From: Eli Zaretskii Date: Mon, 18 Oct 2021 14:13:18 +0000 (+0300) Subject: Minor fixes for recent changes in ELisp manual X-Git-Tag: emacs-28.0.90~260 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=c163fd9260317adbb85a2274dab795a6a7f3061f;p=emacs.git Minor fixes for recent changes in ELisp manual * doc/lispref/windows.texi (Basic Windows, Windows and Frames) (Selecting Windows): * doc/lispref/objects.texi (Window Type): * doc/lispref/frames.texi (Input Focus, Frame Layout): Fix wording, punctuation, and indexing. --- diff --git a/doc/lispref/frames.texi b/doc/lispref/frames.texi index 2c3a58d5513..f851d12c080 100644 --- a/doc/lispref/frames.texi +++ b/doc/lispref/frames.texi @@ -644,8 +644,9 @@ accommodate an overlong tool bar. @item Tab Bar @cindex internal tab bar The tab bar (@pxref{Tab Bars,,,emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) is always -drawn by Emacs itself. On builds with internal tool bars, the tab bar -appears above the tool bar, on builds with external tool bars below. +drawn by Emacs itself. The tab bar appears above the tool bar in +Emacs built with an internal tool bar, and below the tool bar in +builds with an external tool bar. Display of the tab bar can be suppressed by setting the @code{tab-bar-lines} parameter (@pxref{Layout Parameters}) to zero. @@ -3009,7 +3010,7 @@ Auto-selection}). Note that this option does not distinguish ``sloppy'' focus (where the frame that previously had focus retains focus as long as the mouse -pointer does not move into another window system window) from ``strict'' +pointer does not move into another window-system window) from ``strict'' focus (where a frame immediately loses focus when it's left by the mouse pointer). Neither does it recognize whether your window manager supports delayed focusing or auto-raising where you can explicitly diff --git a/doc/lispref/objects.texi b/doc/lispref/objects.texi index 2b82e03006c..0551bb5673f 100644 --- a/doc/lispref/objects.texi +++ b/doc/lispref/objects.texi @@ -1625,7 +1625,7 @@ markers. @node Window Type @subsection Window Type - A @dfn{window} describes a portion of the screen that Emacs uses to + A @dfn{window} describes the portion of the screen that Emacs uses to display buffers. Every live window (@pxref{Basic Windows}) has one associated buffer, whose contents appear in that window. By contrast, a given buffer may appear in one window, no window, or several windows. diff --git a/doc/lispref/windows.texi b/doc/lispref/windows.texi index c4bb4e68e6b..c66ae173e42 100644 --- a/doc/lispref/windows.texi +++ b/doc/lispref/windows.texi @@ -65,15 +65,15 @@ another window. @cindex terminal screen @cindex screen of terminal -@cindex window system window +@cindex window-system window Emacs uses the term ``window'' with a different meaning than in graphical desktop environments and window systems, such as the X Window System. When Emacs is run on X, each graphical X window owned by the Emacs process corresponds to one Emacs frame. When Emacs is run on a text terminal, each Emacs frame fills the entire terminal screen. In either case, the frame may contain one or more Emacs windows. For -disambiguation, we use the term @dfn{window system window} when we mean -the window system window corresponding to an Emacs frame. +disambiguation, we use the term @dfn{window-system window} when we mean +the window-system window corresponding to an Emacs frame. @cindex tiled windows Unlike X windows, Emacs windows are @dfn{tiled}; they never overlap @@ -82,7 +82,8 @@ deleted, the change in window space is taken from or given to other windows on the same frame, so that the total area of the frame is unchanged. -In Emacs Lisp, windows are represented by a special Lisp object type. +In Emacs Lisp, windows are represented by a special Lisp object type +(@pxref{Window Type}). @defun windowp object This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a window (whether or @@ -212,7 +213,7 @@ window} which is used for displaying a tooltip in a tooltip frame Each window belongs to exactly one frame (@pxref{Frames}). For all windows belonging to a specific frame, we sometimes also say that these -windows are owned by that frame or simply that they are on that frame. +windows are @dfn{owned} by that frame or simply that they are on that frame. @defun window-frame &optional window This function returns the specified @var{window}'s frame---the frame @@ -251,14 +252,15 @@ the first element. whose leaf nodes are the live windows. The internal nodes of a window tree are not live; they exist for the purpose of organizing the relationships between live windows. The root node of a window tree is -called the @dfn{root window}. It is either a live window (if the frame -has just one window besides the minibuffer window or the frame is a -minibuffer-only frame, see @ref{Frame Layout}), or an internal window. +called the @dfn{root window}. It is either a live window or an +internal window. If it is a live window, then the frame has just one +window besides the minibuffer window, or the frame is a +minibuffer-only frame, @pxref{Frame Layout}. A minibuffer window (@pxref{Minibuffer Windows}) that is not alone on its frame does not have a parent window, so it strictly speaking is not part of its frame's window tree. Nonetheless, it is a sibling window of -the frame's root window, and thus can be reached from there via +the frame's root window, and thus can be reached from the root window via @code{window-next-sibling}, see below. Also, the function @code{window-tree} described at the end of this section lists the minibuffer window alongside the actual window tree. @@ -282,7 +284,7 @@ these live windows become leaf nodes of the window tree, as @dfn{child windows} of a single internal window. If necessary, Emacs automatically creates this internal window, which is also called the @dfn{parent window}, and assigns it to the appropriate position in the window tree. -A set of windows that share the same parent are called @dfn{siblings}. +The set of windows that share the same parent are called @dfn{siblings}. @cindex parent window @defun window-parent &optional window @@ -513,7 +515,7 @@ The following function explicitly selects a window and its frame. @defun select-window window &optional norecord This function makes @var{window} the selected window and the window -selected within its frame and selects that frame. It also makes +selected within its frame, and selects that frame. It also makes @var{window}'s buffer (@pxref{Buffers and Windows}) current and sets that buffer's value of @code{point} to the value of @code{window-point} (@pxref{Window Point}) in @var{window}. @var{window} must be a live @@ -529,7 +531,7 @@ update the display of @var{window} when its frame gets redisplayed the next time. If @var{norecord} is non-@code{nil}, such updates are usually not performed. If, however, @var{norecord} equals the special symbol @code{mark-for-redisplay}, the additional actions mentioned above -are omitted but @var{window} will be nevertheless updated. +are omitted but @var{window}'s display will be nevertheless updated. Note that sometimes selecting a window is not enough to show it, or make its frame the top-most frame on display: you may also need to @@ -670,7 +672,7 @@ display a bigger portion of the buffer than one window could alone. It is often useful to consider such a @dfn{window group} as a single entity. Several functions such as @code{window-group-start} (@pxref{Window Start and End}) allow you to do this by supplying, as -an argument, one of the windows as a stand in for the whole group. +an argument, one of the windows as a stand-in for the whole group. @defun selected-window-group @vindex selected-window-group-function diff --git a/lisp/tab-bar.el b/lisp/tab-bar.el index 82ec617ccc4..3dc95c91691 100644 --- a/lisp/tab-bar.el +++ b/lisp/tab-bar.el @@ -705,11 +705,14 @@ the formatted tab name to display in the tab bar." "Template for displaying tab bar items. Every item in the list is a function that returns a string, or a list of menu-item elements, or nil. -When you add more items `tab-bar-format-align-right' and -`tab-bar-format-global' to the end, then after enabling -`display-time-mode' (or any other mode that uses `global-mode-string') -it will display time aligned to the right on the tab bar instead of -the mode line. Replacing `tab-bar-format-tabs' with +Adding a function to the list causes the tab bar to show +that string, or display a menu with those menu items when +you click on the tab bar. +If the list ends with `tab-bar-format-align-right' and +`tab-bar-format-global', then after enabling `display-time-mode' +(or any other mode that uses `global-mode-string'), +it will display time aligned to the right on the tab bar instead +of the mode line. Replacing `tab-bar-format-tabs' with `tab-bar-format-tabs-groups' will group tabs on the tab bar." :type 'hook :options '(tab-bar-format-menu-global @@ -728,7 +731,7 @@ the mode line. Replacing `tab-bar-format-tabs' with :version "28.1") (defun tab-bar-format-menu-global () - "Show global menu on clicking the Menu button." + "Produce the Menu button for the tab bar that shows a global menu." `((add-tab menu-item (propertize "Menu" 'face 'tab-bar-tab-inactive) (lambda (event) (interactive "e") (let ((menu (make-sparse-keymap @@ -745,7 +748,8 @@ the mode line. Replacing `tab-bar-format-tabs' with :help "Global Menu"))) (defun tab-bar-format-history () - "Show back and forward buttons when `tab-bar-history-mode' is enabled. + "Produce back and forward buttons for the tab bar. +These buttons will be shown when `tab-bar-history-mode' is enabled. You can hide these buttons by customizing `tab-bar-format' and removing `tab-bar-format-history' from it." (when tab-bar-history-mode @@ -781,7 +785,7 @@ You can hide these buttons by customizing `tab-bar-format' and removing ,(alist-get 'close-binding tab)))))) (defun tab-bar-format-tabs () - "Show all tabs." + "Produce all the tabs for the tab bar." (let ((i 0)) (mapcan (lambda (tab) @@ -855,7 +859,7 @@ when the tab is current. Return the result as a keymap." :help "Click to visit group")))) (defun tab-bar-format-tabs-groups () - "Show tabs with their groups." + "Produce tabs for the tab bar grouped according to their groups." (let* ((tabs (funcall tab-bar-tabs-function)) (current-group (funcall tab-bar-tab-group-function (tab-bar--current-tab-find tabs))) @@ -899,7 +903,7 @@ when the tab is current. Return the result as a keymap." `((align-right menu-item ,str ignore)))) (defun tab-bar-format-global () - "Format `global-mode-string' to display it in the tab bar. + "Produce display of `global-mode-string' in the tab bar. When `tab-bar-format-global' is added to `tab-bar-format' (possibly appended after `tab-bar-format-align-right'), then modes that display information on the mode line