-This is ../info/xemacs.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.0 from
+This is ../info/xemacs.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.6 from
xemacs/xemacs.texi.
INFO-DIR-SECTION XEmacs Editor
translation approved by the author instead of in the original English.
\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Position Info, Next: Arguments, Prev: Continuation Lines, Up: Basic
-
-Cursor Position Information
-===========================
-
- If you are accustomed to other display editors, you may be surprised
-that Emacs does not always display the page number or line number of
-point in the mode line. In Emacs, this information is only rarely
-needed, and a number of commands are available to compute and print it.
-Since text is stored in a way that makes it difficult to compute the
-information, it is not displayed all the time.
-
-`M-x what-page'
- Print page number of point, and line number within page.
-
-`M-x what-line'
- Print line number of point in the buffer.
-
-`M-x line-number-mode'
- Toggle automatic display of current line number.
-
-`M-='
- Print number of lines and characters in the current region
- (`count-lines-region'). *Note Mark::, for information about the
- region.
-
-`C-x ='
- Print character code of character after point, character position
- of point, and column of point (`what-cursor-position').
-
- There are several commands for printing line numbers:
-
- * `M-x what-line' counts lines from the beginning of the file and
- prints the line number point is on. The first line of the file is
- line number 1. You can use these numbers as arguments to `M-x
- goto-line'.
-
- * `M-x what-page' counts pages from the beginning of the file, and
- counts lines within the page, printing both of them. *Note
- Pages::, for the command `C-x l', which counts the lines in the
- current page.
-
- * `M-=' (`count-lines-region') prints the number of lines in the
- region (*note Mark::). *Note Pages::, for the command `C-x l'
- which counts the lines in the
-
- The command `C-x =' (`what-cursor-position') can be used to find out
-the column that the cursor is in, and other miscellaneous information
-about point. It prints a line in the echo area that looks like this:
-
- Char: c (0143, 99, 0x63) point=18862 of 24800(76%) column 53
-
-(In fact, this is the output produced when point is before `column 53'
-in the example.)
-
- The four values after `Char:' describe the character that follows
-point, first by showing it and then by giving its character code in
-octal, decimal and hex.
-
- `point=' is followed by the position of point expressed as a
-character count. The front of the buffer counts as position 1, one
-character later as 2, and so on. The next, larger number is the total
-number of characters in the buffer. Afterward in parentheses comes the
-position expressed as a percentage of the total size.
-
- `column' is followed by the horizontal position of point, in columns
-from the left edge of the window.
-
- If the buffer has been narrowed, making some of the text at the
-beginning and the end temporarily invisible, `C-x =' prints additional
-text describing the current visible range. For example, it might say:
-
- Char: c (0143, 99, 0x63) point=19674 of 24575(80%) <19591 - 19703> column 69
-
-where the two extra numbers give the smallest and largest character
-position that point is allowed to assume. The characters between those
-two positions are the visible ones. *Note Narrowing::.
-
- If point is at the end of the buffer (or the end of the visible
-part), `C-x =' omits any description of the character after point. The
-output looks like
-
- point=563026 of 563025(100%) column 0
-
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Arguments, Prev: Position Info, Up: Basic
-
-Numeric Arguments
-=================
-
- In mathematics and computer usage, the word "argument" means "data
-provided to a function or operation." Any Emacs command can be given a
-"numeric argument" (also called a "prefix argument"). Some commands
-interpret the argument as a repetition count. For example, giving an
-argument of ten to the key `C-f' (the command `forward-char', move
-forward one character) moves forward ten characters. With these
-commands, no argument is equivalent to an argument of one. Negative
-arguments are allowed. Often they tell a command to move or act in
-the opposite direction.
-
- If your keyboard has a <META> key (labelled with a diamond on
-Sun-type keyboards and labelled `Alt' on some other keyboards), the
-easiest way to specify a numeric argument is to type digits and/or a
-minus sign while holding down the <META> key. For example,
- M-5 C-n
-
-would move down five lines. The characters `Meta-1', `Meta-2', and so
-on, as well as `Meta--', do this because they are keys bound to
-commands (`digit-argument' and `negative-argument') that are defined to
-contribute to an argument for the next command. Digits and `-'
-modified with Control, or Control and Meta, also specify numeric
-arguments.
-
- Another way of specifying an argument is to use the `C-u'
-(`universal-argument') command followed by the digits of the argument.
-With `C-u', you can type the argument digits without holding down
-modifier keys; `C-u' works on all terminals. To type a negative
-argument, type a minus sign after `C-u'. Just a minus sign without
-digits normally means -1.
-
- `C-u' followed by a character which is neither a digit nor a minus
-sign has the special meaning of "multiply by four". It multiplies the
-argument for the next command by four. `C-u' twice multiplies it by
-sixteen. Thus, `C-u C-u C-f' moves forward sixteen characters. This
-is a good way to move forward "fast", since it moves about 1/5 of a line
-in the usual size frame. Other useful combinations are `C-u C-n', `C-u
-C-u C-n' (move down a good fraction of a frame), `C-u C-u C-o' (make "a
-lot" of blank lines), and `C-u C-k' (kill four lines).
-
- Some commands care only about whether there is an argument and not
-about its value. For example, the command `M-q' (`fill-paragraph') with
-no argument fills text; with an argument, it justifies the text as well.
-(*Note Filling::, for more information on `M-q'.) Just `C-u' is a
-handy way of providing an argument for such commands.
-
- Some commands use the value of the argument as a repeat count, but do
-something peculiar when there is no argument. For example, the command
-`C-k' (`kill-line') with argument N kills N lines, including their
-terminating newlines. But `C-k' with no argument is special: it kills
-the text up to the next newline, or, if point is right at the end of
-the line, it kills the newline itself. Thus, two `C-k' commands with
-no arguments can kill a non-blank line, just like `C-k' with an
-argument of one. (*Note Killing::, for more information on `C-k'.)
-
- A few commands treat a plain `C-u' differently from an ordinary
-argument. A few others may treat an argument of just a minus sign
-differently from an argument of -1. These unusual cases are described
-when they come up; they are always for reasons of convenience of use of
-the individual command.
-
- You can use a numeric argument to insert multiple copies of a
-character. This is straightforward unless the character is a digit; for
-example, `C-u 6 4 a' inserts 64 copies of the character `a'. But this
-does not work for inserting digits; `C-u 6 4 1' specifies an argument
-of 641, rather than inserting anything. To separate the digit to
-insert from the argument, type another `C-u'; for example, `C-u 6 4 C-u
-1' does insert 64 copies of the character `1'.
-
- We use the term "prefix argument" as well as "numeric argument" to
-emphasize that you type the argument before the command, and to
-distinguish these arguments from minibuffer arguments that come after
-the command.
-
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Undo, Next: Minibuffer, Prev: Basic, Up: Top
-
-Undoing Changes
-***************
-
- Emacs allows you to undo all changes you make to the text of a
-buffer, up to a certain amount of change (8000 characters). Each
-buffer records changes individually, and the undo command always
-applies to the current buffer. Usually each editing command makes a
-separate entry in the undo records, but some commands such as
-`query-replace' make many entries, and very simple commands such as
-self-inserting characters are often grouped to make undoing less
-tedious.
-
-`C-x u'
- Undo one batch of changes (usually, one command's worth) (`undo').
-
-`C-_'
- The same.
-
- The command `C-x u' or `C-_' allows you to undo changes. The first
-time you give this command, it undoes the last change. Point moves to
-the text affected by the undo, so you can see what was undone.
-
- Consecutive repetitions of the `C-_' or `C-x u' commands undo
-earlier and earlier changes, back to the limit of what has been
-recorded. If all recorded changes have already been undone, the undo
-command prints an error message and does nothing.
-
- Any command other than an undo command breaks the sequence of undo
-commands. Starting at this moment, the previous undo commands are
-considered ordinary changes that can themselves be undone. Thus, you
-can redo changes you have undone by typing `C-f' or any other command
-that have no important effect, and then using more undo commands.
-
- If you notice that a buffer has been modified accidentally, the
-easiest way to recover is to type `C-_' repeatedly until the stars
-disappear from the front of the mode line. When that happens, all the
-modifications you made have been canceled. If you do not remember
-whether you changed the buffer deliberately, type `C-_' once. When you
-see Emacs undo the last change you made, you probably remember why you
-made it. If the change was an accident, leave it undone. If it was
-deliberate, redo the change as described in the preceding paragraph.
-
- Whenever an undo command makes the stars disappear from the mode
-line, the buffer contents is the same as it was when the file was last
-read in or saved.
-
- Not all buffers record undo information. Buffers whose names start
-with spaces don't; these buffers are used internally by Emacs and its
-extensions to hold text that users don't normally look at or edit.
-Minibuffers, help buffers, and documentation buffers also don't record
-undo information.
-
- Emacs can remember at most 8000 or so characters of deleted or
-modified text in any one buffer for reinsertion by the undo command.
-There is also a limit on the number of individual insert, delete, or
-change actions that Emacs can remember.
-
- There are two keys to run the `undo' command, `C-x u' and `C-_',
-because on some keyboards, it is not obvious how to type `C-_'. `C-x u'
-is an alternative you can type in the same fashion on any terminal.
-
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Minibuffer, Next: M-x, Prev: Undo, Up: Top
-
-The Minibuffer
-**************
-
- The "minibuffer" is the facility used by XEmacs commands to read
-arguments more complicated than a single number. Minibuffer arguments
-can be file names, buffer names, Lisp function names, XEmacs command
-names, Lisp expressions, and many other things, depending on the command
-reading the argument. You can use the usual XEmacs editing commands in
-the minibuffer to edit the argument text.
-
- When the minibuffer is in use, it appears in the echo area, and the
-cursor moves there. The beginning of the minibuffer line displays a
-"prompt" which says what kind of input you should supply and how it
-will be used. Often this prompt is derived from the name of the command
-that the argument is for. The prompt normally ends with a colon.
-
- Sometimes a "default argument" appears in parentheses after the
-colon; it, too, is part of the prompt. The default is used as the
-argument value if you enter an empty argument (e.g., by just typing
-<RET>). For example, commands that read buffer names always show a
-default, which is the name of the buffer that will be used if you type
-just <RET>.
-
- The simplest way to enter a minibuffer argument is to type the text
-you want, terminated by <RET> which exits the minibuffer. You can
-cancel the command that wants the argument, and get out of the
-minibuffer, by typing `C-g'.
-
- Since the minibuffer uses the screen space of the echo area, it can
-conflict with other ways XEmacs customarily uses the echo area. Here is
-how XEmacs handles such conflicts:
-
- * If a command gets an error while you are in the minibuffer, this
- does not cancel the minibuffer. However, the echo area is needed
- for the error message and therefore the minibuffer itself is
- hidden for a while. It comes back after a few seconds, or as soon
- as you type anything.
-
- * If in the minibuffer you use a command whose purpose is to print a
- message in the echo area, such as `C-x =', the message is printed
- normally, and the minibuffer is hidden for a while. It comes back
- after a few seconds, or as soon as you type anything.
-
- * Echoing of keystrokes does not take place while the minibuffer is
- in use.
-
-* Menu:
-
-* File: Minibuffer File. Entering file names with the minibuffer.
-* Edit: Minibuffer Edit. How to edit in the minibuffer.
-* Completion:: An abbreviation facility for minibuffer input.
-* Minibuffer History:: Reusing recent minibuffer arguments.
-* Repetition:: Re-executing commands that used the minibuffer.
-
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Minibuffer File, Next: Minibuffer Edit, Prev: Minibuffer, Up: Minibuffer
-
-Minibuffers for File Names
-==========================
-
- Sometimes the minibuffer starts out with text in it. For example,
-when you are supposed to give a file name, the minibuffer starts out
-containing the "default directory", which ends with a slash. This is
-to inform you which directory the file will be found in if you do not
-specify a directory.
-
- For example, the minibuffer might start out with these contents:
-
- Find File: /u2/emacs/src/
-
-where `Find File: ' is the prompt. Typing `buffer.c' specifies the
-file `/u2/emacs/src/buffer.c'. To find files in nearby directories,
-use `..'; thus, if you type `../lisp/simple.el', you will get the file
-named `/u2/emacs/lisp/simple.el'. Alternatively, you can kill with
-`M-<DEL>' the directory names you don't want (*note Words::).
-
- If you don't want any of the default, you can kill it with `C-a
-C-k'. But you don't need to kill the default; you can simply ignore it.
-Insert an absolute file name, one starting with a slash or a tilde,
-after the default directory. For example, to specify the file
-`/etc/termcap', just insert that name, giving these minibuffer contents:
-
- Find File: /u2/emacs/src//etc/termcap
-
-XEmacs gives a special meaning to a double slash (which is not normally
-a useful thing to write): it means, "ignore everything before the
-second slash in the pair." Thus, `/u2/emacs/src/' is ignored in the
-example above, and you get the file `/etc/termcap'.
-
- If you set `insert-default-directory' to `nil', the default
-directory is not inserted in the minibuffer. This way, the minibuffer
-starts out empty. But the name you type, if relative, is still
-interpreted with respect to the same default directory.
-
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Minibuffer Edit, Next: Completion, Prev: Minibuffer File, Up: Minibuffer
-
-Editing in the Minibuffer
-=========================
-
- The minibuffer is an XEmacs buffer (albeit a peculiar one), and the
-usual XEmacs commands are available for editing the text of an argument
-you are entering.
-
- Since <RET> in the minibuffer is defined to exit the minibuffer, you
-can't use it to insert a newline in the minibuffer. To do that, type
-`C-o' or `C-q C-j'. (Recall that a newline is really the character
-control-J.)
-
- The minibuffer has its own window which always has space on the
-screen but acts as if it were not there when the minibuffer is not in
-use. When the minibuffer is in use, its window is just like the
-others; you can switch to another window with `C-x o', edit text in
-other windows and perhaps even visit more files, before returning to the
-minibuffer to submit the argument. You can kill text in another window,
-return to the minibuffer window, and then yank the text to use it in the
-argument. *Note Windows::.
-
- There are some restrictions on the use of the minibuffer window,
-however. You cannot switch buffers in it--the minibuffer and its
-window are permanently attached. Also, you cannot split or kill the
-minibuffer window. But you can make it taller in the normal fashion with
-`C-x ^'. If you enable Resize-Minibuffer mode, then the minibuffer
-window expands vertically as necessary to hold the text that you put in
-the minibuffer. Use `M-x resize-minibuffer-mode' to enable or disable
-this minor mode (*note Minor Modes::).
-
- If while in the minibuffer you issue a command that displays help
-text of any sort in another window, you can use the `C-M-v' command
-while in the minibuffer to scroll the help text. This lasts until you
-exit the minibuffer. This feature is especially useful if a completing
-minibuffer gives you a list of possible completions. *Note Other
-Window::.
-
- If the variable `minibuffer-confirm-incomplete' is `t', you are
-asked for confirmation if there is no known completion for the text you
-typed. For example, if you attempted to visit a non-existent file, the
-minibuffer might read:
- Find File: chocolate_bar.c [no completions, confirm]
- If you press `Return' again, that confirms the filename. Otherwise,
-you can continue editing it.
-
- XEmacs supports recursive use of the minibuffer. However, it is easy
-to do this by accident (because of autorepeating keyboards, for example)
-and get confused. Therefore, most XEmacs commands that use the
-minibuffer refuse to operate if the minibuffer window is selected. If
-the minibuffer is active but you have switched to a different window,
-recursive use of the minibuffer is allowed--if you know enough to try
-to do this, you probably will not get confused.
-
- If you set the variable `enable-recursive-minibuffers' to a
-non-`nil', recursive use of the minibuffer is always allowed.
-
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Completion, Next: Minibuffer History, Prev: Minibuffer Edit, Up: Minibuffer
+File: xemacs.info, Node: Glossary, Next: Manifesto, Prev: Intro, Up: Top
+
+Glossary
+********
+
+Abbrev
+ An abbrev is a text string which expands into a different text
+ string when present in the buffer. For example, you might define
+ a short word as an abbrev for a long phrase that you want to insert
+ frequently. *Note Abbrevs::.
+
+Aborting
+ Aborting means getting out of a recursive edit (q.v.). You can use
+ the commands `C-]' and `M-x top-level' for this. *Note Quitting::.
+
+Auto Fill mode
+ Auto Fill mode is a minor mode in which text you insert is
+ automatically broken into lines of fixed width. *Note Filling::.
+
+Auto Saving
+ Auto saving means that Emacs automatically stores the contents of
+ an Emacs buffer in a specially-named file so the information will
+ not be lost if the buffer is lost due to a system error or user
+ error. *Note Auto Save::.
+
+Backup File
+ A backup file records the contents that a file had before the
+ current editing session. Emacs creates backup files automatically
+ to help you track down or cancel changes you later regret. *Note
+ Backup::.
+
+Balance Parentheses
+ Emacs can balance parentheses manually or automatically. Manual
+ balancing is done by the commands to move over balanced expressions
+ (*note Lists::). Automatic balancing is done by blinking the
+ parenthesis that matches one just inserted (*note Matching Parens:
+ Matching.).
+
+Bind
+ To bind a key is to change its binding (q.v.). *Note Rebinding::.
+
+Binding
+ A key gets its meaning in Emacs by having a binding which is a
+ command (q.v.), a Lisp function that is run when the key is typed.
+ *Note Binding: Commands. Customization often involves rebinding a
+ character to a different command function. The bindings of all
+ keys are recorded in the keymaps (q.v.). *Note Keymaps::.
+
+Blank Lines
+ Blank lines are lines that contain only whitespace. Emacs has
+ several commands for operating on the blank lines in a buffer.
+
+Buffer
+ The buffer is the basic editing unit; one buffer corresponds to one
+ piece of text being edited. You can have several buffers, but at
+ any time you are editing only one, the `selected' buffer, though
+ several buffers can be visible when you are using multiple
+ windows. *Note Buffers::.
+
+Buffer Selection History
+ Emacs keeps a buffer selection history which records how recently
+ each Emacs buffer was selected. Emacs uses this list when
+ choosing a buffer to select. *Note Buffers::.
+
+C-
+ `C' in the name of a character is an abbreviation for Control.
+ *Note C-: Keystrokes.
+
+C-M-
+ `C-M-' in the name of a character is an abbreviation for
+ Control-Meta. *Note C-M-: Keystrokes.
+
+Case Conversion
+ Case conversion means changing text from upper case to lower case
+ or vice versa. *Note Case::, for the commands for case conversion.
+
+Characters
+ Characters form the contents of an Emacs buffer; also, Emacs
+ commands are invoked by keys (q.v.), which are sequences of one or
+ more characters. *Note Keystrokes::.
+
+Command
+ A command is a Lisp function specially defined to be able to serve
+ as a key binding in Emacs. When you type a key (q.v.), Emacs
+ looks up its binding (q.v.) in the relevant keymaps (q.v.) to find
+ the command to run. *Note Commands::.
+
+Command Name
+ A command name is the name of a Lisp symbol which is a command
+ (*note Commands::). You can invoke any command by its name using
+ `M-x' (*note M-x::).
+
+Comments
+ A comment is text in a program which is intended only for the
+ people reading the program, and is marked specially so that it
+ will be ignored when the program is loaded or compiled. Emacs
+ offers special commands for creating, aligning, and killing
+ comments. *Note Comments::.
+
+Compilation
+ Compilation is the process of creating an executable program from
+ source code. Emacs has commands for compiling files of Emacs Lisp
+ code (*note Lisp Libraries::) and programs in C and other languages
+ (*note Compilation::).
+
+Complete Key
+ A complete key is a character or sequence of characters which,
+ when typed by the user, fully specifies one action to be performed
+ by Emacs. For example, `X' and `Control-f' and `Control-x m' are
+ keys. Keys derive their meanings from being bound (q.v.) to
+ commands (q.v.). Thus, `X' is conventionally bound to a command
+ to insert `X' in the buffer; `C-x m' is conventionally bound to a
+ command to begin composing a mail message. *Note Keystrokes::.
Completion
-==========
-
- For certain kinds of arguments, you can use "completion" to enter
-the argument value. Completion means that you type part of the
-argument, then XEmacs visibly fills in the rest, or as much as can be
-determined from the part you have typed.
-
- When completion is available, certain keys--<TAB>, <RET>, and
-<SPC>--are rebound to complete the text present in the minibuffer into
-a longer string that it stands for, by matching it against a set of
-"completion alternatives" provided by the command reading the argument.
-`?' is defined to display a list of possible completions of what you
-have inserted.
-
- For example, when `M-x' uses the minibuffer to read the name of a
-command, it provides a list of all available XEmacs command names to
-complete against. The completion keys match the text in the minibuffer
-against all the command names, find any additional name characters
-implied by the ones already present in the minibuffer, and add those
-characters to the ones you have given. This is what makes it possible
-to type `M-x inse <SPC> b <RET>' instead of `M-x insert-buffer <RET>'
-(for example).
-
- Case is normally significant in completion because it is significant
-in most of the names that you can complete (buffer names, file names and
-command names). Thus, `fo' does not complete to `Foo'. When you are
-completing a name in which case does not matter, case may be ignored
-for completion's sake if specified by program.
-
- When a completion list is displayed, the completions will highlight
-as you move the mouse over them. Clicking the middle mouse button on
-any highlighted completion will "select" it just as if you had typed it
-in and hit <RET>.
-
-* Menu:
-
-* Example: Completion Example.
-* Commands: Completion Commands.
-* Strict Completion::
-* Options: Completion Options.
+ When Emacs automatically fills an abbreviation for a name into the
+ entire name, that process is called completion. Completion is
+ done for minibuffer (q.v.) arguments when the set of possible
+ valid inputs is known; for example, on command names, buffer
+ names, and file names. Completion occurs when you type <TAB>,
+ <SPC>, or <RET>. *Note Completion::.
+
+Continuation Line
+ When a line of text is longer than the width of the frame, it
+ takes up more than one screen line when displayed. We say that the
+ text line is continued, and all screen lines used for it after the
+ first are called continuation lines. *Note Continuation: Basic.
+
+Control-Character
+ ASCII characters with octal codes 0 through 037, and also code
+ 0177, do not have graphic images assigned to them. These are the
+ control characters. Any control character can be typed by holding
+ down the <CTRL> key and typing some other character; some have
+ special keys on the keyboard. <RET>, <TAB>, <ESC>, <LFD>, and
+ <DEL> are all control characters. *Note Keystrokes::.
+
+Copyleft
+ A copyleft is a notice giving the public legal permission to
+ redistribute a program or other work of art. Copylefts are used
+ by leftists to enrich the public just as copyrights are used by
+ rightists to gain power over the public.
+
+Current Buffer
+ The current buffer in Emacs is the Emacs buffer on which most
+ editing commands operate. You can select any Emacs buffer as the
+ current one. *Note Buffers::.
+
+Current Line
+ The line point is on (*note Point::).
+
+Current Paragraph
+ The paragraph that point is in. If point is between paragraphs,
+ the current paragraph is the one that follows point. *Note
+ Paragraphs::.
+
+Current Defun
+ The defun (q.v.) that point is in. If point is between defuns, the
+ current defun is the one that follows point. *Note Defuns::.
+
+Cursor
+ The cursor is the rectangle on the screen which indicates the
+ position called point (q.v.) at which insertion and deletion takes
+ place. The cursor is on or under the character that follows
+ point. Often people speak of `the cursor' when, strictly
+ speaking, they mean `point'. *Note Cursor: Basic.
+
+Customization
+ Customization is making minor changes in the way Emacs works. It
+ is often done by setting variables (*note Variables::) or by
+ rebinding keys (*note Keymaps::).
+
+Default Argument
+ The default for an argument is the value that is used if you do not
+ specify one. When Emacs prompts you in the minibuffer for an
+ argument, the default argument is used if you just type <RET>.
+ *Note Minibuffer::.
+
+Default Directory
+ When you specify a file name that does not start with `/' or `~',
+ it is interpreted relative to the current buffer's default
+ directory. *Note Default Directory: Minibuffer File.
+
+Defun
+ A defun is a list at the top level of parenthesis or bracket
+ structure in a program. It is so named because most such lists in
+ Lisp programs are calls to the Lisp function `defun'. *Note
+ Defuns::.
+
+<DEL>
+ The <DEL> character runs the command that deletes one character of
+ text. *Note DEL: Basic.
+
+Deletion
+ Deleting text means erasing it without saving it. Emacs deletes
+ text only when it is expected not to be worth saving (all
+ whitespace, or only one character). The alternative is killing
+ (q.v.). *Note Deletion: Killing.
+
+Deletion of Files
+ Deleting a file means removing it from the file system. *Note
+ Misc File Ops::.
+
+Deletion of Messages
+ Deleting a message means flagging it to be eliminated from your
+ mail file. Until the mail file is expunged, you can undo this by
+ undeleting the message.
+
+Deletion of Frames
+ When working under the multi-frame X-based version of XEmacs, you
+ can delete individual frames using the Close menu item from the
+ File menu.
+
+Deletion of Windows
+ When you delete a subwindow of an Emacs frame, you eliminate it
+ from the frame. Other windows expand to use up the space. The
+ deleted window can never come back, but no actual text is lost.
+ *Note Windows::.
+
+Directory
+ Files in the Unix file system are grouped into file directories.
+ *Note Directories: ListDir.
+
+Dired
+ Dired is the Emacs facility that displays the contents of a file
+ directory and allows you to "edit the directory", performing
+ operations on the files in the directory. *Note Dired::.
+
+Disabled Command
+ A disabled command is one that you may not run without special
+ confirmation. Commands are usually disabled because they are
+ confusing for beginning users. *Note Disabling::.
+
+Dribble File
+ A file into which Emacs writes all the characters that the user
+ types on the keyboard. Dribble files are used to make a record for
+ debugging Emacs bugs. Emacs does not make a dribble file unless
+ you tell it to. *Note Bugs::.
+
+Echo Area
+ The area at the bottom of the Emacs frame which is used for
+ echoing the arguments to commands, for asking questions, and for
+ printing brief messages (including error messages). *Note Echo
+ Area::.
+
+Echoing
+ Echoing refers to acknowledging the receipt of commands by
+ displaying them (in the echo area). Emacs never echoes
+ single-character keys; longer keys echo only if you pause while
+ typing them.
+
+Error
+ An error occurs when an Emacs command cannot execute in the current
+ circumstances. When an error occurs, execution of the command
+ stops (unless the command has been programmed to do otherwise) and
+ Emacs reports the error by printing an error message (q.v.).
+ Type-ahead is discarded. Then Emacs is ready to read another
+ editing command.
+
+Error Messages
+ Error messages are single lines of output printed by Emacs when the
+ user asks for something impossible to do (such as killing text
+ forward when point is at the end of the buffer). They appear in
+ the echo area, accompanied by a beep.
+
+<ESC>
+ <ESC> is a character used as a prefix for typing Meta characters on
+ keyboards lacking a <META> key. Unlike the <META> key (which,
+ like the <SHIFT> key, is held down while another character is
+ typed), the <ESC> key is pressed and released, and applies to the
+ next character typed.
+
+Fill Prefix
+ The fill prefix is a string that Emacs enters at the beginning of
+ each line when it performs filling. It is not regarded as part of
+ the text to be filled. *Note Filling::.
+
+Filling
+ Filling text means moving text from line to line so that all the
+ lines are approximately the same length. *Note Filling::.
+
+Frame
+ When running Emacs on a TTY terminal, "frame" means the terminal's
+ screen. When running Emacs under X, you can have multiple frames,
+ each corresponding to a top-level X window and each looking like
+ the screen on a TTY. Each frame contains one or more
+ non-overlapping Emacs windows (possibly with associated
+ scrollbars, under X), an echo area, and (under X) possibly a
+ menubar, toolbar, and/or gutter.
+
+Global
+ Global means `independent of the current environment; in effect
+ throughout Emacs'. It is the opposite of local (q.v.). Examples
+ of the use of `global' appear below.
+
+Global Abbrev
+ A global definition of an abbrev (q.v.) is effective in all major
+ modes that do not have local (q.v.) definitions for the same
+ abbrev. *Note Abbrevs::.
+
+Global Keymap
+ The global keymap (q.v.) contains key bindings that are in effect
+ unless local key bindings in a major mode's local keymap (q.v.)
+ override them.*Note Keymaps::.
+
+Global Substitution
+ Global substitution means replacing each occurrence of one string
+ by another string through a large amount of text. *Note Replace::.
+
+Global Variable
+ The global value of a variable (q.v.) takes effect in all buffers
+ that do not have their own local (q.v.) values for the variable.
+ *Note Variables::.
+
+Graphic Character
+ Graphic characters are those assigned pictorial images rather than
+ just names. All the non-Meta (q.v.) characters except for the
+ Control (q.v.) character are graphic characters. These include
+ letters, digits, punctuation, and spaces; they do not include
+ <RET> or <ESC>. In Emacs, typing a graphic character inserts that
+ character (in ordinary editing modes). *Note Basic Editing: Basic.
+
+Grinding
+ Grinding means adjusting the indentation in a program to fit the
+ nesting structure. *Note Grinding: Indentation.
+
+Hardcopy
+ Hardcopy means printed output. Emacs has commands for making
+ printed listings of text in Emacs buffers. *Note Hardcopy::.
+
+<HELP>
+ You can type <HELP> at any time to ask what options you have, or
+ to ask what any command does. <HELP> is really `Control-h'.
+ *Note Help::.
+
+Inbox
+ An inbox is a file in which mail is delivered by the operating
+ system. Some mail handlers transfers mail from inboxes to mail
+ files (q.v.) in which the mail is then stored permanently or until
+ explicitly deleted.
+
+Indentation
+ Indentation means blank space at the beginning of a line. Most
+ programming languages have conventions for using indentation to
+ illuminate the structure of the program, and Emacs has special
+ features to help you set up the correct indentation. *Note
+ Indentation::.
+
+Insertion
+ Insertion means copying text into the buffer, either from the
+ keyboard or from some other place in Emacs.
+
+Justification
+ Justification means adding extra spaces to lines of text to make
+ them come exactly to a specified width. *Note Justification:
+ Filling.
+
+Keyboard Macros
+ Keyboard macros are a way of defining new Emacs commands from
+ sequences of existing ones, with no need to write a Lisp program.
+ *Note Keyboard Macros::.
+
+Key
+ A key is a sequence of characters that, when input to Emacs,
+ specify or begin to specify a single action for Emacs to perform.
+ That is, the sequence is considered a single unit. If the key is
+ enough to specify one action, it is a complete key (q.v.); if it
+ is less than enough, it is a prefix key (q.v.). *Note
+ Keystrokes::.
+
+Keymap
+ The keymap is the data structure that records the bindings (q.v.)
+ of keys to the commands that they run. For example, the keymap
+ binds the character `C-n' to the command function `next-line'.
+ *Note Keymaps::.
+
+Kill Ring
+ The kill ring is the place where all text you have killed recently
+ is saved. You can re-insert any of the killed text still in the
+ ring; this is called yanking (q.v.). *Note Yanking::.
+
+Killing
+ Killing means erasing text and saving it on the kill ring so it
+ can be yanked (q.v.) later. Some other systems call this
+ "cutting." Most Emacs commands to erase text do killing, as
+ opposed to deletion (q.v.). *Note Killing::.
+
+Killing Jobs
+ Killing a job (such as, an invocation of Emacs) means making it
+ cease to exist. Any data within it, if not saved in a file, is
+ lost. *Note Exiting::.
+
+List
+ A list is, approximately, a text string beginning with an open
+ parenthesis and ending with the matching close parenthesis. In C
+ mode and other non-Lisp modes, groupings surrounded by other kinds
+ of matched delimiters appropriate to the language, such as braces,
+ are also considered lists. Emacs has special commands for many
+ operations on lists. *Note Lists::.
+
+Local
+ Local means `in effect only in a particular context'; the relevant
+ kind of context is a particular function execution, a particular
+ buffer, or a particular major mode. Local is the opposite of
+ `global' (q.v.). Specific uses of `local' in Emacs terminology
+ appear below.
+
+Local Abbrev
+ A local abbrev definition is effective only if a particular major
+ mode is selected. In that major mode, it overrides any global
+ definition for the same abbrev. *Note Abbrevs::.
+
+Local Keymap
+ A local keymap is used in a particular major mode; the key bindings
+ (q.v.) in the current local keymap override global bindings of the
+ same keys. *Note Keymaps::.
+
+Local Variable
+ A local value of a variable (q.v.) applies to only one buffer.
+ *Note Locals::.
+
+M-
+ `M-' in the name of a character is an abbreviation for <META>, one
+ of the modifier keys that can accompany any character. *Note
+ Keystrokes::.
+
+M-C-
+ `M-C-' in the name of a character is an abbreviation for
+ Control-Meta; it means the same thing as `C-M-'. If your terminal
+ lacks a real <META> key, you type a Control-Meta character by
+ typing <ESC> and then typing the corresponding Control character.
+ *Note C-M-: Keystrokes.
+
+M-x
+ `M-x' is the key which is used to call an Emacs command by name.
+ You use it to call commands that are not bound to keys. *Note
+ M-x::.
+
+Mail
+ Mail means messages sent from one user to another through the
+ computer system, to be read at the recipient's convenience. Emacs
+ has commands for composing and sending mail, and for reading and
+ editing the mail you have received. *Note Sending Mail::.
+
+Major Mode
+ The major modes are a mutually exclusive set of options each of
+ which configures Emacs for editing a certain sort of text.
+ Ideally, each programming language has its own major mode. *Note
+ Major Modes::.
+
+Mark
+ The mark points to a position in the text. It specifies one end
+ of the region (q.v.), point being the other end. Many commands
+ operate on the whole region, that is, all the text from point to
+ the mark. *Note Mark::.
+
+Mark Ring
+ The mark ring is used to hold several recent previous locations of
+ the mark, just in case you want to move back to them. *Note Mark
+ Ring::.
+
+Message
+ See `mail'.
+
+Meta
+ Meta is the name of a modifier bit which a command character may
+ have. It is present in a character if the character is typed with
+ the <META> key held down. Such characters are given names that
+ start with `Meta-'. For example, `Meta-<' is typed by holding down
+ <META> and at the same time typing `<' (which itself is done, on
+ most terminals, by holding down <SHIFT> and typing `,'). *Note
+ Meta: Keystrokes.
+
+Meta Character
+ A Meta character is one whose character code includes the Meta bit.
+
+Minibuffer
+ The minibuffer is the window that Emacs displays inside the echo
+ area (q.v.) when it prompts you for arguments to commands. *Note
+ Minibuffer::.
+
+Minor Mode
+ A minor mode is an optional feature of Emacs which can be switched
+ on or off independent of the major mode. Each minor mode has a
+ command to turn it on or off. *Note Minor Modes::.
+
+Mode Line
+ The mode line is the line at the bottom of each text window (q.v.),
+ which gives status information on the buffer displayed in that
+ window. *Note Mode Line::.
+
+Modified Buffer
+ A buffer (q.v.) is modified if its text has been changed since the
+ last time the buffer was saved (or since it was created, if it has
+ never been saved). *Note Saving::.
+
+Moving Text
+ Moving text means erasing it from one place and inserting it in
+ another. This is done by killing (q.v.) and then yanking (q.v.).
+ *Note Killing::.
+
+Named Mark
+ A named mark is a register (q.v.) in its role of recording a
+ location in text so that you can move point to that location.
+ *Note Registers::.
+
+Narrowing
+ Narrowing means creating a restriction (q.v.) that limits editing
+ in the current buffer to only a part of the text in the buffer.
+ Text outside that part is inaccessible to the user until the
+ boundaries are widened again, but it is still there, and saving
+ the file saves the invisible text. *Note Narrowing::.
+
+Newline
+ <LFD> characters in the buffer terminate lines of text and are
+ called newlines. *Note Newline: Keystrokes.
+
+Numeric Argument
+ A numeric argument is a number, specified before a command, to
+ change the effect of the command. Often the numeric argument
+ serves as a repeat count. *Note Arguments::.
+
+Option
+ An option is a variable (q.v.) that allows you to customize Emacs
+ by giving it a new value. *Note Variables::.
+
+Overwrite Mode
+ Overwrite mode is a minor mode. When it is enabled, ordinary text
+ characters replace the existing text after point rather than
+ pushing it to the right. *Note Minor Modes::.
+
+Page
+ A page is a unit of text, delimited by formfeed characters (ASCII
+ Control-L, code 014) coming at the beginning of a line. Some Emacs
+ commands are provided for moving over and operating on pages.
+ *Note Pages::.
+
+Paragraphs
+ Paragraphs are the medium-size unit of English text. There are
+ special Emacs commands for moving over and operating on paragraphs.
+ *Note Paragraphs::.
+
+Parsing
+ We say that Emacs parses words or expressions in the text being
+ edited. Really, all it knows how to do is find the other end of a
+ word or expression. *Note Syntax::.
+
+Point
+ Point is the place in the buffer at which insertion and deletion
+ occur. Point is considered to be between two characters, not at
+ one character. The terminal's cursor (q.v.) indicates the
+ location of point. *Note Point: Basic.
+
+Prefix Key
+ A prefix key is a key (q.v.) whose sole function is to introduce a
+ set of multi-character keys. `Control-x' is an example of a prefix
+ key; any two-character sequence starting with `C-x' is also a
+ legitimate key. *Note Keystrokes::.
+
+Prompt
+ A prompt is text printed to ask the user for input. Printing a
+ prompt is called prompting. Emacs prompts always appear in the
+ echo area (q.v.). One kind of prompting happens when the
+ minibuffer is used to read an argument (*note Minibuffer::); the
+ echoing which happens when you pause in the middle of typing a
+ multi-character key is also a kind of prompting (*note Echo
+ Area::).
+
+Quitting
+ Quitting means cancelling a partially typed command or a running
+ command, using `C-g'. *Note Quitting::.
+
+Quoting
+ Quoting means depriving a character of its usual special
+ significance. In Emacs this is usually done with `Control-q'.
+ What constitutes special significance depends on the context and
+ on convention. For example, an "ordinary" character as an Emacs
+ command inserts itself; so in this context, a special character is
+ any character that does not normally insert itself (such as <DEL>,
+ for example), and quoting it makes it insert itself as if it were
+ not special. Not all contexts allow quoting. *Note Quoting:
+ Basic.
+
+Read-only Buffer
+ A read-only buffer is one whose text you are not allowed to change.
+ Normally Emacs makes buffers read-only when they contain text which
+ has a special significance to Emacs, such as Dired buffers.
+ Visiting a file that is write-protected also makes a read-only
+ buffer. *Note Buffers::.
+
+Recursive Editing Level
+ A recursive editing level is a state in which part of the
+ execution of a command involves asking the user to edit some text.
+ This text may or may not be the same as the text to which the
+ command was applied. The mode line indicates recursive editing
+ levels with square brackets (`[' and `]'). *Note Recursive Edit::.
+
+Redisplay
+ Redisplay is the process of correcting the image on the screen to
+ correspond to changes that have been made in the text being edited.
+ *Note Redisplay: Frame.
+
+Regexp
+ See `regular expression'.
+
+Region
+ The region is the text between point (q.v.) and the mark (q.v.).
+ Many commands operate on the text of the region. *Note Region:
+ Mark.
+
+Registers
+ Registers are named slots in which text or buffer positions or
+ rectangles can be saved for later use. *Note Registers::.
+
+Regular Expression
+ A regular expression is a pattern that can match various text
+ strings; for example, `l[0-9]+' matches `l' followed by one or more
+ digits. *Note Regexps::.
+
+Replacement
+ See `global substitution'.
+
+Restriction
+ A buffer's restriction is the amount of text, at the beginning or
+ the end of the buffer, that is temporarily invisible and
+ inaccessible. Giving a buffer a nonzero amount of restriction is
+ called narrowing (q.v.). *Note Narrowing::.
+
+<RET>
+ <RET> is the character than runs the command to insert a newline
+ into the text. It is also used to terminate most arguments read
+ in the minibuffer (q.v.). *Note Return: Keystrokes.
+
+Saving
+ Saving a buffer means copying its text into the file that was
+ visited (q.v.) in that buffer. To actually change a file you have
+ edited in Emacs, you have to save it. *Note Saving::.
+
+Scrolling
+ Scrolling means shifting the text in the Emacs window to make a
+ different part of the buffer visible. *Note Scrolling: Display.
+
+Searching
+ Searching means moving point to the next occurrence of a specified
+ string. *Note Search::.
+
+Selecting
+ Selecting a buffer means making it the current (q.v.) buffer.
+ *Note Selecting: Buffers.
+
+Self-documentation
+ Self-documentation is the feature of Emacs which can tell you what
+ any command does, or can give you a list of all commands related
+ to a topic you specify. You ask for self-documentation with the
+ help character, `C-h'. *Note Help::.
+
+Sentences
+ Emacs has commands for moving by or killing by sentences. *Note
+ Sentences::.
+
+Sexp
+ An sexp (short for `s-expression,' itself short for `symbolic
+ expression') is the basic syntactic unit of Lisp in its textual
+ form: either a list, or Lisp atom. Many Emacs commands operate on
+ sexps. The term `sexp' is generalized to languages other than
+ Lisp to mean a syntactically recognizable expression. *Note
+ Sexps: Lists.
+
+Simultaneous Editing
+ Simultaneous editing means two users modifying the same file at
+ once. If simultaneous editing is not detected, you may lose your
+ work. Emacs detects all cases of simultaneous editing and warns
+ the user to investigate them. *Note Simultaneous Editing:
+ Interlocking.
+
+String
+ A string is a kind of Lisp data object which contains a sequence of
+ characters. Many Emacs variables are intended to have strings as
+ values. The Lisp syntax for a string consists of the characters in
+ the string with a `"' before and another `"' after. Write a `"'
+ that is part of the string as `\"' and a `\' that is part of the
+ string as `\\'. You can include all other characters, including
+ newline, just by writing them inside the string. You can also
+ include escape sequences as in C, such as `\n' for newline or
+ `\241' using an octal character code.
+
+String Substitution
+ See `global substitution'.
+
+Syntax Table
+ The syntax table tells Emacs which characters are part of a word,
+ which characters balance each other like parentheses, etc. *Note
+ Syntax::.
+
+Tag Table
+ A tag table is a file that serves as an index to the function
+ definitions in one or more other files. *Note Tags::.
+
+Termscript File
+ A termscript file contains a record of all characters Emacs sent to
+ the terminal. It is used for tracking down bugs in Emacs
+ redisplay. Emacs does not make a termscript file unless
+ explicitly instructed to do so. *Note Bugs::.
+
+Text
+ Text has two meanings (*note Text::):
+
+ * Data consisting of a sequence of characters, as opposed to
+ binary numbers, images, graphics commands, executable
+ programs, and the like. The contents of an Emacs buffer are
+ always text in this sense.
+
+ * Data consisting of written human language, as opposed to
+ programs, or something that follows the stylistic conventions
+ of human language.
+
+Top Level
+ Top level is the normal state of Emacs, in which you are editing
+ the text of the file you have visited. You are at top level
+ whenever you are not in a recursive editing level (q.v.) or the
+ minibuffer (q.v.), and not in the middle of a command. You can
+ get back to top level by aborting (q.v.) and quitting (q.v.).
+ *Note Quitting::.
+
+Transposition
+ Transposing two units of text means putting each one into the place
+ formerly occupied by the other. There are Emacs commands to
+ transpose two adjacent characters, words, sexps (q.v.), or lines
+ (*note Transpose::).
+
+Truncation
+ Truncating text lines in the display means leaving out any text on
+ a line that does not fit within the right margin of the window
+ displaying it. See also `continuation line'. *Note Truncation:
+ Basic.
+
+Undoing
+ Undoing means making your previous editing go in reverse, bringing
+ back the text that existed earlier in the editing session. *Note
+ Undo::.
+
+Variable
+ A variable is Lisp object that can store an arbitrary value.
+ Emacs uses some variables for internal purposes, and has others
+ (known as `options' (q.v.)) you can set to control the behavior of
+ Emacs. The variables used in Emacs that you are likely to be
+ interested in are listed in the Variables Index of this manual.
+ *Note Variables::, for information on variables.
+
+Visiting
+ Visiting a file means loading its contents into a buffer (q.v.)
+ where they can be edited. *Note Visiting::.
+
+Whitespace
+ Whitespace is any run of consecutive formatting characters (spaces,
+ tabs, newlines, and backspaces).
+
+Widening
+ Widening is removing any restriction (q.v.) on the current buffer;
+ it is the opposite of narrowing (q.v.). *Note Narrowing::.
+
+Window
+ Emacs divides the frame into one or more windows, each of which can
+ display the contents of one buffer (q.v.) at any time. *Note
+ Frame::, for basic information on how Emacs uses the frame. *Note
+ Windows::, for commands to control the use of windows. Note that if
+ you are running Emacs under X, terminology can be confusing: Each
+ Emacs frame occupies a separate X window and can, in turn, be
+ divided into different subwindows.
+
+Word Abbrev
+ Synonymous with `abbrev'.
+
+Word Search
+ Word search is searching for a sequence of words, considering the
+ punctuation between them as insignificant. *Note Word Search::.
+
+Yanking
+ Yanking means reinserting text previously killed. It can be used
+ to undo a mistaken kill, or for copying or moving text. Some other
+ systems call this "pasting". *Note Yanking::.
\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Completion Example, Next: Completion Commands, Prev: Completion, Up: Completion
-
-Completion Example
-------------------
-
- A concrete example may help here. If you type `M-x au <TAB>', the
-<TAB> looks for alternatives (in this case, command names) that start
-with `au'. There are several, including `auto-fill-mode' and
-`auto-save-mode'--but they are all the same as far as `auto', so the
-`au' in the minibuffer changes to `auto'.
-
- If you type <TAB> again immediately, there are multiple
-possibilities for the very next character--it could be any of `c-'--so
-no more characters are added; instead, <TAB> displays a list of all
-possible completions in another window.
-
- If you go on to type `-f <TAB>', this <TAB> sees `auto-f'. The only
-command name starting this way is `auto-fill-mode', so completion fills
-in the rest of that. You now have `auto-fill-mode' in the minibuffer
-after typing just `au <TAB> f <TAB>'. Note that <TAB> has this effect
-because in the minibuffer it is bound to the command
-`minibuffer-complete' when completion is available.
-
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Completion Commands, Next: Strict Completion, Prev: Completion Example, Up: Completion
-
-Completion Commands
--------------------
-
- Here is a list of the completion commands defined in the minibuffer
-when completion is available.
-
-`<TAB>'
- Complete the text in the minibuffer as much as possible
- (`minibuffer-complete').
-
-`<SPC>'
- Complete the minibuffer text, but don't go beyond one word
- (`minibuffer-complete-word').
-
-`<RET>'
- Submit the text in the minibuffer as the argument, possibly
- completing first as described below
- (`minibuffer-complete-and-exit').
-
-`?'
- Print a list of all possible completions of the text in the
- minibuffer (`minibuffer-list-completions').
-
-`<button2>'
- Select the highlighted text under the mouse as a minibuffer
- response. When the minibuffer is being used to prompt the user
- for a completion, any valid completions which are visible on the
- screen will be highlighted when the mouse moves over them.
- Clicking <button2> will select the highlighted completion and exit
- the minibuffer. (`minibuf-select-highlighted-completion').
-
- <SPC> completes much like <TAB>, but never goes beyond the next
-hyphen or space. If you have `auto-f' in the minibuffer and type
-<SPC>, it finds that the completion is `auto-fill-mode', but it stops
-completing after `fill-'. This gives `auto-fill-'. Another <SPC> at
-this point completes all the way to `auto-fill-mode'. <SPC> in the
-minibuffer when completion is available runs the command
-`minibuffer-complete-word'.
-
- Here are some commands you can use to choose a completion from a
-window that displays a list of completions:
-
-`button2up'
- Clicking mouse button 2 on a completion in the list of possible
- completions chooses that completion (`mouse-choose-completion').
- You normally use this command while point is in the minibuffer;
- but you must click in the list of completions, not in the
- minibuffer itself.
-
-`<PRIOR>'
-`M-v'
- Typing <PRIOR> or `M-v', while in the minibuffer, selects the
- window showing the completion list buffer
- (`switch-to-completions'). This paves the way for using the
- commands below. (Selecting that window in the usual ways has the
- same effect, but this way is more convenient.)
-
-`<RET>'
- Typing <RET> _in the completion list buffer_ chooses the
- completion that point is in or next to (`choose-completion'). To
- use this command, you must first switch windows to the window that
- shows the list of completions.
-
-`<RIGHT>'
-`<TAB>'
-`C-f'
- Typing the right-arrow key <RIGHT>, <TAB> or `C-f' _in the
- completion list buffer_ moves point to the following completion
- (`next-list-mode-item').
-
-`<LEFT>'
-`C-b'
- Typing the left-arrow key <LEFT> or `C-b' _in the completion list
- buffer_ moves point toward the beginning of the buffer, to the
- previous completion (`previous-list-mode-item').
-
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Strict Completion, Next: Completion Options, Prev: Completion Commands, Up: Completion
-
-Strict Completion
------------------
-
- There are three different ways that <RET> can work in completing
-minibuffers, depending on how the argument will be used.
-
- * "Strict" completion is used when it is meaningless to give any
- argument except one of the known alternatives. For example, when
- `C-x k' reads the name of a buffer to kill, it is meaningless to
- give anything but the name of an existing buffer. In strict
- completion, <RET> refuses to exit if the text in the minibuffer
- does not complete to an exact match.
-
- * "Cautious" completion is similar to strict completion, except that
- <RET> exits only if the text was an exact match already, not
- needing completion. If the text is not an exact match, <RET> does
- not exit, but it does complete the text. If it completes to an
- exact match, a second <RET> will exit.
-
- Cautious completion is used for reading file names for files that
- must already exist.
-
- * "Permissive" completion is used when any string whatever is
- meaningful, and the list of completion alternatives is just a
- guide. For example, when `C-x C-f' reads the name of a file to
- visit, any file name is allowed, in case you want to create a
- file. In permissive completion, <RET> takes the text in the
- minibuffer exactly as given, without completing it.
-
- The completion commands display a list of all possible completions in
-a window whenever there is more than one possibility for the very next
-character. Also, typing `?' explicitly requests such a list. If the
-list of completions is long, you can scroll it with `C-M-v' (*note
-Other Window::).
+File: xemacs.info, Node: Manifesto, Next: Key Index, Prev: Glossary, Up: Top
+
+The GNU Manifesto
+*****************
+
+What's GNU? GNU's Not Unix!
+============================
+
+GNU, which stands for GNU's Not Unix, is the name for the complete
+Unix-compatible software system which I am writing so that I can give it
+away free to everyone who can use it. Several other volunteers are
+helping me. Contributions of time, money, programs, and equipment are
+greatly needed.
+
+ So far we have an Emacs text editor with Lisp for writing editor
+commands, a source level debugger, a yacc-compatible parser generator,
+a linker, and around 35 utilities. A shell (command interpreter) is
+nearly completed. A new portable optimizing C compiler has compiled
+itself and may be released this year. An initial kernel exists, but
+many more features are needed to emulate Unix. When the kernel and
+compiler are finished, it will be possible to distribute a GNU system
+suitable for program development. We will use TeX as our text
+formatter, but an nroff is being worked on. We will use the free,
+portable X window system as well. After this we will add a portable
+Common Lisp, an Empire game, a spreadsheet, and hundreds of other
+things, plus online documentation. We hope to supply, eventually,
+everything useful that normally comes with a Unix system, and more.
+
+ GNU will be able to run Unix programs, but will not be identical to
+Unix. We will make all improvements that are convenient, based on our
+experience with other operating systems. In particular, we plan to
+have longer filenames, file version numbers, a crashproof file system,
+filename completion perhaps, terminal-independent display support, and
+perhaps eventually a Lisp-based window system through which several
+Lisp programs and ordinary Unix programs can share a screen. Both C
+and Lisp will be available as system programming languages. We will
+try to support UUCP, MIT Chaosnet, and Internet protocols for
+communication.
+
+ GNU is aimed initially at machines in the 68000/16000 class with
+virtual memory, because they are the easiest machines to make it run
+on. The extra effort to make it run on smaller machines will be left
+to someone who wants to use it on them.
+
+ To avoid horrible confusion, please pronounce the `G' in the word
+`GNU' when it is the name of this project.
+
+Why I Must Write GNU
+====================
+
+I consider that the golden rule requires that if I like a program I must
+share it with other people who like it. Software sellers want to divide
+the users and conquer them, making each user agree not to share with
+others. I refuse to break solidarity with other users in this way. I
+cannot in good conscience sign a nondisclosure agreement or a software
+license agreement. For years I worked within the Artificial
+Intelligence Lab to resist such tendencies and other inhospitalities,
+but eventually they had gone too far: I could not remain in an
+institution where such things are done for me against my will.
+
+ So that I can continue to use computers without dishonor, I have
+decided to put together a sufficient body of free software so that I
+will be able to get along without any software that is not free. I
+have resigned from the AI lab to deny MIT any legal excuse to prevent
+me from giving GNU away.
+
+Why GNU Will Be Compatible With Unix
+====================================
+
+Unix is not my ideal system, but it is not too bad. The essential
+features of Unix seem to be good ones, and I think I can fill in what
+Unix lacks without spoiling them. And a system compatible with Unix
+would be convenient for many other people to adopt.
+
+How GNU Will Be Available
+=========================
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Completion Options, Prev: Strict Completion, Up: Completion
-
-Completion Options
-------------------
-
- When completion is done on file names, certain file names are usually
-ignored. The variable `completion-ignored-extensions' contains a list
-of strings; a file whose name ends in any of those strings is ignored
-as a possible completion. The standard value of this variable has
-several elements including `".o"', `".elc"', `".dvi"' and `"~"'. The
-effect is that, for example, `foo' can complete to `foo.c' even though
-`foo.o' exists as well. However, if _all_ the possible completions end
-in "ignored" strings, then they are not ignored. Ignored extensions do
-not apply to lists of completions--those always mention all possible
-completions.
-
- If a completion command finds the next character is undetermined, it
-automatically displays a list of all possible completions. If the
-variable `completion-auto-help' is set to `nil', this does not happen,
-and you must type `?' to display the possible completions.
-
- If the variable `minibuffer-confirm-incomplete' is set to `t', then
-in contexts where `completing-read' allows answers that are not valid
-completions, an extra <RET> must be typed to confirm the response.
-This is helpful for catching typos.
-
- Icomplete mode presents a constantly-updated display that tells you
-what completions are available for the text you've entered so far. The
-command to enable or disable this minor mode is `M-x icomplete-mode'.
+GNU is not in the public domain. Everyone will be permitted to modify
+and redistribute GNU, but no distributor will be allowed to restrict its
+further redistribution. That is to say, proprietary modifications will
+not be allowed. I want to make sure that all versions of GNU remain
+free.
+
+Why Many Other Programmers Want to Help
+=======================================
+
+I have found many other programmers who are excited about GNU and want
+to help.
+
+ Many programmers are unhappy about the commercialization of system
+software. It may enable them to make more money, but it requires them
+to feel in conflict with other programmers in general rather than feel
+as comrades. The fundamental act of friendship among programmers is the
+sharing of programs; marketing arrangements now typically used
+essentially forbid programmers to treat others as friends. The
+purchaser of software must choose between friendship and obeying the
+law. Naturally, many decide that friendship is more important. But
+those who believe in law often do not feel at ease with either choice.
+They become cynical and think that programming is just a way of making
+money.
+
+ By working on and using GNU rather than proprietary programs, we can
+be hospitable to everyone and obey the law. In addition, GNU serves as
+an example to inspire and a banner to rally others to join us in
+sharing. This can give us a feeling of harmony which is impossible if
+we use software that is not free. For about half the programmers I
+talk to, this is an important happiness that money cannot replace.
+
+How You Can Contribute
+======================
+
+I am asking computer manufacturers for donations of machines and money.
+I'm asking individuals for donations of programs and work.
+
+ One consequence you can expect if you donate machines is that GNU
+will run on them at an early date. The machines should be complete,
+ready-to-use systems, approved for use in a residential area, and not
+in need of sophisticated cooling or power.
+
+ I have found very many programmers eager to contribute part-time
+work for GNU. For most projects, such part-time distributed work would
+be very hard to coordinate; the independently-written parts would not
+work together. But for the particular task of replacing Unix, this
+problem is absent. A complete Unix system contains hundreds of utility
+programs, each of which is documented separately. Most interface
+specifications are fixed by Unix compatibility. If each contributor
+can write a compatible replacement for a single Unix utility, and make
+it work properly in place of the original on a Unix system, then these
+utilities will work right when put together. Even allowing for Murphy
+to create a few unexpected problems, assembling these components will
+be a feasible task. (The kernel will require closer communication and
+will be worked on by a small, tight group.)
+
+ If I get donations of money, I may be able to hire a few people full
+or part time. The salary won't be high by programmers' standards, but
+I'm looking for people for whom building community spirit is as
+important as making money. I view this as a way of enabling dedicated
+people to devote their full energies to working on GNU by sparing them
+the need to make a living in another way.
+
+Why All Computer Users Will Benefit
+===================================
+
+Once GNU is written, everyone will be able to obtain good system
+software free, just like air.
+
+ This means much more than just saving everyone the price of a Unix
+license. It means that much wasteful duplication of system programming
+effort will be avoided. This effort can go instead into advancing the
+state of the art.
+
+ Complete system sources will be available to everyone. As a result,
+a user who needs changes in the system will always be free to make them
+himself, or hire any available programmer or company to make them for
+him. Users will no longer be at the mercy of one programmer or company
+which owns the sources and is in sole position to make changes.
+
+ Schools will be able to provide a much more educational environment
+by encouraging all students to study and improve the system code.
+Harvard's computer lab used to have the policy that no program could be
+installed on the system if its sources were not on public display, and
+upheld it by actually refusing to install certain programs. I was very
+much inspired by this.
+
+ Finally, the overhead of considering who owns the system software
+and what one is or is not entitled to do with it will be lifted.
+
+ Arrangements to make people pay for using a program, including
+licensing of copies, always incur a tremendous cost to society through
+the cumbersome mechanisms necessary to figure out how much (that is,
+which programs) a person must pay for. And only a police state can
+force everyone to obey them. Consider a space station where air must
+be manufactured at great cost: charging each breather per liter of air
+may be fair, but wearing the metered gas mask all day and all night is
+intolerable even if everyone can afford to pay the air bill. And the
+TV cameras everywhere to see if you ever take the mask off are
+outrageous. It's better to support the air plant with a head tax and
+chuck the masks.
+
+ Copying all or parts of a program is as natural to a programmer as
+breathing, and as productive. It ought to be as free.
+
+Some Easily Rebutted Objections to GNU's Goals
+==============================================
+
+ "Nobody will use it if it is free, because that means they can't
+ rely on any support."
+
+ "You have to charge for the program to pay for providing the
+ support."
+
+ If people would rather pay for GNU plus service than get GNU free
+without service, a company to provide just service to people who have
+obtained GNU free ought to be profitable.
+
+ We must distinguish between support in the form of real programming
+work and mere handholding. The former is something one cannot rely on
+from a software vendor. If your problem is not shared by enough
+people, the vendor will tell you to get lost.
+
+ If your business needs to be able to rely on support, the only way
+is to have all the necessary sources and tools. Then you can hire any
+available person to fix your problem; you are not at the mercy of any
+individual. With Unix, the price of sources puts this out of
+consideration for most businesses. With GNU this will be easy. It is
+still possible for there to be no available competent person, but this
+problem cannot be blamed on distribution arrangements. GNU does not
+eliminate all the world's problems, only some of them.
+
+ Meanwhile, the users who know nothing about computers need
+handholding: doing things for them which they could easily do
+themselves but don't know how.
+
+ Such services could be provided by companies that sell just
+hand-holding and repair service. If it is true that users would rather
+spend money and get a product with service, they will also be willing
+to buy the service having got the product free. The service companies
+will compete in quality and price; users will not be tied to any
+particular one. Meanwhile, those of us who don't need the service
+should be able to use the program without paying for the service.
+
+ "You cannot reach many people without advertising, and you must
+ charge for the program to support that."
+
+ "It's no use advertising a program people can get free."
+
+ There are various forms of free or very cheap publicity that can be
+used to inform numbers of computer users about something like GNU. But
+it may be true that one can reach more microcomputer users with
+advertising. If this is really so, a business which advertises the
+service of copying and mailing GNU for a fee ought to be successful
+enough to pay for its advertising and more. This way, only the users
+who benefit from the advertising pay for it.
+
+ On the other hand, if many people get GNU from their friends, and
+such companies don't succeed, this will show that advertising was not
+really necessary to spread GNU. Why is it that free market advocates
+don't want to let the free market decide this?
+
+ "My company needs a proprietary operating system to get a
+ competitive edge."
+
+ GNU will remove operating system software from the realm of
+competition. You will not be able to get an edge in this area, but
+neither will your competitors be able to get an edge over you. You and
+they will compete in other areas, while benefitting mutually in this
+one. If your business is selling an operating system, you will not
+like GNU, but that's tough on you. If your business is something else,
+GNU can save you from being pushed into the expensive business of
+selling operating systems.
+
+ I would like to see GNU development supported by gifts from many
+manufacturers and users, reducing the cost to each.
+
+ "Don't programmers deserve a reward for their creativity?"
+
+ If anything deserves a reward, it is social contribution.
+Creativity can be a social contribution, but only in so far as society
+is free to use the results. If programmers deserve to be rewarded for
+creating innovative programs, by the same token they deserve to be
+punished if they restrict the use of these programs.
+
+ "Shouldn't a programmer be able to ask for a reward for his
+ creativity?"
+
+ There is nothing wrong with wanting pay for work, or seeking to
+maximize one's income, as long as one does not use means that are
+destructive. But the means customary in the field of software today
+are based on destruction.
+
+ Extracting money from users of a program by restricting their use of
+it is destructive because the restrictions reduce the amount and the
+ways that the program can be used. This reduces the amount of wealth
+that humanity derives from the program. When there is a deliberate
+choice to restrict, the harmful consequences are deliberate destruction.
+
+ The reason a good citizen does not use such destructive means to
+become wealthier is that, if everyone did so, we would all become
+poorer from the mutual destructiveness. This is Kantian ethics; or,
+the Golden Rule. Since I do not like the consequences that result if
+everyone hoards information, I am required to consider it wrong for one
+to do so. Specifically, the desire to be rewarded for one's creativity
+does not justify depriving the world in general of all or part of that
+creativity.
+
+ "Won't programmers starve?"
+
+ I could answer that nobody is forced to be a programmer. Most of us
+cannot manage to get any money for standing on the street and making
+faces. But we are not, as a result, condemned to spend our lives
+standing on the street making faces, and starving. We do something
+else.
+
+ But that is the wrong answer because it accepts the questioner's
+implicit assumption: that without ownership of software, programmers
+cannot possibly be paid a cent. Supposedly it is all or nothing.
+
+ The real reason programmers will not starve is that it will still be
+possible for them to get paid for programming; just not paid as much as
+now.
+
+ Restricting copying is not the only basis for business in software.
+It is the most common basis because it brings in the most money. If it
+were prohibited, or rejected by the customer, software business would
+move to other bases of organization which are now used less often.
+There are always numerous ways to organize any kind of business.
+
+ Probably programming will not be as lucrative on the new basis as it
+is now. But that is not an argument against the change. It is not
+considered an injustice that sales clerks make the salaries that they
+now do. If programmers made the same, that would not be an injustice
+either. (In practice they would still make considerably more than
+that.)
+
+ "Don't people have a right to control how their creativity is
+ used?"
+
+ "Control over the use of one's ideas" really constitutes control over
+other people's lives; and it is usually used to make their lives more
+difficult.
+
+ People who have studied the issue of intellectual property rights
+carefully (such as lawyers) say that there is no intrinsic right to
+intellectual property. The kinds of supposed intellectual property
+rights that the government recognizes were created by specific acts of
+legislation for specific purposes.
+
+ For example, the patent system was established to encourage
+inventors to disclose the details of their inventions. Its purpose was
+to help society rather than to help inventors. At the time, the life
+span of 17 years for a patent was short compared with the rate of
+advance of the state of the art. Since patents are an issue only among
+manufacturers, for whom the cost and effort of a license agreement are
+small compared with setting up production, the patents often do not do
+much harm. They do not obstruct most individuals who use patented
+products.
+
+ The idea of copyright did not exist in ancient times, when authors
+frequently copied other authors at length in works of non-fiction. This
+practice was useful, and is the only way many authors' works have
+survived even in part. The copyright system was created expressly for
+the purpose of encouraging authorship. In the domain for which it was
+invented--books, which could be copied economically only on a printing
+press--it did little harm, and did not obstruct most of the individuals
+who read the books.
+
+ All intellectual property rights are just licenses granted by society
+because it was thought, rightly or wrongly, that society as a whole
+would benefit by granting them. But in any particular situation, we
+have to ask: are we really better off granting such license? What kind
+of act are we licensing a person to do?
+
+ The case of programs today is very different from that of books a
+hundred years ago. The fact that the easiest way to copy a program is
+from one neighbor to another, the fact that a program has both source
+code and object code which are distinct, and the fact that a program is
+used rather than read and enjoyed, combine to create a situation in
+which a person who enforces a copyright is harming society as a whole
+both materially and spiritually; in which a person should not do so
+regardless of whether the law enables him to.
+
+ "Competition makes things get done better."
+
+ The paradigm of competition is a race: by rewarding the winner, we
+encourage everyone to run faster. When capitalism really works this
+way, it does a good job; but its defenders are wrong in assuming it
+always works this way. If the runners forget why the reward is offered
+and become intent on winning, no matter how, they may find other
+strategies--such as, attacking other runners. If the runners get into
+a fist fight, they will all finish late.
+
+ Proprietary and secret software is the moral equivalent of runners
+in a fist fight. Sad to say, the only referee we've got does not seem
+to object to fights; he just regulates them ("For every ten yards you
+run, you can fire one shot"). He really ought to break them up, and
+penalize runners for even trying to fight.
+
+ "Won't everyone stop programming without a monetary incentive?"
+
+ Actually, many people will program with absolutely no monetary
+incentive. Programming has an irresistible fascination for some
+people, usually the people who are best at it. There is no shortage of
+professional musicians who keep at it even though they have no hope of
+making a living that way.
+
+ But really this question, though commonly asked, is not appropriate
+to the situation. Pay for programmers will not disappear, only become
+less. So the right question is, will anyone program with a reduced
+monetary incentive? My experience shows that they will.
+
+ For more than ten years, many of the world's best programmers worked
+at the Artificial Intelligence Lab for far less money than they could
+have had anywhere else. They got many kinds of non-monetary rewards:
+fame and appreciation, for example. And creativity is also fun, a
+reward in itself.
+
+ Then most of them left when offered a chance to do the same
+interesting work for a lot of money.
+
+ What the facts show is that people will program for reasons other
+than riches; but if given a chance to make a lot of money as well, they
+will come to expect and demand it. Low-paying organizations do poorly
+in competition with high-paying ones, but they do not have to do badly
+if the high-paying ones are banned.
+
+ "We need the programmers desperately. If they demand that we stop
+ helping our neighbors, we have to obey."
+
+ You're never so desperate that you have to obey this sort of demand.
+Remember: millions for defense, but not a cent for tribute!
+
+ "Programmers need to make a living somehow."
+
+ In the short run, this is true. However, there are plenty of ways
+that programmers could make a living without selling the right to use a
+program. This way is customary now because it brings programmers and
+businessmen the most money, not because it is the only way to make a
+living. It is easy to find other ways if you want to find them. Here
+are a number of examples.
+
+ A manufacturer introducing a new computer will pay for the porting of
+operating systems onto the new hardware.
+
+ The sale of teaching, hand-holding, and maintenance services could
+also employ programmers.
+
+ People with new ideas could distribute programs as freeware and ask
+for donations from satisfied users or sell hand-holding services. I
+have met people who are already working this way successfully.
+
+ Users with related needs can form users' groups and pay dues. A
+group would contract with programming companies to write programs that
+the group's members would like to use.
+
+ All sorts of development can be funded with a Software Tax:
+
+ Suppose everyone who buys a computer has to pay a certain percent
+ of the price as a software tax. The government gives this to an
+ agency like the NSF to spend on software development.
+
+ But if the computer buyer makes a donation to software development
+ himself, he can take a credit against the tax. He can donate to
+ the project of his own choosing--often, chosen because he hopes to
+ use the results when
+
+ it is done. He can take a credit for any amount of donation up to
+ the total tax he had to pay.
+
+ The total tax rate could be decided by a vote of the payers of the
+ tax, weighted according to the amount they will be taxed on.
+
+ The consequences:
+
+ * The computer-using community supports software development.
+
+ * This community decides what level of support is needed.
+
+ * Users who care which projects their share is spent on can
+ choose this for themselves.
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Minibuffer History, Next: Repetition, Prev: Completion, Up: Minibuffer
-
-Minibuffer History
-==================
-
- Every argument that you enter with the minibuffer is saved on a
-"minibuffer history list" so that you can use it again later in another
-argument. Special commands load the text of an earlier argument in the
-minibuffer. They discard the old minibuffer contents, so you can think
-of them as moving through the history of previous arguments.
-
-`<UP>'
-`M-p'
- Move to the next earlier argument string saved in the minibuffer
- history (`previous-history-element').
-
-`<DOWN>'
-`M-n'
- Move to the next later argument string saved in the minibuffer
- history (`next-history-element').
-
-`M-r REGEXP <RET>'
- Move to an earlier saved argument in the minibuffer history that
- has a match for REGEXP (`previous-matching-history-element').
-
-`M-s REGEXP <RET>'
- Move to a later saved argument in the minibuffer history that has a
- match for REGEXP (`next-matching-history-element').
-
- The simplest way to reuse the saved arguments in the history list is
-to move through the history list one element at a time. While in the
-minibuffer, use `M-p' or up-arrow (`previous-history-element') to "move
-to" the next earlier minibuffer input, and use `M-n' or down-arrow
-(`next-history-element') to "move to" the next later input.
-
- The previous input that you fetch from the history entirely replaces
-the contents of the minibuffer. To use it as the argument, exit the
-minibuffer as usual with <RET>. You can also edit the text before you
-reuse it; this does not change the history element that you "moved" to,
-but your new argument does go at the end of the history list in its own
-right.
-
- For many minibuffer arguments there is a "default" value. In some
-cases, the minibuffer history commands know the default value. Then you
-can insert the default value into the minibuffer as text by using `M-n'
-to move "into the future" in the history.
-
- There are also commands to search forward or backward through the
-history; they search for history elements that match a regular
-expression that you specify with the minibuffer. `M-r'
-(`previous-matching-history-element') searches older elements in the
-history, while `M-s' (`next-matching-history-element') searches newer
-elements. By special dispensation, these commands can use the
-minibuffer to read their arguments even though you are already in the
-minibuffer when you issue them. As with incremental searching, an
-uppercase letter in the regular expression makes the search
-case-sensitive (*note Search Case::).
-
- All uses of the minibuffer record your input on a history list, but
-there are separate history lists for different kinds of arguments. For
-example, there is a list for file names, used by all the commands that
-read file names.
-
- There are several other very specific history lists, including one
-for command names read by `M-x', one for buffer names, one for arguments
-of commands like `query-replace', and one for compilation commands read
-by `compile'. Finally, there is one "miscellaneous" history list that
-most minibuffer arguments use.
+ In the long run, making programs free is a step toward the
+post-scarcity world, where nobody will have to work very hard just to
+make a living. People will be free to devote themselves to activities
+that are fun, such as programming, after spending the necessary ten
+hours a week on required tasks such as legislation, family counseling,
+robot repair, and asteroid prospecting. There will be no need to be
+able to make a living from programming.
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Repetition, Prev: Minibuffer History, Up: Minibuffer
-
-Repeating Minibuffer Commands
-=============================
-
- Every command that uses the minibuffer at least once is recorded on a
-special history list, together with the values of its arguments, so that
-you can repeat the entire command. In particular, every use of `M-x'
-is recorded there, since `M-x' uses the minibuffer to read the command
-name.
-
-`C-x <ESC> <ESC>'
- Re-execute a recent minibuffer command (`repeat-complex-command').
-
-`M-p'
- Within `C-x <ESC> <ESC>', move to previous recorded command
- (`previous-history-element').
-
-`M-n'
- Within `C-x <ESC> <ESC>', move to the next (more recent) recorded
- command (`next-history-element').
-
-`M-x list-command-history'
- Display the entire command history, showing all the commands `C-x
- <ESC> <ESC>' can repeat, most recent first.
-
- `C-x <ESC> <ESC>' is used to re-execute a recent minibuffer-using
-command. With no argument, it repeats the last such command. A
-numeric argument specifies which command to repeat; one means the last
-one, and larger numbers specify earlier ones.
-
- `C-x <ESC> <ESC>' works by turning the previous command into a Lisp
-expression and then entering a minibuffer initialized with the text for
-that expression. If you type just <RET>, the command is repeated as
-before. You can also change the command by editing the Lisp
-expression. Whatever expression you finally submit is what will be
-executed. The repeated command is added to the front of the command
-history unless it is identical to the most recently executed command
-already there.
-
- Even if you don't understand Lisp syntax, it will probably be obvious
-which command is displayed for repetition. If you do not change the
-text, you can be sure the command will repeat exactly as before.
-
- If you are in the minibuffer for `C-x <ESC> <ESC>' and the command
-shown to you is not the one you want to repeat, you can move around the
-list of previous commands using `M-n' and `M-p'. `M-p' replaces the
-contents of the minibuffer with the next earlier recorded command, and
-`M-n' replaces it with the next later command. After finding the
-desired previous command, you can edit its expression and then resubmit
-it by typing <RET>. Any editing you have done on the command to be
-repeated is lost if you use `M-n' or `M-p'.
-
- `M-n' and `M-p' are specially defined within `C-x <ESC> <ESC>' to
-run the commands `previous-history-element' and `next-history-element'.
-
- The list of previous commands using the minibuffer is stored as a
-Lisp list in the variable `command-history'. Each element of the list
-is a Lisp expression which describes one command and its arguments.
-Lisp programs can reexecute a command by feeding the corresponding
-`command-history' element to `eval'.
+ We have already greatly reduced the amount of work that the whole
+society must do for its actual productivity, but only a little of this
+has translated itself into leisure for workers because much
+nonproductive activity is required to accompany productive activity.
+The main causes of this are bureaucracy and isometric struggles against
+competition. Free software will greatly reduce these drains in the
+area of software production. We must do this, in order for technical
+gains in productivity to translate into less work for us.
\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: M-x, Next: Help, Prev: Minibuffer, Up: Top
-
-Running Commands by Name
-************************
-
- The Emacs commands that are used often or that must be quick to type
-are bound to keys--short sequences of characters--for convenient use.
-Other Emacs commands that are used more rarely are not bound to keys;
-to run them, you must refer to them by name.
-
- A command name consists, by convention, of one or more words,
-separated by hyphens: for example, `auto-fill-mode' or `manual-entry'.
-The use of English words makes the command name easier to remember than
-a key made up of obscure characters, even though it results in more
-characters to type. You can run any command by name, even if it can be
-run by keys as well.
+File: xemacs.info, Node: Key Index, Next: Command Index, Prev: Manifesto, Up: Top
- To run a command by name, start with `M-x', then type the command
-name, and finish with <RET>. `M-x' uses the minibuffer to read the
-command name. <RET> exits the minibuffer and runs the command.
+Key (Character) Index
+*********************
- Emacs uses the minibuffer for reading input for many different
-purposes; on this occasion, the string `M-x' is displayed at the
-beginning of the minibuffer as a "prompt" to remind you that your input
-should be the name of a command to be run. *Note Minibuffer::, for
-full information on the features of the minibuffer.
-
- You can use completion to enter a command name. For example, to
-invoke the command `forward-char', type:
-
- M-x forward-char <RET>
- or
- M-x fo <TAB> c <RET>
-
-After you type in `M-x fo TAB' emacs will give you a possible list of
-completions from which you can choose. Note that `forward-char' is the
-same command that you invoke with the key `C-f'. You can call any
-command (interactively callable function) defined in Emacs by its name
-using `M-x' regardless of whether or not any keys are bound to it.
-
- If you type `C-g' while Emacs reads the command name, you cancel the
-`M-x' command and get out of the minibuffer, ending up at top level.
-
- To pass a numeric argument to a command you are invoking with `M-x',
-specify the numeric argument before the `M-x'. `M-x' passes the
-argument along to the function that it calls. The argument value
-appears in the prompt while the command name is being read.
-
- You can use the command `M-x interactive' to specify a way of
-parsing arguments for interactive use of a function. For example,
-write:
-
- (defun foo (arg) "Doc string" (interactive "p") ...use arg...)
-
- to make `arg' be the prefix argument when `foo' is called as a
-command. The call to `interactive' is actually a declaration rather
-than a function; it tells `call-interactively' how to read arguments to
-pass to the function. When actually called, `interactive' returns
-`nil'.
-
- The argument of INTERACTIVE is usually a string containing a code
-letter followed by a prompt. Some code letters do not use I/O to get
-the argument and do not need prompts. To prompt for multiple arguments,
-you must provide a code letter, its prompt, a newline, and another code
-letter, and so forth. If the argument is not a string, it is evaluated
-to get a list of arguments to pass to the function. If you do not
-provide an argument to `interactive', no arguments are passed when
-calling interactively.
-
- Available code letters are:
-
-`a'
- Function name: symbol with a function definition
-
-`b'
- Name of existing buffer
-
-`B'
- Name of buffer, possibly nonexistent
-
-`c'
- Character
-
-`C'
- Command name: symbol with interactive function definition
-
-`d'
- Value of point as number (does not do I/O)
-
-`D'
- Directory name
-
-`e'
- Last mouse event
-
-`f'
- Existing file name
-
-`F'
- Possibly nonexistent file name
-
-`k'
- Key sequence (string)
-
-`m'
- Value of mark as number (does not do I/O)
-
-`n'
- Number read using minibuffer
-
-`N'
- Prefix arg converted to number, or if none, do like code `n'
-
-`p'
- Prefix arg converted to number (does not do I/O)
-
-`P'
- Prefix arg in raw form (does not do I/O)
-
-`r'
- Region: point and mark as two numeric arguments, smallest first
- (does not do I/O)
-
-`s'
- Any string
-
-`S'
- Any symbol
-
-`v'
- Variable name: symbol that is `user-variable-p'
-
-`x'
- Lisp expression read but not evaluated
-
-`X'
- Lisp expression read and evaluated
-
- In addition, if the string begins with `*', an error is signaled if
-the buffer is read-only. This happens before reading any arguments.
-If the string begins with `@', the window the mouse is over is selected
-before anything else is done. You may use both `@' and `*'; they are
-processed in the order that they appear.
-
- Normally, when describing a command that is run by name, we omit the
-<RET> that is needed to terminate the name. Thus we may refer to `M-x
-auto-fill-mode' rather than `M-x auto-fill-mode' <RET>. We mention the
-<RET> only when it is necessary to emphasize its presence, for example,
-when describing a sequence of input that contains a command name and
-arguments that follow it.
+* Menu:
- `M-x' is defined to run the command `execute-extended-command',
-which is responsible for reading the name of another command and
-invoking it.
+* ! (query-replace): Query Replace.
+* " (TeX mode): TeX Editing.
+* , (query-replace): Query Replace.
+* . (Calendar mode): Specified Dates.
+* . (query-replace): Query Replace.
+* ? (Calendar mode): General Calendar.
+* ^ (query-replace): Query Replace.
+* a (Calendar mode): Holidays.
+* BS: Inserting Text.
+* button1: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* button1up: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* button2: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* button2up: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* button3: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* button3up: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* C-<: Setting Mark.
+* C->: Setting Mark.
+* C-@ (Calendar mode): Mark and Region.
+* C-\: Select Input Method.
+* C-] <1>: Quitting.
+* C-]: Recursive Edit.
+* C-_: Undo.
+* C-a: Moving Point.
+* C-a (Calendar mode): Move to Beginning or End.
+* C-b: Moving Point.
+* C-b (Calendar mode): Calendar Unit Motion.
+* C-c: Key Sequences.
+* C-c ' (Picture mode): Insert in Picture.
+* C-c . (Picture mode): Insert in Picture.
+* C-c / (Picture mode): Insert in Picture.
+* C-c ; (Fortran mode): Fortran Comments.
+* C-c < (Picture mode): Insert in Picture.
+* C-c > (Picture mode): Insert in Picture.
+* C-c \ (Picture mode): Insert in Picture.
+* C-c ^ (Picture mode): Insert in Picture.
+* C-c ` (Picture mode): Insert in Picture.
+* C-c C-\ (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* C-c C-b (Outline mode): Outline Motion.
+* C-c C-b (Picture mode): Insert in Picture.
+* C-c C-b (TeX mode): TeX Print.
+* C-c C-c (Edit Abbrevs): Editing Abbrevs.
+* C-c C-c (Edit Tab Stops): Tab Stops.
+* C-c C-c (Mail mode): Mail Mode.
+* C-c C-c (Occur mode): Other Repeating Search.
+* C-c C-c (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* C-c C-d (Outline mode): Outline Visibility.
+* C-c C-d (Picture mode): Basic Picture.
+* C-c C-d (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* C-c C-f (LaTeX mode): TeX Editing.
+* C-c C-f (Outline mode): Outline Motion.
+* C-c C-f (Picture mode): Insert in Picture.
+* C-c C-f C-c (Mail mode): Mail Mode.
+* C-c C-f C-s (Mail mode): Mail Mode.
+* C-c C-f C-t (Mail mode): Mail Mode.
+* C-c C-h (Outline mode): Outline Visibility.
+* C-c C-i (Outline mode): Outline Visibility.
+* C-c C-j (Term mode): Term Mode.
+* C-c C-k (Picture mode): Rectangles in Picture.
+* C-c C-k (Term mode): Term Mode.
+* C-c C-k (TeX mode): TeX Print.
+* C-c C-l (Calendar mode): General Calendar.
+* C-c C-l (TeX mode): TeX Print.
+* C-c C-n (Fortran mode): Fortran Motion.
+* C-c C-n (Outline mode): Outline Motion.
+* C-c C-o (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* C-c C-p (Fortran mode): Fortran Motion.
+* C-c C-p (Outline mode): Outline Motion.
+* C-c C-p (TeX mode): TeX Print.
+* C-c C-q (Mail mode): Mail Mode.
+* C-c C-q (Term mode): Paging in Term.
+* C-c C-q (TeX mode): TeX Print.
+* C-c C-r (Fortran mode): Fortran Columns.
+* C-c C-r (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* C-c C-r (TeX mode): TeX Print.
+* C-c C-s (Mail mode): Mail Mode.
+* C-c C-u (Outline mode): Outline Motion.
+* C-c C-u (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* C-c C-w (Fortran mode): Fortran Columns.
+* C-c C-w (Mail mode): Mail Mode.
+* C-c C-w (Picture mode): Rectangles in Picture.
+* C-c C-w (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* C-c C-x (Picture mode): Rectangles in Picture.
+* C-c C-y (Mail mode): Mail Mode.
+* C-c C-y (Picture mode): Rectangles in Picture.
+* C-c C-y (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* C-c C-z (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* C-c TAB (Picture mode): Tabs in Picture.
+* C-c { (TeX mode): TeX Editing.
+* C-c } (TeX mode): TeX Editing.
+* C-d: Killing.
+* C-d (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* C-e: Moving Point.
+* C-e (Calendar mode): Move to Beginning or End.
+* C-END: Moving Point.
+* C-f: Moving Point.
+* C-f (Calendar mode): Calendar Unit Motion.
+* C-g <1>: Quitting.
+* C-g: Minibuffer.
+* C-g (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* C-h <1>: Help.
+* C-h: Key Sequences.
+* C-h A: Apropos.
+* C-h b: Misc Help.
+* C-h c: Key Help.
+* C-h C-\: Select Input Method.
+* C-h C-c: Misc Help.
+* C-h C-d: Misc Help.
+* C-h C-f: Misc Help.
+* C-h C-h: Help.
+* C-h C-k: Misc Help.
+* C-h C-w: Misc Help.
+* C-h f: Documentation.
+* C-h F: Misc Help.
+* C-h f: Name Help.
+* C-h h: Mule Intro.
+* C-h I: Select Input Method.
+* C-h i: Misc Help.
+* C-h k: Key Help.
+* C-h L: Language Environments.
+* C-h l: Misc Help.
+* C-h m: Misc Help.
+* C-h n: Misc Help.
+* C-h p: Library Keywords.
+* C-h s: Syntax Change.
+* C-h t <1>: Misc Help.
+* C-h t: Basic.
+* C-h v <1>: Examining.
+* C-h v <2>: Documentation.
+* C-h v: Name Help.
+* C-h w: Name Help.
+* C-HOME: Moving Point.
+* C-k: Killing.
+* C-l <1>: Scrolling.
+* C-l: Moving Point.
+* C-l (query-replace): Query Replace.
+* C-LEFT: Moving Point.
+* C-M-@ <1>: Lists.
+* C-M-@: Marking Objects.
+* C-M-\ <1>: Multi-line Indent.
+* C-M-\: Indentation Commands.
+* C-M-a: Defuns.
+* C-M-a (Fortran mode): Fortran Motion.
+* C-M-b: Lists.
+* C-M-c: Recursive Edit.
+* C-M-d: Lists.
+* C-M-e: Defuns.
+* C-M-e (Fortran mode): Fortran Motion.
+* C-M-f: Lists.
+* C-M-h <1>: Defuns.
+* C-M-h: Marking Objects.
+* C-M-h (Fortran mode): Fortran Motion.
+* C-M-k <1>: Lists.
+* C-M-k: Killing.
+* C-M-n: Lists.
+* C-M-o: Indentation Commands.
+* C-M-p: Lists.
+* C-M-q: Multi-line Indent.
+* C-M-q (Fortran mode): ForIndent Commands.
+* C-M-t <1>: Lists.
+* C-M-t: Transpose.
+* C-M-u: Lists.
+* C-M-v <1>: Other Window.
+* C-M-v: Minibuffer Edit.
+* C-M-w: Appending Kills.
+* C-M-x <1>: External Lisp.
+* C-M-x: Lisp Eval.
+* C-n: Moving Point.
+* C-n (Calendar mode): Calendar Unit Motion.
+* C-o: Blank Lines.
+* C-p: Moving Point.
+* C-p (Calendar mode): Calendar Unit Motion.
+* C-q: Inserting Text.
+* C-q (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* C-r: Incremental Search.
+* C-r (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* C-r (query-replace): Query Replace.
+* C-RIGHT: Moving Point.
+* C-s: Incremental Search.
+* C-s (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* C-SPC: Setting Mark.
+* C-SPC (Calendar mode): Mark and Region.
+* C-t <1>: Transpose.
+* C-t: Moving Point.
+* C-u: Arguments.
+* C-u - C-x ;: Comments.
+* C-u C-@: Mark Ring.
+* C-u C-SPC: Mark Ring.
+* C-u C-x v v: Editing with VC.
+* C-u TAB: Multi-line Indent.
+* C-v <1>: Scrolling.
+* C-v: Moving Point.
+* C-v (Calendar mode): Scroll Calendar.
+* C-w: Killing.
+* C-w (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* C-w (query-replace): Query Replace.
+* C-x: Key Sequences.
+* C-x $: Selective Display.
+* C-x (: Basic Kbd Macro.
+* C-x ): Basic Kbd Macro.
+* C-x .: Fill Prefix.
+* C-x 0: Change Window.
+* C-x 1: Change Window.
+* C-x 2: Split Window.
+* C-x 3: Split Window.
+* C-x 4: Pop Up Window.
+* C-x 4 .: Find Tag.
+* C-x 4 b: Select Buffer.
+* C-x 4 d: Dired Enter.
+* C-x 4 f: Visiting.
+* C-x 4 m: Sending Mail.
+* C-x 5 b: Select Buffer.
+* C-x 5 C-f: Visiting.
+* C-x ;: Comments.
+* C-x <: Horizontal Scrolling.
+* C-x < (Calendar mode): Scroll Calendar.
+* C-x <RET> C: Coding Systems.
+* C-x =: Position Info.
+* C-x >: Horizontal Scrolling.
+* C-x > (Calendar mode): Scroll Calendar.
+* C-x [: Pages.
+* C-x [ (Calendar mode): Calendar Unit Motion.
+* C-x ]: Pages.
+* C-x ] (Calendar mode): Calendar Unit Motion.
+* C-x ^: Change Window.
+* C-x `: Compilation.
+* C-x a g: Defining Abbrevs.
+* C-x a i g: Defining Abbrevs.
+* C-x a i l: Defining Abbrevs.
+* C-x a l: Defining Abbrevs.
+* C-x b: Select Buffer.
+* C-x C-b: List Buffers.
+* C-x C-c: Exiting.
+* C-x C-d: ListDir.
+* C-x C-e: Lisp Eval.
+* C-x C-l: Case.
+* C-x C-o <1>: Killing.
+* C-x C-o: Blank Lines.
+* C-x C-p <1>: Pages.
+* C-x C-p: Marking Objects.
+* C-x C-q: Misc Buffer.
+* C-x C-q (version control): Editing with VC.
+* C-x C-s: Saving.
+* C-x C-t: Transpose.
+* C-x C-u: Case.
+* C-x C-v: Visiting.
+* C-x C-w: Saving.
+* C-x C-x: Setting Mark.
+* C-x C-x (Calendar mode): Mark and Region.
+* C-x d: Dired Enter.
+* C-x DEL <1>: Sentences.
+* C-x DEL <2>: Kill Errors.
+* C-x DEL: Killing.
+* C-x e: Basic Kbd Macro.
+* C-x ESC ESC: Repetition.
+* C-x f: Fill Commands.
+* C-x h: Marking Objects.
+* C-x k: Kill Buffer.
+* C-x l: Pages.
+* C-x m: Sending Mail.
+* C-x n n: Narrowing.
+* C-x n w: Narrowing.
+* C-x o: Other Window.
+* C-x q: Kbd Macro Query.
+* C-x r +: RegNumbers.
+* C-x r b: Bookmarks.
+* C-x r g: RegText.
+* C-x r i: RegText.
+* C-x r j: RegPos.
+* C-x r l: Bookmarks.
+* C-x r m: Bookmarks.
+* C-x r n: RegNumbers.
+* C-x r r: RegRect.
+* C-x r s: RegText.
+* C-x r SPC: RegPos.
+* C-x r w: RegConfig.
+* C-x RET: Mule Intro.
+* C-x RET c: Specify Coding.
+* C-x RET C-\: Select Input Method.
+* C-x RET f: Specify Coding.
+* C-x RET k: Specify Coding.
+* C-x RET p: Specify Coding.
+* C-x RET t: Specify Coding.
+* C-x s: Saving.
+* C-x TAB: Indentation Commands.
+* C-x u: Undo.
+* C-x v =: Old Versions.
+* C-x v a: Change Logs and VC.
+* C-x v c: Editing with VC.
+* C-x v d: VC Status.
+* C-x v h: Version Headers.
+* C-x v i: Editing with VC.
+* C-x v l: VC Status.
+* C-x v r: Making Snapshots.
+* C-x v s: Making Snapshots.
+* C-x v u: Editing with VC.
+* C-x v ~: Old Versions.
+* C-x }: Change Window.
+* C-y: Kill Ring.
+* C-y (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* C-z: Exiting.
+* control key: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* d (Calendar mode): Diary Commands.
+* DEL <1>: Program Modes.
+* DEL <2>: Major Modes.
+* DEL <3>: Kill Errors.
+* DEL: Killing.
+* DEL (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* DEL (query-replace): Query Replace.
+* DOWN: Moving Point.
+* END: Moving Point.
+* ESC <1>: Meta Key.
+* ESC: Key Sequences.
+* ESC (query-replace): Query Replace.
+* F1: Help.
+* g CHAR (Calendar mode): From Other Calendar.
+* g d (Calendar mode): Specified Dates.
+* g m l (Calendar mode): Mayan Calendar.
+* h (Calendar mode): Holidays.
+* Help: Help.
+* HOME: Moving Point.
+* hyper key <1>: Super and Hyper Keys.
+* hyper key <2>: Representing Keystrokes.
+* hyper key: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* i a (Calendar mode): Special Diary Entries.
+* i b (Calendar mode): Special Diary Entries.
+* i c (Calendar mode): Special Diary Entries.
+* i d (Calendar mode): Adding to Diary.
+* i m (Calendar mode): Adding to Diary.
+* i w (Calendar mode): Adding to Diary.
+* i y (Calendar mode): Adding to Diary.
+* LEFT: Moving Point.
+* LFD <1>: Basic Indent.
+* LFD <2>: Major Modes.
+* LFD: String Key Sequences.
+* LFD (TeX mode): TeX Editing.
+* m (Calendar mode): Diary Commands.
+* M (Calendar mode): Lunar Phases.
+* M-!: Single Shell.
+* M-$: Spelling.
+* M-%: Query Replace.
+* M-': Expanding Abbrevs.
+* M-(: Balanced Editing.
+* M-): Balanced Editing.
+* M-,: Tags Search.
+* M--: Arguments.
+* M-- M-c: Fixing Case.
+* M-- M-l: Fixing Case.
+* M-- M-u: Fixing Case.
+* M-.: Find Tag.
+* M-/: Dynamic Abbrevs.
+* M-1: Arguments.
+* M-:: Lisp Eval.
+* M-;: Comments.
+* M-<: Moving Point.
+* M-< (Calendar mode): Move to Beginning or End.
+* M-=: Position Info.
+* M-= (Calendar mode): Mark and Region.
+* M->: Moving Point.
+* M-> (Calendar mode): Move to Beginning or End.
+* M-?: Nroff Mode.
+* M-@ <1>: Words.
+* M-@: Marking Objects.
+* M-\ <1>: Indentation Commands.
+* M-\: Killing.
+* M-^ <1>: Indentation Commands.
+* M-^: Killing.
+* M-a: Sentences.
+* M-a (Calendar mode): Move to Beginning or End.
+* M-b: Words.
+* M-c: Case.
+* M-C-r: Regexp Search.
+* M-C-s: Regexp Search.
+* M-d <1>: Words.
+* M-d: Killing.
+* M-DEL <1>: Words.
+* M-DEL <2>: Kill Errors.
+* M-DEL: Killing.
+* M-e: Sentences.
+* M-e (Calendar mode): Move to Beginning or End.
+* M-f: Words.
+* M-g: Fill Commands.
+* M-h <1>: Paragraphs.
+* M-h: Marking Objects.
+* M-i: Tab Stops.
+* M-k <1>: Sentences.
+* M-k: Killing.
+* M-l: Case.
+* M-LFD: Comments.
+* M-LFD (Fortran mode): ForIndent Commands.
+* M-m: Indentation Commands.
+* M-n <1>: Nroff Mode.
+* M-n: Repetition.
+* M-n (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* M-n (minibuffer history): Minibuffer History.
+* M-n (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* M-p <1>: Nroff Mode.
+* M-p: Repetition.
+* M-p (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* M-p (minibuffer history): Minibuffer History.
+* M-p (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* M-q: Fill Commands.
+* M-r: Moving Point.
+* M-r (minibuffer history): Minibuffer History.
+* M-s: Fill Commands.
+* M-s (minibuffer history): Minibuffer History.
+* M-SPC: Killing.
+* M-t <1>: Words.
+* M-t: Transpose.
+* M-TAB <1>: Tabs in Picture.
+* M-TAB: Lisp Completion.
+* M-TAB (customization buffer): Changing an Option.
+* M-TAB (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* M-u: Case.
+* M-v <1>: Scrolling.
+* M-v: Moving Point.
+* M-v (Calendar mode): Scroll Calendar.
+* M-w: Kill Ring.
+* M-x: M-x.
+* M-y: Earlier Kills.
+* M-z: Killing.
+* M-{: Paragraphs.
+* M-{ (Calendar mode): Calendar Unit Motion.
+* M-|: Single Shell.
+* M-}: Paragraphs.
+* M-} (Calendar mode): Calendar Unit Motion.
+* M-~: Saving.
+* META: Meta Key.
+* meta key: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* next: Scrolling.
+* o (Calendar mode): Specified Dates.
+* p (Calendar mode): To Other Calendar.
+* p d (Calendar mode): General Calendar.
+* pgdn: Scrolling.
+* PGDN: Moving Point.
+* pgup: Scrolling.
+* PGUP: Moving Point.
+* prior: Scrolling.
+* q (Calendar mode): General Calendar.
+* RET: Inserting Text.
+* RET (isearch-mode): Incremental Search.
+* RET (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* RIGHT: Moving Point.
+* s (Calendar mode): Diary Commands.
+* S (Calendar mode): Sunrise/Sunset.
+* S-TAB (customization buffer): Changing an Option.
+* shift key: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* SPC: Completion Commands.
+* SPC (Calendar mode): General Calendar.
+* SPC (query-replace): Query Replace.
+* super key <1>: Super and Hyper Keys.
+* super key <2>: Representing Keystrokes.
+* super key: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* t (Calendar mode): LaTeX Calendar.
+* TAB <1>: Basic Indent.
+* TAB <2>: Text Mode.
+* TAB <3>: Indentation.
+* TAB <4>: Major Modes.
+* TAB <5>: Completion Example.
+* TAB: String Key Sequences.
+* TAB (customization buffer): Changing an Option.
+* TAB (Shell mode): Shell Mode.
+* u (Calendar mode) <1>: Diary Commands.
+* u (Calendar mode): Holidays.
+* UP: Moving Point.
+* x (Calendar mode): Holidays.
\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Help, Next: Mark, Prev: M-x, Up: Top
+File: xemacs.info, Node: Command Index, Next: Variable Index, Prev: Key Index, Up: Top
-Help
-****
-
- XEmacs provides extensive help features accessible through a single
-character, `C-h'. `C-h' is a prefix key that is used only for
-documentation-printing commands. The characters that you can type after
-`C-h' are called "help options". One help option is `C-h'; that is how
-you ask for help about using `C-h'. To cancel, type `C-g'. The
-function key <F1> is equivalent to `C-h'.
-
- `C-h C-h' (`help-for-help') displays a list of the possible help
-options, and then asks you to type the desired option. It prompts with
-the string:
-
- A B C F I K L M N P S T V W C-c C-d C-f C-i C-k C-n C-w; ? for more help:
-
-You should type one of those characters.
-
- Typing a third `C-h' displays a description of what the options mean;
-Emacs still waits for you to type an option. To cancel, type `C-g'.
-
- Most help buffers use a special major mode, Help mode, which lets you
-scroll conveniently with <SPC> and <DEL> or <BS>.
+Command and Function Index
+**************************
* Menu:
-* Help Summary:: Brief list of all Help commands.
-* Key Help:: Asking what a key does in XEmacs.
-* Name Help:: Asking about a command, variable or function name.
-* Apropos:: Asking what pertains to a given topic.
-* Library Keywords:: Finding Lisp libraries by keywords (topics).
-* Help Mode:: Special features of Help mode and Help buffers.
-* Misc Help:: Other help commands.
+* abbrev-mode <1>: Minor Modes.
+* abbrev-mode: Abbrevs.
+* abbrev-prefix-mark: Expanding Abbrevs.
+* abort-recursive-edit <1>: Quitting.
+* abort-recursive-edit: Recursive Edit.
+* add-change-log-entry: Change Log.
+* add-global-abbrev: Defining Abbrevs.
+* add-menu: Menu Customization.
+* add-menu-item: Menu Customization.
+* add-mode-abbrev: Defining Abbrevs.
+* add-name-to-file: Misc File Ops.
+* american-calendar: Date Formats.
+* append-next-kill: Appending Kills.
+* append-to-buffer: Accumulating Text.
+* append-to-file <1>: Misc File Ops.
+* append-to-file: Accumulating Text.
+* apropos: Apropos.
+* apropos-documentation: Apropos.
+* apropos-value: Apropos.
+* ask-user-about-lock: Interlocking.
+* auto-fill-mode <1>: Minor Modes.
+* auto-fill-mode: Auto Fill.
+* auto-save-mode: Auto Save Control.
+* back-to-indentation: Indentation Commands.
+* backward-char: Moving Point.
+* backward-delete-char-untabify: Program Modes.
+* backward-kill-sentence <1>: Sentences.
+* backward-kill-sentence <2>: Kill Errors.
+* backward-kill-sentence: Killing.
+* backward-kill-word <1>: Words.
+* backward-kill-word <2>: Kill Errors.
+* backward-kill-word: Killing.
+* backward-list: Lists.
+* backward-or-forward-delete-char: Inserting Text.
+* backward-page: Pages.
+* backward-paragraph: Paragraphs.
+* backward-sentence: Sentences.
+* backward-sexp: Lists.
+* backward-text-line: Nroff Mode.
+* backward-up-list: Lists.
+* backward-word: Words.
+* batch-byte-compile: Compiling Libraries.
+* beginning-of-buffer: Moving Point.
+* beginning-of-defun: Defuns.
+* beginning-of-fortran-subprogram: Fortran Motion.
+* beginning-of-line: Moving Point.
+* bookmark-delete: Bookmarks.
+* bookmark-insert: Bookmarks.
+* bookmark-insert-location: Bookmarks.
+* bookmark-jump: Bookmarks.
+* bookmark-load: Bookmarks.
+* bookmark-save: Bookmarks.
+* bookmark-set: Bookmarks.
+* bookmark-write: Bookmarks.
+* buffer-menu: Several Buffers.
+* byte-compile-and-load-file: Compiling Libraries.
+* byte-compile-buffer: Compiling Libraries.
+* byte-compile-file: Compiling Libraries.
+* byte-recompile-directory: Compiling Libraries.
+* c-indent-line: Basic Indent.
+* calendar: Calendar/Diary.
+* calendar-backward-day: Calendar Unit Motion.
+* calendar-backward-month: Calendar Unit Motion.
+* calendar-backward-week: Calendar Unit Motion.
+* calendar-beginning-of-month: Move to Beginning or End.
+* calendar-beginning-of-week: Move to Beginning or End.
+* calendar-beginning-of-year: Move to Beginning or End.
+* calendar-count-days-region: Mark and Region.
+* calendar-cursor-holidays: Holidays.
+* calendar-end-of-month: Move to Beginning or End.
+* calendar-end-of-week: Move to Beginning or End.
+* calendar-end-of-year: Move to Beginning or End.
+* calendar-exchange-point-and-mark: Mark and Region.
+* calendar-forward-day: Calendar Unit Motion.
+* calendar-forward-month: Calendar Unit Motion.
+* calendar-forward-week: Calendar Unit Motion.
+* calendar-forward-year: Calendar Unit Motion.
+* calendar-goto-astro-day-number: From Other Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-chinese-date: From Other Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-coptic-date: From Other Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-date: Specified Dates.
+* calendar-goto-ethiopic-date: From Other Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-french-date: From Other Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-hebrew-date: From Other Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-islamic-date: From Other Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-iso-date: From Other Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-julian-date: From Other Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-mayan-long-count-date: Mayan Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-persian-date: From Other Calendar.
+* calendar-goto-today: Specified Dates.
+* calendar-mark-today: Calendar Customizing.
+* calendar-next-calendar-round-date: Mayan Calendar.
+* calendar-next-haab-date: Mayan Calendar.
+* calendar-next-tzolkin-date: Mayan Calendar.
+* calendar-other-month: Specified Dates.
+* calendar-phases-of-moon: Lunar Phases.
+* calendar-previous-haab-date: Mayan Calendar.
+* calendar-previous-tzolkin-date: Mayan Calendar.
+* calendar-print-astro-day-number: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-print-chinese-date: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-print-coptic-date: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-print-day-of-year: General Calendar.
+* calendar-print-ethiopic-date: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-print-french-date: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-print-hebrew-date: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-print-islamic-date: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-print-iso-date: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-print-julian-date: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-print-mayan-date: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-print-persian-date: To Other Calendar.
+* calendar-set-mark: Mark and Region.
+* calendar-star-date: Calendar Customizing.
+* calendar-sunrise-sunset: Sunrise/Sunset.
+* calendar-unmark <1>: Diary Commands.
+* calendar-unmark: Holidays.
+* call-last-kbd-macro: Basic Kbd Macro.
+* cancel-debug-on-entry: Lisp Debug.
+* capitalize-word <1>: Case.
+* capitalize-word: Fixing Case.
+* center-line: Fill Commands.
+* choose-completion: Completion Commands.
+* clear-rectangle: Rectangles.
+* comint-delchar-or-maybe-eof: Shell Mode.
+* comint-dynamic-complete: Shell Mode.
+* comint-next-input: Shell Mode.
+* comint-previous-input: Shell Mode.
+* command-apropos: Apropos.
+* compare-windows <1>: Other Window.
+* compare-windows: Comparing Files.
+* compile: Compilation.
+* compile-defun: Defuns.
+* convert-mocklisp-buffer: Mocklisp.
+* conx: CONX.
+* conx-buffer: CONX.
+* conx-init: CONX.
+* conx-load: CONX.
+* conx-region: CONX.
+* conx-save: CONX.
+* copy-file: Misc File Ops.
+* copy-last-shell-input: Shell Mode.
+* copy-rectangle-to-register: RegRect.
+* copy-region-as-kill: Kill Ring.
+* copy-to-buffer: Accumulating Text.
+* copy-to-register: RegText.
+* count-lines-page: Pages.
+* count-lines-region: Position Info.
+* count-matches: Other Repeating Search.
+* count-text-lines: Nroff Mode.
+* customize: Easy Customization.
+* customize-apropos: Specific Customization.
+* customize-browse: Customization Groups.
+* customize-customized: Specific Customization.
+* customize-face: Specific Customization.
+* customize-group: Specific Customization.
+* customize-option: Specific Customization.
+* customize-saved: Specific Customization.
+* dabbrev-expand: Dynamic Abbrevs.
+* debug: Lisp Debug.
+* debug-on-entry: Lisp Debug.
+* default-value: Locals.
+* define-abbrevs: Saving Abbrevs.
+* define-key <1>: Programmatic Rebinding.
+* define-key: Interactive Rebinding.
+* delete-backward-char <1>: Kill Errors.
+* delete-backward-char: Killing.
+* delete-blank-lines <1>: Killing.
+* delete-blank-lines: Blank Lines.
+* delete-char <1>: Basic Picture.
+* delete-char: Killing.
+* delete-file: Misc File Ops.
+* delete-horizontal-space <1>: Indentation Commands.
+* delete-horizontal-space: Killing.
+* delete-indentation <1>: Indentation Commands.
+* delete-indentation: Killing.
+* delete-matching-lines: Other Repeating Search.
+* delete-menu-item: Menu Customization.
+* delete-non-matching-lines: Other Repeating Search.
+* delete-other-windows: Change Window.
+* delete-rectangle: Rectangles.
+* delete-window: Change Window.
+* describe-bindings: Misc Help.
+* describe-calendar-mode: General Calendar.
+* describe-coding-system: Coding Systems.
+* describe-copying: Misc Help.
+* describe-distribution: Misc Help.
+* describe-function <1>: Documentation.
+* describe-function: Name Help.
+* describe-input-method: Select Input Method.
+* describe-key: Key Help.
+* describe-key-briefly: Key Help.
+* describe-language-environment: Language Environments.
+* describe-mode: Misc Help.
+* describe-no-warranty: Misc Help.
+* describe-syntax: Syntax Change.
+* describe-variable <1>: Examining.
+* describe-variable <2>: Documentation.
+* describe-variable: Name Help.
+* diary: Diary Commands.
+* diary-anniversary <1>: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-anniversary: Special Diary Entries.
+* diary-astro-day-number: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-block: Special Diary Entries.
+* diary-cyclic <1>: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-cyclic: Special Diary Entries.
+* diary-day-of-year: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-float: Special Diary Entries.
+* diary-french-date: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-hebrew-date: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-islamic-date: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-iso-date: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-julian-date: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-mail-entries: Diary Commands.
+* diary-mayan-date: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-omer: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-parasha: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-phases-of-moon: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-rosh-hodesh: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-sabbath-candles: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-sunrise-sunset: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diary-yahrzeit: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* diff: Comparing Files.
+* diff-backup: Comparing Files.
+* digit-argument: Arguments.
+* dired: Dired Enter.
+* dired-other-window <1>: Pop Up Window.
+* dired-other-window: Dired Enter.
+* disable-command: Disabling.
+* disable-menu-item: Menu Customization.
+* disassemble: Compiling Libraries.
+* display-time: Mode Line.
+* dissociated-press: Dissociated Press.
+* do-auto-save: Auto Save Control.
+* doctor: Total Frustration.
+* down-list: Lists.
+* downcase-region: Case.
+* downcase-word <1>: Case.
+* downcase-word: Fixing Case.
+* edit-abbrevs: Editing Abbrevs.
+* edit-abbrevs-redefine: Editing Abbrevs.
+* edit-options: Edit Options.
+* edit-picture: Picture.
+* edit-tab-stops <1>: Text Mode.
+* edit-tab-stops: Tab Stops.
+* edit-tab-stops-note-changes: Tab Stops.
+* edt-emulation-off: Emulation.
+* edt-emulation-on: Emulation.
+* electric-nroff-mode: Nroff Mode.
+* emacs-lisp-mode: Lisp Eval.
+* emacs-version: Bugs.
+* enable-command: Disabling.
+* enable-menu-item: Menu Customization.
+* end-kbd-macro: Basic Kbd Macro.
+* end-of-buffer: Moving Point.
+* end-of-defun: Defuns.
+* end-of-fortran-subprogram: Fortran Motion.
+* end-of-line: Moving Point.
+* enlarge-window: Change Window.
+* enlarge-window-horizontally: Change Window.
+* european-calendar: Date Formats.
+* eval-current-buffer: Lisp Eval.
+* eval-defun: Lisp Eval.
+* eval-expression: Lisp Eval.
+* eval-last-sexp: Lisp Eval.
+* eval-region: Lisp Eval.
+* exchange-point-and-mark: Setting Mark.
+* execute-extended-command: M-x.
+* exit-calendar: General Calendar.
+* exit-recursive-edit: Recursive Edit.
+* expand-abbrev: Expanding Abbrevs.
+* expand-region-abbrevs: Expanding Abbrevs.
+* fancy-diary-display: Fancy Diary Display.
+* fill-individual-paragraphs: Fill Prefix.
+* fill-paragraph: Fill Commands.
+* fill-region: Fill Commands.
+* fill-region-as-paragraph: Fill Commands.
+* find-alternate-file: Visiting.
+* find-file: Visiting.
+* find-file-other-frame <1>: Visiting.
+* find-file-other-frame: XEmacs under X.
+* find-file-other-window <1>: Pop Up Window.
+* find-file-other-window: Visiting.
+* find-tag: Find Tag.
+* find-tag-other-window <1>: Find Tag.
+* find-tag-other-window: Pop Up Window.
+* find-this-file: Visiting.
+* find-this-file-other-window: Visiting.
+* finder-by-keyword: Library Keywords.
+* fortran-column-ruler: Fortran Columns.
+* fortran-comment-region: Fortran Comments.
+* fortran-indent-line: ForIndent Commands.
+* fortran-indent-subprogram: ForIndent Commands.
+* fortran-mode: Fortran.
+* fortran-next-statement: Fortran Motion.
+* fortran-previous-statement: Fortran Motion.
+* fortran-split-line: ForIndent Commands.
+* fortran-window-create: Fortran Columns.
+* forward-char: Moving Point.
+* forward-list: Lists.
+* forward-page: Pages.
+* forward-paragraph: Paragraphs.
+* forward-sentence: Sentences.
+* forward-sexp: Lists.
+* forward-text-line: Nroff Mode.
+* forward-word: Words.
+* frame-configuration-to-register: RegConfig.
+* global-set-key <1>: Programmatic Rebinding.
+* global-set-key: Interactive Rebinding.
+* goto-char: Moving Point.
+* goto-line: Moving Point.
+* hanoi: Amusements.
+* help-command: Help.
+* help-for-help: Help.
+* help-with-tutorial <1>: Misc Help.
+* help-with-tutorial: Basic.
+* hide-body: Outline Visibility.
+* hide-entry: Outline Visibility.
+* hide-leaves: Outline Visibility.
+* hide-subtree: Outline Visibility.
+* holidays: Holidays.
+* include-other-diary-files: Included Diary Files.
+* increment-register: RegNumbers.
+* indent-c-exp: Multi-line Indent.
+* indent-for-comment: Comments.
+* indent-new-comment-line: Comments.
+* indent-region <1>: Multi-line Indent.
+* indent-region: Indentation Commands.
+* indent-relative: Indentation Commands.
+* indent-rigidly: Indentation Commands.
+* indent-sexp: Multi-line Indent.
+* indented-text-mode: Text Mode.
+* info: Misc Help.
+* Info-elisp-ref: Misc Help.
+* Info-goto-emacs-command-node: Misc Help.
+* insert-abbrevs: Saving Abbrevs.
+* insert-anniversary-diary-entry: Special Diary Entries.
+* insert-block-diary-entry: Special Diary Entries.
+* insert-cyclic-diary-entry: Special Diary Entries.
+* insert-diary-entry: Adding to Diary.
+* insert-file: Misc File Ops.
+* insert-hebrew-diary-entry: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* insert-islamic-diary-entry: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* insert-kbd-macro: Save Kbd Macro.
+* insert-monthly-diary-entry: Adding to Diary.
+* insert-monthly-hebrew-diary-entry: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* insert-monthly-islamic-diary-entry: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* insert-parentheses: Balanced Editing.
+* insert-register: RegText.
+* insert-weekly-diary-entry: Adding to Diary.
+* insert-yearly-diary-entry: Adding to Diary.
+* insert-yearly-hebrew-diary-entry: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* insert-yearly-islamic-diary-entry: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* interactive: M-x.
+* interrupt-shell-subjob: Shell Mode.
+* inverse-add-global-abbrev: Defining Abbrevs.
+* inverse-add-mode-abbrev: Defining Abbrevs.
+* invert-face: Faces.
+* isearch-abort: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-backward: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-backward-regexp: Regexp Search.
+* isearch-complete: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-delete-char: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-exit: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-forward: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-forward-regexp: Regexp Search.
+* isearch-quote-char: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-repeat-backward: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-repeat-forward: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-ring-advance: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-ring-retreat: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-yank-line: Incremental Search.
+* isearch-yank-word: Incremental Search.
+* jump-to-register <1>: Split Window.
+* jump-to-register: RegPos.
+* just-one-space: Killing.
+* kbd-macro-query: Kbd Macro Query.
+* kill-all-abbrevs: Defining Abbrevs.
+* kill-buffer: Kill Buffer.
+* kill-comment: Comments.
+* kill-compilation: Compilation.
+* kill-line: Killing.
+* kill-local-variable: Locals.
+* kill-output-from-shell: Shell Mode.
+* kill-rectangle: Rectangles.
+* kill-region: Killing.
+* kill-sentence <1>: Sentences.
+* kill-sentence: Killing.
+* kill-sexp <1>: Lists.
+* kill-sexp: Killing.
+* kill-some-buffers: Kill Buffer.
+* kill-word <1>: Words.
+* kill-word: Killing.
+* latex-mode: TeX Mode.
+* LaTeX-mode: TeX Mode.
+* lisp-complete-symbol: Lisp Completion.
+* lisp-indent-line: Basic Indent.
+* lisp-interaction-mode: Lisp Interaction.
+* lisp-mode: External Lisp.
+* lisp-send-defun: External Lisp.
+* list-abbrevs: Editing Abbrevs.
+* list-bookmarks: Bookmarks.
+* list-buffers: List Buffers.
+* list-calendar-holidays: Holidays.
+* list-coding-systems: Coding Systems.
+* list-command-history: Repetition.
+* list-directory: ListDir.
+* list-hebrew-diary-entries: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* list-holidays: Holidays.
+* list-input-methods: Select Input Method.
+* list-islamic-diary-entries: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* list-matching-lines: Other Repeating Search.
+* list-options: Edit Options.
+* list-tags: List Tags.
+* list-yahrzeit-dates: From Other Calendar.
+* load: Loading.
+* load-default-sounds: Audible Bell.
+* load-file: Loading.
+* load-library <1>: Loading.
+* load-library: Startup Paths.
+* load-sound-file: Audible Bell.
+* local-set-key: Interactive Rebinding.
+* local-unset-key: Interactive Rebinding.
+* locate-library: Loading.
+* lpr-buffer: Hardcopy.
+* lpr-region: Hardcopy.
+* mail: Sending Mail.
+* mail-cc: Mail Mode.
+* mail-fill-yanked-message: Mail Mode.
+* mail-interactive-insert-alias: Mail Headers.
+* mail-other-window <1>: Sending Mail.
+* mail-other-window: Pop Up Window.
+* mail-send: Mail Mode.
+* mail-send-and-exit: Mail Mode.
+* mail-signature: Mail Mode.
+* mail-subject: Mail Mode.
+* mail-to: Mail Mode.
+* mail-yank-original: Mail Mode.
+* make-directory: File Names.
+* make-face-bold: Faces.
+* make-face-bold-italic: Faces.
+* make-face-italic: Faces.
+* make-face-larger: Faces.
+* make-face-smaller: Faces.
+* make-face-unbold: Faces.
+* make-face-unitalic: Faces.
+* make-frame: XEmacs under X.
+* make-local-variable: Locals.
+* make-obsolete: Compiling Libraries.
+* make-symbolic-link: Misc File Ops.
+* make-variable-buffer-local: Locals.
+* manual-entry: Documentation.
+* mark-beginning-of-buffer: Setting Mark.
+* mark-calendar-holidays: Holidays.
+* mark-defun <1>: Defuns.
+* mark-defun: Marking Objects.
+* mark-diary-entries: Diary Commands.
+* mark-end-of-buffer: Setting Mark.
+* mark-fortran-subprogram: Fortran Motion.
+* mark-hebrew-diary-entries: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* mark-included-diary-files: Included Diary Files.
+* mark-islamic-diary-entries: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* mark-page <1>: Pages.
+* mark-page: Marking Objects.
+* mark-paragraph <1>: Paragraphs.
+* mark-paragraph: Marking Objects.
+* mark-sexp <1>: Lists.
+* mark-sexp: Marking Objects.
+* mark-whole-buffer: Marking Objects.
+* mark-word <1>: Words.
+* mark-word: Marking Objects.
+* minibuffer-complete: Completion Example.
+* minibuffer-complete-word: Completion Commands.
+* modify-syntax-entry: Syntax Change.
+* mouse-choose-completion: Completion Commands.
+* mouse-del-char: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-delete-window: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-keep-one-window: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-kill-line: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-line-length: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-scroll: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-select: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-select-and-split: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-set-mark: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-set-point: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-track: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-track-adjust: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-track-and-copy-to-cutbuffer: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse-track-delete-and-insert: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* move-over-close-and-reindent: Balanced Editing.
+* move-to-window-line: Moving Point.
+* name-last-kbd-macro: Save Kbd Macro.
+* narrow-to-region: Narrowing.
+* negative-argument: Arguments.
+* newline: Inserting Text.
+* newline-and-indent: Basic Indent.
+* next-complex-command: Repetition.
+* next-error: Compilation.
+* next-history-element: Minibuffer History.
+* next-line: Moving Point.
+* next-list-mode-item: Completion Commands.
+* next-matching-history-element: Minibuffer History.
+* not-modified: Saving.
+* nroff-mode: Nroff Mode.
+* number-to-register: RegNumbers.
+* occur: Other Repeating Search.
+* open-dribble-file: Bugs.
+* open-line: Blank Lines.
+* open-rectangle: Rectangles.
+* open-termscript: Bugs.
+* other-window: Other Window.
+* other-window-any-frame: Other Window.
+* outline-backward-same-level: Outline Motion.
+* outline-forward-same-level: Outline Motion.
+* outline-next-visible-heading: Outline Motion.
+* outline-previous-visible-heading: Outline Motion.
+* outline-up-heading: Outline Motion.
+* overwrite-mode: Minor Modes.
+* phases-of-moon: Lunar Phases.
+* picture-backward-clear-column: Basic Picture.
+* picture-backward-column: Basic Picture.
+* picture-clear-column: Basic Picture.
+* picture-clear-line: Basic Picture.
+* picture-clear-rectangle: Rectangles in Picture.
+* picture-clear-rectangle-to-register: Rectangles in Picture.
+* picture-forward-column: Basic Picture.
+* picture-motion: Insert in Picture.
+* picture-motion-reverse: Insert in Picture.
+* picture-move-down: Basic Picture.
+* picture-move-up: Basic Picture.
+* picture-movement-down: Insert in Picture.
+* picture-movement-left: Insert in Picture.
+* picture-movement-ne: Insert in Picture.
+* picture-movement-nw: Insert in Picture.
+* picture-movement-right: Insert in Picture.
+* picture-movement-se: Insert in Picture.
+* picture-movement-sw: Insert in Picture.
+* picture-movement-up: Insert in Picture.
+* picture-newline: Basic Picture.
+* picture-open-line: Basic Picture.
+* picture-set-tab-stops: Tabs in Picture.
+* picture-tab: Tabs in Picture.
+* picture-tab-search: Tabs in Picture.
+* picture-yank-rectangle: Rectangles in Picture.
+* picture-yank-rectangle-from-register: Rectangles in Picture.
+* plain-TeX-mode: TeX Mode.
+* plain-tex-mode: TeX Mode.
+* play-sound: Audible Bell.
+* point-to-register: RegPos.
+* prefer-coding-system: Recognize Coding.
+* prepend-to-buffer: Accumulating Text.
+* previous-complex-command: Repetition.
+* previous-history-element: Minibuffer History.
+* previous-line: Moving Point.
+* previous-list-mode-item: Completion Commands.
+* previous-matching-history-element: Minibuffer History.
+* print-buffer: Hardcopy.
+* print-diary-entries <1>: Diary Customizing.
+* print-diary-entries: Diary Commands.
+* print-region: Hardcopy.
+* quail-set-keyboard-layout: Select Input Method.
+* query-replace: Query Replace.
+* query-replace-regexp: Query Replace.
+* quietly-read-abbrev-file: Saving Abbrevs.
+* quit-shell-subjob: Shell Mode.
+* quoted-insert: Inserting Text.
+* re-search-backward: Regexp Search.
+* re-search-forward: Regexp Search.
+* read-abbrev-file: Saving Abbrevs.
+* read-key-sequence: Representing Keystrokes.
+* recenter <1>: Scrolling.
+* recenter: Moving Point.
+* recover-file: Recover.
+* redraw-calendar: General Calendar.
+* relabel-menu-item: Menu Customization.
+* remove-directory: File Names.
+* rename-buffer: Misc Buffer.
+* rename-file: Misc File Ops.
+* repeat-complex-command: Repetition.
+* replace-regexp: Unconditional Replace.
+* replace-string: Unconditional Replace.
+* revert-buffer: Reverting.
+* run-lisp: External Lisp.
+* save-buffer: Saving.
+* save-buffers-kill-emacs: Exiting.
+* save-some-buffers: Saving.
+* scroll-calendar-left: Scroll Calendar.
+* scroll-calendar-left-three-months: Scroll Calendar.
+* scroll-calendar-right: Scroll Calendar.
+* scroll-calendar-right-three-months: Scroll Calendar.
+* scroll-down: Scrolling.
+* scroll-left: Horizontal Scrolling.
+* scroll-other-window <1>: General Calendar.
+* scroll-other-window: Other Window.
+* scroll-right: Horizontal Scrolling.
+* scroll-up: Scrolling.
+* search-backward: Non-Incremental Search.
+* search-forward: Non-Incremental Search.
+* select-input-method: Select Input Method.
+* self-insert: Inserting Text.
+* send-shell-input: Shell Mode.
+* set-buffer-file-coding-system: Specify Coding.
+* set-buffer-process-coding-system: Specify Coding.
+* set-comment-column: Comments.
+* set-default-file-modes: Interlocking.
+* set-face-background: Faces.
+* set-face-background-pixmap: Faces.
+* set-face-font: Faces.
+* set-face-foreground: Faces.
+* set-face-underline-p: Faces.
+* set-fill-column: Fill Commands.
+* set-fill-prefix: Fill Prefix.
+* set-gnu-bindings: Emulation.
+* set-goal-column: Moving Point.
+* set-gosmacs-bindings: Emulation.
+* set-keyboard-coding-system: Specify Coding.
+* set-language-environment: Language Environments.
+* set-mark-command: Setting Mark.
+* set-selective-display: Selective Display.
+* set-terminal-coding-system: Specify Coding.
+* set-variable: Examining.
+* set-visited-file-name: Saving.
+* setq-default: Locals.
+* shell: Interactive Shell.
+* shell-command: Single Shell.
+* shell-command-on-region: Single Shell.
+* shell-send-eof: Shell Mode.
+* show-all: Outline Visibility.
+* show-all-diary-entries: Diary Commands.
+* show-branches: Outline Visibility.
+* show-children: Outline Visibility.
+* show-entry: Outline Visibility.
+* show-output-from-shell: Shell Mode.
+* show-subtree: Outline Visibility.
+* simple-diary-display: Fancy Diary Display.
+* sort-columns: Sorting.
+* sort-diary-entries: Fancy Diary Display.
+* sort-fields: Sorting.
+* sort-lines: Sorting.
+* sort-numeric-fields: Sorting.
+* sort-pages: Sorting.
+* sort-paragraphs: Sorting.
+* spell-buffer: Spelling.
+* spell-region: Spelling.
+* spell-string: Spelling.
+* spell-word: Spelling.
+* split-line: Indentation Commands.
+* split-window-horizontally: Split Window.
+* split-window-vertically: Split Window.
+* start-kbd-macro: Basic Kbd Macro.
+* stop-shell-subjob: Shell Mode.
+* substitute-key-definition: Interactive Rebinding.
+* sunrise-sunset: Sunrise/Sunset.
+* suspend-emacs: Exiting.
+* switch-to-buffer: Select Buffer.
+* switch-to-buffer-other-frame <1>: Select Buffer.
+* switch-to-buffer-other-frame: XEmacs under X.
+* switch-to-buffer-other-window <1>: Pop Up Window.
+* switch-to-buffer-other-window: Select Buffer.
+* switch-to-completions: Completion Commands.
+* switch-to-other-buffer: Select Buffer.
+* tab-to-tab-stop <1>: Text Mode.
+* tab-to-tab-stop: Tab Stops.
+* tabify: Just Spaces.
+* tags-apropos: List Tags.
+* tags-loop-continue: Tags Search.
+* tags-query-replace: Tags Search.
+* tags-search: Tags Search.
+* term: Terminal emulator.
+* term-line-mode: Term Mode.
+* term-pager-toggle: Paging in Term.
+* tex-buffer: TeX Print.
+* tex-close-latex-block: TeX Editing.
+* tex-insert-braces: TeX Editing.
+* tex-insert-quote: TeX Editing.
+* tex-kill-job: TeX Print.
+* tex-mode: TeX Mode.
+* TeX-mode: TeX Mode.
+* tex-print: TeX Print.
+* tex-recenter-output-buffer: TeX Print.
+* tex-region: TeX Print.
+* tex-show-print-queue: TeX Print.
+* tex-terminate-paragraph: TeX Editing.
+* text-mode: Text Mode.
+* toggle-input-method: Select Input Method.
+* toggle-read-only: Misc Buffer.
+* top-level <1>: Quitting.
+* top-level: Recursive Edit.
+* transpose-chars <1>: Transpose.
+* transpose-chars: Moving Point.
+* transpose-lines: Transpose.
+* transpose-sexps <1>: Lists.
+* transpose-sexps: Transpose.
+* transpose-words <1>: Words.
+* transpose-words: Transpose.
+* undo: Undo.
+* unexpand-abbrev: Expanding Abbrevs.
+* universal-argument: Arguments.
+* universal-coding-system-argument: Specify Coding.
+* untabify: Just Spaces.
+* up-list: TeX Editing.
+* upcase-region: Case.
+* upcase-word <1>: Case.
+* upcase-word: Fixing Case.
+* validate-tex-buffer: TeX Editing.
+* vc-cancel-version: Editing with VC.
+* vc-create-snapshot: Making Snapshots.
+* vc-diff: Old Versions.
+* vc-directory: VC Status.
+* vc-insert-headers: Version Headers.
+* vc-next-action: Editing with VC.
+* vc-print-log: VC Status.
+* vc-register: Editing with VC.
+* vc-rename-file: Renaming and VC.
+* vc-retrieve-snapshot: Making Snapshots.
+* vc-revert-buffer: Editing with VC.
+* vc-update-change-log: Change Logs and VC.
+* vc-version-other-window: Old Versions.
+* view-buffer: Misc Buffer.
+* view-diary-entries: Diary Commands.
+* view-emacs-news: Misc Help.
+* view-file: Misc File Ops.
+* view-hello-file: Mule Intro.
+* view-lossage: Misc Help.
+* view-register: Registers.
+* visit-tags-table: Select Tags Table.
+* what-cursor-position: Position Info.
+* what-line: Position Info.
+* what-page: Position Info.
+* where-is: Name Help.
+* widen: Narrowing.
+* widget-backward: Changing an Option.
+* widget-complete: Changing an Option.
+* widget-forward: Changing an Option.
+* window-configuration-to-register <1>: Split Window.
+* window-configuration-to-register: RegConfig.
+* word-search-backward: Word Search.
+* word-search-forward: Word Search.
+* write-abbrev-file: Saving Abbrevs.
+* write-file: Saving.
+* x-copy-primary-selection: X Selection Commands.
+* x-create-frame: X Resources.
+* x-delete-primary-selection: X Selection Commands.
+* x-insert-selection: X Selection Commands.
+* x-kill-primary-selection: X Selection Commands.
+* x-mouse-kill: X Selection Commands.
+* x-own-secondary-selection: X Selection Commands.
+* x-own-selection: X Selection Commands.
+* x-set-point-and-insert-selection: X Selection Commands.
+* xemacs-local-faq: Misc Help.
+* Yank: Kill Ring.
+* yank-pop: Earlier Kills.
+* yank-rectangle: Rectangles.
+* yow: Amusements.
+* zap-to-char: Killing.
+* zmacs-activate-region: Active Regions.
+* zmacs-deactivate-region: Active Regions.
\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Help Summary, Next: Key Help, Prev: Help, Up: Help
-
-Help Summary
-============
-
- Here is a summary of the defined help commands.
-
-`C-h a REGEXP <RET>'
- Display a list of functions and variables whose names match REGEXP
- (`hyper-apropos').
-
-`C-h A REGEXP'
- Show all commands whose names contain matches for REGEXP
- (`command-apropos').
-
-`C-h b'
- Display a table of all key bindings currently in effect, with local
- bindings of the current major mode first, followed by all global
- bindings (`describe-bindings').
-
-`C-h c KEY'
- Print the name of the command that KEY runs
- (`describe-key-briefly'). Here `c' stands for `character'. For
- more extensive information on KEY, use `C-h k'.
-
-`C-h d FUNCTION <RET>'
-`C-h f FUNCTION <RET>'
- Display documentation on the Lisp function named FUNCTION
- (`describe-function'). Since commands are Lisp functions, a
- command name may be used.
-
-`C-h i'
- Run Info, the program for browsing documentation files (`info').
- The complete XEmacs manual is available online in Info.
-
-`C-h k KEY'
- Display the name and documentation of the command that KEY runs
- (`describe-key').
-
-`C-h l'
- Display a description of the last 100 characters you typed
- (`view-lossage').
-
-`C-h m'
- Display documentation of the current major mode (`describe-mode').
+File: xemacs.info, Node: Variable Index, Next: Concept Index, Prev: Command Index, Up: Top
-`C-h n'
-`C-h C-n'
- Display documentation of XEmacs changes, most recent first
- (`view-emacs-news').
-
-`C-h p'
- Find packages by topic keyword (`finder-by-keyword').
-
-`C-h C-p'
- Display a table of all mouse bindings currently in effect now, with
- local bindings of the current major mode first, followed by all
- global bindings (`describe-pointer').
-
-`C-h s'
- Display current contents of the syntax table, plus an explanation
- of what they mean (`describe-syntax'). *Note Syntax::.
-
-`C-h t'
- Enter the XEmacs interactive tutorial (`help-with-tutorial').
-
-`C-h v VAR <RET>'
- Display the documentation of the Lisp variable VAR
- (`describe-variable').
-
-`C-h w COMMAND <RET>'
- Print which keys run the command named COMMAND (`where-is').
-
-`C-h B <RET>'
- Display info on how to deal with Beta versions of XEmacs
- (`describe-beta').
-
-`C-h C GROUP <RET>'
- Select customization buffer for GROUP (`customize').
-
-`C-h F <RET>'
- View the local copy of the XEmacs FAQ (`xemacs-local-faq').
-
-`C-h C-i FILE <RET>'
- Read Info file FILE with Info browser (`Info-query').
+Variable Index
+**************
-`C-h C-c COMMAND <RET>'
- Look up an Emacs command COMMAND in the Emacs manual in the Info
- system (`Info-goto-emacs-command-node').
+* Menu:
-`C-h C-f FUNCTION <RET>'
- Look up an Emacs Lisp function FUNCTION in the Elisp manual in the
- Info system (`Info-elisp-ref').
+* abbrev-all-caps: Expanding Abbrevs.
+* abbrev-file-name: Saving Abbrevs.
+* abbrev-mode: Abbrevs.
+* after-load-alist: Loading.
+* after-save-hook: Saving.
+* all-christian-calendar-holidays: Holiday Customizing.
+* all-hebrew-calendar-holidays: Holiday Customizing.
+* all-islamic-calendar-holidays: Holiday Customizing.
+* appt-audible: Appt Customizing.
+* appt-display-duration: Appt Customizing.
+* appt-display-mode-line: Appt Customizing.
+* appt-message-warning-time: Appt Customizing.
+* appt-msg-window: Appt Customizing.
+* appt-visible: Appt Customizing.
+* apropos-do-all: Apropos.
+* auto-fill-inhibit-regexp: Fill Commands.
+* auto-lower-frame: XEmacs under X.
+* auto-mode-alist: Choosing Modes.
+* auto-raise-frame: XEmacs under X.
+* auto-save-default: Auto Save Control.
+* auto-save-interval: Auto Save Control.
+* auto-save-timeout: Auto Save Control.
+* auto-save-visited-file-name: Auto Save Files.
+* backup-by-copying: Backup Copying.
+* backup-by-copying-when-linked: Backup Copying.
+* backup-by-copying-when-mismatch: Backup Copying.
+* bell-volume: Audible Bell.
+* blink-matching-paren: Matching.
+* blink-matching-paren-distance: Matching.
+* bookmark-save-flag: Bookmarks.
+* bookmark-search-size: Bookmarks.
+* buffer-file-coding-system: Recognize Coding.
+* buffer-file-name: Visiting.
+* buffer-file-truename: Visiting.
+* buffer-read-only: Misc Buffer.
+* buffer-tag-table: Find Tag.
+* c-argdecl-indent: C Indent.
+* c-auto-newline: C Indent.
+* c-brace-imaginary-offset: C Indent.
+* c-brace-offset: C Indent.
+* c-continued-statement-offset: C Indent.
+* c-indent-level: C Indent.
+* c-label-offset: C Indent.
+* c-mode-hook: Program Modes.
+* c-mode-map: Keymaps.
+* c-tab-always-indent: C Indent.
+* calendar-date-display-form: Date Display Format.
+* calendar-daylight-savings-ends: Daylight Savings.
+* calendar-daylight-savings-ends-time: Daylight Savings.
+* calendar-daylight-savings-starts: Daylight Savings.
+* calendar-daylight-time-offset: Daylight Savings.
+* calendar-daylight-time-zone-name: Sunrise/Sunset.
+* calendar-holiday-marker: Calendar Customizing.
+* calendar-holidays: Holiday Customizing.
+* calendar-latitude: Sunrise/Sunset.
+* calendar-load-hook: Calendar Customizing.
+* calendar-location-name: Sunrise/Sunset.
+* calendar-longitude: Sunrise/Sunset.
+* calendar-standard-time-zone-name: Sunrise/Sunset.
+* calendar-time-display-form: Time Display Format.
+* calendar-time-zone: Sunrise/Sunset.
+* calendar-today-marker: Calendar Customizing.
+* calendar-week-start-day: Move to Beginning or End.
+* case-fold-search <1>: Replacement and Case.
+* case-fold-search: Search Case.
+* case-replace: Replacement and Case.
+* christian-holidays: Holiday Customizing.
+* coding: Recognize Coding.
+* command-history: Repetition.
+* command-line-args: Command Switches.
+* comment-column: Comments.
+* comment-end: Comments.
+* comment-indent-hook: Comments.
+* comment-line-start: Fortran Comments.
+* comment-line-start-skip: Fortran Comments.
+* comment-multi-line: Comments.
+* comment-start: Comments.
+* comment-start-skip: Comments.
+* compare-ignore-case: Comparing Files.
+* compile-command: Compilation.
+* completion-auto-help: Completion Options.
+* completion-ignored-extensions: Completion Options.
+* create-frame-hook: XEmacs under X.
+* ctl-arrow: Display Vars.
+* ctl-x-map: Keymaps.
+* current-input-method: Select Input Method.
+* data-directory: Startup Paths.
+* data-directory-list: Startup Paths.
+* debug-on-error: Lisp Debug.
+* debug-on-quit: Lisp Debug.
+* default-buffer-file-coding-system: Specify Coding.
+* default-directory: File Names.
+* default-directory-alist: File Names.
+* default-frame-alist: XEmacs under X.
+* default-frame-plist: XEmacs under X.
+* default-input-method: Select Input Method.
+* default-major-mode: Choosing Modes.
+* delete-auto-save-files: Auto Save Files.
+* delete-old-versions: Backup Deletion.
+* describe-function-show-arglist: Name Help.
+* diary-date-forms: Diary Customizing.
+* diary-display-hook: Fancy Diary Display.
+* diary-entry-marker: Calendar Customizing.
+* diary-file: Format of Diary File.
+* diary-list-include-blanks: Fancy Diary Display.
+* diary-mail-days: Diary Commands.
+* diff-switches: Comparing Files.
+* dired-kept-versions: Dired Deletion.
+* dired-listing-switches: Dired Enter.
+* display-buffer-function: Pop Up Window.
+* doc-directory: Startup Paths.
+* echo-keystrokes: Display Vars.
+* emacs-lisp-mode-hook: Program Modes.
+* emacs-roots: Startup Paths.
+* EMACSDATA: Startup Paths.
+* EMACSLOADPATH: Startup Paths.
+* EMACSPATH: Startup Paths.
+* enable-local-variables: File Variables.
+* enable-recursive-minibuffers: Minibuffer Edit.
+* esc-map: Keymaps.
+* european-calendar-style: Date Formats.
+* exec-directory: Startup Paths.
+* exec-path: Startup Paths.
+* explicit-shell-file-name: Interactive Shell.
+* face-frob-from-locale-first: Faces.
+* file-coding-system-alist: Recognize Coding.
+* file-name-coding-system: Specify Coding.
+* fill-column: Fill Commands.
+* fill-prefix: Fill Prefix.
+* find-file-compare-truenames: Visiting.
+* find-file-hooks: Visiting.
+* find-file-not-found-hooks: Visiting.
+* find-file-run-dired: Visiting.
+* find-file-use-truenames: Visiting.
+* fortran-check-all-num-for-matching-do: ForIndent Vars.
+* fortran-comment-indent-char: Fortran Comments.
+* fortran-comment-indent-style: Fortran Comments.
+* fortran-comment-line-column: Fortran Comments.
+* fortran-comment-region: Fortran Comments.
+* fortran-continuation-char: ForIndent Conv.
+* fortran-continuation-indent: ForIndent Vars.
+* fortran-do-indent: ForIndent Vars.
+* fortran-electric-line-number: ForIndent Num.
+* fortran-if-indent: ForIndent Vars.
+* fortran-line-number-indent: ForIndent Num.
+* fortran-minimum-statement-indent: ForIndent Vars.
+* frame-icon-title-format <1>: Command Switches.
+* frame-icon-title-format: XEmacs under X.
+* frame-title-format <1>: Command Switches.
+* frame-title-format: XEmacs under X.
+* general-holidays: Holiday Customizing.
+* global-map: Keymaps.
+* hebrew-holidays: Holiday Customizing.
+* help-map: Keymaps.
+* holidays-in-diary-buffer: Diary Customizing.
+* indent-tabs-mode: Just Spaces.
+* Info-directory-list: Startup Paths.
+* INFOPATH: Startup Paths.
+* initial-calendar-window-hook: Calendar Customizing.
+* initial-major-mode: Entering Emacs.
+* input-method-highlight-flag: Input Methods.
+* input-method-verbose-flag: Input Methods.
+* input-ring-size: Interactive Shell.
+* insert-default-directory <1>: File Names.
+* insert-default-directory: Minibuffer File.
+* isearch-mode-map: Keymaps.
+* islamic-holidays: Holiday Customizing.
+* kept-new-versions: Backup Deletion.
+* kept-old-versions: Backup Deletion.
+* keyboard-translate-table: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* kill-ring-max: Earlier Kills.
+* LaTeX-mode-hook: TeX Print.
+* lisp-body-indention: Lisp Indent.
+* lisp-directory: Startup Paths.
+* lisp-indent-offset: Lisp Indent.
+* lisp-interaction-mode-hook: Program Modes.
+* lisp-mode-hook: Program Modes.
+* lisp-mode-map: Keymaps.
+* list-diary-entries-hook: Included Diary Files.
+* list-directory-brief-switches: ListDir.
+* list-directory-verbose-switches: ListDir.
+* load-path <1>: Loading.
+* load-path: Startup Paths.
+* local-holidays: Holiday Customizing.
+* lpr-switches: Hardcopy.
+* mail-abbrev-mailrc-file: Mail Headers.
+* mail-abbrev-mode-regexp: Mail Headers.
+* mail-alias-separator-string: Mail Headers.
+* mail-archive-file-name: Mail Headers.
+* mail-header-separator: Mail Format.
+* mail-mode-hook: Mail Mode.
+* make-backup-files: Backup.
+* make-tags-files-invisible: Find Tag.
+* mark-diary-entries-hook: Included Diary Files.
+* mark-diary-entries-in-calendar: Calendar Customizing.
+* mark-holidays-in-calendar: Calendar Customizing.
+* mark-ring: Mark Ring.
+* mark-ring-max: Mark Ring.
+* meta-flag: Meta Key.
+* minibuffer-confirm-incomplete <1>: Completion Options.
+* minibuffer-confirm-incomplete: Minibuffer Edit.
+* minibuffer-local-completion-map: Keymaps.
+* minibuffer-local-map: Keymaps.
+* minibuffer-local-must-match-map: Keymaps.
+* minibuffer-local-ns-map: Keymaps.
+* mode-line-inverse-video: Mode Line.
+* modeline-pointer-glyph: Mouse Selection.
+* muddle-mode-hook: Program Modes.
+* next-line-add-newlines: Moving Point.
+* next-screen-context-lines: Scrolling.
+* no-redraw-on-reenter: Display Vars.
+* nongregorian-diary-listing-hook: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* nongregorian-diary-marking-hook: Hebrew/Islamic Entries.
+* nontext-pointer-glyph: Mouse Selection.
+* nroff-mode-hook: Nroff Mode.
+* number-of-diary-entries: Diary Customizing.
+* other-holidays: Holiday Customizing.
+* outline-mode-hook: Outline Mode.
+* outline-regexp: Outline Format.
+* page-delimiter: Pages.
+* paragraph-separate: Paragraphs.
+* paragraph-start: Paragraphs.
+* parse-sexp-ignore-comments: Syntax Entry.
+* PATH: Startup Paths.
+* picture-mode-hook: Picture.
+* picture-tab-chars: Tabs in Picture.
+* plain-TeX-mode-hook: TeX Print.
+* print-diary-entries-hook: Diary Customizing.
+* repeat-complex-command-map: Keymaps.
+* require-final-newline: Saving.
+* save-abbrevs: Saving Abbrevs.
+* scheme-mode-hook: Program Modes.
+* scroll-conservatively: Scrolling.
+* scroll-step: Scrolling.
+* search-slow-speed: Incremental Search.
+* search-slow-window-lines: Incremental Search.
+* selective-display-ellipses <1>: Outline Visibility.
+* selective-display-ellipses: Display Vars.
+* sentence-end: Sentences.
+* shell-cd-regexp: Interactive Shell.
+* shell-file-name: Single Shell.
+* shell-popd-regexp: Interactive Shell.
+* shell-prompt-pattern: Shell Mode.
+* shell-pushd-regexp: Interactive Shell.
+* sound-alist: Audible Bell.
+* tab-stop-list: Tab Stops.
+* tab-width: Display Vars.
+* tag-mark-stack-max: Find Tag.
+* tag-table-alist <1>: Find Tag.
+* tag-table-alist: Select Tags Table.
+* tags-always-build-completion-table: Select Tags Table.
+* tags-build-completion-table: Find Tag.
+* tags-file-name <1>: Find Tag.
+* tags-file-name: Select Tags Table.
+* term-file-prefix: Terminal Init.
+* term-setup-hook: Terminal Init.
+* TeX-mode-hook: TeX Print.
+* text-mode-hook: Text Mode.
+* text-pointer-glyph: Mouse Selection.
+* today-invisible-calendar-hook: Calendar Customizing.
+* today-visible-calendar-hook: Calendar Customizing.
+* track-eol: Moving Point.
+* truncate-lines: Continuation Lines.
+* truncate-partial-width-windows: Split Window.
+* vc-command-messages: Variables for Check-in/out.
+* vc-comment-alist: Version Headers.
+* vc-default-back-end: Editing with VC.
+* vc-header-alist: Version Headers.
+* vc-initial-comment: Editing with VC.
+* vc-keep-workfiles: Editing with VC.
+* vc-log-mode-hook: Log Entries.
+* vc-make-backup-files: Editing with VC.
+* vc-mistrust-permissions: Variables for Check-in/out.
+* vc-path: Variables for Check-in/out.
+* vc-static-header-alist: Version Headers.
+* vc-suppress-confirm: Variables for Check-in/out.
+* version-control: Backup Names.
+* view-calendar-holidays-initially: Calendar Customizing.
+* view-diary-entries-initially: Calendar Customizing.
+* window-min-height: Change Window.
+* window-min-width: Change Window.
+* write-file-hooks: Saving.
+* x-frame-defaults: XEmacs under X.
+* zmacs-region-stays: Active Regions.
+* zmacs-regions: Active Regions.
\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Key Help, Next: Name Help, Prev: Help Summary, Up: Help
-
-Documentation for a Key
-=======================
+File: xemacs.info, Node: Concept Index, Next: Frame, Prev: Variable Index, Up: Top
- The most basic `C-h' options are `C-h c' (`describe-key-briefly')
-and `C-h k' (`describe-key'). `C-h c KEY' prints in the echo area the
-name of the command that KEY is bound to. For example, `C-h c C-f'
-prints `forward-char'. Since command names are chosen to describe what
-the commands do, this is a good way to get a very brief description of
-what KEY does.
+Concept Index
+*************
- `C-h k KEY' is similar to `C-h c' but gives more information. It
-displays the documentation string of the function KEY is bound to as
-well as its name. KEY is a string or vector of events. When called
-interactively, KEY may also be a menu selection. This information does
-not usually fit into the echo area, so a window is used for the display.
-
- `C-h c' and `C-h k' work for any sort of key sequences, including
-function keys and mouse events.
+* Menu:
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Name Help, Next: Apropos, Prev: Key Help, Up: Help
-
-Help by Command or Variable Name
-================================
-
- `C-h f' (`describe-function') reads the name of a Lisp function
-using the minibuffer, then displays that function's documentation
-string in a window. Since commands are Lisp functions, you can use the
-argument FUNCTION to get the documentation of a command that you know
-by name. For example,
-
- C-h f auto-fill-mode <RET>
-
-displays the documentation for `auto-fill-mode'. Using `C-h f' is the
-only way to see the documentation of a command that is not bound to any
-key, that is, a command you would normally call using `M-x'. If the
-variable `describe-function-show-arglist' is `t', `describe-function'
-shows its arglist if the FUNCTION is not an autoload function.
-
- `C-h f' is also useful for Lisp functions that you are planning to
-use in a Lisp program. For example, if you have just written the
-expression `(make-vector len)' and want to make sure you are using
-`make-vector' properly, type `C-h f make-vector <RET>'. Because `C-h
-f' allows all function names, not just command names, you may find that
-some of your favorite abbreviations that work in `M-x' don't work in
-`C-h f'. An abbreviation may be unique among command names, yet fail
-to be unique when other function names are allowed.
-
- The function name for `C-h f' to describe has a default which is
-used if you type <RET> leaving the minibuffer empty. The default is
-the function called by the innermost Lisp expression in the buffer
-around point, _provided_ that is a valid, defined Lisp function name.
-For example, if point is located following the text `(make-vector (car
-x)', the innermost list containing point is the one that starts with
-`(make-vector', so the default is to describe the function
-`make-vector'.
-
- `C-h f' is often useful just to verify that you have the right
-spelling for the function name. If `C-h f' mentions a name from the
-buffer as the default, that name must be defined as a Lisp function. If
-that is all you want to know, just type `C-g' to cancel the `C-h f'
-command, then go on editing.
-
- `C-h w COMMAND <RET>' (`where-is') tells you what keys are bound to
-COMMAND. It prints a list of the keys in the echo area. Alternatively,
-it informs you that a command is not bound to any keys, which implies
-that you must use `M-x' to call the command.
-
- `C-h v' (`describe-variable') is like `C-h f' but describes Lisp
-variables instead of Lisp functions. Its default is the Lisp symbol
-around or before point, if that is the name of a known Lisp variable.
-*Note Variables::.
+* $ in regexp: Regexps.
+* ( in regexp: Regexps.
+* ) in regexp: Regexps.
+* * in regexp: Regexps.
+* *? in regexp: Regexps.
+* + in regexp: Regexps.
+* +? in regexp: Regexps.
+* . in regexp: Regexps.
+* .mailrc file: Mail Headers.
+* // in file name: Minibuffer File.
+* ? in regexp: Regexps.
+* ?? in regexp: Regexps.
+* [ in regexp: Regexps.
+* \ in regexp: Regexps.
+* \' in regexp: Regexps.
+* \(?: in regexp: Regexps.
+* \< in regexp: Regexps.
+* \= in regexp: Regexps.
+* \> in regexp: Regexps.
+* \` in regexp: Regexps.
+* \B in regexp: Regexps.
+* \b in regexp: Regexps.
+* \S in regexp: Regexps.
+* \s in regexp: Regexps.
+* \W in regexp: Regexps.
+* \w in regexp: Regexps.
+* \{n,m\} in regexp: Regexps.
+* ] in regexp: Regexps.
+* ^ in regexp: Regexps.
+* Abbrev mode: Minor Modes.
+* abbrevs: Abbrevs.
+* aborting: Quitting.
+* accumulating text: Accumulating Text.
+* active fields (customization buffer): Customization Groups.
+* active regions: Active Regions.
+* adding menu items: Menu Customization.
+* adding menus: Menu Customization.
+* againformation: Dissociated Press.
+* Apps menu <1>: Apps Menu.
+* Apps menu: Pull-down Menus.
+* apropos: Apropos.
+* architecture-specific directories: Startup Paths.
+* arguments (from shell): Command Switches.
+* arrow keys: Moving Point.
+* ASCII: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* Asm mode: Asm Mode.
+* astronomical day numbers: Calendar Systems.
+* audible bell, changing: Audible Bell.
+* Auto Delete Selection menu item: Options Menu.
+* Auto Fill mode <1>: Minor Modes.
+* Auto Fill mode <2>: Comments.
+* Auto Fill mode: Auto Fill.
+* Auto-Save mode: Auto Save.
+* autoload: Loading.
+* automatic package install: Automatically.
+* available packages: Available Packages.
+* backup file: Backup.
+* batch mode: Command Switches.
+* beginning of line in regexp: Regexps.
+* bell, changing: Audible Bell.
+* binary packages: Package Terminology.
+* binding: Commands.
+* blank lines <1>: Comments.
+* blank lines: Blank Lines.
+* body lines (Outline mode): Outline Format.
+* bold font: Face Customization.
+* bookmarks: Bookmarks.
+* boredom: Amusements.
+* buffer: Frame.
+* buffer menu: Several Buffers.
+* buffers: Buffers.
+* Buffers menu <1>: Buffers Menu.
+* Buffers menu: Pull-down Menus.
+* Buffers Menu Length... menu item: Options Menu.
+* Buffers Sub-Menus menu item: Options Menu.
+* buggestion: Dissociated Press.
+* bugs: Bugs.
+* building packages: Building Packages.
+* byte code: Compiling Libraries.
+* C: Programs.
+* C mode: Program Modes.
+* C++ class browser, tags: Tags.
+* calendar: Calendar/Diary.
+* calendar and LaTeX: LaTeX Calendar.
+* calendar, first day of week: Move to Beginning or End.
+* candle lighting times: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* case conversion <1>: Case.
+* case conversion: Fixing Case.
+* Case Sensitive Search menu item: Options Menu.
+* CCL programs: Mule and Fonts.
+* centering: Fill Commands.
+* change log: Change Log.
+* changing buffers: Select Buffer.
+* changing menu items: Menu Customization.
+* character set: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* character set (in regexp): Regexps.
+* checking in files: Concepts of VC.
+* checking out files: Concepts of VC.
+* Chinese: Mule.
+* Chinese calendar: Calendar Systems.
+* choosing packages <1>: Which Packages.
+* choosing packages: Installing Packages.
+* class browser, C++: Tags.
+* Clear menu item: Edit Menu.
+* clipboard selections: X Clipboard Selection.
+* coding systems: Coding Systems.
+* command <1>: Key Bindings.
+* command: Commands.
+* command history: Repetition.
+* command line arguments: Command Switches.
+* command name: Key Bindings.
+* comments: Comments.
+* comparing files: Comparing Files.
+* compilation errors: Compilation.
+* compiling files: Compilation.
+* completion: Completion.
+* completion (symbol names): Lisp Completion.
+* continuation line: Continuation Lines.
+* Control-Meta: Lists.
+* Coptic calendar: Calendar Systems.
+* Copy menu item: Edit Menu.
+* copying files: Misc File Ops.
+* copying text <1>: Accumulating Text.
+* copying text: Yanking.
+* core distribution: Installing Packages.
+* crashes: Auto Save.
+* creating directories: File Names.
+* creating files: Visiting.
+* current buffer: Buffers.
+* current stack frame: Lisp Debug.
+* cursor <1>: Inserting Text.
+* cursor: Point.
+* cursor motion: Moving Point.
+* customization <1>: Customization.
+* customization <2>: Lisp Indent.
+* customization: Commands.
+* customization buffer: Easy Customization.
+* customization groups: Customization Groups.
+* customizing faces: Face Customization.
+* cut buffers: X Selection Commands.
+* Cut menu item: Edit Menu.
+* cutting: Killing.
+* Cyrillic: Mule.
+* day of year: General Calendar.
+* daylight savings time: Daylight Savings.
+* debugger: Lisp Debug.
+* default argument: Minibuffer.
+* defuns: Defuns.
+* Delete Frame menu item: File Menu.
+* deleting blank lines: Blank Lines.
+* deleting characters and lines: Erasing.
+* deleting menu items: Menu Customization.
+* deleting packages: Removing Packages.
+* deletion <1>: Killing.
+* deletion: Inserting Text.
+* deletion (of files) <1>: Misc File Ops.
+* deletion (of files): Dired.
+* diary: Diary.
+* diary buffer: Fancy Diary Display.
+* diary file: Format of Diary File.
+* ding: Audible Bell.
+* directories: Startup Paths.
+* directory hierarchies: Startup Paths.
+* directory listing: ListDir.
+* Dired: Dired.
+* disabled command: Disabling.
+* disabling menu items: Menu Customization.
+* Distribution: License.
+* doctor: Total Frustration.
+* double slash in file name: Minibuffer File.
+* drastic changes: Reverting.
+* dribble file: Bugs.
+* early package hierarchies: Startup Paths.
+* Ebrowse: Tags.
+* echo area: Echo Area.
+* Edit menu <1>: Edit Menu.
+* Edit menu: Pull-down Menus.
+* editable fields (customization buffer): Customization Groups.
+* editing level, recursive <1>: Quitting.
+* editing level, recursive: Recursive Edit.
+* EDT: Emulation.
+* Eliza: Total Frustration.
+* Emacs initialization file: Init File.
+* Emacs-Lisp mode: Lisp Eval.
+* enabling menu items: Menu Customization.
+* encoding of characters: Mule.
+* End Macro Recording menu item: Edit Menu.
+* entering XEmacs: Entering Emacs.
+* environment: Single Shell.
+* erasing characters and lines: Erasing.
+* error log: Compilation.
+* etags program: Create Tags Table.
+* Ethiopic calendar: Calendar Systems.
+* Execute Last Macro menu item: Edit Menu.
+* Exit Emacs menu item: File Menu.
+* exiting <1>: Recursive Edit.
+* exiting: Exiting.
+* expansion (of abbrevs): Abbrevs.
+* expression: Lists.
+* file dates: Interlocking.
+* file directory: ListDir.
+* File menu <1>: File Menu.
+* File menu: Pull-down Menus.
+* file names: File Names.
+* file protection: Interlocking.
+* files <1>: Visiting.
+* files <2>: Files.
+* files: Basic Files.
+* files, remote: Files.
+* fill prefix: Fill Prefix.
+* filling: Filling.
+* font encoding: Mule and Fonts.
+* Font menu item: Options Menu.
+* font registry: Mule and Fonts.
+* fonts: Mule and Fonts.
+* fonts and faces: Face Customization.
+* formfeed: Pages.
+* Fortran mode: Fortran.
+* frame: Frame.
+* French Revolutionary calendar: Calendar Systems.
+* function <1>: Key Bindings.
+* function: Commands.
+* General Public License: License.
+* getting help with keys: Basic Help.
+* global keymap: Keymaps.
+* global substitution: Replace.
+* graphic characters: Inserting Text.
+* Greek: Mule.
+* Gregorian calendar: Other Calendars.
+* grinding: Grinding.
+* hardcopy: Hardcopy.
+* header (TeX mode): TeX Print.
+* headers (of mail message): Mail Headers.
+* heading lines (Outline mode): Outline Format.
+* Hebrew calendar: Calendar Systems.
+* help: Help.
+* Help menu <1>: Help Menu.
+* Help menu: Pull-down Menus.
+* hierarchies: Startup Paths.
+* history of commands: Repetition.
+* history of minibuffer input: Minibuffer History.
+* holiday forms: Holiday Customizing.
+* holidays: Holidays.
+* horizontal scrolling: Horizontal Scrolling.
+* Icomplete mode: Completion Options.
+* ignoriginal: Dissociated Press.
+* indentation <1>: Comments.
+* indentation <2>: Grinding.
+* indentation: Indentation.
+* inferior process: Compilation.
+* Info: Misc Help.
+* init file: Init File.
+* input methods: Input Methods.
+* Insert File... menu item: File Menu.
+* inserting blank lines: Blank Lines.
+* insertion: Inserting Text.
+* install: Installing Packages.
+* installing packages: Installing Packages.
+* international scripts: Mule.
+* interval operator (in regexps): Etags Regexps.
+* invisible lines: Outline Mode.
+* IPA: Mule.
+* Islamic calendar: Calendar Systems.
+* ISO commercial calendar: Calendar Systems.
+* italic font: Face Customization.
+* Japanese: Mule.
+* Julian calendar: Calendar Systems.
+* Julian day numbers: Calendar Systems.
+* justification: Fill Commands.
+* key rebinding, permanent: Init File.
+* key rebinding, this session: Rebinding.
+* keyboard macros: Keyboard Macros.
+* keycode: Super and Hyper Keys.
+* keymap <1>: Keymaps.
+* keymap: Commands.
+* keystroke: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* keysym: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* keysyms: Super and Hyper Keys.
+* Kill Buffer menu item: File Menu.
+* kill ring: Yanking.
+* killing: Killing.
+* killing characters and lines: Erasing.
+* killing Emacs: Exiting.
+* Korean: Mule.
+* language environments: Language Environments.
+* last package hierarchies: Startup Paths.
+* late package hierarchies: Startup Paths.
+* LaTeX: TeX Mode.
+* leaving Emacs: Exiting.
+* libraries: Lisp Libraries.
+* license to copy XEmacs: License.
+* line number: Position Info.
+* line wrapping: Continuation Lines.
+* Lisp: Programs.
+* Lisp mode: Program Modes.
+* list: Lists.
+* loading libraries: Loading.
+* loading Lisp code: Lisp Libraries.
+* local keymap: Keymaps.
+* local variables: Locals.
+* local variables in files: File Variables.
+* local.rules: Local.rules File.
+* locking and version control: Concepts of VC.
+* log entry: Editing with VC.
+* mail <1>: Reading Mail.
+* mail: Sending Mail.
+* major modes: Major Modes.
+* make: Compilation.
+* manual package install: Manually.
+* manuals, on-line: Misc Help.
+* mark: Mark.
+* mark ring <1>: Mark and Region.
+* mark ring: Mark Ring.
+* Markov chain: Dissociated Press.
+* master file: Concepts of VC.
+* matching parentheses: Matching.
+* Mayan calendar: Calendar Systems.
+* Mayan calendar round: Mayan Calendar.
+* Mayan haab calendar: Mayan Calendar.
+* Mayan long count: Mayan Calendar.
+* Mayan tzolkin calendar: Mayan Calendar.
+* menus <1>: Change Window.
+* menus: Pull-down Menus.
+* message <1>: Reading Mail.
+* message: Sending Mail.
+* Meta: Words.
+* minibuffer <1>: Keymaps.
+* minibuffer <2>: M-x.
+* minibuffer: Minibuffer.
+* minibuffer history: Minibuffer History.
+* minor modes: Minor Modes.
+* mistakes, correcting <1>: Fixit.
+* mistakes, correcting: Undo.
+* mocklisp: Mocklisp.
+* mode hook: Program Modes.
+* mode line <1>: Minor Modes.
+* mode line: Mode Line.
+* mode, Term: Term Mode.
+* modified (buffer): Visiting.
+* modifier key: Intro to Keystrokes.
+* modifier mapping: Super and Hyper Keys.
+* moon, phases of: Lunar Phases.
+* mouse operations: Additional Mouse Operations.
+* mouse selection: Mouse Selection.
+* movement: Moving Point.
+* moving inside the calendar: Calendar Motion.
+* moving point: Moving Point.
+* moving text: Yanking.
+* moving the cursor: Moving Point.
+* MULE: Mule.
+* multi-frame XEmacs: XEmacs under X.
+* multibyte characters: Mule.
+* named configurations (RCS): Snapshot Caveats.
+* narrowing: Narrowing.
+* New Frame menu item: File Menu.
+* newline: Inserting Text.
+* non-incremental search: Non-Incremental Search.
+* nroff: Nroff Mode.
+* numeric arguments: Arguments.
+* omer count: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* on-line manuals: Misc Help.
+* Open File, New Frame... menu item: File Menu.
+* Open File... menu item: File Menu.
+* option <1>: Examining.
+* option: Variables.
+* Options menu <1>: Options Menu.
+* Options menu: Pull-down Menus.
+* other editors: Emulation.
+* outlines: Outline Mode.
+* outragedy: Dissociated Press.
+* Overstrike menu item: Options Menu.
+* Overwrite mode: Minor Modes.
+* package building: Building Packages.
+* package distributions: Package Terminology.
+* package hierarchies: Startup Paths.
+* package path: Startup Paths.
+* package tools: Automatically.
+* packages <1>: Available Packages.
+* packages: Packages.
+* page number: Position Info.
+* pages: Pages.
+* paragraphs: Paragraphs.
+* parasha, weekly: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* Paren Highlighting menu item: Options Menu.
+* parentheses: Matching.
+* Paste menu item: Edit Menu.
+* pasting: Yanking.
+* path: Startup Paths.
+* paths: Startup Paths.
+* per-buffer variables: Locals.
+* Persian calendar: Calendar Systems.
+* phases of the moon: Lunar Phases.
+* pictures: Picture.
+* point <1>: Inserting Text.
+* point: Point.
+* pointer face: Mouse Selection.
+* pointer shapes: Mouse Selection.
+* prefix key sequence: Key Sequences.
+* presidentagon: Dissociated Press.
+* primary selections: X Selection Commands.
+* Print Buffer menu item: File Menu.
+* prompt: Minibuffer.
+* properbose: Dissociated Press.
+* Pull-down Menus <1>: Change Window.
+* Pull-down Menus: Pull-down Menus.
+* query replace: Query Replace.
+* quitting: Quitting.
+* quitting (in search): Incremental Search.
+* quitting Emacs: Exiting.
+* quoting: Inserting Text.
+* random sentences: CONX.
+* RCS: Concepts of VC.
+* Read Only menu item: Options Menu.
+* read-only buffer: Misc Buffer.
+* rebinding keys, permanently: Init File.
+* rebinding keys, this session: Rebinding.
+* rectangle <1>: Rectangles in Picture.
+* rectangle: RegRect.
+* rectangles: Rectangles.
+* recursive editing level <1>: Quitting.
+* recursive editing level: Recursive Edit.
+* redefining keys: Key Bindings Using Strings.
+* regexp: Regexp Search.
+* regexp alternative: Regexps.
+* regexp grouping: Regexps.
+* region <1>: Case.
+* region: Mark.
+* registered file: Concepts of VC.
+* registers: Registers.
+* regular expression: Regexp Search.
+* regular packages: Package Terminology.
+* remote files: Files.
+* removing directories: File Names.
+* removing packages: Removing Packages.
+* replacement: Replace.
+* restriction: Narrowing.
+* Revert Buffer menu item: File Menu.
+* root of a hierarchy: Startup Paths.
+* rosh hodesh: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* Russian: Mule.
+* Save Buffer As ... menu item: File Menu.
+* Save Buffer menu item: File Menu.
+* Save Options: Options Menu.
+* saving: Visiting.
+* saving option value: Changing an Option.
+* SCCS: Concepts of VC.
+* Scheme mode: Program Modes.
+* scrolling: Scrolling.
+* scrolling in the calendar: Scroll Calendar.
+* searching: Search.
+* selected buffer: Buffers.
+* selected window: Basic Window.
+* selective display: Outline Mode.
+* self-documentation: Help.
+* sentences: Sentences.
+* setting option value: Changing an Option.
+* setting variables: Examining.
+* sexp: Lists.
+* sexp diary entries: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* shell commands: Shell.
+* Shell mode: Shell Mode.
+* shift modifier: Representing Keystrokes.
+* shrinking XEmacs frame: Exiting.
+* simultaneous editing: Interlocking.
+* single-file packages: Package Terminology.
+* site-specific directories: Startup Paths.
+* Size menu item: Options Menu.
+* slashes repeated in file name: Minibuffer File.
+* snapshots and version control: Snapshots.
+* sorting: Sorting.
+* sorting diary entries: Fancy Diary Display.
+* source packages: Package Terminology.
+* spelling: Spelling.
+* Split Frame: File Menu.
+* Start Macro Recording menu item: Edit Menu.
+* starting XEmacs: Entering Emacs.
+* startup paths: Startup Paths.
+* string substitution: Replace.
+* subshell: Shell.
+* subtree (Outline mode): Outline Visibility.
+* sumo package install: Sumo.
+* sunrise and sunset: Sunrise/Sunset.
+* suspending: Exiting.
+* switching buffers: Select Buffer.
+* Syntax Highlighting menu item: Options Menu.
+* syntax table <1>: Syntax.
+* syntax table: Words.
+* tags table: Tags.
+* tags, C++: Tags.
+* Teach Extended Commands menu item: Options Menu.
+* techniquitous: Dissociated Press.
+* television: Appending Kills.
+* Term mode: Term Mode.
+* termscript file: Bugs.
+* TeX: TeX Mode.
+* text: Text.
+* Text mode: Text Mode.
+* Tools menu <1>: Tools Menu.
+* Tools menu: Pull-down Menus.
+* top level: Mode Line.
+* transposition <1>: Lists.
+* transposition <2>: Words.
+* transposition: Transpose.
+* truncation: Continuation Lines.
+* typos: Fixit.
+* Un-split (Keep Others): File Menu.
+* Un-split (Keep This): File Menu.
+* undo: Undo.
+* Undo menu item: Edit Menu.
+* variable: Variables.
+* variables: Commands.
+* version control: Version Control.
+* version-specific directories: Startup Paths.
+* vi: Emulation.
+* viewing: Misc File Ops.
+* Viper: Emulation.
+* visiting: Visiting.
+* visiting files: Visiting.
+* weeks, which day they start on: Move to Beginning or End.
+* Weight menu item: Options Menu.
+* which packages: Which Packages.
+* widening: Narrowing.
+* window: Frame.
+* windows: Windows.
+* Windows menu: Change Window.
+* word search: Word Search.
+* words <1>: Case.
+* words <2>: Words.
+* words: Fixing Case.
+* work file: Concepts of VC.
+* wrapping: Continuation Lines.
+* X resources: X Resources.
+* yahrzeits <1>: Sexp Diary Entries.
+* yahrzeits: From Other Calendar.
+* yanking: Yanking.
+* | in regexp: Regexps.
-\1f
-File: xemacs.info, Node: Apropos, Next: Library Keywords, Prev: Name Help, Up: Help
-
-Apropos
-=======
-
-`C-h A'
- Show only symbols that are names of commands (`command-apropos').
-
-`M-x apropos REGEXP'
- Show all symbols whose names contain matches for REGEXP.
-
- A more sophisticated sort of question to ask is, "What are the
-commands for working with files?" To ask this question, type `C-h a
-file <RET>', which displays a list of all command names that contain
-`file', including `copy-file', `find-file', and so on. With each
-command name appears a brief description of how to use the command, and
-what keys you can currently invoke it with. For example, it would say
-that you can invoke `find-file' by typing `C-x C-f'. The `A' in `C-h
-A' stands for `Apropos'; `C-h A' runs the command `command-apropos'.
-This command normally checks only commands (interactive functions); if
-you specify a prefix argument, it checks noninteractive functions as
-well.
-
- Because `C-h A' looks only for functions whose names contain the
-string you specify, you must use ingenuity in choosing the string. If
-you are looking for commands for killing backwards and `C-h a
-kill-backwards <RET>' doesn't reveal any, don't give up. Try just
-`kill', or just `backwards', or just `back'. Be persistent. Pretend
-you are playing Adventure. Also note that you can use a regular
-expression as the argument, for more flexibility (*note Regexps::).
-
- Here is a set of arguments to give to `C-h a' that covers many
-classes of XEmacs commands, since there are strong conventions for
-naming the standard XEmacs commands. By giving you a feel for the
-naming conventions, this set should also serve to aid you in developing
-a technique for picking `apropos' strings.
-
- char, line, word, sentence, paragraph, region, page, sexp, list,
- defun, rect, buffer, frame, window, face, file, dir, register,
- mode, beginning, end, forward, backward, next, previous, up, down,
- search, goto, kill, delete, mark, insert, yank, fill, indent,
- case, change, set, what, list, find, view, describe, default.
-
- To list all Lisp symbols that contain a match for a regexp, not just
-the ones that are defined as commands, use the command `M-x apropos'
-instead of `C-h A'. This command does not check key bindings by
-default; specify a numeric argument if you want it to check them.
-
- The `apropos-documentation' command is like `apropos' except that it
-searches documentation strings for matches for the specified regular
-expression.
-
- The `apropos-value' command is like `apropos' except that it
-searches symbols' values for matches for the specified regular
-expression. This command does not check function definitions or
-property lists by default; specify a numeric argument if you want it to
-check them.
-
- If the variable `apropos-do-all' is non-`nil', the commands above
-all behave as if they had been given a prefix argument.
-
- If you want more information about a function definition, variable or
-symbol property listed in the Apropos buffer, you can click on it with
-`Mouse-2' or move there and type <RET>.