diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/cheat.texi | 3 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/repl.texi | 13 |
2 files changed, 4 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/doc/cheat.texi b/doc/cheat.texi index 4e81b92..68e4274 100644 --- a/doc/cheat.texi +++ b/doc/cheat.texi @@ -107,9 +107,6 @@ @item C-c C-q @tab geiser-repl-exit @tab Kill Scheme process -@item C-c C-k -@tab geiser-repl-nuke -@tab Soft restart for unresponsive REPL @item M-. @tab geiser-edit-symbol-at-point @tab Edit identifier at point diff --git a/doc/repl.texi b/doc/repl.texi index 03fb42a..aefa432 100644 --- a/doc/repl.texi +++ b/doc/repl.texi @@ -118,15 +118,10 @@ There are also a few commands to twiddle with the Scheme process. mercilessly kill the process (but not before stowing your history in the file system). Unless you're using a remote REPL, that is, in which case both commands will just sever the connection and leave the remote -process alone. A softer nuke is performed by @kbd{C-c C-k}: some (rare, -i promise) times, Geiser's REPL can get confused by the input -received from then underlying Scheme (specially if you have multiple -threads writing to the standard ports), and become irresponsive; you can -try this command to try to revive it without killing the process or -closing your connection. Finally, if worse comes to worst and the -process is dead, @kbd{C-c C-z} will restart it (but the same shortcut, -issued when the REPL is alive, will bring you back to the buffer you -came from, as explained @ref{switching-repl-buff,,here}). +process alone. If worse comes to worst and the process is dead, @kbd{C-c +C-z} will restart it (but the same shortcut, issued when the REPL is +alive, will bring you back to the buffer you came from, as explained +@ref{switching-repl-buff,,here}). The remaining commands are meatier, and deserve sections of their own. |