Mercurial > emacs
changeset 38866:662d4bf4871a
Avoid saying "Unix" in a way that includes GNU.
Use "file name" rather than "path name", per GNU conventions.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 20 Aug 2001 01:20:03 +0000 |
parents | 62e02f5ae533 |
children | bd208373c5a8 |
files | man/viper.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/viper.texi Mon Aug 20 01:19:30 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/viper.texi Mon Aug 20 01:20:03 2001 +0000 @@ -624,10 +624,10 @@ @cindex Ex commands The current working directory of a buffer is automatically inserted in the minibuffer if you type @kbd{:e} then space. Absolute filenames are -required less often in Viper. For path names, Emacs uses a convention that -is slightly different from that of Unix. It is designed to minimize the -need for deleting path names that Emacs provides in its prompts. (This is -usually convenient, but occasionally the prompt may suggest a wrong path +required less often in Viper. For file names, Emacs uses a convention that +is slightly different from other programs. It is designed to minimize the +need for deleting file names that Emacs provides in its prompts. (This is +usually convenient, but occasionally the prompt may suggest a wrong file name for you.) If you see a prompt @kbd{/usr/foo/} and you wish to edit the file @kbd{~/.viper}, you don't have to erase the prompt. Instead, simply continue typing what you need. Emacs will interpret @kbd{/usr/foo/~/.viper} @@ -865,7 +865,7 @@ text, you should perform a non-deleting action, e.g., move the cursor one character in any direction. @item Absolute Filenames -@cindex absolute paths +@cindex absolute file names The current directory name for a file is automatically prepended to the file name in any @kbd{:e}, @kbd{:r}, @kbd{:w}, etc., command (in Emacs, each buffer has a @@ -879,8 +879,8 @@ You should be aware that Emacs interprets @kbd{/foo/bar//bla} as @kbd{/bla} and @kbd{/foo/~/bar} as @kbd{~/bar}. This is designed to -minimize the need for erasing path names that Emacs suggests in its -prompts, if a suggested path name is not what you wanted. +minimize the need for erasing file names that Emacs suggests in its +prompts, if a suggested file name is not what you wanted. The command @kbd{:cd} will change the default directory for the current Emacs buffer. The Ex command @kbd{:e} will interpret the @@ -1135,8 +1135,8 @@ @cindex completion Completion is done when you type @key{TAB}. The Emacs completer does not -grok wildcards in filenames. Once you type a wildcard, the completer will -no longer work for that path. Remember that Emacs interprets a file name +grok wildcards in file names. Once you type a wildcard, the completer will +no longer work for that file name. Remember that Emacs interprets a file name of the form @kbd{/foo//bar} as @kbd{/bar} and @kbd{/foo/~/bar} as @kbd{~/bar}. @@ -1791,7 +1791,7 @@ @item viper-glob-function The value of this variable is the function symbol used to expand wildcard symbols. This is platform-dependent. The default tries to set this variable -to work with most Unix shells, MS Windows, OS/2, etc. However, if it +to work with most shells, MS Windows, OS/2, etc. However, if it doesn't work the way you expect, you should write your own. Use @code{viper-glob-unix-files} and @code{viper-glob-mswindows-files} in @file{viper-util.el} as examples.