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author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> | 2002-06-26 22:34:21 +0000 |
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committer | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> | 2002-06-26 22:34:21 +0000 |
commit | 285b48ffc417f338dc6981befba922f883e484db (patch) | |
tree | dd7f97e0bbcfafa2aff93c536db4145e946fffe9 /man/mini.texi | |
parent | 7464a6466ed9c440dc5d8ac9a4536020949c61a3 (diff) | |
download | emacs-285b48ffc417f338dc6981befba922f883e484db.tar.gz |
Completion operates on text before point.
Doc incremental search and complex command history.
Diffstat (limited to 'man/mini.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | man/mini.texi | 15 |
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/man/mini.texi b/man/mini.texi index 86793e3ec38..88aac3bdc74 100644 --- a/man/mini.texi +++ b/man/mini.texi @@ -184,7 +184,7 @@ argument, then Emacs visibly fills in the rest, or as much as can be determined from the part you have typed. When completion is available, certain keys---@key{TAB}, @key{RET}, and -@key{SPC}---are rebound to complete the text present in the minibuffer +@key{SPC}---are rebound to complete the text in the minibuffer before point into a longer string that it stands for, by matching it against a set of @dfn{completion alternatives} provided by the command reading the argument. @kbd{?} is defined to display a list of possible completions @@ -192,7 +192,7 @@ of what you have inserted. For example, when @kbd{M-x} uses the minibuffer to read the name of a command, it provides a list of all available Emacs command names to -complete against. The completion keys match the text in the minibuffer +complete against. The completion keys match the minibuffer text against all the command names, find any additional name characters implied by the ones already present in the minibuffer, and add those characters to the ones you have given. This is what makes it possible @@ -245,10 +245,10 @@ when completion is available. @table @kbd @item @key{TAB} -Complete the text in the minibuffer as much as possible +Complete the text before point in the minibuffer as much as possible (@code{minibuffer-complete}). @item @key{SPC} -Complete the minibuffer text, but don't go beyond one word +Complete the minibuffer text before point, but don't go beyond one word (@code{minibuffer-complete-word}). @item @key{RET} Submit the text in the minibuffer as the argument, possibly completing @@ -558,6 +558,13 @@ of saved entire commands. After finding the desired previous command, you can edit its expression as usual and then resubmit it by typing @key{RET} as usual. +@vindex isearch-resume-enabled + Incremental search does not, strictly speaking, use the minibuffer, +but it does something similar, so normally it is treated as a complex +command and it appears in the history list for @kbd{C-x @key{ESC} +@key{ESC}}. You can disable that by setting +@code{isearch-resume-enabled} to @code{nil}. + @vindex command-history The list of previous minibuffer-using commands is stored as a Lisp list in the variable @code{command-history}. Each element is a Lisp |