you can't find your .emacs file anywhere in your system. You've already looked in you home directory and it's nowhere to be found. Could somebody help me out?
So the solution is here.
There are two main versions of emacs - emacs and Xemacs and I don't think that either of them creates a .emacs file automatically - you have to create your own.
So what do you put in your .emacs? There are lots of examples of .emacs's that you can google for on the net, but here's one to start you off...
http://www.dotemacs.de/dotfiles/sample.emacs.html
...just save it to .emacs in your home directory.
If you have Xemacs installed, they don't use a file called .emacs but create a directory called .xemacs. Inside that directory you create a file called custom.el and that functions as your .emacs.
location of .emacs file :
/home/yourname/.emacs
eg: /home/siva/.emacs
Then add according to your need of your choice in emacs and save the file
sample .emacs file
;; -*- Mode: Emacs-Lisp -*-
;;; This is a sample .emacs file.
;;;
;;; The .emacs file, which should reside in your home directory, allows you to
;;; customize the behavior of Emacs. In general, changes to your .emacs file
;;; will not take effect until the next time you start up Emacs. You can load
;;; it explicitly with `M-x load-file RET ~/.emacs RET'.
;;;
;;; There is a great deal of documentation on customization in the Emacs
;;; manual. You can read this manual with the online Info browser: type
;;; `C-h i' or select "Emacs Info" from the "Help" menu.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;; Basic Customization ;;
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;; Enable the command `narrow-to-region' ("C-x n n"), a useful
;; command, but possibly confusing to a new user, so it's disabled by
;; default.
(put 'narrow-to-region 'disabled nil)
;;; Define a variable to indicate whether we're running XEmacs/Lucid Emacs.
;;; (You do not have to defvar a global variable before using it --
;;; you can just call `setq' directly like we do for `emacs-major-version'
;;; below. It's clearer this way, though.)
(defvar running-xemacs (string-match "XEmacs\\|Lucid" emacs-version))
;; Make the sequence "C-x w" execute the `what-line' command,
;; which prints the current line number in the echo area.
(global-set-key "\C-xw" 'what-line)
;; set up the function keys to do common tasks to reduce Emacs pinky
;; and such.
;; Make F1 invoke help
(global-set-key [f1] 'help-command)
;; Make F2 be `undo'
(global-set-key [f2] 'undo)
;; Make F3 be `find-file'
;; Note: it does not currently work to say
;; (global-set-key 'f3 "\C-x\C-f")
;; The reason is that macros can't do interactive things properly.
;; This is an extremely longstanding bug in Emacs. Eventually,
;; it will be fixed. (Hopefully ..)
(global-set-key [f3] 'find-file)
;; Make F4 be "mark", F5 be "copy", F6 be "paste"
;; Note that you can set a key sequence either to a command or to another
;; key sequence.
(global-set-key [f4] 'set-mark-command)
(global-set-key [f5] "\M-w")
(global-set-key [f6] "\C-y")
;; Shift-F4 is "pop mark off of stack"
(global-set-key [(shift f4)] (lambda () (interactive) (set-mark-command t)))
;; Make F7 be `save-buffer'
(global-set-key [f7] 'save-buffer)
;; Make F8 be "start macro", F9 be "end macro", F10 be "execute macro"
(global-set-key [f8] 'start-kbd-macro)
(global-set-key [f9] 'end-kbd-macro)
(global-set-key [f10] 'call-last-kbd-macro)
;; Here's an alternative binding if you don't use keyboard macros:
;; Make F8 be `save-buffer' followed by `delete-window'.
;;(global-set-key 'f8 "\C-x\C-s\C-x0")
;; If you prefer delete to actually delete forward then you want to
;; uncomment the next line (or use `Customize' to customize this).
;; (setq delete-key-deletes-forward t)
(cond (running-xemacs
;;
;; Code for any version of XEmacs/Lucid Emacs goes here
;;
;; Change the values of some variables.
;; (t means true; nil means false.)
;;
;; Use the "Describe Variable..." option on the "Help" menu
;; to find out what these variables mean.
(setq find-file-use-truenames nil
find-file-compare-truenames t
minibuffer-confirm-incomplete t
complex-buffers-menu-p t
next-line-add-newlines nil
mail-yank-prefix "> "
kill-whole-line t
)
;; When running ispell, consider all 1-3 character words as correct.
(setq ispell-extra-args '("-W" "3"))
(cond ((or (not (fboundp 'device-type))
(equal (device-type) 'x))
;; Code which applies only when running emacs under X goes here.
;; (We check whether the function `device-type' exists
;; before using it. In versions before 19.12, there
;; was no such function. If it doesn't exist, we
;; simply assume we're running under X -- versions before
;; 19.12 only supported X.)
;; Remove the binding of C-x C-c, which normally exits emacs.
;; It's easy to hit this by mistake, and that can be annoying.
;; Under X, you can always quit with the "Exit Emacs" option on
;; the File menu.
(global-set-key "\C-x\C-c" nil)
;; Uncomment this to enable "sticky modifier keys" in 19.13
;; and up. With sticky modifier keys enabled, you can
;; press and release a modifier key before pressing the
;; key to be modified, like how the ESC key works always.
;; If you hold the modifier key down, however, you still
;; get the standard behavior. I personally think this
;; is the best thing since sliced bread (and a *major*
;; win when it comes to reducing Emacs pinky), but it's
;; disorienting at first so I'm not enabling it here by
;; default.
;;(setq modifier-keys-are-sticky t)
;; This changes the variable which controls the text that goes
;; in the top window title bar. (However, it is not changed
;; unless it currently has the default value, to avoid
;; interfering with a -wn command line argument I may have
;; started emacs with.)
(if (equal frame-title-format "%S: %b")
(setq frame-title-format
(concat "%S: " invocation-directory invocation-name
" [" emacs-version "]"
(if nil ; (getenv "NCD")
""
" %b"))))
;; If we're running on display 0, load some nifty sounds that
;; will replace the default beep. But if we're running on a
;; display other than 0, which probably means my NCD X terminal,
;; which can't play digitized sounds, do two things: reduce the
;; beep volume a bit, and change the pitch of the sound that is
;; made for "no completions."
;;
;; (Note that sampled sounds only work if XEmacs was compiled
;; with sound support, and we're running on the console of a
;; Sparc, HP, or SGI machine, or on a machine which has a
;; NetAudio server; otherwise, you just get the standard beep.)
;;
;; (Note further that changing the pitch and duration of the
;; standard beep only works with some X servers; many servers
;; completely ignore those parameters.)
;;
(cond ((string-match ":0" (getenv "DISPLAY"))
(load-default-sounds))
(t
(setq bell-volume 40)
(setq sound-alist
(append sound-alist '((no-completion :pitch 500))))
))
;; Make `C-x C-m' and `C-x RET' be different (since I tend
;; to type the latter by accident sometimes.)
(define-key global-map [(control x) return] nil)
;; Change the pointer used when the mouse is over a modeline
(set-glyph-image modeline-pointer-glyph "leftbutton")
;; Change the continuation glyph face so it stands out more
(and (fboundp 'set-glyph-property)
(boundp 'continuation-glyph)
(set-glyph-property continuation-glyph 'face 'bold))
;; Change the pointer used during garbage collection.
;;
;; Note that this pointer image is rather large as pointers go,
;; and so it won't work on some X servers (such as the MIT
;; R5 Sun server) because servers may have lamentably small
;; upper limits on pointer size.
;;(if (featurep 'xpm)
;; (set-glyph-image gc-pointer-glyph
;; (expand-file-name "trash.xpm" data-directory)))
;; Here's another way to do that: it first tries to load the
;; pointer once and traps the error, just to see if it's
;; possible to load that pointer on this system; if it is,
;; then it sets gc-pointer-glyph, because we know that
;; will work. Otherwise, it doesn't change that variable
;; because we know it will just cause some error messages.
(if (featurep 'xpm)
(let ((file (expand-file-name "recycle.xpm" data-directory)))
(if (condition-case error
;; check to make sure we can use the pointer.
(make-image-instance file nil
'(pointer))
(error nil)) ; returns nil if an error occurred.
(set-glyph-image gc-pointer-glyph file))))
(when (featurep 'menubar)
;; Add `dired' to the File menu
(add-menu-button '("File") ["Edit Directory" dired t])
;; Here's a way to add scrollbar-like buttons to the menubar
(add-menu-button nil ["Top" beginning-of-buffer t])
(add-menu-button nil ["<<<" scroll-down t])
(add-menu-button nil [" . " recenter t])
(add-menu-button nil [">>>" scroll-up t])
(add-menu-button nil ["Bot" end-of-buffer t]))
;; Change the behavior of mouse button 2 (which is normally
;; bound to `mouse-yank'), so that it inserts the selected text
;; at point (where the text cursor is), instead of at the
;; position clicked.
;;
;; Note that you can find out what a particular key sequence or
;; mouse button does by using the "Describe Key..." option on
;; the Help menu.
(setq mouse-yank-at-point t)
;; When editing C code (and Lisp code and the like), I often
;; like to insert tabs into comments and such. It gets to be
;; a pain to always have to use `C-q TAB', so I set up a more
;; convenient binding. Note that this does not work in
;; TTY frames, where tab and shift-tab are indistinguishable.
(define-key global-map '(shift tab) 'self-insert-command)
;; LISPM bindings of Control-Shift-C and Control-Shift-E.
;; Note that "\C-C" means Control-C, not Control-Shift-C.
;; To specify shifted control characters, you must use the
;; more verbose syntax used here.
(define-key emacs-lisp-mode-map '(control C) 'compile-defun)
(define-key emacs-lisp-mode-map '(control E) 'eval-defun)
;; If you like the FSF Emacs binding of button3 (single-click
;; extends the selection, double-click kills the selection),
;; uncomment the following:
;; Under 19.13, the following is enough:
;(define-key global-map 'button3 'mouse-track-adjust)
;; But under 19.12, you need this:
;(define-key global-map 'button3
; (lambda (event)
; (interactive "e")
; (let ((default-mouse-track-adjust t))
; (mouse-track event))))
;; Under both 19.12 and 19.13, you also need this:
;(add-hook 'mouse-track-click-hook
; (lambda (event count)
; (if (or (/= (event-button event) 3)
; (/= count 2))
; nil ;; do the normal operation
; (kill-region (point) (mark))
; t ;; don't do the normal operations.
; )))
))
))
;; Oh, and here's a cute hack you might want to put in the sample .emacs
;; file: it changes the color of the window if it's not on the local
;; machine, or if it's running as root:
;; local emacs background: whitesmoke
;; remote emacs background: palegreen1
;; root emacs background: coral2
(cond
((and (string-match "XEmacs" emacs-version)
(eq window-system 'x)
(boundp 'emacs-major-version)
(= emacs-major-version 19)
(>= emacs-minor-version 12))
(let* ((root-p (eq 0 (user-uid)))
(dpy (or (getenv "DISPLAY") ""))
(remote-p (not
(or (string-match "^\\(\\|unix\\|localhost\\):" dpy)
(let ((s (system-name)))
(if (string-match "\\.\\(netscape\\|mcom\\)\\.com" s)
(setq s (substring s 0 (match-beginning 0))))
(string-match (concat "^" (regexp-quote s)) dpy)))))
(bg (cond (root-p "coral2")
(remote-p "palegreen1")
(t nil))))
(cond (bg
(let ((def (color-name (face-background 'default)))
(faces (face-list)))
(while faces
(let ((obg (face-background (car faces))))
(if (and obg (equal def (color-name obg)))
(set-face-background (car faces) bg)))
(setq faces (cdr faces)))))))))
;;; Older versions of emacs did not have these variables
;;; (emacs-major-version and emacs-minor-version.)
;;; Let's define them if they're not around, since they make
;;; it much easier to conditionalize on the emacs version.
(if (and (not (boundp 'emacs-major-version))
(string-match "^[0-9]+" emacs-version))
(setq emacs-major-version
(string-to-int (substring emacs-version
(match-beginning 0) (match-end 0)))))
(if (and (not (boundp 'emacs-minor-version))
(string-match "^[0-9]+\\.\\([0-9]+\\)" emacs-version))
(setq emacs-minor-version
(string-to-int (substring emacs-version
(match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))))
;;; Define a function to make it easier to check which version we're
;;; running.
(defun running-emacs-version-or-newer (major minor)
(or (> emacs-major-version major)
(and (= emacs-major-version major)
(>= emacs-minor-version minor))))
(cond ((and running-xemacs
(running-emacs-version-or-newer 19 6))
;;
;; Code requiring XEmacs/Lucid Emacs version 19.6 or newer goes here
;;
))
(cond ((>= emacs-major-version 19)
;;
;; Code for any vintage-19 emacs goes here
;;
))
(cond ((and (not running-xemacs)
(>= emacs-major-version 19))
;;
;; Code specific to FSF Emacs 19 (not XEmacs/Lucid Emacs) goes here
;;
))
(cond ((< emacs-major-version 19)
;;
;; Code specific to emacs 18 goes here
;;
))
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;; Customization of Specific Packages ;;
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;;; Load gnuserv, which will allow you to connect to XEmacs sessions
;;; using `gnuclient'.
;; If you never run more than one XEmacs at a time, you might want to
;; always start gnuserv. Otherwise it is preferable to specify
;; `-f gnuserv-start' on the command line to one of the XEmacsen.
; (gnuserv-start)
;;; ********************
;;; Load efs, which uses the FTP protocol as a pseudo-filesystem.
;;; When this is loaded, the pathname syntax /user@host:/remote/path
;;; refers to files accessible through ftp.
;;;
(require 'dired)
;; compatible ange-ftp/efs initialization derived from code
;; from John Turner
;; As of 19.15, efs is bundled instead of ange-ftp.
;; NB: doesn't handle 20.0 properly, efs didn't appear until 20.1.
;;
;; The environment variable EMAIL_ADDRESS is used as the password
;; for access to anonymous ftp sites, if it is set. If not, one is
;; constructed using the environment variables USER and DOMAINNAME
;; (e.g. turner@lanl.gov), if set.
(if (and running-xemacs
(or (and (= emacs-major-version 20) (>= emacs-minor-version 1))
(and (= emacs-major-version 19) (>= emacs-minor-version 15))))
(progn
(message "Loading and configuring bundled packages... efs")
(require 'efs-auto)
(if (getenv "USER")
(setq efs-default-user (getenv "USER")))
(if (getenv "EMAIL_ADDRESS")
(setq efs-generate-anonymous-password (getenv "EMAIL_ADDRESS"))
(if (and (getenv "USER")
(getenv "DOMAINNAME"))
(setq efs-generate-anonymous-password
(concat (getenv "USER")"@"(getenv "DOMAINNAME")))))
(setq efs-auto-save 1))
(progn
(message "Loading and configuring bundled packages... ange-ftp")
(require 'ange-ftp)
(if (getenv "USER")
(setq ange-ftp-default-user (getenv "USER")))
(if (getenv "EMAIL_ADDRESS")
(setq ange-ftp-generate-anonymous-password (getenv "EMAIL_ADDRESS"))
(if (and (getenv "USER")
(getenv "DOMAINNAME"))
(setq ange-ftp-generate-anonymous-password
(concat (getenv "USER")"@"(getenv "DOMAINNAME")))))
(setq ange-ftp-auto-save 1)
)
)
;;; ********************
;;; Load the default-dir.el package which installs fancy handling
;;; of the initial contents in the minibuffer when reading
;;; file names.
(if (and running-xemacs
(or (and (= emacs-major-version 20) (>= emacs-minor-version 1))
(and (= emacs-major-version 19) (>= emacs-minor-version 15))))
(require 'default-dir))
;;; ********************
;;; Load the auto-save.el package, which lets you put all of your autosave
;;; files in one place, instead of scattering them around the file system.
;;;
(setq auto-save-directory (expand-file-name "~/autosave/")
auto-save-directory-fallback auto-save-directory
auto-save-hash-p nil
efs-auto-save t
efs-auto-save-remotely nil
;; now that we have auto-save-timeout, let's crank this up
;; for better interactive response.
auto-save-interval 2000
)
;; We load this afterwards because it checks to make sure the
;; auto-save-directory exists (creating it if not) when it's loaded.
(require 'auto-save)
;; This adds additional extensions which indicate files normally
;; handled by cc-mode.
(setq auto-mode-alist
(append '(("\\.C$" . c++-mode)
("\\.cc$" . c++-mode)
("\\.hh$" . c++-mode)
("\\.c$" . c-mode)
("\\.h$" . c-mode))
auto-mode-alist))
;;; ********************
;;; cc-mode (the mode you're in when editing C, C++, and Objective C files)
;; Tell cc-mode not to check for old-style (K&R) function declarations.
;; This speeds up indenting a lot.
(setq c-recognize-knr-p nil)
;; Change the indentation amount to 4 spaces instead of 2.
;; You have to do it in this complicated way because of the
;; strange way the cc-mode initializes the value of `c-basic-offset'.
(add-hook 'c-mode-hook (lambda () (setq c-basic-offset 4)))
;;; ********************
;;; Load a partial-completion mechanism, which makes minibuffer completion
;;; search multiple words instead of just prefixes; for example, the command
;;; `M-x byte-compile-and-load-file RET' can be abbreviated as `M-x b-c-a RET'
;;; because there are no other commands whose first three words begin with
;;; the letters `b', `c', and `a' respectively.
;;;
(load-library "completer")
;;; ********************
;;; Load crypt, which is a package for automatically decoding and reencoding
;;; files by various methods - for example, you can visit a .Z or .gz file,
;;; edit it, and have it automatically re-compressed when you save it again.
;;;
(setq crypt-encryption-type 'pgp ; default encryption mechanism
crypt-confirm-password t ; make sure new passwords are correct
;crypt-never-ever-decrypt t ; if you don't encrypt anything, set this to
; tell it not to assume that "binary" files
; are encrypted and require a password.
)
(require 'crypt)
;;; ********************
;;; Edebug is a source-level debugger for emacs-lisp programs.
;;;
(define-key emacs-lisp-mode-map "\C-xx" 'edebug-defun)
;;; ********************
;;; Font-Lock is a syntax-highlighting package. When it is enabled and you
;;; are editing a program, different parts of your program will appear in
;;; different fonts or colors. For example, with the code below, comments
;;; appear in red italics, function names in function definitions appear in
;;; blue bold, etc. The code below will cause font-lock to automatically be
;;; enabled when you edit C, C++, Emacs-Lisp, and many other kinds of
;;; programs.
;;;
;;; The "Options" menu has some commands for controlling this as well.
;;;
(cond (running-xemacs
;; If you want the default colors, you could do this:
;; (setq font-lock-use-default-fonts nil)
;; (setq font-lock-use-default-colors t)
;; but I want to specify my own colors, so I turn off all
;; default values.
(setq font-lock-use-default-fonts nil)
(setq font-lock-use-default-colors nil)
(require 'font-lock)
;; Mess around with the faces a bit. Note that you have
;; to change the font-lock-use-default-* variables *before*
;; loading font-lock, and wait till *after* loading font-lock
;; to customize the faces.
;; string face is green
(set-face-foreground 'font-lock-string-face "forest green")
;; comments are italic and red; doc strings are italic
;;
;; (I use copy-face instead of make-face-italic/make-face-bold
;; because the startup code does intelligent things to the
;; 'italic and 'bold faces to ensure that they are different
;; from the default face. For example, if the default face
;; is bold, then the 'bold face will be unbold.)
(copy-face 'italic 'font-lock-comment-face)
;; Underlining comments looks terrible on tty's
(set-face-underline-p 'font-lock-comment-face nil 'global 'tty)
(set-face-highlight-p 'font-lock-comment-face t 'global 'tty)
(copy-face 'font-lock-comment-face 'font-lock-doc-string-face)
(set-face-foreground 'font-lock-comment-face "red")
;; function names are bold and blue
(copy-face 'bold 'font-lock-function-name-face)
(set-face-foreground 'font-lock-function-name-face "blue")
;; misc. faces
(and (find-face 'font-lock-preprocessor-face) ; 19.13 and above
(copy-face 'bold 'font-lock-preprocessor-face))
(copy-face 'italic 'font-lock-type-face)
(copy-face 'bold 'font-lock-keyword-face)
))
;;; ********************
;;; fast-lock is a package which speeds up the highlighting of files
;;; by saving information about a font-locked buffer to a file and
;;; loading that information when the file is loaded again. This
;;; requires a little extra disk space be used.
;;;
;;; Normally fast-lock puts the cache file (the filename appended with
;;; .flc) in the same directory as the file it caches. You can
;;; specify an alternate directory to use by setting the variable
;;; fast-lock-cache-directories.
;; Let's use lazy-lock instead.
;;(add-hook 'font-lock-mode-hook 'turn-on-fast-lock)
;;(setq fast-lock-cache-directories '("/foo/bar/baz"))
;;; ********************
;;; lazy-lock is a package which speeds up the highlighting of files
;;; by doing it "on-the-fly" -- only the visible portion of the
;;; buffer is fontified. The results may not always be quite as
;;; accurate as using full font-lock or fast-lock, but it's *much*
;;; faster. No more annoying pauses when you load files.
(add-hook 'font-lock-mode-hook 'turn-on-lazy-lock)
;; I personally don't like "stealth mode" (where lazy-lock starts
;; fontifying in the background if you're idle for 30 seconds)
;; because it takes too long to wake up again on my piddly Sparc 1+.
(setq lazy-lock-stealth-time nil)
;;; ********************
;;; func-menu is a package that scans your source file for function
;;; definitions and makes a menubar entry that lets you jump to any
;;; particular function definition by selecting it from the menu. The
;;; following code turns this on for all of the recognized languages.
;;; Scanning the buffer takes some time, but not much.
;;;
;;; Send bug reports, enhancements etc to:
;;; David Hughes
;;;
(cond (running-xemacs
(require 'func-menu)
(define-key global-map 'f8 'function-menu)
(add-hook 'find-file-hooks 'fume-add-menubar-entry)
(define-key global-map "\C-cl" 'fume-list-functions)
(define-key global-map "\C-cg" 'fume-prompt-function-goto)
;; The Hyperbole information manager package uses (shift button2) and
;; (shift button3) to provide context-sensitive mouse keys. If you
;; use this next binding, it will conflict with Hyperbole's setup.
;; Choose another mouse key if you use Hyperbole.
(define-key global-map '(shift button3) 'mouse-function-menu)
;; For descriptions of the following user-customizable variables,
;; type C-h v
(setq fume-max-items 25
fume-fn-window-position 3
fume-auto-position-popup t
fume-display-in-modeline-p t
fume-menubar-menu-location "File"
fume-buffer-name "*Function List*"
fume-no-prompt-on-valid-default nil)
))
;;; ********************
;;; MH is a mail-reading system from the Rand Corporation that relies on a
;;; number of external filter programs (which do not come with emacs.)
;;; Emacs provides a nice front-end onto MH, called "mh-e".
;;;
;; Bindings that let you send or read mail using MH
;(global-set-key "\C-xm" 'mh-smail)
;(global-set-key "\C-x4m" 'mh-smail-other-window)
;(global-set-key "\C-cr" 'mh-rmail)
;; Customization of MH behavior.
(setq mh-delete-yanked-msg-window t)
(setq mh-yank-from-start-of-msg 'body)
(setq mh-summary-height 11)
;; Use lines like the following if your version of MH
;; is in a special place.
;(setq mh-progs "/usr/dist/pkgs/mh/bin.svr4/")
;(setq mh-lib "/usr/dist/pkgs/mh/lib.svr4/")
;;; ********************
;;; resize-minibuffer-mode makes the minibuffer automatically
;;; resize as necessary when it's too big to hold its contents.
(autoload 'resize-minibuffer-mode "rsz-minibuf" nil t)
(resize-minibuffer-mode)
(setq resize-minibuffer-window-exactly nil)
;;; ********************
;;; W3 is a browser for the World Wide Web, and takes advantage of the very
;;; latest redisplay features in XEmacs. You can access it simply by typing
;;; 'M-x w3'; however, if you're unlucky enough to be on a machine that is
;;; behind a firewall, you will have to do something like this first:
;(setq w3-use-telnet t
; ;;
; ;; If the Telnet program you use to access the outside world is
; ;; not called "telnet", specify its name like this.
; w3-telnet-prog "itelnet"
; ;;
; ;; If your Telnet program adds lines of junk at the beginning
; ;; of the session, specify the number of lines here.
; w3-telnet-header-length 4
; )
Thanks to :
http://www.uluga.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1375454
http://www.dotemacs.de/dotfiles/sample.emacs.html
http://www.dotemacs.de/dotfiles/BenjaminRutt.emacs.html
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