From: Richard M. Stallman Date: Mon, 11 Sep 2006 17:16:07 +0000 (+0000) Subject: (Compilation Mode): Clarification. X-Git-Tag: emacs-pretest-22.0.90~614 X-Git-Url: http://git.eshelyaron.com/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=f489fc25190b6719dd28008b3ac85566cfc13e96;p=emacs.git (Compilation Mode): Clarification. (Grep Searching): Add xref to Compilation Mode. --- diff --git a/man/ChangeLog b/man/ChangeLog index 29e86a400a7..9980175fe56 100644 --- a/man/ChangeLog +++ b/man/ChangeLog @@ -1,4 +1,9 @@ -2006-09-09 Reiner Steib +2006-09-11 Richard Stallman + + * building.texi (Compilation Mode): Clarification. + (Grep Searching): Add xref to Compilation Mode. + +2006-09-11 Reiner Steib * gnus.texi (Mail Source Specifiers): Mention problem of duplicate mails with pop3-leave-mail-on-server. Fix wording. diff --git a/man/building.texi b/man/building.texi index 01cdf88fe39..451246ae55d 100644 --- a/man/building.texi +++ b/man/building.texi @@ -210,9 +210,9 @@ click @kbd{Mouse-2} on the error message; you need not switch to the backquote or ``grave accent,'' not the single-quote. This command is available in all buffers, not just in @samp{*compilation*}; it displays the next error message at the top of one window and source -location of the error in another window. It also momentarily -highlights the relevant source line. You can change the behavior of -this highlighting with the variable @code{next-error-highlight}. +location of the error in another window. It also temporarily +highlights the relevant source line, for a period controlled by the +variable @code{next-error-highlight}. The first time @w{@kbd{C-x `}} is used after the start of a compilation, it moves to the first error's location. Subsequent uses of @kbd{C-x @@ -335,9 +335,11 @@ Emacs. @section Searching with Grep under Emacs Just as you can run a compiler from Emacs and then visit the lines -with compilation errors, you can also run @code{grep} and -then visit the lines on which matches were found. This works by -treating the matches reported by @code{grep} as if they were ``errors.'' +with compilation errors, you can also run @code{grep} and then visit +the lines on which matches were found. This works by treating the +matches reported by @code{grep} as if they were ``errors.'' The +buffer of matches uses Grep mode, which is a variant of Compilation +mode (@pxref{Compilation Mode}). @table @kbd @item M-x grep