Mercurial > emacs
changeset 55246:33248295ffc4
emacs -> Emacs.
author | Jesper Harder <harder@ifa.au.dk> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 30 Apr 2004 01:42:13 +0000 |
parents | 902d9cd6cdb6 |
children | a6dca495fdcd |
files | lispref/ChangeLog lispref/display.texi |
diffstat | 2 files changed, 13 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/lispref/ChangeLog Thu Apr 29 22:41:05 2004 +0000 +++ b/lispref/ChangeLog Fri Apr 30 01:42:13 2004 +0000 @@ -1,3 +1,7 @@ +2004-04-30 Jesper Harder <harder@ifa.au.dk> + + * display.texi: emacs -> Emacs. + 2004-04-27 Matthew Mundell <matt@mundell.ukfsn.org> * files.texi (Changing Files): Document set-file-times.
--- a/lispref/display.texi Thu Apr 29 22:41:05 2004 +0000 +++ b/lispref/display.texi Fri Apr 30 01:42:13 2004 +0000 @@ -3433,7 +3433,7 @@ etc. Emacs uses buttons for the hyper-links in help text and the like. A button is essentially a set of properties attached (via text -properties or overlays) to a region of text in an emacs buffer, which +properties or overlays) to a region of text in an Emacs buffer, which are called its button properties. @xref{Button Properties}. One of the these properties (@code{action}) is a function, which will @@ -3441,7 +3441,7 @@ The invoked function may then examine the button and use its other properties as desired. -In some ways the emacs button package duplicates functionality offered +In some ways the Emacs button package duplicates functionality offered by the widget package (@pxref{Top, , Introduction, widget, The Emacs Widget Library}), but the button package has the advantage that it is much faster, much smaller, and much simpler to use (for elisp @@ -3454,7 +3454,7 @@ @menu * Button Properties:: Button properties with special meanings. * Button Types:: Defining common properties for classes of buttons. -* Making Buttons:: Adding buttons to emacs buffers. +* Making Buttons:: Adding buttons to Emacs buffers. * Manipulating Buttons:: Getting and setting properties of buttons. * Button Buffer Commands:: Buffer-wide commands and bindings for buttons. * Manipulating Button Types:: @@ -3488,14 +3488,14 @@ @item face @kindex face @r{(button property)} -This is an emacs face controlling how buttons of this type are +This is an Emacs face controlling how buttons of this type are displayed; by default this is the @code{button} face. @item mouse-face @kindex mouse-face @r{(button property)} This is an additional face which controls appearance during mouse-overs (merged with the usual button face); by default this is -the usual emacs @code{highlight} face. +the usual Emacs @code{highlight} face. @item keymap @kindex keymap @r{(button property)} @@ -3512,7 +3512,7 @@ @item help-echo @kindex help-index @r{(button property)} -A string displayed by the emacs tool-tip help system; by default, +A string displayed by the Emacs tool-tip help system; by default, @code{"mouse-2, RET: Push this button"}. @item button @@ -3562,7 +3562,7 @@ Buttons are associated with a region of text, using an overlay or text-properties to hold button-specific information, all of which are initialized from the button's type (which defaults to the built-in -button type @code{button}). Like all emacs text, the appearance of +button type @code{button}). Like all Emacs text, the appearance of the button is governed by the @code{face} property; by default (via the @code{face} property inherited from the @code{button} button-type) this is a simple underline, like a typical web-page link. @@ -3594,7 +3594,7 @@ Insert a button with the label @var{label}. @end defun -The following functions are similar, but use emacs text-properties +The following functions are similar, but use Emacs text-properties (@pxref{Text Properties}) to hold the button properties, making the button actually part of the text instead of being a property of the buffer (using text-properties is usually faster than using overlays, @@ -3683,7 +3683,7 @@ @cindex button buffer commands These are commands and functions for locating and operating on -buttons in an emacs buffer. +buttons in an Emacs buffer. @code{push-button} is the command that a user uses to actually `push' a button, and is bound by default in the button itself to @key{RET}