@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
-@c Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1993-1995, 1997, 2000-2013 Free Software
+@c Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1993-1995, 1997, 2000-2014 Free Software
@c Foundation, Inc.
@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
@iftex
else: viewing ``document files'', reading Usenet news, running shell
commands and shell subprocesses, using a single shared Emacs for
utilities that expect to run an editor as a subprocess, printing
-hardcopy, sorting text, narrowing display to part of the buffer,
-editing binary files, saving an Emacs session for later resumption,
-following hyperlinks, browsing images, emulating other editors, and
-various diversions and amusements.
+hardcopy, sorting text, editing binary files, saving an Emacs session
+for later resumption, following hyperlinks, emulating other editors,
+and various diversions and amusements.
@end iftex
(@code{doc-view-kill-proc-and-buffer}) kills the converter process and
the DocView buffer.
+@node EWW
+@section Web Browsing with EWW
+
+@findex eww
+@findex eww-open-file
+ @dfn{EWW}, the Emacs Web Wowser, is a web browser package for Emacs.
+It allows browsing URLs within an Emacs buffer. The command @kbd{M-x
+eww} will open a URL or search the web. You can open a file
+using the command @kbd{M-x eww-open-file}. You can use EWW as the
+web browser for @code{browse-url}, @pxref{Browse-URL}. For full
+details, @pxref{Top, EWW,, eww, The Emacs Web Wowser Manual}.
+
@node Shell
@section Running Shell Commands from Emacs
@cindex subshell
@item @key{TAB}
@kindex TAB @r{(Shell mode)}
@findex completion-at-point
+@cindex shell completion
Complete the command name or file name before point in the shell
buffer (@code{completion-at-point}). This uses the usual Emacs
completion rules (@pxref{Completion}), with the completion
alternatives being file names, environment variable names, the shell
command history, and history references (@pxref{History References}).
-
-@vindex shell-completion-fignore
-@vindex comint-completion-fignore
-The variable @code{shell-completion-fignore} specifies a list of file
-name extensions to ignore in Shell mode completion. The default
-setting is @code{nil}, but some users prefer @code{("~" "#" "%")} to
-ignore file names ending in @samp{~}, @samp{#} or @samp{%}. Other
-related Comint modes use the variable @code{comint-completion-fignore}
-instead.
+For options controlling the completion, @pxref{Shell Options}.
@item M-?
@kindex M-? @r{(Shell mode)}
for a password.
Please note that Emacs will not echo passwords by default. If you
-really want them to be echoed, evaluate the following Lisp
-expression:
+really want them to be echoed, evaluate (@pxref{Lisp Eval}) the
+following Lisp expression:
@example
(remove-hook 'comint-output-filter-functions
@key{RET}} over and over.
The command @kbd{C-c .}@: (@code{comint-input-previous-argument})
-copies an individual argument from a previous command, like @kbd{ESC
-.} in Bash. The simplest use copies the last argument from the
+copies an individual argument from a previous command, like
+@kbd{@key{ESC} .} in Bash. The simplest use copies the last argument from the
previous shell command. With a prefix argument @var{n}, it copies the
@var{n}th argument instead. Repeating @kbd{C-c .} copies from an
earlier shell command instead, always using the same value of @var{n}
If you set @code{shell-completion-execonly} to @code{nil},
it considers nonexecutable files as well.
+@vindex shell-completion-fignore
+@vindex comint-completion-fignore
+The variable @code{shell-completion-fignore} specifies a list of file
+name extensions to ignore in Shell mode completion. The default
+setting is @code{nil}, but some users prefer @code{("~" "#" "%")} to
+ignore file names ending in @samp{~}, @samp{#} or @samp{%}. Other
+related Comint modes use the variable @code{comint-completion-fignore}
+instead.
+
+@findex shell-dynamic-complete-command
+Some implementation details of the shell command completion may also be found
+in the lisp documentation of the @code{shell-dynamic-complete-command}
+function.
+
@findex shell-pushd-tohome
@findex shell-pushd-dextract
@findex shell-pushd-dunique
current text terminal. @xref{Windows Startup}.
If you omit a filename argument while supplying the @samp{-c} option,
-the new frame displays the @file{*scratch*} buffer by default. If
-@code{initial-buffer-choice} is a string (@pxref{Entering Emacs}), the
-new frame displays that file or directory instead.
+the new frame displays the @file{*scratch*} buffer by default. This
+behavior can be customized using the variable
+@code{initial-buffer-choice} (@pxref{Entering Emacs}).
@item -F @var{alist}
@itemx --frame-parameters=@var{alist}
init file (@pxref{Init File}), followed by @code{(pr-update-menus)}.
This function replaces the usual printing commands in the menu bar
with a @samp{Printing} submenu that contains various printing options.
-You can also type @kbd{M-x pr-interface RET}; this creates a
+You can also type @kbd{M-x pr-interface @key{RET}}; this creates a
@file{*Printing Interface*} buffer, similar to a customization buffer,
where you can set the printing options. After selecting what and how
to print, you start the print job using the @samp{Print} button (click
-@kbd{mouse-2} on it, or move point over it and type @kbd{RET}). For
+@kbd{Mouse-2} on it, or move point over it and type @key{RET}). For
further information on the various options, use the @samp{Interface
Help} button.
used for comparison comes from a fixed range of columns. See below
for an explanation.
+@findex reverse-region
@item M-x reverse-region
Reverse the order of the lines in the region. This is useful for
sorting into descending order by fields or columns, since those sort
@cindex reload files
@cindex desktop
+@vindex desktop-restore-frames
Use the desktop library to save the state of Emacs from one session
to another. Once you save the Emacs @dfn{desktop}---the buffers,
their file names, major modes, buffer positions, and so on---then
-subsequent Emacs sessions reload the saved desktop.
+subsequent Emacs sessions reload the saved desktop. By default,
+the desktop also tries to save the frame and window configuration.
+To disable this, set @code{desktop-restore-frames} to @code{nil}.
+(See that variable's documentation for some related options
+that you can customize to fine-tune this behavior.)
@findex desktop-save
@vindex desktop-save-mode
(desktop-save-mode 1)
@end example
+@vindex desktop-auto-save-timeout
+@noindent
+When @code{desktop-save-mode} is active and the desktop file exists,
+Emacs auto-saves it every @code{desktop-auto-save-timeout}
+seconds, if that is non-@code{nil} and non-zero.
+
@findex desktop-change-dir
@findex desktop-revert
@vindex desktop-path
@cindex Macintosh key bindings
@cindex WordStar
- GNU Emacs can be programmed to emulate (more or less) most other
+ GNU Emacs can be programmed to emulate (more or less) some other
editors. Standard facilities can emulate these:
@table @asis