Next: Terminal emulator, Previous: Directory Tracking, Up: Shell [Contents][Index]
If the variable comint-scroll-to-bottom-on-input
is non-nil, insertion and yank commands scroll the
selected window to the bottom before inserting. The default is
nil.
If comint-scroll-show-maximum-output is
non-nil, then arrival of output when point is at the
end tries to scroll the last line of text to the bottom line of
the window, showing as much useful text as possible. (This mimics
the scrolling behavior of most terminals.) The default is
t.
By setting comint-move-point-for-output, you can
opt for having point jump to the end of the buffer whenever
output arrives—no matter where in the buffer point was
before. If the value is this, point jumps in the
selected window. If the value is all, point jumps in
each window that shows the Comint buffer. If the value is
other, point jumps in all nonselected windows that
show the current buffer. The default value is nil,
which means point does not jump to the end.
If you set comint-prompt-read-only, the prompts
in the Comint buffer are read-only.
The variable comint-input-ignoredups controls
whether successive identical inputs are stored in the input
history. A non-nil value means to omit an input that
is the same as the previous input. The default is
nil, which means to store each input even if it is
equal to the previous input.
Three variables customize file name completion. The variable
comint-completion-addsuffix controls whether
completion inserts a space or a slash to indicate a fully
completed file or directory name (non-nil means do
insert a space or slash).
comint-completion-recexact, if non-nil,
directs TAB to choose the shortest possible
completion if the usual Emacs completion algorithm cannot add
even a single character. comint-completion-autolist,
if non-nil, says to list all the possible
completions whenever completion is not exact.
Command completion normally considers only executable files.
If you set shell-completion-execonly to
nil, it considers nonexecutable files as
well.
The variable shell-completion-fignore specifies a
list of file name extensions to ignore in Shell mode completion.
The default setting is nil, but some users prefer
("~" "#" "%") to ignore file names ending in
‘~’, ‘#’ or
‘%’. Other related Comint modes use the
variable comint-completion-fignore
instead.
Some implementation details of the shell command completion
may also be found in the lisp documentation of the
shell-dynamic-complete-command function.
You can configure the behavior of
‘pushd’. Variables control whether
‘pushd’ behaves like
‘cd’ if no argument is given
(shell-pushd-tohome), pop rather than rotate with a
numeric argument (shell-pushd-dextract), and only
add directories to the directory stack if they are not already on
it (shell-pushd-dunique). The values you choose
should match the underlying shell, of course.
Next: Terminal emulator, Previous: Directory Tracking, Up: Shell [Contents][Index]