doc/misc minor stylistic changes.
* doc/misc/edt.texi, erc.texi, gnus.texi, idlwave.texi, mh-e.texi: Standardize some Emacs/XEmacs terminology.
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@ -1,3 +1,8 @@
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2011-02-19 Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org>
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* edt.texi, erc.texi, gnus.texi, idlwave.texi, mh-e.texi:
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Standardize some Emacs/XEmacs terminology.
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2011-02-19 Michael Albinus <michael.albinus@gmx.de>
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* tramp.texi: Use consistently "Emacs" (instead of "GNU Emacs") and
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@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ informing you that the emulation has been enabled: ``Default EDT keymap
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active''.
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You can have the EDT Emulation start up automatically, each time you
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initiate a GNU Emacs session, by adding the following line to your
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initiate an Emacs session, by adding the following line to your
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@file{.emacs} file:
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@example
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@ -219,7 +219,7 @@ user quits without saving those buffers.
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@item
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Emulate EDT Keypad Mode commands closely so that current EDT users will
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find that it easy and comfortable to use GNU Emacs with a small learning
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find that it easy and comfortable to use Emacs with a small learning
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curve.
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@item
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@ -238,7 +238,7 @@ Provide an easy way to restore @strong{all} original Emacs key bindings,
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just as they existed before the EDT emulation was first invoked.
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@item
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Support GNU Emacs 19 and higher. XEmacs 19, and above, is also supported.
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Support Emacs and XEmacs 19 and higher.
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@item
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Supports highlighting of marked text within the EDT emulation on all
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@ -286,13 +286,13 @@ apply to you.
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@node Starting emulation
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@chapter How to Get Started
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Start up GNU Emacs and enter @kbd{M-x edt-emulation-on} to begin the
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Start up Emacs and enter @kbd{M-x edt-emulation-on} to begin the
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emulation. After initialization is complete, the following message will
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appear below the status line informing you that the emulation has been
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enabled: ``Default EDT keymap active''.
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You can have the EDT Emulation start up automatically, each time you
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initiate a GNU Emacs session, by adding the following line to your
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initiate an Emacs session, by adding the following line to your
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@file{.emacs} file:
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@example
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@ -307,7 +307,7 @@ in the EDT Default Mode).
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It is easy to customize key bindings in the EDT Emulation
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(@pxref{Customizing}). Customizations are placed in a file called
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@file{edt-user.el}. The Emacs @file{etc/} directory contains an
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example. If @file{edt-user.el} is found in your GNU Emacs load path
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example. If @file{edt-user.el} is found in your Emacs load path
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during EDT Emulation initialization, then the following message will
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appear below the status line indicating that the emulation has been
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enabled, enhanced by your own customizations: ``User EDT custom keymap
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@ -322,8 +322,8 @@ restores the original key bindings in effect just prior to invoking the
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emulation.
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Emacs binds keys to @acronym{ASCII} control characters and so does the
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real EDT. Where EDT key bindings and GNU Emacs key bindings conflict,
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the default GNU Emacs key bindings are retained by the EDT emulation by
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real EDT. Where EDT key bindings and Emacs key bindings conflict,
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the default Emacs key bindings are retained by the EDT emulation by
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default. If you are a diehard EDT user you may not like this. The
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@ref{Control keys} section explains how to change this so that the EDT
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bindings to @acronym{ASCII} control characters override the default
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@ -365,7 +365,7 @@ older SunOS release configured with a Sun Type 5 keyboard:
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@example
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! File: .xmodmaprc
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!
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! Set up Sun Type 5 keypad for use with the GNU Emacs EDT Emulation
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! Set up Sun Type 5 keypad for use with the Emacs EDT Emulation
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!
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keycode 53 = KP_Divide
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keycode 54 = KP_Multiply
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@ -437,7 +437,7 @@ things up nicely.
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@example
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! File: .xmodmaprc
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!
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! Set up PC keypad under GNU/Linux for the GNU Emacs EDT Emulation
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! Set up PC keypad under GNU/Linux for the Emacs EDT Emulation
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!
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clear mod2
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keycode 77 = F12
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@ -519,7 +519,7 @@ assign Num_Lock back to mod2.
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@example
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! File: .xmodmaprc
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!
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! Set up PC keypad under GNU/Linux for the GNU Emacs EDT Emulation
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! Set up PC keypad under GNU/Linux for the Emacs EDT Emulation
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!
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clear mod2
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keycode 77 = F12
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@ -542,7 +542,7 @@ In general, you will find that this emulation of EDT replicates most,
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but not all, of EDT's most used Keypad Mode editing functions and
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behavior. It is not perfect, but most EDT users who have tried the
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emulation agree that it is quite good enough to make it easy for
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die-hard EDT users to move over to using GNU Emacs.
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die-hard EDT users to move over to using Emacs.
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Here's a list of the most important differences between EDT and this GNU
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Emacs EDT Emulation. The list is short but you must be aware of these
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@ -784,7 +784,7 @@ terminals on the same system, you need not look at @file{edt-user.el2}.
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@end ignore
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First, you need to have your own private lisp directory, say
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@file{~/lisp}, and you should add it to the GNU Emacs load path.
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@file{~/lisp}, and you should add it to the Emacs load path.
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@strong{Please note:} A few sites have different load-path requirements,
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so the above directions may need some modification if your site has such
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@ -899,8 +899,8 @@ Here are some examples:
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@node Control keys
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@section Enabling EDT Control Key Sequence Bindings
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Where EDT key bindings and GNU Emacs key bindings conflict, the default
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GNU Emacs key bindings are retained by default. Some diehard EDT users
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Where EDT key bindings and Emacs key bindings conflict, the default
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Emacs key bindings are retained by default. Some diehard EDT users
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may not like this. So, if the variable
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@code{edt-use-EDT-control-key-bindings} is set to true in a user's
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@file{.emacs} file, then the default EDT Emulation mode will enable most
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@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ and modified without restriction.
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@titlepage
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@title ERC manual
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@subtitle a full-featured IRC client
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@subtitle for GNU Emacs and XEmacs
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@subtitle for Emacs and XEmacs
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@c The following two commands
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@c start the copyright page.
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@ -23156,7 +23156,7 @@ variables should be either strings or symbols naming functions that
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return a string. When the mouse passes over text with this property
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set, a balloon window will appear and display the string. Please
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refer to @ref{Tooltips, ,Tooltips, emacs, The Emacs Manual},
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(in GNU Emacs) or the doc string of @code{balloon-help-mode} (in
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(in Emacs) or the doc string of @code{balloon-help-mode} (in
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XEmacs) for more information on this. (For technical reasons, the
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guillemets have been approximated as @samp{<<} and @samp{>>} in this
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paragraph.)
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the second parameter.
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@file{make.bat} has been rewritten from scratch, it now features
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automatic recognition of XEmacs and GNU Emacs, generates
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automatic recognition of XEmacs and Emacs, generates
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@file{gnus-load.el}, checks if errors occur while compilation and
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generation of info files and reports them at the end of the build
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process. It now uses @code{makeinfo} if it is available and falls
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@ -4275,7 +4275,7 @@ browse-url-browser-function} or similar when attempting to load IDLWAVE
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under XEmacs.}
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You don't have the @samp{browse-url} (or other required) XEmacs package.
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Unlike GNU Emacs, XEmacs distributes many packages separately from the
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Unlike Emacs, XEmacs distributes many packages separately from the
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main program. IDLWAVE is actually among these, but is not always the
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most up to date. When installing IDLWAVE as an XEmacs package, it
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should prompt you for required additional packages. When installing it
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@ -212,9 +212,9 @@ However, MH-E was the tip of the iceberg, and I discovered more and
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more niceties about GNU Emacs and MH@. Now I'm fully hooked on both of
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them.
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The MH-E package is distributed with GNU Emacs@footnote{Version
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@value{VERSION} of MH-E appeared in GNU Emacs 23.1. It is supported
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in GNU Emacs 21 and 22, as well as XEmacs 21 (except for versions
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The MH-E package is distributed with Emacs@footnote{Version
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@value{VERSION} of MH-E appeared in Emacs 23.1. It is supported
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in Emacs 21 and 22, as well as XEmacs 21 (except for versions
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21.5.9-21.5.16). It is compatible with MH versions 6.8.4 and higher,
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all versions of nmh, and GNU mailutils 1.0 and higher.}, so you
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shouldn't have to do anything special to use it. Gnus is also
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