A single Emacs can talk to more than one X display.
Initially, Emacs uses just one display--the one chosen with the
DISPLAY
environment variable or with the `--display' option
(see section `Initial Options' in The GNU Emacs Manual). To connect to
another display, use the command make-frame-on-display
or specify
the display
frame parameter when you create the frame.
Emacs treats each X server as a separate terminal, giving each one its own selected frame and its own minibuffer windows.
A few Lisp variables are terminal-local; that is, they have a
separate binding for each terminal. The binding in effect at any time
is the one for the terminal that the currently selected frame belongs
to. These variables include default-minibuffer-frame
,
defining-kbd-macro
, last-kbd-macro
, and
system-key-alist
. They are always terminal-local, and can never
be buffer-local (see section Buffer-Local Variables) or frame-local.
A single X server can handle more than one screen. A display name `host:server.screen' has three parts; the last part specifies the screen number for a given server. When you use two screens belonging to one server, Emacs knows by the similarity in their names that they share a single keyboard, and it treats them as a single terminal.
make-frame
(see section Creating Frames).
The optional argument xrm-string, if not nil
, is a
string of resource names and values, in the same format used in the
`.Xresources' file. The values you specify override the resource
values recorded in the X server itself; they apply to all Emacs frames
created on this display. Here's an example of what this string might
look like:
"*BorderWidth: 3\n*InternalBorder: 2\n"
See section X Resources.
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