diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'lisp/cmuscheme.el')
-rw-r--r-- | lisp/cmuscheme.el | 8 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/lisp/cmuscheme.el b/lisp/cmuscheme.el index 18087da9ac9..0910ea6187e 100644 --- a/lisp/cmuscheme.el +++ b/lisp/cmuscheme.el @@ -33,15 +33,15 @@ ;; merge them into the master source. ;; ;; NOTE: MIT Cscheme, when invoked with the -emacs flag, has a special user -;; interface that communicates process state back to the superior emacs by +;; interface that communicates process state back to the superior Emacs by ;; outputting special control sequences. The Emacs package, xscheme.el, has ;; lots and lots of special purpose code to read these control sequences, and ;; so is very tightly integrated with the cscheme process. The cscheme ;; interrupt handler and debugger read single character commands in cbreak ;; mode; when this happens, xscheme.el switches to special keymaps that bind -;; the single letter command keys to emacs functions that directly send the +;; the single letter command keys to Emacs functions that directly send the ;; character to the scheme process. Cmuscheme mode does *not* provide this -;; functionality. If you are a cscheme user, you may prefer to use the +;; functionality. If you are a cscheme user, you may prefer to use the ;; xscheme.el/cscheme -emacs interaction. ;; ;; Here's a summary of the pros and cons, as I see them. @@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ The following commands are available: \\{inferior-scheme-mode-map} -A Scheme process can be fired up with M-x run-scheme. +A Scheme process can be fired up with \\[run-scheme]. Customization: Entry to this mode runs the hooks on `comint-mode-hook' and `inferior-scheme-mode-hook' (in that order). |