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| author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Mon, 15 Nov 1993 06:41:45 +0000 |
| parents | 2173e8c3723b |
| children | e76136b468b3 |
| rev | line source |
|---|---|
| 13 | 1 Copyright (c) 1985 Free Software Foundation, Inc; See end for conditions. |
| 2 | |
| 3 You are looking at the Emacs tutorial. | |
| 4 | |
| 5 Emacs commands generally involve the CONTROL key (sometimes labelled | |
| 6 CTRL or CTL) or the META key (sometimes labelled EDIT). Rather than | |
| 7 write out META or CONTROL each time we want you to prefix a character, | |
| 8 we'll use the following abbreviations: | |
| 9 | |
| 10 C-<chr> means hold the CONTROL key while typing the character <chr> | |
| 11 Thus, C-f would be: hold the CONTROL key and type f. | |
| 12 M-<chr> means hold the META or EDIT key down while typing <chr>. | |
| 13 If there is no META or EDIT key, type <ESC>, release it, | |
| 14 then type the character <chr>. "<ESC>" stands for the | |
| 15 key labelled "ALT" or "ESC". | |
| 16 | |
| 17 Important note: to end the Emacs session, type C-x C-c. (Two characters.) | |
| 18 The characters ">>" at the left margin indicate directions for you to | |
| 19 try using a command. For instance: | |
| 20 <<Blank lines inserted here by startup of help-with-tutorial>> | |
| 21 >> Now type C-v (View next screen) to move to the next screen. | |
| 22 (go ahead, do it by depressing the control key and v together). | |
| 23 From now on, you'll be expected to do this whenever you finish | |
| 24 reading the screen. | |
| 25 | |
| 26 Note that there is an overlap when going from screen to screen; this | |
| 27 provides some continuity when moving through the file. | |
| 28 | |
| 29 The first thing that you need to know is how to move around from | |
| 30 place to place in the file. You already know how to move forward a | |
| 31 screen, with C-v. To move backwards a screen, type M-v (depress the | |
| 32 META key and type v, or type <ESC>v if you don't have a META or EDIT | |
| 33 key). | |
| 34 | |
| 35 >> Try typing M-v and then C-v to move back and forth a few times. | |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 1375 | 38 * SUMMARY |
| 39 --------- | |
| 13 | 40 |
| 41 The following commands are useful for viewing screenfuls: | |
| 42 | |
| 43 C-v Move forward one screenful | |
| 44 M-v Move backward one screenful | |
| 45 C-l Clear screen and redisplay everything | |
| 46 putting the text near the cursor at the center. | |
|
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Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
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47 (That's control-L, not control-1.) |
| 13 | 48 |
| 49 >> Find the cursor and remember what text is near it. | |
| 50 Then type a C-l. | |
| 51 Find the cursor again and see what text is near it now. | |
| 52 | |
| 53 | |
| 1375 | 54 * BASIC CURSOR CONTROL |
| 55 ---------------------- | |
| 13 | 56 |
| 57 Getting from screenful to screenful is useful, but how do you | |
| 58 reposition yourself within a given screen to a specific place? | |
| 59 There are several ways you can do this. One way (not the best, but | |
| 60 the most basic) is to use the commands previous, backward, forward | |
| 61 and next. As you can imagine these commands (which are given to | |
| 62 Emacs as C-p, C-b, C-f, and C-n respectively) move the cursor from | |
| 63 where it currently is to a new place in the given direction. Here, | |
| 64 in a more graphical form are the commands: | |
| 65 | |
| 66 Previous line, C-p | |
| 67 : | |
| 68 : | |
| 69 Backward, C-b .... Current cursor position .... Forward, C-f | |
| 70 : | |
| 71 : | |
| 72 Next line, C-n | |
| 73 | |
| 74 >> Move the cursor to the line in the middle of that diagram | |
| 75 and type C-l to see the whole diagram centered in the screen. | |
| 76 | |
| 77 You'll probably find it easy to think of these by letter. P for | |
| 78 previous, N for next, B for backward and F for forward. These are | |
| 79 the basic cursor positioning commands and you'll be using them ALL | |
| 80 the time so it would be of great benefit if you learn them now. | |
| 81 | |
| 82 >> Do a few C-n's to bring the cursor down to this line. | |
| 83 | |
| 84 >> Move into the line with C-f's and then up with C-p's. | |
| 85 See what C-p does when the cursor is in the middle of the line. | |
| 86 | |
| 87 Lines are separated by Newline characters. For most applications | |
| 88 there should normally be a Newline character at the end of the text, | |
| 89 as well, but it is up to you to make sure of this. A file can | |
| 90 validly exist without a Newline at the end. | |
| 91 | |
| 92 >> Try to C-b at the beginning of a line. Do a few more C-b's. | |
| 93 Then do C-f's back to the end of the line and beyond. | |
| 94 | |
| 95 When you go off the top or bottom of the screen, the text beyond | |
| 96 the edge is shifted onto the screen so that your instructions can | |
| 97 be carried out while keeping the cursor on the screen. | |
| 98 | |
| 99 >> Try to move the cursor off the bottom of the screen with C-n and | |
| 100 see what happens. | |
| 101 | |
| 102 If moving by characters is too slow, you can move by words. M-f | |
| 103 (Meta-f) moves forward a word and M-b moves back a word. | |
| 104 | |
| 105 >> Type a few M-f's and M-b's. Intersperse them with C-f's and C-b's. | |
| 106 | |
| 107 Notice the parallel between C-f and C-b on the one hand, and M-f and | |
| 108 M-b on the other hand. Very often Meta characters are used for | |
| 109 operations related to English text whereas Control characters operate | |
| 110 on the basic textual units that are independent of what you are | |
| 111 editing (characters, lines, etc). There is a similar parallel between | |
| 112 lines and sentences: C-a and C-e move to the beginning or end of a | |
| 113 line, and M-a and M-e move to the beginning or end of a sentence. | |
| 114 | |
| 115 >> Try a couple of C-a's, and then a couple of C-e's. | |
| 116 Try a couple of M-a's, and then a couple of M-e's. | |
| 117 | |
| 118 See how repeated C-a's do nothing, but repeated M-a's keep moving | |
| 119 farther. Do you think that this is right? | |
| 120 | |
| 121 Two other simple cursor motion commands are M-< (Meta Less-than), | |
| 122 which moves to the beginning of the file, and M-> (Meta Greater-than), | |
| 123 which moves to the end of the file. You probably don't need to try | |
| 124 them, since finding this spot again will be boring. On most terminals | |
| 125 the "<" is above the comma and you must use the shift key to type it. | |
| 126 On these terminals you must use the shift key to type M-< also; | |
| 127 without the shift key, you would be typing M-comma. | |
| 128 | |
| 129 The location of the cursor in the text is also called "point". To | |
| 130 paraphrase, the cursor shows on the screen where point is located in | |
| 131 the text. | |
| 132 | |
| 133 Here is a summary of simple moving operations including the word and | |
| 134 sentence moving commands: | |
| 135 | |
| 136 C-f Move forward a character | |
| 137 C-b Move backward a character | |
| 138 | |
| 139 M-f Move forward a word | |
| 140 M-b Move backward a word | |
| 141 | |
| 142 C-n Move to next line | |
| 143 C-p Move to previous line | |
| 144 | |
| 145 C-a Move to beginning of line | |
| 146 C-e Move to end of line | |
| 147 | |
| 148 M-a Move back to beginning of sentence | |
| 149 M-e Move forward to end of sentence | |
| 150 | |
| 151 M-< Go to beginning of file | |
| 152 M-> Go to end of file | |
| 153 | |
| 154 >> Try all of these commands now a few times for practice. | |
| 155 Since the last two will take you away from this screen, | |
| 156 you can come back here with M-v's and C-v's. These are | |
| 157 the most often used commands. | |
| 158 | |
| 159 Like all other commands in Emacs, these commands can be given | |
| 160 arguments which cause them to be executed repeatedly. The way you | |
| 161 give a command a repeat count is by typing C-u and then the digits | |
| 162 before you type the command. If you have a META or EDIT key, you can | |
| 163 omit the C-u if you hold down the META or EDIT key while you type the | |
| 164 digits. This is easier, but we recommend the C-u method because it | |
| 165 works on any terminal. | |
| 166 | |
| 167 For instance, C-u 8 C-f moves forward eight characters. | |
| 168 | |
| 169 >> Try giving a suitable argument to C-n or C-p to come as close | |
| 170 as you can to this line in one jump. | |
| 171 | |
| 172 The only apparent exception to this is the screen moving commands, | |
| 173 C-v and M-v. When given an argument, they scroll the screen up or | |
| 174 down by that many lines, rather than screenfuls. This proves to be | |
| 175 much more useful. | |
| 176 | |
| 177 >> Try typing C-u 8 C-v now. | |
| 178 | |
| 179 Did it scroll the screen up by 8 lines? If you would like to | |
| 180 scroll it down you can give an argument to M-v. | |
| 181 | |
| 2863 | 182 If you are using X Windows, there is probably a rectangular area |
| 183 called a scroll bar at the right hand side of the Emacs window. You | |
| 184 can scroll the text by clicking the mouse in the scroll bar. | |
| 185 | |
| 186 >> Try pressing the middle button at the top of the highlighted area | |
| 187 within the scroll bar, then moving the mouse while holding that button | |
| 188 down. | |
| 189 | |
| 190 >> Move the mouse to a point in the scroll bar about three lines from | |
| 191 the top, and click the left button a couple of times. Then try the | |
| 192 right button a couple of times. | |
| 193 | |
| 13 | 194 |
| 1375 | 195 * WHEN EMACS IS HUNG |
| 196 -------------------- | |
| 13 | 197 |
| 198 If Emacs gets into an infinite (or simply very long) computation which | |
| 199 you don't want to finish, you can stop it safely by typing C-g. | |
| 200 You can also use C-g to discard a numeric argument or the beginning of | |
| 201 a command that you don't want to finish. | |
| 202 | |
| 203 >> Type C-u 100 to make a numeric arg of 100, then type C-g. | |
| 204 Now type C-f. How many characters does it move? | |
| 205 If you have typed an <ESC> by mistake, you can get rid of it | |
| 206 with a C-g. | |
| 207 | |
| 208 If you type <ESC> <ESC>, you get a new window appearing on | |
| 209 the screen, telling you that M-ESC is a "disabled command" | |
| 210 and asking whether you really want to execute it. The command | |
| 211 M-ESC is marked as disabled because you probably don't want to | |
| 212 use it until you know more about Emacs, and we expect it would | |
| 213 confuse you if it were allowed to go ahead and run. If you really | |
| 214 want to try the M-ESC command, you could type a Space in answer | |
| 215 to the question and M-ESC would go ahead. Normally, if you do | |
| 216 not want to execute M-ESC, you would type "n" to answer the question. | |
| 217 | |
| 218 >> Type <ESC> <ESC>, then type n. | |
| 219 | |
| 220 | |
| 1375 | 221 * WINDOWS |
| 222 --------- | |
| 13 | 223 |
| 224 Emacs can have several windows, each displaying its own text. | |
| 225 At this stage it is better not to go into the techniques of | |
| 226 using multiple windows. But you do need to know how to get | |
| 227 rid of extra windows that may appear to display help or | |
| 228 output from certain commands. It is simple: | |
| 229 | |
| 230 C-x 1 One window (i.e., kill all other windows). | |
| 231 | |
| 232 That is Control-x followed by the digit 1. | |
| 233 C-x 1 makes the window which the cursor is in become | |
| 234 the full screen, by getting rid of any other windows. | |
| 235 | |
| 236 >> Move the cursor to this line and type C-u 0 C-l. | |
| 237 >> Type Control-h k Control-f. | |
| 238 See how this window shrinks, while a new one appears | |
| 239 to display documentation on the Control-f command. | |
| 240 | |
| 241 >> Type C-x 1 and see the documentation listing window disappear. | |
| 242 | |
| 243 | |
| 1375 | 244 * INSERTING AND DELETING |
| 245 ------------------------ | |
| 13 | 246 |
| 247 If you want to insert text, just type it. Characters which you can | |
| 248 see, such as A, 7, *, etc. are taken by Emacs as text and inserted | |
| 249 immediately. Type <Return> (the carriage-return key) to insert a | |
| 250 Newline character. | |
| 251 | |
| 252 You can delete the last character you typed by typing <Rubout>. | |
| 253 <Rubout> is a key on the keyboard, which might be labelled "Delete" | |
| 254 instead of "Rubout" on some terminals. More generally, <Rubout> | |
| 255 deletes the character immediately before the current cursor position. | |
| 256 | |
| 257 >> Do this now, type a few characters and then delete them | |
| 258 by typing <Rubout> a few times. Don't worry about this file | |
| 259 being changed; you won't affect the master tutorial. This is just | |
| 260 a copy of it. | |
| 261 | |
| 262 >> Now start typing text until you reach the right margin, and keep | |
| 263 typing. When a line of text gets too big for one line on the | |
| 264 screen, the line of text is "continued" onto a second screen line. | |
| 265 The backslash at the right margin indicates a line which has | |
| 266 been continued. | |
| 267 >> Use <Rubout>s to delete the text until the line fits on one screen | |
| 268 line again. The continuation line goes away. | |
| 269 | |
| 270 >> Move the cursor to the beginning of a line and type <Rubout>. This | |
| 271 deletes the newline before the line and merges the line onto | |
| 272 the previous line. The resulting line may be too long to fit, in | |
| 273 which case it has a continuation line. | |
| 274 >> Type <Return> to reinsert the Newline you deleted. | |
| 275 | |
| 276 Remember that most Emacs commands can be given a repeat count; | |
| 277 this includes characters which insert themselves. | |
| 278 | |
| 279 >> Try that now -- type C-u 8 * and see what happens. | |
| 280 | |
| 281 You've now learned the most basic way of typing something in | |
| 282 Emacs and correcting errors. You can delete by words or lines | |
| 283 as well. Here is a summary of the delete operations: | |
| 284 | |
| 285 <Rubout> delete the character just before the cursor | |
| 286 C-d delete the next character after the cursor | |
| 287 | |
| 288 M-<Rubout> kill the word immediately before the cursor | |
| 289 M-d kill the next word after the cursor | |
| 290 | |
| 291 C-k kill from the cursor position to end of line | |
| 292 M-k kill to the end of the current sentence | |
| 293 | |
| 294 Notice that <Rubout> and C-d vs M-<Rubout> and M-d extend the parallel | |
| 295 started by C-f and M-f (well, <Rubout> isn't really a control | |
| 296 character, but let's not worry about that). C-k and M-k are like C-e | |
| 297 and M-e, sort of, in that lines are opposite sentences. | |
| 298 | |
| 299 Now suppose you kill something, and then you decide that you want to | |
| 300 get it back? Well, whenever you kill something bigger than a | |
| 301 character, Emacs saves it for you. To yank it back, use C-y. You | |
| 302 can kill text in one place, move elsewhere, and then do C-y; this is | |
| 303 a good way to move text around. Note that the difference | |
| 304 between "Killing" and "Deleting" something is that "Killed" things | |
| 305 can be yanked back, and "Deleted" things cannot. Generally, the | |
| 306 commands that can destroy a lot of text save it, while the ones that | |
| 307 attack only one character, or nothing but blank lines and spaces, do | |
| 308 not save. | |
| 309 | |
| 34 | 310 For instance, type C-n a couple times to position the cursor |
| 13 | 311 at some line on this screen. |
| 312 | |
| 313 >> Do this now, move the cursor and kill that line with C-k. | |
| 314 | |
| 315 Note that a single C-k kills the contents of the line, and a second | |
| 316 C-k kills the line itself, and make all the other lines move up. If | |
| 317 you give C-k a repeat count, it kills that many lines AND their | |
| 318 contents. | |
| 319 | |
| 320 The text that has just disappeared is saved so that you can | |
| 321 retrieve it. To retrieve the last killed text and put it where | |
| 322 the cursor currently is, type C-y. | |
| 323 | |
| 324 >> Try it; type C-y to yank the text back. | |
| 325 | |
| 326 Think of C-y as if you were yanking something back that someone | |
| 327 took away from you. Notice that if you do several C-k's in a row | |
| 328 the text that is killed is all saved together so that one C-y will | |
| 329 yank all of the lines. | |
| 330 | |
| 331 >> Do this now, type C-k several times. | |
| 332 | |
| 333 Now to retrieve that killed text: | |
| 334 | |
| 335 >> Type C-y. Then move the cursor down a few lines and type C-y | |
| 336 again. You now see how to copy some text. | |
| 337 | |
| 338 What do you do if you have some text you want to yank back, and then | |
| 339 you kill something else? C-y would yank the more recent kill. But | |
| 340 the previous text is not lost. You can get back to it using the M-y | |
| 341 command. After you have done C-y to get the most recent kill, typing | |
| 342 M-Y replaces that yanked text with the previous kill. Typing M-y | |
| 343 again and again brings in earlier and earlier kills. When you | |
| 344 have reached the text you are looking for, you can just go away and | |
| 345 leave it there. If you M-y enough times, you come back to the | |
| 346 starting point (the most recent kill). | |
| 347 | |
| 348 >> Kill a line, move around, kill another line. | |
| 349 Then do C-y to get back the second killed line. | |
| 350 Then do M-y and it will be replaced by the first killed line. | |
| 351 Do more M-y's and see what you get. Keep doing them until | |
| 352 the second kill line comes back, and then a few more. | |
| 353 If you like, you can try giving M-y positive and negative | |
| 354 arguments. | |
| 355 | |
| 356 | |
| 1375 | 357 * UNDO |
| 358 ------ | |
| 13 | 359 |
| 360 Any time you make a change to the text and wish you had not done so, | |
| 361 you can undo the change (return the text to its previous state) | |
| 362 with the undo command, C-x u. Normally, C-x u undoes one command's | |
| 363 worth of changes; if you repeat the C-x u several times in a row, | |
| 364 each time undoes one more command. There are two exceptions: | |
| 365 commands that made no change (just moved the cursor) do not count, | |
| 366 and self-inserting characters are often lumped together in groups | |
| 367 of up to 20. This is to reduce the number of C-x u's you have to type. | |
| 368 | |
| 369 >> Kill this line with C-k, then type C-x u and it should reappear. | |
| 370 | |
| 371 C-_ is another command for undoing; it is just the same as C-x u | |
| 372 but easier to type several times in a row. The problem with C-_ is | |
| 373 that on some keyboards it is not obvious how to type it. That is | |
| 374 why C-x u is provided as well. On some DEC terminals, you can type | |
| 375 C-_ by typing / while holding down CTRL. Illogical, but what can | |
| 376 you expect from DEC? | |
| 377 | |
| 378 Giving a numeric argument to C-_ or C-x u is equivalent to repeating | |
| 379 it as many times as the argument says. | |
| 380 | |
| 381 | |
| 1375 | 382 * FILES |
| 383 ------- | |
| 13 | 384 |
| 385 In order to make the text you edit permanent, you must put it in a | |
| 386 file. Otherwise, it will go away when your invocation of Emacs goes | |
| 387 away. You put your editing in a file by "finding" the file. What | |
| 388 finding means is that you see the contents of the file in your Emacs; | |
| 389 and, loosely speaking, what you are editing is the file itself. | |
| 390 However, the changes still don't become permanent until you "save" the | |
| 391 file. This is so you can have control to avoid leaving a half-changed | |
| 392 file around when you don't want to. Even then, Emacs leaves the | |
| 393 original file under a changed name in case your changes turn out | |
| 394 to be a mistake. | |
| 395 | |
| 396 If you look near the bottom of the screen you will see a line that | |
| 397 begins and ends with dashes, and contains the string "Emacs: TUTORIAL". | |
| 398 Your copy of the Emacs tutorial is called "TUTORIAL". Whatever | |
| 399 file you find, that file's name will appear in that precise | |
| 400 spot. | |
| 401 | |
| 402 The commands for finding and saving files are unlike the other | |
| 403 commands you have learned in that they consist of two characters. | |
| 404 They both start with the character Control-x. There is a whole series | |
| 405 of commands that start with Control-x; many of them have to do with | |
| 406 files, buffers, and related things, and all of them consist of | |
| 407 Control-x followed by some other character. | |
| 408 | |
| 409 Another thing about the command for finding a file is that you have | |
| 410 to say what file name you want. We say the command "reads an argument | |
| 411 from the terminal" (in this case, the argument is the name of the | |
| 412 file). After you type the command | |
| 413 | |
| 414 C-x C-f Find a file | |
| 415 | |
| 416 Emacs asks you to type the file name. It echoes on the bottom | |
| 417 line of the screen. You are using the minibuffer now! this is | |
| 418 what the minibuffer is for. When you type <Return> to end the | |
| 419 file name, the minibuffer is no longer needed, so it disappears. | |
| 420 | |
| 421 >> Type C-x C-f, then type C-g. This cancels the minibuffer, | |
| 422 and also cancels the C-x C-f command that was using the | |
| 423 minibuffer. So you do not find any file. | |
| 424 | |
| 425 In a little while the file contents appear on the screen. You can | |
| 426 edit the contents. When you wish to make the changes permanent, | |
| 427 issue the command | |
| 428 | |
| 429 C-x C-s Save the file | |
| 430 | |
| 431 The contents of Emacs are written into the file. The first time you | |
| 432 do this, the original file is renamed to a new name so that it | |
| 433 is not lost. The new name is made by appending "~" to the end | |
| 434 of the original file's name. | |
| 435 | |
| 436 When saving is finished, Emacs prints the name of the file written. | |
| 437 You should save fairly often, so that you will not lose very much | |
| 438 work if the system should crash. | |
| 439 | |
| 440 >> Type C-x C-s, saving your copy of the tutorial. | |
| 441 This should print "Wrote .../TUTORIAL" at the bottom of the screen. | |
| 442 On VMS it will print "Wrote ...[...]TUTORIAL." | |
| 443 | |
| 444 To make a new file, just find it "as if" it already existed. Then | |
| 445 start typing in the text. When you ask to "save" the file, Emacs | |
| 446 will really create the file with the text that you have inserted. | |
| 447 From then on, you can consider yourself to be editing an already | |
| 448 existing file. | |
| 449 | |
| 450 | |
| 1375 | 451 * BUFFERS |
| 452 --------- | |
| 13 | 453 |
| 454 If you find a second file with C-x C-f, the first file remains | |
| 455 inside Emacs. You can switch back to it by finding it again with | |
| 456 C-x C-f. This way you can get quite a number of files inside Emacs. | |
| 457 | |
| 458 The object inside Emacs which holds the text read from one file | |
| 459 is called a "buffer." Finding a file makes a new buffer inside Emacs. | |
| 460 To see a list of the buffers that exist in Emacs, type | |
| 461 | |
| 462 C-x C-b List buffers | |
| 463 | |
| 464 >> Try C-x C-b now. | |
| 465 | |
| 466 See how each buffer has a name, and it may also have a file name | |
| 467 for the file whose contents it holds. Some buffers do not correspond | |
| 468 to files. For example, the buffer named "*Buffer List*" does | |
| 469 not have any file. It is the buffer which contains the buffer | |
| 470 list that was made by C-x C-b. ANY text you see in an Emacs window | |
| 471 has to be in some buffer. | |
| 472 | |
| 473 >> Type C-x 1 to get rid of the buffer list. | |
| 474 | |
| 475 If you make changes to the text of one file, then find another file, | |
| 476 this does not save the first file. Its changes remain inside Emacs, | |
| 477 in that file's buffer. The creation or editing of the second file's | |
| 478 buffer has no effect on the first file's buffer. This is very useful, | |
| 479 but it also means that you need a convenient way to save the first | |
| 480 file's buffer. It would be a nuisance to have to switch back to | |
| 481 it with C-x C-f in order to save it with C-x C-s. So we have | |
| 482 | |
| 483 C-x s Save some buffers | |
| 484 | |
| 485 C-x s goes through the list of all the buffers you have | |
| 486 and finds the ones that contain files you have changed. | |
| 487 For each such buffer, C-x s asks you whether to save it. | |
| 488 | |
| 489 | |
| 1375 | 490 * EXTENDING THE COMMAND SET |
| 491 --------------------------- | |
| 13 | 492 |
| 493 There are many, many more Emacs commands than could possibly be put | |
| 494 on all the control and meta characters. Emacs gets around this with | |
| 495 the X (eXtend) command. This comes in two flavors: | |
| 496 | |
| 497 C-x Character eXtend. Followed by one character. | |
| 498 M-x Named command eXtend. Followed by a long name. | |
| 499 | |
| 500 These are commands that are generally useful but used less than the | |
| 501 commands you have already learned about. You have already seen two | |
| 502 of them: the file commands C-x C-f to Find and C-x C-s to Save. | |
| 503 Another example is the command to tell Emacs that you'd like to stop | |
| 504 editing and get rid of Emacs. The command to do this is C-x C-c. | |
| 505 (Don't worry; it offers to save each changed file before it kills the | |
| 506 Emacs.) | |
| 507 | |
| 508 C-z is the usual way to exit Emacs, because it is always better not to | |
| 509 kill the Emacs if you are going to do any more editing. On systems | |
| 510 which allow it, C-z exits from Emacs to the shell but does not destroy | |
| 511 the Emacs; if you use the C shell, you can resume Emacs with the `fg' | |
| 512 command (or, more generally, with `%emacs', which works even if your | |
| 513 most recent job was some other). On systems where suspending is not | |
| 514 possible, C-z creates a subshell running under Emacs to give you the | |
| 515 chance to run other programs and return to Emacs afterward, but it | |
| 516 does not truly "exit" from Emacs. In this case, the shell command | |
| 517 `exit' is the usual way to get back to Emacs from the subshell. | |
| 518 | |
| 519 You would use C-x C-c if you were about to log out. You would | |
| 520 also use it to exit an Emacs invoked under mail handling programs | |
| 521 and other random utilities, since they may not believe you have | |
| 522 really finished using the Emacs if it continues to exist. | |
| 523 | |
| 524 There are many C-x commands. The ones you know are: | |
| 525 | |
| 526 C-x C-f Find file. | |
| 527 C-x C-s Save file. | |
| 528 C-x C-b List buffers. | |
| 529 C-x C-c Quit Emacs. | |
| 530 C-x u Undo. | |
| 531 | |
| 532 Named eXtended commands are commands which are used even less | |
| 533 frequently, or commands which are used only in certain modes. These | |
| 534 commands are usually called "functions". An example is the function | |
| 535 replace-string, which globally replaces one string with another. When | |
| 536 you type M-x, Emacs prompts you at the bottom of the screen with | |
| 537 M-x and you should type the name of the function you wish to call; in | |
| 538 this case, "replace-string". Just type "repl s<TAB>" and Emacs will | |
| 539 complete the name. End the command name with <Return>. | |
| 540 Then type the two "arguments"--the string to be replaced, and the string | |
| 541 to replace it with--each one ended with a Return. | |
| 542 | |
| 543 >> Move the cursor to the blank line two lines below this one. | |
| 544 Then type M-x repl s<Return>changed<Return>altered<Return>. | |
| 545 | |
| 546 Notice how this line has changed: you've replaced | |
| 34 | 547 the word c-h-a-n-g-e-d with "altered" wherever it occurred |
| 13 | 548 after the cursor. |
| 549 | |
| 550 | |
| 1375 | 551 * MODE LINE |
| 552 ----------- | |
| 13 | 553 |
| 554 If Emacs sees that you are typing commands slowly it shows them to you | |
| 555 at the bottom of the screen in an area called the "echo area." The echo | |
| 556 area contains the bottom line of the screen. The line immediately above | |
| 557 it is called the MODE LINE. The mode line says something like | |
| 558 | |
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559 --**-Emacs: TUTORIAL (Fundamental)--58%---------------------- |
| 13 | 560 |
| 561 This is a very useful "information" line. | |
| 562 | |
| 563 You already know what the filename means--it is the file you have | |
| 564 found. What the --NN%-- means is that NN percent of the file is | |
| 565 above the top of the screen. If the top of the file is on the screen, | |
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566 it will say --Top-- instead of --00%--. If the bottom of the file is |
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567 on the screen, it will say --Bot--. If you are looking at a file so |
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568 small it all fits on the screen, it says --All--. |
| 13 | 569 |
| 570 The stars near the front mean that you have made changes to the text. | |
| 571 Right after you visit or save a file, there are no stars, just dashes. | |
| 572 | |
| 573 The part of the mode line inside the parentheses is to tell you what | |
| 574 modes you are in. The default mode is Fundamental which is what you | |
| 575 are in now. It is an example of a "major mode". There are several | |
| 576 major modes in Emacs for editing different languages and text, such as | |
| 577 Lisp mode, Text mode, etc. At any time one and only one major mode is | |
| 578 active, and its name can always be found in the mode line just where | |
| 579 "Fundamental" is now. Each major mode makes a few commands behave | |
| 580 differently. For example, there are commands for creating comments in | |
| 581 a program, and since each programming language has a different idea of | |
| 582 what a comment should look like, each major mode has to insert | |
| 583 comments differently. Each major mode is the name of an extended | |
| 584 command, which is how you get into the mode. For example, | |
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585 M-x fundamental-mode is how to get into Fundamental mode. |
| 13 | 586 |
| 587 If you are going to be editing English text, such as this file, you | |
| 588 should probably use Text Mode. | |
| 589 >> Type M-x text-mode<Return>. | |
| 590 | |
| 591 Don't worry, none of the commands you have learned changes Emacs in | |
| 2619 | 592 any great way. But you can observe that apostrophes are now part of |
| 593 words when you do M-f or M-b. Major modes are usually like that: | |
| 594 commands don't change into completely unrelated things, but they work | |
| 595 a little bit differently. | |
| 13 | 596 |
| 597 To get documentation on your current major mode, type C-h m. | |
| 598 | |
| 599 >> Use C-u C-v once or more to bring this line near the top of screen. | |
| 600 >> Type C-h m, to see how Text mode differs from Fundamental mode. | |
| 601 >> Type C-x 1 to remove the documentation from the screen. | |
| 602 | |
| 603 Major modes are called major because there are also minor modes. | |
| 604 They are called minor because they aren't alternatives to the major | |
| 605 modes, just minor modifications of them. Each minor mode can be | |
| 606 turned on or off by itself, regardless of what major mode you are in, | |
| 607 and regardless of the other minor modes. So you can use no minor | |
| 608 modes, or one minor mode, or any combination of several minor modes. | |
| 609 | |
| 610 One minor mode which is very useful, especially for editing English | |
| 611 text, is Auto Fill mode. When this mode is on, Emacs breaks the line | |
| 612 in between words automatically whenever the line gets too long. You | |
| 613 can turn this mode on by doing M-x auto-fill-mode<Return>. When the | |
| 614 mode is on, you can turn it off by doing M-x auto-fill-mode<Return>. | |
| 615 If the mode is off, this function turns it on, and if the mode is on, | |
| 616 this function turns it off. This is called "toggling". | |
| 617 | |
| 618 >> Type M-x auto-fill-mode<Return> now. Then insert a line of "asdf " | |
| 619 over again until you see it divide into two lines. You must put in | |
| 620 spaces between them because Auto Fill breaks lines only at spaces. | |
| 621 | |
| 622 The margin is usually set at 70 characters, but you can change it | |
| 623 with the C-x f command. You should give the margin setting you want | |
| 624 as a numeric argument. | |
| 625 | |
| 626 >> Type C-x f with an argument of 20. (C-u 2 0 C-x f). | |
| 627 Then type in some text and see Emacs fill lines of 20 | |
| 628 characters with it. Then set the margin back to 70 using | |
| 629 C-x f again. | |
| 630 | |
| 631 If you makes changes in the middle of a paragraph, Auto Fill mode | |
| 632 does not re-fill it for you. | |
| 633 To re-fill the paragraph, type M-q (Meta-q) with the cursor inside | |
| 634 that paragraph. | |
| 635 | |
| 636 >> Move the cursor into the previous paragraph and type M-q. | |
| 637 | |
| 1375 | 638 * SEARCHING |
| 639 ----------- | |
| 13 | 640 |
| 641 Emacs can do searches for strings (these are groups of contiguous | |
| 642 characters or words) either forward through the file or backward | |
| 643 through it. To search for the string means that you are trying to | |
| 644 locate it somewhere in the file and have Emacs show you where the | |
| 645 occurrences of the string exist. This type of search is somewhat | |
| 646 different from what you may be familiar with. It is a search that is | |
| 647 performed as you type in the thing to search for. The command to | |
| 648 initiate a search is C-s for forward search, and C-r for reverse | |
| 649 search. BUT WAIT! Don't do them now. When you type C-s you'll | |
| 650 notice that the string "I-search" appears as a prompt in the echo | |
| 651 area. This tells you that Emacs is in what is called an incremental | |
| 652 search waiting for you to type the thing that you want to search for. | |
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653 <RET> terminates a search. |
| 13 | 654 |
| 655 >> Now type C-s to start a search. SLOWLY, one letter at a time, | |
| 656 type the word 'cursor', pausing after you type each | |
| 657 character to notice what happens to the cursor. | |
| 658 >> Type C-s to find the next occurrence of "cursor". | |
| 659 >> Now type <Rubout> four times and see how the cursor moves. | |
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660 >> Type <RET> to terminate the search. |
| 13 | 661 |
| 662 Did you see what happened? Emacs, in an incremental search, tries to | |
| 663 go to the occurrence of the string that you've typed out so far. To go | |
| 664 to the next occurrence of 'cursor' just type C-s again. If no such | |
| 665 occurrence exists Emacs beeps and tells you that it is a failing | |
| 666 search. C-g would also terminate the search. | |
| 667 | |
| 668 If you are in the middle of an incremental search and type <Rubout>, | |
| 669 you'll notice that the last character in the search string is erased | |
| 670 and the search backs up to the last place of the search. For | |
| 671 instance, suppose you currently have typed 'cu' and you see that your | |
| 672 cursor is at the first occurrence of 'cu'. If you now type <Rubout>, | |
| 673 the 'u' on the search line is erased and you'll be repositioned in the | |
| 674 text to the occurrence of 'c' where the search took you before you | |
| 675 typed the 'u'. This provides a useful means for backing up while you | |
| 676 are searching. | |
| 677 | |
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678 If you are in the middle of a search and type a control or meta |
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679 character (with a few exceptions--characters that are special in |
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680 a search, such as C-s and C-r), the search is terminated. |
| 13 | 681 |
| 682 The C-s starts a search that looks for any occurrence of the search | |
| 683 string AFTER the current cursor position. But what if you want to | |
| 684 search for something earlier in the text? To do this, type C-r for | |
| 685 Reverse search. Everything that applies to C-s applies to C-r except | |
| 686 that the direction of the search is reversed. | |
| 687 | |
| 688 | |
| 1375 | 689 * MULTIPLE WINDOWS |
| 690 ------------------ | |
| 476 | 691 |
| 692 One of the nice features of Emacs is that you can display more than one | |
| 693 window on the screen at the same time. | |
| 694 | |
| 695 >> Move the cursor to this line and type C-u 0 C-l. | |
| 696 | |
| 697 >> Now type C-x 2 which splits the screen into two windows. | |
| 698 Both windows display this tutorial. The cursor stays in the top window. | |
| 699 | |
| 700 >> Type C-M-v to scroll the bottom window. | |
| 701 | |
| 702 >> Type C-x o ("o" for "other") to move the cursor to the bottom window. | |
| 703 >> Use C-v and M-v in the bottom window to scroll it. | |
| 704 Keep reading these directions in the top window. | |
| 705 | |
| 706 >> Type C-x o again to move the cursor back to the top window. | |
| 707 The cursor is still just where it was in the top window before. | |
| 708 | |
| 709 You can keep using C-x o to switch between the windows. Each | |
| 710 window has its own cursor position, but only one window actually | |
| 711 shows the cursor. All the ordinary editing commands apply to the | |
| 712 window that the cursor is in. | |
| 713 | |
| 714 The command C-M-v is very useful when you are editing text in one | |
| 715 window and using the other window just for reference. You can keep | |
| 716 the cursor always in the window where you are editing, and edit | |
| 717 there as you advance through the other window. | |
| 718 | |
| 719 >> Type C-x 1 (in the top window) to get rid of the bottom window. | |
| 720 | |
| 721 (If you had typed C-x 1 in the bottom window, that would get rid | |
| 722 of the top one. Think of this command as "Keep just one | |
| 723 window--the window I am already in.") | |
| 724 | |
| 725 You don't have to display the same buffer in both windows. If | |
| 726 you use C-x C-f to find a file in one window, the other window | |
| 727 doesn't change. You can pick a file in each window | |
| 728 independently. | |
| 729 | |
| 730 Here is another way to use two windows to display two different | |
| 731 things: | |
| 732 | |
| 733 >> Type C-x 4 C-f followed by the name of one of your files. | |
| 734 End with <RETURN>. See the specified file appear in the bottom | |
| 735 window. The cursor goes there, too. | |
| 736 | |
| 737 >> Type C-x o to go back to the top window, and C-x 1 to delete | |
| 738 the bottom window. | |
| 739 | |
| 740 | |
| 1375 | 741 * RECURSIVE EDITING LEVELS |
| 742 -------------------------- | |
| 13 | 743 |
| 744 Sometimes you will get into what is called a "recursive editing | |
| 745 level". This is indicated by square brackets in the mode line, | |
| 746 surrounding the parentheses around the major mode name. For | |
| 747 example, you might see [(Fundamental)] instead of (Fundamental). | |
| 748 | |
| 749 To get out of the recursive editing level, type | |
| 750 M-x top-level<Return>. | |
| 751 | |
| 752 >> Try that now; it should display "Back to top level" | |
| 753 at the bottom of the screen. | |
| 754 | |
| 755 In fact, you were ALREADY at top level (not inside a recursive editing | |
| 756 level) if you have obeyed instructions. M-x top-level does not care; | |
| 757 it gets out of any number of recursive editing levels, perhaps zero, | |
| 758 to get back to top level. | |
| 759 | |
| 760 You can't use C-g to get out of a recursive editing level because C-g | |
| 761 is used for discarding numeric arguments and partially typed commands | |
| 762 WITHIN the recursive editing level. | |
| 763 | |
| 764 | |
| 1375 | 765 * GETTING MORE HELP |
| 766 ------------------- | |
| 13 | 767 |
| 768 In this tutorial we have tried to supply just enough information to | |
| 769 get you started using Emacs. There is so much available in Emacs that | |
| 770 it would be impossible to explain it all here. However, you may want | |
| 771 to learn more about Emacs since it has numerous desirable features | |
| 772 that you don't know about yet. Emacs has a great deal of internal | |
| 773 documentation. All of these commands can be accessed through | |
| 774 the character Control-h, which we call "the Help character" | |
| 775 because of the function it serves. | |
| 776 | |
| 777 To use the HELP features, type the C-h character, and then a | |
| 778 character saying what kind of help you want. If you are REALLY lost, | |
| 779 type C-h ? and Emacs will tell you what kinds of help it can give. | |
| 780 If you have typed C-h and decide you don't want any help, just | |
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781 type C-g to cancel it. |
| 13 | 782 |
| 783 The most basic HELP feature is C-h c. Type C-h, a c, and a | |
| 784 command character or sequence, and Emacs displays a very brief | |
| 785 description of the command. | |
| 786 | |
| 787 >> Type C-h c Control-p. | |
| 788 The message should be something like | |
| 789 | |
| 790 C-p runs the command previous-line | |
| 791 | |
| 792 This tells you the "name of the function". That is important in | |
| 793 writing Lisp code to extend Emacs; it also is enough to remind | |
| 794 you of what the command does if you have seen it before but did | |
| 795 not remember. | |
| 796 | |
| 797 Multi-character commands such as C-x C-s and (if you have no META or | |
| 798 EDIT key) <ESC>v are also allowed after C-h c. | |
| 799 | |
| 800 To get more information on the command, use C-h k instead of C-h c. | |
| 801 | |
| 802 >> Type C-h k Control-p. | |
| 803 | |
| 477 | 804 This displays the documentation of the function, as well as its |
| 805 name, in an Emacs window. When you are finished reading the | |
| 806 output, type C-x 1 to get rid of the help text. You do not have | |
| 807 to do this right away. You can do some editing while referring | |
| 808 to the help text and then type C-x 1. | |
| 13 | 809 |
| 810 Here are some other useful C-h options: | |
| 811 | |
| 812 C-h f Describe a function. You type in the name of the | |
| 813 function. | |
| 814 | |
| 815 >> Try typing C-h f previous-line<Return>. | |
| 816 This prints all the information Emacs has about the | |
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817 function which implements the C-p command. |
| 13 | 818 |
| 819 C-h a Command Apropos. Type in a keyword and Emacs will list | |
| 820 all the commands whose names contain that keyword. | |
| 821 These commands can all be invoked with Meta-x. | |
| 822 For some commands, Command Apropos will also list a one | |
| 823 or two character sequence which has the same effect. | |
| 824 | |
| 477 | 825 >> Type C-h a file<Return>. |
| 826 | |
| 827 This displays in another window a list of all M-x commands with | |
| 828 "file" in their names. You will also see commands like C-x C-f | |
| 829 and C-x C-w, listed beside the command names find-file and | |
| 830 write-file. | |
| 831 | |
| 832 >> Type C-M-v to scroll the help window. Do this a few times. | |
| 833 | |
| 834 >> Type C-x 1 to delete the help window. | |
| 13 | 835 |
| 836 | |
| 1375 | 837 * CONCLUSION |
| 838 ------------ | |
| 13 | 839 |
| 840 Remember, to exit Emacs permanently use C-x C-c. To exit to a shell | |
| 841 temporarily, so that you can come back in, use C-z. | |
| 842 | |
| 843 This tutorial is meant to be understandable to all new users, so if | |
| 844 you found something unclear, don't sit and blame yourself - complain! | |
| 845 | |
| 846 | |
| 847 COPYING | |
| 848 ------- | |
| 849 | |
| 850 This tutorial descends from a long line of Emacs tutorials | |
| 851 starting with the one written by Stuart Cracraft for the original Emacs. | |
| 852 | |
| 853 This version of the tutorial, like GNU Emacs, is copyrighted, and | |
| 854 comes with permission to distribute copies on certain conditions: | |
| 855 | |
| 856 Copyright (c) 1985 Free Software Foundation | |
| 857 | |
| 858 Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies | |
| 859 of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the | |
| 860 copyright notice and permission notice are preserved, | |
| 861 and that the distributor grants the recipient permission | |
| 862 for further redistribution as permitted by this notice. | |
| 863 | |
| 864 Permission is granted to distribute modified versions | |
| 865 of this document, or of portions of it, | |
| 866 under the above conditions, provided also that they | |
| 867 carry prominent notices stating who last altered them. | |
| 868 | |
| 869 The conditions for copying Emacs itself are slightly different | |
| 870 but in the same spirit. Please read the file COPYING and then | |
| 871 do give copies of GNU Emacs to your friends. | |
| 872 Help stamp out software obstructionism ("ownership") by using, | |
| 873 writing, and sharing free software! |
