[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
Deletion means erasing text and not saving it in the kill ring. For the most part, the Emacs commands that delete text are those that erase just one character or only whitespace.
delete-char
). If your keyboard has a
Delete function key (usually located in the edit keypad), Emacs
binds it to delete-char
as well.
delete-backward-char
). Some keyboards
refer to this key as a "backspace key" and label it with a left arrow.
delete-horizontal-space
).
just-one-space
).
delete-blank-lines
).
delete-indentation
).
The most basic delete commands are C-d (delete-char
) and
DEL (delete-backward-char
). C-d deletes the
character after point, the one the cursor is "on top of." This
doesn't move point. DEL deletes the character before the cursor,
and moves point back. You can delete newlines like any other characters
in the buffer; deleting a newline joins two lines. Actually, C-d
and DEL aren't always delete commands; when given arguments, they
kill instead, since they can erase more than one character this way.
Every keyboard has a large key, labeled DEL, BACKSPACE, BS or DELETE, which is a short distance above the RET or ENTER key and is normally used for erasing what you have typed. Regardless of the actual name on the key, in Emacs it is equivalent to DEL---or it should be.
Many keyboards (including standard PC keyboards) have a BACKSPACE key a short ways above RET or ENTER, and a DELETE key elsewhere. In that case, the BACKSPACE key is DEL, and the DELETE key is equivalent to C-d---or it should be.
Why do we say "or it should be"? When Emacs starts up using a window system, it determines automatically which key or keys should be equivalent to DEL. As a result, BACKSPACE and/or DELETE keys normally do the right things. But in some unusual cases Emacs gets the wrong information from the system. If these keys don't do what they ought to do, you need to tell Emacs which key to use for DEL. See section AD.9.1 If DEL Fails to Delete, for how to do this.
On most text-only terminals, Emacs cannot tell which keys the keyboard really has, so it follows a uniform plan which may or may not fit your keyboard. The uniform plan is that the ASCII DEL character deletes, and the ASCII BS (backspace) character asks for help (it is the same as C-h). If this is not right for your keyboard, such as if you find that the key which ought to delete backwards enters Help instead, see AD.9.1 If DEL Fails to Delete.
The other delete commands are those which delete only whitespace
characters: spaces, tabs and newlines. M-\
(delete-horizontal-space
) deletes all the spaces and tab
characters before and after point. M-SPC
(just-one-space
) does likewise but leaves a single space after
point, regardless of the number of spaces that existed previously (even
if there were none before).
C-x C-o (delete-blank-lines
) deletes all blank lines
after the current line. If the current line is blank, it deletes all
blank lines preceding the current line as well (leaving one blank line,
the current line).
M-^ (delete-indentation
) joins the current line and the
previous line, by deleting a newline and all surrounding spaces, usually
leaving a single space. See section M-^.
[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |