Quoting means depriving a character of its usual special significance In Emacs this is usually done with Control-q What constitutes special significance depends on the context and on convention For example, an "ordinary" character as an Emacs command inserts itself; so in this context, a special character is any character that does not normally insert itself (such as DEL, for example), and quoting it makes it insert itself as if it were not special Not all contexts allow quoting See section Basic Editing Commands
Process of marking a character in a document, mail etc that would otherwise become lost or corrupted in transit; An example would be ç
Quoting means depriving a character of its usual special significance The most common kind of quoting in Emacs is with C-q What constitutes special significance depends on the context and on convention For example, an "ordinary" character as an Emacs command inserts itself; so in this context, a special character is any character that does not normally insert itself (such as DEL, for example), and quoting it makes it insert itself as if it were not special Not all contexts allow quoting See section Basic Editing Commands
Quoting means depriving a character of its usual special significance In af this is usually done with C-q What constitutes special significance depends on the context and on convention For example, in the minibuffer, an "ordinary" character as an af command inserts itself; so in this context, a special character is any character that does not normally insert itself (such as DEL, for example), and quoting it makes it insert itself as if it were not special Not all contexts allow quoting See section 7 The Minibuffer
The focal point for this dictionary is the quote Detail is presented down to quote detail This data group is limited to quote information since a quote can be generated without a customer or work order
Including parts of an original message in a e-mail reply The standard character used to set off a quote from the rest of the text is a column of > (greater-than) characters along the left margin
{i} citation, act of repeating another person's words; inclusion of part of an original message within a reply to a message or letter on the Internet (Computers)
This is the citing of an article you're answering to You are quoting the original article to make clear on which passages your text refers to
The act of including parts of an original message in a reply The standard character used to set off a quote from the rest of the text is a column of > (greater-than) characters along the left margin When replying, be careful not to over-quote Nothing can be more annoying than scrolling through the same 200 line message quoted with only "me too" added at the bottom
Quoting means depriving a character of its usual special significance In Emacs this is usually done with C-q What constitutes special significance depends on the context and on convention For example, an "ordinary" character as an Emacs command inserts itself; so in this context, a special character is any character that does not normally insert itself (such as DEL, for example), and quoting it makes it insert itself as if it were not special Not all contexts allow quoting See section Basic Editing Commands
Repeating (exactly) part of an email message or newsgroup posting To conserve bandwidth, try to only quote what is relevant to the response
The act of including text from a previous message when replying by e-mail or to a Usenet newsgroup