menu bar at the top of the frame makes shortcuts to several of the
commands available (*note Pull-down Menus::).
- * If you are running XEmacs under a graphical windowing system, a
- toolbar at the top of the frame, just under the menu bar if it
- exists, provides "one-touch" shortcuts to several commands. (Not
- yet documented.)
+ * Under a graphical windowing system, a toolbar at the top of the
+ frame, just under the menu bar if it exists, provides "one-touch"
+ shortcuts to several commands. (Not yet documented.)
- * If you are running XEmacs under a graphical windowing system, a
- gutter at the top (under the toolbar) and/or bottom of the frame
- provides advanced GUI facilities like tab controls for rapid
- switching among related windows and progress bars for
- time-consuming operations like downloads across the Internet.
- Gutters are an experimental feature introduced in XEmacs version
- 21.2. (Not yet documented.)
+ * Under a graphical windowing system, a gutter at the top (under the
+ toolbar) and/or bottom of the frame provides advanced GUI
+ facilities like tab controls for rapid switching among related
+ windows and progress bars for time-consuming operations like
+ downloads across the Internet. Gutters are an experimental feature
+ introduced in XEmacs version 21.2. (Not yet documented.)
You can subdivide the XEmacs frame into multiple text windows, and
use each window for a different file (*note Windows::). Multiple XEmacs
* Point:: The place in the text where editing commands operate.
* Echo Area:: Short messages appear at the bottom of the frame.
* Mode Line:: Interpreting the mode line.
+* GUI Components:: Menubar, toolbars, gutters.
* XEmacs under X:: Some information on using XEmacs under the X
Window System.
+* XEmacs under MS Windows:: Some information on using XEmacs under
+ Microsoft Windows.
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File: xemacs.info, Node: Point, Next: Echo Area, Prev: Frame, Up: Frame