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authorRichard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>1994-10-17 04:17:33 +0000
committerRichard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>1994-10-17 04:17:33 +0000
commitcef7e84275905989fae96747e9fe2a4fdc8775d6 (patch)
treec3d6dfeafa34edd1409669aa75bf9fb51e0a42dc /etc
parentd08df3ea5192d06a7a891f4d66778f8b2aeabf31 (diff)
downloademacs-cef7e84275905989fae96747e9fe2a4fdc8775d6.tar.gz
Better info about C-z vs C-x C-c.
Diffstat (limited to 'etc')
-rw-r--r--etc/TUTORIAL33
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/etc/TUTORIAL b/etc/TUTORIAL
index 90554f7d920..91160d8aa20 100644
--- a/etc/TUTORIAL
+++ b/etc/TUTORIAL
@@ -512,21 +512,24 @@ editing and get rid of Emacs. The command to do this is C-x C-c.
(Don't worry; it offers to save each changed file before it kills the
Emacs.)
-C-z is the usual way to exit Emacs, because it is always better not to
-kill the Emacs if you are going to do any more editing. On systems
-which allow it, C-z exits from Emacs to the shell but does not destroy
-the Emacs; if you use the C shell, you can resume Emacs with the `fg'
-command (or, more generally, with `%emacs', which works even if your
-most recent job was some other). On systems where suspending is not
-possible, C-z creates a subshell running under Emacs to give you the
-chance to run other programs and return to Emacs afterward, but it
-does not truly "exit" from Emacs. In this case, the shell command
-`exit' is the usual way to get back to Emacs from the subshell.
-
-You would use C-x C-c if you were about to log out. You would
-also use it to exit an Emacs invoked under mail handling programs
-and other random utilities, since they may not believe you have
-really finished using the Emacs if it continues to exist.
+C-z is the command to exit Emacs *temporarily*--so that you can go
+back to the same Emacs session afterward.
+
+On systems which allow it, C-z exits from Emacs to the shell but does
+not destroy the Emacs; if you use the C shell, you can resume Emacs
+with the `fg' command (or, more generally, with `%emacs', which works
+even if your most recent job was some other). On systems which don't
+implement suspending, C-z creates a subshell running under Emacs to
+give you the chance to run other programs and return to Emacs
+afterward; it does not truly "exit" from Emacs. In this case, the
+shell command `exit' is the usual way to get back to Emacs from the
+subshell.
+
+The time to use C-x C-c is when you are about to log out. It's also
+the right thing to use to exit an Emacs invoked under mail handling
+programs and other random utilities, since they may not know how to
+cope with suspension of Emacs. On other occasions, use C-z, and
+resume the Emacs when you have more editing to do.
There are many C-x commands. The ones you know are: