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Each terminal type can have its own Lisp library that Emacs loads when
run on that type of terminal. The library's name is constructed by
concatenating the value of the variable term-file-prefix
and the
terminal type (specified by the environment variable TERM
).
Normally, term-file-prefix
has the value
"term/"
; changing this is not recommended. Emacs finds the file
in the normal manner, by searching the load-path
directories, and
trying the `.elc' and `.el' suffixes.
The usual function of a terminal-specific library is to enable special
keys to send sequences that Emacs can recognize. It may also need to
set or add to function-key-map
if the Termcap entry does not
specify all the terminal's function keys. See section 40.8 Terminal Input.
When the name of the terminal type contains a hyphen, only the part of
the name before the first hyphen is significant in choosing the library
name. Thus, terminal types `aaa-48' and `aaa-30-rv' both use
the `term/aaa' library. If necessary, the library can evaluate
(getenv "TERM")
to find the full name of the terminal
type.
Your init file can prevent the loading of the
terminal-specific library by setting the variable
term-file-prefix
to nil
. This feature is useful when
experimenting with your own peculiar customizations.
You can also arrange to override some of the actions of the
terminal-specific library by setting the variable
term-setup-hook
. This is a normal hook which Emacs runs using
run-hooks
at the end of Emacs initialization, after loading both
your init file and any terminal-specific libraries. You can
use this variable to define initializations for terminals that do not
have their own libraries. See section 23.6 Hooks.
term-file-prefix
variable is non-nil
, Emacs loads
a terminal-specific initialization file as follows:
(load (concat term-file-prefix (getenv "TERM"))) |
You may set the term-file-prefix
variable to nil
in your
init file if you do not wish to load the
terminal-initialization file. To do this, put the following in
your init file: (setq term-file-prefix nil)
.
On MS-DOS, if the environment variable TERM
is not set, Emacs
uses `internal' as the terminal type.
You can use term-setup-hook
to override the definitions made by a
terminal-specific file.
See window-setup-hook
in 38.19 Window Systems, for a related
feature.
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