Closing down the competition
<p>
Well yesterday I talked about <code class="verbatim">C-o (open-line)</code> that opens up additional
lines beneath the line you're currently on, and how little I used it.</p>
<p>
A related key that I use even less, but could see more opportunity for,
is <code class="verbatim">C-x C-o (delete-blank-lines)</code>, which collapses repeated lines of
whitespace into a single line.</p>
<p>
The first thing I find myself wondering, though, is "Why <code class="verbatim">C-x</code>?" It
seems to me that most other commands like this—variations on a shorter
set of keystrokes—use the <code class="verbatim">C-u</code> prefix to say, "do the opposite-ish".</p>
One minute to read
Michael Alan Dorman