summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorAaron Campbell <aaron@cvs.openbsd.org>2000-02-28 14:59:55 +0000
committerAaron Campbell <aaron@cvs.openbsd.org>2000-02-28 14:59:55 +0000
commite76f5097103f22a0a0dd708ef0f14201ff6b076c (patch)
tree11decf4b51616072917c33b5352d571fd29d74ac
parente6a45ab5b0869babff96d56abec94aa10be2dcd6 (diff)
Lots of obvious clean-up, but needs more work.
-rw-r--r--usr.bin/mg/mg.179
1 files changed, 41 insertions, 38 deletions
diff --git a/usr.bin/mg/mg.1 b/usr.bin/mg/mg.1
index 70a68a87585..42812e3917c 100644
--- a/usr.bin/mg/mg.1
+++ b/usr.bin/mg/mg.1
@@ -6,11 +6,11 @@
.Nd emacs-like text editor
.Sh SYNOPSIS
.Nm mg
-.Op files
+.Op Ar
.Sh DESCRIPTION
.Nm
-is intented intended to be a small, fast, and portable editor for
-people who can't (or don't want to) run real emacs thing for one
+is intended to be a small, fast, and portable editor for
+people who can't (or don't want to) run the real emacs for one
reason or another, or are not familiar with the
.Xr vi 1
editor. It is compatible with emacs because there shouldn't
@@ -19,37 +19,41 @@ be any reason to learn more editor types than emacs or
.Pp
Normal editing commands should be identical to Gnu Emacs. It differs
primarily in not having special modes for tasks other than straight
-editing, e.g. mail and news, and in not having special modes that
+editing, e.g., mail and news, and in not having special modes that
support various programming languages. It does have text justification
and auto-fill mode. It is written directly in C, so there is no
-language in which you can write extensions. However you can rebind
+language in which you can write extensions. However, you can rebind
keys and change some parameters. There are no limits to line length
or format. Command, buffer, and file name completion and listing can
-be done using space and ? respectively.
-.Pp
+be done using the spacebar and
+.Ql ? ,
+respectively.
.Pp
The one major difference is in configuration files. Gnu Emacs uses
a configuration file
-.IR .emacs ,
+.Pa .emacs ,
which is written in Lisp.
.Nm
uses its own configuration files, which contain extend mode Emacs
-commands (i.e. commands that you could type after doing m-x).
+commands (i.e., commands that you could type after doing m-x).
There are two configuration files,
-.IR .mg ,
+.Pa .mg ,
and
-.IR .mg-TERM .
-TERM here represents the name of you terminal type. E.g. if
-your terminal type is set to vt100,
+.Pa .mg-TERM .
+Here,
+.Ev TERM
+represents the name of you terminal type; e.g., if your terminal type
+is set to
+.Dq vt100 ,
.Nm
will use
-.I .mg-vt100
+.Pa .mg-vt100
as a startup file. The terminal type startup file is used
first. If either of these files does not exist,
.Nm
will look for a file by the same name (but without the leading
dot) in
-.IR /usr/local/lib/mg .
+.Pa /usr/local/lib/mg .
.Pp
See the manual for a full list of the commands that can
go in the files. The most commonly
@@ -79,38 +83,37 @@ global-set-key ^[^[[A exchange-point-and-mark
global-set-key ^[^[[H beginning-of-buffer
.Ed
.Pp
-Here's another example sequence that you may find useful. By default ()
-and [] are recognized as brackets, so bracket matching can be done.
-The following defines {} as brackets, and turns on the mode that causes
+Here's another example sequence that you may find useful. By default,
+.Dq ()
+and
+.Dq []
+are recognized as brackets, so bracket matching can be done.
+The following defines
+.Dq {}
+as brackets, and turns on the mode that causes
the cursor to "blink" to show you matching brackets.
.Bd -literal -offset indent
global-set-key } blink-matching-paren-hack
blink-matching-paren
set-default-mode blink
.Ed
-.Pp
-.Sh ARGUMENTS
-.Nm
-does not take any options. The only arguments you can pass it are
-file names. It will do a find-file on each one, reading it into
-a buffer. It will leave the last buffer on the screen.
-.Sh "SEE ALSO"
+.Sh FILES
+.Bl -tag -width /usr/local/lib/mg -compact
+.It Pa ~/.mg
+normal startup file
+.It Pa ~/.mg-TERM
+terminal-specific startup file
+.It Pa /usr/local/lib/mg
+directory for system-wide startup files
+.El
+.Sh SEE ALSO
.Xr vi 1
.Sh BUGS
-When you type ? to list possible file names, buffer names, etc.,
+When you type
+.Ql ?
+to list possible file names, buffer names, etc.,
a help buffer is created for the possibilities. In Gnu Emacs,
this buffer goes away the next time you type a real command.
In
-.Nm ,
+.Nm mg ,
you must use "m-x 1" to get rid of it.
-.Sh FILES
-.Pp
-.Bl -tag -width /etc/passwd -compact
-.It ~/.mg
-normal startup file
-.It ~/.mg-TERM
-terminal-specific startup file
-.It /usr/local/lib/mg
-Directory for system-wide startup files. (Files in
-this directory do not have the leading dot).
-.El