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4873755c 1Emacs tutorial. See end for copying conditions.
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3Emacs commands generally involve the CONTROL key (sometimes labeled
4CTRL or CTL) or the META key (sometimes labeled EDIT or ALT). Rather than
4a3142d2 5write that in full each time, we'll use the following abbreviations:
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6
7 C-<chr> means hold the CONTROL key while typing the character <chr>
8 Thus, C-f would be: hold the CONTROL key and type f.
8a4aff68 9 M-<chr> means hold the META or EDIT or ALT key down while typing <chr>.
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10 If there is no META, EDIT or ALT key, instead press and release the
11 ESC key and then type <chr>. We write <ESC> for the ESC key.
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12
13Important note: to end the Emacs session, type C-x C-c. (Two characters.)
14The characters ">>" at the left margin indicate directions for you to
15try using a command. For instance:
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16<<Blank lines inserted around following line by help-with-tutorial>>
17[Middle of page left blank for didactic purposes. Text continues below]
f751376f 18>> Now type C-v (View next screen) to move to the next screen.
1e78d347 19 (go ahead, do it by holding down the CONTROL key while typing v).
82e312c7 20 From now on, you should do this again whenever you finish
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21 reading the screen.
22
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23Note that there is an overlap of two lines when you move from screen
24to screen; this provides some continuity so you can continue reading
25the text.
f751376f 26
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27The first thing that you need to know is how to move around from place
28to place in the text. You already know how to move forward one screen,
29with C-v. To move backwards one screen, type M-v (hold down the META key
bec1289c 30and type v, or type <ESC>v if you do not have a META, EDIT, or ALT key).
f751376f 31
82e312c7 32>> Try typing M-v and then C-v, a few times.
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33
34
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35* SUMMARY
36---------
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37
38The following commands are useful for viewing screenfuls:
39
40 C-v Move forward one screenful
41 M-v Move backward one screenful
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42 C-l Clear screen and redisplay all the text,
43 moving the text around the cursor
44 to the center of the screen.
1e78d347 45 (That's CONTROL-L, not CONTROL-1.)
f751376f 46
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47>> Find the cursor, and note what text is near it.
48 Then type C-l.
49 Find the cursor again and notice that the same text
50 is near the cursor now.
f751376f 51
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52You can also use the PageUp and PageDn keys to move by screenfuls, if
53your terminal has them, but you can edit more efficiently if you use
54C-v and M-v.
49a8a2f5 55
f751376f 56
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57* BASIC CURSOR CONTROL
58----------------------
f751376f 59
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60Moving from screenful to screenful is useful, but how do you
61move to a specific place within the text on the screen?
62
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63There are several ways you can do this. You can use the arrow keys,
64but it's more efficient to keep your hands in the standard position
65and use the commands C-p, C-b, C-f, and C-n. These characters
66are equivalent to the four arrow keys, like this:
177c0ea7 67
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68 Previous line, C-p
69 :
70 :
71 Backward, C-b .... Current cursor position .... Forward, C-f
72 :
73 :
82e312c7 74 Next line, C-n
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75
76>> Move the cursor to the line in the middle of that diagram
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77 using C-n or C-p. Then type C-l to see the whole diagram
78 centered in the screen.
f751376f 79
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80You'll find it easy to remember these letters by words they stand for:
81P for previous, N for next, B for backward and F for forward. You
82will be using these basic cursor positioning commands all the time.
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83
84>> Do a few C-n's to bring the cursor down to this line.
85
86>> Move into the line with C-f's and then up with C-p's.
87 See what C-p does when the cursor is in the middle of the line.
88
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89Each line of text ends with a Newline character, which serves to
90separate it from the following line. The last line in your file ought
91to have a Newline at the end (but Emacs does not require it to have
92one).
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93
94>> Try to C-b at the beginning of a line. It should move to
95 the end of the previous line. This is because it moves back
96 across the Newline character.
f751376f 97
82e312c7 98C-f can move across a Newline just like C-b.
f751376f 99
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100>> Do a few more C-b's, so you get a feel for where the cursor is.
101 Then do C-f's to return to the end of the line.
102 Then do one more C-f to move to the following line.
f751376f 103
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104When you move past the top or bottom of the screen, the text beyond
105the edge shifts onto the screen. This is called "scrolling". It
106enables Emacs to move the cursor to the specified place in the text
107without moving it off the screen.
108
109>> Try to move the cursor off the bottom of the screen with C-n, and
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110 see what happens.
111
112If moving by characters is too slow, you can move by words. M-f
1e78d347 113(META-f) moves forward a word and M-b moves back a word.
f751376f 114
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115>> Type a few M-f's and M-b's.
116
117When you are in the middle of a word, M-f moves to the end of the word.
118When you are in whitespace between words, M-f moves to the end of the
119following word. M-b works likewise in the opposite direction.
120
121>> Type M-f and M-b a few times, interspersed with C-f's and C-b's
122 so that you can observe the action of M-f and M-b from various
123 places inside and between words.
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124
125Notice the parallel between C-f and C-b on the one hand, and M-f and
126M-b on the other hand. Very often Meta characters are used for
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127operations related to the units defined by language (words, sentences,
128paragraphs), while Control characters operate on basic units that are
129independent of what you are editing (characters, lines, etc).
130
131This parallel applies between lines and sentences: C-a and C-e move to
132the beginning or end of a line, and M-a and M-e move to the beginning
133or end of a sentence.
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134
135>> Try a couple of C-a's, and then a couple of C-e's.
136 Try a couple of M-a's, and then a couple of M-e's.
137
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138See how repeated C-a's do nothing, but repeated M-a's keep moving one
139more sentence. Although these are not quite analogous, each one seems
140natural.
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141
142The location of the cursor in the text is also called "point". To
143paraphrase, the cursor shows on the screen where point is located in
144the text.
145
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146Here is a summary of simple cursor-moving operations, including the
147word and sentence moving commands:
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148
149 C-f Move forward a character
150 C-b Move backward a character
151
152 M-f Move forward a word
153 M-b Move backward a word
154
155 C-n Move to next line
156 C-p Move to previous line
157
158 C-a Move to beginning of line
159 C-e Move to end of line
160
161 M-a Move back to beginning of sentence
162 M-e Move forward to end of sentence
163
f751376f 164>> Try all of these commands now a few times for practice.
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165 These are the most often used commands.
166
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167Two other important cursor motion commands are M-< (META Less-than),
168which moves to the beginning of the whole text, and M-> (META
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169Greater-than), which moves to the end of the whole text.
170
171On most terminals, the "<" is above the comma, so you must use the
172shift key to type it. On these terminals you must use the shift key
173to type M-< also; without the shift key, you would be typing M-comma.
174
175>> Try M-< now, to move to the beginning of the tutorial.
176 Then use C-v repeatedly to move back here.
177
178>> Try M-> now, to move to the end of the tutorial.
179 Then use M-v repeatedly to move back here.
180
181You can also move the cursor with the arrow keys, if your terminal has
182arrow keys. We recommend learning C-b, C-f, C-n and C-p for three
183reasons. First, they work on all kinds of terminals. Second, once
8806d20f 184you gain practice at using Emacs, you will find that typing these Control
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185characters is faster than typing the arrow keys (because you do not
186have to move your hands away from touch-typing position). Third, once
8806d20f 187you form the habit of using these Control character commands, you can
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188easily learn to use other advanced cursor motion commands as well.
189
190Most Emacs commands accept a numeric argument; for most commands, this
191serves as a repeat-count. The way you give a command a repeat count
192is by typing C-u and then the digits before you type the command. If
6f108a37 193you have a META (or EDIT or ALT) key, there is another, alternative way
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194to enter a numeric argument: type the digits while holding down the
195META key. We recommend learning the C-u method because it works on
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196any terminal. The numeric argument is also called a "prefix argument",
197because you type the argument before the command it applies to.
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198
199For instance, C-u 8 C-f moves forward eight characters.
177c0ea7 200
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201>> Try using C-n or C-p with a numeric argument, to move the cursor
202 to a line near this one with just one command.
f751376f 203
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204Most commands use the numeric argument as a repeat count, but some
205commands use it in some other way. Several commands (but none of
206those you have learned so far) use it as a flag--the presence of a
207prefix argument, regardless of its value, makes the command do
208something different.
209
210C-v and M-v are another kind of exception. When given an argument,
211they scroll the screen up or down by that many lines, rather than by a
212screenful. For example, C-u 8 C-v scrolls the screen by 8 lines.
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213
214>> Try typing C-u 8 C-v now.
215
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216This should have scrolled the screen up by 8 lines. If you would like
217to scroll it down again, you can give an argument to M-v.
f751376f 218
fc19ea9d 219If you are using a windowed display, such as X11 or MS-Windows, there
541a0de1 220should be a tall rectangular area called a scroll bar at the
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221side of the Emacs window. You can scroll the text by clicking the
222mouse in the scroll bar.
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223
224>> Try pressing the middle button at the top of the highlighted area
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225 within the scroll bar. This should scroll the text to a position
226 determined by how high or low you click.
b0874bbd 227
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228>> Try moving the mouse up and down, while holding the middle button
229 pressed down. You'll see that the text scrolls up and down as
230 you move the mouse.
b0874bbd 231
f751376f 232
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233* WHEN EMACS IS HUNG
234--------------------
f751376f 235
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236If Emacs stops responding to your commands, you can stop it safely by
237typing C-g. You can use C-g to stop a command which is taking too
238long to execute.
239
f751376f 240You can also use C-g to discard a numeric argument or the beginning of
82e312c7 241a command that you do not want to finish.
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242
243>> Type C-u 100 to make a numeric arg of 100, then type C-g.
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244 Now type C-f. It should move just one character,
245 because you canceled the argument with C-g.
f751376f 246
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247If you have typed an <ESC> by mistake, you can get rid of it
248with a C-g.
335b1952 249
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250
251* DISABLED COMMANDS
252-------------------
253
254Some Emacs commands are "disabled" so that beginning users cannot use
255them by accident.
256
257If you type one of the disabled commands, Emacs displays a message
258saying what the command was, and asking you whether you want to go
259ahead and execute the command.
260
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261If you really want to try the command, type <SPC> (the Space bar) in
262answer to the question. Normally, if you do not want to execute the
263disabled command, answer the question with "n".
82e312c7 264
70f4a594 265>> Type C-x C-l (which is a disabled command),
82e312c7 266 then type n to answer the question.
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267
268
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269* WINDOWS
270---------
f751376f 271
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272Emacs can have several windows, each displaying its own text. We will
273explain later on how to use multiple windows. Right now we want to
274explain how to get rid of extra windows and go back to basic
275one-window editing. It is simple:
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276
277 C-x 1 One window (i.e., kill all other windows).
278
1e78d347 279That is CONTROL-x followed by the digit 1. C-x 1 expands the window
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280which contains the cursor, to occupy the full screen. It deletes all
281other windows.
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282
283>> Move the cursor to this line and type C-u 0 C-l.
1e78d347 284>> Type CONTROL-h k CONTROL-f.
f751376f 285 See how this window shrinks, while a new one appears
1e78d347 286 to display documentation on the CONTROL-f command.
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287
288>> Type C-x 1 and see the documentation listing window disappear.
289
8806d20f 290This command is unlike the other commands you have learned in that it
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291consists of two characters. It starts with the character CONTROL-x.
292There is a whole series of commands that start with CONTROL-x; many of
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293them have to do with windows, files, buffers, and related things.
294These commands are two, three or four characters long.
295
f751376f 296
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297* INSERTING AND DELETING
298------------------------
f751376f 299
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300If you want to insert text, just type the text. Characters which you
301can see, such as A, 7, *, etc. are taken by Emacs as text and inserted
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302immediately. Type <Return> (the carriage-return key) to insert a
303Newline character.
304
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305You can delete the last character you typed by typing <Delback>.
306<Delback> is a key on the keyboard--the same one you normally use,
307outside Emacs, for deleting the last character you typed. It is
308normally a large key a couple of lines up from the <Return> key, and
309it is usually labeled "Delete", "Del" or "Backspace".
50d326a4 310
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311If the large key there is labeled "Backspace", then that's the one you
312use for <Delback>. There may also be another key labeled "Delete"
313somewhere else, but that's not <Delback>.
314
315More generally, <Delback> deletes the character immediately before the
50d326a4 316current cursor position.
f751376f 317
82e312c7 318>> Do this now--type a few characters, then delete them
d6635fa1 319 by typing <Delback> a few times. Don't worry about this file
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320 being changed; you will not alter the master tutorial. This is
321 your personal copy of it.
322
323When a line of text gets too big for one line on the screen, the line
324of text is "continued" onto a second screen line. A backslash ("\")
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325(or, if you're using a windowed display, a little curved arrow) at the
326right margin indicates a line which has been continued.
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327
328>> Insert text until you reach the right margin, and keep on inserting.
329 You'll see a continuation line appear.
330
d6635fa1 331>> Use <Delback>s to delete the text until the line fits on one screen
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332 line again. The continuation line goes away.
333
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334You can delete a Newline character just like any other character.
335Deleting the Newline character between two lines merges them into
336one line. If the resulting combined line is too long to fit in the
337screen width, it will be displayed with a continuation line.
338
d6635fa1 339>> Move the cursor to the beginning of a line and type <Delback>. This
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340 merges that line with the previous line.
341
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342>> Type <Return> to reinsert the Newline you deleted.
343
344Remember that most Emacs commands can be given a repeat count;
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345this includes text characters. Repeating a text character inserts
346it several times.
f751376f 347
82e312c7 348>> Try that now -- type C-u 8 * to insert ********.
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349
350You've now learned the most basic way of typing something in
351Emacs and correcting errors. You can delete by words or lines
352as well. Here is a summary of the delete operations:
353
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354 <Delback> Delete the character just before the cursor
355 C-d Delete the next character after the cursor
f751376f 356
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357 M-<Delback> Kill the word immediately before the cursor
358 M-d Kill the next word after the cursor
f751376f 359
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360 C-k Kill from the cursor position to end of line
361 M-k Kill to the end of the current sentence
f751376f 362
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363Notice that <Delback> and C-d vs M-<Delback> and M-d extend the parallel
364started by C-f and M-f (well, <Delback> is not really a control
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365character, but let's not worry about that). C-k and M-k are like C-e
366and M-e, sort of, in that lines are opposite sentences.
367
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368You can also kill any part of the text with one uniform method. Move
369to one end of that part, and type C-@ or C-<SPC> (either one). (<SPC>
370is the Space bar.) Move to the other end of that part, and type C-w.
371That kills all the text between the two positions.
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372
373>> Move the cursor to the Y at the start of the previous paragraph.
41835686 374>> Type C-<SPC>. Emacs should display a message "Mark set"
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375 at the bottom of the screen.
376>> Move the cursor to the n in "end", on the second line of the
377 paragraph.
378>> Type C-w. This will kill the text starting from the Y,
379 and ending just before the n.
380
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381The difference between "killing" and "deleting" is that "killed" text
382can be reinserted, whereas "deleted" things cannot be reinserted.
383Reinsertion of killed text is called "yanking". Generally, the
384commands that can remove a lot of text kill the text (they set up so
385that you can yank the text), while the commands that remove just one
3d9a3367 386character, or only remove blank lines and spaces, do deletion (so you
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387cannot yank that text). <Delback> and C-d do deletion in the simplest
388case, with no argument. When given an argument, they kill instead.
f751376f 389
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390>> Move the cursor to the beginning of a line which is not empty.
391 Then type C-k to kill the text on that line.
392>> Type C-k a second time. You'll see that it kills the Newline
393 which follows that line.
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394
395Note that a single C-k kills the contents of the line, and a second
6f108a37 396C-k kills the line itself, and makes all the other lines move up. C-k
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397treats a numeric argument specially: it kills that many lines AND
398their contents. This is not mere repetition. C-u 2 C-k kills two
399lines and their newlines; typing C-k twice would not do that.
f751376f 400
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401Bringing back killed text is called "yanking". (Think of it as
402yanking back, or pulling back, some text that was taken away.) You
403can yank the killed text either at the same place where it was killed,
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404or at some other place in the text you are editing, or even in a
405different file. You can yank the same text several times; that makes
406multiple copies of it.
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407
408The command for yanking is C-y. It reinserts the last killed text,
409at the current cursor position.
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410
411>> Try it; type C-y to yank the text back.
412
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413If you do several C-k's in a row, all of the killed text is saved
414together, so that one C-y will yank all of the lines at once.
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415
416>> Do this now, type C-k several times.
417
418Now to retrieve that killed text:
419
420>> Type C-y. Then move the cursor down a few lines and type C-y
421 again. You now see how to copy some text.
422
423What do you do if you have some text you want to yank back, and then
424you kill something else? C-y would yank the more recent kill. But
425the previous text is not lost. You can get back to it using the M-y
426command. After you have done C-y to get the most recent kill, typing
bec1289c 427M-y replaces that yanked text with the previous kill. Typing M-y
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428again and again brings in earlier and earlier kills. When you have
429reached the text you are looking for, you do not have to do anything to
430keep it. Just go on with your editing, leaving the yanked text where
431it is.
432
433If you M-y enough times, you come back to the starting point (the most
434recent kill).
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435
436>> Kill a line, move around, kill another line.
437 Then do C-y to get back the second killed line.
438 Then do M-y and it will be replaced by the first killed line.
439 Do more M-y's and see what you get. Keep doing them until
440 the second kill line comes back, and then a few more.
441 If you like, you can try giving M-y positive and negative
442 arguments.
443
444
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445* UNDO
446------
f751376f 447
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448If you make a change to the text, and then decide that it was a
449mistake, you can undo the change with the undo command, C-x u.
450
451Normally, C-x u undoes the changes made by one command; if you repeat
452the C-x u several times in a row, each repetition undoes one
453additional command.
454
455But there are two exceptions: commands that do not change the text do
456not count (this includes cursor motion commands and scrolling
457command), and self-inserting characters are usually handled in groups
458of up to 20. (This is to reduce the number of C-x u's you have to
459type to undo insertion of text.)
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460
461>> Kill this line with C-k, then type C-x u and it should reappear.
462
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463C-_ is an alternative undo command; it works just the same as C-x u,
464but it is easier to type several times in a row. The disadvantage of
465C-_ is that on some keyboards it is not obvious how to type it. That
466is why we provide C-x u as well. On some terminals, you can type C-_
8806d20f 467by typing / while holding down CONTROL.
f751376f 468
82e312c7 469A numeric argument to C-_ or C-x u acts as a repeat count.
f751376f 470
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471You can undo deletion of text just as you can undo killing of text.
472The distinction between killing something and deleting it affects
473whether you can yank it with C-y; it makes no difference for undo.
474
f751376f 475
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476* FILES
477-------
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478
479In order to make the text you edit permanent, you must put it in a
480file. Otherwise, it will go away when your invocation of Emacs goes
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481away. In order to put your text in a file, you must "find" the file
482before you enter the text. (This is also called "visiting" the file.)
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483
484Finding a file means that you see the contents of the file within
485Emacs. In many ways, it is as if you were editing the file itself.
486However, the changes you make using Emacs do not become permanent
487until you "save" the file. This is so you can avoid leaving a
488half-changed file on the system when you do not want to. Even when
489you save, Emacs leaves the original file under a changed name in case
490you later decide that your changes were a mistake.
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491
492If you look near the bottom of the screen you will see a line that
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493begins and ends with dashes, and starts with "--:-- TUTORIAL" or
494something like that. This part of the screen normally shows the name
495of the file that you are visiting. Right now, you are visiting a file
496called "TUTORIAL" which is your personal scratch copy of the Emacs
497tutorial. When you find a file with Emacs, that file's name will
498appear in that precise spot.
f751376f 499
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500One special thing about the command for finding a file is that you
501have to say what file name you want. We say the command "reads an
502argument from the terminal" (in this case, the argument is the name of
503the file). After you type the command
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504
505 C-x C-f Find a file
506
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507Emacs asks you to type the file name. The file name you type appears
508on the bottom line of the screen. The bottom line is called the
509minibuffer when it is used for this sort of input. You can use
510ordinary Emacs editing commands to edit the file name.
511
512While you are entering the file name (or any minibuffer input),
513you can cancel the command with C-g.
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514
515>> Type C-x C-f, then type C-g. This cancels the minibuffer,
516 and also cancels the C-x C-f command that was using the
517 minibuffer. So you do not find any file.
518
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519When you have finished entering the file name, type <Return> to
520terminate it. Then C-x C-f command goes to work, and finds the file
521you chose. The minibuffer disappears when the C-x C-f command is
522finished.
523
524In a little while the file contents appear on the screen, and you can
525edit the contents. When you wish to make your changes permanent,
526type the command
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527
528 C-x C-s Save the file
529
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530This copies the text within Emacs into the file. The first time you
531do this, Emacs renames the original file to a new name so that it is
532not lost. The new name is made by adding "~" to the end of the
533original file's name.
f751376f 534
fafee579 535When saving is finished, Emacs displays the name of the file written.
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536You should save fairly often, so that you will not lose very much
537work if the system should crash.
538
539>> Type C-x C-s, saving your copy of the tutorial.
fafee579 540 This should show "Wrote ...TUTORIAL" at the bottom of the screen.
f751376f 541
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542NOTE: On some systems, typing C-x C-s will freeze the screen and you
543will see no further output from Emacs. This indicates that an
544operating system "feature" called "flow control" is intercepting the
545C-s and not letting it get through to Emacs. To unfreeze the screen,
546type C-q. Then see the section "Spontaneous Entry to Incremental
547Search" in the Emacs manual for advice on dealing with this "feature".
548
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549You can find an existing file, to view it or edit it. You can also
550find a file which does not already exist. This is the way to create a
551file with Emacs: find the file, which will start out empty, and then
552begin inserting the text for the file. When you ask to "save" the
553file, Emacs will really create the file with the text that you have
554inserted. From then on, you can consider yourself to be editing an
555already existing file.
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556
557
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558* BUFFERS
559---------
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560
561If you find a second file with C-x C-f, the first file remains
562inside Emacs. You can switch back to it by finding it again with
563C-x C-f. This way you can get quite a number of files inside Emacs.
564
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565>> Create a file named "foo" by typing C-x C-f foo <Return>.
566 Then insert some text, edit it, and save "foo" by typing C-x C-s.
567 Finally, type C-x C-f TUTORIAL <Return>
568 to come back to the tutorial.
569
73635959 570Emacs stores each file's text inside an object called a "buffer".
82e312c7 571Finding a file makes a new buffer inside Emacs. To see a list of the
73635959 572buffers that currently exist in your Emacs job, type
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573
574 C-x C-b List buffers
575
576>> Try C-x C-b now.
577
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578See how each buffer has a name, and it may also have a file name for
579the file whose contents it holds. ANY text you see in an Emacs window
82e312c7 580is always part of some buffer.
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581
582>> Type C-x 1 to get rid of the buffer list.
583
f458a8e0 584When you have several buffers, only one of them is "current" at any
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585time. That buffer is the one you edit. If you want to edit another
586buffer, you need to "switch" to it. If you want to switch to a buffer
587that corresponds to a file, you can do it by visiting the file again
588with C-x C-f. But there is an easier way: use the C-x b command.
589In that command, you have to type the buffer's name.
590
591>> Type C-x b foo <Return> to go back to the buffer "foo" which holds
592 the text of the file "foo". Then type C-x b TUTORIAL <Return>
593 to come back to this tutorial.
594
595Most of the time, the buffer's name is the same as the file name
596(without the file directory part). However, this is not always true.
597The buffer list you make with C-x C-b always shows you the name of
598every buffer.
599
600ANY text you see in an Emacs window is always part of some buffer.
601Some buffers do not correspond to files. For example, the buffer
602named "*Buffer List*" does not have any file. It is the buffer which
603contains the buffer list that you made with C-x C-b. The buffer named
604"*Messages*" also does not correspond to any file; it contains the
605messages that have appeared on the bottom line during your Emacs
606session.
607
608>> Type C-x b *Messages* <Return> to look at the buffer of messages.
ff7de4ee 609 Then type C-x b TUTORIAL <Return> to come back to this tutorial.
8d60818b 610
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611If you make changes to the text of one file, then find another file,
612this does not save the first file. Its changes remain inside Emacs,
613in that file's buffer. The creation or editing of the second file's
614buffer has no effect on the first file's buffer. This is very useful,
615but it also means that you need a convenient way to save the first
616file's buffer. It would be a nuisance to have to switch back to
617it with C-x C-f in order to save it with C-x C-s. So we have
618
619 C-x s Save some buffers
620
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621C-x s asks you about each buffer which contains changes that you have
622not saved. It asks you, for each such buffer, whether to save the
623buffer.
f751376f 624
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625>> Insert a line of text, then type C-x s.
626 It should ask you whether to save the buffer named TUTORIAL.
627 Answer yes to the question by typing "y".
f751376f 628
5577e2b2 629
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630* EXTENDING THE COMMAND SET
631---------------------------
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632
633There are many, many more Emacs commands than could possibly be put
634on all the control and meta characters. Emacs gets around this with
635the X (eXtend) command. This comes in two flavors:
636
637 C-x Character eXtend. Followed by one character.
638 M-x Named command eXtend. Followed by a long name.
639
640These are commands that are generally useful but used less than the
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641commands you have already learned about. You have already seen a few
642of them: the file commands C-x C-f to Find and C-x C-s to Save, for
643example. Another example is the command to end the Emacs
644session--this is the command C-x C-c. (Do not worry about losing
645changes you have made; C-x C-c offers to save each changed file before
646it kills the Emacs.)
f751376f 647
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648If you are using a graphical display that supports multiple
649applications in parallel, you don't need any special command to move
650from Emacs to another application. You can do this with the mouse or
651with window manager commands. However, if you're using a text
652terminal which can only show one application at a time, you need to
653"suspend" Emacs to move to any other program.
82e312c7 654
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655C-z is the command to exit Emacs *temporarily*--so that you can go
656back to the same Emacs session afterward. When Emacs is running on a
657text terminal, C-z "suspends" Emacs; that is, it returns to the shell
658but does not destroy the Emacs. In the most common shells, you can
659resume Emacs with the `fg' command or with `%emacs'.
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660
661The time to use C-x C-c is when you are about to log out. It's also
662the right thing to use to exit an Emacs invoked under mail handling
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663programs and other miscellaneous utilities, since they may not know
664how to cope with suspension of Emacs. In ordinary circumstances,
665though, if you are not about to log out, it is better to suspend Emacs
666with C-z instead of exiting Emacs.
f751376f 667
82e312c7 668There are many C-x commands. Here is a list of the ones you have learned:
f751376f 669
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670 C-x C-f Find file
671 C-x C-s Save file
672 C-x s Save some buffers
673 C-x C-b List buffers
674 C-x b Switch buffer
675 C-x C-c Quit Emacs
676 C-x 1 Delete all but one window
677 C-x u Undo
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678
679Named eXtended commands are commands which are used even less
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680frequently, or commands which are used only in certain modes. An
681example is the command replace-string, which globally replaces one
682string with another. When you type M-x, Emacs prompts you at the
683bottom of the screen with M-x and you should type the name of the
684command; in this case, "replace-string". Just type "repl s<TAB>" and
dcb14dc0 685Emacs will complete the name. (<TAB> is the Tab key, usually found
2f6e6410 686above the CapsLock or Shift key near the left edge of the keyboard.)
dcb14dc0 687End the command name with <Return>.
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688
689The replace-string command requires two arguments--the string to be
690replaced, and the string to replace it with. You must end each
691argument with <Return>.
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692
693>> Move the cursor to the blank line two lines below this one.
694 Then type M-x repl s<Return>changed<Return>altered<Return>.
695
696 Notice how this line has changed: you've replaced
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697 the word c-h-a-n-g-e-d with "altered" wherever it occurred,
698 after the initial position of the cursor.
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699
700
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701* AUTO SAVE
702-----------
703
704When you have made changes in a file, but you have not saved them yet,
705they could be lost if your computer crashes. To protect you from
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706this, Emacs periodically writes an "auto save" file for each file that
707you are editing. The auto save file name has a # at the beginning and
708the end; for example, if your file is named "hello.c", its auto save
709file's name is "#hello.c#". When you save the file in the normal way,
710Emacs deletes its auto save file.
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711
712If the computer crashes, you can recover your auto-saved editing by
713finding the file normally (the file you were editing, not the auto
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714save file) and then typing M-x recover file<Return>. When it asks for
715confirmation, type yes<Return> to go ahead and recover the auto-save
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716data.
717
718
82e312c7 719* ECHO AREA
26dc36e6 720-----------
f751376f 721
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722If Emacs sees that you are typing multicharacter commands slowly, it
723shows them to you at the bottom of the screen in an area called the
724"echo area". The echo area contains the bottom line of the screen.
f751376f 725
f751376f 726
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727* MODE LINE
728-----------
729
e64159dd 730The line immediately above the echo area is called the "mode line".
82e312c7
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731The mode line says something like this:
732
41835686 733--:** TUTORIAL 63% L749 (Fundamental)-----------------------
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734
735This line gives useful information about the status of Emacs and
736the text you are editing.
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737
738You already know what the filename means--it is the file you have
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739found. NN% indicates your current position in the text; it means that
740NN percent of the text is above the top of the screen. If the top of
741the file is on the screen, it will say "Top" instead of " 0%". If the
742bottom of the text is on the screen, it will say "Bot". If you are
743looking at text so small that all of it fits on the screen, the mode
744line says "All".
f751376f 745
dcf671d2
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746The L and digits indicate position in another way: they give the
747current line number of point.
748
f751376f 749The stars near the front mean that you have made changes to the text.
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750Right after you visit or save a file, that part of the mode line shows
751no stars, just dashes.
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752
753The part of the mode line inside the parentheses is to tell you what
82e312c7 754editing modes you are in. The default mode is Fundamental which is
177c0ea7 755what you are using now. It is an example of a "major mode".
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756
757Emacs has many different major modes. Some of them are meant for
bec1289c 758editing different languages and/or kinds of text, such as Lisp mode,
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759Text mode, etc. At any time one and only one major mode is active,
760and its name can always be found in the mode line just where
761"Fundamental" is now.
762
763Each major mode makes a few commands behave differently. For example,
764there are commands for creating comments in a program, and since each
765programming language has a different idea of what a comment should
766look like, each major mode has to insert comments differently. Each
767major mode is the name of an extended command, which is how you can
bec1289c 768switch to that mode. For example, M-x fundamental-mode is a command to
82e312c7 769switch to Fundamental mode.
f751376f 770
ab380f51 771If you are going to be editing human-language text, such as this file, you
f751376f 772should probably use Text Mode.
41835686 773
73635959 774>> Type M-x text mode<Return>.
f751376f 775
e64159dd 776Don't worry, none of the Emacs commands you have learned changes in
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777any great way. But you can observe that M-f and M-b now treat
778apostrophes as part of words. Previously, in Fundamental mode,
779M-f and M-b treated apostrophes as word-separators.
f751376f 780
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781Major modes usually make subtle changes like that one: most commands
782do "the same job" in each major mode, but they work a little bit
783differently.
784
785To view documentation on your current major mode, type C-h m.
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786
787>> Use C-u C-v once or more to bring this line near the top of screen.
788>> Type C-h m, to see how Text mode differs from Fundamental mode.
789>> Type C-x 1 to remove the documentation from the screen.
790
791Major modes are called major because there are also minor modes.
6f108a37 792Minor modes are not alternatives to the major modes, just minor
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793modifications of them. Each minor mode can be turned on or off by
794itself, independent of all other minor modes, and independent of your
795major mode. So you can use no minor modes, or one minor mode, or any
796combination of several minor modes.
f751376f 797
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798One minor mode which is very useful, especially for editing
799human-language text, is Auto Fill mode. When this mode is on, Emacs
800breaks the line in between words automatically whenever you insert
801text and make a line that is too wide.
82e312c7 802
48cc32f0 803You can turn Auto Fill mode on by doing M-x auto fill mode<Return>.
6f108a37 804When the mode is on, you can turn it off again by doing M-x
48cc32f0 805auto fill mode<Return>. If the mode is off, this command turns it on,
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806and if the mode is on, this command turns it off. We say that the
807command "toggles the mode".
f751376f 808
48cc32f0 809>> Type M-x auto fill mode<Return> now. Then insert a line of "asdf "
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810 over again until you see it divide into two lines. You must put in
811 spaces between them because Auto Fill breaks lines only at spaces.
812
813The margin is usually set at 70 characters, but you can change it
814with the C-x f command. You should give the margin setting you want
815as a numeric argument.
816
817>> Type C-x f with an argument of 20. (C-u 2 0 C-x f).
818 Then type in some text and see Emacs fill lines of 20
819 characters with it. Then set the margin back to 70 using
820 C-x f again.
821
e64159dd 822If you make changes in the middle of a paragraph, Auto Fill mode
f751376f 823does not re-fill it for you.
1e78d347 824To re-fill the paragraph, type M-q (META-q) with the cursor inside
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825that paragraph.
826
827>> Move the cursor into the previous paragraph and type M-q.
828
5577e2b2 829
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830* SEARCHING
831-----------
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832
833Emacs can do searches for strings (these are groups of contiguous
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834characters or words) either forward through the text or backward
835through it. Searching for a string is a cursor motion command;
836it moves the cursor to the next place where that string appears.
837
838The Emacs search command is different from the search commands
839of most editors, in that it is "incremental". This means that the
840search happens while you type in the string to search for.
841
842The command to initiate a search is C-s for forward search, and C-r
843for reverse search. BUT WAIT! Don't try them now.
844
845When you type C-s you'll notice that the string "I-search" appears as
846a prompt in the echo area. This tells you that Emacs is in what is
847called an incremental search waiting for you to type the thing that
8806d20f 848you want to search for. <Return> terminates a search.
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849
850>> Now type C-s to start a search. SLOWLY, one letter at a time,
851 type the word 'cursor', pausing after you type each
852 character to notice what happens to the cursor.
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853 Now you have searched for "cursor", once.
854>> Type C-s again, to search for the next occurrence of "cursor".
d6635fa1 855>> Now type <Delback> four times and see how the cursor moves.
8806d20f 856>> Type <Return> to terminate the search.
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857
858Did you see what happened? Emacs, in an incremental search, tries to
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859go to the occurrence of the string that you've typed out so far. To
860go to the next occurrence of 'cursor' just type C-s again. If no such
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861occurrence exists, Emacs beeps and tells you the search is currently
862"failing". C-g would also terminate the search.
f751376f 863
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864NOTE: On some systems, typing C-s will freeze the screen and you will
865see no further output from Emacs. This indicates that an operating
866system "feature" called "flow control" is intercepting the C-s and not
867letting it get through to Emacs. To unfreeze the screen, type C-q.
868Then see the section "Spontaneous Entry to Incremental Search" in the
869Emacs manual for advice on dealing with this "feature".
870
d6635fa1 871If you are in the middle of an incremental search and type <Delback>,
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872you'll notice that the last character in the search string is erased
873and the search backs up to the last place of the search. For
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874instance, suppose you have typed "c", to search for the first
875occurrence of "c". Now if you type "u", the cursor will move
d6635fa1 876to the first occurrence of "cu". Now type <Delback>. This erases
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877the "u" from the search string, and the cursor moves back to
878the first occurrence of "c".
f751376f 879
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880If you are in the middle of a search and type a control or meta
881character (with a few exceptions--characters that are special in
882a search, such as C-s and C-r), the search is terminated.
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883
884The C-s starts a search that looks for any occurrence of the search
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885string AFTER the current cursor position. If you want to search for
886something earlier in the text, type C-r instead. Everything that we
887have said about C-s also applies to C-r, except that the direction of
888the search is reversed.
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889
890
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891* MULTIPLE WINDOWS
892------------------
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893
894One of the nice features of Emacs is that you can display more than one
895window on the screen at the same time.
896
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897>> Move the cursor to this line and type C-u 0 C-l (that's CONTROL-L, not
898 CONTROL-1).
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899
900>> Now type C-x 2 which splits the screen into two windows.
901 Both windows display this tutorial. The cursor stays in the top window.
902
903>> Type C-M-v to scroll the bottom window.
41835686 904 (If you do not have a real META key, type <ESC> C-v.)
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905
906>> Type C-x o ("o" for "other") to move the cursor to the bottom window.
907>> Use C-v and M-v in the bottom window to scroll it.
908 Keep reading these directions in the top window.
909
910>> Type C-x o again to move the cursor back to the top window.
82e312c7 911 The cursor in the top window is just where it was before.
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912
913You can keep using C-x o to switch between the windows. Each
914window has its own cursor position, but only one window actually
915shows the cursor. All the ordinary editing commands apply to the
82e312c7 916window that the cursor is in. We call this the "selected window".
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917
918The command C-M-v is very useful when you are editing text in one
919window and using the other window just for reference. You can keep
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920the cursor always in the window where you are editing, and advance
921through the other window sequentially with C-M-v.
e652a34a 922
8a4aff68 923C-M-v is an example of a CONTROL-META character. If you have a real
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924META key, you can type C-M-v by holding down both CONTROL and META while
925typing v. It does not matter whether CONTROL or META "comes first,"
82e312c7 926because both of these keys act by modifying the characters you type.
8a4aff68 927
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928If you do not have a real META key, and you use <ESC> instead, the
929order does matter: you must type <ESC> followed by CONTROL-v, because
930CONTROL-<ESC> v will not work. This is because <ESC> is a character
931in its own right, not a modifier key.
8a4aff68 932
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933>> Type C-x 1 (in the top window) to get rid of the bottom window.
934
935(If you had typed C-x 1 in the bottom window, that would get rid
936of the top one. Think of this command as "Keep just one
937window--the window I am already in.")
938
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939You do not have to display the same buffer in both windows. If you
940use C-x C-f to find a file in one window, the other window does not
941change. You can find a file in each window independently.
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942
943Here is another way to use two windows to display two different
944things:
945
946>> Type C-x 4 C-f followed by the name of one of your files.
82e312c7 947 End with <Return>. See the specified file appear in the bottom
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948 window. The cursor goes there, too.
949
950>> Type C-x o to go back to the top window, and C-x 1 to delete
951 the bottom window.
952
953
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954* RECURSIVE EDITING LEVELS
955--------------------------
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956
957Sometimes you will get into what is called a "recursive editing
958level". This is indicated by square brackets in the mode line,
959surrounding the parentheses around the major mode name. For
960example, you might see [(Fundamental)] instead of (Fundamental).
961
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962To get out of the recursive editing level, type <ESC> <ESC> <ESC>.
963That is an all-purpose "get out" command. You can also use it for
964eliminating extra windows, and getting out of the minibuffer.
f751376f 965
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966>> Type M-x to get into a minibuffer; then type <ESC> <ESC> <ESC> to
967 get out.
f751376f 968
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969You cannot use C-g to get out of a recursive editing level. This is
970because C-g is used for canceling commands and arguments WITHIN the
971recursive editing level.
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972
973
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974* GETTING MORE HELP
975-------------------
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976
977In this tutorial we have tried to supply just enough information to
978get you started using Emacs. There is so much available in Emacs that
979it would be impossible to explain it all here. However, you may want
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980to learn more about Emacs since it has many other useful features.
981Emacs provides commands for reading documentation about Emacs
982commands. These "help" commands all start with the character
1e78d347 983CONTROL-h, which is called "the Help character".
f751376f 984
82e312c7 985To use the Help features, type the C-h character, and then a
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986character saying what kind of help you want. If you are REALLY lost,
987type C-h ? and Emacs will tell you what kinds of help it can give.
82e312c7 988If you have typed C-h and decide you do not want any help, just
3242b6f0 989type C-g to cancel it.
f751376f 990
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991(Some sites change the meaning of the character C-h. They really
992should not do this as a blanket measure for all users, so you have
993grounds to complain to the system administrator. Meanwhile, if C-h
994does not display a message about help at the bottom of the screen, try
8806d20f 995typing the F1 key or M-x help <Return> instead.)
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996
997The most basic HELP feature is C-h c. Type C-h, the character c, and
998a command character or sequence; then Emacs displays a very brief
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999description of the command.
1000
dcf671d2 1001>> Type C-h c C-p.
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1002
1003The message should be something like this:
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1004
1005 C-p runs the command previous-line
1006
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1007This tells you the "name of the function". Function names are used
1008mainly for customizing and extending Emacs. But since function names
1009are chosen to indicate what the command does, they can serve also as
1010very brief documentation--sufficient to remind you of commands you
1011have already learned.
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1012
1013Multi-character commands such as C-x C-s and (if you have no META or
bec1289c 1014EDIT or ALT key) <ESC>v are also allowed after C-h c.
f751376f 1015
82e312c7 1016To get more information about a command, use C-h k instead of C-h c.
f751376f 1017
dcf671d2 1018>> Type C-h k C-p.
f751376f 1019
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1020This displays the documentation of the function, as well as its
1021name, in an Emacs window. When you are finished reading the
1022output, type C-x 1 to get rid of the help text. You do not have
1023to do this right away. You can do some editing while referring
82e312c7 1024to the help text, and then type C-x 1.
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1025
1026Here are some other useful C-h options:
1027
1028 C-h f Describe a function. You type in the name of the
1029 function.
1030
1031>> Try typing C-h f previous-line<Return>.
fafee579 1032 This displays all the information Emacs has about the
3242b6f0 1033 function which implements the C-p command.
f751376f 1034
fafee579 1035A similar command C-h v displays the documentation of variables whose
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1036values you can set to customize Emacs behavior. You need to type in
1037the name of the variable when Emacs prompts for it.
1038
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1039 C-h a Command Apropos. Type in a keyword and Emacs will list
1040 all the commands whose names contain that keyword.
1e78d347 1041 These commands can all be invoked with META-x.
f751376f 1042 For some commands, Command Apropos will also list a one
bec1289c 1043 or two character sequence which runs the same command.
f751376f 1044
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1045>> Type C-h a file<Return>.
1046
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1047This displays in another window a list of all M-x commands with "file"
1048in their names. You will see character-commands like C-x C-f listed
1049beside the corresponding command names such as find-file.
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1050
1051>> Type C-M-v to scroll the help window. Do this a few times.
1052
1053>> Type C-x 1 to delete the help window.
f751376f 1054
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1055 C-h i Read On-line Manuals (a.k.a. Info). This command puts
1056 you into a special buffer called `*info*' where you
1057 can read on-line manuals for the packages installed on
1058 your system. Type m emacs <Return> to read the Emacs
1059 manual. If you have never before used Info, type ?
1060 and Emacs will take you on a guided tour of Info mode
1061 facilities. Once you are through with this tutorial,
1062 you should consult the Emacs Info manual as your
1063 primary documentation.
1064
f751376f 1065
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1066* MORE FEATURES
1067---------------
1068
1069You can learn more about Emacs by reading its manual, either as a book
1070or on-line in Info (use the Help menu or type F10 h r). Two features
1071that you may like especially are completion, which saves typing, and
1072dired, which simplifies file handling.
1073
1074Completion is a way to avoid unnecessary typing. For instance, if you
1075want to switch to the *Messages* buffer, you can type C-x b *M<Tab>
1076and Emacs will fill in the rest of the buffer name as far as it can
1077determine from what you have already typed. Completion is described
1078in Info in the Emacs manual in the node called "Completion".
1079
1080Dired enables you to list files in a directory (and optionally its
1081subdirectories), move around that list, visit, rename, delete and
1082otherwise operate on the files. Dired is described in Info in the
1083Emacs manual in the node called "Dired".
1084
1085The manual also describes many other Emacs features.
1086
1087
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1088* CONCLUSION
1089------------
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1090
1091Remember, to exit Emacs permanently use C-x C-c. To exit to a shell
82e312c7 1092temporarily, so that you can come back to Emacs afterward, use C-z.
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1093
1094This tutorial is meant to be understandable to all new users, so if
1095you found something unclear, don't sit and blame yourself - complain!
1096
1097
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1098* COPYING
1099---------
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1100
1101This tutorial descends from a long line of Emacs tutorials
1102starting with the one written by Stuart Cracraft for the original Emacs.
1103
1104This version of the tutorial, like GNU Emacs, is copyrighted, and
1105comes with permission to distribute copies on certain conditions:
1106
bfd6d01a 1107Copyright (C) 1985, 1996, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,
4e6835db 1108 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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1109
1110 Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies
1111 of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the
1112 copyright notice and permission notice are preserved,
1113 and that the distributor grants the recipient permission
1114 for further redistribution as permitted by this notice.
1115
1116 Permission is granted to distribute modified versions
1117 of this document, or of portions of it,
1118 under the above conditions, provided also that they
1119 carry prominent notices stating who last altered them.
1120
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1121The conditions for copying Emacs itself are more complex, but in the
1122same spirit. Please read the file COPYING and then do give copies of
1123GNU Emacs to your friends. Help stamp out software obstructionism
1124("ownership") by using, writing, and sharing free software!
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1125
1126;;; arch-tag: a0f84628-777f-4238-8865-451a73167f55