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Transpose two characters
(transpose-chars).
Transpose two words (transpose-words).
Transpose two balanced expressions
(transpose-sexps).
Transpose two lines (transpose-lines).
The common error of transposing two characters can be fixed,
when they are adjacent, with the C-t command
(transpose-chars). Normally, C-t
transposes the two characters on either side of point. When given
at the end of a line, rather than transposing the last character
of the line with the newline, which would be useless,
C-t transposes the last two characters on the line.
So, if you catch your transposition error right away, you can fix
it with just a C-t. If you don’t catch it so
fast, you must move the cursor back between the two transposed
characters before you type C-t. If you transposed a
space with the last character of the word before it, the word
motion commands are a good way of getting there. Otherwise, a
reverse search (C-r) is often the best way. See
Search.
M-t transposes the word before point with the word
after point (transpose-words). It moves point
forward over a word, dragging the word preceding or containing
point forward as well. The punctuation characters between the
words do not move. For example,
‘FOO, BAR’ transposes
into ‘BAR, FOO’ rather
than ‘BAR FOO,’.
C-M-t (transpose-sexps) is a similar
command for transposing two expressions (see Expressions), and C-x
C-t (transpose-lines) exchanges lines. They
work like M-t except as regards what units of text
they transpose.
A numeric argument to a transpose command serves as a repeat count: it tells the transpose command to move the character (word, expression, line) before or containing point across several other characters (words, expressions, lines). For example, C-u 3 C-t moves the character before point forward across three other characters. It would change ‘f∗oobar’ into ‘oobf∗ar’. This is equivalent to repeating C-t three times. C-u - 4 M-t moves the word before point backward across four words. C-u - C-M-t would cancel the effect of plain C-M-t.
A numeric argument of zero is assigned a special meaning (because otherwise a command with a repeat count of zero would do nothing): to transpose the character (word, expression, line) ending after point with the one ending after the mark.
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