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-
- :entry "abort-char" "Variable"
- This variable defines JOVE'S'S abort character. When JOVE reads this
- character from the keyboard, it stops what it is doing (unless the
- character is quoted in some way). Unfortunately, JOVE won't notice
- the character until it reads from the keyboard. The default value is
- ^G. See also "interrupt-character".
-
- :entry "add-lisp-special" "Command"
- This command is to tell JOVE what identifiers require special
- indentation in lisp mode. Lisp functions like "defun" and "let" are
- two of the default functions that get treated specially. This is just
- a kludge to define some of your own. It prompts for the function
- name.
-
- :entry "allow-^S-and-^Q" "Variable"
- This variable, when set, tells JOVE that your terminal will not need
- to use the characters ^S and ^Q for flow control, in which case JOVE
- will instruct the system's tty driver to pass them through as normal
- characters. Otherwise, if the tty driver was already using these
- characters for flow control, it will continue to do so. Certain
- terminals and communications systems require that this variable be set
- "off"; in other circumstances it is better set "on".
-
- :entry "allow-bad-characters-in-filenames" "Variable"
- If set, this variable permits the creation of filenames which contain
- "bad" characters such as those from the set *&%!"`[]{}. These files
- are harder to deal with, because the characters mean something to the
- shell. The default value is "off".
-
- :entry "allow-bad-filenames" "Variable"
- This is the obsolete name for "allow-bad-characters-in-filenames".
-
- :entry "append-region" "Command"
- This appends the region to a specified file. If the file does not
- already exist it is created.
-
- :entry "apropos" "Command"
- This types out each command, variable and macro with the specified
- string in its name ("?" matches every name). For each command and
- macro that contains the string, the key sequence that can be used to
- execute the command or macro is printed; with variables, the current
- value is printed. So, to find all the commands that are related to
- windows, you type
-
- : apropos window<Return> .
-
-
- :entry "auto-case-abbrev" "Variable"
- When this variable is "on" (the default), word abbreviations are
- adjusted for case automatically. If the abbreviation is typed with no
- uppercase letter, the expansion is not changed; if it is typed with
- one or more uppercase letters, the first character in the expansion is
- capitalized; additionally, if the abbreviation is typed with more than
- one uppercase letter, each letter in the expansion immediately
- preceded by whitespace or - is capitalized. For example, if "jove"
- were the abbreviation for "jonathan's own version of EMACS", the
- following table shows how the abbreviation would be expanded.
-
- jove jonathan's own version of EMACS
- Jove Jonathan's own version of EMACS
- JOVE Jonathan's Own Version Of EMACS
- JoVe Jonathan's Own Version Of EMACS
-
- When this variable is "off", upper and lower case are distinguished
- when looking for the abbreviation, i.e., in the example above, "JOVE"
- and "Jove" would not be expanded unless they were defined separately.
- See also the "word-abbrev-mode" command.
-
- :entry "auto-execute-command" "Command"
- This tells JOVE to execute a command automatically when a file whose
- name matches a specified pattern is read. The first argument is the
- command you wish to have executed. The second argument is the
- pattern, a regular expression that is matched against the start of the
- file name. If you wish to match a suffix, start the pattern with
- ".*"; to match every file, use that as the whole pattern. Any numeric
- argument will be passed on to the command when it is executed (this is
- useful when combined with commands that adjust a minor mode). For
- example, if you want to be in "show-match-mode" when you edit C source
- files (that is, files that end with ".c" or ".h") you can type
-
- : auto-execute-command show-match-mode .*\.[ch]$
-
- Actually, this command toggles the Show Match minor mode, but since it
- is initially off, it will have the desired effect. For more certain
- control, give the "auto-execute-command" a non-zero numeric argument:
- this will be passed on to the "show-match-mode".
-
- :entry "auto-execute-macro" "Command"
- This is like "auto-execute-command" except you use it to execute
- macros automatically instead of built-in commands.
-
- :entry "auto-fill-mode" "Command"
- This turns on or off the Auto Fill minor mode in the selected buffer.
- Without a numeric argument, the command toggles the mode; with a zero
- argument, the mode is turned off; with a non-zero argument, the mode
- is turned on. When JOVE is in Auto Fill mode it automatically breaks
- lines for you when you reach the right margin so you don't have to
- remember to hit Return. JOVE uses 78 as the right margin but you can
- change that by setting the variable "right-margin" to another value.
-
- :entry "auto-indent-mode" "Command"
- This turns on or off Auto Indent minor mode in the selected buffer.
- Without a numeric argument, the command toggles the mode; with a zero
- argument, the mode is turned off; with a non-zero argument, the mode
- is turned on. When JOVE is in Auto Indent mode, the "newline" command
- (which is normally bound to Return) acts identically to "newline-and-
- indent": the new line is indented to the same position as the line you
- were just on. This is useful for lining up C code (or any other
- language (but what else is there besides C?)). Furthermore, if a line
- is broken because of Auto Fill mode, and Auto Indent mode is on, the
- new line will be indented as the old line was.
-
- :entry "backward-character" "Command"
- This moves point backward over a single character or line-separator.
- Thus if point is at the beginning of the line it moves to the end of
- the previous line.
-
- :entry "backward-list" "Command"
- This moves point backward over a list, which is any text between
- properly matching (...), [...] or {...}. It first searches backward
- for a ")" and then moves to the matching "(". This is useful when you
- are trying to find unmatched parentheses in a program. Arguments are
- accepted, and negative arguments search forwards. See also "backward-
- s-expression".
-
- :entry "backward-paragraph" "Command"
- This moves point backward to the beginning of the current or previous
- paragraph. Paragraphs are bounded by lines that match "paragraph-
- delimiter-pattern" (by default, those that are empty or look like
- troff or TeX commands). A change in indentation may also signal a
- break between paragraphs, except that JOVE allows the first line of a
- paragraph to be indented differently from the other lines. Arguments
- are accepted, and negative arguments search forwards.
-
- :entry "backward-s-expression" "Command"
- This moves point backward over an s-expression, that is over a Lisp
- atom or a C identifier (depending on the major mode) ignoring
- punctuation and whitespace; or, if the nearest preceding significant
- character is one of ")]}", over a list as in "backward-list".
- Arguments are accepted, and negative arguments search forwards.
-
- :entry "backward-sentence" "Command"
- This moves point backward to the beginning of the current or previous
- sentence. JOVE considers the end of a sentence to be the characters
- ".", "!" or "?" followed by a Return or by one or more spaces.
- Arguments are accepted, and negative arguments search forwards.
-
- :entry "backward-up-list" "Command"
- This is similar to "backward-list" except it backs up and OUT of the
- enclosing list. In other words, it moves backward to whichever of
- "([{" would match one of ")]}" if you were to type it right then.
- Arguments are accepted, and negative arguments search forwards as in
- "down-list".
-
- :entry "backward-word" "Command"
- This moves point backward to the beginning of the current or previous
- word. Arguments are accepted, and negative arguments search forwards.
-
- :entry "bad-filename-extensions" "Variable"
- This contains a list of words separated by spaces which are to be
- considered bad filename extensions, and so will not be included in
- filename completion. The default contains, amongst much else, ".o" so
- if you have "jove.c" and "jove.o" in the same directory, the filename
- completion will not complain of an ambiguity because it will ignore
- "jove.o".
-
- :entry "begin-kbd-macro" "Command"
- This starts defining the keyboard macro by remembering all your key
- strokes until you execute "end-kbd-macro", by typing "^X )". Because
- of a bug in JOVE you shouldn't terminate the macro by typing "ESC X
- end-kbd-macro"; "end-kbd-macro" must be bound to "^X )" in order to
- make things work correctly. The "execute-kbd-macro" command will
- execute the remembered key strokes. Sometimes you may want a macro to
- accept different input each time it runs. To see how to do this, see
- the "make-macro-interactive" command.
-
- :entry "beginning-of-file" "Command"
- This moves point backward to the beginning of the buffer. This
- sometimes prints the "[Point pushed]" message to indicate that JOVE
- has set the mark so you can go back to where you were if you want.
- See also the variable "mark-threshold".
-
- :entry "beginning-of-line" "Command"
- This moves point to the beginning of the current line.
-
- :entry "beginning-of-window" "Command"
- This moves point to the beginning of the active window. If there is a
- numeric argument, point moves that many lines below the top line.
- With the default bindings, the sequence "ESC ," is the same as "ESC <"
- ("beginning-of-file") but without the shift key on the "<", and can
- thus easily be remembered.
-
- :entry "bind-keymap-to-key" "Command"
- This is like "bind-to-key" except that you use it to attach a key
- sequence to a named keymap. The only reasonable use is to bind some
- extra key to "ESC-map" for keyboards that make typing ESC painful.
-
- :entry "bind-macro-to-key" "Command"
- This is like "bind-to-key" except you use it to attach a key sequence
- to a named macro.
-
- :entry "bind-macro-to-word-abbrev" "Command"
- This command allows you to bind a macro to a previously defined word
- abbreviation. Whenever you type the abbreviation, it will first be
- expanded as an abbreviation (which could be empty, of course), and
- then the macro will be executed. Note that if the macro moves point
- around, you should first "set-mark" and then "exchange-point-and-
- mark".
-
- :entry "bind-to-key" "Command"
- This attaches a key sequence to an internal JOVE command so that
- future hits on that key sequence invoke that command. This is called
- a global binding, as compared to local bindings and process bindings.
- Any previous global binding of this key sequence is discarded. For
- example, to make "^W" erase the previous word, you type
-
- : bind-to-key kill-previous-word ^W .
-
- It isn't possible to have two globally bound key sequences where one
- is a prefix of the other: JOVE wouldn't know whether to obey the
- shorter sequence or wait for the longer sequence. Normally, when the
- "bind-to-key" command is issued interactively, the key sequence is
- taken to end one keystroke after the longest sequence matching any
- proper prefix of another binding (thus no new prefix can be created).
- If the command is given a numeric argument, the key sequence is taken
- up to the next Return keystroke (kludge!); bindings to any prefix of
- the sequence are discarded. When the command is issued from a
- "source"d file, the key sequence is taken up to the end of the line
- (it is also processed so that control characters can and should be
- entered using the ^A notation).
-
- Note that neither process nor local bindings are changed by this
- command, although they can be eclipsed. Given a choice between
- bindings, the shortest is executed; if there is still a choice, a
- process binding is preferred to a local binding, and a local binding
- is preferred to a global binding.
-
- :entry "buffer-position" "Command"
- This displays the current file name, current line number, total number
- of lines, current character number, total number of characters,
- percentage of the way through the file, and the position of the cursor
- in the current line.
-
- :entry "c-argument-indentation" "Variable"
- This variable describes how to indent lines which are part of nested
- expressions in C. The default is -1, which means to indent a
- continued line by lining it up with the first argument of the current
- expression. Otherwise, the line will be indented by "c-argument-
- indentation" characters past the indent of the first line of the
- expression. For example, the default value produces:
-
- Typeout(fmt, itoa(bcount++), line_cnt(b, nbuf),
- TypeNames[b->b_type],
- IsModified(b) ? "*" : b->b_ntbf ? "+" : NullStr,
- buf_width, b->b_name, filename(b));
-
- :entry "c-indentation-increment" "Variable"
- This defines a set of tabstops independent of the value of "tab-
- width". This value will be used in C mode, and JOVE will insert the
- correct number of Spaces and Tabs to get the right behavior. For
- programmers that like to indent with 4 spaces, set this value to 4.
- Some people prefer to set this to 4 and leave tab-width set to 8.
- This will create files whose indentation steps in 4-space increments,
- and which look the same anywhere that tabs are expanded to 8 spaces
- (i.e. in most settings). Others prefer to have one tab character per
- indentation level, then fiddle the tab expansion width to get the
- appearance they like. They should set both "c-indentation-increment"
- and "tab-width" to 4. Whenever using a non-standard tab width ("tab-
- width") you should only use tabs for indentation, and use spaces for
- all columnar alignment later in the lines.
-
- :entry "c-mode" "Command"
- This turns on the C major mode in the currently selected buffer. When
- in C or Lisp mode, Tab, "}", and ")" behave a little differently from
- usual: They are indented to the "right" place for C (or Lisp)
- programs. In JOVE, the "right" place is simply the way the author
- likes it (but I've got good taste).
-
- :entry "case-character-capitalize" "Command"
- This capitalizes the character after point, i.e., the character under
- the cursor. If a negative argument is supplied that many characters
- before point are upper cased.
-
- :entry "case-ignore-search" "Variable"
- This variable, when "on", tells JOVE to treat upper and lower case the
- same when searching. Thus "jove" would match "JOVE", and "JoVe" would
- match either. The default value of this variable is "off".
-
- :entry "case-region-lower" "Command"
- This changes all the upper case letters in the region to their lower
- case equivalents.
-
- :entry "case-region-upper" "Command"
- This changes all the lower case letters in the region to their upper
- case equivalents.
-
- :entry "case-word-capitalize" "Command"
- This capitalizes the current word by making the current letter upper
- case and making the rest of the word lower case. Point is moved to
- the end of the word. If point is not positioned on a word it is first
- moved forward to the beginning of the next word. If a negative
- argument is supplied that many words before point are capitalized.
- This is useful for correcting the word just typed without having to
- move point to the beginning of the word yourself.
-
- :entry "case-word-lower" "Command"
- This lower-cases the current word and leaves point at the end of it.
- If point is in the middle of a word the rest of the word is converted.
- If point is not in a word it is first moved forward to the beginning
- of the next word. If a negative argument is supplied that many words
- before point are converted to lower case. This is useful for
- correcting the word just typed without having to move point to the
- beginning of the word yourself.
-
- :entry "case-word-upper" "Command"
- This upper-cases the current word and leaves point at the end of it.
- If point is in the middle of a word the rest of the word is converted.
- If point is not in a word it is first moved forward to the beginning
- of the next word. If a negative argument is supplied that many words
- before point are converted to upper case. This is useful for
- correcting the word just typed without having to move point to the
- beginning of the word yourself.
-
- :entry "cd" "Command"
- This changes the current directory.
-
- :entry "character-to-octal-insert" "Command"
- This inserts a Back-slash followed by the ascii value of the next
- character typed. For example, "^G" inserts the string "\007".
-
- :entry "clear-and-redraw" "Command"
- This clears the entire screen and redraws all the windows. Use this
- when JOVE gets confused about what's on the screen, or when the screen
- gets filled with garbage characters or output from another program.
-
- :entry "comment-format" "Variable"
- This variable tells JOVE how to format your comments when you run the
- command "fill-comment". Its format is this:
-
- <open pattern>%!<line header>%c<line trailer>%!<close pattern>
-
- The %!, %c, and %! must appear in the format; everything else is
- optional. A newline (represented by %n) may appear in the open or
- close patterns. %% is the representation for %. The default comment
- format is for C comments. See "fill-comment" for more details.
-
- :entry "compile-it" "Command"
- This compiles your program by running the UNIX command "make" into a
- buffer, and automatically parsing the error messages that are created
- (if any). See the "parse-errors" command. If "compile-it" is given a
- numeric argument, it will prompt for a command to run in place of the
- plain make and the command you enter will become the new default. See
- also "error-format-string" which makes it possible to parse errors of
- a different format and see also the variable "error-window-size".
-
- :entry "continue-process" "Command"
- This sends the signal SIGCONT to the interactive process in the
- current buffer, IF the process is currently stopped.
-
- :entry "copy-region" "Command"
- This takes all the text in the region and copies it onto the kill ring
- buffer. This is just like running "kill-region" followed by the
- "yank" command. See the "kill-region" and "yank" commands.
-
- :entry "current-error" "Command"
- This moves to the current error in the list of parsed errors. See the
- "next-error" and "previous-error" commands for more detailed
- information.
-
- :entry "date" "Command"
- This prints the date on the message line.
-
- :entry "dbx-format-string" "Variable"
- This is the default regular-expression search string used by JOVE to
- parse output from "dbx" running in a shell process (see the "process-
- dbx-output" command). You shouldn't have to change this unless you
- are using "gdb" or some other symbolic debugger.
-
- :entry "define-global-word-abbrev" "Command"
- This defines a global abbreviation. See the "word-abbrev-mode"
- command.
-
- :entry "define-macro" "Command"
- This provides a different mechanism for defining keyboard macros.
- Instead of gathering keystrokes and storing them into the "keyboard-
- macro" (which is how "begin-kbd-macro" works), "define-macro" prompts
- for a macro name (terminated with Space, or Newline) and then for the
- actual macro body. If you wish to specify control characters in the
- macro, you may simply insert them (using the "quoted-insert" command)
- or by inserting the character '^' followed by the appropriate letter
- for that character (e.g., ^A would be the two characters '^' followed
- by 'A'). You may use Back-slash to prevent the '^' from being
- interpreted as part of a control character when you really wish to
- insert one (e.g., a macro body "\^foo" would insert the string "^foo"
- into the buffer, whereas the body "^foo" would be the same as typing
- ^F and then inserting the string "oo"). See "write-macros-to-file" to
- see how to save macros.
-
- :entry "define-mode-word-abbrev" "Command"
- This defines a mode-specific abbreviation. See the "word-abbrev-mode"
- command.
-
- :entry "delete-blank-lines" "Command"
- This deletes all the blank lines around point. This is useful when
- you previously opened many lines with the "newline-and-backup" command
- and now wish to delete the unused ones.
-
- :entry "delete-buffer" "Command"
- This deletes a buffer and frees up all the memory associated with it.
- Be careful(!) - once a buffer has been deleted it is gone forever.
- JOVE will ask you to confirm if you try to delete a buffer that needs
- saving. This command is useful for when JOVE runs out of space to
- store new buffers. See also the "erase-buffer" command and the "kill-
- some-buffers" command.
-
- :entry "delete-current-window" "Command"
- This deletes the active window and moves point into one of the
- remaining ones. It is an error to try to delete the only remaining
- window.
-
- :entry "delete-next-character" "Command"
- This deletes the character that's just after point (that is, the
- character under the cursor). If point is at the end of a line, the
- line-separator is deleted and the next line is joined with the current
- one. If an argument is given, that many characters are deleted and
- placed on the kill ring. If the argument is negative the deletion is
- forwards.
-
- :entry "delete-other-windows" "Command"
- This deletes all the other windows except the current one. This can
- be thought of as going back into One Window mode.
-
- :entry "delete-previous-character" "Command"
- This deletes the character that's just before point (that is, the
- character before the cursor). If point is at the beginning of the
- line, the line separator is deleted and that line is joined with the
- previous one. If an argument is given, that many characters are
- deleted and placed on the kill ring. If the argument is negative the
- deletion is backwards.
-
- :entry "delete-white-space" "Command"
- This deletes all the Tabs and Spaces around point.
-
- :entry "describe-bindings" "Command"
- This types out a list containing each bound key and the command that
- gets invoked every time that key is typed. To make a wall chart of
- JOVE commands, set "send-typeout-to-buffer" to "on" and JOVE will
- store the key bindings in a buffer which you can save to a file and
- then print.
-
- :entry "describe-command" "Command"
- This waits for you to type a command and then prints an explanation of
- that command, together with its current bindings.
-
- :entry "describe-key" "Command"
- This waits for you to type a key and then tells the name of the
- command that gets invoked every time that key is hit. Once you have
- the name of the command you can use the "describe-command" command to
- find out exactly what it does.
-
- :entry "describe-variable" "Command"
- This prints an explanation of a specified variable.
-
- :entry "digit" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit
- typed. It continues reading digits until you type some other command.
- Then that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
-
- :entry "digit-0" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit 0.
- It continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then
- that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the 0 key on the numeric keypad.
-
- :entry "digit-1" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit 1.
- It continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then
- that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the 1 key on the numeric keypad.
-
- :entry "digit-2" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit 2.
- It continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then
- that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the 2 key on the numeric keypad.
-
- :entry "digit-3" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit 3.
- It continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then
- that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the 3 key on the numeric keypad.
-
- :entry "digit-4" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit 4.
- It continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then
- that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the 4 key on the numeric keypad.
-
- :entry "digit-5" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit 5.
- It continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then
- that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the 5 key on the numeric keypad.
-
- :entry "digit-6" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit 6.
- It continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then
- that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the 6 key on the numeric keypad.
-
- :entry "digit-7" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit 7.
- It continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then
- that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the 7 key on the numeric keypad.
-
- :entry "digit-8" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit 8.
- It continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then
- that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the 8 key on the numeric keypad.
-
- :entry "digit-9" "Command"
- Starts or continues the entry of a numeric argument with the digit 9.
- It continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then
- that command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the 9 key on the numeric keypad.
-
- :entry "digit-minus" "Command"
- Starts the entry of a numeric argument with a minus sign. It
- continues reading digits until you type some other command. Then that
- command is executed with the numeric argument you specified.
- Sometimes it is handy to bind this to the - key on a numeric keypad.
- In the absence of further digits and unless otherwise stated (e.g.
- "next-page"), the argument -1 is assumed.
-
- :entry "dirs" "Command"
- This prints out the directory stack. See the "cd", "pushd",
- "pushlibd" and "popd" commands for more information.
-
- :entry "disable-biff" "Variable"
- When this is set, JOVE disables biff when you're editing and enables
- it again when you get out of JOVE, or when you pause to the parent
- shell or push to a new shell. (This means arrival of new mail will
- not be immediately apparent but will not cause indiscriminate writing
- on the display). The default is "off", although it is always safe to
- set it "on", even on systems that do not provide the biff facility.
- Note that the variable "mode-line" can be set up to announce the
- arrival of new mail during a JOVE session.
-
- :entry "display-bad-filenames" "Variable"
- This is the obsolete name for "display-filenames-with-bad-extensions".
-
- :entry "display-filenames-with-bad-extensions" "Variable"
- This variable affects only filename completion, in particular, what
- happens when "?" is typed while prompting for a file. When this
- variable is "on", any files that end with one of the extensions
- defined by the variable "bad-filename-extensions" will be displayed
- with an "!" in front of their names. When "display-filenames-with-
- bad-extensions" is "off" the files will not be displayed at all. The
- default value is "on".
-
- :entry "down-list" "Command"
- This is the opposite of "backward-up-list". It enters the next list.
- In other words, it moves forward to whichever of "([{" it first
- encounters. Arguments are accepted, and negative arguments search
- backwards as in "backward-up-list".
-
- :entry "dstop-process" "Command"
- Send the signal SIGTSTP to the interactive process in the selected
- buffer when next it tries to read input. This is equivalent to
- sending the "dsusp" character (which most people have set to ^Y) to
- the process. This only works if you are in a buffer bound to an
- interactive process.
-
- :entry "edit-word-abbrevs" "Command"
- This creates (if necessary) a buffer with a list of each abbreviation
- and the phrase it expands into, and enters a recursive edit to let you
- change the abbreviations or add some more. The format of this list is
- "abbreviation:phrase" so if you add some more you should follow that
- format. It's probably simplest just to copy some already existing
- abbreviations and edit them. Use the "exit-jove" command to exit the
- recursive edit.
-
- :entry "end-kbd-macro" "Command"
- This stops the definition of the keyboard macro. Because of a bug in
- JOVE, this must be bound to "^X )", or some key sequence which is one
- or two characters long. Anything else will not work properly. See
- "begin-kbd-macro" for more details.
-
- :entry "end-of-file" "Command"
- This moves point forward to the end of the buffer. This sometimes
- prints the "[Point pushed]" message to indicate that JOVE has set the
- mark so you can go back to where you were if you want. See also the
- variable "mark-threshold".
-
- :entry "end-of-line" "Command"
- This moves point to the end of the current line. If the line is too
- long to fit on the screen, it will be scrolled horizontally. This is
- described with the variables "scroll-width" and "scroll-all-lines".
-
- :entry "end-of-window" "Command"
- This moves point to the last character in the active window. If there
- is a numeric argument, the point moves that many lines above the
- bottom line. With the default bindings, the sequence "ESC ." is the
- same as "ESC >" ("beginning-of-file") but without the shift key on the
- ">", and can thus easily be remembered.
-
- :entry "enhanced-keyboard" "Variable"
- (IBM PC version only) This is a boolean variable which can be set to
- enable the enhanced AT-style keyboard. The enhanced keyboard contains
- function keys and key combinations that are not supported on the
- original IBM PCs and XTs. The default value is determined by a bit in
- the BIOS data area, but this method apparently does not work with a
- few BIOS implementations. WARNING: setting enhanced-keyboard "on" on
- systems without an enhanced keyboard will lock up your system and
- require you to reboot.
-
- :entry "eof-process" "Command"
- Sends EOF to the current interactive process. This only works on
- versions of JOVE running under versions of UNIX with pty's.
-
- :entry "erase-buffer" "Command"
- This erases the contents of the specified buffer. This is like
- "delete-buffer" except it only erases the contents of the buffer, not
- the buffer itself. If you try to erase a buffer that needs saving you
- will be asked to confirm it.
-
- :entry "error-format-string" "Variable"
- This is the error format string that is used by "parse-errors" to find
- the error messages in a buffer. The way it works is by using this
- string as a JOVE regular expression search string, where the \(...\)
- regular expression feature is used to pick out the file name and line
- number from the line containing an error message. For instance, a
- typical error message might look like this:
-
- "file.c", line 540: missing semi-colon
-
- For strings of this format, an appropriate value for "error-format-
- string" would be something like this:
-
- ^"\([^"]*\)", line \([0-9]*\):
-
- What this means is, to find an error message, search for a line
- beginning with a double-quote. Then it says that all the following
- characters up to another double-quote should be remembered as one
- unit, namely the filename that the error is in (that is why the first
- set of parentheses is surrounding it). Then it says that after the
- filename there will be the string ", line " followed by a line number,
- which should be remembered as a single unit (which is why the second
- set of parentheses is around that). The only constraint on the error
- messages is that the file name and line number appear on the same
- line. Most compilers seem to do this anyway, so this is not an
- unreasonable restriction.
-
- If you do not know how to use regular expressions then this variable
- will be hard for you to use. Also note that you can look at the
- default value of this variable by printing it out, but it is a really
- complicated string because it is trying to accommodate the outputs of
- more than one compiler.
-
- :entry "error-window-size" "Variable"
- This is the percentage of the screen to use for the error-window on
- the screen. When you execute "compile-it" or "spell-buffer", "error-
- window-size" percent of the screen will go to the error window. If
- the window already exists and is a different size, it is made to be
- this size. The default value is 20%.
-
- :entry "exchange-point-and-mark" "Command"
- This moves point to mark and makes mark the old point. This is for
- quickly moving from one end of the region to the other.
-
- :entry "execute-kbd-macro" "Command"
- This executes the keyboard macro. If you supply a numeric argument
- the macro is executed that many times. See the "begin-kbd-macro"
- command for more details.
-
- :entry "execute-macro" "Command"
- This executes a specified macro. If you supply a numeric argument the
- macro is executed that many times.
-
- :entry "execute-named-command" "Command"
- This is the way to execute a command that isn't bound to any key.
- When you are prompted with ": " you can type the name of the command.
- You don't have to type the entire name. After typing a few
- characters, Tab will fill in as many more as it can (as will Space,
- but that will also obey the command if it is now unambiguous). If you
- are not sure of the name of the command, type "?" and JOVE will print
- a list of all the commands that you could possibly match given what
- you've already typed. Once the command is unambiguous, typing Return
- will cause it to be obeyed.
-
- If you don't have any idea what the command's name is but you know it
- has something to do with windows (for example), you can do "ESC X
- apropos window" and JOVE will print a list of all the commands that
- are related to windows. If you find yourself constantly executing the
- same commands this way you probably want to bind them to keys so that
- you can execute them more quickly. See the "bind-to-key" command.
-
- :entry "exit-jove" "Command"
- This exits JOVE. If any buffers need saving JOVE will print a warning
- message and ask for confirmation. If you leave without saving your
- buffers all your work will be lost. If you made a mistake and really
- do want to exit then you can. If there are any interactive processes
- running, JOVE will also ask whether they should be terminated.
-
- If you are in a recursive editing level "exit-jove" will return you
- from that. The selected buffer will be set back to the buffer that
- was current when the recursive edit was entered. Normally, point will
- be returned to its position at the time of entry, but if the "exit-
- jove" command is given a numeric argument, point is left at its most
- recent position within that buffer.
-
- :entry "expand-environment-variables" "Variable"
- When this variable is "on" JOVE will try to expand any strings of the
- form "$var" into the value of the environment variable "var" when
- asking for a filename. For example, if you type "$HOME/.joverc",
- "$HOME" will be replaced with your home directory. The default value
- is "on".
-
- :entry "file-creation-mode" "Variable"
- This variable has an octal value. It contains the mode (see
- "chmod"(1)) with which files should be created. This mode gets
- modified by your current umask setting (see "umask"(1)). The default
- value is usually 0666 or 0644.
-
- :entry "files-should-end-with-newline" "Variable"
- This variable indicates that all files should always have a newline at
- the end. This is often necessary for line printers and the like.
- When set, if JOVE is writing a file whose last character is not a
- newline, it will add one automatically. The default value is "on".
-
- :entry "fill-comment" "Command"
- This command fills in your C comments to make them pretty and
- readable. This filling is done according the variable "comment-
- format".
-
- /*
- * the default format makes comments like this.
- */
-
- This can be changed by changing the "format-comment" variable. Other
- languages may be supported by changing the format variable
- appropriately. The formatter looks backwards from point for an open
- comment symbol. If found, all indentation is done relative to the
- position of the first character of the open symbol. If there is a
- matching close symbol, the entire comment is formatted. If not, the
- region between the open symbol and point is reformatted. The original
- text is saved in the kill ring; a "yank-pop" command will undo the
- formatting.
-
- :entry "fill-paragraph" "Command"
- This rearranges words between lines so that all the lines in the
- current paragraph extend as close to the right margin as possible,
- ensuring that none of the lines will be greater than the right margin.
- The default value for "right-margin" is 78, but can be changed with
- the "set" and "right-margin-here" commands.
-
- The rearrangement may cause an end of line to be replaced by
- whitespace. Normally, this whitespace is a single space character.
- If the variable "space-sentence-2" is "on", and the end of the line
- was apparently the end of a sentence or the line ended with a colon,
- two spaces will be used. However, a sentence or colon followed by a
- single space already within a line will not be altered.
-
- JOVE has a complicated algorithm for determining the beginning and end
- of the paragraph. In the normal case JOVE will give all the lines the
- same indent as they currently have, but if you wish to force a new
- indent you can supply a numeric argument to "fill-paragraph" and JOVE
- will indent each line to the column specified by the "left-margin"
- variable. See also the "left-margin" variable and "left-margin-here"
- command.
-
- :entry "fill-region" "Command"
- This is like "fill-paragraph", except it operates on a region instead
- of just a paragraph.
-
- :entry "filter-region" "Command"
- This sends the text in the region to a UNIX command, and replaces the
- region with the output from that command. For example, if you are
- lazy and don't like to take the time to write properly indented C
- code, you can put the region around your C file and "filter-region" it
- through "cb", the UNIX C beautifier. If you have a file that contains
- a bunch of lines that need to be sorted you can do that from inside
- JOVE too, by filtering the region through the UNIX "sort" command.
- Before output from the command replaces the region JOVE stores the old
- text in the kill ring. If you are unhappy with the results a "yank-
- pop" command will get back the old text.
-
- :entry "find-file" "Command"
- This reads a specified file into its own buffer and then selects that
- buffer. If you've already read this file into a buffer, that buffer
- is simply selected. If the file doesn't yet exist, JOVE will print
- "(New file)" so that you know. If possible, the buffer is named after
- the filename (ignoring any directory part).
-
- :entry "find-tag" "Command"
- This finds the file that contains the specified tag. JOVE looks up
- tags by default in the "tags" file in the current directory, as
- created by the UNIX command "ctags(1)". You can change the default
- tag name by setting the "tag-file" variable to another name. If you
- specify a numeric argument to this command, you will be prompted for a
- tag file. This is a good way to specify another tag file without
- changing the default.
-
- :entry "find-tag-at-point" "Command"
- This finds the file that contains the tag that point is currently in.
- See "find-tag".
-
- :entry "first-non-blank" "Command"
- This moves point (backwards or forwards) to the indent of the current
- line.
-
- :entry "forward-character" "Command"
- This moves point forward over a single character or line-separator.
- Thus if point is at the end of the line it moves to the beginning of
- the next one.
-
- :entry "forward-list" "Command"
- This moves point forward over a list, which is any text between
- properly matching (...), [...] or {...}. It first searches forward
- for a "(" and then moves to the matching ")". This is useful when you
- are trying to find unmatched parentheses in a program. Arguments are
- accepted, and negative arguments search backwards. See also "forward-
- s-expression".
-
- :entry "forward-paragraph" "Command"
- This moves point forward to the end of the current or next paragraph.
- Paragraphs are bounded by lines that match "paragraph-delimiter-
- pattern" (by default, those that are empty or look like troff or TeX
- commands). A change in indentation may also signal a break between
- paragraphs, except that JOVE allows the first line of a paragraph to
- be indented differently from the other lines. Arguments are accepted,
- and negative arguments search backwards.
-
- :entry "forward-s-expression" "Command"
- This moves point forward over an s-expression, that is over a Lisp
- atom or a C identifier (depending on the major mode) ignoring
- punctuation and whitespace; or, if the nearest succeeding significant
- character is one of "([{", over a list as in "forward-list".
- Arguments are accepted, and negative arguments search backwards.
-
- :entry "forward-sentence" "Command"
- This moves point forward to the end of the current or next sentence.
- JOVE considers the end of a sentence to be the characters ".", "!" or
- "?", followed possibly by "'", "''", or """, followed by a Return or
- whitespace. Arguments are accepted, and negative arguments search
- backwards.
-
- :entry "forward-word" "Command"
- This moves point forward to the end of the current or next word.
-
- :entry "fundamental-mode" "Command"
- This sets the major mode to Fundamental. Fundamental mode is the mode
- of the Minibuf, and hence of anything typed in the message line.
-
- :entry "gather-numeric-argument" "Command"
- This command is one of two ways to specify a numeric argument to a
- command. Typing this command once means, Do the next command 4 times.
- Typing it twice will do the next command 16 times, and so on. If at
- any point you type a number, then that number will be used instead of
- 4. For instance, ^U 3 5 means do the next command 35 times (assuming
- "gather-numeric-argument" is bound to ^U).
-
- :entry "goto-line" "Command"
- If a positive numeric argument is supplied, point moves to the
- beginning of that line. If the argument is negative, it indicates how
- many lines from the end of the buffer to move point to. If no
- argument is supplied one is prompted for.
-
- :entry "goto-window-with-buffer" "Command"
- This command prompts for a buffer name and then selects that buffer.
- If the buffer is currently being displayed in one of the windows, that
- window is selected instead.
-
- :entry "grind-s-expr" "Command"
- When point is positioned on a "(", this re-indents that LISP
- expression.
-
- :entry "grow-window" "Command"
- This makes the active window one line bigger. This only works when
- there is more than one window and provided there is room to change the
- size. See also "shrink-window".
-
- :entry "handle-tab" "Command"
- This handles indenting to the "right" place in C and Lisp mode, and
- just inserts itself in Text mode.
-
- :entry "highlight-attribute" "Variable"
- (IBM PC version only) This specifies how the attribute (color) of a
- character is to be changed when it is highlighted. Highlighting is
- indicated by exclusive oring this value with the normal attribute for
- the character. The default is 16.
-
- :entry "highlight-mark" "Variable"
- When this is on, jove will highlight the mark if currently visible.
- The mark is highlighted with an underscore.
-
- :entry "i-search-forward" "Command"
- Incremental search. Like search-forward except that instead of
- prompting for a string and searching for that string all at once, it
- accepts the string one character at a time. After each character you
- type as part of the search string, it searches for the entire string
- so far. When you like what it found, type Return to finish the
- search. You can take back a character with DEL and the search will
- back up to the position before that character was typed. ^G aborts
- the search.
-
- :entry "i-search-reverse" "Command"
- Incremental search. Like search-reverse except that instead of
- prompting for a string and searching for that string all at once, it
- accepts the string one character at a time. After each character you
- type as part of the search string, it searches for the entire string
- so far. When you like what it found, type Return to finish the
- search. You can take back a character with DEL and the search will
- back up to the position before that character was typed. ^G aborts
- the search.
-
- :entry "i-shell-command" "Command"
- This is like "shell-command" except that it launches an interactive
- process and so lets you continue with your editing while the command
- is running. This is really useful for long running commands with
- sporadic output. See also the variable "wrap-process-lines".
-
- :entry "insert-file" "Command"
- This inserts a specified file into the selected buffer at point.
- Point is positioned at the beginning of the inserted file.
-
- :entry "internal-tabstop" "Variable"
- This is the obsolete name for "tab-width".
-
- :entry "interrupt-character" "Variable"
- This specifies what character should be used as the operating system's
- tty driver interrupt character. When this character is typed, the tty
- driver generates SIGINT signal. This will interrupt a non-interactive
- process. If no such process is running, JOVE'S will offer you the
- option of continuing, or crashing JOVE'S (trying to save your work).
- This is a crude and desperate way to stop JOVE'S. Unfortunately there
- is no way to turn off the interrupt character. The default is ^].
- See also "abort-char".
-
- :entry "interrupt-process" "Command"
- This sends the signal SIGINT to the interactive process in the
- selected buffer. This only works if you are inside a buffer bound to
- an interactive process.
-
- :entry "kill-next-word" "Command"
- This kills the text from point to the end of the current or next word.
- The killed text is sent to the kill ring.
-
- :entry "kill-previous-word" "Command"
- This kills the text from point to the beginning of the current or
- previous word. The killed text is sent to the kill ring.
-
- :entry "kill-process" "Command"
- This command prompts for a buffer name or buffer number (just as
- "select-buffer" does) and then sends the process in that buffer the
- signal SIGKILL.
-
- :entry "kill-region" "Command"
- This deletes the text in the region and saves it on the kill ring.
- Commands that delete text but save it on the kill ring all have the
- word "kill" in their names. Use the "yank" command to get back the
- most recent kill.
-
- :entry "kill-s-expression" "Command"
- This kills the text from point to the end of the current or next s-
- expression. The killed text is sent to the kill ring.
-
- :entry "kill-some-buffers" "Command"
- This goes through all the existing buffers and asks whether or not to
- delete each one. If you decide to delete a buffer, and it turns out
- that the buffer is modified, JOVE will offer to save it first. This
- is useful for when JOVE runs out of memory to store lines (this only
- happens on PDP-11's) and you have lots of buffers that you are no
- longer using. See also the "delete-buffer" command.
-
- :entry "kill-to-beginning-of-sentence" "Command"
- This kills from point to the beginning of the current or previous
- sentence. If a negative numeric argument is supplied it kills from
- point to the end of the current or next sentence. The killed text is
- sent to the kill ring.
-
- :entry "kill-to-end-of-line" "Command"
- This kills from point to the end of the current line. When point is
- at the end of the line (discounting any white space) the line-
- separator is also deleted and the next line is joined with current
- one. If a numeric argument is supplied that many lines are killed; if
- the argument is negative that many lines before point are killed; if
- the argument is zero the text from point to the beginning of the line
- is killed. The killed text is sent to the kill ring.
-
- :entry "kill-to-end-of-sentence" "Command"
- This kills from point to the end of the current or next sentence. If
- a negative numeric argument is supplied it kills from point to the
- beginning of the current or previous sentence. The killed text is
- sent to the kill ring.
-
- :entry "lc-ctype" "Variable"
- This string variable determines how non-ASCII characters are
- displayed, and which characters are to be considered as upper-case,
- lower-case, printable, etc. The default is the implementation-defined
- native environment; under POSIX, it is determined by whichever of the
- environment variables LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE or LANG is first found to be
- set, and is otherwise "C". Some useful values of "lc-ctype" might be:
-
- "" Default: the native environment.
- "C" Strict ASCII. All other characters greater than \177
- rendered in octal.
- "iso_8859_1" Latin-1 alphabet.
-
-
- :entry "left-margin" "Variable"
- This is how far lines should be indented when Auto Indent mode is on,
- or when the "newline-and-indent" command is run (usually by typing
- Linefeed). It is also used by "fill-paragraph" and Auto Fill mode.
- If the value is zero (the default) then the left margin is determined
- from the surrounding lines.
-
- :entry "left-margin-here" "Command"
- This sets the "left-margin" variable to the current position of point.
- This is an easy way to say, "Make the left margin begin here," without
- having to count the number of spaces over it actually is.
-
- :entry "lisp-mode" "Command"
- This turns on the Lisp major mode. In Lisp mode, the characters Tab
- and ")" are treated specially, similar to the way they are treated in
- C mode. Also, Auto Indent mode is affected, and handled specially.
- See also the "c-mode" command.
-
- :entry "list-buffers" "Command"
- This types out a list containing various information about each
- buffer. The list looks like this:
-
- (* means the buffer needs saving)
- NO Lines Type Name File
- -- ----- ---- ---- ----
- 1 1 File Main [No file]
- 2 1 Scratch * Minibuf [No file]
- 3 519 File * commands.doc commands.doc
-
- The first column lists the buffer's number. When JOVE prompts for a
- buffer name you can either type in the full name, or you can simply
- type the buffer's number. The second column is the number of lines in
- the buffer. The third says what type of buffer. There are four
- types: File, Scratch, Process and I-Process. "File" is simply a
- buffer that holds a file; "Scratch" is for buffers that JOVE uses
- internally; "Process" is one that holds the output from a UNIX
- command; "I-Process" is one that has an interactive process attached
- to it. The next column contains the name of the buffer. And the last
- column is the name of the file that's attached to the buffer. In this
- case, both Minibuf and commands.doc have been changed but not yet
- saved. In fact Minibuf won't be saved since it's a Scratch buffer.
-
- :entry "list-processes" "Command"
- This makes a list somewhat like "list-buffers" does, except its list
- consists of the current interactive processes. The list looks like
- this:
-
- Buffer Status Pid Command
- ------ ------ --- -------
- *shell* Running 18415 shell
- fgrep Done 18512 fgrep -n Buffer *.c
-
- The first column has the name of the buffer to which the process is
- attached. The second has the status of the process; if a process has
- exited normally the status is "Done" as in fgrep; if the process
- exited with an error the status is "Exit N" where N is the value of
- the exit code; if the process was killed by some signal the status is
- the name of the signal that was used; otherwise the process is
- running. The last column is the name of the command that is being
- run.
-
- :entry "local-bind-keymap-to-key" "Command"
- This is like "local-bind-to-key" except that you use it to attach a
- key sequence to a named keymap. The only reasonable use is to bind
- some extra key to "ESC-map" for keyboards that make typing ESC
- painful.
-
- :entry "local-bind-macro-to-key" "Command"
- This is like "local-bind-to-key" except you use it to attach a key
- sequence to a named macro.
-
- :entry "local-bind-to-key" "Command"
- This is like "bind-to-key", except that the binding is only enabled
- when the selected buffer is the buffer that was current when the
- command was executed. In other words, the binding only applies to the
- selected buffer.
-
- :entry "macify" "Variable"
- (Mac version only) When this variable is on, JOVE will use the
- standard Macintosh file-selector dialog in place of the traditional
- JOVE Minibuffer.
-
- :entry "mail-check-frequency" "Variable"
- This is how often (in seconds) JOVE should check your mailbox for
- incoming mail. If you set this to zero JOVE won't check for new mail.
- See also the "mode-line", "mailbox" and "disable-biff" variables. The
- default is 60.
-
- :entry "mailbox" "Variable"
- Set this to the full pathname of your mailbox. JOVE will look here to
- decide whether or not you have any unread mail. This defaults to
- "/usr/spool/mail/$USER", where "$USER" is set to your login name.
-
- :entry "make-backup-files" "Variable"
- If this variable is set, then whenever JOVE writes out a file, it will
- move the previous version of the file (if there was one) to
- "#filename~". This is often convenient if you save a file by
- accident. The default value of this variable is "off".
-
- :entry "make-buffer-unmodified" "Command"
- This makes JOVE think the selected buffer hasn't been changed even if
- it has. Use this when you accidentally change the buffer but don't
- want it considered changed. Watch the mode line to see the *
- disappear when you use this command.
-
- :entry "make-macro-interactive" "Command"
- This command is meaningful only while you are defining a keyboard
- macro, and when you are expecting input in the message line.
- Ordinarily, when a command in a macro definition requires a trailing
- text argument (file name, search string, etc.), the argument you
- supply becomes part of the macro definition. If you want to be able
- to supply a different argument each time the macro is used, then while
- you are defining it, you should give the "make-macro-interactive"
- command just before typing the argument which will be used during the
- definition process. Note: you must bind this command to a key in
- order to use it; you can't say "ESC X make-macro-interactive".
-
- :entry "mark-threshold" "Variable"
- This variable contains the number of lines point may move by before
- the mark is set. If, in a search or some other command that may move
- point, point moves by more than this many lines, the mark is set so
- that you may return easily. The default value of this variable is 22
- (one screenful, on most terminals). See also the commands "search-
- forward", "search-reverse", "beginning-of-file" and "end-of-file".
-
- :entry "match-regular-expressions" "Variable"
- When set, JOVE will match regular expressions in search patterns.
- This makes special the characters ., *, [ and ]. See the JOVE Manual
- for a full discussion of regular-expressions.
-
- :entry "meta-key" "Variable"
- You should set this variable to "on" if your terminal has a real Meta
- key which forces the 8th bit of each character. If your terminal has
- such a key, then a key sequence like ESC Y can be entered by holding
- down Meta and typing Y. On the IBM PC, this variable affects how ALT
- is interpreted. On the Macintosh, it affects how Option is
- interpreted. NOTE: In some older UNIX systems, JOVE must switch the
- tty to raw mode to accept the 8-bit characters generated by a meta
- key. Unfortunately, the "interrupt-character" does not generate an
- interrupt in raw mode.
-
- :entry "mode-line" "Variable"
- The format of the mode line can be determined by setting this
- variable. The items in the line are specified using a format similar
- to that used by "printf(3)", with the special things being marked as
- "%x". Digits may be used between the '%' and the 'x' to mean repeat
- that many times. 'x' may be:
-
- C checks for new mail, and displays "[New mail]" if there is any
- (see also the "mail-check-frequency" and "mailbox" variables)
- F the current file name, with leading path stripped
- M the current list of major and minor modes
- b the selected buffer name
- c the fill character (-)
- d the current directory
- e extra space in mode line is distributed evenly
- among the places %e is used (used for justifying,
- separating, or centering parts of the mode line)
- f the current file name
- ixy x, when the buffer's file has been changed behind JOVE's back,
- y, when not
- mxy x, when the buffer is modified or y, when not
- n the selected buffer number
- p interactive process status for process windows
- s space, but only if previous character is not a space
- t the current time (updated automatically)
- w a '>' for windows which are scrolled left
- [ ] the square brackets printed when in a recursive edit
- ( ) items enclosed in %( ... %) will only be printed on
- the bottom mode line, rather than copied when the
- window is split
-
- In addition, any other character is simply copied into the mode line.
- Characters may be escaped with a backslash. To get a feel for all
- this, try typing "ESC X print mode-line" and compare the result with
- your current mode line.
-
- :entry "mode-line-attribute" "Variable"
- (IBM PC version only) This specifies the screen attribute (color) for
- characters in the mode line. The default is 112 (black on white).
-
- :entry "mode-line-should-standout" "Variable"
- If set, the mode line will be printed in reverse video, if your
- terminal supports it. The default for this variable is "on".
-
- :entry "name-kbd-macro" "Command"
- This copies the keyboard macro and gives it a name freeing up the
- keyboard macro so you can define some more. Keyboard macros with
- their own names can be bound to keys just like built in commands can.
- See the "define-macro", "source" and "write-macros-to-file" commands.
-
- :entry "newline" "Command"
- This divides the current line at point moving all the text to the
- right of point down onto the newly created line. Point moves down to
- the beginning of the new line. In Auto Indent mode, the new line will
- be indented to match the old line.
-
- :entry "newline-and-backup" "Command"
- This divides the current line at point moving all the text to the
- right of point down onto the newly created line. The difference
- between this and "newline" is that point does not move down to the
- beginning of the new line.
-
- :entry "newline-and-indent" "Command"
- This behaves in any mode the same way as "newline" does in Auto Indent
- mode.
-
- :entry "next-error" "Command"
- This moves to the next error in the list of errors that were parsed
- with "parse-errors". In one window the list of errors is shown with
- the current one always at the top. If the file that contains the
- error is not already in a buffer, it is read in. Its buffer is
- displayed in another window and point is positioned in this window on
- the line where the error occurred.
-
- :entry "next-line" "Command"
- This moves point down to the corresponding position on the next line
- (or the end of that line if it does not extend so far).
-
- :entry "next-page" "Command"
- This displays the next page of the selected buffer by taking the
- bottom line of the window and redrawing the window with it at the top.
- If there isn't another page in the buffer JOVE rings the bell. If a
- numeric argument of only - (with no digits) is supplied, the previous
- page is displayed. Otherwise, if a numeric argument is supplied the
- screen is scrolled up that many lines, exactly as in the "scroll-up"
- command; if the argument is negative the screen is scrolled down.
-
- :entry "next-window" "Command"
- This moves into the next window. Windows live in a circular list so
- when you're in the bottom window and you try to move to the next one
- you are moved to the top window. It is an error to use this command
- with only one window.
-
- :entry "number-lines-in-window" "Command"
- This displays the line numbers for each line in the buffer being
- displayed. The number isn't actually part of the text; it's just
- printed before the actual buffer line is. To turn this off you run
- the command again; it toggles.
-
- :entry "one-key-confirmation" "Variable"
- If this variable is set, a single keystroke of y or n is expected in
- answer to yes/no questions. Normally, a yes/no question must be
- answered with any non-empty prefix of yes or no, followed by a Return
-
- :entry "over-write-mode" "Command"
- This turns Over Write minor mode on in the selected buffer. Without a
- numeric argument, the command toggles the mode; with a zero argument,
- the mode is turned off; with a non-zero argument, the mode is turned
- on. When on, this mode changes the way the self-inserting characters
- work. Instead of inserting themselves and pushing the rest of the
- line over to the right, they replace or over-write the existing
- character. Also, DEL replaces the character before point with a space
- instead of deleting it. When Over Write mode is on "OvrWt" is
- displayed in the mode line.
-
- :entry "page-next-window" "Command"
- This displays the next page in the next window. It switches to the
- next window, performs a "next-page" command (with any numeric
- argument), and switches back to the original window. Note that an
- argument of just "-" will thus display the previous page.
-
- :entry "paren-flash" "Command"
- This command causes the characters bound to it to be inserted, and
- then to partake in C mode curly brace indentation, Lisp mode
- parenthesis indentation, and the Show Match mode paren/curly-
- brace/square-bracket flashing.
-
- :entry "paragraph-delimiter-pattern" "Variable"
- When JOVE is searching for a paragraph boundary, if this pattern (a
- regular expression) matches the start of a line, that line is treated
- as a paragraph delimiter. The default pattern recognizes blank lines,
- troff control lines, and lines starting with a TeX control sequence.
-
- There is a special provision for TeX: if a line is matched by the
- pattern, and the match is of exactly an initial \, that line is only
- treated as a delimiter if the next line also starts with \.
-
- :entry "paren-flash-delay" "Variable"
- How long, in tenths of a second, JOVE should pause on a matching
- parenthesis in Show Match mode. The default is 5.
-
- :entry "parse-errors" "Command"
- This takes the list of C compilation errors (or the output from
- another program in an acceptable format) in the selected buffer and
- parses them for use with the "next-error", "previous-error" and
- "current-error" commands. This is a very useful tool and helps with
- compiling C programs or, when used in conjunction with the UNIX "grep"
- command, with making changes to a bunch of files. JOVE finds each
- file that has an error and remembers each line that contains an error.
- It doesn't matter if later you insert or delete some lines in the
- buffers containing errors; JOVE remembers where they are regardless.
- "current-error" is automatically executed after one of the parse
- commands, so you end up at the first error. The variable "error-
- format-string" specifies, by means of regular-expressions, the format
- of errors to be recognized. Its default value can handle messages
- from "cc", "cpp", "lint" and "grep -n".
-
- :entry "parse-spelling-errors-in-buffer" "Command"
- This parses a list of words in the selected buffer and looks them up
- in another buffer that you specify. It is invoked automatically by
- the "spell-buffer" command.
-
- :entry "pause-jove" "Command"
- This stops JOVE and returns control to the parent shell. This only
- works on systems that have the job control facility. To return to
- JOVE you type "fg" to the shell.
-
- :entry "pop-mark" "Command"
- JOVE remembers the last eight marks and you use "pop-mark" to go
- backward through the ring of marks. If you execute "pop-mark" enough
- times you will eventually get back to where you started. This command
- is also executed when you run "set-mark" with a numeric argument.
-
- :entry "popd" "Command"
- This pops one entry off the directory stack. Entries are pushed with
- the "pushd" or "pushlibd" commands. The names were stolen from the C-
- shell and the behavior is the same.
-
- :entry "previous-error" "Command"
- This is the same as "next-error" except it goes to the previous error.
- See "next-error" for documentation.
-
- :entry "previous-line" "Command"
- This moves point up to the corresponding position on the previous line
- (or the end of that line if it does not extend so far).
-
- :entry "previous-page" "Command"
- This displays the previous page of the selected buffer by taking the
- top line and redrawing the window with it at the bottom. If a numeric
- argument of only - (with no digits) is supplied, the next page is
- displayed. Otherwise, if a numeric argument is supplied the screen is
- scrolled down that many lines, exactly as in the "scroll-down"
- command; if the argument is negative the screen is scrolled up.
-
- :entry "previous-window" "Command"
- This moves into the previous window. Windows live in a circular list
- so when you're in the top window and you try to move to the previous
- one you are moved to the bottom window. It is an error to use this
- command with only one window.
-
- :entry "print" "Command"
- This displays the value of a JOVE variable in the message line.
-
- :entry "process-bind-keymap-to-key" "Command"
- This is like "process-bind-to-key" except that you use it to attach a
- key sequence to named keymap. The only reasonable use is to bind some
- extra key to "ESC-map" for keyboards that make typing ESC painful.
-
- :entry "process-bind-macro-to-key" "Command"
- This is like "process-bind-to-key" except you use it to attach a key
- sequence to a named macro.
-
- :entry "process-bind-to-key" "Command"
- This command is identical to "bind-to-key", except that it only
- affects your bindings when you are in a buffer attached to an
- interactive process. When you enter the process buffer, any keys
- bound with this command will automatically take their new values.
- When you switch to a non-process buffer, the old bindings for those
- keys will be restored. For example, you might want to execute
-
- process-bind-to-key stop-process ^C ^Z
- process-bind-to-key interrupt-process ^C ^C
-
- Then, when you start up an interactive process and switch into that
- buffer, ^C ^Z will execute "stop-process" and ^C ^C will execute
- "interrupt-process". Bindings effective only in process windows are
- shown with a "Proc:" prefix in this manual and by the "apropos" and
- "describe-bindings" commands.
-
- :entry "process-dbx-output" "Command"
- This command only makes sense in a buffer running an interactive shell
- process. If you are running "dbx" in a window, JOVE will
- automatically find the file you are currently stepping through and
- display it in another window whenever you type "where" or while you're
- stepping through a program, or when you reach a breakpoint. The
- string DBX will appear in the mode line along with the process status
- when this feature is enabled. See also the variable "dbx-format-
- string".
-
- :entry "process-newline" "Command"
- This command is normally bound to Return as if by a "process-bind-to-
- key" so that it will only be bound in a process window. JOVE does two
- different things depending on where you are when you hit Return. When
- you're in the last line of the interactive process buffer, point moves
- to the end of the line, the line is terminated, and the line is made
- available as input to the process. When point is positioned in some
- other line, that line is copied to the end of the buffer (with the
- prompt stripped) and point is moved there with it, so you can then
- edit that line before sending it to the process. This command must be
- bound to the key you usually use to enter shell commands (Return), or
- else you won't be able to enter any. See the variable "process-
- prompt".
-
- :entry "process-prompt" "Variable"
- What a prompt looks like from the "shell" and "i-shell-command"
- processes. The default is "% ", the default C-shell prompt. This is
- actually a regular expression search string. So you can set it to be
- more than one thing at once using the \| operator. For instance, for
- LISP hackers, the prompt can be
-
- "% \|-> \|<[0-9]>: ".
-
-
- :entry "process-send-data-no-return" "Command"
- This is like "process-newline" except it sends everything to the
- process without the newline. Normally, when you type return in a
- process buffer it sends everything you typed including the Return.
- This command just provides a way to send data to the process without
- having to send a newline as well.
-
- :entry "push-shell" "Command"
- This spawns a child shell and relinquishes control to it. Within this
- shell, $1 can be used to refer to the filename (if any) of the
- selected buffer. This works on any version of UNIX, but this isn't as
- good as "pause-jove" because it takes time to start up the new shell
- and you get a brand new environment every time. To return to JOVE,
- simply exit the shell.
-
- :entry "pushd" "Command"
- This pushes a directory onto the directory stack and cd's into it. It
- asks for the directory name but if you don't specify one it switches
- the top two entries on the stack. It purposely behaves the same as C-
- shell's "pushd".
-
- :entry "pushlibd" "Command"
- Performs same function as "pushd" except that it pushes the Jove
- sharable library directory. This directory holds the system-wide
- "jove.rc" and the text used by the "describe-command" and "describe-
- variable" commands. It is mainly intended for use with the "jove.rc"
- file.
-
- :entry "pwd" "Command"
- This prints the pathname of the working directory, as in the UNIX
- "pwd" command.
-
- :entry "query-replace-string" "Command"
- This replaces strings matching a specified regular-expression with a
- specified replacement string. When a match is found, point is moved
- to it and then JOVE asks what to do. The options are:
-
- Space or Y or y to replace this match and go on to the next one.
- Period to replace this match and then stop.
- DEL, BS, or N or n to skip this match and go on to the next one.
- ^R or R or r to enter a recursive edit. This lets you temporarily
- suspend the replace, do some editing, and then return
- to continue where you left off. To continue with the
- "query-replace-string", use the "exit-jove" command.
- ^W to delete the match and then enter a recursive edit.
- ^U or U or u to undo all changes to the last modified line and
- continue the search from the start of that line.
- ! or P or p to go ahead and replace the remaining matches without
- asking, as in "replace-string".
- Return or Q or q to stop the "query-replace-string".
- ^L to redraw the screen
-
- It is often useful to include a piece of the matched string in the
- replacement, especially if the piece was not matched by literal text.
- To select which part of the matched string is to be used, the
- corresponding part of the pattern is bracketed with \( and \). More
- than one set of brackets may be used, as long as they are properly
- nested. The matching substring is selected in the replacement string
- using \ followed by a digit: \1 for the first, \2 for the second, and
- so on. Conveniently, \0 always stands for the complete matched
- string, as if the whole regular expression were bracketed. For
- example, the following command will reverse pairs of comma-separated
- numbers:
-
- : query-replace-string \([0-9]*\),\([0-9]*\) with \2,\1
-
- The search for a match starts at point and goes to the end of the
- buffer, so to replace in the entire buffer you must first go to the
- beginning. Each subsequent search starts at the position after the
- previous match; if the previous match was an empty string, the search
- is first advanced one character to prevent unbounded repetition.
-
- :entry "quit-process" "Command"
- Send the signal SIGQUIT to the interactive process in the selected
- buffer. This is equivalent to sending the "quit" character (which
- most people have bound to ^\) to the process. This only works if you
- are in a buffer bound to an interactive process.
-
- :entry "quoted-insert" "Command"
- This lets you insert characters that normally would be executed as
- other JOVE commands. For example, to insert "^F" you type "^Q ^F"
- (assuming "quoted-insert" is bound to ^Q). NUL cannot be represented
- in the buffer, so "quoted-insert" will insert "^@" in its stead. On
- the IBM PC under DOS, non-ASCII keystrokes are seen by JOVE as a hex
- FF character followed by another character; "quoted-insert" will quote
- both characters.
-
- :entry "read-only-mode" "Command"
- This turns on or off the Read-only minor mode. Without a numeric
- argument, the command toggles the mode; with a zero argument, the mode
- is turned off; with a non-zero argument, the mode is turned on. When
- a buffer is in Read-only mode, any attempt to modify the buffer will
- fail. When a file is found, and it's not got write permission, JOVE
- automatically puts the buffer in read-only mode. This is very helpful
- when you are in environments which use source control programs like
- RCS and SCCS. It prevents accidents like making a bunch of changes
- and only THEN discovering that you haven't checked the file out for
- making changes.
-
- :entry "read-word-abbrev-file" "Command"
- This reads a specified file that contains a bunch of abbreviation
- definitions, and makes those abbreviations available. See the "word-
- abbrev-mode" command.
-
- :entry "recursive-edit" "Command"
- This enters a recursive editing level. This isn't really very useful.
- I don't know why it's available for public use. I think I'll delete
- it some day.
-
- :entry "redraw-display" "Command"
- This vertically centers the line containing point within the window.
- If that line is already in place, the screen is first cleared and then
- redrawn. If a numeric argument is supplied, the line is positioned at
- that offset from the top of the window. For example, "ESC 0 ^L"
- positions the line containing point at the top of the window (assuming
- "redraw-display" is bound to ^L).
-
- :entry "rename-buffer" "Command"
- This lets you rename the selected buffer.
-
- :entry "replace-in-region" "Command"
- This is the same as "replace-string" except that it is restricted to
- occurrences between point and the mark.
-
- :entry "replace-string" "Command"
- This replaces all occurrences of a specified string with a specified
- replacement string. This is just like "query-replace-string" except
- that it replaces without asking.
-
- :entry "right-margin" "Variable"
- Where the right margin is for Auto Fill mode and the "fill-paragraph"
- and "fill-region" commands. The default is 78.
-
- :entry "right-margin-here" "Command"
- This sets the "right-margin" variable to the current position of
- point. This is an easy way to say, "Make the right margin begin
- here," without having to count the number of spaces over it actually
- is.
-
- :entry "save-file" "Command"
- This saves the selected buffer to the associated file. This makes
- your changes permanent so you should be sure you really want to do it.
- If the buffer has not been modified "save-file" refuses to do the
- save. If you really do want to write the file you must use "write-
- file".
-
- :entry "scroll-all-lines" "Variable"
- When this is "off", (the default) horizontal scrolling will only
- affect the line containing point. When it is "on", horizontal
- scrolling will affect the whole window. See also the "scroll-width"
- variable.
-
- :entry "scroll-bar" "Variable"
- When this is turned "on", a section of the mode line at the foot of
- each window is left in not-reverse-video, to show the position of the
- window relative to the whole of the file represented by that buffer
- (however, if the whole of the buffer is within the window, the whole
- mode line remains inverted).
-
- :entry "scroll-down" "Command"
- This scrolls the screen one line down. If the line containing point
- moves past the bottom of the window, point is moved up to the top of
- the window. If a numeric argument is supplied that many lines are
- scrolled; if the argument is negative the screen is scrolled up
- instead. See the "previous-page" command.
-
- :entry "scroll-left" "Command"
- This scrolls the text in the active window to the left. If a numeric
- argument is specified then the text is scrolled that number of
- columns. Otherwise, the text is scrolled by the number of columns
- specified by the variable "scroll-width". If the variable "scroll-
- all-lines" is ON then "scroll-left" may actually do nothing if the
- scrolling would cause point not to be visible. A negative argument
- scrolls right. If the "mode-line" variable is suitably set, an
- indication that the text is scrolled will be given in the mode line.
-
- :entry "scroll-right" "Command"
- This scrolls the text in the active window to the right. If a numeric
- argument is specified then the text is scrolled that number of
- columns. Otherwise, the text is scrolled by the number of columns
- specified by the variable "scroll-width". If the variable "scroll-
- all-lines" is ON then "scroll-right" may actually do nothing if the
- scrolling would cause point not to be visible. A negative argument
- scrolls left.
-
- :entry "scroll-step" "Variable"
- How many lines should be scrolled if the "previous-line" or "next-
- line" commands move you off the top or bottom of the screen. You may
- wish to decrease this variable if you are on a slow terminal. The
- default value is 0, which means to center the current line in the
- window. If the value is negative, the behavior is slightly different.
- If you move off the top of the window, and "scroll-step" is, say, -5
- then the new line will be displayed 5 lines from the bottom of the
- window. If you move off the bottom of the window, the new line will
- be positioned 5 lines from the top of the window.
-
- :entry "scroll-up" "Command"
- This scrolls the screen one line up. If the line containing point
- moves past the top of the window, point is moved down to the top of
- the window. If a numeric argument is supplied that many lines are
- scrolled; if the argument is negative the screen is scrolled down
- instead. See also the "next-page" command.
-
- :entry "scroll-width" "Variable"
- Just as a buffer may be too long to be completely displayed in a
- window, a line may be too wide. JOVE handles wide lines through
- horizontal scrolling, displaying only a portion of the line. This
- variable affects horizontal scrolling. If point is outside the
- displayed portion of its line, but is within the specified number of
- columns beyond either side, the line is scrolled that much.
- Otherwise, the line will be scrolled to center point. The default
- value is 10. If the variable is 0, centering will always be used.
- See also the "scroll-all-lines" variable.
-
- :entry "search-exit-char" "Variable"
- Set this to the character you want to use to exit incremental search.
- The default is Newline, which makes "i-search" commands compatible
- with normal string search.
-
- :entry "search-forward" "Command"
- This searches forward for a specified search string and positions
- point at the end of the string if it's found. If the string is not
- found point remains unchanged. This searches from point to the end of
- the buffer, so any matches before point will be missed. If point is
- moved by more than the variable "mark-threshold", the old point will
- be pushed.
-
- :entry "search-forward-nd" "Command"
- This is just like "search-forward" except that it doesn't assume a
- default search string, and it doesn't set the default search string.
- This is useful for defining macros, when you want to search for
- something, but you don't want it to affect the current default search
- string.
-
- :entry "search-reverse" "Command"
- This searches backward for a specified search string and positions
- point at the beginning if the string if it's found. If the string is
- not found point remains unchanged. This searches from point to the
- beginning of the buffer, so any matches after point will be missed.
- If point is moved by more than the variable "mark-threshold", the old
- point will be pushed.
-
- :entry "search-reverse-nd" "Command"
- This is just like "search-reverse" except that it doesn't assume a
- default search string, and it doesn't set the default search string.
- This is useful for defining macros, when you want to search for
- something, but you don't want it to affect the current default search
- string.
-
- :entry "select-buffer" "Command"
- This selects a new or already existing buffer making it the current
- one. You can type either the buffer name or number. If you type in
- the name you need only type the name until it is unambiguous, at which
- point typing Tab or Space will complete it for you. If you want to
- create a new buffer you can type Return instead of Space, and a new
- empty buffer will be created.
-
- :entry "select-buffer-1" "Command"
- This selects buffer number 1, if it exists.
-
- :entry "select-buffer-10" "Command"
- This selects buffer number 10, if it exists.
-
- :entry "select-buffer-2" "Command"
- This selects buffer number 2, if it exists.
-
- :entry "select-buffer-3" "Command"
- This selects buffer number 3, if it exists.
-
- :entry "select-buffer-4" "Command"
- This selects buffer number 4, if it exists.
-
- :entry "select-buffer-5" "Command"
- This selects buffer number 5, if it exists.
-
- :entry "select-buffer-6" "Command"
- This selects buffer number 6, if it exists.
-
- :entry "select-buffer-7" "Command"
- This selects buffer number 7, if it exists.
-
- :entry "select-buffer-8" "Command"
- This selects buffer number 8, if it exists.
-
- :entry "select-buffer-9" "Command"
- This selects buffer number 9, if it exists.
-
- :entry "self-insert" "Command"
- This inserts the character that invoked it into the buffer at point.
- Initially all but a few of the printing characters are bound to "self-
- insert". See also "paren-flash".
-
- :entry "send-typeout-to-buffer" "Variable"
- When this is "on" JOVE will send output that normally overwrites the
- screen (temporarily) to a buffer instead. This affects commands like
- "list-buffers", "list-processes", "shell-command-with-typeout", and
- commands that use completion. The default value is "off".
-
- :entry "set" "Command"
- This sets a specified variable to a new value.
-
- :entry "set-mark" "Command"
- This sets the mark at the current position in the buffer. It prints
- the message "[Point pushed]" on the message line. It says that
- instead of "[Mark set]" because when you set the mark the previous
- mark is still remembered on a ring of eight marks. So "[Point
- pushed]" means point is pushed onto the ring of marks and becomes the
- value of "the mark". To go through the ring of marks, use the "pop-
- mark" command. If you type this enough times you will get back to
- where you started. If a "set-mark" command is given a numeric
- argument, it acts like a "pop-mark" command.
-
- :entry "shell" "Variable"
- The shell to be used with all the shell-* commands command. If your
- SHELL environment variable is set, it is used as the default value of
- "shell"; otherwise "/bin/csh" is the default. See also the
- description of the "shell-flags" variable to see how to change the
- flags passed to this shell.
-
- :entry "shell" "Command"
- This starts up an interactive shell in a window; if there is already
- an interactive shell, it just selects that buffer. JOVE uses "*shell-
- n*" (where "n" is the argument of the command) as the name of the
- buffer in which the interacting takes place. Thus different argument
- values refer to different interactive shells. See the JOVE manual for
- information on how to use interactive processes. See also the
- variable "wrap-process-lines".
-
- :entry "shell-command" "Command"
- This runs a UNIX command and places the output from that command in a
- buffer. Within the command, $1 can be used to refer the the filename
- (if any) of the selected buffer. JOVE creates a buffer that matches
- the name of the command you specify and then attaches that buffer to a
- window. So, when you have only one window running, this command will
- cause JOVE to split the window and attach the new buffer to that
- window. Otherwise, JOVE finds the most convenient of the available
- windows and uses that one instead. If the buffer already exists it is
- first emptied (unless a numeric argument is specified). If it's
- already holding a file, not some output from a previous command, JOVE
- asks permission before emptying the buffer. Beware that if you go
- ahead, not only do you lose any unsaved changes that you made to the
- buffer, but the buffer's file name remains set, making it easy to
- later accidentally overwrite the original file. See also the variable
- "wrap-process-lines".
-
- :entry "shell-command-no-buffer" "Command"
- This is just like "shell-command" except it just runs the command
- without saving the output to any buffer. It will report the success
- of the command in the usual way.
-
- :entry "shell-command-to-buffer" "Command"
- This is just like "shell-command" except it lets you specify the
- buffer to use.
-
- :entry "shell-command-with-typeout" "Command"
- This is just like "shell-command" except that instead of saving the
- output to a buffer, and displaying it in a window, this just types out
- the output in the same way that "list-buffers" does. Actually, how
- this behaves depends on the value of the variable "send-typeout-to-
- buffer". If it is "on" then "shell-command-with-typeout" will behave
- just like "shell-command". If a numeric argument is given, the
- "completed successfully" message at the end is suppressed.
-
- :entry "shell-flags" "Variable"
- This specifies a flag argument that directs the shell to take the next
- argument as a command to be executed. The default is "-c" (suitable
- for all known UNIX shells). Under MSDOS, the default is "/c"
- (suitable for command.com and similar MSDOS shells). Other MSDOS
- shells, such as MKS KSH require that this be changed to "-c". Under
- MSDOS, JOVE puts quotes around the command argument if "shell-flags"
- starts with "-". See the "shell" variable to change the default
- shell.
-
- :entry "shift-region-left" "Command"
- This shifts the region left by "c-indentation-increment" OR by the
- numeric argument, if one is supplied. If a negative argument is
- supplied the region is shifted the other way.
-
- :entry "shift-region-right" "Command"
- This shifts the region right by "c-indentation-increment" OR by the
- numeric argument, if one is supplied. If a negative argument is
- supplied the region is shifted the other way.
-
- :entry "show-match-mode" "Command"
- This turns on or off the Show Match minor mode in the selected buffer.
- Without a numeric argument, the command toggles the mode; with a zero
- argument, the mode is turned off; with a non-zero argument, the mode
- is turned on. This mode changes "}", ")" and "]" so that when they
- are typed they are inserted as usual, and then the cursor flashes back
- to the matching "{", "(" or "[" (depending on what was typed) for
- about half a second, and then goes back to just after the "}", ")" or
- "]" that invoked the command. This is useful for typing in
- complicated expressions in a program. You can change how long the
- cursor sits on the matching parenthesis by setting the "paren-flash-
- delay" variable in tenths of a second. If the matching "{", "(" or
- "[" isn't visible, the line containing the match is displayed on the
- message line.
-
- :entry "shrink-window" "Command"
- This makes the active window one line shorter, if possible. Windows
- must be at least 2 lines high, one for the text and the other for the
- mode line. See also "grow-window".
-
- :entry "source" "Command"
- This reads a bunch of JOVE commands from a file. If a numeric
- argument is supplied to the "source" command, it will quietly do
- nothing if it cannot read the file.
-
- The format of the file is the same as that in the "jove.rc" file, or
- your private ".joverc" in your home directory. There should be one
- command per line and it should be as though you were responding to an
- "execute-named-command" command while in JOVE. A command can be
- optionally preceded by a numeric argument. Lines commencing with a #
- are treated as comments. Control characters such as ^R may be
- represented as themselves, or as "^" followed by "R". ESC should be
- represented by ^[.
-
- Sometimes it is useful to do different things in different
- circumstances. To make this possible, there are two conditional
- commands: "if" and "ifenv". The "if" command takes as an operand a
- shell command, which it runs. If the command succeeds, the commands
- after the "if", until a line containing "else" or "endif", are
- performed. Otherwise, these commands are suppressed and the commands
- after any "else", up until an "endif", are executed. Conditionals
- nest in the normal way. The "ifenv" command takes as operands the
- name of an environment variable and a pattern. If the environment
- variable is defined and its value matches the pattern, the "ifenv"
- succeeds.
-
- For example, here are some lines from the file "jove.rc".
-
- bind-to-key pause-jove ^[S
- bind-to-key pause-jove ^[s
- set process-prompt ^[^%$#]*[%$#]
- # source any TERMinal-specific rc file
- 1 source jove.rc.$TERM
-
- What they do is to provide two alternative key bindings for "pause-
- jove", set the variable "process-prompt", and attempt to call the
- "source" command on the file "jove.rc.$TERM". Because of the numeric
- argument 1, there will be no complaint if this file cannot be found.
-
- :entry "space-sentence-2" "Variable"
- If set "on", two spaces are left after each sentence by commands such
- as "fill-paragraph"; otherwise, one space is left. The default is
- "on".
-
- :entry "spell-buffer" "Command"
- This runs the selected buffer through the UNIX "spell" program and
- places the output in buffer "Spell". Then JOVE lets you edit the list
- of words, expecting you to delete the ones that you don't care about,
- i.e., the ones you know are spelled correctly. Then the "parse-
- spelling-errors-in-buffer" command comes along and finds all the
- misspelled words and sets things up so the error commands "next-
- error", "previous-error" and "current-error" work. See also the
- variable "error-window-size".
-
- :entry "split-current-window" "Command"
- This splits the active window into two equal parts (providing the
- resulting windows would be big enough) and displays the selected
- buffer in both windows. Use "delete-other-windows" to go back to 1
- window mode. If a numeric argument is supplied, the window is split
- "evenly" that many times (when possible).
-
- :entry "start-remembering" "Command"
- This is just another name for the "begin-kbd-macro" command. It is
- included for backward compatibility.
-
- :entry "stop-process" "Command"
- Send the signal SIGTSTP to the interactive process in the selected
- buffer. This is equivalent to sending the "stop" character (which
- most people have bound to ^Z) to the process. This only works if you
- are in a buffer bound to an interactive process.
-
- :entry "stop-remembering" "Command"
- This is just another name for the "end-kbd-macro" command. It is
- included for backward compatibility.
-
- :entry "string-length" "Command"
- This prints the number of characters in the string that point sits in.
- Strings are surrounded by double quotes. JOVE knows that "\007" is
- considered a single character, namely "^G", and also knows about other
- common ones, like "\r" (Return) and "\n" (Linefeed). This is mostly
- useful only for C programmers.
-
- :entry "suspend-jove" "Command"
- This is a synonym for "pause-jove".
-
- :entry "sync-frequency" "Variable"
- The temporary files used by JOVE are forced out to disk every "sync-
- frequency" modifications. The default is 50, which really makes good
- sense. Unless your system is very unstable, you probably shouldn't
- fool with this.
-
- :entry "tab-width" "Variable"
- When JOVE displays a Tab character, it moves point forward to the next
- multiple of this variable. If the value is 0, tab is displayed as ^I,
- not whitespace. The default value is 8.
-
- :entry "tag-file" "Variable"
- This is the name of the file in which JOVE should look up tag
- definitions. The default value is "./tags".
-
- :entry "text-attribute" "Variable"
- (IBM PC version only) This specifies the screen attribute (color) for
- normal text characters. The default is 7 (white on black).
-
- :entry "text-mode" "Command"
- This sets the major mode to Text. This affects what JOVE considers as
- characters that make up words. For instance, Single-quote is not part
- of a word in Fundamental mode, but is in Text mode.
-
- :entry "tmp-file-pathname" "Variable"
- This tells JOVE where to put the tmp files, which is where JOVE stores
- buffers internally. The default is in "/tmp", or as set up when your
- system was compiled, but if you want to store them somewhere else, you
- can set this variable. If your system crashes a lot it might be a
- good idea to set this variable to somewhere other than "/tmp" because
- the system removes all the files in "/tmp" upon reboot, and so you
- would not be able to recover editor buffers using the "jove -r"
- command.
-
- NOTE: In order for this to work correctly you must set this variable
- BEFORE JOVE creates the tmp file. You can set this in your ".joverc"
- (the closer to the beginning the better), or as soon as you start up
- JOVE before you read any files.
-
- :entry "transpose-characters" "Command"
- This switches the character before point with the one after point, and
- then moves forward one. This doesn't work at the beginning of the
- line, and at the end of the line it switches the two characters before
- point. Since point is moved forward, so that the character that was
- before point is still before point, you can use "transpose-characters"
- to drag a character down the length of a line.
-
- :entry "transpose-lines" "Command"
- This switches the current line with the one above it, and then moves
- down one so that the line that was above point is still above point.
- This, like "transpose-characters", can be used to drag a line down a
- page.
-
- :entry "unbound" "Command"
- This command acts as if an unbound key sequence were typed. In fact,
- that is its use: if you wish to unbind a key sequence, simply bind it
- to this command.
-
- :entry "update-time-frequency" "Variable"
- How often the mode line is updated (and thus the time). The default
- is 30 seconds.
-
- :entry "use-i/d-char" "Variable"
- If your terminal has insert/delete character capability you can tell
- JOVE not to use it by setting this to "off". In my opinion it is only
- worth using insert/delete character at low baud rates. WARNING: if
- you set this to "on" when your terminal doesn't have insert/delete
- character capability, you will get weird (perhaps fatal) results.
-
- :entry "version" "Command"
- Displays the version number of this JOVE.
-
- :entry "visible-bell" "Variable"
- If the terminal has a visible bell, use it instead of beeping.
-
- :entry "visible-spaces-in-window" "Command"
- This displays an underscore character instead of each Space in the
- window and displays a greater-than followed by spaces for each Tab in
- the window. The actual text in the buffer is not changed; only the
- screen display is affected. To turn this off you run the command
- again; it toggles.
-
- :entry "visit-file" "Command"
- This reads a specified file into the selected buffer replacing the old
- text. If the buffer needs saving JOVE will offer to save it for you.
- Sometimes you use this to start over, say if you make lots of changes
- and then change your mind. If that's the case you don't want JOVE to
- save your buffer and you answer "NO" to the question.
-
- :entry "window-find" "Command"
- This lets you select another buffer in another window three different
- ways. This waits for another character which can be one of the
- following:
-
- T Finds a tag in the other window.
- ^T Finds the tag at point in the other window
- F Finds a file in the other window.
- B Selects a buffer in the other window.
-
- This is just a convenient short hand for "split-current-window" (or
- "previous-window" if there are already two windows) followed by the
- appropriate sequence for invoking each command. With this, though,
- there isn't the extra overhead of having to redisplay. In addition,
- you don't have to decide whether to use "split-current-window" or
- "previous-window" since "window-find" does the right thing.
-
- :entry "word-abbrev-mode" "Command"
- This turns on or off Word Abbrev minor mode in the selected buffer.
- Without a numeric argument, the command toggles the mode; with a zero
- argument, the mode is turned off; with a non-zero argument, the mode
- is turned on. Word Abbrev mode lets you specify a word (an
- abbreviation) and a phrase with which JOVE should substitute the
- abbreviation. You can use this to define words to expand into long
- phrases, e.g., "jove" can expand into "Jonathan's Own Version of
- Emacs"; another common use is defining words that you often misspell
- in the same way, e.g., "thier" => "their" or "teh" => "the". See the
- information on the "auto-case-abbrev" variable.
-
- There are two kinds of abbreviations: mode specific and global. If
- you define a Mode specific abbreviation in C mode, it will expand only
- in buffers that are in C mode. This is so you can have the same
- abbreviation expand to different things depending on your context.
- Global abbreviations expand regardless of the major mode of the
- buffer. The way it works is this: JOVE looks first in the mode
- specific table, and then in the global table. Whichever it finds it
- in first is the one that's used in the expansion. If it doesn't find
- the word it is left untouched. JOVE tries to expand words when you
- type a punctuation character or Space or Return. If you are in Auto
- Fill mode the expansion will be filled as if you typed it yourself.
-
- :entry "wrap-process-lines" "Variable"
- If this variable is "on", the process output that is captured in a
- buffer is wrapped just before the line would have as many characters
- as there are columns on the screen. This introduces extra newlines,
- but it makes the output more readable. Note that the folding does not
- take into account that some characters (notably tabs) occupy more than
- one column of the display. The output of the "filter-region" command
- is not processed in this way because the extra newlines are presumed
- to be undesired in this case.
-
- :entry "wrap-search" "Variable"
- If set, searches will "wrap around" the ends of the buffer instead of
- stopping at the bottom or top. The default is "off".
-
- :entry "write-file" "Command"
- This saves the selected buffer to a specified file, and then makes
- that file the default file name for this buffer. If you specify a
- file that already exists you are asked to confirm over-writing it.
-
- :entry "write-files-on-make" "Variable"
- When set, all modified files will be written out before calling make
- when the "compile-it" command is executed. The default is "on".
-
- :entry "write-macros-to-file" "Command"
- This writes the currently defined macros to a specified file in a
- format appropriate for reading them back in with the "source" command.
- The purpose of this command is to allow you to define macros once and
- use them in other instances of JOVE. See also the "define-macro"
- command.
-
- :entry "write-modified-files" "Command"
- This saves all the buffers that need saving. If you supply a numeric
- argument it asks, for each buffer, whether you really want to save it.
-
- :entry "write-region" "Command"
- This writes the text in the region to a specified file. If the file
- already exists you are asked to confirm over-writing it.
-
- :entry "write-word-abbrev-file" "Command"
- This writes the currently defined abbreviations to a specified file.
- They can be read back in and automatically defined with "read-word-
- abbrev-file".
-
- :entry "xj-mouse-commands" "Command"
- Programs such as XJove and JoveTool generate these commands whenever a
- mouse button is pressed or released, or the mouse is moved while the
- button is pressed. They are followed by parameters giving parameters
- for the button pressed, the coordinates of the mouse, etc. They are
- not intended for direct use by the normal user.
-
- The individual commands will now be described.
-
- :entry "xj-mouse-copy-cut" "Command"
- Performs a "copy-region" if the CTRL key was down, or a "kill-region"
- if both CTRL and SHIFT were down. This command is normally bound to
- the release of button 2.
-
- :entry "xj-mouse-line" "Command"
- Sets the region to be the whole line containing the cursor. This
- command is normally bound to a triple down click of button 2, and the
- presumed effects of the preceding double click are first undone.
-
- :entry "xj-mouse-mark" "Command"
- Both point and mark are set to the cursor. This command is normally
- bound to the pressing of button 2.
-
- :entry "xj-mouse-point" "Command"
- Point is set to the cursor. This command is normally bound to the
- single, double, and triple down-click and the dragging of button 1;
- also the dragging of button 2.
-
- :entry "xj-mouse-word" "Command"
- Sets the region to be the word (or the gap between two words)
- containing the cursor. This command is normally bound to a double
- down click of button 2, and the presumed effects of the preceding
- single click are first undone.
-
- :entry "xj-mouse-yank" "Command"
- Performs a "yank" if the CTRL key was down. This command is normally
- bound to the release of button 1.
-
- :entry "xt-mouse" "Variable"
- When set, JOVE sends XTerm escape sequences to enable and disable the
- mouse messages at appropriate times. Warning: due to the way XTerm
- encodes mouse events, if "meta-key" is set, mouse actions beyond
- column 95 or row 95 will be misunderstood; in any case, mouse actions
- beyond column 223 or row 223 will be misunderstood.
-
- :entry "xt-mouse-commands" "Command"
- Programs such as XTerm generate these commands whenever a mouse button
- is pressed or released. XTerm does not give the user as much power as
- XJove. They are followed by parameters specifying the button pressed,
- the coordinates of the mouse, etc. They are not intended for direct
- use by the normal user. Set the variable "xt-mouse" on to enable
- XTerm mouse mode.
-
- The individual commands will now be described.
-
- :entry "xt-mouse-mark" "Command"
- Both point and mark are set to the cursor. This command is normally
- bound to the pressing of button 2.
-
- :entry "xt-mouse-point" "Command"
- Point is set to the cursor. This command is normally bound to the
- down-click of button 1.
-
- :entry "xt-mouse-up" "Command"
- As the name implies, this command is normally bound to the release of
- any button (XTerm does not specify which button was released). Note
- that a normally configured XTerm will not pass on mouse events if the
- CTRL or SHIFT keys are pressed. Point is set to the cursor. If the
- most recently pressed button was button 1 and the CTRL key was down
- (and not the SHIFT key), this command performs a "yank". If the most
- recently pressed button was button 2 and the CTRL key was down, this
- command performs a "copy-region". If the most recently pressed button
- was button 2 and the CTRL and SHIFT keys were down, this command
- performs a "kill-region".
-
- :entry "yank" "Command"
- This inserts the text at the front of the kill ring (as set by an
- earlier "copy-region", "kill-region", etc.) at point. When you do
- multiple kill commands in a row, they are merged so that the "yank"
- command yanks back all of them.
-
- :entry "yank-pop" "Command"
- JOVE has a kill ring on which the last sixteen kills are stored. This
- command yanks back previous texts from the kill ring. "yank" yanks a
- copy of the text at the front of the ring. If you want one of the
- last sixteen kills you then use "yank-pop" which rotates the ring so
- another different entry is now at the front. You can use "yank-pop"
- only immediately following a "yank" or another "yank-pop". If you
- supply a negative numeric argument the ring is rotated the other way.
- If you use this command enough times in a row you will eventually get
- back to where you started.
-