From: Eli Zaretskii Date: Mon, 23 Apr 2007 09:15:59 +0000 (+0000) Subject: (Unconditional Replace, Query Replace): Add xref to "Replacement and Case". X-Git-Tag: emacs-pretest-22.0.99~46 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=8a3b53527766cd11932507352aa9f6e9339c63b7;p=emacs.git (Unconditional Replace, Query Replace): Add xref to "Replacement and Case". --- diff --git a/man/search.texi b/man/search.texi index 47d73bd26f6..1a8a6372ba2 100644 --- a/man/search.texi +++ b/man/search.texi @@ -1002,6 +1002,9 @@ C-@key{SPC}} to move back there. A numeric argument restricts replacement to matches that are surrounded by word boundaries. The argument's value doesn't matter. + @xref{Replacement and Case}, for details about case-sensitivity in +replace commands. + What if you want to exchange @samp{x} and @samp{y}: replace every @samp{x} with a @samp{y} and vice versa? You can do it this way: @example @@ -1155,9 +1158,9 @@ This command finds occurrences of @samp{foo} one by one, displays each occurrence and asks you whether to replace it. Aside from querying, @code{query-replace} works just like @code{replace-string}. It preserves case, like @code{replace-string}, provided -@code{case-replace} is non-@code{nil}, as it normally is. A numeric -argument means consider only occurrences that are bounded by -word-delimiter characters. +@code{case-replace} is non-@code{nil}, as it normally is +(@pxref{Replacement and Case}). A numeric argument means consider +only occurrences that are bounded by word-delimiter characters. @kindex C-M-% @findex query-replace-regexp