# HG changeset patch # User Kevin Ryde # Date 1261862937 0 # Node ID dfa5f38a6a2ac8fa26837ea272c92fa403bef547 # Parent 134a2112d31c60ef62c95efcb5574202961fa9f3 * man.el (man): Revise docstring a bit to show -a and -l as examples. Add -k description since support for it has otherwise been a secret. (Further to bug#3717.) diff -r 134a2112d31c -r dfa5f38a6a2a lisp/man.el --- a/lisp/man.el Sat Dec 26 21:14:25 2009 +0000 +++ b/lisp/man.el Sat Dec 26 21:28:57 2009 +0000 @@ -808,16 +808,39 @@ ;;;###autoload (defun man (man-args) "Get a Un*x manual page and put it in a buffer. -This command is the top-level command in the man package. It runs a Un*x -command to retrieve and clean a manpage in the background and places the -results in a Man mode (manpage browsing) buffer. See variable -`Man-notify-method' for what happens when the buffer is ready. -If a buffer already exists for this man page, it will display immediately. +This command is the top-level command in the man package. It +runs a Un*x command to retrieve and clean a manpage in the +background and places the results in a `Man-mode' browsing +buffer. See variable `Man-notify-method' for what happens when +the buffer is ready. If a buffer already exists for this man +page, it will display immediately. + +For a manpage from a particular section, use either of the +following. \"cat(1)\" is how cross-references appear and is +passed to man as \"1 cat\". + + cat(1) + 1 cat -To specify a man page from a certain section, type SUBJECT(SECTION) or -SECTION SUBJECT when prompted for a manual entry. To see manpages from -all sections related to a subject, put something appropriate into the -`Man-switches' variable, which see." +To see manpages from all sections related to a subject, use an +\"all pages\" option (which might be \"-a\" if it's not the +default), then step through with `Man-next-manpage' (\\\\[Man-next-manpage]) etc. +Add to `Man-switches' to make this option permanent. + + -a chmod + +An explicit filename can be given too. Use -l if it might +otherwise look like a page name. + + /my/file/name.1.gz + -l somefile.1 + +An \"apropos\" query with -k gives a buffer of matching page +names or descriptions. The pattern argument is usually an +\"egrep\" style regexp. + + -k pattern" + (interactive (list (let* ((default-entry (Man-default-man-entry)) ;; ignore case because that's friendly for bizarre