From a4338f5175a7eeefa3d0eb52da9a2916d073d4fd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jay Belanger Date: Tue, 4 Jan 2005 19:51:00 +0000 Subject: (Basic Tutorial, Programming Tutorial): Removed caveats for Lucid Emacs. --- man/ChangeLog | 5 +++++ man/calc.texi | 8 ++------ 2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/man/ChangeLog b/man/ChangeLog index 81f1449fb1..504073cbe8 100644 --- a/man/ChangeLog +++ b/man/ChangeLog @@ -1,3 +1,8 @@ +2005-01-04 Jay Belanger + + * calc.texi (Basic Tutorial, Programming Tutorial): Remove caveats + for Lucid Emacs. + 2005-01-04 Richard M. Stallman * custom.texi (Saving Customizations): Minor improvement. diff --git a/man/calc.texi b/man/calc.texi index 96b8d73938..514b09d20d 100644 --- a/man/calc.texi +++ b/man/calc.texi @@ -2331,9 +2331,8 @@ key. If you type a prefix key by accident, you can press @kbd{C-g} to cancel it. (In fact, you can press @kbd{C-g} to cancel almost anything in Emacs.) To get help on a prefix key, press that key followed by @kbd{?}. Some prefixes have several lines of help, -so you need to press @kbd{?} repeatedly to see them all. This may -not work under Lucid Emacs, but you can also type @kbd{h h} to -see all the help at once. +so you need to press @kbd{?} repeatedly to see them all. +You can also type @kbd{h h} to see all the help at once. Try pressing @kbd{t ?} now. You will see a line of the form, @@ -5924,9 +5923,6 @@ system. But Lisp and rewrite rules take a while to master, and often all you want to do is define a new function or repeat a command a few times. Calc has features that allow you to do these things easily. -(Note that the programming commands relating to user-defined keys -are not yet supported under Lucid Emacs 19.) - One very limited form of programming is defining your own functions. Calc's @kbd{Z F} command allows you to define a function name and key sequence to correspond to any formula. Programming commands use -- cgit v1.2.3