Mercurial > emacs
changeset 36726:d18a841a4a5a
Clarify key bindings vs running a command by name.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 12 Mar 2001 03:32:46 +0000 |
parents | 640fb21a2098 |
children | d184144845bc |
files | man/m-x.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/man/m-x.texi Mon Mar 12 03:31:14 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/m-x.texi Mon Mar 12 03:32:46 2001 +0000 @@ -4,18 +4,19 @@ @node M-x, Help, Minibuffer, Top @chapter Running Commands by Name - The Emacs commands that are used often or that must be quick to type are -bound to keys---short sequences of characters---for convenient use. Other -Emacs commands that do not need to be brief are not bound to keys; to run -them, you must refer to them by name. (Command bound to keys can also -be invoked by their name.) @xref{Key Bindings}, for the description of + Every Emacs command has a name that you can use to run it. Commands +that are used often, or that must be quick to type, are also bound to +keys---short sequences of characters---for convenient use. You can +run them by name if you don't remember the keys. Other Emacs commands +that do not need to be quick are not bound to keys; the only way to +run them is by name. @xref{Key Bindings}, for the description of how to bind commands to keys. - A command name is, by convention, made up of one or more words, + By convention, a command name consists of one or more words, separated by hyphens; for example, @code{auto-fill-mode} or @code{manual-entry}. The use of English words makes the command name -easier to remember than a key made up of obscure characters, even though -it is more characters to type. +easier to remember than a key made up of obscure characters, even +though it is more characters to type. @kindex M-x The way to run a command by name is to start with @kbd{M-x}, type the @@ -26,8 +27,8 @@ command to be run. @xref{Minibuffer}, for full information on the features of the minibuffer. - You can use completion to enter the command name. For example, the -command @code{forward-char} can be invoked by name by typing + You can use completion to enter the command name. For example, you +can invoke the command @code{forward-char} by name by typing either @example M-x forward-char @key{RET}