Mercurial > emacs
changeset 59836:9d3ae9d4372d
(Undo): Update description of `undo-outer-limit'.
author | Luc Teirlinck <teirllm@auburn.edu> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 31 Jan 2005 23:18:45 +0000 |
parents | 942539e5cf4e |
children | 99a4ebcb02a2 |
files | man/basic.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/basic.texi Mon Jan 31 23:17:42 2005 +0000 +++ b/man/basic.texi Mon Jan 31 23:18:45 2005 +0000 @@ -399,13 +399,13 @@ Regardless of the values of those variables, the most recent change is never discarded unless it gets bigger than @code{undo-outer-limit} -(normally 300,000). At that point, Emacs asks whether to discard the -undo information even for the current command. (You also have the -option of quitting.) So there is normally no danger that garbage -collection occurring right after an unintentional large change might -prevent you from undoing it. But if you didn't expect the command -to create such large undo data, you can get rid of it and prevent -Emacs from running out of memory. +(normally 3,000,000). At that point, Emacs discards the undo data and +warns you about it. This is the only situation in which you can not +undo the last command. If this happens, you can increase the value of +@code{undo-outer-limit} to make it even less likely to happen in the +future. But if you didn't expect the command to create such large +undo data, then it is probably a bug and you should report it. +@xref{Bugs,, Reporting Bugs}. The reason the @code{undo} command has two keys, @kbd{C-x u} and @kbd{C-_}, set up to run it is that it is worthy of a single-character