An unseen character that marks the end of a line of text in a document. It tells a printer or screen to break a line and start a new one.
LFD characters in the buffer terminate lines of text and are called newlines. See section Emacs¤Îʸ»ú¥»¥Ã¥È.
a line feed, and the carriage return of the CR-LF from dos won't cause any harm in html
UNIX does not put both the Carriage Return and Line Feed characters at the end of each line of text. Instead, it puts just the Line Feed character. Because this one character serves both to mark the end of a line and to advance a terminal to the beginning of the next line, it is referred to as the Newline character
the standard character Newline, notated for the Lisp reader as #\Newline.
Control-J characters in the buffer terminate lines of text and are therefore also called newlines. See section Newline. nil nil is a value usually interpreted as a logical "false." Its opposite is , interpreted as "true."
The character that marks the end of a line of text in most UNIX files. (This is a convention, not a requirement.)
A special character represented by that causes the display of text to continue at the leftmost column of the next line.
Linefeed characters in the buffer terminate lines of text and are therefore also called newlines. See section Character Set for Text.