docs: slightly reword the notice about the changed defaults since 4.0

master
Benno Schulenberg 2019-06-05 19:40:15 +02:00
parent 157098ee75
commit 378aa8bc41
3 changed files with 6 additions and 6 deletions

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@ -27,8 +27,8 @@ nano \- Nano's ANOther editor, inspired by Pico
.SH NOTICE
Starting with version 4.0, \fBnano\fR no longer hard-wraps an overlong
line by default, uses smooth scrolling by default, and by default makes
use of the line below the title bar.
line by default. It further uses smooth scrolling by default, and by
default includes the line below the title bar into the editing area.
.sp
If you want the old, Pico behavior back, you can use \fB\-\-breaklonglines\fR,
\fB\-\-jumpyscrolling\fR, and \fB\-\-emptyline\fR (or \fB\-bje\fR for short).

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@ -97,8 +97,8 @@ as is reasonable while offering a superset of Pico's functionality.
Pico differ.
Starting with version 4.0, @command{nano} no longer hard-wraps an overlong
line by default, uses smooth scrolling by default, and by default makes
use of the line below the title bar.
line by default. It further uses smooth scrolling by default, and by
default includes the line below the title bar into the editing area.
If you want the old, Pico behavior back, you can use the
following options: @option{--breaklonglines},

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@ -23,8 +23,8 @@ nanorc \- GNU nano's configuration file
.SH NOTICE
Starting with version 4.0, \fBnano\fR no longer hard-wraps an overlong
line by default, uses smooth scrolling by default, and by default makes
use of the line below the title bar.
line by default. It further uses smooth scrolling by default, and by
default includes the line below the title bar into the editing area.
.sp
If you want the old, Pico behavior back, you can use \fBset breaklonglines\fR,
\fBset jumpyscrolling\fR, and \fBset emptyline\fR.