Inside of double quotes, most characters have no special meaning.
However, @samp{\}, @samp{"}, and @samp{$} are still special; to escape
them, use backslash as above. Thus, if the value of the variable
-@var{answer} is @code{42}, then @code{"The answer is: \"$answer\""}
+@var{answer} is @code{42}, then @code{"The answer is: \"$@var{answer}\""}
returns the string @code{The answer is: "42"}. However, when escaping
characters with no special meaning, the result is the full
@code{\@var{c}} sequence. For example, @code{"foo\bar"} means the
@item ff
@cmindex ff
Shorthand for the the function @code{find-name-dired} (@pxref{Dired
-and Find, , , elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}).
+and Find, , , emacs, The Emacs Editor}).
@item gf
@cmindex gf
Shorthand for the the function @code{find-grep-dired} (@pxref{Dired
-and Find, , , elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}).
+and Find, , , emacs, The Emacs Editor}).
@item intersection
@cmindex intersection