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(pc-selection-mode-hook)
(pc-select-saved-settings-alist, pc-select-map)
(pc-select-saved-global-map, pc-select-key-bindings-alist)
(pc-select-default-key-bindings, pc-select-extra-key-bindings)
(pc-select-meta-moves-sexps-key-bindings)
(pc-select-tty-key-bindings, pc-select-old-M-delete-binding):
New variables.
(pc-select-define-keys, pc-select-restore-keys): New functions.
(pc-select-add-to-alist, pc-select-save-and-set-var)
(pc-select-save-and-set-mode, pc-select-restore-var)
(pc-select-restore-mode): New macros.
(pc-selection-mode): Completely rewrote the body of the function;
the main goal was to make pc-selection-mode "turn-off"-able, like
other minor modes. Use define-minore-mode instead of just a
defun. Store the key bindings into four alists:
pc-select-default-key-bindings, pc-select-extra-key-bindings,
pc-select-meta-moves-sexps-key-bindings, and
pc-select-tty-key-bindings; then have the pc-select-define-keys
function walk those alists instead of calling define-key
repeatedly. When the mode is turned on, set the
keybindings in global-map and remember the old keybindings; when
the mode is turned off, restore the previously-saved keybindings.
(pc-selection-mode defcustom): Reflect the fact that the mode is
now "turn-off"-able.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 26 Jan 2002 22:47:39 +0000 |
parents | 75e2a0dcadcd |
children | 23a1cea22d13 |
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Basic Installation for An Introduction to Programming in Emacs Lisp version 2 ================== # To see the table of contents of the emacs-lisp-intro-2.00.tar.gz # file, execute the following at your shell prompt: tar -tzvf emacs-lisp-intro-2.00.tar.gz # To uncompress and untar the file, execute the following: tar -xzvf emacs-lisp-intro-2.00.tar.gz # The file will untar into a subdirectory called emacs-lisp-intro-2.00 # That directory will contain the Texinfo source for the book, the # Info files and various other files. cd emacs-lisp-intro-2.00 # To create a DVI file that can be printed directly or converted # to PostScript or PDF and then printed, execute the following: ./configure make dvi # To create an HTML file, execute the following # (presumably you have already executed the `./configure' command # before running `make dvi'; if not execute `./configure' now); # this will place HTML files into a emacs-lisp-intro/ subdirectory: makeinfo --html --verbose emacs-lisp-intro.texi # To create a single, large HTML file in the current directory, # use the --no-split option, like this: makeinfo --html --no-split --verbose emacs-lisp-intro.texi # At the time of writing, `makeinfo' version 4.0b creates HTML # files with %20 in addresses instead of a space. Some # browsers have difficulty following such references. In # GNU Emacs, you can replace the occurrences of %20 with a # command such as # (replace-string "%20" " ") # To create a single, large Info file in the current directory # instead of the usual 16 smaller Info files, and also, to avoid # indenting paragraphs, execute: makeinfo --no-split --paragraph-indent=0 --verbose emacs-lisp-intro.texi # To create a single, large Plain text file in the current # directory, execute: makeinfo --fill-column=70 --no-split --paragraph-indent=0 \ --verbose --no-headers --output=emacs-lisp-intro.txt emacs-lisp-intro.texi ###