From xemacs-m  Mon Mar  3 13:32:59 1997
Received: from cerise.sensei.co.uk (cerise.sensei.co.uk [193.132.124.200])
	by xemacs.org (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id NAA20524
	for <xemacs-beta@xemacs.org>; Mon, 3 Mar 1997 13:32:55 -0600 (CST)
Received: (from glynn@localhost) by cerise.sensei.co.uk (8.8.3/8.8.2) id TAA06198; Mon, 3 Mar 1997 19:33:13 GMT
Date: Mon, 3 Mar 1997 19:33:13 GMT
Message-Id: <199703031933.TAA06198@cerise.sensei.co.uk>
From: Glynn Clements <glynn@sensei.co.uk>
To: jens@lemming0.lem.uni-karlsruhe.de
CC: xemacs-beta@xemacs.org
Subject: Re: Build success: 19.15-b96 on Linux-2.0.27 (+SSL patch)
In-Reply-To: <m33euc23wg.fsf@jens.metrix.de>
References: <199703031654.QAA05290@cerise.sensei.co.uk>
	<m33euc23wg.fsf@jens.metrix.de>
Reply-To: glynn@sensei.co.uk
Mime-Version: 1.0 (generated by tm-edit 7.105)
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII


Jens Lautenbacher writes:

 > > 2) I have to supply --with-sound=native manually, else configure
 > > doesn't enable sound support (what's it looking for?)
 >
 > I think this is intentional

I only point this out because the INSTALL file says:

`configure' will attempt to determine if your configuration supports
sound and define --with-sound for you.

 > > commands (e.g. Set) are case-sensitive
 >
 > I don't know what you mean. cu-edit-faces is just a wrapper around custom.el

What I mean is that if you use the keyboard to enter Set/Save/..., you
have to get the capitalization correct or else it don't work.

 > >  can we have a quick way to disable `italic' on *all* faces. Italic
 > >  fonts look really naff on my system, and it took me a good few hours
 > >  to find them all and get rid of them.
 > So please configure your font path the right way. I suggest upgrading
 > (if you havn't) to XFree3.2

I have XFree86-3.2. What does the font path have to do with this, and
how should I configure it?

Note: I don't want to eliminate italic fonts altogether; I just wanted
to know if there's a simpler way to make all of XEmacs default faces
non-italic than having to first exercise various modes to make the
faces exist, then wading through the customisation buffer setting them
all to regular one-by-one.

-- 
Glynn Clements <glynn@sensei.co.uk>

