Mercurial > emacs
diff man/help.texi @ 90288:7432ca837c8d
Revision: emacs@sv.gnu.org/emacs--unicode--0--patch-9
Merge from emacs--devo--0
Patches applied:
* emacs--devo--0 (patch 16-33)
- Update from CVS
- Install ERC.
- Fix ERC compiler warnings.
- Use utf-8 encoding in ERC ChangeLogs.
- Merge ERC-related Viper hacks into Viper.
- Merge from erc--main--0
- Merge from gnus--rel--5.10
* gnus--rel--5.10 (patch 8-13)
- Merge from emacs--devo--0
- Update from CVS
author | Miles Bader <miles@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 01 Feb 2006 10:07:17 +0000 |
parents | 7beb78bc1f8e ab50d02721ae |
children | c5406394f567 |
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--- a/man/help.texi Thu Jan 26 02:23:05 2006 +0000 +++ b/man/help.texi Wed Feb 01 10:07:17 2006 +0000 @@ -12,17 +12,19 @@ @kindex F1 Emacs provides extensive help features accessible through a single -character, @kbd{C-h}. @kbd{C-h} is a prefix key that is used for -commands that display documentation. The characters that you can type after -@kbd{C-h} are called @dfn{help options}. One help option is @kbd{C-h}; -that is how you ask for help about using @kbd{C-h}. To cancel, type -@kbd{C-g}. The function key @key{F1} is equivalent to @kbd{C-h}. +character, @kbd{C-h} (or @key{F1}). @kbd{C-h} is a prefix key that is +used for commands that display documentation. The characters that you +can type after @kbd{C-h} are called @dfn{help options}. One help +option is @kbd{C-h}; that is how you ask for help about using +@kbd{C-h}. To cancel, type @kbd{C-g}. The function key @key{F1} is +equivalent to @kbd{C-h}. @kindex C-h C-h @findex help-for-help @kbd{C-h C-h} (@code{help-for-help}) displays a list of the possible -help options, each with a brief description. Before you type a help -option, you can use @key{SPC} or @key{DEL} to scroll through the list. +help options, each with a brief description. You can look at the +list, using @key{SPC} and @key{DEL} to scroll through it, then type +the help option you want. To cancel, type @kbd{C-g}. @kbd{C-h} or @key{F1} means ``help'' in various other contexts as well. After a prefix key, it displays a list of the alternatives that @@ -70,13 +72,6 @@ pertinent to the feature you need. @xref{Library Keywords}. @end table - To find the documentation of a key sequence or a menu item, type -@kbd{C-h K} and then type that key sequence or select the menu -item. This looks up the description of the command invoked by the key -or the menu in the appropriate manual (not necessarily the Emacs -manual). Likewise, use @kbd{C-h F} for reading documentation of a -command. - @menu * Help Summary:: Brief list of all Help commands. * Key Help:: Asking what a key does in Emacs. @@ -100,7 +95,8 @@ Here is a summary of the Emacs interactive help commands. @xref{Help Files}, for other help commands that just display a -pre-written file of information. +pre-written file of information. The character that follows +@kbd{C-h} is a ``help option.'' @table @kbd @item C-h a @var{topics} @key{RET} @@ -180,7 +176,7 @@ @kindex C-h c @findex describe-key-briefly - The most basic @kbd{C-h} options are @kbd{C-h c} + The most basic @kbd{C-h} commands are @kbd{C-h c} (@code{describe-key-briefly}) and @w{@kbd{C-h k}} (@code{describe-key}). @kbd{C-h c @var{key}} displays in the echo area the name of the command that @var{key} is bound to. For example, @kbd{C-h c C-f} displays @@ -194,8 +190,19 @@ displays the documentation string of the command as well as its name. This is too big for the echo area, so a window is used for the display. - @kbd{C-h c} and @kbd{C-h k} work for any sort of key sequences, -including function keys and mouse events. +@kindex C-h K +@findex Info-goto-emacs-key-command-node + To find the documentation of a key sequence, type @kbd{C-h K} and +then enter that key sequence. This looks up the description of the +command invoked by the key in whichever manual describes it (this need +not be the Emacs manual). @kbd{C-h K} runs the command +@code{Info-goto-emacs-key-command-node}. + + @kbd{C-h c}, @kbd{C-h k} and @kbd{C-h K} work for any sort of key +sequences, including function keys, menus, and mouse events. For +instance, you can type @kbd{C-h k} and then select a menu item from +the menu bar, to show the documentation string of the command that +menu item runs. @kindex C-h w @findex where-is @@ -256,9 +263,18 @@ hyperlinks to the definition, if you have the source files installed. (@xref{Hyperlinking}.) If you know Lisp (or C), this provides the ultimate documentation. If you don't know Lisp, you should learn it. -If you are just @emph{using} Emacs, treating Emacs as an object -(file), then you don't really love it. For true intimacy with your -editor, you need to read the source code. +(The Introduction to Emacs Lisp Programming, available from the FSF +through fsf.org, is a good way to get started.) Emacs won't be happy +if it feels you are just @emph{using} Emacs, treating it as an object +program. If you really love Emacs, show that you care by reading the +source code. + +@kindex C-h F +@findex Info-goto-emacs-command-node + To find a specific function's documentation in a manual, use +@kbd{C-h F} (@code{Info-goto-emacs-command-node}). This knows +about various manuals, not just the Emacs manual, and finds the +right one. @node Apropos @section Apropos @@ -432,8 +448,8 @@ the support for a specific language environment. @xref{Language Environments}. This tells you which languages this language environment is useful for, and lists the character sets, coding -systems, and input methods that go with it. It also shows some sample -text to illustrate scripts. +systems, and input methods that it operates on. It also shows some +sample text to illustrate scripts. The command @kbd{C-h h} (@code{view-hello-file}) displays the file @file{etc/HELLO}, which shows how to say ``hello'' in many languages. @@ -456,9 +472,7 @@ @item @key{SPC} Scroll forward. @item @key{DEL} -@itemx @key{BS} -Scroll backward. On some keyboards, this key is known as @key{BS} or -@key{backspace}. +Scroll backward. @item @key{RET} Follow a cross reference at point. @item @key{TAB} @@ -521,24 +535,9 @@ need to get to the documentation quickly, and you know the exact name of the file. -@kindex C-h F -@kindex C-h K -@findex Info-goto-emacs-key-command-node -@findex Info-goto-emacs-command-node - There are two special help commands for accessing Emacs -documentation through Info. @kbd{C-h F @var{function} @key{RET}} -enters Info and goes straight to the documentation of the Emacs -function @var{function}. @kbd{C-h K @var{key}} enters Info and goes -straight to the documentation of the key @var{key}. These two keys -run the commands @code{Info-goto-emacs-command-node} and -@code{Info-goto-emacs-key-command-node}. You can use @kbd{C-h K} to -find the documentation of a menu item: just select that menu item when -@kbd{C-h K} prompts for a key. - - @kbd{C-h F} and @kbd{C-h K} know about commands and keys described -in manuals other than the Emacs manual. Thus, they make it easier to -find the documentation of commands and keys when you are not sure -which manual describes them, like when using some specialized mode. + The help commands @kbd{C-h F @var{function} @key{RET}} and @kbd{C-h +K @var{key}}, described above, enter Info and go straight to the +documentation of @var{function} or @var{key}. @kindex C-h S @findex info-lookup-symbol