if I do find-tag for e.g. `when' the first hit is
`quack-when-xemacs', the second `quack-when-gnuemacs', the third
`magit-commit-all-when-nothing-staged' ... and only the fourth
hit is `when' in subr.el.
Is there a way to force find-tag to first show an exact hit?
Gregor Zattler <telegr...@gmx.net> writes:
> Dear Emacs-users,
> if I do find-tag for e.g. `when' the first hit is
> `quack-when-xemacs', the second `quack-when-gnuemacs', the third
> `magit-commit-all-when-nothing-staged' ... and only the fourth
> hit is `when' in subr.el.
> Is there a way to force find-tag to first show an exact hit?
As long as your are in .el file, hit C-h f and C-h v while on a
function/variable and follow the link to the file from within the Help
buffer.
Or you can add the following to your .emacs,
(find-function-setup-keys)
Then you can do `C-x F' to find a function, `C-x V' to find a variable
or `C-x K' (for eg, C-x K C-x C-f) will jump directly to the command
bound to that particular key sequence.
Hi Jambunathan, Emacs users,
* Jambunathan K <kjambunat...@gmail.com> [13. Nov. 2012]:
> Gregor Zattler <telegr...@gmx.net> writes:
>> if I do find-tag for e.g. `when' the first hit is
>> `quack-when-xemacs', the second `quack-when-gnuemacs', the third
>> `magit-commit-all-when-nothing-staged' ... and only the fourth
>> hit is `when' in subr.el.
>> Is there a way to force find-tag to first show an exact hit?
> As long as your are in .el file, hit C-h f and C-h v while on a
> function/variable and follow the link to the file from within the Help
> buffer.
> Then you can do `C-x F' to find a function, `C-x V' to find a variable
> or `C-x K' (for eg, C-x K C-x C-f) will jump directly to the command
> bound to that particular key sequence.