Mercurial > emacs
changeset 68689:05a209d3a8c2
Minor cleanups. "Graphical display", not window system.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 07 Feb 2006 23:52:35 +0000 |
parents | 1cfffe48ae02 |
children | 1c1a7dd79bb3 |
files | man/custom.texi man/frames.texi |
diffstat | 2 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/custom.texi Tue Feb 07 23:51:34 2006 +0000 +++ b/man/custom.texi Tue Feb 07 23:52:35 2006 +0000 @@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ Font-Lock mode automatically highlights certain textual units found in programs, such as comments, strings, and function names being defined. -This requires a window system that can display multiple fonts. +This requires a graphical display that can show multiple fonts. @xref{Faces}. ISO Accents mode makes the characters @samp{`}, @samp{'}, @samp{"}, @@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ @file{~/.emacs} file (@pxref{Init File}). The appearance of the example buffers in this section is typically -different under a window system, since faces are then used to indicate +different under a graphical display, since faces are then used to indicate buttons, links and editable fields. @menu @@ -2030,7 +2030,7 @@ When Emacs is started, it normally loads a Lisp program from the file @file{.emacs} or @file{.emacs.el} in your home directory -(see @ref{General Variables, HOME} if you don't know where that is). +(see @ref{General Variables, HOME}, if you don't know where that is). We call this file your @dfn{init file} because it specifies how to initialize Emacs for you. You can use the command line switch @samp{-q} to prevent loading your init file, and @samp{-u} (or @@ -2456,7 +2456,7 @@ editor customizations even if you are running as the super user. More precisely, Emacs first determines which user's init file to use. -It gets the user name from the environment variables @env{LOGNAME} and +It gets your user name from the environment variables @env{LOGNAME} and @env{USER}; if neither of those exists, it uses effective user-ID. If that user name matches the real user-ID, then Emacs uses @env{HOME}; otherwise, it looks up the home directory corresponding to that user
--- a/man/frames.texi Tue Feb 07 23:51:34 2006 +0000 +++ b/man/frames.texi Tue Feb 07 23:52:35 2006 +0000 @@ -510,8 +510,10 @@ @kindex C-z @r{(X windows)} @findex iconify-or-deiconify-frame Iconify the selected Emacs frame (@code{iconify-or-deiconify-frame}). -The normal meaning of @kbd{C-z}, to suspend Emacs, is not useful under a -window system, so it has a different binding in that case. +The normal meaning of @kbd{C-z}, to suspend Emacs, is not useful under +a graphical display that allows multiple applications to operate +simultaneously in their own windies, so Emacs gives @kbd{C-z} a +different binding in that case. If you type this command on an Emacs frame's icon, it deiconifies the frame. @@ -967,8 +969,8 @@ @cindex mouse avoidance @vindex mouse-avoidance-mode -Mouse Avoidance mode keeps the window system mouse pointer away from -point, to avoid obscuring text. Whenever it moves the mouse, it also +Mouse Avoidance mode keeps the mouse pointer away from point, to avoid +obscuring text you want to edit. Whenever it moves the mouse, it also raises the frame. To use Mouse Avoidance mode, customize the variable @code{mouse-avoidance-mode}. You can set this to various values to move the mouse in several ways: