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sc-cite-region-limit
to nil
. The following commands
perform these functions on the region of text between `point' and
`mark'. Each of them sets the undo boundary before modifying
the region so that the command can be undone in the standard Emacs
way.A quick note about Emacs 19. Unlike in Emacs 18, the region delimited by `point' and `mark' can have two states. It can be active or inactive. Although the FSF Emacs 19 and Lucid Emacs 19 use different terminology and functions, both employ the same convention such that when the region is inactive, commands that modify the region should generate an error. The user needs to explicitly activate the region before successfully executing the command. All Supercite commands conform to this convention.
Here is the list of Supercite citing commands:
sc-cite-region
(C-c C-p c)
sc-cite-frame-alist
, or the default citing
frame sc-default-cite-frame
. It runs the hook
sc-pre-cite-hook
before interpreting the frame. With an optional
universal argument (C-u), it temporarily sets
sc-confirm-always-p
to t
so you can confirm the
attribution string for a single manual citing.
See section Configuring the Citation Engine.
sc-uncite-region
(C-c C-p u)
sc-uncite-frame-alist
, or the default unciting frame
sc-default-uncite-frame
. It runs the hook
sc-pre-uncite-hook
before interpreting the frame.
See section Configuring the Citation Engine.
sc-recite-region
(C-c C-p r)
sc-recite-frame-alist
, or the default reciting frame
sc-default-recite-frame
. It runs the hook
sc-pre-recite-hook
before interpreting the frame.
See section Configuring the Citation Engine.
Supercite will always ask you to confirm the attribution when reciting a
region, regardless of the value of sc-confirm-always-p
.
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