(main): When relative file names are given as argument,
[bpt/emacs.git] / lispref / searching.texi
CommitLineData
7015aca4
RS
1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
fd897522 3@c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999
177c0ea7 4@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
7015aca4
RS
5@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6@setfilename ../info/searching
f9f59935 7@node Searching and Matching, Syntax Tables, Non-ASCII Characters, Top
7015aca4
RS
8@chapter Searching and Matching
9@cindex searching
10
11 GNU Emacs provides two ways to search through a buffer for specified
12text: exact string searches and regular expression searches. After a
13regular expression search, you can examine the @dfn{match data} to
14determine which text matched the whole regular expression or various
15portions of it.
16
17@menu
18* String Search:: Search for an exact match.
19* Regular Expressions:: Describing classes of strings.
20* Regexp Search:: Searching for a match for a regexp.
22697dac 21* POSIX Regexps:: Searching POSIX-style for the longest match.
7015aca4 22* Search and Replace:: Internals of @code{query-replace}.
2a233172
RS
23* Match Data:: Finding out which part of the text matched,
24 after a string or regexp search.
7015aca4
RS
25* Searching and Case:: Case-independent or case-significant searching.
26* Standard Regexps:: Useful regexps for finding sentences, pages,...
27@end menu
28
29 The @samp{skip-chars@dots{}} functions also perform a kind of searching.
30@xref{Skipping Characters}.
31
32@node String Search
33@section Searching for Strings
34@cindex string search
35
36 These are the primitive functions for searching through the text in a
37buffer. They are meant for use in programs, but you may call them
8241495d
RS
38interactively. If you do so, they prompt for the search string; the
39arguments @var{limit} and @var{noerror} are @code{nil}, and @var{repeat}
40is 1.
7015aca4 41
f9f59935
RS
42 These search functions convert the search string to multibyte if the
43buffer is multibyte; they convert the search string to unibyte if the
44buffer is unibyte. @xref{Text Representations}.
45
7015aca4 46@deffn Command search-forward string &optional limit noerror repeat
f9f59935 47This function searches forward from point for an exact match for
7015aca4
RS
48@var{string}. If successful, it sets point to the end of the occurrence
49found, and returns the new value of point. If no match is found, the
50value and side effects depend on @var{noerror} (see below).
51@c Emacs 19 feature
52
f9f59935 53In the following example, point is initially at the beginning of the
7015aca4
RS
54line. Then @code{(search-forward "fox")} moves point after the last
55letter of @samp{fox}:
56
57@example
58@group
59---------- Buffer: foo ----------
60@point{}The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
61---------- Buffer: foo ----------
62@end group
63
64@group
65(search-forward "fox")
66 @result{} 20
67
68---------- Buffer: foo ----------
69The quick brown fox@point{} jumped over the lazy dog.
70---------- Buffer: foo ----------
71@end group
72@end example
73
f9f59935 74The argument @var{limit} specifies the upper bound to the search. (It
7015aca4
RS
75must be a position in the current buffer.) No match extending after
76that position is accepted. If @var{limit} is omitted or @code{nil}, it
77defaults to the end of the accessible portion of the buffer.
78
79@kindex search-failed
f9f59935 80What happens when the search fails depends on the value of
7015aca4
RS
81@var{noerror}. If @var{noerror} is @code{nil}, a @code{search-failed}
82error is signaled. If @var{noerror} is @code{t}, @code{search-forward}
83returns @code{nil} and does nothing. If @var{noerror} is neither
84@code{nil} nor @code{t}, then @code{search-forward} moves point to the
f9f59935
RS
85upper bound and returns @code{nil}. (It would be more consistent now to
86return the new position of point in that case, but some existing
87programs may depend on a value of @code{nil}.)
7015aca4 88
61cfa852
RS
89If @var{repeat} is supplied (it must be a positive number), then the
90search is repeated that many times (each time starting at the end of the
91previous time's match). If these successive searches succeed, the
92function succeeds, moving point and returning its new value. Otherwise
bcb6b6b8
LT
93the search fails, with results depending on the value of
94@var{noerror}, as described above.
7015aca4
RS
95@end deffn
96
97@deffn Command search-backward string &optional limit noerror repeat
98This function searches backward from point for @var{string}. It is
99just like @code{search-forward} except that it searches backwards and
100leaves point at the beginning of the match.
101@end deffn
102
103@deffn Command word-search-forward string &optional limit noerror repeat
104@cindex word search
105This function searches forward from point for a ``word'' match for
106@var{string}. If it finds a match, it sets point to the end of the
107match found, and returns the new value of point.
108@c Emacs 19 feature
109
110Word matching regards @var{string} as a sequence of words, disregarding
111punctuation that separates them. It searches the buffer for the same
112sequence of words. Each word must be distinct in the buffer (searching
113for the word @samp{ball} does not match the word @samp{balls}), but the
114details of punctuation and spacing are ignored (searching for @samp{ball
115boy} does match @samp{ball. Boy!}).
116
117In this example, point is initially at the beginning of the buffer; the
118search leaves it between the @samp{y} and the @samp{!}.
119
120@example
121@group
122---------- Buffer: foo ----------
123@point{}He said "Please! Find
124the ball boy!"
125---------- Buffer: foo ----------
126@end group
127
128@group
129(word-search-forward "Please find the ball, boy.")
130 @result{} 35
131
132---------- Buffer: foo ----------
133He said "Please! Find
134the ball boy@point{}!"
135---------- Buffer: foo ----------
136@end group
137@end example
138
139If @var{limit} is non-@code{nil} (it must be a position in the current
140buffer), then it is the upper bound to the search. The match found must
141not extend after that position.
142
143If @var{noerror} is @code{nil}, then @code{word-search-forward} signals
144an error if the search fails. If @var{noerror} is @code{t}, then it
145returns @code{nil} instead of signaling an error. If @var{noerror} is
146neither @code{nil} nor @code{t}, it moves point to @var{limit} (or the
bcb6b6b8 147end of the accessible portion of the buffer) and returns @code{nil}.
7015aca4
RS
148
149If @var{repeat} is non-@code{nil}, then the search is repeated that many
150times. Point is positioned at the end of the last match.
151@end deffn
152
153@deffn Command word-search-backward string &optional limit noerror repeat
154This function searches backward from point for a word match to
155@var{string}. This function is just like @code{word-search-forward}
156except that it searches backward and normally leaves point at the
157beginning of the match.
158@end deffn
159
160@node Regular Expressions
161@section Regular Expressions
162@cindex regular expression
163@cindex regexp
164
165 A @dfn{regular expression} (@dfn{regexp}, for short) is a pattern that
166denotes a (possibly infinite) set of strings. Searching for matches for
167a regexp is a very powerful operation. This section explains how to write
168regexps; the following section says how to search for them.
169
170@menu
171* Syntax of Regexps:: Rules for writing regular expressions.
172* Regexp Example:: Illustrates regular expression syntax.
bcb6b6b8 173* Regexp Functions:: Functions for operating on regular expressions.
7015aca4
RS
174@end menu
175
176@node Syntax of Regexps
177@subsection Syntax of Regular Expressions
178
61cfa852
RS
179 Regular expressions have a syntax in which a few characters are
180special constructs and the rest are @dfn{ordinary}. An ordinary
181character is a simple regular expression that matches that character and
182nothing else. The special characters are @samp{.}, @samp{*}, @samp{+},
183@samp{?}, @samp{[}, @samp{]}, @samp{^}, @samp{$}, and @samp{\}; no new
184special characters will be defined in the future. Any other character
185appearing in a regular expression is ordinary, unless a @samp{\}
186precedes it.
7015aca4 187
8241495d 188 For example, @samp{f} is not a special character, so it is ordinary, and
7015aca4
RS
189therefore @samp{f} is a regular expression that matches the string
190@samp{f} and no other string. (It does @emph{not} match the string
8241495d
RS
191@samp{fg}, but it does match a @emph{part} of that string.) Likewise,
192@samp{o} is a regular expression that matches only @samp{o}.@refill
7015aca4 193
8241495d 194 Any two regular expressions @var{a} and @var{b} can be concatenated. The
61cfa852 195result is a regular expression that matches a string if @var{a} matches
7015aca4
RS
196some amount of the beginning of that string and @var{b} matches the rest of
197the string.@refill
198
8241495d 199 As a simple example, we can concatenate the regular expressions @samp{f}
7015aca4
RS
200and @samp{o} to get the regular expression @samp{fo}, which matches only
201the string @samp{fo}. Still trivial. To do something more powerful, you
8241495d
RS
202need to use one of the special regular expression constructs.
203
204@menu
205* Regexp Special:: Special characters in regular expressions.
206* Char Classes:: Character classes used in regular expressions.
207* Regexp Backslash:: Backslash-sequences in regular expressions.
208@end menu
209
210@node Regexp Special
211@subsubsection Special Characters in Regular Expressions
212
213 Here is a list of the characters that are special in a regular
214expression.
7015aca4 215
7dd3d99f 216@need 800
969fe9b5
RS
217@table @asis
218@item @samp{.}@: @r{(Period)}
7015aca4
RS
219@cindex @samp{.} in regexp
220is a special character that matches any single character except a newline.
221Using concatenation, we can make regular expressions like @samp{a.b}, which
222matches any three-character string that begins with @samp{a} and ends with
223@samp{b}.@refill
224
969fe9b5 225@item @samp{*}
7015aca4 226@cindex @samp{*} in regexp
1cd71ce0
RS
227is not a construct by itself; it is a postfix operator that means to
228match the preceding regular expression repetitively as many times as
229possible. Thus, @samp{o*} matches any number of @samp{o}s (including no
230@samp{o}s).
7015aca4
RS
231
232@samp{*} always applies to the @emph{smallest} possible preceding
1cd71ce0
RS
233expression. Thus, @samp{fo*} has a repeating @samp{o}, not a repeating
234@samp{fo}. It matches @samp{f}, @samp{fo}, @samp{foo}, and so on.
7015aca4 235
f9f59935
RS
236The matcher processes a @samp{*} construct by matching, immediately, as
237many repetitions as can be found. Then it continues with the rest of
238the pattern. If that fails, backtracking occurs, discarding some of the
239matches of the @samp{*}-modified construct in the hope that that will
240make it possible to match the rest of the pattern. For example, in
241matching @samp{ca*ar} against the string @samp{caaar}, the @samp{a*}
242first tries to match all three @samp{a}s; but the rest of the pattern is
7015aca4 243@samp{ar} and there is only @samp{r} left to match, so this try fails.
f9f59935
RS
244The next alternative is for @samp{a*} to match only two @samp{a}s. With
245this choice, the rest of the regexp matches successfully.@refill
7015aca4 246
473f8eb3
RS
247Nested repetition operators can be extremely slow or loop infinitely
248if they use repetition operators inside repetition operators. For
249example, it could take hours for the regular expression
250@samp{\(x+y*\)*a} to try to match the sequence
251@samp{xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxz}, before it ultimately
252fails. Emacs must try each way of grouping the 35 @samp{x}s before
253concluding that none of them can work. Even worse, @samp{\(x*\)*} can
254match the null string in infinitely many ways, so it causes an
255infinite loop. To avoid these problems, check nested repetitions
a9f0a989 256carefully.
73031603 257
969fe9b5 258@item @samp{+}
7015aca4 259@cindex @samp{+} in regexp
1cd71ce0
RS
260is a postfix operator, similar to @samp{*} except that it must match
261the preceding expression at least once. So, for example, @samp{ca+r}
7015aca4
RS
262matches the strings @samp{car} and @samp{caaaar} but not the string
263@samp{cr}, whereas @samp{ca*r} matches all three strings.
264
969fe9b5 265@item @samp{?}
7015aca4 266@cindex @samp{?} in regexp
f9f59935 267is a postfix operator, similar to @samp{*} except that it must match the
1cd71ce0
RS
268preceding expression either once or not at all. For example,
269@samp{ca?r} matches @samp{car} or @samp{cr}; nothing else.
7015aca4 270
c082a348
RS
271@item @samp{*?}, @samp{+?}, @samp{??}
272These are ``non-greedy'' variants of the operators @samp{*}, @samp{+}
273and @samp{?}. Where those operators match the largest possible
274substring (consistent with matching the entire containing expression),
275the non-greedy variants match the smallest possible substring
276(consistent with matching the entire containing expression).
277
278For example, the regular expression @samp{c[ad]*a} when applied to the
279string @samp{cdaaada} matches the whole string; but the regular
280expression @samp{c[ad]*?a}, applied to that same string, matches just
281@samp{cda}. (The smallest possible match here for @samp{[ad]*?} that
282permits the whole expression to match is @samp{d}.)
283
969fe9b5
RS
284@item @samp{[ @dots{} ]}
285@cindex character alternative (in regexp)
7015aca4
RS
286@cindex @samp{[} in regexp
287@cindex @samp{]} in regexp
969fe9b5
RS
288is a @dfn{character alternative}, which begins with @samp{[} and is
289terminated by @samp{]}. In the simplest case, the characters between
290the two brackets are what this character alternative can match.
1cd71ce0
RS
291
292Thus, @samp{[ad]} matches either one @samp{a} or one @samp{d}, and
293@samp{[ad]*} matches any string composed of just @samp{a}s and @samp{d}s
294(including the empty string), from which it follows that @samp{c[ad]*r}
295matches @samp{cr}, @samp{car}, @samp{cdr}, @samp{caddaar}, etc.
296
969fe9b5
RS
297You can also include character ranges in a character alternative, by
298writing the starting and ending characters with a @samp{-} between them.
bcb6b6b8
LT
299Thus, @samp{[a-z]} matches any lower-case @acronym{ASCII} letter.
300Ranges may be intermixed freely with individual characters, as in
301@samp{[a-z$%.]}, which matches any lower case @acronym{ASCII} letter
302or @samp{$}, @samp{%} or period.
1cd71ce0
RS
303
304Note that the usual regexp special characters are not special inside a
86494bd5 305character alternative. A completely different set of characters is
969fe9b5 306special inside character alternatives: @samp{]}, @samp{-} and @samp{^}.
1cd71ce0 307
969fe9b5
RS
308To include a @samp{]} in a character alternative, you must make it the
309first character. For example, @samp{[]a]} matches @samp{]} or @samp{a}.
310To include a @samp{-}, write @samp{-} as the first or last character of
311the character alternative, or put it after a range. Thus, @samp{[]-]}
312matches both @samp{]} and @samp{-}.
7015aca4 313
969fe9b5
RS
314To include @samp{^} in a character alternative, put it anywhere but at
315the beginning.
7015aca4 316
8f17d892
RS
317The beginning and end of a range of multibyte characters must be in
318the same character set (@pxref{Character Sets}). Thus,
319@code{"[\x8e0-\x97c]"} is invalid because character 0x8e0 (@samp{a}
320with grave accent) is in the Emacs character set for Latin-1 but the
321character 0x97c (@samp{u} with diaeresis) is in the Emacs character
322set for Latin-2. (We use Lisp string syntax to write that example,
323and a few others in the next few paragraphs, in order to include hex
324escape sequences in them.)
6cc089d2
DL
325
326If a range starts with a unibyte character @var{c} and ends with a
327multibyte character @var{c2}, the range is divided into two parts: one
328is @samp{@var{c}..?\377}, the other is @samp{@var{c1}..@var{c2}}, where
329@var{c1} is the first character of the charset to which @var{c2}
330belongs.
177c0ea7 331
ad800164 332You cannot always match all non-@acronym{ASCII} characters with the regular
8f17d892 333expression @code{"[\200-\377]"}. This works when searching a unibyte
8241495d 334buffer or string (@pxref{Text Representations}), but not in a multibyte
ad800164 335buffer or string, because many non-@acronym{ASCII} characters have codes
8f17d892 336above octal 0377. However, the regular expression @code{"[^\000-\177]"}
ad800164 337does match all non-@acronym{ASCII} characters (see below regarding @samp{^}),
8241495d 338in both multibyte and unibyte representations, because only the
ad800164 339@acronym{ASCII} characters are excluded.
8241495d
RS
340
341Starting in Emacs 21, a character alternative can also specify named
342character classes (@pxref{Char Classes}). This is a POSIX feature whose
343syntax is @samp{[:@var{class}:]}. Using a character class is equivalent
344to mentioning each of the characters in that class; but the latter is
345not feasible in practice, since some classes include thousands of
346different characters.
347
969fe9b5 348@item @samp{[^ @dots{} ]}
7015aca4 349@cindex @samp{^} in regexp
969fe9b5 350@samp{[^} begins a @dfn{complemented character alternative}, which matches any
1cd71ce0
RS
351character except the ones specified. Thus, @samp{[^a-z0-9A-Z]} matches
352all characters @emph{except} letters and digits.
7015aca4 353
969fe9b5 354@samp{^} is not special in a character alternative unless it is the first
7015aca4 355character. The character following the @samp{^} is treated as if it
1cd71ce0 356were first (in other words, @samp{-} and @samp{]} are not special there).
7015aca4 357
969fe9b5 358A complemented character alternative can match a newline, unless newline is
1cd71ce0
RS
359mentioned as one of the characters not to match. This is in contrast to
360the handling of regexps in programs such as @code{grep}.
7015aca4 361
969fe9b5 362@item @samp{^}
7015aca4 363@cindex beginning of line in regexp
bcb6b6b8
LT
364When matching a buffer, @samp{^} matches the empty string, but only at the
365beginning of a line in the text being matched (or the beginning of the
366accessible portion of the buffer). Otherwise it fails to match
367anything. Thus, @samp{^foo} matches a @samp{foo} that occurs at the
368beginning of a line.
7015aca4 369
61cfa852 370When matching a string instead of a buffer, @samp{^} matches at the
8f17d892 371beginning of the string or after a newline character.
7015aca4 372
8241495d
RS
373For historical compatibility reasons, @samp{^} can be used only at the
374beginning of the regular expression, or after @samp{\(} or @samp{\|}.
375
969fe9b5 376@item @samp{$}
7015aca4 377@cindex @samp{$} in regexp
8241495d 378@cindex end of line in regexp
bcb6b6b8
LT
379is similar to @samp{^} but matches only at the end of a line (or the
380end of the accessible portion of the buffer). Thus, @samp{x+$}
381matches a string of one @samp{x} or more at the end of a line.
7015aca4 382
61cfa852 383When matching a string instead of a buffer, @samp{$} matches at the end
8f17d892 384of the string or before a newline character.
7015aca4 385
8241495d
RS
386For historical compatibility reasons, @samp{$} can be used only at the
387end of the regular expression, or before @samp{\)} or @samp{\|}.
388
969fe9b5 389@item @samp{\}
7015aca4
RS
390@cindex @samp{\} in regexp
391has two functions: it quotes the special characters (including
392@samp{\}), and it introduces additional special constructs.
393
394Because @samp{\} quotes special characters, @samp{\$} is a regular
61cfa852
RS
395expression that matches only @samp{$}, and @samp{\[} is a regular
396expression that matches only @samp{[}, and so on.
7015aca4
RS
397
398Note that @samp{\} also has special meaning in the read syntax of Lisp
399strings (@pxref{String Type}), and must be quoted with @samp{\}. For
400example, the regular expression that matches the @samp{\} character is
401@samp{\\}. To write a Lisp string that contains the characters
402@samp{\\}, Lisp syntax requires you to quote each @samp{\} with another
403@samp{\}. Therefore, the read syntax for a regular expression matching
404@samp{\} is @code{"\\\\"}.@refill
405@end table
406
b22f3a19 407@strong{Please note:} For historical compatibility, special characters
7015aca4
RS
408are treated as ordinary ones if they are in contexts where their special
409meanings make no sense. For example, @samp{*foo} treats @samp{*} as
410ordinary since there is no preceding expression on which the @samp{*}
61cfa852
RS
411can act. It is poor practice to depend on this behavior; quote the
412special character anyway, regardless of where it appears.@refill
7015aca4 413
8241495d
RS
414@node Char Classes
415@subsubsection Character Classes
416@cindex character classes in regexp
417
418 Here is a table of the classes you can use in a character alternative,
419in Emacs 21, and what they mean:
420
421@table @samp
422@item [:ascii:]
ad800164 423This matches any @acronym{ASCII} (unibyte) character.
8241495d
RS
424@item [:alnum:]
425This matches any letter or digit. (At present, for multibyte
426characters, it matches anything that has word syntax.)
427@item [:alpha:]
428This matches any letter. (At present, for multibyte characters, it
429matches anything that has word syntax.)
430@item [:blank:]
431This matches space and tab only.
432@item [:cntrl:]
ad800164 433This matches any @acronym{ASCII} control character.
8241495d
RS
434@item [:digit:]
435This matches @samp{0} through @samp{9}. Thus, @samp{[-+[:digit:]]}
436matches any digit, as well as @samp{+} and @samp{-}.
437@item [:graph:]
ad800164 438This matches graphic characters---everything except @acronym{ASCII} control
75708135 439characters, space, and the delete character.
8241495d
RS
440@item [:lower:]
441This matches any lower-case letter, as determined by
442the current case table (@pxref{Case Tables}).
443@item [:nonascii:]
ad800164 444This matches any non-@acronym{ASCII} (multibyte) character.
8241495d 445@item [:print:]
ad800164 446This matches printing characters---everything except @acronym{ASCII} control
caccdcbb 447characters and the delete character.
8241495d
RS
448@item [:punct:]
449This matches any punctuation character. (At present, for multibyte
450characters, it matches anything that has non-word syntax.)
451@item [:space:]
452This matches any character that has whitespace syntax
453(@pxref{Syntax Class Table}).
454@item [:upper:]
455This matches any upper-case letter, as determined by
456the current case table (@pxref{Case Tables}).
457@item [:word:]
458This matches any character that has word syntax (@pxref{Syntax Class
459Table}).
460@item [:xdigit:]
461This matches the hexadecimal digits: @samp{0} through @samp{9}, @samp{a}
462through @samp{f} and @samp{A} through @samp{F}.
463@end table
464
465@node Regexp Backslash
466@subsubsection Backslash Constructs in Regular Expressions
467
468 For the most part, @samp{\} followed by any character matches only
469that character. However, there are several exceptions: certain
470two-character sequences starting with @samp{\} that have special
471meanings. (The character after the @samp{\} in such a sequence is
472always ordinary when used on its own.) Here is a table of the special
473@samp{\} constructs.
7015aca4 474
969fe9b5 475@table @samp
7015aca4
RS
476@item \|
477@cindex @samp{|} in regexp
478@cindex regexp alternative
479specifies an alternative.
480Two regular expressions @var{a} and @var{b} with @samp{\|} in
481between form an expression that matches anything that either @var{a} or
482@var{b} matches.@refill
483
484Thus, @samp{foo\|bar} matches either @samp{foo} or @samp{bar}
485but no other string.@refill
486
487@samp{\|} applies to the largest possible surrounding expressions. Only a
488surrounding @samp{\( @dots{} \)} grouping can limit the grouping power of
489@samp{\|}.@refill
490
01913af2
RS
491If you need full backtracking capability to handle multiple uses of
492@samp{\|}, use the POSIX regular expression functions (@pxref{POSIX
493Regexps}).
7015aca4 494
2d06696f
RS
495@item \@{@var{m}\@}
496is a postfix operator that repeats the previous pattern exactly @var{m}
497times. Thus, @samp{x\@{5\@}} matches the string @samp{xxxxx}
498and nothing else. @samp{c[ad]\@{3\@}r} matches string such as
499@samp{caaar}, @samp{cdddr}, @samp{cadar}, and so on.
500
501@item \@{@var{m},@var{n}\@}
2a233172 502is a more general postfix operator that specifies repetition with a
2d06696f
RS
503minimum of @var{m} repeats and a maximum of @var{n} repeats. If @var{m}
504is omitted, the minimum is 0; if @var{n} is omitted, there is no
505maximum.
506
507For example, @samp{c[ad]\@{1,2\@}r} matches the strings @samp{car},
508@samp{cdr}, @samp{caar}, @samp{cadr}, @samp{cdar}, and @samp{cddr}, and
509nothing else.@*
510@samp{\@{0,1\@}} or @samp{\@{,1\@}} is equivalent to @samp{?}. @*
511@samp{\@{0,\@}} or @samp{\@{,\@}} is equivalent to @samp{*}. @*
512@samp{\@{1,\@}} is equivalent to @samp{+}.
513
7015aca4
RS
514@item \( @dots{} \)
515@cindex @samp{(} in regexp
516@cindex @samp{)} in regexp
517@cindex regexp grouping
518is a grouping construct that serves three purposes:
519
520@enumerate
521@item
9e2b495b
RS
522To enclose a set of @samp{\|} alternatives for other operations. Thus,
523the regular expression @samp{\(foo\|bar\)x} matches either @samp{foox}
524or @samp{barx}.
7015aca4
RS
525
526@item
1cd71ce0
RS
527To enclose a complicated expression for the postfix operators @samp{*},
528@samp{+} and @samp{?} to operate on. Thus, @samp{ba\(na\)*} matches
a9f0a989
RS
529@samp{ba}, @samp{bana}, @samp{banana}, @samp{bananana}, etc., with any
530number (zero or more) of @samp{na} strings.
7015aca4
RS
531
532@item
2d06696f
RS
533To record a matched substring for future reference with
534@samp{\@var{digit}} (see below).
7015aca4
RS
535@end enumerate
536
537This last application is not a consequence of the idea of a
2d06696f
RS
538parenthetical grouping; it is a separate feature that was assigned as a
539second meaning to the same @samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct because, in
a39c2e0d 540practice, there was usually no conflict between the two meanings. But
2d06696f
RS
541occasionally there is a conflict, and that led to the introduction of
542shy groups.
543
544@item \(?: @dots{} \)
545is the @dfn{shy group} construct. A shy group serves the first two
546purposes of an ordinary group (controlling the nesting of other
547operators), but it does not get a number, so you cannot refer back to
548its value with @samp{\@var{digit}}.
549
bcb6b6b8 550Shy groups are particularly useful for mechanically-constructed regular
2d06696f
RS
551expressions because they can be added automatically without altering the
552numbering of any ordinary, non-shy groups.
7015aca4
RS
553
554@item \@var{digit}
61cfa852 555matches the same text that matched the @var{digit}th occurrence of a
a5d0a32e 556grouping (@samp{\( @dots{} \)}) construct.
7015aca4 557
a5d0a32e
RS
558In other words, after the end of a group, the matcher remembers the
559beginning and end of the text matched by that group. Later on in the
560regular expression you can use @samp{\} followed by @var{digit} to
561match that same text, whatever it may have been.
7015aca4 562
a5d0a32e
RS
563The strings matching the first nine grouping constructs appearing in
564the entire regular expression passed to a search or matching function
565are assigned numbers 1 through 9 in the order that the open
566parentheses appear in the regular expression. So you can use
567@samp{\1} through @samp{\9} to refer to the text matched by the
568corresponding grouping constructs.
7015aca4
RS
569
570For example, @samp{\(.*\)\1} matches any newline-free string that is
571composed of two identical halves. The @samp{\(.*\)} matches the first
572half, which may be anything, but the @samp{\1} that follows must match
573the same exact text.
574
bcb6b6b8
LT
575If a @samp{\( @dots{} \)} construct matches more than once (which can
576happen, for instance, if it is followed by @samp{*}), only the last
577match is recorded.
578
a5d0a32e
RS
579If a particular grouping construct in the regular expression was never
580matched---for instance, if it appears inside of an alternative that
581wasn't used, or inside of a repetition that repeated zero times---then
582the corresponding @samp{\@var{digit}} construct never matches
583anything. To use an artificial example,, @samp{\(foo\(b*\)\|lose\)\2}
584cannot match @samp{lose}: the second alternative inside the larger
585group matches it, but then @samp{\2} is undefined and can't match
586anything. But it can match @samp{foobb}, because the first
587alternative matches @samp{foob} and @samp{\2} matches @samp{b}.
588
7015aca4
RS
589@item \w
590@cindex @samp{\w} in regexp
591matches any word-constituent character. The editor syntax table
592determines which characters these are. @xref{Syntax Tables}.
593
594@item \W
595@cindex @samp{\W} in regexp
61cfa852 596matches any character that is not a word constituent.
7015aca4
RS
597
598@item \s@var{code}
599@cindex @samp{\s} in regexp
600matches any character whose syntax is @var{code}. Here @var{code} is a
61cfa852 601character that represents a syntax code: thus, @samp{w} for word
7015aca4 602constituent, @samp{-} for whitespace, @samp{(} for open parenthesis,
f9f59935
RS
603etc. To represent whitespace syntax, use either @samp{-} or a space
604character. @xref{Syntax Class Table}, for a list of syntax codes and
605the characters that stand for them.
7015aca4
RS
606
607@item \S@var{code}
608@cindex @samp{\S} in regexp
609matches any character whose syntax is not @var{code}.
a8b5bbef
DL
610
611@item \c@var{c}
612matches any character whose category is @var{c}. Here @var{c} is a
613character that represents a category: thus, @samp{c} for Chinese
614characters or @samp{g} for Greek characters in the standard category
615table.
616
617@item \C@var{c}
618matches any character whose category is not @var{c}.
7015aca4
RS
619@end table
620
61cfa852 621 The following regular expression constructs match the empty string---that is,
7015aca4 622they don't use up any characters---but whether they match depends on the
bcb6b6b8
LT
623context. For all, the beginning and end of the accessible portion of
624the buffer are treated as if they were the actual beginning and end of
625the buffer.
7015aca4 626
969fe9b5 627@table @samp
7015aca4
RS
628@item \`
629@cindex @samp{\`} in regexp
630matches the empty string, but only at the beginning
631of the buffer or string being matched against.
632
633@item \'
634@cindex @samp{\'} in regexp
635matches the empty string, but only at the end of
636the buffer or string being matched against.
637
638@item \=
639@cindex @samp{\=} in regexp
640matches the empty string, but only at point.
641(This construct is not defined when matching against a string.)
642
643@item \b
644@cindex @samp{\b} in regexp
645matches the empty string, but only at the beginning or
646end of a word. Thus, @samp{\bfoo\b} matches any occurrence of
647@samp{foo} as a separate word. @samp{\bballs?\b} matches
648@samp{ball} or @samp{balls} as a separate word.@refill
649
bcb6b6b8 650@samp{\b} matches at the beginning or end of the buffer (or string)
1cd71ce0
RS
651regardless of what text appears next to it.
652
7015aca4
RS
653@item \B
654@cindex @samp{\B} in regexp
655matches the empty string, but @emph{not} at the beginning or
bcb6b6b8 656end of a word, nor at the beginning or end of the buffer (or string).
7015aca4
RS
657
658@item \<
659@cindex @samp{\<} in regexp
660matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of a word.
bcb6b6b8 661@samp{\<} matches at the beginning of the buffer (or string) only if a
1cd71ce0 662word-constituent character follows.
7015aca4
RS
663
664@item \>
665@cindex @samp{\>} in regexp
1cd71ce0 666matches the empty string, but only at the end of a word. @samp{\>}
bcb6b6b8
LT
667matches at the end of the buffer (or string) only if the contents end
668with a word-constituent character.
9a7e97c6
LT
669
670@item \_<
671@cindex @samp{\_<} in regexp
672matches the empty string, but only at the beginning of a symbol. A
673symbol is a sequence of one or more word or symbol constituent
674characters. @samp{\_<} matches at the beginning of the buffer (or
675string) only if a symbol-constituent character follows.
676
677@item \_>
678@cindex @samp{\_>} in regexp
679matches the empty string, but only at the end of a symbol. @samp{\_>}
680matches at the end of the buffer (or string) only if the contents end
681with a symbol-constituent character.
7015aca4
RS
682@end table
683
684@kindex invalid-regexp
685 Not every string is a valid regular expression. For example, a string
686with unbalanced square brackets is invalid (with a few exceptions, such
61cfa852 687as @samp{[]]}), and so is a string that ends with a single @samp{\}. If
7015aca4
RS
688an invalid regular expression is passed to any of the search functions,
689an @code{invalid-regexp} error is signaled.
690
7015aca4
RS
691@node Regexp Example
692@comment node-name, next, previous, up
693@subsection Complex Regexp Example
694
bcb6b6b8
LT
695 Here is a complicated regexp which was formerly used by Emacs to
696recognize the end of a sentence together with any whitespace that
697follows. It was used as the variable @code{sentence-end}. (Its value
698nowadays contains alternatives for @samp{.}, @samp{?} and @samp{!} in
699other character sets.)
7015aca4
RS
700
701 First, we show the regexp as a string in Lisp syntax to distinguish
702spaces from tab characters. The string constant begins and ends with a
703double-quote. @samp{\"} stands for a double-quote as part of the
704string, @samp{\\} for a backslash as part of the string, @samp{\t} for a
705tab and @samp{\n} for a newline.
706
707@example
bcb6b6b8 708"[.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\| $\\|\t\\|@ @ \\)[ \t\n]*"
7015aca4
RS
709@end example
710
969fe9b5 711@noindent
bcb6b6b8 712In contrast, if you evaluate this string, you will see the following:
7015aca4
RS
713
714@example
715@group
bcb6b6b8
LT
716"[.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\| $\\|\t\\|@ @ \\)[ \t\n]*"
717 @result{} "[.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\| $\\| \\|@ @ \\)[
7015aca4
RS
718]*"
719@end group
720@end example
721
722@noindent
723In this output, tab and newline appear as themselves.
724
725 This regular expression contains four parts in succession and can be
726deciphered as follows:
727
728@table @code
729@item [.?!]
969fe9b5
RS
730The first part of the pattern is a character alternative that matches
731any one of three characters: period, question mark, and exclamation
bcb6b6b8
LT
732mark. The match must begin with one of these three characters. (This
733is the one point where the new value of @code{sentence-end} differs
734from the old. The new value also lists sentence ending
735non-@acronym{ASCII} characters.)
7015aca4
RS
736
737@item []\"')@}]*
738The second part of the pattern matches any closing braces and quotation
739marks, zero or more of them, that may follow the period, question mark
740or exclamation mark. The @code{\"} is Lisp syntax for a double-quote in
741a string. The @samp{*} at the end indicates that the immediately
969fe9b5 742preceding regular expression (a character alternative, in this case) may be
7015aca4
RS
743repeated zero or more times.
744
7fd1911a 745@item \\($\\|@ $\\|\t\\|@ @ \\)
7015aca4 746The third part of the pattern matches the whitespace that follows the
f9f59935
RS
747end of a sentence: the end of a line (optionally with a space), or a
748tab, or two spaces. The double backslashes mark the parentheses and
749vertical bars as regular expression syntax; the parentheses delimit a
750group and the vertical bars separate alternatives. The dollar sign is
751used to match the end of a line.
7015aca4
RS
752
753@item [ \t\n]*
754Finally, the last part of the pattern matches any additional whitespace
755beyond the minimum needed to end a sentence.
756@end table
757
8241495d
RS
758@node Regexp Functions
759@subsection Regular Expression Functions
760
761 These functions operate on regular expressions.
762
763@defun regexp-quote string
764This function returns a regular expression whose only exact match is
765@var{string}. Using this regular expression in @code{looking-at} will
766succeed only if the next characters in the buffer are @var{string};
767using it in a search function will succeed if the text being searched
768contains @var{string}.
769
770This allows you to request an exact string match or search when calling
771a function that wants a regular expression.
772
773@example
774@group
775(regexp-quote "^The cat$")
776 @result{} "\\^The cat\\$"
777@end group
778@end example
779
780One use of @code{regexp-quote} is to combine an exact string match with
781context described as a regular expression. For example, this searches
782for the string that is the value of @var{string}, surrounded by
783whitespace:
784
785@example
786@group
787(re-search-forward
788 (concat "\\s-" (regexp-quote string) "\\s-"))
789@end group
790@end example
791@end defun
792
793@defun regexp-opt strings &optional paren
8241495d 794This function returns an efficient regular expression that will match
bcb6b6b8
LT
795any of the strings in the list @var{strings}. This is useful when you
796need to make matching or searching as fast as possible---for example,
797for Font Lock mode.
8241495d
RS
798
799If the optional argument @var{paren} is non-@code{nil}, then the
800returned regular expression is always enclosed by at least one
bcb6b6b8
LT
801parentheses-grouping construct. If @var{paren} is @code{words}, then
802that construct is additionally surrounded by @samp{\<} and @samp{\>}.
8241495d
RS
803
804This simplified definition of @code{regexp-opt} produces a
805regular expression which is equivalent to the actual value
806(but not as efficient):
807
808@example
809(defun regexp-opt (strings paren)
810 (let ((open-paren (if paren "\\(" ""))
811 (close-paren (if paren "\\)" "")))
812 (concat open-paren
813 (mapconcat 'regexp-quote strings "\\|")
814 close-paren)))
815@end example
816@end defun
817
818@defun regexp-opt-depth regexp
8241495d 819This function returns the total number of grouping constructs
bcb6b6b8
LT
820(parenthesized expressions) in @var{regexp}. (This does not include
821shy groups.)
8241495d
RS
822@end defun
823
7015aca4
RS
824@node Regexp Search
825@section Regular Expression Searching
826@cindex regular expression searching
827@cindex regexp searching
828@cindex searching for regexp
829
969fe9b5
RS
830 In GNU Emacs, you can search for the next match for a regular
831expression either incrementally or not. For incremental search
832commands, see @ref{Regexp Search, , Regular Expression Search, emacs,
833The GNU Emacs Manual}. Here we describe only the search functions
834useful in programs. The principal one is @code{re-search-forward}.
7015aca4 835
f9f59935
RS
836 These search functions convert the regular expression to multibyte if
837the buffer is multibyte; they convert the regular expression to unibyte
838if the buffer is unibyte. @xref{Text Representations}.
839
7015aca4
RS
840@deffn Command re-search-forward regexp &optional limit noerror repeat
841This function searches forward in the current buffer for a string of
842text that is matched by the regular expression @var{regexp}. The
843function skips over any amount of text that is not matched by
844@var{regexp}, and leaves point at the end of the first match found.
845It returns the new value of point.
846
847If @var{limit} is non-@code{nil} (it must be a position in the current
848buffer), then it is the upper bound to the search. No match extending
849after that position is accepted.
850
f9f59935
RS
851If @var{repeat} is supplied (it must be a positive number), then the
852search is repeated that many times (each time starting at the end of the
853previous time's match). If all these successive searches succeed, the
854function succeeds, moving point and returning its new value. Otherwise
855the function fails.
856
857What happens when the function fails depends on the value of
7015aca4
RS
858@var{noerror}. If @var{noerror} is @code{nil}, a @code{search-failed}
859error is signaled. If @var{noerror} is @code{t},
860@code{re-search-forward} does nothing and returns @code{nil}. If
861@var{noerror} is neither @code{nil} nor @code{t}, then
862@code{re-search-forward} moves point to @var{limit} (or the end of the
bcb6b6b8 863accessible portion of the buffer) and returns @code{nil}.
7015aca4 864
7015aca4
RS
865In the following example, point is initially before the @samp{T}.
866Evaluating the search call moves point to the end of that line (between
867the @samp{t} of @samp{hat} and the newline).
868
869@example
870@group
871---------- Buffer: foo ----------
872I read "@point{}The cat in the hat
873comes back" twice.
874---------- Buffer: foo ----------
875@end group
876
877@group
878(re-search-forward "[a-z]+" nil t 5)
879 @result{} 27
880
881---------- Buffer: foo ----------
882I read "The cat in the hat@point{}
883comes back" twice.
884---------- Buffer: foo ----------
885@end group
886@end example
887@end deffn
888
889@deffn Command re-search-backward regexp &optional limit noerror repeat
890This function searches backward in the current buffer for a string of
891text that is matched by the regular expression @var{regexp}, leaving
892point at the beginning of the first text found.
893
7fd1911a
RS
894This function is analogous to @code{re-search-forward}, but they are not
895simple mirror images. @code{re-search-forward} finds the match whose
896beginning is as close as possible to the starting point. If
897@code{re-search-backward} were a perfect mirror image, it would find the
898match whose end is as close as possible. However, in fact it finds the
bcb6b6b8
LT
899match whose beginning is as close as possible (and yet ends before the
900starting point). The reason for this is that matching a regular
901expression at a given spot always works from beginning to end, and
902starts at a specified beginning position.
7015aca4
RS
903
904A true mirror-image of @code{re-search-forward} would require a special
969fe9b5
RS
905feature for matching regular expressions from end to beginning. It's
906not worth the trouble of implementing that.
7015aca4
RS
907@end deffn
908
909@defun string-match regexp string &optional start
910This function returns the index of the start of the first match for
911the regular expression @var{regexp} in @var{string}, or @code{nil} if
912there is no match. If @var{start} is non-@code{nil}, the search starts
913at that index in @var{string}.
914
915For example,
916
917@example
918@group
919(string-match
920 "quick" "The quick brown fox jumped quickly.")
921 @result{} 4
922@end group
923@group
924(string-match
925 "quick" "The quick brown fox jumped quickly." 8)
926 @result{} 27
927@end group
928@end example
929
930@noindent
931The index of the first character of the
932string is 0, the index of the second character is 1, and so on.
933
934After this function returns, the index of the first character beyond
935the match is available as @code{(match-end 0)}. @xref{Match Data}.
936
937@example
938@group
939(string-match
940 "quick" "The quick brown fox jumped quickly." 8)
941 @result{} 27
942@end group
943
944@group
945(match-end 0)
946 @result{} 32
947@end group
948@end example
949@end defun
950
951@defun looking-at regexp
952This function determines whether the text in the current buffer directly
953following point matches the regular expression @var{regexp}. ``Directly
954following'' means precisely that: the search is ``anchored'' and it can
955succeed only starting with the first character following point. The
956result is @code{t} if so, @code{nil} otherwise.
957
958This function does not move point, but it updates the match data, which
959you can access using @code{match-beginning} and @code{match-end}.
960@xref{Match Data}.
961
962In this example, point is located directly before the @samp{T}. If it
963were anywhere else, the result would be @code{nil}.
964
965@example
966@group
967---------- Buffer: foo ----------
968I read "@point{}The cat in the hat
969comes back" twice.
970---------- Buffer: foo ----------
971
972(looking-at "The cat in the hat$")
973 @result{} t
974@end group
975@end example
976@end defun
977
22697dac
KH
978@node POSIX Regexps
979@section POSIX Regular Expression Searching
980
981 The usual regular expression functions do backtracking when necessary
982to handle the @samp{\|} and repetition constructs, but they continue
983this only until they find @emph{some} match. Then they succeed and
984report the first match found.
985
986 This section describes alternative search functions which perform the
987full backtracking specified by the POSIX standard for regular expression
988matching. They continue backtracking until they have tried all
989possibilities and found all matches, so they can report the longest
990match, as required by POSIX. This is much slower, so use these
991functions only when you really need the longest match.
992
01913af2
RS
993 The POSIX search and match functions do not properly support the
994non-greedy repetition operators. This is because POSIX backtracking
995conflicts with the semantics of non-greedy repetition.
996
22697dac
KH
997@defun posix-search-forward regexp &optional limit noerror repeat
998This is like @code{re-search-forward} except that it performs the full
999backtracking specified by the POSIX standard for regular expression
1000matching.
1001@end defun
1002
1003@defun posix-search-backward regexp &optional limit noerror repeat
1004This is like @code{re-search-backward} except that it performs the full
1005backtracking specified by the POSIX standard for regular expression
1006matching.
1007@end defun
1008
1009@defun posix-looking-at regexp
1010This is like @code{looking-at} except that it performs the full
1011backtracking specified by the POSIX standard for regular expression
1012matching.
1013@end defun
1014
1015@defun posix-string-match regexp string &optional start
1016This is like @code{string-match} except that it performs the full
1017backtracking specified by the POSIX standard for regular expression
1018matching.
1019@end defun
1020
7015aca4
RS
1021@ignore
1022@deffn Command delete-matching-lines regexp
1023This function is identical to @code{delete-non-matching-lines}, save
1024that it deletes what @code{delete-non-matching-lines} keeps.
1025
1026In the example below, point is located on the first line of text.
1027
1028@example
1029@group
1030---------- Buffer: foo ----------
1031We hold these truths
1032to be self-evident,
1033that all men are created
1034equal, and that they are
1035---------- Buffer: foo ----------
1036@end group
1037
1038@group
1039(delete-matching-lines "the")
1040 @result{} nil
1041
1042---------- Buffer: foo ----------
1043to be self-evident,
1044that all men are created
1045---------- Buffer: foo ----------
1046@end group
1047@end example
1048@end deffn
1049
1050@deffn Command flush-lines regexp
1051This function is the same as @code{delete-matching-lines}.
1052@end deffn
1053
1054@defun delete-non-matching-lines regexp
1055This function deletes all lines following point which don't
1056contain a match for the regular expression @var{regexp}.
1057@end defun
1058
1059@deffn Command keep-lines regexp
1060This function is the same as @code{delete-non-matching-lines}.
1061@end deffn
1062
1063@deffn Command how-many regexp
1064This function counts the number of matches for @var{regexp} there are in
1065the current buffer following point. It prints this number in
1066the echo area, returning the string printed.
1067@end deffn
1068
1069@deffn Command count-matches regexp
1070This function is a synonym of @code{how-many}.
1071@end deffn
1072
79ddc9c9 1073@deffn Command list-matching-lines regexp &optional nlines
7015aca4
RS
1074This function is a synonym of @code{occur}.
1075Show all lines following point containing a match for @var{regexp}.
1076Display each line with @var{nlines} lines before and after,
1077or @code{-}@var{nlines} before if @var{nlines} is negative.
1078@var{nlines} defaults to @code{list-matching-lines-default-context-lines}.
1079Interactively it is the prefix arg.
1080
1081The lines are shown in a buffer named @samp{*Occur*}.
1082It serves as a menu to find any of the occurrences in this buffer.
86494bd5 1083@kbd{C-h m} (@code{describe-mode}) in that buffer gives help.
7015aca4
RS
1084@end deffn
1085
1086@defopt list-matching-lines-default-context-lines
1087Default value is 0.
1088Default number of context lines to include around a @code{list-matching-lines}
1089match. A negative number means to include that many lines before the match.
1090A positive number means to include that many lines both before and after.
1091@end defopt
1092@end ignore
1093
1094@node Search and Replace
1095@section Search and Replace
1096@cindex replacement
1097
09facbd2 1098@defun perform-replace from-string replacements query-flag regexp-flag delimited-flag &optional repeat-count map start end
3da17c12
GM
1099This function is the guts of @code{query-replace} and related
1100commands. It searches for occurrences of @var{from-string} in the
1101text between positions @var{start} and @var{end} and replaces some or
09facbd2 1102all of them. If @var{start} is @code{nil} (or omitted), point is used
bcb6b6b8
LT
1103instead, and the end of the buffer's accessible portion is used for
1104@var{end}.
3da17c12
GM
1105
1106If @var{query-flag} is @code{nil}, it replaces all
7015aca4
RS
1107occurrences; otherwise, it asks the user what to do about each one.
1108
1109If @var{regexp-flag} is non-@code{nil}, then @var{from-string} is
1110considered a regular expression; otherwise, it must match literally. If
1111@var{delimited-flag} is non-@code{nil}, then only replacements
1112surrounded by word boundaries are considered.
1113
1114The argument @var{replacements} specifies what to replace occurrences
1115with. If it is a string, that string is used. It can also be a list of
1116strings, to be used in cyclic order.
1117
13ede7fc 1118If @var{replacements} is a cons cell, @code{(@var{function}
8241495d
RS
1119. @var{data})}, this means to call @var{function} after each match to
1120get the replacement text. This function is called with two arguments:
1121@var{data}, and the number of replacements already made.
1122
bda144f4
MW
1123If @var{repeat-count} is non-@code{nil}, it should be an integer. Then
1124it specifies how many times to use each of the strings in the
bcb6b6b8 1125@var{replacements} list before advancing cyclically to the next one.
7015aca4 1126
8241495d
RS
1127If @var{from-string} contains upper-case letters, then
1128@code{perform-replace} binds @code{case-fold-search} to @code{nil}, and
1129it uses the @code{replacements} without altering the case of them.
1130
7015aca4 1131Normally, the keymap @code{query-replace-map} defines the possible user
7fd1911a
RS
1132responses for queries. The argument @var{map}, if non-@code{nil}, is a
1133keymap to use instead of @code{query-replace-map}.
bcb6b6b8
LT
1134
1135@strong{Usage note:} Do not use this function in your own programs
1136unless you want to do something very similar to what
1137@code{query-replace} does, including setting the mark and possibly
1138querying the user. For most purposes a simple loop like, for
1139instance:
1140
1141@example
1142(while (re-search-forward "foo[ \t]+bar" nil t)
1143 (replace-match "foobar"))
1144@end example
1145
1146@noindent
1147is preferable. It runs faster and avoids side effects, such as
1148setting the mark. @xref{Replacing Match,, Replacing the Text that
1149Matched}, for a description of @code{replace-match}.
7015aca4
RS
1150@end defun
1151
1152@defvar query-replace-map
1153This variable holds a special keymap that defines the valid user
1154responses for @code{query-replace} and related functions, as well as
1155@code{y-or-n-p} and @code{map-y-or-n-p}. It is unusual in two ways:
1156
1157@itemize @bullet
1158@item
1159The ``key bindings'' are not commands, just symbols that are meaningful
1160to the functions that use this map.
1161
1162@item
f9f59935
RS
1163Prefix keys are not supported; each key binding must be for a
1164single-event key sequence. This is because the functions don't use
1165@code{read-key-sequence} to get the input; instead, they read a single
1166event and look it up ``by hand.''
7015aca4
RS
1167@end itemize
1168@end defvar
1169
1170Here are the meaningful ``bindings'' for @code{query-replace-map}.
1171Several of them are meaningful only for @code{query-replace} and
1172friends.
1173
1174@table @code
1175@item act
1176Do take the action being considered---in other words, ``yes.''
1177
1178@item skip
1179Do not take action for this question---in other words, ``no.''
1180
1181@item exit
7fd1911a
RS
1182Answer this question ``no,'' and give up on the entire series of
1183questions, assuming that the answers will be ``no.''
7015aca4
RS
1184
1185@item act-and-exit
7fd1911a
RS
1186Answer this question ``yes,'' and give up on the entire series of
1187questions, assuming that subsequent answers will be ``no.''
7015aca4
RS
1188
1189@item act-and-show
1190Answer this question ``yes,'' but show the results---don't advance yet
1191to the next question.
1192
1193@item automatic
1194Answer this question and all subsequent questions in the series with
1195``yes,'' without further user interaction.
1196
1197@item backup
1198Move back to the previous place that a question was asked about.
1199
1200@item edit
1201Enter a recursive edit to deal with this question---instead of any
1202other action that would normally be taken.
1203
1204@item delete-and-edit
1205Delete the text being considered, then enter a recursive edit to replace
1206it.
1207
1208@item recenter
1209Redisplay and center the window, then ask the same question again.
1210
1211@item quit
1212Perform a quit right away. Only @code{y-or-n-p} and related functions
1213use this answer.
1214
1215@item help
1216Display some help, then ask again.
1217@end table
1218
1219@node Match Data
1220@section The Match Data
1221@cindex match data
1222
3f63de1e 1223 Emacs keeps track of the start and end positions of the segments of
2a233172
RS
1224text found during a search. This means, for example, that you can
1225search for a complex pattern, such as a date in an Rmail message, and
1226then extract parts of the match under control of the pattern.
7015aca4
RS
1227
1228 Because the match data normally describe the most recent search only,
1229you must be careful not to do another search inadvertently between the
1230search you wish to refer back to and the use of the match data. If you
1231can't avoid another intervening search, you must save and restore the
1232match data around it, to prevent it from being overwritten.
1233
1234@menu
969fe9b5 1235* Replacing Match:: Replacing a substring that was matched.
7015aca4
RS
1236* Simple Match Data:: Accessing single items of match data,
1237 such as where a particular subexpression started.
7015aca4
RS
1238* Entire Match Data:: Accessing the entire match data at once, as a list.
1239* Saving Match Data:: Saving and restoring the match data.
1240@end menu
1241
969fe9b5 1242@node Replacing Match
8241495d 1243@subsection Replacing the Text that Matched
969fe9b5
RS
1244
1245 This function replaces the text matched by the last search with
1246@var{replacement}.
1247
1248@cindex case in replacements
1249@defun replace-match replacement &optional fixedcase literal string subexp
1250This function replaces the text in the buffer (or in @var{string}) that
1251was matched by the last search. It replaces that text with
1252@var{replacement}.
1253
1254If you did the last search in a buffer, you should specify @code{nil}
bcb6b6b8
LT
1255for @var{string} and make sure that the current buffer when you call
1256@code{replace-match} is the one in which you did the searching or
1257matching. Then @code{replace-match} does the replacement by editing
1258the buffer; it leaves point at the end of the replacement text, and
1259returns @code{t}.
969fe9b5
RS
1260
1261If you did the search in a string, pass the same string as @var{string}.
1262Then @code{replace-match} does the replacement by constructing and
1263returning a new string.
1264
2037b263
RS
1265If @var{fixedcase} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{replace-match} uses
1266the replacement text without case conversion; otherwise, it converts
1267the replacement text depending upon the capitalization of the text to
1268be replaced. If the original text is all upper case, this converts
1269the replacement text to upper case. If all words of the original text
1270are capitalized, this capitalizes all the words of the replacement
1271text. If all the words are one-letter and they are all upper case,
1272they are treated as capitalized words rather than all-upper-case
1273words.
969fe9b5 1274
969fe9b5
RS
1275If @var{literal} is non-@code{nil}, then @var{replacement} is inserted
1276exactly as it is, the only alterations being case changes as needed.
1277If it is @code{nil} (the default), then the character @samp{\} is treated
1278specially. If a @samp{\} appears in @var{replacement}, then it must be
1279part of one of the following sequences:
1280
1281@table @asis
1282@item @samp{\&}
1283@cindex @samp{&} in replacement
1284@samp{\&} stands for the entire text being replaced.
1285
1286@item @samp{\@var{n}}
1287@cindex @samp{\@var{n}} in replacement
1288@samp{\@var{n}}, where @var{n} is a digit, stands for the text that
1289matched the @var{n}th subexpression in the original regexp.
1290Subexpressions are those expressions grouped inside @samp{\(@dots{}\)}.
bcb6b6b8 1291If the @var{n}th subexpression never matched, an empty string is substituted.
969fe9b5
RS
1292
1293@item @samp{\\}
1294@cindex @samp{\} in replacement
1295@samp{\\} stands for a single @samp{\} in the replacement text.
1296@end table
1297
2037b263
RS
1298These substitutions occur after case conversion, if any,
1299so the strings they substitute are never case-converted.
1300
969fe9b5
RS
1301If @var{subexp} is non-@code{nil}, that says to replace just
1302subexpression number @var{subexp} of the regexp that was matched, not
1303the entire match. For example, after matching @samp{foo \(ba*r\)},
1304calling @code{replace-match} with 1 as @var{subexp} means to replace
1305just the text that matched @samp{\(ba*r\)}.
1306@end defun
1307
7015aca4
RS
1308@node Simple Match Data
1309@subsection Simple Match Data Access
1310
22697dac 1311 This section explains how to use the match data to find out what was
87bf725e 1312matched by the last search or match operation, if it succeeded.
22697dac
KH
1313
1314 You can ask about the entire matching text, or about a particular
1315parenthetical subexpression of a regular expression. The @var{count}
1316argument in the functions below specifies which. If @var{count} is
1317zero, you are asking about the entire match. If @var{count} is
1318positive, it specifies which subexpression you want.
1319
1320 Recall that the subexpressions of a regular expression are those
1321expressions grouped with escaped parentheses, @samp{\(@dots{}\)}. The
1322@var{count}th subexpression is found by counting occurrences of
1323@samp{\(} from the beginning of the whole regular expression. The first
1324subexpression is numbered 1, the second 2, and so on. Only regular
1325expressions can have subexpressions---after a simple string search, the
1326only information available is about the entire match.
1327
a9f0a989
RS
1328 A search which fails may or may not alter the match data. In the
1329past, a failing search did not do this, but we may change it in the
87bf725e
RS
1330future. So don't try to rely on the value of the match data after
1331a failing search.
a9f0a989 1332
22697dac
KH
1333@defun match-string count &optional in-string
1334This function returns, as a string, the text matched in the last search
1335or match operation. It returns the entire text if @var{count} is zero,
1336or just the portion corresponding to the @var{count}th parenthetical
a5d0a32e 1337subexpression, if @var{count} is positive.
22697dac
KH
1338
1339If the last such operation was done against a string with
1340@code{string-match}, then you should pass the same string as the
969fe9b5 1341argument @var{in-string}. After a buffer search or match,
22697dac
KH
1342you should omit @var{in-string} or pass @code{nil} for it; but you
1343should make sure that the current buffer when you call
1344@code{match-string} is the one in which you did the searching or
1345matching.
a5d0a32e
RS
1346
1347The value is @code{nil} if @var{count} is out of range, or for a
1348subexpression inside a @samp{\|} alternative that wasn't used or a
1349repetition that repeated zero times.
22697dac 1350@end defun
7015aca4 1351
79ddc9c9 1352@defun match-string-no-properties count &optional in-string
f9f59935
RS
1353This function is like @code{match-string} except that the result
1354has no text properties.
1355@end defun
1356
7015aca4
RS
1357@defun match-beginning count
1358This function returns the position of the start of text matched by the
1359last regular expression searched for, or a subexpression of it.
1360
7fd1911a 1361If @var{count} is zero, then the value is the position of the start of
eaac2be1 1362the entire match. Otherwise, @var{count} specifies a subexpression in
969fe9b5 1363the regular expression, and the value of the function is the starting
22697dac
KH
1364position of the match for that subexpression.
1365
1366The value is @code{nil} for a subexpression inside a @samp{\|}
a5d0a32e 1367alternative that wasn't used or a repetition that repeated zero times.
7015aca4
RS
1368@end defun
1369
1370@defun match-end count
22697dac
KH
1371This function is like @code{match-beginning} except that it returns the
1372position of the end of the match, rather than the position of the
1373beginning.
7015aca4
RS
1374@end defun
1375
1376 Here is an example of using the match data, with a comment showing the
1377positions within the text:
1378
1379@example
1380@group
1381(string-match "\\(qu\\)\\(ick\\)"
1382 "The quick fox jumped quickly.")
177c0ea7 1383 ;0123456789
7015aca4
RS
1384 @result{} 4
1385@end group
1386
22697dac
KH
1387@group
1388(match-string 0 "The quick fox jumped quickly.")
1389 @result{} "quick"
1390(match-string 1 "The quick fox jumped quickly.")
1391 @result{} "qu"
1392(match-string 2 "The quick fox jumped quickly.")
1393 @result{} "ick"
1394@end group
1395
7015aca4
RS
1396@group
1397(match-beginning 1) ; @r{The beginning of the match}
1398 @result{} 4 ; @r{with @samp{qu} is at index 4.}
1399@end group
1400
1401@group
1402(match-beginning 2) ; @r{The beginning of the match}
1403 @result{} 6 ; @r{with @samp{ick} is at index 6.}
1404@end group
1405
1406@group
1407(match-end 1) ; @r{The end of the match}
1408 @result{} 6 ; @r{with @samp{qu} is at index 6.}
1409
1410(match-end 2) ; @r{The end of the match}
1411 @result{} 9 ; @r{with @samp{ick} is at index 9.}
1412@end group
1413@end example
1414
1415 Here is another example. Point is initially located at the beginning
1416of the line. Searching moves point to between the space and the word
1417@samp{in}. The beginning of the entire match is at the 9th character of
1418the buffer (@samp{T}), and the beginning of the match for the first
1419subexpression is at the 13th character (@samp{c}).
1420
1421@example
1422@group
1423(list
1424 (re-search-forward "The \\(cat \\)")
1425 (match-beginning 0)
1426 (match-beginning 1))
7fd1911a 1427 @result{} (9 9 13)
7015aca4
RS
1428@end group
1429
1430@group
1431---------- Buffer: foo ----------
1432I read "The cat @point{}in the hat comes back" twice.
1433 ^ ^
1434 9 13
1435---------- Buffer: foo ----------
1436@end group
1437@end example
1438
1439@noindent
1440(In this case, the index returned is a buffer position; the first
1441character of the buffer counts as 1.)
1442
7015aca4
RS
1443@node Entire Match Data
1444@subsection Accessing the Entire Match Data
1445
1446 The functions @code{match-data} and @code{set-match-data} read or
1447write the entire match data, all at once.
1448
bcb6b6b8 1449@defun match-data &optional integers reuse
7015aca4
RS
1450This function returns a newly constructed list containing all the
1451information on what text the last search matched. Element zero is the
1452position of the beginning of the match for the whole expression; element
1453one is the position of the end of the match for the expression. The
1454next two elements are the positions of the beginning and end of the
1455match for the first subexpression, and so on. In general, element
37680279 1456@ifnottex
7015aca4 1457number 2@var{n}
37680279 1458@end ifnottex
7015aca4
RS
1459@tex
1460number {\mathsurround=0pt $2n$}
1461@end tex
1462corresponds to @code{(match-beginning @var{n})}; and
1463element
37680279 1464@ifnottex
7015aca4 1465number 2@var{n} + 1
37680279 1466@end ifnottex
7015aca4
RS
1467@tex
1468number {\mathsurround=0pt $2n+1$}
1469@end tex
1470corresponds to @code{(match-end @var{n})}.
1471
1472All the elements are markers or @code{nil} if matching was done on a
bcb6b6b8
LT
1473buffer and all are integers or @code{nil} if matching was done on a
1474string with @code{string-match}. If @var{integers} is
7a58d84d
DK
1475non-@code{nil}, then the elements are integers or @code{nil}, even if
1476matching was done on a buffer. In that case, the buffer itself is
1477appended as an additional element at the end of the list
1478to facilitate complete restoration of the match data. Also,
1479@code{match-beginning} and
bcb6b6b8
LT
1480@code{match-end} always return integers or @code{nil}.
1481
1482If @var{reuse} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a list. In that case,
1483@code{match-data} stores the match data in @var{reuse}. That is,
1484@var{reuse} is destructively modified. @var{reuse} does not need to
1485have the right length. If it is not long enough to contain the match
1486data, it is extended. If it is too long, the length of @var{reuse}
1487stays the same, but the elements that were not used are set to
1488@code{nil}. The purpose of this feature is to avoid producing too
1489much garbage, that would later have to be collected.
7015aca4
RS
1490
1491As always, there must be no possibility of intervening searches between
1492the call to a search function and the call to @code{match-data} that is
1493intended to access the match data for that search.
1494
1495@example
1496@group
1497(match-data)
1498 @result{} (#<marker at 9 in foo>
1499 #<marker at 17 in foo>
1500 #<marker at 13 in foo>
1501 #<marker at 17 in foo>)
1502@end group
1503@end example
1504@end defun
1505
1506@defun set-match-data match-list
1507This function sets the match data from the elements of @var{match-list},
1508which should be a list that was the value of a previous call to
3ab8acb9
RS
1509@code{match-data}. (More precisely, anything that has the same format
1510will work.)
7015aca4
RS
1511
1512If @var{match-list} refers to a buffer that doesn't exist, you don't get
1513an error; that sets the match data in a meaningless but harmless way.
1514
1515@findex store-match-data
969fe9b5 1516@code{store-match-data} is a semi-obsolete alias for @code{set-match-data}.
7015aca4
RS
1517@end defun
1518
1519@node Saving Match Data
1520@subsection Saving and Restoring the Match Data
1521
d1280259
RS
1522 When you call a function that may do a search, you may need to save
1523and restore the match data around that call, if you want to preserve the
1524match data from an earlier search for later use. Here is an example
1525that shows the problem that arises if you fail to save the match data:
7015aca4
RS
1526
1527@example
1528@group
1529(re-search-forward "The \\(cat \\)")
1530 @result{} 48
1531(foo) ; @r{Perhaps @code{foo} does}
1532 ; @r{more searching.}
1533(match-end 0)
1534 @result{} 61 ; @r{Unexpected result---not 48!}
1535@end group
1536@end example
1537
d1280259 1538 You can save and restore the match data with @code{save-match-data}:
7015aca4 1539
bfe721d1 1540@defmac save-match-data body@dots{}
1911e6e5 1541This macro executes @var{body}, saving and restoring the match
bcb6b6b8
LT
1542data around it. The return value is the value of the last form in
1543@var{body}.
bfe721d1 1544@end defmac
7015aca4 1545
969fe9b5
RS
1546 You could use @code{set-match-data} together with @code{match-data} to
1547imitate the effect of the special form @code{save-match-data}. Here is
1548how:
7015aca4
RS
1549
1550@example
1551@group
1552(let ((data (match-data)))
1553 (unwind-protect
f9f59935 1554 @dots{} ; @r{Ok to change the original match data.}
7015aca4
RS
1555 (set-match-data data)))
1556@end group
1557@end example
1558
d1280259
RS
1559 Emacs automatically saves and restores the match data when it runs
1560process filter functions (@pxref{Filter Functions}) and process
1561sentinels (@pxref{Sentinels}).
1562
7015aca4
RS
1563@ignore
1564 Here is a function which restores the match data provided the buffer
1565associated with it still exists.
1566
1567@smallexample
1568@group
1569(defun restore-match-data (data)
1570@c It is incorrect to split the first line of a doc string.
1571@c If there's a problem here, it should be solved in some other way.
1572 "Restore the match data DATA unless the buffer is missing."
1573 (catch 'foo
1574 (let ((d data))
1575@end group
1576 (while d
1577 (and (car d)
1578 (null (marker-buffer (car d)))
1579@group
1580 ;; @file{match-data} @r{buffer is deleted.}
1581 (throw 'foo nil))
1582 (setq d (cdr d)))
1583 (set-match-data data))))
1584@end group
1585@end smallexample
1586@end ignore
1587
1588@node Searching and Case
1589@section Searching and Case
1590@cindex searching and case
1591
1592 By default, searches in Emacs ignore the case of the text they are
1593searching through; if you specify searching for @samp{FOO}, then
f9f59935
RS
1594@samp{Foo} or @samp{foo} is also considered a match. This applies to
1595regular expressions, too; thus, @samp{[aB]} would match @samp{a} or
1596@samp{A} or @samp{b} or @samp{B}.
7015aca4
RS
1597
1598 If you do not want this feature, set the variable
1599@code{case-fold-search} to @code{nil}. Then all letters must match
7fd1911a
RS
1600exactly, including case. This is a buffer-local variable; altering the
1601variable affects only the current buffer. (@xref{Intro to
7015aca4
RS
1602Buffer-Local}.) Alternatively, you may change the value of
1603@code{default-case-fold-search}, which is the default value of
1604@code{case-fold-search} for buffers that do not override it.
1605
1606 Note that the user-level incremental search feature handles case
1607distinctions differently. When given a lower case letter, it looks for
1608a match of either case, but when given an upper case letter, it looks
1609for an upper case letter only. But this has nothing to do with the
f9f59935 1610searching functions used in Lisp code.
7015aca4
RS
1611
1612@defopt case-replace
bcb6b6b8
LT
1613This variable determines whether the higher level replacement
1614functions should preserve case. If the variable is @code{nil}, that
1615means to use the replacement text verbatim. A non-@code{nil} value
1616means to convert the case of the replacement text according to the
1617text being replaced.
7fd1911a 1618
8241495d
RS
1619This variable is used by passing it as an argument to the function
1620@code{replace-match}. @xref{Replacing Match}.
7015aca4
RS
1621@end defopt
1622
1623@defopt case-fold-search
1624This buffer-local variable determines whether searches should ignore
1625case. If the variable is @code{nil} they do not ignore case; otherwise
1626they do ignore case.
1627@end defopt
1628
1629@defvar default-case-fold-search
1630The value of this variable is the default value for
1631@code{case-fold-search} in buffers that do not override it. This is the
1632same as @code{(default-value 'case-fold-search)}.
1633@end defvar
1634
1635@node Standard Regexps
1636@section Standard Regular Expressions Used in Editing
1637@cindex regexps used standardly in editing
1638@cindex standard regexps used in editing
1639
1640 This section describes some variables that hold regular expressions
1641used for certain purposes in editing:
1642
1643@defvar page-delimiter
969fe9b5
RS
1644This is the regular expression describing line-beginnings that separate
1645pages. The default value is @code{"^\014"} (i.e., @code{"^^L"} or
1646@code{"^\C-l"}); this matches a line that starts with a formfeed
1647character.
7015aca4
RS
1648@end defvar
1649
22697dac
KH
1650 The following two regular expressions should @emph{not} assume the
1651match always starts at the beginning of a line; they should not use
1652@samp{^} to anchor the match. Most often, the paragraph commands do
1653check for a match only at the beginning of a line, which means that
bfe721d1
KH
1654@samp{^} would be superfluous. When there is a nonzero left margin,
1655they accept matches that start after the left margin. In that case, a
1656@samp{^} would be incorrect. However, a @samp{^} is harmless in modes
1657where a left margin is never used.
22697dac 1658
7015aca4
RS
1659@defvar paragraph-separate
1660This is the regular expression for recognizing the beginning of a line
1661that separates paragraphs. (If you change this, you may have to
7fd1911a 1662change @code{paragraph-start} also.) The default value is
22697dac
KH
1663@w{@code{"[@ \t\f]*$"}}, which matches a line that consists entirely of
1664spaces, tabs, and form feeds (after its left margin).
7015aca4
RS
1665@end defvar
1666
1667@defvar paragraph-start
1668This is the regular expression for recognizing the beginning of a line
1669that starts @emph{or} separates paragraphs. The default value is
bcb6b6b8
LT
1670@w{@code{"\f\\|[ \t]*$"}}, which matches a line containing only
1671whitespace or starting with a form feed (after its left margin).
7015aca4
RS
1672@end defvar
1673
1674@defvar sentence-end
1675This is the regular expression describing the end of a sentence. (All
bcb6b6b8
LT
1676paragraph boundaries also end sentences, regardless.) The (slightly
1677simplified) default value is:
7015aca4
RS
1678
1679@example
bcb6b6b8 1680"[.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\| $\\|\t\\|@ @ \\)[ \t\n]*"
7015aca4
RS
1681@end example
1682
bcb6b6b8
LT
1683This means a period, question mark or exclamation mark (the actual
1684default value also lists their alternatives in other character sets),
2a233172 1685followed optionally by closing parenthetical characters, followed by
bcb6b6b8 1686tabs, spaces or new lines.
7015aca4
RS
1687
1688For a detailed explanation of this regular expression, see @ref{Regexp
1689Example}.
1690@end defvar
ab5796a9
MB
1691
1692@ignore
1693 arch-tag: c2573ca2-18aa-4839-93b8-924043ef831f
1694@end ignore