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(emacs)Undo


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Undoing Changes
===============

   You can undo all the recent changes in the buffer text, up to a
certain point.  Each buffer records changes individually, and the undo
command always applies to the current buffer.  Usually each editing
command makes a separate entry in the undo records, but some commands
such as `query-replace' make many entries, and very simple commands
such as self-inserting characters are often grouped to make undoing less
tedious.

`C-x u'
     Undo one batch of changes--usually, one command worth (`undo').

`C-_'
     The same.

`C-u C-x u'
     Undo one batch of changes in the region.

   The command `C-x u' or `C-_' is how you undo.  The first time you
give this command, it undoes the last change.  Point moves back to
where it was before the command that made the change.

   Consecutive repetitions of `C-_' or `C-x u' undo earlier and earlier
changes, back to the limit of the undo information available.  If all
recorded changes have already been undone, the undo command displays an
error message and does nothing.

   Any command other than an undo command breaks the sequence of undo
commands.  Starting from that moment, the previous undo commands become
ordinary changes that you can undo.  Thus, to redo changes you have
undone, type `C-f' or any other command that will harmlessly break the
sequence of undoing, then type more undo commands.

   Ordinary undo applies to all changes made in the current buffer.  You
can also perform "selective undo", limited to the current region.  To
do this, specify the region you want, then run the `undo' command with
a prefix argument (the value does not matter): `C-u C-x u' or `C-u
C-_'.  This undoes the most recent change in the region.  To undo
further changes in the same region, repeat the `undo' command (no
prefix argument is needed).  In Transient Mark mode, any use of `undo'
when there is an active region performs selective undo; you do not need
a prefix argument.

   If you notice that a buffer has been modified accidentally, the
easiest way to recover is to type `C-_' repeatedly until the stars
disappear from the front of the mode line.  At this time, all the
modifications you made have been canceled.  Whenever an undo command
makes the stars disappear from the mode line, it means that the buffer
contents are the same as they were when the file was last read in or
saved.

   If you do not remember whether you changed the buffer deliberately,
type `C-_' once.  When you see the last change you made undone, you
will see whether it was an intentional change.  If it was an accident,
leave it undone.  If it was deliberate, redo the change as described
above.

   Not all buffers record undo information.  Buffers whose names start
with spaces don't; these buffers are used internally by Emacs and its
extensions to hold text that users don't normally look at or edit.

   You cannot undo mere cursor motion; only changes in the buffer
contents save undo information.  However, some cursor motion commands
set the mark, so if you use these commands from time to time, you can
move back to the neighborhoods you have moved through by popping the
mark ring (Note: Mark Ring).

   When the undo information for a buffer becomes too large, Emacs
discards the oldest undo information from time to time (during garbage
collection).  You can specify how much undo information to keep by
setting two variables: `undo-limit' and `undo-strong-limit'.  Their
values are expressed in units of bytes of space.

   The variable `undo-limit' sets a soft limit: Emacs keeps undo data
for enough commands to reach this size, and perhaps exceed it, but does
not keep data for any earlier commands beyond that.  Its default value
is 20000.  The variable `undo-strong-limit' sets a stricter limit: the
command which pushes the size past this amount is itself forgotten.
Its default value is 30000.

   Regardless of the values of those variables, the most recent change
is never discarded, so there is no danger that garbage collection
occurring right after an unintentional large change might prevent you
from undoing it.

   The reason the `undo' command has two keys, `C-x u' and `C-_', set
up to run it is that it is worthy of a single-character key, but on
some keyboards it is not obvious how to type `C-_'.  `C-x u' is an
alternative you can type straightforwardly on any terminal.


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