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1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
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2 @c Copyright (C) 1985, 86, 87, 93, 94, 95, 97, 2000
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3 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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4 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
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5 @node Text, Programs, Indentation, Top
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6 @chapter Commands for Human Languages
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7 @cindex text
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8 @cindex manipulating text
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9
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10 The term @dfn{text} has two widespread meanings in our area of the
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11 computer field. One is data that is a sequence of characters. Any file
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12 that you edit with Emacs is text, in this sense of the word. The other
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13 meaning is more restrictive: a sequence of characters in a human language
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14 for humans to read (possibly after processing by a text formatter), as
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15 opposed to a program or commands for a program.
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16
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17 Human languages have syntactic/stylistic conventions that can be
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18 supported or used to advantage by editor commands: conventions involving
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19 words, sentences, paragraphs, and capital letters. This chapter
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20 describes Emacs commands for all of these things. There are also
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21 commands for @dfn{filling}, which means rearranging the lines of a
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22 paragraph to be approximately equal in length. The commands for moving
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23 over and killing words, sentences and paragraphs, while intended
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24 primarily for editing text, are also often useful for editing programs.
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25
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26 Emacs has several major modes for editing human-language text. If the
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27 file contains text pure and simple, use Text mode, which customizes
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28 Emacs in small ways for the syntactic conventions of text. Outline mode
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29 provides special commands for operating on text with an outline
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30 structure.
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31 @iftex
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32 @xref{Outline Mode}.
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33 @end iftex
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34
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35 For text which contains embedded commands for text formatters, Emacs
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36 has other major modes, each for a particular text formatter. Thus, for
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37 input to @TeX{}, you would use @TeX{}
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38 @iftex
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39 mode (@pxref{TeX Mode}).
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40 @end iftex
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41 @ifinfo
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42 mode.
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43 @end ifinfo
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44 For input to nroff, use Nroff mode.
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45
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46 Instead of using a text formatter, you can edit formatted text in
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47 WYSIWYG style (``what you see is what you get''), with Enriched mode.
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48 Then the formatting appears on the screen in Emacs while you edit.
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49 @iftex
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50 @xref{Formatted Text}.
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51 @end iftex
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52
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53 The `automatic typing' features may be useful when writing text.
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54 @xref{Top, Autotyping, autotype, Features for Automatic Typing}.
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55
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56 @menu
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57 * Words:: Moving over and killing words.
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58 * Sentences:: Moving over and killing sentences.
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59 * Paragraphs:: Moving over paragraphs.
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60 * Pages:: Moving over pages.
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61 * Filling:: Filling or justifying text.
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62 * Case:: Changing the case of text.
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63 * Text Mode:: The major modes for editing text files.
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64 * Outline Mode:: Editing outlines.
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65 * TeX Mode:: Editing input to the formatter TeX.
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66 * Nroff Mode:: Editing input to the formatter nroff.
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67 * Formatted Text:: Editing formatted text directly in WYSIWYG fashion.
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68 @end menu
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69
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70 @node Words
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71 @section Words
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72 @cindex words
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73 @cindex Meta commands and words
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74
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75 Emacs has commands for moving over or operating on words. By convention,
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76 the keys for them are all Meta characters.
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77
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78 @c widecommands
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79 @table @kbd
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80 @item M-f
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81 Move forward over a word (@code{forward-word}).
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82 @item M-b
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83 Move backward over a word (@code{backward-word}).
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84 @item M-d
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85 Kill up to the end of a word (@code{kill-word}).
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86 @item M-@key{DEL}
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87 Kill back to the beginning of a word (@code{backward-kill-word}).
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88 @item M-@@
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89 Mark the end of the next word (@code{mark-word}).
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90 @item M-t
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91 Transpose two words or drag a word across other words
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92 (@code{transpose-words}).
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93 @end table
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94
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95 Notice how these keys form a series that parallels the character-based
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96 @kbd{C-f}, @kbd{C-b}, @kbd{C-d}, @key{DEL} and @kbd{C-t}. @kbd{M-@@} is
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97 cognate to @kbd{C-@@}, which is an alias for @kbd{C-@key{SPC}}.
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98
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99 @kindex M-f
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100 @kindex M-b
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101 @findex forward-word
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102 @findex backward-word
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103 The commands @kbd{M-f} (@code{forward-word}) and @kbd{M-b}
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104 (@code{backward-word}) move forward and backward over words. These
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105 Meta characters are thus analogous to the corresponding control
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106 characters, @kbd{C-f} and @kbd{C-b}, which move over single characters
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107 in the text. The analogy extends to numeric arguments, which serve as
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108 repeat counts. @kbd{M-f} with a negative argument moves backward, and
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109 @kbd{M-b} with a negative argument moves forward. Forward motion
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110 stops right after the last letter of the word, while backward motion
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111 stops right before the first letter.@refill
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112
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113 @kindex M-d
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114 @findex kill-word
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115 @kbd{M-d} (@code{kill-word}) kills the word after point. To be
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116 precise, it kills everything from point to the place @kbd{M-f} would
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117 move to. Thus, if point is in the middle of a word, @kbd{M-d} kills
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118 just the part after point. If some punctuation comes between point and the
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119 next word, it is killed along with the word. (If you wish to kill only the
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120 next word but not the punctuation before it, simply do @kbd{M-f} to get
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121 the end, and kill the word backwards with @kbd{M-@key{DEL}}.)
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122 @kbd{M-d} takes arguments just like @kbd{M-f}.
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123
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124 @findex backward-kill-word
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125 @kindex M-DEL
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126 @kbd{M-@key{DEL}} (@code{backward-kill-word}) kills the word before
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127 point. It kills everything from point back to where @kbd{M-b} would
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128 move to. If point is after the space in @w{@samp{FOO, BAR}}, then
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129 @w{@samp{FOO, }} is killed. (If you wish to kill just @samp{FOO}, and
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130 not the comma and the space, use @kbd{M-b M-d} instead of
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131 @kbd{M-@key{DEL}}.)
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132
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133 @kindex M-t
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134 @findex transpose-words
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135 @kbd{M-t} (@code{transpose-words}) exchanges the word before or
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136 containing point with the following word. The delimiter characters between
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137 the words do not move. For example, @w{@samp{FOO, BAR}} transposes into
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138 @w{@samp{BAR, FOO}} rather than @samp{@w{BAR FOO,}}. @xref{Transpose}, for
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139 more on transposition and on arguments to transposition commands.
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140
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141 @kindex M-@@
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142 @findex mark-word
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143 To operate on the next @var{n} words with an operation which applies
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144 between point and mark, you can either set the mark at point and then move
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145 over the words, or you can use the command @kbd{M-@@} (@code{mark-word})
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146 which does not move point, but sets the mark where @kbd{M-f} would move
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147 to. @kbd{M-@@} accepts a numeric argument that says how many words to
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148 scan for the place to put the mark. In Transient Mark mode, this command
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149 activates the mark.
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150
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151 The word commands' understanding of syntax is completely controlled by
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152 the syntax table. Any character can, for example, be declared to be a word
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153 delimiter. @xref{Syntax}.
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154
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155 @node Sentences
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156 @section Sentences
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157 @cindex sentences
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158 @cindex manipulating sentences
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159
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160 The Emacs commands for manipulating sentences and paragraphs are mostly
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161 on Meta keys, so as to be like the word-handling commands.
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162
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163 @table @kbd
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164 @item M-a
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165 Move back to the beginning of the sentence (@code{backward-sentence}).
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166 @item M-e
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167 Move forward to the end of the sentence (@code{forward-sentence}).
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168 @item M-k
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169 Kill forward to the end of the sentence (@code{kill-sentence}).
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170 @item C-x @key{DEL}
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171 Kill back to the beginning of the sentence (@code{backward-kill-sentence}).
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172 @end table
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173
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174 @kindex M-a
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175 @kindex M-e
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176 @findex backward-sentence
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177 @findex forward-sentence
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178 The commands @kbd{M-a} and @kbd{M-e} (@code{backward-sentence} and
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179 @code{forward-sentence}) move to the beginning and end of the current
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180 sentence, respectively. They were chosen to resemble @kbd{C-a} and
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181 @kbd{C-e}, which move to the beginning and end of a line. Unlike them,
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182 @kbd{M-a} and @kbd{M-e} if repeated or given numeric arguments move over
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183 successive sentences.
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184
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185 Moving backward over a sentence places point just before the first
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186 character of the sentence; moving forward places point right after the
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187 punctuation that ends the sentence. Neither one moves over the
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188 whitespace at the sentence boundary.
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189
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190 @kindex M-k
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191 @kindex C-x DEL
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192 @findex kill-sentence
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193 @findex backward-kill-sentence
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194 Just as @kbd{C-a} and @kbd{C-e} have a kill command, @kbd{C-k}, to go
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195 with them, so @kbd{M-a} and @kbd{M-e} have a corresponding kill command
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196 @kbd{M-k} (@code{kill-sentence}) which kills from point to the end of
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197 the sentence. With minus one as an argument it kills back to the
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198 beginning of the sentence. Larger arguments serve as a repeat count.
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199 There is also a command, @kbd{C-x @key{DEL}}
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200 (@code{backward-kill-sentence}), for killing back to the beginning of a
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201 sentence. This command is useful when you change your mind in the
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202 middle of composing text.@refill
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203
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204 The sentence commands assume that you follow the American typist's
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205 convention of putting two spaces at the end of a sentence; they consider
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206 a sentence to end wherever there is a @samp{.}, @samp{?} or @samp{!}
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207 followed by the end of a line or two spaces, with any number of
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208 @samp{)}, @samp{]}, @samp{'}, or @samp{"} characters allowed in between.
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209 A sentence also begins or ends wherever a paragraph begins or ends.
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210
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211 @vindex sentence-end
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212 The variable @code{sentence-end} controls recognition of the end of a
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213 sentence. It is a regexp that matches the last few characters of a
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214 sentence, together with the whitespace following the sentence. Its
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215 normal value is
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216
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217 @example
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218 "[.?!][]\"')]*\\($\\|\t\\| \\)[ \t\n]*"
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219 @end example
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220
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221 @noindent
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222 This example is explained in the section on regexps. @xref{Regexps}.
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223
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224 If you want to use just one space between sentences, you should
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225 set @code{sentence-end} to this value:
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226
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227 @example
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228 "[.?!][]\"')]*\\($\\|\t\\| \\)[ \t\n]*"
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229 @end example
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230
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231 @noindent
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232 You should also set the variable @code{sentence-end-double-space} to
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233 @code{nil} so that the fill commands expect and leave just one space at
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234 the end of a sentence. Note that this makes it impossible to
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235 distinguish between periods that end sentences and those that indicate
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236 abbreviations.
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237
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238 @node Paragraphs
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239 @section Paragraphs
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240 @cindex paragraphs
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241 @cindex manipulating paragraphs
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242 @kindex M-@{
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243 @kindex M-@}
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244 @findex backward-paragraph
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245 @findex forward-paragraph
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246
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247 The Emacs commands for manipulating paragraphs are also Meta keys.
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248
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249 @table @kbd
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250 @item M-@{
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251 Move back to previous paragraph beginning (@code{backward-paragraph}).
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252 @item M-@}
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253 Move forward to next paragraph end (@code{forward-paragraph}).
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254 @item M-h
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255 Put point and mark around this or next paragraph (@code{mark-paragraph}).
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256 @end table
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257
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258 @kbd{M-@{} moves to the beginning of the current or previous
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259 paragraph, while @kbd{M-@}} moves to the end of the current or next
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260 paragraph. Blank lines and text-formatter command lines separate
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261 paragraphs and are not considered part of any paragraph. In Fundamental
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262 mode, but not in Text mode, an indented line also starts a new
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263 paragraph. (If a paragraph is preceded by a blank line, these commands
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264 treat that blank line as the beginning of the paragraph.)
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265
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266 In major modes for programs, paragraphs begin and end only at blank
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267 lines. This makes the paragraph commands continue to be useful even
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268 though there are no paragraphs per se.
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269
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270 When there is a fill prefix, then paragraphs are delimited by all lines
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271 which don't start with the fill prefix. @xref{Filling}.
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272
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273 @kindex M-h
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274 @findex mark-paragraph
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275 When you wish to operate on a paragraph, you can use the command
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276 @kbd{M-h} (@code{mark-paragraph}) to set the region around it. Thus,
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277 for example, @kbd{M-h C-w} kills the paragraph around or after point.
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278 The @kbd{M-h} command puts point at the beginning and mark at the end of
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279 the paragraph point was in. In Transient Mark mode, it activates the
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280 mark. If point is between paragraphs (in a run of blank lines, or at a
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281 boundary), the paragraph following point is surrounded by point and
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282 mark. If there are blank lines preceding the first line of the
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283 paragraph, one of these blank lines is included in the region.
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284
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285 @vindex paragraph-start
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286 @vindex paragraph-separate
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287 The precise definition of a paragraph boundary is controlled by the
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288 variables @code{paragraph-separate} and @code{paragraph-start}. The
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289 value of @code{paragraph-start} is a regexp that should match any line
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290 that either starts or separates paragraphs. The value of
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291 @code{paragraph-separate} is another regexp that should match only lines
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292 that separate paragraphs without being part of any paragraph (for
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293 example, blank lines). Lines that start a new paragraph and are
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294 contained in it must match only @code{paragraph-start}, not
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295 @code{paragraph-separate}. For example, in Fundamental mode,
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296 @code{paragraph-start} is @code{"[ @t{\}t@t{\}n@t{\}f]"} and
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297 @code{paragraph-separate} is @code{"[ @t{\}t@t{\}f]*$"}.@refill
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298
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299 Normally it is desirable for page boundaries to separate paragraphs.
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300 The default values of these variables recognize the usual separator for
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301 pages.
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302
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303 @node Pages
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304 @section Pages
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305
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306 @cindex pages
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307 @cindex formfeed
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308 Files are often thought of as divided into @dfn{pages} by the
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309 @dfn{formfeed} character (ASCII control-L, octal code 014). When you
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310 print hardcopy for a file, this character forces a page break; thus,
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311 each page of the file goes on a separate page on paper. Most Emacs
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312 commands treat the page-separator character just like any other
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313 character: you can insert it with @kbd{C-q C-l}, and delete it with
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314 @key{DEL}. Thus, you are free to paginate your file or not. However,
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315 since pages are often meaningful divisions of the file, Emacs provides
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316 commands to move over them and operate on them.
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317
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318 @c WideCommands
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319 @table @kbd
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320 @item C-x [
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321 Move point to previous page boundary (@code{backward-page}).
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322 @item C-x ]
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323 Move point to next page boundary (@code{forward-page}).
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324 @item C-x C-p
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325 Put point and mark around this page (or another page) (@code{mark-page}).
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326 @item C-x l
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327 Count the lines in this page (@code{count-lines-page}).
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328 @end table
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329
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330 @kindex C-x [
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331 @kindex C-x ]
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332 @findex forward-page
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333 @findex backward-page
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334 The @kbd{C-x [} (@code{backward-page}) command moves point to immediately
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335 after the previous page delimiter. If point is already right after a page
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336 delimiter, it skips that one and stops at the previous one. A numeric
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337 argument serves as a repeat count. The @kbd{C-x ]} (@code{forward-page})
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338 command moves forward past the next page delimiter.
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339
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340 @kindex C-x C-p
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341 @findex mark-page
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342 The @kbd{C-x C-p} command (@code{mark-page}) puts point at the
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343 beginning of the current page and the mark at the end. The page
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344 delimiter at the end is included (the mark follows it). The page
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345 delimiter at the front is excluded (point follows it). @kbd{C-x C-p
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346 C-w} is a handy way to kill a page to move it elsewhere. If you move to
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347 another page delimiter with @kbd{C-x [} and @kbd{C-x ]}, then yank the
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348 killed page, all the pages will be properly delimited once again. The
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349 reason @kbd{C-x C-p} includes only the following page delimiter in the
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350 region is to ensure that.
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351
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352 A numeric argument to @kbd{C-x C-p} is used to specify which page to go
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353 to, relative to the current one. Zero means the current page. One means
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354 the next page, and @minus{}1 means the previous one.
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355
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356 @kindex C-x l
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357 @findex count-lines-page
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358 The @kbd{C-x l} command (@code{count-lines-page}) is good for deciding
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359 where to break a page in two. It prints in the echo area the total number
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360 of lines in the current page, and then divides it up into those preceding
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361 the current line and those following, as in
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362
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363 @example
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364 Page has 96 (72+25) lines
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365 @end example
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366
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367 @noindent
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368 Notice that the sum is off by one; this is correct if point is not at the
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369 beginning of a line.
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370
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371 @vindex page-delimiter
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372 The variable @code{page-delimiter} controls where pages begin. Its
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373 value is a regexp that matches the beginning of a line that separates
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374 pages. The normal value of this variable is @code{"^@t{\}f"}, which
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375 matches a formfeed character at the beginning of a line.
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376
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377 @node Filling
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378 @section Filling Text
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379 @cindex filling text
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380
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381 @dfn{Filling} text means breaking it up into lines that fit a
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382 specified width. Emacs does filling in two ways. In Auto Fill mode,
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383 inserting text with self-inserting characters also automatically fills
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384 it. There are also explicit fill commands that you can use when editing
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385 text leaves it unfilled. When you edit formatted text, you can specify
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386 a style of filling for each portion of the text (@pxref{Formatted
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387 Text}).
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388
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389 @menu
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390 * Auto Fill:: Auto Fill mode breaks long lines automatically.
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391 * Fill Commands:: Commands to refill paragraphs and center lines.
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392 * Fill Prefix:: Filling paragraphs that are indented
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393 or in a comment, etc.
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394 * Adaptive Fill:: How Emacs can determine the fill prefix automatically.
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395 @end menu
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396
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397 @node Auto Fill
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398 @subsection Auto Fill Mode
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399 @cindex Auto Fill mode
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400 @cindex mode, Auto Fill
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401 @cindex word wrap
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402
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403 @dfn{Auto Fill} mode is a minor mode in which lines are broken
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404 automatically when they become too wide. Breaking happens only when
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405 you type a @key{SPC} or @key{RET}.
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406
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407 @table @kbd
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408 @item M-x auto-fill-mode
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409 Enable or disable Auto Fill mode.
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410 @item @key{SPC}
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411 @itemx @key{RET}
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412 In Auto Fill mode, break lines when appropriate.
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413 @end table
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414
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415 @findex auto-fill-mode
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416 @kbd{M-x auto-fill-mode} turns Auto Fill mode on if it was off, or off
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417 if it was on. With a positive numeric argument it always turns Auto
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418 Fill mode on, and with a negative argument always turns it off. You can
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419 see when Auto Fill mode is in effect by the presence of the word
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420 @samp{Fill} in the mode line, inside the parentheses. Auto Fill mode is
|
|
421 a minor mode which is enabled or disabled for each buffer individually.
|
|
422 @xref{Minor Modes}.
|
|
423
|
|
424 In Auto Fill mode, lines are broken automatically at spaces when they
|
|
425 get longer than the desired width. Line breaking and rearrangement
|
|
426 takes place only when you type @key{SPC} or @key{RET}. If you wish to
|
|
427 insert a space or newline without permitting line-breaking, type
|
|
428 @kbd{C-q @key{SPC}} or @kbd{C-q C-j} (recall that a newline is really a
|
|
429 control-J). Also, @kbd{C-o} inserts a newline without line breaking.
|
|
430
|
|
431 Auto Fill mode works well with programming-language modes, because it
|
|
432 indents new lines with @key{TAB}. If a line ending in a comment gets
|
|
433 too long, the text of the comment is split into two comment lines.
|
|
434 Optionally, new comment delimiters are inserted at the end of the first
|
|
435 line and the beginning of the second so that each line is a separate
|
|
436 comment; the variable @code{comment-multi-line} controls the choice
|
|
437 (@pxref{Comments}).
|
|
438
|
|
439 Adaptive filling (see the following section) works for Auto Filling as
|
|
440 well as for explicit fill commands. It takes a fill prefix
|
|
441 automatically from the second or first line of a paragraph.
|
|
442
|
|
443 Auto Fill mode does not refill entire paragraphs; it can break lines but
|
|
444 cannot merge lines. So editing in the middle of a paragraph can result in
|
|
445 a paragraph that is not correctly filled. The easiest way to make the
|
|
446 paragraph properly filled again is usually with the explicit fill commands.
|
|
447 @ifinfo
|
|
448 @xref{Fill Commands}.
|
|
449 @end ifinfo
|
|
450
|
|
451 Many users like Auto Fill mode and want to use it in all text files.
|
|
452 The section on init files says how to arrange this permanently for yourself.
|
|
453 @xref{Init File}.
|
|
454
|
|
455 @node Fill Commands
|
|
456 @subsection Explicit Fill Commands
|
|
457
|
|
458 @table @kbd
|
|
459 @item M-q
|
|
460 Fill current paragraph (@code{fill-paragraph}).
|
|
461 @item C-x f
|
|
462 Set the fill column (@code{set-fill-column}).
|
|
463 @item M-x fill-region
|
|
464 Fill each paragraph in the region (@code{fill-region}).
|
|
465 @item M-x fill-region-as-paragraph
|
|
466 Fill the region, considering it as one paragraph.
|
|
467 @item M-s
|
|
468 Center a line.
|
|
469 @end table
|
|
470
|
|
471 @kindex M-q
|
|
472 @findex fill-paragraph
|
|
473 To refill a paragraph, use the command @kbd{M-q}
|
|
474 (@code{fill-paragraph}). This operates on the paragraph that point is
|
|
475 inside, or the one after point if point is between paragraphs.
|
|
476 Refilling works by removing all the line-breaks, then inserting new ones
|
|
477 where necessary.
|
|
478
|
|
479 @findex fill-region
|
|
480 To refill many paragraphs, use @kbd{M-x fill-region}, which
|
|
481 divides the region into paragraphs and fills each of them.
|
|
482
|
|
483 @findex fill-region-as-paragraph
|
|
484 @kbd{M-q} and @code{fill-region} use the same criteria as @kbd{M-h}
|
|
485 for finding paragraph boundaries (@pxref{Paragraphs}). For more
|
|
486 control, you can use @kbd{M-x fill-region-as-paragraph}, which refills
|
|
487 everything between point and mark. This command deletes any blank lines
|
|
488 within the region, so separate blocks of text end up combined into one
|
|
489 block.@refill
|
|
490
|
|
491 @cindex justification
|
|
492 A numeric argument to @kbd{M-q} causes it to @dfn{justify} the text as
|
|
493 well as filling it. This means that extra spaces are inserted to make
|
|
494 the right margin line up exactly at the fill column. To remove the
|
|
495 extra spaces, use @kbd{M-q} with no argument. (Likewise for
|
|
496 @code{fill-region}.) Another way to control justification, and choose
|
|
497 other styles of filling, is with the @code{justification} text property;
|
|
498 see @ref{Format Justification}.
|
|
499
|
|
500 @kindex M-s @r{(Text mode)}
|
|
501 @cindex centering
|
|
502 @findex center-line
|
|
503 The command @kbd{M-s} (@code{center-line}) centers the current line
|
|
504 within the current fill column. With an argument @var{n}, it centers
|
|
505 @var{n} lines individually and moves past them.
|
|
506
|
|
507 @vindex fill-column
|
|
508 @kindex C-x f
|
|
509 @findex set-fill-column
|
|
510 The maximum line width for filling is in the variable
|
|
511 @code{fill-column}. Altering the value of @code{fill-column} makes it
|
|
512 local to the current buffer; until that time, the default value is in
|
|
513 effect. The default is initially 70. @xref{Locals}. The easiest way
|
|
514 to set @code{fill-column} is to use the command @kbd{C-x f}
|
|
515 (@code{set-fill-column}). With a numeric argument, it uses that as the
|
|
516 new fill column. With just @kbd{C-u} as argument, it sets
|
|
517 @code{fill-column} to the current horizontal position of point.
|
|
518
|
|
519 Emacs commands normally consider a period followed by two spaces or by
|
|
520 a newline as the end of a sentence; a period followed by just one space
|
|
521 indicates an abbreviation and not the end of a sentence. To preserve
|
|
522 the distinction between these two ways of using a period, the fill
|
|
523 commands do not break a line after a period followed by just one space.
|
|
524
|
|
525 @vindex sentence-end-double-space
|
|
526 If the variable @code{sentence-end-double-space} is @code{nil}, the
|
|
527 fill commands expect and leave just one space at the end of a sentence.
|
|
528 Ordinarily this variable is @code{t}, so the fill commands insist on
|
|
529 two spaces for the end of a sentence, as explained above. @xref{Sentences}.
|
|
530
|
|
531 @vindex colon-double-space
|
|
532 If the variable @code{colon-double-space} is non-@code{nil}, the
|
|
533 fill commands put two spaces after a colon.
|
|
534
|
|
535 @node Fill Prefix
|
|
536 @subsection The Fill Prefix
|
|
537
|
|
538 @cindex fill prefix
|
|
539 To fill a paragraph in which each line starts with a special marker
|
|
540 (which might be a few spaces, giving an indented paragraph), you can use
|
|
541 the @dfn{fill prefix} feature. The fill prefix is a string that Emacs
|
|
542 expects every line to start with, and which is not included in filling.
|
|
543 You can specify a fill prefix explicitly; Emacs can also deduce the
|
|
544 fill prefix automatically (@pxref{Adaptive Fill}).
|
|
545
|
|
546 @table @kbd
|
|
547 @item C-x .
|
|
548 Set the fill prefix (@code{set-fill-prefix}).
|
|
549 @item M-q
|
|
550 Fill a paragraph using current fill prefix (@code{fill-paragraph}).
|
|
551 @item M-x fill-individual-paragraphs
|
|
552 Fill the region, considering each change of indentation as starting a
|
|
553 new paragraph.
|
|
554 @item M-x fill-nonuniform-paragraphs
|
|
555 Fill the region, considering only paragraph-separator lines as starting
|
|
556 a new paragraph.
|
|
557 @end table
|
|
558
|
|
559 @kindex C-x .
|
|
560 @findex set-fill-prefix
|
|
561 To specify a fill prefix, move to a line that starts with the desired
|
|
562 prefix, put point at the end of the prefix, and give the command
|
|
563 @w{@kbd{C-x .}}@: (@code{set-fill-prefix}). That's a period after the
|
|
564 @kbd{C-x}. To turn off the fill prefix, specify an empty prefix: type
|
|
565 @w{@kbd{C-x .}}@: with point at the beginning of a line.@refill
|
|
566
|
|
567 When a fill prefix is in effect, the fill commands remove the fill
|
|
568 prefix from each line before filling and insert it on each line after
|
|
569 filling. Auto Fill mode also inserts the fill prefix automatically when
|
|
570 it makes a new line. The @kbd{C-o} command inserts the fill prefix on
|
|
571 new lines it creates, when you use it at the beginning of a line
|
|
572 (@pxref{Blank Lines}). Conversely, the command @kbd{M-^} deletes the
|
|
573 prefix (if it occurs) after the newline that it deletes
|
|
574 (@pxref{Indentation}).
|
|
575
|
|
576 For example, if @code{fill-column} is 40 and you set the fill prefix
|
|
577 to @samp{;; }, then @kbd{M-q} in the following text
|
|
578
|
|
579 @example
|
|
580 ;; This is an
|
|
581 ;; example of a paragraph
|
|
582 ;; inside a Lisp-style comment.
|
|
583 @end example
|
|
584
|
|
585 @noindent
|
|
586 produces this:
|
|
587
|
|
588 @example
|
|
589 ;; This is an example of a paragraph
|
|
590 ;; inside a Lisp-style comment.
|
|
591 @end example
|
|
592
|
|
593 Lines that do not start with the fill prefix are considered to start
|
|
594 paragraphs, both in @kbd{M-q} and the paragraph commands; this gives
|
|
595 good results for paragraphs with hanging indentation (every line
|
|
596 indented except the first one). Lines which are blank or indented once
|
|
597 the prefix is removed also separate or start paragraphs; this is what
|
|
598 you want if you are writing multi-paragraph comments with a comment
|
|
599 delimiter on each line.
|
|
600
|
|
601 @findex fill-individual-paragraphs
|
|
602 You can use @kbd{M-x fill-individual-paragraphs} to set the fill
|
|
603 prefix for each paragraph automatically. This command divides the
|
|
604 region into paragraphs, treating every change in the amount of
|
|
605 indentation as the start of a new paragraph, and fills each of these
|
|
606 paragraphs. Thus, all the lines in one ``paragraph'' have the same
|
|
607 amount of indentation. That indentation serves as the fill prefix for
|
|
608 that paragraph.
|
|
609
|
|
610 @findex fill-nonuniform-paragraphs
|
|
611 @kbd{M-x fill-nonuniform-paragraphs} is a similar command that divides
|
|
612 the region into paragraphs in a different way. It considers only
|
|
613 paragraph-separating lines (as defined by @code{paragraph-separate}) as
|
|
614 starting a new paragraph. Since this means that the lines of one
|
|
615 paragraph may have different amounts of indentation, the fill prefix
|
|
616 used is the smallest amount of indentation of any of the lines of the
|
|
617 paragraph. This gives good results with styles that indent a paragraph's
|
|
618 first line more or less that the rest of the paragraph.
|
|
619
|
|
620 @vindex fill-prefix
|
|
621 The fill prefix is stored in the variable @code{fill-prefix}. Its value
|
|
622 is a string, or @code{nil} when there is no fill prefix. This is a
|
|
623 per-buffer variable; altering the variable affects only the current buffer,
|
|
624 but there is a default value which you can change as well. @xref{Locals}.
|
|
625
|
|
626 The @code{indentation} text property provides another way to control
|
|
627 the amount of indentation paragraphs receive. @xref{Format Indentation}.
|
|
628
|
|
629 @node Adaptive Fill
|
|
630 @subsection Adaptive Filling
|
|
631
|
|
632 @cindex adaptive filling
|
|
633 The fill commands can deduce the proper fill prefix for a paragraph
|
|
634 automatically in certain cases: either whitespace or certain punctuation
|
|
635 characters at the beginning of a line are propagated to all lines of the
|
|
636 paragraph.
|
|
637
|
|
638 If the paragraph has two or more lines, the fill prefix is taken from
|
|
639 the paragraph's second line, but only if it appears on the first line as
|
|
640 well.
|
|
641
|
|
642 If a paragraph has just one line, fill commands @emph{may} take a
|
|
643 prefix from that line. The decision is complicated because there are
|
|
644 three reasonable things to do in such a case:
|
|
645
|
|
646 @itemize @bullet
|
|
647 @item
|
|
648 Use the first line's prefix on all the lines of the paragraph.
|
|
649
|
|
650 @item
|
|
651 Indent subsequent lines with whitespace, so that they line up under the
|
|
652 text that follows the prefix on the first line, but don't actually copy
|
|
653 the prefix from the first line.
|
|
654
|
|
655 @item
|
|
656 Don't do anything special with the second and following lines.
|
|
657 @end itemize
|
|
658
|
|
659 All three of these styles of formatting are commonly used. So the
|
|
660 fill commands try to determine what you would like, based on the prefix
|
|
661 that appears and on the major mode. Here is how.
|
|
662
|
|
663 @vindex adaptive-fill-first-line-regexp
|
|
664 If the prefix found on the first line matches
|
|
665 @code{adaptive-fill-first-line-regexp}, or if it appears to be a
|
|
666 comment-starting sequence (this depends on the major mode), then the
|
|
667 prefix found is used for filling the paragraph, provided it would not
|
|
668 act as a paragraph starter on subsequent lines.
|
|
669
|
|
670 Otherwise, the prefix found is converted to an equivalent number of
|
|
671 spaces, and those spaces are used as the fill prefix for the rest of the
|
|
672 lines, provided they would not act as a paragraph starter on subsequent
|
|
673 lines.
|
|
674
|
|
675 In Text mode, and other modes where only blank lines and page
|
|
676 delimiters separate paragraphs, the prefix chosen by adaptive filling
|
|
677 never acts as a paragraph starter, so it can always be used for filling.
|
|
678
|
|
679 @vindex adaptive-fill-mode
|
|
680 @vindex adaptive-fill-regexp
|
|
681 The variable @code{adaptive-fill-regexp} determines what kinds of line
|
|
682 beginnings can serve as a fill prefix: any characters at the start of
|
|
683 the line that match this regular expression are used. If you set the
|
|
684 variable @code{adaptive-fill-mode} to @code{nil}, the fill prefix is
|
|
685 never chosen automatically.
|
|
686
|
|
687 @vindex adaptive-fill-function
|
|
688 You can specify more complex ways of choosing a fill prefix
|
|
689 automatically by setting the variable @code{adaptive-fill-function} to a
|
|
690 function. This function is called with point after the left margin of a
|
|
691 line, and it should return the appropriate fill prefix based on that
|
|
692 line. If it returns @code{nil}, that means it sees no fill prefix in
|
|
693 that line.
|
|
694
|
|
695 @node Case
|
|
696 @section Case Conversion Commands
|
|
697 @cindex case conversion
|
|
698
|
|
699 Emacs has commands for converting either a single word or any arbitrary
|
|
700 range of text to upper case or to lower case.
|
|
701
|
|
702 @c WideCommands
|
|
703 @table @kbd
|
|
704 @item M-l
|
|
705 Convert following word to lower case (@code{downcase-word}).
|
|
706 @item M-u
|
|
707 Convert following word to upper case (@code{upcase-word}).
|
|
708 @item M-c
|
|
709 Capitalize the following word (@code{capitalize-word}).
|
|
710 @item C-x C-l
|
|
711 Convert region to lower case (@code{downcase-region}).
|
|
712 @item C-x C-u
|
|
713 Convert region to upper case (@code{upcase-region}).
|
|
714 @end table
|
|
715
|
|
716 @kindex M-l
|
|
717 @kindex M-u
|
|
718 @kindex M-c
|
|
719 @cindex words, case conversion
|
|
720 @cindex converting text to upper or lower case
|
|
721 @cindex capitalizing words
|
|
722 @findex downcase-word
|
|
723 @findex upcase-word
|
|
724 @findex capitalize-word
|
|
725 The word conversion commands are the most useful. @kbd{M-l}
|
|
726 (@code{downcase-word}) converts the word after point to lower case, moving
|
|
727 past it. Thus, repeating @kbd{M-l} converts successive words.
|
|
728 @kbd{M-u} (@code{upcase-word}) converts to all capitals instead, while
|
|
729 @kbd{M-c} (@code{capitalize-word}) puts the first letter of the word
|
|
730 into upper case and the rest into lower case. All these commands convert
|
|
731 several words at once if given an argument. They are especially convenient
|
|
732 for converting a large amount of text from all upper case to mixed case,
|
|
733 because you can move through the text using @kbd{M-l}, @kbd{M-u} or
|
|
734 @kbd{M-c} on each word as appropriate, occasionally using @kbd{M-f} instead
|
|
735 to skip a word.
|
|
736
|
|
737 When given a negative argument, the word case conversion commands apply
|
|
738 to the appropriate number of words before point, but do not move point.
|
|
739 This is convenient when you have just typed a word in the wrong case: you
|
|
740 can give the case conversion command and continue typing.
|
|
741
|
|
742 If a word case conversion command is given in the middle of a word, it
|
|
743 applies only to the part of the word which follows point. This is just
|
|
744 like what @kbd{M-d} (@code{kill-word}) does. With a negative argument,
|
|
745 case conversion applies only to the part of the word before point.
|
|
746
|
|
747 @kindex C-x C-l
|
|
748 @kindex C-x C-u
|
|
749 @findex downcase-region
|
|
750 @findex upcase-region
|
|
751 The other case conversion commands are @kbd{C-x C-u}
|
|
752 (@code{upcase-region}) and @kbd{C-x C-l} (@code{downcase-region}), which
|
|
753 convert everything between point and mark to the specified case. Point and
|
|
754 mark do not move.
|
|
755
|
|
756 The region case conversion commands @code{upcase-region} and
|
|
757 @code{downcase-region} are normally disabled. This means that they ask
|
|
758 for confirmation if you try to use them. When you confirm, you may
|
|
759 enable the command, which means it will not ask for confirmation again.
|
|
760 @xref{Disabling}.
|
|
761
|
|
762 @node Text Mode
|
|
763 @section Text Mode
|
|
764 @cindex Text mode
|
|
765 @cindex mode, Text
|
|
766 @findex text-mode
|
|
767
|
|
768 When you edit files of text in a human language, it's more convenient
|
|
769 to use Text mode rather than Fundamental mode. To enter Text mode, type
|
|
770 @kbd{M-x text-mode}.
|
|
771
|
|
772 In Text mode, only blank lines and page delimiters separate
|
|
773 paragraphs. As a result, paragraphs can be indented, and adaptive
|
|
774 filling determines what indentation to use when filling a paragraph.
|
|
775 @xref{Adaptive Fill}.
|
|
776
|
|
777 @kindex TAB @r{(Text mode)}
|
|
778 Text mode defines @key{TAB} to run @code{indent-relative}
|
|
779 (@pxref{Indentation}), so that you can conveniently indent a line like
|
|
780 the previous line. When the previous line is not indented,
|
|
781 @code{indent-relative} runs @code{tab-to-tab-stop}, which uses Emacs tab
|
|
782 stops that you can set (@pxref{Tab Stops}).
|
|
783
|
|
784 Text mode turns off the features concerned with comments except when
|
|
785 you explicitly invoke them. It changes the syntax table so that periods
|
|
786 are not considered part of a word, while apostrophes, backspaces and
|
|
787 underlines are considered part of words.
|
|
788
|
|
789 @cindex Paragraph-Indent Text mode
|
|
790 @cindex mode, Paragraph-Indent Text
|
|
791 @findex paragraph-indent-text-mode
|
27207
|
792 @findex paragraph-indent-minor-mode
|
25829
|
793 If you indent the first lines of paragraphs, then you should use
|
|
794 Paragraph-Indent Text mode rather than Text mode. In this mode, you do
|
|
795 not need to have blank lines between paragraphs, because the first-line
|
|
796 indentation is sufficient to start a paragraph; however paragraphs in
|
|
797 which every line is indented are not supported. Use @kbd{M-x
|
27207
|
798 paragraph-indent-text-mode} to enter this mode. Use @kbd{M-x
|
|
799 paragraph-indent-minor-mode} to enter an equivalent minor mode, for
|
|
800 instance during mail composition.
|
25829
|
801
|
|
802 @kindex M-TAB @r{(Text mode)}
|
|
803 Text mode, and all the modes based on it, define @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} as
|
|
804 the command @code{ispell-complete-word}, which performs completion of
|
|
805 the partial word in the buffer before point, using the spelling
|
|
806 dictionary as the space of possible words. @xref{Spelling}.
|
|
807
|
|
808 @vindex text-mode-hook
|
|
809 Entering Text mode runs the hook @code{text-mode-hook}. Other major
|
|
810 modes related to Text mode also run this hook, followed by hooks of
|
|
811 their own; this includes Paragraph-Indent Text mode, Nroff mode, @TeX{}
|
|
812 mode, Outline mode, and Mail mode. Hook functions on
|
|
813 @code{text-mode-hook} can look at the value of @code{major-mode} to see
|
|
814 which of these modes is actually being entered. @xref{Hooks}.
|
|
815
|
|
816 @ifinfo
|
|
817 Emacs provides two other modes for editing text that is to be passed
|
|
818 through a text formatter to produce fancy formatted printed output.
|
|
819 @xref{Nroff Mode}, for editing input to the formatter nroff.
|
|
820 @xref{TeX Mode}, for editing input to the formatter TeX.
|
|
821
|
|
822 Another mode is used for editing outlines. It allows you to view the
|
|
823 text at various levels of detail. You can view either the outline
|
|
824 headings alone or both headings and text; you can also hide some of the
|
|
825 headings at lower levels from view to make the high level structure more
|
|
826 visible. @xref{Outline Mode}.
|
|
827 @end ifinfo
|
|
828
|
|
829 @node Outline Mode
|
|
830 @section Outline Mode
|
|
831 @cindex Outline mode
|
|
832 @cindex mode, Outline
|
|
833 @cindex selective display
|
|
834 @cindex invisible lines
|
|
835
|
|
836 @findex outline-mode
|
|
837 @findex outline-minor-mode
|
|
838 @vindex outline-minor-mode-prefix
|
|
839 Outline mode is a major mode much like Text mode but intended for
|
|
840 editing outlines. It allows you to make parts of the text temporarily
|
|
841 invisible so that you can see the outline structure. Type @kbd{M-x
|
|
842 outline-mode} to switch to Outline mode as the major mode of the current
|
|
843 buffer.
|
|
844
|
|
845 When Outline mode makes a line invisible, the line does not appear on
|
|
846 the screen. The screen appears exactly as if the invisible line were
|
|
847 deleted, except that an ellipsis (three periods in a row) appears at the
|
|
848 end of the previous visible line (only one ellipsis no matter how many
|
|
849 invisible lines follow).
|
|
850
|
|
851 Editing commands that operate on lines, such as @kbd{C-n} and
|
|
852 @kbd{C-p}, treat the text of the invisible line as part of the previous
|
|
853 visible line. Killing an entire visible line, including its terminating
|
|
854 newline, really kills all the following invisible lines along with it.
|
|
855
|
|
856 Outline minor mode provides the same commands as the major mode,
|
|
857 Outline mode, but you can use it in conjunction with other major modes.
|
|
858 Type @kbd{M-x outline-minor-mode} to enable the Outline minor mode in
|
|
859 the current buffer. You can also specify this in the text of a file,
|
|
860 with a file local variable of the form @samp{mode: outline-minor}
|
|
861 (@pxref{File Variables}).
|
|
862
|
|
863 @kindex C-c @@ @r{(Outline minor mode)}
|
|
864 The major mode, Outline mode, provides special key bindings on the
|
|
865 @kbd{C-c} prefix. Outline minor mode provides similar bindings with
|
|
866 @kbd{C-c @@} as the prefix; this is to reduce the conflicts with the
|
|
867 major mode's special commands. (The variable
|
|
868 @code{outline-minor-mode-prefix} controls the prefix used.)
|
|
869
|
|
870 @vindex outline-mode-hook
|
|
871 Entering Outline mode runs the hook @code{text-mode-hook} followed by
|
|
872 the hook @code{outline-mode-hook} (@pxref{Hooks}).
|
|
873
|
|
874 @menu
|
|
875 * Format: Outline Format. What the text of an outline looks like.
|
|
876 * Motion: Outline Motion. Special commands for moving through
|
|
877 outlines.
|
|
878 * Visibility: Outline Visibility. Commands to control what is visible.
|
|
879 * Views: Outline Views. Outlines and multiple views.
|
28328
|
880 * Foldout:: Folding editing.
|
25829
|
881 @end menu
|
|
882
|
|
883 @node Outline Format
|
|
884 @subsection Format of Outlines
|
|
885
|
|
886 @cindex heading lines (Outline mode)
|
|
887 @cindex body lines (Outline mode)
|
|
888 Outline mode assumes that the lines in the buffer are of two types:
|
|
889 @dfn{heading lines} and @dfn{body lines}. A heading line represents a
|
|
890 topic in the outline. Heading lines start with one or more stars; the
|
|
891 number of stars determines the depth of the heading in the outline
|
|
892 structure. Thus, a heading line with one star is a major topic; all the
|
|
893 heading lines with two stars between it and the next one-star heading
|
|
894 are its subtopics; and so on. Any line that is not a heading line is a
|
|
895 body line. Body lines belong with the preceding heading line. Here is
|
|
896 an example:
|
|
897
|
|
898 @example
|
|
899 * Food
|
|
900 This is the body,
|
|
901 which says something about the topic of food.
|
|
902
|
|
903 ** Delicious Food
|
|
904 This is the body of the second-level header.
|
|
905
|
|
906 ** Distasteful Food
|
|
907 This could have
|
|
908 a body too, with
|
|
909 several lines.
|
|
910
|
|
911 *** Dormitory Food
|
|
912
|
|
913 * Shelter
|
|
914 Another first-level topic with its header line.
|
|
915 @end example
|
|
916
|
|
917 A heading line together with all following body lines is called
|
|
918 collectively an @dfn{entry}. A heading line together with all following
|
|
919 deeper heading lines and their body lines is called a @dfn{subtree}.
|
|
920
|
|
921 @vindex outline-regexp
|
|
922 You can customize the criterion for distinguishing heading lines
|
|
923 by setting the variable @code{outline-regexp}. Any line whose
|
|
924 beginning has a match for this regexp is considered a heading line.
|
|
925 Matches that start within a line (not at the left margin) do not count.
|
|
926 The length of the matching text determines the level of the heading;
|
|
927 longer matches make a more deeply nested level. Thus, for example,
|
|
928 if a text formatter has commands @samp{@@chapter}, @samp{@@section}
|
|
929 and @samp{@@subsection} to divide the document into chapters and
|
|
930 sections, you could make those lines count as heading lines by
|
|
931 setting @code{outline-regexp} to @samp{"@@chap\\|@@\\(sub\\)*section"}.
|
|
932 Note the trick: the two words @samp{chapter} and @samp{section} are equally
|
|
933 long, but by defining the regexp to match only @samp{chap} we ensure
|
|
934 that the length of the text matched on a chapter heading is shorter,
|
|
935 so that Outline mode will know that sections are contained in chapters.
|
|
936 This works as long as no other command starts with @samp{@@chap}.
|
|
937
|
|
938 @vindex outline-level
|
|
939 It is possible to change the rule for calculating the level of a
|
|
940 heading line by setting the variable @code{outline-level}. The value of
|
|
941 @code{outline-level} should be a function that takes no arguments and
|
|
942 returns the level of the current heading. Some major modes such as C,
|
|
943 Nroff, and Emacs Lisp mode set this variable and/or
|
|
944 @code{outline-regexp} in order to work with Outline minor mode.
|
|
945
|
|
946 @node Outline Motion
|
|
947 @subsection Outline Motion Commands
|
|
948
|
|
949 Outline mode provides special motion commands that move backward and
|
|
950 forward to heading lines.
|
|
951
|
|
952 @table @kbd
|
|
953 @item C-c C-n
|
|
954 Move point to the next visible heading line
|
|
955 (@code{outline-next-visible-heading}).
|
|
956 @item C-c C-p
|
|
957 Move point to the previous visible heading line
|
|
958 (@code{outline-previous-visible-heading}).
|
|
959 @item C-c C-f
|
|
960 Move point to the next visible heading line at the same level
|
|
961 as the one point is on (@code{outline-forward-same-level}).
|
|
962 @item C-c C-b
|
|
963 Move point to the previous visible heading line at the same level
|
|
964 (@code{outline-backward-same-level}).
|
|
965 @item C-c C-u
|
|
966 Move point up to a lower-level (more inclusive) visible heading line
|
|
967 (@code{outline-up-heading}).
|
|
968 @end table
|
|
969
|
|
970 @findex outline-next-visible-heading
|
|
971 @findex outline-previous-visible-heading
|
|
972 @kindex C-c C-n @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
973 @kindex C-c C-p @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
974 @kbd{C-c C-n} (@code{outline-next-visible-heading}) moves down to the next
|
|
975 heading line. @kbd{C-c C-p} (@code{outline-previous-visible-heading}) moves
|
|
976 similarly backward. Both accept numeric arguments as repeat counts. The
|
|
977 names emphasize that invisible headings are skipped, but this is not really
|
|
978 a special feature. All editing commands that look for lines ignore the
|
|
979 invisible lines automatically.@refill
|
|
980
|
|
981 @findex outline-up-heading
|
|
982 @findex outline-forward-same-level
|
|
983 @findex outline-backward-same-level
|
|
984 @kindex C-c C-f @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
985 @kindex C-c C-b @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
986 @kindex C-c C-u @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
987 More powerful motion commands understand the level structure of headings.
|
|
988 @kbd{C-c C-f} (@code{outline-forward-same-level}) and
|
|
989 @kbd{C-c C-b} (@code{outline-backward-same-level}) move from one
|
|
990 heading line to another visible heading at the same depth in
|
|
991 the outline. @kbd{C-c C-u} (@code{outline-up-heading}) moves
|
|
992 backward to another heading that is less deeply nested.
|
|
993
|
|
994 @node Outline Visibility
|
|
995 @subsection Outline Visibility Commands
|
|
996
|
|
997 The other special commands of outline mode are used to make lines visible
|
|
998 or invisible. Their names all start with @code{hide} or @code{show}.
|
|
999 Most of them fall into pairs of opposites. They are not undoable; instead,
|
|
1000 you can undo right past them. Making lines visible or invisible is simply
|
|
1001 not recorded by the undo mechanism.
|
|
1002
|
|
1003 @table @kbd
|
|
1004 @item C-c C-t
|
|
1005 Make all body lines in the buffer invisible (@code{hide-body}).
|
|
1006 @item C-c C-a
|
|
1007 Make all lines in the buffer visible (@code{show-all}).
|
|
1008 @item C-c C-d
|
|
1009 Make everything under this heading invisible, not including this
|
|
1010 heading itself (@code{hide-subtree}).
|
|
1011 @item C-c C-s
|
|
1012 Make everything under this heading visible, including body,
|
|
1013 subheadings, and their bodies (@code{show-subtree}).
|
|
1014 @item C-c C-l
|
|
1015 Make the body of this heading line, and of all its subheadings,
|
|
1016 invisible (@code{hide-leaves}).
|
|
1017 @item C-c C-k
|
|
1018 Make all subheadings of this heading line, at all levels, visible
|
|
1019 (@code{show-branches}).
|
|
1020 @item C-c C-i
|
|
1021 Make immediate subheadings (one level down) of this heading line
|
|
1022 visible (@code{show-children}).
|
|
1023 @item C-c C-c
|
|
1024 Make this heading line's body invisible (@code{hide-entry}).
|
|
1025 @item C-c C-e
|
|
1026 Make this heading line's body visible (@code{show-entry}).
|
|
1027 @item C-c C-q
|
|
1028 Hide everything except the top @var{n} levels of heading lines
|
|
1029 (@code{hide-sublevels}).
|
|
1030 @item C-c C-o
|
|
1031 Hide everything except for the heading or body that point is in, plus
|
|
1032 the headings leading up from there to the top level of the outline
|
|
1033 (@code{hide-other}).
|
|
1034 @end table
|
|
1035
|
|
1036 @findex hide-entry
|
|
1037 @findex show-entry
|
|
1038 @kindex C-c C-c @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1039 @kindex C-c C-e @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1040 Two commands that are exact opposites are @kbd{C-c C-c}
|
|
1041 (@code{hide-entry}) and @kbd{C-c C-e} (@code{show-entry}). They are
|
|
1042 used with point on a heading line, and apply only to the body lines of
|
|
1043 that heading. Subheadings and their bodies are not affected.
|
|
1044
|
|
1045 @findex hide-subtree
|
|
1046 @findex show-subtree
|
|
1047 @kindex C-c C-s @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1048 @kindex C-c C-d @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1049 @cindex subtree (Outline mode)
|
|
1050 Two more powerful opposites are @kbd{C-c C-d} (@code{hide-subtree}) and
|
|
1051 @kbd{C-c C-s} (@code{show-subtree}). Both expect to be used when point is
|
|
1052 on a heading line, and both apply to all the lines of that heading's
|
|
1053 @dfn{subtree}: its body, all its subheadings, both direct and indirect, and
|
|
1054 all of their bodies. In other words, the subtree contains everything
|
|
1055 following this heading line, up to and not including the next heading of
|
|
1056 the same or higher rank.@refill
|
|
1057
|
|
1058 @findex hide-leaves
|
|
1059 @findex show-branches
|
|
1060 @kindex C-c C-l @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1061 @kindex C-c C-k @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1062 Intermediate between a visible subtree and an invisible one is having
|
|
1063 all the subheadings visible but none of the body. There are two
|
|
1064 commands for doing this, depending on whether you want to hide the
|
|
1065 bodies or make the subheadings visible. They are @kbd{C-c C-l}
|
|
1066 (@code{hide-leaves}) and @kbd{C-c C-k} (@code{show-branches}).
|
|
1067
|
|
1068 @kindex C-c C-i @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1069 @findex show-children
|
|
1070 A little weaker than @code{show-branches} is @kbd{C-c C-i}
|
|
1071 (@code{show-children}). It makes just the direct subheadings
|
|
1072 visible---those one level down. Deeper subheadings remain invisible, if
|
|
1073 they were invisible.@refill
|
|
1074
|
|
1075 @findex hide-body
|
|
1076 @findex show-all
|
|
1077 @kindex C-c C-t @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1078 @kindex C-c C-a @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1079 Two commands have a blanket effect on the whole file. @kbd{C-c C-t}
|
|
1080 (@code{hide-body}) makes all body lines invisible, so that you see just
|
|
1081 the outline structure. @kbd{C-c C-a} (@code{show-all}) makes all lines
|
|
1082 visible. These commands can be thought of as a pair of opposites even
|
|
1083 though @kbd{C-c C-a} applies to more than just body lines.
|
|
1084
|
|
1085 @findex hide-sublevels
|
|
1086 @kindex C-c C-q @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1087 The command @kbd{C-c C-q} (@code{hide-sublevels}) hides all but the
|
|
1088 top level headings. With a numeric argument @var{n}, it hides everything
|
|
1089 except the top @var{n} levels of heading lines.
|
|
1090
|
|
1091 @findex hide-other
|
|
1092 @kindex C-c C-o @r{(Outline mode)}
|
|
1093 The command @kbd{C-c C-o} (@code{hide-other}) hides everything except
|
|
1094 the heading or body text that point is in, plus its parents (the headers
|
|
1095 leading up from there to top level in the outline).
|
|
1096
|
|
1097 You can turn off the use of ellipses at the ends of visible lines by
|
|
1098 setting @code{selective-display-ellipses} to @code{nil}. Then there is
|
|
1099 no visible indication of the presence of invisible lines.
|
|
1100
|
|
1101 When incremental search finds text that is hidden by Outline mode,
|
|
1102 it makes that part of the buffer visible. If you exit the search
|
|
1103 at that position, the text remains visible.
|
|
1104
|
|
1105 @node Outline Views
|
|
1106 @subsection Viewing One Outline in Multiple Views
|
|
1107
|
|
1108 @cindex multiple views of outline
|
|
1109 @cindex views of an outline
|
|
1110 @cindex outline with multiple views
|
|
1111 @cindex indirect buffers and outlines
|
|
1112 You can display two views of a single outline at the same time, in
|
|
1113 different windows. To do this, you must create an indirect buffer using
|
|
1114 @kbd{M-x make-indirect-buffer}. The first argument of this command is
|
|
1115 the existing outline buffer name, and its second argument is the name to
|
|
1116 use for the new indirect buffer. @xref{Indirect Buffers}.
|
|
1117
|
|
1118 Once the indirect buffer exists, you can display it in a window in the
|
|
1119 normal fashion, with @kbd{C-x 4 b} or other Emacs commands. The Outline
|
|
1120 mode commands to show and hide parts of the text operate on each buffer
|
|
1121 independently; as a result, each buffer can have its own view. If you
|
|
1122 want more than two views on the same outline, create additional indirect
|
|
1123 buffers.
|
|
1124
|
28328
|
1125 @node Foldout
|
|
1126 @subsection Folding editing with Foldout
|
|
1127
|
|
1128 @cindex folding editing
|
|
1129 The Foldout package provides folding editor extensions for Outline mode
|
|
1130 and Outline minor mode. It may be used by putting in your @file{.emacs}
|
|
1131 @example
|
|
1132 (eval-after-load "outline" '(require 'foldout))
|
|
1133 @end example
|
|
1134 Folding editing works as follows.
|
|
1135
|
|
1136 Consider an Outline mode buffer all the text and subheadings under
|
|
1137 level-1 headings hidden. To look at what is hidden under one of these
|
|
1138 headings normally you would use @kbd{C-c C-e} (@kbd{M-x show-entry}) to
|
|
1139 expose the body or @kbd{C-c C-i} to expose the child (level-2) headings.
|
|
1140
|
|
1141 @kindex C-c C-z
|
|
1142 @findex foldout-zoom-subtree
|
|
1143 With Foldout, you use @kbd{C-c C-z} (@kbd{M-x foldout-zoom-subtree}).
|
|
1144 This exposes the body and child subheadings and narrows the buffer so
|
|
1145 that only the level-1 heading, the body and the level-2 headings are
|
|
1146 visible. Now to look under one of the level-2 headings, position the
|
|
1147 cursor on it and use @kbd{C-c C-z} again. This exposes the level-2 body
|
|
1148 and its level-3 child subheadings and narrows the buffer again. Zooming
|
|
1149 in on successive subheadings can be done as much as you like. A string
|
|
1150 in the modeline shows how deep you've gone.
|
|
1151
|
|
1152 When zooming in on a heading, to see only the child subheadings specify
|
|
1153 a numeric argument: @kbd{C-u C-c C-z}. The number of levels of children
|
|
1154 can be specified too (compare @kbd{M-x show-children}), e.g.@: @kbd{M-2
|
|
1155 C-c C-z} exposes two levels of child subheadings. Alternatively, the
|
|
1156 body can be spcified with a negative argument: @kbd{M-- C-c C-z}. The
|
|
1157 whole subtree can be expanded, similarly to @kbd{C-c C-s} (@kbd{M-x
|
|
1158 show-subtree}), by specifying a zero argument: @kbd{M-0 C-c C-z}.
|
|
1159
|
|
1160 While you're zoomed in you can still use outline-mode's exposure and
|
|
1161 hiding functions without disturbing Foldout. Also, since the buffer is
|
|
1162 narrowed, `global' editing actions will only affect text under the
|
|
1163 zoomed-in heading. This is useful for restricting changes to a
|
|
1164 particular chapter or section of your document.
|
|
1165
|
|
1166 @kindex C-c C-x
|
|
1167 @findex foldout-exit-fold
|
|
1168 Unzoom (exit) a fold using @kbd{C-c C-x} (@kbd{M-x foldout-exit-fold}).
|
|
1169 This hides all the text and subheadings under the top-level heading and
|
|
1170 returns you to the previous view of the buffer. Specifying a numeric
|
|
1171 argument exits that many folds. Specifying a zero argument exits all
|
|
1172 folds.
|
|
1173
|
|
1174 You might want to exit a fold without hiding the text and subheadings,
|
|
1175 specify a negative argument. For example, @kbd{M--2 C-c C-x} exits two
|
|
1176 folds and leaves the text and subheadings exposed.
|
|
1177
|
|
1178 Foldout provides mouse bindings for entering and exiting folds and for
|
|
1179 showing and hiding text as follows:
|
|
1180 @table @asis
|
|
1181 @item @kbd{M-C-mouse-1} zooms in on the heading clicked on
|
|
1182 @table @asis
|
|
1183 @item single click
|
|
1184 expose body
|
|
1185 @item double click
|
|
1186 expose subheadings
|
|
1187 @item triple click
|
|
1188 expose body and subheadings
|
|
1189 @item quad click
|
|
1190 expose entire subtree
|
|
1191 @end table
|
|
1192 @item @kbd{M-C-mouse-2} exposes text under the heading clicked on
|
|
1193 @table @r
|
|
1194 @item single click
|
|
1195 expose body
|
|
1196 @item double click
|
|
1197 expose subheadings
|
|
1198 @item triple click
|
|
1199 expose body and subheadings
|
|
1200 @item quad click
|
|
1201 expose entire subtree
|
|
1202 @end table
|
|
1203 @item @kbd{M-C-mouse-3} hides text under the heading clicked on or exits fold
|
|
1204 @table @r
|
|
1205 @item single click
|
|
1206 hide subtree
|
|
1207 @item double click
|
|
1208 exit fold and hide text
|
|
1209 @item triple click
|
|
1210 exit fold without hiding text
|
|
1211 @item quad click
|
|
1212 exit all folds and hide text
|
|
1213 @end table
|
|
1214 @end table
|
|
1215
|
|
1216 @vindex foldout-mouse-modifiers
|
|
1217 You can change the modifier keys used by setting
|
|
1218 @code{foldout-mouse-modifiers}.
|
|
1219
|
|
1220 @node TeX Mode, Nroff Mode, Outline Mode, Text
|
25829
|
1221 @section @TeX{} Mode
|
|
1222 @cindex @TeX{} mode
|
|
1223 @cindex La@TeX{} mode
|
|
1224 @cindex Sli@TeX{} mode
|
|
1225 @cindex mode, @TeX{}
|
|
1226 @cindex mode, La@TeX{}
|
|
1227 @cindex mode, Sli@TeX{}
|
|
1228 @findex tex-mode
|
|
1229 @findex plain-tex-mode
|
|
1230 @findex latex-mode
|
|
1231 @findex slitex-mode
|
|
1232
|
|
1233 @TeX{} is a powerful text formatter written by Donald Knuth; it is also
|
|
1234 free, like GNU Emacs. La@TeX{} is a simplified input format for @TeX{},
|
|
1235 implemented by @TeX{} macros; it comes with @TeX{}. Sli@TeX{} is a special
|
|
1236 form of La@TeX{}.@refill
|
|
1237
|
|
1238 Emacs has a special @TeX{} mode for editing @TeX{} input files.
|
|
1239 It provides facilities for checking the balance of delimiters and for
|
|
1240 invoking @TeX{} on all or part of the file.
|
|
1241
|
|
1242 @vindex tex-default-mode
|
|
1243 @TeX{} mode has three variants, Plain @TeX{} mode, La@TeX{} mode, and
|
|
1244 Sli@TeX{} mode (these three distinct major modes differ only slightly).
|
|
1245 They are designed for editing the three different formats. The command
|
|
1246 @kbd{M-x tex-mode} looks at the contents of the buffer to determine
|
|
1247 whether the contents appear to be either La@TeX{} input or Sli@TeX{}
|
|
1248 input; if so, it selects the appropriate mode. If the file contents do
|
|
1249 not appear to be La@TeX{} or Sli@TeX{}, it selects Plain @TeX{} mode.
|
|
1250 If the contents are insufficient to determine this, the variable
|
|
1251 @code{tex-default-mode} controls which mode is used.
|
|
1252
|
|
1253 When @kbd{M-x tex-mode} does not guess right, you can use the commands
|
|
1254 @kbd{M-x plain-tex-mode}, @kbd{M-x latex-mode}, and @kbd{M-x
|
|
1255 slitex-mode} to select explicitly the particular variants of @TeX{}
|
|
1256 mode.
|
|
1257
|
|
1258 @vindex tex-shell-hook
|
|
1259 @vindex tex-mode-hook
|
|
1260 @vindex latex-mode-hook
|
|
1261 @vindex slitex-mode-hook
|
|
1262 @vindex plain-tex-mode-hook
|
|
1263 Entering any kind of @TeX{} mode runs the hooks @code{text-mode-hook}
|
|
1264 and @code{tex-mode-hook}. Then it runs either
|
|
1265 @code{plain-tex-mode-hook} or @code{latex-mode-hook}, whichever is
|
|
1266 appropriate. For Sli@TeX{} files, it calls @code{slitex-mode-hook}.
|
|
1267 Starting the @TeX{} shell runs the hook @code{tex-shell-hook}.
|
|
1268 @xref{Hooks}.
|
|
1269
|
|
1270 @menu
|
|
1271 * Editing: TeX Editing. Special commands for editing in TeX mode.
|
|
1272 * LaTeX: LaTeX Editing. Additional commands for LaTeX input files.
|
|
1273 * Printing: TeX Print. Commands for printing part of a file with TeX.
|
|
1274 @end menu
|
|
1275
|
|
1276 @node TeX Editing
|
|
1277 @subsection @TeX{} Editing Commands
|
|
1278
|
|
1279 Here are the special commands provided in @TeX{} mode for editing the
|
|
1280 text of the file.
|
|
1281
|
|
1282 @table @kbd
|
|
1283 @item "
|
|
1284 Insert, according to context, either @samp{``} or @samp{"} or
|
|
1285 @samp{''} (@code{tex-insert-quote}).
|
|
1286 @item C-j
|
|
1287 Insert a paragraph break (two newlines) and check the previous
|
|
1288 paragraph for unbalanced braces or dollar signs
|
|
1289 (@code{tex-terminate-paragraph}).
|
|
1290 @item M-x tex-validate-region
|
|
1291 Check each paragraph in the region for unbalanced braces or dollar signs.
|
|
1292 @item C-c @{
|
|
1293 Insert @samp{@{@}} and position point between them (@code{tex-insert-braces}).
|
|
1294 @item C-c @}
|
|
1295 Move forward past the next unmatched close brace (@code{up-list}).
|
|
1296 @end table
|
|
1297
|
|
1298 @findex tex-insert-quote
|
|
1299 @kindex " @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1300 In @TeX{}, the character @samp{"} is not normally used; we use
|
|
1301 @samp{``} to start a quotation and @samp{''} to end one. To make
|
|
1302 editing easier under this formatting convention, @TeX{} mode overrides
|
|
1303 the normal meaning of the key @kbd{"} with a command that inserts a pair
|
|
1304 of single-quotes or backquotes (@code{tex-insert-quote}). To be
|
|
1305 precise, this command inserts @samp{``} after whitespace or an open
|
|
1306 brace, @samp{"} after a backslash, and @samp{''} after any other
|
|
1307 character.
|
|
1308
|
|
1309 If you need the character @samp{"} itself in unusual contexts, use
|
|
1310 @kbd{C-q} to insert it. Also, @kbd{"} with a numeric argument always
|
|
1311 inserts that number of @samp{"} characters. You can turn off the
|
|
1312 feature of @kbd{"} expansion by eliminating that binding in the local
|
|
1313 map (@pxref{Key Bindings}).
|
|
1314
|
|
1315 In @TeX{} mode, @samp{$} has a special syntax code which attempts to
|
|
1316 understand the way @TeX{} math mode delimiters match. When you insert a
|
|
1317 @samp{$} that is meant to exit math mode, the position of the matching
|
|
1318 @samp{$} that entered math mode is displayed for a second. This is the
|
|
1319 same feature that displays the open brace that matches a close brace that
|
|
1320 is inserted. However, there is no way to tell whether a @samp{$} enters
|
|
1321 math mode or leaves it; so when you insert a @samp{$} that enters math
|
|
1322 mode, the previous @samp{$} position is shown as if it were a match, even
|
|
1323 though they are actually unrelated.
|
|
1324
|
|
1325 @findex tex-insert-braces
|
|
1326 @kindex C-c @{ @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1327 @findex up-list
|
|
1328 @kindex C-c @} @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1329 @TeX{} uses braces as delimiters that must match. Some users prefer
|
|
1330 to keep braces balanced at all times, rather than inserting them
|
|
1331 singly. Use @kbd{C-c @{} (@code{tex-insert-braces}) to insert a pair of
|
|
1332 braces. It leaves point between the two braces so you can insert the
|
|
1333 text that belongs inside. Afterward, use the command @kbd{C-c @}}
|
|
1334 (@code{up-list}) to move forward past the close brace.
|
|
1335
|
|
1336 @findex tex-validate-region
|
|
1337 @findex tex-terminate-paragraph
|
|
1338 @kindex C-j @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1339 There are two commands for checking the matching of braces. @kbd{C-j}
|
|
1340 (@code{tex-terminate-paragraph}) checks the paragraph before point, and
|
|
1341 inserts two newlines to start a new paragraph. It prints a message in
|
|
1342 the echo area if any mismatch is found. @kbd{M-x tex-validate-region}
|
|
1343 checks a region, paragraph by paragraph. The errors are listed in the
|
|
1344 @samp{*Occur*} buffer, and you can use @kbd{C-c C-c} or @kbd{Mouse-2} in
|
|
1345 that buffer to go to a particular mismatch.
|
|
1346
|
|
1347 Note that Emacs commands count square brackets and parentheses in
|
|
1348 @TeX{} mode, not just braces. This is not strictly correct for the
|
|
1349 purpose of checking @TeX{} syntax. However, parentheses and square
|
|
1350 brackets are likely to be used in text as matching delimiters and it is
|
|
1351 useful for the various motion commands and automatic match display to
|
|
1352 work with them.
|
|
1353
|
|
1354 @node LaTeX Editing
|
|
1355 @subsection La@TeX{} Editing Commands
|
|
1356
|
|
1357 La@TeX{} mode, and its variant, Sli@TeX{} mode, provide a few extra
|
|
1358 features not applicable to plain @TeX{}.
|
|
1359
|
|
1360 @table @kbd
|
|
1361 @item C-c C-o
|
|
1362 Insert @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} for La@TeX{} block and position
|
|
1363 point on a line between them (@code{tex-latex-block}).
|
|
1364 @item C-c C-e
|
|
1365 Close the innermost La@TeX{} block not yet closed
|
|
1366 (@code{tex-close-latex-block}).
|
|
1367 @end table
|
|
1368
|
|
1369 @findex tex-latex-block
|
|
1370 @kindex C-c C-o @r{(La@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1371 @vindex latex-block-names
|
|
1372 In La@TeX{} input, @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} commands are used to
|
|
1373 group blocks of text. To insert a @samp{\begin} and a matching
|
|
1374 @samp{\end} (on a new line following the @samp{\begin}), use @kbd{C-c
|
|
1375 C-o} (@code{tex-latex-block}). A blank line is inserted between the
|
|
1376 two, and point is left there. You can use completion when you enter the
|
|
1377 block type; to specify additional block type names beyond the standard
|
|
1378 list, set the variable @code{latex-block-names}. For example, here's
|
|
1379 how to add @samp{theorem}, @samp{corollary}, and @samp{proof}:
|
|
1380
|
|
1381 @example
|
|
1382 (setq latex-block-names '("theorem" "corollary" "proof"))
|
|
1383 @end example
|
|
1384
|
|
1385 @findex tex-close-latex-block
|
|
1386 @kindex C-c C-e @r{(La@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1387 In La@TeX{} input, @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} commands must
|
|
1388 balance. You can use @kbd{C-c C-e} (@code{tex-close-latex-block}) to
|
|
1389 insert automatically a matching @samp{\end} to match the last unmatched
|
|
1390 @samp{\begin}. It indents the @samp{\end} to match the corresponding
|
|
1391 @samp{\begin}. It inserts a newline after @samp{\end} if point is at
|
|
1392 the beginning of a line.
|
|
1393
|
|
1394 @node TeX Print
|
|
1395 @subsection @TeX{} Printing Commands
|
|
1396
|
|
1397 You can invoke @TeX{} as an inferior of Emacs on either the entire
|
|
1398 contents of the buffer or just a region at a time. Running @TeX{} in
|
|
1399 this way on just one chapter is a good way to see what your changes
|
|
1400 look like without taking the time to format the entire file.
|
|
1401
|
|
1402 @table @kbd
|
|
1403 @item C-c C-r
|
|
1404 Invoke @TeX{} on the current region, together with the buffer's header
|
|
1405 (@code{tex-region}).
|
|
1406 @item C-c C-b
|
|
1407 Invoke @TeX{} on the entire current buffer (@code{tex-buffer}).
|
|
1408 @item C-c @key{TAB}
|
|
1409 Invoke Bib@TeX{} on the current file (@code{tex-bibtex-file}).
|
|
1410 @item C-c C-f
|
|
1411 Invoke @TeX{} on the current file (@code{tex-file}).
|
|
1412 @item C-c C-l
|
|
1413 Recenter the window showing output from the inferior @TeX{} so that
|
|
1414 the last line can be seen (@code{tex-recenter-output-buffer}).
|
|
1415 @item C-c C-k
|
|
1416 Kill the @TeX{} subprocess (@code{tex-kill-job}).
|
|
1417 @item C-c C-p
|
|
1418 Print the output from the last @kbd{C-c C-r}, @kbd{C-c C-b}, or @kbd{C-c
|
|
1419 C-f} command (@code{tex-print}).
|
|
1420 @item C-c C-v
|
|
1421 Preview the output from the last @kbd{C-c C-r}, @kbd{C-c C-b}, or @kbd{C-c
|
|
1422 C-f} command (@code{tex-view}).
|
|
1423 @item C-c C-q
|
|
1424 Show the printer queue (@code{tex-show-print-queue}).
|
|
1425 @end table
|
|
1426
|
|
1427 @findex tex-buffer
|
|
1428 @kindex C-c C-b @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1429 @findex tex-print
|
|
1430 @kindex C-c C-p @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1431 @findex tex-view
|
|
1432 @kindex C-c C-v @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1433 @findex tex-show-print-queue
|
|
1434 @kindex C-c C-q @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1435 You can pass the current buffer through an inferior @TeX{} by means of
|
|
1436 @kbd{C-c C-b} (@code{tex-buffer}). The formatted output appears in a
|
|
1437 temporary file; to print it, type @kbd{C-c C-p} (@code{tex-print}).
|
|
1438 Afterward, you can use @kbd{C-c C-q} (@code{tex-show-print-queue}) to
|
|
1439 view the progress of your output towards being printed. If your terminal
|
|
1440 has the ability to display @TeX{} output files, you can preview the
|
|
1441 output on the terminal with @kbd{C-c C-v} (@code{tex-view}).
|
|
1442
|
|
1443 @cindex @code{TEXINPUTS} environment variable
|
|
1444 @vindex tex-directory
|
|
1445 You can specify the directory to use for running @TeX{} by setting the
|
|
1446 variable @code{tex-directory}. @code{"."} is the default value. If
|
|
1447 your environment variable @code{TEXINPUTS} contains relative directory
|
|
1448 names, or if your files contains @samp{\input} commands with relative
|
|
1449 file names, then @code{tex-directory} @emph{must} be @code{"."} or you
|
|
1450 will get the wrong results. Otherwise, it is safe to specify some other
|
|
1451 directory, such as @code{"/tmp"}.
|
|
1452
|
|
1453 @vindex tex-run-command
|
|
1454 @vindex latex-run-command
|
|
1455 @vindex slitex-run-command
|
|
1456 @vindex tex-dvi-print-command
|
|
1457 @vindex tex-dvi-view-command
|
|
1458 @vindex tex-show-queue-command
|
|
1459 If you want to specify which shell commands are used in the inferior @TeX{},
|
|
1460 you can do so by setting the values of the variables @code{tex-run-command},
|
|
1461 @code{latex-run-command}, @code{slitex-run-command},
|
|
1462 @code{tex-dvi-print-command}, @code{tex-dvi-view-command}, and
|
|
1463 @code{tex-show-queue-command}. You @emph{must} set the value of
|
|
1464 @code{tex-dvi-view-command} for your particular terminal; this variable
|
|
1465 has no default value. The other variables have default values that may
|
|
1466 (or may not) be appropriate for your system.
|
|
1467
|
|
1468 Normally, the file name given to these commands comes at the end of
|
|
1469 the command string; for example, @samp{latex @var{filename}}. In some
|
|
1470 cases, however, the file name needs to be embedded in the command; an
|
|
1471 example is when you need to provide the file name as an argument to one
|
|
1472 command whose output is piped to another. You can specify where to put
|
|
1473 the file name with @samp{*} in the command string. For example,
|
|
1474
|
|
1475 @example
|
|
1476 (setq tex-dvi-print-command "dvips -f * | lpr")
|
|
1477 @end example
|
|
1478
|
|
1479 @findex tex-kill-job
|
|
1480 @kindex C-c C-k @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1481 @findex tex-recenter-output-buffer
|
|
1482 @kindex C-c C-l @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1483 The terminal output from @TeX{}, including any error messages, appears
|
|
1484 in a buffer called @samp{*tex-shell*}. If @TeX{} gets an error, you can
|
|
1485 switch to this buffer and feed it input (this works as in Shell mode;
|
|
1486 @pxref{Interactive Shell}). Without switching to this buffer you can
|
|
1487 scroll it so that its last line is visible by typing @kbd{C-c
|
|
1488 C-l}.
|
|
1489
|
|
1490 Type @kbd{C-c C-k} (@code{tex-kill-job}) to kill the @TeX{} process if
|
|
1491 you see that its output is no longer useful. Using @kbd{C-c C-b} or
|
|
1492 @kbd{C-c C-r} also kills any @TeX{} process still running.@refill
|
|
1493
|
|
1494 @findex tex-region
|
|
1495 @kindex C-c C-r @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1496 You can also pass an arbitrary region through an inferior @TeX{} by typing
|
|
1497 @kbd{C-c C-r} (@code{tex-region}). This is tricky, however, because most files
|
|
1498 of @TeX{} input contain commands at the beginning to set parameters and
|
|
1499 define macros, without which no later part of the file will format
|
|
1500 correctly. To solve this problem, @kbd{C-c C-r} allows you to designate a
|
|
1501 part of the file as containing essential commands; it is included before
|
|
1502 the specified region as part of the input to @TeX{}. The designated part
|
|
1503 of the file is called the @dfn{header}.
|
|
1504
|
|
1505 @cindex header (@TeX{} mode)
|
|
1506 To indicate the bounds of the header in Plain @TeX{} mode, you insert two
|
|
1507 special strings in the file. Insert @samp{%**start of header} before the
|
|
1508 header, and @samp{%**end of header} after it. Each string must appear
|
|
1509 entirely on one line, but there may be other text on the line before or
|
|
1510 after. The lines containing the two strings are included in the header.
|
|
1511 If @samp{%**start of header} does not appear within the first 100 lines of
|
|
1512 the buffer, @kbd{C-c C-r} assumes that there is no header.
|
|
1513
|
|
1514 In La@TeX{} mode, the header begins with @samp{\documentclass} or
|
|
1515 @samp{\documentstyle} and ends with @samp{\begin@{document@}}. These
|
|
1516 are commands that La@TeX{} requires you to use in any case, so nothing
|
|
1517 special needs to be done to identify the header.
|
|
1518
|
|
1519 @findex tex-file
|
|
1520 @kindex C-c C-f @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1521 The commands (@code{tex-buffer}) and (@code{tex-region}) do all of their
|
|
1522 work in a temporary directory, and do not have available any of the auxiliary
|
|
1523 files needed by @TeX{} for cross-references; these commands are generally
|
|
1524 not suitable for running the final copy in which all of the cross-references
|
|
1525 need to be correct.
|
|
1526
|
|
1527 When you want the auxiliary files for cross references, use @kbd{C-c
|
|
1528 C-f} (@code{tex-file}) which runs @TeX{} on the current buffer's file,
|
|
1529 in that file's directory. Before running @TeX{}, it offers to save any
|
|
1530 modified buffers. Generally, you need to use (@code{tex-file}) twice to
|
|
1531 get the cross-references right.
|
|
1532
|
|
1533 @vindex tex-start-options-string
|
|
1534 The value of the variable @code{tex-start-options-string} specifies
|
|
1535 options for the @TeX{} run. The default value causes @TeX{} to run in
|
|
1536 nonstopmode. To run @TeX{} interactively, set the variable to @code{""}.
|
|
1537
|
|
1538 @vindex tex-main-file
|
|
1539 Large @TeX{} documents are often split into several files---one main
|
|
1540 file, plus subfiles. Running @TeX{} on a subfile typically does not
|
|
1541 work; you have to run it on the main file. In order to make
|
|
1542 @code{tex-file} useful when you are editing a subfile, you can set the
|
|
1543 variable @code{tex-main-file} to the name of the main file. Then
|
|
1544 @code{tex-file} runs @TeX{} on that file.
|
|
1545
|
|
1546 The most convenient way to use @code{tex-main-file} is to specify it
|
|
1547 in a local variable list in each of the subfiles. @xref{File
|
|
1548 Variables}.
|
|
1549
|
|
1550 @findex tex-bibtex-file
|
|
1551 @kindex C-c TAB @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
|
|
1552 @vindex tex-bibtex-command
|
|
1553 For La@TeX{} files, you can use Bib@TeX{} to process the auxiliary
|
|
1554 file for the current buffer's file. Bib@TeX{} looks up bibliographic
|
|
1555 citations in a data base and prepares the cited references for the
|
|
1556 bibliography section. The command @kbd{C-c TAB}
|
|
1557 (@code{tex-bibtex-file}) runs the shell command
|
|
1558 (@code{tex-bibtex-command}) to produce a @samp{.bbl} file for the
|
|
1559 current buffer's file. Generally, you need to do @kbd{C-c C-f}
|
|
1560 (@code{tex-file}) once to generate the @samp{.aux} file, then do
|
|
1561 @kbd{C-c TAB} (@code{tex-bibtex-file}), and then repeat @kbd{C-c C-f}
|
|
1562 (@code{tex-file}) twice more to get the cross-references correct.
|
|
1563
|
|
1564 For managing all kinds of references, you can use Ref@TeX{}.
|
|
1565 @xref{Top, , RefTeX, reftex}.
|
|
1566
|
|
1567 @node Nroff Mode
|
|
1568 @section Nroff Mode
|
|
1569
|
|
1570 @cindex nroff
|
|
1571 @findex nroff-mode
|
|
1572 Nroff mode is a mode like Text mode but modified to handle nroff commands
|
|
1573 present in the text. Invoke @kbd{M-x nroff-mode} to enter this mode. It
|
|
1574 differs from Text mode in only a few ways. All nroff command lines are
|
|
1575 considered paragraph separators, so that filling will never garble the
|
|
1576 nroff commands. Pages are separated by @samp{.bp} commands. Comments
|
|
1577 start with backslash-doublequote. Also, three special commands are
|
|
1578 provided that are not in Text mode:
|
|
1579
|
|
1580 @findex forward-text-line
|
|
1581 @findex backward-text-line
|
|
1582 @findex count-text-lines
|
|
1583 @kindex M-n @r{(Nroff mode)}
|
|
1584 @kindex M-p @r{(Nroff mode)}
|
|
1585 @kindex M-? @r{(Nroff mode)}
|
|
1586 @table @kbd
|
|
1587 @item M-n
|
|
1588 Move to the beginning of the next line that isn't an nroff command
|
|
1589 (@code{forward-text-line}). An argument is a repeat count.
|
|
1590 @item M-p
|
|
1591 Like @kbd{M-n} but move up (@code{backward-text-line}).
|
|
1592 @item M-?
|
|
1593 Prints in the echo area the number of text lines (lines that are not
|
|
1594 nroff commands) in the region (@code{count-text-lines}).
|
|
1595 @end table
|
|
1596
|
|
1597 @findex electric-nroff-mode
|
|
1598 The other feature of Nroff mode is that you can turn on Electric Nroff
|
|
1599 mode. This is a minor mode that you can turn on or off with @kbd{M-x
|
|
1600 electric-nroff-mode} (@pxref{Minor Modes}). When the mode is on, each
|
|
1601 time you use @key{RET} to end a line that contains an nroff command that
|
|
1602 opens a kind of grouping, the matching nroff command to close that
|
|
1603 grouping is automatically inserted on the following line. For example,
|
|
1604 if you are at the beginning of a line and type @kbd{.@: ( b @key{RET}},
|
|
1605 this inserts the matching command @samp{.)b} on a new line following
|
|
1606 point.
|
|
1607
|
|
1608 If you use Outline minor mode with Nroff mode (@pxref{Outline Mode}),
|
|
1609 heading lines are lines of the form @samp{.H} followed by a number (the
|
|
1610 header level).
|
|
1611
|
|
1612 @vindex nroff-mode-hook
|
|
1613 Entering Nroff mode runs the hook @code{text-mode-hook}, followed by
|
|
1614 the hook @code{nroff-mode-hook} (@pxref{Hooks}).
|
|
1615
|
|
1616 @node Formatted Text
|
|
1617 @section Editing Formatted Text
|
|
1618
|
|
1619 @cindex Enriched mode
|
|
1620 @cindex mode, Enriched
|
|
1621 @cindex formatted text
|
|
1622 @cindex WYSIWYG
|
|
1623 @cindex word processing
|
|
1624 @dfn{Enriched mode} is a minor mode for editing files that contain
|
|
1625 formatted text in WYSIWYG fashion, as in a word processor. Currently,
|
|
1626 formatted text in Enriched mode can specify fonts, colors, underlining,
|
|
1627 margins, and types of filling and justification. In the future, we plan
|
|
1628 to implement other formatting features as well.
|
|
1629
|
|
1630 Enriched mode is a minor mode (@pxref{Minor Modes}). Typically it is
|
|
1631 used in conjunction with Text mode (@pxref{Text Mode}). However, you
|
|
1632 can also use it with other major modes such as Outline mode and
|
|
1633 Paragraph-Indent Text mode.
|
|
1634
|
|
1635 Potentially, Emacs can store formatted text files in various file
|
|
1636 formats. Currently, only one format is implemented: @dfn{text/enriched}
|
|
1637 format, which is defined by the MIME protocol. @xref{Format
|
|
1638 Conversion,, Format Conversion, elisp, the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual},
|
|
1639 for details of how Emacs recognizes and converts file formats.
|
|
1640
|
|
1641 The Emacs distribution contains a formatted text file that can serve as
|
|
1642 an example. Its name is @file{etc/enriched.doc}. It contains samples
|
|
1643 illustrating all the features described in this section. It also
|
|
1644 contains a list of ideas for future enhancements.
|
|
1645
|
|
1646 @menu
|
|
1647 * Requesting Formatted Text:: Entering and exiting Enriched mode.
|
|
1648 * Hard and Soft Newlines:: There are two different kinds of newlines.
|
|
1649 * Editing Format Info:: How to edit text properties.
|
|
1650 * Faces: Format Faces. Bold, italic, underline, etc.
|
|
1651 * Color: Format Colors. Changing the color of text.
|
|
1652 * Indent: Format Indentation. Changing the left and right margins.
|
|
1653 * Justification: Format Justification.
|
|
1654 Centering, setting text flush with the
|
|
1655 left or right margin, etc.
|
|
1656 * Other: Format Properties. The "special" text properties submenu.
|
|
1657 * Forcing Enriched Mode:: How to force use of Enriched mode.
|
|
1658 @end menu
|
|
1659
|
|
1660 @node Requesting Formatted Text
|
|
1661 @subsection Requesting to Edit Formatted Text
|
|
1662
|
|
1663 Whenever you visit a file that Emacs saved in the text/enriched format,
|
|
1664 Emacs automatically converts the formatting information in the file into
|
|
1665 Emacs's own internal format (text properties), and turns on Enriched
|
|
1666 mode.
|
|
1667
|
|
1668 @findex enriched-mode
|
|
1669 To create a new file of formatted text, first visit the nonexistent
|
|
1670 file, then type @kbd{M-x enriched-mode} before you start inserting text.
|
|
1671 This command turns on Enriched mode. Do this before you begin inserting
|
|
1672 text, to ensure that the text you insert is handled properly.
|
|
1673
|
|
1674 More generally, the command @code{enriched-mode} turns Enriched mode
|
|
1675 on if it was off, and off if it was on. With a prefix argument, this
|
|
1676 command turns Enriched mode on if the argument is positive, and turns
|
|
1677 the mode off otherwise.
|
|
1678
|
|
1679 When you save a buffer while Enriched mode is enabled in it, Emacs
|
|
1680 automatically converts the text to text/enriched format while writing it
|
|
1681 into the file. When you visit the file again, Emacs will automatically
|
|
1682 recognize the format, reconvert the text, and turn on Enriched mode
|
|
1683 again.
|
|
1684
|
|
1685 @vindex enriched-fill-after-visiting
|
|
1686 Normally, after visiting a file in text/enriched format, Emacs refills
|
|
1687 each paragraph to fit the specified right margin. You can turn off this
|
|
1688 refilling, to save time, by setting the variable
|
|
1689 @code{enriched-fill-after-visiting} to @code{nil} or to @code{ask}.
|
|
1690
|
|
1691 However, when visiting a file that was saved from Enriched mode, there
|
|
1692 is no need for refilling, because Emacs saves the right margin settings
|
|
1693 along with the text.
|
|
1694
|
|
1695 @vindex enriched-translations
|
|
1696 You can add annotations for saving additional text properties, which
|
|
1697 Emacs normally does not save, by adding to @code{enriched-translations}.
|
|
1698 Note that the text/enriched standard requires any non-standard
|
|
1699 annotations to have names starting with @samp{x-}, as in
|
|
1700 @samp{x-read-only}. This ensures that they will not conflict with
|
|
1701 standard annotations that may be added later.
|
|
1702
|
|
1703 @node Hard and Soft Newlines
|
|
1704 @subsection Hard and Soft Newlines
|
|
1705 @cindex hard newline
|
|
1706 @cindex soft newline
|
|
1707 @cindex newlines, hard and soft
|
|
1708
|
|
1709 In formatted text, Emacs distinguishes between two different kinds of
|
|
1710 newlines, @dfn{hard} newlines and @dfn{soft} newlines.
|
|
1711
|
|
1712 Hard newlines are used to separate paragraphs, or items in a list, or
|
|
1713 anywhere that there should always be a line break regardless of the
|
|
1714 margins. The @key{RET} command (@code{newline}) and @kbd{C-o}
|
|
1715 (@code{open-line}) insert hard newlines.
|
|
1716
|
|
1717 Soft newlines are used to make text fit between the margins. All the
|
|
1718 fill commands, including Auto Fill, insert soft newlines---and they
|
|
1719 delete only soft newlines.
|
|
1720
|
|
1721 Although hard and soft newlines look the same, it is important to bear
|
|
1722 the difference in mind. Do not use @key{RET} to break lines in the
|
|
1723 middle of filled paragraphs, or else you will get hard newlines that are
|
|
1724 barriers to further filling. Instead, let Auto Fill mode break lines,
|
|
1725 so that if the text or the margins change, Emacs can refill the lines
|
|
1726 properly. @xref{Auto Fill}.
|
|
1727
|
|
1728 On the other hand, in tables and lists, where the lines should always
|
|
1729 remain as you type them, you can use @key{RET} to end lines. For these
|
|
1730 lines, you may also want to set the justification style to
|
|
1731 @code{unfilled}. @xref{Format Justification}.
|
|
1732
|
|
1733 @node Editing Format Info
|
|
1734 @subsection Editing Format Information
|
|
1735
|
|
1736 There are two ways to alter the formatting information for a formatted
|
|
1737 text file: with keyboard commands, and with the mouse.
|
|
1738
|
|
1739 The easiest way to add properties to your document is by using the Text
|
|
1740 Properties menu. You can get to this menu in two ways: from the Edit
|
|
1741 menu in the menu bar, or with @kbd{C-mouse-2} (hold the @key{CTRL} key
|
|
1742 and press the middle mouse button).
|
|
1743
|
|
1744 Most of the items in the Text Properties menu lead to other submenus.
|
|
1745 These are described in the sections that follow. Some items run
|
|
1746 commands directly:
|
|
1747
|
|
1748 @table @code
|
|
1749 @findex facemenu-remove-props
|
|
1750 @item Remove Properties
|
|
1751 Delete from the region all the text properties that the Text Properties
|
|
1752 menu works with (@code{facemenu-remove-props}).
|
|
1753
|
|
1754 @findex facemenu-remove-all
|
|
1755 @item Remove All
|
|
1756 Delete @emph{all} text properties from the region
|
|
1757 (@code{facemenu-remove-all}).
|
|
1758
|
|
1759 @findex list-text-properties-at
|
|
1760 @item List Properties
|
|
1761 List all the text properties of the character following point
|
|
1762 (@code{list-text-properties-at}).
|
|
1763
|
|
1764 @item Display Faces
|
|
1765 Display a list of all the defined faces.
|
|
1766
|
|
1767 @item Display Colors
|
|
1768 Display a list of all the defined colors.
|
|
1769 @end table
|
|
1770
|
|
1771 @node Format Faces
|
|
1772 @subsection Faces in Formatted Text
|
|
1773
|
|
1774 The Faces submenu lists various Emacs faces including @code{bold},
|
|
1775 @code{italic}, and @code{underline}. Selecting one of these adds the
|
|
1776 chosen face to the region. @xref{Faces}. You can also specify a face
|
|
1777 with these keyboard commands:
|
|
1778
|
|
1779 @table @kbd
|
|
1780 @kindex M-g d @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1781 @findex facemenu-set-default
|
|
1782 @item M-g d
|
|
1783 Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the @code{default} face
|
|
1784 (@code{facemenu-set-default}).
|
|
1785 @kindex M-g b @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1786 @findex facemenu-set-bold
|
|
1787 @item M-g b
|
|
1788 Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the @code{bold} face
|
|
1789 (@code{facemenu-set-bold}).
|
|
1790 @kindex M-g i @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1791 @findex facemenu-set-italic
|
|
1792 @item M-g i
|
|
1793 Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the @code{italic} face
|
|
1794 (@code{facemenu-set-italic}).
|
|
1795 @kindex M-g l @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1796 @findex facemenu-set-bold-italic
|
|
1797 @item M-g l
|
|
1798 Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the @code{bold-italic} face
|
|
1799 (@code{facemenu-set-bold-italic}).
|
|
1800 @kindex M-g u @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1801 @findex facemenu-set-underline
|
|
1802 @item M-g u
|
|
1803 Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the @code{underline} face
|
|
1804 (@code{facemenu-set-underline}).
|
|
1805 @kindex M-g o @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1806 @findex facemenu-set-face
|
|
1807 @item M-g o @var{face} @key{RET}
|
|
1808 Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the face @var{face}
|
|
1809 (@code{facemenu-set-face}).
|
|
1810 @end table
|
|
1811
|
|
1812 If you use these commands with a prefix argument---or, in Transient Mark
|
|
1813 mode, if the region is not active---then these commands specify a face
|
|
1814 to use for your next self-inserting input. @xref{Transient Mark}. This
|
|
1815 applies to both the keyboard commands and the menu commands.
|
|
1816
|
|
1817 Enriched mode defines two additional faces: @code{excerpt} and
|
|
1818 @code{fixed}. These correspond to codes used in the text/enriched file
|
|
1819 format.
|
|
1820
|
|
1821 The @code{excerpt} face is intended for quotations. This face is the
|
|
1822 same as @code{italic} unless you customize it (@pxref{Face Customization}).
|
|
1823
|
|
1824 The @code{fixed} face is meant to say, ``Use a fixed-width font for this
|
|
1825 part of the text.'' Emacs currently supports only fixed-width fonts;
|
|
1826 therefore, the @code{fixed} annotation is not necessary now. However,
|
|
1827 we plan to support variable width fonts in future Emacs versions, and
|
|
1828 other systems that display text/enriched format may not use a
|
|
1829 fixed-width font as the default. So if you specifically want a certain
|
|
1830 part of the text to use a fixed-width font, you should specify the
|
|
1831 @code{fixed} face for that part.
|
|
1832
|
|
1833 The @code{fixed} face is normally defined to use a different font from
|
|
1834 the default. However, different systems have different fonts installed,
|
|
1835 so you may need to customize this.
|
|
1836
|
|
1837 If your terminal cannot display different faces, you will not be able
|
|
1838 to see them, but you can still edit documents containing faces. You can
|
|
1839 even add faces and colors to documents. They will be visible when the
|
|
1840 file is viewed on a terminal that can display them.
|
|
1841
|
|
1842 @node Format Colors
|
|
1843 @subsection Colors in Formatted Text
|
|
1844
|
|
1845 You can specify foreground and background colors for portions of the
|
|
1846 text. There is a menu for specifying the foreground color and a menu
|
|
1847 for specifying the background color. Each color menu lists all the
|
|
1848 colors that you have used in Enriched mode in the current Emacs session.
|
|
1849
|
|
1850 If you specify a color with a prefix argument---or, in Transient Mark
|
|
1851 mode, if the region is not active---then it applies to your next
|
|
1852 self-inserting input. @xref{Transient Mark}. Otherwise, the command
|
|
1853 applies to the region.
|
|
1854
|
|
1855 Each color menu contains one additional item: @samp{Other}. You can use
|
|
1856 this item to specify a color that is not listed in the menu; it reads
|
|
1857 the color name with the minibuffer. To display list of available colors
|
|
1858 and their names, use the @samp{Display Colors} menu item in the Text
|
|
1859 Properties menu (@pxref{Editing Format Info}).
|
|
1860
|
|
1861 Any color that you specify in this way, or that is mentioned in a
|
|
1862 formatted text file that you read in, is added to both color menus for
|
|
1863 the duration of the Emacs session.
|
|
1864
|
|
1865 @findex facemenu-set-foreground
|
|
1866 @findex facemenu-set-background
|
|
1867 There are no key bindings for specifying colors, but you can do so
|
|
1868 with the extended commands @kbd{M-x facemenu-set-foreground} and
|
|
1869 @kbd{M-x facemenu-set-background}. Both of these commands read the name
|
|
1870 of the color with the minibuffer.
|
|
1871
|
|
1872 @node Format Indentation
|
|
1873 @subsection Indentation in Formatted Text
|
|
1874
|
|
1875 When editing formatted text, you can specify different amounts of
|
|
1876 indentation for the right or left margin of an entire paragraph or a
|
|
1877 part of a paragraph. The margins you specify automatically affect the
|
|
1878 Emacs fill commands (@pxref{Filling}) and line-breaking commands.
|
|
1879
|
|
1880 The Indentation submenu provides a convenient interface for specifying
|
|
1881 these properties. The submenu contains four items:
|
|
1882
|
|
1883 @table @code
|
|
1884 @kindex C-x TAB @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1885 @findex increase-left-margin
|
|
1886 @item Indent More
|
|
1887 Indent the region by 4 columns (@code{increase-left-margin}). In
|
|
1888 Enriched mode, this command is also available on @kbd{C-x @key{TAB}}; if
|
|
1889 you supply a numeric argument, that says how many columns to add to the
|
|
1890 margin (a negative argument reduces the number of columns).
|
|
1891
|
|
1892 @item Indent Less
|
|
1893 Remove 4 columns of indentation from the region.
|
|
1894
|
|
1895 @item Indent Right More
|
|
1896 Make the text narrower by indenting 4 columns at the right margin.
|
|
1897
|
|
1898 @item Indent Right Less
|
|
1899 Remove 4 columns of indentation from the right margin.
|
|
1900 @end table
|
|
1901
|
|
1902 You can use these commands repeatedly to increase or decrease the
|
|
1903 indentation.
|
|
1904
|
|
1905 The most common way to use these commands is to change the indentation
|
|
1906 of an entire paragraph. However, that is not the only use. You can
|
|
1907 change the margins at any point; the new values take effect at the end
|
|
1908 of the line (for right margins) or the beginning of the next line (for
|
|
1909 left margins).
|
|
1910
|
|
1911 This makes it possible to format paragraphs with @dfn{hanging indents},
|
|
1912 which means that the first line is indented less than subsequent lines.
|
|
1913 To set up a hanging indent, increase the indentation of the region
|
|
1914 starting after the first word of the paragraph and running until the end
|
|
1915 of the paragraph.
|
|
1916
|
|
1917 Indenting the first line of a paragraph is easier. Set the margin for
|
|
1918 the whole paragraph where you want it to be for the body of the
|
|
1919 paragraph, then indent the first line by inserting extra spaces or tabs.
|
|
1920
|
|
1921 Sometimes, as a result of editing, the filling of a paragraph becomes
|
|
1922 messed up---parts of the paragraph may extend past the left or right
|
|
1923 margins. When this happens, use @kbd{M-q} (@code{fill-paragraph}) to
|
|
1924 refill the paragraph.
|
|
1925
|
|
1926 @vindex standard-indent
|
|
1927 The variable @code{standard-indent} specifies how many columns these
|
|
1928 commands should add to or subtract from the indentation. The default
|
|
1929 value is 4. The overall default right margin for Enriched mode is
|
|
1930 controlled by the variable @code{fill-column}, as usual.
|
|
1931
|
|
1932 The fill prefix, if any, works in addition to the specified paragraph
|
|
1933 indentation: @kbd{C-x .} does not include the specified indentation's
|
|
1934 whitespace in the new value for the fill prefix, and the fill commands
|
|
1935 look for the fill prefix after the indentation on each line. @xref{Fill
|
|
1936 Prefix}.
|
|
1937
|
|
1938 @node Format Justification
|
|
1939 @subsection Justification in Formatted Text
|
|
1940
|
|
1941 When editing formatted text, you can specify various styles of
|
|
1942 justification for a paragraph. The style you specify automatically
|
|
1943 affects the Emacs fill commands.
|
|
1944
|
|
1945 The Justification submenu provides a convenient interface for specifying
|
|
1946 the style. The submenu contains five items:
|
|
1947
|
|
1948 @table @code
|
|
1949 @item Flush Left
|
|
1950 This is the most common style of justification (at least for English).
|
|
1951 Lines are aligned at the left margin but left uneven at the right.
|
|
1952
|
|
1953 @item Flush Right
|
|
1954 This aligns each line with the right margin. Spaces and tabs are added
|
|
1955 on the left, if necessary, to make lines line up on the right.
|
|
1956
|
|
1957 @item Full
|
|
1958 This justifies the text, aligning both edges of each line. Justified
|
|
1959 text looks very nice in a printed book, where the spaces can all be
|
|
1960 adjusted equally, but it does not look as nice with a fixed-width font
|
|
1961 on the screen. Perhaps a future version of Emacs will be able to adjust
|
|
1962 the width of spaces in a line to achieve elegant justification.
|
|
1963
|
|
1964 @item Center
|
|
1965 This centers every line between the current margins.
|
|
1966
|
|
1967 @item None
|
|
1968 This turns off filling entirely. Each line will remain as you wrote it;
|
|
1969 the fill and auto-fill functions will have no effect on text which has
|
|
1970 this setting. You can, however, still indent the left margin. In
|
|
1971 unfilled regions, all newlines are treated as hard newlines (@pxref{Hard
|
|
1972 and Soft Newlines}) .
|
|
1973 @end table
|
|
1974
|
|
1975 In Enriched mode, you can also specify justification from the keyboard
|
|
1976 using the @kbd{M-j} prefix character:
|
|
1977
|
|
1978 @table @kbd
|
|
1979 @kindex M-j l @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1980 @findex set-justification-left
|
|
1981 @item M-j l
|
|
1982 Make the region left-filled (@code{set-justification-left}).
|
|
1983 @kindex M-j r @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1984 @findex set-justification-right
|
|
1985 @item M-j r
|
|
1986 Make the region right-filled (@code{set-justification-right}).
|
|
1987 @kindex M-j f @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1988 @findex set-justification-full
|
|
1989 @item M-j f
|
|
1990 Make the region fully-justified (@code{set-justification-full}).
|
|
1991 @kindex M-j c @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1992 @kindex M-S @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1993 @findex set-justification-center
|
|
1994 @item M-j c
|
|
1995 @itemx M-S
|
|
1996 Make the region centered (@code{set-justification-center}).
|
|
1997 @kindex M-j u @r{(Enriched mode)}
|
|
1998 @findex set-justification-none
|
|
1999 @item M-j u
|
|
2000 Make the region unfilled (@code{set-justification-none}).
|
|
2001 @end table
|
|
2002
|
|
2003 Justification styles apply to entire paragraphs. All the
|
|
2004 justification-changing commands operate on the paragraph containing
|
|
2005 point, or, if the region is active, on all paragraphs which overlap the
|
|
2006 region.
|
|
2007
|
|
2008 @vindex default-justification
|
|
2009 The default justification style is specified by the variable
|
|
2010 @code{default-justification}. Its value should be one of the symbols
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2011 @code{left}, @code{right}, @code{full}, @code{center}, or @code{none}.
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|
2012
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2013 @node Format Properties
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2014 @subsection Setting Other Text Properties
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2015
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|
2016 The Other Properties menu lets you add or remove three other useful text
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2017 properties: @code{read-only}, @code{invisible} and @code{intangible}.
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2018 The @code{intangible} property disallows moving point within the text,
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|
2019 the @code{invisible} text property hides text from display, and the
|
|
2020 @code{read-only} property disallows alteration of the text.
|
|
2021
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2022 Each of these special properties has a menu item to add it to the
|
|
2023 region. The last menu item, @samp{Remove Special}, removes all of these
|
|
2024 special properties from the text in the region.
|
|
2025
|
|
2026 Currently, the @code{invisible} and @code{intangible} properties are
|
|
2027 @emph{not} saved in the text/enriched format. The @code{read-only}
|
|
2028 property is saved, but it is not a standard part of the text/enriched
|
|
2029 format, so other editors may not respect it.
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|
2030
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|
2031 @node Forcing Enriched Mode
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|
2032 @subsection Forcing Enriched Mode
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|
2033
|
|
2034 Normally, Emacs knows when you are editing formatted text because it
|
|
2035 recognizes the special annotations used in the file that you visited.
|
|
2036 However, there are situations in which you must take special actions
|
|
2037 to convert file contents or turn on Enriched mode:
|
|
2038
|
|
2039 @itemize @bullet
|
|
2040 @item
|
|
2041 When you visit a file that was created with some other editor, Emacs may
|
|
2042 not recognize the file as being in the text/enriched format. In this
|
|
2043 case, when you visit the file you will see the formatting commands
|
|
2044 rather than the formatted text. Type @kbd{M-x format-decode-buffer} to
|
|
2045 translate it.
|
|
2046
|
|
2047 @item
|
|
2048 When you @emph{insert} a file into a buffer, rather than visiting it.
|
|
2049 Emacs does the necessary conversions on the text which you insert, but
|
|
2050 it does not enable Enriched mode. If you wish to do that, type @kbd{M-x
|
|
2051 enriched-mode}.
|
|
2052 @end itemize
|
|
2053
|
|
2054 The command @code{format-decode-buffer} translates text in various
|
|
2055 formats into Emacs's internal format. It asks you to specify the format
|
|
2056 to translate from; however, normally you can type just @key{RET}, which
|
|
2057 tells Emacs to guess the format.
|
|
2058
|
|
2059 @findex format-find-file
|
|
2060 If you wish to look at text/enriched file in its raw form, as a
|
|
2061 sequence of characters rather than as formatted text, use the @kbd{M-x
|
|
2062 find-file-literally} command. This visits a file, like
|
|
2063 @code{find-file}, but does not do format conversion. It also inhibits
|
|
2064 character code conversion (@pxref{Coding Systems}) and automatic
|
|
2065 uncompression (@pxref{Compressed Files}). To disable format conversion
|
|
2066 but allow character code conversion and/or automatic uncompression if
|
|
2067 appropriate, use @code{format-find-file} with suitable arguments.
|
|
2068
|