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The calendar display scrolls automatically through time when you move out of the visible portion. You can also scroll it manually. Imagine that the calendar window contains a long strip of paper with the months on it. Scrolling the calendar means moving the strip horizontally, so that new months become visible in the window.
scroll-calendar-left
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scroll-calendar-right
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scroll-calendar-left-three-months
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scroll-calendar-right-three-months
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The most basic calendar scroll commands scroll by one month at a time. This means that there are two months of overlap between the display before the command and the display after. < scrolls the calendar contents one month to the left; that is, it moves the display forward in time. > scrolls the contents to the right, which moves backwards in time.
The commands C-v and M-v scroll the calendar by an entire “screenful”—three months—in analogy with the usual meaning of these commands. C-v makes later dates visible and M-v makes earlier dates visible. These commands take a numeric argument as a repeat count; in particular, since C-u multiplies the next command by four, typing C-u C-v scrolls the calendar forward by a year and typing C-u M-v scrolls the calendar backward by a year.
The function keys <NEXT> and <PRIOR> are equivalent to C-v and M-v, just as they are in other modes.