David Kastrup <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Press the button for longer. That avoids following the link. How to > teach this best is a different question.
View at it like this: Press the mouse button "harder" (i.e. longer) to make it stick where you click. Here's the relevant doc string: mouse-1-click-follows-link's value is 300 Non-nil means that clicking Mouse-1 on a link follows the link. With the default setting, an ordinary Mouse-1 click on a link performs the same action as Mouse-2 on that link, while a longer Mouse-1 click (hold down the Mouse-1 button for more than 350 milliseconds) performs the original Mouse-1 binding (which typically sets point where you click the mouse). If value is an integer, the time elapsed between pressing and releasing the mouse button determines whether to follow the link or perform the normal Mouse-1 action (typically set point). The absolute numeric value specifices the maximum duration of a "short click" in milliseconds. A positive value means that a short click follows the link, and a longer click performs the normal action. A negative value gives the opposite behaviour. If value is `double', a double click follows the link. Otherwise, a single Mouse-1 click unconditionally follows the link. Note that dragging the mouse never follows the link. This feature only works in modes that specifically identify clickable text as links, so it may not work with some external packages. See `mouse-on-link-p' for details. -- Kim F. Storm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://www.cua.dk _______________________________________________ Emacs-devel mailing list Emacs-devel@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-devel