not displayed and the standard terminal interrupt characters such as
@kbd{C-z} and @kbd{C-c} continue to have their normal effect. Emacs in
batch mode outputs to @code{stderr} only what would normally be printed
-in the echo area under program control.
+in the echo area under program control, and functions which would
+normally read from the minibuffer take their input from @code{stdin}.
Batch mode is used for running programs written in Emacs Lisp from
shell scripts, makefiles, and so on. Normally the @samp{-l} option
coding system using 12-point Monaco.
To insert characters directly in the @code{mac-roman} coding system,
-type @kbd{C-x @key{RET} k mac-roman @key{RET}}, or put this in your
-@file{.emacs} init file:
+type @kbd{C-x @key{RET} k mac-roman @key{RET}}, customize the option
+@code{keyboard-coding-system}, or put this in your init file:
@lisp
(set-keyboard-coding-system 'mac-roman)
Methods}) or the Mac OS to enter international characters.
To use the former, see the International Character Set Support section
-of the manual.
+of the manual (@pxref{International}).
To use input methods provided by the Mac OS, set the keyboard coding
system accordingly using the @kbd{C-x @key{RET} k} command
instead, e.g.@: @samp{"o} for o-umlaut. Load the library
@file{iso-ascii} to do this.
+@vindex latin1-display
If your terminal can display Latin-1, you can display characters
from other European character sets using a mixture of equivalent
Latin-1 characters and @sc{ascii} mnemonics. Use the Custom option
@cindex directional window selection
@findex windmove-right
@findex windmove-default-keybindings
- The Windmode commands move directionally between neighbouring windows in
+ The Windmove commands move directionally between neighbouring windows in
a frame. @kbd{M-x windmove-right} selects the window immediately to the
right of the currently selected one, and similarly for the ``left,'' ``up,''
and ``down'' counterparts. @kbd{M-x windmove-default-keybindings} binds