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On Unix, the main form of on-line documentation was the manual page or man page. In the GNU operating system, we hope to replace man pages with better-organized manuals that you can browse with Info (see section G.8 Other Help Commands). This process is not finished, so it is still useful to read manual pages.
You can read the man page for an operating system command, library
function, or system call, with the M-x manual-entry command. It
runs the man
program to format the man page; if the system
permits, it runs man
asynchronously, so that you can keep on
editing while the page is being formatted. (On MS-DOS and MS-Windows
3, you cannot edit while Emacs waits for man
to finish.) The
result goes in a buffer named `*Man topic*'. These buffers
use a special major mode, Man mode, that facilitates scrolling and
jumping to other manual pages. For details, type C-h m while in
a man page buffer.
Each man page belongs to one of ten or more sections, each
named by a digit or by a digit and a letter. Sometimes there are
multiple man pages with the same name in different sections. To read
a man page from a specific section, type
`topic(section)' or `section topic'
when M-x manual-entry prompts for the topic. For example, to
read the man page for the C library function chmod
(as opposed
to a command of the same name), type M-x manual-entry RET
chmod(2) RET (chmod
is a system call, so it is in
section `2').
If you do not specify a section, the results depend on how the
man
program works on your system. Some of them display only
the first man page they find. Others display all man pages that have
the specified name, so you can move between them with the M-n
and M-p keys(10).
The mode line shows how many manual pages are present in the Man buffer.
By default, Emacs highlights the text in man pages. For a long man
page, highlighting can take substantial time. You can turn off
highlighting of man pages by setting the variable
Man-fontify-manpage-flag
to nil
.
If you insert the text of a man page into an Emacs buffer in some other fashion, you can use the command M-x Man-fontify-manpage to perform the same conversions that M-x manual-entry does.
An alternative way of reading manual pages is the M-x woman
command(11). Unlike M-x man, it does not run any external
programs to format and display the man pages; instead it does the job
in Emacs Lisp, so it works on systems such as MS-Windows, where the
man
program (and the other programs it uses) are not generally
available.
M-x woman prompts for a name of a manual page, and provides
completion based on the list of manual pages that are installed on
your machine; the list of available manual pages is computed
automatically the first time you invoke woman
. The word at
point in the current buffer is used to suggest the default for the
name the manual page.
With a numeric argument, M-x woman recomputes the list of the manual pages used for completion. This is useful if you add or delete manual pages.
If you type a name of a manual page and M-x woman finds that several manual pages by the same name exist in different sections, it pops up a window with possible candidates asking you to choose one of them.
By default, M-x woman looks for manual pages in the
directories specified in the MANPATH
environment variable. (If
MANPATH
is not set, woman
uses a suitable default value,
which can be customized.) More precisely, woman
looks for
subdirectories that match the shell wildcard pattern `man*' in each one
of these directories, and tries to find the manual pages in those
subdirectories. When first invoked, M-x woman converts the
value of MANPATH
to a list of directory names and stores that
list in the woman-manpath
variable. Changing the value of this
variable is another way to control the list of directories used.
You can also augment the list of directories searched by
woman
by setting the value of the woman-path
variable.
This variable should hold a list of specific directories which
woman
should search, in addition to those in
woman-manpath
. Unlike woman-manpath
, the directories in
woman-path
are searched for the manual pages, not for
`man*' subdirectories.
Occasionally, you might need to display manual pages that are not in
any of the directories listed by woman-manpath
and
woman-path
. The M-x woman-find-file command prompts for a
name of a manual page file, with completion, and then formats and
displays that file like M-x woman does.
The first time you invoke M-x woman, it defines the Dired
W key to run the woman-find-file
command on the current
line's file. You can disable this by setting the variable
woman-dired-keys
to nil
. See section AB. Dired, the Directory Editor. In addition,
the Tar-mode w key is define to invoke woman-find-file
on
the current line's archive member.
For more information about setting up and using M-x woman, see section `Browse UN*X Manual Pages WithOut Man' in The WoMan Manual.
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