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The current line number of point appears in the mode line when Line Number mode is enabled. Use the command M-x line-number-mode to turn this mode on and off; normally it is on. The line number appears before the buffer percentage pos, with the letter `L' to indicate what it is. See section AD.1 Minor Modes, for more information about minor modes and about how to use this command.
If you have narrowed the buffer (see section AC.22 Narrowing), the displayed line number is relative to the accessible portion of the buffer.
If the buffer is very large (larger than the value of
line-number-display-limit
), then the line number doesn't appear.
Emacs doesn't compute the line number when the buffer is large, because
that would be too slow. Set it to nil
to remove the limit.
Line-number computation can also be slow if the lines in the buffer
are too long. For this reason, Emacs normally doesn't display line
numbers if the average width, in characters, of lines near point is
larger than the value of the variable
line-number-display-limit-width
. The default value is 200
characters.
You can also display the current column number by turning on Column Number mode. It displays the current column number preceded by the letter `C'. Type M-x column-number-mode to toggle this mode.
Emacs can optionally display the time and system load in all mode
lines. To enable this feature, type M-x display-time or customize
the option display-time-mode
. The information added to the mode
line usually appears after the buffer name, before the mode names and
their parentheses. It looks like this:
hh:mmpm l.ll |
Here hh and mm are the hour and minute, followed always by
`am' or `pm'. l.ll is the average number of running
processes in the whole system recently. (Some fields may be missing if
your operating system cannot support them.) If you prefer time display
in 24-hour format, set the variable display-time-24hr-format
to t
.
The word `Mail' appears after the load level if there is mail
for you that you have not read yet. On a graphical display you can use
an icon instead of `Mail' by customizing
display-time-use-mail-icon
; this may save some space on the mode
line. You can customize display-time-mail-face
to make the mail
indicator prominent.
By default, the mode line is drawn on graphics displays with
3D-style highlighting, like that of a button when it is not being
pressed. If you don't like this effect, you can disable the 3D
highlighting of the mode line, by customizing the attributes of the
mode-line
face in your `.emacs' init file, like this:
(set-face-attribute 'mode-line nil :box nil) |
Alternatively, you can turn off the box attribute in your `.Xdefaults' file:
Emacs.mode-line.AttributeBox: off |
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