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When a line of text extends beyond the right edge of a window, Emacs can continue the line (make it wrap to the next screen line), or truncate the line (limit it to one screen line). The additional screen lines used to display a long text line are called continuation lines. Continuation is not the same as filling; continuation happens on the screen only, not in the buffer contents, and it breaks a line precisely at the right margin, not at a word boundary. See Filling.
On a graphical display, tiny arrow images in the window fringes indicate truncated and continued lines (see Fringes). On a text terminal, a ‘$’ in the rightmost column of the window indicates truncation; a ‘\’ on the rightmost column indicates a line that wraps. (The display table can specify alternate characters to use for this; see Display Tables).
If this buffer-local variable is non-nil,
lines that extend beyond the right edge of the window are
truncated; otherwise, they are continued. As a special
exception, the variable
truncate-partial-width-windows takes precedence
in partial-width windows (i.e., windows that do not
occupy the entire frame width).
This variable controls line truncation in
partial-width windows. A partial-width window is one
that does not occupy the entire frame width (see Splitting
Windows). If the value is nil, line
truncation is determined by the variable
truncate-lines (see above). If the value is an
integer n, lines are truncated if the
partial-width window has fewer than n columns,
regardless of the value of truncate-lines; if
the partial-width window has n or more columns,
line truncation is determined by truncate-lines.
For any other non-nil value, lines are truncated
in every partial-width window, regardless of the value of
truncate-lines.
When horizontal scrolling (see Horizontal Scrolling) is in use in a window, that forces truncation.
If this buffer-local variable is non-nil, it
defines a wrap prefix which Emacs displays at the
start of every continuation line. (If lines are truncated,
wrap-prefix is never used.) Its value may be a
string or an image (see Other Display
Specs), or a stretch of whitespace such as specified by
the :width or :align-to display
properties (see Specified Space).
The value is interpreted in the same way as a
display text property. See Display
Property.
A wrap prefix may also be specified for regions of text,
using the wrap-prefix text or overlay property.
This takes precedence over the wrap-prefix
variable. See Special
Properties.
If this buffer-local variable is non-nil, it
defines a line prefix which Emacs displays at the
start of every non-continuation line. Its value may be a
string or an image (see Other Display
Specs), or a stretch of whitespace such as specified by
the :width or :align-to display
properties (see Specified Space).
The value is interpreted in the same way as a
display text property. See Display
Property.
A line prefix may also be specified for regions of text
using the line-prefix text or overlay property.
This takes precedence over the line-prefix
variable. See Special
Properties.
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