view man/xemacs/undo.texi @ 2417:8b907450718f

[xemacs-hg @ 2004-12-05 08:48:12 by ben] The section on Troubleshooting (now 2.3) has been completely written and includes a lot of stuff that is not properly documented anywhere else. A fair amount of obsolete info has been deleted and I've incorporated the comments that people (mostly Stephen T) made. Former chapter 3 has been split up in two, one pertaining to basic I/O and the other to external I/O. What were formerly chapters 5 and 6 no longer exist as such; the info in them has been distributed across various other chapters. Old chapter 4 got split up, part going to the new chapter 4 on external I/O and part going to the new chapter 5 on the Internet. In this new chapter, stuff not pertaining to a specific package (e.g. VM or GNUS) was taken out of package-specific sections and a general mail section was constituted. Part of old chapter 5 remains in a new chapter 6 devoted to Emacs Lisp and other advanced stuff, and a section from old chapter 3 on basic init-file Lisp and some stuff from old chapter 5 on Info. The rest of chapter 5 was just misc and has gotten scattered to the winds (mostly in chapters 3 and 4). Old chapter 6 has also gotten quite scattered; there is no longer any section specifically devoted to Windows except one of the Installation sections (along with a section specfically devoted to Unix), and the rest has moved to join the appropriate non-Windows-specific section elsewhere. A lot of chapters had their sections rearranged and likewise for sections having entries rearranged, with the intention that the new arrangement should be more natural. In general I hope that stuff should be much easier to locate. I also rewrote the entries on the relation between XEmacs and GNU Emacs on the authors of XEmacs, including lots of info on who wrote specific subsections. However, this history is certainly not complete; I hope people will look over this and fix it up as necessary.
author ben
date Sun, 05 Dec 2004 08:48:12 +0000
parents 376386a54a3c
children
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@node Undo, Minibuffer, Basic, Top
@chapter Undoing Changes
@cindex undo
@cindex mistakes, correcting

  Emacs allows you to undo all changes you make to the text of a buffer,
up to a certain amount of change (8000 characters).  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 @code{query-replace}
make many entries, and very simple commands such as self-inserting
characters are often grouped to make undoing less tedious.

@table @kbd
@item C-x u
Undo one batch of changes (usually, one command's worth) (@code{undo}).
@item C-_
The same.
@end table

@kindex C-x u
@kindex C-_
@findex undo
  The command @kbd{C-x u} or @kbd{C-_} allows you to undo changes.  The
first time you give this command, it undoes the last change.  Point
moves to the text affected by the undo, so you can see what was undone.

  Consecutive repetitions of the @kbd{C-_} or @kbd{C-x u} commands undo
earlier and earlier changes, back to the limit of what has been
recorded.  If all recorded changes have already been undone, the undo
command prints an error message and does nothing.

  Any command other than an undo command breaks the sequence of undo
commands.  Starting at this moment, the previous undo commands are
considered ordinary changes that can themselves be undone.  Thus, you can
redo changes you have undone by typing @kbd{C-f} or any other command
that have no important effect, and then using more undo commands.

  If you notice that a buffer has been modified accidentally, the
easiest way to recover is to type @kbd{C-_} repeatedly until the stars
disappear from the front of the mode line.  When that happens, all the
modifications you made have been canceled.  If you do not remember
whether you changed the buffer deliberately, type @kbd{C-_} once. When
you see Emacs undo the last change you made, you probably remember why you
made it.  If the change was an accident, leave it undone.  If it was
deliberate, redo the change as described in the preceding paragraph.

  Whenever an undo command makes the stars disappear from the mode line,
the buffer contents is the same as it was when the file was last read in
or saved.

  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.  Minibuffers,
help buffers, and documentation buffers also don't record undo information.

  Emacs can remember at most 8000 or so characters of deleted or
modified text in any one buffer for reinsertion by the undo command.
There is also a limit on the number of individual insert, delete, or
change actions that Emacs can remember.

  There are two keys to run the @code{undo} command, @kbd{C-x u} and
@kbd{C-_}, because on some keyboards, it is not obvious how to type
@kbd{C-_}. @kbd{C-x u} is an alternative you can type in the same
fashion on any terminal.