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[bpt/emacs.git] / man / reftex.texi
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1\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c %**start of header
0b634dc1 3@setfilename ../info/reftex
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4@settitle RefTeX User Manual
5@dircategory Editors
6@direntry
7* RefTeX: (reftex). Emacs support for LaTeX cross-references and citations.
8@end direntry
9@synindex ky cp
10@syncodeindex vr cp
11@syncodeindex fn cp
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12@set VERSION 4.12
13@set EDITION 4.12
14@set DATE March 2000
6bf7aab6 15@set AUTHOR Carsten Dominik
a0d31341 16@set AUTHOR-EMAIL dominik@@astro.uva.nl
6bf7aab6 17@set MAINTAINER Carsten Dominik
a0d31341 18@set MAINTAINER-EMAIL dominik@@astro.uva.nl
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19@c %**end of header
20@finalout
21
22@c Macro definitions
23
24@c Subheadings inside a table. Need a difference between info and the rest.
25@macro tablesubheading{text}
26@ifinfo
27@subsubheading \text\
28@end ifinfo
29@ifnotinfo
30@item @b{\text\}
31@end ifnotinfo
32@end macro
33
34@ifinfo
35This file documents @b{Ref@TeX{}}, a package to do labels, references,
36citations and indices for LaTeX documents with Emacs.@refill
37
38This is edition @value{EDITION} of the @b{Ref@TeX{}} User Manual for
39@b{Ref@TeX{}} @value{VERSION}@refill
40
a2cc2b28 41Copyright (c) 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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42
43Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim
44copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and
45this permission notice are preserved on all copies.
46
47@ignore
48Permission is granted to process this file through TeX
49and print the results, provided the printed document
50carries a copying permission notice identical to this
51one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
52paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
53
54@end ignore
55Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified
56versions of this manual under the conditions for
57verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting
58derive work is distributed under the terms of a permission
59notice identical to this one.
60
61Permission is granted to copy and distribute
62translations of this manual into another language,
63under the above conditions for modified versions,
64except that this permission notice may be stated in a
65translation approved by the Free Software Foundation.
66@end ifinfo
67
68@titlepage
69@title Ref@TeX{} User Manual
70@subtitle Support for LaTeX labels, references, citations and index entries with GNU Emacs
71@subtitle Edition @value{EDITION}, @value{DATE}
72
73@author by Carsten Dominik
74@page
a2cc2b28 75Copyright @copyright{} 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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76
77@sp 2
78This is edition @value{EDITION} of the @cite{Ref@TeX{} User Manual} for
79@b{Ref@TeX{}} version @value{VERSION}, @value{DATE}.@refill
80
81@sp 2
82
83Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim
84copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and
85this permission notice are preserved on all copies.
86
87Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified
88versions of this manual under the conditions for
89verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting
90derive work is distributed under the terms of a permission
91notice identical to this one.
92
93Permission is granted to copy and distribute
94translations of this manual into another language,
95under the above conditions for modified versions,
96except that this permission notice may be stated in a
97translation approved by the Free Software Foundation.
98
99@end titlepage
100@page
101
a0d31341 102@ifnottex
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103@node Top,,,(dir)
104
105@b{Ref@TeX{}} is a package for managing Labels, References,
106Citations and index entries with GNU Emacs.@refill
107
108Don't be discouraged by the size of this manual, which covers
109@b{Ref@TeX{}} in great depth. All you need to know to use
110@b{Ref@TeX{}} can be summarized on two pages (@pxref{RefTeX in a
111Nutshell}). You can go back later to other parts of this document when
112needed.@refill
113
114@menu
115* Introduction:: Quick-Start information.
116
117* Table of Contents:: A Tool to move around quickly.
118* Labels and References:: Creating and referencing labels.
119* Citations:: Creating Citations.
120* Index Support:: Creating and Checking Index Entries.
121* Viewing Cross-References:: Who references or cites what?
122
123* RefTeXs Menu:: The Ref menu in the menubar.
124* Keybindings:: The default keybindings.
125* Faces:: Fontification of RefTeX's buffers.
126* Multifile Documents:: Document spread over many files.
127* Language Support:: How to support other languages.
128* Finding Files:: Included TeX files and BibTeX .bib files.
129* AUCTeX:: Cooperation with AUCTeX.
130* Optimizations:: When RefTeX is too slow.
131* Problems and Work-Arounds:: First Aid.
132* Imprint:: Author, Web-site, Thanks
133
134* Commands:: Which are the available commands.
135* Options:: How to extend and configure RefTeX.
136* Keymaps and Hooks:: For customization.
137* Changes:: A List of recent changes to RefTeX.
138
139The Index
140
141* Index:: The full index.
142
143@detailmenu
144
145Introduction
146
147* Installation:: How to install and activate RefTeX.
148* RefTeX in a Nutshell:: A brief summary and quick guide.
149
150Labels and References
151
152* Creating Labels::
153* Referencing Labels::
154* Builtin Label Environments:: The environments RefTeX knows about.
155* Defining Label Environments:: ... and environments it doesn't.
156* Reference Info:: View the label corresponding to a \ref.
157* xr (LaTeX package):: References to external documents.
158* varioref (LaTeX package):: How to create \vref instead of \ref.
159* fancyref (LaTeX package):: How to create \fref instead of \ref.
160
161Defining Label Environments
162
163* Theorem and Axiom:: Defined with @code{\newenvironment}.
164* Quick Equation:: When a macro sets the label type.
165* Figure Wrapper:: When a macro argument is a label.
166* Adding Magic Words:: Other words for other languages.
167* Using \eqref:: How to switch to this AMS-LaTeX macro.
168* Non-Standard Environments:: Environments without \begin and \end
169* Putting it Together:: How to combine many entries.
170
171Citations
172
173* Creating Citations:: How to create them.
174* Citation Styles:: Natbib, Harvard, Chicago and Co.
175* Citation Info:: View the corresponding database entry.
176* Chapterbib and Bibunits:: Multiple bibliographies in a Document.
177* Citations Outside LaTeX:: How to make citations in Emails etc.
178
179Index Support
180
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181* Creating Index Entries:: Macros and completion of entries.
182* The Index Phrases File:: A special file for global indexing.
183* Displaying and Editing the Index:: The index editor.
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184* Builtin Index Macros:: The index macros RefTeX knows about.
185* Defining Index Macros:: ... and macros it doesn't.
186
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187The Index Phrases File
188
189* Collecting Phrases:: Collecting from document or external.
190* Consistency Checks:: Check for duplicates etc.
191* Global Indexing:: The interactive indexing process.
192
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193AUCTeX
194
195* AUCTeX-RefTeX Interface:: How both packages work together
196* Style Files:: AUCTeX's style files can support RefTeX
197* Bib-Cite:: Hypertext reading of a document
198
199Options, Keymaps, Hooks
200
201* Options (Table of Contents)::
202* Options (Defining Label Environments)::
203* Options (Creating Labels)::
204* Options (Referencing Labels)::
205* Options (Creating Citations)::
206* Options (Index Support)::
207* Options (Viewing Cross-References)::
208* Options (Finding Files)::
209* Options (Optimizations)::
210* Options (Fontification)::
211* Options (Misc)::
212
213@end detailmenu
214@end menu
215
a0d31341 216@end ifnottex
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217
218@node Introduction, Table of Contents, , Top
219@chapter Introduction
220@cindex Introduction
221
222@b{Ref@TeX{}} is a specialized package for support of labels,
223references, citations, and the index in LaTeX. @b{Ref@TeX{}} wraps
224itself round 4 LaTeX macros: @code{\label}, @code{\ref}, @code{\cite},
225and @code{\index}. Using these macros usually requires looking up
226different parts of the document and searching through BibTeX database
227files. @b{Ref@TeX{}} automates these time--consuming tasks almost
228entirely. It also provides functions to display the structure of a
229document and to move around in this structure quickly.@refill
230
231@iftex
232Don't be discouraged by the size of this manual, which covers @b{Ref@TeX{}}
233in great depth. All you need to know to use @b{Ref@TeX{}} can be
234summarized on two pages (@pxref{RefTeX in a Nutshell}). You can go
235back later to other parts of this document when needed.
236@end iftex
237
238@xref{Imprint}, for information about who to contact for help, bug
239reports or suggestions.
240
241@menu
242* Installation:: How to install and activate RefTeX.
243* RefTeX in a Nutshell:: A brief summary and quick guide.
244@end menu
245
246@node Installation, RefTeX in a Nutshell, , Introduction
247@section Installation
248@cindex Installation
249
250@b{Ref@TeX{}} is bundled and pre--installed with Emacs since version 20.2.
251It was also bundled and pre--installed with XEmacs 19.16--20.x. XEmacs
25221.x users want to install the corresponding plug-in package which is
253available from the
254@uref{ftp://ftp.xemacs.org/pub/xemacs/packages/,XEmacs ftp site}. See
255the XEmacs 21.x documentation on package installation for
256details.@refill
257
258Users of earlier Emacs distributions (including Emacs 19) can get a copy
259of the @b{Ref@TeX{}} distribution from the maintainers web-page.
260@xref{Imprint}, for more information.@refill
261
262@section Environment
263@cindex Finding files
264@cindex BibTeX database files, not found
265@cindex TeX files, not found
266@cindex @code{TEXINPUTS}, environment variable
267@cindex @code{BIBINPUTS}, environment variable
268
269@b{Ref@TeX{}} needs to access all files which are part of a multifile
270document, and the BibTeX database files requested by the
271@code{\bibliography} command. To find these files, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will
272require a search path, i.e. a list of directories to check. Normally
273this list is stored in the environment variables @code{TEXINPUTS} and
274@code{BIBINPUTS} which are also used by @b{Ref@TeX{}}. However, on some
275systems these variables do not contain the full search path. If
276@b{Ref@TeX{}} does not work for you because it cannot find some files,
277read @ref{Finding Files}.
278
279@section Entering @b{Ref@TeX{}} Mode
280
281@findex turn-on-reftex
282@findex reftex-mode
283@vindex LaTeX-mode-hook
284@vindex latex-mode-hook
285To turn @b{Ref@TeX{}} Mode on and off in a particular buffer, use
286@kbd{M-x reftex-mode}. To turn on @b{Ref@TeX{}} Mode for all LaTeX
287files, add the following lines to your @file{.emacs} file:@refill
288
289@example
290(add-hook 'LaTeX-mode-hook 'turn-on-reftex) ; with AUCTeX LaTeX mode
291(add-hook 'latex-mode-hook 'turn-on-reftex) ; with Emacs latex mode
292@end example
293
294@page
295@node RefTeX in a Nutshell, , Installation, Introduction
296@section @b{Ref@TeX{}} in a Nutshell
297@cindex Quick-Start
298@cindex Getting Started
299@cindex RefTeX in a Nutshell
300@cindex Nutshell, RefTeX in a
301
302@enumerate
303@item
304@b{Table of Contents}@* Typing @kbd{C-c =} (@code{reftex-toc}) will show
305a table of contents of the document. This buffer can display sections,
306labels and index entries defined in the document. From the buffer, you
307can jump quickly to every part of your document. Press @kbd{?} to get
308help.@refill
309
310@item
311@b{Labels and References}@* @b{Ref@TeX{}} helps to create unique labels
312and to find the correct key for references quickly. It distinguishes
313labels for different environments, knows about all standard
314environments (and many others), and can be configured to recognize any
315additional labeled environments you have defined yourself (variable
316@code{reftex-label-alist}).@refill
317
318@itemize @bullet
319@item
320@b{Creating Labels}@*
321Type @kbd{C-c (} (@code{reftex-label}) to insert a label at point.
322@b{Ref@TeX{}} will either
323@itemize @minus
324@item
325derive a label from context (default for section labels)
326@item
327prompt for a label string (default for figures and tables) or
328@item
329insert a simple label made of a prefix and a number (all other
330environments)@refill
331@end itemize
332@noindent
333Which labels are created how is configurable with the variable
334@code{reftex-insert-label-flags}.@refill
335
336@item
337@b{Referencing Labels}@* To make a reference, type @kbd{C-c )}
338(@code{reftex-reference}). This shows an outline of the document with
339all labels of a certain type (figure, equation,...) and some label
340context. Selecting a label inserts a @code{\ref@{@var{label}@}} macro
341into the original buffer.@refill
342@end itemize
343
344@item
345@b{Citations}@*
346Typing @kbd{C-c [} (@code{reftex-citation}) will let you specify a
347regular expression to search in current BibTeX database files (as
348specified in the @code{\bibliography} command) and pull out a list of
349matches for you to choose from. The list is @emph{formatted} and
350sorted. The selected article is referenced as @samp{\cite@{@var{key}@}}
351(see the variable @code{reftex-cite-format} if you want to insert
352different macros).@refill
353
354@item
355@b{Index Support}@*
356@b{Ref@TeX{}} helps to enter index entries. It also compiles all
357entries into an alphabetically sorted @file{*Index*} buffer which you
358can use to check and edit the entries. @b{Ref@TeX{}} knows about the
359standard index macros and can be configured to recognize any additional
360macros you have defined (@code{reftex-index-macros}). Multiple indices
361are supported.@refill
362
363@itemize @bullet
364@item
365@b{Creating Index Entries}@*
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366To index the current selection or the word at point, type @kbd{C-c /}
367(@code{reftex-index-selection-or-word}). The default macro
368@code{reftex-index-default-macro} will be used. For a more complex entry
369type @kbd{C-c <} (@code{reftex-index}), select any of the index macros
370and enter the arguments with completion.@refill
371
372@item
373@b{The Index Phrases File (Delayed Indexing)}@*
374Type @kbd{C-c \} (@code{reftex-index-phrase-selection-or-word}) to add
375the current word or selection to a special @emph{index phrase file}.
376@b{Ref@TeX{}} can later search the document for occurrences of these
377phrases and let you interactively index the matches.@refill
378
379@item
380@b{Displaying and Editing the Index}@*
381To display the compiled index in a special buffer, type @kbd{C-c >}
382(@code{reftex-display-index}). From that buffer you can check and edit
383all entries.@refill
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384@end itemize
385
386@page
387@item @b{Viewing Cross-References}@*
388When point is on the @var{key} argument of a cross--referencing macro
389(@code{\label}, @code{\ref}, @code{\cite}, @code{\bibitem},
390@code{\index}, and variations) or inside a BibTeX database entry, you
391can press @kbd{C-c &} (@code{reftex-view-crossref}) to display
392corresponding locations in the document and associated BibTeX database
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393files.@refill @*
394When the enclosing macro is @code{\cite} or @code{\ref} and no other
395message occupies the echo area, information about the citation or label
396will automatically be displayed in the echo area.@refill
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397
398@item
399@b{Multifile Documents}@*
400Multifile Documents are fully supported. The included files must have a
401file variable @code{TeX-master} or @code{tex-main-file} pointing to the
402master file. @b{Ref@TeX{}} provides cross-referencing information from
403all parts of the document, and across document borders
404(@file{xr.sty}).@refill
405
406@item
407@b{Document Parsing}@* @b{Ref@TeX{}} needs to parse the document in
408order to find labels and other information. It does it automatically
409once and updates its list internally when @code{reftex-label} and
410@code{reftex-index} are used. To enforce reparsing, call any of the
411commands described above with a raw @kbd{C-u} prefix, or press the
412@kbd{r} key in the label selection buffer, the table of contents
413buffer, or the index buffer.@refill
414
415@item
416@b{AUCTeX} @* If your major LaTeX mode is AUCTeX, @b{Ref@TeX{}} can
417cooperate with it (see variable @code{reftex-plug-into-AUCTeX}). AUCTeX
418contains style files which trigger appropriate settings in
419@b{Ref@TeX{}}, so that for many of the popular LaTeX packages no
420additional customizations will be necessary.@refill
421
422@item
423@b{Useful Settings}@* To make @b{Ref@TeX{}} faster for large documents,
424try these:@refill
425@lisp
426(setq reftex-enable-partial-scans t)
427(setq reftex-save-parse-info t)
428(setq reftex-use-multiple-selection-buffers t)
429@end lisp
430
431To integrate with AUCTeX, use
432@lisp
433(setq reftex-plug-into-AUCTeX t)
434@end lisp
435
436To make your own LaTeX macro definitions known to @b{Ref@TeX{}},
437customize the variables@refill
438@example
439@code{reftex-label-alist} @r{(for label macros/environments)}
440@code{reftex-section-levels} @r{(for sectioning commands)}
441@code{reftex-cite-format} @r{(for @code{\cite}-like macros)}
442@code{reftex-index-macros} @r{(for @code{\index}-like macros)}
443@code{reftex-index-default-macro} @r{(to set the default macro)}
444@end example
445If you have a large number of macros defined, you may want to write
446an AUCTeX style file to support them with both AUCTeX and
447@b{Ref@TeX{}}.@refill
448
449@item @b{Where Next?}@* Go ahead and use @b{Ref@TeX{}}. Use its menus
450until you have picked up the key bindings. For an overview of what you
451can do in each of the different special buffers, press @kbd{?}. Read
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452the manual if you get stuck, of if you are curious what else might be
453available. The first part of the manual explains in
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454a tutorial way how to use and customize @b{Ref@TeX{}}. The second
455part is a command and variable reference.@refill
456@end enumerate
457
458@node Table of Contents, Labels and References, Introduction, Top
459@chapter Table of Contents
460@cindex @file{*toc*} buffer
461@cindex Table of contents buffer
462@findex reftex-toc
463@kindex C-c =
464
465Pressing the keys @kbd{C-c =} pops up a buffer showing the table of
466contents of the document. By default, this @file{*toc*} buffer shows
467only the sections of a document. Using the @kbd{l} and @kbd{i} keys you
468can display all labels and index entries defined in the document as
469well.@refill
470
471With the cursor in any of the lines denoting a location in the
472document, simple key strokes will display the corresponding part in
473another window, jump to that location, or perform other actions.@refill
474
475@kindex ?
476Here is a list of special commands in the @file{*toc*} buffer. A
477summary of this information is always available by pressing
478@kbd{?}.@refill
479
480@table @kbd
481
482@tablesubheading{General}
483@item ?
484Display a summary of commands.
485
486@item 0-9, -
487Prefix argument.
488
489@tablesubheading{Moving around}
490@item n
491Goto next entry in the table of context.
492
493@item p
494Goto previous entry in the table of context.
495
496@item C-c C-n
497Goto next section heading. Useful when many labels and index entries
498separate section headings.@refill
499
500@item C-c C-p
501Goto previous section heading.
502
503@tablesubheading{Access to document locations}
504@item @key{SPC}
505Show the corresponding location in another window. This command does
506@emph{not} select that other window.@refill
507
508@item @key{TAB}
509Goto the location in another window.
510
511@item @key{RET}
512Go to the location and hide the @file{*toc*} buffer. This will restore
513the window configuration before @code{reftex-toc} (@kbd{C-c =}) was
514called.@refill
515
516@item mouse-2
517@vindex reftex-highlight-selection
518Clicking with mouse button 2 on a line has the same effect as @key{RET}.
519See also variable @code{reftex-highlight-selection}, @ref{Options
520(Fontification)}.@refill
521
522@item f
523@vindex reftex-toc-follow-mode
524@vindex reftex-revisit-to-follow
525Toggle follow mode. When follow mode is active, the other window will
526always show the location corresponding to the line at point in the
527@file{*toc*} buffer. This is similar to pressing @key{SPC} after each
528cursor motion. The default for this flag can be set with the variable
529@code{reftex-toc-follow-mode}. Note that only context in files already
530visited is shown. @b{Ref@TeX{}} will not visit a file just for follow
531mode. See, however, the variable
532@code{reftex-revisit-to-follow}.@refill
533
534@item .
535Show calling point in another window. This is the point from where
536@code{reftex-toc} was last called.
537
538@tablesubheading{Exiting}
539@item q
540Hide the @file{*toc*} buffer, return to the position where
541@code{reftex-toc} was last called.@refill
542
543@item k
544Kill the @file{*toc*} buffer, return to the position where
545@code{reftex-toc} was last called.@refill
546
547@item C-c >
548Switch to the @file{*Index*} buffer of this document. With prefix
549@samp{2}, restrict the index to the section at point in the @file{*toc*}
550buffer.
551
552@tablesubheading{Controlling what gets displayed}
553
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554@item t
555@vindex reftex-toc-max-level
556Change the maximum level of toc entries displayed in the @file{*toc*}
557buffer. Without prefix arg, all levels will be included. With prefix
558arg (e.g @kbd{3 t}), ignore all toc entries with level greater than
559@var{arg} (3 in this case). Chapters are level 1, sections are level 2.
560The mode line @samp{T<>} indicator shows the current value. The default
561depth can be configured with the variable
562@code{reftex-toc-max-level}.@refill
563
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564@item F
565@vindex reftex-toc-include-file-boundaries
566Toggle the display of the file borders of a multifile document in the
567@file{*toc*} buffer. The default for this flag can be set with the
568variable @code{reftex-toc-include-file-boundaries}.@refill
569
570@item l
571@vindex reftex-toc-include-labels
572Toggle the display of labels in the @file{*toc*} buffer. The default
573for this flag can be set with the variable
574@code{reftex-toc-include-labels}. When called with a prefix argument,
575@b{Ref@TeX{}} will prompt for a label type and include only labels of
576the selected type in the @file{*toc*} buffer. The mode line @samp{L<>}
577indicator shows which labels are included.@refill
578
579@item i
580@vindex reftex-toc-include-index-entries
581Toggle the display of index entries in the @file{*toc*} buffer. The
582default for this flag can be set with the variable
583@code{reftex-toc-include-index-entries}. When called with a prefix
584argument, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will prompt for a specific index and include
585only entries in the selected index in the @file{*toc*} buffer. The mode
586line @samp{I<>} indicator shows which index is used.@refill
587
588@item c
589@vindex reftex-toc-include-context
590Toggle the display of label and index context in the @file{*toc*}
591buffer. The default for this flag can be set with the variable
592@code{reftex-toc-include-context}.@refill
593
594@tablesubheading{Updating the buffer}
595
596@item g
597Rebuild the @file{*toc*} buffer. This does @emph{not} rescan the
598document.@refill
599
600@item r
601@vindex reftex-enable-partial-scans
602Reparse the LaTeX document and rebuild the @file{*toc*} buffer. When
603@code{reftex-enable-partial-scans} is non-nil, rescan only the file this
604location is defined in, not the entire document.@refill
605
606@item C-u r
607Reparse the @emph{entire} LaTeX document and rebuild the @file{*toc*}
608buffer.@refill
609
610@item x
611Switch to the @file{*toc*} buffer of an external document. When the
612current document is using the @code{xr} package (@pxref{xr (LaTeX
613package)}), @b{Ref@TeX{}} will switch to one of the external
614documents.@refill
615
616@end table
617
618@vindex reftex-toc-map
619In order to define additional commands for the @file{*toc*} buffer, the
620keymap @code{reftex-toc-map} may be used.@refill
621
622@cindex Sectioning commands
623@cindex KOMA-Script, LaTeX classes
624@cindex LaTeX classes, KOMA-Script
d4e1eea3 625@cindex TOC entries for environments
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626@vindex reftex-section-levels
627The section macros recognized by @b{Ref@TeX{}} are all LaTeX section
628macros (from @code{\part} to @code{\subsubparagraph}) and the commands
629@code{\addchap} and @code{\addsec} from the KOMA-Script classes.
630Additional macros can be configured with the variable
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631@code{reftex-section-levels}. It is also possible to add certain LaTeX
632environments to the table of contents. This is probably only useful for
633theorem-like environments. @xref{Defining Label Environments}, for an
634example.
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635
636@node Labels and References, Citations, Table of Contents, Top
637@chapter Labels and References
638@cindex Labels in LaTeX
639@cindex References in LaTeX
640@cindex Label category
641@cindex Label environment
642@cindex @code{\label}
643
644LaTeX provides a powerful mechanism to deal with cross--references in a
645document. When writing a document, any part of it can be marked with a
646label, like @samp{\label@{mark@}}. LaTeX records the current value of a
647certain counter when a label is defined. Later references to this label
648(like @samp{\ref@{mark@}}) will produce the recorded value of the
649counter.@refill
650
651Labels can be used to mark sections, figures, tables, equations,
652footnotes, items in enumerate lists etc. LaTeX is context sensitive in
653doing this: A label defined in a figure environment automatically
654records the figure counter, not the section counter.@refill
655
656Several different environments can share a common counter and therefore
657a common label category. E.g. labels in both @code{equation} and
658@code{eqnarray} environments record the value of the same counter - the
659equation counter.@refill
660
661@menu
662* Creating Labels::
663* Referencing Labels::
664* Builtin Label Environments:: The environments RefTeX knows about.
665* Defining Label Environments:: ... and environments it doesn't.
666* Reference Info:: View the label corresponding to a \ref.
667* xr (LaTeX package):: References to external documents.
668* varioref (LaTeX package):: How to create \vref instead of \ref.
669* fancyref (LaTeX package):: How to create \fref instead of \ref.
670@end menu
671
672@node Creating Labels, Referencing Labels, , Labels and References
673@section Creating Labels
674@cindex Creating labels
675@cindex Labels, creating
676@cindex Labels, deriving from context
677@kindex C-c (
678@findex reftex-label
679
680In order to create a label in a LaTeX document, press @kbd{C-c (}
681(@code{reftex-label}). Just like LaTeX, @b{Ref@TeX{}} is context sensitive
682and will figure out the environment it currently is in and adapt the
683label to that environment. A label usually consists of a short prefix
684indicating the type of the label and a unique mark. @b{Ref@TeX{}} has
6853 different modes to create this mark.@refill
686
687@enumerate
688@item
689@vindex reftex-translate-to-ascii-function
690@vindex reftex-derive-label-parameters
691@vindex reftex-label-illegal-re
692@vindex reftex-abbrev-parameters
693A label can be derived from context. This means, @b{Ref@TeX{}} takes
694the context of the label definition and constructs a label from
695that@footnote{Note that the context may contain constructs which are
696illegal in labels. @b{Ref@TeX{}} will therefore strip the accent from
697accented Latin-1 characters and remove everything else which is not
698legal in labels. This mechanism is safe, but may not be satisfactory
699for non-western languages. Check the following variables if you need to
700change things: @code{reftex-translate-to-ascii-function},
701@code{reftex-derive-label-parameters}, @code{reftex-label-illegal-re},
702@code{reftex-abbrev-parameters}.}. This works best for section labels,
703where the section heading is used to construct a label. In fact,
704@b{Ref@TeX{}}'s default settings use this method only for section
705labels. You will be asked to confirm the derived label, or edit
706it.@refill
707
708@item
709We may also use a simple unique number to identify a label. This is
710mostly useful for labels where it is difficult to come up with a very
711good descriptive name. @b{Ref@TeX{}}'s default settings use this method
712for equations, enumerate items and footnotes. The author of @b{Ref@TeX{}}
713tends to write documents with many equations and finds it impossible
714to come up with good names for each of them. These simple labels are
715inserted without query, and are therefore very fast. Good descriptive
716names are not really necessary as @b{Ref@TeX{}} will provide context to
717reference a label (@pxref{Referencing Labels}).@refill
718
719@item
720The third method is to ask the user for a label. This is most
721useful for things which are easy to describe briefly and do not turn up
722too frequently in a document. @b{Ref@TeX{}} uses this for figures and
723tables. Of course, one can enter the label directly by typing the full
724@samp{\label@{mark@}}. The advantage of using @code{reftex-label}
725anyway is that @b{Ref@TeX{}} will know that a new label has been defined.
726It will then not be necessary to rescan the document in order to access
727this label later.@refill
728@end enumerate
729
730@vindex reftex-insert-label-flags
731If you want to change the way certain labels are created, check out the
732variable @code{reftex-insert-label-flags} (@pxref{Options (Creating
733Labels)}).@refill
734
735If you are using AUCTeX to write your LaTeX documents, you can
736set it up to delegate the creation of labels to
737@b{Ref@TeX{}}. @xref{AUCTeX}, for more information.
738
739@node Referencing Labels, Builtin Label Environments, Creating Labels, Labels and References
740@section Referencing Labels
741@cindex Referencing labels
742@cindex Labels, referencing
743@cindex Selection buffer, labels
744@cindex Selection process
745@cindex @code{\ref}
746@kindex C-c )
747@findex reftex-reference
748
749Referencing Labels is really at the heart of @b{Ref@TeX{}}. Press @kbd{C-c
750)} in order to reference a label (reftex-reference). This will start a
751selection process and finally insert the complete @samp{\ref@{label@}}
752into the buffer.@refill
753
754First, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will determine the label category which is required.
755Often that can be figured out from context. For example, if you
756write @samp{As shown in eq.} and the press @kbd{C-c )}, @b{Ref@TeX{}} knows
757that an equation label is going to be referenced. If it cannot figure
758out what label category is needed, it will query for one.@refill
759
760You will then be presented with a label selection menu. This is a
761special buffer which contains an outline of the document along with all
762labels of the given label category. In addition, next to the label
763there will be one line of context of the label definition, which is some
764text in the buffer near the label definition. Usually this is
765sufficient to identify the label. If you are unsure about a certain
766label, pressing @key{SPC} will show the label definition point in
767another window.@refill
768
769In order to reference a label, move to cursor to the correct label and
770press @key{RET}. You can also reference several labels with a single
771call to @code{reftex-reference} by marking entries with the @kbd{m}
772key (see below).
773
774@kindex ?
775Here is a list of special commands in the selection buffer. A summary
776of this information is always available from the selection process by
777pressing @kbd{?}.@refill
778
779
780
781@table @kbd
782@tablesubheading{General}
783@item ?
784Show a summary of available commands.
785
786@item 0-9,-
787Prefix argument.
788
789@tablesubheading{Moving around}
790@item n
791Go to next label.
792
793@item p
794Go to previous label.
795
796@item b
797Jump back to the position where you last left the selection buffer.
798Normally this should get you back to the last referenced label.@refill
799
800@item C-c C-n
801Goto next section heading.
802
803@item C-c C-p
804Goto previous section heading.
805
806@tablesubheading{Displaying Context}
807@item @key{SPC}
808Show the surroundings of the definition of the current label in another
809window. See also the @kbd{f} key.@refill
810
811@item f
812@vindex reftex-revisit-to-follow
813Toggle follow mode. When follow mode is active, the other window will
814always display the full context of the current label. This is similar
815to pressing @key{SPC} after each cursor motion. Note that only context
816in files already visited is shown. @b{RefTeX} will not visit a file
817just for follow mode. See, however, the variable
818@code{reftex-revisit-to-follow}.@refill
819
820@item .
821Show insertion point in another window. This is the point from where you
822called @code{reftex-reference}.@refill
823
824@tablesubheading{Selecting a label and creating the reference}
825@item @key{RET}
826Insert a reference to the label at point into the buffer from which the
827selection process was started. When entries have been marked, @key{RET}
828references all marked labels.@refill
829
830@item mouse-2
831@vindex reftex-highlight-selection
832Clicking with mouse button 2 on a label will accept it like @key{RET}
833would. See also variable @code{reftex-highlight-selection}, @ref{Options
834(Misc)}.@refill
835
836@vindex reftex-multiref-punctuation
837@item m - + ,
838Mark the current entry. When several entries have been marked, pressing
839@kbd{RET} will accept all of them and place them into several
840@code{\ref} macros. The special markers @samp{,-+} also store a
841separator to be inserted before the corresponding reference. So marking
842six entries with the keys @samp{m , , - , +} will give a reference list
843like this (see the variable @code{reftex-multiref-punctuation})
844@example
845In eqs. (1), (2), (3)--(4), (5) and (6)
846@end example
847
848@item u
849Unmark a marked entry.
850
851@c FIXME: Do we need `A' as well for consistency?
852@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{saferef}
853@cindex @code{saferef}, LaTeX package
854@item a
855Accept the marked entries and put all labels as a comma-separated list
856into one @emph{single} @code{\ref} macro. Some packages like
857@file{saferef.sty} support multiple references in this way.@refill
858
859@item l
860Use the last referenced label(s) again. This is equivalent to moving to
861that label and pressing @key{RET}.@refill
862
863@item @key{TAB}
864Enter a label with completion. This may also be a label which does not
865yet exist in the document.
866
867@item v
868@cindex @code{varioref}, LaTeX package
869@cindex @code{\vref}
870@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{varioref}
871Toggle between @code{\ref} and @code{\vref} macro for references. The
872@code{\vref} macro is defined in the @code{varioref} LaTeX package.
873With this key you can force @b{Ref@TeX{}} to insert a @code{\vref}
874macro. The current state of this flag is displayed by the @samp{S<>}
875indicator in the mode line of the selection buffer.@refill
876
877@item V
878@cindex @code{fancyref}, LaTeX package
879@cindex @code{\fref}
880@cindex @code{\Fref}
881@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{fancyref}
882Cycle between @code{\ref}, @code{\fref} and @code{\Fref}. The
883@code{\fref} and @code{\Fref} macros are defined in the @code{fancyref}
884LaTeX package. With this key you can force @b{Ref@TeX{}} to insert a
885@code{\fref} or @code{\Fref} macro. The current state of this flag is
886displayed by the @samp{S<>} indicator in the mode line of the
887selection buffer.
888
889@tablesubheading{Exiting}
890
891@item q
892Exit the selection process without inserting any reference into the
893buffer.@refill
894
895@tablesubheading{Controlling what gets displayed}
896@vindex reftex-label-menu-flags
897The defaults for the following flags can be configured with the variable
898@code{reftex-label-menu-flags} (@pxref{Options (Referencing Labels)}).
899
900@item c
901Toggle the display of the one-line label definition context in the
902selection buffer.@refill
903
904@item F
905Toggle the display of the file borders of a multifile document in the
906selection buffer.@refill
907
908@item t
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909Toggle the display of the table of contents in the selection buffer.
910With prefix @var{arg}, change the maximum level of toc entries displayed
911to @var{arg}. Chapters are level 1, section are level 2.@refill
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912
913@item #
914Toggle the display of a label counter in the selection buffer.@refill
915
916@item %
917Toggle the display of labels hidden in comments in the selection
918buffers. Sometimes, you may have commented out parts of your document.
919If these parts contain label definitions, @b{Ref@TeX{}} can still display
920and reference these labels.@refill
921
922@tablesubheading{Updating the buffer}
923@item g
924Update the menu. This will rebuilt the menu from the internal label
925list, but not reparse the document (see @kbd{r}).@refill
926
927@item r
928@vindex reftex-enable-partial-scans
929Reparse the document to update the information on all labels and rebuild
930the menu. If the variable @code{reftex-enable-partial-scans} is
931non-@code{nil} and your document is a multifile document, this will
932reparse only a part of the document (the file in which the label at
933point was defined).@refill
934
935@item C-u r
936Reparse the @emph{entire} document.
937
938@item s
939Switch the label category. After prompting for another label category,
940a menu for that category will be shown.@refill
941
942@item x
943Reference a label from an external document. With the LaTeX package
944@code{xr} it is possible to reference labels defined in another
945document. This key will switch to the label menu of an external
946document and let you select a label from there (@pxref{xr (LaTeX
947package),,xr}).@refill
948
949@end table
950
951@vindex reftex-select-label-map
952In order to define additional commands for the selection process, the
953keymap @code{reftex-select-label-map} may be used.@refill
954
955@node Builtin Label Environments, Defining Label Environments, Referencing Labels, Labels and References
956@section Builtin Label Environments
957@cindex Builtin label environments
958@cindex Label environments, builtin
959@cindex Environments, builtin
960@vindex reftex-label-alist
961@vindex reftex-label-alist-builtin
962
963@b{Ref@TeX{}} needs to be aware of the environments which can be referenced
964with a label (i.e. which carry their own counters). By default, @b{Ref@TeX{}}
965recognizes all labeled environments and macros discussed in @cite{The
966LaTeX Companion by Goossens, Mittelbach & Samarin, Addison-Wesley
9671994.}. These are:@refill
968
969@itemize @minus
970@item
971@cindex @code{figure}, LaTeX environment
972@cindex @code{figure*}, LaTeX environment
973@cindex @code{table}, LaTeX environment
974@cindex @code{table*}, LaTeX environment
975@cindex @code{equation}, LaTeX environment
976@cindex @code{eqnarray}, LaTeX environment
977@cindex @code{enumerate}, LaTeX environment
978@cindex @code{\footnote}, LaTeX macro
979@cindex LaTeX macro @code{footnote}
980@cindex LaTeX core
981@code{figure}, @code{figure*}, @code{table}, @code{table*}, @code{equation},
982@code{eqnarray}, @code{enumerate}, the @code{\footnote} macro (this is
983the LaTeX core stuff)@refill
984@item
985@cindex AMS-LaTeX
986@cindex @code{amsmath}, LaTeX package
987@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{amsmath}
988@cindex @code{align}, AMS-LaTeX environment
989@cindex @code{gather}, AMS-LaTeX environment
990@cindex @code{multline}, AMS-LaTeX environment
991@cindex @code{flalign}, AMS-LaTeX environment
992@cindex @code{alignat}, AMS-LaTeX environment
993@cindex @code{xalignat}, AMS-LaTeX environment
994@cindex @code{xxalignat}, AMS-LaTeX environment
995@cindex @code{subequations}, AMS-LaTeX environment
996@code{align}, @code{gather}, @code{multline}, @code{flalign},
997@code{alignat}, @code{xalignat}, @code{xxalignat}, @code{subequations}
998(from AMS-LaTeX's @file{amsmath.sty} package)@refill
999@item
1000@cindex @code{endnote}, LaTeX package
1001@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{endnote}
1002@cindex @code{\endnote}, LaTeX macro
1003the @code{\endnote} macro (from @file{endnotes.sty})
1004@item
1005@cindex @code{fancybox}, LaTeX package
1006@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{fancybox}
1007@cindex @code{Beqnarray}, LaTeX environment
1008@code{Beqnarray} (@file{fancybox.sty})
1009@item
1010@cindex @code{floatfig}, LaTeX package
1011@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{floatfig}
1012@cindex @code{floatingfig}, LaTeX environment
1013@code{floatingfig} (@file{floatfig.sty})
1014@item
1015@cindex @code{longtable}, LaTeX package
1016@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{longtable}
1017@cindex @code{longtable}, LaTeX environment
1018@code{longtable} (@file{longtable.sty})
1019@item
1020@cindex @code{picinpar}, LaTeX package
1021@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{picinpar}
1022@cindex @code{figwindow}, LaTeX environment
1023@cindex @code{tabwindow}, LaTeX environment
1024@code{figwindow}, @code{tabwindow} (@file{picinpar.sty})
1025@item
1026@cindex @code{sidecap}, LaTeX package
1027@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{sidecap}
1028@cindex @code{SCfigure}, LaTeX environment
1029@cindex @code{SCtable}, LaTeX environment
1030@code{SCfigure}, @code{SCtable} (@file{sidecap.sty})
1031@item
1032@cindex @code{rotating}, LaTeX package
1033@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{rotating}
1034@cindex @code{sidewaysfigure}, LaTeX environment
1035@cindex @code{sidewaystable}, LaTeX environment
1036@code{sidewaysfigure}, @code{sidewaystable} (@file{rotating.sty})
1037@item
1038@cindex @code{subfig}, LaTeX package
1039@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{subfigure}
1040@cindex @code{subfigure}, LaTeX environment
1041@cindex @code{subfigure*}, LaTeX environment
1042@code{subfigure}, @code{subfigure*}, the @code{\subfigure} macro
1043(@file{subfigure.sty})@refill
1044@item
1045@cindex @code{supertab}, LaTeX package
1046@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{supertab}
1047@cindex @code{supertabular}, LaTeX environment
1048@code{supertabular} (@file{supertab.sty})
1049@item
1050@cindex @code{wrapfig}, LaTeX package
1051@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{wrapfig}
1052@cindex @code{wrapfigure}, LaTeX environment
1053@code{wrapfigure} (@file{wrapfig.sty})
1054@end itemize
1055
1056If you want to use other labeled environments, defined with
1057@code{\newtheorem}, @b{Ref@TeX{}} needs to be configured to recognize
1058them (@pxref{Defining Label Environments}).@refill
1059
1060@node Defining Label Environments, Reference Info, Builtin Label Environments, Labels and References
1061@section Defining Label Environments
1062@cindex Label environments, defining
1063
1064@vindex reftex-label-alist
1065@b{Ref@TeX{}} can be configured to recognize additional labeled
1066environments and macros. This is done with the variable
1067@code{reftex-label-alist} (@pxref{Options (Defining Label
1068Environments)}). If you are not familiar with Lisp, you can use the
1069@code{custom} library to configure this rather complex variable. To do
1070this, use
1071
1072@example
1073@kbd{M-x customize-variable @key{RET} reftex-label-alist @key{RET}}
1074@end example
1075
1076@vindex reftex-label-alist-builtin
1077Here we will discuss a few examples, in order to make things clearer.
1078It can also be instructive to look at the constant
1079@code{reftex-label-alist-builtin} which contains the entries for
1080all the builtin environments and macros (@pxref{Builtin Label
1081Environments}).@refill
1082
1083@menu
1084* Theorem and Axiom:: Defined with @code{\newenvironment}.
1085* Quick Equation:: When a macro sets the label type.
1086* Figure Wrapper:: When a macro argument is a label.
1087* Adding Magic Words:: Other words for other languages.
1088* Using \eqref:: How to switch to this AMS-LaTeX macro.
1089* Non-Standard Environments:: Environments without \begin and \end
1090* Putting it Together:: How to combine many entries.
1091@end menu
1092
1093@node Theorem and Axiom, Quick Equation, , Defining Label Environments
1094@subsection Theorem and Axiom Environments
1095@cindex @code{theorem}, newtheorem
1096@cindex @code{axiom}, newtheorem
1097@cindex @code{\newtheorem}
1098
1099Suppose you are using @code{\newtheorem} in LaTeX in order to define two
1100new environments, @code{theorem} and @code{axiom}@refill
1101
1102@example
1103\newtheorem@{axiom@}@{Axiom@}
1104\newtheorem@{theorem@}@{Theorem@}
1105@end example
1106
1107@noindent
1108to be used like this:
1109
1110@example
1111\begin@{axiom@}
1112\label@{ax:first@}
1113 ....
1114\end@{axiom@}
1115@end example
1116
1117So we need to tell @b{Ref@TeX{}} that @code{theorem} and @code{axiom} are new
1118labeled environments which define their own label categories. We can
1119either use Lisp to do this (e.g. in @file{.emacs}) or use the custom
1120library. With Lisp it would look like this
1121
1122@lisp
1123(setq reftex-label-alist
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1124 '(("axiom" ?a "ax:" "~\\ref@{%s@}" nil ("axiom" "ax.") -2)
1125 ("theorem" ?h "thr:" "~\\ref@{%s@}" t ("theorem" "th.") -3)))
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1126@end lisp
1127
1128The type indicator characters @code{?a} and @code{?h} are used for
1129prompts when @b{Ref@TeX{}} queries for a label type. @code{?h}
1130was chosen for @code{theorem} since @code{?t} is already taken by
1131@code{table}. Note that also @code{?s}, @code{?f}, @code{?e},
1132@code{?i}, @code{?n} are already used for standard environments.@refill
1133
1134@noindent
1135The labels for Axioms and Theorems will have the prefixes @samp{ax:} and
1136@samp{thr:}, respectively. @xref{AUCTeX}, for information on how
1137AUCTeX can use @b{Ref@TeX{}} to automatically create labels when a new
1138environment is inserted into a buffer.@refill
1139
1140@noindent
1141The @samp{~\ref@{%s@}} is a format string indicating how to insert
1142references to these labels.@refill
1143
1144@noindent
1145The next item indicates how to grab context of the label definition.@refill
1146@itemize @minus
1147@item
1148@code{t} means to get it from a default location (from the beginning of
1149a @code{\macro} or after the @code{\begin} statement). @code{t} is
1150@emph{not} a good choice for eqnarray and similar environments.@refill
1151@item
1152@code{nil} means to use the text right after the label definition.@refill
1153@item
1154For more complex ways of getting context, see the variable
1155@code{reftex-label-alist} (@ref{Options (Defining Label
1156Environments)}).@refill
1157@end itemize
1158
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1159The following list of strings is used to guess the correct label type
1160from the word before point when creating a reference. E.g. if you
6bf7aab6 1161write: @samp{As we have shown in Theorem} and then press @kbd{C-c )},
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1162@b{Ref@TeX{}} will know that you are looking for a theorem label and
1163restrict the menu to only these labels without even asking.@refill
1164
1165The final item in each entry is the level at which the environment
1166should produce entries in the table of context buffer. If the number is
1167positive, the environment will produce numbered entries (like
1168@code{\section}), if it is negative the entries will be unnumbered (like
1169@code{\section*}). Use this only for environments which structure the
1170document similar to sectioning commands. For everything else, omit the
1171item.@refill
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1172
1173To do the same configuration with @code{customize}, you need to click on
1174the @code{[INS]} button twice to create two templates and fill them in
1175like this:@refill
1176
1177@example
1178Reftex Label Alist: [Hide]
1179[INS] [DEL] Package or Detailed : [Value Menu] Detailed:
1180 Environment or \macro : [Value Menu] String: axiom
1181 Type specification : [Value Menu] Char : a
1182 Label prefix string : [Value Menu] String: ax:
1183 Label reference format: [Value Menu] String: ~\ref@{%s@}
1184 Context method : [Value Menu] After label
1185 Magic words:
1186 [INS] [DEL] String: axiom
1187 [INS] [DEL] String: ax.
1188 [INS]
d4e1eea3 1189 [X] Make TOC entry : [Value Menu] Level: -2
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1190[INS] [DEL] Package or Detailed : [Value Menu] Detailed:
1191 Environment or \macro : [Value Menu] String: theorem
1192 Type specification : [Value Menu] Char : h
1193 Label prefix string : [Value Menu] String: thr:
1194 Label reference format: [Value Menu] String: ~\ref@{%s@}
1195 Context method : [Value Menu] Default position
1196 Magic words:
1197 [INS] [DEL] String: theorem
1198 [INS] [DEL] String: theor.
1199 [INS] [DEL] String: th.
1200 [INS]
d4e1eea3 1201 [X] Make TOC entry : [Value Menu] Level: -3
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1202@end example
1203
1204@vindex reftex-insert-label-flags
1205@vindex reftex-label-menu-flags
1206Depending on how you would like the label insertion and selection for
1207the new environments to work, you might want to add the letters @samp{a}
1208and @samp{h} to some of the flags in the variables
1209@code{reftex-insert-label-flags} (@pxref{Options (Creating Labels)})
1210and @code{reftex-label-menu-flags} (@pxref{Options (Referencing
1211Labels)}).@refill
1212
1213
1214@node Quick Equation, Figure Wrapper, Theorem and Axiom , Defining Label Environments
1215@subsection Quick Equation Macro
1216@cindex Quick equation macro
1217@cindex Macros as environment wrappers
1218
1219Suppose you would like to have a macro for quick equations. It
1220could be defined like this:
1221
1222@example
1223\newcommand@{\quickeq@}[1]@{\begin@{equation@} #1 \end@{equation@}@}
1224@end example
1225
1226@noindent
1227and used like this:
1228
1229@example
1230Einstein's equation is \quickeq@{E=mc^2 \label@{eq:einstein@}@}.
1231@end example
1232
1233We need to tell @b{Ref@TeX{}} that any label defined in the argument of the
1234@code{\quickeq} is an equation label. Here is how to do this with lisp:
1235
1236@lisp
1237(setq reftex-label-alist '(("\\quickeq@{@}" ?e nil nil 1 nil)))
1238@end lisp
1239
1240The first element in this list is now the macro with empty braces as an
1241@emph{image} of the macro arguments. @code{?e} indicates that this is
1242an equation label, the different @code{nil} elements indicate to use the
1243default values for equations. The @samp{1} as the fifth element
1244indicates that the context of the label definition should be the 1st
1245argument of the macro.@refill
1246
1247Here is again how this would look in the customization buffer:
1248
1249@example
1250Reftex Label Alist: [Hide]
1251[INS] [DEL] Package or Detailed : [Value Menu] Detailed:
1252 Environment or \macro : [Value Menu] String: \quickeq@{@}
1253 Type specification : [Value Menu] Char : e
1254 Label prefix string : [Value Menu] Default
1255 Label reference format: [Value Menu] Default
1256 Context method : [Value Menu] Macro arg nr: 1
1257 Magic words:
1258 [INS]
d4e1eea3 1259 [ ] Make TOC entry : [Value Menu] No entry
6bf7aab6
DL
1260@end example
1261
1262@node Figure Wrapper, Adding Magic Words, Quick Equation, Defining Label Environments
1263@subsection Figure Wrapping Macro
1264@cindex Macros as environment wrappers
1265@cindex Figure wrapping macro
1266
1267Suppose you want to make figures not directly with the figure
1268environment, but with a macro like
1269
1270@example
1271\newcommand@{\myfig@}[5][tbp]@{%
1272 \begin@{figure@}[#1]
1273 \epsimp[#5]@{#2@}
1274 \caption@{#3@}
1275 \label@{#4@}
1276 \end@{figure@}@}
1277@end example
1278
1279@noindent
1280which would be called like
1281
1282@example
1283\myfig[htp]@{filename@}@{caption text@}@{label@}@{1@}
1284@end example
1285
1286Now we need to tell @b{Ref@TeX{}} that the 4th argument of the
1287@code{\myfig} macro @emph{is itself} a figure label, and where to find
1288the context.@refill
1289
1290@lisp
1291(setq reftex-label-alist
1292 '(("\\myfig[]@{@}@{@}@{*@}@{@}" ?f nil nil 3)))
1293@end lisp
1294
1295The empty pairs of brackets indicate the different arguments of the
1296@code{\myfig} macro. The @samp{*} marks the label argument. @code{?f}
1297indicates that this is a figure label which will be listed together with
1298labels from normal figure environments. The @code{nil} entries for
1299prefix and reference format mean to use the defaults for figure labels.
1300The @samp{3} for the context method means to grab the 3rd macro argument
1301- the caption.@refill
1302
1303As a side effect of this configuration, @code{reftex-label} will now
1304insert the required naked label (without the @code{\label} macro) when
1305point is directly after the opening parenthesis of a @code{\myfig} macro
1306argument.@refill
1307
1308Again, here the configuration in the customization buffer:
1309
1310@example
1311[INS] [DEL] Package or Detailed : [Value Menu] Detailed:
1312 Environment or \macro : [Value Menu] String: \myfig[]@{@}@{@}@{*@}@{@}
1313 Type specification : [Value Menu] Char : f
1314 Label prefix string : [Value Menu] Default
1315 Label reference format: [Value Menu] Default
1316 Context method : [Value Menu] Macro arg nr: 3
1317 Magic words:
1318 [INS]
d4e1eea3 1319 [ ] Make TOC entry : [Value Menu] No entry
6bf7aab6
DL
1320@end example
1321
1322@node Adding Magic Words, Using \eqref, Figure Wrapper, Defining Label Environments
1323@subsection Adding Magic Words
1324@cindex Magic words
1325@cindex German magic words
1326@cindex Label category
1327
1328Sometimes you don't want to define a new label environment or macro, but
1329just change the information associated with a label category. Maybe you
1330want to add some magic words, for another language. Changing only the
1331information associated with a label category is done by giving
1332@code{nil} for the environment name and then specify the items you want
1333to define. Here is an example which adds German magic words to all
1334predefined label categories.@refill
1335
1336@lisp
1337(setq reftex-label-alist
1338 '((nil ?s nil nil nil ("Kapitel" "Kap." "Abschnitt" "Teil"))
1339 (nil ?e nil nil nil ("Gleichung" "Gl."))
1340 (nil ?t nil nil nil ("Tabelle"))
1341 (nil ?f nil nil nil ("Figur" "Abbildung" "Abb."))
1342 (nil ?n nil nil nil ("Anmerkung" "Anm."))
1343 (nil ?i nil nil nil ("Punkt"))))
1344@end lisp
1345
1346@node Using \eqref, Non-Standard Environments, Adding Magic Words, Defining Label Environments
1347@subsection Using @code{\eqref}
1348@cindex @code{\eqref}, AMS-LaTeX macro
1349@cindex AMS-LaTeX
1350@cindex Label category
1351
1352Another case where one only wants to change the information associated
1353with the label category is to change the macro which is used for
1354referencing the label. When working with the AMS-LaTeX stuff, you might
1355prefer @code{\eqref} for doing equation references. Here is how to
1356do this:
1357
1358@lisp
1359(setq reftex-label-alist '((nil ?e nil "~\\eqref@{%s@}" nil nil)))
1360@end lisp
1361
1362@b{Ref@TeX{}} has also a predefined symbol for this special purpose. The
1363following is equivalent to the line above.@refill
1364
1365@lisp
1366(setq reftex-label-alist '(AMSTeX))
1367@end lisp
1368
1369Note that this is automatically done by the @file{amsmath.el} style file
1370of AUCTeX (@pxref{Style Files}) - so if you use AUCTeX,
1371this configuration will not be necessary.@refill
1372
1373@node Non-Standard Environments, Putting it Together, Using \eqref, Defining Label Environments
1374@subsection Non-standard Environments
1375@cindex Non-standard environments
1376@cindex Environments without @code{\begin}
1377@cindex Special parser functions
1378@cindex Parser functions, for special environments
1379
1380Some LaTeX packages define environment-like structures without using the
1381standard @samp{\begin..\end} structure. @b{Ref@TeX{}} cannot parse
1382these directly, but you can write your own special-purpose parser and
1383use it instead of the name of an environment in an entry for
1384@code{reftex-label-alist}. The function should check if point is
1385currently in the special environment it was written to detect. If so,
1386it must return a buffer position indicating the start of this
1387environment. The return value must be @code{nil} on failure to detect
1388the environment. The function is called with one argument @var{bound}.
1389If non-@code{nil}, @var{bound} is a boundary for backwards searches
1390which should be observed. We will discuss two examples.@refill
1391
1392@cindex LaTeX commands, abbreviated
1393
1394Some people define abbreviations for
1395environments, like @code{\be} for @code{\begin@{equation@}}, and
1396@code{\ee} for @code{\end@{equation@}}. The parser function would have
1397to search backward for these macros. When the first match is
1398@code{\ee}, point is not in this environment. When the first match is
1399@code{\be}, point is in this environment and the function must return
1400the beginning of the match. To avoid scanning too far, we can also look
1401for empty lines which cannot occure inside an equation environment.
1402Here is the setup:@refill
1403
1404@lisp
1405;; Setup entry in reftex-label-alist, using all defaults for equations
1406(setq reftex-label-alist '((detect-be-ee ?e nil nil nil nil)))
1407
1408(defun detect-be-ee (bound)
1409 ;; Search backward for the macros or an empty line
1410 (if (re-search-backward
1411 "\\(^[ \t]*\n\\|\\\\ee\\>\\)\\|\\(\\\\be\\>\\)" bound t)
1412 (if (match-beginning 2)
1413 (match-beginning 2) ; Return start of environment
1414 nil) ; Return nil because env is closed
1415 nil)) ; Return nil for not found
1416@end lisp
1417
1418@cindex @code{linguex}, LaTeX package
1419@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{linguex}
1420A more complex example is the @file{linguex.sty} package which defines
1421list macros @samp{\ex.}, @samp{\a.}, @samp{\b.} etc. for lists which are
1422terminated by @samp{\z.} or by an empty line.@refill
1423
1424@example
1425\ex. \label@{ex:12@} Some text in an exotic language ...
1426 \a. \label@{ex:13@} more stuff
1427 \b. \label@{ex:14@} still more stuff
1428 \a. List on a deeper level
1429 \b. Another item
1430 \b. and the third one
1431 \z.
1432 \b. Third item on this level.
1433
1434... text after the empty line terminating all lists
1435@end example
1436
1437The difficulty is that the @samp{\a.} lists can nest and that an empty
1438line terminates all list levels in one go. So we have to count nesting
1439levels between @samp{\a.} and @samp{\z.}. Here is the implementation
1440for @b{Ref@TeX{}}.
1441
1442@lisp
1443(setq reftex-label-alist
1444 '((detect-linguex ?x "ex:" "~\\ref@{%s@}" nil ("Example" "Ex."))))
1445
1446(defun detect-linguex (bound)
1447 (let ((cnt 0))
1448 (catch 'exit
1449 (while
1450 ;; Search backward for all possible delimiters
1451 (re-search-backward
1452 (concat "\\(^[ \t]*\n\\)\\|\\(\\\\z\\.\\)\\|"
1453 "\\(\\ex[ig]?\\.\\)\\|\\(\\\\a\\.\\)")
1454 nil t)
1455 ;; Check which delimiter was matched.
1456 (cond
1457 ((match-beginning 1)
1458 ;; empty line terminates all - return nil
1459 (throw 'exit nil))
1460 ((match-beginning 2)
1461 ;; \z. terminates one list level - decrease nesting count
1462 (decf cnt))
1463 ((match-beginning 3)
1464 ;; \ex. : return match unless there was a \z. on this level
1465 (throw 'exit (if (>= cnt 0) (match-beginning 3) nil)))
1466 ((match-beginning 4)
1467 ;; \a. : return match when on level 0, otherwise
1468 ;; increment nesting count
1469 (if (>= cnt 0)
1470 (throw 'exit (match-beginning 4))
1471 (incf cnt))))))))
1472@end lisp
1473
1474@node Putting it Together, , Non-Standard Environments, Defining Label Environments
1475@subsection Putting it all together
1476
1477When you have to put several entries into @code{reftex-label-alist}, just
1478put them after each other in a list, or create that many templates in
1479the customization buffer. Here is a lisp example which uses several of
1480the entries described above:
1481
1482@lisp
1483(setq reftex-label-alist
d4e1eea3
CD
1484 '(("axiom" ?a "ax:" "~\\ref@{%s@}" nil ("axiom" "ax.") -2)
1485 ("theorem" ?h "thr:" "~\\ref@{%s@}" t ("theorem" "theor." "th.") -3)
6bf7aab6
DL
1486 ("\\quickeq@{@}" ?e nil nil 1 nil)
1487 AMSTeX
1488 ("\\myfig[]@{@}@{@}@{*@}@{@}" ?f nil nil 3)
1489 (detect-linguex ?x "ex:" "~\\ref@{%s@}" nil ("Example" "Ex."))))
1490@end lisp
1491
1492@node Reference Info, xr (LaTeX package), Defining Label Environments, Labels and References
1493@section Reference Info
1494@findex reftex-view-crossref
1495@findex reftex-mouse-view-crossref
1496@cindex Cross-references, displaying
1497@cindex Reference info
1498@cindex Displaying cross-references
1499@cindex Viewing cross-references
1500@kindex C-c &
1501@kindex S-mouse-2
1502
1503When point is idle on the argument of a @code{\ref} macro, the echo area
1504will display some information about the label referenced there. Note
1505that the information is only displayed if the echo area is not occupied
1506by a different message.
1507
1508@b{Ref@TeX{}} can also display the label definition corresponding to a
1509@code{\ref} macro, or all reference locations corresponding to a
1510@code{\label} macro. @xref{Viewing Cross-References}, for more
1511information.@refill
1512
1513@node xr (LaTeX package), varioref (LaTeX package), Reference Info, Labels and References
1514@section @code{xr}: Cross-Document References
1515@cindex @code{xr}, LaTeX package
1516@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{xr}
1517@cindex @code{\externaldocument}
1518@cindex External documents
1519@cindex References to external documents
1520@cindex Cross-document references
1521
1522The LaTeX package @code{xr} makes it possible to create references to
1523labels defined in external documents. The preamble of a document using
1524@code{xr} will contain something like this:@refill
1525
1526@example
1527\usepackage@{xr@}
1528\externaldocument[V1-]@{volume1@}
1529\externaldocument[V3-]@{volume3@}
1530@end example
1531
1532@noindent
1533and we can make references to any labels defined in these
1534external documents by using the prefixes @samp{V1-} and @samp{V3-},
1535respectively.@refill
1536
1537@b{Ref@TeX{}} can be used to create such references as well. Start the
1538referencing process normally, by pressing @kbd{C-c )}. Select a label
1539type if necessary. When you see the label selection buffer, pressing
1540@kbd{x} will switch to the label selection buffer of one of the external
1541documents. You may then select a label as before and @b{Ref@TeX{}} will
1542insert it along with the required prefix.@refill
1543
1544For this kind of inter-document cross-references, saving of parsing
1545information and the use of multiple selection buffers can mean a large
1546speed-up (@pxref{Optimizations}).@refill
1547
1548@node varioref (LaTeX package), fancyref (LaTeX package), xr (LaTeX package), Labels and References
1549@section @code{varioref}: Variable Page References
1550@cindex @code{varioref}, LaTeX package
1551@cindex @code{\vref}
1552@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{varioref}
1553@vindex reftex-vref-is-default
1554@code{varioref} is a frequently used LaTeX package to create
1555cross--references with page information. When you want to make a
1556reference with the @code{\vref} macro, just press the @kbd{v} key in the
1557selection buffer to toggle between @code{\ref} and @code{\vref}
1558(@pxref{Referencing Labels}). The mode line of the selection buffer
1559shows the current status of this switch. If you find that you almost
1560always use @code{\vref}, you may want to make it the default by
1561customizing the variable @code{reftex-vref-is-default}. If this
1562toggling seems too inconvenient, you can also use the command
1563@code{reftex-varioref-vref}@footnote{bind it to @kbd{C-c v}.}.
1564Or use AUCTeX to create your macros (@pxref{AUCTeX}).@refill
1565
1566@node fancyref (LaTeX package), , varioref (LaTeX package), Labels and References
1567@section @code{fancyref}: Fancy Cross References
1568@cindex @code{fancyref}, LaTeX package
1569@cindex @code{\fref}
1570@cindex @code{\Fref}
1571@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{fancyref}
1572@vindex reftex-fref-is-default
1573@code{fancyref} is a LaTeX package where a macro call like
1574@code{\fref@{@var{fig:map-of-germany}@}} creates not only the number of
1575the referenced counter but also the complete text around it, like
1576@samp{Figure 3 on the preceding page}. In order to make it work you
1577need to use label prefixes like @samp{fig:} consistently - something
1578@b{Ref@TeX{}} does automatically. When you want to make a reference
1579with the @code{\fref} macro, just press the @kbd{V} key in the selection
1580buffer to cycle between @code{\ref}, @code{\fref} and @code{\Fref}
1581(@pxref{Referencing Labels}). The mode line of the selection buffer
1582shows the current status of this switch. If this cycling seems
1583inconvenient, you can also use the commands @code{reftex-fancyref-fref}
1584and @code{reftex-fancyref-Fref}@footnote{bind them to @kbd{C-c
1585f} and @kbd{C-c F}.}. Or use AUCTeX to create your macros
1586(@pxref{AUCTeX}).@refill
1587
1588@node Citations, Index Support, Labels and References, Top
1589@chapter Citations
1590@cindex Citations
1591@cindex @code{\cite}
1592
1593Citations in LaTeX are done with the @code{\cite} macro or variations of
1594it. The argument of the macro is a citation key which identifies an
1595article or book in either a BibTeX database file or in an explicit
1596@code{thebibliography} environment in the document. @b{Ref@TeX{}}'s
1597support for citations helps to select the correct key quickly.@refill
1598
1599@menu
1600* Creating Citations:: How to create them.
1601* Citation Styles:: Natbib, Harvard, Chicago and Co.
1602* Citation Info:: View the corresponding database entry.
1603* Chapterbib and Bibunits:: Multiple bibliographies in a Document.
1604* Citations Outside LaTeX:: How to make citations in Emails etc.
1605@end menu
1606
1607@node Creating Citations, Citation Styles, , Citations
1608@section Creating Citations
1609@cindex Creating citations
1610@cindex Citations, creating
1611@findex reftex-citation
1612@kindex C-c [
1613@cindex Selection buffer, citations
1614@cindex Selection process
1615
1616In order to create a citation, press @kbd{C-c [}. @b{Ref@TeX{}} then
1617prompts for a regular expression which will be used to search through
1618the database and present the list of matches to choose from in a
1619selection process similar to that for selecting labels
1620(@pxref{Referencing Labels}).@refill
1621
1622The regular expression uses an extended syntax: @samp{&&} defines a
1623logic @code{and} for regular expressions. For example
1624@samp{Einstein&&Bose} will match all articles which mention
1625Bose-Einstein condensation, or which are co-authored by Bose and
1626Einstein. When entering the regular expression, you can complete on
1627known citation keys.@refill
1628
1629@cindex @code{\bibliography}
1630@cindex @code{thebibliography}, LaTeX environment
1631@cindex @code{BIBINPUTS}, environment variable
1632@cindex @code{TEXBIB}, environment variable
1633@b{Ref@TeX{}} prefers to use BibTeX database files specified with a
1634@code{\bibliography} macro to collect its information. Just like
1635BibTeX, it will search for the specified files in the current directory
1636and along the path given in the environment variable @code{BIBINPUTS}.
1637If you do not use BibTeX, but the document contains an explicit
1638@code{thebibliography} environment, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will collect its
1639information from there. Note that in this case the information
1640presented in the selection buffer will just be a copy of relevant
1641@code{\bibitem} entries, not the structured listing available with
1642BibTeX database files.@refill
1643
1644@kindex ?
1645In the selection buffer, the following keys provide special commands. A
1646summary of this information is always available from the selection
1647process by pressing @kbd{?}.@refill
1648
1649@table @kbd
1650@tablesubheading{General}
1651@item ?
1652Show a summary of available commands.
1653
1654@item 0-9,-
1655Prefix argument.
1656
1657@tablesubheading{Moving around}
1658@item n
1659Go to next article.
1660
1661@item p
1662Go to previous article.
1663
1664@tablesubheading{Access to full database entries}
1665@item @key{SPC}
1666Show the database entry corresponding to the article at point, in
1667another window. See also the @kbd{f} key.@refill
1668
1669@item f
1670Toggle follow mode. When follow mode is active, the other window will
1671always display the full database entry of the current article. This is
1672equivalent to pressing @key{SPC} after each cursor motion. With BibTeX
1673entries, follow mode can be rather slow.@refill
1674
1675@tablesubheading{Selecting entries and creating the citation}
1676@item @key{RET}
1677Insert a citation referencing the article at point into the buffer from
1678which the selection process was started.@refill
1679
1680@item mouse-2
1681@vindex reftex-highlight-selection
1682Clicking with mouse button 2 on a citation will accept it like @key{RET}
1683would. See also variable @code{reftex-highlight-selection}, @ref{Options
1684(Misc)}.@refill
1685
1686@item m
1687Mark the current entry. When one or several entries are marked,
1688pressing @kbd{a} or @kbd{A} accepts all marked entries. Also,
1689@key{RET} behaves like the @kbd{a} key.
1690
1691@item u
1692Unmark a marked entry.
1693
1694@item a
1695Accept all (marked) entries in the selection buffer and create a single
1696@code{\cite} macro referring to them.@refill
1697
1698@item A
1699Accept all (marked) entries in the selection buffer and create a
1700separate @code{\cite} macro for each of it.@refill
1701
1702@item @key{TAB}
1703Enter a citation key with completion. This may also be a key which does
1704not yet exist.
1705
1706@item .
1707Show insertion point in another window. This is the point from where you
1708called @code{reftex-citation}.@refill
1709
1710@tablesubheading{Exiting}
1711@item q
1712Exit the selection process without inserting a citation into the
1713buffer.@refill
1714
1715@tablesubheading{Updating the buffer}
1716
1717@item g
1718Start over with a new regular expression. The full database will be
1719rescanned with the new expression (see also @kbd{r}).@refill
1720
1721@c FIXME: Should we use something else here? r is usually rescan!
1722@item r
1723Refine the current selection with another regular expression. This will
1724@emph{not} rescan the entire database, but just the already selected
1725entries.@refill
1726
1727@end table
1728
1729@vindex reftex-select-bib-map
1730In order to define additional commands for this selection process, the
1731keymap @code{reftex-select-bib-map} may be used.@refill
1732
1733@node Citation Styles, Citation Info, Creating Citations, Citations
1734@section Citation Styles
1735@cindex Citation styles
1736@cindex Citation styles, @code{natbib}
1737@cindex Citation styles, @code{harvard}
1738@cindex Citation styles, @code{chicago}
1739@cindex @code{natbib}, citation style
1740@cindex @code{harvard}, citation style
1741@cindex @code{chicago}, citation style
1742
1743@vindex reftex-cite-format
1744The standard LaTeX macro @code{\cite} works well with numeric or simple
1745key citations. To deal with the more complex task of author-year
1746citations as used in many natural sciences, a variety of packages has
1747been developed which define derived forms of the @code{\cite} macro.
1748@b{Ref@TeX{}} can be configured to produce these citation macros as well by
1749setting the variable @code{reftex-cite-format}. For the most commonly
1750used packages (@code{natbib}, @code{harvard}, @code{chicago}) this may
1751be done from the menu, under @code{Ref->Citation Styles}. Since there
1752are usually several macros to create the citations, executing
1753@code{reftex-citation} (@kbd{C-c [}) starts by prompting for the correct
1754macro. For the Natbib style, this looks like this:
1755
1756@example
1757SELECT A CITATION FORMAT
1758
1759[^M] \cite@{%l@}
1760[t] \citet@{%l@}
1761[T] \citet*@{%l@}
1762[p] \citep@{%l@}
1763[P] \citep*@{%l@}
1764[e] \citep[e.g.][]@{%l@}
1765[s] \citep[see][]@{%l@}
1766[a] \citeauthor@{%l@}
1767[A] \citeauthor*@{%l@}
1768[y] \citeyear@{%l@}
1769@end example
1770
1771Following the most generic of these packages, @code{natbib}, the builtin
1772citation packages always accept the @kbd{t} key for a @emph{textual}
1773citation (like: @code{Jones et al. (1997) have shown...}) as well as
1774the @kbd{p} key for a parenthetical citation (like: @code{As shown
1775earlier (Jones et al, 1997)}).@refill
1776
1777To make one of these styles the default, customize the variable
1778@code{reftex-cite-format} or put into @file{.emacs}:
1779
1780@lisp
1781(setq reftex-cite-format 'natbib)
1782@end lisp
1783
1784You can also use AUCTeX style files to automatically set the
1785citation style based on the @code{usepackage} commands in a given
1786document. @xref{Style Files}, for information on how to set up the style
1787files correctly.@refill
1788
1789@node Citation Info, Chapterbib and Bibunits, Citation Styles, Citations, Top
1790@section Citation Info
1791@cindex Displaying citations
1792@cindex Citations, displaying
1793@cindex Citation info
1794@cindex Viewing citations
1795@kindex C-c &
1796@kindex S-mouse-2
1797@findex reftex-view-crossref
1798@findex reftex-mouse-view-crossref
1799
1800When point is idle on the argument of a @code{\cite} macro, the echo area
1801will display some information about the article cited there. Note
1802that the information is only displayed if the echo area is not occupied
1803by a different message.
1804
1805@b{Ref@TeX{}} can also display the @code{\bibitem} or BibTeX database
1806entry corresponding to a @code{\cite} macro, or all citation locations
1807corresponding to a @code{\bibitem} or BibTeX database entry.
1808@xref{Viewing Cross-References}.@refill
1809
1810@node Chapterbib and Bibunits, Citations Outside LaTeX, Citation Info, Citations
1811@section Chapterbib and Bibunits
1812@cindex @code{chapterbib}, LaTeX package
1813@cindex @code{bibunits}, LaTeX package
1814@cindex Bibliographies, multiple
1815
1816@code{chapterbib} and @code{bibunits} are two LaTeX packages which
1817produce multiple bibliographies in a document. This is no problem for
1818@b{Ref@TeX{}} as long as all bibliographies use the same BibTeX database
1819files. If they do not, it is best to have each document part in a
1820separate file (as it is required for @code{chapterbib} anyway). Then
1821@b{Ref@TeX{}} will still scan the locally relevant databases correctly. If
1822you have multiple bibliographies within a @emph{single file}, this may
1823or may not be the case.
1824
1825@node Citations Outside LaTeX, , Chapterbib and Bibunits, Citations
1826@section Citations outside LaTeX
1827@cindex Citations outside LaTeX
1828@vindex reftex-default-bibliography
1829
1830The command @code{reftex-citation} can also be executed outside a LaTeX
1831buffer. This can be useful to reference articles in the mail buffer and
1832other documents. You should @emph{not} enter @code{reftex-mode} for
1833this, just execute the command. The list of BibTeX files will in this
1834case be taken from the variable @code{reftex-default-bibliography}.
1835Setting the variable @code{reftex-cite-format} to the symbol
1836@code{locally} does a decent job of putting all relevant information
1837about a citation directly into the buffer. Here is the lisp code to add
1838the @kbd{C-c [} binding to the mail buffer. It also provides a local
1839binding for @code{reftex-cite-format}.@refill
1840
1841@lisp
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1842(add-hook 'mail-setup-hook
1843 (lambda () (define-key mail-mode-map "\C-c["
1844 (lambda () (interactive)
1845 (require 'reftex)
1846 (let ((reftex-cite-format 'locally))
1847 (reftex-citation))))))
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1848@end lisp
1849
1850@node Index Support, Viewing Cross-References, Citations, Top
1851@chapter Index Support
1852@cindex Index Support
1853@cindex @code{\index}
1854
1855LaTeX has builtin support for creating an Index. The LaTeX core
1856supports two different indices, the standard index and a glossary. With
1857the help of special LaTeX packages (@file{multind.sty} or
1858@file{index.sty}), any number of indices can be supported.
1859
1860Index entries are created with the @code{\index@{@var{entry}@}} macro.
1861All entries defined in a document are written out to the @file{.aux}
1862file. A separate tool must be used to convert this information into a
1863nicely formatted index. Tools used with LaTeX include @code{MakeIndex}
1864and @code{xindy}.@refill
1865
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1866Indexing is a very difficult task. It must follow strict conventions to
1867make the index consistent and complete. There are basically two
1868approaches one can follow, and both have their merits.
1869
1870@enumerate
1871@item
1872Part of the indexing should already be done with the markup. The
1873document structure should be reflected in the index, so when starting
1874new sections, the basic topics of the section should be indexed. If the
1875document contains definitions, theorems or the like, these should all
1876correspond to appropriate index entries. This part of the index can
1877very well be developed along with the document. Often it is worthwhile
1878to define special purpose macros which define an item and at the same
1879time make an index entry, possibly with special formatting to make the
1880reference page in the index bold or underlined. To make @b{Ref@TeX{}}
1881support for indexing possible, these special macros must be added to
1882@b{Ref@TeX{}}'s configuration (@pxref{Defining Index Macros}).@refill
1883
1884@item
1885The rest of the index is often just a collection of where in the
1886document certain words or phrases are being used. This part is
1887difficult to develop along with the document, because consistent entries
1888for each occurrence are needed and are best selected when the document
1889is ready. @b{Ref@TeX{}} supports this with an @emph{index phrases file}
1890which collects phrases and helps indexing the phrases globally.@refill
1891@end enumerate
1892
1893Before you start, you need to make sure that @b{Ref@TeX{}} knows about
1894the index style being used in the current document. @b{Ref@TeX{}} has
1895builtin support for the default @code{\index} and @code{\glossary}
1896macros. Other LaTeX packages, like the @file{multind} or @file{index}
1897package, redefine the @code{\index} macro to have an additional
1898argument, and @b{Ref@TeX{}} needs to be configured for those. A
1899sufficiently new version of AUCTeX (9.10c or later) will do this
1900automatically. If you really don't use AUCTeX (you should!), this
1901configuration needs to be done by hand with the menu (@code{Ref->Index
1902Style}), or globally for all your documents with@refill
1903
1904@lisp
1905(setq reftex-index-macros '(multind)) @r{or}
1906(setq reftex-index-macros '(index))
1907@end lisp
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1908
1909@menu
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1910* Creating Index Entries:: Macros and completion of entries.
1911* The Index Phrases File:: A special file for global indexing.
1912* Displaying and Editing the Index:: The index editor.
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1913* Builtin Index Macros:: The index macros RefTeX knows about.
1914* Defining Index Macros:: ... and macros it doesn't.
1915@end menu
1916
d4e1eea3 1917@node Creating Index Entries, The Index Phrases File, , Index Support
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1918@section Creating Index Entries
1919@cindex Creating index entries
1920@cindex Index entries, creating
1921@kindex C-c <
1922@findex reftex-index
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1923@kindex C-c /
1924@findex reftex-index-selection-or-word
1925
1926In order to index the current selection or the word at the cursor press
1927@kbd{C-c /} (@code{reftex-index-selection-or-word}). This causes the
1928selection or word @samp{@var{word}} to be replaced with
1929@samp{\index@{@var{word}@}@var{word}}. The macro which is used
1930(@code{\index} by default) can be configured with the variable
1931@code{reftex-index-default-macro}. When the command is called with a
1932prefix argument (@kbd{C-u C-c /}), you get a chance to edit the
1933generated index entry. Use this to change the case of the word or to
1934make the entry a subentry, for example by entering
1935@samp{main!sub!@var{word}}. When called with two raw @kbd{C-u} prefixes
1936(@kbd{C-u C-u C-c /}), you will be asked for the index macro as well.
1937When there is nothing selected and no word at point, this command will
1938just call @code{reftex-index}, described below.
1939
1940In order to create a general index entry, press @kbd{C-c <}
1941(@code{reftex-index}). @b{Ref@TeX{}} will prompt for one of the
1942available index macros and for its arguments. Completion will be
1943available for the index entry and, if applicable, the index tag. The
1944index tag is a string identifying one of multiple indices. With the
1945@file{multind} and @file{index} packages, this tag is the first argument
1946to the redefined @code{\index} macro.@refill
1947
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1948@node The Index Phrases File, Displaying and Editing the Index, Creating Index Entries, Index Support
1949@section The Index Phrases File
1950@cindex Index phrase file
1951@cindex Phrase file
1952@kindex C-c |
1953@findex reftex-index-visit-phrases-buffer
1954@cindex Macro definition lines, in phrase buffer
1955
1956@b{Ref@TeX{}} maintains a file in which phrases can be collected for
1957later indexing. The file is located in the same directory as the master
1958file of the document and has the extension @file{.rip} (@b{R}eftex
1959@b{I}ndex @b{P}hrases). You can create or visit the file with @kbd{C-c
1960|} (@code{reftex-index-visit-phrases-buffer}). If the file is empty it
1961is initialized by inserting a file header which contains the definition
1962of the available index macros. This list is initialized from
1963@code{reftex-index-macros} (@pxref{Defining Index Macros}). You can
1964edit the header as needed, but if you define new LaTeX indexing macros,
1965don't forget to add them to @code{reftex-index-macros} as well. Here is
1966a phrase file header example:@refill
1967
1968@example
1969% -*- mode: reftex-index-phrases -*-
1970% Key Macro Format Repeat
1971%----------------------------------------------------------
1972>>>INDEX_MACRO_DEFINITION: i \index@{%s@} t
1973>>>INDEX_MACRO_DEFINITION: I \index*@{%s@} nil
1974>>>INDEX_MACRO_DEFINITION: g \glossary@{%s@} t
1975>>>INDEX_MACRO_DEFINITION: n \index*[name]@{%s@} nil
1976%----------------------------------------------------------
1977@end example
1978
1979The macro definition lines consist of a unique letter identifying a
1980macro, a format string and the @var{repeat} flag, all separated by
1981@key{TAB}. The format string shows how the macro is to be applied, the
1982@samp{%s} will be replaced with the index entry. The repeat flag
1983indicates if @var{word} is indexed by the macro as
1984@samp{\index@{@var{word}@}} (@var{repeat} = @code{nil}) or as
1985@samp{\index@{@var{word}@}@var{word}} (@var{repeat} = @code{t}). In the
1986above example it is assumed that the macro @code{\index*@{@var{word}@}}
1987already typesets its argument in the text, so that it is unnecessary to
1988repeat @var{word} outside the macro.@refill
1989
1990@menu
1991* Collecting Phrases:: Collecting from document or external.
1992* Consistency Checks:: Check for duplicates etc.
1993* Global Indexing:: The interactive indexing process.
1994@end menu
1995
1996@node Collecting Phrases, Consistency Checks, , The Index Phrases File
1997@subsection Collecting Phrases
1998@cindex Collecting index phrases
1999@cindex Index phrases, collection
2000@cindex Phrases, collecting
2001
2002Phrases for indexing can be collected while writing the document. The
2003command @kbd{C-c \} (@code{reftex-index-phrase-selection-or-word})
2004copies the current selection (if active) or the word near point into the
2005phrases buffer. It then selects this buffer, so that the phrase line
2006can be edited. To return to the LaTeX document, press @kbd{C-c C-c}
2007(@code{reftex-index-phrases-save-and-return}).
2008
2009You can also prepare the list of index phrases in a different way and
2010copy it into the phrases file. For example you might want to start from
2011a word list of the document and remove all words which should not be
2012indexed.
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2014The phrase lines in the phrase buffer must have a specific format.
2015@b{Ref@TeX{}} will use font-lock to indicate if a line has the proper
2016format. A phrase line looks like this:
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2018@example
2019[@var{key}] <TABs> @var{phrase} [<TABs> @var{arg}[&&@var{arg}]... [ || @var{arg}]...]
2020@end example
2021
2022@code{<TABs>} stands for white space containing at least one @key{TAB}.
2023@var{key} must be at the start of the line and is the character
2024identifying one of the macros defined in the file header. It is
2025optional - when omitted, the first macro definition line in the file
2026will be used for this phrase. The @var{phrase} is the phrase to be
2027searched for when indexing. It may contain several words separated by
2028spaces. By default the search phrase is also the text entered as
2029argument of the index macro. If you want the index entry to be
2030different from the search phrase, enter another @key{TAB} and the index
2031argument @var{arg}. If you want to have each match produce several
2032index entries, separate the different index arguments with @samp{ &&
2033}@footnote{@samp{&&} with optional spaces, see
2034@code{reftex-index-phrases-logical-and-regexp}.}. If you want to be
2035able to choose at each match between several different index arguments,
2036separate them with @samp{ || }@footnote{@samp{||} with optional spaces,
2037see @code{reftex-index-phrases-logical-or-regexp}.}. Here is an
2038example:@refill
2039
2040@example
2041%--------------------------------------------------------------------
2042I Sun
2043i Planet Planets
2044i Vega Stars!Vega
2045 Jupiter Planets!Jupiter
2046i Mars Planets!Mars || Gods!Mars || Chocolate Bars!Mars
2047i Pluto Planets!Pluto && Kuiper Belt Objects!Pluto
2048@end example
2049
2050
2051So @samp{Sun} will be indexed directly as @samp{\index*@{Sun@}}, while
2052@samp{Planet} will be indexed as @samp{\index@{Planets@}Planet}.
2053@samp{Vega} will be indexed as a subitem of @samp{Stars}. The
2054@samp{Jupiter} line will also use the @samp{i} macro as it was the first
2055macro definition in the file header (see above example). At each
2056occurrence of @samp{Mars} you will be able choose between indexing it as
2057a subitem of @samp{Planets}, @samp{Gods} or @samp{Chocolate Bars}.
2058Finally, every occurrence of @samp{Pluto} will be indexed as
2059@samp{\index@{Planets!Pluto@}\index@{Kuiper Belt Objects!Pluto@}Pluto}
2060and will therefore create two different index entries.@refill
2061
2062@node Consistency Checks, Global Indexing, Collecting Phrases, The Index Phrases File
2063@subsection Consistency Checks
2064@cindex Index phrases, consistency checks
2065@cindex Phrases, consistency checks
2066@cindex Consistency check for index phrases
2067
2068@kindex C-c C-s
2069Before indexing the phrases in the phrases buffer, they should be
2070checked carefully for consistency. A first step is to sort the phrases
2071alphabetically - this is done with the command @kbd{C-c C-s}
2072(@code{reftex-index-sort-phrases}). It will sort all phrases in the
2073buffer alphabetically by search phrase. If you want to group certain
2074phrases and only sort within the groups, insert empty lines between the
2075groups. Sorting will only change the sequence of phrases within each
2076group (see the variable @code{reftex-index-phrases-sort-in-blocks}).@refill
2077
2078@kindex C-c C-i
2079A useful command is @kbd{C-c C-i} (@code{reftex-index-phrases-info})
2080which lists information about the phrase at point, including an example
2081of how the index entry will look like and the number of expected matches
2082in the document.@refill
2083
2084@kindex C-c C-t
2085Another important check is to find out if there are double or
2086overlapping entries in the buffer. For example if you are first
2087searching and indexing @samp{Mars} and then @samp{Planet Mars}, the
2088second phrase will not match because of the index macro inserted before
2089@samp{Mars} earlier. The command @kbd{C-c C-t}
2090(@code{reftex-index-find-next-conflict-phrase}) finds the next phrase in
2091the buffer which is either duplicate or a subphrase of another phrase.
2092In order to check the whole buffer like this, start at the beginning and
2093execute this command repeatedly.@refill
2094
2095@node Global Indexing, , Consistency Checks, The Index Phrases File
2096@subsection Global Indexing
2097@cindex Global indexing
2098@cindex Indexing, global
2099@cindex Indexing, from @file{phrases} buffer
2100
2101Once the index phrases have been collected and organized, you are set
2102for global indexing. I recommend to do this only on an otherwise
2103finished document. Global indexing starts from the phrases buffer.
2104There are several commands which start indexing: @kbd{C-c C-x} acts on
2105the current phrase line, @kbd{C-c C-r} on all lines in the current
2106region and @kbd{C-c C-a} on all phrase lines in the buffer. It is
2107probably good to do indexing in small chunks since your concentration
2108may not last long enough to do everything in one go.@refill
2109
2110@b{Ref@TeX{}} will start at the first phrase line and search the phrase
2111globally in the whole document. At each match it will stop, compute the
2112replacement string and offer you the following choices@footnote{Windows
2113users: Restrict yourself to the described keys during indexing. Pressing
2114@key{Help} at the indexing prompt can apparently hang Emacs.}:@refill
2115
2116@table @kbd
2117@item y
2118Replace this match with the proposed string.
2119@item n
2120Skip this match.
2121@item !
2122Replace this and all further matches in this file.
2123@item q
2124Skip this match, start with next file.
2125@item Q
2126Skip this match, start with next phrase.
2127@item o
2128Select a different indexing macro for this match.
2129@item 1-9
2130Select one of multiple index keys (those separated with @samp{||}).
2131@item e
2132Edit the replacement text.
2133@item C-r
2134Recursive edit. Use @kbd{M-C-c} to return to the indexing process.
2135@item s
2136Save this buffer and ask again about the current match.
2137@item S
2138Save all document buffers and ask again about the current match.
2139@item C-g
2140Abort the indexing process.
2141@end table
2142
2143The @samp{Find and Index in Document} menu in the phrases buffer also
2144lists a few options for the indexing process. The options have
2145associated customization variables to set the defaults (@pxref{Options
2146(Index Support)}). Here is a short explanation of what the options do:
2147
2148@table @i
2149@item Match Whole Words
2150When searching for index phrases, make sure whole words are matched.
2151This should probably always be on.
2152@item Case Sensitive Search
2153Search case sensitively for phrases. I recommend to have this setting
2154off, in order to match the capitalized words at the beginning of a
2155sentence, and even typos. You can always say @emph{no} at a match you
2156do not like.
2157@item Wrap Long Lines
2158Inserting index macros increases the line length. Turn this option on
2159to allow @b{Ref@TeX{}} to wrap long lines.
2160@item Skip Indexed Matches
2161When this is on, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will at each match try to figure out if
2162this match is already indexed. A match is considered indexed if it is
2163either the argument of an index macro, or if an index macro is directly
2164(without whitespace separation) before or after the match. Index macros
2165are those configured in @code{reftex-index-macros}. Intended for
2166re-indexing a documents after changes have been made.@refill
2167@end table
2168
2169Even though indexing should be the last thing you do to a document, you
2170are bound to make changes afterwards. Indexing then has to be applied
2171to the changed regions. The command
2172@code{reftex-index-phrases-apply-to-region} is designed for this
2173purpose. When called from a LaTeX document with active region, it will
2174apply @code{reftex-index-all-phrases} to the current region.@refill
2175
2176@node Displaying and Editing the Index, Builtin Index Macros, The Index Phrases File, Index Support
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2177@section Displaying and Editing the Index
2178@cindex Displaying the Index
2179@cindex Editing the Index
2180@cindex Index entries, creating
2181@cindex Index, displaying
2182@cindex Index, editing
2183@kindex C-c >
2184@findex reftex-display-index
2185
2186In order to compile and display the index, press @kbd{C-c >}. If the
2187document uses multiple indices, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will ask you to select
2188one. Then, all index entries will be sorted alphabetically and
2189displayed in a special buffer, the @file{*Index*} buffer. From that
2190buffer you can check and edit each entry.@refill
2191
2192The index can be restricted to the current section or the region. Then
2193only entries in that part of the document will go into the compiled
2194index. To restrict to the current section, use a numeric prefix
2195@samp{2}, thus press @kbd{C-u 2 C-c >}. To restrict to the current
2196region, make the region active and use a numeric prefix @samp{3} (press
2197@kbd{C-u 3 C-c >}). From within the @file{*Index*} buffer the
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2198restriction can be moved from one section to the next by pressing the
2199@kbd{<} and @kbd{>} keys.@refill
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2200
2201One caveat: @b{Ref@TeX{}} finds the definition point of an index entry
2202by searching near the buffer position where it had found to macro during
2203scanning. If you have several identical index entries in the same
2204buffer and significant changes have shifted the entries around, you must
2205rescan the buffer to ensure the correspondence between the
2206@file{*Index*} buffer and the definition locations. It is therefore
2207advisable to rescan the document (with @kbd{r} or @kbd{C-u r})
2208frequently while editing the index from the @file{*Index*}
2209buffer.@refill
2210
2211@kindex ?
2212Here is a list of special commands available in the @file{*Index*} buffer. A
2213summary of this information is always available by pressing
2214@kbd{?}.@refill
2215
2216@table @kbd
2217@tablesubheading{General}
2218@item ?
2219Display a summary of commands.
2220
2221@item 0-9, -
2222Prefix argument.
2223
2224@tablesubheading{Moving around}
2225@item ! A..Z
2226Pressing any capital letter will jump to the corresponding section in
2227the @file{*Index*} buffer. The exclamation mark is special and jumps to
2228the first entries alphabetically sorted below @samp{A}. These are
2229usually non-alphanumeric characters.@refill
2230@item n
2231Go to next entry.@refill
2232@item p
2233Go to previous entry.@refill
2234
2235@tablesubheading{Access to document locations}
2236@item @key{SPC}
2237Show the place in the document where this index entry is defined.@refill
2238
2239@item @key{TAB}
2240Go to the definition of the current index entry in another
2241window.@refill
2242
2243@item @key{RET}
2244Go to the definition of the current index entry and hide the
d4e1eea3 2245@file{*Index*} buffer window.@refill
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2246
2247@item f
2248@vindex reftex-index-follow-mode
2249@vindex reftex-revisit-to-follow
2250Toggle follow mode. When follow mode is active, the other window will
2251always show the location corresponding to the line in the @file{*Index*}
2252buffer at point. This is similar to pressing @key{SPC} after each
2253cursor motion. The default for this flag can be set with the variable
2254@code{reftex-index-follow-mode}. Note that only context in files
2255already visited is shown. @b{Ref@TeX{}} will not visit a file just for
2256follow mode. See, however, the variable
2257@code{reftex-revisit-to-follow}.@refill
2258
2259@tablesubheading{Entry editing}
2260@item e
2261Edit the current index entry. In the minibuffer, you can edit the
2262index macro which defines this entry.@refill
2263
2264@item C-k
2265Kill the index entry. Currently not implemented because I don't know
2266how to implement an @code{undo} function for this.@refill
2267
2268@item *
2269Edit the @var{key} part of the entry. This is the initial part of the
2270entry which determines the location of the entry in the index.@refill
2271
2272@item |
2273Edit the @var{attribute} part of the entry. This is the part after the
2274vertical bar. With @code{MakeIndex}, this part is an encapsulating
2275macro. With @code{xindy}, it is called @emph{attribute} and is a
2276property of the index entry that can lead to special formatting. When
2277called with @kbd{C-u} prefix, kill the entire @var{attribute}
2278part.@refill
2279
2280@item @@
2281Edit the @var{visual} part of the entry. This is the part after the
2282@samp{@@} which is used by @code{MakeIndex} to change the visual
2283appearance of the entry in the index. When called with @kbd{C-u}
2284prefix, kill the entire @var{visual} part.@refill
2285
2286@item (
2287Toggle the beginning of page range property @samp{|(} of the
2288entry.@refill
2289
2290@item )
2291Toggle the end of page range property @samp{|)} of the entry.@refill
2292
2293@item _
2294Make the current entry a subentry. This command will prompt for the
2295superordinate entry and insert it.@refill
2296
2297@item ^
2298Remove the highest superordinate entry. If the current entry is a
2299subitem (@samp{aaa!bbb!ccc}), this function moves it up the hierarchy
2300(@samp{bbb!ccc}).@refill
2301
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2302@tablesubheading{Exiting}
2303@item q
2304Hide the @file{*Index*} buffer.@refill
2305
2306@item k
2307Kill the @file{*Index*} buffer.@refill
2308
2309@item C-c =
2310Switch to the Table of Contents buffer of this document.@refill
2311
2312@tablesubheading{Controlling what gets displayed}
2313@item c
2314@vindex reftex-index-include-context
2315Toggle the display of short context in the @file{*Index*} buffer. The
2316default for this flag can be set with the variable
2317@code{reftex-index-include-context}.@refill
2318
2319@item @}
2320Restrict the index to a single document section. The corresponding
d4e1eea3 2321section number will be displayed in the @code{R<>} indicator in the
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2322mode line and in the header of the @file{*Index*} buffer.@refill
2323
2324@item @{
2325Widen the index to contain all entries of the document.@refill
2326
2327@item <
2328When the index is currently restricted, move the restriction to the
2329previous section.@refill
2330
2331@item >
2332When the index is currently restricted, move the restriction to the
2333next section.@refill
2334
2335@tablesubheading{Updating the buffer}
2336@item g
2337Rebuild the @file{*Index*} buffer. This does @emph{not} rescan the
2338document. However, it sorts the entries again, so that edited entries
2339will move to the correct position.@refill
2340
2341@item r
2342@vindex reftex-enable-partial-scans
2343Reparse the LaTeX document and rebuild the @file{*Index*} buffer. When
2344@code{reftex-enable-partial-scans} is non-nil, rescan only the file this
2345location is defined in, not the entire document.@refill
2346
2347@item C-u r
2348Reparse the @emph{entire} LaTeX document and rebuild the @file{*Index*}
2349buffer.@refill
2350
2351@item s
2352Switch to a different index (for documents with multiple
2353indices).@refill
2354@end table
2355
2356
2357@node Builtin Index Macros, Defining Index Macros, Displaying and Editing the Index, Index Support
2358@section Builtin Index Macros
2359@cindex Builtin index macros
2360@cindex Index macros, builtin
2361@vindex reftex-index-macros
2362@cindex @code{multind}, LaTeX package
2363@cindex @code{index}, LaTeX package
2364@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{multind}
2365@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{index}
2366
2367@b{Ref@TeX{}} by default recognizes the @code{\index} and
2368@code{\glossary} macros which are defined in the LaTeX core. It has
d4e1eea3
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2369also builtin support for the re-implementations of @code{\index}
2370in the @file{multind} and @file{index} packages. However, since
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2371the different definitions of the @code{\index} macro are incompatible,
2372you will have to explicitly specify the index style used.
2373@xref{Creating Index Entries}, for information on how to do that.
2374
2375@node Defining Index Macros, , Builtin Index Macros, Index Support
2376@section Defining Index Macros
2377@cindex Defining Index Macros
2378@cindex Index macros, defining
2379@vindex reftex-index-macros
2380
2381When writing a document with an index you will probably define
2382additional macros which make entries into the index.
2383Let's look at an example.
2384
2385@example
2386\newcommand@{\ix@}[1]@{#1\index@{#1@}@}
2387\newcommand@{\nindex@}[1]@{\textit@{#1@}\index[name]@{#1@}@}
2388\newcommand@{\astobj@}[1]@{\index@{Astronomical Objects!#1@}@}
2389@end example
2390
2391The first macro @code{\ix} typesets its argument in the text and places
2392it into the index. The second macro @code{\nindex} typesets its
2393argument in the text and places it into a separate index with the tag
2394@samp{name}@footnote{We are using the syntax of the @file{index} package
2395here.}. The last macro also places its argument into the index, but as
2396subitems under the main index entry @samp{Astronomical Objects}. Here
2397is how to make @b{Ref@TeX{}} recognize and correctly interpret these
2398macros, first with Emacs Lisp.
2399
2400@lisp
2401(setq reftex-index-macros
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2402 '(("\\ix@{*@}" "idx" ?x "" nil nil)
2403 ("\\nindex@{*@}" "name" ?n "" nil nil)
2404 ("\\astobj@{*@}" "idx" ?o "Astronomical Objects!" nil t)))
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2405@end lisp
2406
2407Note that the index tag is @samp{idx} for the main index, and
2408@samp{name} for the name index. @samp{idx} and @samp{glo} are reserved
2409for the default index and for the glossary.
2410
2411The character arguments @code{?x}, @code{?n}, and @code{?o} are for
2412quick identification of these macros when @b{Ref@TeX{}} inserts new
2413index entries with @code{reftex-index}. These codes need to be
2414unique. @code{?i}, @code{?I}, and @code{?g} are reserved for the
2415@code{\index}, @code{\index*}, and @code{\glossary} macros,
2416respectively.
2417
2418The following string is empty unless your macro adds a superordinate
2419entry to the index key - this is the case for the @code{\astobj} macro.
2420
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2421The next entry can be a hook function to exclude certain matches, it
2422almost always can be @code{nil}.
2423
2424The final element in the list indicates if the text being indexed needs
2425to be repeated outside the macro. For the normal index macros, this
2426should be @code{t}. Only if the macro typesets the entry in the text
2427(like @code{\ix} and @code{\nindex} in the example do), this should be
2428@code{nil}.
2429
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2430To do the same thing with customize, you need to fill in the templates
2431like this:
2432
2433@example
2434Repeat:
2435[INS] [DEL] List:
2436 Macro with args: \ix@{*@}
2437 Index Tag : [Value Menu] String: idx
2438 Access Key : x
2439 Key Prefix :
2440 Exclusion hook : nil
d4e1eea3 2441 Repeat Outside : [Toggle] off (nil)
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2442[INS] [DEL] List:
2443 Macro with args: \nindex@{*@}
2444 Index Tag : [Value Menu] String: name
2445 Access Key : n
2446 Key Prefix :
2447 Exclusion hook : nil
d4e1eea3 2448 Repeat Outside : [Toggle] off (nil)
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2449[INS] [DEL] List:
2450 Macro with args: \astobj@{*@}
2451 Index Tag : [Value Menu] String: idx
2452 Access Key : o
2453 Key Prefix : Astronomical Objects!
2454 Exclusion hook : nil
d4e1eea3 2455 Repeat Outside : [Toggle] on (non-nil)
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2456[INS]
2457@end example
2458
2459With the macro @code{\ix} defined, you may want to change the default
2460macro used for indexing a text phrase (@pxref{Creating Index Entries}).
2461This would be done like this
2462
2463@lisp
d4e1eea3 2464(setq reftex-index-default-macro '(?x "idx"))
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2465@end lisp
2466
2467which specifies that the macro identified with the character @code{?x} (the
2468@code{\ix} macro) should be used for indexing phrases and words already
2469in the buffer with @kbd{C-c /} (@code{reftex-index-selection-or-word}).
d4e1eea3 2470The index tag is "idx".@refill
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2471
2472@node Viewing Cross-References, RefTeXs Menu, Index Support, Top
2473@chapter Viewing Cross--References
2474@findex reftex-view-crossref
2475@findex reftex-mouse-view-crossref
2476@kindex C-c &
2477@kindex S-mouse-2
2478
2479@b{Ref@TeX{}} can display cross--referencing information. This means,
2480if two document locations are linked, @b{Ref@TeX{}} can display the
2481matching location(s) in another window. The @code{\label} and @code{\ref}
2482macros are one way of establishing such a link. Also, a @code{\cite}
2483macro is linked to the corresponding @code{\bibitem} macro or a BibTeX
2484database entry.@refill
2485
2486The feature is invoked by pressing @kbd{C-c &}
2487(@code{reftex-view-crossref}) while point is on the @var{key} argument
2488of a macro involved in cross--referencing. You can also click with
2489@kbd{S-mouse-2} on the macro argument. Here is what will happen for
2490individual classes of macros:@refill
2491
2492@table @asis
2493
2494@item @code{\ref}
2495@cindex @code{\ref}
2496Display the corresponding label definition. All usual
2497variants@footnote{all macros that start with @samp{ref} or end with
2498@samp{ref} or @samp{refrange}} of the @code{\ref} macro are active for
2499cross--reference display. This works also for labels defined in an
2500external document when the current document refers to them through the
2501@code{xr} interface (@pxref{xr (LaTeX package)}).@refill
2502
2503@item @code{\label}
2504@cindex @code{\label}
2505@vindex reftex-label-alist
2506Display a document location which references this label. Pressing
2507@kbd{C-c &} several times moves through the entire document and finds
2508all locations. Not only the @code{\label} macro but also other macros
2509with label arguments (as configured with @code{reftex-label-alist}) are
2510active for cross--reference display.@refill
2511
2512@item @code{\cite}
2513@cindex @code{\cite}
2514Display the corresponding BibTeX database entry or @code{\bibitem}.
2515All usual variants@footnote{all macros that either start or end with
2516@samp{cite}} of the @code{\cite} macro are active for cross--reference
2517display.@refill
2518
2519@item @code{\bibitem}
2520@cindex @code{\bibitem}
2521Display a document location which cites this article. Pressing
2522@kbd{C-c &} several times moves through the entire document and finds
2523all locations.@refill
2524
2525@item BibTeX
2526@cindex BibTeX buffer, viewing cite locations from
2527@cindex Viewing cite locations from BibTeX buffer
2528@kbd{C-c &} is also active in BibTeX buffers. All locations in a
2529document where the database entry at point is cited will be displayed.
2530On first use, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will prompt for a buffer which belongs to
2531the document you want to search. Subsequent calls will use the same
2532document, until you break this link with a prefix argument to @kbd{C-c
2533&}.@refill
2534
2535@item @code{\index}
2536@cindex @code{\index}
2537Display other locations in the document which are marked by an index
2538macro with the same key argument. Along with the standard @code{\index}
2539and @code{\glossary} macros, all macros configured in
2540@code{reftex-index-macros} will be recognized.@refill
2541@end table
2542
2543@vindex reftex-view-crossref-macros
2544While the display of cross referencing information for the above
2545mentioned macros is hard--coded, you can configure additional relations
2546in the variable @code{reftex-view-crossref-macros}.
2547
2548@iftex
2549@chapter All the Rest
2550@end iftex
2551
2552@node RefTeXs Menu, Keybindings, Viewing Cross-References, Top
2553@section @b{Ref@TeX{}}'s Menu
2554@cindex RefTeXs Menu
2555@cindex Menu, in the menu bar
2556
2557@b{Ref@TeX{}} installs a @code{Ref} menu in the menu bar on systems
2558which support this. From this menu you can access all of
2559@b{Ref@TeX{}}'s commands and a few of its options. There is also a
2560@code{Customize} submenu which can be used to access @b{Ref@TeX{}}'s
2561entire set of options.@refill
2562
2563@node Keybindings, Faces, RefTeXs Menu, Top
2564@section Default Keybindings
2565@cindex Keybindings, summary
2566
2567Here is a summary of the available keybindings.
2568
2569@kindex C-c =
2570@kindex C-c (
2571@kindex C-c )
2572@kindex C-c [
2573@kindex C-c &
2574@kindex S-mouse-2
2575@kindex C-c /
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2576@kindex C-c \
2577@kindex C-c |
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2578@kindex C-c <
2579@kindex C-c >
2580@example
2581@kbd{C-c =} @code{reftex-toc}
2582@kbd{C-c (} @code{reftex-label}
2583@kbd{C-c )} @code{reftex-reference}
2584@kbd{C-c [} @code{reftex-citation}
2585@kbd{C-c &} @code{reftex-view-crossref}
2586@kbd{S-mouse-2} @code{reftex-mouse-view-crossref}
2587@kbd{C-c /} @code{reftex-index-selection-or-word}
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2588@kbd{C-c \} @code{reftex-index-phrase-selection-or-word}
2589@kbd{C-c |} @code{reftex-index-visit-phrases-buffer}
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2590@kbd{C-c <} @code{reftex-index}
2591@kbd{C-c >} @code{reftex-display-index}
2592@end example
2593
2594Note that the @kbd{S-mouse-2} binding is only provided if this key is
2595not already used by some other package. @b{Ref@TeX{}} will not override an
2596existing binding to @kbd{S-mouse-2}.@refill
2597
2598Personally, I also bind some functions in the users @kbd{C-c} map for
2599easier access.@refill
2600
2601@c FIXME: Do we need bindings for the Index macros here as well?
2602@c C-c i C-c I or so????
2603@c How about keybindings for reftex-reset-mode and reftex-parse-document?
2604@kindex C-c t
2605@kindex C-c l
2606@kindex C-c r
2607@kindex C-c c
2608@kindex C-c v
2609@kindex C-c s
2610@kindex C-c g
2611@example
2612@kbd{C-c t} @code{reftex-toc}
2613@kbd{C-c l} @code{reftex-label}
2614@kbd{C-c r} @code{reftex-reference}
2615@kbd{C-c c} @code{reftex-citation}
2616@kbd{C-c v} @code{reftex-view-crossref}
2617@kbd{C-c s} @code{reftex-search-document}
2618@kbd{C-c g} @code{reftex-grep-document}
2619@end example
2620
2621@noindent These keys are reserved for the user, so I cannot bind them by
2622default. If you want to have these keybindings available, set in your
2623@file{.emacs} file:
2624
2625@vindex reftex-extra-bindings
2626@lisp
2627(setq reftex-extra-bindings t)
2628@end lisp
2629
2630@vindex reftex-load-hook
2631Changing and adding to @b{Ref@TeX{}}'s keybindings is best done in the hook
2632@code{reftex-load-hook}. For information on the keymaps
2633which should be used to add keys, see @ref{Keymaps and Hooks}.
2634
2635@node Faces, AUCTeX, Keybindings, Top
2636@section Faces
2637@cindex Faces
2638
2639@b{Ref@TeX{}} uses faces when available to structure the selection and
2640table of contents buffers. It does not create its own faces, but uses
2641the ones defined in @file{font-lock.el}. Therefore, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will
2642use faces only when @code{font-lock} is loaded. This seems to be
2643reasonable because people who like faces will very likely have it
2644loaded. If you wish to turn off fontification or change the involved
2645faces, see @ref{Options (Fontification)}.@refill
2646
2647@node Multifile Documents, Language Support, AUCTeX, Top
2648@section Multifile Documents
2649@cindex Multifile documents
2650@cindex Documents, spread over files
2651
2652The following is relevant when working with documents spread over many
2653files:@refill
2654
2655@itemize @bullet
2656@item
2657@b{Ref@TeX{}} has full support for multifile documents. You can edit parts of
2658several (multifile) documents at the same time without conflicts.
2659@b{Ref@TeX{}} provides functions to run @code{grep}, @code{search} and
2660@code{query-replace} on all files which are part of a multifile
2661document.@refill
2662
2663@item
2664@vindex tex-main-file
2665@vindex TeX-master
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2666All files belonging to a multifile document should define a File
2667Variable (@code{TeX-master} for AUCTeX or @code{tex-main-file} for the
2668standard Emacs LaTeX mode) containing the name of the master file. For
2669example, to set the file variable @code{TeX-master}, include something
2670like the following at the end of each TeX file:@refill
2671
2672@example
2673%%% Local Variables: ***
2674%%% mode:latex ***
2675%%% TeX-master: "thesis.tex" ***
2676%%% End: ***
2677@end example
2678
2679AUCTeX with the setting
2680
2681@lisp
2682(setq-default TeX-master nil)
2683@end lisp
2684
2685will actually ask you for each new file about the master file and insert
2686this comment automatically. For more details see the documentation of
2687the AUCTeX (@pxref{Multifile,,,auctex, The AUC TeX User Manual}), the
2688documentation about the Emacs (La)TeX mode (@pxref{TeX Print,,,emacs,
2689The GNU Emacs Manual}) and the Emacs documentation on File Variables
2690(@pxref{File Variables,,,emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).@refill
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2691
2692@item
2693The context of a label definition must be found in the same file as the
2694label itself in order to be processed correctly by @b{Ref@TeX{}}. The only
2695exception is that section labels referring to a section statement
2696outside the current file can still use that section title as
2697context.@refill
2698@end itemize
2699
2700@node Language Support, Finding Files, Multifile Documents, Top
2701@section Language Support
2702@cindex Language support
2703
2704Some parts of @b{Ref@TeX{}} are language dependent. The default
2705settings work well for English. If you are writing in a different
2706language, the following hints may be useful:
2707
2708@itemize @bullet
2709@item
2710@vindex reftex-derive-label-parameters
2711@vindex reftex-abbrev-parameters
2712The mechanism to derive a label from context includes the abbreviation
2713of words and omission of unimportant words. These mechanisms may have
2714to be changed for other languages. See the variables
2715@code{reftex-derive-label-parameters} and @code{reftex-abbrev-parameters}.
2716
2717@item
2718@vindex reftex-translate-to-ascii-function
2719@vindex reftex-label-illegal-re
2720Also, when a label is derived from context, @b{Ref@TeX{}} clears the
2721context string from non-ASCII characters in order to make a legal label.
2722If there should ever be a version of @TeX{} which allows extended
2723characters @emph{in labels}, then we will have to look at the
2724variables @code{reftex-translate-to-ascii-function} and
2725@code{reftex-label-illegal-re}.
2726
2727@item
2728When a label is referenced, @b{Ref@TeX{}} looks at the word before point
2729to guess which label type is required. These @emph{magic words} are
2730different in every language. For an example of how to add magic words,
2731see @ref{Adding Magic Words}.
2732
2733@vindex reftex-multiref-punctuation
2734@vindex reftex-cite-punctuation
2735@item
2736@b{Ref@TeX{}} inserts ``punctuation'' for multiple references and
2737for the author list in citations. Some of this may be language
2738dependent. See the variables @code{reftex-multiref-punctuation} and
2739@code{reftex-cite-punctuation}.
2740@end itemize
2741
2742@node Finding Files, Optimizations, Language Support, Top
2743@section Finding Files
2744@cindex Finding files
2745
2746In order to find files included in a document via @code{\input} or
2747@code{\include}, @b{Ref@TeX{}} searches all directories specified in the
2748environment variable @code{TEXINPUTS}. Similarly, it will search the
2749path specified in the variables @code{BIBINPUTS} and @code{TEXBIB} for
2750BibTeX database files.
2751
2752When searching, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will also expand recursive path
2753definitions (directories ending in @samp{//} or @samp{!!}). But it will
2754only search and expand directories @emph{explicitly} given in these
2755variables. This may cause problems under the following circumstances:
2756
2757@itemize @bullet
2758@item
2759Most TeX system have a default search path for both TeX files and BibTeX
2760files which is defined in some setup file. Usually this default path is
2761for system files which @b{Ref@TeX{}} does not need to see. But if your
2762document needs TeX files or BibTeX database files in a directory only
2763given in the default search path, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will fail to find them.
2764@item
2765Some TeX systems do not use environment variables at all in order to
2766specify the search path. Both default and user search path are then
2767defined in setup files.
2768@end itemize
2769
2770@noindent
2771There are three ways to solve this problem:
2772
2773@itemize @bullet
2774@item
2775Specify all relevant directories explicitly in the environment
2776variables. If for some reason you don't want to mess with the default
2777variables @code{TEXINPUTS} and @code{BIBINPUTS}, define your own
2778variables and configure @b{Ref@TeX{}} to use them instead:
2779
2780@lisp
2781(setq reftex-texpath-environment-variables '("MYTEXINPUTS"))
2782(setq reftex-bibpath-environment-variables '("MYBIBINPUTS"))
2783@end lisp
2784
2785@item
2786Specify the full search path directly in @b{Ref@TeX{}}'s variables.
2787
2788@lisp
2789(setq reftex-texpath-environment-variables
2790 '("./inp:/home/cd/tex//:/usr/local/tex//"))
2791(setq reftex-bibpath-environment-variables
2792 '("/home/cd/tex/lit/"))
2793@end lisp
2794
2795@item
2796Some TeX systems provide stand--alone programs to do the file search just
2797like TeX and BibTeX. E.g. Thomas Esser's @code{teTeX} uses the
2798@code{kpathsearch} library which provides the command @code{kpsewhich}
2799to search for files. @b{Ref@TeX{}} can be configured to use this
2800program. Note that the exact syntax of the @code{kpsewhich}
2801command depends upon the version of that program.
2802
2803@lisp
2804(setq reftex-use-external-file-finders t)
2805(setq reftex-external-file-finders
2806 '(("tex" "kpsewhich -format=.tex %f")
2807 ("bib" "kpsewhich -format=.bib %f")))
2808@end lisp
2809@end itemize
2810
2811@node Optimizations, Problems and Work-Arounds, Finding Files, Top
2812@section Optimizations
2813@cindex Optimizations
2814
2815Implementing the principle of least surprises, the default settings of
2816@b{Ref@TeX{}} ensure a safe ride for beginners and casual users. However,
2817when using @b{Ref@TeX{}} for a large project and/or on a small computer,
2818there are ways to improve speed or memory usage.@refill
2819
2820@itemize @bullet
2821@item
2822@b{Removing Lookup Buffers}@*
2823@cindex Removing lookup buffers
2824@b{Ref@TeX{}} will load other parts of a multifile document as well as BibTeX
2825database files for lookup purposes. These buffers are kept, so that
2826subsequent use of the same files is fast. If you can't afford keeping
2827these buffers around, and if you can live with a speed penalty, try
2828
2829@vindex reftex-keep-temporary-buffers
2830@lisp
2831(setq reftex-keep-temporary-buffers nil)
2832@end lisp
2833
2834@item
2835@b{Partial Document Scans}@*
2836@cindex Partial documents scans
2837@cindex Document scanning, partial
2838A @kbd{C-u} prefix on the major @b{Ref@TeX{}} commands @code{reftex-label}
2839(@kbd{C-u C-c (}), @code{reftex-reference} (@kbd{C-u C-c )}),
2840@code{reftex-citation} (@kbd{C-u C-c [}), @code{reftex-toc} (@kbd{C-u C-c
2841=}), and @code{reftex-view-crossref} (@kbd{C-u C-c &}) initiates
2842re-parsing of the entire document in order to update the parsing
2843information. For a large document this can be unnecessary, in
2844particular if only one file has changed. @b{Ref@TeX{}} can be configured
2845to do partial scans instead of full ones. @kbd{C-u} re-parsing then
2846does apply only to the current buffer and files included from it.
2847Likewise, the @kbd{r} key in both the label selection buffer and the
2848table-of-contents buffer will only prompt scanning of the file in which
2849the label or section macro near the cursor was defined. Re-parsing of
2850the entire document is still available by using @kbd{C-u C-u} as a
2851prefix, or the capital @kbd{R} key in the menus. To use this feature,
2852try@refill
2853
2854@vindex reftex-enable-partial-scans
2855@lisp
2856(setq reftex-enable-partial-scans t)
2857@end lisp
2858
2859@item
2860@b{Saving Parser Information}@*
2861@cindex Saving parser information
2862@cindex Parse information, saving to a file
a2cc2b28 2863@vindex reftex-parse-file-extension
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2864Even with partial scans enabled, @b{Ref@TeX{}} still has to make one full
2865scan, when you start working with a document. To avoid this, parsing
2866information can be stored in a file. The file @file{MASTER.rel} is used
2867for storing information about a document with master file
2868@file{MASTER.tex}. It is written automatically when you kill a buffer
2869in @code{reftex-mode} or when you exit Emacs. The information is
2870restored when you begin working with a document in a new editing
2871session. To use this feature, put into @file{.emacs}:@refill
2872
2873@vindex reftex-save-parse-info
2874@lisp
2875(setq reftex-save-parse-info t)
2876@end lisp
2877
2878@item
2879@b{Automatic Document Scans}@*
2880@cindex Automatic document scans
2881@cindex Document scanning, automatic
2882At rare occasions, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will automatically rescan a part of the
2883document. If this gets into your way, it can be turned off with
2884
2885@vindex reftex-allow-automatic-rescan
2886@lisp
2887(setq reftex-allow-automatic-rescan nil)
2888@end lisp
2889
2890@b{Ref@TeX{}} will then occasionally annotate new labels in the selection
2891buffer, saying that their position in the label list in uncertain. A
2892manual document scan will fix this.@refill
2893
2894@item
2895@b{Multiple Selection Buffers}@*
2896@cindex Multiple selection buffers
2897@cindex Selection buffers, multiple
2898Normally, the selection buffer @file{*RefTeX Select*} is re-created for
2899every selection process. In documents with very many labels this can
2900take several seconds. @b{Ref@TeX{}} provides an option to create a
2901separate selection buffer for each label type and to keep this buffer
2902from one selection to the next. These buffers are updated automatically
2903only when a new label has been added in the buffers category with
2904@code{reftex-label}. Updating the buffer takes as long as recreating it
2905- so the time saving is limited to cases where no new labels of that
2906category have been added. To turn on this feature, use@refill
2907
2908@vindex reftex-use-multiple-selection-buffers
2909@lisp
2910(setq reftex-use-multiple-selection-buffers t)
2911@end lisp
2912
2913@noindent
2914@cindex Selection buffers, updating
2915You can also inhibit the automatic updating entirely. Then the
2916selection buffer will always pop up very fast, but may not contain the
2917most recently defined labels. You can always update the buffer by hand,
2918with the @kbd{g} key. To get this behavior, use instead@refill
2919
2920@vindex reftex-auto-update-selection-buffers
2921@lisp
2922(setq reftex-use-multiple-selection-buffers t
2923 reftex-auto-update-selection-buffers nil)
2924@end lisp
2925@end itemize
2926
2927@need 2000
2928@noindent
2929@b{As a summary}, here are the settings I recommend for heavy use of
2930@b{Ref@TeX{}} with large documents:
2931
2932@lisp
2933@group
2934(setq reftex-enable-partial-scans t
2935 reftex-save-parse-info t
2936 reftex-use-multiple-selection-buffers t)
2937@end group
2938@end lisp
2939
2940@page
2941@node AUCTeX, Multifile Documents, Faces, Top
2942@section @w{AUC @TeX{}}
2943@cindex @code{AUCTeX}, Emacs package
2944@cindex Emacs packages, @code{AUCTeX}
2945
2946AUCTeX is without doubt the best major mode for editing TeX and LaTeX
a0d31341
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2947files with Emacs (@pxref{Top,AUCTeX,,auctex, The AUCTeX User Manual}).
2948If AUCTeX is not part of you Emacs distribution, you can get
2949it@footnote{XEmacs 21.x users may want to install the corresponding
2950XEmacs package.} by ftp from the
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2951@uref{http://www.sunsite.auc.dk/auctex/,AUCTeX distribution site}.
2952
2953@menu
2954* AUCTeX-RefTeX Interface:: How both packages work together
2955* Style Files:: AUCTeX's style files can support RefTeX
2956* Bib-Cite:: Hypertext reading of a document
2957@end menu
2958
2959@node AUCTeX-RefTeX Interface, Style Files, , AUCTeX
2960@subsection The AUC@TeX{}-@b{Ref@TeX{}} Interface
2961
2962@b{Ref@TeX{}} contains code to interface with AUCTeX. When this
2963interface is turned on, both packages will interact closely. Instead of
2964using @b{Ref@TeX{}}'s commands directly, you can then also use them
2965indirectly as part of the AUCTeX
2966environment@footnote{@b{Ref@TeX{}} 4.0 and AUCTeX 9.10c will be
2967needed for all of this to work. Parts of it work also with earlier
2968versions.}. The interface is turned on with@refill
2969
2970@lisp
2971(setq reftex-plug-into-AUCTeX t)
2972@end lisp
2973
2974If you need finer control about which parts of the interface are used
2975and which not, read the docstring of the variable
2976@code{reftex-plug-into-AUCTeX} or customize it with @kbd{M-x
2977customize-variable @key{RET} reftex-plug-into-AUCTeX @key{RET}}.
2978
2979The following list describes the individual parts of the interface.
2980
2981@itemize @bullet
2982@item
2983@findex reftex-label
2984@vindex LaTeX-label-function, @r{AUCTeX}
2985@kindex C-c C-e
2986@kindex C-c C-s
2987@findex LaTeX-section, @r{AUCTeX}
2988@findex TeX-insert-macro, @r{AUCTeX}
2989@b{AUCTeX calls @code{reftex-label} to insert labels}@*
2990When a new section is created with @kbd{C-c C-s}, or a new environment
2991is inserted with @kbd{C-c C-e}, AUCTeX normally prompts for a label to
2992go with it. With the interface, @code{reftex-label} is called instead.
2993For example, if you type @kbd{C-c C-e equation @key{RET}}, AUCTeX and
2994@b{Ref@TeX{}} will insert
2995
2996@example
2997\begin@{equation@}
2998\label@{eq:1@}
2999
3000\end@{equation@}
3001@end example
3002
3003@noindent
3004without further prompts.
3005
3006Similarly, when you type @kbd{C-c C-s section @key{RET}}, @b{Ref@TeX{}}
3007will offer its default label which is derived from the section title.
3008
3009@item
3010@b{AUCTeX tells @b{Ref@TeX{}} about new sections}@*
3011When creating a new section with @kbd{C-c C-s}, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will not
3012have to rescan the buffer in order to see it.@refill
3013
3014@item
3015@findex reftex-arg-label
3016@findex TeX-arg-label, @r{AUCTeX function}
3017@findex reftex-arg-ref
3018@findex TeX-arg-ref, @r{AUCTeX function}
3019@findex reftex-arg-cite
3020@findex TeX-arg-cite, @r{AUCTeX function}
3021@findex reftex-arg-index
3022@findex TeX-arg-index, @r{AUCTeX function}
3023@findex TeX-insert-macro, @r{AUCTeX function}
3024@kindex C-c @key{RET}
3025@b{@b{Ref@TeX{}} supplies macro arguments}@* When you insert a macro
3026interactively with @kbd{C-c @key{RET}}, AUCTeX normally prompts for
3027macro arguments. Internally, it uses the functions
3028@code{TeX-arg-label}, @code{TeX-arg-cite}, and @code{TeX-arg-index} to
3029prompt for arguments which are labels, citation keys and index entries.
3030The interface takes over these functions@footnote{@code{fset} is used to
3031do this, which is not reversible. However, @b{Ref@TeX{}} implements the
3032old functionality when you later decide to turn off the interface.} and
3033supplies the macro arguments with @b{Ref@TeX{}'s} mechanisms. For
3034example, when you type @kbd{C-c @key{RET} ref @key{RET}}, @b{Ref@TeX{}}
3035will supply its label selection process (@pxref{Referencing
3036Labels}).@refill
3037
3038@item
3039@b{@b{Ref@TeX{}} tells AUCTeX about new labels, citation-- and index keys}@*
3040@b{Ref@TeX{}} will add all newly created labels to AUCTeX's completion list.
3041@end itemize
3042
3043@node Style Files, Bib-Cite, AUCTeX-RefTeX Interface, AUCTeX
3044@subsection Style Files
3045@cindex Style files, AUCTeX
3046@findex TeX-add-style-hook, @r{AUCTeX}
3047Style files are Emacs Lisp files which are evaluated by AUCTeX in
3048association with the @code{\documentclass} and @code{\usepackage}
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3049commands of a document (@pxref{Style Files,,,auctex}). Support for
3050@b{Ref@TeX{}} in such a style file is useful when the LaTeX style
3051defines macros or environments connected with labels, citations, or the
3052index. Many style files (e.g. @file{amsmath.el} or @file{natbib.el})
3053distributed with AUCTeX already support @b{Ref@TeX{}} in this
3054way.@refill
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3055
3056Before calling a @b{Ref@TeX{}} function, the style hook should always
3057test for the availability of the function, so that the style file will
3058also work for people who do not use @b{Ref@TeX{}}. @refill
3059
3060Additions made with style files in the way described below remain local
3061to the current document. For example, if one package uses AMSTeX, the
3062style file will make @b{Ref@TeX{}} switch over to @code{\eqref}, but
3063this will not affect other documents.@refill
3064
3065@findex reftex-add-label-environments
3066@findex reftex-add-to-label-alist
3067A style hook may contain calls to
3068@code{reftex-add-label-environments}@footnote{This used to be the
3069function @code{reftex-add-to-label-alist} which is still available as an
3070alias for compatibility.} which defines additions to
3071@code{reftex-label-alist}. The argument taken by this function must have
3072the same format as @code{reftex-label-alist}. The @file{amsmath.el}
3073style file of AUCTeX for example contains the following:@refill
3074
3075@lisp
3076@group
3077(TeX-add-style-hook "amsmath"
3078 (lambda ()
3079 (if (fboundp 'reftex-add-label-environments)
3080 (reftex-add-label-environments '(AMSTeX)))))
3081@end group
3082@end lisp
3083
3084@noindent
3085@findex LaTeX-add-environments, @r{AUCTeX}
3086while a package @code{myprop} defining a @code{proposition} environment
3087with @code{\newtheorem} might use@refill
3088
3089@lisp
3090@group
3091(TeX-add-style-hook "myprop"
3092 (lambda ()
3093 (LaTeX-add-environments '("proposition" LaTeX-env-label))
3094 (if (fboundp 'reftex-add-label-environments)
3095 (reftex-add-label-environments
3096 '(("proposition" ?p "prop:" "~\\ref@{%s@}" t
d4e1eea3 3097 ("Proposition" "Prop.") -3))))))
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3098@end group
3099@end lisp
3100
3101@findex reftex-set-cite-format
3102Similarly, a style hook may contain a call to
3103@code{reftex-set-cite-format} to set the citation format. The style
3104file @file{natbib.el} for the Natbib citation style does switch
3105@b{Ref@TeX{}}'s citation format like this:@refill
3106
3107@lisp
3108(TeX-add-style-hook "natbib"
3109 (lambda ()
3110 (if (fboundp 'reftex-set-cite-format)
3111 (reftex-set-cite-format 'natbib))))
3112@end lisp
3113
3114@findex reftex-add-index-macros
3115The hook may contain a call to @code{reftex-add-index-macros} to
3116define additional @code{\index}-like macros. The argument must have
3117the same format as @code{reftex-index-macros}. It may be a symbol, to
3118trigger support for one of the builtin index packages. For example,
3119the style @file{multind.el} contains
3120
3121@lisp
3122(TeX-add-style-hook "multind"
3123 (lambda ()
3124 (and (fboundp 'reftex-add-index-macros)
3125 (reftex-add-index-macros '(multind)))))
3126@end lisp
3127
3128If you have your own package @file{myindex} which defines the
3129following macros to be used with the LaTeX @file{index.sty} file
3130@example
3131\newcommand@{\molec@}[1]@{#1\index@{Molecules!#1@}@}
3132\newcommand@{\aindex@}[1]@{#1\index[author]@{#1@}
3133@end example
3134
3135you could write this in the style file @file{myindex.el}:
3136
3137@lisp
3138(TeX-add-style-hook "myindex"
3139 (lambda ()
3140 (TeX-add-symbols
3141 '("molec" TeX-arg-index)
3142 '("aindex" TeX-arg-index))
3143 (if (fboundp 'reftex-add-index-macros)
3144 (reftex-add-index-macros
d4e1eea3
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3145 '(("molec@{*@}" "idx" ?m "Molecules!" nil nil)
3146 ("aindex@{*@}" "author" ?a "" nil nil))))))
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3147@end lisp
3148
3149@findex reftex-add-section-levels
3150Finally the hook may contain a call to @code{reftex-add-section-levels}
3151to define additional section statements. For example, the FoilTeX class
3152has just two headers, @code{\foilhead} and @code{\rotatefoilhead}. Here
3153is a style file @file{foils.el} that will inform @b{Ref@TeX{}} about these:
3154
3155@lisp
3156(TeX-add-style-hook "foils"
3157 (lambda ()
3158 (if (fboundp 'reftex-add-section-levels)
3159 (reftex-add-section-levels '(("foilhead" . 3)
3160 ("rotatefoilhead" . 3))))))
3161@end lisp
3162
3163@node Bib-Cite, , Style Files, AUCTeX
3164@subsection Bib-Cite
3165@cindex @code{bib-cite}, Emacs package
3166@cindex Emacs packages, @code{bib-cite}
3167
3168Once you have written a document with labels, references and citations,
3169it can be nice to read it like a hypertext document. @b{Ref@TeX{}} has
d4e1eea3 3170support for that: @code{reftex-view-crossref} (bound to @kbd{C-c
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3171&}), @code{reftex-mouse-view-crossref} (bound to @kbd{S-mouse-2}), and
3172@code{reftex-search-document}. A somewhat fancier interface with mouse
3173highlighting is provided (among other things) by Peter S. Galbraith's
3174@file{bib-cite.el}. There is some overlap in the functionalities of
3175Bib-cite and @b{Ref@TeX{}}. Bib-cite.el comes bundled with
3176AUCTeX.@refill
3177
3178Bib-cite version 3.06 and later can be configured so that bib-cite's
3179mouse functions use @b{Ref@TeX{}} for displaying references and citations.
3180This can be useful in particular when working with the LaTeX @code{xr}
3181package or with an explicit @code{thebibliography} environment (rather
3182than BibTeX). Bib-cite cannot handle those, but @b{Ref@TeX{}} does. To
3183make use of this feature, try@refill
3184
3185@vindex bib-cite-use-reftex-view-crossref
3186@lisp
3187(setq bib-cite-use-reftex-view-crossref t)
3188@end lisp
3189
3190@page
3191@node Problems and Work-Arounds, Imprint, Optimizations, Top
3192@section Problems and Work-arounds
3193@cindex Problems and work-arounds
3194
3195@itemize @bullet
3196@item
3197@b{LaTeX commands}@*
3198@cindex LaTeX commands, not found
3199@code{\input}, @code{\include}, @code{\bibliography} and @code{\section}
3200(etc.) statements have to be first on a line (except for white space).@refill
3201
3202@item
3203@b{Commented regions}@*
3204@cindex Labels, commented out
3205@b{Ref@TeX{}} sees also labels in regions commented out and will refuse to
3206make duplicates of such labels. This is considered to be a feature.@refill
3207
3208@item
3209@b{Wrong section numbers}@*
3210@cindex Section numbers, wrong
3211@vindex reftex-enable-partial-scans
3212When using partial scans (@code{reftex-enable-partial-scans}), the section
3213numbers in the table of contents may eventually become wrong. A full
3214scan will fix this.@refill
3215
3216@item
3217@b{Local settings}@*
3218@cindex Settings, local
3219@findex reftex-add-label-environments
3220@findex reftex-set-cite-format
3221@findex reftex-add-section-levels
3222The label environment definitions in @code{reftex-label-alist} are
3223global and apply to all documents. If you need to make definitions
3224local to a document, because they would interfere with settings in other
3225documents, you should use AUCTeX and set up style files with calls to
3226@code{reftex-add-label-environments}, @code{reftex-set-cite-format},
3227@code{reftex-add-index-macros}, and @code{reftex-add-section-levels}.
3228Settings made with these functions remain local to the current
3229document. @xref{AUCTeX}.@refill
3230
3231@item
3232@b{Funny display in selection buffer}@*
3233@cindex @code{x-symbol}, Emacs package
3234@cindex Emacs packages, @code{x-symbol}
3235@cindex @code{isotex}, Emacs package
3236@cindex Emacs packages, @code{isotex}
3237@cindex @code{iso-cvt}, Emacs package
3238@cindex Emacs packages, @code{iso-cvt}
3239When using packages which make the buffer representation of a file
3240different from its disk representation (e.g. x-symbol, isotex,
3241iso-cvt) you may find that @b{Ref@TeX{}}'s parsing information sometimes
3242reflects the disk state of a file. This happens only in @emph{unvisited}
3243parts of a multifile document, because @b{Ref@TeX{}} visits these files
3244literally for speed reasons. Then both short context and section
3245headings may look different from what you usually see on your screen.
3246In rare cases @code{reftex-toc} may have problems to jump to an affected
3247section heading. There are three possible ways to deal with
3248this:@refill
3249@itemize @minus
3250@item
3251@vindex reftex-keep-temporary-buffers
3252@code{(setq reftex-keep-temporary-buffers t)}@*
3253This implies that @b{Ref@TeX{}} will load all parts of a multifile
3254document into Emacs (i.e. there won't be any temporary buffers).@refill
3255@item
3256@vindex reftex-initialize-temporary-buffers
3257@code{(setq reftex-initialize-temporary-buffers t)}@*
3258This means full initialization of temporary buffers. It involves
3259a penalty when the same unvisited file is used for lookup often.@refill
3260@item
3261Set @code{reftex-initialize-temporary-buffers} to a list of hook
3262functions doing a minimal initialization.@refill
3263@end itemize
3264@vindex reftex-refontify-context
3265See also the variable @code{reftex-refontify-context}.
3266
3267@item
3268@b{Labels as arguments to \begin}@*
3269@cindex @code{pf}, LaTeX package
3270@cindex LaTeX packages, @code{pf}
3271Some packages use an additional argument to a @code{\begin} macro
3272to specify a label. E.g. Lamport's @file{pf.sty} uses both
3273@example
3274\step@{@var{label}@}@{@var{claim}@} and \begin@{step+@}@{@var{label}@}
3275 @var{claim}
3276 \end@{step+@}
3277@end example
3278
3279@noindent
3280We need to trick @b{Ref@TeX{}} into swallowing this:
3281
3282@lisp
3283@group
3284;; Configuration for Lamport's pf.sty
3285(setq reftex-label-alist
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3286 '(("\\step@{*@}@{@}" ?p "st:" "~\\stepref@{%s@}" 2 ("Step" "St."))
3287 ("\\begin@{step+@}@{*@}" ?p "st:" "~\\stepref@{%s@}" 1000)))
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3288@end group
3289@end lisp
3290
3291@noindent
3292The first line is just a normal configuration for a macro. For the
3293@code{step+} environment we actually tell @b{Ref@TeX{}} to look for the
3294@emph{macro} @samp{\begin@{step+@}} and interpret the @emph{first}
3295argument (which really is a second argument to the macro @code{\begin})
3296as a label of type @code{?p}. Argument count for this macro starts only
3297after the @samp{@{step+@}}, also when specifying how to get
3298context.@refill
3299
3300@item
3301@b{Idle timers in XEmacs}@*
3302@cindex Idle timer restart
3303@vindex reftex-use-itimer-in-xemacs
3304In XEmacs, idle timer restart does not work reliably after fast
3305keystrokes. Therefore @b{Ref@TeX{}} currently uses the post command
3306hook to start the timer used for automatic crossref information. When
3307this bug gets fixed, a real idle timer can be requested with
3308@lisp
3309(setq reftex-use-itimer-in-xemacs t)
3310@end lisp
3311
3312@item
3313@b{Viper mode}@*
3314@cindex Viper mode
3315@cindex Keybindings, problems with Viper mode
3316@findex viper-harness-minor-mode
3317With @i{Viper} mode prior to Vipers version 3.01, you need to protect
3318@b{Ref@TeX{}}'s keymaps with@refill
3319
3320@lisp
3321(viper-harness-minor-mode "reftex")
3322@end lisp
3323
3324@end itemize
3325
3326@page
3327@node Imprint, Commands, Problems and Work-Arounds, Top
3328@section Imprint
3329@cindex Imprint
3330@cindex Maintainer
3331@cindex Acknowledgments
3332@cindex Thanks
3333@cindex Bug reports
3334@cindex @code{http}, @b{Ref@TeX{}} home page
3335@cindex @code{ftp}, @b{Ref@TeX{}} site
3336
3337@b{Ref@TeX{}} was written by @i{@value{AUTHOR}}
3338@email{@value{AUTHOR-EMAIL}}, with contributions by @i{Stephen
3339Eglen}. @b{Ref@TeX{}} is currently maintained by @refill
3340
3341@noindent
3342@value{MAINTAINER} @email{@value{MAINTAINER-EMAIL}}
3343
3344If you have questions about @b{Ref@TeX{}}, there are several Usenet
3345groups which have competent readers: @code{comp.emacs},
3346@code{gnu.emacs.help}, @code{comp.emacs.xemacs}, @code{comp.text.tex}.
3347You can also write directly to the maintainer.
3348
3349If you find a bug in @b{Ref@TeX{}} or its documentation, or if you want
3350to contribute code or ideas, please
3351@uref{mailto:@value{MAINTAINER-EMAIL},contact the maintainer}. Remember
3352to provide all necessary information such as version numbers of Emacs
3353and @b{Ref@TeX{}}, and the relevant part of your configuration in
3354@file{.emacs}. When reporting a bug which throws an exception, please
3355include a backtrace if you know how to produce one.
3356
3357@b{Ref@TeX{}} is bundled and pre-installed with Emacs since version 20.2.
3358It was also bundled and pre-installed with XEmacs 19.16--20.x. XEmacs
335921.x users want to install the corresponding plugin package which is
3360available from the XEmacs @code{ftp} site. See the XEmacs 21.x
3361documentation on package installation for details.@refill
3362
3363Users of earlier Emacs distributions (including Emacs 19) can get a
3364@b{Ref@TeX{}} distribution from the
3365@uref{http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/~dominik/Tools/,maintainers
3366webpage}. Note that the Emacs 19 version supports many but not all
3367features described in this manual.@refill
3368
3369Thanks to the people on the Net who have used @b{Ref@TeX{}} and helped
d4e1eea3
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3370developing it with their reports. In particular thanks to @i{Fran
3371Burstall, Alastair Burt, Soren Dayton, Stephen Eglen, Karl Eichwalder,
3372Peter Galbraith, Kai Grossjohann, Frank Harrell, Dieter Kraft, Adrian
3373Lanz, Rory Molinari, Stefan Monnier, Laurent Mugnier, Sudeep Kumar
3374Palat, Daniel Polani, Robin Socha, Richard Stanton, Allan Strand, Jan
3375Vroonhof, Christoph Wedler, Alan Williams}.@refill
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3376
3377The @code{view-crossref} feature was inspired by @i{Peter Galbraith's}
3378@file{bib-cite.el}.@refill
3379
3380Finally thanks to @i{Uwe Bolick} who first got me (some years ago) into
3381supporting LaTeX labels and references with an editor (which was
3382MicroEmacs at the time).@refill
3383
3384@node Commands, Options, Imprint, Top
3385@chapter Commands
3386@cindex Commands, list of
3387
d4e1eea3
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3388Here is a summary of @b{Ref@TeX{}}'s commands which can be executed from
3389LaTeX files. Command which are executed from the special buffers are
3390not described here. All commands are available from the @code{Ref}
3391menu. For keybindings, @pxref{Keybindings}.
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3392
3393@deffn Command reftex-toc
3394Show the table of contents for the current document. When called with
3395one ore two @kbd{C-u} prefixes, rescan the document first.@refill
3396@end deffn
3397
3398@deffn Command reftex-label
3399Insert a unique label. With one or two @kbd{C-u} prefixes, enforce
3400document rescan first.
3401@end deffn
3402
3403@deffn Command reftex-reference
3404Start a selection process to select a label, and insert a reference to
3405it. With one or two @kbd{C-u} prefixes, enforce document rescan first.
3406@end deffn
3407
3408@deffn Command reftex-citation
3409Make a citation using BibTeX database files. After prompting for a regular
3410expression, scans the buffers with BibTeX entries (taken from the
3411@code{\bibliography} command or a @code{thebibliography} environment)
3412and offers the matching entries for selection. The selected entry is
3413formated according to @code{reftex-cite-format} and inserted into the
3414buffer.@refill @*
3415When called with one or two @kbd{C-u} prefixes, first rescans the
3416document. When called with a numeric prefix, make that many citations.
3417When called with point inside the braces of a @code{\cite} command, it
3418will add another key, ignoring the value of
3419@code{reftex-cite-format}.@refill @*
3420The regular expression uses an expanded syntax: @samp{&&} is interpreted
3421as @code{and}. Thus, @samp{aaaa&&bbb} matches entries which contain
3422both @samp{aaaa} and @samp{bbb}. While entering the regexp, completion
3423on knows citation keys is possible. @samp{=} is a good regular
3424expression to match all entries in all files.@refill
3425@end deffn
3426
3427@deffn Command reftex-index
3428Query for an index macro and insert it along with its arguments. The
3429index macros available are those defined in @code{reftex-index-macro} or
3430by a call to @code{reftex-add-index-macros}, typically from an AUCTeX
3431style file. @b{Ref@TeX{}} provides completion for the index tag and the
3432index key, and will prompt for other arguments.@refill
3433@end deffn
3434
3435@deffn Command reftex-index-selection-or-word
3436Put current selection or the word near point into the default index
3437macro. This uses the information in @code{reftex-index-default-macro}
3438to make an index entry. The phrase indexed is the current selection or
3439the word near point. When called with one @kbd{C-u} prefix, let the
3440user have a chance to edit the index entry. When called with 2
3441@kbd{C-u} as prefix, also ask for the index macro and other stuff. When
3442called inside TeX math mode as determined by the @file{texmathp.el}
3443library which is part of AUCTeX, the string is first processed with the
3444@code{reftex-index-math-format}, which see.@refill
3445@end deffn
3446
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3447@deffn Command reftex-index-phrase-selection-or-word
3448Add current selection or the word at point to the phrases buffer.
3449When you are in transient-mark-mode and the region is active, the
3450selection will be used - otherwise the word at point.
3451You get a chance to edit the entry in the phrases buffer - to save the
3452buffer and return to the LaTeX document, finish with @kbd{C-c C-c}.
3453@end deffn
3454
3455@deffn Command reftex-index-visit-phrases-buffer
3456Switch to the phrases buffer, initialize if empty.
3457@end deffn
3458
3459@deffn Command reftex-index-phrases-apply-to-region
3460Index all index phrases in the current region.
3461This works exactly like global indexing from the index phrases buffer,
3462but operation is restricted to the current region.
3463@end deffn
3464
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3465@deffn Command reftex-display-index
3466Display a buffer with an index compiled from the current document.
3467When the document has multiple indices, first prompts for the correct one.
3468When index support is turned off, offer to turn it on.
3469With one or two @kbd{C-u} prefixes, rescan document first.
3470With prefix 2, restrict index to current document section.
3471With prefix 3, restrict index to active region.@refill
3472@end deffn
3473
6bf7aab6
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3474@deffn Command reftex-view-crossref
3475View cross reference of macro at point. Point must be on the @var{key}
3476argument. Works with the macros @code{\label}, @code{\ref},
3477@code{\cite}, @code{\bibitem}, @code{\index} and many derivatives of
3478these. Where it makes sense, subsequent calls show additional
3479locations. See also the variable @code{reftex-view-crossref-extra} and
3480the command @code{reftex-view-crossref-from-bibtex}. With one or two
3481@kbd{C-u} prefixes, enforce rescanning of the document. With argument
34822, select the window showing the cross reference.
3483@end deffn
3484
3485@deffn Command reftex-view-crossref-from-bibtex
3486View location in a LaTeX document which cites the BibTeX entry at point.
3487Since BibTeX files can be used by many LaTeX documents, this function
3488prompts upon first use for a buffer in @b{Ref@TeX{}} mode. To reset this
3489link to a document, call the function with with a prefix arg. Calling
3490this function several times find successive citation locations.
3491@end deffn
3492
3493@deffn Command reftex-create-tags-file
3494Create TAGS file by running @code{etags} on the current document. The
3495TAGS file is also immediately visited with
3496@code{visit-tags-table}.@refill
3497@end deffn
3498
3499@deffn Command reftex-grep-document
3500Run grep query through all files related to this document.
3501With prefix arg, force to rescan document.
3502No active TAGS table is required.@refill
3503@end deffn
3504
3505@deffn Command reftex-search-document
3506Regexp search through all files of the current document.
3507Starts always in the master file. Stops when a match is found.
3508No active TAGS table is required.@refill
3509@end deffn
3510
3511@deffn Command reftex-query-replace-document
3512Run a query-replace-regexp of @var{from} with @var{to} over the entire
3513document. With prefix arg, replace only word-delimited matches. No
3514active TAGS table is required.@refill
3515@end deffn
3516
3517@deffn Command reftex-change-label
3518Query replace @var{from} with @var{to} in all @code{\label} and
3519@code{\ref} commands. Works on the entire multifile document. No
3520active TAGS table is required.@refill
3521@end deffn
3522
3523@deffn Command reftex-renumber-simple-labels
3524Renumber all simple labels in the document to make them sequentially.
3525Simple labels are the ones created by RefTeX, consisting only of the
3526prefix and a number. After the command completes, all these labels will
3527have sequential numbers throughout the document. Any references to the
3528labels will be changed as well. For this, @b{Ref@TeX{}} looks at the
3529arguments of any macros which either start or end with the string
3530@samp{ref}. This command should be used with care, in particular in
3531multifile documents. You should not use it if another document refers
3532to this one with the @code{xr} package.@refill
3533@end deffn
3534
3535@deffn Command reftex-find-duplicate-labels
3536Produce a list of all duplicate labels in the document.@refill
3537@end deffn
3538
3539@deffn Command reftex-customize
3540Run the customize browser on the @b{Ref@TeX{}} group.
3541@end deffn
3542@deffn Command reftex-show-commentary
3543Show the commentary section from @file{reftex.el}.
3544@end deffn
3545@deffn Command reftex-info
3546Run info on the top @b{Ref@TeX{}} node.
3547@end deffn
3548@deffn Command reftex-parse-document
3549Parse the entire document in order to update the parsing information.
3550@end deffn
3551@deffn Command reftex-reset-mode
3552Enforce rebuilding of several internal lists and variables. Also
3553removes the parse file associated with the current document.
3554@end deffn
3555
3556@node Options, Keymaps and Hooks, Commands, Top
3557@chapter Options, Keymaps, Hooks
3558@cindex Options, list of
3559
3560Here is a complete list of @b{Ref@TeX{}}'s configuration variables. All
3561variables have customize support - so if you are not familiar with Emacs
3562Lisp (and even if you are) you might find it more comfortable to use
3563@code{customize} to look at and change these variables. @kbd{M-x
3564reftex-customize} will get you there.@refill
3565
3566@menu
3567* Options (Table of Contents)::
3568* Options (Defining Label Environments)::
3569* Options (Creating Labels)::
3570* Options (Referencing Labels)::
3571* Options (Creating Citations)::
3572* Options (Index Support)::
3573* Options (Viewing Cross-References)::
3574* Options (Finding Files)::
3575* Options (Optimizations)::
3576* Options (Fontification)::
3577* Options (Misc)::
3578@end menu
3579
3580@node Options (Table of Contents), Options (Defining Label Environments), , Options
3581@section Table of Contents
3582@cindex Options, table of contents
3583@cindex Table of contents, options
3584
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3585@defopt reftex-toc-max-level
3586The maximum level of toc entries which will be included in the TOC.
3587Section headings with a bigger level will be ignored. In RefTeX,
3588chapters are level 1, sections level 2 etc. This variable can be
3589changed from within the @file{*toc*} buffer with the @kbd{t} key.@refill
3590@end defopt
3591
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3592@defopt reftex-toc-keep-other-windows
3593Non-@code{nil} means, split the selected window to display the
3594@file{*toc*} buffer. This helps to keep the window configuration, but
3595makes the @file{*toc*} small. When @code{nil}, all other windows except
3596the selected one will be deleted, so that the @file{*toc*} window fills
3597half the frame.@refill
3598@end defopt
3599
3600@defopt reftex-toc-include-file-boundaries
3601Non-@code{nil} means, include file boundaries in @file{*toc*} buffer.
3602This flag can be toggled from within the @file{*toc*} buffer with the
3603@kbd{i} key.@refill
3604@end defopt
3605
3606@defopt reftex-toc-include-labels
3607Non-@code{nil} means, include labels in @file{*toc*} buffer. This flag
3608can be toggled from within the @file{*toc*} buffer with the @kbd{l}
3609key.@refill
3610@end defopt
3611
3612@defopt reftex-toc-include-index-entries
3613Non-@code{nil} means, include index entries in @file{*toc*} buffer.
3614This flag can be toggled from within the @file{*toc*} buffer with the
3615@kbd{i} key.
3616@end defopt
3617
3618@defopt reftex-toc-include-context
3619Non-@code{nil} means, include context with labels in the @file{*toc*}
3620buffer. Context will only be shown if the labels are visible as well.
3621This flag can be toggled from within the @file{*toc*} buffer with the
3622@kbd{c} key.@refill
3623@end defopt
3624
3625@defopt reftex-toc-follow-mode
3626Non-@code{nil} means, point in @file{*toc*} buffer (the
3627table-of-contents buffer) will cause other window to follow. The other
3628window will show the corresponding part of the document. This flag can
3629be toggled from within the @file{*toc*} buffer with the @kbd{f}
3630key.@refill
3631@end defopt
3632
3633@deffn {Normal Hook} reftex-toc-mode-hook
3634Normal hook which is run when a @file{*toc*} buffer is
3635created.@refill
3636@end deffn
3637
3638@deffn Keymap reftex-toc-map
3639The keymap which is active in the @file{*toc*} buffer.
3640(@pxref{Table of Contents}).@refill
3641@end deffn
3642
3643@node Options (Defining Label Environments), Options (Creating Labels), Options (Table of Contents), Options
3644@section Defining Label Environments
3645@cindex Options, defining label environments
3646@cindex Defining label environments, options
3647
3648@defopt reftex-default-label-alist-entries
3649Default label alist specifications. It is a list of symbols with
3650associations in the constant @code{reftex-label-alist-builtin}.
3651@code{LaTeX} should always be the last entry.@refill
3652@end defopt
3653
3654@defopt reftex-label-alist
3655Set this variable to define additions and changes to the defaults in
3656@code{reftex-default-label-alist-entries}. The only things you
3657@emph{must not} change is that @code{?s} is the type indicator for
3658section labels, and @key{SPC} for the @code{any} label type. These are
3659hard-coded at other places in the code.@refill
3660
3661The value of the variable must be a list of items. Each item is a list
3662itself and has the following structure:
3663
3664@example
3665 (@var{env-or-macro} @var{type-key} @var{label-prefix} @var{reference-format}
d4e1eea3 3666 @var{context-method} (@var{magic-word} ... ) @var{toc-level})
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3667@end example
3668
3669Each list entry describes either an environment carrying a counter for
3670use with @code{\label} and @code{\ref}, or a LaTeX macro defining a
3671label as (or inside) one of its arguments. The elements of each list
3672entry are:@refill
3673
3674@table @asis
3675@item @var{env-or-macro}
3676Name of the environment (like @samp{table}) or macro (like
3677@samp{\myfig}). For macros, indicate the arguments, as in
3678@samp{\myfig[]@{@}@{@}@{*@}@{@}}. Use square brackets for optional
3679arguments, a star to mark the label argument, if any. The macro does
3680not have to have a label argument - you could also use
3681@samp{\label@{...@}} inside one of its arguments.@refill
3682
3683Special names: @code{section} for section labels, @code{any} to define a
3684group which contains all labels.@refill
3685
3686This may also be a function to do local parsing and identify point to be
3687in a a non-standard label environment. The function must take an
3688argument @var{bound} and limit backward searches to this value. It
3689should return either nil or a cons cell @code{(@var{function}
3690. @var{position})} with the function symbol and the position where the
3691special environment starts. See the Info documentation for an
3692example.@refill
3693
3694Finally this may also be @code{nil} if the entry is only meant to change
3695some settings associated with the type indicator character (see
3696below).@refill
3697
3698@item @var{type-key}
3699Type indicator character, like @code{?t}, must be a printable ASCII
3700character. The type indicator is a single character which defines a
3701label type. Any label inside the environment or macro is assumed to
3702belong to this type. The same character may occur several times in this
3703list, to cover cases in which different environments carry the same
3704label type (like @code{equation} and @code{eqnarray}). If the type
3705indicator is @code{nil} and the macro has a label argument @samp{@{*@}},
3706the macro defines neutral labels just like @code{\label}. In this case
3707the reminder of this entry is ignored.@refill
3708
3709@item @var{label-prefix}
3710Label prefix string, like @samp{tab:}. The prefix is a short string
3711used as the start of a label. It may be the empty string. The prefix
3712may contain the following @samp{%} escapes:@refill
3713
3714@example
3715%f Current file name, directory and extension stripped.
3716%F Current file name relative to master file directory.
3717%u User login name, on systems which support this.
3718%S A section prefix derived with variable @code{reftex-section-prefixes}.
3719@end example
3720
3721@noindent
3722Example: In a file @file{intro.tex}, @samp{eq:%f:} will become
3723@samp{eq:intro:}.@refill
3724
3725@item @var{reference-format}
3726Format string for reference insert in buffer. @samp{%s} will be
3727replaced by the label. When the format starts with @samp{~}, this
3728@samp{~} will only be inserted when the character before point is
3729@emph{not} a whitespace.@refill
3730
3731@item @var{context-method}
3732Indication on how to find the short context.
3733@itemize @minus
3734@item
3735If @code{nil}, use the text following the @samp{\label@{...@}} macro.@refill
3736@item
3737If @code{t}, use
3738@itemize @minus
3739@item
3740the section heading for section labels.
3741@item
3742text following the @samp{\begin@{...@}} statement of environments (not
3743a good choice for environments like eqnarray or enumerate, where one has
3744several labels in a single environment).@refill
3745@item
3746text after the macro name (starting with the first arg) for
3747macros.@refill
3748@end itemize
3749@item
3750If an integer, use the nth argument of the macro. As a special case,
37511000 means to get text after the last macro argument.@refill
3752@item
3753If a string, use as regexp to search @emph{backward} from the label.
3754Context is then the text following the end of the match. E.g. putting
3755this to @samp{\\caption[[@{]} will use the caption in a figure or table
3756environment. @samp{\\begin@{eqnarray@}\|\\\\} works for
3757eqnarrays.@refill
3758@item
3759If any of @code{caption}, @code{item}, @code{eqnarray-like},
3760@code{alignat-like}, this symbol will internally be translated into an
3761appropriate regexp (see also the variable
3762@code{reftex-default-context-regexps}).@refill
3763@item
3764If a function, call this function with the name of the environment/macro
3765as argument. On call, point will be just after the @code{\label} macro.
3766The function is expected to return a suitable context string. It should
3767throw an exception (error) when failing to find context. As an example,
3768here is a function returning the 10 chars following the label macro as
3769context:@refill
3770
3771@example
3772(defun my-context-function (env-or-mac)
3773 (if (> (point-max) (+ 10 (point)))
3774 (buffer-substring (point) (+ 10 (point)))
3775 (error "Buffer too small")))
3776@end example
3777@end itemize
3778
3779Label context is used in two ways by @b{Ref@TeX{}}: For display in the label
3780menu, and to derive a label string. If you want to use a different
3781method for each of these, specify them as a dotted pair.
3782E.g. @code{(nil . t)} uses the text after the label (@code{nil}) for
3783display, and text from the default position (@code{t}) to derive a label
3784string. This is actually used for section labels.@refill
3785
3786@item @var{magic-word-list}
3787List of magic words which identify a reference to be of this type. If
3788the word before point is equal to one of these words when calling
3789@code{reftex-reference}, the label list offered will be automatically
3790restricted to labels of the correct type. If the first element of this
3791word--list is the symbol `regexp', the strings are interpreted as regular
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3792expressions.@refill
3793
3794@item @var{toc-level}
3795The integer level at which this environment should be added to the table
3796of contents. See also @code{reftex-section-levels}. A positive value
3797will number the entries mixed with the sectioning commands of the same
3798level. A negative value will make unnumbered entries. Useful only for
3799theorem-like environments which structure the document. Will be ignored
3800for macros. When omitted or @code{nil}, no TOC entries will be
3801made.@refill
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3802@end table
3803
3804If the type indicator characters of two or more entries are the same,
3805@b{Ref@TeX{}} will use@refill
3806@itemize @minus
3807@item
3808the first non-@code{nil} format and prefix
3809@item
3810the magic words of all involved entries.
3811@end itemize
3812
3813Any list entry may also be a symbol. If that has an association in
3814@code{reftex-label-alist-builtin}, the @code{cddr} of that association is
3815spliced into the list. However, builtin defaults should normally be set
3816with the variable @code{reftex-default-label-alist-entries}.@refill
3817@end defopt
3818
3819@defopt reftex-max-section-depth
3820Maximum depth of section levels in document structure.
3821Standard LaTeX needs 7, default is 12.
3822@end defopt
3823
3824@defopt reftex-section-levels
3825Commands and levels used for defining sections in the document. The
3826@code{car} of each cons cell is the name of the section macro. The
3827@code{cdr} is a number indicating its level. A negative level means the
3828same as the positive value, but the section will never get a
d4e1eea3 3829number. The @code{cdr} may also be a function which then has to return
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DL
3830the level.@refill
3831@end defopt
3832
3833@defopt reftex-section-prefixes
3834Prefixes for section labels. When the label prefix given in an entry in
3835@code{reftex-label-alist} contains @samp{%S}, this list is used to
3836determine the correct prefix string depending on the current section
3837level. The list is an alist, with each entry of the form
3838@w{@code{(@var{key} . @var{prefix})}}. Possible keys are sectioning macro
3839names like @samp{chapter}, integer section levels (as given in
3840@code{reftex-section-levels}), and @code{t} for the default.
3841@end defopt
3842
3843@defopt reftex-default-context-regexps
3844Alist with default regular expressions for finding context. The emacs
3845lisp form @w{@code{(format regexp (regexp-quote environment))}} is used
3846to calculate the final regular expression - so @samp{%s} will be
3847replaced with the environment or macro.@refill
3848@end defopt
3849
3850@node Options (Creating Labels), Options (Referencing Labels), Options (Defining Label Environments), Options
3851@section Creating Labels
3852@cindex Options, creating labels
3853@cindex Creating labels, options
3854
3855@defopt reftex-insert-label-flags
3856Flags governing label insertion. The value has the form
3857
3858@example
3859(@var{derive} @var{prompt})
3860@end example
3861
3862If @var{derive}is @code{t}, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will try to derive a sensible
3863label from context. A section label for example will be derived from
3864the section heading. The conversion of the context to a legal label is
3865governed by the specifications given in
3866@code{reftex-derive-label-parameters}. If @var{derive} is @code{nil},
3867the default label will consist of the prefix and a unique number, like
3868@samp{eq:23}.@refill
3869
3870If @var{prompt} is @code{t}, the user will be prompted for a label
3871string. When @var{prompt} is @code{nil}, the default label will be
3872inserted without query.@refill
3873
3874So the combination of @var{derive} and @var{prompt} controls label
3875insertion. Here is a table describing all four possibilities:@refill
3876
3877@example
3878@group
3879@var{derive} @var{prompt} @var{action}
3880-----------------------------------------------------------
3881nil nil @r{Insert simple label, like @samp{eq:22} or @samp{sec:13}. No query.}
3882nil t @r{Prompt for label.}
3883t nil @r{Derive a label from context and insert. No query.}
3884t t @r{Derive a label from context, prompt for confirmation.}
3885@end group
3886@end example
3887
3888Each flag may be set to @code{t}, @code{nil}, or a string of label type
3889letters indicating the label types for which it should be true. Thus,
3890the combination may be set differently for each label type. The default
3891settings @samp{"s"} and @samp{"sft"} mean: Derive section labels from
3892headings (with confirmation). Prompt for figure and table labels. Use
3893simple labels without confirmation for everything else.@refill
3894
3895The available label types are: @code{s} (section), @code{f} (figure),
3896@code{t} (table), @code{i} (item), @code{e} (equation), @code{n}
3897(footnote), @code{N} (endnote) plus any definitions in
3898@code{reftex-label-alist}.@refill
3899@end defopt
3900
3901@deffn Hook reftex-format-label-function
3902If non-@code{nil}, should be a function which produces the string to
3903insert as a label definition. The function will be called with two
3904arguments, the @var{label} and the @var{default-format} (usually
3905@samp{\label@{%s@}}). It should return the string to insert into the
3906buffer.@refill
3907@end deffn
3908
3909@deffn Hook reftex-string-to-label-function
3910Function to turn an arbitrary string into a legal label.
3911@b{Ref@TeX{}}'s default function uses the variable
3912@code{reftex-derive-label-parameters}.@refill
3913@end deffn
3914
3915@deffn Hook reftex-translate-to-ascii-function
3916Filter function which will process a context string before it is used to
3917derive a label from it. The intended application is to convert ISO or
3918Mule characters into something legal in labels. The default function
3919@code{reftex-latin1-to-ascii} removes the accents from Latin-1
3920characters. X-Symbol (>=2.6) sets this variable to the much more
3921general @code{x-symbol-translate-to-ascii}.@refill
3922@end deffn
3923
3924@defopt reftex-derive-label-parameters
3925Parameters for converting a string into a label. This variable is a
3926list of the following items:@refill
3927@table @asis
3928@item @var{nwords}
3929Number of words to use.
3930@item @var{maxchar}
3931Maximum number of characters in a label string.
3932@item @var{illegal}
3933@code{nil}: Throw away any words containing characters illegal in labels.@*
3934@code{t}: Throw away only the illegal characters, not the whole word.
3935@item @var{abbrev}
3936@code{nil}: Never abbreviate words.@*
3937@code{t}: Always abbreviate words (see @code{reftex-abbrev-parameters}).@*
3938@code{1}: Abbreviate words if necessary to shorten label string.
3939@item @var{separator}
3940String separating different words in the label.
3941@item @var{ignorewords}
3942List of words which should not be part of labels.
3943@item @var{downcase}
3944@code{t}: Downcase words before putting them into the label.@*
3945@end table
3946@end defopt
3947
3948@defopt reftex-label-illegal-re
3949Regexp matching characters not legal in labels.
3950@end defopt
3951
3952@defopt reftex-abbrev-parameters
3953Parameters for abbreviation of words. A list of four parameters.@refill
3954@table @asis
3955@item @var{min-chars}
3956Minimum number of characters remaining after abbreviation.
3957@item @var{min-kill}
3958Minimum number of characters to remove when abbreviating words.@refill
3959@item @var{before}
3960Character class before abbrev point in word.@refill
3961@item @var{after}
3962Character class after abbrev point in word.@refill
3963@end table
3964@end defopt
3965
3966@node Options (Referencing Labels), Options (Creating Citations), Options (Creating Labels), Options
3967@section Referencing Labels
3968@cindex Options, referencing labels
3969@cindex Referencing labels, options
3970
3971@defopt reftex-label-menu-flags
3972List of flags governing the label menu makeup. The flags are:
3973@table @asis
3974@item @var{table-of-contents}
3975Show the labels embedded in a table of context.@refill
3976@item @var{section-numbers}
3977Include section numbers (like 4.1.3) in table of contents.@refill
3978@item @var{counters}
3979Show counters. This just numbers the labels in the menu.@refill
3980@item @var{no-context}
3981Non-@code{nil} means do @emph{not} show the short context.@refill
3982@item @var{follow}
3983Follow full context in other window.@refill
3984@item @var{show-commented}
3985Show labels from regions which are commented out.@refill
3986@item @var{match-everywhere}
3987Obsolete flag.@refill
3988@item @var{show-files}
3989Show begin and end of included files.@refill
3990@end table
3991
3992Each of these flags can be set to @code{t} or @code{nil}, or to a string
3993of type letters indicating the label types for which it should be true.
3994These strings work like character classes in regular expressions. Thus,
3995setting one of the flags to @samp{"sf"} makes the flag true for section
3996and figure labels, @code{nil} for everything else. Setting it to
3997@samp{"^sf"} makes it the other way round.@refill
3998
3999The available label types are: @code{s} (section), @code{f} (figure),
4000@code{t} (table), @code{i} (item), @code{e} (equation), @code{n}
4001(footnote), plus any definitions in @code{reftex-label-alist}.@refill
4002
4003Most options can also be switched from the label menu itself - so if you
4004decide here to not have a table of contents in the label menu, you can
4005still get one interactively during selection from the label menu.@refill
4006@end defopt
4007
4008@defopt reftex-multiref-punctuation
4009Punctuation strings for multiple references. When marking is used in
4010the selection buffer to select several references, this variable
4011associates the 3 marking characters @samp{,-+} with prefix strings to be
4012inserted into the buffer before the corresponding @code{\ref} macro.
4013This is used to string together whole reference sets, like
4014@samp{eqs. 1,2,3-5,6 and 7} in a single call to
4015@code{reftex-reference}.@refill
4016@end defopt
4017
4018@defopt reftex-vref-is-default
4019Non-@code{nil} means, the varioref macro @code{\vref} is used as
4020default. In the selection buffer, the @kbd{v} key toggles the reference
4021macro between @code{\ref} and @code{\vref}. The value of this variable
4022determines the default which is active when entering the selection
4023process. Instead of @code{nil} or @code{t}, this may also be a string
4024of type letters indicating the label types for which it should be
4025true.@refill
4026@end defopt
4027
4028@defopt reftex-fref-is-default
4029Non-@code{nil} means, the fancyref macro @code{\fref} is used as
4030default. In the selection buffer, the @kbd{V} key toggles the reference
4031macro between @code{\ref}, @code{\fref} and @code{\Fref}. The value of
4032this variable determines the default which is active when entering the
4033selection process. Instead of @code{nil} or @code{t}, this may also be
4034a string of type letters indicating the label types for which it should
4035be true.
4036@end defopt
4037
4038@deffn Hook reftex-format-ref-function
4039If non-@code{nil}, should be a function which produces the string to
4040insert as a reference. Note that the insertion format can also be
4041changed with @code{reftex-label-alist}. This hook also is used by the
4042special commands to insert @code{\vref} and @code{\fref} references, so
4043even if you set this, your setting will be ignored by the special
4044commands. The function will be called with two arguments, the
4045@var{label} and the @var{default-format} (usually @samp{~\ref@{%s@}}).
4046It should return the string to insert into the buffer.@refill
4047@end deffn
4048
4049@defopt reftex-level-indent
4050Number of spaces to be used for indentation per section level.@refill
4051@end defopt
4052
4053@defopt reftex-guess-label-type
4054Non-@code{nil} means, @code{reftex-reference} will try to guess the
4055label type. To do that, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will look at the word before the
4056cursor and compare it with the magic words given in
4057@code{reftex-label-alist}. When it finds a match, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will
4058immediately offer the correct label menu - otherwise it will prompt you
4059for a label type. If you set this variable to @code{nil}, @b{Ref@TeX{}}
4060will always prompt for a label type.@refill
4061@end defopt
4062
4063@deffn {Normal Hook} reftex-display-copied-context-hook
4064Normal Hook which is run before context is displayed anywhere. Designed
4065for @w{@code{X-Symbol}}, but may have other uses as well.@refill
4066@end deffn
4067
4068@deffn Hook reftex-pre-refontification-functions
4069@code{X-Symbol} specific hook. Probably not useful for other purposes.
4070The functions get two arguments, the buffer from where the command
4071started and a symbol indicating in what context the hook is
4072called.@refill
4073@end deffn
4074
4075@deffn {Normal Hook} reftex-select-label-mode-hook
4076Normal hook which is run when a selection buffer enters
4077@code{reftex-select-label-mode}.@refill
4078@end deffn
4079
4080@deffn Keymap reftex-select-label-map
4081The keymap which is active in the labels selection process
4082(@pxref{Referencing Labels}).@refill
4083@end deffn
4084
4085@node Options (Creating Citations), Options (Index Support), Options (Referencing Labels), Options
4086@section Creating Citations
4087@cindex Options, creating citations
4088@cindex Creating citations, options
4089
4090@defopt reftex-bibfile-ignore-regexps
4091List of regular expressions to exclude files in
4092@code{\\bibliography@{..@}}. File names matched by any of these regexps
4093will not be parsed. Intended for files which contain only
4094@code{@@string} macro definitions and the like, which are ignored by
4095@b{Ref@TeX{}} anyway.@refill
4096@end defopt
4097
4098@defopt reftex-default-bibliography
4099List of BibTeX database files which should be used if none are specified.
4100When @code{reftex-citation} is called from a document with neither
4101a @samp{\bibliography@{...@}} statement nor a @code{thebibliography}
4102environment, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will scan these files instead. Intended for
4103using @code{reftex-citation} in non-LaTeX files. The files will be
4104searched along the BIBINPUTS or TEXBIB path.@refill
4105@end defopt
4106
4107@defopt reftex-sort-bibtex-matches
4108Sorting of the entries found in BibTeX databases by reftex-citation.
4109Possible values:@refill
4110@example
4111nil @r{Do not sort entries.}
4112author @r{Sort entries by author name.}
4113year @r{Sort entries by increasing year.}
4114reverse-year @r{Sort entries by decreasing year.}
4115@end example
4116@end defopt
4117
4118@defopt reftex-cite-format
4119The format of citations to be inserted into the buffer. It can be a
4120string, an alist or a symbol. In the simplest case this is just the string
4121@samp{\cite@{%l@}}, which is also the default. See the definition of
4122@code{reftex-cite-format-builtin} for more complex examples.@refill
4123
4124If @code{reftex-cite-format} is a string, it will be used as the format.
4125In the format, the following percent escapes will be expanded.@refill
4126
4127@table @code
4128@item %l
4129The BibTeX label of the citation.
4130@item %a
4131List of author names, see also @code{reftex-cite-punctuation}.
4132@item %2a
4133Like %a, but abbreviate more than 2 authors like Jones et al.
4134@item %A
4135First author name only.
4136@item %e
4137Works like @samp{%a}, but on list of editor names. (@samp{%2e} and
4138@samp{%E} work a well).@refill
4139@end table
4140
4141It is also possible to access all other BibTeX database fields:
4142
4143@example
4144%b booktitle %c chapter %d edition %h howpublished
4145%i institution %j journal %k key %m month
4146%n number %o organization %p pages %P first page
4147%r address %s school %u publisher %t title
4148%v volume %y year
4149%B booktitle, abbreviated %T title, abbreviated
4150@end example
4151
4152@noindent
4153Usually, only @samp{%l} is needed. The other stuff is mainly for the
4154echo area display, and for @code{(setq reftex-comment-citations t)}.@refill
4155
4156@samp{%<} as a special operator kills punctuation and space around it
4157after the string has been formatted.@refill
4158
4159Beware that all this only works with BibTeX database files. When
4160citations are made from the @code{\bibitems} in an explicit
4161@code{thebibliography} environment, only @samp{%l} is available.@refill
4162
4163If @code{reftex-cite-format} is an alist of characters and strings, the
4164user will be prompted for a character to select one of the possible
4165format strings.@refill
4166
4167In order to configure this variable, you can either set
4168@code{reftex-cite-format} directly yourself or set it to the
4169@emph{symbol} of one of the predefined styles. The predefined symbols
4170are those which have an association in the constant
4171@code{reftex-cite-format-builtin}) E.g.: @code{(setq reftex-cite-format
4172'natbib)}.@refill
4173@end defopt
4174
4175@deffn Hook reftex-format-cite-function
4176
4177If non-@code{nil}, should be a function which produces the string to
4178insert as a citation. Note that the citation format can also be changed
4179with the variable @code{reftex-cite-format}. The function will be
4180called with two arguments, the @var{citation-key} and the
4181@var{default-format} (taken from @code{reftex-cite-format}). It should
4182return the string to insert into the buffer.@refill
4183@end deffn
4184
4185@defopt reftex-comment-citations
4186Non-@code{nil} means add a comment for each citation describing the full
4187entry. The comment is formatted according to
4188@code{reftex-cite-comment-format}.@refill
4189@end defopt
4190
4191@defopt reftex-cite-comment-format
4192Citation format used for commented citations. Must @emph{not} contain
4193@samp{%l}. See the variable @code{reftex-cite-format} for possible
4194percent escapes.@refill
4195@end defopt
4196
4197@defopt reftex-cite-punctuation
4198Punctuation for formatting of name lists in citations. This is a list
4199of 3 strings.@refill
4200@enumerate
4201@item
4202normal names separator, like @samp{, } in Jones, Brown and Miller
4203@item
4204final names separator, like @samp{ and } in Jones, Brown and Miller
4205@item
4206The @samp{et al.} string, like @samp{ @{\it et al.@}} in
4207Jones @{\it et al.@}
4208@end enumerate
4209@end defopt
4210
4211@deffn {Normal Hook} reftex-select-bib-mode-hook
4212Normal hook which is run when a selection buffer enters
4213@code{reftex-select-bib-mode}.@refill
4214@end deffn
4215
4216@deffn Keymap reftex-select-bib-map
4217The keymap which is active in the citation-key selection process
4218(@pxref{Creating Citations}).@refill
4219@end deffn
4220
4221@node Options (Index Support), Options (Viewing Cross-References), Options (Creating Citations), Options
4222@section Index Support
4223@cindex Options, Index support
4224@cindex Index support, options
4225
4226@defopt reftex-support-index
4227Non-@code{nil} means, index entries are parsed as well. Index support
4228is resource intensive and the internal structure holding the parsed
4229information can become quite big. Therefore it can be turned off. When
4230this is @code{nil} and you execute a command which requires index
4231support, you will be asked for confirmation to turn it on and rescan the
4232document.@refill
4233@end defopt
4234
4235@defopt reftex-index-special-chars
4236List of special characters in index entries, given as strings. These
4237correspond to the @code{MakeIndex} keywords
4238@code{(@var{level} @var{encap} @var{actual} @var{quote} @var{escape})}.
4239@end defopt
4240
4241@defopt reftex-index-macros
4242List of macros which define index entries. The structure of each entry
4243is
4244@lisp
d4e1eea3 4245(@var{macro} @var{index-tag} @var{key} @var{prefix} @var{exclude} @var{repeat})
6bf7aab6
DL
4246@end lisp
4247
4248@var{macro} is the macro. Arguments should be denoted by empty braces,
4249as for example in @samp{\index[]@{*@}}. Use square brackets to denote
4250optional arguments. The star marks where the index key is.@refill
4251
4252@var{index-tag} is a short name of the index. @samp{idx} and @samp{glo}
4253are reserved for the default index and the glossary. Other indices can
4254be defined as well. If this is an integer, the Nth argument of the
4255macro holds the index tag.@refill
4256
4257@var{key} is a character which is used to identify the macro for input
4258with @code{reftex-index}. @samp{?i}, @samp{?I}, and @samp{?g} are
4259reserved for default index and glossary.@refill
4260
4261@var{prefix} can be a prefix which is added to the @var{key} part of the
4262index entry. If you have a macro
4263@code{\newcommand@{\molec@}[1]@{#1\index@{Molecules!#1@}}, this prefix
4264should be @samp{Molecules!}.@refill
4265
4266@var{exclude} can be a function. If this function exists and returns a
4267non-nil value, the index entry at point is ignored. This was
4268implemented to support the (deprecated) @samp{^} and @samp{_} shortcuts
4269in the LaTeX2e @code{index} package.@refill
4270
d4e1eea3
CD
4271@var{repeat}, if non-@code{nil}, means the index macro does not typeset
4272the entry in the text, so that the text has to be repeated outside the
4273index macro. Needed for @code{reftex-index-selection-or-word} and for
4274indexing from the phrase buffer.@refill
4275
6bf7aab6
DL
4276The final entry may also be a symbol. It must have an association in
4277the variable @code{reftex-index-macros-builtin} to specify the main
4278indexing package you are using. Legal values are currently@refill
4279@example
4280default @r{The LaTeX default - unnecessary to specify this one}
4281multind @r{The multind.sty package}
4282index @r{The index.sty package}
4283index-shortcut @r{The index.sty packages with the ^ and _ shortcuts.}
4284 @r{Should not be used - only for old documents}
4285@end example
4286Note that AUCTeX sets these things internally for @b{Ref@TeX{}} as well,
4287so with a sufficiently new version of AUCTeX, you should not set the
4288package here.
4289@end defopt
4290
4291@defopt reftex-index-default-macro
4292The default index macro for @code{reftex-index-selection-or-word}.
d4e1eea3 4293This is a list with @code{(@var{macro-key} @var{default-tag})}.
6bf7aab6
DL
4294
4295@var{macro-key} is a character identifying an index macro - see
4296@code{reftex-index-macros}.
4297
4298@var{default-tag} is the tag to be used if the macro requires a
4299@var{tag} argument. When this is @code{nil} and a @var{tag} is needed,
4300@b{Ref@TeX{}} will ask for it. When this is the empty string and the
4301TAG argument of the index macro is optional, the TAG argument will be
d4e1eea3 4302omitted.@refill
6bf7aab6
DL
4303@end defopt
4304
4305@defopt reftex-index-default-tag
4306Default index tag. When working with multiple indexes, RefTeX queries
4307for an index tag when creating index entries or displaying a specific
4308index. This variable controls the default offered for these queries.
4309The default can be selected with @key{RET} during selection or
4310completion. Legal values of this variable are:@refill
4311@example
4312nil @r{Do not provide a default index}
4313"tag" @r{The default index tag given as a string, e.g. "idx"}
4314last @r{The last used index tag will be offered as default}
4315@end example
4316@end defopt
4317
4318@defopt reftex-index-math-format
4319Format of index entries when copied from inside math mode. When
4320@code{reftex-index-selection-or-word} is executed inside TeX math mode,
4321the index key copied from the buffer is processed with this format
4322string through the @code{format} function. This can be used to add the
4323math delimiters (e.g. @samp{$}) to the string. Requires the
4324@file{texmathp.el} library which is part of AUCTeX.@refill
4325@end defopt
4326
a2cc2b28
CD
4327@defopt reftex-index-phrase-file-extension
4328File extension for the index phrase file. This extension will be added
4329to the base name of the master file.
4330@end defopt
4331
d4e1eea3
CD
4332@defopt reftex-index-phrases-logical-and-regexp
4333Regexp matching the @samp{and} operator for index arguments in phrases
4334file. When several index arguments in a phrase line are separated by
4335this operator, each part will generate an index macro. So each match of
4336the search phrase will produce @emph{several} different index entries.
4337Make sure this does no match things which are not separators. This
4338logical @samp{and} has higher priority than the logical @samp{or}
4339specified in @code{reftex-index-phrases-logical-or-regexp}.@refill
4340@end defopt
4341
4342@defopt reftex-index-phrases-logical-or-regexp
4343Regexp matching the @samp{or} operator for index arguments in phrases
4344file. When several index arguments in a phrase line are separated by
4345this operator, the user will be asked to select one of them at each
4346match of the search phrase. The first index arg will be the default. A
4347number key @kbd{1}--@kbd{9} must be pressed to switch to another. Make
4348sure this does no match things which are not separators. The logical
4349@samp{and} specified in @code{reftex-index-phrases-logical-or-regexp}
4350has higher priority than this logical @samp{or}.@refill
4351@end defopt
4352
4353@defopt reftex-index-phrases-search-whole-words
4354Non-@code{nil} means phrases search will look for whole words, not subwords.
4355This works by requiring word boundaries at the beginning and end of
4356the search string. When the search phrase already has a non-word-char
4357at one of these points, no word boundary is required there.
4358@end defopt
4359
4360@defopt reftex-index-phrases-case-fold-search
4361Non-@code{nil} means, searching for index phrases will ignore
4362case.@refill
4363@end defopt
4364
4365@defopt reftex-index-phrases-skip-indexed-matches
4366Non-@code{nil} means, skip matches which appear to be indexed already.
4367When doing global indexing from the phrases buffer, searches for some
4368phrases may match at places where that phrase was already indexed. In
4369particular when indexing an already processed document again, this
4370will even be the norm. When this variable is non-@code{nil},
4371@b{Ref@TeX{}} checks if the match is an index macro argument, or if an
4372index macro is directly before or after the phrase. If that is the
4373case, that match will be ignored.@refill
4374@end defopt
4375
4376@defopt reftex-index-phrases-wrap-long-lines
4377Non-@code{nil} means, when indexing from the phrases buffer, wrap lines.
4378Inserting indexing commands in a line makes the line longer - often
4379so long that it does not fit onto the screen. When this variable is
4380non-@code{nil}, newlines will be added as necessary before and/or after the
4381indexing command to keep lines short. However, the matched text
4382phrase and its index command will always end up on a single line.@refill
4383@end defopt
4384
4385@defopt reftex-index-phrases-sort-prefers-entry
4386Non-@code{nil} means when sorting phrase lines, the explicit index entry
4387is used. Phrase lines in the phrases buffer contain a search phrase, and
4388sorting is normally based on these. Some phrase lines also have
4389an explicit index argument specified. When this variable is
4390non-@code{nil}, the index argument will be used for sorting.@refill
4391@end defopt
4392
4393@defopt reftex-index-phrases-sort-in-blocks
4394Non-@code{nil} means, empty and comment lines separate phrase buffer
4395into blocks. Sorting will then preserve blocks, so that lines are
4396re-arranged only within blocks.
4397@end defopt
4398
4399@defopt reftex-index-phrases-map
4400Keymap for the Index Phrases buffer.
4401@end defopt
4402
4403@defopt reftex-index-phrases-mode-hook
4404Normal hook which is run when a buffer is put into
4405@code{reftex-index-phrases-mode}.@refill
4406@end defopt
4407
6bf7aab6
DL
4408@defopt reftex-index-section-letters
4409The letters which denote sections in the index. Usually these are all
4410capital letters. Don't use any downcase letters. Order is not
4411significant, the index will be sorted by whatever the sort function
d4e1eea3
CD
4412thinks is correct. In addition to these letters, @b{Ref@TeX{}} will
4413create a group @samp{!} which contains all entries sorted below the
4414lowest specified letter. In the @file{*Index*} buffer, pressing any of
4415these capital letters or @kbd{!} will jump to that section.@refill
6bf7aab6
DL
4416@end defopt
4417
4418@defopt reftex-index-include-context
4419Non-@code{nil} means, display the index definition context in the
4420@file{*Index*} buffer. This flag may also be toggled from the
4421@file{*Index*} buffer with the @kbd{c} key.
4422@end defopt
4423
4424@defopt reftex-index-follow-mode
4425Non-@code{nil} means, point in @file{*Index*} buffer will cause other
4426window to follow. The other window will show the corresponding part of
4427the document. This flag can be toggled from within the @file{*Index*}
4428buffer with the @kbd{f} key.
4429@end defopt
4430
4431@deffn Keymap reftex-index-map
4432The keymap which is active in the @file{*Index*} buffer
4433(@pxref{Index Support}).@refill
4434@end deffn
4435
4436@node Options (Viewing Cross-References), Options (Finding Files), Options (Index Support), Options
4437@section Viewing Cross-References
4438@cindex Options, viewing cross-references
4439@cindex Viewing cross-references, options
4440
4441@defopt reftex-view-crossref-extra
4442Macros which can be used for the display of cross references.
4443This is used when `reftex-view-crossref' is called with point in an
4444argument of a macro. Note that crossref viewing for citations,
4445references (both ways) and index entries is hard-coded. This variable
4446is only to configure additional structures for which crossreference
4447viewing can be useful. Each entry has the structure
4448@example
4449(@var{macro-re} @var{search-re} @var{highlight}).
4450@end example
4451@var{macro-re} is matched against the macro. @var{search-re} is the
4452regexp used to search for cross references. @samp{%s} in this regexp is
4453replaced with with the macro argument at point. @var{highlight} is an
4454integer indicating which subgroup of the match should be highlighted.
4455@end defopt
4456
4457@defopt reftex-auto-view-crossref
4458Non-@code{nil} means, initially turn automatic viewing of crossref info
4459on. Automatic viewing of crossref info normally uses the echo area.
4460Whenever point is on the argument of a @code{\ref} or @code{\cite}
4461macro, and no other message is being displayed, the echo area will
4462display information about that cross reference. You can also set the
4463variable to the symbol @code{window}. In this case a small temporary
4464window is used for the display. This feature can be turned on and of
4465from the menu (Ref->Options).@refill
4466@end defopt
4467
4468@defopt reftex-idle-time
4469Time (secs) Emacs has to be idle before automatic crossref display is
4470done.@refill
4471@end defopt
4472
4473@defopt reftex-cite-view-format
4474Citation format used to display citation info in the message area. See
4475the variable @code{reftex-cite-format} for possible percent
4476escapes.@refill
4477@end defopt
4478
4479@defopt reftex-revisit-to-echo
4480Non-@code{nil} means, automatic citation display will revisit files if
4481necessary. When nil, citation display in echo area will only be active
4482for cached echo strings (see @code{reftex-cache-cite-echo}), or for
4483BibTeX database files which are already visited by a live associated
4484buffers.@refill
4485@end defopt
4486
4487@defopt reftex-cache-cite-echo
4488Non-@code{nil} means, the information displayed in the echo area for
4489cite macros (see variable @code{reftex-auto-view-crossref}) is cached and
4490saved along with the parsing information. The cache survives document
4491scans. In order to clear it, use @kbd{M-x reftex-reset-mode}.
4492@end defopt
4493
4494@node Options (Finding Files), Options (Optimizations), Options (Viewing Cross-References), Options
4495@section Finding Files
4496@cindex Options, Finding Files
4497@cindex Finding files, options
4498
4499@defopt reftex-texpath-environment-variables
4500List of specifications how to retrieve the search path for TeX files.
4501Several entries are possible.@refill
4502@itemize @minus
4503@item
4504If an element is the name of an environment variable, its content is
4505used.@refill
4506@item
4507If an element starts with an exclamation mark, it is used as a command
4508to retrieve the path. A typical command with the kpathsearch library
4509would be @w{@code{"!kpsewhich -show-path=.tex"}}.
4510@item
4511Otherwise the element itself is interpreted as a path.
4512@end itemize
4513Multiple directories can be separated by the system dependent
4514@code{path-separator}. Directories ending in @samp{//} or @samp{!!} will
4515be expanded recursively. See also @code{reftex-use-external-file-finders}.
4516@end defopt
4517
4518@defopt reftex-bibpath-environment-variables
4519List of specifications how to retrieve the search path for BibTeX
4520files. Several entries are possible.@refill
4521@itemize @minus
4522@item
4523If an element is the name of an environment variable, its content is
4524used.@refill
4525@item
4526If an element starts with an exclamation mark, it is used as a command
4527to retrieve the path. A typical command with the kpathsearch library
4528would be @w{@code{"!kpsewhich -show-path=.bib"}}.
4529@item
4530Otherwise the element itself is interpreted as a path.
4531@end itemize
4532Multiple directories can be separated by the system dependent
4533@code{path-separator}. Directories ending in @samp{//} or @samp{!!} will
4534be expanded recursively. See also @code{reftex-use-external-file-finders}.
4535@end defopt
4536
4537@defopt reftex-file-extensions
4538Association list with file extensions for different file types.
4539This is a list of items, each item is like:
4540@code{(@var{type} . (@var{def-ext} @var{other-ext} ...))}
4541@example
4542@var{type}: @r{File type like @code{"bib"} or @code{"tex"}.}
4543@var{def-ext}: @r{The default extension for that file type, like @code{".tex"} or @code{".bib"}.}
4544@var{other-ext}: @r{Any number of other legal extensions for this file type.}
4545@end example
4546When a files is searched and it does not have any of the legal extensions,
4547we try the default extension first, and then the naked file name.@refill
4548@end defopt
4549
4550@defopt reftex-search-unrecursed-path-first
4551Non-@code{nil} means, search all specified directories before trying
4552recursion. Thus, in a path @samp{.//:/tex/}, search first @samp{./},
4553then @samp{/tex/}, and then all subdirectories of @samp{./}. If this
4554option is @code{nil}, the subdirectories of @samp{./} are searched
4555before @samp{/tex/}. This is mainly for speed - most of the time the
4556recursive path is for the system files and not for the user files. Set
4557this to @code{nil} if the default makes @b{Ref@TeX{}} finding files with
4558equal names in wrong sequence.@refill
4559@end defopt
4560
4561@defopt reftex-use-external-file-finders
4562Non-@code{nil} means, use external programs to find files. Normally,
4563@b{Ref@TeX{}} searches the paths given in the environment variables
4564@code{TEXINPUTS} and @code{BIBINPUTS} to find TeX files and BibTeX
4565database files. With this option turned on, it calls an external
4566program specified in the option @code{reftex-external-file-finders}
4567instead. As a side effect, the variables
4568@code{reftex-texpath-environment-variables} and
4569@code{reftex-bibpath-environment-variables} will be ignored.
4570@end defopt
4571
4572@defopt reftex-external-file-finders
4573Association list with external programs to call for finding files. Each
4574entry is a cons cell @w{@code{(@var{type} . @var{program})}}.
4575@var{type} is either @code{"tex"} or @code{"bib"}. @var{program} is a
4576string containing the external program to use with any arguments.
4577@code{%f} will be replaced by the name of the file to be found. Note
4578that these commands will be executed directly, not via a shell. Only
4579relevant when @code{reftex-use-external-file-finders} is
4580non-@code{nil}.@refill
4581@end defopt
4582
4583@page
4584@node Options (Optimizations), Options (Fontification), Options (Finding Files), Options
4585@section Optimizations
4586@cindex Options, optimizations
4587@cindex Optimizations, options
4588
4589@defopt reftex-keep-temporary-buffers
4590Non-@code{nil} means, keep buffers created for parsing and lookup.
4591@b{Ref@TeX{}} sometimes needs to visit files related to the current
4592document. We distinguish files visited for@refill
4593@table @asis
4594@item PARSING
4595Parts of a multifile document loaded when (re)-parsing the
4596document.@refill
4597@item LOOKUP
4598BibTeX database files and TeX files loaded to find a reference, to
4599display label context, etc.@refill
4600@end table
4601The created buffers can be kept for later use, or be thrown away
4602immediately after use, depending on the value of this variable:@refill
4603
4604@table @code
4605@item nil
4606Throw away as much as possible.
4607@item t
4608Keep everything.
4609@item 1
4610Throw away buffers created for parsing, but keep the ones created for
4611lookup.@refill
4612@end table
4613
4614If a buffer is to be kept, the file is visited normally (which is
4615potentially slow but will happen only once). If a buffer is to be thrown
4616away, the initialization of the buffer depends upon the variable
4617@code{reftex-initialize-temporary-buffers}.@refill
4618@end defopt
4619
4620@defopt reftex-initialize-temporary-buffers
4621Non-@code{nil} means do initializations even when visiting file
4622temporarily. When @code{nil}, @b{Ref@TeX{}} may turn off find-file hooks and
4623other stuff to briefly visit a file. When @code{t}, the full default
4624initializations are done (@code{find-file-hook} etc.). Instead of
4625@code{t} or @code{nil}, this variable may also be a list of hook
4626functions to do a minimal initialization.@refill
4627@end defopt
4628
4629@defopt reftex-no-include-regexps
4630List of regular expressions to exclude certain input files from parsing.
4631If the name of a file included via @code{\include} or @code{\input} is
4632matched by any of the regular expressions in this list, that file is not
4633parsed by @b{Ref@TeX{}}.
4634@end defopt
4635
4636@defopt reftex-enable-partial-scans
4637Non-@code{nil} means, re-parse only 1 file when asked to re-parse.
4638Re-parsing is normally requested with a @kbd{C-u} prefix to many @b{Ref@TeX{}}
4639commands, or with the @kbd{r} key in menus. When this option is
4640@code{t} in a multifile document, we will only parse the current buffer,
4641or the file associated with the label or section heading near point in a
4642menu. Requesting re-parsing of an entire multifile document then
4643requires a @kbd{C-u C-u} prefix or the capital @kbd{R} key in
4644menus.@refill
4645@end defopt
4646
4647@defopt reftex-save-parse-info
4648Non-@code{nil} means, save information gathered with parsing in files.
4649The file @file{MASTER.rel} in the same directory as @file{MASTER.tex} is
4650used to save the information. When this variable is @code{t},
4651@itemize @minus
4652@item
4653accessing the parsing information for the first time in an editing
4654session will read that file (if available) instead of parsing the
4655document.@refill
4656@item
4657exiting Emacs or killing a buffer in reftex-mode will cause a new
4658version of the file to be written.@refill
4659@end itemize
4660@end defopt
4661
a2cc2b28
CD
4662@defopt reftex-parse-file-extension
4663File extension for the file in which parser information is stored.
4664This extension is added to the base name of the master file.
4665@end defopt
4666
6bf7aab6
DL
4667@defopt reftex-allow-automatic-rescan
4668Non-@code{nil} means, @b{Ref@TeX{}} may rescan the document when this seems
4669necessary. Applies (currently) only in rare cases, when a new label
4670cannot be placed with certainty into the internal label list.
4671@end defopt
4672
4673@defopt reftex-use-multiple-selection-buffers
4674Non-@code{nil} means use a separate selection buffer for each label
4675type. These buffers are kept from one selection to the next and need
4676not to be created for each use - so the menu generally comes up faster.
4677The selection buffers will be erased (and therefore updated)
4678automatically when new labels in its category are added. See the
4679variable @code{reftex-auto-update-selection-buffers}.@refill
4680@end defopt
4681
4682@defopt reftex-auto-update-selection-buffers
4683Non-@code{nil} means, selection buffers will be updated automatically.
4684When a new label is defined with @code{reftex-label}, all selection
4685buffers associated with that label category are emptied, in order to
4686force an update upon next use. When @code{nil}, the buffers are left
4687alone and have to be updated by hand, with the @kbd{g} key from the
4688label selection process. The value of this variable will only have any
4689effect when @code{reftex-use-multiple-selection-buffers} is
4690non-@code{nil}.@refill
4691@end defopt
4692
4693@node Options (Fontification), Options (Misc), Options (Optimizations), Options
4694@section Fontification
4695@cindex Options, fontification
4696@cindex Fontification, options
4697
4698@defopt reftex-use-fonts
4699Non-@code{nil} means, use fonts in label menu and on-the-fly help.
4700Font-lock must be loaded as well to actually get fontified
4701display. After changing this option, a rescan may be necessary to
4702activate it.@refill
4703@end defopt
4704
4705@defopt reftex-refontify-context
4706Non-@code{nil} means, re-fontify the context in the label menu with
4707font-lock. This slightly slows down the creation of the label menu. It
4708is only necessary when you definitely want the context fontified.@refill
4709
4710This option may have 3 different values:
4711@table @code
4712@item nil
4713Never refontify.
4714@item t
4715Always refontify.
4716@item 1
4717Refontify when necessary, e.g. with old versions of the x-symbol
4718package.@refill
4719@end table
4720The option is ignored when @code{reftex-use-fonts} is @code{nil}.@refill
4721@end defopt
4722
4723@defopt reftex-highlight-selection
4724Non-@code{nil} means, highlight selected text in selection and
4725@file{*toc*} buffers. Normally, the text near the cursor is the
4726@emph{selected} text, and it is highlighted. This is the entry most
4727keys in the selection and @file{*toc*} buffers act on. However, if you
4728mainly use the mouse to select an item, you may find it nice to have
4729mouse-triggered highlighting @emph{instead} or @emph{as well}. The
4730variable may have one of these values:@refill
4731
4732@example
4733nil @r{No highlighting.}
4734cursor @r{Highlighting is cursor driven.}
4735mouse @r{Highlighting is mouse driven.}
4736both @r{Both cursor and mouse trigger highlighting.}
4737@end example
4738
4739Changing this variable requires to rebuild the selection and *toc*
4740buffers to become effective (keys @kbd{g} or @kbd{r}).@refill
4741@end defopt
4742
4743@defopt reftex-cursor-selected-face
4744Face name to highlight cursor selected item in toc and selection buffers.
4745See also the variable @code{reftex-highlight-selection}.@refill
4746@end defopt
4747@defopt reftex-mouse-selected-face
4748Face name to highlight mouse selected item in toc and selection buffers.
4749See also the variable @code{reftex-highlight-selection}.@refill
4750@end defopt
4751@defopt reftex-file-boundary-face
4752Face name for file boundaries in selection buffer.
4753@end defopt
4754@defopt reftex-label-face
4755Face name for labels in selection buffer.
4756@end defopt
4757@defopt reftex-section-heading-face
4758Face name for section headings in toc and selection buffers.
4759@end defopt
4760@defopt reftex-toc-header-face
4761Face name for the header of a toc buffer.
4762@end defopt
4763@defopt reftex-bib-author-face
4764Face name for author names in bib selection buffer.
4765@end defopt
4766@defopt reftex-bib-year-face
4767Face name for year in bib selection buffer.
4768@end defopt
4769@defopt reftex-bib-title-face
4770Face name for article title in bib selection buffer.
4771@end defopt
4772@defopt reftex-bib-extra-face
4773Face name for bibliographic information in bib selection buffer.
4774@end defopt
4775@defopt reftex-select-mark-face
4776Face name for marked entries in the selection buffers.
4777@end defopt
4778@defopt reftex-index-header-face
4779Face name for the header of an index buffer.
4780@end defopt
4781@defopt reftex-index-section-face
4782Face name for the start of a new letter section in the index.
4783@end defopt
4784@defopt reftex-index-tag-face
4785Face name for index names (for multiple indices).
4786@end defopt
4787@defopt reftex-index-face
4788Face name for index entries.
4789@end defopt
4790
4791@node Options (Misc), , Options (Fontification), Options
4792@section Miscellaneous
4793@cindex Options, misc
4794
4795@defopt reftex-extra-bindings
4796Non-@code{nil} means, make additional key bindings on startup. These
4797extra bindings are located in the users @samp{C-c letter}
4798map. @xref{Keybindings}.@refill
4799@end defopt
4800
4801@defopt reftex-plug-into-AUCTeX
4802Plug-in flags for AUCTeX interface. This variable is a list of
48035 boolean flags. When a flag is non-@code{nil}, @b{Ref@TeX{}}
4804will@refill
4805
4806@example
4807- supply labels in new sections and environments (flag 1)
4808- supply arguments for macros like @code{\label} (flag 2)
4809- supply arguments for macros like @code{\ref} (flag 3)
4810- supply arguments for macros like @code{\cite} (flag 4)
4811- supply arguments for macros like @code{\index} (flag 5)
4812@end example
4813
4814You may also set the variable itself to t or nil in order to turn all
4815options on or off, respectively.@*
4816Supplying labels in new sections and environments applies when creating
4817sections with @kbd{C-c C-s} and environments with @kbd{C-c C-e}.@*
4818Supplying macro arguments applies when you insert such a macro
4819interactively with @kbd{C-c @key{RET}}.@*
4820See the AUCTeX documentation for more information.
4821@end defopt
4822
4823@defopt reftex-revisit-to-follow
4824Non-@code{nil} means, follow-mode will revisit files if necessary.
4825When nil, follow-mode will be suspended for stuff in unvisited files.
4826@end defopt
4827
4828@defopt reftex-allow-detached-macro-args
4829Non-@code{nil} means, allow arguments of macros to be detached by
4830whitespace. When this is @code{t}, the @samp{aaa} in @w{@samp{\bbb
4831[xxx] @{aaa@}}} will be considered an argument of @code{\bb}. Note that
4832this will be the case even if @code{\bb} is defined with zero or one
4833argument.@refill
4834@end defopt
4835
4836@node Keymaps and Hooks, Changes, Options, Top
4837@section Keymaps and Hooks
4838@cindex Keymaps
4839
4840@b{Ref@TeX{}} has the usual general keymap and load-- and mode-hook.
4841
4842@deffn Keymap reftex-mode-map
4843The keymap for @b{Ref@TeX{}} mode.
4844@end deffn
4845
4846@deffn {Normal Hook} reftex-load-hook
4847Normal hook which is being run when loading @file{reftex.el}.
4848@end deffn
4849
4850@deffn {Normal Hook} reftex-mode-hook
4851Normal hook which is being run when turning on @b{Ref@TeX{}} mode.@refill
4852@end deffn
4853
d4e1eea3
CD
4854Furthermore, the 4 modes used for referencing labels, creating
4855citations, the table of contents buffer and the phrases buffer have
4856their own keymaps and mode hooks. See the respective sections. There
4857are many more hooks which are described in the relevant sections about
4858options for a specific part of @b{Ref@TeX{}}.@refill
6bf7aab6
DL
4859
4860@node Changes, , Keymaps and Hooks, Top
4861@chapter Changes
4862@cindex Changes
4863
4864Here is a list of recent changes to @b{Ref@TeX{}}.
4865
4866@ignore
4867@noindent @b{Version 1.00}
4868@itemize @bullet
4869@item
4870released on 7 Jan 1997.
4871@end itemize
4872
4873@noindent @b{Version 1.04}
4874@itemize @bullet
4875@item
4876Macros as wrappers, AMSTeX support, delayed context parsing for
4877new labels.@refill
4878@end itemize
4879
4880@noindent @b{Version 1.05}
4881@itemize @bullet
4882@item
4883XEmacs port.
4884@end itemize
4885
4886@noindent @b{Version 1.07}
4887@itemize @bullet
4888@item
4889@b{Ref@TeX{}} gets its own menu.
4890@end itemize
4891
4892@noindent @b{Version 1.09}
4893@itemize @bullet
4894@item
4895Support for @code{tex-main-file}, an analogue for
4896@code{TeX-master}.@refill
4897@item
4898MS-DOS support.
4899@end itemize
4900
4901@noindent @b{Version 2.00}
4902@itemize @bullet
4903@item
4904Labels can be derived from context (default for sections).
4905@item
4906Configuration of label insertion and label referencing revised.
4907@item
4908Crossref fields in BibTeX database entries.
4909@item
4910@code{reftex-toc} introduced (thanks to Stephen Eglen).
4911@end itemize
4912
4913@noindent @b{Version 2.03}
4914@itemize @bullet
4915@item
4916@code{figure*}, @code{table*}, @code{sidewaysfigure/table} added to
4917default environments.@refill
4918@item
4919@code{reftex-bibfile-ignore-list} introduced (thanks to Rory Molinari).
4920@item
4921New functions @code{reftex-arg-label}, @code{reftex-arg-ref},
4922@code{reftex-arg-cite}.@refill
4923@item
4924Emacs/XEmacs compatibility reworked. XEmacs 19.15 now is
4925required.@refill
4926@item
4927@code{reftex-add-to-label-alist} (to be called from AUCTeX style
4928files).@refill
4929@item
4930Finding context with a hook function.
4931@item
4932Sorting BibTeX entries (new variable:
4933@code{reftex-sort-bibtex-matches}).
4934@end itemize
4935
4936@noindent @b{Version 2.05}
4937@itemize @bullet
4938@item
4939Support for @file{custom.el}.
4940@item
4941New function @code{reftex-grep-document} (thanks to Stephen Eglen).
4942@end itemize
4943
4944@noindent @b{Version 2.07}
4945@itemize @bullet
4946@item
4947New functions @code{reftex-search-document},
4948@code{reftex-query-replace-document}.
4949@end itemize
4950
4951@noindent @b{Version 2.11}
4952@itemize @bullet
4953@item
4954Submitted for inclusion to Emacs and XEmacs.
4955@end itemize
4956
4957@noindent @b{Version 2.14}
4958@itemize @bullet
4959@item
4960Variable @code{reftex-plug-into-AUCTeX} simplifies cooperation with
4961AUCTeX.@refill
4962@end itemize
4963
4964@noindent @b{Version 2.17}
4965@itemize @bullet
4966@item
4967Label prefix expands % escapes with current file name and other stuff.
4968@item
4969Citation format now with % escapes. This is not backward
4970compatible!@refill
4971@item
4972TEXINPUTS variable recognized when looking for input files.
4973@item
4974Context can be the nth argument of a macro.@refill
4975@item
4976Searching in the select buffer is now possible (@kbd{C-s} and
4977@kbd{C-r}).@refill
4978@item
4979Display and derive-label can use two different context methods.
4980@item
4981AMSmath @code{xalignat} and @code{xxalignat} added.
4982@end itemize
4983
4984@noindent @b{Version 3.00}
4985@itemize @bullet
4986@item
4987@b{Ref@TeX{}} should work better for very large projects:
4988@item
4989The new parser works without creating a master buffer.
4990@item
4991Rescanning can be limited to a part of a multifile document.
4992@item
4993Information from the parser can be stored in a file.
4994@item
4995@b{Ref@TeX{}} can deal with macros having a naked label as an argument.
4996@item
4997Macros may have white space and newlines between arguments.
4998@item
4999Multiple identical section headings no longer confuse
5000@code{reftex-toc}.@refill
5001@item
5002@b{Ref@TeX{}} should work correctly in combination with buffer-altering
5003packages like outline, folding, x-symbol, iso-cvt, isotex, etc.@refill
5004@item
5005All labeled environments discussed in @emph{The LaTeX Companion} by
5006Goossens, Mittelbach & Samarin, Addison-Wesley 1994) are part of
5007@b{Ref@TeX{}}'s defaults.@refill
5008@end itemize
5009
5010@noindent @b{Version 3.03}
5011@itemize @bullet
5012@item
5013Support for the LaTeX package @code{xr}, for inter-document
5014references.@refill
5015@item
5016A few (minor) Mule-related changes.
5017@item
5018Fixed bug which could cause @emph{huge} @file{.rel} files.
5019@item
5020Search for input and @file{.bib} files with recursive path definitions.
5021@end itemize
5022
5023@noindent @b{Version 3.04}
5024@itemize @bullet
5025@item
5026Fixed BUG in the @emph{xr} support.
5027@end itemize
5028
5029@noindent @b{Version 3.05}
5030@itemize @bullet
5031@item
5032Compatibility code now first checks for XEmacs feature.
5033@end itemize
5034
5035@noindent @b{Version 3.07}
5036@itemize @bullet
5037@item
5038@code{Ref} menu improved.
5039@end itemize
5040
5041@noindent @b{Version 3.10}
5042@itemize @bullet
5043@item
5044Fixed a bug which made reftex 3.07 fail on [X]Emacs version 19.
5045@item
5046Removed unimportant code which caused OS/2 Emacs to crash.
5047@item
5048All customization variables now accessible from menu.
5049@end itemize
5050
5051@noindent @b{Version 3.11}
5052@itemize @bullet
5053@item
5054Fixed bug which led to naked label in (e.g.) footnotes.
5055@item
5056Added scroll-other-window functions to RefTeX-Select.
5057@end itemize
5058
5059@noindent @b{Version 3.12}
5060@itemize @bullet
5061@item
5062There are 3 new keymaps for customization: @code{reftex-toc-map},
5063@code{reftex-select-label-map}, @code{reftex-select-bib-map}.
5064@item
5065Refontification uses more standard font-lock stuff.
5066@item
5067When no BibTeX database files are specified, citations can also use
5068@code{\bibitem} entries from a @code{thebibliography} environment.@refill
5069@end itemize
5070
5071@noindent @b{Version 3.14}
5072@itemize @bullet
5073@item
5074Selection buffers can be kept between selections: this is faster.
5075See new variable @code{reftex-use-multiple-selection-buffers}.@refill
5076@item
5077Prefix interpretation of reftex-view-crossref changed.
5078@item
5079Support for the @code{varioref} package (@kbd{v} key in selection
5080buffer).@refill
5081@end itemize
5082
5083@noindent @b{Version 3.16}
5084@itemize @bullet
5085@item
5086New hooks @code{reftex-format-label-function},
5087@code{reftex-format-ref-function}, @code{reftex-format-cite-function}.@refill
5088@item
5089TeXInfo documentation completed.
5090@item
5091Some restrictions in Label inserting and referencing removed.
5092@item
5093New variable @code{reftex-default-bibliography}.
5094@end itemize
5095
5096@noindent @b{Version 3.17}
5097@itemize @bullet
5098@item
5099Additional bindings in selection and @file{*toc*} buffers. @kbd{g}
5100redefined.
5101@item
5102New command @code{reftex-save-all-document-buffers}.
5103@item
5104Magic word matching made more intelligent.
5105@item
5106Selection process can switch to completion (with @key{TAB}).
5107@item
5108@code{\appendix} is now recognized and influences section numbering.
5109@item
5110File commentary shortened considerably (use Info documentation).
5111@item
5112New option @code{reftex-no-include-regexps} to skip some include files.
5113@item
5114New option @code{reftex-revisit-to-follow}.
5115@end itemize
5116
5117@noindent @b{Version 3.18}
5118@itemize @bullet
5119@item
5120The selection now uses a recursive edit, much like minibuffer input.
5121This removes all restrictions during selection. E.g. you can now
5122switch buffers at will, use the mouse etc.@refill
5123@item
5124New option @code{reftex-highlight-selection}.
5125@item
5126@kbd{mouse-2} can be used to select in selection and @file{*toc*}
5127buffers.@refill
5128@item
5129Fixed some problems regarding the interaction with VIPER mode.
5130@item
5131Follow-mode is now only used after point motion.
5132@item
5133@b{Ref@TeX{}} now finally does not fontify temporary files anymore.
5134@end itemize
5135
5136@noindent @b{Version 3.19}
5137@itemize @bullet
5138@item
5139Fixed bug with AUCTeX @code{TeX-master}.
5140@end itemize
5141
5142@noindent @b{Version 3.21}
5143@itemize @bullet
5144@item
5145New options for all faces used by @b{Ref@TeX{}}. They're in the
5146customization group @code{reftex-fontification-configurations}.@refill
5147@end itemize
5148
5149@noindent @b{Version 3.22}
5150@itemize @bullet
5151@item
5152Fixed bug with empty context strings.
5153@item
5154@code{reftex-mouse-view-crossref} is now bound by default at
5155@kbd{S-mouse-2}.@refill
5156@end itemize
5157
5158@noindent @b{Version 3.23}
5159@itemize @bullet
5160@item
5161Parse files @file{MASTER.rel} made compatible between Emacs and XEmacs.
5162@item
5163@code{kill-emacs-hook} and @code{kill-buffer-hook} now write the parse
5164file.
5165@item
5166The cursor inside a @code{\ref} or @code{\cite} macro can now trigger
5167automatic display of crossref information in the echo area. See
5168variable @code{reftex-auto-view-crossref}.
5169@item
5170AUCTeX interface updates:
5171@itemize @minus
5172@item
5173AUCTeX 9.9c and later notifies @b{Ref@TeX{}} about new sections.
5174@item
5175@b{Ref@TeX{}} notifies AUCTeX about new labels.
5176@item
5177@code{TeX-arg-ref} no longer used (introduction was unnecessary).
5178@item
5179@code{reftex-arg-label} and @code{reftex-arg-cite} fixed up.
5180@item
5181Settings added to @b{Ref@TeX{}} via style files remain local.
5182@end itemize
5183@item
5184Fixed bug with @code{reftex-citation} in non-latex buffers.
5185@item
5186Fixed bug with syntax table and context refontification.
5187@item
5188Safety-net for name change of @code{font-lock-reference-face}.
5189@end itemize
5190
5191@noindent @b{Version 3.24}
5192@itemize @bullet
5193@item
5194New option @code{reftex-revisit-to-echo}.
5195@item
5196Interface with X-Symbol (>=2.6) is now complete and stable.
5197@item
5198Adapted to new outline, which uses overlays.
5199@item
5200File names in @code{\bibliography} may now have the @code{.bib}
5201extension.@refill
5202@item
5203Fixed Bug with parsing "single file" from master file buffer.
5204@end itemize
5205
5206@noindent @b{Version 3.25}
5207@itemize @bullet
5208@item
5209Echoing of citation info caches the info for displayed entries.
5210New option @code{reftex-cache-cite-echo}.@refill
5211@item
5212@kbd{M-x reftex-reset-mode} now also removes the file with parsing
5213info.@refill
5214@item
5215Default of @code{reftex-revisit-to-follow} changed to nil.
5216@end itemize
5217
5218@noindent @b{Version 3.26}
5219@itemize @bullet
5220@item
5221[X]Emacs 19 no longer supported. Use 3.22 for Emacs 19.
5222@item
5223New hooks @code{reftex-translate-to-ascii-function},
5224@code{reftex-string-to-label-function}.@refill
5225@item
5226Made sure automatic crossref display will not visit/scan files.
5227@end itemize
5228
5229@noindent @b{Version 3.27}
5230@itemize @bullet
5231@item
5232Macros can define @emph{neutral} labels, just like @code{\label}
5233itself.@refill
5234@item
5235New option @code{reftex-allow-detached-macro-args}, default @code{nil}!
5236@end itemize
5237
5238@noindent @b{Version 3.28}
5239@itemize @bullet
5240@item
5241Auto view crossref for XEmacs uses @code{post-command-hook} to restart the
5242timer, since itimer restart is not reliable.@refill
5243@item
5244Option @code{reftex-bibfile-ignore-list} renamed to @code{-regexps}.
5245@item
5246Expansion of recursive tex and bib path rewritten.
5247@item
5248Fixed problem where @b{Ref@TeX{}} did not scan unsaved buffers.
5249@item
5250Fixed bug with section numbering after *-red sections.
5251@end itemize
5252
5253@noindent @b{Version 3.30}
5254@itemize @bullet
5255@item
5256In @code{reftex-citation}, the regular expression used to scan BibTeX
5257files can be specified using completion on known citation keys.
5258@item
5259New keys @kbd{a} and @kbd{A} in BibTeX selection process to cite @emph{all}
5260entries.
5261@item
5262New command @code{reftex-renumber-simple-labels} to renumber simple
5263labels like @samp{eq:13} sequentially through a document.
5264@end itemize
5265@noindent @b{Version 3.33}
5266@itemize @bullet
5267@item
5268Multiple selection buffers are now hidden buffers (they start with a
5269SPACE).
5270@item
5271Fixed bug with file search when TEXINPUTS environment variable is empty.
5272@end itemize
5273@noindent @b{Version 3.34}
5274@itemize @bullet
5275@item
5276Additional flag in @code{reftex-derive-label-parameters} do make only
5277lowercase labels (default @code{t}).
5278@item
5279All @file{.rel} files have a final newline to avoid queries.
5280@item
5281Single byte representations of accented European letters (ISO-8859-1)
5282are now legal in labels.
5283@end itemize
5284@noindent @b{Version 3.35}
5285@itemize @bullet
5286@item
5287ISO 8859 Latin-1 chars are converted to ASCII to derive better labels.
5288This takes back the related changes in 3.34 for safety reasons.@refill
5289@end itemize
5290@noindent @b{Version 3.36}
5291@itemize @bullet
5292@item
5293New value @code{window} for option @code{reftex-auto-view-crossref}.
5294@end itemize
5295@noindent @b{Version 3.38}
5296@itemize @bullet
5297@item
5298@code{reftex-view-crossref} no longer moves to find a macro. Point has
5299to be on the macro argument.
5300@end itemize
5301@noindent @b{Version 3.41}
5302@itemize @bullet
5303@item
5304New options @code{reftex-texpath-environment-variables},
5305@code{reftex-use-external-file-finders},
5306@code{reftex-external-file-finders},
5307@code{reftex-search-unrecursed-path-first}.
5308@item
5309@emph{kpathsearch} support. See new options and
5310@code{reftex-bibpath-environment-variables}.
5311@end itemize
6bf7aab6
DL
5312@noindent @b{Version 3.42}
5313@itemize @bullet
5314@item
5315File search further refined. New option @code{reftex-file-extensions}.
5316@item
5317@file{*toc*} buffer can show the file boundaries of a multifile
5318document, all labels and associated context. New keys @kbd{i}, @kbd{l},
5319and @kbd{c}. New options @code{reftex-toc-include-labels},
5320@code{reftex-toc-include-context},
5321@code{reftex-toc-include-file-boundaries}. @refill
5322@end itemize
5323@noindent @b{Version 3.43}
5324@itemize @bullet
5325@item
5326Viewing cross-references generalized. Now works on @code{\label},
5327@code{\ref}, @code{\cite}, @code{\bibitem}, @code{\index}, variations of
5328these, and from BibTeX buffers.@refill
5329@item
5330New option @code{reftex-view-crossref-extra}.@refill
5331@item
5332Support for the additional sectioning commands @code{\addchap} and
5333@code{\addsec} which are defined in the LaTeX KOMA-Script classes.@refill
5334@item
5335Files in @code{reftex-default-bibliography} will be searched along
5336@code{BIBINPUTS} path.@refill
5337@item
5338Reading a parse file now checks consistency.
5339@end itemize
d4e1eea3 5340@end ignore
6bf7aab6
DL
5341@noindent @b{Version 4.00}
5342@itemize @bullet
5343@item
5344RefTeX has been split into several smaller files which are autoloaded on
5345demand.
5346@item
5347Index support, along with many new options.
5348@item
5349The selection of keys for @code{\ref} and @code{\cite} now allows to
5350select multiple items by marking entries with the @kbd{m} key.
5351@item
5352Fancyref support.
5353@end itemize
5354@noindent @b{Version 4.01}
5355@itemize @bullet
5356@item
5357New command @code{reftex-index-globally} to index a word in many
5358places in the document. Also available from the index buffer with
5359@kbd{&}.
5360@item
5361The first item in a @code{reftex-label-alist} entry may now also be a parser
5362function to do non-standard parsing.
5363@item
5364@code{reftex-auto-view-crossref} no longer interferes with
5365@code{pop-up-frames} (patch from Stefan Monnier).
5366@end itemize
5367@noindent @b{Version 4.02}
5368@itemize @bullet
5369@item
5370macros ending in @samp{refrange} are considered to contain references.
5371@item
5372Index entries made with @code{reftex-index-selection-or-word} in TeX
5373math mode automatically get enclosing @samp{$} to preserve math mode. See
5374new option @code{reftex-index-math-format}. Requires AUCTeX.
5375@end itemize
5376@noindent @b{Version 4.04}
5377@itemize @bullet
5378@item
5379New option @code{reftex-index-default-tag} implements a default for queries.
5380@end itemize
5381@noindent @b{Version 4.06}
5382@itemize @bullet
5383@item
5384@code{reftex-section-levels} can contain a function to compute the level
5385of a sectioning command.
5386@item
5387Multiple @code{thebibliography} environments recognized.
5388@end itemize
d4e1eea3
CD
5389@noindent @b{Version 4.09}
5390@itemize @bullet
5391@item
5392New option @code{reftex-toc-max-level} to limit the depth of the toc.
5393New keybinding @kbd{t} in the @file{*toc*} buffer to change this
5394setting.@refill
5395@item
5396RefTeX maintaines an @file{Index Phrases} file in which phrases can be
5397collected. When the document is ready, RefTeX can search all
5398these phrases and assist indexing all matches.@refill
5399@item
5400The variables @code{reftex-index-macros} and
5401@code{reftex-index-default-macro} have changed their syntax slightly.
5402The @var{repeat} parameter has move from the latter to the former.
5403Also calls to @code{reftex-add-index-macros} from AUCTeX style files
5404need to be adapted.@refill
5405@item
5406The variable @code{reftex-section-levels} no longer contains the
5407default stuff which has been moved to a constant.@refill
5408@item
5409Environments like theorems can be placed into the TOC by putting
5410entries for @samp{"begin@{theorem@}"} in
5411@code{reftex-setion-levels}.@refill
5412@end itemize
a2cc2b28
CD
5413@noindent @b{Version 4.10}
5414@itemize @bullet
5415@item
5416Renamed @file{reftex-vcr.el} to @file{reftex-dcr.el} because of conflict
5417with @file{reftex-vars.el} on DOS machines.
5418@item
5419New options @code{reftex-parse-file-extension} and
5420@code{reftex-index-phrase-file-extension}.
5421@end itemize
60816766
CD
5422@noindent @b{Version 4.11}
5423@itemize @bullet
5424@item
5425Fixed bug which would parse @samp{\Section} just like @samp{\section}.
5426@end itemize
a0d31341
CD
5427@noindent @b{Version 4.12}
5428@itemize @bullet
5429@item
5430Support for @file{bibentry} citation style.
5431@end itemize
6bf7aab6
DL
5432
5433@node Index, , , Top
5434@unnumbered Index
5435@printindex cp
5436
5437@summarycontents
5438@contents
5439@bye
5440