Mercurial > emacs
changeset 59943:1b1724ddcdad
(Character Motion): Mention default arg for forward-char.
backward-char refers to forward-char.
(Word Motion): Mention default arg for forward-word.
(Buffer End Motion): Mention default arg for beginning-of-buffer.
Simplify end-of-buffer.
(Text Lines): Mention default arg for forward-line.
(List Motion): Mention default arg for beginning/end-of-defun.
(Skipping Characters): Minor fixes in explaining character-set.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 06 Feb 2005 10:54:05 +0000 |
parents | 1f6a9cf44999 |
children | b58bba262639 |
files | lispref/positions.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 41 insertions(+), 37 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lispref/positions.texi Sun Feb 06 10:49:35 2005 +0000 +++ b/lispref/positions.texi Sun Feb 06 10:54:05 2005 +0000 @@ -165,23 +165,20 @@ @c @kindex end-of-buffer This function moves point @var{count} characters forward, towards the end of the buffer (or backward, towards the beginning of the buffer, if -@var{count} is negative). If the function attempts to move point past -the beginning or end of the buffer (or the limits of the accessible -portion, when narrowing is in effect), an error is signaled with error -code @code{beginning-of-buffer} or @code{end-of-buffer}. +@var{count} is negative). If @var{count} is @code{nil}, the default +is 1. + +If this attempts to move past the beginning or end of the buffer (or +the limits of the accessible portion, when narrowing is in effect), it +signals an error with error symbol @code{beginning-of-buffer} or +@code{end-of-buffer}. In an interactive call, @var{count} is the numeric prefix argument. @end deffn @deffn Command backward-char &optional count -This function moves point @var{count} characters backward, towards the -beginning of the buffer (or forward, towards the end of the buffer, if -@var{count} is negative). If the function attempts to move point past -the beginning or end of the buffer (or the limits of the accessible -portion, when narrowing is in effect), an error is signaled with error -code @code{beginning-of-buffer} or @code{end-of-buffer}. - -In an interactive call, @var{count} is the numeric prefix argument. +This is just like @code{forward-char} except that it moves +in the opposite direction. @end deffn @node Word Motion @@ -192,12 +189,15 @@ @deffn Command forward-word &optional count This function moves point forward @var{count} words (or backward if -@var{count} is negative). ``Moving one word'' means moving until point -crosses a word-constituent character and then encounters a -word-separator character. However, this function cannot move point past -the boundary of the accessible portion of the buffer, or across a field -boundary (@pxref{Fields}). The most common case of a field boundary is -the end of the prompt in the minibuffer. +@var{count} is negative). If @var{count} is @code{nil}, it moves +forward one word. + +``Moving one word'' means moving until point crosses a +word-constituent character and then encounters a word-separator +character. However, this function cannot move point past the boundary +of the accessible portion of the buffer, or across a field boundary +(@pxref{Fields}). The most common case of a field boundary is the end +of the prompt in the minibuffer. If it is possible to move @var{count} words, without being stopped prematurely by the buffer boundary or a field boundary, the value is @@ -258,22 +258,24 @@ @deffn Command beginning-of-buffer &optional n This function moves point to the beginning of the buffer (or the limits of the accessible portion, when narrowing is in effect), setting the -mark at the previous position. If @var{n} is non-@code{nil}, then it -puts point @var{n} tenths of the way from the beginning of the -accessible portion of the buffer. +mark at the previous position (except in Transient Mark mode, if +the mark is already active, it does not set the mark.) -In an interactive call, @var{n} is the numeric prefix argument, -if provided; otherwise @var{n} defaults to @code{nil}. +If @var{n} is non-@code{nil}, then it puts point @var{n} tenths of the +way from the beginning of the accessible portion of the buffer. In an +interactive call, @var{n} is the numeric prefix argument, if provided; +otherwise @var{n} defaults to @code{nil}. @strong{Warning:} Don't use this function in Lisp programs! @end deffn @deffn Command end-of-buffer &optional n -This function moves point to the end of the buffer (or the limits of the -accessible portion, when narrowing is in effect), setting the mark at -the previous position. If @var{n} is non-@code{nil}, then it puts point -@var{n} tenths of the way from the end of the accessible portion of the -buffer. +This function moves point to the end of the buffer (or the limits of +the accessible portion, when narrowing is in effect), setting the mark +at the previous position (except in Transient Mark mode when the mark +is already active). If @var{n} is non-@code{nil}, then it puts point +@var{n} tenths of the way from the end of the accessible portion of +the buffer. In an interactive call, @var{n} is the numeric prefix argument, if provided; otherwise @var{n} defaults to @code{nil}. @@ -373,7 +375,7 @@ the line. If @var{count} is negative, it moves point @minus{}@var{count} lines backward, to the beginning of a line. If @var{count} is zero, it moves point to the beginning of the current -line. +line. If @var{count} is @code{nil}, that means 1. If @code{forward-line} encounters the beginning or end of the buffer (or of the accessible portion) before finding that many lines, it sets point @@ -703,13 +705,15 @@ @deffn Command beginning-of-defun &optional arg This function moves back to the @var{arg}th beginning of a defun. If @var{arg} is negative, this actually moves forward, but it still moves -to the beginning of a defun, not to the end of one. +to the beginning of a defun, not to the end of one. @var{arg} defaults +to 1. @end deffn @deffn Command end-of-defun &optional arg This function moves forward to the @var{arg}th end of a defun. If @var{arg} is negative, this actually moves backward, but it still moves -to the end of a defun, not to the beginning of one. +to the end of a defun, not to the beginning of one. @var{arg} defaults +to 1. @end deffn @defopt defun-prompt-regexp @@ -761,12 +765,12 @@ continues until it reaches a character that does not match. The function returns the number of characters moved over. -The argument @var{character-set} is like the inside of a -@samp{[@dots{}]} in a regular expression except that @samp{]} is never -special and @samp{\} quotes @samp{^}, @samp{-} or @samp{\}. Thus, -@code{"a-zA-Z"} skips over all letters, stopping before the first -nonletter, and @code{"^a-zA-Z"} skips nonletters stopping before the -first letter. @xref{Regular Expressions}. +The argument @var{character-set} is a string, like the inside of a +@samp{[@dots{}]} in a regular expression except that @samp{]} does not +terminate it, and @samp{\} quotes @samp{^}, @samp{-} or @samp{\}. +Thus, @code{"a-zA-Z"} skips over all letters, stopping before the +first nonletter, and @code{"^a-zA-Z"} skips nonletters stopping before +the first letter. @xref{Regular Expressions}. If @var{limit} is supplied (it must be a number or a marker), it specifies the maximum position in the buffer that point can be skipped