Mercurial > emacs
changeset 61108:6ce7613a2c0e
(Fortran Motion): Add fortran-end-of-block,
fortran-beginning-of-block.
author | Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 29 Mar 2005 19:07:36 +0000 |
parents | 9554f19ae068 |
children | 2a3dcfbeb0e6 |
files | man/programs.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 13 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/programs.texi Tue Mar 29 18:59:02 2005 +0000 +++ b/man/programs.texi Tue Mar 29 19:07:36 2005 +0000 @@ -1842,7 +1842,7 @@ In addition to the normal commands for moving by and operating on ``defuns'' (Fortran subprograms---functions and subroutines, as well as modules for F90 mode), Fortran mode provides special commands to move by -statements. +statements and other program units. @table @kbd @kindex C-c C-n @r{(Fortran mode)} @@ -1877,21 +1877,26 @@ (@code{f90-previous-block}). This is like @code{f90-next-block}, but moves backwards. +@kindex C-M-n @r{(Fortran mode)} @kindex C-M-n @r{(F90 mode)} +@findex fortran-end-of-block @findex f90-end-of-block @item C-M-n -Move to the end of the current code block (@code{f90-end-of-block}). -This is for F90 mode only. With a numeric agument, move forward that -number of blocks. This command checks for consistency of block types -and labels (if present), but it does not check the outermost block -since that may be incomplete. The mark is set before moving point. +Move to the end of the current code block (@code{fortran-end-of-block}, +@code{f90-end-of-block}). With a numeric agument, move forward that +number of blocks. The mark is set before moving point. The F90 mode +version of this command checks for consistency of block types and labels +(if present), but it does not check the outermost block since that may +be incomplete. +@kindex C-M-p @r{(Fortran mode)} @kindex C-M-p @r{(F90 mode)} +@findex fortran-beginning-of-block @findex f90-beginning-of-block @item C-M-p Move to the start of the current code block -(@code{f90-beginning-of-block}). This is like @code{f90-end-of-block}, -but moves backwards. +(@code{fortran-beginning-of-block}, @code{f90-beginning-of-block}). This +is like @code{fortran-end-of-block}, but moves backwards. @end table @node Fortran Indent