-This is Info file ../info/xemacs.info, produced by Makeinfo version
-1.68 from the input file xemacs/xemacs.texi.
+This is ../info/xemacs.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.0 from
+xemacs/xemacs.texi.
INFO-DIR-SECTION XEmacs Editor
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
comment lines. Optionally, new comment delimiters are inserted at the
end of the first line and the beginning of the second, so that each line
is a separate comment. The variable `comment-multi-line' controls the
-choice (*note Comments::.).
+choice (*note Comments::).
Auto Fill mode does not refill entire paragraphs. It can break
lines but cannot merge lines. Editing in the middle of a paragraph can
the region into paragraphs and fills each of them.
`Meta-q' and `Meta-g' use the same criteria as `Meta-h' for finding
-paragraph boundaries (*note Paragraphs::.). For more control, you can
+paragraph boundaries (*note Paragraphs::). For more control, you can
use `M-x fill-region-as-paragraph', which refills everything between
point and mark. This command recognizes only blank lines as paragraph
separators.
Emacs has many commands designed to understand the syntax of
programming languages such as Lisp and C. These commands can:
- * Move over or kill balanced expressions or "sexps" (*note Lists::.).
+ * Move over or kill balanced expressions or "sexps" (*note Lists::).
* Move over or mark top-level balanced expressions ("defuns", in
Lisp; functions, in C).
- * Show how parentheses balance (*note Matching::.).
+ * Show how parentheses balance (*note Matching::).
- * Insert, kill, or align comments (*note Comments::.).
+ * Insert, kill, or align comments (*note Comments::).
* Follow the usual indentation conventions of the language (*note
- Grinding::.).
+ Grinding::).
The commands available for words, sentences, and paragraphs are
useful in editing code even though their canonical application is for
editing human language text. Most symbols contain words (*note
-Words::.); sentences can be found in strings and comments (*note
-Sentences::.). Paragraphs per se are not present in code, but the
+Words::); sentences can be found in strings and comments (*note
+Sentences::). Paragraphs per se are not present in code, but the
paragraph commands are useful anyway, because Lisp mode and C mode
-define paragraphs to begin and end at blank lines (*note
-Paragraphs::.). Judicious use of blank lines to make the program
-clearer also provides interesting chunks of text for the paragraph
-commands to work on.
+define paragraphs to begin and end at blank lines (*note Paragraphs::).
+Judicious use of blank lines to make the program clearer also provides
+interesting chunks of text for the paragraph commands to work on.
The selective display feature is useful for looking at the overall
-structure of a function (*note Selective Display::.). This feature
+structure of a function (*note Selective Display::). This feature
causes only the lines that are indented less than a specified amount to
appear on the screen.