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author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> | 2001-06-29 03:19:40 +0000 |
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committer | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> | 2001-06-29 03:19:40 +0000 |
commit | b2683503ad70ffadb4699fc28d37877350911321 (patch) | |
tree | 178cc243e209fb372b21dfb4766df4b059a44e92 /man/text.texi | |
parent | ed104a87a987f4e1c557a29a4c44060e72baa8fe (diff) | |
download | emacs-b2683503ad70ffadb4699fc28d37877350911321.tar.gz |
Get rid of inexplicable @t's in values of paragraph-start and
paragraph-separate and page-delimiter.
Say C-x C-p activates the mark.
Prevent break inside `level-1'.
Clean up presentation of items within M-C-Mouse-1.
Minor changes.
Diffstat (limited to 'man/text.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | man/text.texi | 51 |
1 files changed, 25 insertions, 26 deletions
diff --git a/man/text.texi b/man/text.texi index 2c29c7140d8..ac6190bff4c 100644 --- a/man/text.texi +++ b/man/text.texi @@ -75,7 +75,6 @@ Then the formatting appears on the screen in Emacs while you edit. Emacs has commands for moving over or operating on words. By convention, the keys for them are all Meta characters. -@c widecommands @table @kbd @item M-f Move forward over a word (@code{forward-word}). @@ -295,8 +294,8 @@ that separate paragraphs without being part of any paragraph (for example, blank lines). Lines that start a new paragraph and are contained in it must match only @code{paragraph-start}, not @code{paragraph-separate}. For example, in Fundamental mode, -@code{paragraph-start} is @code{"[ @t{\}t@t{\}n@t{\}f]"} and -@code{paragraph-separate} is @code{"[ @t{\}t@t{\}f]*$"}.@refill +@code{paragraph-start} is @w{@code{"[ \t\n\f]"}}, and +@code{paragraph-separate} is @w{@code{"[ \t\f]*$"}}. Normally it is desirable for page boundaries to separate paragraphs. The default values of these variables recognize the usual separator for @@ -317,7 +316,6 @@ character: you can insert it with @kbd{C-q C-l}, and delete it with since pages are often meaningful divisions of the file, Emacs provides commands to move over them and operate on them. -@c WideCommands @table @kbd @item C-x [ Move point to previous page boundary (@code{backward-page}). @@ -344,12 +342,14 @@ command moves forward past the next page delimiter. The @kbd{C-x C-p} command (@code{mark-page}) puts point at the beginning of the current page and the mark at the end. The page delimiter at the end is included (the mark follows it). The page -delimiter at the front is excluded (point follows it). @kbd{C-x C-p -C-w} is a handy way to kill a page to move it elsewhere. If you move to -another page delimiter with @kbd{C-x [} and @kbd{C-x ]}, then yank the -killed page, all the pages will be properly delimited once again. The -reason @kbd{C-x C-p} includes only the following page delimiter in the -region is to ensure that. +delimiter at the front is excluded (point follows it). In Transient +Mark mode, this command activates the mark. + + @kbd{C-x C-p C-w} is a handy way to kill a page to move it +elsewhere. If you move to another page delimiter with @kbd{C-x [} and +@kbd{C-x ]}, then yank the killed page, all the pages will be properly +delimited once again. The reason @kbd{C-x C-p} includes only the +following page delimiter in the region is to ensure that. A numeric argument to @kbd{C-x C-p} is used to specify which page to go to, relative to the current one. Zero means the current page. One means @@ -373,7 +373,7 @@ beginning of a line. @vindex page-delimiter The variable @code{page-delimiter} controls where pages begin. Its value is a regexp that matches the beginning of a line that separates -pages. The normal value of this variable is @code{"^@t{\}f"}, which +pages. The normal value of this variable is @code{"^\f"}, which matches a formfeed character at the beginning of a line. @node Filling @@ -730,7 +730,6 @@ that line. Emacs has commands for converting either a single word or any arbitrary range of text to upper case or to lower case. -@c WideCommands @table @kbd @item M-l Convert following word to lower case (@code{downcase-word}). @@ -1170,7 +1169,7 @@ the body, or @kbd{C-c C-i} to expose the child (level-2) headings. @findex foldout-zoom-subtree With Foldout, you use @kbd{C-c C-z} (@kbd{M-x foldout-zoom-subtree}). This exposes the body and child subheadings, and narrows the buffer so -that only the level-1 heading, the body and the level-2 headings are +that only the @w{level-1} heading, the body and the level-2 headings are visible. Now to look under one of the level-2 headings, position the cursor on it and use @kbd{C-c C-z} again. This exposes the level-2 body and its level-3 child subheadings and narrows the buffer again. Zooming @@ -1208,16 +1207,16 @@ folds, and for showing and hiding text: @table @asis @item @kbd{M-C-Mouse-1} zooms in on the heading clicked on -@table @asis -@item single click -expose body. -@item double click -expose subheadings. -@item triple click -expose body and subheadings. -@item quad click -expose entire subtree. -@end table +@itemize @asis +@item +single click: expose body. +@item +double click: expose subheadings. +@item +triple click: expose body and subheadings. +@item +quad click: expose entire subtree. +@end itemize @item @kbd{M-C-Mouse-2} exposes text under the heading clicked on @table @r @item single click @@ -1702,9 +1701,9 @@ formatted text in Enriched mode can specify fonts, colors, underlining, margins, and types of filling and justification. In the future, we plan to implement other formatting features as well. - Enriched mode is a minor mode (@pxref{Minor Modes}). Typically it is -used in conjunction with Text mode (@pxref{Text Mode}). However, you -can also use it with other major modes such as Outline mode and + Enriched mode is a minor mode (@pxref{Minor Modes}). It is +typically used in conjunction with Text mode (@pxref{Text Mode}), but +you can also use it with other major modes such as Outline mode and Paragraph-Indent Text mode. @cindex text/enriched MIME format |