Mercurial > emacs
changeset 46040:3c219fd68a91
Update info on C-u C-x =.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 26 Jun 2002 22:38:34 +0000 |
parents | 3c5d96a2d05f |
children | 53b3233b2574 |
files | man/basic.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/basic.texi Wed Jun 26 22:37:27 2002 +0000 +++ b/man/basic.texi Wed Jun 26 22:38:34 2002 +0000 @@ -605,9 +605,10 @@ @kindex C-x = @findex what-cursor-position - The command @kbd{C-x =} (@code{what-cursor-position}) can be used to find out -the column that the cursor is in, and other miscellaneous information about -point. It displays a line in the echo area that looks like this: + The command @kbd{C-x =} (@code{what-cursor-position}) shows what +column the cursor is in, and other miscellaneous information about +point and the character after it. It displays a line in the echo area +that looks like this: @smallexample Char: c (0143, 99, 0x63) point=21044 of 26883(78%) column 53 @@ -665,8 +666,9 @@ identified as belonging to the @code{ascii} character set. It also shows the character's syntax, categories, and encodings both internally in the buffer and externally if you save the file. It also -shows the character's text properties, if any, and the font used to -display it. +shows the character's text properties (@pxref{Text Properties,,, +elisp, the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}), and any overlays containing it +(@pxref{Overlays,,, elisp, the same manual}). Here's an example showing the Latin-1 character A with grave accent, in a buffer whose coding system is @code{iso-2022-7bit}, whose @@ -686,7 +688,7 @@ terminal code: C0 Text properties - face: font-lock-variable-name-face + font-lock-face: font-lock-variable-name-face fontified: t @end smallexample