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authorJose Antonio Ortega Ruiz <jao@gnu.org>2010-11-11 03:01:33 +0100
committerJose Antonio Ortega Ruiz <jao@gnu.org>2010-11-11 03:01:33 +0100
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parenta7ad5704722b7fab966ac8fb4e6b62fe2e424756 (diff)
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@@ -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.