The right fringe shows a curving arrow for each screen line except the
last, indicating that ``this is not the real end.''
- The fringes indicate line truncation with short horizontale arrows
+ The fringes indicate line truncation with short horizontal arrows
meaning ``there's more text on this line which is scrolled
-horizontally out of view.'' They also indicate other things such as
-empty lines, or where a program you are debugging is executing
-(@pxref{Debuggers}).
+horizontally out of view;'' clicking the mouse on one of the arrows
+scrolls the display horizontally in the direction of the arrow. The
+fringes also indicate other things such as empty lines, or where a
+program you are debugging is executing (@pxref{Debuggers}).
@findex set-fringe-style
@findex fringe-mode
@vindex default-indicate-empty-lines
@cindex empty lines
@cindex fringes, and empty line indication
- Emacs can indicate empty lines at the end of the buffer with a
-special bitmap in the left fringe of the window. To enable this
-feature, set the buffer-local variable @code{indicate-empty-lines} to
-a non-@code{nil} value. The default value of this variable is
+ Emacs can indicate empty lines at the end of the buffer with a special
+bitmap in the left fringe of the window (@pxref{Fringes}). To enable
+this feature, set the buffer-local variable @code{indicate-empty-lines}
+to a non-@code{nil} value. The default value of this variable is
controlled by the variable @code{default-indicate-empty-lines}; by
setting that variable, you can enable or disable this feature for all
new buffers. (This feature currently doesn't work on character