Content-Type: text/enriched
Text-Width: 70
bluewhiteenriched.el:
bluewhiteWYSIWYG rich text editing for GNU Emacs
bluewhiteINTRODUCTION
Emacs has the ability to edit enriched text, which is text
containing faces, colors, indentation, and other properties.
This document is a quick introduction to some of the features,
and is also an example file in the text/enriched format.
bluewhiteINSTALLATION and STARTUP
Most of the time, you need not do anything to get these features
to work. If you visit a file that has been written out in
text/enriched format, it will automatically be decoded, Emacs will
enter 'enriched-mode' while visiting it, and whenever you save it
it will be saved in the same format it was read in.
If you wish to create a new file, however, you will need to turn
on enriched-mode yourself:
M-x enriched-mode RET
Or, if you get a text/enriched file that Emacs does not
automatically recognize and decode, you can tell Emacs to decode
it (which also turns on enriched-mode automatically):
M-x format-decode-buffer RET text/enriched RET
bluewhiteWHAT IS ENCODED
Here is the current list of text-properties that are saved; they
are discussed in more detail below. Most of these can be added or
changed with the "Text Properties" menu, available under the
"Edit" item in the menu-bar, or on C-mouse-2 (Control + the middle
mouse button).
Faces: default, bold, italic, underline, etc.
Colors: redDarkSlateGrayanyDarkSlateGrayorangething yellowyourgreen screenblue light bluecanviolet display...
Newlines: Which ones are real ("hard") newlines, and which can be
changed to fit lines into the margins.
Margins: can be indented on the left or right.
Justification (whether lines should be flush with the left margin,
the right margin, fully justified, centered, or left alone).
Excerpts: "For quoted material."
Read-only, Invisible, and Intangible regions.
Charset properties.
Display properties.
bluewhiteFACES and COLORS
You can add faces either with the menu or with M-o. The face is
applied to the current region. If you are using
'transient-mark-mode' and the region is not active, then the face
applies to whatever you type next. Any face can have colors. If
this is its lone attribute, the face is put on the color submenus
of the "Text Properties" menu.
bluewhiteNEWLINES and PARAGRAPHS
Text/enriched format distinguishes between hard and soft newlines.
Hard newlines are used to separate paragraphs, or items in a list,
or anywhere that must be a line break no matter what the margins
are. Soft newlines are the ones inserted in order to fit text
between the margins. The fill and auto-fill functions insert soft
newlines as necessary, but hard newlines are only inserted by
direct request, such as using the return key or the C-o
(open-line) function.
bluewhiteINDENTATION
The fill functions also understand margins, which can be set for
any region of a document. In addition to the menu items, which
increase or decrease the margins, there are two commands for
setting the margins absolutely: C-c [ (set-left-margin) and C-c
] (set-right-margin).
You can change indentation at any point in a paragraph, which
makes it possible to do interesting things like
hanging-indents: this paragraph was indented by selecting the
region from the second word to the end of the paragraph, and
indenting only that part.
bluewhiteJUSTIFICATION
Several styles of justification are possible, the simplest being unfilled.
This means that your lines will be left as you write them.
This paragraph is unfilled.
The most common (for English) style is FlushLeft. This means
lines are aligned at the left margin but left uneven at the right.
FlushRight makes each line flush with the right margin instead.
This paragraph is FlushRight.
FlushBoth regions, which are sometimes called "fully justified"
are aligned evenly on both edges, so that the text on the page has
a smooth appearance as in a book or newspaper article.
Unfortunately this does not look as nice with a fixed-width font
as it does in a proportionally-spaced printed document; the extra
spaces that are needed on the screen can make it hard to read.
Center
Finally, there is center justification. The normal
center-paragraph key, M-S, can be used to turn on center
justification in enriched-mode.
M-j or the "Text Properties" menu also can be used to change
justification.
Note that justification can only change at hard newlines, because
that is the unit over which filling gets done.
bluewhiteEXCERPTS
This is an example of an excerpt. You can use them for quoted
parts of other people's email messages and the like. It is just a
face, which is the same as the 'italic' face by default.
bluewhiteCHARSET
You can add character set information to stretches of text; this
is important for selecting the font that will display that text.
Users of various charsets, especially in East Asian cultures,
prefer the same characters to be rendered differently depending on
the language/charset context.
bluewhiteTHE FILE FORMAT
Enriched-mode documents are saved in an extended version of a
format called text/enriched, which is defined as part of the MIME
standard. This means that your documents are transportable (even
through email) to many other systems. In the future other file
formats may be supported as well.
Since Emacs adds some non-standard features to the format (colors
and read-only regions), not all systems will be able to recreate
all of the features of your document, but they will get as close
as possible.
The text/enriched standard is defined in Internet RFC 1896
(<).
To make format annotations visible and possibly edit them, tell
Emacs to display the markup:
M-x enriched-toggle-markup RET
bluewhiteCUSTOMIZATION
- The fixed and excerpt faces should be set to your liking.
- User-preference variables: default-justification,
enriched-verbose.
- You can add annotations for your own text properties by making
additions to enriched-translations. Note that the standard
requires you to name your annotation starting "x-" (as in
"x-read-only"). Please report any such additions that you
think might be of general interest using M-x report-emacs-bug.
bluewhiteTODO LIST
[Feel free to work on these and send us the results!]
+ Conform to updated text/enriched spec in RFC 1896.
+ Be smarter about fixing malformed files.
+ Make the indentation work more seamlessly and robustly:
+ Create an aggressive auto-fill function that will keep the
paragraph properly filled all the time, without slowing down
editing too much. Refill mode is a start at this, but needs
improvement.
+ Refill after yank. [Refill mode does that.]
+ Make deleting a newline also delete the indentation following
it.
+ Never let point enter indentation??
+ Notice and re-fill when window changes widths (optionally).
+ Deal with the 'category' text-property in a smart way.
+ Interface w/ Gnus, VM, RMAIL. Maybe Info too? (Gnus 5.9 copes
with text/enriched incoming mail.)
+ Support more formats: RTF, HTML...
+ Use modern Emacs display features.
bluewhiteOriginal Author:
whiteblueBoris Goldowskylight blue light blue<
Copyright (C) 1995, 1997, 2001-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
COPYING PERMISSIONS:
This document is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <.