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authorJuri Linkov <[email protected]>2004-12-15 10:22:26 +0000
committerJuri Linkov <[email protected]>2004-12-15 10:22:26 +0000
commit93e8fd61330394143dc422b70270ca62d8f59bee (patch)
tree346524dd99b5754c64e06e3e0386d0937c791e2d
parentccec9764dcf01131e1d10c2b525a3ba68ac4c227 (diff)
(Transient Mark, Mark Ring): M-< and other
movement commands don't set mark in Transient Mark mode if mark is active.
-rw-r--r--man/mark.texi11
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/man/mark.texi b/man/mark.texi
index 4f1c8a6d4d..c37bd7857e 100644
--- a/man/mark.texi
+++ b/man/mark.texi
@@ -191,7 +191,9 @@ You can activate the new region by executing @kbd{C-x C-x}
(@code{exchange-point-and-mark}).
@item
-@kbd{C-s} when the mark is active does not alter the mark.
+Commands that normally set the mark before moving long distances (like
+@kbd{M-<} and @kbd{C-s}) do not alter the mark in Transient Mark mode
+when the mark is active.
@item
Some commands operate on the region if a region is active. For
@@ -384,9 +386,10 @@ the same buffer.
Many commands that can move long distances, such as @kbd{M-<}
(@code{beginning-of-buffer}), start by setting the mark and saving the
old mark on the mark ring. This is to make it easier for you to move
-back later. Searches set the mark if they move point. You can tell
-when a command sets the mark because it displays @samp{Mark set} in the
-echo area.
+back later. Searches set the mark if they move point. However, in
+Transient Mark mode, these commands do not set the mark when the mark
+is already active. You can tell when a command sets the mark because
+it displays @samp{Mark set} in the echo area.
If you want to move back to the same place over and over, the mark
ring may not be convenient enough. If so, you can record the position