Next: Display Tables, Up: Character Display [Contents][Index]
Here are the conventions for displaying each character code (in the absence of a display table, which can override these conventions; see Display Tables).
tab-width controls the number of spaces
per tab stop (see below).ctl-arrow. If this variable is
non-nil (the default), these characters are
displayed as sequences of two glyphs, where the first glyph
is ‘^’ (a display table can specify
a glyph to use instead of ‘^’);
e.g., the DEL character is displayed as
‘^?’.
If ctl-arrow is nil, these
characters are displayed as octal escapes (see below).
This rule also applies to carriage return (character code 13), if that character appears in the buffer. But carriage returns usually do not appear in buffer text; they are eliminated as part of end-of-line conversion (see Coding System Basics).
The above display conventions apply even when there is a
display table, for any character whose entry in the active
display table is nil. Thus, when you set up a
display table, you need only specify the characters for which you
want special behavior.
The following variables affect how certain characters are
displayed on the screen. Since they change the number of columns
the characters occupy, they also affect the indentation
functions. They also affect how the mode line is displayed; if
you want to force redisplay of the mode line using the new
values, call the function force-mode-line-update
(see Mode Line
Format).
This buffer-local variable controls how control characters
are displayed. If it is non-nil, they are
displayed as a caret followed by the character:
‘^A’. If it is nil,
they are displayed as octal escapes: a backslash followed by
three octal digits, as in
‘\001’.
The value of this buffer-local variable is the spacing
between tab stops used for displaying tab characters in Emacs
buffers. The value is in units of columns, and the default is
8. Note that this feature is completely independent of the
user-settable tab stops used by the command
tab-to-tab-stop. See Indent Tabs.
Next: Display Tables, Up: Character Display [Contents][Index]