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| author | Thien-Thi Nguyen <ttn@gnuvola.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Wed, 08 Sep 2004 11:43:30 +0000 |
| parents | 695cf19ef79e |
| children | 0259a1711394 375f2633d815 |
| rev | line source |
|---|---|
| 25853 | 1 How is this Emacs different from all other Emacses? -*-Outline-*- |
| 2 | |
| 3 This file describes the differences between GNU Emacs 19, Twenex | |
| 4 Emacs, Gosling Emacs (including the commercial versions by Unipress) | |
| 5 and CCA Emacs. | |
| 6 | |
| 7 * Copyright (c) 1985 Richard M. Stallman | |
| 8 | |
| 9 Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies | |
| 10 of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the | |
| 11 copyright notice and permission notice are preserved, | |
| 12 and that the distributor grants the recipient permission | |
| 13 for further redistribution as permitted by this notice. | |
| 14 | |
| 15 Permission is granted to distribute modified versions | |
| 16 of this document, or of portions of it, | |
| 17 under the above conditions, provided also that they | |
| 18 carry prominent notices stating who last changed them. | |
| 19 | |
| 20 Updated March 1993 for Emacs 19 by Eric S. Raymond | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | |
| 23 * How is this Emacs different from Twenex Emacs? | |
| 24 | |
| 25 ** Fundamental concepts. | |
| 26 | |
| 27 *** There is no concept of "typeout" in GNU Emacs. | |
| 28 | |
| 29 Any time that a command wants to display some output, | |
| 30 it creates a buffer (usually with a name surrounded by asterisks) | |
| 31 and displays it in a window. | |
| 32 | |
| 33 This provides some advantages: | |
| 34 you can edit some more while looking at the output; | |
| 35 you can copy parts of the output into other buffers. | |
| 36 | |
| 37 It also has a disadvantage that you must type a command | |
| 38 in order to make the output disappear. | |
| 39 You can use C-x 1 to get rid of all windows except the | |
| 40 selected one. To be more selective, you can switch to | |
| 41 the window you want to get rid of and then type C-x 0 | |
| 42 (delete-window). | |
| 43 | |
| 44 You also need to type a command to scroll the other | |
| 45 window if not all the output fits in it. Meta-Control-v | |
| 46 will usually do the job. | |
| 47 | |
| 48 *** There is no concept of a "subsystem" in GNU Emacs. | |
| 49 | |
| 50 Where Twenex Emacs would use a subsystem, GNU Emacs | |
| 51 instead creates a buffer and redefines commands in it. | |
| 52 | |
| 53 For example, when you send mail in GNU Emacs, you use | |
| 54 a buffer named *mail* which is in Mail Mode. You can | |
| 55 switch away from this buffer to any other buffer and | |
| 56 resume normal editing; then switch back and resume | |
| 57 composing mail. You do not have to "exit" from | |
| 58 composing mail in order to do ordinary editing. | |
| 59 | |
| 60 This has many advantages, but it also has a disadvantage: | |
| 61 Subsystems in Emacs tend to have "exit" commands that return you | |
| 62 to whatever you were doing before entering the subsystem. | |
| 63 In GNU Emacs the idea of what to return to is not well defined, | |
| 64 so it is not clear what an "exit" command should do. | |
| 65 The only way to "exit" in general is to type C-x b, C-x C-f, or | |
| 66 some other suitable command to switch buffers. Some | |
| 67 subsystem-like major modes, such as Info and Mail mode, provide | |
| 68 commands to "exit" by switching to the previously selected | |
| 69 buffer. | |
| 70 | |
| 71 *** Files are always visited in their own buffers. | |
| 72 | |
| 73 Beginning users of Twenex Emacs were told how to edit | |
| 74 using a single buffer and reading one file after another | |
| 75 into that buffer. Use of a new buffer for each file was | |
| 76 regarded as a more advanced mode. | |
| 77 | |
| 78 In GNU Emacs, the idea of using a single buffer for various | |
| 79 files, one by one, has been dropped, given that the address | |
| 80 space is expected to be large enough for many buffers. C-x | |
| 81 C-f (find-file), which behaves nearly the same as in Twenex | |
| 82 Emacs, is in GNU Emacs the canonical way for all users to | |
| 83 visit files. | |
| 84 | |
| 85 Various commands need to read files into Emacs in the course | |
| 86 of their execution. In Twenex Emacs the user must tell them | |
| 87 whether to reuse buffers or create new ones, using the variable | |
| 88 Tags Find File. In GNU Emacs, these commands always use | |
| 89 C-x C-f. | |
| 90 | |
| 91 The command C-x C-v does still exist; it kills the current | |
| 92 buffer and reads the specified file into a new buffer. | |
| 93 It is equivalent to kill-buffer followed by find-file. | |
| 94 | |
| 95 Since there is no reusing of buffers, there is no point in | |
| 96 calling the initial buffer "main". So the initial buffer | |
| 97 in GNU Emacs is called "*scratch*" and is intended for typing | |
| 98 Lisp expressions to be evaluated. | |
| 99 | |
| 100 *** File name defaulting. | |
| 101 | |
| 102 GNU Emacs records a separate working directory for each buffer. | |
| 103 Normally this is the directory on which the buffer's file | |
| 104 resides; for buffers not visiting any file, it is copied from | |
| 105 the buffer that was current when it was created. The current buffer's | |
| 106 working directory can be printed with M-x pwd and set with M-x cd. | |
| 107 | |
| 108 GNU Emacs shows you the default directory by inserting it in | |
| 109 the minibuffer when a file name is being read. You can type | |
| 110 the filename you want at the end of the default as if the | |
| 111 default were not there, or you can edit and alter the default. | |
| 112 | |
| 113 If you want file /lose/big when the default /foo/defaultdir/ | |
| 114 has been inserted for you, you need not kill the default; simply | |
| 115 type at the end of it: /foo/defaultdir//lose/big. Such a file | |
| 116 name is not ordinarily considered valid, but GNU Emacs | |
| 117 considers it equivalent to /lose/big. | |
| 118 | |
| 119 Likewise, if you want file quux in your home directory, just add | |
| 120 ~/quux to the end of the supplied text, to get | |
| 121 /foo/defaultdir/~/quux. GNU Emacs sees "/~" and throws away | |
| 122 everything before the "~". | |
| 123 | |
| 124 You can refer to environment variables also within file names. | |
| 125 $ followed by the environment variable name is replaced by the | |
| 126 variable's value. The variable name should either be followed | |
| 127 by a nonalphanumeric character (which counts as part of the | |
| 128 file name) or be surrounded by braces {...} (which do not count | |
| 129 as part of the file name). Thus, if variable USER has value "rms", | |
| 130 "x/$USER-foo" is expanded to "x/rms-foo", and "x${USER}foo" | |
| 131 is expanded to "xrmsfoo". Note that this substitution is not | |
| 132 performed by the primitive file operation functions of GNU Emacs, | |
| 133 but rather by the interactive file name reader. It is also | |
| 134 available as a separate primitive, in the function | |
| 135 substitute-in-file-name. | |
| 136 | |
| 137 *** Exit commands C-z, C-x C-c and C-x C-z. | |
| 138 | |
| 139 There are two ways to exit GNU Emacs: killing and suspending. | |
| 140 Killing is like what Control-c does to ordinary Unix programs. | |
| 141 In GNU Emacs, you type C-x C-c to kill it. (This offers to | |
| 142 save any modified file buffers before really killing Emacs.) | |
| 143 Suspending is like what Control-z does to ordinary Unix programs. | |
| 144 To suspend GNU Emacs, type C-x C-z, or type just C-z. | |
| 145 Note that C-z suspends ordinary programs instantly, but | |
| 146 Emacs does not suspend until it reads the C-z. | |
| 147 | |
| 148 Usually it is better to suspend: once a system is smart | |
| 149 enough to have job control, why ever kill an editor? | |
| 150 You'll just have to make a new one in a minute. | |
| 151 This is why the convenient command C-z is provided for | |
| 152 suspending. | |
| 153 | |
| 154 C-c is used as a prefix key for mode-specific commands and for users' | |
| 155 own commands. We deliberately do not make C-c ever kill Emacs, | |
| 156 because it should not be so easy to do something irreversible. | |
| 157 | |
| 158 *** Quitting with C-g. | |
| 159 | |
| 160 If you type C-g while GNU Emacs is waiting for input, it | |
| 161 is an ordinary command (which is defined to beep). If you | |
| 162 type C-g while Lisp code is executing, it sets a flag which | |
| 163 causes a special signal, nearly the same as an error, to | |
| 164 happen at the next safe place in Lisp execution. This usually | |
| 165 has the effect of aborting the current command in a safe way. | |
| 166 | |
| 167 Because at times there have been bugs causing GNU Emacs to loop | |
| 168 without checking the quit flag, a special feature causes | |
| 169 GNU Emacs to be suspended immediately if you type a second C-g | |
| 170 while the flag is already set. So you can always get out | |
| 171 of GNU Emacs. Normally GNU Emacs recognizes and clears the quit flag | |
| 172 quickly enough to prevent this from happening. | |
| 173 | |
| 174 When you resume GNU Emacs after a suspension caused by multiple C-g, it | |
| 175 asks two questions before resuming execution: | |
| 176 Checkpoint? | |
| 177 Dump core? | |
| 178 Answer each one with `y' or `n' and a Return. | |
| 179 `y' to Checkpoint? causes immediate auto-saving of all | |
| 180 buffers in which auto-saving is enabled. | |
| 181 `y' to Dump core? causes an illegal instruction to be executed. | |
| 182 This is to enable a wizard to figure out why GNU Emacs was | |
| 183 looping without checking for quits. Execution does not continue | |
| 184 after a core dump. If you answer `n', execution continues. | |
| 185 With luck, GNU Emacs will ultimately check the quit flag, | |
| 186 and quit normally. If not, and you type another C-g, it | |
| 187 is suspended again. | |
| 188 | |
| 189 If GNU Emacs is not really hung, just slow, you may invoke | |
| 190 the double C-g feature without really meaning to. Then just | |
| 191 resume and answer `n' to both questions, and you will | |
| 192 arrive at your former state. Presumably the quit you | |
| 193 wanted will finish happening soon. | |
| 194 | |
| 195 These questions are not asked if you suspend GNU Emacs with the C-z | |
| 196 command. Continuing GNU Emacs after a C-z takes you straight back | |
| 197 into editing. | |
| 198 | |
| 199 *** Undoing with C-x u or C-_ | |
| 200 | |
| 201 You can undo many commands--up to 10,000 characters worth. | |
| 202 Each time you type C-x u or C-_, another command or batch of change | |
| 203 is undone. Undo information is stored per buffer, and the undo | |
| 204 command always applies to the current buffer. A numeric argument | |
| 205 serves as a repeat count. | |
| 206 | |
| 207 Consecutive self-inserting characters are undone in groups of twenty. | |
| 208 | |
| 209 *** Different character set. | |
| 210 | |
| 211 GNU Emacs does not expect anyone ever to have a keyboard in which | |
| 212 the Control key sets an independent bit which may accompany any | |
| 213 character. The only control characters that can exist are the | |
| 214 ASCII control characters. | |
| 215 | |
| 216 There is, as a result, no "control prefix" character. | |
| 217 | |
| 218 *** Control-h is the Help character. | |
| 219 | |
| 220 I'm amazed it took me so long to get this idea. In Twenex Emacs, C-h | |
| 221 and C-b are equivalent commands, making C-h redundant. C-h is not | |
| 222 only easy to type, it is mnemonic for "Help". So in GNU Emacs the | |
| 223 Help character is C-h. | |
| 224 | |
| 225 *** Completion is done by TAB, not ESC. | |
| 226 | |
| 227 ESC in the minibuffer is a Meta prefix, same as at top level. | |
| 228 | |
| 229 *** The string-argument reader is the minibuffer is an editor window. | |
| 230 | |
| 231 In GNU Emacs, the line at the bottom of the screen is the minibuffer. | |
| 232 Commands that want string arguments always use this line to read them, | |
| 233 and you can use the ordinary Emacs editing commands to edit the | |
| 234 input. You can terminate input with Return because Return is defined | |
| 235 as the exit-minibuffer command when in the minibuffer. If you | |
| 236 are using a command that needs several arguments, terminate each | |
| 237 one with Return. You cannot separate arguments with Escape | |
| 238 the way you would in Twenex Emacs. | |
| 239 | |
| 240 The minibuffer window does not overlay other editor windows; | |
| 241 it is a nearly ordinary editor window which lacks a mode line | |
| 242 and is "turned off" when not in use. While it IS in use, you | |
| 243 can switch windows to and from the minibuffer, kill text in other | |
| 244 windows and yank in the minibuffer, etc. | |
| 245 | |
| 246 You can even issue a command that uses the minibuffer while in the | |
| 247 minibuffer. This gets you temporarily into a recursive minibuffer. | |
| 248 However, this is allowed only if you enable it, since it could be | |
| 249 confusing for beginners. | |
| 250 | |
| 251 When you exit the minibuffer, the cursor immediately moves back to | |
| 252 column zero of the minibuffer line, to show you that the exit | |
| 253 command has been obeyed. The minibuffer contents remain on the screen | |
| 254 until the end of the command, unless some other text is displayed there. | |
| 255 | |
| 256 A single Control-g exits the minibuffer. | |
| 257 | |
| 258 *** There are no &'s or ^R's or spaces in function names. | |
| 259 | |
| 260 For example, the function which is called ^R Forward Word | |
| 261 in Twenex Emacs is called forward-word in GNU Emacs. | |
| 262 | |
| 263 *** The extension language is Lisp rather than TECO. | |
| 264 | |
| 265 Libraries must be written in Lisp. Meta-ESC reads a Lisp | |
| 266 expression, evaluates it, and prints the result. Note that | |
| 267 Meta-ESC is "disabled" by default, so that beginning users | |
| 268 do not get into the minibuffer by accident in a confusing way. | |
| 269 | |
| 270 Data types available include integers (which double as characters), | |
| 271 strings, symbols, lists, vectors, buffers, buffer pointers, | |
| 272 windows, and process channels. | |
| 273 | |
| 274 For now, to learn about writing Lisp code for GNU Emacs, read some of | |
| 275 the source code, which is in directory ../lisp. Read the GNU Emacs Lisp | |
| 276 Reference Manual. Also, all Lisp primitives have self-documentation you can | |
| 277 read with C-h f. | |
| 278 | |
| 279 *** Enabling the error handler. | |
| 280 | |
| 281 GNU Emacs has a Lisp debugger/stepper/trace package, but normally | |
| 282 errors do not enter the debugger because that is slow, and unlikely to | |
| 283 be of interest to most users. Set the variable debug-on-error to t to | |
| 284 cause errors to invoke the debugger. Set debug-on-quit to cause quit | |
| 285 signals (caused by C-g) to invoke the debugger. | |
| 286 | |
| 287 ** Other changes. | |
| 288 | |
| 289 *** More than two windows are allowed. | |
| 290 | |
| 291 C-x 2 splits the current window into two windows, | |
| 292 one above the other. Initially they both display | |
| 293 the same buffer. | |
| 294 | |
| 295 C-x 2 now accepts a numeric argument to specify the number of | |
| 296 lines to give to the uppermost of the two windows it makes. | |
| 297 | |
| 298 C-x 0 kills the current window, making all others larger. | |
| 299 C-x 1 kills all windows except the current one. | |
| 300 C-x O switches to the next window down. | |
| 301 It rotates from the bottom one to the top one. | |
| 302 An argument serves as a repeat count; negative arguments | |
| 303 circulate in the reverse order. | |
| 304 | |
| 305 If the same buffer is displayed in several windows, | |
| 306 changes made in it are redisplayed in all of them. | |
| 307 | |
| 308 *** Side by side windows are supported. | |
| 309 | |
| 310 The command C-x 3 splits the current window into | |
| 311 two side-by-side windows. | |
| 312 | |
| 313 C-x } makes the selected window ARG columns wider at the | |
| 314 expense of the windows at its sides. C-x { makes the selected | |
| 315 window ARG columns narrower. An argument to C-x 5 specifies | |
| 316 how many columns to give to the leftmost of the two windows made. | |
| 317 | |
| 318 *** Horizontal scrolling of the lines in a window is implemented. | |
| 319 | |
| 320 C-x < (scroll-left) scrolls all displayed lines left, | |
| 321 with the numeric argument (default 1) saying how far to scroll. | |
| 322 When the window is scrolled left, some amount of the beginning | |
| 323 of each nonempty line is replaced by an "$". | |
| 324 C-x > scrolls right. If a window has no text hidden at the left | |
| 325 margin, it cannot be scrolled any farther right than that. | |
| 326 When nonzero leftwards scrolling is in effect in a window. | |
| 327 lines are automatically truncated at the window's right margin | |
| 328 regardless of the value of the variable truncate-lines in the | |
| 329 buffer being displayed. | |
| 330 | |
| 331 *** Return key does not use up empty lines. | |
| 332 | |
| 333 In Twenex Emacs, the Return command advances over an existing | |
| 334 empty line in some cases. In GNU Emacs, the Return command always | |
| 335 makes inserts a newline. Twenex Emacs was designed at a time when | |
| 336 most display terminals did not have the ability to scroll part | |
| 337 of the screen, and using existing empty lines made redisplay faster. | |
| 338 Nowadays, terminals that cannot scroll part of the screen are rare, | |
| 339 so there is no need to make Return behave in a more complicated manner. | |
| 340 | |
| 341 *** Help m. | |
| 342 | |
| 343 Typing C-h m displays documentation of the current major mode., | |
| 344 telling you what special commands and features are available | |
| 345 and how to use them or get more information on them. | |
| 346 | |
| 347 This is simply the documentation, as a function, of the | |
| 348 symbol which is the value of major-mode. Each major mode | |
| 349 function has been given documentation intended for C-h m. | |
| 350 | |
| 351 *** Display-hiding features. | |
| 352 | |
| 353 **** Hiding indented lines | |
| 354 | |
| 355 The command C-x $ with numeric argument N causes lines indented by N | |
| 356 or more columns to become invisible. All you see is " ..." appended | |
| 357 to the previous line, in place of any number of consecutive invisible | |
| 358 lines. | |
| 359 | |
| 360 **** Outline Mode. | |
| 361 | |
| 362 Outline mode is designed for editing outline-structured | |
| 363 files, such as this one. | |
| 364 | |
| 365 Headings should be lines starting with one or more asterisks. | |
| 366 Major headings have one asterisk, subheadings two, etc. | |
| 367 Lines not starting with asterisks are body text. | |
| 368 | |
| 369 You can make the body under a heading, or the subheadings | |
| 370 under a heading, temporarily invisible, or visible again. | |
| 371 Invisible lines are attached to the end of the previous line | |
| 372 so they go with it if you kill it and yank it back. | |
| 373 | |
| 374 Commands: | |
| 375 Meta-} next-visible-heading move by visible headings | |
| 376 Meta-{ previous-visible-heading move by visible headings | |
| 377 | |
| 378 Meta-x hide-body make all body text invisible (not headings). | |
| 379 Meta-x show-all make everything in buffer visible. | |
| 380 | |
| 381 The remaining commands are used when dot is on a heading line. | |
| 382 They apply to some of the body or subheadings of that heading. | |
| 383 C-c C-h hide-subtree make text and subheadings invisible. | |
| 384 C-c C-s show-subtree make text and subheadings visible. | |
| 385 C-c C-i show-children make direct subheadings visible. | |
| 386 No effect on body, or subheadings 2 or more levels down. | |
| 387 With arg N, affects subheadings N levels down. | |
| 388 M-x hide-entry make immediately following body invisible. | |
| 389 M-x show-entry make it visible. | |
| 390 M-x hide-leaves make text under heading and under its subheadings invisible. | |
| 391 The subheadings remain visible. | |
| 392 M-x show-branches make all subheadings at all levels visible. | |
| 393 | |
| 394 *** C mode is fancy. | |
| 395 | |
| 396 C mode assumes that you put the initial open-brace of | |
| 397 a function definition at the beginning of a line. | |
| 398 If you use the popular indenting style that puts this | |
| 399 open-brace at the end of a line containing a type declaration, | |
| 400 YOU WILL LOSE: C mode does not know a function starts there. | |
| 401 | |
| 402 Open-brace at the beginning of a line makes it possible | |
| 403 for C mode to find function boundaries with total reliability; | |
| 404 something I consider vital and which cannot be done | |
| 405 if the other style is used. | |
| 406 | |
| 407 The Tab command indents C code very cleverly. | |
| 408 I know of only one cases in which Tab does not indent C code nicely: | |
| 409 Expressions continued over several lines with few parentheses. | |
| 410 Tab does not know the precedences of C operators, so it does | |
| 411 not know which lines of the expression should go where. | |
| 412 Using parentheses to indicate the nesting of operators | |
| 413 except within a line makes this problem go away. | |
| 414 | |
| 415 The indenting algorithm is entirely written in Lisp. | |
| 416 | |
| 417 Tab with a numeric argument in Twenex Emacs indents | |
| 418 that many lines. It is different in GNU Emacs: it means | |
| 419 to shift all the lines of a bracketed expression by the | |
| 420 same amount as the line being indented. For example, if you have | |
| 421 if (foo) | |
| 422 { | |
| 423 hack (); | |
| 424 /** Well? */ | |
| 425 } | |
| 426 and type C-u Tab on the line with the open brace, you get | |
| 427 if (foo) | |
| 428 { | |
| 429 hack (); | |
| 430 /* Well? */ | |
| 431 } | |
| 432 from indenting the brace line and then shifting the | |
| 433 lines within the braces rigidly with the first one. | |
| 434 | |
| 435 Meta-Control-q works as in Lisp mode; it should be | |
| 436 used with dot just before a bracketed grouping, and | |
| 437 indents each line INSIDE that grouping using Tab. | |
| 438 If used instead of C-u Tab in the previous example, it makes | |
| 439 if (foo) | |
| 440 { | |
| 441 hack (); | |
| 442 /* Well? */ | |
| 443 } | |
| 444 | |
| 445 Meta-Control-h puts mark at the end of the current C function | |
| 446 and puts dot before it. | |
| 447 | |
| 448 Most other Meta-Control commands intended for Lisp expressions | |
| 449 work usefully in C mode as well. | |
| 450 | |
| 451 *** Meta-g (fill-region) is different. | |
| 452 | |
| 453 In Twenex Emacs, Meta-g fills the region with no paragraph | |
| 454 boundaries except for blank and indented lines. In GNU Emacs, | |
| 455 it divides the region into paragraphs in the same manner as | |
| 456 Meta-], and fills each paragraph separately. There is also | |
| 457 the function fill-region-as-paragraph which fills the region | |
| 458 regarding at as a single paragraph regardless even of blank | |
| 459 or indented lines. | |
| 460 | |
| 461 *** Indented Text Mode instead of Edit Indented Text. | |
| 462 | |
| 463 Twenex Emacs has a command Edit Indented Text which temporarily | |
| 464 alters some commands for editing indented paragraphs. | |
| 465 GNU Emacs has instead a separate major mode, Indented Text Mode, | |
| 466 which is different from ordinary Text Mode in just the same | |
| 467 alterations. Specifically, in Indented Text Mode, | |
| 468 Tab runs the function indent-relative, and auto filling indents | |
| 469 the newly created lines. | |
| 470 | |
| 471 *** But rectangle commands are implemented. | |
| 472 | |
| 473 C-x r r stores the rectangle described by dot and mark | |
| 474 into a register; it reads the register name from the keyboard. | |
| 475 C-x r g, the command to insert the contents of a register, | |
| 476 can be used to reinsert the rectangle elsewhere. | |
| 477 | |
| 478 Other rectangle commands include | |
| 479 open-rectangle: | |
| 480 insert a blank rectangle in the position and size | |
| 481 described by dot and mark, at its corners; | |
| 482 the existing text is pushed to the right. | |
| 483 clear-rectangle: | |
| 484 replace the rectangle described by dot ane mark | |
| 485 with blanks. The previous text is deleted. | |
| 486 delete-rectangle: | |
| 487 delete the text of the specified rectangle, | |
| 488 moving the text beyond it on each line leftward. | |
| 489 kill-rectangle | |
| 490 like delete-rectangle but also stores the text of | |
| 491 the rectangle in the "rectangle kill buffer". | |
| 492 More precisely, it stores the text as a list of strings | |
| 493 (one string for each line) in the variable killed-rectangle. | |
| 494 yank-rectangle | |
| 495 inserts the text of the last killed rectangle. | |
| 496 extract-rectangle and delete-extract-rectangle | |
| 497 these functions return the text of a rectangle | |
| 498 as a list of strings. They are for use in writing | |
|
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Trailing whitespace deleted.
Juanma Barranquero <lekktu@gmail.com>
parents:
25853
diff
changeset
|
499 other functions that operate on rectangles. |
| 25853 | 500 |
| 501 *** Keyboard Macros | |
| 502 | |
| 503 The C-x ( command for defining a keyboard macro can in GNU Emacs | |
| 504 be given a numeric argument, which means that the new macro | |
| 505 starts out not empty but rather as the same as the last | |
| 506 keyboard macro entered. In addition, that last keyboard | |
| 507 macro is replayed when the C-x ( is typed. C-x ( with an | |
| 508 argument is thus equivalent to typing plain C-x ( and then | |
| 509 retyping the last keyboard macro entered. | |
| 510 | |
| 511 The command write-kbd-macro and append-kbd-macro can be used to | |
| 512 save a keyboard macro definition in a file. It is represented as | |
| 513 a Lisp expression which, when evaluated, will define the keyboard | |
| 514 macro. write-kbd-macro writes the specified file from scratch, | |
| 515 whereas append-kbd-macro adds to any existing text in the file. | |
| 516 Both expect the keyboard macro to be saved to be specified by | |
| 517 name; this means you must use the command name-last-kbd-macro to | |
| 518 give the macro a name before you can save it. | |
| 519 | |
| 520 *** The command to resume a terminated tags-search or tags-query-replace | |
| 521 | |
| 522 is Meta-comma in GNU Emacs. | |
| 523 | |
| 524 *** Auto Save is on by default. | |
| 525 | |
| 526 Auto Save mode is enabled by default in all buffers | |
| 527 that are visiting files. | |
| 528 | |
| 529 The file name used for auto saving is made by prepending | |
| 530 "#" to the file name visited. | |
| 531 | |
| 532 *** Backup files. | |
| 533 | |
| 534 Since Unix stupidly fails to have file version numbers, | |
| 535 GNU Emacs compensates slightly in the customary fashion: | |
| 536 when a file is modified and saved for the first time in | |
| 537 a particular GNU Emacs run, the original file is renamed, | |
| 538 appending "~" to its name. Thus, foo.c becomes foo.c~. | |
| 539 | |
| 540 Emacs can also put a version number into the name of the backup file, | |
| 541 as in foo.c.~69~ for version number 69. This is an optional feature | |
| 542 that the user has to enable. | |
| 543 | |
| 544 *** Mode Line differences. | |
| 545 | |
| 546 Each window in GNU Emacs has its own mode line, which always | |
| 547 displays the status of that window's buffer and nothing else. | |
| 548 The mode line appears at the bottom of the window. It is | |
| 549 full of dashes, to emphasize the boundaries between windows, | |
| 550 and is displayed in inverse video if the terminal supports it. | |
| 551 The information usually available includes: | |
| 552 | |
| 553 *** Local Modes feature changed slightly. | |
| 554 | |
| 555 GNU Emacs supports local mode lists much like those in Twenex Emacs, | |
| 556 but you can only set variables, not commands. You write | |
| 557 | |
| 558 Local variables: | |
| 559 tab-width: 10 | |
| 560 end: | |
| 561 | |
| 562 in the last page of a file, if you want to make tab-width be ten in a | |
| 563 file's buffer. The value you specify must be a Lisp object! | |
| 564 It will be read, but not evaluated. So, to specify a string, | |
| 565 you MUST use doublequotes. For "false", in variables whose | |
| 566 meanings are true or false, you MUST write nil . | |
| 567 | |
| 568 Two variable names are special: "mode" and "eval". | |
| 569 Mode is used for specifying the major mode (as in Twenex Emacs). | |
| 570 | |
| 571 mode: text | |
| 572 | |
| 573 specifies text mode. Eval is used for requesting the evaluation | |
| 574 of a Lisp expression; its value is ignored. Thus, | |
| 575 | |
| 576 eval: (set-syntax-table lisp-mode-syntax-table) | |
| 577 | |
| 578 causes Lisp Mode syntax to be used. | |
| 579 | |
| 580 | |
| 581 Note that GNU Emacs looks for the string "Local variables:" | |
| 582 whereas Twenex Emacs looks for "Local modes:". This incompatibility | |
| 583 id deliberate, so that neither one will see local settings | |
| 584 intended for the other. | |
| 585 | |
| 586 *** Lisp code libraries. | |
| 587 | |
| 588 Libraries of commands, and init files, are written in Lisp. | |
| 589 libraries conventionally have names ending in .el, while the | |
| 590 init file is named .emacs and is in your home directory. | |
| 591 | |
| 592 Use Meta-x load-library to load a library. Most standard libraries | |
| 593 load automatically if you try to use the commands in them. | |
| 594 | |
| 595 Meta-x byte-compile-file filename | |
| 596 compiles the file into byte code which loads and runs faster | |
| 597 than Lisp source code. The file of byte code is given a name | |
| 598 made by appending "c" to the end of the input file name. | |
| 599 | |
| 600 Meta-x byte-recompile-directory directoryname | |
| 601 compiles all files in the specified directory (globbing not allowed) | |
| 602 which have been compiled before but have been changed since then. | |
| 603 | |
| 604 Meta-x load-library automatically checks for a compiled file | |
| 605 before loading the source file. | |
| 606 | |
| 607 Libraries once loaded do not retain their identity within GNU | |
| 608 Emacs. Therefore, you cannot tell just what was loaded from a | |
| 609 library, and you cannot un-load a library. Normally, libraries | |
| 610 are written so that loading one has no effect on the editing | |
| 611 operations that you would have used if you had not loaded the | |
| 612 library. | |
| 613 | |
| 614 *** Dired features. | |
| 615 | |
| 616 You can do dired on partial directories --- any pattern | |
| 617 the shell can glob. Dired creates a buffer named after | |
| 618 the directory or pattern, so you can dired several different | |
| 619 directories. If you repeat dired on the same directory or | |
| 620 pattern, it just reselects the same buffer. Use Meta-x Revert | |
| 621 on that buffer to read in the current contents of the directory. | |
| 622 | |
| 623 *** Directory listing features. | |
| 624 | |
| 625 C-x C-d now uses the default output format of `ls', | |
| 626 which gives just file names in multiple columns. | |
| 627 C-u C-x C-d passes the -l switch to `ls'. | |
| 628 | |
| 629 Both read a directory spec from the minibuffer. It can | |
| 630 be any pattern that the shell can glob. | |
| 631 | |
| 632 *** Compiling other programs. | |
| 633 | |
| 634 Meta-x compile allows you to run make, or any other compilation | |
| 635 command, underneath GNU Emacs. Error messages go into a buffer whose | |
| 636 name is *compilation*. If you get error messages, you can use the | |
| 637 command C-x ` (that is a backquote) to find the text of the next | |
| 638 error message. | |
| 639 | |
| 640 You must specify the command to be run as an argument to M-x compile. | |
| 641 A default is placed in the minibuffer; you can kill it and start | |
| 642 fresh, edit it, or just type Return if it is what you want. | |
| 643 The default is the last compilation command you used; initially, | |
| 644 it is "make -k". | |
| 645 | |
| 646 *** Searching multiple files. | |
| 647 | |
| 648 Meta-x grep searches many files for a regexp by invoking grep | |
| 649 and reading the output of grep into a buffer. You can then | |
| 650 move to the text lines that grep found, using the C-x ` command | |
| 651 just as after M-x compile. | |
| 652 | |
| 653 *** Running inferior shells. | |
| 654 | |
| 655 Do Meta-x shell to make an inferior shell together with a buffer | |
| 656 which serves to hold "terminal" input and output of the shell. | |
| 657 The shell used is specified by the environment variable ESHELL, | |
| 658 or by SHELL if ESHELL is not set. | |
| 659 | |
| 660 Use C-h m whilst in the *shell* buffer to get more detailed info. | |
| 661 | |
| 662 The inferior shell loads the file .emacs_csh or.emacs_sh | |
| 663 (or similar using whatever name the shell has) when it starts up. | |
| 664 | |
| 665 M-! executes a shell command in an inferior shell | |
| 666 and displays the output from it. With a prefix argument, | |
| 667 it inserts the output in the current buffer after dot | |
| 668 and sets the mark after the output. The shell command | |
| 669 gets /dev/null as its standard input. | |
| 670 | |
| 671 M-| is like M-! but passes the contents of the region | |
| 672 as input to the shell command. A prefix argument makes | |
| 673 the output from the command replace the contents of the region. | |
| 674 | |
| 675 *** Sending mail. | |
| 676 | |
| 677 Once you enter Mail Mode using C-x m or C-x 4 m or M-x mail, | |
| 678 C-c becomes a prefix character for mail-related editing commands. | |
| 679 C-c C-s is vital; that's how you send the message. C-c C-c sends | |
| 680 and then switches buffers or kills the current window. | |
| 681 Use C-h m to get a list of the others. | |
| 682 | |
| 683 *** Regular expressions. | |
| 684 | |
| 685 GNU Emacs has regular expression facilities like those of most | |
| 686 Unix editors, but more powerful: | |
| 687 | |
| 688 **** -- + -- | |
| 689 | |
| 690 + specifies repetition of the preceding expression 1 or more | |
| 691 times. It is in other respect like *, which specifies repetition | |
| 692 0 or more times. | |
| 693 | |
| 694 **** -- ? -- | |
| 695 | |
| 696 ? is like * but matches at most one repetition of the preceding | |
| 697 expression. | |
| 698 | |
| 699 **** -- \| -- | |
| 700 | |
| 701 \| specifies an alternative. Two regular expressions A and B with \| in | |
| 702 between form an expression that matches anything that either A or B will | |
| 703 match. Thus, "foo\|bar" matches either "foo" or "bar" but no other | |
| 704 string. | |
| 705 | |
| 706 \| applies to the larges possible surrounding expressions. Only a | |
| 707 surrounding \( ... \) grouping can limit the grouping power of \|. | |
| 708 | |
| 709 Full backtracking capability exists when multiple \|'s are used. | |
| 710 | |
| 711 **** -- \( ... \) -- | |
| 712 | |
| 713 \( ... \) are a grouping construct that serves three purposes: | |
| 714 | |
| 715 1. To enclose a set of \| alternatives for other operations. | |
| 716 Thus, "\(foo\|bar\)x" matches either "foox" or "barx". | |
| 717 2. To enclose a complicated expression for * to operate on. | |
| 718 Thus, "ba\(na\)*" matches "bananana", etc., with any number | |
| 719 of na's (zero or more). | |
| 720 3. To mark a matched substring for future reference. | |
| 721 | |
| 722 Application 3 is not a consequence of the idea of a parenthetical | |
| 723 grouping; it is a separate feature which happens to be assigned as a | |
| 724 second meaning to the same \( ... \) construct because there is no | |
| 725 conflict in practice between the two meanings. Here is an explanation | |
| 726 of this feature. | |
| 727 | |
| 728 -- \digit -- | |
| 729 | |
| 730 After the end of a \( ... \) construct, the matcher remembers the | |
| 731 beginning and end of the text matched by that construct. Then, later on | |
| 732 in the regular expression, you can use \ followed by a digit to mean, | |
| 733 ``match the same text matched this time by the \( ... \) construct.'' | |
| 734 The first nine \( ... \) constructs that appear in a regular expression | |
| 735 are assigned numbers 1 through 9 in order of their beginnings. \1 | |
| 736 through \9 can be used to refer to the text matched by the corresponding | |
| 737 \( ... \) construct. | |
| 738 | |
| 739 For example, "\(.*\)\1" matches any string that is composed of two | |
| 740 identical halves. The "\(.*\)" matches the first half, which can be | |
| 741 anything, but the \1 that follows must match the same exact text. | |
| 742 | |
| 743 **** -- \` -- | |
| 744 | |
| 745 Matches the empty string, but only if it is at the beginning of the buffer. | |
| 746 | |
| 747 **** -- \' -- | |
| 748 | |
| 749 Matches the empty string, but only if it is at the end of the buffer. | |
| 750 | |
| 751 **** -- \b -- | |
| 752 | |
| 753 Matches the empty string, but only if it is at the beginning or end of | |
| 754 a word. Thus, "\bfoo\b" matches any occurrence of "foo" as a separate word. | |
| 755 "\bball\(s\|\)\b" matches "ball" or "balls" as a separate word. | |
| 756 | |
| 757 **** -- \B -- | |
| 758 | |
| 759 Matches the empty string, provided it is NOT at the beginning or end of | |
| 760 a word. | |
| 761 | |
| 762 **** -- \< -- | |
| 763 | |
| 764 Matches the empty string, provided it is at the beginning of a word. | |
| 765 | |
| 766 **** -- \> -- | |
| 767 | |
| 768 Matches the empty string, provided it is at the end of a word. | |
| 769 | |
| 770 **** -- \w -- | |
| 771 | |
| 772 Matches any word-constituent character. The editor syntax table determines | |
| 773 which characters these are. | |
| 774 | |
| 775 **** -- \W -- | |
| 776 | |
| 777 Matches any character that is not a word-constituent. | |
| 778 | |
| 779 **** -- \s<code> -- | |
| 780 | |
| 781 Matches any character whose syntax is <code>. <code> is a letter that | |
| 782 represents a syntax code: thus, "w" for word constituent, "-" for | |
| 783 whitespace, "(" for open-parenthesis, etc. Thus, "\s(" matches any | |
| 784 character with open-parenthesis syntax. | |
| 785 | |
| 786 **** -- \S<code> -- | |
| 787 | |
| 788 Matches any character whose syntax is not <code>. | |
| 789 | |
| 790 * How is this Emacs different from Gosling Emacs? | |
| 791 | |
| 792 ** Advantages of Gosling Emacs: | |
| 793 | |
| 794 1. The program itself is much smaller. | |
| 795 GNU Emacs uses about 250k more pure storage. | |
| 796 As a result, Gosling Emacs can run on machines | |
| 797 that cannot run GNU Emacs. There is not much difference | |
| 798 in the amount of impure storage in the two programs. | |
| 799 | |
| 800 2. In some versions there is support for other forks to | |
| 801 establish communications channels to Emacs (using sockets?). | |
| 802 | |
| 803 3. There is a direct interface to dbm (data bases). | |
| 804 | |
| 805 ** Advantages of GNU Emacs: | |
| 806 | |
| 807 *** True Lisp, not Mocklisp. | |
| 808 | |
| 809 GNU Emacs's extension language has real symbols, lists | |
| 810 and vectors. Many extensions are much simpler, and some | |
| 811 become possible that were nearly impossible in Gosling Emacs. | |
| 812 Many primitives can have cleaner interfaces, and some features | |
| 813 need not be put in as special primitives because you can do | |
| 814 them easily yourself. | |
| 815 | |
| 816 *** But Mocklisp still works. | |
| 817 | |
| 818 An automatic conversion package plus a run-time library | |
| 819 allows you to convert a Mocklisp library into a Lisp library. | |
| 820 | |
| 821 *** Commands are better crafted. | |
| 822 | |
| 823 For example, nearly every editing function for which a | |
| 824 numeric argument would make sense as a repeat count does | |
| 825 accept a repeat count, and does handle a negative argument | |
| 826 in the way you would expect. | |
| 827 | |
| 828 *** The manual is clearer. | |
| 829 | |
| 830 Everyone tells me it is a very good manual. | |
| 831 | |
| 832 *** Better on-line documentation. | |
| 833 | |
| 834 Both functions and variables have documentation strings that | |
| 835 describe exactly how to use them. | |
| 836 | |
| 837 *** C mode is smart. | |
| 838 | |
| 839 It really knows how to indent each line correctly, | |
| 840 for most popular indentation styles. (Some variables | |
| 841 control which style is used; popular named styles are also supported.) | |
| 842 | |
| 843 *** Compatible with PDP-10 Emacs, Multics Emacs and Zmacs. | |
| 844 | |
| 845 The commands in GNU Emacs are nearly the same as in the | |
| 846 original Emacs and the other Emacses which imitated it. | |
| 847 (A few have been changed to fit the Unix environment better.) | |
| 848 | |
| 849 *** Support for Gosling's Emacs commands. | |
| 850 | |
| 851 M-x set-gosmacs-bindings rebinds many editing commands for | |
| 852 compatibility with Gosling's Emacs. | |
| 853 M-x set-gnu-bindings reverses the change. | |
| 854 | |
| 855 *** Side-by-side windows. | |
| 856 | |
| 857 You can split a GNU Emacs window either horizontally or | |
| 858 vertically. | |
| 859 | |
| 860 *** Redisplay is faster. | |
| 861 | |
| 862 GNU Emacs sends about the same stuff to the terminal that | |
| 863 Gosling's does, but GNU Emacs uses much less CPU time to | |
| 864 decide what to do. | |
| 865 | |
| 866 *** Entirely termcap-driven. | |
| 867 | |
| 868 GNU Emacs has nearly no special code for any terminal type. Various | |
| 869 new termcap strings make it possible to handle all terminals nearly as | |
| 870 fast as they could be handled by special-case code. | |
| 871 | |
| 872 *** Display-hiding features. | |
| 873 | |
| 874 For example, Outline Mode makes it possible for you to edit | |
| 875 an outline, making entire sub-branches of the outline visible | |
| 876 or invisible when you wish. | |
| 877 | |
| 878 *** You can interrupt with Control-G. | |
| 879 | |
| 880 Even a looping Lisp program can be stopped this way. | |
| 881 And even a loop in C code does not stop you from killing | |
| 882 Emacs and getting back to your shell. | |
| 883 | |
| 884 *** Per-buffer Undo. | |
| 885 | |
| 886 You can undo the last several changes, in each buffer | |
| 887 independently. | |
| 888 | |
| 889 *** The editor code itself is clean. | |
| 890 | |
| 891 Many people have remarked on how much they enjoy reading | |
| 892 the code for GNU Emacs. | |
| 893 | |
| 894 One other note: The program etc/cvtmail that comes with GNU Emacs can | |
| 895 be used to convert a mail directory for Gosling Emacs's Rmail into a | |
| 896 Unix mail file that you could read into GNU Emacs's Rmail. | |
| 897 | |
| 898 * How is this Emacs different from CCA Emacs? | |
| 899 | |
| 900 ** GNU Emacs Lisp vs CCA Elisp. | |
| 901 | |
| 902 GNU Emacs Lisp does not have a distinction between Lisp functions | |
| 903 and Emacs functions, or between Lisp variables and Emacs variables. | |
| 904 The Lisp and the editor are integrated. A Lisp function defined | |
| 905 with defun is callable as an editor command if you put an | |
|
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Trailing whitespace deleted.
Juanma Barranquero <lekktu@gmail.com>
parents:
25853
diff
changeset
|
906 interactive calling spec in it; for example, |
| 25853 | 907 (defun forward-character (n) |
| 908 (interactive "p") | |
| 909 (goto-char (+ (point) n))) | |
| 910 defines a function of one argument that moves point forward by | |
| 911 a specified number of characters. Programs could call this function, | |
| 912 as in (forward-character 6), or it could be assigned to a key, | |
| 913 in which case the "p" says to pass the prefix numeric arg as | |
| 914 the function's argument. As a result of this feature, you often | |
| 915 need not have two different functions, one to be called by programs | |
| 916 and another to read arguments from the user conveniently; the same | |
| 917 function can do both. | |
| 918 | |
| 919 CCA Elisp tries to be a subset of Common Lisp and tries to | |
| 920 have as many Common Lisp functions as possible (though it is still | |
| 921 only a small fraction of full Common Lisp). GNU Emacs Lisp | |
| 922 is somewhat similar to Common Lisp just because of my Maclisp | |
| 923 and Lisp Machine background, but it has several distinct incompatibilities | |
| 924 in both syntax and semantics. Also, I have not attempted to | |
| 925 provide many Common Lisp functions that you could write in Lisp, | |
| 926 or others that provide no new capability in the circumstances. | |
| 927 | |
| 928 GNU Emacs Lisp does not have packages, readtables, or character objects | |
| 929 (it uses integers to represent characters). | |
| 930 | |
| 931 On the other hand, windows, buffers, relocatable markers and processes | |
| 932 are first class objects in GNU Emacs Lisp. You can get information about them | |
| 933 and do things to them in a Lispy fashion. Not so in CCA Emacs. | |
| 934 | |
| 935 In GNU Emacs Lisp, you cannot open a file and read or write characters | |
| 936 or Lisp objects from it. This feature is painful to support, and | |
| 937 is not fundamentally necessary in an Emacs, because instead you | |
| 938 can read the file into a buffer, read or write characters or | |
| 939 Lisp objects in the buffer, and then write the buffer into the file. | |
| 940 | |
| 941 On the other hand, GNU Emacs Lisp does allow you to rename, delete, add | |
| 942 names to, and copy files; also to find out whether a file is a | |
| 943 directory, whether it is a symbolic link and to what name, whether | |
| 944 you can read it or write it, find out its directory component, | |
| 945 expand a relative pathname, find completions of a file name, etc., | |
| 946 which you cannot do in CCA Elisp. | |
| 947 | |
| 948 GNU Emacs Lisp uses dynamic scope exclusively. This enables you to | |
| 949 bind variables which affect the execution of the editor, such as | |
| 950 indent-tabs-mode. | |
| 951 | |
| 952 GNU Emacs Lisp code is normally compiled into byte code. Most of the | |
| 953 standard editing commands are written in Lisp, and many are | |
| 954 dumped, pure, in the Emacs that users normally run. | |
| 955 | |
| 956 GNU Emacs allows you to interrupt a runaway Lisp program with | |
| 957 Control-g. | |
| 958 | |
| 959 ** GNU Emacs Editing Advantages | |
| 960 | |
| 961 GNU Emacs is faster for many things, especially insertion of text | |
| 962 and file I/O. | |
| 963 | |
| 964 GNU Emacs allows you to undo more than just the last command | |
| 965 with the undo command (C-x u, or C-_). You can undo quite a ways back. | |
| 966 Undo information is separate for each buffer; changes in one buffer | |
| 967 do not affect your ability to undo in another buffer. | |
| 968 | |
| 969 GNU Emacs commands that want to display some output do so by putting | |
| 970 it in a buffer and displaying that buffer in a window. This | |
| 971 technique comes from Gosling Emacs. It has both advantages and | |
| 972 disadvantages when compared with the technique, copied by CCA Emacs | |
| 973 from my original Emacs which inherited it from TECO, of having "type | |
| 974 out" which appears on top of the text in the current window but | |
| 975 disappears automatically at the next input character. | |
| 976 | |
| 977 GNU Emacs does not use the concept of "subsystems". Instead, it uses | |
| 978 highly specialized major modes. For example, dired in GNU Emacs has | |
| 979 the same commands as dired does in other versions of Emacs, give or | |
| 980 take a few, but it is a major mode, not a subsystem. The advantage | |
| 981 of this is that you do not have to "exit" from dired and lose the | |
| 982 state of dired in order to edit files again. You can simply switch | |
| 983 to another buffer, and switch back to the dired buffer later. You | |
| 984 can also have several dired buffers, looking at different directories. | |
| 985 | |
| 986 It is still possible to write a subsystem--your own command loop-- | |
| 987 in GNU Emacs, but it is not recommended, since writing a major mode | |
| 988 for a special buffer is better. | |
| 989 | |
| 990 Recursive edits are also rarely used, for the same reason: it is better | |
| 991 to make a new buffer and put it in a special major mode. Sending | |
| 992 mail is done this way. | |
| 993 | |
| 994 GNU Emacs expects everyone to use find-file (C-x C-f) for reading | |
| 995 in files; its C-x C-v command kills the current buffer and then finds | |
| 996 the specified file. | |
| 997 | |
| 998 As a result, users do not need to think about the complexities | |
| 999 of subsystems, recursive edits, and various ways to read in files | |
| 1000 or what to do if a buffer contains changes to some other file. | |
| 1001 | |
| 1002 GNU Emacs uses its own format of tag table, made by the "etags" | |
| 1003 program. This format makes finding a tag much faster. | |
| 1004 | |
| 1005 Dissociated Press is supported. | |
| 1006 | |
| 1007 | |
| 1008 ** GNU Emacs Editing Disadvantages. | |
| 1009 | |
| 1010 GNU Emacs does not display the location of the mark. | |
| 1011 | |
| 1012 GNU Emacs does not have a concept of numbers of buffers, | |
| 1013 or a permanent ordering of buffers, or searching through multiple | |
| 1014 buffers. The tags-search command provides a way to search | |
| 1015 through several buffers automatically. | |
| 1016 | |
| 1017 GNU Emacs does not provide commands to visit files without | |
| 1018 setting the buffer's default directory. Users can write such | |
| 1019 commands in Lisp by copying the code of the standard file | |
| 1020 visiting commands and modifying them. | |
| 1021 | |
| 1022 GNU Emacs does not support "plus options" in the command | |
| 1023 arguments or in buffer-selection commands, except for line numbers. | |
| 1024 | |
| 1025 GNU Emacs does not support encryption. Down with security! | |
| 1026 | |
| 1027 GNU Emacs does not support replaying keystroke files, | |
| 1028 and does not normally write keystroke files. | |
| 1029 | |
| 1030 | |
| 1031 ** Neutral Differences | |
| 1032 | |
| 1033 GNU Emacs uses TAB, not ESC, to complete file names, buffer names, | |
| 1034 command names, etc. | |
| 1035 | |
| 1036 GNU Emacs uses LFD to terminate searches, instead of | |
| 1037 the C-d uses by CCA Emacs. (Actually, this character is controlled | |
| 1038 by a parameter in GNU Emacs.) C-M-s in GNU Emacs is an interactive | |
| 1039 regular expression search, but you can get to a noninteractive | |
| 1040 one by typing ESC right after the C-M-s. | |
| 1041 | |
| 1042 In GNU Emacs, C-x s asks, for each modified file buffer, whether | |
| 1043 to save it. | |
| 1044 | |
| 1045 GNU Emacs indicates line continuation with "\" and line | |
| 1046 truncation (at either margin) with "$". | |
| 1047 | |
| 1048 The command to resume a tags-search or tags-query-replace in | |
| 1049 GNU Emacs is Meta-Comma. | |
| 52401 | 1050 |
| 1051 arch-tag: e5a3da2f-f13d-400e-95e2-b6e1a520af90 |
