Hi, I have the following sort of transformation that I have to do fairly often. For example, when writing LaTeX code, I might have a line in maths mode which looks like G_*[n] = G_* \times \Delta^n (this defines the left hand side to be the Cartesian product of a G with a star and a capital delta with a superscript n, for those reading who aren't au fait with LaTeX). Anyway, suppose I wanted the product the other way round: G_*[n] = \Delta^n \times G_* I'm using Auctex, which is pretty brilliant, but it's syntax table breaks at quite a few characters other than whitespace for word boundaries. I don't particularly want to change that: it seems reasonable, but it means that the transpose-* commands don't really help in this case: you end up mangling together bits of the various sections. Moreover, I sometimes don't bother, say, putting a space before the \times, which is still perfectly fine LaTeX, but it means that there would be no way for Auctex to sensibly see what to do. At the moment, I do a crazy jumping forward and back, killing and yanking, but I suspect there's a better way! Before I started hacking elisp, I was wondering whether there was already a neat way to solve this sort of problem that I didn't know about? Many thanks, Rupert