line within the region, not just the current line.
The command @key{RET} (@code{newline}), which was documented in
-@ref{Inserting Text}, does the same as @key{C-j} followed by
+@ref{Inserting Text}, does the same as @kbd{C-j} followed by
@key{TAB}: it inserts a new line, then adjusts the line's indentation.
When indenting a line that starts within a parenthetical grouping,
onto the indentation of the @dfn{anchor statement}.
@table @kbd
-@item C-c . @key{RET} @var{style} @key{RET}
+@item C-c . @var{style} @key{RET}
Select a predefined style @var{style} (@code{c-set-style}).
@end table
styles are primarily intended for one language, but any of them can be
used with any of the languages supported by these modes. To find out
what a style looks like, select it and reindent some code, e.g., by
-typing @key{C-M-q} at the start of a function definition.
+typing @kbd{C-M-q} at the start of a function definition.
@kindex C-c . @r{(C mode)}
@findex c-set-style
As an alternative to the above commands, you can enable @dfn{hungry
delete mode}. When this feature is enabled (indicated by @samp{/h} in
the mode line after the mode name), a single @key{DEL} deletes all
-preceding whitespace, not just one space, and a single @kbd{C-c C-d}
+preceding whitespace, not just one space, and a single @kbd{C-d}
(but @emph{not} plain @key{Delete}) deletes all following whitespace.
@table @kbd