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[bpt/emacs.git] / man / fixit.texi
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1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2@c Copyright (C) 1985, 86, 87, 93, 94, 95, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
4@node Fixit, Files, Search, Top
5@chapter Commands for Fixing Typos
6@cindex typos, fixing
7@cindex mistakes, correcting
8
9 In this chapter we describe the commands that are especially useful for
10the times when you catch a mistake in your text just after you have made
11it, or change your mind while composing text on the fly.
12
13 The most fundamental command for correcting erroneous editing is the
14undo command, @kbd{C-x u} or @kbd{C-_}. This command undoes a single
15command (usually), a part of a command (in the case of
16@code{query-replace}), or several consecutive self-inserting characters.
17Consecutive repetitions of @kbd{C-_} or @kbd{C-x u} undo earlier and
18earlier changes, back to the limit of the undo information available.
19@xref{Undo}, for for more information.
20
21@menu
22* Kill Errors:: Commands to kill a batch of recently entered text.
23* Transpose:: Exchanging two characters, words, lines, lists...
24* Fixing Case:: Correcting case of last word entered.
25* Spelling:: Apply spelling checker to a word, or a whole file.
26@end menu
27
28@node Kill Errors
29@section Killing Your Mistakes
30
31@table @kbd
32@item @key{DEL}
33Delete last character (@code{delete-backward-char}).
34@item M-@key{DEL}
35Kill last word (@code{backward-kill-word}).
36@item C-x @key{DEL}
37Kill to beginning of sentence (@code{backward-kill-sentence}).
38@end table
39
40 The @key{DEL} character (@code{delete-backward-char}) is the most
41important correction command. It deletes the character before point.
42When @key{DEL} follows a self-inserting character command, you can think
43of it as canceling that command. However, avoid the mistake of thinking
44of @key{DEL} as a general way to cancel a command!
45
46 When your mistake is longer than a couple of characters, it might be
47more convenient to use @kbd{M-@key{DEL}} or @kbd{C-x @key{DEL}}.
48@kbd{M-@key{DEL}} kills back to the start of the last word, and @kbd{C-x
49@key{DEL}} kills back to the start of the last sentence. @kbd{C-x
50@key{DEL}} is particularly useful when you change your mind about the
51phrasing of the text you are writing. @kbd{M-@key{DEL}} and @kbd{C-x
52@key{DEL}} save the killed text for @kbd{C-y} and @kbd{M-y} to
53retrieve. @xref{Yanking}.@refill
54
55 @kbd{M-@key{DEL}} is often useful even when you have typed only a few
56characters wrong, if you know you are confused in your typing and aren't
57sure exactly what you typed. At such a time, you cannot correct with
58@key{DEL} except by looking at the screen to see what you did. Often it
59requires less thought to kill the whole word and start again.
60
61@node Transpose
62@section Transposing Text
63
64@table @kbd
65@item C-t
66Transpose two characters (@code{transpose-chars}).
67@item M-t
68Transpose two words (@code{transpose-words}).
69@item C-M-t
70Transpose two balanced expressions (@code{transpose-sexps}).
71@item C-x C-t
72Transpose two lines (@code{transpose-lines}).
73@end table
74
75@kindex C-t
76@findex transpose-chars
77 The common error of transposing two characters can be fixed, when they
78are adjacent, with the @kbd{C-t} command (@code{transpose-chars}). Normally,
79@kbd{C-t} transposes the two characters on either side of point. When
80given at the end of a line, rather than transposing the last character of
81the line with the newline, which would be useless, @kbd{C-t} transposes the
82last two characters on the line. So, if you catch your transposition error
83right away, you can fix it with just a @kbd{C-t}. If you don't catch it so
84fast, you must move the cursor back to between the two transposed
85characters. If you transposed a space with the last character of the word
86before it, the word motion commands are a good way of getting there.
87Otherwise, a reverse search (@kbd{C-r}) is often the best way.
88@xref{Search}.
89
90
91@kindex C-x C-t
92@findex transpose-lines
93@kindex M-t
94@findex transpose-words
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95@c Don't index C-M-t and transpose-sexps here, they are indexed in
96@c programs.texi, in the "List Commands" node.
97@c @kindex C-M-t
98@c @findex transpose-sexps
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99 @kbd{M-t} (@code{transpose-words}) transposes the word before point
100with the word after point. It moves point forward over a word, dragging
101the word preceding or containing point forward as well. The punctuation
102characters between the words do not move. For example, @w{@samp{FOO, BAR}}
103transposes into @w{@samp{BAR, FOO}} rather than @samp{@w{BAR FOO,}}.
104
105 @kbd{C-M-t} (@code{transpose-sexps}) is a similar command for transposing
106two expressions (@pxref{Lists}), and @kbd{C-x C-t} (@code{transpose-lines})
107exchanges lines. They work like @kbd{M-t} except in determining the
108division of the text into syntactic units.
109
110 A numeric argument to a transpose command serves as a repeat count: it
111tells the transpose command to move the character (word, sexp, line)
112before or containing point across several other characters (words,
113sexps, lines). For example, @kbd{C-u 3 C-t} moves the character before
114point forward across three other characters. It would change
115@samp{f@point{}oobar} into @samp{oobf@point{}ar}. This is equivalent to
116repeating @kbd{C-t} three times. @kbd{C-u - 4 M-t} moves the word
117before point backward across four words. @kbd{C-u - C-M-t} would cancel
118the effect of plain @kbd{C-M-t}.@refill
119
120 A numeric argument of zero is assigned a special meaning (because
121otherwise a command with a repeat count of zero would do nothing): to
122transpose the character (word, sexp, line) ending after point with the
123one ending after the mark.
124
125@node Fixing Case
126@section Case Conversion
127
128@table @kbd
129@item M-- M-l
130Convert last word to lower case. Note @kbd{Meta--} is Meta-minus.
131@item M-- M-u
132Convert last word to all upper case.
133@item M-- M-c
134Convert last word to lower case with capital initial.
135@end table
136
137@kindex M-@t{-} M-l
138@kindex M-@t{-} M-u
139@kindex M-@t{-} M-c
140 A very common error is to type words in the wrong case. Because of this,
141the word case-conversion commands @kbd{M-l}, @kbd{M-u} and @kbd{M-c} have a
142special feature when used with a negative argument: they do not move the
143cursor. As soon as you see you have mistyped the last word, you can simply
144case-convert it and go on typing. @xref{Case}.@refill
145
146@node Spelling
147@section Checking and Correcting Spelling
148@cindex spelling, checking and correcting
149@cindex checking spelling
150@cindex correcting spelling
151
152 This section describes the commands to check the spelling of a single
153word or of a portion of a buffer. These commands work with the spelling
154checker program Ispell, which is not part of Emacs.
155@ifinfo
156@xref{Top, Ispell, Overview ispell, ispell.info, The Ispell Manual}.
157@end ifinfo
158
159@table @kbd
160@item M-x flyspell-mode
161Enable Flyspell mode, which highlights all misspelled words.
162@item M-$
163Check and correct spelling of the word at point (@code{ispell-word}).
164@item M-@key{TAB}
165Complete the word before point based on the spelling dictionary
166(@code{ispell-complete-word}).
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167@item M-x ispell
168Spell-check the active region or the current buffer.
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169@item M-x ispell-buffer
170Check and correct spelling of each word in the buffer.
171@item M-x ispell-region
172Check and correct spelling of each word in the region.
173@item M-x ispell-message
174Check and correct spelling of each word in a draft mail message,
175excluding cited material.
176@item M-x ispell-change-dictionary @key{RET} @var{dict} @key{RET}
177Restart the Ispell process, using @var{dict} as the dictionary.
178@item M-x ispell-kill-ispell
179Kill the Ispell subprocess.
180@end table
181
182@cindex Flyspell mode
183@findex flyspell-mode
184 Flyspell mode is a fully-automatic way to check spelling as you edit
185in Emacs. It operates by checking words as you change or insert them.
186When it finds a word that it does not recognize, it highlights that
187word. This does not interfere with your editing, but when you see the
188highlighted word, you can move to it and fix it. Type @kbd{M-x
189flyspell-mode} to enable or disable this mode in the current buffer.
190
191 When Flyspell mode highlights a word as misspelled, you can click on
192it with @kbd{Mouse-2} to display a menu of possible corrections and
193actions. You can also correct the word by editing it manually in any
194way you like.
195
196 The other Emacs spell-checking features check or look up words when
197you give an explicit command to do so. Checking all or part of the
198buffer is useful when you have text that was written outside of this
199Emacs session and might contain any number of misspellings.
200
201@kindex M-$
202@findex ispell-word
203 To check the spelling of the word around or next to point, and
204optionally correct it as well, use the command @kbd{M-$}
205(@code{ispell-word}). If the word is not correct, the command offers
206you various alternatives for what to do about it.
207
208@findex ispell-buffer
209@findex ispell-region
210 To check the entire current buffer, use @kbd{M-x ispell-buffer}. Use
211@kbd{M-x ispell-region} to check just the current region. To check
212spelling in an email message you are writing, use @kbd{M-x
213ispell-message}; that checks the whole buffer, but does not check
214material that is indented or appears to be cited from other messages.
215
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216@findex ispell
217@cindex spell-checking the active region
218 The @kbd{M-x ispell} command spell-checks the active region if the
219Transient Mark mode is on (@pxref{Transient Mark}), otherwise it
220spell-checks the current buffer.
221
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222 Each time these commands encounter an incorrect word, they ask you
223what to do. They display a list of alternatives, usually including
224several ``near-misses''---words that are close to the word being
225checked. Then you must type a character. Here are the valid responses:
226
227@table @kbd
228@item @key{SPC}
229Skip this word---continue to consider it incorrect, but don't change it
230here.
231
232@item r @var{new} @key{RET}
233Replace the word (just this time) with @var{new}.
234
235@item R @var{new} @key{RET}
236Replace the word with @var{new}, and do a @code{query-replace} so you
237can replace it elsewhere in the buffer if you wish.
238
239@item @var{digit}
240Replace the word (just this time) with one of the displayed
241near-misses. Each near-miss is listed with a digit; type that digit to
242select it.
243
244@item a
245Accept the incorrect word---treat it as correct, but only in this
246editing session.
247
248@item A
249Accept the incorrect word---treat it as correct, but only in this
250editing session and for this buffer.
251
252@item i
253Insert this word in your private dictionary file so that Ispell will
254consider it correct it from now on, even in future sessions.
255
256@item u
257Insert the lower-case version of this word in your private dictionary
258file.
259
260@item m
261Like @kbd{i}, but you can also specify dictionary completion
262information.
263
264@item l @var{word} @key{RET}
265Look in the dictionary for words that match @var{word}. These words
266become the new list of ``near-misses''; you can select one of them to
267replace with by typing a digit. You can use @samp{*} in @var{word} as a
268wildcard.
269
270@item C-g
271Quit interactive spell checking. You can restart it again afterward
272with @kbd{C-u M-$}.
273
274@item X
275Same as @kbd{C-g}.
276
277@item x
278Quit interactive spell checking and move point back to where it was
279when you started spell checking.
280
281@item q
282Quit interactive spell checking and kill the Ispell subprocess.
283
284@item C-l
285Refresh the screen.
286
287@item C-z
288This key has its normal command meaning (suspend Emacs or iconify this
289frame).
290@end table
291
292@findex ispell-complete-word
293 The command @code{ispell-complete-word}, which is bound to the key
294@kbd{M-@key{TAB}} in Text mode and related modes, shows a list of
295completions based on spelling correction. Insert the beginning of a
296word, and then type @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}; the command displays a completion
297list window. To choose one of the completions listed, click
298@kbd{Mouse-2} on it, or move the cursor there in the completions window
299and type @key{RET}. @xref{Text Mode}.
300
301@ignore
302@findex reload-ispell
303 The first time you use any of the spell checking commands, it starts
304an Ispell subprocess. The first thing the subprocess does is read your
305private dictionary, which defaults to the file @file{~/ispell.words}.
306Words that you ``insert'' with the @kbd{i} command are added to that
307file, but not right away---only at the end of the interactive
308replacement procedure. Use the @kbd{M-x reload-ispell} command to
309reload your private dictionary if you edit the file outside of Ispell.
310@end ignore
311
312@cindex @code{ispell} program
313@findex ispell-kill-ispell
314 Once started, the Ispell subprocess continues to run (waiting for
315something to do), so that subsequent spell checking commands complete
316more quickly. If you want to get rid of the Ispell process, use
317@kbd{M-x ispell-kill-ispell}. This is not usually necessary, since the
318process uses no time except when you do spelling correction.
319
320@vindex ispell-dictionary
321 Ispell uses two dictionaries: the standard dictionary and your private
322dictionary. The variable @code{ispell-dictionary} specifies the file
323name of the standard dictionary to use. A value of @code{nil} says to
324use the default dictionary. The command @kbd{M-x
325ispell-change-dictionary} sets this variable and then restarts the
326Ispell subprocess, so that it will use a different dictionary.
327