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39.22.5 Glyphless Character Display

Glyphless characters are characters which are displayed in a special way, e.g., as a box containing a hexadecimal code, instead of being displayed literally. These include characters which are explicitly defined to be glyphless, as well as characters for which there is no available font (on a graphical display), and characters which cannot be encoded by the terminal's coding system (on a text terminal).

— Variable: glyphless-char-display

The value of this variable is a char-table which defines glyphless characters and how they are displayed. Each entry must be one of the following display methods:

nil
Display the character in the usual way.
zero-width
Don't display the character.
thin-space
Display a thin space, 1-pixel wide on graphical displays, or 1-character wide on text terminals.
empty-box
Display an empty box.
hex-code
Display a box containing the Unicode codepoint of the character, in hexadecimal notation.
an ASCII string
Display a box containing that string. The string should contain at most 6 ASCII characters.
a cons cell (graphical . text)
Display with graphical on graphical displays, and with text on text terminals. Both graphical and text must be one of the display methods described above.

The thin-space, empty-box, hex-code, and ASCII string display methods are drawn with the glyphless-char face. On text terminals, a box is emulated by square brackets, ‘[]’.

The char-table has one extra slot, which determines how to display any character that cannot be displayed with any available font, or cannot be encoded by the terminal's coding system. Its value should be one of the above display methods, except zero-width or a cons cell.

If a character has a non-nil entry in an active display table, the display table takes effect; in this case, Emacs does not consult glyphless-char-display at all.

— User Option: glyphless-char-display-control

This user option provides a convenient way to set glyphless-char-display for groups of similar characters. Do not set its value directly from Lisp code; the value takes effect only via a custom :set function (see Variable Definitions), which updates glyphless-char-display.

Its value should be an alist of elements (group . method), where group is a symbol specifying a group of characters, and method is a symbol specifying how to display them.

group should be one of the following:

c0-control
ASCII control characters U+0000 to U+001F, excluding the newline and tab characters (normally displayed as escape sequences like ‘^A’; see How Text Is Displayed).
c1-control
Non-ASCII, non-printing characters U+0080 to U+009F (normally displayed as octal escape sequences like ‘\230’).
format-control
Characters of Unicode General Category [Cf], such as U+200E left-to-right mark, but excluding characters that have graphic images, such as U+00AD soft hyphen.
no-font
Characters for which there is no suitable font, or which cannot be encoded by the terminal's coding system.

The method symbol should be one of zero-width, thin-space, empty-box, or hex-code. These have the same meanings as in glyphless-char-display, above.