mg
— emacs-like
text editor
mg |
[-nR ] [-f
mode] [+number]
[file ...] |
mg
is intended to be a small, fast, and
portable editor for people who can't (or don't want to) run emacs for one
reason or another, or are not familiar with the vi(1)
editor. It is compatible with emacs because there shouldn't be any reason to
learn more editor types than emacs or vi(1).
The options are as follows:
- +number
- Go to the line specified by number (do not insert a space between the
‘+’ sign and the number). If a negative number is specified,
the line number counts backwards from the end of the file i.e. +-1 will be
the last line of the file, +-2 will be second last, and so on.
-f
mode
- Run the mode command for all buffers created from arguments on the command
line, including the scratch buffer and all files.
-n
- Turn off backup file generation.
-R
- Files specified on the command line will be opened read-only.
When a file is loaded into mg
, it is
stored in a
buffer.
This buffer may be displayed on the screen in more than one window. At
present, windows may only be split horizontally, so each window is
delineated by a modeline at the bottom. If changes are made to a buffer, it
will be reflected in all open windows.
If a file is changed outside mg
and its
buffer is about to be changed, mg
prompts if the
change should go ahead (y), not go ahead (n) or if the buffer should be
reverted (r) to the latest file on disk.
If a buffer name begins and ends with an asterisk, the buffer is
considered throwaway; i.e. the user will not be prompted to save changes
when the buffer is killed.
The current cursor location in mg
is
called the
point
(or dot). It
is possible to define a window-specific region of text by setting a second
location, called the
mark. The
region
is the text between point and mark inclusive. Deleting the character at the
mark position leaves the mark at the point of deletion.
Note: The point and mark are window-specific in
mg
, not buffer-specific, as in other emacs
flavours.
Backup files have a ‘~’ character appended to the
file name and are created in the current working directory by default.
Whether to create backup files or not can be toggled with the
make-backup-files command. The backup file location can either be in the
current working directory, or all backups can be moved to a
~/.mg.d directory where files retain their path name
to retain uniqueness. Use the backup-to-home-directory to alternate between
these two locations. Further, if any application creates backup files in
/tmp, these can be left with the
leave-tmpdir-backups command.
mg
supports tag files created by
ctags(1), allowing the user to quickly locate various
object definitions. Note though that emacs uses etags, not ctags.
mg
supports navigating source code using
cscope. However, mg
requires cscope and
cscope-indexer executables to be present in PATH
for
it to work.
Normal editing commands are very similar to GNU Emacs. In the
following examples, C-x means Control-x, and M-x means Meta-x, where the
Meta key may be either a special key on the keyboard or the ALT key;
otherwise ESC followed by the key X works as well.
- C-SPC
- set-mark-command
- C-a
- beginning-of-line
- C-b
- backward-char
- C-c s c
- cscope-find-functions-calling-this-function
- C-c s d
- cscope-find-global-definition
- C-c s e
- cscope-find-egrep-pattern
- C-c s f
- cscope-find-this-file
- C-c s i
- cscope-find-files-including-file
- C-c s n
- cscope-next-symbol
- C-c s p
- cscope-prev-symbol
- C-c s s
- cscope-find-this-symbol
- C-c s t
- cscope-find-this-text-string
- C-d
- delete-char
- C-e
- end-of-line
- C-f
- forward-char
- C-g
- keyboard-quit
- C-h C-h
- help-help
- C-h a
- apropos
- C-h b
- describe-bindings
- C-h c
- describe-key-briefly
- C-j
- newline-and-indent
- C-k
- kill-line
- C-l
- recenter
- RET
- newline
- C-n
- next-line
- C-o
- open-line
- C-p
- previous-line
- C-q
- quoted-insert
- C-r
- isearch-backward
- C-s
- isearch-forward
- C-t
- transpose-chars
- C-u
- universal-argument
- C-v
- scroll-up
- C-w
- kill-region
- C-x C-b
- list-buffers
- C-x C-c
- save-buffers-kill-emacs
- C-x C-f
- find-file
- C-x C-g
- keyboard-quit
- C-x C-l
- downcase-region
- C-x C-o
- delete-blank-lines
- C-x C-q
- toggle-read-only
- C-x C-r
- find-file-read-only
- C-x C-s
- save-buffer
- C-x C-u
- upcase-region
- C-x C-v
- find-alternate-file
- C-x C-w
- write-file
- C-x C-x
- exchange-point-and-mark
- C-x (
- start-kbd-macro
- C-x )
- end-kbd-macro
- C-x 0
- delete-window
- C-x 1
- delete-other-windows
- C-x 2
- split-window-vertically
- C-x 4 C-f
- find-file-other-window
- C-x 4 C-g
- keyboard-quit
- C-x 4 b
- switch-to-buffer-other-window
- C-x 4 f
- find-file-other-window
- C-x =
- what-cursor-position
- C-x ^
- enlarge-window
- C-x `
- next-error
- C-x b
- switch-to-buffer
- C-x d
- dired
- C-x e
- call-last-kbd-macro
- C-x f
- set-fill-column
- C-x g
- goto-line
- C-x h
- mark-whole-buffer
- C-x i
- insert-file
- C-x k
- kill-buffer
- C-x n
- other-window
- C-x o
- other-window
- C-x p
- previous-window
- C-x s
- save-some-buffers
- C-x u
- undo
- C-y
- yank
- C-z
- suspend-emacs
- M-C-v
- scroll-other-window
- M-SPC
- just-one-space
- M-!
- shell-command
- M-.
- find-tag
- M-*
- pop-tag-mark
- M-%
- query-replace
- M-<
- beginning-of-buffer
- M->
- end-of-buffer
- M-\
- delete-horizontal-space
- M-^
- join-line
- M-b
- backward-word
- M-c
- capitalize-word
- M-d
- kill-word
- M-f
- forward-word
- M-h
- mark-paragraph
- M-l
- downcase-word
- M-m
- back-to-indentation
- M-q
- fill-paragraph
- M-r
- search-backward
- M-s
- search-forward
- M-t
- transpose-words
- M-u
- upcase-word
- M-v
- scroll-down
- M-w
- copy-region-as-kill
- M-x
- execute-extended-command
- M-{
- backward-paragraph
- M-|
- shell-command-on-region
- M-}
- forward-paragraph
- M-~
- not-modified
- M-DEL
- backward-kill-word
- C-_
- undo
- )
- blink-and-insert
- DEL
- delete-backward-char
For a complete description of mg
commands,
see MG COMMANDS. To see the active
keybindings at any time, type “M-x describe-bindings”.
Commands are invoked by “M-x”, or by binding to a
key. Many commands take an optional numerical parameter,
n. This parameter is set either by M-<n> (where
n is the numerical argument) before the command, or by
one or more invocations of the universal argument, usually bound to C-u.
When invoked in this manner, the value of the numeric parameter to be passed
is displayed in the minibuffer before the M-x. One common use of the
parameter is in mode toggles (e.g. make-backup-files). If no parameter is
supplied, the mode is toggled to its alternate state. If a positive
parameter is supplied, the mode is forced to on. Otherwise, it is forced to
off.
- apropos
- Help Apropos. Prompt the user for a string, open the *help* buffer, and
list all
mg
commands that contain that
string.
- audible-bell
- Toggle the audible system bell.
- auto-execute
- Register an auto-execute hook; that is, specify a filename pattern
(conforming to the shell's filename globbing rules) and an associated
function to execute when a file matching the specified pattern is read
into a buffer.
- auto-fill-mode
- Toggle auto-fill mode (sometimes called mail-mode) in the current buffer,
where text inserted past the fill column is automatically wrapped to a new
line. Can be set globally with set-default-mode.
- auto-indent-mode
- Toggle indent mode in the current buffer, where indentation is preserved
after a newline. Can be set globally with set-default-mode.
- back-to-indentation
- Move the dot to the first non-whitespace character on the current
line.
- backup-to-home-directory
- Save backup copies to a ~/.mg.d directory instead
of working directory. Requires make-backup-files to be on.
- backward-char
- Move cursor backwards one character.
- backward-kill-word
- Kill text backwards by n words.
- backward-paragraph
- Move cursor backwards n paragraphs. Paragraphs are
delimited by <NL><NL> or <NL><TAB> or
<NL><SPACE>.
- backward-word
- Move cursor backwards by the specified number of words.
- beginning-of-buffer
- Move cursor to the top of the buffer.
- beginning-of-line
- Move cursor to the beginning of the line.
- blink-and-insert
- Self-insert a character, then search backwards and blink its matching
delimiter. For delimiters other than parenthesis, brackets, and braces,
the character itself is used as its own match.
- bsmap-mode
- Toggle bsmap mode, where DEL and C-h are swapped.
- c-mode
- Toggle a KNF-compliant mode for editing C program files.
- call-last-kbd-macro
- Invoke the keyboard macro.
- capitalize-word
- Capitalize n words; i.e. convert the first character
of the word to upper case, and subsequent letters to lower case.
- cd
- Change the global working directory. See also global-wd-mode.
- column-number-mode
- Toggle whether the column number is displayed in the modeline.
- copy-region-as-kill
- Copy all of the characters in the region to the kill buffer, clearing the
mark afterwards. This is a bit like a kill-region followed by a yank.
- count-matches
- Count the number of lines matching the supplied regular expression.
- count-non-matches
- Count the number of lines not matching the supplied regular
expression.
- cscope-find-this-symbol
- List the matches for the given symbol.
- cscope-find-global-definition
- List global definitions for the given literal.
- cscope-find-called-functions
- List functions called from the given function.
- cscope-find-functions-calling-this-function
- List functions calling the given function.
- cscope-find-this-text-string
- List locations matching the given text string.
- cscope-find-egrep-pattern
- List locations matching the given extended regular expression
pattern.
- cscope-find-this-file
- List filenames matching the given filename.
- cscope-find-files-including-file
- List files that #include the given filename.
- cscope-next-symbol
- Navigate to the next match.
- cscope-prev-symbol
- Navigate to the previous match.
- cscope-next-file
- Navigate to the next file.
- cscope-prev-file
- Navigate to the previous file.
- cscope-create-list-of-files-to-index
- Create cscope's List and Index in the given directory.
- define-key
- Prompts the user for a named keymap (mode), a key, and an
mg
command, then creates a keybinding in the
appropriate map.
- delete-backward-char
- Delete backwards n characters. Like delete-char,
this actually does a kill if presented with an argument.
- delete-blank-lines
- Delete blank lines around dot. If dot is sitting on a blank line, this
command deletes all the blank lines above and below the current line.
Otherwise, it deletes all of the blank lines after the current line.
- delete-char
- Delete n characters forward. If any argument is
present, it kills rather than deletes, saving the result in the kill
buffer.
- delete-horizontal-space
- Delete any whitespace around the dot.
- delete-leading-space
- Delete leading whitespace on the current line.
- delete-trailing-space
- Delete trailing whitespace on the current line.
- delete-matching-lines
- Delete all lines after dot that contain a string matching the supplied
regular expression.
- delete-non-matching-lines
- Delete all lines after dot that don't contain a string matching the
supplied regular expression.
- delete-other-windows
- Make the current window the only window visible on the screen.
- delete-window
- Delete current window.
- describe-bindings
- List all global and local keybindings, putting the result in the *help*
buffer.
- describe-key-briefly
- Read a key from the keyboard, and look it up in the keymap. Display the
name of the function currently bound to the key.
- diff-buffer-with-file
- View the differences between buffer and its associated file.
- digit-argument
- Process a numerical argument for keyboard-invoked functions.
- downcase-region
- Set all characters in the region to lower case.
- downcase-word
- Set characters to lower case, starting at the dot, and ending
n words away.
- emacs-version
- Return an
mg
version string.
- end-kbd-macro
- Stop defining a keyboard macro.
- end-of-buffer
- Move cursor to the end of the buffer.
- end-of-line
- Move cursor to the end of the line.
- enlarge-window
- Enlarge the current window by shrinking either the window above or below
it.
- eval-current-buffer
- Evaluate the current buffer as a series of
mg
commands. Useful for testing mg
startup
files.
- eval-expression
- Get one line from the user, and run it. Useful for testing expressions in
mg
startup files.
- exchange-point-and-mark
- Swap the values of "dot" and "mark" in the current
window. Return an error if no mark is set.
- execute-extended-command
- Invoke an extended command; i.e. M-x. Call the message line routine to
read in the command name and apply autocompletion to it. When it comes
back, look the name up in the symbol table and run the command if it is
found, passing arguments as necessary. Print an error if there is anything
wrong.
- fill-paragraph
- Justify a paragraph, wrapping text at the current fill column.
- find-file
- Select a file for editing. First check if the file can be found in another
buffer; if it is there, just switch to that buffer. If the file cannot be
found, create a new buffer, read in the file from disk, and switch to the
new buffer.
- find-file-read-only
- Same as find-file, except the new buffer is set to read-only.
- find-alternate-file
- Replace the current file with an alternate one. Semantics for finding the
replacement file are the same as find-file, except the current buffer is
killed before the switch. If the kill fails, or is aborted, revert to the
original file.
- find-file-other-window
- Opens the specified file in a second buffer. Splits the current window if
necessary.
- find-tag
- Jump to definition of tag at dot.
- forward-char
- Move cursor forwards (or backwards, if n is
negative) n characters. Returns an error if the end
of buffer is reached.
- forward-paragraph
- Move forward n paragraphs. Paragraphs are delimited
by <NL><NL> or <NL><TAB> or
<NL><SPACE>.
- forward-word
- Move the cursor forward by the specified number of words.
- global-set-key
- Bind a key in the global (fundamental) key map.
- global-unset-key
- Unbind a key from the global (fundamental) key map; i.e. set it to
'rescan'.
- global-wd-mode
- Toggle global working-directory mode. When enabled,
mg
defaults to opening files (and executing
commands like compile and grep) relative to the global working directory.
When disabled, a working directory is set for each buffer.
- goto-line
- Go to a specific line. If an argument is present, then it is the line
number, else prompt for a line number to use.
- help-help
- Prompts for one of (a)propos, (b)indings, des(c)ribe key briefly.
- insert
- Insert a string, mainly for use from macros.
- insert-buffer
- Insert the contents of another buffer at dot.
- insert-file
- Insert a file into the current buffer at dot.
- insert-with-wrap
- Insert the bound character with word wrap. Check to see if we're past the
fill column, and if so, justify this line.
- isearch-backward
- Use incremental searching, initially in the reverse direction. isearch
ignores any explicit arguments. If invoked during macro definition or
evaluation, the non-incremental search-backward is invoked instead.
- isearch-forward
- Use incremental searching, initially in the forward direction. isearch
ignores any explicit arguments. If invoked during macro definition or
evaluation, the non-incremental search-forward is invoked instead.
- join-line
- Join the current line to the previous. If called with an argument, join
the next line to the current one.
- just-one-space
- Delete any whitespace around dot, then insert a space.
- keyboard-quit
- Abort the current action.
- kill-buffer
- Dispose of a buffer, by name. If the buffer name does not start and end
with an asterisk, prompt the user if the buffer has been changed.
- kill-line
- Kill line. If called without an argument, it kills from dot to the end of
the line, unless it is at the end of the line, when it kills the newline.
If called with an argument of 0, it kills from the start of the line to
dot. If called with a positive argument, it kills from dot forward over
that number of newlines. If called with a negative argument it kills any
text before dot on the current line, then it kills back abs(n) lines.
- kill-paragraph
- Delete n paragraphs starting with the current
one.
- kill-region
- Kill the currently defined region.
- kill-word
- Delete forward n words.
- leave-tmpdir-backups
- Modifies the behaviour of backup-to-home-directory. Backup files that
would normally reside in /tmp are left there and
not moved to the ~/.mg.d directory.
- line-number-mode
- Toggle whether the line number is displayed in the modeline.
- list-buffers
- Display the list of available buffers.
- load
- Prompt the user for a filename, and then execute commands from that
file.
- local-set-key
- Bind a key mapping in the local (topmost) mode.
- local-unset-key
- Unbind a key mapping in the local (topmost) mode.
- make-backup-files
- Toggle generation of backup files.
- make-directory
- Prompt the user for a path or directory name which is then created.
- mark-paragraph
- Mark n paragraphs.
- mark-whole-buffer
- Marks whole buffer as a region by putting dot at the beginning and mark at
the end of buffer.
- meta-key-mode
- When disabled, the meta key can be used to insert extended-ascii (8-bit)
characters. When enabled, the meta key acts as usual.
- negative-argument
- Process a negative argument for keyboard-invoked functions.
- newline
- Insert a newline into the current buffer.
- newline-and-indent
- Insert a newline, then enough tabs and spaces to duplicate the indentation
of the previous line. Assumes tabs are every eight characters.
- next-line
- Move forward n lines.
- not-modified
- Turn off the modified flag in the current buffer.
- open-line
- Open up some blank space. Essentially, insert n
newlines, then back up over them.
- other-window
- The command to make the next (down the screen) window the current window.
There are no real errors, although the command does nothing if there is
only 1 window on the screen.
- overwrite-mode
- Toggle overwrite mode in the current buffer, where typing overwrites
existing characters rather than inserting them. Can be set globally with
set-default-mode.
- prefix-region
- Inserts a prefix string before each line of a region. The prefix string is
settable by using 'set-prefix-string'.
- previous-line
- Move backwards n lines.
- previous-window
- This command makes the previous (up the screen) window the current window.
There are no errors, although the command does not do a lot if there is
only 1 window.
- pop-tag-mark
- Return to position where find-tag was previously invoked.
- push-shell
- Suspend
mg
and switch to alternate screen, if
available.
- pwd
- Display current (global) working directory in the status area.
- query-replace
- Query Replace. Search and replace strings selectively, prompting after
each match.
- replace-string
- Replace string globally without individual prompting.
- query-replace-regexp
- Replace strings selectively. Does a search and replace operation using
regular expressions for both patterns.
- quoted-insert
- Insert the next character verbatim into the current buffer; i.e. ignore
any function bound to that key.
- re-search-again
- Perform a regular expression search again, using the same search string
and direction as the last search command.
- re-search-backward
- Search backwards using a regular expression. Get a search string from the
user, and search, starting at dot and proceeding toward the front of the
buffer. If found, dot is left pointing at the first character of the
pattern [the last character that was matched].
- re-search-forward
- Search forward using a regular expression. Get a search string from the
user and search for it starting at dot. If found, move dot to just after
the matched characters. display does all the hard stuff. If not found, it
just prints a message.
- recenter
- Reposition dot in the current window. By default, the dot is centered. If
given a positive argument (n), the display is repositioned to line n. If
n is negative, it is that line from the bottom.
- redraw-display
- Refresh the display. Recomputes all window sizes in case something has
changed.
- revert-buffer
- Revert the current buffer to the latest file on disk.
- save-buffer
- Save the contents of the current buffer if it has been changed, optionally
creating a backup copy.
- save-buffers-kill-emacs
- Offer to save modified buffers and quit
mg
.
- save-some-buffers
- Look through the list of buffers, offering to save any buffer that has
been changed. Buffers that are not associated with files (such as
*scratch*, *grep*, *compile*) are ignored.
- scroll-down
- Scroll backwards n pages. A two-line overlap between
pages is assumed. If given a repeat argument, scrolls back lines, not
pages.
- scroll-one-line-down
- Scroll the display down n lines without changing the
cursor position.
- scroll-one-line-up
- Scroll the display n lines up without moving the
cursor position.
- scroll-other-window
- Scroll the next window in the window list window forward
n pages.
- scroll-up
- Scroll forward one page. A two-line overlap between pages is assumed. If
given a repeat argument, scrolls back lines, not pages.
- search-again
- Search again, using the same search string and direction as the last
search command.
- search-backward
- Reverse search. Get a search string from the user, and search, starting at
dot and proceeding toward the front of the buffer. If found, dot is left
pointing at the first character of the pattern (the last character that
was matched).
- search-forward
- Search forward. Get a search string from the user, and search for it
starting at dot. If found, dot gets moved to just after the matched
characters, if not found, print a message.
- self-insert-command
- Insert a character.
- sentence-end-double-space
- Toggle double or single spaces for end of sentences. Double is the
default. Currently only affects fill-paragraph.
- set-case-fold-search
- Set case-fold searching, causing case not to matter in regular expression
searches. This is the default.
- set-case-replace
- Preserve the case of the replaced string. This is the default.
- set-default-mode
- Append the supplied mode to the list of default modes used by subsequent
buffer creation. Built in modes include: fill, indent and overwrite.
- set-fill-column
- Prompt the user for a fill column. Used by auto-fill-mode.
- set-mark-command
- Sets the mark in the current window to the current dot location.
- set-prefix-string
- Sets the prefix string to be used by the 'prefix-region' command.
- shell-command
- Execute external command from mini-buffer.
- shell-command-on-region
- Provide the text in region to the shell command as input.
- shrink-window
- Shrink current window by one line. The window immediately below is
expanded to pick up the slack. If only one window is present, this command
has no effect.
- split-window-vertically
- Split the current window. A window smaller than 3 lines cannot be
split.
- start-kbd-macro
- Start defining a keyboard macro. Macro definition is ended by invoking
end-kbd-macro.
- suspend-emacs
- Suspend
mg
and switch back to alternate screen, if
in use.
- switch-to-buffer
- Prompt and switch to a new buffer in the current window.
- switch-to-buffer-other-window
- Switch to buffer in another window.
- toggle-read-only
- Toggle the read-only flag on the current buffer.
- transpose-chars
- Transpose the two characters in front of and under dot, then move forward
one character. Treat newline characters the same as any other.
- transpose-paragraphs
- Transpose adjacent paragraphs. If multiple iterations are requested, the
current paragraph will be moved n paragraphs
forward.
- transpose-words
- Transpose adjacent words.
- undo
- Undo the most recent action. If invoked again without an intervening
command, move the undo pointer to the previous action and undo it.
- undo-boundary
- Add an undo boundary. This is not usually done interactively.
- undo-boundary-toggle
- Toggle whether undo boundaries are generated. Undo boundaries are often
disabled before operations that should be considered atomically
undoable.
- undo-enable
- Toggle whether undo information is kept.
- undo-list
- Show the undo records for the current buffer in a new buffer.
- universal-argument
- Repeat the next command 4 times. Usually bound to C-u. This command may be
stacked; e.g. C-u C-u C-f moves the cursor forward 16 characters.
- upcase-region
- Upper case region. Change all of the lower case characters in the region
to upper case.
- upcase-word
- Move the cursor forward by the specified number of words. As it moves,
convert any characters to upper case.
- visible-bell
- Toggle the visible bell. If this toggle is on, the modeline will
flash.
- visit-tags-table
- Record name of the tags file to be used for subsequent find-tag.
- what-cursor-position
- Display a bunch of useful information about the current location of dot.
The character under the cursor (in octal), the current line, row, and
column, and approximate position of the cursor in the file (as a
percentage) is displayed. The column position assumes an infinite position
display; it does not truncate just because the screen does.
- write-file
- Ask for a file name and write the contents of the current buffer to that
file. Update the remembered file name and clear the buffer changed
flag.
- yank
- Yank text from kill-buffer. Unlike emacs, the
mg
kill buffer consists only of the most recent kill. It is not a ring.
Specific key bindings are available in dired mode.
- DEL
- dired-unmark-backward
- RET, e, f and C-m
- dired-find-file
- SPC
- dired-next-line
- !
- dired-shell-command
- +
- dired-create-directory
- a
- dired-find-alternate-file
- c
- dired-do-copy
- d and C-d
- dired-flag-file-deletion
- g
- dired-revert
- n
- dired-next-line
- o
- dired-find-file-other-window
- p
- dired-previous-line
- q
- quit-window
- r
- dired-do-rename
- u
- dired-unmark
- x
- dired-do-flagged-delete
- C-v
- dired-scroll-down
- M-v
- dired-scroll-up
The following are a list of the commands specific to dired
mode:
- dired-create-directory
- Create a directory.
- dired-do-copy
- Copy the file listed on the current line of the dired buffer.
- dired-do-flagged-delete
- Delete the files that have been flagged for deletion.
- dired-do-rename
- Rename the file listed on the current line of the dired buffer.
- dired-find-alternate-file
- Replace the current dired buffer with an alternate one as specified by the
position of the cursor in the dired buffer.
- dired-find-file
- Open the file on the current line of the dired buffer. If the cursor is on
a directory it will be opened in dired mode.
- dired-flag-file-deletion
- Flag the file listed on the current line for deletion. This is indicated
in the buffer by putting a D at the left margin. No files are actually
deleted until the function dired-do-flagged-delete is executed.
- dired-find-file-other-window
- Open the file on the current line of the dired buffer in a different
window.
- dired-next-line
- Move the cursor to the next line.
- dired-other-window
- This function works just like dired, except that it puts the dired buffer
in another window.
- dired-previous-line
- Move the cursor to the previous line.
- dired-revert
- Refresh the dired buffer.
- dired-scroll-down
- Scroll down the dired buffer.
- dired-scroll-up
- Scroll up the dired buffer.
- dired-unmark
- Remove the deletion flag for the file on the current line.
- dired-unmark-backward
- Remove the deletion flag from the file listed on the previous line of the
dired buffer, then move up to that line.
- quit-window
- Close the current dired buffer.
There are two configuration files, .mg and
.mg-TERM. Here, TERM
represents the name of the terminal type; e.g. if the terminal type is set
to “vt100”, mg
will use
.mg-vt100 as a startup file. The terminal type
startup file is used first.
The startup file format is a list of commands, one per line, as
used for interactive evaluation. Strings that are normally entered by the
user at any subsequent prompts may be specified after the command name;
e.g.:
global-set-key ")" self-insert-command
global-set-key "\^x\^f" find-file
global-set-key "\e[Z" backward-char
set-default-mode fill
set-fill-column 72
auto-execute *.c c-mode
Comments can be added to the startup files by placing
“;” or “#” as the first character of a line.
- ~/.mg
- normal startup file
- ~/.mg-TERM
- terminal-specific startup file
- ~/.mg.d
- alternative backup file location
- /usr/share/doc/mg/tutorial
- concise tutorial
Since it is written completely in C, there is currently no
language in which extensions can be written; however, keys can be rebound
and certain parameters can be changed in startup files.
In order to use 8-bit characters (such as German umlauts), the
Meta key needs to be disabled via the “meta-key-mode”
command.
Multi-byte character sets, such as UTF-8, are not supported.