[Top][All Lists]
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[Texi2html-cvs] Changes to texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_7.htm
From: |
Patrice Dumas |
Subject: |
[Texi2html-cvs] Changes to texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_7.html |
Date: |
Tue, 23 Aug 2005 19:52:49 -0400 |
Index: texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_7.html
diff -u texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_7.html:1.19
texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_7.html:1.20
--- texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_7.html:1.19 Tue Aug 9 17:19:26 2005
+++ texi2html/Tests/xemacs_frame_res/xemacs_7.html Tue Aug 23 23:51:17 2005
@@ -766,7 +766,7 @@
<h2 class="section"> 4.9 Numeric Arguments </h2>
<p> In mathematics and computer usage, the word <em>argument</em> means
-"data provided to a function or operation." Any Emacs command can be
+“data provided to a function or operation.” Any Emacs command can
be
given a <em>numeric argument</em> (also called a <em>prefix argument</em>).
Some commands interpret the argument as a repetition count. For
example, giving an argument of ten to the key <kbd>C-f</kbd> (the command
@@ -802,13 +802,13 @@
without digits normally means -1.
</p>
<p> <kbd>C-u</kbd> followed by a character which is neither a digit nor a
minus
-sign has the special meaning of "multiply by four". It multiplies
the
+sign has the special meaning of “multiply by four”. It multiplies
the
argument for the next command by four. <kbd>C-u</kbd> twice multiplies it by
sixteen. Thus, <kbd>C-u C-u C-f</kbd> moves forward sixteen characters. This
-is a good way to move forward "fast", since it moves about 1/5 of a
line
+is a good way to move forward “fast”, since it moves about 1/5 of
a line
in the usual size frame. Other useful combinations are <kbd>C-u C-n</kbd>,
<kbd>C-u C-u C-n</kbd> (move down a good fraction of a frame), <kbd>C-u C-u
-C-o</kbd> (make "a lot" of blank lines), and <kbd>C-u C-k</kbd>
(kill four
+C-o</kbd> (make “a lot” of blank lines), and <kbd>C-u C-k</kbd>
(kill four
lines).
</p>
<p> Some commands care only about whether there is an argument and not about
@@ -841,7 +841,7 @@
digit to insert from the argument, type another <kbd>C-u</kbd>; for example,
<kbd>C-u 6 4 C-u 1</kbd> does insert 64 copies of the character
<samp>`1'</samp>.
</p>
-<p> We use the term "prefix argument" as well as "numeric
argument" to
+<p> We use the term “prefix argument” as well as “numeric
argument” to
emphasize that you type the argument before the command, and to
distinguish these arguments from minibuffer arguments that come after
the command.