view man/new-users-guide/region.texi @ 5353:38e24b8be4ea

Improve the lexical scoping in #'block, #'return-from. lisp/ChangeLog addition: 2011-02-07 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * bytecomp.el: * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-initial-macro-environment): Shadow `block', `return-from' here, we implement them differently when byte-compiling. * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-active-blocks): New. * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-block-1): New. * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-return-from-1): New. * bytecomp.el (return-from-1): New. * bytecomp.el (block-1): New. These are two aliases that exist to have their own associated byte-compile functions, which functions implement `block' and `return-from'. * cl-extra.el (cl-macroexpand-all): Fix a bug here when macros in the environment have been compiled. * cl-macs.el (block): * cl-macs.el (return): * cl-macs.el (return-from): Be more careful about lexical scope in these macros. * cl.el: * cl.el ('cl-block-wrapper): Removed. * cl.el ('cl-block-throw): Removed. These aren't needed in code generated by this XEmacs. They shouldn't be needed in code generated by XEmacs 21.4, but if it turns out the packages do need them, we can put them back. 2011-01-30 Mike Sperber <mike@xemacs.org> * font-lock.el (font-lock-fontify-pending-extents): Don't fail if `font-lock-mode' is unset, which can happen in the middle of `revert-buffer'. 2011-01-23 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-macs.el (delete): * cl-macs.el (delq): * cl-macs.el (remove): * cl-macs.el (remq): Don't use the compiler macro if these functions were given the wrong number of arguments, as happens in lisp-tests.el. * cl-seq.el (remove, remq): Removed. I added these to subr.el, and forgot to remove them from here. 2011-01-22 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-setq, byte-compile-set): Remove kludge allowing keywords' values to be set, all the code that does that is gone. * cl-compat.el (elt-satisfies-test-p): * faces.el (set-face-parent): * faces.el (face-doc-string): * gtk-font-menu.el: * gtk-font-menu.el (gtk-reset-device-font-menus): * msw-font-menu.el: * msw-font-menu.el (mswindows-reset-device-font-menus): * package-get.el (package-get-installedp): * select.el (select-convert-from-image-data): * sound.el: * sound.el (load-sound-file): * x-font-menu.el (x-reset-device-font-menus-core): Don't quote keywords, they're self-quoting, and the win from backward-compatibility is sufficiently small now that the style problem overrides it. 2011-01-22 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-macs.el (block, return-from): Require that NAME be a symbol in these macros, as always documented in the #'block docstring and as required by Common Lisp. * descr-text.el (unidata-initialize-unihan-database): Correct the use of non-symbols in #'block and #'return-from in this function. 2011-01-15 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-extra.el (concatenate): Accept more complicated TYPEs in this function, handing the sequences over to #'coerce if we don't understand them here. * cl-macs.el (inline): Don't proclaim #'concatenate as inline, its compiler macro is more useful than doing that. 2011-01-11 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * subr.el (delete, delq, remove, remq): Move #'remove, #'remq here, they don't belong in cl-seq.el; move #'delete, #'delq here from fns.c, implement them in terms of #'delete*, allowing support for sequences generally. * update-elc.el (do-autoload-commands): Use #'delete*, not #'delq here, now the latter's no longer dumped. * cl-macs.el (delete, delq): Add compiler macros transforming #'delete and #'delq to #'delete* calls. 2011-01-10 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * dialog.el (make-dialog-box): Correct a misplaced parenthesis here, thank you Mats Lidell in 87zkr9gqrh.fsf@mail.contactor.se ! 2011-01-02 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * dialog.el (make-dialog-box): * list-mode.el (display-completion-list): These functions used to use cl-parsing-keywords; change them to use defun* instead, fixing the build. (Not sure what led to me not including this change in d1b17a33450b!) 2011-01-02 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-macs.el (define-star-compiler-macros): Make sure the form has ITEM and LIST specified before attempting to change to calls with explicit tests; necessary for some tests in lisp-tests.el to compile correctly. (stable-union, stable-intersection): Add compiler macros for these functions, in the same way we do for most of the other functions in cl-seq.el. 2011-01-01 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-macs.el (dolist, dotimes, do-symbols, macrolet) (symbol-macrolet): Define these macros with defmacro* instead of parsing the argument list by hand, for the sake of style and readability; use backquote where appropriate, instead of calling #'list and and friends, for the same reason. 2010-12-30 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * x-misc.el (device-x-display): Provide this function, documented in the Lispref for years, but not existing previously. Thank you Julian Bradfield, thank you Jeff Mincy. 2010-12-30 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-seq.el: Move the heavy lifting from this file to C. Dump the cl-parsing-keywords macro, but don't use defun* for the functions we define that do take keywords, dynamic scope lossage makes that not practical. * subr.el (sort, fillarray): Move these aliases here. (map-plist): #'nsublis is now built-in, but at this point #'eql isn't necessarily available as a test; use #'eq. * obsolete.el (cl-delete-duplicates): Make this available for old compiler macros and old code. (memql): Document that this is equivalent to #'member*, and worse. * cl.el (adjoin, subst): Removed. These are in C. 2010-12-30 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * simple.el (assoc-ignore-case): Remove a duplicate definition of this function (it's already in subr.el). * iso8859-1.el (char-width): On non-Mule, make this function equivalent to that produced by (constantly 1), but preserve its docstring. * subr.el (subst-char-in-string): Define this in terms of #'substitute, #'nsubstitute. (string-width): Define this using #'reduce and #'char-width. (char-width): Give this a simpler definition, it makes far more sense to check for mule at load time and redefine, as we do in iso8859-1.el. (store-substring): Implement this in terms of #'replace, now #'replace is cheap. 2010-12-30 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * update-elc.el (lisp-files-needed-for-byte-compilation) (lisp-files-needing-early-byte-compilation): cl-macs belongs in the former, not the latter, it is as fundamental as bytecomp.el. 2010-12-30 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl.el: Provde the Common Lisp program-error, type-error as error symbols. This doesn't nearly go far enough for anyone using the Common Lisp errors. 2010-12-29 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-macs.el (delete-duplicates): If the form has an incorrect number of arguments, don't attempt a compiler macroexpansion. 2010-12-29 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-macs.el (cl-safe-expr-p): Forms that start with the symbol lambda are also safe. 2010-12-29 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-macs.el (= < > <= >=): For these functions' compiler macros, the optimisation is safe even if the first and the last arguments have side effects, since they're only used the once. 2010-12-29 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-macs.el (inline-side-effect-free-compiler-macros): Unroll a loop here at macro-expansion time, so these compiler macros are compiled. Use #'eql instead of #'eq in a couple of places for better style. 2010-12-29 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-extra.el (notany, notevery): Avoid some dynamic scope stupidity with local variable names in these functions, when they weren't prefixed with cl-; go into some more detail in the doc strings. 2010-12-29 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * byte-optimize.el (side-effect-free-fns): #'remove, #'remq are free of side-effects. (side-effect-and-error-free-fns): Drop dot, dot-marker from the list. 2010-11-17 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-extra.el (coerce): In the argument list, name the first argument OBJECT, not X; the former name was always used in the doc string and is clearer. Handle vector type specifications which include the length of the target sequence, error if there's a mismatch. * cl-macs.el (cl-make-type-test): Handle type specifications starting with the symbol 'eql. 2010-11-14 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-macs.el (eql): Don't remove the byte-compile property of this symbol. That was necessary to override a bug in bytecomp.el where #'eql was confused with #'eq, which bug we no longer have. If neither expression is constant, don't attempt to handle the expression in this compiler macro, leave it to byte-compile-eql, which produces better code anyway. * bytecomp.el (eq): #'eql is not the function associated with the byte-eq byte code. (byte-compile-eql): Add an explicit compile method for this function, for cases where the cl-macs compiler macro hasn't reduced it to #'eq or #'equal. 2010-10-25 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> Add compiler macros and compilation sanity-checking for various functions that take keywords. * byte-optimize.el (side-effect-free-fns): #'symbol-value is side-effect free and not error free. * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-normal-call): Check keyword argument lists for sanity; store information about the positions where keyword arguments start using the new byte-compile-keyword-start property. * cl-macs.el (cl-const-expr-val): Take a new optional argument, cl-not-constant, defaulting to nil, in this function; return it if the expression is not constant. (cl-non-fixnum-number-p): Make this into a separate function, we want to pass it to #'every. (eql): Use it. (define-star-compiler-macros): Use the same code to generate the member*, assoc* and rassoc* compiler macros; special-case some code in #'add-to-list in subr.el. (remove, remq): Add compiler macros for these two functions, in preparation for #'remove being in C. (define-foo-if-compiler-macros): Transform (remove-if-not ...) calls to (remove ... :if-not) at compile time, which will be a real win once the latter is in C. (define-substitute-if-compiler-macros) (define-subst-if-compiler-macros): Similarly for these functions. (delete-duplicates): Change this compiler macro to use #'plists-equal; if we don't have information about the type of SEQUENCE at compile time, don't bother attempting to inline the call, the function will be in C soon enough. (equalp): Remove an old commented-out compiler macro for this, if we want to see it it's in version control. (subst-char-in-string): Transform this to a call to nsubstitute or nsubstitute, if that is appropriate. * cl.el (ldiff): Don't call setf here, this makes for a load-time dependency problem in cl-macs.el 2010-06-14 Stephen J. Turnbull <stephen@xemacs.org> * term/vt100.el: Refer to XEmacs, not GNU Emacs, in permissions. * term/bg-mouse.el: * term/sup-mouse.el: Put copyright notice in canonical "Copyright DATE AUTHOR" form. Refer to XEmacs, not GNU Emacs, in permissions. * site-load.el: Add permission boilerplate. * mule/canna-leim.el: * alist.el: Refer to XEmacs, not APEL/this program, in permissions. * mule/canna-leim.el: Remove my copyright, I've assigned it to the FSF. 2010-06-14 Stephen J. Turnbull <stephen@xemacs.org> * gtk.el: * gtk-widget-accessors.el: * gtk-package.el: * gtk-marshal.el: * gtk-compose.el: * gnome.el: Add copyright notice based on internal evidence. 2010-06-14 Stephen J. Turnbull <stephen@xemacs.org> * easymenu.el: Add reference to COPYING to permission notice. * gutter.el: * gutter-items.el: * menubar-items.el: Fix typo "Xmacs" in permissions notice. 2010-06-14 Stephen J. Turnbull <stephen@xemacs.org> * auto-save.el: * font.el: * fontconfig.el: * mule/kinsoku.el: Add "part of XEmacs" text to permission notice. 2010-10-14 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * byte-optimize.el (side-effect-free-fns): * cl-macs.el (remf, getf): * cl-extra.el (tailp, cl-set-getf, cl-do-remf): * cl.el (ldiff, endp): Tighten up Common Lisp compatibility for #'ldiff, #'endp, #'tailp; add circularity checking for the first two. #'cl-set-getf and #'cl-do-remf were Lisp implementations of #'plist-put and #'plist-remprop; change the names to aliases, changes the macros that use them to using #'plist-put and #'plist-remprop directly. 2010-10-12 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * abbrev.el (fundamental-mode-abbrev-table, global-abbrev-table): Create both these abbrev tables using the usual #'define-abbrev-table calls, rather than attempting to special-case them. * cl-extra.el: Force cl-macs to be loaded here, if cl-extra.el is being loaded interpreted. Previously other, later files would redundantly call (load "cl-macs") when interpreted, it's more reasonable to do it here, once. * cmdloop.el (read-quoted-char-radix): Use defcustom here, we don't have any dump-order dependencies that would prevent that. * custom.el (eval-when-compile): Don't load cl-macs when interpreted or when byte-compiling, rely on cl-extra.el in the former case and the appropriate entry in bytecomp-load-hook in the latter. Get rid of custom-declare-variable-list, we have no dump-time dependencies that would require it. * faces.el (eval-when-compile): Don't load cl-macs when interpreted or when byte-compiling. * packages.el: Remove some inaccurate comments. * post-gc.el (cleanup-simple-finalizers): Use #'delete-if-not here, now the order of preloaded-file-list has been changed to make it available. * subr.el (custom-declare-variable-list): Remove. No need for it. Also remove a stub define-abbrev-table from this file, given the current order of preloaded-file-list there's no need for it. 2010-10-10 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-constp) Forms quoted with FUNCTION are also constant. (byte-compile-initial-macro-environment): In #'the, if FORM is constant and does not match TYPE, warn at byte-compile time. 2010-10-10 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * backquote.el (bq-vector-contents, bq-list*): Remove; the former is equivalent to (append VECTOR nil), the latter to (list* ...). (bq-process-2): Use (append VECTOR nil) instead of using #'bq-vector-contents to convert to a list. (bq-process-1): Now we use list* instead of bq-list * subr.el (list*): Moved from cl.el, since it is now required to be available the first time a backquoted form is encountered. * cl.el (list*): Move to subr.el. 2010-09-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * test-harness.el (Check-Message): Add an omitted comma here, thank you the buildbot. 2010-09-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * hash-table.el (hash-table-key-list, hash-table-value-list) (hash-table-key-value-alist, hash-table-key-value-plist): Remove some useless #'nreverse calls in these files; our hash tables have no order, it's not helpful to pretend they do. * behavior.el (read-behavior): Do the same in this file, in some code evidently copied from hash-table.el. 2010-09-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * info.el (Info-insert-dir): * format.el (format-deannotate-region): * files.el (cd, save-buffers-kill-emacs): Use #'some, #'every and related functions for applying boolean operations to lists, instead of rolling our own ones that cons and don't short-circuit. 2010-09-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-initial-macro-environment): * cl-macs.el (the): Rephrase the docstring, make its implementation when compiling files a little nicer. 2010-09-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * descr-text.el (unidata-initialize-unicodedata-database) (unidata-initialize-unihan-database, describe-char-unicode-data) (describe-char-unicode-data): Wrap calls to the database functions with (with-fboundp ...), avoiding byte compile warnings on builds without support for the database functions. (describe-char): (reduce #'max ...), not (apply #'max ...), no need to cons needlessly. (describe-char): Remove a redundant lambda wrapping #'extent-properties. (describe-char-unicode-data): Call #'nsubst when replacing "" with nil in the result of #'split-string, instead of consing inside mapcar. 2010-09-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * x-faces.el (x-available-font-sizes): * specifier.el (let-specifier): * package-ui.el (pui-add-required-packages): * msw-faces.el (mswindows-available-font-sizes): * modeline.el (modeline-minor-mode-menu): * minibuf.el (minibuf-directory-files): Replace the O2N (delq nil (mapcar (lambda (W) (and X Y)) Z)) with the ON (mapcan (lambda (W) (and X (list Y))) Z) in these files. 2010-09-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * cl-macs.el (= < > <= >=): When these functions are handed more than two arguments, and those arguments have no side effects, transform to a series of two argument calls, avoiding funcall in the byte-compiled code. * mule/mule-cmds.el (finish-set-language-environment): Take advantage of this change in a function called 256 times at startup. 2010-09-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-function-form, byte-compile-quote) (byte-compile-quote-form): Warn at compile time, and error at runtime, if a (quote ...) or a (function ...) form attempts to quote more than one object. 2010-09-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * byte-optimize.el (byte-optimize-apply): Transform (apply 'nconc (mapcar ...)) to (mapcan ...); warn about use of the first idiom. * update-elc.el (do-autoload-commands): * packages.el (packages-find-package-library-path): * frame.el (frame-list): * extents.el (extent-descendants): * etags.el (buffer-tag-table-files): * dumped-lisp.el (preloaded-file-list): * device.el (device-list): * bytecomp-runtime.el (proclaim-inline, proclaim-notinline) Use #'mapcan, not (apply #'nconc (mapcar ...) in all these files. * bytecomp-runtime.el (eval-when-compile, eval-and-compile): In passing, mention that these macros also evaluate the body when interpreted. tests/ChangeLog addition: 2011-02-07 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> * automated/lisp-tests.el: Test lexical scope for `block', `return-from'; add a Known-Bug-Expect-Failure for a contorted example that fails when byte-compiled.
author Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
date Mon, 07 Feb 2011 12:01:24 +0000
parents abe6d1db359e
children
line wrap: on
line source

@comment  node-name,  next,  previous,  up
@node Select and Move, Search and Replace, Other Customizations, Top
@chapter Selecting and Moving Text
@cindex region
@cindex mark

  Many Emacs commands operate on an arbitrary contiguous
part of the current buffer. You can select some part of the buffer and
edit only that part of the buffer. This selected buffer is called a
@dfn{region}. You can select text in two ways:

@itemize @bullet
@item
You use special keys to select text by defining a region between the
cursor and @dfn{the mark} (which you set). 
@item
If you are running XEmacs under X, you can also select text
with the mouse. 
@end itemize

@comment  node-name,  next,  previous,  up
@menu
* Selecting Text::              Select a region of text by setting the Mark
* Mouse::                       Selecting Text with Mouse
* Region Operation::            Various ways to operate on a selected text
* Moving Text::                 Moving Text 
* Accumulating text::           Accumulating Text from several buffers
@end menu

@node Selecting Text, Mouse, Select and Move, Select and Move
@section Setting the Mark
@kindex C-SPC
@kindex C-x C-x
@kindex C-<
@kindex C->
@findex set-mark-command
@findex mark-beginning-of-buffer
@findex mark-end-of-buffer
@findex exchange-point-and-mark
  To define a region you need to set @dfn{the mark} at one end of it and 
move the cursor to the other end. Once you set the mark, it remains
there until you set it again to some other place. Each buffer has its
own @dfn{mark ring} (a place where Emacs remembers 16 previous
locations of the mark). To set @dfn{the mark}, you can use the
following commands:

@table @kbd
@item C-@key{SPC}
This command will set @dfn{the mark} at the position of your cursor
(@code{set-mark-command}).  You can move your cursor around and @dfn{the
mark} will stay there. 
@item C-x C-x
Interchange mark and point (@code{exchange-point-and-mark}). Since Emacs
will have only one cursor, after you move the cursor it will be unable
to show you where you set the @dfn{the mark}. In order to see @dfn{the
mark} you can type the command @kbd{C-x C-x} which will put your cursor
on the position of your mark and your mark on the position of your
cursor. Use the command again to reset the positions of your cursor and
mark. 
@item C-<
This command will push the mark at the beginning of the buffer without
changing the position of your cursor.
@item C->
This command will push the mark at the end of the buffer without
changing the position of your cursor.
@end table
@noindent
You can also give arguments to @kbd{C-<} or @kbd{C->}. @xref{The Mark
and the Region,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's Manual}, for more information.

@comment  node-name,  next,  previous,  up
@node Mouse, Region Operation, Selecting Text, Select and Move
@section Selecting Text with Mouse
@cindex mouse selection
@cindex clipboard selection
@cindex primary selection
@cindex cursor shapes
  If you are using XEmacs under X, you can use the mouse to select
text. The selected text will always be highlighted, so just by looking
at the text you know what you have selected so far. To select a word
just double-click with the left-mouse-button on the word. To select a
whole line triple-click anywhere on the line with the
left-mouse-button. You can also use the @b{Copy} item from the @b{Edit}
menu on the menu-bar to select text. This kind of selection is called
@b{Clipboard} selection, @xref{X Clipboard Selection,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's
Manual}, for more information. To select an arbitrary region, follow
these steps:

@enumerate
@item
Move the mouse cursor over the character at the beginning of the region of
text you want to select.
@item
Press and hold the left mouse button. 
@item
While holding the left mouse button down, drag the cursor to the
character at the end of the region of text you want to select.
@item
Release the left mouse button.
@end enumerate
The selected region of text is highlighted.

  @xref{Selecting Text with the Mouse,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's Manual}, for
more information regarding the Mouse and additional mouse operations.

@comment  node-name,  next,  previous,  up
@node Region Operation, Moving Text, Mouse, Select and Move
@section Operating on the Region
  Once you have selected a region you can do a lot of things to the text
in the region:
@kindex C-w
@kindex C-x C-u
@kindex C-x C-l
@kindex C-SPC
@kindex C-x TAB
@kindex C-M-\
@findex print-region
@itemize @bullet
@item
Kill the text with @kbd{C-w}. For example if you want to kill a
paragraph, position the cursor to the beginning of the paragraph and
type @kbd{C-SPC}. Then go to the end of the paragraph and type
@kbd{C-w}. The entire paragraph will be deleted. You can also select the
text with a mouse and type @kbd{C-w} to kill the entire
region. @xref{Killing,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's Manual}, for more information.

@item
Save the text in a buffer or a file (@pxref{Accumulating
Text,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's Manual}).
@item
You can convert the case of the text with @kbd{C-x C-l} or @kbd{C-x C-u}
If you type @kbd{C-x C-u} the selected text will become all
upper-case. If you type @kbd{C-x C-l} the selected text will become all
lower-case. 
@item
Print hardcopy with @kbd{M-x
print-region}. @xref{Hardcopy,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's Manual}, for more
information. This command will print a hardcopy of only the selected
text.
@item
Indent it with @kbd{C-x @key{TAB}} or @kbd{C-M-\}
@xref{Indentation,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's Manual}, for more information.
@end itemize


@comment  node-name,  next,  previous,  up
@node Moving Text, Accumulating text, Region Operation, Select and Move
@section Moving Text
@cindex yanking
@cindex pasting
@findex yank
@cindex killing
@cindex kill ring
@cindex moving text
@kindex C-y
  The most common way to move or copy text in Emacs is through
@dfn{killing} or @samp{cutting} it and then @dfn{yanking} or
@samp{pasting} it. You can also use the @b{Cut} or @b{Copy} option from
the @b{Edit} menu for killing and copying respectively. @xref{Edit menu}, 
for reviewing the commands for killing text. All the killed text
in Emacs is recorded in the @dfn{kill ring}. Since there is only one
kill ring in Emacs, you can kill text in one buffer and yank it in
another buffer. To @samp{paste} or 
@samp{yank} the killed text you can use the following commands:
@table @kbd
@item C-y
This command will yank or paste the last killed text (@code{yank}).
@item M-w
Save region as last killed text without actually killing it
(@code{copy-region-as-kill}). You can use this command to copy a
selected region and then yank (or paste) it without actually removing it
from the buffer.
@item C-M-w
Append next kill to last batch of killed text
(@code{append-next-kill}). This command will append whatever you killed
last to what you kill now. Then later you will be able to yank the
entire appended text from the @dfn{kill ring}. 
@end table

@comment  node-name,  next,  previous,  up
@node Accumulating text,  , Moving Text, Select and Move
@section Accumulating Text
@findex append-to-buffer
@findex prepend-to-buffer
@findex copy-to-buffer
@findex append-to-file
@cindex copying text
@cindex accumulating text
@cindex rectangle commands
@cindex registers
@cindex temporary storage

  The following commands can be used for accumulating text from
different buffers into one place or for copying one region of text into
many buffers: 

@table @kbd
@item M-x append-to-buffer
Append region to contents of specified buffer
(@code{append-to-buffer}). After you type in this command and press
@key{RET}, Emacs will prompt you for a buffer name. You will see a
message in the echo area:
@example
Append to buffer: (default <buffer name>) 
@end example
@noindent
After you type in a buffer name, a copy of the region will be inserted
at the location of the cursor into that buffer. If there is no buffer
with the name given by you, Emacs will create a new buffer with that
name. By default the cursor's position in the <buffer name> is at the end.
@item M-x prepend-to-buffer
Prepend region to contents of specified buffer. This command is similar
to the above command except that the cursor in the buffer (by default)
is at the beginning rather than at the end.
@item M-x copy-to-buffer
Copy region into specified buffer, deleting that buffer's old
contents. This command will also prompt you for a buffer name.
@item M-x insert-buffer
Insert contents of specified buffer into current buffer at point. This
command will prompt you for a buffer name which you want to be copied
into the current buffer at the location of the cursor.
@item M-x append-to-file
This command will prompt you for a filename and append the region to
the end of the contents of the specified file.
@end table

@noindent
@xref{Accumulating Text,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's Manual}, for more
information regarding this topic.
  
  You can also use @dfn{rectangle commands} for operating on rectangular
areas of text. @xref{Rectangles,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's Manual}, for more
information regarding rectangle commands.

  Emacs also provides @dfn{registers} which serve as temporary storage for
text or positions. Each register has a one character name and they can
store @dfn{regions}, a @dfn{rectangle}, or a @dfn{mark} i.e. a cursor
position. Whatever you store in register stays there until you store
something else in that register. To find out about commands which
manipulate registers @xref{Registers,,,xemacs,XEmacs User's Manual}.