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authorJose Antonio Ortega Ruiz <jao@gnu.org>2010-11-25 18:52:25 +0100
committerJose Antonio Ortega Ruiz <jao@gnu.org>2010-11-25 18:52:25 +0100
commit56db9f728629e0859cafa34b53d8a16f34eeef01 (patch)
tree9f62445347fc44d8e1e39cc0fe0212dc13f3f1f3 /doc/parens.texi
parentca4761af930caef19427863af75b576ce611d2e4 (diff)
downloadgeiser-chez-56db9f728629e0859cafa34b53d8a16f34eeef01.tar.gz
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Completion: a bit of documentation
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/parens.texi')
-rw-r--r--doc/parens.texi21
1 files changed, 16 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/parens.texi b/doc/parens.texi
index a902b27..c65522b 100644
--- a/doc/parens.texi
+++ b/doc/parens.texi
@@ -480,6 +480,16 @@ you're at the end of the following partial expression:
and press @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}, one of the possible completions will be
@code{default}.
+@cindex partial completion
+After obtaining the list of completions from the running Scheme, Geiser
+uses the standard Emacs completion machinery to display them. That
+means, among other things, that partial completion is available: just
+try to complete @code{d-s} or @code{w-o-t-s} to see why this is a good
+thing. Partial completion won't work if you have disabled it globally in
+your Emacs configuration: if you don't know what i'm talking about,
+never mind: Geiser's partial completion will work for you out of the
+box.
+
@cindex smart tabs
If you find the @kbd{M} modifier annoying, you always have the option to
activate @code{geiser-smart-tab-mode}, which will make the @key{TAB} key
@@ -495,11 +505,12 @@ try to find a module name that matches it. You can also request
explicitly completion only over module names using @kbd{M-`} (that's a
backtick).
-There's also this little command, @code{geiser-squarify}, which will
-toggle the delimiters of the innermost list around point between round
-and square brackets. It is bound to @kbd{C-c C-e [}. With a numeric
-prefix (as in, say, @kbd{M-2 C-c C-e [}), it will perform that many
-toggles, forward for positive values and backward for negative ones.
+Besides completion, there's also this little command,
+@code{geiser-squarify}, which will toggle the delimiters of the
+innermost list around point between round and square brackets. It is
+bound to @kbd{C-c C-e [}. With a numeric prefix (as in, say, @kbd{M-2
+C-c C-e [}), it will perform that many toggles, forward for positive
+values and backward for negative ones.
@c Local Variables:
@c mode: texinfo