+2012-04-21 Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org>
+
+ * minibuf.texi (Intro to Minibuffers):
+ Tweak discussion of resizing minibuffer window.
+
2012-04-20 Chong Yidong <cyd@gnu.org>
* processes.texi (Asynchronous Processes): Mention nil argument to
@code{forward-sentence}, and @code{forward-paragraph}, stop at the
boundary between the prompt and the actual text.
+@c See http://debbugs.gnu.org/11276
The minibuffer's window is normally a single line; it grows
-automatically if the contents require more space. You can explicitly
-@c FIXME? Works in 23.4, not 24.0.95. (Bug#11276)
-resize it temporarily with the window sizing commands; it reverts to
-its normal size when the minibuffer is exited. You can resize it
-@c FIXME? Doesn't work in any version of Emacs?
+automatically if the contents require more space. Whilst it is
+active, you can explicitly resize it temporarily with the window
+sizing commands; it reverts to its normal size when the minibuffer is
+exited. When the minibuffer is not active, you can resize it
permanently by using the window sizing commands in the frame's other
-window, when the minibuffer is not active. If the frame contains just
-a minibuffer, you can change the minibuffer's size by changing the
-frame's size.
+window, or dragging the mode line with the mouse. (Due to details of
+the current implementation, for this to work @code{resize-mini-windows}
+must be @code{nil}.) If the frame contains just a minibuffer, you can
+change the minibuffer's size by changing the frame's size.
Use of the minibuffer reads input events, and that alters the values
of variables such as @code{this-command} and @code{last-command}