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[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / emacs / glossary.texi
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1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2@c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2002,
6ed161e1 3@c 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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4@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5@node Glossary, Key Index, Intro, Top
6@unnumbered Glossary
7
8@table @asis
9@item Abbrev
10An abbrev is a text string which expands into a different text string
11when present in the buffer. For example, you might define a few letters
12as an abbrev for a long phrase that you want to insert frequently.
13@xref{Abbrevs}.
14
15@item Aborting
16Aborting means getting out of a recursive edit (q.v.@:). The
17commands @kbd{C-]} and @kbd{M-x top-level} are used for this.
18@xref{Quitting}.
19
20@item Alt
07ee224d 21Alt is the name of a modifier bit that a keyboard input character may
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22have. To make a character Alt, type it while holding down the @key{ALT}
23key. Such characters are given names that start with @kbd{Alt-}
24(usually written @kbd{A-} for short). (Note that many terminals have a
07ee224d 25key labeled @key{ALT} that is really a @key{META} key.) @xref{User
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26Input, Alt}.
27
28@item Argument
29See `numeric argument.'
30
31@item @acronym{ASCII} character
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32An @acronym{ASCII} character is either an @acronym{ASCII} control
33character or an @acronym{ASCII} printing character. @xref{User Input}.
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34
35@item @acronym{ASCII} control character
36An @acronym{ASCII} control character is the Control version of an upper-case
37letter, or the Control version of one of the characters @samp{@@[\]^_?}.
38
39@item @acronym{ASCII} printing character
40@acronym{ASCII} printing characters include letters, digits, space, and these
41punctuation characters: @samp{!@@#$%^& *()_-+=|\~` @{@}[]:;"' <>,.?/}.
42
43@item Auto Fill Mode
07ee224d 44Auto Fill mode is a minor mode (q.v.@:) in which text that you insert is
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45automatically broken into lines of a given maximum width.
46@xref{Filling}.
47
48@item Auto Saving
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49Auto saving is the practice of periodically saving the contents of an
50Emacs buffer in a specially-named file, so that the information will
51be preserved if the buffer is lost due to a system error or user error.
52@xref{Auto Save}.
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53
54@item Autoloading
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55Emacs can automatically load Lisp libraries when a Lisp program requests a
56function from those libraries. This is called `autoloading.'
57@xref{Lisp Libraries}.
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58
59@item Backtrace
60A backtrace is a trace of a series of function calls showing how a
07ee224d 61program arrived at a certain point. It is used mainly for finding and
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62correcting bugs (q.v.@:). Emacs can display a backtrace when it signals
63an error or when you type @kbd{C-g} (see `quitting'). @xref{Checklist}.
64
65@item Backup File
66A backup file records the contents that a file had before the current
67editing session. Emacs makes backup files automatically to help you
68track down or cancel changes you later regret making. @xref{Backup}.
69
70@item Balancing Parentheses
71Emacs can balance parentheses (or other matching delimiters) either
72manually or automatically. You do manual balancing with the commands
73to move over parenthetical groupings (@pxref{Moving by Parens}).
74Automatic balancing works by blinking or highlighting the delimiter
75that matches the one you just inserted (@pxref{Matching,,Matching
76Parens}).
77
78@item Balanced Expressions
79A balanced expression is a syntactically recognizable expression, such
80as a symbol, number, string constant, block, or parenthesized expression
81in C. @xref{Expressions,Balanced Expressions}.
82
83@item Balloon Help
84See `tooltips.'
85
86@item Base Buffer
87A base buffer is a buffer whose text is shared by an indirect buffer
88(q.v.@:).
89
90@item Bind
91To bind a key sequence means to give it a binding (q.v.@:).
92@xref{Rebinding}.
93
94@item Binding
95A key sequence gets its meaning in Emacs by having a binding, which is a
07ee224d 96command (q.v.@:), a Lisp function that is run when you type that
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97sequence. @xref{Commands,Binding}. Customization often involves
98rebinding a character to a different command function. The bindings of
99all key sequences are recorded in the keymaps (q.v.@:). @xref{Keymaps}.
100
101@item Blank Lines
102Blank lines are lines that contain only whitespace. Emacs has several
103commands for operating on the blank lines in the buffer.
104
105@item Bookmark
106Bookmarks are akin to registers (q.v.@:) in that they record positions
107in buffers to which you can return later. Unlike registers, bookmarks
108persist between Emacs sessions.
109
110@item Border
111A border is a thin space along the edge of the frame, used just for
112spacing, not for displaying anything. An Emacs frame has an ordinary
113external border, outside of everything including the menu bar, plus an
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114internal border that surrounds the text windows, their scroll bars
115and fringes, and separates them from the menu bar and tool bar. You
116can customize both borders with options and resources (@pxref{Borders
117X}). Borders are not the same as fringes (q.v.@:).
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118
119@item Buffer
120The buffer is the basic editing unit; one buffer corresponds to one text
121being edited. You can have several buffers, but at any time you are
122editing only one, the `current buffer,' though several can be visible
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123when you are using multiple windows or frames (q.v.@:). Most buffers
124are visiting (q.v.@:) some file. @xref{Buffers}.
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125
126@item Buffer Selection History
127Emacs keeps a buffer selection history which records how recently each
128Emacs buffer has been selected. This is used for choosing a buffer to
129select. @xref{Buffers}.
130
131@item Bug
132A bug is an incorrect or unreasonable behavior of a program, or
133inaccurate or confusing documentation. Emacs developers treat bug
134reports, both in Emacs code and its documentation, very seriously and
135ask you to report any bugs you find. @xref{Bugs}.
136
137@item Button Down Event
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138A button down event is the kind of input event (q.v.@:) generated
139right away when you press down on a mouse button. @xref{Mouse Buttons}.
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140
141@item By Default
142See `default.'
143
144@item Byte Compilation
145See `compilation.'
146
147@item @kbd{C-}
148@kbd{C-} in the name of a character is an abbreviation for Control.
149@xref{User Input,C-}.
150
151@item @kbd{C-M-}
152@kbd{C-M-} in the name of a character is an abbreviation for
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153Control-Meta. If your terminal lacks a real @key{META} key, you type
154a Control-Meta character by typing @key{ESC} and then typing the
155corresponding Control character. @xref{User Input,C-M-}.
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156
157@item Case Conversion
158Case conversion means changing text from upper case to lower case or
159vice versa. @xref{Case}, for the commands for case conversion.
160
161@item Character
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162Characters form the contents of an Emacs buffer. Also, key sequences
163(q.v.@:) are usually made up of characters (though they may include
164other input events as well). @xref{User Input}.
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165
166@item Character Set
167Emacs supports a number of character sets, each of which represents a
168particular alphabet or script. @xref{International}.
169
170@item Character Terminal
171See `text-only terminal.'
172
173@item Click Event
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174A click event is the kind of input event (q.v.@:) generated when you
175press a mouse button and release it without moving the mouse.
176@xref{Mouse Buttons}.
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177
178@item Clipboard
179A clipboard is a buffer provided by the window system for transferring
180text between applications. On the X Window system, the clipboard is
181provided in addition to the primary selection (q.v.@:); on MS-Windows and Mac,
182the clipboard is used @emph{instead} of the primary selection.
183@xref{Clipboard}.
184
185@item Coding System
186A coding system is an encoding for representing text characters in a
187file or in a stream of information. Emacs has the ability to convert
188text to or from a variety of coding systems when reading or writing it.
189@xref{Coding Systems}.
190
191@item Command
192A command is a Lisp function specially defined to be able to serve as a
193key binding in Emacs. When you type a key sequence (q.v.@:), its
194binding (q.v.@:) is looked up in the relevant keymaps (q.v.@:) to find
195the command to run. @xref{Commands}.
196
197@item Command History
198See `minibuffer history.'
199
200@item Command Name
201A command name is the name of a Lisp symbol which is a command
202(@pxref{Commands}). You can invoke any command by its name using
203@kbd{M-x} (@pxref{M-x,M-x,Running Commands by Name}).
204
205@item Comment
206A comment is text in a program which is intended only for humans reading
07ee224d 207the program, and which is specially marked so that it will be ignored
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208when the program is loaded or compiled. Emacs offers special commands
209for creating, aligning and killing comments. @xref{Comments}.
210
211@item Common Lisp
212Common Lisp is a dialect of Lisp (q.v.@:) much larger and more powerful
213than Emacs Lisp. Emacs provides a subset of Common Lisp in the CL
214package. @xref{Top, Common Lisp, Overview, cl, Common Lisp Extensions}.
215
216@item Compilation
217Compilation is the process of creating an executable program from source
218code. Emacs has commands for compiling files of Emacs Lisp code
219(@pxref{Byte Compilation,,, elisp, the Emacs Lisp
220Reference Manual}) and programs in C and other languages
221(@pxref{Compilation}).
222
223@item Complete Key
224A complete key is a key sequence which fully specifies one action to be
225performed by Emacs. For example, @kbd{X} and @kbd{C-f} and @kbd{C-x m}
226are complete keys. Complete keys derive their meanings from being bound
227(q.v.@:) to commands (q.v.@:). Thus, @kbd{X} is conventionally bound to
228a command to insert @samp{X} in the buffer; @kbd{C-x m} is
229conventionally bound to a command to begin composing a mail message.
230@xref{Keys}.
231
232@item Completion
07ee224d 233Completion is what Emacs does when it automatically expands an
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234abbreviation for a name into the entire name. Completion is done for
235minibuffer (q.v.@:) arguments when the set of possible valid inputs
236is known; for example, on command names, buffer names, and
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237file names. Completion usually occurs when @key{TAB}, @key{SPC} or
238@key{RET} is typed. @xref{Completion}.@refill
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239
240@item Continuation Line
241When a line of text is longer than the width of the window, it
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242normally (but see `Truncation') takes up more than one screen line
243when displayed. We say that the text line is continued, and all
244screen lines used for it after the first are called continuation
245lines. @xref{Continuation Lines}. A related Emacs feature is
246`filling' (q.v.@:).
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247
248@item Control Character
249A control character is a character that you type by holding down the
250@key{CTRL} key. Some control characters also have their own keys, so
251that you can type them without using @key{CTRL}. For example,
252@key{RET}, @key{TAB}, @key{ESC} and @key{DEL} are all control
253characters. @xref{User Input}.
254
255@item Copyleft
256A copyleft is a notice giving the public legal permission to
257redistribute and modify a program or other work of art, but requiring
258modified versions to carry similar permission. Copyright is normally
259used to keep users divided and helpless; with copyleft we turn that
260around to empower users and encourage them to cooperate.
261
262The particular form of copyleft used by the GNU project is called the
263GNU General Public License. @xref{Copying}.
264
265@item @key{CTRL}
266The @key{CTRL} or ``control'' key is what you hold down
07ee224d 267in order to enter a control character (q.v.). See also `@kbd{C-}.'
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268
269@item Current Buffer
270The current buffer in Emacs is the Emacs buffer on which most editing
271commands operate. You can select any Emacs buffer as the current one.
272@xref{Buffers}.
273
274@item Current Line
275The current line is the line that point is on (@pxref{Point}).
276
277@item Current Paragraph
278The current paragraph is the paragraph that point is in. If point is
279between two paragraphs, the current paragraph is the one that follows
280point. @xref{Paragraphs}.
281
282@item Current Defun
283The current defun is the defun (q.v.@:) that point is in. If point is
284between defuns, the current defun is the one that follows point.
285@xref{Defuns}.
286
287@item Cursor
288The cursor is the rectangle on the screen which indicates the position
07ee224d 289(called point; q.v.@:) at which insertion and deletion takes place.
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290The cursor is on or under the character that follows point. Often
291people speak of `the cursor' when, strictly speaking, they mean
292`point.' @xref{Point,Cursor}.
293
294@item Customization
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295Customization is making minor changes in the way Emacs works, to
296reflect your preferences or needs. It is often done by setting
297variables (@pxref{Variables}) or faces (@pxref{Face Customization}),
298or by rebinding key sequences (@pxref{Keymaps}).
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299
300@cindex cut and paste
301@item Cut and Paste
302See `killing' and `yanking.'
303
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304@item Daemon
305A daemon is a standard term for a Unix process that runs in the
306background. Daemons are often started when the system first starts up.
307When Emacs runs in daemon-mode, it runs in the background and does not
308open a display. You can then connect to it with the
309@command{emacsclient} program. @xref{Emacs Server}.
310
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311@item Default Argument
312The default for an argument is the value that will be assumed if you
313do not specify one. When the minibuffer is used to read an argument,
314the default argument is used if you just type @key{RET}.
315@xref{Minibuffer}.
316
317@item Default
318A default is the value that is used for a certain purpose if and when
319you do not specify a value to use.
320
321@item Default Directory
322When you specify a file name that does not start with @samp{/} or @samp{~},
323it is interpreted relative to the current buffer's default directory.
324(On MS-Windows and MS-DOS, file names which start with a drive letter
325@samp{@var{x}:} are treated as absolute, not relative.)
326@xref{Minibuffer File,Default Directory}.
327
328@item Defun
329A defun is a major definition at the top level in a program. The name
330`defun' comes from Lisp, where most such definitions use the construct
331@code{defun}. @xref{Defuns}.
332
333@item @key{DEL}
334@key{DEL} is a character that runs the command to delete one character
335of text before the cursor. It is typically either the @key{DELETE}
336key or the @key{BACKSPACE} key, whichever one is easy to type.
337@xref{Erasing,DEL}.
338
339@item Deletion
340Deletion means erasing text without copying it into the kill ring
341(q.v.@:). The alternative is killing (q.v.@:). @xref{Killing,Deletion}.
342
343@item Deletion of Files
344Deleting a file means erasing it from the file system.
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345(Note that some systems use the concept of a ``trash can'', or ``recycle
346bin'', to allow you to ``undelete'' files.)
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347@xref{Misc File Ops,Misc File Ops,Miscellaneous File Operations}.
348
349@item Deletion of Messages
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350Deleting a message (in Rmail, and other mail clients) means flagging
351it to be eliminated from your mail file. Until you expunge (q.v.@:)
352the Rmail file, you can still undelete the messages you have deleted.
353@xref{Rmail Deletion}.
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354
355@item Deletion of Windows
356Deleting a window means eliminating it from the screen. Other windows
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357expand to use up the space. The text that was in the window is not
358lost, and you can create a new window with the same dimensions as the
359old if you wish. @xref{Windows}.
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360
361@item Directory
362File directories are named collections in the file system, within which
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363you can place individual files or subdirectories. They are sometimes
364referred to as ``folders.'' @xref{Directories}.
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365
366@item Dired
367Dired is the Emacs facility that displays the contents of a file
368directory and allows you to ``edit the directory,'' performing
369operations on the files in the directory. @xref{Dired}.
370
371@item Disabled Command
372A disabled command is one that you may not run without special
373confirmation. The usual reason for disabling a command is that it is
374confusing for beginning users. @xref{Disabling}.
375
376@item Down Event
377Short for `button down event' (q.v.@:).
378
379@item Drag Event
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380A drag event is the kind of input event (q.v.@:) generated when you
381press a mouse button, move the mouse, and then release the button.
382@xref{Mouse Buttons}.
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383
384@item Dribble File
385A dribble file is a file into which Emacs writes all the characters that
07ee224d 386you type on the keyboard. Dribble files can be used to make a record
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387for debugging Emacs bugs. Emacs does not make a dribble file unless you
388tell it to. @xref{Bugs}.
389
390@item Echo Area
391The echo area is the bottom line of the screen, used for echoing the
392arguments to commands, for asking questions, and showing brief messages
393(including error messages). The messages are stored in the buffer
394@samp{*Messages*} so you can review them later. @xref{Echo Area}.
395
396@item Echoing
397Echoing is acknowledging the receipt of input events by displaying
398them (in the echo area). Emacs never echoes single-character key
399sequences; longer key sequences echo only if you pause while typing
400them.
401
402@item Electric
403We say that a character is electric if it is normally self-inserting
404(q.v.@:), but the current major mode (q.v.@:) redefines it to do something
405else as well. For example, some programming language major modes define
07ee224d 406particular delimiter characters to reindent the line, or insert one or
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407more newlines in addition to self-insertion.
408
409@item End Of Line
410End of line is a character or a sequence of characters that indicate
411the end of a text line. On GNU and Unix systems, this is a newline
412(q.v.@:), but other systems have other conventions. @xref{Coding
413Systems,end-of-line}. Emacs can recognize several end-of-line
414conventions in files and convert between them.
415
416@item Environment Variable
417An environment variable is one of a collection of variables stored by
418the operating system, each one having a name and a value. Emacs can
419access environment variables set by its parent shell, and it can set
420variables in the environment it passes to programs it invokes.
421@xref{Environment}.
422
423@item EOL
424See `end of line.'
425
426@item Error
427An error occurs when an Emacs command cannot execute in the current
428circumstances. When an error occurs, execution of the command stops
429(unless the command has been programmed to do otherwise) and Emacs
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430reports the error by displaying an error message (q.v.@:).
431@c Not helpful?
432@c Type-ahead is discarded. Then Emacs is ready to read another
433@c editing command.
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434
435@item Error Message
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436An error message is output displayed by Emacs when you ask it to do
437something impossible (such as, killing text forward when point is at
438the end of the buffer), or when a command malfunctions in some way.
439Such messages appear in the echo area, accompanied by a beep.
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440
441@item @key{ESC}
442@key{ESC} is a character used as a prefix for typing Meta characters on
443keyboards lacking a @key{META} key. Unlike the @key{META} key (which,
444like the @key{SHIFT} key, is held down while another character is
445typed), you press the @key{ESC} key as you would press a letter key, and
446it applies to the next character you type.
447
448@item Expression
449See `balanced expression.'
450
451@item Expunging
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452Expunging an Rmail, Gnus newsgroup, or Dired buffer is an operation
453that truly discards the messages or files you have previously flagged
454for deletion.
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455
456@item Face
457A face is a style of displaying characters. It specifies attributes
458such as font family and size, foreground and background colors,
459underline and strike-through, background stipple, etc. Emacs provides
460features to associate specific faces with portions of buffer text, in
461order to display that text as specified by the face attributes.
462@xref{Faces}.
463
464@item File Locking
465Emacs uses file locking to notice when two different users
466start to edit one file at the same time. @xref{Interlocking}.
467
468@item File Name
469A file name is a name that refers to a file. File names may be relative
470or absolute; the meaning of a relative file name depends on the current
471directory, but an absolute file name refers to the same file regardless
472of which directory is current. On GNU and Unix systems, an absolute
473file name starts with a slash (the root directory) or with @samp{~/} or
474@samp{~@var{user}/} (a home directory). On MS-Windows/MS-DOS, an
07ee224d 475absolute file name can also start with a drive letter and a colon, e.g.
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476@samp{@var{d}:}.
477
478Some people use the term ``pathname'' for file names, but we do not;
479we use the word ``path'' only in the term ``search path'' (q.v.@:).
480
481@item File-Name Component
482A file-name component names a file directly within a particular
483directory. On GNU and Unix systems, a file name is a sequence of
484file-name components, separated by slashes. For example, @file{foo/bar}
485is a file name containing two components, @samp{foo} and @samp{bar}; it
486refers to the file named @samp{bar} in the directory named @samp{foo} in
487the current directory. MS-DOS/MS-Windows file names can also use
488backslashes to separate components, as in @file{foo\bar}.
489
490@item Fill Prefix
491The fill prefix is a string that should be expected at the beginning
492of each line when filling is done. It is not regarded as part of the
493text to be filled. @xref{Filling}.
494
495@item Filling
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496Filling text means adjusting the position of line-breaks to shift text
497between consecutive lines, so that all the lines are approximately the
498same length. @xref{Filling}. Some other editors call this feature
499`line wrapping.'
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500
501@item Font Lock
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502Font Lock is a mode that highlights parts of buffer text in different
503faces, according to the syntax. For example, all comments (q.v.@:)
504might be colored red. @xref{Font Lock}.
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505
506@item Fontset
507A fontset is a named collection of fonts. A fontset specification lists
508character sets and which font to use to display each of them. Fontsets
509make it easy to change several fonts at once by specifying the name of a
510fontset, rather than changing each font separately. @xref{Fontsets}.
511
512@item Formatted Text
513Formatted text is text that displays with formatting information while
514you edit. Formatting information includes fonts, colors, and specified
515margins. @xref{Formatted Text}.
516
517@item Formfeed Character
518See `page.'
519
520@item Frame
521A frame is a rectangular cluster of Emacs windows. Emacs starts out
522with one frame, but you can create more. You can subdivide each frame
523into Emacs windows (q.v.@:). When you are using a window system
07ee224d 524(q.v.@:), more than one frame can be visible at the same time.
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525@xref{Frames}. Some other editors use the term ``window'' for this,
526but in Emacs a window means something else.
527
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528@item Free Software
529Free software is software that gives you the freedom to share, study
530and modify it. Emacs is free software, part of the GNU project
531(q.v.@:), and distributed under a copyleft (q.v.@:) license called the
532GNU General Public License. @xref{Copying}.
533
534@item Free Software Foundation
535The Free Software Foundation (FSF) is a charitable foundation
536dedicated to promoting the development of free software (q.v.@:).
537For more information, see @uref{http://fsf.org/, the FSF website}.
538
8cf51b2c 539@item Fringe
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540On a graphical display (q.v.@:), there's a narrow portion of the frame
541(q.v.@:) between the text area and the window's border. These
542`fringes' are used to display symbols that provide information about
543the buffer text (@pxref{Fringes}). Emacs displays the fringe using a
544special face (q.v.@:) called @code{fringe}. @xref{Faces,fringe}.
545
546@item FSF
547See `Free Software Foundation.'
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548
549@item FTP
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550FTP is an acronym for File Transfer Protocol. This is one standard
551method for retrieving remote files (q.v.@:).
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552
553@item Function Key
554A function key is a key on the keyboard that sends input but does not
555correspond to any character. @xref{Function Keys}.
556
557@item Global
558Global means ``independent of the current environment; in effect
559throughout Emacs.'' It is the opposite of local (q.v.@:). Particular
560examples of the use of `global' appear below.
561
562@item Global Abbrev
563A global definition of an abbrev (q.v.@:) is effective in all major
564modes that do not have local (q.v.@:) definitions for the same abbrev.
565@xref{Abbrevs}.
566
567@item Global Keymap
568The global keymap (q.v.@:) contains key bindings that are in effect
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569everywhere, except when overridden by local key bindings in a major
570mode's local keymap (q.v.@:). @xref{Keymaps}.
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571
572@item Global Mark Ring
573The global mark ring records the series of buffers you have recently
574set a mark (q.v.@:) in. In many cases you can use this to backtrack
07ee224d 575through buffers you have been editing, or in which you have found
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576tags (see `tags table'). @xref{Global Mark Ring}.
577
578@item Global Substitution
579Global substitution means replacing each occurrence of one string by
580another string throughout a large amount of text. @xref{Replace}.
581
582@item Global Variable
583The global value of a variable (q.v.@:) takes effect in all buffers
584that do not have their own local (q.v.@:) values for the variable.
585@xref{Variables}.
586
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587@item GNU
588GNU is a recursive acronym for GNU's Not Unix. The GNU project aims
589to develop a complete operating system that is free software (q.v.@:).
590@xref{Manifesto}. For more information, see
591@uref{http://www.gnu.org/, the GNU website}.
592
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593@item Graphic Character
594Graphic characters are those assigned pictorial images rather than
595just names. All the non-Meta (q.v.@:) characters except for the
596Control (q.v.@:) characters are graphic characters. These include
597letters, digits, punctuation, and spaces; they do not include
598@key{RET} or @key{ESC}. In Emacs, typing a graphic character inserts
599that character (in ordinary editing modes). @xref{Inserting Text}.
600
601@item Graphical Display
602A graphical display is one that can display images and multiple fonts.
603Usually it also has a window system (q.v.@:).
604
605@item Highlighting
606Highlighting text means displaying it with a different foreground and/or
607background color to make it stand out from the rest of the text in the
608buffer.
609
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610Emacs uses highlighting in several ways. It highlights the region
611whenever it is active (@pxref{Mark}). Incremental search also
07ee224d 612highlights matches (@pxref{Incremental Search}). See also `font lock.'
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613
614@item Hardcopy
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615Hardcopy means printed output. Emacs has various commands for
616printing the contents of Emacs buffers. @xref{Printing}.
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617
618@item @key{HELP}
619@key{HELP} is the Emacs name for @kbd{C-h} or @key{F1}. You can type
620@key{HELP} at any time to ask what options you have, or to ask what any
621command does. @xref{Help}.
622
623@item Help Echo
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624Help echo is a short message displayed in the echo area (q.v.@:) when
625the mouse pointer is located on portions of display that require some
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626explanations. Emacs displays help echo for menu items, parts of the
627mode line, tool-bar buttons, etc. On graphics displays, the messages
628can be displayed as tooltips (q.v.@:). @xref{Tooltips}.
629
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630@item Home Directory
631Your home directory contains your personal files. On a multi-user GNU
632or Unix system, each user has his or her own home directory. When you
633start a new login session, your home directory is the default
634directory in which to start. A standard shorthand for your home
635directory is @samp{~}. Similarly, @samp{~@var{user}} represents the
636home directory of some other user.
637
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638@item Hook
639A hook is a list of functions to be called on specific occasions, such
640as saving a buffer in a file, major mode activation, etc. By
641customizing the various hooks, you can modify Emacs's behavior without
642changing any of its code. @xref{Hooks}.
643
644@item Hyper
07ee224d 645Hyper is the name of a modifier bit that a keyboard input character may
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646have. To make a character Hyper, type it while holding down the
647@key{HYPER} key. Such characters are given names that start with
07ee224d 648@kbd{Hyper-} (usually written @kbd{H-} for short). @xref{User Input}.
8cf51b2c
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649
650@item Iff
651``Iff'' means ``if and only if.'' This terminology comes from
652mathematics. Try to avoid using this term in documentation, since
653many are unfamiliar with it and mistake it for a typo.
654
655@item Inbox
656An inbox is a file in which mail is delivered by the operating system.
657Rmail transfers mail from inboxes to Rmail files (q.v.@:) in which the
658mail is then stored permanently or until explicitly deleted.
659@xref{Rmail Inbox}.
660
661@item Incremental Search
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662Emacs provides an incremental search facility, whereby Emacs begins
663searching for a string as soon as you type the first character.
664As you type more characters, it refines the search. @xref{Incremental Search}.
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665
666@item Indentation
667Indentation means blank space at the beginning of a line. Most
668programming languages have conventions for using indentation to
669illuminate the structure of the program, and Emacs has special
670commands to adjust indentation.
671@xref{Indentation}.
672
673@item Indirect Buffer
674An indirect buffer is a buffer that shares the text of another buffer,
675called its base buffer (q.v.@:). @xref{Indirect Buffers}.
676
677@item Info
678Info is the hypertext format used by the GNU project for writing
679documentation.
680
681@item Input Event
682An input event represents, within Emacs, one action taken by the user on
683the terminal. Input events include typing characters, typing function
684keys, pressing or releasing mouse buttons, and switching between Emacs
685frames. @xref{User Input}.
686
687@item Input Method
688An input method is a system for entering non-@acronym{ASCII} text characters by
689typing sequences of @acronym{ASCII} characters (q.v.@:). @xref{Input Methods}.
690
691@item Insertion
07ee224d 692Insertion means adding text into the buffer, either from the keyboard
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693or from some other place in Emacs.
694
695@item Interlocking
696Interlocking is a feature for warning when you start to alter a file
697that someone else is already editing.
698@xref{Interlocking,Interlocking,Simultaneous Editing}.
699
700@item Isearch
701See `incremental search.'
702
703@item Justification
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704Justification means adding extra spaces within lines of text
705in order to adjust the position of the text edges.
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706@xref{Format Justification}.
707
5a331f34 708@item Key Binding
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709See `binding.'
710
711@item Keyboard Macro
712Keyboard macros are a way of defining new Emacs commands from
713sequences of existing ones, with no need to write a Lisp program.
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714You can use a macro to record a sequence of commands, then
715play them back as many times as you like.
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716@xref{Keyboard Macros}.
717
718@cindex keyboard shortcuts
719@item Keyboard Shortcut
720A keyboard shortcut is a key sequence (q.v.@:) which invokes a
721command. What some programs call ``assigning a keyboard shortcut,''
722Emacs calls ``binding a key sequence.'' See `binding.'
723
724@item Key Sequence
725A key sequence (key, for short) is a sequence of input events (q.v.@:)
726that are meaningful as a single unit. If the key sequence is enough to
727specify one action, it is a complete key (q.v.@:); if it is not enough,
728it is a prefix key (q.v.@:). @xref{Keys}.
729
730@item Keymap
731The keymap is the data structure that records the bindings (q.v.@:) of
732key sequences to the commands that they run. For example, the global
733keymap binds the character @kbd{C-n} to the command function
734@code{next-line}. @xref{Keymaps}.
735
736@item Keyboard Translation Table
737The keyboard translation table is an array that translates the character
738codes that come from the terminal into the character codes that make up
739key sequences.
740
741@item Kill Ring
742The kill ring is where all text you have killed recently is saved.
743You can reinsert any of the killed text still in the ring; this is
744called yanking (q.v.@:). @xref{Yanking}.
745
746@item Killing
747Killing means erasing text and saving it on the kill ring so it can be
748yanked (q.v.@:) later. Some other systems call this ``cutting.''
749Most Emacs commands that erase text perform killing, as opposed to
750deletion (q.v.@:). @xref{Killing}.
751
752@item Killing a Job
753Killing a job (such as, an invocation of Emacs) means making it cease
754to exist. Any data within it, if not saved in a file, is lost.
755@xref{Exiting}.
756
757@item Language Environment
758Your choice of language environment specifies defaults for the input
759method (q.v.@:) and coding system (q.v.@:). @xref{Language
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760Environments}. These defaults are relevant if you edit
761non-@acronym{ASCII} text (@pxref{International}).
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762
763@item Line Wrapping
764See `filling.'
765
766@item Lisp
767Lisp is a programming language. Most of Emacs is written in a dialect
07ee224d 768of Lisp, called Emacs Lisp, which is extended with special features that
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769make it especially suitable for text editing tasks.
770
771@item List
772A list is, approximately, a text string beginning with an open
773parenthesis and ending with the matching close parenthesis. In C mode
774and other non-Lisp modes, groupings surrounded by other kinds of matched
775delimiters appropriate to the language, such as braces, are also
776considered lists. Emacs has special commands for many operations on
777lists. @xref{Moving by Parens}.
778
779@item Local
780Local means ``in effect only in a particular context''; the relevant
781kind of context is a particular function execution, a particular
782buffer, or a particular major mode. It is the opposite of `global'
783(q.v.@:). Specific uses of `local' in Emacs terminology appear below.
784
785@item Local Abbrev
786A local abbrev definition is effective only if a particular major mode
787is selected. In that major mode, it overrides any global definition
788for the same abbrev. @xref{Abbrevs}.
789
790@item Local Keymap
791A local keymap is used in a particular major mode; the key bindings
792(q.v.@:) in the current local keymap override global bindings of the
793same key sequences. @xref{Keymaps}.
794
795@item Local Variable
796A local value of a variable (q.v.@:) applies to only one buffer.
797@xref{Locals}.
798
799@item @kbd{M-}
800@kbd{M-} in the name of a character is an abbreviation for @key{META},
801one of the modifier keys that can accompany any character.
802@xref{User Input,M-}.
803
804@item @kbd{M-C-}
805@kbd{M-C-} in the name of a character is an abbreviation for
07ee224d 806Control-Meta; it means the same thing as `@kbd{C-M-}' (q.v.@:).
8cf51b2c
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807
808@item @kbd{M-x}
07ee224d 809@kbd{M-x} is the key sequence that is used to call an Emacs command by
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810name. This is how you run commands that are not bound to key sequences.
811@xref{M-x,M-x,Running Commands by Name}.
812
813@item Mail
814Mail means messages sent from one user to another through the computer
815system, to be read at the recipient's convenience. Emacs has commands for
816composing and sending mail, and for reading and editing the mail you have
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817received. @xref{Sending Mail}. @xref{Rmail}, for one way to read
818mail with Emacs.
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819
820@item Mail Composition Method
821A mail composition method is a program runnable within Emacs for editing
822and sending a mail message. Emacs lets you select from several
823alternative mail composition methods. @xref{Mail Methods}.
824
825@item Major Mode
826The Emacs major modes are a mutually exclusive set of options, each of
827which configures Emacs for editing a certain sort of text. Ideally,
828each programming language has its own major mode. @xref{Major Modes}.
829
830@item Margin
831The space between the usable part of a window (including the
832fringe) and the window edge.
833
834@item Mark
835The mark points to a position in the text. It specifies one end of the
836region (q.v.@:), point being the other end. Many commands operate on
837all the text from point to the mark. Each buffer has its own mark.
838@xref{Mark}.
839
840@item Mark Ring
841The mark ring is used to hold several recent previous locations of the
842mark, just in case you want to move back to them. Each buffer has its
843own mark ring; in addition, there is a single global mark ring (q.v.@:).
844@xref{Mark Ring}.
845
846@item Menu Bar
07ee224d 847The menu bar is a line at the top of an Emacs frame. It contains
8cf51b2c
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848words you can click on with the mouse to bring up menus, or you can use
849a keyboard interface to navigate it. @xref{Menu Bars}.
850
851@item Message
852See `mail.'
853
854@item Meta
855Meta is the name of a modifier bit which you can use in a command
856character. To enter a meta character, you hold down the @key{META}
857key while typing the character. We refer to such characters with
858names that start with @kbd{Meta-} (usually written @kbd{M-} for
859short). For example, @kbd{M-<} is typed by holding down @key{META}
860and at the same time typing @kbd{<} (which itself is done, on most
861terminals, by holding down @key{SHIFT} and typing @kbd{,}).
862@xref{User Input,Meta}.
863
864On some terminals, the @key{META} key is actually labeled @key{ALT}
865or @key{EDIT}.
866
867@item Meta Character
868A Meta character is one whose character code includes the Meta bit.
869
870@item Minibuffer
871The minibuffer is the window that appears when necessary inside the
872echo area (q.v.@:), used for reading arguments to commands.
873@xref{Minibuffer}.
874
875@item Minibuffer History
876The minibuffer history records the text you have specified in the past
877for minibuffer arguments, so you can conveniently use the same text
878again. @xref{Minibuffer History}.
879
880@item Minor Mode
881A minor mode is an optional feature of Emacs which can be switched on
882or off independently of all other features. Each minor mode has a
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883command to turn it on or off. Some minor modes are global (q.v.@:),
884and some are local (q.v.@:). @xref{Minor Modes}.
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885
886@item Minor Mode Keymap
887A minor mode keymap is a keymap that belongs to a minor mode and is
888active when that mode is enabled. Minor mode keymaps take precedence
889over the buffer's local keymap, just as the local keymap takes
890precedence over the global keymap. @xref{Keymaps}.
891
892@item Mode Line
893The mode line is the line at the bottom of each window (q.v.@:), giving
894status information on the buffer displayed in that window. @xref{Mode
895Line}.
896
897@item Modified Buffer
898A buffer (q.v.@:) is modified if its text has been changed since the
07ee224d 899last time the buffer was saved (or since it was created, if it
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900has never been saved). @xref{Saving}.
901
902@item Moving Text
903Moving text means erasing it from one place and inserting it in
904another. The usual way to move text is by killing (q.v.@:) it and then
905yanking (q.v.@:) it. @xref{Killing}.
906
907@item MULE
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908MULE refers to the Emacs features for editing multilingual
909non-@acronym{ASCII} text using multibyte characters (q.v.@:).
910@xref{International}.
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911
912@item Multibyte Character
913A multibyte character is a character that takes up several bytes in a
914buffer. Emacs uses multibyte characters to represent non-@acronym{ASCII} text,
915since the number of non-@acronym{ASCII} characters is much more than 256.
916@xref{International Chars, International Characters}.
917
918@item Named Mark
919A named mark is a register (q.v.@:) in its role of recording a
920location in text so that you can move point to that location.
921@xref{Registers}.
922
923@item Narrowing
924Narrowing means creating a restriction (q.v.@:) that limits editing in
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925the current buffer to only a part of the text. Text outside that part
926is inaccessible for editing (or viewing) until the boundaries are
8cf51b2c
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927widened again, but it is still there, and saving the file saves it
928all. @xref{Narrowing}.
929
930@item Newline
931Control-J characters in the buffer terminate lines of text and are
07ee224d 932therefore also called newlines. See `End of Line.'
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933
934@cindex nil
935@cindex t
936@item @code{nil}
937@code{nil} is a value usually interpreted as a logical ``false.'' Its
938opposite is @code{t}, interpreted as ``true.''
939
940@item Numeric Argument
941A numeric argument is a number, specified before a command, to change
942the effect of the command. Often the numeric argument serves as a
943repeat count. @xref{Arguments}.
944
945@item Overwrite Mode
946Overwrite mode is a minor mode. When it is enabled, ordinary text
947characters replace the existing text after point rather than pushing
948it to the right. @xref{Minor Modes}.
949
950@item Page
951A page is a unit of text, delimited by formfeed characters (@acronym{ASCII}
952control-L, code 014) coming at the beginning of a line. Some Emacs
953commands are provided for moving over and operating on pages.
954@xref{Pages}.
955
956@item Paragraph
957Paragraphs are the medium-size unit of human-language text. There are
958special Emacs commands for moving over and operating on paragraphs.
959@xref{Paragraphs}.
960
961@item Parsing
962We say that certain Emacs commands parse words or expressions in the
963text being edited. Really, all they know how to do is find the other
964end of a word or expression. @xref{Syntax}.
965
966@item Point
967Point is the place in the buffer at which insertion and deletion
968occur. Point is considered to be between two characters, not at one
969character. The terminal's cursor (q.v.@:) indicates the location of
970point. @xref{Point}.
971
972@item Prefix Argument
973See `numeric argument.'
974
975@item Prefix Key
976A prefix key is a key sequence (q.v.@:) whose sole function is to
977introduce a set of longer key sequences. @kbd{C-x} is an example of
978prefix key; any two-character sequence starting with @kbd{C-x} is
979therefore a legitimate key sequence. @xref{Keys}.
980
981@item Primary Rmail File
982Your primary Rmail file is the file named @samp{RMAIL} in your home
983directory. That's where Rmail stores your incoming mail, unless you
984specify a different file name. @xref{Rmail}.
985
986@item Primary Selection
987The primary selection is one particular X selection (q.v.@:); it is the
988selection that most X applications use for transferring text to and from
989other applications.
990
991The Emacs kill commands set the primary selection and the yank command
992uses the primary selection when appropriate. @xref{Killing}.
993
994@item Prompt
07ee224d 995A prompt is text used to ask you for input. Displaying a prompt
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996is called prompting. Emacs prompts always appear in the echo area
997(q.v.@:). One kind of prompting happens when the minibuffer is used to
07ee224d 998read an argument (@pxref{Minibuffer}); the echoing that happens when
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999you pause in the middle of typing a multi-character key sequence is also
1000a kind of prompting (@pxref{Echo Area}).
1001
1002@item Query-Replace
1003Query-replace is an interactive string replacement feature provided by
1004Emacs. @xref{Query Replace}.
1005
1006@item Quitting
1007Quitting means canceling a partially typed command or a running
1008command, using @kbd{C-g} (or @kbd{C-@key{BREAK}} on MS-DOS). @xref{Quitting}.
1009
1010@item Quoting
1011Quoting means depriving a character of its usual special significance.
1012The most common kind of quoting in Emacs is with @kbd{C-q}. What
1013constitutes special significance depends on the context and on
1014convention. For example, an ``ordinary'' character as an Emacs command
1015inserts itself; so in this context, a special character is any character
1016that does not normally insert itself (such as @key{DEL}, for example),
1017and quoting it makes it insert itself as if it were not special. Not
1018all contexts allow quoting. @xref{Inserting Text,Quoting}.
1019
1020@item Quoting File Names
1021Quoting a file name turns off the special significance of constructs
1022such as @samp{$}, @samp{~} and @samp{:}. @xref{Quoted File Names}.
1023
1024@item Read-Only Buffer
1025A read-only buffer is one whose text you are not allowed to change.
1026Normally Emacs makes buffers read-only when they contain text which
1027has a special significance to Emacs; for example, Dired buffers.
1028Visiting a file that is write-protected also makes a read-only buffer.
1029@xref{Buffers}.
1030
1031@item Rectangle
1032A rectangle consists of the text in a given range of columns on a given
1033range of lines. Normally you specify a rectangle by putting point at
1034one corner and putting the mark at the diagonally opposite corner.
1035@xref{Rectangles}.
1036
1037@item Recursive Editing Level
1038A recursive editing level is a state in which part of the execution of
1039a command involves asking you to edit some text. This text may
1040or may not be the same as the text to which the command was applied.
1041The mode line indicates recursive editing levels with square brackets
1042(@samp{[} and @samp{]}). @xref{Recursive Edit}.
1043
1044@item Redisplay
1045Redisplay is the process of correcting the image on the screen to
1046correspond to changes that have been made in the text being edited.
1047@xref{Screen,Redisplay}.
1048
1049@item Regexp
1050See `regular expression.'
1051
1052@item Region
1053The region is the text between point (q.v.@:) and the mark (q.v.@:).
1054Many commands operate on the text of the region. @xref{Mark,Region}.
1055
1056@item Register
07ee224d 1057Registers are named slots in which text, buffer positions, or
8cf51b2c
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1058rectangles can be saved for later use. @xref{Registers}. A related
1059Emacs feature is `bookmarks' (q.v.@:).
1060
1061@item Regular Expression
1062A regular expression is a pattern that can match various text strings;
1063for example, @samp{a[0-9]+} matches @samp{a} followed by one or more
1064digits. @xref{Regexps}.
1065
1066@item Remote File
1067A remote file is a file that is stored on a system other than your own.
1068Emacs can access files on other computers provided that they are
1069connected to the same network as your machine, and (obviously) that
1070you have a supported method to gain access to those files.
1071@xref{Remote Files}.
1072
1073@item Repeat Count
1074See `numeric argument.'
1075
1076@item Replacement
1077See `global substitution.'
1078
1079@item Restriction
1080A buffer's restriction is the amount of text, at the beginning or the
1081end of the buffer, that is temporarily inaccessible. Giving a buffer a
1082nonzero amount of restriction is called narrowing (q.v.@:); removing
1083a restriction is called widening (q.v.@:). @xref{Narrowing}.
1084
1085@item @key{RET}
1086@key{RET} is a character that in Emacs runs the command to insert a
1087newline into the text. It is also used to terminate most arguments
1088read in the minibuffer (q.v.@:). @xref{User Input,Return}.
1089
1090@item Reverting
1091Reverting means returning to the original state. Emacs lets you
1092revert a buffer by re-reading its file from disk. @xref{Reverting}.
1093
1094@item Rmail File
07ee224d 1095An Rmail file is a file containing text in the format used by
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1096Rmail for storing mail. @xref{Rmail}.
1097
1098@item Saving
1099Saving a buffer means copying its text into the file that was visited
1100(q.v.@:) in that buffer. This is the way text in files actually gets
1101changed by your Emacs editing. @xref{Saving}.
1102
1103@item Scroll Bar
1104A scroll bar is a tall thin hollow box that appears at the side of a
1105window. You can use mouse commands in the scroll bar to scroll the
1106window. The scroll bar feature is supported only under windowing
1107systems. @xref{Scroll Bars}.
1108
1109@item Scrolling
1110Scrolling means shifting the text in the Emacs window so as to see a
1111different part of the buffer. @xref{Scrolling}.
1112
1113@item Searching
1114Searching means moving point to the next occurrence of a specified
1115string or the next match for a specified regular expression.
1116@xref{Search}.
1117
1118@item Search Path
1119A search path is a list of directory names, to be used for searching for
1120files for certain purposes. For example, the variable @code{load-path}
1121holds a search path for finding Lisp library files. @xref{Lisp Libraries}.
1122
1123@item Secondary Selection
07ee224d 1124The secondary selection is one particular X selection (q.v.@:); some X
8cf51b2c
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1125applications can use it for transferring text to and from other
1126applications. Emacs has special mouse commands for transferring text
1127using the secondary selection. @xref{Secondary Selection}.
1128
1129@item Selected Frame
1130The selected frame is the one your input currently operates on.
1131@xref{Frames}.
1132
1133@item Selected Window
8dc17977 1134The selected window is the one your input currently operates on.
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1135@xref{Basic Window}.
1136
1137@item Selecting a Buffer
1138Selecting a buffer means making it the current (q.v.@:) buffer.
1139@xref{Select Buffer}.
1140
1141@item Selection
1142Windowing systems allow an application program to specify
1143selections whose values are text. A program can also read the
1144selections that other programs have set up. This is the principal way
1145of transferring text between window applications. Emacs has commands to
1146work with the primary (q.v.@:) selection and the secondary (q.v.@:)
1147selection, and also with the clipboard (q.v.@:).
1148
1149@item Self-Documentation
07ee224d 1150Self-documentation is the feature of Emacs that can tell you what any
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1151command does, or give you a list of all commands related to a topic
1152you specify. You ask for self-documentation with the help character,
1153@kbd{C-h}. @xref{Help}.
1154
1155@item Self-Inserting Character
1156A character is self-inserting if typing that character inserts that
1157character in the buffer. Ordinary printing and whitespace characters
1158are self-inserting in Emacs, except in certain special major modes.
1159
1160@item Sentences
1161Emacs has commands for moving by or killing by sentences.
1162@xref{Sentences}.
1163
1164@item Sexp
1165A sexp (short for ``s-expression'') is the basic syntactic unit of
1166Lisp in its textual form: either a list, or Lisp atom. Sexps are also
1167the balanced expressions (q.v.@:) of the Lisp language; this is why
1168the commands for editing balanced expressions have `sexp' in their
1169name. @xref{Expressions,Sexps}.
1170
1171@item Simultaneous Editing
1172Simultaneous editing means two users modifying the same file at once.
1173Simultaneous editing, if not detected, can cause one user to lose his
1174or her work. Emacs detects all cases of simultaneous editing, and
1175warns one of the users to investigate.
1176@xref{Interlocking,Interlocking,Simultaneous Editing}.
1177
1178@item @key{SPC}
1179@key{SPC} is the space character, which you enter by pressing the
1180space bar.
1181
1182@item Speedbar
1183The speedbar is a special tall frame that provides fast access to Emacs
1184buffers, functions within those buffers, Info nodes, and other
1185interesting parts of text within Emacs. @xref{Speedbar}.
1186
1187@item Spell Checking
1188Spell checking means checking correctness of the written form of each
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1189one of the words in a text. Emacs can use various external
1190spelling-checker programs to check the spelling of parts of a buffer
1191via a convenient user interface. @xref{Spelling}.
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1192
1193@item String
1194A string is a kind of Lisp data object which contains a sequence of
1195characters. Many Emacs variables are intended to have strings as
1196values. The Lisp syntax for a string consists of the characters in the
1197string with a @samp{"} before and another @samp{"} after. A @samp{"}
1198that is part of the string must be written as @samp{\"} and a @samp{\}
1199that is part of the string must be written as @samp{\\}. All other
1200characters, including newline, can be included just by writing them
1201inside the string; however, backslash sequences as in C, such as
1202@samp{\n} for newline or @samp{\241} using an octal character code, are
1203allowed as well.
1204
1205@item String Substitution
07ee224d 1206See `global substitution.'
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1207
1208@item Syntax Highlighting
1209See `font lock.'
1210
1211@item Syntax Table
1212The syntax table tells Emacs which characters are part of a word,
1213which characters balance each other like parentheses, etc.
1214@xref{Syntax}.
1215
1216@item Super
07ee224d 1217Super is the name of a modifier bit that a keyboard input character may
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1218have. To make a character Super, type it while holding down the
1219@key{SUPER} key. Such characters are given names that start with
07ee224d 1220@kbd{Super-} (usually written @kbd{s-} for short). @xref{User Input}.
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1221
1222@item Suspending
1223Suspending Emacs means stopping it temporarily and returning control
1224to its parent process, which is usually a shell. Unlike killing a job
1225(q.v.@:), you can later resume the suspended Emacs job without losing
1226your buffers, unsaved edits, undo history, etc. @xref{Exiting}.
1227
1228@item @key{TAB}
1229@key{TAB} is the tab character. In Emacs it is typically used for
1230indentation or completion.
1231
1232@item Tags Table
1233A tags table is a file that serves as an index to the function
1234definitions in one or more other files. @xref{Tags}.
1235
1236@item Termscript File
1237A termscript file contains a record of all characters sent by Emacs to
1238the terminal. It is used for tracking down bugs in Emacs redisplay.
1239Emacs does not make a termscript file unless you tell it to.
1240@xref{Bugs}.
1241
1242@item Text
1243`Text' has two meanings (@pxref{Text}):
1244
1245@itemize @bullet
1246@item
1247Data consisting of a sequence of characters, as opposed to binary
1248numbers, executable programs, and the like. The basic contents of an
1249Emacs buffer (aside from the text properties, q.v.@:) are always text
1250in this sense.
1251@item
07ee224d 1252Data consisting of written human language (as opposed to programs),
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1253or following the stylistic conventions of human language.
1254@end itemize
1255
1256@item Text-only Terminal
1257A text-only terminal is a display that is limited to displaying text in
1258character units. Such a terminal cannot control individual pixels it
1259displays. Emacs supports a subset of display features on text-only
1260terminals.
1261
1262@item Text Properties
1263Text properties are annotations recorded for particular characters in
1264the buffer. Images in the buffer are recorded as text properties;
1265they also specify formatting information. @xref{Editing Format Info}.
1266
1267@item Tool Bar
1268The tool bar is a line (sometimes multiple lines) of icons at the top
1269of an Emacs frame. Clicking on one of these icons executes a command.
1270You can think of this as a graphical relative of the menu bar (q.v.@:).
1271@xref{Tool Bars}.
1272
1273@item Tooltips
07ee224d 1274Tooltips are small windows displaying a help echo (q.v.@:) text, which
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1275explains parts of the display, lists useful options available via mouse
1276clicks, etc. @xref{Tooltips}.
1277
1278@item Top Level
1279Top level is the normal state of Emacs, in which you are editing the
1280text of the file you have visited. You are at top level whenever you
1281are not in a recursive editing level (q.v.@:) or the minibuffer
1282(q.v.@:), and not in the middle of a command. You can get back to top
1283level by aborting (q.v.@:) and quitting (q.v.@:). @xref{Quitting}.
1284
1285@item Transposition
1286Transposing two units of text means putting each one into the place
1287formerly occupied by the other. There are Emacs commands to transpose
1288two adjacent characters, words, balanced expressions (q.v.@:) or lines
1289(@pxref{Transpose}).
1290
1291@item Truncation
1292Truncating text lines in the display means leaving out any text on a
1293line that does not fit within the right margin of the window
1294displaying it. See also `continuation line.'
1295@xref{Continuation Lines,Truncation}.
1296
1297@item TTY
1298See `text-only terminal.'
1299
1300@item Undoing
1301Undoing means making your previous editing go in reverse, bringing
1302back the text that existed earlier in the editing session.
1303@xref{Undo}.
1304
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1305@item Unix
1306Unix is a class of multi-user computer operating systems with a long
1307history. There are several implementations today. The GNU project
1308(q.v.@:) aims to develop a complete Unix-like operating system that
1309is free software (q.v.@:).
1310
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1311@item User Option
1312A user option is a face (q.v.@:) or a variable (q.v.@:) that exists so
1313that you can customize Emacs by setting it to a new value.
1314@xref{Easy Customization}.
1315
1316@item Variable
1317A variable is an object in Lisp that can store an arbitrary value.
1318Emacs uses some variables for internal purposes, and has others (known
07ee224d 1319as `user options'; q.v.@:) just so that you can set their values to
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1320control the behavior of Emacs. The variables used in Emacs that you
1321are likely to be interested in are listed in the Variables Index in
1322this manual (@pxref{Variable Index}). @xref{Variables}, for
1323information on variables.
1324
1325@item Version Control
1326Version control systems keep track of multiple versions of a source file.
1327They provide a more powerful alternative to keeping backup files (q.v.@:).
1328@xref{Version Control}.
1329
1330@item Visiting
1331Visiting a file means loading its contents into a buffer (q.v.@:)
1332where they can be edited. @xref{Visiting}.
1333
1334@item Whitespace
1335Whitespace is any run of consecutive formatting characters (space,
1336tab, newline, and backspace).
1337
1338@item Widening
1339Widening is removing any restriction (q.v.@:) on the current buffer;
1340it is the opposite of narrowing (q.v.@:). @xref{Narrowing}.
1341
1342@item Window
1343Emacs divides a frame (q.v.@:) into one or more windows, each of which
1344can display the contents of one buffer (q.v.@:) at any time.
1345@xref{Screen}, for basic information on how Emacs uses the screen.
1346@xref{Windows}, for commands to control the use of windows. Some
1347other editors use the term ``window'' for what we call a `frame'
1348(q.v.@:) in Emacs.
1349
1350@item Window System
1351A window system is software that operates on a graphical display
1352(q.v.@:), to subdivide the screen so that multiple applications can
1353have their] own windows at the same time. All modern operating systems
1354include a window system.
1355
1356@item Word Abbrev
1357See `abbrev.'
1358
1359@item Word Search
1360Word search is searching for a sequence of words, considering the
1361punctuation between them as insignificant. @xref{Word Search}.
1362
1363@item WYSIWYG
1364WYSIWYG stands for ``What you see is what you get.'' Emacs generally
1365provides WYSIWYG editing for files of characters; in Enriched mode
1366(@pxref{Formatted Text}), it provides WYSIWYG editing for files that
1367include text formatting information.
1368
1369@item Yanking
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1370Yanking means reinserting text previously killed (q.v.@:). It can be
1371used to undo a mistaken kill, or for copying or moving text. Some
1372other systems call this ``pasting.'' @xref{Yanking}.
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1373@end table
1374
1375@ignore
1376 arch-tag: 0dd53ce1-5f09-4ac2-b13b-cf22b0f28d23
1377@end ignore