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We now give the basics of how to enter text, make corrections, and
save the text in a file. If this material is new to you, you might
learn it more easily by running the Emacs learn-by-doing tutorial. To
use the tutorial, run Emacs and type Control-h t
(help-with-tutorial
).
To clear the screen and redisplay, type C-l (recenter
).
D.1 Inserting Text Inserting text by simply typing it. D.2 Changing the Location of Point How to move the cursor to the place where you want to change something. D.3 Erasing Text Deleting and killing text. D.4 Undoing Changes Undoing recent changes in the text. D.5 Files Visiting, creating, and saving files. D.6 Help Asking what a character does. D.7 Blank Lines Commands to make or delete blank lines. D.8 Continuation Lines Lines too wide for the screen. D.9 Cursor Position Information What page, line, row, or column is point on? D.10 Numeric Arguments Numeric arguments for repeating a command. D.11 Repeating a Command A short-cut for repeating the previous command.
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To insert printing characters into the text you are editing, just type them. This inserts the characters you type into the buffer at the cursor (that is, at point; see section B.1 Point). The cursor moves forward, and any text after the cursor moves forward too. If the text in the buffer is `FOOBAR', with the cursor before the `B', then if you type XX, you get `FOOXXBAR', with the cursor still before the `B'.
To delete text you have just inserted, use the large key labeled DEL, BACKSPACE or DELETE which is a short distance above the RET or ENTER key. This is the key you normally use, outside Emacs, for erasing the last character that you typed. Regardless of the label on that key, Emacs thinks of it as DEL, and that's what we call it in this manual.
The DEL key deletes the character before the cursor. As a consequence, the cursor and all the characters after it move backwards. If you type a printing character and then type DEL, they cancel out.
On most computers, Emacs recognizes automatically which key ought to be DEL, and sets it up that way. But in some cases, especially with text-only terminals, you will need to tell Emacs which key to use for that purpose. If the large key not far above the RET or ENTER key doesn't delete backwards, you need to do this. See section AD.9.1 If DEL Fails to Delete, for an explanation of how.
Most PC keyboards have both a BACKSPACE key a short ways above RET or ENTER, and a DELETE key elsewhere. On these keyboards, Emacs supports when possible the usual convention that the BACKSPACE key deletes backwards (it is DEL), while the DELETE key deletes "forwards," deleting the character after point, the one underneath the cursor, like C-d (see below).
To end a line and start typing a new one, type RET. This inserts a newline character in the buffer. If point is in the middle of a line, RET splits the line. Typing DEL when the cursor is at the beginning of a line deletes the preceding newline, thus joining the line with the preceding line.
Emacs can split lines automatically when they become too long, if you turn on a special minor mode called Auto Fill mode. See section T.5 Filling Text, for how to use Auto Fill mode.
If you prefer to have text characters replace (overwrite) existing text rather than shove it to the right, you can enable Overwrite mode, a minor mode. See section AD.1 Minor Modes.
Direct insertion works for printing characters and SPC, but other
characters act as editing commands and do not insert themselves. If you
need to insert a control character or a character whose code is above 200
octal, you must quote it by typing the character Control-q
(quoted-insert
) first. (This character's name is normally written
C-q for short.) There are two ways to use C-q:
The use of octal sequences is disabled in ordinary non-binary Overwrite mode, to give you a convenient way to insert a digit instead of overwriting with it.
When multibyte characters are enabled, if you specify a code in the range 0200 through 0377 octal, C-q assumes that you intend to use some ISO 8859-n character set, and converts the specified code to the corresponding Emacs character code. See section Q.2 Enabling Multibyte Characters. You select which of the ISO 8859 character sets to use through your choice of language environment (see section Q.3 Language Environments).
To use decimal or hexadecimal instead of octal, set the variable
read-quoted-char-radix
to 10 or 16. If the radix is greater than
10, some letters starting with a serve as part of a character
code, just like digits.
A numeric argument to C-q specifies how many copies of the quoted character should be inserted (see section D.10 Numeric Arguments).
Customization information: DEL in most modes runs the command
delete-backward-char
; RET runs the command newline
, and
self-inserting printing characters run the command self-insert
,
which inserts whatever character was typed to invoke it. Some major modes
rebind DEL to other commands.
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To do more than insert characters, you have to know how to move point (see section B.1 Point). The simplest way to do this is with arrow keys, or by clicking the left mouse button where you want to move to.
There are also control and meta characters for cursor motion. Some are equivalent to the arrow keys (these date back to the days before terminals had arrow keys, and are usable on terminals which don't have them). Others do more sophisticated things.
beginning-of-line
).
end-of-line
).
forward-char
). The right-arrow key
does the same thing.
backward-char
). The left-arrow
key has the same effect.
forward-word
).
backward-word
).
next-line
). This command
attempts to keep the horizontal position unchanged, so if you start in
the middle of one line, you end in the middle of the next. The
down-arrow key does the same thing.
previous-line
). The up-arrow key
has the same effect.
move-to-window-line
). Text does not move on the screen.
A numeric argument says which screen line to place point on. It counts screen lines down from the top of the window (zero for the top line). A negative argument counts lines from the bottom (-1 for the bottom line).
beginning-of-buffer
). With
numeric argument n, move to n/10 of the way from the top.
See section D.10 Numeric Arguments, for more information on numeric arguments.end-of-buffer
).
scroll-up
). This doesn't always
move point, but it is commonly used to do so.
If your keyboard has a PAGEDOWN key, it does the same thing.
Scrolling commands are further described in J.6 Scrolling.
scroll-down
). This doesn't always move point, but
it is commonly used to do so. The PAGEUP key has the same
effect.
set-goal-column
). Henceforth, those
commands always move to this column in each line moved into, or as
close as possible given the contents of the line. This goal column remains
in effect until canceled.
If you set the variable track-eol
to a non-nil
value,
then C-n and C-p, when starting at the end of the line, move
to the end of another line. Normally, track-eol
is nil
.
See section AD.2 Variables, for how to set variables such as track-eol
.
C-n normally gets an error when you use it on the last line of
the buffer (just as C-p gets an error on the first line). But
if you set the variable next-line-add-newlines
to a
non-nil
value, C-n on the last line of a buffer creates
an additional line at the end and moves down onto it.
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delete-backward-char
).
delete-char
).
kill-line
).
kill-word
).
backward-kill-word
).
You already know about the DEL key which deletes the character before point (that is, before the cursor). Another key, Control-d (C-d for short), deletes the character after point (that is, the character that the cursor is on). This shifts the rest of the text on the line to the left. If you type C-d at the end of a line, it joins together that line and the next line.
To erase a larger amount of text, use the C-k key, which kills a line at a time. If you type C-k at the beginning or middle of a line, it kills all the text up to the end of the line. If you type C-k at the end of a line, it joins that line and the next line.
See section H.7 Deletion and Killing, for more flexible ways of killing text.
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You can undo all the recent changes in the buffer text, up to a
certain point. Each buffer records changes individually, and the undo
command always applies to the current buffer. Usually each editing
command makes a separate entry in the undo records, but some commands
such as query-replace
make many entries, and very simple commands
such as self-inserting characters are often grouped to make undoing less
tedious.
undo
).
The command C-x u or C-_ is how you undo. The first time you give this command, it undoes the last change. Point moves back to where it was before the command that made the change.
Consecutive repetitions of C-_ or C-x u undo earlier and earlier changes, back to the limit of the undo information available. If all recorded changes have already been undone, the undo command displays an error message and does nothing.
Any command other than an undo command breaks the sequence of undo commands. Starting from that moment, the previous undo commands become ordinary changes that you can undo. Thus, to redo changes you have undone, type C-f or any other command that will harmlessly break the sequence of undoing, then type more undo commands.
Ordinary undo applies to all changes made in the current buffer. You
can also perform selective undo, limited to the current region.
To do this, specify the region you want, then run the undo
command with a prefix argument (the value does not matter): C-u C-x
u or C-u C-_. This undoes the most recent change in the region.
To undo further changes in the same region, repeat the undo
command (no prefix argument is needed). In Transient Mark mode, any use
of undo
when there is an active region performs selective undo;
you do not need a prefix argument.
If you notice that a buffer has been modified accidentally, the easiest way to recover is to type C-_ repeatedly until the stars disappear from the front of the mode line. At this time, all the modifications you made have been canceled. Whenever an undo command makes the stars disappear from the mode line, it means that the buffer contents are the same as they were when the file was last read in or saved.
If you do not remember whether you changed the buffer deliberately, type C-_ once. When you see the last change you made undone, you will see whether it was an intentional change. If it was an accident, leave it undone. If it was deliberate, redo the change as described above.
Not all buffers record undo information. Buffers whose names start with spaces don't; these buffers are used internally by Emacs and its extensions to hold text that users don't normally look at or edit.
You cannot undo mere cursor motion; only changes in the buffer contents save undo information. However, some cursor motion commands set the mark, so if you use these commands from time to time, you can move back to the neighborhoods you have moved through by popping the mark ring (see section H.5 The Mark Ring).
When the undo information for a buffer becomes too large, Emacs
discards the oldest undo information from time to time (during garbage
collection). You can specify how much undo information to keep by
setting two variables: undo-limit
and undo-strong-limit
.
Their values are expressed in units of bytes of space.
The variable undo-limit
sets a soft limit: Emacs keeps undo
data for enough commands to reach this size, and perhaps exceed it, but
does not keep data for any earlier commands beyond that. Its default
value is 20000. The variable undo-strong-limit
sets a stricter
limit: the command which pushes the size past this amount is itself
forgotten. Its default value is 30000.
Regardless of the values of those variables, the most recent change is never discarded, so there is no danger that garbage collection occurring right after an unintentional large change might prevent you from undoing it.
The reason the undo
command has two keys, C-x u and
C-_, set up to run it is that it is worthy of a single-character
key, but on some keyboards it is not obvious how to type C-_.
C-x u is an alternative you can type straightforwardly on any
terminal.
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The commands described above are sufficient for creating and altering text in an Emacs buffer; the more advanced Emacs commands just make things easier. But to keep any text permanently you must put it in a file. Files are named units of text which are stored by the operating system for you to retrieve later by name. To look at or use the contents of a file in any way, including editing the file with Emacs, you must specify the file name.
Consider a file named `/usr/rms/foo.c'. In Emacs, to begin editing this file, type
C-x C-f /usr/rms/foo.c RET |
Here the file name is given as an argument to the command C-x
C-f (find-file
). That command uses the minibuffer to
read the argument, and you type RET to terminate the argument
(see section E. The Minibuffer).
Emacs obeys the command by visiting the file: creating a buffer,
copying the contents of the file into the buffer, and then displaying
the buffer for you to edit. If you alter the text, you can save
the new text in the file by typing C-x C-s (save-buffer
).
This makes the changes permanent by copying the altered buffer contents
back into the file `/usr/rms/foo.c'. Until you save, the changes
exist only inside Emacs, and the file `foo.c' is unaltered.
To create a file, just visit the file with C-x C-f as if it already existed. This creates an empty buffer in which you can insert the text you want to put in the file. The file is actually created when you save this buffer with C-x C-s.
Of course, there is a lot more to learn about using files. See section M. File Handling.
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If you forget what a key does, you can find out with the Help
character, which is C-h (or F1, which is an alias for
C-h). Type C-h k followed by the key you want to know
about; for example, C-h k C-n tells you all about what C-n
does. C-h is a prefix key; C-h k is just one of its
subcommands (the command describe-key
). The other subcommands of
C-h provide different kinds of help. Type C-h twice to get
a description of all the help facilities. See section G. Help.
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Here are special commands and techniques for putting in and taking out blank lines.
open-line
).
delete-blank-lines
).
When you want to insert a new line of text before an existing line, you
can do it by typing the new line of text, followed by RET.
However, it may be easier to see what you are doing if you first make a
blank line and then insert the desired text into it. This is easy to do
using the key C-o (open-line
), which inserts a newline
after point but leaves point in front of the newline. After C-o,
type the text for the new line. C-o F O O has the same effect as
F O O RET, except for the final location of point.
You can make several blank lines by typing C-o several times, or by giving it a numeric argument to tell it how many blank lines to make. See section D.10 Numeric Arguments, for how. If you have a fill prefix, then C-o command inserts the fill prefix on the new line, when you use it at the beginning of a line. See section T.5.4 The Fill Prefix.
The easy way to get rid of extra blank lines is with the command
C-x C-o (delete-blank-lines
). C-x C-o in a run of
several blank lines deletes all but one of them. C-x C-o on a
solitary blank line deletes that blank line. When point is on a
nonblank line, C-x C-o deletes any blank lines following that
nonblank line.
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If you add too many characters to one line without breaking it with RET, the line grows to occupy two (or more) lines on the screen. On graphical displays, Emacs indicates line wrapping with small bent arrows in the fringes to the left and right of the window. On text-only terminals, Emacs displays a `\' character at the right margin of a screen line if it is not the last in its text line. This `\' character says that the following screen line is not really a distinct line in the text, just a continuation of a line too long to fit the screen. Continuation is also called line wrapping.
When line wrapping occurs before a character that is wider than one column, some columns at the end of the previous screen line may be "empty." In this case, Emacs displays additional `\' characters in the "empty" columns, just before the `\' character that indicates continuation.
Sometimes it is nice to have Emacs insert newlines automatically when a line gets too long. Continuation on the screen does not do that. Use Auto Fill mode (see section T.5 Filling Text) if that's what you want.
As an alternative to continuation, Emacs can display long lines by truncation. This means that all the characters that do not fit in the width of the screen or window do not appear at all. They remain in the buffer, temporarily invisible. On terminals, `$' in the last column informs you that the line has been truncated on the display. On window systems, a small straight arrow in the fringe to the right of the window indicates a truncated line.
Truncation instead of continuation happens whenever horizontal scrolling is in use, and optionally in all side-by-side windows (see section O. Multiple Windows). You can enable or disable truncation for a particular buffer with the command M-x toggle-truncate-lines.
See section J.12 Customization of Display, for additional variables that affect how text is displayed.
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Here are commands to get information about the size and position of parts of the buffer, and to count lines.
count-lines-region
).
See section H. The Mark and the Region, for information about the region.
what-cursor-position
).
There are two commands for working with line numbers. M-x what-line computes the current line number and displays it in the echo area. To go to a given line by number, use M-x goto-line; it prompts you for the number. These line numbers count from one at the beginning of the buffer.
You can also see the current line number in the mode line; see B.3 The Mode Line. If you narrow the buffer, then the line number in the mode line
is relative to the accessible portion (see section AC.22 Narrowing). By contrast,
what-line
shows both the line number relative to the narrowed
region and the line number relative to the whole buffer.
M-x what-page counts pages from the beginning of the file, and counts lines within the page, showing both numbers in the echo area. See section T.4 Pages.
While on this subject, we might as well mention M-= (count-lines-region
),
which displays the number of lines in the region (see section H. The Mark and the Region).
See section T.4 Pages, for the command C-x l which counts the lines in the
current page.
The command C-x = (what-cursor-position
) can be used to find out
the column that the cursor is in, and other miscellaneous information about
point. It displays a line in the echo area that looks like this:
Char: c (0143, 99, 0x63) point=21044 of 26883(78%) column 53 |
(In fact, this is the output produced when point is before the `column' in the example.)
The four values after `Char:' describe the character that follows point, first by showing it and then by giving its character code in octal, decimal and hex. For a non-ASCII multibyte character, these are followed by `ext' and the character's representation, in hex, in the buffer's coding system, if that coding system encodes the character safely and with a single byte (see section Q.7 Coding Systems). If the character's encoding is longer than one byte, Emacs shows `ext ...'.
`point=' is followed by the position of point expressed as a character count. The front of the buffer counts as position 1, one character later as 2, and so on. The next, larger, number is the total number of characters in the buffer. Afterward in parentheses comes the position expressed as a percentage of the total size.
`column' is followed by the horizontal position of point, in columns from the left edge of the window.
If the buffer has been narrowed, making some of the text at the beginning and the end temporarily inaccessible, C-x = displays additional text describing the currently accessible range. For example, it might display this:
Char: C (0103, 67, 0x43) point=252 of 889(28%) <231 - 599> column 0 |
where the two extra numbers give the smallest and largest character position that point is allowed to assume. The characters between those two positions are the accessible ones. See section AC.22 Narrowing.
If point is at the end of the buffer (or the end of the accessible part), the C-x = output does not describe a character after point. The output might look like this:
point=26957 of 26956(100%) column 0 |
C-u C-x = displays additional information about a character,
in place of the buffer coordinates and column: the character set name
and the codes that identify the character within that character set;
ASCII characters are identified as belonging to the ASCII
character set. In addition, the full character encoding, even if it
takes more than a single byte, is shown after `ext'. Here's an
example for a Latin-1 character A with a grave accent in a buffer whose
coding system is iso-2022-7bit(1):
Char: À (04300, 2240, 0x8c0, ext ESC , A @) (latin-iso8859-1 64) |
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In mathematics and computer usage, the word argument means "data provided to a function or operation." You can give any Emacs command a numeric argument (also called a prefix argument). Some commands interpret the argument as a repetition count. For example, C-f with an argument of ten moves forward ten characters instead of one. With these commands, no argument is equivalent to an argument of one. Negative arguments tell most such commands to move or act in the opposite direction.
If your terminal keyboard has a META key, the easiest way to specify a numeric argument is to type digits and/or a minus sign while holding down the META key. For example,
M-5 C-n |
would move down five lines. The characters Meta-1, Meta-2,
and so on, as well as Meta--, do this because they are keys bound
to commands (digit-argument
and negative-argument
) that
are defined to contribute to an argument for the next command.
Meta-- without digits normally means -1. Digits and
- modified with Control, or Control and Meta, also specify numeric
arguments.
Another way of specifying an argument is to use the C-u
(universal-argument
) command followed by the digits of the
argument. With C-u, you can type the argument digits without
holding down modifier keys; C-u works on all terminals. To type a
negative argument, type a minus sign after C-u. Just a minus sign
without digits normally means -1.
C-u followed by a character which is neither a digit nor a minus sign has the special meaning of "multiply by four." It multiplies the argument for the next command by four. C-u twice multiplies it by sixteen. Thus, C-u C-u C-f moves forward sixteen characters. This is a good way to move forward "fast," since it moves about 1/5 of a line in the usual size screen. Other useful combinations are C-u C-n, C-u C-u C-n (move down a good fraction of a screen), C-u C-u C-o (make "a lot" of blank lines), and C-u C-k (kill four lines).
Some commands care only about whether there is an argument, and not about
its value. For example, the command M-q (fill-paragraph
) with
no argument fills text; with an argument, it justifies the text as well.
(See section T.5 Filling Text, for more information on M-q.) Plain C-u is a
handy way of providing an argument for such commands.
Some commands use the value of the argument as a repeat count, but do
something peculiar when there is no argument. For example, the command
C-k (kill-line
) with argument n kills n lines,
including their terminating newlines. But C-k with no argument is
special: it kills the text up to the next newline, or, if point is right at
the end of the line, it kills the newline itself. Thus, two C-k
commands with no arguments can kill a nonblank line, just like C-k
with an argument of one. (See section H.7 Deletion and Killing, for more information on
C-k.)
A few commands treat a plain C-u differently from an ordinary argument. A few others may treat an argument of just a minus sign differently from an argument of -1. These unusual cases are described when they come up; they are always for reasons of convenience of use of the individual command.
You can use a numeric argument to insert multiple copies of a character. This is straightforward unless the character is a digit; for example, C-u 6 4 a inserts 64 copies of the character `a'. But this does not work for inserting digits; C-u 6 4 1 specifies an argument of 641, rather than inserting anything. To separate the digit to insert from the argument, type another C-u; for example, C-u 6 4 C-u 1 does insert 64 copies of the character `1'.
We use the term "prefix argument" as well as "numeric argument" to emphasize that you type the argument before the command, and to distinguish these arguments from minibuffer arguments that come after the command.
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Many simple commands, such as those invoked with a single key or with M-x command-name RET, can be repeated by invoking them with a numeric argument that serves as a repeat count (see section D.10 Numeric Arguments). However, if the command you want to repeat prompts for some input, or uses a numeric argument in another way, repetition using a numeric argument might be problematical.
The command C-x z (repeat
) provides another way to repeat
an Emacs command many times. This command repeats the previous Emacs
command, whatever that was. Repeating a command uses the same arguments
that were used before; it does not read new arguments each time.
To repeat the command more than once, type additional z's: each z repeats the command one more time. Repetition ends when you type a character other than z, or press a mouse button.
For example, suppose you type C-u 2 0 C-d to delete 20 characters. You can repeat that command (including its argument) three additional times, to delete a total of 80 characters, by typing C-x z z z. The first C-x z repeats the command once, and each subsequent z repeats it once again.
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