commit c63f4c1f5809299ba8a531baebd1739d295f53fc
parent b8dc8d4a378e209d673e09eaa411e4c4ba861dfd
Author: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@telfort.nl>
Date: Mon, 14 Oct 2019 10:21:02 +0200
docs: remove the note about the formatter having been removed
The 'fixer' command has taken the place of the 'formatter' command.
(Also, normalize a double blank line before a chapter.)
Diffstat:
2 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 35 deletions(-)
diff --git a/doc/nano.texi b/doc/nano.texi
@@ -57,9 +57,9 @@ You may contact the author by
e-mail: @email{chrisa@@asty.org}@*
@end titlepage
-
@ifnottex
+
@node Top
@top
@@ -156,6 +156,7 @@ As a special case: when instead of a filename a dash is given, @command{nano}
will read data from standard input. This means you can pipe the output of
a command straight into a buffer, and then edit it.
+
@node Command-line Options
@chapter Command-line Options
@@ -614,6 +615,7 @@ The recording and playback of keyboard macros works correctly only on a
terminal emulator, not on a Linux console (VT), because the latter does
not by default distinguish modified from unmodified arrow keys.
+
@node Built-in Help
@chapter Built-in Help
@@ -1114,22 +1116,6 @@ in one of the system-installed files (which normally are not writable).
@end table
-Note: the @code{formatter} command has been removed. It was superseded by
-a more general mechanism: the filtering of buffer or marked text through
-an external command. Such filtering is done by typing @code{^R^X} and then
-preceding your formatter command with the pipe symbol (@code{|}). It has
-the added advantage that the operation can be undone.
-
-If you use such a formatting command regularly, you could assign the relevant
-series of keystrokes to a single key in your nanorc:
-
-@example
- bind M-F "^R^X|yourformatcommand^M" main
-@end example
-
-(Note that the @key{^R}, @key{^X}, and @key{^M} are each a single, literal
-control character. You can enter them by preceding each with @key{M-V}.)
-
@node Rebinding Keys
@section Rebinding Keys
diff --git a/doc/nanorc.5 b/doc/nanorc.5
@@ -449,23 +449,6 @@ command to an already defined syntax -- useful when you want to
slightly improve a syntax defined in one of the system-installed
files (which normally are not writable).
-.P
-Note: the \fBformatter\fR command has been removed. It was superseded by
-a more general mechanism: the filtering of buffer or marked text through
-an external command. Such filtering is done by typing \fB^R^X\fR and then
-preceding your formatter command with the pipe symbol (\fB|\fR). It has
-the added advantage that the operation can be undone.
-.sp
-If you use such a formatting command regularly, you could assign the relevant
-series of keystrokes to a single key in your nanorc:
-.sp
-.RS
-.B "bind M\-F \(dq^R^X|yourformatcommand^M\(dq main"
-.RE
-.sp
-(Note that the \fB^R\fR, \fB^X\fR, and \fB^M\fR are each a single, literal
-control character. You can enter them by preceding each with \fBM\-V\fR.)
-
.SH REBINDING KEYS
Key bindings can be changed via the following three commands:
.RS 3
@@ -480,7 +463,6 @@ Makes the given \fIkey\fR produce the given \fIstring\fR in the given
The \fIstring\fR can consist of text or commands or a mix of them.
(To enter a command into the \fIstring\fR, precede its keystroke
with \fBM\-V\fR.)
-
.TP
.BI unbind " key menu"
Unbinds the given \fIkey\fP from the given \fImenu\fP (or from all