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Almathera Ten Pack 3: CDPD 3
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emacs.hlp
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1995-03-17
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MicroEMACS 3.6 Help screens (04/18/86)
M- means to use the <ESC> key prior to using another key
^A means to use the control key at the same time as the A key
^V or [Pg Dn] Scroll down M-< or [HOME] Begining of file
^Z or [Pg Up] Scroll up M-> or [END] End of file
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) MOVING THE CURSOR
^F Forward character M-F Forward word Keypad arrows
^B Backward character M-B Backward word are active!
^A Front of line
^E End of line
^N Next line M-N Front of paragraph
^P Previous line M-P End of paragraph
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) SEARCHING
^S Search forward from cursor position. Type in a string to be searched
for at the prompt and end it with ESC. Either case matches either
unless EXECT mode is set for the current buffer
^R As above, but Reverse search from cursor position.
<ALT> S Search for the next occurence of the last string (IBM-PC only)
<ALT> R Search for the last occurence of the last string (IBM-PC only)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) REPLACING
M-R Replace all instances of first typed-in string with second
typed-in string. End each string with ESC.
M-^R Replace with query. Answer with:
^G cancel . exit to entry point
! replace the rest Y replace & continue
? Get a list of options N no replacement & continue
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(4) CAPITALIZING & TRANSPOSING
M-U UPPERCASE word
M-C Capitalize word ^T Transpose characters
M-L lowercase word
^X^L lowercase region
^X^U uppercase region
^Q Quote next entry, so that control codes may be entered into text
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) REGIONS & THE KILL BUFFER
M-<spacebar> set MARK at current position
^X^X eXchange mark and cursor
A REGION will then be continuously-defined as the area between the mark and
the current cursor position. The KILL BUFFER is the text which has been
most recently saved or deleted.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(6) DELETING & INSERTING
<-- Delete previous character M-<-- Delete previous word
^D Delete next character M-D Delete next word
^K Close (delete) to end of line <INSERT> Insert a space (IBM-PC only)
^O Open (insert) line <DELETE> Delete next char ( " )
^W Delete region between mark (set using M-<spacebar>) and cursor
M-W Copy region to kill buffer
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(7) COPYING AND MOVING
^W Delete (Wipe) region M-W copy region to KILL buffer
^Y Yankback save buffer at cursor
Generally, the procedure for copying or moving text is:
1) Mark a REGION using M-<spacebar> at beginning and cursor at end.
2) Delete it (with ^W) or copy it (with M-W) into the KILL buffer.
3) Move the cursor to the desired location and yank it back (with ^Y).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(8) MODES OF OPERATION
^X M Add Mode ^X ^M Delete Mode
OVER Replaces (overwrites) rather than inserts characters
WRAP Turns on word wrap (automatic carraige return).
VIEW Allows viewing file without insertion and deletion.
EXACT All searches done with exact case matching
CMODE Automatic indenting for C program entry
(automatically set on any files ending with .C or .H)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(9) ON-SCREEN FORMATTING
^X F Set fill column
Mn-<tab> Set tab spacing to n charecters between tabs stops
M-Q Format paragraph so that text lies between margins
^X = Position report -- displays line number, char count, size
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(10) MULTIPLE WINDOWS
Many WINDOWS may be active at once on the screen. All windows may show
different parts of the same buffer, or each may display a different one.
^X 2 Split the current window in two ^X 1 remove all but current window
^X O cursor to next window ^X ^ Enlarge current window
M-^V scroll down, other window M-^Z scroll up, other window
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(11) MULTIPLE BUFFERS
A BUFFER is a named area containing a document being edited. Many buffers
may be activated at once.
^X B Switch to another buffer. <CR> = use just-previous buffer
^X ^B Type buffer directory in a window
^X ^F Find file; read into a new buffer created from filename.
^X K Delete a non-displayed buffer.
^X X Switch to next buffer in buffer list
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(12) READING FROM DISK
^X^F Find file; read into a new buffer created from filename.
(This is the usual way to begin editing a new file.)
^X^R Read file into current buffer, erasing its previous contents.
No new buffer will be created.
^X^I Insert file into current buffer at cursor's location.
^X^V Find a file to make current in VIEW mode
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(13) SAVING TO DISK
^X^S Save current buffer to disk, using the buffer's filename
as the name of the disk file. Any disk file of that name
will be overwritten.
^X^W Write current buffer to disk. Type in a new filename at the
prompt to write to; it will become the current buffer's filename.
M-Z Write out all changed buffers and exit MicroEMACS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(14) ACCESSING THE OPERATING SYSTEM
^X! Send one command to the operating system and return
^XC Start a new command processer under MicroEMACS
^XD Suspend MicroEMACS into the background (UNIX BSD4.2 only)
^X^C Exit MicroEMACS
M-Z Write out all changed buffers and then Exit MicroEMACS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(15) SPECIAL KEYS AND KEY BINDINGS
^G Cancel current command and return to top level of processing.
^U or Universal repeat. May be followed by an integer (default = 4)
M-<digit> and repeats the next command that many times.
M-X Execute a named (and possibly unbound) command
M-K Bind a key to a named command
Describe-Bindings
List the current key bindings in a buffer