Mercurial > emacs
diff man/basic.texi @ 35206:054acbd5e9f7
*** empty log message ***
author | Gerd Moellmann <gerd@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 10 Jan 2001 15:24:55 +0000 |
parents | d23d6a3e8128 |
children | 3ec035fea54a |
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--- a/man/basic.texi Wed Jan 10 15:24:21 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/basic.texi Wed Jan 10 15:24:55 2001 +0000 @@ -464,11 +464,16 @@ @cindex wrapping @cindex line wrapping If you add too many characters to one line without breaking it with -@key{RET}, the line will grow to occupy two (or more) lines on the screen, -with a @samp{\} at the extreme right margin of all but the last of them. -The @samp{\} says that the following screen line is not really a distinct -line in the text, but just the @dfn{continuation} of a line too long to fit -the screen. Continuation is also called @dfn{line wrapping}. +@key{RET}, the line will grow to occupy two (or more) lines on the +screen. On terminals, one or more @samp{\} characters are displayed +at the extreme right margin of all but the last of them. The @samp{\} +characters say that the following screen line is not really a distinct +line in the text, but just the @dfn{continuation} of a line too long +to fit the screen. Continuation is also called @dfn{line wrapping}. +More than one @samp{\} is displayed for a wrapped character which is +wider than one column. On window systems, small bitmaps are displayed +in the fringes to the left and right of the window to indicate line +wrapping. Sometimes it is nice to have Emacs insert newlines automatically when a line gets too long. Continuation on the screen does not do that. Use @@ -478,10 +483,12 @@ @findex toggle-truncate-lines @cindex truncation As an alternative to continuation, Emacs can display long lines by -@dfn{truncation}. This means that all the characters that do not fit in -the width of the screen or window do not appear at all. They remain in -the buffer, temporarily invisible. @samp{$} is used in the last column -instead of @samp{\} to inform you that truncation is in effect. +@dfn{truncation}. This means that all the characters that do not fit +in the width of the screen or window do not appear at all. They +remain in the buffer, temporarily invisible. On terminals, @samp{$} +is used in the last column instead of @samp{\} to inform you that +truncation is in effect. On window systems, a small bitmap in the +fringe to the right of the window indicates line truncation. Truncation instead of continuation happens whenever horizontal scrolling is in use, and optionally in all side-by-side windows