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NAME
       dkns -- Text editor

SYNOPSIS
       dkns [<line-number>] <filename>

DESCRIPTION
       Dickens	is  an	old-school,  black-and-white, one-buffer-in-one-window
       console text editor for 8-bit text.   It	 does  not  understand	UTF-8.
       Dickens	is  written  in	a custom dialect of lisp called	Munger,	so the
       editor is programmable, but Dickens is not Emacs.

   Keys	and Chords
       In the command summaries	which follow, lone letters preceded by C-  in-
       dicate  a  key chord in which the specified key is to be	pressed	at the
       same time as the	control	key.  Lone letters preceded by M-  indicate  a
       key  chord in which the specified key is	to be pressed at the same time
       as the alt/meta key, or you can precede the specified key by a separate
       press of	the ESC	key.

       Chords made with	the control key	always consist of a lower case charac-
       ter and the control key,	but chords made	with the meta key  consist  of
       either the upper	or lower case version of a character and the meta key.
       For example, M-c	and M-C	are two	distinct commands.

       Keys or key chords preceded by C-x indicate this	chord is to be pressed
       first  separately, followed by the succeeding keys or key chords.  Such
       commands	are called extended commands.  While waiting  for  the	second
       part  of	an extended command, the editor	displays "C-x ?" in the	status
       line.  To cancel	a pending extended command, press C-u.

       In the command summaries	that follow,  a	 paragraph  forward  is	 those
       lines  of  text from the	line the cursor	is on to the line to which the
       cursor moves when M-} is	invoked.  A paragraph backward is those	 lines
       of  text	from the line the cursor is on to the line to which the	cursor
       moves when C-{ is invoked.

   Exiting
       C-x C-c	exits the editor.

       C-x 9	Will write unsaved changes to disk and exit the	editor.

   Command-Line	Arguments
       Command line arguments specify files to load on startup.	 If the	 first
       character  of the first argument	is a plus sign (+), then the remaining
       characters of that argument are considered to specify a line number  to
       move the	cursor to after	loading	the file specified by the second argu-
       ment.   If  the remainder of the	first argument is not a	positive inte-
       ger, it is ignored, but the file	specified by the  second  argument  is
       still  loaded.	If the first argument does not begin with a plus sign,
       then it is assumed to be	a filename to load into	the buffer on startup.
       To load a file whose name begins	with a plus sign,  pass	 a  do-nothing
       line number argument, or	qualify	the filename:

       % dkns +1 +funnyfile

       % dkns ./+funnyfile

       Other  command-line  arguments  are  assumed  to	 be filenames, and are
       pushed onto the file stack.   See  the  section	titled	"Working  With
       Files" for more information on using the	file stack.

   Configuration Options
       The editor has five configuration settings.

       line_length  This  option  is a positive	integer	specifying the desired
		    maximum length of lines.  This value is used by the	 auto-
		    wrapper and	by the paragraph formatter.

       tab_stop	    This option	is a positive integer specifying the frequency
		    of	tabstops.   Tabstops  are  considered  to  occur every
		    tab_stop characters	ad infinitum in	the line.

       auto_indent  This option	is a boolean which specifies  whether  or  not
		    leading whitespace from the	preceding line should be prop-
		    agated to a	new line when the user terminates a line.

       auto_wrap    This  option  is  a	boolean	which specifies	whether	or not
		    lines should be automatically wrapped  when	 manual	 input
		    causes a line to exceed the	value of line_length.

       show_match   This  option  is  a	boolean	which specifies	whether	or not
		    the	location of opening delimiters are indicated  visually
		    when  a closing delimiter is input (")", "}", or "]").  If
		    the	opening	delimiter cannot be found, the	terminal  bell
		    is	sounded.   In  no  case	will the editor	search farther
		    back than the line which the cursor	would be moved	to  if
		    an C-x [ command were invoked from the original cursor po-
		    sition.

       The  user's  startup  configuration  file,  if it exists, must be named
       .dkns and be located in the user's home directory.  The following exam-
       ple shows code to modify	the configuration settings.

       ; These values must be set via a	function call.

       (set_line_length	75)
       (set_tab_stop 3)

       ; The boolean flags may be set directly.

       (setq auto_indent 1)
       (setq auto_wrap 1)
       (setq show_match	1)

       The following commands are used to inspect or change the	 configuration
       settings	from within the	editor.

       C-x @  displays the values of the user settings.

       C-x N  sets a new value for the line_length variable.

       C-x B  sets a new value for the tab_stop	variable.

       C-x I  toggles the value	of the auto_indent variable.

       C-x U  toggles the value	of the auto_wrap variable.

       C-x M  toggles the value	of the show_match variable.

   Command Prompts
       Some  commands  require	textual	or numerical input from	the user.  The
       editor prompts for this input on	 the  status  line.   At  any  command
       prompt,	three  editing commands	are available.	Interactive completion
       and a browsable history may also	be available for the prompt.  To input
       a tab use C-a.  To input	any other character bound to editing commands,
       type C-v	followed by the	desired	character.

       C-h  backspaces over the	last character of input.

       C-w  backspaces over the	last complete word on the command line.

       C-u  backspaces over the	entire command line.

       C-p  causes the text input so far to be replaced	with the  most	recent
	    item  in  the  command's saved history.  Successive	invocations of
	    this command continue to advance backward through the command his-
	    tory.

       C-n  If the C-p command has been	invoked, this command causes the  cur-
	    rent text on the command line to be	replaced with the next item in
	    the	 command history.  Successive invocations of this command con-
	    tinue to advance forward through the  command  history  until  the
	    original input text	is reached.

       C-a  inserts a tab character into the input text.

       [tab]
	    invokes interactive	filename completion.

       C-c  cancels the	input operation.

   Repeating Commands
       M-o    causes  the  user	 to  be	prompted for a repeat count.  The next
	      command invoked is  repeated  the	 specified  number  of	times.
	      Those  commands for which	a repeat count does not	make sense ig-
	      nore the repeat count.

       C-x g  repeats the most recently	invoked	 command.   This  command  re-
	      spects the repeat	count given to the original command.

       C-x [space]
	      starts or	stops recording	keystrokes for subsequent playback.

       M-[space]
	      plays  the  recorded keystrokes.	If this	command	is given a re-
	      peat count, it is	respected.  If C-g is invoked  after  invoking
	      this command, the	last command in	the set	of recorded keystrokes
	      is invoked and not the playback operation.

   The Region
       An  abitrary  region  of	text may be delineated for certain operations.
       The region consists of the text lying between the cursor	and the	 mark.
       The cursor and the mark are both	considered to be between the character
       they  are  over	and the	previous character in the buffer.  At the end-
       point that occurs earlier in the	buffer,	the character under  the  end-
       point  is  included  in the region.  At the endpoint occurring later in
       the buffer, the character under the endpoint is outside the region.

       C-[space]  sets the mark	before the character the cursor	is over.

       C-x C-e	  exchanges the	cursor position	and the	mark.

   Working With	Files
       Filename	completion is triggered	by entering  a	tab  at	 the  filename
       prompt.	 Tab characters	themselves can be entered at the prompt	by in-
       voking C-a.  To input any character bound to  a	line-editing  command,
       type C-v	followed by the	desired	character.  If the last	line of	a file
       is  not terminated with a newline, the editor adds a newline to the end
       of that line.

       C-x C-f	loads the buffer from a	file.  The buffer  is  emptied	first,
		and  the  user is prompted for the filename.  If the specified
		file does not exist, the editor	assumes	the user wants to edit
		a new file.

       C-x 2	stores the filename currently associated with the  buffer  and
		the  cursor  position,	then loads the buffer from a new file.
		The filename and cursor	position are stored on	a  stack,  and
		may  be	 returned to at	a later	time.  The specified file must
		exist, or an error is generated.

       C-x 3	pops the last saved filename and cursor	position off the saved
		file stack.  The editors loads the file	and jumps to the saved
		cursor position.

       C-x 4	exchanges the current file  and	 cursor	 position  with	 those
		stored	on top of the file stack.  This	command	can be used to
		quickly	switch between two files.

       C-x D	pushes the current file	and  cursor  position  onto  the  file
		stack,	then  shifts  the filename and cursor position off the
		bottom of the file stack.  The	editor	loads  that  file  and
		jumps  to  that	 cursor	position.  This	command	may be used to
		visit each of the files	on the file stack in a circular	manner
		ad infinitum.

       C-x C-s	saves the buffer to a file.  If	the buffer was loaded  from  a
		file, the buffer is written back to that file.	Otherwise, the
		user  is  prompted  for	a filename.  Successive	invocations of
		this command reuse that	filename.

       C-x C-a	lists the filenames saved on the file stack.

       C-x C-i	Inserts	a file into the	buffer after the line  the  cursor  is
		on.   The user is prompted for the filename.  If the cursor is
		on the first line in the  buffer,  the	user  is  prompted  to
		choose	between	inserting the file content before or after the
		first line.

       C-x W	writes the lines of  the  region  to  a	 file.	 The  user  is
		prompted for the filename.

       C-x F	prompts	 the  user  for	 a  new	filename to associate with the
		buffer.	 Subsequent invocations	of C-x C-s use this filename.

   Working With	External Commands
       For these commands, the region is  considered  to  include  the	entire
       lines  the region endpoints lie on, which is to say that	these commands
       work on whole lines.  These commands also prompt	the user for a command
       line, which is passed to	the shell (/bin/sh) for	execution.

       C-x C-m
	      filters the region through an external command.	The  lines  in
	      the region are replaced by the command's output.

       C-x &  inserts the output of a specified	command	into the buffer, after
	      the current line.

       C-x *  writes the lines in the region to	the standard input of a	speci-
	      fied command.

       C-x !  runs a command under the shell.

       C-x $  suspends	the  editor and	returns	to the shell from which	it was
	      launched.

   Moving The Cursor And Scrolling The Buffer
       Lines longer than the width of the terminal are truncated onscreen, but
       the editor scrolls the screen horizontally if an	 attempt  is  made  to
       move to a destination off the edge of the screen.

       C-f    moves the	cursor a character forward in the buffer.

       C-b    moves the	cursor a character backward in the buffer.

       M-f    moves the	cursor forward a word in the buffer.

       M-b    moves the	cursor backward	a word in the buffer.

       C-a    moves the	cursor to the beginning	of the current line.

       C-e    moves the	cursor to the end of the current line.

       M-a    moves  the cursor	to the sentence	ending punctuation mark	occur-
	      ing before the cursor.

       M-e    moves the	cursor to the sentence ending punctuation mark	occur-
	      ing after	the cursor.

       M-}    moves  the  cursor forward to the	next blank line	or to the line
	      line with	a full-stop in column zero.

       M-{    moves the	cursor backward	to the previous	blank line or  to  the
	      line with	a full-stop in column zero.

       M-]    moves  the  cursor forward in the	buffer to the next line	having
	      an opening parenthesis, an opening brace,	or  a  full-stop  fol-
	      lowed by an uppercase S in column	zero (troff section).

       M-[    moves  the  cursor  backward  to the previous line in the	buffer
	      having an	opening	parenthesis, an	opening	brace, or a  full-stop
	      followed by an uppercase S in column zero.

       M-^    moves  the  cursor  to the first non-whitespace character	in the
	      current line, if any.

       M-+    moves the	cursor to the first non-whitespace  character  in  the
	      line immediately after the line the cursor is on.

       M--    moves  the  cursor  to the first non-whitespace character	in the
	      line immediately preceding the line the cursor is	on.

       M-n    scrolls the buffer upward	by one line.

       M-p    scrolls the buffer downward by one line.

       C-t    scrolls the buffer upward	to place the line the cursor is	on  at
	      the top of the screen.

       C-l    scrolls  the  buffer  to	place the line the cursor is on	in the
	      middle of	the screen.

       C-c    scrolls the buffer downward to place the line the	cursor	is  on
	      at the bottom of the screen.

       C-x 0  moves  the  cursor  to first character of	the line at the	top of
	      the screen.

       C-x 1  moves the	cursor to the first character of the line at the  bot-
	      tom of the screen.

       C-x l  moves the	cursor to the line in the center of the	screen.

       C-v    scrolls the buffer upward	by one screenful of lines.  The	cursor
	      is moved to the bottom line on the screen.

       M-v    scrolls the buffer downward by one screenful of lines.  The cur-
	      sor is moved to the top line on the screen.

       M->    moves the	cursor to the last character in	the buffer.

       M-<    moves the	cursor to the first character in the buffer.

       C-x #  moves the	cusror to line specified by the	user by	line number.

   Marking Lines With Bookmarks
       Named bookmarks can be associated with lines in the buffer.  A bookmark
       is unset	when the bookmarked line is deleted.

       C-x m  associates a bookmark with the line the cursor is	on.

       C-x j  jumps to the line	associated with	a bookmark.

   Cutting And Pasting Text To And From	The Clipboard
       The following commands perform cut and paste operations on buffer text.
       The  deletion  commands	unset  the mark.  The text on the clipboard is
       overwritten with	every deletion or copy except when  deletion  commands
       are invoked with	a repeat count or when C-k command is invoked multiple
       times in	succession.  In	those situations, the successive deletions are
       appended	 to  form one item on the clipboard.  To preserve the contents
       of the clipboard	for later use, it can be pushed	onto a stack.

       C-x C	copies the region to the clipboard.

       M-c	copies text to the clipboard from the cursor position  to  the
		end  of	the line.  Suppying a repeat count to this command de-
		termines the number of lines copied.  A	repeat count of	 1  is
		the  same  as supplying	no repeat count.  The terminating new-
		line of	the last line affected is not copied.

       M-C	copies text to the clipboard from the cursor position  to  the
		end  of	 the  current  paragraph.  Supplying a repeat count to
		this command determines	the number  a  paragraphs  from	 which
		text  is copied.  Supplying a repeat count of 1	is the same as
		supplying no repeat count.

       C-d	deletes	the character under the	cursor.

       C-h	deletes	the character before the cursor.

       M-d	deletes	the word that occur after the cursor position.

       M-h	deletes	the word that is occurs	before the cursor.

       C-x C-p	deletes	successive whitespace characters from the cursor loca-
		tion to	the next non-whitespace	character in the current line.
		The deleted whitespace is not stored on	 the  clipboard.   The
		user can restore accidentally-deleted whitespace with the undo
		command.

       C-k	deletes	 the  characters  in the line from the cursor position
		forward	to the end of the line creating	a blank	line.	Invok-
		ing  this command on a blank line deletes the terminating new-
		line, causing the blank	line to	be removed  from  the  buffer.
		If  this  command is given a repeat count, the command deletes
		whole lines.  Successive invocations  of  this	command	 cause
		each  separate deletion	to be appended to form one item	on the
		clipboard.

       M-k	deletes	the characters from the	start of the line  the	cursor
		is on to the cursor position.

       C-x E	deletes	a sentence forward.

       C-x A	deletes	a sentence backward.

       C-x i	deletes	a paragraph forward

       C-x o	deletes	a paragraph backward.

       C-x w	deletes	 text  forward	to the text that matches a regular ex-
		pression.

       C-x q	deletes	text backward to the text that matches a  regular  ex-
		pression.

       C-x K	deletes	the text from a	specified bookmark to the cursor posi-
		tion.  The book	mark is	unset after this operation.

       C-x =	deletes	 text  backward	 in the	current	line until the initial
		whitespace in the line.

       C-x y	deletes	the text from the cursor position to the  end  of  the
		buffer.	 The final newline cannot be deleted.

       C-x u	deletes	 the text from the beginning of	the buffer to the cur-
		sor position.

       C-x C-d	deletes	the text delineated by the region.

       C-y	pastes the content of the clipboard into the buffer before the
		cursor position.  The region is	set to the inserted  text,  so
		that it	may be removed again by	invoking C-x C-d, or M-y.

       M-y	if the region is set, deletes the region.  The clipboard stack
		is  rotated  and the contents of the next clipboard are	pasted
		into the buffer.  The region is	set to the pasted text.	  Suc-
		cessive	 invocations  allow the	user to	browse the contents of
		the clipboard stack.

       M-t	pushes the current clipboard onto the clipboard	stack.

       M-g	replaces the clipboard with the	clipboard on top of the	 clip-
		boardstack.

       C-x M-q	Executes  M-g, followed	by C-y,	to pop the clipboard stack and
		paste the new clipboad's content into the buffer at the	cursor
		location.

       C-x Q	copies the contents of the clipboard on	top of	the  clipboard
		stack into the current clipboard, and then pastes the new con-
		tent  into  the	 buffer	at the cursor location.	 The clipboard
		stack is not popped.

   Undoing Modifications To Buffer Content
       Insertions and deletions	may be undone with the undo command.   If  the
       last  buffer-modifying  command	invoked	was the	undo command, then the
       redo command is available to allow the undone changes themselves	to  be
       undone.	 One can think of the undo operation as	moving the buffer back
       in time,	and the	redo operation moving the buffer forward in time.

       C-u    undoes the last modification to  the  buffer.   Changes  to  the
	      buffer occur in a	line-oriented manner, so these changes are un-
	      done  line-by-line as well.  This	means that if you deleted many
	      lines in the buffer with one invocation of C-x k,	 for  example,
	      the  lines would be undeleted one	at a time, by successive invo-
	      cations of this command, and not all at once.  The  undo	behav-
	      iour  of	the editor may baffle you at first, but	you are	merely
	      seeing the changes that go on "behind the	scenes,"  and  if  you
	      keep invoking C-u, you will get back to the buffer state you de-
	      sire.  This command accepts a repeat count.

       C-x _  undoes  the last undo operation.	This command is	only available
	      if the last modification to the buffer was performed by an  undo
	      operation.   Once	fresh changes to the buffer have been made af-
	      ter the undo command has been invoked, the redo  information  is
	      discarded.  This command accepts a repeat	count.

   Searching For Matches On Regular Expressions
       All  searches wraparound	to search the portion of the buffer on the op-
       posite side of the cursor.  A search fails if there is no match in  the
       buffer.

       C-s  searches  forward  in  the buffer for a match of a regular expres-
	    sion.

       C-r  searches backward in the buffer for	a match	of a  regular  expres-
	    sion.

       M-s  repeats the	last search, searching forward in the buffer.

       M-r  repeats the	last search, searching backward	in the buffer.

   Transforming	Lines With Regular-Expression-Based Substitutions
       Each  of	the commands below performs a regular-expression-based substi-
       tution over a range of lines in the buffer.  For	each command the  user
       is  prompted  for the pattern, the replacement text, and	a repeat count
       to use.	A repeat count of 0 means to replace every occurrence  in  the
       affected	 region.   The	replacement  text  can	refer to the first ten
       parenthesized subexpressions in the pattern by  using  the  escape  se-
       quences	\1  to	\0, with \0 referring to the tenth subexpression.  The
       text of the entire match	can be accessed	with \&.  As well, \U turns on
       conversion to uppercase and affects all text from that point forward in
       the affected line, including that portion of the	line outside  the  re-
       placement text.	Similarly \L turns on conversion to lowercase.	Either
       can  be	turned	off  with \e.  The two sequences \u and	\l convert the
       single character	succeeding them	to upper or lower case,	 respectively.
       These  commands are front-ends to the Munger(1) "substitute" intrinsic.
       More information	on  performing	substitutions  can  be	found  in  the
       Munger(1) manual	page.

       Terminating  newlines  are removed from lines when performing substitu-
       tions so	that "$" matches the empty string before the newline, and "^$"
       matches empty lines.  The terminators are replaced  when	 the  modified
       lines are written back to the buffer.

       C-x t	performs  a  substitution on the portion of the	line after the
		cursor.

       C-x T	performs a substitution	on the portion of the line before  the
		cursor.

       C-x )	performs  a substitution on the	paragraph after	the cursor po-
		sition.

       C-x (	Performs a substitution	on the paragraph preceding cursor  po-
		sition.

       C-x S	performs a substitution	on the region from the cursor position
		to the occurrence of the next match of a specified regular ex-
		pression in the	buffer.

       C-x R	performs  a  substitution  on  the  region from	the match on a
		specified regular expression closest to	the  cursor  position,
		occurring before the cursor position, to the cursor position.

       C-x C-r	performs a substitution	on the region.

       C-x J	performs  a  substitution on the region	formed between a named
		bookmark and the cursor	location.  The exact  region  affected
		depends	 upon  whether the bookmark occurs before or after the
		cursor.

       C-x .	performs a substitution	on the region from the cursor position
		to the end of the buffer.

       C-x ,	performs a substitution	on the region from the	start  of  the
		buffer to the cursor position.

   Modifying The Indentation Of	Lines
       The  following  commands	 alter the indentation of lines	in the buffer.
       The functions that decrease indentation do so by	one tab	 character  or
       the  equivalent number of space characters as determined	by the tabstop
       variable.  Indentation is assumed to be in increments of	this variable,
       so for example, if it were set to three,	then one tab  or  three	 space
       characters would	be removed from	the start of the affected lines.

       M-z	decreases the indentation of lines from	the line the cursor is
		on  forward  in	 the buffer.  Supplying	a repeat count to this
		command	determines the number of lines	the  command  affects.
		The default is to affect only the line the cursor is on.

       M-x	behaves	similarly to the above described command but increases
		the indentation.

       C-x z	decreases  the	paragraph  forward  from  the cursor position.
		Supplying a repeat count to this command causes	it to affect n
		paragraphs.

       C-x x	increases the indentation of the paragraph  after  the	cursor
		position.   Supplying a	repeat count to	this command causes it
		to affect n paragraphs.

       C-x C-z	decreases the indentation of the paragraph before  the	cursor
		position.   Supplying a	repeat count to	this command causes it
		to affect n paragraphs.

       C-x C-x	increases the indentation of the paragraph before  the	cursor
		position.   Supplying a	repeat count to	this command causes it
		to affect n paragraphs.

       C-x 5	Invokes	M-%, to	jump to	the other end of a region delimited by
		parentheses, brackets, or braces, and if successful, decreases
		the indentation	of that	range of lines.	 This command  ignores
		repeat counts.

       C-x 6	Invokes	M-%, to	jump to	the other end of a region delimited by
		parentheses, brackets, or braces, and if successful, increases
		the  indentation of that range of lines, inclusive.  This com-
		mand ignores repeat counts.

       C-x 7	decreases the indentation of the lines in  the	region.	  This
		command	ignores	repeat counts.

       C-x 8	increases  the	indentation  of	the lines in the region.  This
		command	ignores	repeat counts.

       C-x `	increases the indentation of the range of  lines  foward  from
		the cursor position to the line	containing the next occurrence
		of  a  match of	a regular expression, Supplying	a repeat count
		to this	command	causes it to affect lines to the nth next  oc-
		curence	of the specified regular expression.

       C-x \	decreases  the	indentation of the range of lines forward from
		the cursor position to the line	containing the next occurrence
		of a match of a	regular	expression.  Supplying a repeat	 count
		to  this command causes	it to affect lines to the nth next oc-
		curence	of the specified regular expression.

       C-x |	decreases the indentation of the range of lines	backward  from
		the  cursor position to	a match	of a regular expression.  Sup-
		plying a repeat	count to this  command	causes	it  to	affect
		lines to the nth previous occurence of the regular expression.

       C-x ~	increases  the indentation of the range	of lines backward from
		the cursor position to a match of a regular expression.	  Sup-
		plying	a  repeat  count  to  this command causes it to	affect
		lines to the nth previous occurence of the regular expression.

   Altering The	Capitalization Of Words
       M-;  capitalizes	the character under the	cursor and converts  any  suc-
	    ceeding non-whitespace characters to lowercase.

       M-"  converts  the contiguous non-whitespace characters from the	cursor
	    position forward to	lowercase.

       M-:  converts the contiguous non-whitespace characters from the	cursor
	    position forward to	uppercase.

   Reforming Paragraphs	Of Text
       The  following  commands	 filter	 a  range  of buffer lines through the
       fmt.munger script, which	is part	of the	Munger(1)  distribution.   Any
       tabs  in	 the  formatted	region are expanded, according to the value of
       the tabstop variable and	their  position	 in  the  line.	  The  maximum
       length of formatted lines is determined by the value of the line_length
       variable.

       M-q	formats	 the paragraph forward the cursor position.  Supplying
		a repeat count to this command causes it  to  affect  n	 para-
		graphs.

       M-w	formats	the paragraph backward from the	cursor position.  Sup-
		plying	a  repeat  count to this command causes	it to affect n
		paragraphs.

       C-q	formats	the paragraph forward from the cursor position	propa-
		gating non-alphabetic prefix characters, possibly delimited by
		whitespace  on either or both sides.  The prefix is taken from
		the first line to be formatted.	 This command is used to  for-
		mat some types of program comments and citations in email mes-
		sages.	 Supplying a repeat count to this command causes it to
		affect n paragraphs.

       C-w	formats	the paragraph backward from the	cursor position	propa-
		gating non-alphabetic prefix characters, possibly delimited by
		whitespace on either or	both sides.  The prefix	is taken  from
		the  first line	to be formatted.  This command is used to for-
		mat some types of program comments and citations in email mes-
		sages.	Supplying a repeat count to this command causes	it  to
		affect n paragraphs.

   Working With	Tags
       The  following  command	can be used to find the	location of a toplevel
       definition in program code, using tags tables.  See ctags(1)  for  more
       information on tags.

       C-x C-g	prompts	the user for a symbol name on the status line.	If the
		cursor	appears	 to  be	on a symbol in the buffer, that	symbol
		appears	on the status line as a	default	value.	Tag completion
		is available at	the prompt and is triggered  by	 pressing  the
		tab key.  The editor looks up the symbol the user specifies in
		the  tags  file	 in the	current	directory.  If a tag is	found,
		the editor loads the appropriate file and jumps	to  the	 loca-
		tion  of the definition	for that symbol.  The current filename
		and cursor position are	pushed onto the	file stack and can  be
		returned to with the C-x 3 command.

   Evaluating Munger Code
       C-x L	sends  the s-expression	immediately before the cursor position
		to another munger process for evaluation.   The	 editor	 reads
		and pages the output.  The editor complains if it does not re-
		ceive  output  immediately.  Any subsequently arriving data is
		paged by invoking C-x ?.

       C-x ?	displays any output pending.

       C-x C-l	terminates the external	munger process.

   Miscellaneous Commands
       C-x s  Causes the editor	to remove trailing contigous whitespace	 char-
	      acters  from the ends of buffer lines.  Lines consisting of only
	      whitespace become	blank lines.

       M-%    instructs	the editor to move the cursor to the location  of  the
	      delimiter	which matches ("closes") the delimiter character under
	      the  cursor.  If the cursor is not on a "(", ")",	"[", "]", "{",
	      or "}" character,	an error message is displayed  in  the	status
	      line.

       C-o    inserts  a blank line into the buffer before the line the	cursor
	      is on.

       C-x g  displays the filename associated with the	buffer,	the cursor po-
	      sition, and whether or not the buffer contains unsaved changes.

       C-x V  displays the version of the editor and the version of Munger  on
	      which is it running.

       C-x C-v
	      displays the number of words in the buffer.

       M-i    allows  the user to insert any character their keyboard can gen-
	      erate except the carriage	return character (ascii	13), into  the
	      buffer.

AUTHOR
       James Bailie <jimmy@mammothcheese.ca>
       http://www.mammothcheese.ca

			       Wed, Apr	08, 2020		       dkns(1)

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