Mercurial > emacs
changeset 56822:e62b4de1b18d
(Secondary Selection): Setting the secondary selection with
M-Drag-Mouse-1 does not alter the kill ring, setting it with M-Mouse-1
and M-Mouse-3 does.
(Mode Line Mouse): C-Mouse-2 on scroll bar now also works for
toolkit scroll bars.
(Scroll Bars): Ditto.
author | Luc Teirlinck <teirllm@auburn.edu> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 28 Aug 2004 02:33:33 +0000 |
parents | a6b7cffd2a54 |
children | d908f49e1f64 |
files | man/frames.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/frames.texi Sat Aug 28 02:14:16 2004 +0000 +++ b/man/frames.texi Sat Aug 28 02:33:33 2004 +0000 @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ @c This is part of the Emacs manual. -@c Copyright (C) 1985, 86, 87, 93, 94, 95, 97, 99, 2000, 2001 +@c Copyright (C) 1985, 86, 87, 93, 94, 95, 97, 99, 2000, 2001, 2004 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc. @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions. @node Frames, International, Windows, Top @@ -230,6 +230,8 @@ back into the window. This way, you can mark regions that don't fit entirely on the screen. +This way of setting the secondary selection does not alter the kill ring. + @findex mouse-start-secondary @kindex M-Mouse-1 @item M-Mouse-1 @@ -240,8 +242,9 @@ @kindex M-Mouse-3 @item M-Mouse-3 Make a secondary selection, using the place specified with @kbd{M-Mouse-1} -as the other end (@code{mouse-secondary-save-then-kill}). A second click -at the same place kills the secondary selection just made. +as the other end (@code{mouse-secondary-save-then-kill}). This also +puts the selected text in the kill ring. A second click at the same +place kills the secondary selection just made. @findex mouse-yank-secondary @kindex M-Mouse-2 @@ -376,8 +379,7 @@ @kindex C-Mouse-2 @r{(scroll bar)} @kbd{C-Mouse-2} on a scroll bar splits the corresponding window -vertically, unless you are using an X toolkit's implementation of -scroll bars. @xref{Split Window}. +vertically. @xref{Split Window}. The commands above apply to areas of the mode line which do not have special mouse bindings of their own. Some areas, such as the buffer @@ -747,10 +749,8 @@ down to the level where you click. By clicking repeatedly in the same place, you can scroll by the same distance over and over. - If you are using Emacs's own implementation of scroll bars, as opposed -to scroll bars from an X toolkit, you can also click @kbd{C-Mouse-2} in -the scroll bar to split a window vertically. The split occurs on the -line where you click. + You can also click @kbd{C-Mouse-2} in the scroll bar to split a +window vertically. The split occurs on the line where you click. @findex scroll-bar-mode @vindex scroll-bar-mode @@ -800,9 +800,9 @@ @section Drag and drop in Emacs. @cindex drag and drop - Emacs supports drag and drop so that dropping of files and text is handeled. + Emacs supports drag and drop so that dropping of files and text is handled. Currently supported drag and drop protocols are XDND, Motif and the old -KDE 1.x protocol. There is no drag support yet. +KDE 1.x protocol. There is no drag support yet. When text is dropped on Emacs, Emacs inserts the text where it is dropped. When a file is dragged from a file manager to Emacs, Emacs opens that file. As a special case, if a file is dropped on a dired buffer the file is @@ -896,7 +896,7 @@ You can customize the option @code{use-file-dialog} to suppress the use of file selection windows even if you still want other kinds -of dialogs. This option has no effect if you have supressed all dialog +of dialogs. This option has no effect if you have suppressed all dialog boxes with the option @code{use-dialog-box}.