Category : C Source Code
Archive   : MG2A-DOS.ZIP
Filename : TUTORIAL

 
Output of file : TUTORIAL contained in archive : MG2A-DOS.ZIP
Copyright (c) 1985 Richard M. Stallman. See end for copying conditions.

You are looking at the Emacs tutorial.

Emacs commands generally involve the CONTROL key or the META (ESC)
key. Rather than write out META or CONTROL each time we want you to
prefix a character, we'll use the following abbreviations:

C- means hold the CONTROL key while typing the character
Thus, C-f would be: hold the CONTROL key and type f.
M- means type , release it, then type the character .

The characters ">>" at the left margin indicate directions for you to
try using a command. For instance:

>> Now type C-v (View next screen) to move to the next screen.
(go ahead, do it by depressing the control key and v together).
From now on, you'll be expected to do this whenever you finish
reading the screen.

Note that there is an overlap when going from screen to screen; this
provides some continuity when moving through the file.

The first thing that you need to know is how to move around from
place to place in the file. You already know how to move forward a
screen, with C-v. To move backwards a screen, type M-v (type v).

>> Try typing M-v and then C-v to move back and forth a few times.


SUMMARY
-------

The following commands are useful for viewing screenfuls:

C-v Move forward one screenful
M-v Move backward one screenful
C-l Clear screen and redisplay everything
putting the text near the cursor at the center.
(That's control-L, not control-1.
There is no such character as control-1.)

>> Find the cursor and remember what text is near it.
Then type a C-l.
Find the cursor again and see what text is near it now.


BASIC CURSOR CONTROL
--------------------

Getting from screenful to screenful is useful, but how do you
reposition yourself within a given screen to a specific place? There
are several ways you can do this. One way (not the best, but the most
basic) is to use the commands previous, backward, forward and next.
As you can imagine these commands (which are given to Emacs as C-p,
C-b, C-f, and C-n respectively) move the cursor from where it
currently is to a new place in the given direction. It is also
possible to move the cursor with the arrow keys, but this requires you
move your hand from the keyboard, it is also not supported on other
machines that do support Emacs. Emacs runs on everything from a CP/M
machine to large mainframes. Here then, in a more graphical form are
the commands:

Previous line, C-p
:
:
Backward, C-b .... Current cursor position .... Forward, C-f
:
:
Next line, C-n

>> Move the cursor to the line in the middle of that diagram
and type C-l to see the whole diagram centered in the screen.

You'll probably find it easy to think of these by letter. P for
previous, N for next, B for backward and F for forward. These are
the basic cursor positioning commands and you'll be using them ALL
the time so it would be of great benefit if you learn them now.

>> Do a few C-n's to bring the cursor down to this line.

>> Move into the line with C-f's and then up with C-p's.
See what C-p does when the cursor is in the middle of the line.

>> Try to C-b at the beginning of a line. Do a few more C-b's.
Then do C-f's back to the end of the line and beyond.

When you go off the top or bottom of the screen, the text beyond
the edge is shifted onto the screen so that your instructions can
be carried out while keeping the cursor on the screen.

>> Try to move the cursor off the bottom of the screen with C-n and
see what happens.

If moving by characters is too slow, you can move by words. M-f
(ESC-f) moves forward a word and M-b moves back a word.

>> Type a few M-f's and M-b's. Intersperse them with C-f's and C-b's.

Notice the parallel between C-f and C-b on the one hand, and M-f and
M-b on the other hand. Very often Meta characters are used for
operations related to English text whereas Control characters operate
on the basic textual units that are independent of what you are
editing (characters, lines, etc). C-a and C-e move to the beginning or
end of a line.

>> Try a couple of C-a's, and then a couple of C-e's.
See how repeated C-a's do nothing.

Two other simple cursor motion commands are M-< (Meta Less-than),
which moves to the beginning of the file, and M-> (Meta Greater-than),
which moves to the end of the file. You probably don't need to try
them, since finding this spot again will be boring. On most terminals
the "<" is above the comma and you must use the shift key to type it.
On these terminals you must use the shift key to type M-< also;
without the shift key, you would be typing M-comma.

The location of the cursor in the text is also called "point". To
paraphrase, the cursor shows on the screen where point is located in
the text.

Here is a summary of simple moving operations including the word and
sentence moving commands:

C-f Move forward a character
C-b Move backward a character

M-f Move forward a word
M-b Move backward a word

c-n Move to next line
C-p Move to previous line

C-a Move to beginning of line
C-e Move to end of line

M-< Go to beginning of file
M-> Go to end of file

>> Try all of these commands now a few times for practice.
Since the last two will take you away from this screen,
you can come back here with M-v's and C-v's. These are
the most often used commands.

Like all other commands in Emacs, these commands can be given
arguments which cause them to be executed repeatedly. The way you
give a command a repeat count is by typing C-u and then the digits
before you type the command.

For instance, C-u 8 C-f moves forward eight characters.

>> Try giving a suitable argument to C-n or C-p to come as close
as you can to this line in one jump.

The only apparent exception to this is the screen moving commands,
C-v and M-v. When given an argument, they scroll the screen up or
down by that many lines, rather than screenfuls. This proves to be
much more useful.

>> Try typing C-u 8 C-v now.

Did it scroll the screen up by 8 lines? If you would like to
scroll it down you can give an argument to M-v.


WHEN EMACS IS HUNG
-----------------

If Emacs gets into an infinite (or simply very long) computation which
you don't want to finish, you can stop it safely by typing C-g.
You can also use C-g to discard a numeric argument or the beginning of
a command that you don't want to finish.

>> Type C-u 100 to make a numeric arg of 100, then type C-g.
Now type C-f. How many characters does it move?
If you have typed an by mistake, you can get rid of it
with a C-g.

WINDOWS
-------

Emacs can have several windows, each displaying its own text.
At this stage it is better not to go into the techniques of
using multiple windows. But you do need to know how to get
rid of extra windows that may appear to display help or
output from certain commands. It is simple:

C-x 1 One window (i.e., kill all other windows).

That is Control-x followed by the digit 1.
C-x 1 makes the window which the cursor is in become
the full screen, by getting rid of any other windows.

>> Move the cursor to this line and type C-l (Control-L).
>> Type M-x. The cursor will move to the bottom of the screen.
>> Type the words "describe-bindings" and hit return.
See how this window shrinks, while a new one appears
to display which functions are connected to which keys.

>> Type C-x 1 and see the documentation listing window disappear.


INSERTING AND DELETING
----------------------

If you want to insert text, just type it. Characters which you can
see, such as A, 7, *, etc. are taken by Emacs as text and inserted
immediately. Type (the carriage-return key) to insert a
Newline character.

You can delete the last character you typed by typing . More
generally, deletes the character immediately before the current
cursor position.

>> Do this now, type a few characters and then delete them
by typing a few times. Don't worry about this file
being changed; you won't affect the master tutorial. This is just
a copy of it.

>> Now start typing text until you reach the right margin, and keep
typing. When a line of text gets too big for one line on the
screen, the line of text is "continued" off the edge of the screen.
The dollar sign at the right margin indicates a line which has
been continued.
>> Use s to delete the text until the line fits on one screen
line again. The continuation mark goes away.

>> Move the cursor to the beginning of a line and type . This
deletes the newline before the line and merges the line onto
the previous line. The resulting line may be too long to fit, in
which case it has a continuation mark.
>> Type to reinsert the Newline you deleted.

Remember that most Emacs commands can be given a repeat count;
this includes characters which insert themselves.

>> Try that now -- type C-u 8 * and see what happens.

You've now learned the most basic way of typing something in
Emacs and correcting errors. You can delete by words or lines
as well. Here is a summary of the delete operations:

delete the character just before the cursor
C-d delete the next character after the cursor

M- kill the word immediately before the cursor
M-d kill the next word after the cursor

C-k kill from the cursor position to end of line

Notice that and C-d vs M- and M-d extend the parallel
started by C-f and M-f (well, isn't really a control
character, but let's not worry about that).

Now suppose you kill something, and then you decide that you want to
get it back? Well, whenever you kill something bigger than a
character, Emacs saves it for you. To yank it back, use C-y. You
can kill text in one place, move elsewhere, and then do C-y; this is
a good way to move text around. Note that the difference
between "Killing" and "Deleting" something is that "Killed" things
can be yanked back, and "Deleted" things cannot. Generally, the
commands that can destroy a lot of text save it, while the ones that
attack only one character, or nothing but blank lines and spaces, do
not save.

For instance, type C-n a couple times to postion the cursor
at some line on this screen.

>> Do this now, move the cursor and kill that line with C-k.

Note that a single C-k kills the contents of the line, and a second
C-k kills the line itself, and make all the other lines move up. If
you give C-k a repeat count, it kills that many lines AND their
contents.

The text that has just disappeared is saved so that you can
retrieve it. To retrieve the last killed text and put it where
the cursor currently is, type C-y.

>> Try it; type C-y to yank the text back.

Think of C-y as if you were yanking something back that someone
took away from you. Notice that if you do several C-k's in a row
the text that is killed is all saved together so that one C-y will
yank all of the lines.

>> Do this now, type C-k several times.

Now to retrieve that killed text:

>> Type C-y. Then move the cursor down a few lines and type C-y
again. You now see how to copy some text.


FILES
-----

In order to make the text you edit permanent, you must put it in a
file. Otherwise, it will go away when your invocation of Emacs goes
away. You put your editing in a file by "finding" the file. What
finding means is that you see the contents of the file in your Emacs;
and, loosely speaking, what you are editing is the file itself.
However, the changes still don't become permanent until you "save" the
file. This is so you can have control to avoid leaving a half-changed
file around when you don't want to.

If you look near the bottom of the screen you will see a line that
begins and ends with dashes, and contains the string:
"Mg: TUTORIAL"
Your copy of the Emacs tutorial is called "TUTORIAL". Whatever
file you find, that file's name will appear in that precise
spot.

The commands for finding and saving files are unlike the other
commands you have learned in that they consist of two characters.
They both start with the character Control-x. There is a whole series
of commands that start with Control-x; many of them have to do with
files, buffers, and related things, and all of them consist of
Control-x followed by some other character.

Another thing about the command for finding a file is that you have
to say what file name you want. We say the command "reads an argument
from the terminal" (in this case, the argument is the name of the
file). After you type the command

C-x C-f Find a file

Emacs asks you to type the file name. It echoes on the bottom line of
the screen. When you type to end the file name it disappears.

>> Type C-x C-f, then type C-g. This cancels the C-x C-f command
that was using the minibuffer. So you do not find any file.

In a little while the file contents appear on the screen. You can
edit the contents. When you wish to make the changes permanent,
issue the command

C-x C-s Save the file

The contents of Emacs are written into the file.

When saving is finished, Emacs prints the name of the file written.
You should save fairly often, so that you will not lose very much
work if the system should crash.

>> Type C-x C-s, saving your copy of the tutorial.
This should print "Wrote TUTORIAL" at the bottom of the screen.

To make a new file, just find it "as if" it already existed. Then
start typing in the text. When you ask to "save" the file, Emacs
will really create the file with the text that you have inserted.
>From then on, you can consider yourself to be editing an already
existing file.


BUFFERS
-------

If you find a second file with C-x C-f, the first file remains inside
Emacs. This way you can get quite a number of files inside Emacs.

The object inside Emacs which holds the text read from one file
is called a "buffer." Finding a file makes a new buffer inside Emacs.
To see a list of the buffers that exist in Emacs, type

C-x C-b List buffers

>> Try C-x C-b now.

See how each buffer has a name, and it may also have a file name
for the file whose contents it holds. Some buffers do not correspond
to files. For example, the buffer named "*Buffer List*" does
not have any file. It is the buffer which contains the buffer
list that was made by C-x C-b. ANY text you see in an Emacs window
has to be in some buffer.

>> Type C-x 1 to get rid of the buffer list.

If you make changes to the text of one file, then find another file,
this does not save the first file. Its changes remain inside Emacs,
in that file's buffer. The creation or editing of the second file's
buffer has no effect on the first file's buffer. This is very useful,
but it also means that you need a convenient way to save the first
file's buffer. It would be a nuisance to have to switch back to
it with C-x C-f in order to save it with C-x C-s. So we have

C-x s Save some buffers

C-x s goes through the list of all the buffers you have
and finds the ones that contain files you have changed.
For each such buffer, C-x s asks you whether to save it.


EXTENDING THE COMMAND SET
-------------------------

There are many, many more Emacs commands than could possibly be put
on all the control and meta characters. Emacs gets around this with
the X (eXtend) command. This comes in two flavors:

C-x Character eXtend. Followed by one character.
M-x Named command eXtend. Followed by a long name.

These are commands that are generally useful but used less than the
commands you have already learned about. You have already seen two
of them: the file commands C-x C-f to Find and C-x C-s to Save.
Another example is the command to tell Emacs that you'd like to stop
editing and get rid of Emacs. The command to do this is C-x C-c.
(Don't worry; it offers to save each changed file before it kills the
Emacs.)

C-z is the usual way to exit Emacs, because it is always better not to
kill the Emacs if you are going to do any more editing. On systems
which allow it, C-z exits from Emacs to a CLI but does not destroy the
Emacs; you can resume editing by ending that CLI or depth arranging.

You would use C-x C-c if you were running out of memory. You would
also use it to exit an Emacs invoked under mail handling programs and
other random utilities, since they may not believe you have really
finished using the Emacs if it continues to exist.

There are many C-x commands. The ones you know are:

C-x C-f Find file.
C-x C-s Save file.
C-x C-b List buffers.
C-x C-c Quit Emacs.

Named eXtended commands are commands which are used even less
frequently, or commands which are used only in certain modes. These
commands are usually called "functions". An example is the function
replace-string, which globally replaces one string with another. When
you type M-x, Emacs prompts you at the bottom of the screen with
M-x and you should type the name of the function you wish to call; in
this case, "query-replace". Just type "que" and Emacs will
complete the name. End the command name with .
Then type the two "arguments"--the string to be replaced, and the string
to replace it with--each one ended with a Return.

>> Move the cursor to the blank line two lines below this one.
Then type M-x repl schangedaltered.

Notice how this line has changed: you've replaced
the word c-h-a-n-g-e-d with "altered" wherever it occured
after the cursor.


MODE LINE
---------

If Emacs sees that you are typing commands slowly it shows them to you
at the bottom of the screen in an area called the "echo area." The echo
area contains the bottom line of the screen. The line immediately above
it is called the MODE LINE. The mode line says something like

--**-Mg: TUTORIAL (fundamental)------------------------

This is a very useful "information" line.

The stars near the front mean that you have made changes to the text.
Right after you visit or save a file, there are no stars, just dashes.

The part of the mode line inside the parentheses is to tell you what
modes you are in. The default mode is fundamental which is what you
are in now. It is an example of a "mode". There are several modes in
Emacs for editing different styles of text, such as indent, bsmap,
fill, etc. Each mode makes a few commands behave differently.

One mode which is very useful, especially for editing English text, is
Auto Fill mode. When this mode is on, Emacs breaks the line in
between words automatically whenever the line gets too long. You can
turn this mode on by doing M-x auto-fill-mode. When the mode
is on, you can turn it off by doing M-x auto-fill-mode.

>> Type M-x auto-fill-mode now. Then insert a line of "asdf "
over again until you see it divide into two lines. You must put in
spaces between them because Auto Fill breaks lines only at spaces.

The margin is usually set at 70 characters, but you can change it
with the C-x f command. You should give the margin setting you want
as a numeric argument.

>> Type C-x f with an argument of 20. (C-u 2 0 C-x f).
Then type in some text and see Emacs fill lines of 20
characters with it. Then set the margin back to 70 using
C-x f again.

If you make changes in the middle of a paragraph, Auto Fill mode
does not re-fill it for you.
To re-fill the paragraph, type M-q (Meta-q) with the cursor inside
that paragraph.

>> Move the cursor into the previous paragraph and type M-q.

SEARCHING
---------

Emacs can do searches for strings (these are groups of contiguous
characters or words) either forward through the file or backward
through it. To search for the string means that you are trying to
locate it somewhere in the file and have Emacs show you where the
occurrences of the string exist. This type of search is somewhat
different from what you may be familiar with. It is a search that is
performed as you type in the thing to search for. The command to
initiate a search is C-s for forward search, and C-r for reverse
search. BUT WAIT! Don't do them now. When you type C-s you'll
notice that the string "I-search" appears as a prompt in the echo
area. This tells you that Emacs is in what is called an incremental
search waiting for you to type the thing that you want to search for.
terminates a search.

>> Now type C-s to start a search. SLOWLY, one letter at a time,
type the word 'cursor', pausing after you type each
character to notice what happens to the cursor.
>> Type C-s to find the next occurrence of "cursor".
>> Now type four times and see how the cursor moves.
>> Type to terminate the search.

Did you see what happened? Emacs, in an incremental search, tries to
go to the occurrence of the string that you've typed out so far. To go
to the next occurrence of 'cursor' just type C-s again. If no such
occurrence exists Emacs beeps and tells you that it is a failing
search. C-g would also terminate the search.

If you are in the middle of an incremental search and type ,
you'll notice that the last character in the search string is erased
and the search backs up to the last place of the search. For
instance, suppose you currently have typed 'cu' and you see that your
cursor is at the first occurrence of 'cu'. If you now type ,
the 'u' on the search line is erased and you'll be repositioned in the
text to the occurrence of 'c' where the search took you before you
typed the 'u'. This provides a useful means for backing up while you
are searching.

If you are in the middle of a search and happen to type a control
character (other than a C-s or C-r, which tell Emacs to search for the
next occurrence of the string), the search is terminated.

The C-s starts a search that looks for any occurrence of the search
string AFTER the current cursor position. But what if you want to
search for something earlier in the text? To do this, type C-r for
Reverse search. Everything that applies to C-s applies to C-r except
that the direction of the search is reversed.


GETTING MORE HELP
-----------------

In this tutorial we have tried to supply just enough information to
get you started using Emacs. There is so much available in Emacs that
it would be impossible to explain it all here. However, you may want
to learn more about Emacs since it has numerous desirable features
that you don't know about yet.


CONCLUSION
----------

Remember, to exit Emacs permanently use C-x C-c. To exit to a shell
temporarily, so that you can come back in, use C-z.

This tutorial is meant to be understandable to all new users, so if
you found something unclear, don't sit and blame yourself - complain!


COPYING
-------

This tutorial, like all of GNU Emacs, is copyrighted, and comes with
permission to distribute copies on certain conditions:

Copyright (c) 1985 Richard M. Stallman

Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies
of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the
copyright notice and permission notice are preserved,
and that the distributor grants the recipient permission
for further redistribution as permitted by this notice.

Permission is granted to distribute modified versions
of this document, or of portions of it,
under the above conditions, provided also that they
carry prominent notices stating who last altered them.

The conditions for copying Emacs itself are slightly different
but in the same spirit. Please read the file COPYING and then
do give copies of GNU Emacs to your friends.
Help stamp out ownership of software by using, writing,
and sharing free software!

Mg itself is public domain, and may be given away freely. See the
README file about differences from GNU emacs, and why Mg exists.

*******************************************************************************
*** This document heavily cut by Randy M. Spencer to apply to ***
*** Mg written my Mike Meyer and gang. It was released ***
*** at the AAA users group meeting in Lafayette CA, an Amiga Users ***
*** Group. My profound thanks to Richard Stallman for his work, I ***
*** am proud to carry his initials. ***
*** Additional modifacations were done by Robert A. Larson for Mg ***
*** version 2a, mainly the name change from MicroGnuEmacs to Mg. ***
*******************************************************************************

See other files accompanying this for more system specific information.


  3 Responses to “Category : C Source Code
Archive   : MG2A-DOS.ZIP
Filename : TUTORIAL

  1. Very nice! Thank you for this wonderful archive. I wonder why I found it only now. Long live the BBS file archives!

  2. This is so awesome! 😀 I’d be cool if you could download an entire archive of this at once, though.

  3. But one thing that puzzles me is the “mtswslnkmcjklsdlsbdmMICROSOFT” string. There is an article about it here. It is definitely worth a read: http://www.os2museum.com/wp/mtswslnk/