From 010054643a9d77ca435f910fc049791cfa08e20c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eli Zaretskii Date: Fri, 26 Apr 2002 11:29:26 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] (Position Info): Add text properties to the example. Add index entries. --- man/basic.texi | 14 ++++++++++---- 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/man/basic.texi b/man/basic.texi index 95332c42537..a72604b0d4a 100644 --- a/man/basic.texi +++ b/man/basic.texi @@ -653,9 +653,11 @@ part), the @w{@kbd{C-x =}} output does not describe a character after point. The output might look like this: @smallexample -point=26957 of 26956(100%) column 0 +point=26957 of 26956(100%) column 0 @end smallexample +@cindex character set of character at point +@cindex text properties at point @w{@kbd{C-u C-x =}} displays additional information about a character, including the character set name and the codes that identify the character within that character set; ASCII characters are @@ -665,9 +667,10 @@ internally in the buffer and externally if you save the file. It also shows the character's text properties, if any. Here's an example showing the Latin-1 character A with grave accent, -in a buffer whose coding system is @code{iso-2022-7bit} and whose +in a buffer whose coding system is @code{iso-2022-7bit}, whose terminal coding system is @code{iso-latin-1} (so the terminal actually -displays the character as @samp{@`A}): +displays the character as @samp{@`A}), and which has font-lock-mode +(@pxref{Font Lock}) enabled: @smallexample character: @`A (04300, 2240, 0x8c0) @@ -675,10 +678,13 @@ displays the character as @samp{@`A}): (Right-Hand Part of Latin Alphabet 1@dots{} code point: 64 syntax: w which means: word - category: l:Latin + category: l:Latin buffer code: 0x81 0xC0 file code: ESC 2C 41 40 (encoded by coding system iso-2022-7bit) terminal code: C0 + +Text properties + face: font-lock-variable-name-face fontified: t @end smallexample @node Arguments -- 2.39.2