> Date: Thu, 7 Feb 2019 00:45:55 +0100 > Cc: unicode Unicode Discussion <unicode@unicode.org> > From: Egmont Koblinger via Unicode <unicode@unicode.org> > > > Not necessarily. One could allow the first strong character in the > > prompt to determine the paragraph directions > > How does Emacs know what's a prompt? How can it tell it from the > previous and next command's output?
It uses a regular expression, see term-prompt-regexp. > Whatever it does to know where the prompt is, can it be made into a > standard, cross-terminal feature? Not sure. It's a kind of heuristic, which is why the regexp is customizable on user level, so that users could adapt it to their needs, should that be necessary. > > That's what the Emacs > > terminal (invoked by M-x term; top level definition in term.el) does. > > I tried it. Executed my default shell, and inside that, a "cat > TUTORIAL.he". All the paragraphs are rendered as LTR ones, > left-aligned. Not the way the file is opened in Emacs. In what version of Emacs is that? In the latest version 26 I have here, the tutorial displays with most paragraphs in RTL direction. > If you claim Emacs's built-in terminal emulator supports BiDi, I'm > kindly asking you to present a documentation of its behavior, in > similar spirit to my BiDi proposal. The Emacs terminal emulator displays text as any other text in any other Emacs buffer, so it supports the same bidi reordering as elsewhere. You could make it emulate other terminals by setting the variable bidi-paragraph-direction to either left-to-right or right-to-left, then all the paragraphs will have the base direction you specify. But the default value of this variable in term buffers is nil, which invokes dynamic determination of base paragraph direction.