1 <param>-*-enriched-*-width:86
2 </param><center><bold><x-bg-color><param>gray</param><x-color><param>blue</param>Enriched:
4 A WYSIWYG enriched-text editing environment for GNU Emacs
7 </x-color></x-bg-color></bold></center><bold>INTRODUCTION
10 </bold><indent>This package, along with the <bold>facemenu</bold> package, is the beginning of a WYSIWYG
11 ("what you see is what you get") Emacs mode for editing <italic>enriched text: </italic>text with
12 different faces, colors, etc. Facemenu allows you to add faces (such as
13 <bold>boldface</bold>, <italic>italics</italic>, and <underline>underlining</underline>) your documents, while <bold>enriched</bold> allows you to
14 save the documents with those "text properties" included. The format in which
15 they are saved is called <italic>text/enriched</italic>, and is defined as part of the MIME
16 standard, so that your documents are transportable (even through email) to many
20 Not all systems will be able to recreate all of the features of your document,
21 but they will get as close as possible. For systems that do not understand it at
22 all, the text of the document should still be legible; the reader can simply
23 ignore the annotations specifying face changes and the like.
26 </indent><bold>INSTALLATION and STARTUP </bold>
29 <indent>The <fixed>enriched.el</fixed> file should be installed somewhere that emacs will find it (ie,
30 one of the directories on emacs's <fixed>load-path </fixed>variable), and byte-compiled for
34 The documentation below assumes that you have my <fixed>facemenu.el</fixed> (which is included
35 in recent versions of emacs). You may also find it useful to have Jim Thompson's
36 <fixed>ps-print.el</fixed>, which will allow you to print out buffers including their faces
37 (unfortunately it is not currently able to deal with merged faces; hopefully it
38 will be revised soon.) These two files should also be installed into your lisp
39 directory and byte-compiled.
42 Put the following code into your .emacs file to automatically load enriched when
46 <indent><fixed>(autoload 'enriched-mode "enriched" nil t)</fixed></indent>
49 <bold>Enriched </bold>puts an identifying header into files it writes, which allows it to
50 recognize any emacs-generated <italic>text/enriched</italic> file and put itself into the proper
51 mode. If you get a file from some other source, however, such as through the
52 mail, you may have to enter enriched-mode manually:
55 <indent><fixed>M-x enriched-mode</fixed></indent>
58 You may be asked a couple of questions at this point:
61 <italic>Does the buffer need to be translated now?</italic> If the buffer contains <italic>text/enriched
62 </italic>data which needs to be translated into a readable document with fonts and such,
63 then answer "yes". If you are putting a new document into text/enriched format
64 for the first time, then say "no".
67 <italic>Reformat for current display width?</italic> If emacs knows that the document was created
68 with the same display width that is currently in effect, it will trust the line
69 breaks that are in the file, which saves some time. If it was saved at a
70 different width, or emacs doesn't know what width it was saved at, then it may
71 ask whether it should reformat. Actually it does not ask by default; it just
72 goes ahead and fills. But if you want it to ask, you can set the variable
73 <fixed>enriched-fill-after-visiting</fixed> to <fixed>'ask</fixed>.
76 In the future, other modes such as mail and news may recognize messages that are
77 enriched text, and automatically call on <bold>enriched</bold> to display them for you.
80 </indent><bold>WHAT IS ENCODED</bold>
83 <indent>Aside from the text itself, various properties are saved. More will eventually
84 be added, so that you will be able to save and read just about anything that can
85 be displayed in an emacs frame. Following is the list of properties that are
86 currently understood; each is covered in more detail below.
89 <bold>Faces:</bold> default, <bold>bold</bold>, <italic>italic</italic>, <underline>underline</underline>, <fixed>fixed</fixed>, etc.
91 <bold>Colors:</bold> <x-color><param>red</param><x-bg-color><param>DarkSlateGray</param>any</x-bg-color></x-color><x-bg-color><param>DarkSlateGray</param><x-color><param>orange</param>thing</x-color> <x-color><param>yellow</param>your</x-color><x-color><param>green</param> screen</x-color><x-color><param>blue</param> </x-color><x-color><param>light blue</param>can</x-color><x-color><param>violet</param> display... </x-color></x-bg-color>
93 <bold>Newlines:</bold> <indent>Which ones are real ("hard") newlines, and which can be changed to fit
94 lines into the ma</indent>rgins.
96 <bold>Margins:</bold> can be indented on the left or right.
98 <bold>Justification </bold><indent>(whether lines should be flush with the left margin, the right
99 margin, fully justified, centered, or left alo</indent>ne).
101 <bold>Excerpts: "</bold><excerpt>For quoted material." </excerpt>
103 <bold>Read-only</bold> regions.
109 </bold><indent>The easiest way to add a face to a region is to use the <bold>facemenu </bold>package. This
110 defines a menu obtained by clicking the right mouse button while holding the
111 control key. For example, to make a word boldface, you could select the word by
112 double-clicking on it, then hold C-mouse-3 and select <italic>Bold</italic> from the <italic>Face
113 </italic></indent>sub-menu<indent>. Selecting a face from the menu when the region is not active will apply
114 that face to whatever you type next.
117 </indent><bold>NEWLINES and PARAGRAPHS
120 </bold><indent><italic>Text/enriched</italic> format distinguishes between <underline>hard</underline> newlines and <underline>soft </underline>newlines. Hard
121 newlines are used to separate paragraphs, or items in a list, or anywhere that
122 must be a line break no matter what the margins are. Soft newlines are the ones
123 inserted in order to fit text between the margins. Auto-fill-mode and
124 enriched-mode's fill functions insert soft newlines as necessary, but hard
125 newlines are only inserted by direct request, such as using the return key or the
126 <fixed>C-o (open-line)</fixed> function.
129 </indent><bold>INDENTATION
132 </bold><indent>Indentation of regions of the document can be flexibly controlled. The face menu
133 contains an <italic>Indent</italic> item, which indents the region by the width of 4 characters
134 and an <italic>UnIndent </italic>item which removes 4 character-widths of indentation. All of the
135 text paragraphs in this file are singly indented relative to the headings, for
136 example. In addition, you can indent and unindent the <italic>right </italic>margin though use of
137 the <italic>IndentRight</italic> and <italic>UnindentRight </italic>menu items. The indentation commands can be
138 used repeatedly to get further levels of indentation. There are also shortcut
139 commands to set the left and right margins directly.
141 The basic editing commands in enriched-mode have been modified as necessary to
142 maintain proper indentation, but if it gets messed up, you can use <fixed>C-q</fixed> to
143 reformat the current paragraph. This may be necessary, for example, after
144 yanking or pasting text into the buffer. Eventually all commands should respect
145 indentation. <flushleft><indentright><indentright><indentright><indentright>
148 </indentright>Not <indent>only whole paragraphs can be indented, but in fact any region.
149 This makes it possible to have hanging-indents on paragraphs like
150 this one: it was accomplished by selecting the region starting
151 after the first word of the paragraph and going to the end of the
152 paragraph, and indenting that. </indent></indentright></indentright></indentright><indent>Also notice that this paragraph had been
153 indented on the right until the beginning of this sentence, when it resumed
154 normal w</indent>i</flushleft></indent><flushleft>dth.
157 <bold>JUSTIFICATION<indent>
160 </indent></bold></flushleft><indent><nofill>Several styles of justification are possible, the simplest being <italic>unfilled.
161 </italic>This means that your lines will be left as you write them.
162 This paragraph, for instance, is unfilled.
163 It was written with one sentence on a line.
164 <bold>Enriched </bold>will not change that, no matter what size display it is shown on.
165 There is no hard/soft newline distinction in unfilled text.
167 The most common (for English) style is <italic>FlushLeft. </italic>This means
168 lines are aligned at the left margin but left uneven at the
171 </nofill><italic><flushright>FlushRight</flushright></italic><flushright>, as you may have guessed, makes each line flush with the right margin,
172 but not necessarily the left.
174 This is usually, but by no means necessarily, used for headings.
176 This paragraph is FlushRight.
179 </flushright><italic><flushboth>FlushBoth </flushboth></italic><flushboth>regions, which are sometimes called "fully justified" (or, confusingly,
180 "right justified") are aligned evenly on both edges, so that the text on the page
181 has a smooth appearance as in a book or newspaper article. Unfortunately this
182 does not look as nice with a fixed-width font as it does in a
183 proportionally-spaced printed document; the extra spaces that are needed on the
184 screen can make it hard to read. <indentright><indentright><indentright><indentright>
187 <indent><indent><indent><indent>The narrower the column, the uglier <italic>FlushBoth
188 </italic>text will be. If you think <italic>flushboth </italic>paragraphs
189 look pretty, though, you can set
190 <fixed>enriched-default-justification </fixed>to <fixed>'both </fixed>to
191 justify everything that is not otherwise
195 </indent></indent></indent></indent></indentright></indentright></indentright></indentright></flushboth><bold><center>Center
197 </center></bold><center>You can probably guess what <italic>center </italic>justification is for.
199 The normal center-paragraph key, M-S, can be used to turn on center justification
200 in enriched-mode. M-j also brings up a justification menu.
203 </center><flushboth>Note that justification can only be changed for complete paragraphs (ie, a
204 justified region must start and end at hard newlines). The menu items in the
205 "Justification" menu will all operate on the current paragraph, or, if the region
206 is active, on all paragraphs which are inside or overlapping the region.
209 </flushboth></indent><bold>EXCERPTS</bold>
212 <excerpt><indent>This is an example of an excerpt. You can use them for quoted parts of other
213 people's email messages and the like. Currently it just displays as italics
214 (unless some <bold>other</bold> style is in effect), but this can be changed (see
215 <underline>Customization</underline> below). </indent></excerpt>
218 <bold>DEBUGGING</bold>
221 <indent>The function <fixed>enriched-show-codes</fixed> can be helpful in figuring out what is going if
222 things don't seem to be working. The function can highlight (with a blue or gray
223 background) various items of interest. </indent>Type <fixed>C<indent>-c C-s</indent></fixed><indent>, then what should be
227 <indent><bold>indent:<indent> </indent></bold><indent>Highlight the indentation at the beginning of each line. </indent>
229 <bold>margin: </bold>Highlight regions that are indented.
231 <bold>newline: </bold>Highlight hard newlines.
233 <bold>none: </bold>Turn off all highlighting. <bold><excerpt>
236 </excerpt></bold></indent></indent><bold>CUSTOMIZATION
239 </bold><indent>-<indent> Set the default faces to things you like. The faces named <fixed>fixed </fixed>and <excerpt>excerpt,
240 </excerpt>especially, can be set to your liking. </indent>
242 - <indent>User-preference variables: <fixed>enriched-default-right-margin,
243 enriched-default-justification, enriched-verbose,
244 enriched-auto-save-interval</fixed><bold>, </bold>and <fixed>enriched-fill-after-visiting </fixed>(mentioned
245 above)<bold>. </bold>See their documentation for det</indent>ails.
247 - <indent>You can add annotations for your own text properties by making additions to
248 <fixed>enriched-annotation-alist</fixed>. Note that the standard requires you to name your
249 annotation starting<italic> "x-" </italic>(as in <italic>"x-read-only"</italic>). Please send me any such
250 additions that you think might be of general interest so that I can include
251 them in the distribution.
253 </indent>- <indent>My eventual hope is that people will use the basic code in this file to
254 implement more of the various file formats that are in common use, so that
255 emacs will understand them all and be able to edit them with a common
256 interface. If you are interested in taking on the project of implementing a
257 format, let me know. The code attempts to be as general as possible; a lot
258 of different formats can be defined just by setting up the lists of
259 properties to save and how to represent them in the file.
262 </indent></indent><bold>TO-DO LIST
265 </bold><indent><italic>[Feel free to work on these and send me the results!] </italic>
267 - Be more tolerant of malformed files.
269 - Make the indentation work more seamlessly and robustly:
271 <indent>+ Create<indent> an aggressive auto-fill function that will keep the paragraph
272 properly filled all the time, without slowing down editing too much. </indent>
276 + <indent>Make deleting a newline also delete the indentation following it. </indent>
278 + Never let point enter indentation??
280 +<indent> Optional never-let-things-get-unfilled (ok for fast terminals). </indent>
282 </indent>- Do the right thing for insert-file.
284 - Notice and re-fill when window changes widths (optionally). - Nicer formatting
287 - Interface w/ GNUS, VM, RMAIL.
289 - For documentation, make INFO aware of text/enriched format.
291 -<indent> Have another set of alists for reading and writing RTF, etc (this will take
292 work not only on the alists, of course, but also on the code for interpreting
297 </indent></indent><bold>Final Notes:
300 </bold><indent>The MIME standard is defined in internet RFC 1521; text/enriched is defined in
301 RFC 1563. Details on obtaining these documents via FTP or email may be obtained
302 by sending an email message to <fixed>rfc-info@isi.edu</fixed> with the message body:
304 <indent> <fixed>help: ways_to_get_rfcs </fixed> </indent>
307 This code and documentation is under development. The most current version
308 should always be available from:
310 <indent><fixed>/anonymous@cs.rochester.edu:pub/boris/enriched.shar</fixed>
312 </indent>It is helpful to make sure you have the newest version before reporting a bug.
314 </indent>Please send any and all comments to:
317 <bold><x-color><param>blue</param>Boris Goldowsky </x-color></bold><fixed><<boris@cs.rochester.edu></fixed><x-color><param>blue</param>