From: Luc Teirlinck Date: Wed, 8 Feb 2006 02:21:20 +0000 (+0000) Subject: * faq.texi (Meta key does not work in xterm) X-Git-Tag: emacs-pretest-22.0.90~4290 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=e7d7b4ca8ca50bcd819ac975337946b9ab8507f6;p=emacs.git * faq.texi (Meta key does not work in xterm) (Emacs does not display 8-bit characters) (Inputting eight-bit characters): Update xrefs. --- diff --git a/man/faq.texi b/man/faq.texi index bc78876b8e9..77955d9c1ce 100644 --- a/man/faq.texi +++ b/man/faq.texi @@ -4679,8 +4679,7 @@ terminals. Non-@acronym{ASCII} keys and mouse events (e.g. @kbd{C-=} and @cindex @key{Meta} key and @code{xterm} @cindex Xterm and @key{Meta} key -@inforef{Single-Byte Character Support, Single-Byte Character Set -Support, emacs}. +@inforef{Unibyte Mode, Single-Byte Character Set Support, emacs}. If the advice in the Emacs manual fails, try all of these methods before asking for further help: @@ -4780,10 +4779,10 @@ You can get the old behavior by binding @kbd{SPC} to @code{minibuffer-complete-word} in the minibuffer, as follows: @lisp -(define-key minibuffer-local-filename-completion-map (kbd "SPC") +(define-key minibuffer-local-filename-completion-map (kbd "SPC") 'minibuffer-complete-word) -(define-key minibuffer-local-must-match-filename-map (kbd "SPC") +(define-key minibuffer-local-must-match-filename-map (kbd "SPC") 'minibuffer-complete-word) @end lisp @@ -4804,7 +4803,7 @@ You can get the old behavior by binding @kbd{SPC} to @cindex Displaying eight-bit characters @cindex Eight-bit characters, displaying -@inforef{Single-Byte Character Support, Single-byte Character Set +@inforef{Unibyte Mode, Single-byte Character Set Support, emacs}. On a Unix, when Emacs runs on a text-only terminal display or is invoked with @samp{emacs -nw}, you typically need to use @code{set-terminal-coding-system} to tell Emacs what the terminal can @@ -4821,7 +4820,7 @@ terminal coding system automatically. @cindex Input, 8-bit characters Various methods are available for input of eight-bit characters. See -@inforef{Single-Byte Character Support, Single-byte Character Set +@inforef{Unibyte Mode, Single-byte Character Set Support, emacs}. For more sophisticated methods, @inforef{Input Methods, Input Methods, emacs}.