From: Eli Z. <el...@is...> - 2001-11-04 12:56:01
|
I fixed the few places in the manual where M-C-<key> was used instead of the canonical C-M-<key>. The changes (which are already installed in the Emacs CVS tree) are below. Index: man/cc-mode.texi =================================================================== RCS file: /cvs/emacs/man/cc-mode.texi,v retrieving revision 1.17 diff -c -r1.17 cc-mode.texi *** man/cc-mode.texi 2001/09/12 20:59:06 1.17 --- man/cc-mode.texi 2001/11/04 12:50:18 *************** *** 1536,1545 **** numeric argument, this command rigidly indents the region, preserving the relative indentation among the lines. ! @kindex M-C-q @findex c-indent-exp @findex indent-exp (c-) ! @item @kbd{M-C-q} (@code{c-indent-exp}) Indent an entire balanced brace or parenthesis expression. Note that point must be on the opening brace or parenthesis of the expression you want to indent. --- 1536,1545 ---- numeric argument, this command rigidly indents the region, preserving the relative indentation among the lines. ! @kindex C-M-q @findex c-indent-exp @findex indent-exp (c-) ! @item @kbd{C-M-q} (@code{c-indent-exp}) Indent an entire balanced brace or parenthesis expression. Note that point must be on the opening brace or parenthesis of the expression you want to indent. *************** *** 1554,1570 **** or a Java method. The top-level construct being re-indented must be complete, i.e. it must have both a beginning brace and an ending brace. ! @kindex M-C-\ @findex indent-region ! @item @kbd{M-C-\} (@code{indent-region}) Indents an arbitrary region of code. This is a standard Emacs command, tailored for C code in a @ccmode{} buffer. Note that of course, point and mark must delineate the region you want to indent. ! @kindex M-C-h @findex c-mark-function @findex mark-function (c-) ! @item @kbd{M-C-h} (@code{c-mark-function}) While not strictly an indentation command, this is useful for marking the current top-level function or class definition as the current region. As with @code{c-indent-defun}, this command operates on --- 1554,1570 ---- or a Java method. The top-level construct being re-indented must be complete, i.e. it must have both a beginning brace and an ending brace. ! @kindex C-M-\ @findex indent-region ! @item @kbd{C-M-\} (@code{indent-region}) Indents an arbitrary region of code. This is a standard Emacs command, tailored for C code in a @ccmode{} buffer. Note that of course, point and mark must delineate the region you want to indent. ! @kindex C-M-h @findex c-mark-function @findex mark-function (c-) ! @item @kbd{C-M-h} (@code{c-mark-function}) While not strictly an indentation command, this is useful for marking the current top-level function or class definition as the current region. As with @code{c-indent-defun}, this command operates on *************** *** 1718,1724 **** Move point to the beginning of the innermost C statement. If point is already at the beginning of a statement, move to the beginning of the closest preceding statement, even if that means moving into a block (you ! can use @kbd{M-C-b} to move over a balanced block). With prefix argument @var{n}, move back @var{n} @minus{} 1 statements. If point is within or next to a comment or a string which spans more --- 1718,1724 ---- Move point to the beginning of the innermost C statement. If point is already at the beginning of a statement, move to the beginning of the closest preceding statement, even if that means moving into a block (you ! can use @kbd{C-M-b} to move over a balanced block). With prefix argument @var{n}, move back @var{n} @minus{} 1 statements. If point is within or next to a comment or a string which spans more *************** *** 1735,1741 **** @item @kbd{M-e} (@code{c-end-of-statement}) Move point to the end of the innermost C statement. If point is at the end of a statement, move to the end of the next statement, even if it's ! inside a nested block (use @kbd{M-C-f} to move to the other side of the block). With prefix argument @var{n}, move forward @var{n} @minus{} 1 statements. --- 1735,1741 ---- @item @kbd{M-e} (@code{c-end-of-statement}) Move point to the end of the innermost C statement. If point is at the end of a statement, move to the end of the next statement, even if it's ! inside a nested block (use @kbd{C-M-f} to move to the other side of the block). With prefix argument @var{n}, move forward @var{n} @minus{} 1 statements. |