1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003,
3 @c 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5 @node X Resources, Antinews, Emacs Invocation, Top
6 @appendix X Options and Resources
8 You can customize some X-related aspects of Emacs behavior using X
9 resources, as is usual for programs that use X. On MS-Windows, you
10 can customize some of the same aspects using the system registry.
11 @xref{MS-Windows Registry}. Likewise, the Mac Carbon port emulates X
12 resources using the Preferences system. @xref{Mac Environment Variables}.
14 When Emacs is built using an `X toolkit', such as Lucid or LessTif,
15 you need to use X resources to customize the appearance of the
16 widgets, including the menu-bar, scroll-bar, and dialog boxes. This
17 is because the libraries that implement these don't provide for
18 customization through Emacs. GTK+ widgets use a separate system of
19 `GTK resources', which we will also describe.
22 * Resources:: Using X resources with Emacs (in general).
23 * Table of Resources:: Table of specific X resources that affect Emacs.
24 * Face Resources:: X resources for customizing faces.
25 * Lucid Resources:: X resources for Lucid menus.
26 * LessTif Resources:: X resources for LessTif and Motif menus.
27 * GTK resources:: Resources for GTK widgets.
31 @appendixsec X Resources
34 @cindex @file{~/.Xdefaults} file
35 @cindex @file{~/.Xresources} file
37 Programs running under the X Window System organize their user
38 options under a hierarchy of classes and resources. You can specify
39 default values for these options in your X resources file, usually
40 named @file{~/.Xdefaults} or @file{~/.Xresources}.
41 If changes in @file{~/.Xdefaults} do not
42 take effect, it is because your X server stores its own list of
43 resources; to update them, use the shell command @command{xrdb}---for
44 instance, @samp{xrdb ~/.Xdefaults}.
46 Each line in the file specifies a value for one option or for a
47 collection of related options, for one program or for several programs
48 (optionally even for all programs).
50 @cindex Registry (MS-Windows)
51 MS-Windows systems don't support @file{~/.Xdefaults} files, but
52 Emacs compiled for Windows looks for X resources in the Windows
53 Registry, under the key @samp{HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\GNU\Emacs}
54 and then under the key @samp{HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\GNU\Emacs}.
55 The menu and scrollbars are native widgets on MS-Windows, so they are
56 only customizable via the system-wide settings in the Display Control
57 Panel. You can also set resources using the @samp{-xrm} command line
60 Programs define named resources with particular meanings. They also
61 define how to group resources into named classes. For instance, in
62 Emacs, the @samp{internalBorder} resource controls the width of the
63 internal border, and the @samp{borderWidth} resource controls the width
64 of the external border. Both of these resources are part of the
65 @samp{BorderWidth} class. Case distinctions are significant in these
68 Every resource definition is associated with a specific program
69 name---the name of the executable file that you ran. For Emacs, that
70 is normally @samp{emacs}. To specify a definition for all instances
71 of Emacs, regardless of their names, use @samp{Emacs}.
73 In @file{~/.Xdefaults}, you can specify a value for a single resource
74 on one line, like this:
81 Or you can use a class name to specify the same value for all resources
82 in that class. Here's an example:
88 If you specify a value for a class, it becomes the default for all
89 resources in that class. You can specify values for individual
90 resources as well; these override the class value, for those particular
91 resources. Thus, this example specifies 2 as the default width for all
92 borders, but overrides this value with 4 for the external border:
99 The order in which the lines appear in the file does not matter.
100 Also, command-line options always override the X resources file.
101 Here is a list of X command-line options and their corresponding
105 @item -name @var{name}
107 @itemx --name=@var{name}
108 @cindex resource name, command-line argument
109 Use @var{name} as the resource name (and the title) for the initial
110 Emacs frame. This option does not affect subsequent frames, but Lisp
111 programs can specify frame names when they create frames.
113 If you don't specify this option, the default is to use the Emacs
114 executable's name as the resource name.
116 @item -xrm @var{resource-values}
118 @itemx --xrm=@var{resource-values}
119 @cindex resource values, command-line argument
120 Specify X resource values for this Emacs job (see below).
123 For consistency, @samp{-name} also specifies the name to use for
124 other resource values that do not belong to any particular frame.
126 The resources that name Emacs invocations also belong to a class; its
127 name is @samp{Emacs}. If you write @samp{Emacs} instead of
128 @samp{emacs}, the resource applies to all frames in all Emacs jobs,
129 regardless of frame titles and regardless of the name of the executable
130 file. Here is an example:
137 You can specify a string of additional resource values for Emacs to
138 use with the command line option @samp{-xrm @var{resources}}. The text
139 @var{resources} should have the same format that you would use inside a file
140 of X resources. To include multiple resource specifications in
141 @var{resources}, put a newline between them, just as you would in a file.
142 You can also use @samp{#include "@var{filename}"} to include a file full
143 of resource specifications. Resource values specified with @samp{-xrm}
144 take precedence over all other resource specifications.
146 One way to experiment with the effect of different resource settings
147 is to use the @code{editres} program. Select @samp{Get Tree} from the
148 @samp{Commands} menu, then click on an Emacs frame. This will display
149 a tree showing the structure of X toolkit widgets used in an Emacs
150 frame. Select one of them, such as @samp{menubar}, then select
151 @samp{Show Resource Box} from the @samp{Commands} menu. This displays
152 a list of all the meaningful X resources and allows you to edit them.
153 Changes take effect immediately if you click on the @samp{Apply} button.
154 (See the @code{editres} man page for more details.)
156 @node Table of Resources
157 @appendixsec Table of X Resources for Emacs
159 This table lists the resource names that designate options for
160 Emacs, not counting those for the appearance of the menu bar, each
161 with the class that it belongs to:
164 @item @code{background} (class @code{Background})
165 Background color name.
167 @item @code{bitmapIcon} (class @code{BitmapIcon})
168 Use a bitmap icon (a picture of a gnu) if @samp{on}, let the window
169 manager choose an icon if @samp{off}.
171 @item @code{borderColor} (class @code{BorderColor})
172 Color name for the external border.
174 @item @code{borderWidth} (class @code{BorderWidth})
175 Width in pixels of the external border.
177 @item @code{cursorColor} (class @code{Foreground})
178 Color name for text cursor (point).
180 @item @code{cursorBlink} (class @code{CursorBlink})
181 Specifies whether to make the cursor blink. The default is @samp{on}. Use
182 @samp{off} or @samp{false} to turn cursor blinking off.
184 @item @code{font} (class @code{Font})
185 Font name for text (or fontset name, @pxref{Fontsets}).
187 @item @code{foreground} (class @code{Foreground})
190 @item @code{geometry} (class @code{Geometry})
191 Window size and position. Be careful not to specify this resource as
192 @samp{emacs*geometry}, because that may affect individual menus as well
193 as the Emacs frame itself.
195 If this resource specifies a position, that position applies only to the
196 initial Emacs frame (or, in the case of a resource for a specific frame
197 name, only that frame). However, the size, if specified here, applies to
200 @item @code{fullscreen} (class @code{Fullscreen})
201 The desired fullscreen size. The value can be one of @code{fullboth},
202 @code{fullwidth} or @code{fullheight}, which correspond to
203 the command-line options @samp{-fs}, @samp{-fw}, and @samp{-fh}
204 (@pxref{Window Size X}).
206 Note that this applies to all frames created, not just the initial
209 @item @code{iconName} (class @code{Title})
210 Name to display in the icon.
212 @item @code{internalBorder} (class @code{BorderWidth})
213 Width in pixels of the internal border.
215 @item @code{lineSpacing} (class @code{LineSpacing})
218 Additional space (@dfn{leading}) between lines, in pixels.
220 @item @code{menuBar} (class @code{MenuBar})
222 Give frames menu bars if @samp{on}; don't have menu bars if
223 @samp{off}. @xref{Lucid Resources}, and @ref{LessTif Resources}, for
224 how to control the appearance of the menu bar if you have one.
226 @item @code{minibuffer} (class @code{Minibuffer})
227 If @samp{none}, don't make a minibuffer in this frame.
228 It will use a separate minibuffer frame instead.
230 @item @code{paneFont} (class @code{Font})
231 @cindex font for menus
232 Font name for menu pane titles, in non-toolkit versions of Emacs.
234 @item @code{pointerColor} (class @code{Foreground})
235 Color of the mouse cursor.
237 @item @code{privateColormap} (class @code{PrivateColormap})
238 If @samp{on}, use a private color map, in the case where the ``default
239 visual'' of class PseudoColor and Emacs is using it.
241 @item @code{reverseVideo} (class @code{ReverseVideo})
242 Switch foreground and background default colors if @samp{on}, use colors as
243 specified if @samp{off}.
245 @item @code{screenGamma} (class @code{ScreenGamma})
246 @cindex gamma correction
247 Gamma correction for colors, equivalent to the frame parameter
250 @item @code{selectionFont} (class @code{SelectionFont})
251 Font name for pop-up menu items, in non-toolkit versions of Emacs. (For
252 toolkit versions, see @ref{Lucid Resources}, also see @ref{LessTif
255 @item @code{selectionTimeout} (class @code{SelectionTimeout})
256 Number of milliseconds to wait for a selection reply.
257 If the selection owner doesn't reply in this time, we give up.
258 A value of 0 means wait as long as necessary.
260 @item @code{synchronous} (class @code{Synchronous})
261 @cindex debugging X problems
262 @cindex synchronous X mode
263 Run Emacs in synchronous mode if @samp{on}. Synchronous mode is
264 useful for debugging X problems.
266 @item @code{title} (class @code{Title})
267 Name to display in the title bar of the initial Emacs frame.
269 @item @code{toolBar} (class @code{ToolBar})
271 Number of lines to reserve for the tool bar. A zero value suppresses
272 the tool bar. If the value is non-zero and
273 @code{auto-resize-tool-bars} is non-@code{nil}, the tool bar's size
274 will be changed automatically so that all tool bar items are visible.
276 @item @code{useXIM} (class @code{UseXIM})
278 @cindex X input methods
279 @cindex input methods, X
280 Turn off use of X input methods (XIM) if @samp{false} or @samp{off}.
281 This is only relevant if your Emacs is actually built with XIM
282 support. It is potentially useful to turn off XIM for efficiency,
283 especially slow X client/server links.
285 @item @code{verticalScrollBars} (class @code{ScrollBars})
286 Give frames scroll bars if @samp{on}; don't have scroll bars if
289 @item @code{visualClass} (class @code{VisualClass})
290 Specify the ``visual'' that X should use. This tells X how to handle
293 The value should start with one of @samp{TrueColor},
294 @samp{PseudoColor}, @samp{DirectColor}, @samp{StaticColor},
295 @samp{GrayScale}, and @samp{StaticGray}, followed by
296 @samp{-@var{depth}}, where @var{depth} is the number of color planes.
297 Most terminals only allow a few ``visuals,'' and the @samp{dpyinfo}
298 program outputs information saying which ones.
302 @appendixsec X Resources for Faces
304 You can use resources to customize the appearance of particular
305 faces (@pxref{Faces}):
308 @item @var{face}.attributeForeground
309 Foreground color for face @var{face}.
310 @item @var{face}.attributeBackground
311 Background color for face @var{face}.
312 @item @var{face}.attributeUnderline
313 Underline flag for face @var{face}. Use @samp{on} or @samp{true} for
315 @item @var{face}.attributeStrikeThrough
316 @itemx @var{face}.attributeOverline
317 @itemx @var{face}.attributeBox
318 @itemx @var{face}.attributeInverse
319 Likewise, for other boolean font attributes.
320 @item @var{face}.attributeStipple
321 The name of a pixmap data file to use for the stipple pattern, or
322 @code{false} to not use stipple for the face @var{face}.
323 @item @var{face}.attributeBackgroundPixmap
324 The background pixmap for the face @var{face}. Should be a name of a
325 pixmap file or @code{false}.
326 @item @var{face}.attributeFont
327 Font name (full XFD name or valid X abbreviation) for face @var{face}.
328 Instead of this, you can specify the font through separate attributes.
331 Instead of using @code{attributeFont} to specify a font name, you can
332 select a font through these separate attributes:
335 @item @var{face}.attributeFamily
336 Font family for face @var{face}.
337 @item @var{face}.attributeHeight
338 Height of the font to use for face @var{face}: either an integer
339 specifying the height in units of 1/10@dmn{pt}, or a floating point
340 number that specifies a scale factor to scale the underlying face's
341 default font, or a function to be called with the default height which
342 will return a new height.
343 @item @var{face}.attributeWidth
344 @itemx @var{face}.attributeWeight
345 @itemx @var{face}.attributeSlant
346 Each of these resources corresponds to a like-named font attribute,
347 and you write the resource value the same as the symbol you would use
348 for the font attribute value.
349 @item @var{face}.attributeBold
350 Bold flag for face @var{face}---instead of @code{attributeWeight}. Use @samp{on} or @samp{true} for
352 @item @var{face}.attributeItalic
353 Italic flag for face @var{face}---instead of @code{attributeSlant}.
356 @node Lucid Resources
357 @appendixsec Lucid Menu X Resources
358 @cindex Menu X Resources (Lucid widgets)
359 @cindex Lucid Widget X Resources
361 If the Emacs installed at your site was built to use the X toolkit
362 with the Lucid menu widgets, then the menu bar is a separate widget and
363 has its own resources. The resource names contain @samp{pane.menubar}
364 (following, as always, the name of the Emacs invocation, or @samp{Emacs},
365 which stands for all Emacs invocations). Specify them like this:
368 Emacs.pane.menubar.@var{resource}: @var{value}
372 For example, to specify the font @samp{8x16} for the menu-bar items,
376 Emacs.pane.menubar.font: 8x16
380 Resources for @emph{non-menubar} toolkit pop-up menus have
381 @samp{menu*}, in like fashion. For example, to specify the font
382 @samp{8x16} for the pop-up menu items, write this:
385 Emacs.menu*.font: 8x16
389 For dialog boxes, use @samp{dialog} instead of @samp{menu}:
392 Emacs.dialog*.font: 8x16
396 The Lucid menus can display multilingual text in your locale. For more
397 information about fontsets see the man page for XCreateFontSet. To enable
398 multilingual menu text you specify a fontSet resource instead of the font
399 resource. If both font and fontSet resources are specified, the fontSet
400 resource is used. To specify
401 @samp{-*-helvetica-medium-r-*--*-120-*-*-*-*-*-*,*} for both the popup and
402 menu bar menus, write this:
405 Emacs*fontSet: -*-helvetica-medium-r-*--*-120-*-*-*-*-*-*,*
409 Experience shows that on some systems you may need to add
410 @samp{shell.}@: before the @samp{pane.menubar} or @samp{menu*}. On
411 some other systems, you must not add @samp{shell.}.
413 Here is a list of the specific resources for menu bars and pop-up menus:
417 Font for menu item text.
419 Fontset for menu item text.
421 Color of the foreground.
423 Color of the background.
424 @item buttonForeground
425 In the menu bar, the color of the foreground for a selected item.
426 @item horizontalSpacing
427 Horizontal spacing in pixels between items. Default is 3.
428 @item verticalSpacing
429 Vertical spacing in pixels between items. Default is 2.
431 Horizontal spacing between the arrow (which indicates a submenu) and
432 the associated text. Default is 10.
433 @item shadowThickness
434 Thickness of shadow line around the widget. Default is 1.
436 Also determines the thickness of shadow lines around other objects,
437 for instance 3D buttons and arrows. If you have the impression that
438 the arrows in the menus do not stand out clearly enough or that the
439 difference between ``in'' and ``out'' buttons is difficult to see, set
440 this to 2. If you have no problems with visibility, the default
441 probably looks better. The background color may also have some effect
444 The margin of the menu bar, in characters. Default is 1.
447 @node LessTif Resources
448 @appendixsec LessTif Menu X Resources
449 @cindex Menu X Resources (LessTif widgets)
450 @cindex LessTif Widget X Resources
452 If the Emacs installed at your site was built to use the X toolkit
453 with the LessTif or Motif widgets, then the menu bar, the dialog
454 boxes, the pop-up menus, and the file-selection box are separate
455 widgets and have their own resources.
457 The resource names for the menu bar contain @samp{pane.menubar}
458 (following, as always, the name of the Emacs invocation, or
459 @samp{Emacs}, which stands for all Emacs invocations). Specify them
463 Emacs.pane.menubar.@var{subwidget}.@var{resource}: @var{value}
466 Each individual string in the menu bar is a subwidget; the subwidget's
467 name is the same as the menu item string. For example, the word
468 @samp{File} in the menu bar is part of a subwidget named
469 @samp{emacs.pane.menubar.File}. Most likely, you want to specify the
470 same resources for the whole menu bar. To do this, use @samp{*} instead
471 of a specific subwidget name. For example, to specify the font
472 @samp{8x16} for the menu-bar items, write this:
475 Emacs.pane.menubar.*.fontList: 8x16
479 This also specifies the resource value for submenus.
481 Each item in a submenu in the menu bar also has its own name for X
482 resources; for example, the @samp{File} submenu has an item named
483 @samp{Save (current buffer)}. A resource specification for a submenu
484 item looks like this:
487 Emacs.pane.menubar.popup_*.@var{menu}.@var{item}.@var{resource}: @var{value}
491 For example, here's how to specify the font for the @samp{Save (current
495 Emacs.pane.menubar.popup_*.File.Save (current buffer).fontList: 8x16
499 For an item in a second-level submenu, such as @samp{Complete Word}
500 under @samp{Spell Checking} under @samp{Tools}, the resource fits this
504 Emacs.pane.menubar.popup_*.popup_*.@var{menu}.@var{resource}: @var{value}
511 Emacs.pane.menubar.popup_*.popup_*.Spell Checking.Complete Word: @var{value}
515 (This should be one long line.)
517 It's impossible to specify a resource for all the menu-bar items
518 without also specifying it for the submenus as well. So if you want the
519 submenu items to look different from the menu bar itself, you must ask
520 for that in two steps. First, specify the resource for all of them;
521 then, override the value for submenus alone. Here is an example:
524 Emacs.pane.menubar.*.fontList: 8x16
525 Emacs.pane.menubar.popup_*.fontList: 8x16
529 For LessTif pop-up menus, use @samp{menu*} instead of
530 @samp{pane.menubar}. For example, to specify the font @samp{8x16} for
531 the pop-up menu items, write this:
534 Emacs.menu*.fontList: 8x16
538 For LessTif dialog boxes, use @samp{dialog} instead of @samp{menu}:
541 Emacs.dialog*.fontList: 8x16
542 Emacs.dialog*.foreground: hotpink
545 To specify resources for the LessTif file-selection box, use
546 @samp{fsb*}, like this:
549 Emacs.fsb*.fontList: 8x16
555 Here is a list of the specific resources for LessTif menu bars and
560 The color to show in an armed button.
569 Amount of space to leave around the item, within the border.
571 The width of the border around the menu item, on all sides.
572 @item shadowThickness
573 The width of the border shadow.
574 @item bottomShadowColor
575 The color for the border shadow, on the bottom and the right.
577 The color for the border shadow, on the top and the left.
582 @appendixsec GTK resources
583 @cindex GTK resources and customization
584 @cindex resource files for GTK
585 @cindex @file{~/.gtkrc-2.0} file
586 @cindex @file{~/.emacs.d/gtkrc} file
588 If Emacs was built to use the GTK widget set, then the menu bar, tool bar,
589 scroll bar and the dialogs are customized with the standard GTK
590 customization file, @file{~/.gtkrc-2.0}, or with the Emacs specific
591 file @file{~/.emacs.d/gtkrc}. We recommend that you use
592 @file{~/.emacs.d/gtkrc} for customizations, since @file{~/.gtkrc-2.0}
593 seems to be ignored when running GConf with GNOME. These files apply
594 only to GTK widget features. To customize Emacs font, background,
595 faces, etc., use the normal X resources (@pxref{Resources}).
597 Some GTK themes override these mechanisms, which means that using
598 these mechanisms will not work to customize them.
600 In these files you first define a style and say what it means; then
601 you specify to apply the style to various widget types (@pxref{GTK
602 widget names}). Here is an example of how to change the font for
606 # @r{Define the style @samp{menufont}.}
609 font_name = "helvetica bold 14" # This is a Pango font name
612 # @r{Specify that widget type @samp{*emacs-menuitem*} uses @samp{menufont}.}
613 widget "*emacs-menuitem*" style "menufont"
616 Here is a more elaborate example, showing how to change the parts of
622 fg[NORMAL] = "red"@ @ @ @ @ # @r{The arrow color.}
623 bg[NORMAL] = "yellow"@ @ # @r{The thumb and background around the arrow.}
624 bg[ACTIVE] = "blue"@ @ @ @ # @r{The trough color.}
625 bg[PRELIGHT] = "white"@ # @r{The thumb color when the mouse is over it.}
628 widget "*verticalScrollBar*" style "scroll"
631 There are also parameters that affect GTK as a whole. For example,
632 the property @code{gtk-font-name} sets the default font for GTK. You
633 must use Pango font names (@pxref{GTK styles}). A GTK resources file
634 that just sets a default font looks like this:
637 gtk-font-name = "courier 12"
640 The GTK resources file is fully described in the GTK API document.
642 @file{@var{prefix}/share/gtk-doc/html/gtk/gtk-resource-files.html},
643 where @file{prefix} is the directory in which the GTK libraries were
644 installed (usually @file{/usr} or @file{/usr/local}). You can also
645 find the document online, at
646 @uref{http://developer.gnome.org/doc/API/2.0/gtk/gtk-Resource-Files.html}.
649 * GTK widget names:: How widgets in GTK are named in general.
650 * GTK Names in Emacs:: GTK widget names in Emacs.
651 * GTK styles:: What can be customized in a GTK widget.
654 @node GTK widget names
655 @appendixsubsec GTK widget names
656 @cindex GTK widget names
658 A GTK widget is specified by its @dfn{widget class} and
659 @dfn{widget name}. The widget class is the type of the widget: for
660 example, @code{GtkMenuBar}. The widget name is the name given to a
661 specific widget. A widget always has a class, but need not have a
664 @dfn{Absolute names} are sequences of widget names or widget
665 classes, corresponding to hierarchies of widgets embedded within
666 other widgets. For example, if a @code{GtkWindow} named @code{top}
667 contains a @code{GtkVBox} named @code{box}, which in turn contains
668 a @code{GtkMenuBar} called @code{menubar}, the absolute class name
669 of the menu-bar widget is @code{GtkWindow.GtkVBox.GtkMenuBar}, and
670 its absolute widget name is @code{top.box.menubar}.
672 When assigning a style to a widget, you can use the absolute class
673 name or the absolute widget name.
675 There are two commands to specify changes for widgets:
678 @item @code{widget_class}
679 specifies a style for widgets based on the absolute class name.
682 specifies a style for widgets based on the absolute class name,
687 You must specify the class and the style in double-quotes, and put
688 these commands at the top level in the GTK customization file, like
694 font_name = "helvetica bold 14"
697 widget "top.box.menubar" style "menufont"
698 widget_class "GtkWindow.GtkVBox.GtkMenuBar" style "menufont"
701 Matching of absolute names uses shell wildcard syntax: @samp{*}
702 matches zero or more characters and @samp{?} matches one character.
703 This example assigns @code{base_style} to all widgets:
706 widget "*" style "base_style"
709 Given the absolute class name @code{GtkWindow.GtkVBox.GtkMenuBar}
710 and the corresponding absolute widget name @code{top.box.menubar}, all
711 these examples specify @code{my_style} for the menu bar:
714 widget_class "GtkWindow.GtkVBox.GtkMenuBar" style "my_style"
715 widget_class "GtkWindow.*.GtkMenuBar" style "my_style"
716 widget_class "*GtkMenuBar" style "my_style"
717 widget "top.box.menubar" style "my_style"
718 widget "*box*menubar" style "my_style"
719 widget "*menubar" style "my_style"
720 widget "*menu*" style "my_style"
723 @node GTK Names in Emacs
724 @appendixsubsec GTK Widget Names in Emacs
725 @cindex GTK widget names
726 @cindex GTK widget classes
728 In Emacs, the top level widget for a frame is a @code{GtkWindow}
729 that contains a @code{GtkVBox}. The @code{GtkVBox} contains the
730 @code{GtkMenuBar} and a @code{GtkFixed} widget. The vertical scroll
731 bars, @code{GtkVScrollbar}, are contained in the @code{GtkFixed}
732 widget. The text you write in Emacs is drawn in the @code{GtkFixed}
735 Dialogs in Emacs are @code{GtkDialog} widgets. The file dialog is a
736 @code{GtkFileSelection} widget.
739 To set a style for the menu bar using the absolute class name, use:
742 widget_class "GtkWindow.GtkVBox.GtkMenuBar" style "my_style"
746 For the scroll bar, the absolute class name is:
750 "GtkWindow.GtkVBox.GtkFixed.GtkVScrollbar"
755 The names for the emacs widgets, and their classes, are:
757 @multitable {@code{verticalScrollbar plus}} {@code{GtkFileSelection} and some}
758 @item @code{emacs-filedialog}
759 @tab @code{GtkFileSelection}
760 @item @code{emacs-dialog}
761 @tab @code{GtkDialog}
763 @tab @code{GtkWindow}
768 @item @code{verticalScrollBar}
769 @tab @code{GtkVScrollbar}
770 @item @code{emacs-toolbar}
771 @tab @code{GtkToolbar}
773 @tab @code{GtkMenuBar}
774 @item @code{emacs-menuitem}
775 @tab anything in menus
779 Thus, for Emacs you can write the two examples above as:
782 widget "Emacs.pane.menubar" style "my_style"
783 widget "Emacs.pane.emacs.verticalScrollBar" style "my_style"
786 GTK absolute names are quite strange when it comes to menus
787 and dialogs. The names do not start with @samp{Emacs}, as they are
788 free-standing windows and not contained (in the GTK sense) by the
789 Emacs GtkWindow. To customize the dialogs and menus, use wildcards like this:
792 widget "*emacs-dialog*" style "my_dialog_style"
793 widget "*emacs-filedialog* style "my_file_style"
794 widget "*emacs-menuitem* style "my_menu_style"
797 If you specify a customization in @file{~/.emacs.d/gtkrc}, then it
798 automatically applies only to Emacs, since other programs don't read
799 that file. For example, the drop down menu in the file dialog can not
800 be customized by any absolute widget name, only by an absolute class
801 name. This is because the widgets in the drop down menu do not
802 have names and the menu is not contained in the Emacs GtkWindow. To
803 have all menus in Emacs look the same, use this in
804 @file{~/.emacs.d/gtkrc}:
807 widget_class "*Menu*" style "my_menu_style"
811 @appendixsubsec GTK styles
814 In a GTK style you specify the appearance widgets shall have. You
815 can specify foreground and background color, background pixmap and
816 font. The edit widget (where you edit the text) in Emacs is a GTK
817 widget, but trying to specify a style for the edit widget will have no
818 effect. This is so that Emacs compiled for GTK is compatible with
819 Emacs compiled for other X toolkits. The settings for foreground,
820 background and font for the edit widget is taken from the X resources;
821 @pxref{Resources}. Here is an example of two style declarations,
822 @samp{default} and @samp{ruler}:
825 pixmap_path "/usr/share/pixmaps:/usr/include/X11/pixmaps"
829 font_name = "helvetica 12"
831 bg[NORMAL] = @{ 0.83, 0.80, 0.73 @}
832 bg[SELECTED] = @{ 0.0, 0.55, 0.55 @}
833 bg[INSENSITIVE] = @{ 0.77, 0.77, 0.66 @}
834 bg[ACTIVE] = @{ 0.0, 0.55, 0.55 @}
835 bg[PRELIGHT] = @{ 0.0, 0.55, 0.55 @}
838 fg[SELECTED] = @{ 0.9, 0.9, 0.9 @}
840 fg[PRELIGHT] = @{ 0.9, 0.9, 0.9 @}
842 base[INSENSITIVE] = "#777766"
843 text[INSENSITIVE] = @{ 0.60, 0.65, 0.57 @}
845 bg_pixmap[NORMAL] = "background.xpm"
846 bg_pixmap[INSENSITIVE] = "background.xpm"
847 bg_pixmap[ACTIVE] = "background.xpm"
848 bg_pixmap[PRELIGHT] = "<none>"
852 style "ruler" = "default"
854 font_name = "helvetica 8"
859 The style @samp{ruler} inherits from @samp{default}. This way you can build
860 on existing styles. The syntax for fonts and colors is described below.
862 As this example shows, it is possible to specify several values for
863 foreground and background depending on the widget's @dfn{state}. The
868 This is the default state for widgets.
870 This is the state for a widget that is ready to do something. It is
871 also for the trough of a scroll bar, i.e. @code{bg[ACTIVE] = "red"}
872 sets the scroll bar trough to red. Buttons that have been pressed but
873 not released yet (``armed'') are in this state.
875 This is the state for a widget that can be manipulated, when the mouse
876 pointer is over it---for example when the mouse is over the thumb in
877 the scroll bar or over a menu item. When the mouse is over a button
878 that is not pressed, the button is in this state.
880 This is the state for data that has been selected by the user. It can
881 be selected text or items selected in a list. This state is not used
884 This is the state for widgets that are visible, but they can not be
885 manipulated in the usual way---for example, buttons that can't be
886 pressed, and disabled menu items. To display disabled menu items in
887 yellow, use @code{fg[INSENSITIVE] = "yellow"}.
890 Here are the things that can go in a style declaration:
893 @item bg[@var{state}] = @var{color}
894 This specifies the background color for the widget. Note that
895 editable text doesn't use @code{bg}; it uses @code{base} instead.
897 @item base[@var{state}] = @var{color}
898 This specifies the background color for editable text. In Emacs, this
899 color is used for the background of the text fields in the file
902 @item bg_pixmap[@var{state}] = "@var{pixmap}"
903 This specifies an image background (instead of a background color).
904 @var{pixmap} should be the image file name. GTK can use a number of
905 image file formats, including XPM, XBM, GIF, JPEG and PNG. If you
906 want a widget to use the same image as its parent, use
907 @samp{<parent>}. If you don't want any image, use @samp{<none>}.
908 @samp{<none>} is the way to cancel a background image inherited from a
911 You can't specify the file by its absolute file name. GTK looks for
912 the pixmap file in directories specified in @code{pixmap_path}.
913 @code{pixmap_path} is a colon-separated list of directories within
914 double quotes, specified at the top level in a @file{gtkrc} file
915 (i.e. not inside a style definition; see example above):
918 pixmap_path "/usr/share/pixmaps:/usr/include/X11/pixmaps"
921 @item fg[@var{state}] = @var{color}
922 This specifies the foreground color for widgets to use. It is the
923 color of text in menus and buttons, and the color for the arrows in
924 the scroll bar. For editable text, use @code{text}.
926 @item text[@var{state}] = @var{color}
927 This is the color for editable text. In Emacs, this color is used for the
928 text fields in the file dialog.
930 @item font_name = "@var{font}"
931 This specifies the font for text in the widget. @var{font} is a
932 Pango font name, for example @samp{Sans Italic 10}, @samp{Helvetica
933 Bold 12}, @samp{Courier 14}, @samp{Times 18}. See below for exact
934 syntax. The names are case insensitive.
937 There are three ways to specify a color: by name, in hexadecimal
938 form, and with an RGB triplet.
941 A color name is written within double quotes, for example @code{"red"}.
944 Hexadecimal form is the same as in X:
945 @code{#@var{rrrr}@var{gggg}@var{bbbb}}, where all three color specs
946 must have the same number of hex digits (1, 2, 3 or 4).
949 An RGB triplet looks like @code{@{ @var{r}, @var{g}, @var{b} @}},
950 where @var{r}, @var{g} and @var{b} are either integers in the range
951 0-65535 or floats in the range 0.0-1.0.
953 Pango font names have the form ``@var{family-list} @var{style-options}
955 @cindex Pango font name
957 @var{family-list} is a comma separated list of font families optionally
958 terminated by a comma. This way you can specify several families and the
959 first one found will be used. @var{family} corresponds to the second part in
960 an X font name, for example in
963 -adobe-times-medium-r-normal--12-120-75-75-p-64-iso10646-1
967 the family name is ``times''.
970 @var{style-options} is a whitespace separated list of words where each word
971 is a style, variant, weight, or stretch. The default value for all of
972 these is @code{normal}.
975 A `style' corresponds to the fourth part of an X font name. In X font
976 names it is the character @samp{r}, @samp{i} or @samp{o}; in Pango
977 font names the corresponding values are @code{normal}, @code{italic},
981 A `variant' is either @code{normal} or @code{small-caps}.
982 Small caps is a font with the lower case characters replaced by
983 smaller variants of the capital characters.
986 Weight describes the ``boldness'' of a font. It corresponds to the third
987 part of an X font name. It is one of @code{ultra-light}, @code{light},
988 @code{normal}, @code{bold}, @code{ultra-bold}, or @code{heavy}.
991 Stretch gives the width of the font relative to other designs within a
992 family. It corresponds to the fifth part of an X font name. It is one of
993 @code{ultra-condensed}, @code{extra-condensed}, @code{condensed},
994 @code{semi-condensed}, @code{normal}, @code{semi-expanded},
995 @code{expanded}, @code{extra-expanded}, or @code{ultra-expanded}.
998 @var{size} is a decimal number that describes the font size in points.
1001 arch-tag: 9b6ff773-48b6-41f6-b2f9-f114b8bdd97f