Node:Help-^L, Next:Help-M, Previous:Help-P, Up:Getting Started
This node's mode line tells you that you are now at node Help-^L
,
and the header line tells you that p would get you back to
Help-P
. The node's title is underlined; it says what the node
is about (most nodes have titles).
This is a big node and it does not all fit on your display screen.
You can tell that there is more that is not visible because you
can see the string --Top-----
rather than --All----
near
the bottom right corner of the screen.
The <SPC>, <BACKSPACE> (or <DEL>)1 and b commands exist to
allow you to "move around" in a node that does not all fit on the
screen at once. <SPC> moves forward, to show what was below the
bottom of the screen. <DEL> or <BACKSPACE> moves backward, to
show what was above the top of the screen (there is not anything above
the top until you have typed some spaces). In Emacs, <SPC> runs
the command Info-scroll-up
, while <BACKSPACE> runs
Info-scroll-down
.
>> Now try typing a <SPC> (afterward, type a <BACKSPACE> to return here).
When you type the <SPC>, the two lines that were at the bottom of the screen appear at the top, followed by more lines. <DEL> or <BACKSPACE> takes the two lines from the top and moves them to the bottom, usually, but if there are not a full screen's worth of lines above them they may not make it all the way to the bottom.
If you are reading this in Emacs, note that the header line is
always visible, never scrolling off the display. That way, you can
always see the Next
, Prev
, and Up
links, and you
can conveniently go to one of these links from anywhere in the node by
clicking the mouse on one of these links.
<SPC> and <DEL> not only move forward and backward through the current node. When these keys hit the beginning or the end of the current node, they move to preceding or subsequent nodes. Specifically, they scroll through all the nodes in an Info file as a single logical sequence. In this sequence, a node's subnodes appear following their parent. If a node has a menu, <SPC> takes you into the subnodes listed in the menu, one by one. Once you reach the end of a node, and have seen all of its subnodes, <SPC> takes you to the next node or to the parent's next node. This is so you could read the entire manual top to bottom by just typing <SPC>.
Many keyboards nowadays have two scroll keys labeled PageUp
and PageDown
(or maybe Prior
and Next
). If your
keyboard has these keys, you can use them to move forward and backward
through the text, like with <SPC> and <BACKSPACE>. However,
unlike <SPC> and <BACKSPACE>, <PAGEUP> and <PAGEDOWN>
keys will never scroll beyond the beginning or the end of the current
node.
If your screen is ever garbaged, you can tell Info to display it
again by typing C-l (Control-L, that is--hold down
<CTRL> and type L or l).
>> Type C-l now.
To move back to the beginning of the node you are on, you can type
a lot of <BACKSPACE> keys. You can also type simply b for
beginning.
>> Try that now. (We have put in enough verbiage to push this past the first screenful, but screens are so big nowadays that perhaps it isn't enough. You may need to shrink your Emacs or Info window.) Then come back, with <SPS>s.
If your screen is very tall, all of this node might fit at once. In that case, b won't do anything. Sorry; what can we do?
You have just learned a considerable number of commands. If you
want to use one but have trouble remembering which, you should type
a ? (in Emacs it runs the Info-summary
command) which
displays a brief list of commands. When you are finished looking at
the list, make it go away by typing a <SPC> repeatedly.
>> Type a <?> now. Press <SPC> to see consecutive screenfuls of the list until finished. Then type <SPC> several times, until it goes away.
(If you are using the stand-alone Info reader, type C-x 0 to return here, that is--press and hold <CTRL>, type an x, then release <CTRL> and x, and press 0--a zero, not the letter "o".)
From now on, you will encounter large nodes without warning, and
will be expected to know how to use <SPC> and <BACKSPACE> to
move around in them without being told. Since not all terminals have
the same size screen, it would be impossible to warn you anyway.
>> Now type n, or click the mouse on the Next
link, to
see the description of the m command.
The key which
we call ``Backspace or DEL'' in this manual is labeled differently on
different keyboards. Look for a key which is a little ways above the
<ENTER> or <RET> key and which you normally use outside Emacs
to erase the character before the cursor, i.e. the character you
typed last. It might be labeled Backspace
or <-
or
DEL
, or sometimes Delete
.