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Re: M-k
From: |
harven |
Subject: |
Re: M-k |
Date: |
Tue, 07 Jul 2009 08:44:38 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.11 (Gnus v5.11) Emacs/22.1 (darwin) |
Sean Sieger <sean.sieger@gmail.com> writes:
> In 29.2 of the GNU/Emacs Manual,
>
> The sentence commands assume that you follow the American typist's
> convention of putting two spaces at the end of a sentence; they consider
> a sentence to end wherever there is a `.', `?' or `!' followed by the
> end of a line or two spaces, with any number of `)', `]', `'', or `"'
> characters allowed in between.
>
> Is there any `cure' for when I'm editing arguments in a LaTeX file and I
> want to use either `M-k' or `C-x <DEL>'?
>
> Take
>
> \begin{environment}[This is the sentence I want to kill.]{and so on}
>
> for example, I get this:
>
> \begin{environment}[
>
> right? Any suggestions?
May be zap-to-char ?
M-z .
This kills from point to first .
\begin{environment}[This is the sentence I want to kill.]{and so on}
gives
\begin{environment}[]{and so on}
- M-k, Sean Sieger, 2009/07/06
- Re: M-k, Barry Margolin, 2009/07/06
- Re: M-k,
harven <=