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man/macos.texi
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235
man/macos.texi
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@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
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@c Copyright (C) 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
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@node Mac OS, MS-DOS, Antinews, Top
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@appendix Emacs and the Mac OS
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@cindex Mac OS
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@cindex Macintosh
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Emacs built on the Mac OS supports many of its major features:
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multiple frames, colors, scroll bars, menu bars, use of the mouse,
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fontsets, international characters, input methods, coding systems, and
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synchronous subprocesses (@code{call-process}). Much of this works in
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the same way as on other platforms and is therefore documented in the
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rest of this manual. This section describes the peculiarities of using
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Emacs under the Mac OS.
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The following features of Emacs are not yet supported on the Mac:
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unexec (@code{dump-emacs}), asynchronous subprocesses
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(@code{start-process}), and networking (@code{open-network-connection}).
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As a result, packages such as Gnus, Ispell, and Comint do not work.
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Since external Unix programs to handle commands such as
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@code{print-buffer} and @code{diff} are not available on the Mac OS,
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they are not supported in the Mac OS version.
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@menu
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* Mac Input:: Keyboard input on the Mac.
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* Mac International:: International character set support on the Mac.
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* Mac Environment Variables:: Setting environment variables for Emacs.
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* Mac Directories:: Volumes and directories on the Mac.
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* Mac Font Specs:: Specifying fonts on the Mac.
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* Mac Functions:: Mac specific Lisp functions.
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@end menu
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@node Mac Input
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@section Keyboard Input on the Mac
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@cindex Meta (under Mac OS)
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@cindex Mac keyboard coding
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@vindex mac-command-key-is-meta
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@vindex mac-keyboard-text-encoding
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On the Mac, Emacs can use either the @key{option} key or the
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@key{command} key as the @key{META} key. If the value of the variable
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@code{mac-command-key-is-meta} is non-@code{nil} (its default value),
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Emacs uses the @key{command} key as the @key{META} key. Otherwise it uses the
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@key{option} key as the @key{META} key.
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Most people should want to use the @key{command} key as the @key{META} key,
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so that dead-key processing with the @key{option} key will still work. This is
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useful for entering non-ASCII Latin characters directly from the Mac
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keyboard, for example.
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Emacs recognizes the setting in the Keyboard control panel and
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supports international and alternative keyboard layouts (e.g., Dvorak).
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Selecting one of the layouts from the keyboard layout pull-down menu
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will affect how the keys typed on the keyboard are interpreted.
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The Mac OS intercepts and handles certain key combinations (e.g.,
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@key{command}-@key{SPC} for switching input languages). These will not
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be passed to Emacs.
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The Mac keyboard ordinarily generates characters in the Mac Roman
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encoding. To use it for entering ISO Latin-1 characters directly, set
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the value of the variable @code{mac-keyboard-text-encoding} to
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@code{kTextEncodingISOLatin1}. Note that that not all Mac Roman
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characters that can be entered at the keyboard can be converted to ISO
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Latin-1 characters.
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To enter ISO Latin-2 characters directly from the Mac keyboard. Set
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the value of @code{mac-keyboard-text-encoding} to
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@code{kTextEncodingISOLatin2}. Then let Emacs know that the keyboard
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generates Latin-2 codes by typink @kbd{C-x RET k iso-latin-2 RET}. To
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make this setting permanent, put this in your @file{.emacs} init file:
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@lisp
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(set-keyboard-coding-system 'iso-latin-2)
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@end lisp
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@node Mac International
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@section International Character Set Support on the Mac
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@cindex Mac Roman coding system
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@cindex Mac clipboard support
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The Mac uses a non-standard encoding for the upper 128 single-byte
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characters. It also deviates from the ISO 2022 standard by using code
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points in the range 128-159. The coding system @code{mac-roman} is used
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to represent this Mac encoding. It is used for editing files stored in
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this native encoding, and for displaying filenames in Dired mode.
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Any native (non-symbol) Mac font can be used to correctly display
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characters in the @code{mac-roman} coding system.
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The fontset @code{fontset-mac} is created automatically when Emacs is
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run on the Mac by the following expression. It displays characters in
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the @code{mac-roman} coding system using 12-point Monaco.
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To insert characters directly in the @code{mac-roman} coding system,
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type @kbd{C-x RET k mac-roman RET}, or put this in your @file{.emacs}
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init file:
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@lisp
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(set-keyboard-coding-system 'mac-roman)
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@end lisp
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@noindent
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This is useful for editing documents in native Mac encoding.
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You can use input methods provided either by LEIM (@pxref{Input
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Methods}) or the Mac OS to enter international characters.
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To use the former, see the International Character Set Support section
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of the manual.
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To use input methods provided by the Mac OS, set the keyboard coding
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system accordingly using the @kbd{C-x RET k} command
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(@code{set-keyboard-coding-system}). For example, for Traditional
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Chinese, use the @samp{chinese-big5} as keyboard coding system; for
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Japanese, use @samp{sjis}, etc. Then select the desired input method in
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the keyboard layout pull-down menu.
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The Mac clipboard and the Emacs kill ring (@pxref{Killing}) are
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connected as follows: the most recent kill is copied to the clipboard
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when Emacs is suspended and the contents of the clipboard is inserted
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into the kill ring when Emacs resumes. The result is that you can yank
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a piece of text and paste it into another Mac application, or cut or copy
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one in another Mac application and yank it into a Emacs buffer.
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The encoding of text selections must be specified using the commands
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@kbd{C-x RET x} (@code{set-selection-coding-system}) or @kbd{C-x RET X}
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(@code{set-next-selection-coding-system}) (e.g., for Traditional
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Chinese, use the @samp{chinese-big5-mac} and for Japanese,
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@samp{sjis-mac}). @xref{Specify Coding}, for more details.
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@node Mac Environment Variables
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@section Environment Variables and Command Line Arguments.
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@cindex Mac environment variables
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Environment variables and command line arguments for Emacs can be set
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by modifying the @samp{STR#} resources 128 and 129, respectively. A common
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environment variable that one may want to set is @samp{HOME}.
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The way to set an environment variable is by adding a string of the
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form
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@example
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ENV_VAR=VALUE
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@end example
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@noindent
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to resource @samp{STR#} number 128 using @code{ResEdit}. To set up the
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program to use unibyte characters exclusively, for example, add the
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string
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@example
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EMACS_UNIBYTE=1
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@end example
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@node Mac Directories
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@section Volumes and Directories on the Mac
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@cindex file names under Mac OS
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The directory structure in the Mac OS is seen by Emacs as
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@example
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/<volumename>/<pathname>
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@end example
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So when Emacs requests a file name, doing filename completion on
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@file{/} will display all volumes on the system. As in Unix, @file{..}
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can be used to go up a directory level.
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To access files and folders on the desktop, look in the folder
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@file{Desktop Folder} in your boot volume (this folder is usually
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invisible in the Mac @code{Finder}).
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Emacs creates the Mac folder @file{:Preferences:Emacs:} in the
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@file{System Folder} and uses it as the temporary directory. The Unix
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emulation code maps the Unix directory @file{/tmp} to it. Therefore it
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is best to avoid naming a volume @file{tmp}. If everything works
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correctly, the program should leave no files in it when it exits. You
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should be able to set the environment variable @code{TMPDIR} to use
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another directory but this folder will still be created.
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@node Mac Font Specs
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@section Specifying Fonts on the Mac
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@cindex font names under Mac OS
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Fonts are specified to Emacs on the Mac in the form of a standard X
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font name. I.e.,
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@example
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-FOUNDRY-FAMILY-WEIGHT-SLANT-WIDTH--PIXELS-POINTS-
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HRES-VRES-SPACING-AVEWIDTH-CHARSET
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@end example
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where the fields refer to foundry, font family, weight, slant, width,
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pixels, point size, horizontal resolution, vertical resolution, spacing,
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average width, and character set, respectively.
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Wildcards are supported as they are on X.
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Native Apple fonts in Mac Roman encoding has foundry name @code{apple}
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and charset @code{mac-roman}. For example 12-point Monaco can be
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specified by the name @samp{-apple-monaco-*-12-*-mac-roman}.
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Native Apple Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Japanese, and
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Korean fonts have charsets @samp{big5-0}, @samp{gb2312-0},
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@samp{jisx0208.1983-sjis}, and @samp{ksc5601-1}, respectively.
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Single-byte fonts converted from GNU fonts in BDF format, which are not
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in the Mac Roman encoding, have foundry, family, and character sets
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encoded in the names of their font suitcases. E.g., the font suitcase
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@samp{ETL-Fixed-ISO8859-1} contains fonts which can be referred to by
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the name @samp{-ETL-fixed-*-iso8859-1}.
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@node Mac Functions
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@section Mac Specific Lisp Functions
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@cindex Lisp functions on the Mac OS
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@findex do-applescript
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The function @code{do-applescript} takes a string argument,
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executes it as an AppleScript command, and returns the result as a
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string.
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@findex mac-filename-to-unix
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@findex unix-filename-to-mac
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The function @code{mac-filename-to-unix} takes a Mac pathname and
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returns the Unix equivalent. The function @code{unix-filename-to-mac}
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performs the opposite conversion. They are useful for constructing
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AppleScript commands to be passed to @code{do-applescript}.
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