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allout.el: Summary - migrate to defining allout mode using
define-minor-mode instead of defun. Significantly clean-up internal keymap
provisions, refactoring a bit and removing a lot of accumulated cruft.
allout-mode-map is now a keymap by virtue of being an defalias to
allout-mode-map-value, which contains the actual keymap structure.
(allout-mode): Use define-minor-mode rather than defun. Remove
now-unnecessary minor-mode setup activities from the body. Specify :keymap
as allout-mode-map so the minor-mode-map-alist entry will be
'(allout-mode . allout-mode-map) - see allout-mode-map-value, below.
Adjust docstring to track changes.
(allout-minor-mode): Remove this defalias, now that we're using
define-minor-mode.
(allout-mode-map): Set value to be 'allout-mode-map. The actual keymap
is allout-mode-map-value, via defalias.
(allout-mode-map-value): The variable holding the actual mode keymap
structure, by virtue of defalias from allout-mode-map.
(allout-compose-and-institute-keymap): Renamed from allout-bind-keys, and
including the binding-composition functionality of the former
produce-allout-mode-map and allout-setup-mode-map.
(allout-institute-keymap): Take over the "setup" part of the former
allout-setup-mode-map. Reassign allout-mode-map-value value and update the
defalias.
(allout-command-prefix) (allout-prefixed-keybindings)
(allout-unprefixed-keybindings): Use allout-compose-and-institute-keymap to
process the bindings.
(allout-unprefixed-keybindings): Remove extraneous '?' question marks.
(allout-prefixed-keybindings): Elide binding to (prefixed) \C-h - user can
customize if they want to use that binding. Bind allout-copy-topic-as-kill
to (prefixed) \M-k. Bind allout-up-current-level to (prefixed) \C-u. (I
think i mistakenly elided that, previously, instead of the one for \C-h.)
(allout-hotspot-key-handler): Remove attempt to resolve the key through the
literal key-string lookup on allout-keybindings-list. That probably hasn't
worked for a Long Time, and removal of allout-keybindings-list further
simplifies the keybindings situation.
(allout-pre-command-business): Use allout-mode-map-value instead of
allout-mode-map.
(allout-preempt-trailing-ctrl-h): Remove. The user can customize the
bindings if they want to use a keybinding having a trailing \C-h. No
deprecation needed since this feature was never in a release.
(allout-keybindings-list): Remove. It's not been useful for a while. (See
allout-hotspot-key-handler changes, above.)
(produce-allout-mode-map): Remove. Consolidate into
allout-compose-and-institute-keymap.
(allout-mode-map-adjustments): Remove. No longer necessary with removal of
allout-preempt-trailing-ctrl-h.
(allout-setup-mode-map): Remove. Consolidate into
allout-compose-and-institute-keymap and allout-institute-keymap.
author | Ken Manheimer <ken.manheimer@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 20 Jan 2011 13:13:30 -0500 |
parents | 21cb91dca6c7 |
children | 0222e3f822e3 |
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This is the file .../info/dir, which contains the topmost node of the Info hierarchy, called (dir)Top. The first time you invoke Info you start off looking at this node. File: dir, Node: Top This is the top of the INFO tree The Info Directory ****************** The Info Directory is the top-level menu of major Info topics. Type "d" in Info to return to the Info Directory. Type "q" to exit Info. Type "?" for a list of Info commands, or "h" to visit an Info tutorial. Type "m" to choose a menu item--for instance, "mEmacs<Return>" visits the Emacs manual. In Emacs Info, you can click mouse button 2 on a menu item or cross reference to follow it to its target. Each menu line that starts with a * is a topic you can select with "m". Every third topic has a red * to help pick the right number to type. * Menu: * Info: (info). How to use the documentation browsing system. Emacs * Emacs: (emacs). The extensible self-documenting text editor. * Emacs FAQ: (efaq). Frequently Asked Questions about Emacs. GNU Emacs Lisp * Emacs Lisp Intro: (eintr). A simple introduction to Emacs Lisp programming. * Elisp: (elisp). The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. Emacs editing modes * Ada mode: (ada-mode). Emacs mode for editing and compiling Ada code. * CC Mode: (ccmode). Emacs mode for editing C, C++, Objective-C, Java, Pike, AWK, and CORBA IDL code. * IDLWAVE: (idlwave). Major mode and shell for IDL files. * nXML Mode: (nxml-mode). XML editing mode with RELAX NG support. * Org Mode: (org). Outline-based notes management and organizer Emacs network features * EUDC: (eudc). Emacs client for directory servers (LDAP, PH). * Gnus: (gnus). The newsreader Gnus. * Mairix: (mairix-el). Emacs interface to the Mairix mail indexer. * MH-E: (mh-e). Emacs interface to the MH mail system. * Message: (message). Mail and news composition mode that goes with Gnus. * Newsticker: (newsticker). A Newsticker for Emacs. * PGG: (pgg). Emacs interface to various PGP implementations. * ERC: (erc). Powerful and extensible IRC client for Emacs. * Rcirc: (rcirc). Internet Relay Chat (IRC) client. * SASL: (sasl). The Emacs SASL library. * SC: (sc). Supercite lets you cite parts of messages you're replying to, in flexible ways. * Sieve: (sieve). Managing Sieve scripts in Emacs. * TRAMP: (tramp). Transparent Remote Access, Multiple Protocol GNU Emacs remote file access via rsh and rcp. Emacs misc features * Autotype: (autotype). Convenient features for text that you enter frequently in Emacs. * Calc: (calc). Advanced desk calculator and mathematical tool. * Dired-X: (dired-x). Dired Extra Features. * EasyPG Assistant: (epa). An Emacs user interface to GNU Privacy Guard. * Ebrowse: (ebrowse). A C++ class browser for Emacs. * EDE: (ede). The Emacs Development Environment. * Ediff: (ediff). A visual interface for comparing and merging programs. * EDT: (edt). An Emacs emulation of the EDT editor. * EIEIO: (eieio). An object system for Emacs Lisp. * Eshell: (eshell). A command shell implemented in Emacs Lisp. * Flymake: (flymake). A universal on-the-fly syntax checker. * Forms: (forms). Emacs package for editing data bases by filling in forms. * PCL-CVS: (pcl-cvs). Emacs front-end to CVS. * RefTeX: (reftex). Emacs support for LaTeX cross-references and citations. * Remember: (remember). Simple information manager for Emacs. * Semantic: (semantic). Source code parsing utilities for Emacs. * SES: (ses). Simple Emacs Spreadsheet * Speedbar: (speedbar). File/Tag summarizing utility. * VIP: (vip). An older VI-emulation for Emacs. * VIPER: (viper). The newest Emacs VI-emulation mode. (also, A VI Plan for Emacs Rescue or the VI PERil.) * WoMan: (woman). Browse UN*X Manual Pages "W.O. (without) Man". Emacs lisp libraries * Auth-source: (auth). A single configuration for multiple applications. * CL: (cl). Partial Common Lisp support for Emacs Lisp. * D-Bus: (dbus). Using D-Bus in Emacs. * Emacs MIME: (emacs-mime). Emacs MIME de/composition library. * URL: (url). URL loading package. * Widget: (widget). The "widget" package used by the Emacs Customization facility. * SMTP: (smtpmail). Emacs library for sending mail via SMTP.