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[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/mark.texi
From: |
Richard M. Stallman |
Subject: |
[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/mark.texi |
Date: |
Sun, 02 Dec 2001 19:04:41 -0500 |
Index: emacs/man/mark.texi
diff -c emacs/man/mark.texi:1.17 emacs/man/mark.texi:1.18
*** emacs/man/mark.texi:1.17 Sat Dec 1 08:33:05 2001
--- emacs/man/mark.texi Sun Dec 2 19:04:41 2001
***************
*** 288,309 ****
puts the mark at the end of that paragraph (@pxref{Paragraphs}). It
prepares the region so you can indent, case-convert, or kill a whole
paragraph. With prefix argument, if the argument's value is positive,
! @kbd{M-h} marks that many paragraphs, the paragraph surrounding point
! plus some following paragraphs. If the prefix argument is negative,
! @kbd{M-h} also marks that many paragraphs, but the preceding ones
! instead of the following. (With a positive argument, point is put
! at the beginning and mark at end, with a negative argument, point is
! at end and mark at the beginning.)
@kbd{C-M-h} (@code{mark-defun}) similarly puts point before, and the
mark after, the current (or following) major top-level definition, or
! defun (@pxref{Moving by Defuns}). @kbd{C-x C-p} (@code{mark-page})
! puts point before the current page, and mark at the end
! (@pxref{Pages}). The mark goes after the terminating page delimiter
! (to include it in the region), while point goes after the preceding
! page delimiter (to exclude it). A numeric argument specifies a later
! page (if positive) or an earlier page (if negative) instead of the
! current page.
Finally, @kbd{C-x h} (@code{mark-whole-buffer}) sets up the entire
buffer as the region, by putting point at the beginning and the mark at
--- 288,308 ----
puts the mark at the end of that paragraph (@pxref{Paragraphs}). It
prepares the region so you can indent, case-convert, or kill a whole
paragraph. With prefix argument, if the argument's value is positive,
! @kbd{M-h} marks that many paragraphs starting with the one surrounding
! point. If the prefix argument is @address@hidden, @kbd{M-h} also
! marks @var{n} paragraphs, running back form the one surrounding point.
! In that last case, point moves forward to the end of that paragraph,
! and the mark goes at the start of the region.
@kbd{C-M-h} (@code{mark-defun}) similarly puts point before, and the
mark after, the current (or following) major top-level definition, or
! defun (@pxref{Moving by Defuns}). (Currently it only marks one
! defun.) @kbd{C-x C-p} (@code{mark-page}) puts point before the
! current page, and mark at the end (@pxref{Pages}). The mark goes
! after the terminating page delimiter (to include it in the region),
! while point goes after the preceding page delimiter (to exclude it).
! A numeric argument specifies a later page (if positive) or an earlier
! page (if negative) instead of the current page.
Finally, @kbd{C-x h} (@code{mark-whole-buffer}) sets up the entire
buffer as the region, by putting point at the beginning and the mark at