Mercurial > emacs
changeset 34913:a64b182fd5e5
Clean up delete vs kill explanation.
Explain both can be undone.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 28 Dec 2000 17:54:10 +0000 |
parents | fb16d295afd8 |
children | 753fec5bba1a |
files | etc/TUTORIAL |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 26 insertions(+), 21 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/etc/TUTORIAL Thu Dec 28 16:23:19 2000 +0000 +++ b/etc/TUTORIAL Thu Dec 28 17:54:10 2000 +0000 @@ -84,9 +84,10 @@ >> Move into the line with C-f's and then up with C-p's. See what C-p does when the cursor is in the middle of the line. -Each text line ends with a Newline character, which serves to separate -it from the following line. The last line in your file ought to have -a Newline at the end (but Emacs does not require it to have one). +Each line of text ends with a Newline character, which serves to +separate it from the following line. The last line in your file ought +to have a Newline at the end (but Emacs does not require it to have +one). >> Try to C-b at the beginning of a line. It should move to the end of the previous line. This is because it moves back @@ -368,18 +369,13 @@ >> Type C-w. This will kill the text starting from the Y, and ending just before the n. -When you delete more than one character at a time, Emacs saves the -deleted text so that you can bring it back. Bringing back killed text -is called "yanking". You can yank the killed text either at the same -place where it was killed, or at some other place in the text. You -can yank the text several times in order to make multiple copies of -it. The command to yank is C-y. - -Note that the difference between "Killing" and "Deleting" something is -that "Killed" things can be yanked back, and "Deleted" things cannot. -Generally, the commands that can remove a lot of text save the text, -while the commands that delete just one character, or just blank lines -and spaces, do not save the deleted text. +The difference between "killing" and "deleting" is that "killed" text +can be reinserted, whereas "deleted" things cannot be reinserted. +Reinsertion of killed text is called "yanking". Generally, the +commands that can remove a lot of text kill the text (they set up so +that you can yank the text), while the commands that remove just one +character, or just blank lines and spaces, do deletion (so you cannot +yank that text). >> Move the cursor to the beginning of a line which is not empty. Then type C-k to kill the text on that line. @@ -392,15 +388,20 @@ their contents. This is not mere repetition. C-u 2 C-k kills two lines and their newlines; typing C-k twice would not do that. -To retrieve the last killed text and put it where the cursor currently -is, type C-y. +Bringing back killed text is called "yanking". (Think of it as +yanking back, or pulling back, some text that was taken away.) You +can yank the killed text either at the same place where it was killed, +or at some other place in the buffer, or even in a different file. +You can yank the text several times, which makes multiple copies of +it. + +The command for yanking is C-y. It reinserts the last killed text, +at the current cursor position. >> Try it; type C-y to yank the text back. -Think of C-y as if you were yanking something back that someone took -away from you. Notice that if you do several C-k's in a row, all of -the killed text is saved together, so that one C-y will yank all of -the lines. +If you do several C-k's in a row, all of the killed text is saved +together, so that one C-y will yank all of the lines at once. >> Do this now, type C-k several times. @@ -457,6 +458,10 @@ A numeric argument to C-_ or C-x u acts as a repeat count. +You can undo deletion of text just as you can undo killing of text. +The distinction between killing something and deleting it affects +whether you can yank it with C-y; it makes no difference for undo. + * FILES -------