Since only part of a large buffer fits in the window, Emacs has to show only a part of it. This chapter describes commands and variables that let you specify which part of the text you want to see, and how the text is displayed.
• Scrolling | Commands to move text up and down in a window. | |
• Recentering | A scroll command that centers the current line. | |
• Auto Scrolling | Redisplay scrolls text automatically when needed. | |
• Horizontal Scrolling | Moving text left and right in a window. | |
• Narrowing | Restricting display and editing to a portion of the buffer. | |
• View Mode | Viewing read-only buffers. | |
• Follow Mode | Follow mode lets two windows scroll as one. | |
• Faces | How to change the display style using faces. | |
• Colors | Specifying colors for faces. | |
• Standard Faces | The main predefined faces. | |
• Text Scale | Increasing or decreasing text size in a buffer. | |
• Font Lock | Minor mode for syntactic highlighting using faces. | |
• Highlight Interactively | Tell Emacs what text to highlight. | |
• Fringes | Enabling or disabling window fringes. | |
• Displaying Boundaries | Displaying top and bottom of the buffer. | |
• Useless Whitespace | Showing possibly spurious trailing whitespace. | |
• Selective Display | Hiding lines with lots of indentation. | |
• Optional Mode Line | Optional mode line display features. | |
• Text Display | How text characters are normally displayed. | |
• Cursor Display | Features for displaying the cursor. | |
• Line Truncation | Truncating lines to fit the screen width instead of continuing them to multiple screen lines. | |
• Visual Line Mode | Word wrap and screen line-based editing. | |
• Display Custom | Information on variables for customizing display. |