From d6921e352a20f7b0a19f04738da4a5f882fd07b7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Richard M. Stallman" Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 13:21:07 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Say "expression" instead of "sexp". Update xref, Sexps -> Expressions. --- man/fixit.texi | 16 ++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/man/fixit.texi b/man/fixit.texi index d7bfa1c9923..bbe53f157c8 100644 --- a/man/fixit.texi +++ b/man/fixit.texi @@ -103,15 +103,15 @@ punctuation characters between the words do not move. For example, @w{@samp{FOO, BAR}} transposes into @w{@samp{BAR, FOO}} rather than @samp{@w{BAR FOO,}}. - @kbd{C-M-t} (@code{transpose-sexps}) is a similar command for transposing -two expressions (@pxref{Lists}), and @kbd{C-x C-t} (@code{transpose-lines}) -exchanges lines. They work like @kbd{M-t} except in determining the -division of the text into syntactic units. + @kbd{C-M-t} (@code{transpose-sexps}) is a similar command for +transposing two expressions (@pxref{Expressions}), and @kbd{C-x C-t} +(@code{transpose-lines}) exchanges lines. They work like @kbd{M-t} +except in determining the division of the text into syntactic units. A numeric argument to a transpose command serves as a repeat count: it -tells the transpose command to move the character (word, sexp, line) +tells the transpose command to move the character (word, expression, line) before or containing point across several other characters (words, -sexps, lines). For example, @kbd{C-u 3 C-t} moves the character before +expressions, lines). For example, @kbd{C-u 3 C-t} moves the character before point forward across three other characters. It would change @samp{f@point{}oobar} into @samp{oobf@point{}ar}. This is equivalent to repeating @kbd{C-t} three times. @kbd{C-u - 4 M-t} moves the word @@ -120,8 +120,8 @@ the effect of plain @kbd{C-M-t}.@refill A numeric argument of zero is assigned a special meaning (because otherwise a command with a repeat count of zero would do nothing): to -transpose the character (word, sexp, line) ending after point with the -one ending after the mark. +transpose the character (word, expression, line) ending after point +with the one ending after the mark. @node Fixing Case @section Case Conversion -- 2.39.5