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Mail Archives: djgpp/1998/04/03/22:42:41

From: myknees AT aol DOT com (Myknees)
Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp
Subject: Re: emacs - three questions
Date: 3 Apr 1998 23:47:00 GMT
Lines: 27
Message-ID: <1998040323470000.SAA18168@ladder03.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder03.news.aol.com
References: <3524bc6e DOT 0 AT news1 DOT cityweb DOT de>
Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com
To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com
DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp

In article <3524bc6e DOT 0 AT news1 DOT cityweb DOT de>, "Ingo Ruhnke" <grumbel AT gmx DOT de>
writes:
[snip]
>1. Is there a way I can save the text files in Unix file format
>   and not in the MS-DOS format?

This is not the answer you want, but there is a djgpp utility dtou.exe that
converts MS-DOS format to UNIX format.  (and the opposite is utod.exe)

[snip]
>3. Is there a way I can automaticly refresh the screen after a
>   shell command? For example after executing and Allegro Prg
>   the screen is messed, until I type <M-!> refresh-display

I think C-l (control-l) will help.  You could also bind a key to that command. 
But I'm not really sure that your screen should be garbled.  You could suspend
emacs, run the Allegro program, and then type exit to resume emacs.  Then you
shouldn't have a garbled screen.  --Weird!!  I just did what you are doing.  I
think that suspending emacs is better.  Then your display will "automatically"
come out right.  Anyway, C-l does fix it if you must use M-!.

[snip]
>Sorry if some of the questions are stupid, but i am new to emacs.

Sorry if I couldn't answer all your questions, but I too am new to emacs.

--Ed (Myknees)

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