Mercurial > emacs
changeset 60245:78a1812a9fd5
(Minibuffer): Prompts are highlighted.
(Minibuffer Edit): Newline = C-j only on text terminals.
Clarify resize-mini-windows values.
Mention M-PAGEUP and M-PAGEDOWN.
(Completion Commands): Mouse-1 like Mouse-2.
(Minibuffer History): Explain history commands better.
(Repetition): Add xref to Incremental Search.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 25 Feb 2005 13:54:21 +0000 |
parents | 1f085a397379 |
children | 6fbd9e87233f |
files | man/mini.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 31 insertions(+), 23 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/mini.texi Fri Feb 25 13:51:59 2005 +0000 +++ b/man/mini.texi Fri Feb 25 13:54:21 2005 +0000 @@ -16,9 +16,10 @@ @cindex prompt When the minibuffer is in use, it appears in the echo area, and the terminal's cursor moves there. The beginning of the minibuffer line -displays a @dfn{prompt} which says what kind of input you should supply and -how it will be used. Often this prompt is derived from the name of the -command that the argument is for. The prompt normally ends with a colon. +displays a @dfn{prompt} in a special color, to say what kind of input +you should supply and how it will be used. Often this prompt is +derived from the name of the command that the argument is for. The +prompt normally ends with a colon. @cindex default argument Sometimes a @dfn{default argument} appears in parentheses after the @@ -123,8 +124,8 @@ Since @key{RET} in the minibuffer is defined to exit the minibuffer, you can't use it to insert a newline in the minibuffer. To do that, -type @kbd{C-o} or @kbd{C-q C-j}. (Recall that a newline is really the -character control-J.) +type @kbd{C-o} or @kbd{C-q C-j}. (On text terminals, newline is +really the @acronym{ASCII} character control-J.) The minibuffer has its own window which always has space on the screen but acts as if it were not there when the minibuffer is not in use. When @@ -147,12 +148,13 @@ @vindex resize-mini-windows The minibuffer window expands vertically as necessary to hold the -text that you put in the minibuffer, if @code{resize-mini-windows} is -non-@code{nil}. If @code{resize-mini-windows} is @code{t}, the window -is always resized to fit the size of the text it displays. If -@code{resize-mini-windows} is the symbol @code{grow-only}, the window -grows when the size of displayed text increases, but shrinks (back to -the normal size) only when the minibuffer becomes inactive. +text that you put in the minibuffer. If @code{resize-mini-windows} is +@code{t} (the default), the window is always resized to fit the size +of the text it displays. If its value is the symbol @code{grow-only}, +the window grows when the size of displayed text increases, but +shrinks (back to the normal size) only when the minibuffer becomes +inactive. If its value is @code{nil}, you have to adjust the height +yourself. @vindex max-mini-window-height The variable @code{max-mini-window-height} controls the maximum @@ -161,11 +163,13 @@ maximum number of lines; @code{nil} means do not resize the minibuffer window automatically. The default value is 0.25. - If while in the minibuffer you issue a command that displays help text -of any sort in another window, you can use the @kbd{C-M-v} command while -in the minibuffer to scroll the help text. This lasts until you exit -the minibuffer. This feature is especially useful when you display -a buffer listing possible completions. @xref{Other Window}. + If, while in the minibuffer, you issue a command that displays help +text of any sort in another window, you can use the @kbd{C-M-v} +command while in the minibuffer to scroll the help text. +(@kbd{M-@key{PAGEUP}} and @kbd{M-@key{PAGEDOWN}} also operate on that +help text.) This lasts until you exit the minibuffer. This feature +is especially useful when you display a buffer listing possible +completions. @xref{Other Window}. @vindex enable-recursive-minibuffers Emacs normally disallows most commands that use the minibuffer while @@ -273,8 +277,9 @@ @table @kbd @findex mouse-choose-completion -@item Mouse-2 -Clicking mouse button 2 on a completion in the list of possible +@item Mouse-1 +@itemx Mouse-2 +Clicking mouse button 1 or 2 on a completion in the list of possible completions chooses that completion (@code{mouse-choose-completion}). You normally use this command while point is in the minibuffer, but you must click in the list of completions, not in the minibuffer itself. @@ -447,10 +452,13 @@ @findex previous-history-element The simplest way to reuse the saved arguments in the history list is to move through the history list one element at a time. While in the -minibuffer, use @kbd{M-p} or up-arrow (@code{previous-history-element}) -to ``move to'' the next earlier minibuffer input, and use @kbd{M-n} or -down-arrow (@code{next-history-element}) to ``move to'' the next later -input. +minibuffer, use @kbd{M-p} or up-arrow +(@code{previous-history-element}) to ``move to'' the next earlier +minibuffer input, and use @kbd{M-n} or down-arrow +(@code{next-history-element}) to ``move to'' the next later input. +These commands don't move the cursor, they bring different saved +strings into the minibuffer. But you can think of them as ``moving'' +through the history list. The previous input that you fetch from the history entirely replaces the contents of the minibuffer. To use it as the argument, exit the @@ -570,7 +578,7 @@ it normally does not appear in the history list for @kbd{C-x @key{ESC} @key{ESC}}. You can make it appear in the history by setting @code{isearch-resume-in-command-history} to a non-@code{nil} -value. +value. @xref{Incremental Search}. @vindex command-history The list of previous minibuffer-using commands is stored as a Lisp