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1992-06-07
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40-LOVE TEXT EDITOR
40-LOVE editor provides you with two new features:
1. You can restore your text file to any of its previous versions.
2. You can highlight the changes.
Besides these two major functions, there are other new facilities
that you might find useful. These are the possibilities:
* Display which changes have been made before saving to disk
* Move the cursor to the location of the changes
* An automatic search for any previous version that cantains
the search text
* A better backup system. Plain editors use the older file as
backup, while this backup file does not contain the latest
update. 40-LOVE enables you to completely reconstruct your
file from the backup file
* Search into deleted text
* Display the size of changes in terms of the number of
inserted and deleted characters
* Saving the changes to a temporary file without changing the
text files
The following common features are included:
- multiple files
- mouse support
- movable, adjustable windows
- on-line, context-sensitive Help facility
- pull-down menus
- block commands (cut, copy, append, paste, delete)
- clipboard
- search forward, backward, toggle case sensitivity
- search and replace
- un-delete
- DOS shell
- command-line file load using wildcards
- pair matching
- ASCII chart
- user configurable keyboard (ready-made keys for BRIEF, QEDIT,
PROGRAM EDITOR, ZORTECH EDITOR). default to Borland C++
- configuration-sensitive command reference
You can work with 40-LOVE in the same way as any plain editor. When
you save the file, you are prompted to select one of the save options.
You have the possibility to save the file in the same way as other
editors do.
Hardware and Software Requirements
________________________________________________________________________
40-LOVE runs on the IBM PC family of computers, including the XT, AT,
and PS/2, along with all true IBM compatibles. 40-LOVE requires DOS 2.0
or higher, a floppy drive or a hard disk, an 80-column monitor.
Installing 40-LOVE
________________________________________________________________________
If you want to save disk space, just copy the 4.EXE file.
You will still be able to use all functions except on-line help,
Quick (command) Reference, and reconfigured keys.
We assume you are already familiar with DOS commands. Make a directory
on your hard disk, for instance,
MD C:\40LV
Copy 4.EXE and 40LOVE.HLP to the directory. The other files are not
neccessary. You may want to add the path C:\40LV to your AUTOEXEC.BAT.
Reconfigure keyboard
________________________________________________________________________
The KEYBCONF.EXE file in the KEYS directory lets you assign new key
sequences to the commands. Copy your keyboard configuration file to
the file MINEKEY.4LV in the directory in which 4.EXE resides. For
instance,
COPY A:\KEYS\BRIEF.4LV C:\40LV\MINEKEY.4LV
If the editor cannot find MINEKEY.4LV, default keys are used.
The operation is similar to the editors supplied with Turbo C, Turbo
Pascal and Borland C++.
Four Frequently Used Keys:
________________________________________________________________________
F10 Pop up the menus. Use <-, -> or 1...6 to select one of the
menus. Use the Up, Down, Page Up and Page Down keys to select
a menu item. Press Enter to confirm the choice, ESC to cancel.
Use the letters A, B, .. to select and execute the command.
F1 Help.
ESC Cancel. When you are in a browser window, use the ESC key to
quit and close the browser window.
Enter Confirm.
The 40-LOVE backup file
________________________________________________________________________
You may wonder how much disk space it takes to save all the changes in
your files. It does not take much more space than common editors. In
those editors, even if you just delete one word from the file, they
will save your new file, and the old file with just one more word than
the new file. In 40-LOVE, we save the deleted word instead, together
with the location. This is also the reason that we can let you step
back into the history of the file.
Definitions:
text file - the file you edited
edition file - the file containing the changes. You can reproduce
the text file from the edition file.
The location of the edition file - The edition file is always saved in
a subdirectory named 40LVBK; the edition file has the same name as the
text file. The subdirectory is located in the directory of your text
file.
If you have edited file C:\MYPROG\T.1 , then the edition file is
C:\MYPROG\40LVBK\T.1 . In this way you can always have a backup file,
as long as the length of the path does not exceed the limit defined by
DOS. In the conventional backup system with the .BAK extension, when
you are editing files T.1 and T.2 , they share the backup file T.BAK.
Thus there is a 50% chance your files are not being backed up.
The access to the edition file is completely automatic. This means to
say, after you have opened the text file the editor knows how and
where to create or find the edition file.
The text file and its edition file form a pair. Each time the edition
file is accessed, the editor checks whether the time-date stamp of the
text file matches the record in the edition file. If you have saved
the text file without updating the edition file, they are no longer
matched. Next time you want to save the edition file, the editor will
prompt you to overwrite the present edition file in order to start
saving the editions again.
Invoking the Editor
________________________________________________________________________
At DOS command line, type 4, then Enter to start the editor.
Invoking 40-LOVE with a File Name
________________________________________________________________________
You can specify the name of the file you want to edit when you invoke
40-LOVE. For example,
4 MYFILE
starts the editor and loads MYFILE.
Invoking the editor with 4 *.C will load all files with the extension
.C into the editor.
Saving and Loading Your File
________________________________________________________________________
To load a file you can either press F3 while inside the editor or
select the Open\New option in the File menu. You are then prompted for
the name of the file you wish to load. There are two ways to specify
the file name.
1. If you know the name, you can type it in.
2. You can use wildcards to get a list of the files, from which
you can choose one. Use the arrow keys to highlight the file
you want and then press ENTER.
To save the current file, you can either press F2 while inside the editor
or select the Save option in the File menu. If the file has been changed,
you will be prompted to choose from the different save options:
1 Pressing 1 lets you combine the changes with
the previous changes if they are made on
the same date. The editor checks the date of
the very last version. If this date is
different from the present date, the changes
are just saved to disk; otherwise the changes
are merged. In such a way you can automatically
keep only one version for one day, even when
you have changed the same file several times.
2 This option lets you save the changes without
checking the date and without merging the
versions. Remember however, if you want to
keep this version without merging, the next
time you save the file, you also have to
choose SAVE; or else they will be merged if
they share the same date.
3 This option lets you save the file without
saving the versions. In this option, the
editor functions just like all conventional
editors. Furthermore, a backup file is saved
with the extension of .BAK.
If your file has always been saved with
version, then saving the file now without
saving the version will end the edition data.
In such a case, you will be asked to confirm
the "TEXT save" option. This step can prevent
you from pressing the wrong save button
accidentally. If the file was previously also
saved without saving the version, then no
confirmation is asked.
4 The text file and the edition data will not
be written to disk.
5 The changes made to the file are displayed
in a browser window. Press ESC to quit the
display.
ESC Is equal to No save. However, there is one
difference when you close a file or quit the
editor. During those commands, ESC will let
you go back into the normal Edit mode,
whereas NO save clears the file in memory.
When you quit the editor, these save options will be displayed for the
files that have been changed.
Deleting Characters, Words, and Lines
________________________________________________________________________
You can delete a single character in two ways: with the BACKSPACE key
or with the DEL key.
You can delete from the current cursor position to the beginning of
the next word by typing Ctrl-t.
You can remove an entire line by typing Ctrl-y. It does not matter
where the cursor is positioned; the entire line is deleted.
If you wish to delete from the cursor position to the end of the line,
type Ctrl-q y.
More on Cursor Movement
________________________________________________________________________
Besides the arrow keys, the editor has special cursor commands.
Command Action
Ctrl-Right Start of previous word
Ctrl-Left Start of next word
Ctrl-w Scroll up
Ctrl-z Scroll down
PGUP Previous page
PGDN Next page
HOME Start of the line
END End of the line
Ctrl-PGUP Start of the file
Ctrl-PGDN End of the file
Ctrl-q [ Pair Matching
Moving, Copying, and Deleting Blocks of Text
________________________________________________________________________
To define a block, move the cursor to the Block Begin or End position.
Type Ctrl-k b to define the beginning of the block, Ctrl-k k for the
end of the block. The block that you have defined will be highlighted
(or in a different color if you have a color system).
To move the block, place the cursor on the position you want the text
to go and type Ctrl-k v. This removes the block from its original
position and places it at the new location.
To copy a block, type Ctrl-k c. To delete the currently marked block,
type Ctrl-k y.
Moving Blocks of Text to and from Disk Files
________________________________________________________________________
It is possible to move a block of text into a disk file for later use.
This is done by first defining a block and then typing Ctrl-k w. After
you have done this, you are prompted for the name of the file in which
you wish to save the block. The original block of text is not removed
from your file.
To read a file in, type Ctrl-k r. You are prompted for the file name,
and the contents of that file are read in at the current cursor
location.
Clipboard
________________________________________________________________________
You can move blocks of text between two or more files using the
Clipboard. The Clipbaord commands can be issued through the Edit menu.
Find and Find with Replace
________________________________________________________________________
To find a specific sequence of characters, type Ctrl-q f. You will be
prompted for the string of characters you wish to find.
You can repeat a search by typing Ctrl-l.
Type Ctrl-q a to activate the Replace Forward command. Its operation is
identical to the Find Forward command except that it allows you to
replace the string you are looking for with another.
Review, Reconstruct
________________________________________________________________________
You can highlight the changes which have been made in your current
editing window, or in the version window when you are reviewing an
earlier version of your text. Type Ctrl-v to switch the Highlight
Change Mode On/Off. On a monochrome display, the inserted text will
be shown with the high-intensity and underline attribute; the deleted
text will be in the reversed mode.
To review an older version of your text file, select the Restore
Version option in the Review menu. A list of the previous versions
will be displayed. You can select one by moving the Up and Down arrow
keys, and press Enter.
To reconstruct your file or part of the file, you can use the block
commands to write a block to disk (Ctrl-k w) or to the Clipboard.
To see the changes, without displying the text that has not been
modified, you can select the Show Changes option in the Review menu.
For each file you can open a normal edit window, and a review version
window. Changes on the text can not be made in the version window.
The version window is always titled "Vs # ....", so it can easily
be distinguished from the edit window. If a review version window is
opened, you can see the message "Version On" on the bottom line of your
display. To move between the edit window and the review version window,
select the Switch Edit\Version option in the Review menu. If the
"Version On" message is displayed, then one of the previous versions
of the file is in memory. To close the version window, switch to this
window(if you are not already in it), then type Alt-F3.
Exit
________________________________________________________________________
Use F10 to activate the menu while inside the editor. Select the Quit
option in the File menu. You will be prompted to save the files if they
have been changed.
Context-Sensitive Help
________________________________________________________________________
To access context-sensitive help, you activate the menu and highlight
the menu option you are interested in. After the Help hotkey is pressed,
information relating to the highlighted option is displayed. You can
press ESC to quit.
1-File menu.
________________________________________________________________________
This menu lets you open and create files, save your changes, shell to DOS,
and quit.
A Open\New F3 --- Opens an existing file or creates a new
file. A dialog line is displayed into which
you can type the name of the file. If you
enter a file name that the editor can't find,
it automatically opens a new file with that
name. This new file exists only in the editor
until you save it to disk.
You can use standard DOS wildcards (* and ?)
to let the editor display the files in the
directory. Use the cursor movement keys to
highlight one of the names. Press Enter to
select the file, press ESC to quit.
This command also lets you view the contents
of different directories by either typing the
name of the directory or selecting the
highlighted directory.
B Save F2 --- This command saves the file to disk. If
you have not made any changes to the file, no
action is taken. Otherwise, it displays a
dialog box showing the file name and a message
that the file contents have been changed. It
also displays the number of inserts and deletes.
The actions that can be taken are displayed.
There are different ways to save your file:
a - save the file and keep the original file
with the extension .BAK.
b - save the file and save which changes
have been made (no conventional backup file
will be saved).
1 Pressing 1 lets you combine the changes with
the previous changes if they are made on the
same date. The editor checks the date of the
very last version. If this date is different
from the present date, the changes are just
saved to disk; otherwise the changes are merged.
In such a way you can automatically keep only
one version for one day, even when you have
changed the same file several times.
2 This option lets you save the changes without
checking the date and without merging the
versions. Remember however, if you want to keep
this version without merging, the next time you
save the file, you also have to choose SAVE; or
else they will be merged if they share the same
date.
3 This option lets you save the file without
saving the versions. In this option, the editor
functions just like all conventional editors.
Furthermore, a backup file is saved with the
extension of .BAK.
If your file has always been saved with
version, then saving the file now without
saving the version will end the edition data.
In such a case, you will be asked to confirm
the "TEXT save" option. This step can prevent
you from pressing the wrong save button
accidentally. If the file was previously also
saved without saving the version, then no
confirmation is asked.
4 The text file and the edition data will not
be written to disk.
5 The changes made to the file are displayed
in a browser window. Press ESC to quit the
display.
ESC is equal to No save. However, there is one
difference when you close a file or quit the
editor. During those commands, ESC will let you
go back into the normal Edit mode, whereas NO
save clears the file in memory.
C Save All --- Performs SAVE for every file that has
been changed.
D Save To Temp. --- Saves the changes of all opened files
into one temporary file without actually
modifying your files and edition files (See
"Restart" on how to recover these changes).
This can be useful when you are not sure
yet whether the changes should be saved
permanently.
E Save As.. --- This lets you save the file in the
active edit window under a different name,
in a different directory, or on a different
drive. You will be asked to enter the new
name. If the new name is an existing file in
the disk, a warning is issued and you will
be required to confirm overwriting the file.
F Restart --- When you leave the editor by using the Quit
command, the editor keeps a record of which
files are currently opened and at which
location the cursor is positioned for each
file. When you start the editor again, you can
use this record to automatically open the same
files and bring the cursor to its former
locations, so that you will be in exactly the
same situation as when you quit the editor
(The version windows will not be reopened).
The Restart command will only work when you
have no files which are open.
This command also loads in any changes you have
made and saved temporarily but not permanently.
The disk file that contains the Restart data,
which is given the name 40LVDSK.TMP, is saved
in your current working directory. The Restart
command will look for this file only in your
current working directory, with the result that
you can have a different Restart for different
directories.
There are three commands that will cause the
editor to save and thus overwrite the Restart
record: Save To Temp., DOS Shell, and Quit.
The Quit command only saves the reference to
the open files and the cursor positions,
whereas the other two commands also keep a
record of which changes have been made.
G DOS Shell --- Saves a record of the references to the
open files and the cursor locations, also saves
any modifications in the files to 40LVDSK.TMP;
it clears the memory that is occupied by these
files; it activates the DOS operating system.
Type EXIT to return to the editor, which will
execute the Restart command to reconstruct the
context as it was, before going to DOS.
H DOS Command --- Prompts you for a DOS command. You may not
install any TSR programs. You can delete files,
change directory ect.
I Quit --- Saves a record of the references to the
open files and the cursor locations. If you
have made any changes that you haven't saved,
the editor asks you if you want to save them
before exiting. If ESC is pressed during the
save, the Quit command is aborted and you are
back in the editor.
2-Edit menu
________________________________________________________________________
A Un-delete --- Inserts the characters that have been
deleted. You can only Un-delete characters
that already exist in the file. In other words,
characters that are just typed in without
being saved, cannot be un-deleted.
Un-delete works only when the cursor is at the
deleted text. You can review what can be
un-deleted by turning on the Highlight Change
Mode. Move the cursor inside the deleted text,
call Un-delete to restore the text. Un-delete
also works when Highlight Change Mode is off.
B Show Clipboard --- This shows you what is in the Clipboard.
Press ESC to quit.
C Cut Block to Clipb. --- Appends the contents of the block to the
end of the Clipboard, and then deletes the
block.
D Copy Block to Clipb. --- Clears the Clipboard, then copies the block
to the Clipboard.
E Append Block to Clipb.--- The contents of the block are appended to
the end of the Clipboard.
F Paste Clipb. --- Inserts the text from the Clipboard into
the current file at the current cursor position.
G Copy Deleted to Clipb.--- The deleted text which you can see in the
Highlight Changes Mode, can be copied to the
Clipboard. To select the text, move the cursor
inside the deleted text. Not only the deleted
text at the edit window, but also the deleted
text at the version window can be copied. In
this way you can recover texts which were
deleted at an earlier stage. Before the copy
action, the Clipboard is cleared.
H Append Deleted to Cl. --- Similar to Copy Deleted .. But now the
Clipboard is not cleared, instead the text is
appended to the end of the Clipboard.
I Block Begin --- The beginning position of the Block is set
to the current cursor position. When you open
a file, Beginning of Block and End of Block
are both set to the first position of the file.
The Block is maintained if End of Block is
behind Beginning of Block.
J Block End --- The end position of the Block is set to the
current cursor position. When you open a file,
Beginning of Block and End of Block are both set
to the first position of the file. The Block is
maintained if End of Block is behind Beginning
of Block.
K Block Delete --- The text inside the Block is deleted.
L Block Copy --- The text Block is copied to the current
cursor position.
M Block Move --- The text Block is moved to the current
cursor position.
N Write Block --- The text Block is saved to a disk file.
You will be prompted for the file name. If the
name already exists, you will be asked to
confirm the overwriting of the existing file.
O Insert File --- This command lets you insert the contents
of a text file into the current open file, at
the cursor position.
3-Search menu
________________________________________________________________________
The commands in this menu let you search for text, go to a specific line,
or find the changes. Not only can you search in the text file, but the
deleted text that no longer exists in the text file (which can be seen
in the Highlight Changes Mode), will also be searched, if you turn on
the Highlight Mode.
A Find Forward --- Displays the search dialog line, which lets
you type in the text you want to search for.
Press ESC to cancel the search, press Enter to
carry it out. If the text is found, the cursor
is moved to just behind the text which is
displayed with reversed video.
The search starts from the current cursor
position towards the end of the file.
If it is not found, the "Text not found" message
is displayed and after pressing any key the
cursor will return to its original position.
B Replace Forward --- Displays the search dialog line, which lets
you type in the text that you want to search for.
When text input is completed, a second line asks
you to type in the text with which you want to
replace it. If the specified text is found, you
will be asked whether you want to make the
replacement. If you choose "y", the text will be
replaced. If you choose "a", all text that can
be found between the current cursor position to
the file end, will be replaced.
The Replace command does not work when the
Highlight Changes Mode is on.
C Find Backward --- Displays the search dialog line, which lets
you type in the text you want to search for.
Press ESC to cancel the search, press Enter to
carry it out. If the text is found, the cursor
is moved to just behind the text which is
displayed with reversed video.
The search starts from the current cursor
position towards the beginning of the file.
If it is not found, the "Text not found" message
is displayed and after pressing any key the
cursor will return to its original position.
D Replace Backward --- Displays the search dialog line, which lets
you type in the text you want to search for.
When text input is completed, a second line
asks you to type in the text with which you want
to replace it. If the specified text is found,
you will be asked whether you want to make
the replacement. If you choose "y", the text
will be replaced. If you choose "a", all text
that can be found between the current cursor
position to the beginning of the file, will be
replaced.
The Replace command does not work when the
Highlight Changes Mode is on.
E Case Sens. Toggle --- Switches the case-sensitivity of the search
On and Off.
F Again --- This command repeats your last Find or
Replace command.
G Go to Line --- The command prompts you for the line number
that you want to go to. If you enter a number
larger than the actual number of lines in the
file, the editor moves the cursor to the last
line.
H Next Change --- This command moves the cursor to the change
that is behind your current cursor position. It
will switch the Highlight Changes Mode on.
I Prev. Change --- This command moves the cursor to the change
that is above your current cursor position. It
will switch the Highlight Changes Mode on.
J Pair Match --- This lets you find the companion delimiter
for the following delimiter pair: {} [] () <> .
You have to place the cursor on the delimiter
you wish to match.
4-Review menu
________________________________________________________________________
Most of the features, that you can not find in conventional editors but
only in this editor, are located in this Review menu.
The philosophy is, that instead of keeping the file before modification
as the backup file, we save the specific changes you have made to the
text file. The major advantages are:
* You can review what your file looked like on previous dates,
yesterday, the day before yesterday, and so on. You can restore any
previous version of your file.
* You can also see exactly what modifications were made at a
specific version. You can highlight the changes, you even can display
only the changes.
* Text which has been deleted, can be copied to the Clipboard
and can be used again.
A Highlight Change --- Highlights the modifications made on the
file, so that you can see clearly what has
been changed. On a monochrome display, the
inserted text is displayed in High Intensity
with Underline mode, and the deleted text is
in Reversed mode.
The new line character is shown as «.
Use the command to switch the Highlight Changes
Mode ON and OFF. If it is ON, no edit operation
is possible except Un-delete; the bottom line
of your monitor will display the message
"HiL Mode". If you perform a text search in
"HiL Mode", deleted text will also be searched.
The Highlight Change command can be executed
in both the edit window and the version window.
B Restore Version --- This command lets you review the history of
the file. You can choose one of the versions,
browse through the text, highlight the changes,
copy a part of or the whole file to the
Clipboard or disk.
A list of the versions will be displayed.
From left to right on each line, it shows the
number of the version, the number of inserts,
the total number of inserted characters, the
number of deletes, the total number of
deleted characters, and, the date and the time
when the version was saved. Use the Up and
Down arrow keys, Page Up and Page Down keys to
move the selection bar to the version you are
interested in. Press Enter to select. The text
of the selected version is then restored and
displayed in the version window. You can use
the normal cursor movement commands to browse
through the text. You can not make any changes
on the text. You can define a block and copy
it to the Clipboard or to a disk file. To
restore the whole text, move Block begin to
the begining of the text, Block end to the end
of the file; then write the block to the
Clipboard or to a disk file.
Use the Highlight Change command to review
which changes were made during the edit
operation. The deleted text can be copied to
the Clipboard.
Use the Restore Version command again if you
want to go to another version. You can review
any version that you can select from the
version list.
You can open the version window of each open
file. You can move between the normal edit
window and the version window. When the version
window is open, the text is in the memory of
your computer. You can close the version window
with the Close command (if the current window
is the version window). Closing the file
automatically closes its version window, if it
is already open. At the bottomline of your
monitor, the message "Version On" will be
shown, if the version window is open.
C Show Changes --- This command displays only the changes.
You can use the cursor movement commands to
browse through it. Press ESC to quit. The
window will then be cleared.
D Switch Edit\Version --- This command lets you move between the
edit window which enables you to modify the
text, and the version window which lets you
review and recover previous versions of the
text. When you switch from the version window
to the edit window, the version window will
not be closed. This is shown by the message
"Version On" on the bottom line of the monitor.
When you switch from the edit window to the
version window, while the version window is
not yet open, the Restore Version command is
automatically carried out first.
E Load Editionfile --- When you save a version of a file, the
editor saves the file, and, updates the edition
file in which the changes are stored. In normal
circumstances, you do not have to pay any
attention to the edition file; you just use the
Restore Version, Switch Edit\Version, MERGE or
SAVE version commands, and the editor
automatically accesses the edition file.
However, there could be situations in which you
might want direct access to the edition file.
You can not load the file using the Open\New
command. The Load Editionfile command lets
you correctly read the data saved in the
edition file, review and/or reconstuct the text.
The edition file contains all data about the
text file. If your text file is deleted
accidentally, you can restore it completely
with the edition file. After you have loaded
the edition file, you can use the Restore
Version command to review any versions of the
file.
F Find to.. --- This command automatically calls the
Restore Version command, then searches for the
specified text. This process is repeated until
the text is found. The command only works in
one direction -- you are searching in an
earlier version. For instance, you start at the
version of yesterday, which is Vs #101. In this
case Vs #101 is not searched (if you want to
search that version, use the 2-Search menu
commands), but a Restore Version of Vs #100 is
performed. If the text is found in Vs #100, the
Find to.. command is completed; otherwise Vs #99
is reconstructed and searched. If the text does
not exist in any versions, the search will stop
at Vs #0.
5-Window menu
________________________________________________________________________
A Size\Move --- This command lets you decrease the size
of the current edit window by pressing Page Up
or Home. Use Page Down or End to enlarge the
window. The window moves in response to the
arrow keys. When the window is where you want
it, press Enter. ESC lets you cancel the
Size\Move command, so the window will not be
relocated. This command can only be used on
edit windows. The version window can not be
changed.
B Zoom --- This command lets you enlarge the current
edit window to the maximum size, which is
80 x 24. Moreover, no window border and window
title is displayed. The bottom line is reserved
to display the file name, window, and cursor
information. This command can only be used on
edit windows; the version window can not be
changed.
C Next --- This command allows you to select the next
file as the current one. You can not use this
command to move between an edit window and its
version window of a file; you have to use the
Switch Edit\Version command in the 4-Review
menu.
D Close --- This command lets you close the current
window. If you are inside the edit window, the
command will also close the file, and the
version window if it is open.
6-Misc menu
________________________________________________________________________
A ASCII Chart --- Displays a table of PC characters.
B Insert Value --- This command lets you insert a character
by typing its corresponding decimal value.
0, 26 and 255 are not accepted.
C Tab Size --- Sets the tab width.
D Quick Reference --- Displays the editor commands and the
corresponding key sequences. The Reference is
configuration-sensitive; it is automatically
updated according to your current key
configuration.
E Help on keys.. --- This command lets you see the help text
for the key sequence typed after calling
this command.
Quick Command Reference
________________________________________________________________________
Character left │<Left>
Character right │<Right>
Word left │<Ctrl-Left>
Word left │<Ctrl-A>
Word right │<Ctrl-Right>
Word right │<Ctrl-F>
Line up │<Up>
Line up │<Ctrl-E>
Line down │<Down>
Line down │<Ctrl-X>
Scroll up │<Ctrl-W>
Scroll down │<Ctrl-Z>
Page up │<PgUp>
Page up │<Ctrl-R>
Page down │<PgDn>
Page down │<Ctrl-C>
Beginning of line │<Home>
End of line │<End>
Top of window │<Ctrl-Home>
Top of window │<Ctrl-Q><E>
Bottom of window │<Ctrl-End>
Bottom of window │<Ctrl-Q><X>
Beginning of file │<Ctrl-PgUp>
Beginning of file │<Ctrl-Q><R>
End of file │<Ctrl-PgDn>
End of file │<Ctrl-Q><C>
Beginning of block │<Ctrl-Q><B>
End of block │<Ctrl-Q><K>
Delete word right │<Ctrl-T>
Delete line │<Ctrl-Y>
Delete to end of line │<Ctrl-Q><Y>
Mark block begin │<Ctrl-K><B>
Mark block end │<Ctrl-K><K>
Copy block │<Ctrl-K><C>
Move block │<Ctrl-K><V>
Delete block │<Ctrl-K><Y>
Insert file │<Ctrl-K><R>
Write to file │<Ctrl-K><W>
Copy to clipboard │<Ctrl-B><C>
Append to clipb. │<Ctrl-B><A>
Cut to clipboard │<Ctrl-B><D>
Paste clipboard │<Ctrl-B><P>
Copy deleted to clipb. │
Append deleted to clipb.│
Show clipboard │
Un-delete │<Ctrl-Q><L>
Open file │<F3>
Save file │<F2>
Save all │
Save to temp. │
Save as.. │
DOS shell │
DOS command │
Quit │<Alt-X>
Find forward │<Ctrl-Q><F>
Replace forward │<Ctrl-Q><A>
Find backward │
Replace backward │
Case sens. toggle │
Again │<Ctrl-L>
Go to line │
Next change │
Previous change │
Pair matching │<Ctrl-Q><[>
HiL mode toggle │<Ctrl-V>
Restore version │
Show changes │
Switch edit\version │
Load editionfile │
Find to .. │
Window size\move │
Window zoom │<F5>
Next window │<F6>
Close window │<Alt-F3>
ASCII chart │
Insert value │<Ctrl-P>
Tab size │
Access menus │<F10>
Help │<F1>
Key-specific help │
Typeover toggle │<Insert>
Quick reference │