GNU Emacs is the most popular and widespread of the Emacs family of editors. It is also the most powerful and flexible. Unlike all other text editors, GNU Emacs is a complete working environment -- you can stay within Emacs all day without leaving. TheGNU Emacs Pocket Referenceis a companion volume to O'Reilly'sLearning GNU Emacs, which tells you how to get started with the GNU Emacs editor and, as you become more proficient, it will help you learn how to use Emacs more effectively.This small book, covering Emacs version 20, is a handy reference guide to the basic elements of this powerful editor, presenting the Emacs commands in an easy-to-use tabular format.
Copyright;Chapter 1: GNU Emacs Pocket Reference;1.1 Introduction;1.2 Emacs Commands;1.3 Conventions;1.1 Emacs Basics;1.2 Editing Files;1.3 Search and Replace Operations;1.4 Using Buffers and Windows;1.5 Emacs as a Work Environment;1.6 Email and Newsgroups;1.7 Emacs and the Internet;1.8 Simple Text Formatting and Specialized Editing;1.9 Marking Up Text with Emacs;1.10 Writing Macros;1.11 Customizing Emacs;1.12 Emacs for Programmers;1.13 Version ControlUnder Emacs;1.14 Online Help;
Debra Cameron is president of Cameron Consulting. In addition to her love for Emacs, Deb researches and writes about emerging technologies and their applications. Her latest book, Optical Networking: A Wiley Tech Brief, published in 2002 by John Wiley & Sons, covers the practical applications of optical networking and was written in the hope that true broadband will be more widely deployed. Deb also edits OReilly titles, including DNS and Bind, DNS on Windows 2000, TCP/IP Network Administration, HTML and XHTML: The Definitive Guide, Java Security, Java Swing, Learning Java, and Java Performance Tuning. She has presented numerous videos for WatchIT.com, covering security and networking as well as e-business topics. She has moderated roundtables on PlanetIT on advanced networking and intranet design. Deblƒe