From 5aa2f0de3caa29c5e9dcef1351dc8b307aea5d1d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Lukas Fleischer Date: Mon, 22 Jul 2013 16:29:02 +0200 Subject: doc/: Formatting fixes * Use an AsciiDoc-compatible layout. * Use a maximum line width of 79 characters everywhere. Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer --- doc/enote.txt | 37 ++++++++++++++++++++----------------- 1 file changed, 20 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) (limited to 'doc/enote.txt') diff --git a/doc/enote.txt b/doc/enote.txt index e928960..a4dea0e 100644 --- a/doc/enote.txt +++ b/doc/enote.txt @@ -1,21 +1,24 @@ EditNote ======== -Attach a note to any type of item, or edit an already existing note. -This feature is useful if you do not have enough space to store all -of your item description, or if you would like to add sub-tasks to an -already existing todo item for example. -Before pressing the 'n' key, you first need to highlight the item you -want the note to be attached to. Then you will be driven to an -external editor to edit your note. This editor is chosen the following -way: - o if the 'VISUAL' environment variable is set, then this will be - the default editor to be called. - o if 'VISUAL' is not set, then the 'EDITOR' environment variable - will be used as the default editor. - o if none of the above environment variables is set, then - '/usr/bin/vi' will be used. +Attach a note to any type of item, or edit an already existing note. This +feature is useful if you do not have enough space to store all of your item +description, or if you would like to add sub-tasks to an already existing todo +item for example. -Once the item note is edited and saved, quit your favorite editor. -You will then go back to Calcurse, and the '>' sign will appear in front -of the highlighted item, meaning there is a note attached to it. \ No newline at end of file +Before pressing the 'n' key, you first need to highlight the item you want the +note to be attached to. Then you will be driven to an external editor to edit +your note. This editor is chosen the following way: + +* If the 'VISUAL' environment variable is set, then this will be the default + editor to be called. + +* If 'VISUAL' is not set, then the 'EDITOR' environment variable will be used + as the default editor. + +* If none of the above environment variables is set, then '/usr/bin/vi' will be + used. + +Once the item note is edited and saved, quit your favorite editor. You will +then go back to Calcurse, and the '>' sign will appear in front of the +highlighted item, meaning there is a note attached to it. -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf