The d t
(calc-truncate-stack) command moves the
‘.’ line that
marks the top-of-stack up or down in the Calculator buffer. The
number right above that line is considered to the be at the top
of the stack. Any numbers below that line are
“hidden” from all stack operations (although still
visible to the user). This is similar to the Emacs
“narrowing” feature, except that the values below the
‘.’ are
visible, just temporarily frozen. This feature allows
you to keep several independent calculations running at once in
different parts of the stack, or to apply a certain command to an
element buried deep in the stack.
Pressing d t by itself moves the ‘.’ to the line the cursor is on. Thus, this line and all those below it become hidden. To un-hide these lines, move down to the end of the buffer and press d t. With a positive numeric prefix argument ‘n’, d t hides the bottom ‘n’ values in the buffer. With a negative argument, it hides all but the top ‘n’ values. With an argument of zero, it hides zero values, i.e., moves the ‘.’ all the way down to the bottom.
The d [
(calc-truncate-up) and d ]
(calc-truncate-down) commands move the
‘.’ up or down
one line at a time (or several lines with a prefix argument).