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When Emacs displays a given piece of text, the visual appearance of the text may be determined by faces drawn from different sources. If these various sources together specify more than one face for a particular character, Emacs merges the attributes of the various faces. Here is the order in which Emacs merges the faces, from highest to lowest priority:
region face. See
Standard Faces in The GNU Emacs Manual.nil face property, Emacs applies
the face(s) specified by that property. If the overlay has a
mouse-face property and the mouse is near enough
to the overlay, Emacs applies the face or face attributes
specified by the mouse-face property instead. See
Overlay
Properties.
When multiple overlays cover one character, an overlay with higher priority overrides those with lower priority. See Overlays.
face or
mouse-face property, Emacs applies the specified
faces and face attributes. See Special
Properties. (This is how Font Lock mode faces are applied.
See Font Lock
Mode.)mode-line face. For the
mode line of a non-selected window, Emacs applies the
mode-line-inactive face. For a header line, Emacs
applies the header-line face.default face.At each stage, if a face has a valid :inherit
attribute, Emacs treats any attribute with an
unspecified value as having the corresponding value
drawn from the parent face(s). see Face Attributes. Note
that the parent face(s) may also leave the attribute unspecified;
in that case, the attribute remains unspecified at the next level
of face merging.
Next: Face Remapping, Previous: Attribute Functions, Up: Faces [Contents][Index]