Mercurial > emacs
changeset 37530:d4b1acaf82b0
Markup and proofreading fixes from YAGI Tatsuya <yagi@is.titech.ac.jp>.
author | Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 01 May 2001 10:57:11 +0000 |
parents | 473e0b9e5856 |
children | e71362bfa695 |
files | man/faq.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 24 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/faq.texi Mon Apr 30 15:25:53 2001 +0000 +++ b/man/faq.texi Tue May 01 10:57:11 2001 +0000 @@ -192,9 +192,9 @@ @kbd{C-?} a ``control'' key, since 127 has both bits 5 and 6 turned ON. Also, on very few keyboards does @kbd{C-?} generate ASCII code 127. -@inforef{Characters, Characters, emacs}, and @inforef{Keys, Keys, emacs}, -for more information. (@xref{On-line manual}, for more information about -Info.) +@inforef{Text Characters, Text Characters, emacs}, and @inforef{Keys, +Keys, emacs}, for more information. (@xref{On-line manual}, for more +information about Info.) @node Extended commands, On-line manual, Basic keys, FAQ notation @section What does @file{M-x @var{command}} mean? @@ -274,7 +274,7 @@ Some of these files are available individually via FTP or e-mail; see @ref{Informational files for Emacs}. They all are available in the source distribution. Many of the files in the @file{etc} directory are -also available via the Emacs "@samp{Help} menu, or by typing @kbd{C-h ?} +also available via the Emacs @samp{Help} menu, or by typing @kbd{C-h ?} (@kbd{M-x help-for-help}). Your system administrator may have removed the @file{src} directory and @@ -797,9 +797,9 @@ example, to view a Info file named @file{@var{info-file}} in your home directory, you can type this: -@lisp -C-h i g (~/@var{info-file}) @key{RET} -@end lisp +@example +@kbd{C-h i g (~/@var{info-file}) @key{RET}} +@end example @item You can create your own Info directory. You can tell Emacs where that @@ -1031,8 +1031,8 @@ @item In the Emacs distribution. Since Emacs 18.56, the FAQ at the time -of release has been part of the Emacs distribution as -@file{man/faq.texi} (@pxref{File-name conventions}). +of release has been part of the Emacs distribution as either +@file{etc/FAQ} or @file{man/faq.texi} (@pxref{File-name conventions}). @item Via the World Wide Web. A hypertext version is available at @@ -1359,8 +1359,8 @@ By default, the titlebar for a frame does contain the name of the buffer currently being visited, except if there is a single frame. In such a -case, the titlebar contains the name of the user and the machine at -which Emacs was invoked. This is done by setting +case, the titlebar contains Emacs invocation name and the name of the +machine at which Emacs was invoked. This is done by setting @code{frame-title-format} to the default value of @lisp @@ -1481,7 +1481,7 @@ Using @code{isearch-forward-regexp}: -@kbd{M-C-s [^ @key{TAB} @key{RET} C-q @key{RET} C-q C-l @key{SPC} -~]} +@kbd{M-C-s [^ @key{TAB} @key{LFD} C-q @key{RET} C-q C-l @key{SPC} -~]} To delete all unprintable characters, simply use replace-regexp: @@ -1507,13 +1507,14 @@ @cindex @code{transient-mark-mode} @cindex Region, highlighting a -If you are using a windowing system such as X, you can cause the region -to be highlighted when the mark is active by including +You can cause the region to be highlighted when the mark is active by +including @lisp (transient-mark-mode t) @end lisp +@noindent in your @file{.emacs} file. (Also see @ref{Turning on syntax highlighting}.) @@ -1626,9 +1627,9 @@ @end lisp When this is done, Emacs starts a subprocess running a program called -@samp{server}. @samp{server} creates a Unix domain socket. The socket -is either named @file{.emacs_server}, in the user's home directory, -or @file{esrv-@var{user-id}-@var{system-name}}, in the @file{/tmp} +@samp{emacsserver}. @samp{emacsserver} creates a Unix domain socket. +The socket is either named @file{.emacs_server}, in the user's home directory, +or @file{esrv-@var{userid}-@var{systemname}}, in the @file{/tmp} directory, depending on how @samp{emacsserver} was compiled. To get your news reader, mail reader, etc., to invoke @@ -1667,8 +1668,9 @@ @samp{emacsclient} specifies should be correct for the filesystem that the Emacs process sees. The Emacs process should not be suspended at the time @samp{emacsclient} is invoked. On Unix and GNU/Linux systems, -@samp{emacsclient} should either be invoked from another X window or -from a shell window inside Emacs itself. +@samp{emacsclient} should either be invoked from another X window, or +from a shell window inside Emacs itself, or from another interactive +session, e.g., by means of a @code{screen} program. @cindex @code{gnuserv} There is an enhanced version of @samp{emacsclient}/server called @@ -2452,8 +2454,8 @@ More detailed information---and more examples of how to create and modify menu options---are in the @cite{Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, under -``Keymaps''. (@xref{Emacs Lisp documentation}, for information on this -manual.) +``Menu Keymaps''. (@xref{Emacs Lisp documentation}, for information on +this manual.) @node Deleting menus and menu options, Turning on syntax highlighting, Modifying pull-down menus, Common requests @section How do I delete menus and menu options? @@ -4859,7 +4861,7 @@ @item For X11: Make sure it really is a @key{Meta} key. Use @code{xev} to find out what keysym your @key{Meta} key generates. It should be either -@key{Meta}_L or @key{Meta}_R. If it isn't, use @file{xmodmap} to fix +@code{Meta_L} or @code{Meta_R}. If it isn't, use @file{xmodmap} to fix the situation. @item