38.11.1 Standard Faces 
  This table lists all the standard faces and their uses.  Most of them
are used for displaying certain parts of the frames or certain kinds of
text; you can control how those places look by customizing these faces.
- default
- 
This face is used for ordinary text.
 
- mode-line
- 
This face is used for mode lines, and for menu bars when toolkit menus
are not used--but only if mode-line-inverse-videois
non-nil.
 
- modeline
- 
This is an alias for the mode-lineface, for compatibility with
old Emacs versions.
 
- header-line
- 
This face is used for the header lines of windows that have them.
 
- menu
- This face controls the display of menus, both their colors and their
font.  (This works only on certain systems.)
 
- fringe
- 
This face controls the colors of window fringes, the thin areas on
either side that are used to display continuation and truncation glyphs.
 
- scroll-bar
- 
This face controls the colors for display of scroll bars.
 
- tool-bar
- 
This face is used for display of the tool bar, if any.
 
- region
- 
This face is used for highlighting the region in Transient Mark mode.
 
- secondary-selection
- 
This face is used to show any secondary selection you have made.
 
- highlight
- 
This face is meant to be used for highlighting for various purposes.
 
- trailing-whitespace
- 
This face is used to display excess whitespace at the end of a line,
if show-trailing-whitespaceis non-nil.
  In contrast, these faces are provided to change the appearance of text
in specific ways.  You can use them on specific text, when you want
the effects they produce.
- bold
- 
This face uses a bold font, if possible.  It uses the bold variant of
the frame's font, if it has one.  It's up to you to choose a default
font that has a bold variant, if you want to use one.
 
- italic
- 
This face uses the italic variant of the frame's font, if it has one.
 
- bold-italic
- 
This face uses the bold italic variant of the frame's font, if it has
one.
 
- underline
- 
This face underlines text.
 
- fixed-pitch
- 
This face forces use of a particular fixed-width font.
 
- variable-pitch
- 
This face forces use of a particular variable-width font.  It's
reasonable to customize this to use a different variable-width font, if
you like, but you should not make it a fixed-width font.
- Variable: show-trailing-whitespace
- 
If this variable is non-nil, Emacs uses thetrailing-whitespaceface to display any spaces and tabs at the
end of a line.
  
This document was generated
on May 2, 2002
using texi2html