9.3 The Echo Area
The echo area is a one line window which appears at the bottom of
the screen. It is used to display informative or error messages, and to
read lines of input from you when that is necessary. Almost all of the
commands available in the echo area are identical to their Emacs
counterparts, so please refer to that documentation for greater depth of
discussion on the concepts of editing a line of text. The following
table briefly lists the commands that are available while input is being
read in the echo area:
- C-f (
echo-area-forward
) ¶
- RIGHT (an arrow key)
-
Move forward a character.
- C-b (
echo-area-backward
) ¶
- LEFT (an arrow key)
-
Move backward a character.
- C-a (
echo-area-beg-of-line
) ¶
-
Move to the start of the input line.
- C-e (
echo-area-end-of-line
) ¶
-
Move to the end of the input line.
- M-f (
echo-area-forward-word
) ¶
- C-RIGHT (DOS/Windows only)
-
Move forward a word.
On DOS/Windows, C-RIGHT moves forward by words.
- M-b (
echo-area-backward-word
) ¶
- C-LEFT (DOS/Windows only)
-
Move backward a word.
On DOS/Windows, C-LEFT moves backward by words.
- C-d (
echo-area-delete
) ¶
-
Delete the character under the cursor.
- DEL (
echo-area-rubout
) ¶
-
Delete the character behind the cursor.
On some keyboards, this key is designated BS, for
‘Backspace’. Those keyboards will usually bind DEL in the
echo area to echo-area-delete
.
- C-g (
echo-area-abort
) ¶
-
Cancel or quit the current operation. If completion is being read, this
command discards the text of the input line which does not match any
completion. If the input line is empty, it aborts the calling function.
- RET (
echo-area-newline
) ¶
-
Accept (or forces completion of) the current input line.
- C-q (
echo-area-quoted-insert
) ¶
-
Insert the next character verbatim. This is how you can insert control
characters into a search string.
- M-TAB (
echo-area-tab-insert
) ¶
- Shift-TAB (on DOS/Windows only)
-
Insert a TAB character.
On DOS/Windows only, the Shift-TAB key is an alias for
M-TAB. This key is sometimes called ‘BackTab’.
- C-t (
echo-area-transpose-chars
) ¶
-
Transpose the characters at the cursor.
- printing character ¶
Insert the character.
The next group of commands deal with killing, and yanking
text. (Sometimes these operations are called cut and
paste, respectively.) For an in-depth discussion, see
Killing and Deleting in the GNU Emacs Manual.
- M-d (
echo-area-kill-word
) ¶
-
Kill the word following the cursor.
- M-DEL (
echo-area-backward-kill-word
) ¶
- M-BS
-
Kill the word preceding the cursor.
On some keyboards, the ‘Backspace’ key is used instead of
DEL
, so M-Backspace
has the same effect as
M-DEL
.
- C-k (
echo-area-kill-line
) ¶
-
Kill the text from the cursor to the end of the line.
- C-x DEL (
echo-area-backward-kill-line
) ¶
-
Kill the text from the cursor to the beginning of the line.
- C-y (
echo-area-yank
) ¶
-
Yank back the contents of the last kill.
- M-y (
echo-area-yank-pop
) ¶
-
Yank back a previous kill, removing the last yanked text first.
Sometimes when reading input in the echo area, the command that needed
input will only accept one of a list of several choices. The choices
represent the possible completions, and you must respond with one
of them. Since there are a limited number of responses you can make,
Info allows you to abbreviate what you type, only typing as much of the
response as is necessary to uniquely identify it. In addition, you can
request Info to fill in as much of the response as is possible; this
is called completion.
The following commands are available when completing in the echo area:
- TAB (
echo-area-complete
) ¶
-
Insert as much of a completion as is possible. Otherwise,
display a window containing a list of the possible completions of what
you have typed so far. For example, if the available choices are:
and you have typed an ‘f’, followed by TAB, this
would result in ‘fo’ appearing in the echo area, since
all of the choices which begin with ‘f’ continue with ‘o’.
Now if you type TAB again, Info will pop
up a window showing a node called ‘*Completions*’ which lists the
possible completions like this:
3 completions:
foliate food
forget
i.e., all of the choices which begin with ‘fo’.
Now, typing ‘l’ followed by ‘TAB’ results in ‘foliate’
appearing in the echo area, since that is the only choice which begins
with ‘fol’.
- ESC C-v (
echo-area-scroll-completions-window
) ¶
-
Scroll the completions window, if that is visible, or the “other”
window if not.