emacs GNU Emacs is an extensible, customizable text editor - and more. At its core is an interpreter for Emacs Lisp, a dialect of the Lisp programming language with extensions to support text editing. The features of GNU Emacs include: * Content-sensitive editing modes, including syntax coloring, for a variety of file types including plain text, source code, and HTML. * Complete built-in documentation, including a tutorial for new users. * Full Unicode support for nearly all human languages and their scripts. * Highly customizable, using Emacs Lisp code or a graphical interface. * A large number of extensions that add other functionality, including a project planner, mail and news reader, debugger interface, calendar, and more. Many of these extensions are distributed with GNU Emacs; others are available separately. Enable the MIT Athena widget set (x11-libs/libXaw) Support shared score files for games Use gnome-base/gconf to read the system font name Use gsettings (dev-libs/glib) to read the system font name Link against version 3 of the GIMP Toolkit instead of version 2 (x11-libs/gtk+) Compress bundled Emacs Lisp source Enable support for net-dns/hesiod Use media-gfx/imagemagick for image processing Add support for Emacs input methods Use dev-libs/libxml2 to parse XML instead of the internal Lisp implementations Enable building under a PaX enabled kernel (sys-apps/paxctl) Build Emacs with MTA support Install C source files and make them available for find-function Use the selected toolkit's scrollbars in preference to Emacs' own scrollbars Prefer wide Emacs integers (typically 62-bit). This option has an effect only on architectures where "long" and "long long" types have different size.