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-rw-r--r--etc/TUTORIAL24
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/etc/TUTORIAL b/etc/TUTORIAL
index 5748d0d4e5e..63e5d601fed 100644
--- a/etc/TUTORIAL
+++ b/etc/TUTORIAL
@@ -217,7 +217,7 @@ This should have scrolled the screen up by 8 lines. If you would like
to scroll it down again, you can give an argument to M-v.
If you are using a windowed display, such as X11 or MS-Windows, there
-should be a tall rectangular area called a scroll bar at the left hand
+should be a tall rectangular area called a scroll bar at the
side of the Emacs window. You can scroll the text by clicking the
mouse in the scroll bar.
@@ -644,18 +644,18 @@ session--this is the command C-x C-c. (Do not worry about losing
changes you have made; C-x C-c offers to save each changed file before
it kills the Emacs.)
-C-z is the command to exit Emacs *temporarily*--so that you can go
-back to the same Emacs session afterward.
-
-On systems which allow it, C-z "suspends" Emacs; that is, it returns
-to the shell but does not destroy the Emacs. In the most common
-shells, you can resume Emacs with the `fg' command or with `%emacs'.
+If you are using a graphical display that supports multiple
+applications in parallel, you don't need any special command to move
+from Emacs to another application. You can do this with the mouse or
+with window manager commands. However, if you're using a text
+terminal which can only show one application at a time, you need to
+"suspend" Emacs to move to any other program.
-On systems which do not implement suspending, C-z creates a subshell
-running under Emacs to give you the chance to run other programs and
-return to Emacs afterward; it does not truly "exit" from Emacs. In
-this case, the shell command `exit' is the usual way to get back to
-Emacs from the subshell.
+C-z is the command to exit Emacs *temporarily*--so that you can go
+back to the same Emacs session afterward. When Emacs is running on a
+text terminal, C-z "suspends" Emacs; that is, it returns to the shell
+but does not destroy the Emacs. In the most common shells, you can
+resume Emacs with the `fg' command or with `%emacs'.
The time to use C-x C-c is when you are about to log out. It's also
the right thing to use to exit an Emacs invoked under mail handling