;; XEmacs, and will be removed once you are done with the buffer.
;; To evaluate a Lisp form in a running Emacs, use the `-eval'
-;; argument of gnuclient. To simplify this, we provide the `gnudoit'
-;; shell script. For example `gnudoit "(+ 2 3)"' will print `5',
-;; whereas `gnudoit "(gnus)"' will fire up your favorite newsreader.
-;; Like gnuclient, `gnudoit' requires the server to be started prior
-;; to using it.
+;; argument of gnuclient.
;; For more information you can refer to man pages of gnuclient,
-;; gnudoit and gnuserv, distributed with XEmacs.
+;; and gnuserv, distributed with SXEmacs.
;; gnuserv.el was originally written by Andy Norman as an improvement
;; over William Sommerfeld's server.el. Since then, a number of
:tag "Gnuserv Frame"
:type '(radio (const :tag "Create new frame each time" nil)
(const :tag "Use selected frame" t)
- (function-item :tag "Use main Emacs frame"
+ (function-item :tag "Use main Emacs frame"
gnuserv-main-frame-function)
(function-item :tag "Use visible frame, otherwise create new"
gnuserv-visible-frame-function)
ID - Client id (integer).
BUFFERS - List of buffers that \"belong\" to the client.
- NOTE: one buffer can belong to several clients.
+ NOTE: one buffer can belong to several clients.
DEVICE - The device this client is on. If the device was also created.
- by a client, it will be placed to `gnuserv-devices' list.
+ by a client, it will be placed to `gnuserv-devices' list.
FRAME - Frame created by the client, or nil if the client didn't
- create a frame.
+ create a frame.
All the slots default to nil."
(id nil)
;;;###autoload
(defun gnuserv-start (&optional leave-dead)
"Allow this Emacs process to be a server for client processes.
-This starts a gnuserv communications subprocess through which
-client \"editors\" (gnuclient and gnudoit) can send editing commands to
-this Emacs job. See the gnuserv(1) manual page for more details.
+This starts a gnuserv communications subprocess through which client
+\"editors\" (gnuclient) can send editing commands to this Emacs job.
+See the gnuserv(1) manual page for more details.
Prefix arg means just kill any existing server communications subprocess."
(interactive "P")