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author | Gregor Zattler <telegraph@gmx.net> | 2019-02-15 10:25:18 +0100 |
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committer | Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> | 2019-02-16 09:28:35 +0200 |
commit | 7ad0cd6f1ebb90261bea99fd591b7cdb00f8aa8e (patch) | |
tree | 002f1e2a4c086a825ea2d45bbc5f76f3eb4d5124 /doc/misc/eshell.texi | |
parent | 12b794044a566fba8dc111687c58c5f9b95ae62e (diff) | |
download | emacs-7ad0cd6f1ebb90261bea99fd591b7cdb00f8aa8e.tar.gz |
* doc/misc/eshell.texi: Fix some @ref's.
Copyright-paperwork-exempt: yes
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/misc/eshell.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/misc/eshell.texi | 12 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/doc/misc/eshell.texi b/doc/misc/eshell.texi index 42250a44703..8366006eaae 100644 --- a/doc/misc/eshell.texi +++ b/doc/misc/eshell.texi @@ -213,8 +213,8 @@ available in the Emacs Lisp library. It does this by transforming the input line into a callable Lisp form.@footnote{To see the Lisp form that will be invoked, type: @samp{eshell-parse-command "echo hello"}} The command can be either an Elisp function or an external command. -Eshell looks first for an @ref{Aliases, alias} with the same name as the -command, then a @ref{Built-ins, built-in command} or a function with the +Eshell looks first for an alias (@pxref{Aliases}) with the same name as the +command, then a built-in (@pxref{Built-ins}) or a function with the same name; if there is no match, it then tries to execute it as an external command. @@ -253,7 +253,7 @@ eshell/ls is a compiled Lisp function in `em-ls.el' @end example If you want to discard a given built-in command, you could declare an -alias, @ref{Aliases}. Example: +alias (@pxref{Aliases}). Example: @example ~ $ which sudo @@ -418,7 +418,7 @@ Lisp functions, based on successful completion). @end table -@ref{Aliases} for the built-in variables @samp{$*}, @samp{$1}, +@xref{Aliases} for the built-in variables @samp{$*}, @samp{$1}, @samp{$2}, @dots{}, in alias definitions. @node Variables @@ -629,8 +629,8 @@ to @code{"hello"}. Eshell's globbing syntax is very similar to that of Zsh. Users coming from Bash can still use Bash-style globbing, as there are no incompatibilities. Most globbing is pattern-based expansion, but there -is also predicate-based expansion. See -@ref{Filename Generation, , , zsh, The Z Shell Manual} +is also predicate-based expansion. @xref{Filename Generation, , , +zsh, The Z Shell Manual} for full syntax. To customize the syntax and behavior of globbing in Eshell see the Customize@footnote{@xref{Easy Customization, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.} |