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[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/trouble.texi
From: |
Richard M. Stallman |
Subject: |
[Emacs-diffs] Changes to emacs/man/trouble.texi |
Date: |
Wed, 08 Feb 2006 00:22:49 +0000 |
Index: emacs/man/trouble.texi
diff -u emacs/man/trouble.texi:1.56 emacs/man/trouble.texi:1.57
--- emacs/man/trouble.texi:1.56 Sun Feb 5 22:41:31 2006
+++ emacs/man/trouble.texi Wed Feb 8 00:22:49 2006
@@ -158,14 +158,14 @@
and when Emacs is properly configured for your terminal, it translates
that key into the character @key{DEL}.
- When Emacs starts up using a window system, it determines
+ When Emacs starts up on a graphical display, it determines
automatically which key should be @key{DEL}. In some unusual cases
Emacs gets the wrong information from the system. If the usual
erasure key deletes forwards instead of backwards, that is probably
what happened---Emacs ought to be treating the @key{DELETE} key as
@key{DEL}, but it isn't.
- With a window system, if the usual erasure key is labeled
+ On a graphical display, if the usual erasure key is labeled
@key{BACKSPACE} and there is a @key{DELETE} key elsewhere, but the
@key{DELETE} key deletes backward instead of forward, that too
suggests Emacs got the wrong information---but in the opposite sense.
@@ -213,7 +213,7 @@
@key{DEL}, and @code{nil} specifies the other mode. @xref{Easy
Customization}.
- With a window system, it can also happen that the usual erasure key
+ On a graphical display, it can also happen that the usual erasure key
is labeled @key{BACKSPACE}, there is a @key{DELETE} key elsewhere, and
both keys delete forward. This probably means that someone has
redefined your @key{BACKSPACE} key as a @key{DELETE} key. With X,
@@ -226,7 +226,7 @@
@subsection Recursive Editing Levels
Recursive editing levels are important and useful features of Emacs, but
-they can seem like malfunctions to the user who does not understand them.
+they can seem like malfunctions if you do not understand them.
If the mode line has square brackets @address@hidden around the parentheses
that contain the names of the major and minor modes, you have entered a