changeset 37356:c9bd237ce092

Minor clarification of case where both BACKSPACE and DELETE are handled.
author Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
date Sun, 15 Apr 2001 14:28:45 +0000
parents 981fa38deecf
children ad563f9185fb
files man/basic.texi
diffstat 1 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) [+]
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/basic.texi	Sun Apr 15 08:43:53 2001 +0000
+++ b/man/basic.texi	Sun Apr 15 14:28:45 2001 +0000
@@ -62,12 +62,12 @@
 @key{ENTER} key doesn't delete backwards, you need to do this.
 @xref{DEL Gets Help}, for an explanation of how.
 
-  Many keyboards have both a @key{BACKSPACE} key a short ways above
-@key{RET} or @key{ENTER}, and a @key{DELETE} key elsewhere.  In that
-case, the @key{BACKSPACE} key is @key{DEL}, and the @key{DELETE} key
-does something else---it deletes ``forwards,'' deleting the character
-after point, the one underneath the cursor, like @kbd{C-d} (see
-below).
+  Most PC keyboards have both a @key{BACKSPACE} key a short ways above
+@key{RET} or @key{ENTER}, and a @key{DELETE} key elsewhere.  On these
+keyboards, Emacs supports when possible the usual convention that the
+@key{BACKSPACE} key deletes backwards (it is @key{DEL}), while the
+@key{DELETE} key deletes ``forwards,'' deleting the character after
+point, the one underneath the cursor, like @kbd{C-d} (see below).
 
 @kindex RET
 @cindex newline