-This is Info file ../info/xemacs.info, produced by Makeinfo version
-1.68 from the input file xemacs/xemacs.texi.
+This is ../info/xemacs.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.0 from
+xemacs/xemacs.texi.
INFO-DIR-SECTION XEmacs Editor
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
values, and thereby alter and control the behavior of certain Emacs
commands. These variables are called "options". Most options are
documented in this manual and appear in the Variable Index (*note
-Variable Index::.).
+Variable Index::).
One example of a variable which is an option is `fill-column', which
specifies the position of the right margin (as a number of characters
-from the left margin) to be used by the fill commands (*note
-Filling::.).
+from the left margin) to be used by the fill commands (*note Filling::).
* Menu:
This says that the buffer displays the contents of the `Emacs' group.
The other groups are listed because they are its contents. But they
-are listed differently, without indentation and dashes, because *their*
+are listed differently, without indentation and dashes, because _their_
contents are not included. Each group has a single-line documentation
string; the `Emacs' group also has a `[State]' line.
value in the usual ways.
Setting, saving and resetting a face work like the same operations
-for options (*note Changing an Option::.).
+for options (*note Changing an Option::).
A face can specify different appearances for different types of
display. For example, a face can make text red on a color display, but
customize-apropos'. You specify a regular expression as argument; then
all options, faces and groups whose names match this regular expression
are set up in the customization buffer. If you specify an empty regular
-expression, this includes *all* groups, options and faces in the
+expression, this includes _all_ groups, options and faces in the
customization buffer (but that takes a long time).
If you change option values and then decide the change was a mistake,
a matter of personal taste, not a matter of the contents of particular
files. If you want to use Auto Fill, set up major mode hooks with your
`.emacs' file to turn it on (when appropriate) for you alone (*note
-Init File::.). Don't try to use a local variable list that would
-impose your taste on everyone working with the file.
+Init File::). Don't try to use a local variable list that would impose
+your taste on everyone working with the file.
XEmacs allows you to specify local variables in the first line of a
file, in addition to specifying them in the `Local Variables' section
reads a name as an argument using the minibuffer and defines that name
to execute the macro. The macro name is a Lisp symbol, and defining it
in this way makes it a valid command name for calling with `M-x' or for
-binding a key to with `global-set-key' (*note Keymaps::.). If you
+binding a key to with `global-set-key' (*note Keymaps::). If you
specify a name that has a prior definition other than another keyboard
macro, Emacs prints an error message and nothing is changed.
same macro with the same definition it has now. You need not
understand Lisp code to do this, because `insert-kbd-macro' writes the
Lisp code for you. Then save the file. You can load the file with
-`load-file' (*note Lisp Libraries::.). If the file you save in is your
-initialization file `~/.emacs' (*note Init File::.), then the macro
-will be defined each time you run Emacs.
+`load-file' (*note Lisp Libraries::). If the file you save in is your
+initialization file `~/.emacs' (*note Init File::), then the macro will
+be defined each time you run Emacs.
If you give `insert-kbd-macro' a prefix argument, it creates
additional Lisp code to record the keys (if any) that you have bound to