@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
-@c Copyright (C) 2000-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+@c Copyright (C) 2000-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
-@node Mac OS / GNUstep, Microsoft Windows, Antinews, Top
+@node Mac OS / GNUstep
@appendix Emacs and Mac OS / GNUstep
@cindex Mac OS X
@cindex Macintosh
* GNUstep Support:: Details on status of GNUstep support.
@end menu
-@node Mac / GNUstep Basics, Mac / GNUstep Customization, , Mac OS / GNUstep
+@node Mac / GNUstep Basics
@section Basic Emacs usage under Mac OS and GNUstep
By default, the @key{alt} and @key{option} keys are the same as
of setting PATH is recommended on Mac OS X 10.5 and later, using the
@file{/etc/paths} files and the @file{/etc/paths.d} directory.
-@node Mac / GNUstep Customization, Mac / GNUstep Events, Mac / GNUstep Basics, Mac OS / GNUstep
+@node Mac / GNUstep Customization
@section Mac / GNUstep Customization
Emacs can be customized in several ways in addition to the standard
@end table
-@node Mac / GNUstep Events, GNUstep Support, Mac / GNUstep Customization, Mac OS / GNUstep
+@node Mac / GNUstep Events
@section Windowing System Events under Mac OS / GNUstep
Nextstep applications receive a number of special events which have
double-clicking a file in the Finder application. By default, Emacs
responds to this event by opening a new frame and visiting the file in
that frame (@code{ns-find-file}). As an exception, if the selected
-buffer is the @samp{*scratch*} buffer, Emacs visits the file in the
+buffer is the @file{*scratch*} buffer, Emacs visits the file in the
selected frame.
You can change how Emacs responds to a @code{ns-open-file} event by
services and receive the results back. Note that you may need to
restart Emacs to access newly-available services.
-@node GNUstep Support, , Mac / GNUstep Events, Mac OS / GNUstep
+@node GNUstep Support
@section GNUstep Support
Emacs can be built and run under GNUstep, but there are still