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[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/basic.texi
From: |
Richard M . Stallman |
Subject: |
[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/basic.texi |
Date: |
Mon, 27 Dec 2004 12:19:33 -0500 |
Index: emacs/man/basic.texi
diff -c emacs/man/basic.texi:1.39 emacs/man/basic.texi:1.40
*** emacs/man/basic.texi:1.39 Sun Nov 2 07:00:59 2003
--- emacs/man/basic.texi Mon Dec 27 17:01:44 2004
***************
*** 171,177 ****
@kindex UP
@kindex DOWN
@findex beginning-of-line
! @findex end-of-line
@findex forward-char
@findex backward-char
@findex next-line
--- 171,177 ----
@kindex UP
@kindex DOWN
@findex beginning-of-line
! @findex move-end-of-line
@findex forward-char
@findex backward-char
@findex next-line
***************
*** 185,191 ****
@item C-a
Move to the beginning of the line (@code{beginning-of-line}).
@item C-e
! Move to the end of the line (@code{end-of-line}).
@item C-f
Move forward one character (@code{forward-char}). The right-arrow key
does the same thing.
--- 185,191 ----
@item C-a
Move to the beginning of the line (@code{beginning-of-line}).
@item C-e
! Move to the end of the line (@code{move-end-of-line}).
@item C-f
Move forward one character (@code{forward-char}). The right-arrow key
does the same thing.
***************
*** 380,403 ****
@vindex undo-limit
@vindex undo-strong-limit
@cindex undo limit
When the undo information for a buffer becomes too large, Emacs
discards the oldest undo information from time to time (during garbage
collection). You can specify how much undo information to keep by
! setting two variables: @code{undo-limit} and @code{undo-strong-limit}.
! Their values are expressed in units of bytes of space.
The variable @code{undo-limit} sets a soft limit: Emacs keeps undo
! data for enough commands to reach this size, and perhaps exceed it, but
! does not keep data for any earlier commands beyond that. Its default
! value is 20000. The variable @code{undo-strong-limit} sets a stricter
! limit: the command which pushes the size past this amount is itself
! forgotten. Its default value is 30000.
!
! Regardless of the values of those variables, the most recent change is
! never discarded, so there is no danger that garbage collection occurring
! right after an unintentional large change might prevent you from undoing
! it.
The reason the @code{undo} command has two keys, @kbd{C-x u} and
@kbd{C-_}, set up to run it is that it is worthy of a single-character
--- 380,411 ----
@vindex undo-limit
@vindex undo-strong-limit
+ @vindex undo-outer-limit
@cindex undo limit
When the undo information for a buffer becomes too large, Emacs
discards the oldest undo information from time to time (during garbage
collection). You can specify how much undo information to keep by
! setting three variables: @code{undo-limit}, @code{undo-strong-limit},
! and @code{undo-outer-limit}. Their values are expressed in units of
! bytes of space.
The variable @code{undo-limit} sets a soft limit: Emacs keeps undo
! data for enough commands to reach this size, and perhaps exceed it,
! but does not keep data for any earlier commands beyond that. Its
! default value is 20000. The variable @code{undo-strong-limit} sets a
! stricter limit: a previous command (not the most recent one) which
! pushes the size past this amount is itself forgotten. The default
! value of @code{undo-strong-limit} is 30000.
!
! Regardless of the values of those variables, the most recent change
! is never discarded unless it gets bigger than @code{undo-outer-limit}
! (normally 300,000). At that point, Emacs asks whether to discard the
! undo information even for the current command. (You also have the
! option of quitting.) So there is normally no danger that garbage
! collection occurring right after an unintentional large change might
! prevent you from undoing it. But if you didn't expect the command
! to create such large undo data, you can get rid of it and prevent
! Emacs from running out of memory.
The reason the @code{undo} command has two keys, @kbd{C-x u} and
@kbd{C-_}, set up to run it is that it is worthy of a single-character
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Richard M . Stallman <=