Next: Displaying Boundaries, Previous: Highlight Interactively, Up: Display [Contents][Index]
On graphical displays, each Emacs window normally has narrow
fringes on the left and right edges. The fringes are
used to display symbols that provide information about the text
in the window. You can type M-x fringe-mode to disable
the fringes, or modify their width. This command affects fringes
in all frames; to modify fringes on the selected frame only, use
M-x set-fringe-style. You can make your changes to the
fringes permanent by customizing the variable
fringe-mode.
The most common use of the fringes is to indicate a continuation line (see Continuation Lines). When one line of text is split into multiple screen lines, the left fringe shows a curving arrow for each screen line except the first, indicating that this is not the real beginning. The right fringe shows a curving arrow for each screen line except the last, indicating that this is not the real end. If the line’s direction is right-to-left (see Bidirectional Editing), the meanings of the curving arrows in the fringes are swapped.
The fringes indicate line truncation (see Line Truncation) with short horizontal arrows meaning there’s more text on this line which is scrolled horizontally out of view. Clicking the mouse on one of the arrows scrolls the display horizontally in the direction of the arrow.
The fringes can also indicate other things, such as buffer boundaries (see Displaying Boundaries), and where a program you are debugging is executing (see Debuggers).
The fringe is also used for drawing the cursor, if the current
line is exactly as wide as the window and point is at the end of
the line. To disable this, change the variable
overflow-newline-into-fringe to nil;
this causes Emacs to continue or truncate lines that are exactly
as wide as the window.
If you customize fringe-mode to remove the
fringes on one or both sides of the window display, the features
that display on the fringe are not available. Indicators of line
continuation and truncation are an exception: when fringes are
not available, Emacs uses the leftmost and rightmost character
cells to indicate continuation and truncation with special ASCII
characters, see Continuation
Lines, and Line Truncation. This
reduces the width available for displaying text on each line,
because the character cells used for truncation and continuation
indicators are reserved for that purpose. Since buffer text can
include bidirectional text, and thus both left-to-right and
right-to-left paragraphs (see Bidirectional
Editing), removing only one of the fringes still reserves two
character cells, one on each side of the window, for truncation
and continuation indicators, because these indicators are
displayed on opposite sides of the window in right-to-left
paragraphs.
Next: Displaying Boundaries, Previous: Highlight Interactively, Up: Display [Contents][Index]