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author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> | 2001-04-01 03:20:52 +0000 |
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committer | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> | 2001-04-01 03:20:52 +0000 |
commit | 0a4fb541f71d650f9f4883ae3d426846b5d1253c (patch) | |
tree | bd577934761fce8264161a4b4be6fb9334963b1e /man | |
parent | b72d30a79867f4fe702c599799399ecb9f596b5d (diff) | |
download | emacs-0a4fb541f71d650f9f4883ae3d426846b5d1253c.tar.gz |
Minor change.
Diffstat (limited to 'man')
-rw-r--r-- | man/basic.texi | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | man/fixit.texi | 11 |
2 files changed, 7 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/man/basic.texi b/man/basic.texi index 3349c918082..c0af8fb2426 100644 --- a/man/basic.texi +++ b/man/basic.texi @@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ be @key{DEL}, and sets it up that way. But in some cases, especially with text-only terminals, you will need to tell Emacs which key to use for that purpose. If the large key not far above the @key{RET} or @key{ENTER} key doesn't delete backwards, you need to do this. -@xref{DEL Gets Help}. +@xref{DEL Gets Help}, for an explanation of how. Many keyboards have both a @key{BACKSPACE} key a short ways above @key{RET} or @key{ENTER}, and a @key{DELETE} key elsewhere. In that diff --git a/man/fixit.texi b/man/fixit.texi index 4048e3750ad..8f5fd8871c3 100644 --- a/man/fixit.texi +++ b/man/fixit.texi @@ -96,11 +96,12 @@ Otherwise, a reverse search (@kbd{C-r}) is often the best way. @c programs.texi, in the "List Commands" node. @c @kindex C-M-t @c @findex transpose-sexps - @kbd{M-t} (@code{transpose-words}) transposes the word before point -with the word after point. It moves point forward over a word, dragging -the word preceding or containing point forward as well. The punctuation -characters between the words do not move. For example, @w{@samp{FOO, BAR}} -transposes into @w{@samp{BAR, FOO}} rather than @samp{@w{BAR FOO,}}. + @kbd{M-t} transposes the word before point with the word after point +(@code{transpose-words}). It moves point forward over a word, +dragging the word preceding or containing point forward as well. The +punctuation characters between the words do not move. For example, +@w{@samp{FOO, BAR}} transposes into @w{@samp{BAR, FOO}} rather than +@samp{@w{BAR FOO,}}. @kbd{C-M-t} (@code{transpose-sexps}) is a similar command for transposing two expressions (@pxref{Lists}), and @kbd{C-x C-t} (@code{transpose-lines}) |