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[Texi2html-cvs] Changes to texi2html/Tests/xemacs_res/xemacs_9.html
From: |
Patrice Dumas |
Subject: |
[Texi2html-cvs] Changes to texi2html/Tests/xemacs_res/xemacs_9.html |
Date: |
Tue, 23 Aug 2005 19:53:00 -0400 |
Index: texi2html/Tests/xemacs_res/xemacs_9.html
diff -u texi2html/Tests/xemacs_res/xemacs_9.html:1.23
texi2html/Tests/xemacs_res/xemacs_9.html:1.24
--- texi2html/Tests/xemacs_res/xemacs_9.html:1.23 Tue Aug 9 17:19:27 2005
+++ texi2html/Tests/xemacs_res/xemacs_9.html Tue Aug 23 23:51:18 2005
@@ -176,8 +176,8 @@
<a name="IDX214"></a>
<a name="IDX215"></a>
<p>XEmacs gives a special meaning to a double slash (which is not normally
-a useful thing to write): it means, "ignore everything before the
-second slash in the pair." Thus, <samp>`/u2/emacs/src/'</samp> is
ignored in
+a useful thing to write): it means, “ignore everything before the
+second slash in the pair.” Thus, <samp>`/u2/emacs/src/'</samp> is
ignored in
the example above, and you get the file <tt>`/etc/termcap'</tt>.
</p>
<a name="IDX216"></a>
@@ -226,7 +226,7 @@
argument. See section <a href="xemacs_19.html#SEC175">Multiple Windows</a>.
</p>
<p> There are some restrictions on the use of the minibuffer window,
-however. You cannot switch buffers in it--the minibuffer and its
+however. You cannot switch buffers in it—the minibuffer and its
window are permanently attached. Also, you cannot split or kill the
minibuffer window. But you can make it taller in the normal fashion with
<kbd>C-x ^</kbd>. If you enable Resize-Minibuffer mode, then the
@@ -255,7 +255,7 @@
and get confused. Therefore, most XEmacs commands that use the
minibuffer refuse to operate if the minibuffer window is selected. If
the minibuffer is active but you have switched to a different window,
-recursive use of the minibuffer is allowed--if you know enough to try
+recursive use of the minibuffer is allowed—if you know enough to try
to do this, you probably will not get confused.
</p>
<a name="IDX219"></a>
@@ -288,8 +288,8 @@
argument, then XEmacs visibly fills in the rest, or as much as
can be determined from the part you have typed.
</p>
-<p> When completion is available, certain keys--<kbd>TAB</kbd>,
<kbd>RET</kbd>, and
-<kbd>SPC</kbd>--are rebound to complete the text present in the
+<p> When completion is available, certain keys—<kbd>TAB</kbd>,
<kbd>RET</kbd>, and
+<kbd>SPC</kbd>—are rebound to complete the text present in the
minibuffer into a longer string that it stands for, by matching it
against a set of <em>completion alternatives</em> provided by the command
reading the argument. <kbd>?</kbd> is defined to display a list of possible
@@ -312,7 +312,7 @@
</p>
<p>When a completion list is displayed, the completions will highlight as
you move the mouse over them. Clicking the middle mouse button on any
-highlighted completion will "select" it just as if you had typed it
in
+highlighted completion will “select” it just as if you had typed
it in
and hit <kbd>RET</kbd>.
</p>
<table class="menu" border="0" cellspacing="0">
@@ -350,13 +350,13 @@
<p> A concrete example may help here. If you type <kbd>M-x au
<kbd>TAB</kbd></kbd>,
the <kbd>TAB</kbd> looks for alternatives (in this case, command names) that
start with <samp>`au'</samp>. There are several, including
-<code>auto-fill-mode</code> and <code>auto-save-mode</code>--but they are all
the
+<code>auto-fill-mode</code> and <code>auto-save-mode</code>—but they are
all the
same as far as <code>auto</code>, so the <samp>`au'</samp> in the minibuffer
changes
to <samp>`auto'</samp>.
</p>
<p> If you type <kbd>TAB</kbd> again immediately, there are multiple
-possibilities for the very next character--it could be any of
-<samp>`c-'</samp>--so no more characters are added; instead, <kbd>TAB</kbd>
+possibilities for the very next character—it could be any of
+<samp>`c-'</samp>—so no more characters are added; instead,
<kbd>TAB</kbd>
displays a list of all possible completions in another window.
</p>
<p> If you go on to type <kbd>-f <kbd>TAB</kbd></kbd>, this <kbd>TAB</kbd>
sees
@@ -564,9 +564,9 @@
has several elements including <code>".o"</code>,
<code>".elc"</code>, <code>".dvi"</code>
and <code>"~"</code>. The effect is that, for example,
<samp>`foo'</samp> can
complete to <samp>`foo.c'</samp> even though <samp>`foo.o'</samp> exists as
well.
-However, if <em>all</em> the possible completions end in "ignored"
+However, if <em>all</em> the possible completions end in “ignored”
strings, then they are not ignored. Ignored extensions do not apply to
-lists of completions--those always mention all possible completions.
+lists of completions—those always mention all possible completions.
</p>
<a name="IDX227"></a>
<p> If a completion command finds the next character is undetermined, it
@@ -641,21 +641,21 @@
<p> The simplest way to reuse the saved arguments in the history list is
to move through the history list one element at a time. While in the
minibuffer, use <kbd>M-p</kbd> or up-arrow
(<code>previous-history-element</code>)
-to "move to" the next earlier minibuffer input, and use
<kbd>M-n</kbd> or
-down-arrow (<code>next-history-element</code>) to "move to" the next
later
+to “move to” the next earlier minibuffer input, and use
<kbd>M-n</kbd> or
+down-arrow (<code>next-history-element</code>) to “move to” the
next later
input.
</p>
<p> The previous input that you fetch from the history entirely replaces
the contents of the minibuffer. To use it as the argument, exit the
minibuffer as usual with <kbd>RET</kbd>. You can also edit the text before
you reuse it; this does not change the history element that you
-"moved" to, but your new argument does go at the end of the history
+“moved” to, but your new argument does go at the end of the history
list in its own right.
</p>
-<p> For many minibuffer arguments there is a "default" value. In
some
+<p> For many minibuffer arguments there is a “default” value. In
some
cases, the minibuffer history commands know the default value. Then you
can insert the default value into the minibuffer as text by using
-<kbd>M-n</kbd> to move "into the future" in the history.
+<kbd>M-n</kbd> to move “into the future” in the history.
</p>
<a name="IDX234"></a>
<a name="IDX235"></a>
@@ -680,7 +680,7 @@
<p> There are several other very specific history lists, including one for
command names read by <kbd>M-x</kbd>, one for buffer names, one for arguments
of commands like <code>query-replace</code>, and one for compilation commands
-read by <code>compile</code>. Finally, there is one "miscellaneous"
history
+read by <code>compile</code>. Finally, there is one
“miscellaneous” history
list that most minibuffer arguments use.
</p>