Mercurial > emacs
changeset 36154:b0a0856aa1c1
Minor cleanup.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 17 Feb 2001 17:02:12 +0000 |
parents | 87a2cea44a9c |
children | 3594ca3f5f64 |
files | man/speedbar.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 18 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/speedbar.texi Sat Feb 17 16:50:08 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/speedbar.texi Sat Feb 17 17:02:12 2001 +0000 @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- @c -@c $Id: speedbar.texi,v 1.5 2000/12/05 23:02:24 fx Exp $ +@c $Id: speedbar.texi,v 1.6 2000/12/05 23:06:42 fx Exp $ @c @c This file is part of GNU Emacs @@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ the needs of that mode. Throughout this manual, activities are defined as `clicking on', or -`expanding' items. Clicking means using using @kbd{mouse-2} on a +`expanding' items. Clicking means using using @kbd{Mouse-2} on a button. Expanding refers to clicking on an expansion button to display an expanded summary of the entry the expansion button is on. @xref{Basic Navigation}. @@ -360,28 +360,29 @@ The mouse bindings are: @table @kbd -@item mouse-1 +@item Mouse-1 Move cursor to that location. -@item mouse-2 -@itemx double-mouse-1 -Activate the current button. @kbd{double-mouse-1} is called a @dfn{double +@item Mouse-2 +@itemx Double-Mouse-1 +Activate the current button. @kbd{Double-Mouse-1} is called a @dfn{double click} on other platforms, and is useful for windows users with two button mice. -@c Isn't it true that with two-button mice, the right button is mouse-2? -@item S-mouse-2 -@itemx S-double-mouse-1 +@c Isn't it true that with two-button mice, the right button is Mouse-2? +@c On GNU/Linux, the right button is Mouse-3. +@item S-Mouse-2 +@itemx S-Double-Mouse-1 @cindex power click -This has the same effect as @kbd{mouse-2}, except it is called a power +This has the same effect as @kbd{Mouse-2}, except it is called a power click. This means that if a group with an expansion button @samp{+} is clicked, any caches are flushed, and subitems re-read. If it is a name, it will be opened in a new frame. -@item mouse-3 +@item Mouse-3 Activate the speedbar menu. The item selected affects the line clicked, not the line where the cursor was. -@item mode-line mouse-1 +@item Mouse-1 @r{(mode line)} Activate the menu. This affects the item the cursor is on before the click, since the mouse was not clicked on anything. -@item C-mouse-1 +@item C-Mouse-1 Buffers sub-menu. The buffer in the attached frame is switched. @end table @@ -399,8 +400,8 @@ specialized modes make it easier to navigate the relevant pieces of information, such as files and directories, or buffers. -In the main menu, found by clicking @kbd{mouse-3}, there is a submenu -labeled ``Displays''. This submenu lets you easily choose between +In the main menu, found by clicking @kbd{Mouse-3}, there is a submenu +labeled @samp{Displays}. This submenu lets you easily choose between different display modes. The contents are modes currently loaded into emacs. By default, this @@ -846,8 +847,8 @@ When using the file mode in speedbar, information regarding a version control system adds small details to the display. If a file is in a -version control system, and is ``checked out'', or ``locked'' locally, an -asterisk @samp{*} is placed at the end of the file name. In addition, +version control system, and is ``checked out'' or ``locked'' locally, an +asterisk @samp{*} appears at the end of the file name. In addition, the directory name for Version Control systems are left out of the speedbar display.