Mercurial > emacs
changeset 38229:ae24bb82158d
Get rid of inexplicable @t's in values of paragraph-start and
paragraph-separate and page-delimiter.
Say C-x C-p activates the mark.
Prevent break inside `level-1'.
Clean up presentation of items within M-C-Mouse-1.
Minor changes.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 29 Jun 2001 03:19:40 +0000 |
parents | 812026b169d4 |
children | ec2015ba505d |
files | man/text.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 25 insertions(+), 26 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/text.texi Fri Jun 29 03:17:10 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/text.texi Fri Jun 29 03:19:40 2001 +0000 @@ -75,7 +75,6 @@ Emacs has commands for moving over or operating on words. By convention, the keys for them are all Meta characters. -@c widecommands @table @kbd @item M-f Move forward over a word (@code{forward-word}). @@ -295,8 +294,8 @@ example, blank lines). Lines that start a new paragraph and are contained in it must match only @code{paragraph-start}, not @code{paragraph-separate}. For example, in Fundamental mode, -@code{paragraph-start} is @code{"[ @t{\}t@t{\}n@t{\}f]"} and -@code{paragraph-separate} is @code{"[ @t{\}t@t{\}f]*$"}.@refill +@code{paragraph-start} is @w{@code{"[ \t\n\f]"}}, and +@code{paragraph-separate} is @w{@code{"[ \t\f]*$"}}. Normally it is desirable for page boundaries to separate paragraphs. The default values of these variables recognize the usual separator for @@ -317,7 +316,6 @@ since pages are often meaningful divisions of the file, Emacs provides commands to move over them and operate on them. -@c WideCommands @table @kbd @item C-x [ Move point to previous page boundary (@code{backward-page}). @@ -344,12 +342,14 @@ The @kbd{C-x C-p} command (@code{mark-page}) puts point at the beginning of the current page and the mark at the end. The page delimiter at the end is included (the mark follows it). The page -delimiter at the front is excluded (point follows it). @kbd{C-x C-p -C-w} is a handy way to kill a page to move it elsewhere. If you move to -another page delimiter with @kbd{C-x [} and @kbd{C-x ]}, then yank the -killed page, all the pages will be properly delimited once again. The -reason @kbd{C-x C-p} includes only the following page delimiter in the -region is to ensure that. +delimiter at the front is excluded (point follows it). In Transient +Mark mode, this command activates the mark. + + @kbd{C-x C-p C-w} is a handy way to kill a page to move it +elsewhere. If you move to another page delimiter with @kbd{C-x [} and +@kbd{C-x ]}, then yank the killed page, all the pages will be properly +delimited once again. The reason @kbd{C-x C-p} includes only the +following page delimiter in the region is to ensure that. A numeric argument to @kbd{C-x C-p} is used to specify which page to go to, relative to the current one. Zero means the current page. One means @@ -373,7 +373,7 @@ @vindex page-delimiter The variable @code{page-delimiter} controls where pages begin. Its value is a regexp that matches the beginning of a line that separates -pages. The normal value of this variable is @code{"^@t{\}f"}, which +pages. The normal value of this variable is @code{"^\f"}, which matches a formfeed character at the beginning of a line. @node Filling @@ -730,7 +730,6 @@ Emacs has commands for converting either a single word or any arbitrary range of text to upper case or to lower case. -@c WideCommands @table @kbd @item M-l Convert following word to lower case (@code{downcase-word}). @@ -1170,7 +1169,7 @@ @findex foldout-zoom-subtree With Foldout, you use @kbd{C-c C-z} (@kbd{M-x foldout-zoom-subtree}). This exposes the body and child subheadings, and narrows the buffer so -that only the level-1 heading, the body and the level-2 headings are +that only the @w{level-1} heading, the body and the level-2 headings are visible. Now to look under one of the level-2 headings, position the cursor on it and use @kbd{C-c C-z} again. This exposes the level-2 body and its level-3 child subheadings and narrows the buffer again. Zooming @@ -1208,16 +1207,16 @@ @table @asis @item @kbd{M-C-Mouse-1} zooms in on the heading clicked on -@table @asis -@item single click -expose body. -@item double click -expose subheadings. -@item triple click -expose body and subheadings. -@item quad click -expose entire subtree. -@end table +@itemize @asis +@item +single click: expose body. +@item +double click: expose subheadings. +@item +triple click: expose body and subheadings. +@item +quad click: expose entire subtree. +@end itemize @item @kbd{M-C-Mouse-2} exposes text under the heading clicked on @table @r @item single click @@ -1702,9 +1701,9 @@ margins, and types of filling and justification. In the future, we plan to implement other formatting features as well. - Enriched mode is a minor mode (@pxref{Minor Modes}). Typically it is -used in conjunction with Text mode (@pxref{Text Mode}). However, you -can also use it with other major modes such as Outline mode and + Enriched mode is a minor mode (@pxref{Minor Modes}). It is +typically used in conjunction with Text mode (@pxref{Text Mode}), but +you can also use it with other major modes such as Outline mode and Paragraph-Indent Text mode. @cindex text/enriched MIME format