@@ -692,7 +695,7 @@


<A NAME="unpack" title="unpack"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC28">How do I unpack the distributions?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC28">How do I unpack the distributions?</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -703,13 +706,9 @@
extract the files from the tar file:

<blockquote><pre>
-% gunzip -c -d emacs.tar.gz | tar xvf -
+% gunzip -c -d emacs*.tar.gz | tar xvf -
</pre></blockquote>

-<p>
-(Note: Apparently the alpha version of gunzip cannot handle long file
-names, so you will need to rename the file to something like "emacstar.gz"
-before uncompressing it.)

<p>
The "-d" flag forces gunzip to decompress (its behavior depends upon
@@ -729,35 +728,26 @@
invoke gunzip without the -c option:

<blockquote><pre>
-% gunzip -d emacs.tar.gz
-</pre></blockquote>
-
-<p>
-If you have the zip version, use unzip with the "-x" flag on all of the
- .zip files (note that you cannot use pkunzip on these files, as pkunzipwill not preserve the long filenames):
-
-<blockquote><pre>
-% unzip -x emacs-_1.zip
-% (repeat for the remaining .zip files)
+% gunzip -d emacs*.tar.gz
</pre></blockquote>

<p>
You can find precompiled versions of all of the compression and
-archive utilities in <a href="">
-http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/windows/emacs/utilities
+archive utilities in UnxUtils.zip file at <a href="">
+http://unxutils.sourceforge.net/
</a> (<a href="" >ftp mirrors</a>).

<p>

<A NAME="unpack-install" title="unpack-install"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC29">How do I install Emacs, after unpacking?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC29">How do I install Emacs, after unpacking?</A></H3>

<p>
After unpacking the archive there's very little left to do, you have
the choice of:
<ul>
-<li>Simply running emacs-20.x\bin\runemacs.exe
-<li>Running emacs-20.x\bin\addpm.exe
+<li>Simply running emacs-21.x\bin\runemacs.exe
+<li>Running emacs-21.x\bin\addpm.exe
</ul>

If you run &quot;addpm.exe&quot;, and answer OK to the message
@@ -767,7 +757,7 @@


<A NAME="precomp-problems" title="precomp-problems"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC30">What do I do if Emacs does not work?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC30">What do I do if Emacs does not work?</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -776,7 +766,7 @@
according to the instructions above, you have trouble running Emacs.

<A NAME="install-customizing" title="install-customizing"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC31">How do I customize Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC31">How do I customize Emacs?</A></H3>
<P>
&nbsp;At its core Emacs contains a Lisp interpreter, this engine
is used to implement most of the core functionality of Emacs.
@@ -792,7 +782,7 @@
</P>

<A NAME="what-startup" title="what-startup"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC32">What is a .emacs file?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC32">What is a .emacs file?</A></H3>

<p>
When Emacs starts up it attempts to load, and execute the contents
@@ -800,12 +790,13 @@
This file is where all the customizations are saved, and restored
from when you restart Emacs.
All of these settings are stored as Lisp expressions, for a general
- introduction to Lisp you could see : <A HREF="">http://cons.org</A>, more Emacs Specific information can be found in the
- <A HREF="">Emacs Lisp Manual</A>.
+ introduction to Lisp you could see : <A HREF="">http://cons.org</A>,
+more Emacs Specific information can be found in the
+ <A HREF="">Emacs Lisp Manuals</A>.
</p>

<A NAME="startup" title="startup"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC33">Where do I put my .emacs, (or _emacs), file?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC33">Where do I put my .emacs, (or _emacs), file?</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -873,7 +864,7 @@


<A NAME="startup-samples" title="startup-samples"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC34">Sample .emacs Files</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC34">Sample .emacs Files</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -891,7 +882,7 @@


<A NAME="prompt-before-kill-emacs" title="prompt-before-kill-emacs"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC35">How can I have Emacs prompt me before closing?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC35">How can I have Emacs prompt me before closing?</A></H3>

<p>
If you would like to have Emacs prompt you before closing, add the
@@ -905,7 +896,7 @@


<A NAME="assoc" title="assoc"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC36">How do I associate files with Emacs (i.e., use Emacs as a server with gnuserv/gnuclient)?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC36">How do I associate files with Emacs (i.e., use Emacs as a server with gnuserv/gnuclient)?</A></H3>

<p>
You can use a package like gnuserv to associate files with Emacs so
@@ -949,7 +940,7 @@


<A NAME="assoc-frames" title="assoc-frames"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC37">Controlling the use of frames</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC37">Controlling the use of frames</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -969,7 +960,7 @@


<A NAME="assoc-ie" title="assoc-ie"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC38">For use with Internet Explorer</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC38">For use with Internet Explorer</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -1010,7 +1001,7 @@


<A NAME="assoc-ns" title="assoc-ns"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC39">For use with Netscape</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC39">For use with Netscape</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -1028,17 +1019,18 @@


<A NAME="assoc-pif" title="assoc-pif"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC40">PIF file for gnuserv</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC40">PIF file for gnuserv</A></H3>


<p>
Jerrad Pierce &lt;<A HREF="">belg4mit@mit.edu</A>&gt;
- has <a href="">packaged together a PIF file and batch
+ has <a href="">
+packaged together a PIF file and batch
file</a> for associating Emacs with file-types via gnuserv.


<A NAME="desktop" title="desktop"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC41">How do I use find-file to load files that are on the desktop?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC41">How do I use find-file to load files that are on the desktop?</A></H3>

<p>
Files that you add to the desktop are stored in a directory somewhere
@@ -1047,18 +1039,18 @@
you installed NT in c:\winnt).

<A NAME="active-window" title="active-window"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC42">How do I make the active window follow the mouse?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC42">How do I make the active window follow the mouse?</A></H3>

<p>
&nbsp;If you're running Emacs in a windowing mode, and not in the
console you may use a package called follow-mouse to make the
current frame, or buffer the one with the mouse over it.
</p><p>
- Find it <A HREF="">here</A>.
+ Find it <A HREF="">here</A>.
</p>

<A NAME="capscontrol" title="capscontrol"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC43">How do I swap CapsLock and Control?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC43">How do I swap CapsLock and Control?</A></H3>

<p>
CapsLock and Control cannot be swapped from within Emacs, and Windows
@@ -1093,22 +1085,25 @@
<A NAME="capcontrol-reg" title="capcontrol-reg"><!-- Anchor--></A>
From
Chris McMahon &lt;<A HREF="">cmcmahan@surefirev.com</A>&gt;
-: Download <a href="">caps-as-ctrl.reg</A>
- to make
+: Download <a href="">
+caps-as-ctrl.reg</A> to make
CapsLock a Control key (leaving your original control keys as they
-were), or <a href="">caps-ctrl-swap.reg</a> to
+were), or <a href="">
+caps-ctrl-swap.reg</a> to
swap CapsLock and the left Control key. Once you've downloaded them,
double-click on the .reg files in Explorer or "run" them from a
command prompt to have them update your registry.

<li>
Chris McMahon &lt;<A HREF="">cmcmahan@surefirev.com</A>&gt;
- gives <a href="">explicit step-by-step
+ gives <a href="">
+explicit step-by-step
instructions</a> on modifying the registry.

<li>
Shane Holder &lt;<A HREF="">holder@mordor.rsn.hp.com</A>&gt;
- gives <a href="">some background</a> on
+ gives <a href="">
+some background</a> on
how "Scancode Map" is being used by the system.

<b>Windows 2000</b>
@@ -1119,7 +1114,8 @@
<li>
Ulfar Erlingsson &lt;<A HREF="">ulfar@decode.is</A>&gt;
has provided a registry
-file <a href="">caps-and-win.reg</a>
+file <a href="">
+caps-and-win.reg</a>
that sets the CapsLock key to be a Control key and the Windows key to
be an Alt key.

@@ -1131,7 +1127,8 @@
installed, you can then select it using the "International" control
panel applet.

-<ul> <li><a href="">keyswap.tar</a>
+<ul> <li><a href="">
+keyswap.tar</a>
</ul>

<b>Windows 95:</b> Microsoft has placed a keyboard remapping program for
@@ -1146,9 +1143,9 @@
mapping.)

<ul>
-<li><a href="">README</a>
-<li><a href="">source</a>
-<li><a href="">ctrl2cap.vxd.tar</a>
+<li><a href="">README</a>
+<li><a href="">source</a>
+<li><a href="">ctrl2cap.vxd.tar</a>
</ul>

<p>
@@ -1160,7 +1157,7 @@


<A NAME="windows-like" title="windows-like"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC44">How can I modify Emacs to be more like a Windows app?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC44">How can I modify Emacs to be more like a Windows app?</A></H3>

<P>
&nbsp;There are several differences in the way in which Emacs behaves
@@ -1169,7 +1166,7 @@
</P>

<A NAME="windows-like-keys" title="windows-like-keys"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC45">Keypad keys, highlighting selections, etc.</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC45">Keypad keys, highlighting selections, etc.</A></H3>

<p>
Some behaviors typically found in other Windows apps, such as deleting
@@ -1183,7 +1180,7 @@
<tt>pc-selection-mode</tt>.

<A NAME="windows-like-cua" title="windows-like-cua"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC46">Standard Windows application keymaps (C-c, C-v, C-x, etc.)</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC46">Standard Windows application keymaps (C-c, C-v, C-x, etc.)</A></H3>

<p>
If you are used to standard Windows application keybindings, such as
@@ -1198,7 +1195,7 @@


<A NAME="windows-like-window-ops" title="windows-like-window-ops"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC47">Window operations (maximize, minimize, etc.)</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC47">Window operations (maximize, minimize, etc.)</A></H3>

As of Emacs 20.4.1 there is native support for maximizing, and
minimizing the Emacs window from Lisp, the following functions will
@@ -1220,19 +1217,20 @@


<A NAME="windows-like-dlgopen" title="windows-like-dlgopen"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC48">Open File dialog box</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC48">Open File dialog box</A></H3>

<p>
Binu Jose Philip &lt;<A HREF="">binu@teil.soft.net</A>&gt;
has written the dlgopen
package to use the Windows Open File dialog box for opening files.
-Download <a href="">dlgopen.zip</a>, unpack, and
+Download <a href="">
+dlgopen.zip</a>, unpack, and
read the top of the dlgopen.el file for directions on using the package.
</P>


<A NAME="uninstall" title="uninstall"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC49">How do I uninstall Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC49">How do I uninstall Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
The only thing that Emacs changes in your system is the registry (if
@@ -1250,7 +1248,7 @@


<A NAME="troubleshooting" title="troubleshooting"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC50">When I run Emacs, nothing happens. Whats the deal?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC50">When I run Emacs, nothing happens. Whats the deal?</A></H3>

<p>
Emacs could have failed to run for a number of reasons. The most
@@ -1292,7 +1290,7 @@
receive a helpfull response..

<A NAME="trouble-os-upgrade" title="trouble-os-upgrade"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC51">I just upgraded the operating system, and Emacs no longer works.</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC51">I just upgraded the operating system, and Emacs no longer works.</A></H3>

<p>
I have received reports that, after upgrading the operating system
@@ -1303,14 +1301,14 @@


<A NAME="anti-virus" title="anti-virus"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC52">I use anti-virus software. What problems can this cause?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC52">I use anti-virus software. What problems can this cause?</A></H3>

<p>
Some anti-virus software seems to interact badly with older version of Emacs,
these programs shouldn't cause any problems if you are running a version of Emacs newer than 20.3.

<A NAME="anti-virus-solomon" title="anti-virus-solomon"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC53">Dr. Solomons</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC53">Dr. Solomons</A></H3>

<p>
A number of users <a href="">have
@@ -1319,7 +1317,7 @@
work, though.

<A NAME="anti-virus-mcafee" title="anti-virus-mcafee"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC54">McAfee</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC54">McAfee</A></H3>

<p>
<a href="">A similar report</a> from
@@ -1329,7 +1327,7 @@
Files" to prevent Emacs from hanging.

<A NAME="anti-virus-norton" title="anti-virus-norton"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC55">Norton</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC55">Norton</A></H3>

<p>
A third report from Peter Haas about Norton Antivirus 2000 (Emacs
@@ -1340,7 +1338,7 @@
<p>

<A NAME="emacs-virus" title="emacs-virus"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC56">Does Emacs contain a virus?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC56">Does Emacs contain a virus?</A></H3>
<P>
&nbsp;There have been reports from some people that the
McAfee virus scanner, (versions unreported), claims that the
@@ -1366,7 +1364,7 @@
</P>

<A NAME="hang-os" title="hang-os"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC57">Sometimes when I exit Emacs, my machine hangs or crashes immediately.</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC57">Sometimes when I exit Emacs, my machine hangs or crashes immediately.</A></H3>

<p> Have you installed an Iomega Zip drive recently? The Iomega
driver and Emacs appear to have a conflict that causes this crash. At
@@ -1381,7 +1379,7 @@


<A NAME="hostname" title="hostname"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC58">How does Emacs determine the name of my computer?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC58">How does Emacs determine the name of my computer?</A></H3>

<p>
Emacs initializes the variable "system-name" with the name of your
@@ -1412,7 +1410,7 @@


<A NAME="attributes" title="attributes"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC59">How do I change the size, position, font, and color attributes of Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC59">How do I change the size, position, font, and color attributes of Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
Emacs can run in two different interface modes: the Windows interface,
@@ -1424,7 +1422,7 @@


<A NAME="windows-attributes" title="windows-attributes"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC60">Windows Interface</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC60">Windows Interface</A></H3>

<p>
With the Windows interface, you can change the size, position, font,
@@ -1517,7 +1515,7 @@

<p>
Note that you can also specify position offsets from any of the
-corners of the screen. See the <a href="" >GEOMETRY
+corners of the screen. See the <a href="" >GEOMETRY
SPECIFICATIONS section</a> of the X man page for complete details on
the geometry command.

@@ -1547,7 +1545,8 @@
these names is a set of abstract color names, e.g., <b>red</b>,
<b>green</b>, and <b>blue</b>. These names are the ones you will typically
use as arguments on the command line or in elisp functions. Emacs also
-supports the use of numeric color names; see the <a href="" >COLOR NAMES section</a> of
+supports the use of numeric color names; see the <a href="" >
+COLOR NAMES section</a> of
the X man page for complete details on how to specify numeric color names
and their color spaces.

@@ -1702,7 +1701,7 @@


<A NAME="console-attributes" title="console-attributes"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC61">Console Interface</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC61">Console Interface</A></H3>

<p>
Emacs can also run inside a console window. Simply invoke Emacs with
@@ -1732,7 +1731,7 @@
size in the "Usage" panel. Click on "OK".

<A NAME="console-obscured" title="console-obscured"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC62">Emacs in console mode goes beyond the window size. What do I do?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC62">Emacs in console mode goes beyond the window size. What do I do?</A></H3>

<p>
With Emacs 20.3 and previous version, Emacs uses the size of the
@@ -1791,7 +1790,7 @@


<A NAME="font-lock" title="font-lock"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC63">How do I enable color syntax highlighting in Emacs (font-lock)?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC63">How do I enable color syntax highlighting in Emacs (font-lock)?</A></H3>

<p>
Font-lock mode is a mode that performs color syntax highlighting for
@@ -1852,30 +1851,29 @@


<A NAME="font-lock-html" title="font-lock-html"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC64">Converting font-lock buffers into HTML markup</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC64">Converting font-lock buffers into HTML markup</A></H3>

<p>
-You can use the <a href="" >htmlize.el package</a> by
-Hrvoje Niksic &lt;<A HREF="">hniksic@srce.hr</A>&gt;
-
- to convert font-lock attributes in
+You can use the <a href="" >htmlize.el package</a> by
+Hrvoje Niksic to convert font-lock attributes in &lt;<A HREF="">hniksic@srce.hr</A>&gt;
buffers to HTML markups. See the comments at the top of the file on how to
use it.

<p>
If you are using a version of Emacs before 19.34.6 and an 8-bit
-display, then you should download this version of <a href="">htmlize.el</a> instead.
+display, then you should download this version of
+<a href="">
+htmlize.el</a> instead.
However, this is likely to become out of date with respect to Hrvoje's
version, so I would actually recommend upgrading to 19.34.6.

-
<A NAME="font-lock-embedded-code" title="font-lock-embedded-code"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC65">Font-locking embedded code (e.g., ASP) in HTML documents</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC65">Font-locking embedded code (e.g., ASP) in HTML documents</A></H3>

<p>
Gian Uberto Lauri &lt;<A HREF="">lauri@mail.eng.it</A>&gt;
has modified <a
-href="">html-helper-mode</a>
+href="">html-helper-mode</a>
to enable font-locking and mode editing of code embedded in HTML
documents (ASP, PHP).

@@ -1883,7 +1881,7 @@


<A NAME="modeline" title="modeline"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC66">How do I change the format of the mode line?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC66">How do I change the format of the mode line?</A></H3>

<p>
The format of the mode line is determined by the variable
@@ -1901,7 +1899,7 @@


<A NAME="mouse" title="mouse"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC67">What do I do if I have problems with Emacs and my mouse buttons?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC67">What do I do if I have problems with Emacs and my mouse buttons?</A></H3>

<p>
You can use either a two- or three-button mouse with Emacs. If you
@@ -1909,7 +1907,7 @@


<A NAME="mouse-2b" title="mouse-2b"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC68">How do I use Emacs with a two-button mouse?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC68">How do I use Emacs with a two-button mouse?</A></H3>

<p>
Emacs assumes that you have a three-button mouse by default. However,
@@ -1946,7 +1944,7 @@


<A NAME="mouse-3b" title="mouse-3b"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC69">How do I get Emacs to recognize the third button on my mouse?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC69">How do I get Emacs to recognize the third button on my mouse?</A></H3>

<p>
If you have a three-button mouse, Emacs should recognize and support
@@ -1964,7 +1962,7 @@


<A NAME="mouse-win95" title="mouse-win95"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC70">Strange two-button mouse behavior on Windows 95.</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC70">Strange two-button mouse behavior on Windows 95.</A></H3>

<p>
Some people have reported that using a two-button mouse with Emacs
@@ -1981,7 +1979,7 @@


<A NAME="highlight" title="highlight"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC71">How do I highlight the region between the point and the mark?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC71">How do I highlight the region between the point and the mark?</A></H3>

<p>
To highlight the region between the point and the mark, use the
@@ -1993,7 +1991,7 @@


<A NAME="highlight-paren" title="highlight-paren"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC72">How do I highlight matching parentheses?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC72">How do I highlight matching parentheses?</A></H3>

<p>
To highlight matching parentheses, add the following to your startup
@@ -2005,7 +2003,7 @@


<A NAME="cut-paste-nulls" title="cut-paste-nulls"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC73">How do I cut &amp; paste text with null characters?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC73">How do I cut &amp; paste text with null characters?</A></H3>

<p>
Because of the way Emacs currently tries to share the clipboard with
@@ -2015,7 +2013,7 @@


<A NAME="beep" title="beep"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC74">How do I change the sound of the Emacs beep?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC74">How do I change the sound of the Emacs beep?</A></H3>

<p>
You can use the function <tt>set-message-beep</tt> to change the sound
@@ -2035,7 +2033,7 @@


<A NAME="multibyte-selection" title="multibyte-selection"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC75">When I yank previously copied or killed text into a buffer, it appears garbled. How can I fix this?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC75">When I yank previously copied or killed text into a buffer, it appears garbled. How can I fix this?</A></H3>

<p>
`selection-coding-system' is most likely still at it's default of
@@ -2065,7 +2063,7 @@


<A NAME="windows-font" title="windows-font"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC76"><b>F<font size=-1>ONTS</font></b></a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC76"><b>F<font size=-1>ONTS</font></b></A></H3>


<p>
@@ -2224,14 +2222,14 @@


<A NAME="multibyte" title="multibyte"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC77">Emacs multilingual font support</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC77">Emacs multilingual font support</A></H3>

<p>
<i>(Applies to version 20.4 and later)</i>


<A NAME="multibyte-mule" title="multibyte-mule"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC78">Is it now possible to display correctly the sample of various scripts and languages accessible from the MULE menu?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC78">Is it now possible to display correctly the sample of various scripts and languages accessible from the MULE menu?</A></H3>

<p>
If you have a Windows font for the script or language, then you should
@@ -2266,7 +2264,7 @@


<A NAME="multibyte-fontset" title="multibyte-fontset"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC79">How do I get Emacs to display characters other than ISO-8859-1 (West European)?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC79">How do I get Emacs to display characters other than ISO-8859-1 (West European)?</A></H3>

<p>
If you are content with the size and style of font that Emacs uses at
@@ -2346,7 +2344,7 @@


<A NAME="multibyte-language-fonts" title="multibyte-language-fonts"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC80">Where can I find fonts for other languages?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC80">Where can I find fonts for other languages?</A></H3>

<p>
<b>MS Windows fonts</b> The Windows installation CDROM contains fonts
@@ -2363,7 +2361,7 @@

<p>
<b>X Windows fonts</b> There is a collection of international fonts for
-use with X Windows, and a set can be found at <a href="">ftp.gnu.org</a>. They are
+use with X Windows, and a set can be found at <a href="">ftp.gnu.org</a>. They are
distributed in the bdf font file format, a format that can be handled by
Emacs starting with version 20.3.5.1. For details on how to use these
fonts with Emacs, see the section below on <a href="">using bdf
@@ -2371,7 +2369,7 @@


<A NAME="multibyte-third-party" title="multibyte-third-party"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC81">How do I use third party programs for displaying multibyte characters with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC81">How do I use third party programs for displaying multibyte characters with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
Define a fontset ( <A HREF="">see above</A> ) listing any font
@@ -2398,7 +2396,7 @@


<A NAME="multibyte-foreign-font-name" title="multibyte-foreign-font-name"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC82">How do I use a font with a name in my language?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC82">How do I use a font with a name in my language?</A></H3>

<p>
This is most applicable to East Asian users. Others can probably get
@@ -2423,17 +2421,17 @@


<A NAME="bdf-fonts" title="bdf-fonts"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC83">How can I use bdf fonts with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC83">How can I use bdf fonts with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
To use bdf fonts with Emacs, you need to tell Emacs where the fonts are
located, create fontsets for them, and then use them. We'll use the 16 dot
-international fonts from <a href="">ftp.gnu.org/intlfonts</a> as an
+international fonts from <a href="">ftp.gnu.org/intlfonts</a> as an
example put together by
Jason Rumney &lt;<A HREF="">jasonr@gnu.org</A>&gt;

<p>
-Download the <a href="">16dots.tar.gz</a>
+Download the <a href="">16dots.tar.gz</a>
file and unpack it; I'll assume that they are in "c:\intlfonts". Then set
w32-bdf-filename-alist to the list of fonts returned by using
w32-find-bdf-fonts to enumerate all of the font files. It is a good idea to
@@ -2502,7 +2500,7 @@


<A NAME="font-menu" title="font-menu"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC84">How can I have Emacs use a font menu similar to the one it uses on Unix (with fonts and fontsets listed)?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC84">How can I have Emacs use a font menu similar to the one it uses on Unix (with fonts and fontsets listed)?</A></H3>
<P>
Place the following in your startup file:
<P>
@@ -2512,7 +2510,7 @@


<A NAME="font-menu-modify" title="font-menu-modify"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC85">The font I want to use is not in the font menu, how can I put it there?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC85">The font I want to use is not in the font menu, how can I put it there?</A></H3>



@@ -2532,7 +2530,7 @@


<A NAME="translation" title="translation"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC86">How can I control CR/LF translation (e.g., to access UNIX files via NFS)?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC86">How can I control CR/LF translation (e.g., to access UNIX files via NFS)?</A></H3>

<p>
There are a number of methods by which you can control automatic CR/LF
@@ -2543,7 +2541,7 @@


<A NAME="translation-extension" title="translation-extension"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC87">By file extension</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC87">By file extension</A></H3>

<p>
The first method is by file extension using the alist
@@ -2571,11 +2569,12 @@


<A NAME="translation-file-system" title="translation-file-system"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC88">By file system</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC88">By file system</A></H3>

<p>
A second method for controlling translation is with the functions at
-the end of <a href="">untranslate.el</a>.
+the end of <a href="">
+untranslate.el</a>.
These functions enable you to turn on and off translation on a filesystem
basis (e.g., open anything on <tt>C:</tt> in translated mode, and anything
on <tt>U:</tt> in untranslated mode). If you want to use these functions,
@@ -2586,7 +2585,7 @@


<A NAME="translation-automatic" title="translation-automatic"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC89">Automatic</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC89">Automatic</A></H3>

<p>
A third method for controlling translation is to have Emacs scan files
@@ -2637,46 +2636,43 @@


<A NAME="printing-emacs" title="printing-emacs"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC90">How do I print from Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC90">How do I print from Emacs?</A></H3>


-<h4><a name="TOC91">20.4</a></h4>
+<H4><A NAME="TOC91">20.4</A></H4>

<p>
Please read <a href="">Andrew's note</a>
on how to print from Emacs in 20.4. What you need to do depends upon how
you connect your printer to your machine.
<p>
-Tim Sherrill &lt;sherritp@sagian.com&gt; has a <a href="" >very informative
-page</a> on 2-up (n-up) printing from Emacs.
+Tim Sherrill &lt;sherritp@sagian.com&gt; has a <a href="" >very informative
+note</a> on 2-up (n-up) printing from Emacs.

<p>
-Holger Mueller &lt;hmueller@bigfoot.com&gt; has taken over
-maintaining <a href="" >print-NT.el</a>
+Holger Mueller &lt;hmueller@bigfoot.de&gt; has taken over
+maintaining <a href="" >print-NT.el</a>
[V 1.15, 6/29/98] (previously maintained by Brian Gorka
&lt;gorkab@cyberpass.net&gt;).

<p>
-Theodore Jump &lt;<A HREF="">tjump@tertius.com</A>&gt;
-has also written <a href="" >w32-print.el</a>,
+Vinicius Jose Latorre &lt;<A HREF="">vinicius@cpqd.com</A>&gt;
+has some <a href="" >printing utilities</a>,
a relatively complete package for printing from Emacs on Windows systems
(Postscript, plain-text, 2- and 4-up, 19.34.X and 20.X, UNC and local
-device paths, etc.). [V1.11, 12/7/98]
-
-<p>
-Pascal Obry has a <a href="">nice
-example</a> of how to set up some variables to get printing to work on NT.
+device paths, etc.).

<p>
-Jeff Paquette &lt;paquette@mediaone.net&gt; has a version of <a href="" >pr</a>
-for use with Emacs, and instructions on how to set it up.
+Pascal Obry has a <a href="">
+nice example</a> of how to set up some variables to get printing to work on NT.

<!--
Vassil Peytchev &lt;vassil@msn.fullfeed.com&gt; has an (a href="")example(/a) of how to use ghostscript to print to non-postscript printers. -->

<p>
-Anders Lindgren &lt;andersl@csd.uu.se&gt; has written a <a href="">lpr.bat batch file</a> that can be
-subsituted transparently for lpr on NT (Windows 95 batch files don't redirect
+Anders Lindgren &lt;andersl@csd.uu.se&gt; has written a
+<a href="">lpr.bat batch file</a>
+that can be subsituted transparently for lpr on NT (Windows 95 batch files don't redirect
stdin correctly).

<p>
@@ -2713,7 +2709,7 @@
htmlize.el</a>.

<A NAME="printing-ghostscript" title="printing-ghostscript"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC92">Printing via Ghostscript</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC92">Printing via Ghostscript</A></H3>
<P>
&nbsp;Alec Clews reports success at using Ghostscript to perform his
printing - using gsview version 3.4, and Ghostscript version 6.01
@@ -2739,7 +2735,7 @@


<A NAME="multibyte-printing" title="multibyte-printing"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC93">How do I print all these languages that Emacs is now displaying?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC93">How do I print all these languages that Emacs is now displaying?</A></H3>

<p>
&nbsp;Emacs 20.4 has the ability to print non Western languages in two
@@ -2772,7 +2768,7 @@
character sets.

<A NAME="print-direct" title="print-direct"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC94">How do I print to a printer that is directly connected to a network?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC94">How do I print to a printer that is directly connected to a network?</A></H3>
<p>&nbsp;If you have a printer which doesn't require a print server and is just connected directly to a hub you may find this information useful - it was contributed by
Ed Grissom &lt;<A HREF="">egrissom@ziimaging.com</A>&gt;
</p>
@@ -2795,7 +2791,7 @@


<A NAME="subproc-quoting" title="subproc-quoting"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC95">Quoting issues</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC95">Quoting issues</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -2806,7 +2802,7 @@


<A NAME="subproc-console" title="subproc-console"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC96">Programs reading input hang</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC96">Programs reading input hang</A></H3>

<p>
Programs that explicitly use a handle to the console ("CON" or "CON:")
@@ -2823,7 +2819,7 @@


<A NAME="subproc-buffer" title="subproc-buffer"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC97">Buffering in shells</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC97">Buffering in shells</A></H3>

<p>
You may notice that some programs, when run in a shell in shell-mode,
@@ -2852,7 +2848,7 @@
they are running under Emacs, by using getenve("emacs") internally.

<A NAME="subproc-buffer-perl" title="subproc-buffer-perl"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC98">Perl script buffering.</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC98">Perl script buffering.</A></H3>

<P>
A handy solution for Perl scripts is to use:
@@ -2864,7 +2860,7 @@
</PRE>

<A NAME="subproc-dos" title="subproc-dos"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC99">DOS subprocesses</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC99">DOS subprocesses</A></H3>

<p>
You can run DOS subprocesses under Emacs, with either the native command
@@ -2873,7 +2869,7 @@
tools</a> for pointers to other sites.

<A NAME="subproc-a_drive" title="subproc-a_drive"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC100">16-bit subprocesses accessing the A: drive.</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC100">16-bit subprocesses accessing the A: drive.</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -2890,7 +2886,7 @@


<A NAME="subproc-w95" title="subproc-w95"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC101">Killing subprocesses on Windows 95/98</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC101">Killing subprocesses on Windows 95/98</A></H3>

<p>
Emacs cannot guarantee that a subprocess gets killed on Windows 95/98, and
@@ -2912,7 +2908,7 @@


<A NAME="subproc-ctrl-d" title="subproc-ctrl-d"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC102">Sending eof to subprocesses in Emacs (e.g., C-c C-d in shell buffers)</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC102">Sending eof to subprocesses in Emacs (e.g., C-c C-d in shell buffers)</A></H3>

<p>
When an eof is sent to a subprocess running in an interactive shell
@@ -2923,7 +2919,7 @@


<A NAME="shell" title="shell"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC103">How do I use a shell in Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC103">How do I use a shell in Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
You can use an interactive subshell in Emacs by typing "M-x shell".
@@ -2967,10 +2963,11 @@


<A NAME="shell-bash" title="shell-bash"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC104">bash</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC104">bash</A></H3>

<p>
-You can get a version of bash with the Cygnus tools at <a href="" >http://www.cygnus.com/misc/gnu-win32</a>. To
+You can get a version of bash with the Cygwin tools at <a href="" >
+http://www.cygwin.com/</a>. To
use bash with Emacs, place the following in your startup file:

<blockquote><pre>
@@ -3000,8 +2997,8 @@

<p>
The package <a
-href="">cygwin32-mount.el</a> teaches
-Emacs about cygwin32 mount points.
+href="">
+cygwin32-mount.el</a> teaches Emacs about cygwin32 mount points.

<p>
<b>WARNING:</b>The latest version of bash sets and uses the environment
@@ -3018,7 +3015,7 @@


<A NAME="shell-att-ksh" title="shell-att-ksh"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC105">ksh</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC105">ksh</A></H3>

<p>
For a version of ksh by David Korn, take a look at <a href="" >http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/uwin</a>.
@@ -3040,7 +3037,7 @@


<A NAME="shell-mks-ksh" title="shell-mks-ksh"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC106">MKS ksh</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC106">MKS ksh</A></H3>

<p>
To use MKS ksh, place the following in your startup file:
@@ -3052,10 +3049,10 @@


<A NAME="shell-tcsh" title="shell-tcsh"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC107">tcsh</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC107">tcsh</A></H3>

<p>
-You can find tcsh at <a href="">ftp://ftp.blarg.net/users/amol/tcsh</a>.
+You can find tcsh at <a href="">ftp://ftp.astron.com/pub/tcsh/</a>.
To use tcsh, place the following in your startup file:

<blockquote><pre>
@@ -3071,14 +3068,14 @@


<A NAME="shell-zsh" title="shell-zsh"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC108">zsh</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC108">zsh</A></H3>

<p>
-You can find zsh at <a href="">ftp://ftp.blarg.net/users/amol/zsh/</a>
+You can find zsh at <a href="">http://www.zsh.org/</a>


<A NAME="dired-external-ls" title="dired-external-ls"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC109">How do I make dired use my external ls program?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC109">How do I make dired use my external ls program?</A></H3>

<p>&nbsp;To make dired, (the directory editor), use an external 'ls' program, which will allow you to see symbolic links, and such like you need to set two variables:

@@ -3092,7 +3089,7 @@


<A NAME="shell-echo" title="shell-echo"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC110">How do I prevent shell commands from being echoed?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC110">How do I prevent shell commands from being echoed?</A></H3>

<p>
Some shells echo the commands that you send to them, and the echoed
@@ -3138,7 +3135,7 @@


<A NAME="shell-dirsep" title="shell-dirsep"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC111">How do I have Emacs complete directories with / instead of "?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC111">How do I have Emacs complete directories with / instead of "?</A></H3>

<p>
The character appended to directory names when completing in shell-mode
@@ -3150,7 +3147,7 @@
<p>

<A NAME="shell-invalid" title="shell-invalid"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC112">When I run programs within a shell I get Incorrect DOS version messages. Why?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC112">When I run programs within a shell I get Incorrect DOS version messages. Why?</A></H3>

<p>
This might happen if, for example, you invoke nmake in a shell and it
@@ -3169,7 +3166,7 @@


<A NAME="shell-problems" title="shell-problems"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC113">When I do any shell-related commands, nothing happens. What could be wrong?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC113">When I do any shell-related commands, nothing happens. What could be wrong?</A></H3>

<p>
Chris Boucher &lt;chris@sorted.org&gt; reports that Dr. Solomon's
@@ -3183,7 +3180,7 @@


<A NAME="mail" title="mail"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC114">How do I use mail with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC114">How do I use mail with Emacs?</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -3195,7 +3192,7 @@
and/or other users on other systems.

<A NAME="mail-outgoing" title="mail-outgoing"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC115">Outgoing</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC115">Outgoing</A></H3>

<p>
For outgoing mail, you need to use smtpmail.el, which enables Emacs to
@@ -3239,7 +3236,7 @@


<A NAME="mail-queued-outgoing" title="mail-queued-outgoing"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC116">Outgoing: Queued</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC116">Outgoing: Queued</A></H3>

<p>
If you would like to queue your outgoing mail so that you can then
@@ -3269,7 +3266,9 @@
invalid characters in file names . Note
that all files will auto-save to this directory; this allows Emacs to
auto-save even when the folder files are on an inaccessible remote machine.
-Place the following definition of <a href=""><tt>make-auto-save-file-name</tt></a> in
+Place the following definition of
+<a href="">
+<tt>make-auto-save-file-name</tt></a> in
your startup file to override the definition in winnt.el.

<p>
@@ -3286,7 +3285,7 @@


<A NAME="mail-rmail" title="mail-rmail"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC117">Incoming: RMAIL and POP3</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC117">Incoming: RMAIL and POP3</A></H3>

<p>
For incoming mail using the RMAIL package and a POP3 mail server, you
@@ -3306,7 +3305,7 @@


<A NAME="mail-vm-pop3" title="mail-vm-pop3"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC118">Incoming: VM and POP3</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC118">Incoming: VM and POP3</A></H3>

<p>
For incoming mail using the VM package and a POP3 mail server, you
@@ -3330,7 +3329,7 @@


<A NAME="mail-gnus" title="mail-gnus"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC119">Incoming: GNUS</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC119">Incoming: GNUS</A></H3>

<p>
You should be able to use Gnus 5.2 and above as a mail reader. The
@@ -3353,7 +3352,7 @@
Be sure to customize the <i>POP user name</i> field appropriately.

<A NAME="gnus-imap" title="gnus-imap"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC120">Using GNUS with IMAP</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC120">Using GNUS with IMAP</A></H3>

<P>
&nbsp;Setting up Gnus for reading IMAP email.
@@ -3418,7 +3417,7 @@


<A NAME="mail-sharing-rmail" title="mail-sharing-rmail"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC121">Sharing with Unix: RMAIL</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC121">Sharing with Unix: RMAIL</A></H3>

<p>
If you want to share your rmail folders between Unix and Windows NT/95, you'll
@@ -3435,7 +3434,7 @@
did to setup sharing between Unix and Windows NT/95.

<A NAME="mail-notify" title="mail-notify"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC122">Mail notification</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC122">Mail notification</A></H3>

<p>
Mail packages often provide some way to notify you when email has
@@ -3448,7 +3447,7 @@
</ul>

<A NAME="mail-leave-rmail" title="mail-leave-rmail"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC123">Leaving on server: RMAIL</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC123">Leaving on server: RMAIL</A></H3>

<p>
Franklin Lee &lt;lee.franklin@worldnet.att.net&gt; has extended the
@@ -3459,8 +3458,9 @@
a patched pop3.el and some additional elisp files:

<ul>
-<li><a href="">ep3m-098.zip</a> (8/13/99)
-<li><a href="">README.TXT</a> (8/13/99)
+<li><a href="">
+ep3m-098.zip</a> (8/13/99)
+<li>Read the README.TXT file in ep3m-098 directory for more information.
</ul>

<p>
@@ -3469,9 +3469,8 @@

<p>
For instructions on how to install and configure this package so that
-you can leave your mail on your pop3 servers, see the instructions at the
-top of the <a href="">epop3mail.el
-file</a>.
+you can leave your mail on your pop3 servers, see the instructions in
+epop3mail.el file.

<p>
This should potentially work with other mail packages that rely upon
@@ -3479,7 +3478,7 @@
necessary to make it work, let me know and I'll update this FAQ entry.

<A NAME="mail-leave-vm" title="mail-leave-vm"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC124">Leaving on server: VM</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC124">Leaving on server: VM</A></H3>
<P>
&nbsp;vm doesn't use pop3 (it has its own code) and leaving email on the
server runs 'out of the box'.
@@ -3494,15 +3493,15 @@


<A NAME="mail-metamail" title="mail-metamail"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC125">Handling attachments: Metamail</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC125">Handling attachments: Metamail</A></H3>

<p>
<b>19.34</b> Metamail is a package that allows you to receive and send
MIME attachments using Emacs. For details, see the README file:

<ul>
-<li><a href="">README</a>
-<li><a href="">mm_win32.zip</a>
+<li><a href="">mm_win32.zip</a>
+<li>Read the readme file for more information.
</ul>

<b>Note</b> that this version only works with Emacs 19.34. John
@@ -3524,32 +3523,34 @@


<A NAME="mail-tm" title="mail-tm"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC126">Handling attachments: MIME with tm</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC126">Handling attachments: MIME with tm</A></H3>

<p>
I don't know of any complete ports of tm to the Windows environment, but
Fabrice Popineau &lt;popineau@esemetz.ese-metz.fr&gt; has made some
-modifications to the OS2 version of tm. See <a href="">his description</a> of what he has
-done for more info. The support programs mentioned can be found in <a href="">mm.zip</a> (note that they have only
-been tested on NT 4.0, though).
-
+modifications to the OS2 version of tm. See
+<a href="">
+his description</a> of what he has done for more info.
+The support programs mentioned can be found in
+<a href="">mm.zip</a>
+(note that they have only been tested on NT 4.0, through).

<A NAME="mail-biff-pop" title="mail-biff-pop"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC127">Biff tools: POP</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC127">Biff tools: POP</A></H3>

<p>
Gian Uberto Lauri &lt;lauri@eng.it&gt; has written a win-biff tool for
-use with pop mail servers. <a href="">[More
+use with pop mail servers. <a href="">[More
Info]</a>

<ul>
-<li> <a href="">source.zip</a>,
-<a href="">disk1.zip</a>,
-<a href="">disk2.zip</a>
+<li> <a href="">source.zip</a>,
+<a href="">disk1.zip</a>,
+<a href="">disk2.zip</a>.
</ul>

<A NAME="gnus" title="gnus"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC128">How do I read news with Emacs using Gnus?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC128">How do I read news with Emacs using Gnus?</A></H3>

<p>
To read news with Emacs, you can use the Gnus package. To invoke Gnus,
@@ -3558,15 +3559,17 @@

<ul>
<li> The info files describing the package ("M-x info").
-<li> The FAQ at <a href="" >http://www.ccs.neu.edu/software/contrib/gnus/</a>.
+<li> The FAQ at <a href="" >
+http://www.ccs.neu.edu/software/contrib/gnus/</a>.
<li> The news group <a href="">gnu.emacs.gnus</a>.
-<li> The <A HREF="">mailing list</A> archive at <a href="" >http://www.miranova.com/gnus-list</a>.
-<li> And more at <a href="" >http://www.miranova.com/~steve/gnus-local.html</a>....
+<li> The <A HREF="">mailing list</A> archive at
+<a href="" >
+http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/help-emacs-windows/</a>.
</ul>


<A NAME="gnus-attatch" title="gnus-attatch"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC129">How do I open attatchments with Gnus?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC129">How do I open attatchments with Gnus?</A></H3>

<P>&nbsp;In your HOME directory create a file called &quot;.mailcap&quot;,
place the following in it:
@@ -3580,7 +3583,7 @@
</P>

<A NAME="gnus-auth" title="gnus-auth"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC130">How do I authenticate with Gnus?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC130">How do I authenticate with Gnus?</A></H3>

<p>
If you need to connect and post to an authenticated news server,
@@ -3598,15 +3601,15 @@


<A NAME="gnus-mime" title="gnus-mime"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC131">How do I use mime with Gnus?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC131">How do I use mime with Gnus?</A></H3>

<p>
-See the <a href="" >"Does
+See the <a href="" >"Does
Gnus have MIME support?"</a> question from the Gnus FAQ.


<A NAME="gnus-untrans" title="gnus-untrans"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC132">How do I save messages in untranslated format?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC132">How do I save messages in untranslated format?</A></H3>

<p>
To save messages untranslated (no carriage returns), you must set the
@@ -3618,32 +3621,30 @@


<A NAME="netscoop2000" title="netscoop2000"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC133">How do I read online newspapers with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC133">How do I read online newspapers with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
-David Finucane &lt;finucane@myri.com&gt; has written an elisp/Java
-package that makes it easy to read online newspapers through Emacs:
+Some of the package that makes it easy to read online newspapers through Emacs:

<ul>
-<li><a href="" >Netscoop 2000</a>
+<li><a href="" >WanderLust</a>
+<li><a href="" >WThreeMShimbun</a>
</ul>

Recent versions of <A HREF="">GNUS</A> can also handle reading
some web sites as news, Slashdot.org for example.

<A NAME="w3" title="w3"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC134">How do I use the w3 package?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC134">How do I use the w3 package?</A></H3>

<P>
-Download the latest version from the W3 homepage, <A HREF="">ftp://ftp.xemacs.org/pub/xemacs/emacs-w3/</A> and follow the directions in the README.NT file.
+Download the latest version from the W3 homepage,
+<A HREF="">ftp://ftp.xemacs.org/pub/xemacs/emacs-w3/</A>
+and follow the directions in the README.NT file.
</P>
-<P>
-&nbsp;You may find helpful information at the w3 homepage :
-<A HREF="">http://www.cs.indiana.edu/elisp/w3/docs.html</A>.
-</p>

<A NAME="browse-url" title="browse-url"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC135">How do I use the browse-url package?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC135">How do I use the browse-url package?</A></H3>

<p>
<b>20.4 and later</b> You should be able to use the browse-url
@@ -3652,27 +3653,26 @@
details.

<A NAME="simple-web" title="simple-web"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC136">Package for using browse-url for dictionary, search, etc. functions</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC136">Package for using browse-url for dictionary, search, etc. functions</A></H3>

<p>
Peter Breton &lt;pbreton@i-kinetics.com&gt; wrote a small package for
using browse-url to do dictionary lookups, internet word searches, etc.
-The package is called <a href="">simple-web</a>.
+The package is called <a href="">
+simple-web</a>.

<A NAME="lang-translate" title="lang-translate"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC137">How do I use Emacs to translate text among languages?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC137">How do I use Emacs to translate text among languages?</A></H3>

<p>
-David Finucane &lt;finucane@myri.com&gt; has written an elisp/Java
-package that uses the AltaVista translation service to translate text among
-a number of languages.
+Some packages that can be used for translating text among a number of languages.

<ul>
-<li><a href="" >trans</a>
+<li><a href="" >BabelMode</a>
</ul>

<A NAME="ange-ftp" title="ange-ftp"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC138">How do I use FTP, (ange-ftp), within Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC138">How do I use FTP, (ange-ftp), within Emacs?</A></H3>
<b>20.3</b><br>

<p>
@@ -3681,7 +3681,8 @@
<p>
If you are behind a firewall you may have problems, because the native
FTP client doesn't support passive mode, if this is the case then you'll
-need to download <a href="">ftp.exe</a>, and follow the instructions below.
+need to download <a href="">
+ftp.exe</a>, and follow the instructions below.

<p>
Place the ftp.exe executable in a directory where you keep your local
@@ -3719,7 +3720,7 @@


<A NAME="telnet" title="telnet"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC139">How do I use telnet with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC139">How do I use telnet with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
Before you can use telnet-mode from within Emacs, you need a telnet
@@ -3732,7 +3733,8 @@

<ul>

-<li><a href="">telnet</a>, a Windows version
+<li><a href="">
+telnet</a>, a Windows version
of telnet by Igor Milavec modified to use stdio by Naftali Ramati
&lt;naftali@harmonic.co.il&gt; (includes source).

@@ -3740,7 +3742,9 @@
Unfortunately, this telnet program requires that the host be specified on
the command line, but telnet-mode wants to specify the host using the
"open" command once telnet has started. Zoltan Kemenczy
-&lt;zoltan@nabu.isg.mot.com&gt; has <a href="">written a version of the telnet-mode
+&lt;zoltan@nabu.isg.mot.com&gt; has
+<a href="">
+written a version of the telnet-mode
function</a> that does this. To use it, place "(require 'telnet)" in your
startup file, followed by Zoltan's new telnet-mode code.

@@ -3750,10 +3754,11 @@
using telnet-mode). If you use the Borland C compiler and want to do a
little hacking, it would be great if you could change this telnet to be
able to start up without requiring a host on the command line. The source
-is included in the above zip file, and Naftali has <a href="">some tips</a> for making this change.
+is included in the above zip file, and Naftali has <a href="">some tips</a>
+for making this change.

<p>
-<li><a href="">jtelnet</a>,
+<li><a href="">jtelnet</a>,
a Java telnet application by Ivan Ganza &lt;iganza@watchit.com&gt;
(8/6/97).

@@ -3771,7 +3776,7 @@


<A NAME="tex" title="tex"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC140">How do I use TeX with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC140">How do I use TeX with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
(Note: If you use anti-virus software, see <a href="">the
@@ -3785,7 +3790,7 @@
</P>

<A NAME="miktex" title="miktex"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC141">MiKTeX</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC141">MiKTeX</A></H3>

<p>
&nbsp;MiKTeX is a native Windows implementation of the TeX document processing
@@ -3797,7 +3802,7 @@
</P>

<A NAME="auctex" title="auctex"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC142">AUCTeX</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC142">AUCTeX</A></H3>

<p>
AUCTeX is a package for writing LaTeX files in Emacs. The AUCTeX
@@ -3807,13 +3812,13 @@
MikTex and Emacs</a>.

<A NAME="fptex" title="fptex"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC143">FPTeX</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC143">FPTeX</A></H3>
<P>
FTTex is another port of a TeX system for windows - it is much closer to
the Unix TeX, for more details please see : <A HREF="">http://www.tug.org/interest.html#free</A>.

<A NAME="tex-directions" title="tex-directions"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC144">Putting it all together</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC144">Putting it all together</A></H3>

<p>
Willem Minten &lt;Willem.Minten@esat.kuleuven.ac.be&gt; has put
@@ -3821,13 +3826,13 @@
Emacs working together. If you're starting from scratch, look here first.

<ul>
-<li><a href="" >Directions</a>
-<li><a href="">Files</a>
+<li><a href="" >
+Files and Installation Directions</a>
</ul>


<A NAME="ispell" title="ispell"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC145">How do I perform spell checks, using Ispell?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC145">How do I perform spell checks, using Ispell?</A></H3>

<P>
Ispell version 3 is the latest official supported version of the ispell
@@ -3842,7 +3847,7 @@


<A NAME="sgml" title="sgml"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC146">Emacs for SGML editing and publishing on Windows</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC146">Emacs for SGML editing and publishing on Windows</A></H3>

<p>
Lennart Staflin has written a mode called PSGML for editing SGML
@@ -3857,14 +3862,6 @@
An SGML validator is included in James Clark's DSSSL Engine, <a href="" >Jade</a>.

<p>
-Markus Hoenicka has prepared an NT-specific installation guide for
-PSGML, Jade and many related and useful packages at:
-
-<ul>
-<li><a href="" >http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hoenicka_markus/ntsgml.html</a>
-</ul>
-
-<p>
Another good source of information for creating, managing, and processing TEI documents in SGML or XML. is:

<ul>
@@ -3873,7 +3870,7 @@


<A NAME="gpgp" title="gpgp"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC147">Emacs and Encryption, using GPG - or PGP</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC147">Emacs and Encryption, using GPG - or PGP</A></H3>

<p>
GNU Privacy Guard is a free replacement for PGP which runs on
@@ -3885,7 +3882,7 @@


<A NAME="intellimouse" title="intellimouse"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC148">How do I use an Intellimouse with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC148">How do I use an Intellimouse with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
The Emacs 20.3 pretests and above support the Intellimouse on both NT
@@ -3903,9 +3900,10 @@
</pre></blockquote>

<p>
-Walt Buehring &lt;buehring@i2.com&gt; has extended the <a href="">implementations of
-mouse-wheel-scroll-line and mouse-wheel-scroll-screen</a>. To use,
-download and place in your startup or site-init files.
+Walt Buehring &lt;buehring@i2.com&gt; has extended the
+<a href="">
+implementations of mouse-wheel-scroll-line and mouse-wheel-scroll-screen</a>.
+ To use, download and place in your startup or site-init files.

<p>
For more details on interpreting mouse-wheel events in elisp, see
@@ -3914,7 +3912,7 @@


<A NAME="intelli-flywheel" title="intelli-flywheel"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC149">Interactions with FlyWheel</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC149">Interactions with FlyWheel</A></H3>

<p>
Apparently, FlyWheel and Emacs Intellimouse support don't work
@@ -3925,7 +3923,7 @@


<A NAME="intelli-problems" title="intelli-problems"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC150">Why does Emacs ignore my mouse wheel?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC150">Why does Emacs ignore my mouse wheel?</A></H3>

<p>
Emacs is incompatible with the latest versions of mouse wheel devices.
@@ -3943,7 +3941,7 @@


<A NAME="perl" title="perl"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC151">How do I use perl-mode with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC151">How do I use perl-mode with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
A perl-mode comes with the Emacs distribution, and will be used when
@@ -3951,11 +3949,12 @@

<p>
Users have also recommended an alternate mode named cperl-mode. You
-can get this from <a href="">ftp://ftp.math.ohio-state.edu/pub/users/ilya/perl/</a>.
+can get this from <a href="">
+http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki/CPerlMode</a>.


<A NAME="perldb" title="perldb"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC152">How do I use the perl debugger with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC152">How do I use the perl debugger with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
From Jay Rogers &lt;jay@rgrs.com&gt;:
@@ -4000,17 +3999,18 @@


<A NAME="python" title="python"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC153">How do I use python-mode with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC153">How do I use python-mode with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
The python-mode shipped with Python 1.5 requires a new custom.el before
it can be used with Emacs 19.34. For more information, see the description
-of python-mode at <a href="" >http://www.python.org/emacs/python-mode/</a>.
+of python-mode at <a href="" >
+http://www.python.org/emacs/python-mode/</a>.



<A NAME="grep" title="grep"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC154">How do I use grep with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC154">How do I use grep with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
To use grep with Emacs, you first need to obtain a version of grep.
@@ -4027,13 +4027,15 @@

<p>
Some users find the igrep package to be a more useful package for using
-grep (for example, it supports <A HREF="">recursive greps</A> directly). Here are some <a href="">pointers</a> from other users on what you need
+grep (for example, it supports <A HREF="">recursive greps</A> directly).
+Here are some <a href="">pointers</a> from other users on what you need
to do to get igrep working on your system. You can download igrep from the
-elisp archive at <a href="">ftp://ftp.cis.ohio-state.edu/pub/emacs/emacs-lisp/misc/igrep.el.gz</a>.
+elisp archive at <a href="">
+http://mirrors.sunsite.dk/gnu/elisp-archive/misc/igrep.el.gz</a>.


<A NAME="grep-recursive" title="grep-recursive"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC155">How do I do a recursive grep?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC155">How do I do a recursive grep?</A></H3>

<p>
To do a recursive grep, you need the help of some other utilities.
@@ -4078,7 +4080,7 @@


<A NAME="edt" title="edt"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC156">How do I use the EDT emulation mode in Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC156">How do I use the EDT emulation mode in Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
To use the EDT emulation package distributed with Emacs, place the
@@ -4096,35 +4098,36 @@


<A NAME="desktop-saving" title="desktop-saving"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC157">How do I do desktop saving with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC157">How do I do desktop saving with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
Desktop saving refers to the ability to save and restore editing
sessions (state of frames and buffers) between uses of Emacs. Kevin
-Greiner &lt;kgreiner@geosys.com &gt; has collected <a href="">some elisp</a> for using the desktop
+Greiner &lt;kgreiner@geosys.com &gt; has collected <a href="">
+some elisp</a> for using the desktop
saving features of Emacs that should prove useful for others interested in
the feature.

<p>
Jari Aalto &lt;jari.aalto@poboxes.com&gt; also has collected references
-to packages that <a href="" >save
-Emacs state</a> and <a href="" >
-screen and window position</a>.
+to packages that <a http://tiny-tools.sourceforge.net/emacs-elisp.html" >
+http://tiny-tools.sourceforge.net/emacs-elisp.html</a>.

<p>
Chuck Siska &lt;<a href="">chuck.siska@conexant.com</a>&gt;
wrote his own desktop frame window layout save and restore package called
-<a href="">desktop-frame.el</a>.
+<a href="">
+desktop-frame.el</a>.


<A NAME="develop-page" title="develop-page"><!-- Anchor--></A>

<A NAME="vcpp" title="vcpp"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC158">How Do I Use Emacs with Microsoft Visual C++</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC158">How Do I Use Emacs with Microsoft Visual C++</A></H3>


<A NAME="vcpp-visemacs" title="vcpp-visemacs"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC159">VisEmacs</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC159">VisEmacs</A></H3>

<p>
For a close coupling of Emacs and MSVC, Christopher Payne wrote a Visual Studio add-in that makes Emacs the default text editor, this has now been taken over by
@@ -4133,15 +4136,21 @@

<ul>
<li><a href="">http://sourceforge.net/projects/visemacs/</a> - For the latest version.</li>
-<li><a href="">http://www.atnetsend.net/computing/VisEmacs/</A> - For notes on usage, etc.</li>
+<li><a href="">http://www.smathers.net/VisEmacs.htm</A> - For notes on usage, etc.</li>
</ul>


-<h4><a name="TOC160">Emacs and MSVC</a></h4>
+<H4><A NAME="TOC160">Emacs and MSVC</A></H4>

<p>
-Written by <a href="" >Charles
-Curley</a> with a lot of help from: <a href="">David Biesack</a>, <a href="">Caleb T. Deupree</a>, <a href="">John Huxoll Gardner</a>, <a href="">Anders Lindgren</a>, and <a href="" >John Yates</a>.
+The section of code in .emacs for MSVC written by
+<a href="" >Charles
+Curley</a> with a lot of help from:
+<a href="">David Biesack</a>,
+<a href="">Caleb T. Deupree</a>,
+<a href="">John Huxoll Gardner</a>,
+<a href="">Anders Lindgren</a>,
+and <a href="" >John Yates</a>.

<p>
This is an app note on how to use Microsoft Visual C++ with Emacs. The
@@ -4154,7 +4163,7 @@


<A NAME="vcppEnvironment" title="vcppEnvironment"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC161">VC++ Environmental Variables</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC161">VC++ Environmental Variables</A></H3>

<p>
First, Emacs requires any environmental variables to be set at boot time, in autoexec.bat (for Windows 95). This includes variables such as HOME. So if you haven't already done so, set the environment up so that Emacs' compile mode will correctly run VC++. There is a batch file in your VC++ installation's bin directory called "vcvars32.bat". Call it from your autoexec.bat file. Make sure you use the "call" keyword, or execution never returns from the called batch file. Here is what the relevant portion of my autoexec.bat looks like:
@@ -4198,7 +4207,7 @@
By the way, you can scroll in the M-X command buffer with up and down arrows. You can also scroll in the compile command buffer with the up and down arrows. Both seem to be fully editable as well.

<A NAME="vcppSetting" title="vcppSetting"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC162">Setting the Default Command Line</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC162">Setting the Default Command Line</A></H3>

<p>
Now set up the default value for the compile command line. Add the following to your .Emacs:
@@ -4242,7 +4251,7 @@
there is no option.

<A NAME="vcppHandling" title="vcppHandling"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC163">Handling Compile Time Errors</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC163">Handling Compile Time Errors</A></H3>

<p>
Those of you who never get compile time errors can skip this section.
@@ -4270,7 +4279,7 @@
that regexes.

<A NAME="vcppReverting" title="vcppReverting"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC164">Reverting Buffers</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC164">Reverting Buffers</A></H3>

<p>
Then there is the problem that sometimes you modify the source from Microsoft's IDE. Here's some help for that.
@@ -4296,10 +4305,6 @@
two modes, `global-auto-revert-mode' that applies to all buffers while
`auto-revert-mode' can be activated for individual buffers.

-You can get the latest version from:
-
- <a href="" >http://www.csd.uu.se/~andersl/emacs.shtml</a>
-
Please note that this feature comes with a prize: Normally Emacs acts like
an extra backup system, keeping a copy of the files you are editing.
Should some external program mess up a file, you can always save the copy
@@ -4333,14 +4338,16 @@
<p>
<a href="">Caleb T. Deupree</a> also
writes, "You might also mention a package mode-compile.el, which is a
-wrapper around compile mode and is available from the Emacs lisp archive or
-from <a href="" >http://www.cenatls.cena.dgac.fr/~boubaker/Emacs/index.html</a>.
+wrapper around compile mode and is available from the Emacs lisp archive.
It detects makefiles in directories and parses them for valid targets,
performing many of the same tasks which you do in your hooks."

+<p>
+Also, there is a small note on - <a href="">
+Reverting a Buffer </a>

<A NAME="vcppExporting" title="vcppExporting"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC165">Exporting a File to Emacs</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC165">Exporting a File to Emacs</A></H3>

<p>
You can also set up VC++ to import a file into Emacs for you, all
@@ -4370,32 +4377,33 @@


<A NAME="cpp-builder" title="cpp-builder"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC166">Emacs and Borland C++ Builder</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC166">Emacs and Borland C++ Builder</A></H3>

<p>
-Jonathan Arnold's &lt;jdarnold@buddydog.org&gt; <a href="" >
+Jonathan Arnold's &lt;jdarnold@buddydog.org&gt;
+<a href="" >
EmacsEdit "expert"</a> for interfacing C++ Builder and Emacs.


<A NAME="java" title="java"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC167">Java</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC167">Java</A></H3>

<A NAME="java-imenu" title="java-imenu"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC168">How do I get imenu to work with Java?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC168">How do I get imenu to work with Java?</A></H3>

<p>
-Howard Melman &lt;howard@silverstream.com&gt; has put together <a href="">some elisp</a> to get imenu
-working with Java.
-
+Howard Melman &lt;howard@silverstream.com&gt; has put together
+<a href="">
+some elisp</a> to get imenu working with Java.

<A NAME="java-tags" title="java-tags"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC169">Creating TAGS files for Java source</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC169">Creating TAGS files for Java source</A></H3>

<p>
To create TAGS files for Java source files, use Paul's JDE below.

<A NAME="java-JDE" title="java-JDE"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC170">Java Development Environment</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC170">Java Development Environment</A></H3>

<p>
Paul Kinnucan &lt;paulk@mathworks.com&gt; has also implemented a Java
@@ -4409,23 +4417,23 @@
</blockquote>

<p>
-The JDE can be found at <a href="" >http://sunsite.auc.dk/jde/</a> (also
+The JDE can be found at <a href="" >http://jdee.sunsite.dk/</a> (also
mirrored at <a href="" >http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lakes/1506/</a>).

<p>
Since NT Emacs version <b>20.3.1</b>: Support for jdb has been added to gud.el package.

<A NAME="java-jacob" title="java-jacob"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC171">The Jacob class browser and project manager</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC171">The Jacob class browser and project manager</A></H3>

<p>
Jacob is a Java class browser and project manager for Emacs written by
Clemens Lahme &lt;Clemens.Lahme@gmd.de&gt;. For details about Jacob, see
-<a href="" >http://www.kclee.com/clemens/jacob/</a>.
+<a href="" >http://www.kclee.de/clemens/jacob/</a>.


<A NAME="java-example" title="java-example"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC172">Example instructions for installing Emacs/JDE/JDK</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC172">Example instructions for installing Emacs/JDE/JDK</A></H3>

<p>
David Fellows' &lt;fellows@roo.cs.unb.ca&gt; recipe for installing
@@ -4444,11 +4452,11 @@
</blockquote>

<A NAME="revision-control" title="revision-control"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC173">How do I use revision/source control with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC173">How do I use revision/source control with Emacs?</A></H3>


<A NAME="where-rcs" title="where-rcs"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC174">Is there a version of RCS for Win32?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC174">Is there a version of RCS for Win32?</A></H3>

<p>
There are a number of RCS x86 executables floating about. There is an
@@ -4462,8 +4470,10 @@
formatted documentation files:

<ul>
-<li><a href="">ftp://ftp.leo.org/pub/comp/os/os2/leo/devtools/gnu/rcs57pc1.zip</a>
-<li><a href="">ftp://ftp.leo.org/pub/comp/os/os2/leo/devtools/gnu/rcs57pc2.zip</a>
+<li><a href="">
+ftp://ftp.leo.org/pub/comp/os/os2/leo/devtools/gnu/rcs57pc1.zip</a>
+<li><a href="">
+ftp://ftp.leo.org/pub/comp/os/os2/leo/devtools/gnu/rcs57pc2.zip</a>
</ul>

</blockquote>
@@ -4495,7 +4505,7 @@
"RCSINIT" to "-x,v" ("set RCSINIT=-x,v").

<A NAME="where-cvs" title="where-cvs"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC175">Is there a version of CVS for Win32?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC175">Is there a version of CVS for Win32?</A></H3>

<p>
You can find a free port of CVS from <a href="">Cyclic Software</a>.
@@ -4503,44 +4513,47 @@
<p>
If you use the <tt>pcl-cvs</tt> package, you'll need to fix a couple of
things in the elisp to make it work on NT; Michael M. Schmitz
-&lt;ms@ley.de&gt; has <a href="">some
+&lt;ms@col.sw-ley.de&gt; has <a href="">some
instructions</a> describing what you need to do. John D. Amidon
-&lt;jda@jhk.com&gt; gives <a href="">an
+&lt;jda@jhk.com&gt; gives <a href="">an
example</a> of what he used to set up <tt>pcl-cvs</tt> in his .emacs.


<A NAME="vc-mode" title="vc-mode"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC176">What do I need to do to get vc-mode (version control) working?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC176">What do I need to do to get vc-mode (version control) working?</A></H3>
<p>
If you are having trouble getting vc-mode working with RCS or CVS, take
-a look at Peter Cherna's &lt;peter.cherna@scala.com&gt; <a href="">problem description and fix</a>.
+a look at Peter Cherna's &lt;peter.cherna@scala.com&gt;
+<a href="">problem description and fix</a>.

<A NAME="vc-mode-clearcase" title="vc-mode-clearcase"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC177">vc-mode and Clearcase</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC177">vc-mode and Clearcase</A></H3>

<p>
Andy Eskilsson &lt;andy.eskilsson@telelogic.se&gt; has modified vc-mode
-to work with Clearcase, and it reportedly works very well; see <a href="">http://www.fukt.hk-r.se/~flognat/vc/</a>
+to work with Clearcase, and it reportedly works very well;
+see <a href="">http://www.fukt.hk-r.se/~flognat/vc/</a>.

<p>
-Jari Aalto &lt;jari.aalto@poboxes.com&gt; has a page about using
-Clearcase software with Emacs. See "9.8 Clearcase software" at <a href="">ftp://cs.uta.fi/pub/ssjaaa/emacs-elisp.html</a>.
+Kevin Esler &lt;kaesler@us.ibm.com&gt; has an Emacs/ClearCase Integration
+and Summary of features listed out. see <a href="">
+http://members.verizon.net/~vze24fr2/EmacsClearCase/</a>.

<A NAME="perl" title="perl"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC178">How do I use perl-mode with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC178">How do I use perl-mode with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
A perl-mode comes with the Emacs distribution, and will be used when
you load and edit Perl files.

<p>
-Users have also recommended an alternate mode named cperl-mode. This is installed with Emacs 21.2 - if you are running an older version of Emacs you can find it online at:
+Users have also recommended an alternate mode named cperl-mode. This is installed with Emacs 21.3 - if you are running an older version of Emacs you can find it online at:

- <a href="">ftp://ftp.math.ohio-state.edu/pub/users/ilya/perl/</a>.
+ <a href="">http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki/CPerlMode</a>.


<A NAME="perldb" title="perldb"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC179">How do I use the perl debugger with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC179">How do I use the perl debugger with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
From Jay Rogers &lt;jay@rgrs.com&gt;:
@@ -4583,7 +4596,7 @@
of perldb and Emacs.

<A NAME="python" title="python"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC180">How do I use python-mode with Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC180">How do I use python-mode with Emacs?</A></H3>

<p>
The python-mode shipped with Python 1.5 requires a new custom.el before
@@ -4594,7 +4607,7 @@


<A NAME="emacs-more-info" title="emacs-more-info"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC181">Where can I get general information about Emacs?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC181">Where can I get general information about Emacs?</A></H3>


<p>
@@ -4606,31 +4619,25 @@

<ul>

-<li> The general Emacs website : <a href="" >http://www.emacs.org/</a>
+<li> The general Emacs website : <a href="" >http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/</a>

<li> Emacs FAQ
-<a href="" >[HTML]</a>
+<a href="" >[HTML]</a>

<li> Emacs Manual
-<a href="" >[A4 Postscript 19.34]</a>
-<a href="" >[HTML 20.3]</a>
-<a href="" >[A4 Postscript]</a>
-<a href="" >[FSF site, many formats, 20.3]</a>
+<a href=""> [GNU Site, many formats] </a>
+<a href="" >[Other site, HTML 21.2]</a>

<li> Elisp manual
-<a href="" >[A4 Postscript 19.34]</a>
-<a href="" >[HTML 20.2.5]</a>
+<a href="" >[GNU site, many formats] </a>
<a href="">[Info 20.2.5]</a>
-<a href="" >[FSF site, many formats, 20.2.5]</a>

<li> Intro to Elisp manual
-<a href="" >[A4 Postscript 19.34]</a>
-<a href="" >[FSF site, many formats, 1.05]</a>
-
+<a href="" >[GNU site, many formats]</a>
</ul>

<A NAME="ntemacs-list" title="ntemacs-list"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC182">NTEmacs Mailing List</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC182">NTEmacs Mailing List</A></H3>

<P>
NTEmacs has a vibrant and helpfull mailing list, for people to report
@@ -4665,12 +4672,11 @@


<A NAME="mule-lists" title="mule-lists"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC183">Extra information about MULE</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC183">Extra information about MULE</A></H3>
<P>
- There are several sites that may be of interest to users of MULE:
-<A HREF="">ftp://ftp.etl.go.jp/"</A>, and
-<A HREF="">ftp://ftp.scphys.kyoto-u.ac.jp/</A> both contains papers written by the original developers of
-Mule., and <A HREF="">http://www.m17.org/</A>
+ The home site of MULE that may be of interest to users of MULE:
+<a HREF="">http://www.m17n.org/mule/Mule.en.html"</a>.
+and <a HREF="">http://www.m17n.org/</a>
is another site with Multilingual info.
</P>
<P>
@@ -4687,7 +4693,7 @@
<p>

<A NAME="find-lisp" title="find-lisp"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC184">Where can I find more Lisp packages?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC184">Where can I find more Lisp packages?</A></H3>
<p>
The best place to start looking is in the newsgroup
<A HREF="">gnu.emacs.sources</A>, this
@@ -4704,7 +4710,7 @@
or maintain - the best way to

<A NAME="woman" title="woman"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC185">Reading MAN pages without Man, (WoMan)</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC185">Reading MAN pages without Man, (WoMan)</A></H3>

<p>

@@ -4713,7 +4719,7 @@
<p>
This is included with the latest Emacs, if you're running an older version you can find it online at; <A HREF="">http://centaur.maths.qmw.ac.uk/Emacs/WoMan/</A>.
<A NAME="diff" title="diff"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC186">Where can I find a port of the diff program (e.g, for ediff)?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC186">Where can I find a port of the diff program (e.g, for ediff)?</A></H3>

<p>
You'll need a port of diff before you can use the ediff package in
@@ -4724,74 +4730,76 @@
toolset and use the diff from there in isolation.

<A NAME="patch" title="patch"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC187">Where can I find a port of the patch program?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC187">Where can I find a port of the patch program?</A></H3>

<p>
Patch 2.5 based upon mods by Tim Smith &lt;tzs@halcyon.com&gt; and a
few by Andrew Innes &lt;andrewi@harlequin.co.uk&gt;:

<ul>
-<li><a href="">Source and executable.</a>
+<li><a href="">
+Source and executable.</a>
</ul>


<A NAME="other-tools" title="other-tools"><!-- Anchor--></A>
-<h3><a name="TOC188">What other Unix tools have been ported to NT and/or Windows 95/98?</a></h3>
+<H3><A NAME="TOC188">What other Unix tools have been ported to NT and/or Windows 95/98?</A></H3>

<p>
Probably the first place you should look for more GNU tools is at
Cygwin toolset. The toolset is a port of the GNU tools to the Windows
API, as well as a set of libraries that allow Unix programs to compile
-to Windows with little or no modification. The project is at <a href="" >http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin/</a>
+to Windows with little or no modification.
+The project is at <a href="" >http://www.cygwin.com/</a>
</p>
<p>
Michael Main &lt;main@cs.colorado.edy&gt; has collected together ports
of various Unix programming environments and languages to Windows for
-classes that he teaches. See <a href="" >http://www.cs.colorado.edu/~main/plcd.html</a>
-for an overview; e.g., a version of the mingw32 port of Unix tools is at <a href="" >http://www.cs.colorado.edu/~main/mingw32/</a>.
+classes that he teaches. See <a href="" >
+http://www.cs.colorado.edu/~main/plcd.html</a>
+for an overview; e.g., a version of the mingw32 port of Unix tools is at
+<a href="" >http://www.mingw.org/</a>.
</p>
<p>
There is also a directory of GNU software which has been ported to the
-Windows platform, which is available at <A HREF="">http://www.gnusoftware.com/</A>. This directory also contains several
-patches for Emacs running on Windows, to give extra functionality, see
-<A HREF="">here</A> for details.
+Windows platform, which is available at
+<A HREF="">
+http://www.cs.wisc.edu/twiki/bin/view/CSDocs/WindowsSoftwareCatalogInfo</A>.
</p>
<p>
The UWIN project at AT&amp;T Research is another project whose goal is to
enable UNIX applications to build and run with little or no modification on
Windows NT/95. Part of the UWIN project includes a port of ksh done by
-David Korn. For more information, see <a href="" >http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/uwin</a>.
+David Korn. For more information, see <a href="" >
+http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/uwin</a>.
</p>

<p>
-An older set of the GNU tools that I have seen offered on ftp sites for
+A set of the GNU tools that I have seen offered on ftp sites for
NT and Windows 95 have been based on the Congruent tools (I have heard mixed
reviews of these ports, so use with your own discretion). An ftp site that
-seems to offer the full set of these tools is <a href="">ftp.cc.utexas.edu/microlib/nt/gnu</a>.
+seems to offer the full set of these tools is
+<a href="">http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/</a>.
</p>

<p>
Microsoft also has a collection of tools for use with NT, including
Unix tools such as cron, ps, kill, and nice, as well as a number of NT
-specific tools. A list of these tools is at <a href="" >http://www.microsoft.com/ntserver/nts/exec/vendors/freeshare/maintnce.asp</a>.
+specific tools. A list of these tools is at
+<a href="" >
+http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserversystem/sfu/default.mspx</a>.
</p>
<p>
If you're a perl user, then you probably want the port of perl to Windows.
You can download a perl distribution from any of the CPAN mirror sites,
-such as <a href="">ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/perl/CPAN/ports/win32/Standard/</a>.
-For a complete list of CPAN mirrors, see <a href="">ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/perl/CPAN/SITES.html</a>.
+such as <a href="">http://www.cpan.org/ports/</a>.
+For a complete list of CPAN mirrors, see
+<a href="">http://www.cpan.org/SITES.html</a>.
</p>
<p>
David Wihl is maintaining a FAQ about porting Unix applications to NT.
-It can be found at <a href="" >http://www.nentug.org/unix-to-nt</a>.
-</p>
-<p>
-Chris Szurgot is also collecting and implementing Unix style tools for
-Windows 95 (and presumably NT). See <a href="" >http://www.itribe.net/virtunix</a>.
-</p>
-<p>
-Jeff Paquette &lt;paquette@mediaone.net&gt; has a collection of the GNU
-text utilities for Windows. See <a href="" >http://atnetsend.ne.mediaone.net/~paquette/WinProgramming.html</a>.
+It can be found at <a href="" >
+http://www.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/menschen/sommersn_public/unix2nt.html</a>.
</p>

<p>
@@ -4804,9 +4812,9 @@
<td align=left>
Combined Document
| <A HREF="">Split Document</A>
-<address>Steve Kemp, FAQ Maintainer
+<address>Author: Ramprasad B
<br>
-&lt;<a href="">skx@tardis.ed.ac.uk</a>&gt;
+&lt;<a href="">ramprasad_i82@yahoo.com</a>&gt;
</address>
</td>
<td align=right>
@@ -4814,7 +4822,7 @@
src=""
alt="Valid HTML 4.01!" height="31" width="88"></a>
<br>
- Last Modified : Thursday 1 August 2002
+ Updated: $Sunday 5 March 2006 20:11:03$
</td>
</Table>
</body></HTML>

------------------------------------------------------------

Thanks,

--
Ramprasad B


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