Mercurial > emacs
changeset 60294:8c6bb7dbf4fb
From Matt Hodges <MPHodges@member.fsf.org>:
(General Calendar): Document binding of scroll-other-window-down.
(Mayan Calendar): Fix earliest date.
(Time Intervals): Document timeclock-change. Fix
timeclock-ask-before-exiting documentation.
author | Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 27 Feb 2005 20:32:53 +0000 |
parents | 7b3bc20cd4d8 |
children | 53b5914886cc |
files | man/calendar.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 20 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/calendar.texi Sun Feb 27 20:31:59 2005 +0000 +++ b/man/calendar.texi Sun Feb 27 20:32:53 2005 +0000 @@ -291,7 +291,9 @@ @item C-c C-l Regenerate the calendar window (@code{redraw-calendar}). @item SPC -Scroll the next window (@code{scroll-other-window}). +Scroll the next window up (@code{scroll-other-window}). +@item DEL +Scroll the next window down (@code{scroll-other-window-down}). @item q Exit from calendar (@code{exit-calendar}). @end table @@ -314,8 +316,9 @@ @kindex SPC @r{(Calendar mode)} In Calendar mode, you can use @kbd{SPC} (@code{scroll-other-window}) -to scroll the other window. This is handy when you display a list of -holidays or diary entries in another window. +and @kbd{DEL} (@code{scroll-other-window-down}) to scroll the other +window up or down, respectively. This is handy when you display a list +of holidays or diary entries in another window. @kindex q @r{(Calendar mode)} @findex exit-calendar @@ -437,8 +440,8 @@ @findex list-calendar-holidays To get even more detailed information, use the @kbd{a} command, which displays a separate buffer containing a list of all holidays in the -current three-month range. You can use @key{SPC} in the calendar window -to scroll that list. +current three-month range. You can use @key{SPC} and @key{DEL} in the +calendar window to scroll that list up and down, respectively. @findex holidays The command @kbd{M-x holidays} displays the list of holidays for the @@ -861,7 +864,7 @@ @noindent Thus, the long count date 12.16.11.16.6 means 12 baktun, 16 katun, 11 tun, 16 uinal, and 6 kin. The Emacs calendar can handle Mayan long -count dates as early as 7.17.18.13.1, but no earlier. When you use the +count dates as early as 7.17.18.13.3, but no earlier. When you use the @kbd{g m l} command, type the Mayan long count date with the baktun, katun, tun, uinal, and kin separated by periods. @@ -1510,11 +1513,14 @@ @findex timeclock-in @findex timeclock-out +@findex timeclock-change @findex timeclock-workday-remaining @findex timeclock-when-to-leave Use the @kbd{M-x timeclock-in} command when you start working on a project, and @kbd{M-x timeclock-out} command when you're done. Each -time you do this, it adds one time interval to the record of the project. +time you do this, it adds one time interval to the record of the +project. You can change to working on a different project with @kbd{M-x +timeclock-change}. Once you've collected data from a number of time intervals, you can use @kbd{M-x timeclock-workday-remaining} to see how much time is left to @@ -1529,12 +1535,13 @@ @code{t}, or invoke the @kbd{M-x timeclock-modeline-display} command. @vindex timeclock-ask-before-exiting - Terminating the current Emacs session might or might not mean that -you have stopped working on the project. If you'd like Emacs to ask -you about this, set the value of the variable -@code{timeclock-ask-before-exiting} to @code{t} (via @kbd{M-x -customize}). By default, only an explicit @kbd{M-x timeclock-out} -tells Emacs that the current interval is over. + Terminating the current Emacs session might or might not mean that you +have stopped working on the project and, by default, Emacs queries this. +You can, however, set the value of the variable +@code{timeclock-ask-before-exiting} to @code{nil} (via @kbd{M-x +customize}) to avoid this behaviour; then, only an explicit @kbd{M-x +timeclock-out} or @kbd{M-x timeclock-change} will tell Emacs that the +current interval is over. @cindex @file{.timelog} file @vindex timeclock-file