@code{message} primitive, and for echoing keystrokes. It is not the
same as the minibuffer, despite the fact that the minibuffer appears
(when active) in the same place on the screen as the echo area. The
-@cite{XEmacs Reference Manual} specifies the rules for resolving conflicts
+@cite{XEmacs Lisp Reference Manual} specifies the rules for resolving conflicts
between the echo area and the minibuffer for use of that screen space
-(@pxref{Minibuffer,, The Minibuffer, emacs, The XEmacs Reference Manual}).
+(@pxref{Minibuffer,, The Minibuffer, xemacs, The XEmacs Lisp Reference Manual}).
Error messages appear in the echo area; see @ref{Errors}.
You can write output in the echo area by using the Lisp printing
Ordinarily, commands that operate on text or move point do not care
whether the text is invisible. However, the user-level line motion
-commands explicitly ignore invisible newlines.
+commands explicitly ignore invisible newlines. Since this causes a
+slow-down of these commands it is turned off by default, controlled by
+the variable @code{line-move-ignore-invisible}.
@node Selective Display
@section Selective Display