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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
651f374c 3@c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001,
4e6835db 4@c 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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5@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6@setfilename ../info/text
f9f59935 7@node Text, Non-ASCII Characters, Markers, Top
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8@chapter Text
9@cindex text
10
11 This chapter describes the functions that deal with the text in a
61cfa852 12buffer. Most examine, insert, or delete text in the current buffer,
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13often operating at point or on text adjacent to point. Many are
14interactive. All the functions that change the text provide for undoing
15the changes (@pxref{Undo}).
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16
17 Many text-related functions operate on a region of text defined by two
18buffer positions passed in arguments named @var{start} and @var{end}.
19These arguments should be either markers (@pxref{Markers}) or numeric
20character positions (@pxref{Positions}). The order of these arguments
21does not matter; it is all right for @var{start} to be the end of the
22region and @var{end} the beginning. For example, @code{(delete-region 1
2310)} and @code{(delete-region 10 1)} are equivalent. An
24@code{args-out-of-range} error is signaled if either @var{start} or
25@var{end} is outside the accessible portion of the buffer. In an
26interactive call, point and the mark are used for these arguments.
27
28@cindex buffer contents
29 Throughout this chapter, ``text'' refers to the characters in the
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30buffer, together with their properties (when relevant). Keep in mind
31that point is always between two characters, and the cursor appears on
32the character after point.
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33
34@menu
35* Near Point:: Examining text in the vicinity of point.
36* Buffer Contents:: Examining text in a general fashion.
37* Comparing Text:: Comparing substrings of buffers.
38* Insertion:: Adding new text to a buffer.
39* Commands for Insertion:: User-level commands to insert text.
40* Deletion:: Removing text from a buffer.
41* User-Level Deletion:: User-level commands to delete text.
42* The Kill Ring:: Where removed text sometimes is saved for later use.
43* Undo:: Undoing changes to the text of a buffer.
44* Maintaining Undo:: How to enable and disable undo information.
45 How to control how much information is kept.
46* Filling:: Functions for explicit filling.
bfe721d1 47* Margins:: How to specify margins for filling commands.
e75ecfec 48* Adaptive Fill:: Adaptive Fill mode chooses a fill prefix from context.
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49* Auto Filling:: How auto-fill mode is implemented to break lines.
50* Sorting:: Functions for sorting parts of the buffer.
51* Columns:: Computing horizontal positions, and using them.
52* Indentation:: Functions to insert or adjust indentation.
53* Case Changes:: Case conversion of parts of the buffer.
54* Text Properties:: Assigning Lisp property lists to text characters.
55* Substitution:: Replacing a given character wherever it appears.
b22f3a19 56* Transposition:: Swapping two portions of a buffer.
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57* Registers:: How registers are implemented. Accessing the text or
58 position stored in a register.
b6954afd 59* Base 64:: Conversion to or from base 64 encoding.
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60* MD5 Checksum:: Compute the MD5 "message digest"/"checksum".
61* Atomic Changes:: Installing several buffer changes "atomically".
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62* Change Hooks:: Supplying functions to be run when text is changed.
63@end menu
64
65@node Near Point
66@section Examining Text Near Point
ad8d30b3 67@cindex text near point
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68
69 Many functions are provided to look at the characters around point.
70Several simple functions are described here. See also @code{looking-at}
71in @ref{Regexp Search}.
72
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73In the following four functions, ``beginning'' or ``end'' of buffer
74refers to the beginning or end of the accessible portion.
75
1911e6e5 76@defun char-after &optional position
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77This function returns the character in the current buffer at (i.e.,
78immediately after) position @var{position}. If @var{position} is out of
79range for this purpose, either before the beginning of the buffer, or at
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80or beyond the end, then the value is @code{nil}. The default for
81@var{position} is point.
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82
83In the following example, assume that the first character in the
84buffer is @samp{@@}:
85
86@example
87@group
88(char-to-string (char-after 1))
89 @result{} "@@"
90@end group
91@end example
92@end defun
93
1911e6e5 94@defun char-before &optional position
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95This function returns the character in the current buffer immediately
96before position @var{position}. If @var{position} is out of range for
a3a349c4 97this purpose, either at or before the beginning of the buffer, or beyond
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98the end, then the value is @code{nil}. The default for
99@var{position} is point.
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100@end defun
101
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102@defun following-char
103This function returns the character following point in the current
104buffer. This is similar to @code{(char-after (point))}. However, if
105point is at the end of the buffer, then @code{following-char} returns 0.
106
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107Remember that point is always between characters, and the cursor
108normally appears over the character following point. Therefore, the
109character returned by @code{following-char} is the character the
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110cursor is over.
111
112In this example, point is between the @samp{a} and the @samp{c}.
113
114@example
115@group
116---------- Buffer: foo ----------
117Gentlemen may cry ``Pea@point{}ce! Peace!,''
118but there is no peace.
119---------- Buffer: foo ----------
120@end group
121
122@group
123(char-to-string (preceding-char))
124 @result{} "a"
125(char-to-string (following-char))
126 @result{} "c"
127@end group
128@end example
129@end defun
130
131@defun preceding-char
132This function returns the character preceding point in the current
133buffer. See above, under @code{following-char}, for an example. If
134point is at the beginning of the buffer, @code{preceding-char} returns
1350.
136@end defun
137
138@defun bobp
139This function returns @code{t} if point is at the beginning of the
140buffer. If narrowing is in effect, this means the beginning of the
141accessible portion of the text. See also @code{point-min} in
142@ref{Point}.
143@end defun
144
145@defun eobp
146This function returns @code{t} if point is at the end of the buffer.
147If narrowing is in effect, this means the end of accessible portion of
148the text. See also @code{point-max} in @xref{Point}.
149@end defun
150
151@defun bolp
152This function returns @code{t} if point is at the beginning of a line.
f9f59935 153@xref{Text Lines}. The beginning of the buffer (or of its accessible
61cfa852 154portion) always counts as the beginning of a line.
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155@end defun
156
157@defun eolp
158This function returns @code{t} if point is at the end of a line. The
159end of the buffer (or of its accessible portion) is always considered
160the end of a line.
161@end defun
162
163@node Buffer Contents
164@section Examining Buffer Contents
165
2a233172 166 This section describes functions that allow a Lisp program to
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167convert any portion of the text in the buffer into a string.
168
169@defun buffer-substring start end
170This function returns a string containing a copy of the text of the
171region defined by positions @var{start} and @var{end} in the current
172buffer. If the arguments are not positions in the accessible portion of
173the buffer, @code{buffer-substring} signals an @code{args-out-of-range}
174error.
175
176It is not necessary for @var{start} to be less than @var{end}; the
177arguments can be given in either order. But most often the smaller
178argument is written first.
179
d735cf50 180Here's an example which assumes Font-Lock mode is not enabled:
22697dac 181
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182@example
183@group
184---------- Buffer: foo ----------
185This is the contents of buffer foo
186
187---------- Buffer: foo ----------
188@end group
189
190@group
191(buffer-substring 1 10)
1c1a1471 192 @result{} "This is t"
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193@end group
194@group
195(buffer-substring (point-max) 10)
1c1a1471 196 @result{} "he contents of buffer foo\n"
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197@end group
198@end example
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199
200If the text being copied has any text properties, these are copied into
201the string along with the characters they belong to. @xref{Text
202Properties}. However, overlays (@pxref{Overlays}) in the buffer and
203their properties are ignored, not copied.
204
205For example, if Font-Lock mode is enabled, you might get results like
206these:
207
208@example
209@group
210(buffer-substring 1 10)
211 @result{} #("This is t" 0 1 (fontified t) 1 9 (fontified t))
212@end group
213@end example
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214@end defun
215
371f8cd0 216@defun buffer-substring-no-properties start end
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217This is like @code{buffer-substring}, except that it does not copy text
218properties, just the characters themselves. @xref{Text Properties}.
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219@end defun
220
1f8a33db 221@defun filter-buffer-substring start end &optional delete noprops
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222This function passes the buffer text between @var{start} and @var{end}
223through the filter functions specified by the variable
224@code{buffer-substring-filters}, and returns the value from the last
225filter function. If @code{buffer-substring-filters} is @code{nil},
226the value is the unaltered text from the buffer, what
227@code{buffer-substring} would return.
228
229If @var{delete} is non-@code{nil}, this function deletes the text
230between @var{start} and @var{end} after copying it, like
231@code{delete-and-extract-region}.
232
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233If @var{noprops} is non-@code{nil}, the final string returned does not
234include text properties, while the string passed through the filters
235still includes text properties from the buffer text.
236
237Lisp code should use this function instead of @code{buffer-substring},
238@code{buffer-substring-no-properties},
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239or @code{delete-and-extract-region} when copying into user-accessible
240data structures such as the kill-ring, X clipboard, and registers.
241Major and minor modes can add functions to
242@code{buffer-substring-filters} to alter such text as it is copied out
243of the buffer.
244@end defun
245
246@defvar buffer-substring-filters
247This variable should be a list of functions that accept a single
248argument, a string, and return a string.
249@code{filter-buffer-substring} passes the buffer substring to the
250first function in this list, and the return value of each function is
251passed to the next function. The return value of the last function is
252used as the return value of @code{filter-buffer-substring}.
253
254As a special convention, point is set to the start of the buffer text
255being operated on (i.e., the @var{start} argument for
256@code{filter-buffer-substring}) before these functions are called.
257
258If this variable is @code{nil}, no filtering is performed.
259@end defvar
260
73804d4b 261@defun buffer-string
f9f59935 262This function returns the contents of the entire accessible portion of
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263the current buffer as a string. It is equivalent to
264
265@example
266(buffer-substring (point-min) (point-max))
267@end example
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268
269@example
270@group
271---------- Buffer: foo ----------
272This is the contents of buffer foo
273
274---------- Buffer: foo ----------
275
276(buffer-string)
1c1a1471 277 @result{} "This is the contents of buffer foo\n"
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278@end group
279@end example
280@end defun
281
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282@defun current-word &optional strict really-word
283This function returns the symbol (or word) at or near point, as a string.
284The return value includes no text properties.
285
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286If the optional argument @var{really-word} is non-@code{nil}, it finds a
287word; otherwise, it finds a symbol (which includes both word
288characters and symbol constituent characters).
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289
290If the optional argument @var{strict} is non-@code{nil}, then point
291must be in or next to the symbol or word---if no symbol or word is
292there, the function returns @code{nil}. Otherwise, a nearby symbol or
293word on the same line is acceptable.
294@end defun
295
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296@defun thing-at-point thing
297Return the @var{thing} around or next to point, as a string.
298
299The argument @var{thing} is a symbol which specifies a kind of syntactic
300entity. Possibilities include @code{symbol}, @code{list}, @code{sexp},
301@code{defun}, @code{filename}, @code{url}, @code{word}, @code{sentence},
302@code{whitespace}, @code{line}, @code{page}, and others.
303
304@example
305---------- Buffer: foo ----------
306Gentlemen may cry ``Pea@point{}ce! Peace!,''
307but there is no peace.
308---------- Buffer: foo ----------
309
310(thing-at-point 'word)
311 @result{} "Peace"
312(thing-at-point 'line)
313 @result{} "Gentlemen may cry ``Peace! Peace!,''\n"
314(thing-at-point 'whitespace)
315 @result{} nil
316@end example
317@end defun
318
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319@node Comparing Text
320@section Comparing Text
321@cindex comparing buffer text
322
323 This function lets you compare portions of the text in a buffer, without
324copying them into strings first.
325
326@defun compare-buffer-substrings buffer1 start1 end1 buffer2 start2 end2
327This function lets you compare two substrings of the same buffer or two
328different buffers. The first three arguments specify one substring,
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329giving a buffer (or a buffer name) and two positions within the
330buffer. The last three arguments specify the other substring in the
331same way. You can use @code{nil} for @var{buffer1}, @var{buffer2}, or
332both to stand for the current buffer.
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333
334The value is negative if the first substring is less, positive if the
335first is greater, and zero if they are equal. The absolute value of
336the result is one plus the index of the first differing characters
337within the substrings.
338
339This function ignores case when comparing characters
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340if @code{case-fold-search} is non-@code{nil}. It always ignores
341text properties.
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342
343Suppose the current buffer contains the text @samp{foobarbar
344haha!rara!}; then in this example the two substrings are @samp{rbar }
345and @samp{rara!}. The value is 2 because the first substring is greater
346at the second character.
347
348@example
8241495d 349(compare-buffer-substrings nil 6 11 nil 16 21)
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350 @result{} 2
351@end example
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352@end defun
353
354@node Insertion
bfe721d1 355@section Inserting Text
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356@cindex insertion of text
357@cindex text insertion
358
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359@cindex insertion before point
360@cindex before point, insertion
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361 @dfn{Insertion} means adding new text to a buffer. The inserted text
362goes at point---between the character before point and the character
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363after point. Some insertion functions leave point before the inserted
364text, while other functions leave it after. We call the former
365insertion @dfn{after point} and the latter insertion @dfn{before point}.
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366
367 Insertion relocates markers that point at positions after the
368insertion point, so that they stay with the surrounding text
369(@pxref{Markers}). When a marker points at the place of insertion,
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370insertion may or may not relocate the marker, depending on the marker's
371insertion type (@pxref{Marker Insertion Types}). Certain special
372functions such as @code{insert-before-markers} relocate all such markers
373to point after the inserted text, regardless of the markers' insertion
374type.
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375
376 Insertion functions signal an error if the current buffer is
2468d0c0 377read-only or if they insert within read-only text.
73804d4b 378
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379 These functions copy text characters from strings and buffers along
380with their properties. The inserted characters have exactly the same
381properties as the characters they were copied from. By contrast,
382characters specified as separate arguments, not part of a string or
383buffer, inherit their text properties from the neighboring text.
384
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385 The insertion functions convert text from unibyte to multibyte in
386order to insert in a multibyte buffer, and vice versa---if the text
387comes from a string or from a buffer. However, they do not convert
388unibyte character codes 128 through 255 to multibyte characters, not
389even if the current buffer is a multibyte buffer. @xref{Converting
390Representations}.
391
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392@defun insert &rest args
393This function inserts the strings and/or characters @var{args} into the
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394current buffer, at point, moving point forward. In other words, it
395inserts the text before point. An error is signaled unless all
396@var{args} are either strings or characters. The value is @code{nil}.
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397@end defun
398
399@defun insert-before-markers &rest args
400This function inserts the strings and/or characters @var{args} into the
401current buffer, at point, moving point forward. An error is signaled
402unless all @var{args} are either strings or characters. The value is
403@code{nil}.
404
405This function is unlike the other insertion functions in that it
406relocates markers initially pointing at the insertion point, to point
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407after the inserted text. If an overlay begins at the insertion point,
408the inserted text falls outside the overlay; if a nonempty overlay
409ends at the insertion point, the inserted text falls inside that
410overlay.
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411@end defun
412
9e3561d2 413@defun insert-char character count &optional inherit
73804d4b 414This function inserts @var{count} instances of @var{character} into the
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415current buffer before point. The argument @var{count} should be an
416integer, and @var{character} must be a character. The value is @code{nil}.
33acbad2 417
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418This function does not convert unibyte character codes 128 through 255
419to multibyte characters, not even if the current buffer is a multibyte
420buffer. @xref{Converting Representations}.
421
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422If @var{inherit} is non-@code{nil}, then the inserted characters inherit
423sticky text properties from the two characters before and after the
424insertion point. @xref{Sticky Properties}.
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425@end defun
426
427@defun insert-buffer-substring from-buffer-or-name &optional start end
428This function inserts a portion of buffer @var{from-buffer-or-name}
429(which must already exist) into the current buffer before point. The
af1996b5 430text inserted is the region between @var{start} and @var{end}. (These
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431arguments default to the beginning and end of the accessible portion of
432that buffer.) This function returns @code{nil}.
433
434In this example, the form is executed with buffer @samp{bar} as the
435current buffer. We assume that buffer @samp{bar} is initially empty.
436
437@example
438@group
439---------- Buffer: foo ----------
440We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all
441---------- Buffer: foo ----------
442@end group
443
444@group
445(insert-buffer-substring "foo" 1 20)
446 @result{} nil
447
448---------- Buffer: bar ----------
61cfa852 449We hold these truth@point{}
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450---------- Buffer: bar ----------
451@end group
452@end example
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453@end defun
454
455@defun insert-buffer-substring-no-properties from-buffer-or-name &optional start end
456This is like @code{insert-buffer-substring} except that it does not
457copy any text properties.
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458@end defun
459
460 @xref{Sticky Properties}, for other insertion functions that inherit
61cfa852 461text properties from the nearby text in addition to inserting it.
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462Whitespace inserted by indentation functions also inherits text
463properties.
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464
465@node Commands for Insertion
466@section User-Level Insertion Commands
467
468 This section describes higher-level commands for inserting text,
469commands intended primarily for the user but useful also in Lisp
470programs.
471
472@deffn Command insert-buffer from-buffer-or-name
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473This command inserts the entire accessible contents of
474@var{from-buffer-or-name} (which must exist) into the current buffer
475after point. It leaves the mark after the inserted text. The value
476is @code{nil}.
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477@end deffn
478
479@deffn Command self-insert-command count
480@cindex character insertion
481@cindex self-insertion
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482This command inserts the last character typed; it does so @var{count}
483times, before point, and returns @code{nil}. Most printing characters
484are bound to this command. In routine use, @code{self-insert-command}
485is the most frequently called function in Emacs, but programs rarely use
486it except to install it on a keymap.
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487
488In an interactive call, @var{count} is the numeric prefix argument.
489
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490Self-insertion translates the input character through
491@code{translation-table-for-input}. @xref{Translation of Characters}.
492
22697dac 493This command calls @code{auto-fill-function} whenever that is
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494non-@code{nil} and the character inserted is in the table
495@code{auto-fill-chars} (@pxref{Auto Filling}).
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496
497@c Cross refs reworded to prevent overfull hbox. --rjc 15mar92
22697dac 498This command performs abbrev expansion if Abbrev mode is enabled and
73804d4b 499the inserted character does not have word-constituent
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500syntax. (@xref{Abbrevs}, and @ref{Syntax Class Table}.) It is also
501responsible for calling @code{blink-paren-function} when the inserted
502character has close parenthesis syntax (@pxref{Blinking}).
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503
504Do not try substituting your own definition of
505@code{self-insert-command} for the standard one. The editor command
506loop handles this function specially.
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507@end deffn
508
177c0ea7 509@deffn Command newline &optional number-of-newlines
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510This command inserts newlines into the current buffer before point.
511If @var{number-of-newlines} is supplied, that many newline characters
512are inserted.
513
514@cindex newline and Auto Fill mode
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515This function calls @code{auto-fill-function} if the current column
516number is greater than the value of @code{fill-column} and
517@var{number-of-newlines} is @code{nil}. Typically what
518@code{auto-fill-function} does is insert a newline; thus, the overall
519result in this case is to insert two newlines at different places: one
520at point, and another earlier in the line. @code{newline} does not
521auto-fill if @var{number-of-newlines} is non-@code{nil}.
73804d4b 522
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523This command indents to the left margin if that is not zero.
524@xref{Margins}.
525
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526The value returned is @code{nil}. In an interactive call, @var{count}
527is the numeric prefix argument.
528@end deffn
529
73804d4b 530@defvar overwrite-mode
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531This variable controls whether overwrite mode is in effect. The value
532should be @code{overwrite-mode-textual}, @code{overwrite-mode-binary},
533or @code{nil}. @code{overwrite-mode-textual} specifies textual
534overwrite mode (treats newlines and tabs specially), and
535@code{overwrite-mode-binary} specifies binary overwrite mode (treats
536newlines and tabs like any other characters).
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537@end defvar
538
539@node Deletion
bfe721d1 540@section Deleting Text
ad8d30b3 541@cindex text deletion
73804d4b 542
0bec517f 543@cindex deleting text vs killing
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544 Deletion means removing part of the text in a buffer, without saving
545it in the kill ring (@pxref{The Kill Ring}). Deleted text can't be
546yanked, but can be reinserted using the undo mechanism (@pxref{Undo}).
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547Some deletion functions do save text in the kill ring in some special
548cases.
73804d4b 549
af1996b5 550 All of the deletion functions operate on the current buffer.
73804d4b 551
1911e6e5 552@deffn Command erase-buffer
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553This function deletes the entire text of the current buffer
554(@emph{not} just the accessible portion), leaving it
73804d4b 555empty. If the buffer is read-only, it signals a @code{buffer-read-only}
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556error; if some of the text in it is read-only, it signals a
557@code{text-read-only} error. Otherwise, it deletes the text without
558asking for any confirmation. It returns @code{nil}.
8241495d 559
73804d4b 560Normally, deleting a large amount of text from a buffer inhibits further
13cad738 561auto-saving of that buffer ``because it has shrunk.'' However,
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562@code{erase-buffer} does not do this, the idea being that the future
563text is not really related to the former text, and its size should not
564be compared with that of the former text.
1911e6e5 565@end deffn
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566
567@deffn Command delete-region start end
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568This command deletes the text between positions @var{start} and
569@var{end} in the current buffer, and returns @code{nil}. If point was
570inside the deleted region, its value afterward is @var{start}.
68002b5f 571Otherwise, point relocates with the surrounding text, as markers do.
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572@end deffn
573
1dffc5db 574@defun delete-and-extract-region start end
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575This function deletes the text between positions @var{start} and
576@var{end} in the current buffer, and returns a string containing the
577text just deleted.
578
579If point was inside the deleted region, its value afterward is
580@var{start}. Otherwise, point relocates with the surrounding text, as
581markers do.
582@end defun
583
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584@deffn Command delete-char count &optional killp
585This command deletes @var{count} characters directly after point, or
586before point if @var{count} is negative. If @var{killp} is
587non-@code{nil}, then it saves the deleted characters in the kill ring.
588
589In an interactive call, @var{count} is the numeric prefix argument, and
590@var{killp} is the unprocessed prefix argument. Therefore, if a prefix
591argument is supplied, the text is saved in the kill ring. If no prefix
592argument is supplied, then one character is deleted, but not saved in
593the kill ring.
594
595The value returned is always @code{nil}.
596@end deffn
597
598@deffn Command delete-backward-char count &optional killp
0bec517f 599@cindex deleting previous char
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600This command deletes @var{count} characters directly before point, or
601after point if @var{count} is negative. If @var{killp} is
602non-@code{nil}, then it saves the deleted characters in the kill ring.
603
604In an interactive call, @var{count} is the numeric prefix argument, and
605@var{killp} is the unprocessed prefix argument. Therefore, if a prefix
606argument is supplied, the text is saved in the kill ring. If no prefix
607argument is supplied, then one character is deleted, but not saved in
608the kill ring.
609
610The value returned is always @code{nil}.
611@end deffn
612
613@deffn Command backward-delete-char-untabify count &optional killp
614@cindex tab deletion
615This command deletes @var{count} characters backward, changing tabs
616into spaces. When the next character to be deleted is a tab, it is
617first replaced with the proper number of spaces to preserve alignment
618and then one of those spaces is deleted instead of the tab. If
619@var{killp} is non-@code{nil}, then the command saves the deleted
620characters in the kill ring.
621
622Conversion of tabs to spaces happens only if @var{count} is positive.
623If it is negative, exactly @minus{}@var{count} characters after point
624are deleted.
625
626In an interactive call, @var{count} is the numeric prefix argument, and
627@var{killp} is the unprocessed prefix argument. Therefore, if a prefix
628argument is supplied, the text is saved in the kill ring. If no prefix
629argument is supplied, then one character is deleted, but not saved in
630the kill ring.
631
632The value returned is always @code{nil}.
633@end deffn
634
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635@defopt backward-delete-char-untabify-method
636This option specifies how @code{backward-delete-char-untabify} should
637deal with whitespace. Possible values include @code{untabify}, the
638default, meaning convert a tab to many spaces and delete one;
af1996b5
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639@code{hungry}, meaning delete all tabs and spaces before point with
640one command; @code{all} meaning delete all tabs, spaces and newlines
641before point, and @code{nil}, meaning do nothing special for
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642whitespace characters.
643@end defopt
644
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645@node User-Level Deletion
646@section User-Level Deletion Commands
647
648 This section describes higher-level commands for deleting text,
649commands intended primarily for the user but useful also in Lisp
650programs.
651
af1996b5 652@deffn Command delete-horizontal-space &optional backward-only
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653@cindex deleting whitespace
654This function deletes all spaces and tabs around point. It returns
655@code{nil}.
656
af1996b5
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657If @var{backward-only} is non-@code{nil}, the function deletes
658spaces and tabs before point, but not after point.
659
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660In the following examples, we call @code{delete-horizontal-space} four
661times, once on each line, with point between the second and third
61cfa852 662characters on the line each time.
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663
664@example
665@group
666---------- Buffer: foo ----------
667I @point{}thought
668I @point{} thought
669We@point{} thought
670Yo@point{}u thought
671---------- Buffer: foo ----------
672@end group
673
674@group
675(delete-horizontal-space) ; @r{Four times.}
676 @result{} nil
677
678---------- Buffer: foo ----------
679Ithought
680Ithought
681Wethought
682You thought
683---------- Buffer: foo ----------
684@end group
685@end example
686@end deffn
687
177c0ea7 688@deffn Command delete-indentation &optional join-following-p
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689This function joins the line point is on to the previous line, deleting
690any whitespace at the join and in some cases replacing it with one
691space. If @var{join-following-p} is non-@code{nil},
692@code{delete-indentation} joins this line to the following line
a9f0a989 693instead. The function returns @code{nil}.
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694
695If there is a fill prefix, and the second of the lines being joined
696starts with the prefix, then @code{delete-indentation} deletes the
bfe721d1 697fill prefix before joining the lines. @xref{Margins}.
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698
699In the example below, point is located on the line starting
700@samp{events}, and it makes no difference if there are trailing spaces
701in the preceding line.
702
703@smallexample
b22f3a19 704@group
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705---------- Buffer: foo ----------
706When in the course of human
707@point{} events, it becomes necessary
708---------- Buffer: foo ----------
b22f3a19 709@end group
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710
711(delete-indentation)
712 @result{} nil
713
b22f3a19 714@group
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715---------- Buffer: foo ----------
716When in the course of human@point{} events, it becomes necessary
717---------- Buffer: foo ----------
b22f3a19 718@end group
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719@end smallexample
720
721After the lines are joined, the function @code{fixup-whitespace} is
722responsible for deciding whether to leave a space at the junction.
723@end deffn
724
af1996b5
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725@deffn Command fixup-whitespace
726This function replaces all the horizontal whitespace surrounding point
727with either one space or no space, according to the context. It
728returns @code{nil}.
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729
730At the beginning or end of a line, the appropriate amount of space is
731none. Before a character with close parenthesis syntax, or after a
732character with open parenthesis or expression-prefix syntax, no space is
733also appropriate. Otherwise, one space is appropriate. @xref{Syntax
734Class Table}.
735
736In the example below, @code{fixup-whitespace} is called the first time
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737with point before the word @samp{spaces} in the first line. For the
738second invocation, point is directly after the @samp{(}.
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739
740@smallexample
741@group
742---------- Buffer: foo ----------
743This has too many @point{}spaces
744This has too many spaces at the start of (@point{} this list)
745---------- Buffer: foo ----------
746@end group
747
748@group
749(fixup-whitespace)
750 @result{} nil
751(fixup-whitespace)
752 @result{} nil
753@end group
754
755@group
756---------- Buffer: foo ----------
757This has too many spaces
758This has too many spaces at the start of (this list)
759---------- Buffer: foo ----------
760@end group
761@end smallexample
af1996b5 762@end deffn
73804d4b 763
b471b8e9 764@deffn Command just-one-space &optional n
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765@comment !!SourceFile simple.el
766This command replaces any spaces and tabs around point with a single
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767space, or @var{n} spaces if @var{n} is specified. It returns
768@code{nil}.
73804d4b
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769@end deffn
770
771@deffn Command delete-blank-lines
772This function deletes blank lines surrounding point. If point is on a
773blank line with one or more blank lines before or after it, then all but
774one of them are deleted. If point is on an isolated blank line, then it
775is deleted. If point is on a nonblank line, the command deletes all
af1996b5 776blank lines immediately following it.
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777
778A blank line is defined as a line containing only tabs and spaces.
779
780@code{delete-blank-lines} returns @code{nil}.
781@end deffn
782
783@node The Kill Ring
784@section The Kill Ring
785@cindex kill ring
786
969fe9b5 787 @dfn{Kill functions} delete text like the deletion functions, but save
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788it so that the user can reinsert it by @dfn{yanking}. Most of these
789functions have @samp{kill-} in their name. By contrast, the functions
790whose names start with @samp{delete-} normally do not save text for
791yanking (though they can still be undone); these are ``deletion''
792functions.
793
794 Most of the kill commands are primarily for interactive use, and are
795not described here. What we do describe are the functions provided for
796use in writing such commands. You can use these functions to write
61cfa852 797commands for killing text. When you need to delete text for internal
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798purposes within a Lisp function, you should normally use deletion
799functions, so as not to disturb the kill ring contents.
800@xref{Deletion}.
801
802 Killed text is saved for later yanking in the @dfn{kill ring}. This
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803is a list that holds a number of recent kills, not just the last text
804kill. We call this a ``ring'' because yanking treats it as having
805elements in a cyclic order. The list is kept in the variable
806@code{kill-ring}, and can be operated on with the usual functions for
807lists; there are also specialized functions, described in this section,
808that treat it as a ring.
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809
810 Some people think this use of the word ``kill'' is unfortunate, since
61cfa852 811it refers to operations that specifically @emph{do not} destroy the
13cad738 812entities ``killed.'' This is in sharp contrast to ordinary life, in
73804d4b
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813which death is permanent and ``killed'' entities do not come back to
814life. Therefore, other metaphors have been proposed. For example, the
815term ``cut ring'' makes sense to people who, in pre-computer days, used
816scissors and paste to cut up and rearrange manuscripts. However, it
817would be difficult to change the terminology now.
818
819@menu
820* Kill Ring Concepts:: What text looks like in the kill ring.
821* Kill Functions:: Functions that kill text.
d73eac4d 822* Yanking:: How yanking is done.
73804d4b 823* Yank Commands:: Commands that access the kill ring.
61cfa852 824* Low-Level Kill Ring:: Functions and variables for kill ring access.
af1996b5 825* Internals of Kill Ring:: Variables that hold kill ring data.
73804d4b
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826@end menu
827
828@node Kill Ring Concepts
829@comment node-name, next, previous, up
830@subsection Kill Ring Concepts
831
832 The kill ring records killed text as strings in a list, most recent
833first. A short kill ring, for example, might look like this:
834
835@example
836("some text" "a different piece of text" "even older text")
837@end example
838
839@noindent
840When the list reaches @code{kill-ring-max} entries in length, adding a
841new entry automatically deletes the last entry.
842
843 When kill commands are interwoven with other commands, each kill
844command makes a new entry in the kill ring. Multiple kill commands in
af1996b5 845succession build up a single kill ring entry, which would be yanked as a
a9f0a989
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846unit; the second and subsequent consecutive kill commands add text to
847the entry made by the first one.
73804d4b
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848
849 For yanking, one entry in the kill ring is designated the ``front'' of
850the ring. Some yank commands ``rotate'' the ring by designating a
851different element as the ``front.'' But this virtual rotation doesn't
852change the list itself---the most recent entry always comes first in the
853list.
854
855@node Kill Functions
856@comment node-name, next, previous, up
857@subsection Functions for Killing
858
859 @code{kill-region} is the usual subroutine for killing text. Any
860command that calls this function is a ``kill command'' (and should
861probably have @samp{kill} in its name). @code{kill-region} puts the
862newly killed text in a new element at the beginning of the kill ring or
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863adds it to the most recent element. It determines automatically (using
864@code{last-command}) whether the previous command was a kill command,
61cfa852 865and if so appends the killed text to the most recent entry.
73804d4b 866
d73eac4d 867@deffn Command kill-region start end &optional yank-handler
73804d4b 868This function kills the text in the region defined by @var{start} and
bfe721d1
KH
869@var{end}. The text is deleted but saved in the kill ring, along with
870its text properties. The value is always @code{nil}.
73804d4b
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871
872In an interactive call, @var{start} and @var{end} are point and
873the mark.
874
875@c Emacs 19 feature
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DL
876If the buffer or text is read-only, @code{kill-region} modifies the kill
877ring just the same, then signals an error without modifying the buffer.
878This is convenient because it lets the user use a series of kill
879commands to copy text from a read-only buffer into the kill ring.
d73eac4d
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880
881If @var{yank-handler} is non-@code{nil}, this puts that value onto
af1996b5
LT
882the string of killed text, as a @code{yank-handler} text property.
883@xref{Yanking}. Note that if @var{yank-handler} is @code{nil}, any
884@code{yank-handler} properties present on the killed text are copied
885onto the kill ring, like other text properties.
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886@end deffn
887
1911e6e5 888@defopt kill-read-only-ok
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DL
889If this option is non-@code{nil}, @code{kill-region} does not signal an
890error if the buffer or text is read-only. Instead, it simply returns,
891updating the kill ring but not changing the buffer.
1911e6e5
RS
892@end defopt
893
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894@deffn Command copy-region-as-kill start end
895This command saves the region defined by @var{start} and @var{end} on
bfe721d1 896the kill ring (including text properties), but does not delete the text
af1996b5 897from the buffer. It returns @code{nil}.
73804d4b 898
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KH
899The command does not set @code{this-command} to @code{kill-region}, so a
900subsequent kill command does not append to the same kill ring entry.
901
73804d4b 902Don't call @code{copy-region-as-kill} in Lisp programs unless you aim to
f9f59935
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903support Emacs 18. For newer Emacs versions, it is better to use
904@code{kill-new} or @code{kill-append} instead. @xref{Low-Level Kill
905Ring}.
73804d4b
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906@end deffn
907
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908@node Yanking
909@subsection Yanking
910
911 Yanking means inserting text from the kill ring, but it does
912not insert the text blindly. Yank commands and some other commands
913use @code{insert-for-yank} to perform special processing on the
914text that they copy into the buffer.
915
916@defun insert-for-yank string
917This function normally works like @code{insert} except that it doesn't
918insert the text properties in the @code{yank-excluded-properties}
af1996b5
LT
919list. However, if any part of @var{string} has a non-@code{nil}
920@code{yank-handler} text property, that property can do various
921special processing on that part of the text being inserted.
d73eac4d
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922@end defun
923
924@defun insert-buffer-substring-as-yank buf &optional start end
925This function resembles @code{insert-buffer-substring} except that it
926doesn't insert the text properties in the
927@code{yank-excluded-properties} list.
928@end defun
929
af1996b5
LT
930 You can put a @code{yank-handler} text property on all or part of
931the text to control how it will be inserted if it is yanked. The
932@code{insert-for-yank} function looks for that property. The property
933value must be a list of one to four elements, with the following
934format (where elements after the first may be omitted):
d73eac4d
RS
935
936@example
937(@var{function} @var{param} @var{noexclude} @var{undo})
938@end example
939
940 Here is what the elements do:
941
942@table @var
943@item function
af1996b5 944When @var{function} is present and non-@code{nil}, it is called instead of
d73eac4d
RS
945@code{insert} to insert the string. @var{function} takes one
946argument---the string to insert.
947
948@item param
949If @var{param} is present and non-@code{nil}, it replaces @var{string}
af1996b5
LT
950(or the part of @var{string} being processed) as the object passed to
951@var{function} (or @code{insert}); for example, if @var{function} is
952@code{yank-rectangle}, @var{param} should be a list of strings to
953insert as a rectangle.
d73eac4d
RS
954
955@item noexclude
956If @var{noexclude} is present and non-@code{nil}, the normal removal of the
957yank-excluded-properties is not performed; instead @var{function} is
958responsible for removing those properties. This may be necessary
959if @var{function} adjusts point before or after inserting the object.
960
961@item undo
af1996b5 962If @var{undo} is present and non-@code{nil}, it is a function that will be
d73eac4d
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963called by @code{yank-pop} to undo the insertion of the current object.
964It is called with two arguments, the start and end of the current
965region. @var{function} can set @code{yank-undo-function} to override
966the @var{undo} value.
967@end table
968
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969@node Yank Commands
970@comment node-name, next, previous, up
971@subsection Functions for Yanking
972
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CY
973 This section describes higher-level commands for yanking, which are
974intended primarily for the user but useful also in Lisp programs.
975Both @code{yank} and @code{yank-pop} honor the
976@code{yank-excluded-properties} variable and @code{yank-handler} text
977property (@pxref{Yanking}).
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978
979@deffn Command yank &optional arg
980@cindex inserting killed text
af1996b5 981This command inserts before point the text at the front of the
73804d4b
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982kill ring. It positions the mark at the beginning of that text, and
983point at the end.
984
af1996b5
LT
985If @var{arg} is a non-@code{nil} list (which occurs interactively when
986the user types @kbd{C-u} with no digits), then @code{yank} inserts the
987text as described above, but puts point before the yanked text and
988puts the mark after it.
73804d4b 989
af1996b5
LT
990If @var{arg} is a number, then @code{yank} inserts the @var{arg}th
991most recently killed text---the @var{arg}th element of the kill ring
992list, counted cyclically from the front, which is considered the
993first element for this purpose.
73804d4b 994
af1996b5
LT
995@code{yank} does not alter the contents of the kill ring, unless it
996used text provided by another program, in which case it pushes that text
997onto the kill ring. However if @var{arg} is an integer different from
998one, it rotates the kill ring to place the yanked string at the front.
999
1000@code{yank} returns @code{nil}.
73804d4b
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1001@end deffn
1002
af1996b5 1003@deffn Command yank-pop &optional arg
73804d4b
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1004This command replaces the just-yanked entry from the kill ring with a
1005different entry from the kill ring.
1006
1007This is allowed only immediately after a @code{yank} or another
1008@code{yank-pop}. At such a time, the region contains text that was just
1009inserted by yanking. @code{yank-pop} deletes that text and inserts in
1010its place a different piece of killed text. It does not add the deleted
1011text to the kill ring, since it is already in the kill ring somewhere.
af1996b5
LT
1012It does however rotate the kill ring to place the newly yanked string at
1013the front.
73804d4b
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1014
1015If @var{arg} is @code{nil}, then the replacement text is the previous
1016element of the kill ring. If @var{arg} is numeric, the replacement is
1017the @var{arg}th previous kill. If @var{arg} is negative, a more recent
1018kill is the replacement.
1019
1020The sequence of kills in the kill ring wraps around, so that after the
1021oldest one comes the newest one, and before the newest one goes the
1022oldest.
1023
a9f0a989 1024The return value is always @code{nil}.
73804d4b
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1025@end deffn
1026
d73eac4d
RS
1027@defvar yank-undo-function
1028If this variable is non-@code{nil}, the function @code{yank-pop} uses
1029its value instead of @code{delete-region} to delete the text
1030inserted by the previous @code{yank} or
af1996b5
LT
1031@code{yank-pop} command. The value must be a function of two
1032arguments, the start and end of the current region.
d73eac4d
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1033
1034The function @code{insert-for-yank} automatically sets this variable
1035according to the @var{undo} element of the @code{yank-handler}
1036text property, if there is one.
1037@end defvar
1038
61cfa852
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1039@node Low-Level Kill Ring
1040@subsection Low-Level Kill Ring
73804d4b 1041
969fe9b5
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1042 These functions and variables provide access to the kill ring at a
1043lower level, but still convenient for use in Lisp programs, because they
1044take care of interaction with window system selections
1045(@pxref{Window System Selections}).
73804d4b
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1046
1047@defun current-kill n &optional do-not-move
a9f0a989
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1048The function @code{current-kill} rotates the yanking pointer, which
1049designates the ``front'' of the kill ring, by @var{n} places (from newer
61cfa852 1050kills to older ones), and returns the text at that place in the ring.
73804d4b
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1051
1052If the optional second argument @var{do-not-move} is non-@code{nil},
1053then @code{current-kill} doesn't alter the yanking pointer; it just
61cfa852 1054returns the @var{n}th kill, counting from the current yanking pointer.
73804d4b
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1055
1056If @var{n} is zero, indicating a request for the latest kill,
1057@code{current-kill} calls the value of
af1996b5
LT
1058@code{interprogram-paste-function} (documented below) before
1059consulting the kill ring. If that value is a function and calling it
1060returns a string, @code{current-kill} pushes that string onto the kill
1061ring and returns it. It also sets the yanking pointer to point to
1062that new entry, regardless of the value of @var{do-not-move}.
1063Otherwise, @code{current-kill} does not treat a zero value for @var{n}
1064specially: it returns the entry pointed at by the yanking pointer and
1065does not move the yanking pointer.
1066@end defun
1067
1068@defun kill-new string &optional replace yank-handler
1069This function pushes the text @var{string} onto the kill ring and
1070makes the yanking pointer point to it. It discards the oldest entry
1071if appropriate. It also invokes the value of
73804d4b 1072@code{interprogram-cut-function} (see below).
d73eac4d 1073
af1996b5
LT
1074If @var{replace} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{kill-new} replaces the
1075first element of the kill ring with @var{string}, rather than pushing
1076@var{string} onto the kill ring.
1077
d73eac4d
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1078If @var{yank-handler} is non-@code{nil}, this puts that value onto
1079the string of killed text, as a @code{yank-handler} property.
af1996b5
LT
1080@xref{Yanking}. Note that if @var{yank-handler} is @code{nil}, then
1081@code{kill-new} copies any @code{yank-handler} properties present on
1082@var{string} onto the kill ring, as it does with other text properties.
73804d4b
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1083@end defun
1084
d73eac4d 1085@defun kill-append string before-p &optional yank-handler
73804d4b 1086This function appends the text @var{string} to the first entry in the
af1996b5
LT
1087kill ring and makes the yanking pointer point to the combined entry.
1088Normally @var{string} goes at the end of the entry, but if
73804d4b 1089@var{before-p} is non-@code{nil}, it goes at the beginning. This
af1996b5
LT
1090function also invokes the value of @code{interprogram-cut-function}
1091(see below). This handles @var{yank-handler} just like
1092@code{kill-new}, except that if @var{yank-handler} is different from
1093the @code{yank-handler} property of the first entry of the kill ring,
1094@code{kill-append} pushes the concatenated string onto the kill ring,
1095instead of replacing the original first entry with it.
73804d4b
RS
1096@end defun
1097
1098@defvar interprogram-paste-function
1099This variable provides a way of transferring killed text from other
1100programs, when you are using a window system. Its value should be
1101@code{nil} or a function of no arguments.
1102
1103If the value is a function, @code{current-kill} calls it to get the
13cad738
RS
1104``most recent kill.'' If the function returns a non-@code{nil} value,
1105then that value is used as the ``most recent kill.'' If it returns
af1996b5 1106@code{nil}, then the front of the kill ring is used.
73804d4b 1107
969fe9b5
RS
1108The normal use of this hook is to get the window system's primary
1109selection as the most recent kill, even if the selection belongs to
1110another application. @xref{Window System Selections}.
73804d4b
RS
1111@end defvar
1112
1113@defvar interprogram-cut-function
61cfa852
RS
1114This variable provides a way of communicating killed text to other
1115programs, when you are using a window system. Its value should be
af1996b5 1116@code{nil} or a function of one required and one optional argument.
73804d4b
RS
1117
1118If the value is a function, @code{kill-new} and @code{kill-append} call
af1996b5
LT
1119it with the new first element of the kill ring as the first argument.
1120The second, optional, argument has the same meaning as the @var{push}
1121argument to @code{x-set-cut-buffer} (@pxref{Definition of
1122x-set-cut-buffer}) and only affects the second and later cut buffers.
73804d4b 1123
969fe9b5 1124The normal use of this hook is to set the window system's primary
af1996b5
LT
1125selection (and first cut buffer) from the newly killed text.
1126@xref{Window System Selections}.
73804d4b
RS
1127@end defvar
1128
1129@node Internals of Kill Ring
1130@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1131@subsection Internals of the Kill Ring
1132
1133 The variable @code{kill-ring} holds the kill ring contents, in the
1134form of a list of strings. The most recent kill is always at the front
177c0ea7 1135of the list.
73804d4b
RS
1136
1137 The @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} variable points to a link in the
61cfa852
RS
1138kill ring list, whose @sc{car} is the text to yank next. We say it
1139identifies the ``front'' of the ring. Moving
73804d4b 1140@code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} to a different link is called
61cfa852
RS
1141@dfn{rotating the kill ring}. We call the kill ring a ``ring'' because
1142the functions that move the yank pointer wrap around from the end of the
1143list to the beginning, or vice-versa. Rotation of the kill ring is
1144virtual; it does not change the value of @code{kill-ring}.
73804d4b
RS
1145
1146 Both @code{kill-ring} and @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} are Lisp
1147variables whose values are normally lists. The word ``pointer'' in the
1148name of the @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} indicates that the variable's
1149purpose is to identify one element of the list for use by the next yank
1150command.
1151
1152 The value of @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} is always @code{eq} to one
1153of the links in the kill ring list. The element it identifies is the
1154@sc{car} of that link. Kill commands, which change the kill ring, also
61cfa852
RS
1155set this variable to the value of @code{kill-ring}. The effect is to
1156rotate the ring so that the newly killed text is at the front.
73804d4b
RS
1157
1158 Here is a diagram that shows the variable @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer}
1159pointing to the second entry in the kill ring @code{("some text" "a
177c0ea7 1160different piece of text" "yet older text")}.
73804d4b
RS
1161
1162@example
1163@group
969fe9b5
RS
1164kill-ring ---- kill-ring-yank-pointer
1165 | |
1166 | v
1167 | --- --- --- --- --- ---
1168 --> | | |------> | | |--> | | |--> nil
1169 --- --- --- --- --- ---
177c0ea7
JB
1170 | | |
1171 | | |
1172 | | -->"yet older text"
73804d4b 1173 | |
177c0ea7 1174 | --> "a different piece of text"
73804d4b
RS
1175 |
1176 --> "some text"
1177@end group
1178@end example
1179
1180@noindent
1181This state of affairs might occur after @kbd{C-y} (@code{yank})
1182immediately followed by @kbd{M-y} (@code{yank-pop}).
1183
1184@defvar kill-ring
61cfa852
RS
1185This variable holds the list of killed text sequences, most recently
1186killed first.
73804d4b
RS
1187@end defvar
1188
1189@defvar kill-ring-yank-pointer
1190This variable's value indicates which element of the kill ring is at the
1191``front'' of the ring for yanking. More precisely, the value is a tail
1192of the value of @code{kill-ring}, and its @sc{car} is the kill string
1193that @kbd{C-y} should yank.
1194@end defvar
1195
1196@defopt kill-ring-max
1197The value of this variable is the maximum length to which the kill
1198ring can grow, before elements are thrown away at the end. The default
af1996b5 1199value for @code{kill-ring-max} is 60.
73804d4b
RS
1200@end defopt
1201
1202@node Undo
1203@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1204@section Undo
1205@cindex redo
1206
61cfa852
RS
1207 Most buffers have an @dfn{undo list}, which records all changes made
1208to the buffer's text so that they can be undone. (The buffers that
1209don't have one are usually special-purpose buffers for which Emacs
1e094ef9 1210assumes that undoing is not useful. In particular, any buffer whose
b8f5396a 1211name begins with a space has its undo recording off by default;
1e094ef9 1212see @ref{Buffer Names}.) All the primitives that modify the
61cfa852
RS
1213text in the buffer automatically add elements to the front of the undo
1214list, which is in the variable @code{buffer-undo-list}.
73804d4b
RS
1215
1216@defvar buffer-undo-list
475aab0d
CY
1217This buffer-local variable's value is the undo list of the current
1218buffer. A value of @code{t} disables the recording of undo information.
73804d4b
RS
1219@end defvar
1220
1221Here are the kinds of elements an undo list can have:
1222
1223@table @code
1911e6e5
RS
1224@item @var{position}
1225This kind of element records a previous value of point; undoing this
1226element moves point to @var{position}. Ordinary cursor motion does not
1227make any sort of undo record, but deletion operations use these entries
1228to record where point was before the command.
73804d4b
RS
1229
1230@item (@var{beg} . @var{end})
1231This kind of element indicates how to delete text that was inserted.
177c0ea7 1232Upon insertion, the text occupied the range @var{beg}--@var{end} in the
73804d4b
RS
1233buffer.
1234
d1756ab9 1235@item (@var{text} . @var{position})
73804d4b 1236This kind of element indicates how to reinsert text that was deleted.
d1756ab9 1237The deleted text itself is the string @var{text}. The place to
af1996b5
LT
1238reinsert it is @code{(abs @var{position})}. If @var{position} is
1239positive, point was at the beginning of the deleted text, otherwise it
1240was at the end.
73804d4b
RS
1241
1242@item (t @var{high} . @var{low})
1243This kind of element indicates that an unmodified buffer became
1244modified. The elements @var{high} and @var{low} are two integers, each
1245recording 16 bits of the visited file's modification time as of when it
1246was previously visited or saved. @code{primitive-undo} uses those
1247values to determine whether to mark the buffer as unmodified once again;
1248it does so only if the file's modification time matches those numbers.
1249
1250@item (nil @var{property} @var{value} @var{beg} . @var{end})
1251This kind of element records a change in a text property.
1252Here's how you might undo the change:
1253
1254@example
1255(put-text-property @var{beg} @var{end} @var{property} @var{value})
1256@end example
d1756ab9 1257
61ee3601
RS
1258@item (@var{marker} . @var{adjustment})
1259This kind of element records the fact that the marker @var{marker} was
1260relocated due to deletion of surrounding text, and that it moved
1261@var{adjustment} character positions. Undoing this element moves
1262@var{marker} @minus{} @var{adjustment} characters.
1263
2abded2e
RS
1264@item (apply @var{funname} . @var{args})
1265This is an extensible undo item, which is undone by calling
1266@var{funname} with arguments @var{args}.
1267
1268@item (apply @var{delta} @var{beg} @var{end} @var{funname} . @var{args})
1269This is an extensible undo item, which records a change limited to the
1270range @var{beg} to @var{end}, which increased the size of the buffer
1271by @var{delta}. It is undone by calling @var{funname} with arguments
1272@var{args}.
1273
1412ac47
RS
1274This kind of element enables undo limited to a region to determine
1275whether the element pertains to that region.
1276
73804d4b
RS
1277@item nil
1278This element is a boundary. The elements between two boundaries are
1279called a @dfn{change group}; normally, each change group corresponds to
1280one keyboard command, and undo commands normally undo an entire group as
1281a unit.
1282@end table
1283
1284@defun undo-boundary
1285This function places a boundary element in the undo list. The undo
1286command stops at such a boundary, and successive undo commands undo
1287to earlier and earlier boundaries. This function returns @code{nil}.
1288
b6a786ce
RS
1289The editor command loop automatically creates an undo boundary before
1290each key sequence is executed. Thus, each undo normally undoes the
1291effects of one command. Self-inserting input characters are an
1292exception. The command loop makes a boundary for the first such
1293character; the next 19 consecutive self-inserting input characters do
1294not make boundaries, and then the 20th does, and so on as long as
1295self-inserting characters continue.
1296
1297All buffer modifications add a boundary whenever the previous undoable
a9f0a989
RS
1298change was made in some other buffer. This is to ensure that
1299each command makes a boundary in each buffer where it makes changes.
b6a786ce
RS
1300
1301Calling this function explicitly is useful for splitting the effects of
1302a command into more than one unit. For example, @code{query-replace}
1303calls @code{undo-boundary} after each replacement, so that the user can
1304undo individual replacements one by one.
73804d4b
RS
1305@end defun
1306
0e29c77f
RS
1307@defvar undo-in-progress
1308This variable is normally @code{nil}, but the undo commands bind it to
1309@code{t}. This is so that various kinds of change hooks can tell when
1310they're being called for the sake of undoing.
1311@end defvar
1312
73804d4b
RS
1313@defun primitive-undo count list
1314This is the basic function for undoing elements of an undo list.
1315It undoes the first @var{count} elements of @var{list}, returning
b8f5396a 1316the rest of @var{list}.
73804d4b
RS
1317
1318@code{primitive-undo} adds elements to the buffer's undo list when it
1319changes the buffer. Undo commands avoid confusion by saving the undo
1320list value at the beginning of a sequence of undo operations. Then the
1321undo operations use and update the saved value. The new elements added
bfe721d1 1322by undoing are not part of this saved value, so they don't interfere with
73804d4b 1323continuing to undo.
0e29c77f
RS
1324
1325This function does not bind @code{undo-in-progress}.
73804d4b
RS
1326@end defun
1327
1328@node Maintaining Undo
1329@section Maintaining Undo Lists
1330
1331 This section describes how to enable and disable undo information for
1332a given buffer. It also explains how the undo list is truncated
1333automatically so it doesn't get too big.
1334
1335 Recording of undo information in a newly created buffer is normally
1336enabled to start with; but if the buffer name starts with a space, the
1337undo recording is initially disabled. You can explicitly enable or
1338disable undo recording with the following two functions, or by setting
1339@code{buffer-undo-list} yourself.
1340
1341@deffn Command buffer-enable-undo &optional buffer-or-name
1342This command enables recording undo information for buffer
1343@var{buffer-or-name}, so that subsequent changes can be undone. If no
1344argument is supplied, then the current buffer is used. This function
1345does nothing if undo recording is already enabled in the buffer. It
1346returns @code{nil}.
1347
1348In an interactive call, @var{buffer-or-name} is the current buffer.
1349You cannot specify any other buffer.
1350@end deffn
1351
af1996b5 1352@deffn Command buffer-disable-undo &optional buffer-or-name
0bec517f 1353@cindex disabling undo
af1996b5 1354This function discards the undo list of @var{buffer-or-name}, and disables
73804d4b
RS
1355further recording of undo information. As a result, it is no longer
1356possible to undo either previous changes or any subsequent changes. If
af1996b5 1357the undo list of @var{buffer-or-name} is already disabled, this function
73804d4b
RS
1358has no effect.
1359
a9f0a989 1360This function returns @code{nil}.
a9f0a989 1361@end deffn
73804d4b
RS
1362
1363 As editing continues, undo lists get longer and longer. To prevent
1364them from using up all available memory space, garbage collection trims
1365them back to size limits you can set. (For this purpose, the ``size''
1366of an undo list measures the cons cells that make up the list, plus the
578e484b
LT
1367strings of deleted text.) Three variables control the range of acceptable
1368sizes: @code{undo-limit}, @code{undo-strong-limit} and
b8f5396a
CY
1369@code{undo-outer-limit}. In these variables, size is counted as the
1370number of bytes occupied, which includes both saved text and other
1371data.
73804d4b 1372
578e484b 1373@defopt undo-limit
73804d4b
RS
1374This is the soft limit for the acceptable size of an undo list. The
1375change group at which this size is exceeded is the last one kept.
578e484b 1376@end defopt
73804d4b 1377
578e484b 1378@defopt undo-strong-limit
61cfa852
RS
1379This is the upper limit for the acceptable size of an undo list. The
1380change group at which this size is exceeded is discarded itself (along
1381with all older change groups). There is one exception: the very latest
578e484b
LT
1382change group is only discarded if it exceeds @code{undo-outer-limit}.
1383@end defopt
1384
1385@defopt undo-outer-limit
1386If at garbage collection time the undo info for the current command
b471b8e9
RS
1387exceeds this limit, Emacs discards the info and displays a warning.
1388This is a last ditch limit to prevent memory overflow.
578e484b 1389@end defopt
73804d4b 1390
b8f5396a
CY
1391@defopt undo-ask-before-discard
1392If this variable is non-@code{nil}, when the undo info exceeds
1393@code{undo-outer-limit}, Emacs asks in the echo area whether to
1394discard the info. The default value is @code{nil}, which means to
1395discard it automatically.
1396
1397This option is mainly intended for debugging. Garbage collection is
1398inhibited while the question is asked, which means that Emacs might
1399leak memory if the user waits too long before answering the question.
1400@end defopt
1401
73804d4b
RS
1402@node Filling
1403@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1404@section Filling
0bec517f 1405@cindex filling text
73804d4b
RS
1406
1407 @dfn{Filling} means adjusting the lengths of lines (by moving the line
1408breaks) so that they are nearly (but no greater than) a specified
1409maximum width. Additionally, lines can be @dfn{justified}, which means
bfe721d1
KH
1410inserting spaces to make the left and/or right margins line up
1411precisely. The width is controlled by the variable @code{fill-column}.
1412For ease of reading, lines should be no longer than 70 or so columns.
73804d4b
RS
1413
1414 You can use Auto Fill mode (@pxref{Auto Filling}) to fill text
1415automatically as you insert it, but changes to existing text may leave
1416it improperly filled. Then you must fill the text explicitly.
1417
22697dac
KH
1418 Most of the commands in this section return values that are not
1419meaningful. All the functions that do filling take note of the current
bfe721d1
KH
1420left margin, current right margin, and current justification style
1421(@pxref{Margins}). If the current justification style is
1422@code{none}, the filling functions don't actually do anything.
1423
1424 Several of the filling functions have an argument @var{justify}.
1425If it is non-@code{nil}, that requests some kind of justification. It
1426can be @code{left}, @code{right}, @code{full}, or @code{center}, to
1427request a specific style of justification. If it is @code{t}, that
1428means to use the current justification style for this part of the text
969fe9b5
RS
1429(see @code{current-justification}, below). Any other value is treated
1430as @code{full}.
bfe721d1
KH
1431
1432 When you call the filling functions interactively, using a prefix
1433argument implies the value @code{full} for @var{justify}.
73804d4b 1434
bfe721d1 1435@deffn Command fill-paragraph justify
73804d4b 1436This command fills the paragraph at or after point. If
bfe721d1 1437@var{justify} is non-@code{nil}, each line is justified as well.
73804d4b 1438It uses the ordinary paragraph motion commands to find paragraph
0b2fb045 1439boundaries. @xref{Paragraphs,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
73804d4b
RS
1440@end deffn
1441
15da7853 1442@deffn Command fill-region start end &optional justify nosqueeze to-eop
73804d4b 1443This command fills each of the paragraphs in the region from @var{start}
bfe721d1 1444to @var{end}. It justifies as well if @var{justify} is
73804d4b
RS
1445non-@code{nil}.
1446
1911e6e5
RS
1447If @var{nosqueeze} is non-@code{nil}, that means to leave whitespace
1448other than line breaks untouched. If @var{to-eop} is non-@code{nil},
ebc6903b 1449that means to keep filling to the end of the paragraph---or the next hard
1911e6e5
RS
1450newline, if @code{use-hard-newlines} is enabled (see below).
1451
73804d4b
RS
1452The variable @code{paragraph-separate} controls how to distinguish
1453paragraphs. @xref{Standard Regexps}.
1454@end deffn
1455
2468d0c0 1456@deffn Command fill-individual-paragraphs start end &optional justify citation-regexp
73804d4b
RS
1457This command fills each paragraph in the region according to its
1458individual fill prefix. Thus, if the lines of a paragraph were indented
1459with spaces, the filled paragraph will remain indented in the same
1460fashion.
1461
1462The first two arguments, @var{start} and @var{end}, are the beginning
1463and end of the region to be filled. The third and fourth arguments,
2468d0c0 1464@var{justify} and @var{citation-regexp}, are optional. If
bfe721d1 1465@var{justify} is non-@code{nil}, the paragraphs are justified as
2468d0c0 1466well as filled. If @var{citation-regexp} is non-@code{nil}, it means the
73804d4b 1467function is operating on a mail message and therefore should not fill
2468d0c0
DL
1468the header lines. If @var{citation-regexp} is a string, it is used as
1469a regular expression; if it matches the beginning of a line, that line
1470is treated as a citation marker.
73804d4b
RS
1471
1472Ordinarily, @code{fill-individual-paragraphs} regards each change in
1473indentation as starting a new paragraph. If
1474@code{fill-individual-varying-indent} is non-@code{nil}, then only
61cfa852
RS
1475separator lines separate paragraphs. That mode can handle indented
1476paragraphs with additional indentation on the first line.
73804d4b
RS
1477@end deffn
1478
1479@defopt fill-individual-varying-indent
1480This variable alters the action of @code{fill-individual-paragraphs} as
1481described above.
1482@end defopt
1483
1911e6e5 1484@deffn Command fill-region-as-paragraph start end &optional justify nosqueeze squeeze-after
f9f59935
RS
1485This command considers a region of text as a single paragraph and fills
1486it. If the region was made up of many paragraphs, the blank lines
1487between paragraphs are removed. This function justifies as well as
1488filling when @var{justify} is non-@code{nil}.
22697dac 1489
1911e6e5
RS
1490If @var{nosqueeze} is non-@code{nil}, that means to leave whitespace
1491other than line breaks untouched. If @var{squeeze-after} is
ebc6903b 1492non-@code{nil}, it specifies a position in the region, and means don't
1911e6e5
RS
1493canonicalize spaces before that position.
1494
1495In Adaptive Fill mode, this command calls @code{fill-context-prefix} to
1496choose a fill prefix by default. @xref{Adaptive Fill}.
73804d4b
RS
1497@end deffn
1498
2468d0c0 1499@deffn Command justify-current-line &optional how eop nosqueeze
73804d4b
RS
1500This command inserts spaces between the words of the current line so
1501that the line ends exactly at @code{fill-column}. It returns
1502@code{nil}.
22697dac
KH
1503
1504The argument @var{how}, if non-@code{nil} specifies explicitly the style
1505of justification. It can be @code{left}, @code{right}, @code{full},
1506@code{center}, or @code{none}. If it is @code{t}, that means to do
1507follow specified justification style (see @code{current-justification},
1508below). @code{nil} means to do full justification.
1509
342fd6cd
RS
1510If @var{eop} is non-@code{nil}, that means do only left-justification
1511if @code{current-justification} specifies full justification. This is
1512used for the last line of a paragraph; even if the paragraph as a
1513whole is fully justified, the last line should not be.
22697dac
KH
1514
1515If @var{nosqueeze} is non-@code{nil}, that means do not change interior
1516whitespace.
73804d4b
RS
1517@end deffn
1518
22697dac
KH
1519@defopt default-justification
1520This variable's value specifies the style of justification to use for
1521text that doesn't specify a style with a text property. The possible
1522values are @code{left}, @code{right}, @code{full}, @code{center}, or
bfe721d1 1523@code{none}. The default value is @code{left}.
22697dac
KH
1524@end defopt
1525
1526@defun current-justification
1527This function returns the proper justification style to use for filling
1528the text around point.
b8f5396a
CY
1529
1530This returns the value of the @code{justification} text property at
1531point, or the variable @var{default-justification} if there is no such
1532text property. However, it returns @code{nil} rather than @code{none}
1533to mean ``don't justify''.
22697dac
KH
1534@end defun
1535
1911e6e5 1536@defopt sentence-end-double-space
6cae76c2 1537@anchor{Definition of sentence-end-double-space}
1911e6e5
RS
1538If this variable is non-@code{nil}, a period followed by just one space
1539does not count as the end of a sentence, and the filling functions
1540avoid breaking the line at such a place.
1541@end defopt
1542
d69ea7ab
RS
1543@defopt sentence-end-without-period
1544If this variable is non-@code{nil}, a sentence can end without a
1545period. This is used for languages like Thai, where sentences end
1546with a double space but without a period.
1547@end defopt
1548
1549@defopt sentence-end-without-space
1550If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it should be a string of
1551characters that can end a sentence without following spaces.
1552@end defopt
1553
bfe721d1
KH
1554@defvar fill-paragraph-function
1555This variable provides a way for major modes to override the filling of
1556paragraphs. If the value is non-@code{nil}, @code{fill-paragraph} calls
1557this function to do the work. If the function returns a non-@code{nil}
1558value, @code{fill-paragraph} assumes the job is done, and immediately
1559returns that value.
1560
1561The usual use of this feature is to fill comments in programming
1562language modes. If the function needs to fill a paragraph in the usual
1563way, it can do so as follows:
1564
1565@example
1566(let ((fill-paragraph-function nil))
1567 (fill-paragraph arg))
1568@end example
1569@end defvar
1570
1571@defvar use-hard-newlines
1572If this variable is non-@code{nil}, the filling functions do not delete
1573newlines that have the @code{hard} text property. These ``hard
1574newlines'' act as paragraph separators.
1575@end defvar
1576
1577@node Margins
1578@section Margins for Filling
1579
61cfa852 1580@defopt fill-prefix
b8f5396a
CY
1581This buffer-local variable, if non-@code{nil}, specifies a string of
1582text that appears at the beginning of normal text lines and should be
1583disregarded when filling them. Any line that fails to start with the
1584fill prefix is considered the start of a paragraph; so is any line
1585that starts with the fill prefix followed by additional whitespace.
1586Lines that start with the fill prefix but no additional whitespace are
1587ordinary text lines that can be filled together. The resulting filled
1588lines also start with the fill prefix.
bfe721d1
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1589
1590The fill prefix follows the left margin whitespace, if any.
61cfa852
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1591@end defopt
1592
1911e6e5 1593@defopt fill-column
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1594This buffer-local variable specifies the maximum width of filled lines.
1595Its value should be an integer, which is a number of columns. All the
1596filling, justification, and centering commands are affected by this
1597variable, including Auto Fill mode (@pxref{Auto Filling}).
73804d4b
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1598
1599As a practical matter, if you are writing text for other people to
1600read, you should set @code{fill-column} to no more than 70. Otherwise
1601the line will be too long for people to read comfortably, and this can
1602make the text seem clumsy.
1911e6e5 1603@end defopt
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RS
1604
1605@defvar default-fill-column
1606The value of this variable is the default value for @code{fill-column} in
1607buffers that do not override it. This is the same as
1608@code{(default-value 'fill-column)}.
1609
1610The default value for @code{default-fill-column} is 70.
1611@end defvar
1612
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KH
1613@deffn Command set-left-margin from to margin
1614This sets the @code{left-margin} property on the text from @var{from} to
1615@var{to} to the value @var{margin}. If Auto Fill mode is enabled, this
1616command also refills the region to fit the new margin.
1617@end deffn
1618
1619@deffn Command set-right-margin from to margin
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1620This sets the @code{right-margin} property on the text from @var{from}
1621to @var{to} to the value @var{margin}. If Auto Fill mode is enabled,
1622this command also refills the region to fit the new margin.
22697dac
KH
1623@end deffn
1624
1625@defun current-left-margin
1626This function returns the proper left margin value to use for filling
1627the text around point. The value is the sum of the @code{left-margin}
1628property of the character at the start of the current line (or zero if
bfe721d1 1629none), and the value of the variable @code{left-margin}.
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KH
1630@end defun
1631
1632@defun current-fill-column
1633This function returns the proper fill column value to use for filling
1634the text around point. The value is the value of the @code{fill-column}
1635variable, minus the value of the @code{right-margin} property of the
1636character after point.
1637@end defun
1638
1639@deffn Command move-to-left-margin &optional n force
1640This function moves point to the left margin of the current line. The
1641column moved to is determined by calling the function
bfe721d1 1642@code{current-left-margin}. If the argument @var{n} is non-@code{nil},
22697dac
KH
1643@code{move-to-left-margin} moves forward @var{n}@minus{}1 lines first.
1644
1645If @var{force} is non-@code{nil}, that says to fix the line's
1646indentation if that doesn't match the left margin value.
1647@end deffn
1648
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DL
1649@defun delete-to-left-margin &optional from to
1650This function removes left margin indentation from the text between
1651@var{from} and @var{to}. The amount of indentation to delete is
1652determined by calling @code{current-left-margin}. In no case does this
1653function delete non-whitespace. If @var{from} and @var{to} are omitted,
1654they default to the whole buffer.
22697dac
KH
1655@end defun
1656
bfe721d1
KH
1657@defun indent-to-left-margin
1658This is the default @code{indent-line-function}, used in Fundamental
1659mode, Text mode, etc. Its effect is to adjust the indentation at the
1660beginning of the current line to the value specified by the variable
1661@code{left-margin}. This may involve either inserting or deleting
1662whitespace.
1663@end defun
1664
1665@defvar left-margin
1666This variable specifies the base left margin column. In Fundamental
969fe9b5 1667mode, @kbd{C-j} indents to this column. This variable automatically
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KH
1668becomes buffer-local when set in any fashion.
1669@end defvar
1670
969fe9b5 1671@defvar fill-nobreak-predicate
edd523a9 1672This variable gives major modes a way to specify not to break a line
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CY
1673at certain places. Its value should be a list of functions. Whenever
1674filling considers breaking the line at a certain place in the buffer,
1675it calls each of these functions with no arguments and with point
1676located at that place. If any of the functions returns
1677non-@code{nil}, then the line won't be broken there.
969fe9b5
RS
1678@end defvar
1679
1911e6e5
RS
1680@node Adaptive Fill
1681@section Adaptive Fill Mode
0bec517f 1682@c @cindex Adaptive Fill mode "adaptive-fill-mode" is adjacent.
1911e6e5 1683
0c2cfb96
EZ
1684 When @dfn{Adaptive Fill Mode} is enabled, Emacs determines the fill
1685prefix automatically from the text in each paragraph being filled
1686rather than using a predetermined value. During filling, this fill
1687prefix gets inserted at the start of the second and subsequent lines
1688of the paragraph as described in @ref{Filling}, and in @ref{Auto
1689Filling}.
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RS
1690
1691@defopt adaptive-fill-mode
1692Adaptive Fill mode is enabled when this variable is non-@code{nil}.
1693It is @code{t} by default.
1694@end defopt
1695
1696@defun fill-context-prefix from to
1697This function implements the heart of Adaptive Fill mode; it chooses a
0c2cfb96
EZ
1698fill prefix based on the text between @var{from} and @var{to},
1699typically the start and end of a paragraph. It does this by looking
1700at the first two lines of the paragraph, based on the variables
1701described below.
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DL
1702@c The optional argument first-line-regexp is not documented
1703@c because it exists for internal purposes and might be eliminated
1704@c in the future.
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EZ
1705
1706Usually, this function returns the fill prefix, a string. However,
1707before doing this, the function makes a final check (not specially
1708mentioned in the following) that a line starting with this prefix
1709wouldn't look like the start of a paragraph. Should this happen, the
1710function signals the anomaly by returning @code{nil} instead.
1711
1712In detail, @code{fill-context-prefix} does this:
1713
1714@enumerate
1715@item
1716It takes a candidate for the fill prefix from the first line---it
1717tries first the function in @code{adaptive-fill-function} (if any),
1718then the regular expression @code{adaptive-fill-regexp} (see below).
1719The first non-@code{nil} result of these, or the empty string if
1720they're both @code{nil}, becomes the first line's candidate.
1721@item
1722If the paragraph has as yet only one line, the function tests the
1723validity of the prefix candidate just found. The function then
1724returns the candidate if it's valid, or a string of spaces otherwise.
1725(see the description of @code{adaptive-fill-first-line-regexp} below).
1726@item
1727When the paragraph already has two lines, the function next looks for
1728a prefix candidate on the second line, in just the same way it did for
1729the first line. If it doesn't find one, it returns @code{nil}.
1730@item
1731The function now compares the two candidate prefixes heuristically: if
1732the non-whitespace characters in the line 2 candidate occur in the
1733same order in the line 1 candidate, the function returns the line 2
1734candidate. Otherwise, it returns the largest initial substring which
1735is common to both candidates (which might be the empty string).
1736@end enumerate
1911e6e5
RS
1737@end defun
1738
1739@defopt adaptive-fill-regexp
ebc6903b
RS
1740Adaptive Fill mode matches this regular expression against the text
1741starting after the left margin whitespace (if any) on a line; the
1742characters it matches are that line's candidate for the fill prefix.
0c2cfb96 1743
4cc4a90c
RS
1744The default value matches whitespace with certain punctuation
1745characters intermingled.
1911e6e5
RS
1746@end defopt
1747
1748@defopt adaptive-fill-first-line-regexp
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EZ
1749Used only in one-line paragraphs, this regular expression acts as an
1750additional check of the validity of the one available candidate fill
1751prefix: the candidate must match this regular expression, or match
1752@code{comment-start-skip}. If it doesn't, @code{fill-context-prefix}
1753replaces the candidate with a string of spaces ``of the same width''
1754as it.
1755
3b42af63 1756The default value of this variable is @w{@code{"\\`[ \t]*\\'"}}, which
0c2cfb96
EZ
1757matches only a string of whitespace. The effect of this default is to
1758force the fill prefixes found in one-line paragraphs always to be pure
1759whitespace.
1911e6e5
RS
1760@end defopt
1761
1762@defopt adaptive-fill-function
1763You can specify more complex ways of choosing a fill prefix
1764automatically by setting this variable to a function. The function is
0c2cfb96
EZ
1765called with point after the left margin (if any) of a line, and it
1766must preserve point. It should return either ``that line's'' fill
1767prefix or @code{nil}, meaning it has failed to determine a prefix.
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RS
1768@end defopt
1769
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RS
1770@node Auto Filling
1771@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1772@section Auto Filling
1773@cindex filling, automatic
1774@cindex Auto Fill mode
1775
61cfa852 1776 Auto Fill mode is a minor mode that fills lines automatically as text
bda144f4 1777is inserted. This section describes the hook used by Auto Fill mode.
61cfa852
RS
1778For a description of functions that you can call explicitly to fill and
1779justify existing text, see @ref{Filling}.
73804d4b 1780
bfe721d1
KH
1781 Auto Fill mode also enables the functions that change the margins and
1782justification style to refill portions of the text. @xref{Margins}.
1783
73804d4b 1784@defvar auto-fill-function
475aab0d
CY
1785The value of this buffer-local variable should be a function (of no
1786arguments) to be called after self-inserting a character from the table
ca3be36e
DL
1787@code{auto-fill-chars}. It may be @code{nil}, in which case nothing
1788special is done in that case.
73804d4b
RS
1789
1790The value of @code{auto-fill-function} is @code{do-auto-fill} when
1791Auto-Fill mode is enabled. That is a function whose sole purpose is to
1792implement the usual strategy for breaking a line.
1793
1794@quotation
1795In older Emacs versions, this variable was named @code{auto-fill-hook},
1796but since it is not called with the standard convention for hooks, it
1797was renamed to @code{auto-fill-function} in version 19.
1798@end quotation
1799@end defvar
1800
910bc071
RS
1801@defvar normal-auto-fill-function
1802This variable specifies the function to use for
1803@code{auto-fill-function}, if and when Auto Fill is turned on. Major
969fe9b5
RS
1804modes can set buffer-local values for this variable to alter how Auto
1805Fill works.
910bc071
RS
1806@end defvar
1807
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DL
1808@defvar auto-fill-chars
1809A char table of characters which invoke @code{auto-fill-function} when
1810self-inserted---space and newline in most language environments. They
1811have an entry @code{t} in the table.
1812@end defvar
1813
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RS
1814@node Sorting
1815@section Sorting Text
1816@cindex sorting text
1817
1818 The sorting functions described in this section all rearrange text in
1819a buffer. This is in contrast to the function @code{sort}, which
1820rearranges the order of the elements of a list (@pxref{Rearrangement}).
1821The values returned by these functions are not meaningful.
1822
1412ac47 1823@defun sort-subr reverse nextrecfun endrecfun &optional startkeyfun endkeyfun predicate
f9f59935
RS
1824This function is the general text-sorting routine that subdivides a
1825buffer into records and then sorts them. Most of the commands in this
1826section use this function.
73804d4b
RS
1827
1828To understand how @code{sort-subr} works, consider the whole accessible
1829portion of the buffer as being divided into disjoint pieces called
f9f59935
RS
1830@dfn{sort records}. The records may or may not be contiguous, but they
1831must not overlap. A portion of each sort record (perhaps all of it) is
73804d4b
RS
1832designated as the sort key. Sorting rearranges the records in order by
1833their sort keys.
1834
1835Usually, the records are rearranged in order of ascending sort key.
1836If the first argument to the @code{sort-subr} function, @var{reverse},
1837is non-@code{nil}, the sort records are rearranged in order of
1838descending sort key.
1839
1840The next four arguments to @code{sort-subr} are functions that are
1841called to move point across a sort record. They are called many times
1842from within @code{sort-subr}.
1843
1844@enumerate
1845@item
1846@var{nextrecfun} is called with point at the end of a record. This
1847function moves point to the start of the next record. The first record
1848is assumed to start at the position of point when @code{sort-subr} is
1849called. Therefore, you should usually move point to the beginning of
1850the buffer before calling @code{sort-subr}.
1851
1852This function can indicate there are no more sort records by leaving
1853point at the end of the buffer.
1854
1855@item
1856@var{endrecfun} is called with point within a record. It moves point to
1857the end of the record.
1858
1859@item
1860@var{startkeyfun} is called to move point from the start of a record to
1861the start of the sort key. This argument is optional; if it is omitted,
1862the whole record is the sort key. If supplied, the function should
1863either return a non-@code{nil} value to be used as the sort key, or
1864return @code{nil} to indicate that the sort key is in the buffer
1865starting at point. In the latter case, @var{endkeyfun} is called to
1866find the end of the sort key.
1867
1868@item
1869@var{endkeyfun} is called to move point from the start of the sort key
1870to the end of the sort key. This argument is optional. If
1871@var{startkeyfun} returns @code{nil} and this argument is omitted (or
1872@code{nil}), then the sort key extends to the end of the record. There
1873is no need for @var{endkeyfun} if @var{startkeyfun} returns a
1874non-@code{nil} value.
1875@end enumerate
1876
1412ac47
RS
1877The argument @var{predicate} is the function to use to compare keys.
1878If keys are numbers, it defaults to @code{<}; otherwise it defaults to
1879@code{string<}.
1880
73804d4b
RS
1881As an example of @code{sort-subr}, here is the complete function
1882definition for @code{sort-lines}:
1883
1884@example
1885@group
1886;; @r{Note that the first two lines of doc string}
1887;; @r{are effectively one line when viewed by a user.}
1888(defun sort-lines (reverse beg end)
f9f59935
RS
1889 "Sort lines in region alphabetically;\
1890 argument means descending order.
73804d4b
RS
1891Called from a program, there are three arguments:
1892@end group
1893@group
f9f59935
RS
1894REVERSE (non-nil means reverse order),\
1895 BEG and END (region to sort).
1896The variable `sort-fold-case' determines\
1897 whether alphabetic case affects
690146de 1898the sort order."
f9f59935
RS
1899@end group
1900@group
73804d4b 1901 (interactive "P\nr")
1911e6e5
RS
1902 (save-excursion
1903 (save-restriction
1904 (narrow-to-region beg end)
1905 (goto-char (point-min))
b8f5396a
CY
1906 (let ((inhibit-field-text-motion t))
1907 (sort-subr reverse 'forward-line 'end-of-line)))))
73804d4b
RS
1908@end group
1909@end example
1910
1911Here @code{forward-line} moves point to the start of the next record,
1912and @code{end-of-line} moves point to the end of record. We do not pass
1913the arguments @var{startkeyfun} and @var{endkeyfun}, because the entire
1914record is used as the sort key.
1915
1916The @code{sort-paragraphs} function is very much the same, except that
1917its @code{sort-subr} call looks like this:
1918
1919@example
1920@group
1921(sort-subr reverse
1911e6e5
RS
1922 (function
1923 (lambda ()
1924 (while (and (not (eobp))
1925 (looking-at paragraph-separate))
1926 (forward-line 1))))
73804d4b
RS
1927 'forward-paragraph)
1928@end group
1929@end example
f9f59935
RS
1930
1931Markers pointing into any sort records are left with no useful
1932position after @code{sort-subr} returns.
73804d4b
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1933@end defun
1934
1911e6e5
RS
1935@defopt sort-fold-case
1936If this variable is non-@code{nil}, @code{sort-subr} and the other
1937buffer sorting functions ignore case when comparing strings.
1938@end defopt
1939
73804d4b
RS
1940@deffn Command sort-regexp-fields reverse record-regexp key-regexp start end
1941This command sorts the region between @var{start} and @var{end}
1942alphabetically as specified by @var{record-regexp} and @var{key-regexp}.
1943If @var{reverse} is a negative integer, then sorting is in reverse
1944order.
1945
1946Alphabetical sorting means that two sort keys are compared by
1947comparing the first characters of each, the second characters of each,
1948and so on. If a mismatch is found, it means that the sort keys are
1949unequal; the sort key whose character is less at the point of first
1950mismatch is the lesser sort key. The individual characters are compared
f9f59935 1951according to their numerical character codes in the Emacs character set.
73804d4b
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1952
1953The value of the @var{record-regexp} argument specifies how to divide
1954the buffer into sort records. At the end of each record, a search is
f9f59935
RS
1955done for this regular expression, and the text that matches it is taken
1956as the next record. For example, the regular expression @samp{^.+$},
1957which matches lines with at least one character besides a newline, would
1958make each such line into a sort record. @xref{Regular Expressions}, for
1959a description of the syntax and meaning of regular expressions.
73804d4b
RS
1960
1961The value of the @var{key-regexp} argument specifies what part of each
1962record is the sort key. The @var{key-regexp} could match the whole
1963record, or only a part. In the latter case, the rest of the record has
1964no effect on the sorted order of records, but it is carried along when
1965the record moves to its new position.
1966
1967The @var{key-regexp} argument can refer to the text matched by a
1968subexpression of @var{record-regexp}, or it can be a regular expression
1969on its own.
1970
1971If @var{key-regexp} is:
1972
1973@table @asis
1974@item @samp{\@var{digit}}
1975then the text matched by the @var{digit}th @samp{\(...\)} parenthesis
1976grouping in @var{record-regexp} is the sort key.
1977
1978@item @samp{\&}
1979then the whole record is the sort key.
1980
1981@item a regular expression
1982then @code{sort-regexp-fields} searches for a match for the regular
1983expression within the record. If such a match is found, it is the sort
1984key. If there is no match for @var{key-regexp} within a record then
1985that record is ignored, which means its position in the buffer is not
1986changed. (The other records may move around it.)
1987@end table
1988
1989For example, if you plan to sort all the lines in the region by the
1990first word on each line starting with the letter @samp{f}, you should
1991set @var{record-regexp} to @samp{^.*$} and set @var{key-regexp} to
1992@samp{\<f\w*\>}. The resulting expression looks like this:
1993
1994@example
1995@group
1996(sort-regexp-fields nil "^.*$" "\\<f\\w*\\>"
1997 (region-beginning)
1998 (region-end))
1999@end group
2000@end example
2001
2002If you call @code{sort-regexp-fields} interactively, it prompts for
2003@var{record-regexp} and @var{key-regexp} in the minibuffer.
2004@end deffn
2005
2006@deffn Command sort-lines reverse start end
2007This command alphabetically sorts lines in the region between
2008@var{start} and @var{end}. If @var{reverse} is non-@code{nil}, the sort
2009is in reverse order.
2010@end deffn
2011
2012@deffn Command sort-paragraphs reverse start end
2013This command alphabetically sorts paragraphs in the region between
2014@var{start} and @var{end}. If @var{reverse} is non-@code{nil}, the sort
2015is in reverse order.
2016@end deffn
2017
2018@deffn Command sort-pages reverse start end
2019This command alphabetically sorts pages in the region between
2020@var{start} and @var{end}. If @var{reverse} is non-@code{nil}, the sort
2021is in reverse order.
2022@end deffn
2023
2024@deffn Command sort-fields field start end
2025This command sorts lines in the region between @var{start} and
2026@var{end}, comparing them alphabetically by the @var{field}th field
2027of each line. Fields are separated by whitespace and numbered starting
2028from 1. If @var{field} is negative, sorting is by the
2029@w{@minus{}@var{field}th} field from the end of the line. This command
2030is useful for sorting tables.
2031@end deffn
2032
2033@deffn Command sort-numeric-fields field start end
2034This command sorts lines in the region between @var{start} and
b471b8e9
RS
2035@var{end}, comparing them numerically by the @var{field}th field of
2036each line. Fields are separated by whitespace and numbered starting
2037from 1. The specified field must contain a number in each line of the
2038region. Numbers starting with 0 are treated as octal, and numbers
2039starting with @samp{0x} are treated as hexadecimal.
2040
2041If @var{field} is negative, sorting is by the
2042@w{@minus{}@var{field}th} field from the end of the line. This
2043command is useful for sorting tables.
73804d4b
RS
2044@end deffn
2045
b471b8e9
RS
2046@defopt sort-numeric-base
2047This variable specifies the default radix for
2048@code{sort-numeric-fields} to parse numbers.
2049@end defopt
2050
73804d4b
RS
2051@deffn Command sort-columns reverse &optional beg end
2052This command sorts the lines in the region between @var{beg} and
b471b8e9
RS
2053@var{end}, comparing them alphabetically by a certain range of
2054columns. The column positions of @var{beg} and @var{end} bound the
2055range of columns to sort on.
73804d4b
RS
2056
2057If @var{reverse} is non-@code{nil}, the sort is in reverse order.
2058
2059One unusual thing about this command is that the entire line
2060containing position @var{beg}, and the entire line containing position
2061@var{end}, are included in the region sorted.
2062
b8f5396a
CY
2063Note that @code{sort-columns} rejects text that contains tabs, because
2064tabs could be split across the specified columns. Use @kbd{M-x
2065untabify} to convert tabs to spaces before sorting.
2066
2067When possible, this command actually works by calling the @code{sort}
2068utility program.
73804d4b
RS
2069@end deffn
2070
2071@node Columns
2072@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2073@section Counting Columns
2074@cindex columns
2075@cindex counting columns
2076@cindex horizontal position
2077
2078 The column functions convert between a character position (counting
2079characters from the beginning of the buffer) and a column position
2080(counting screen characters from the beginning of a line).
2081
f9f59935
RS
2082 These functions count each character according to the number of
2083columns it occupies on the screen. This means control characters count
2084as occupying 2 or 4 columns, depending upon the value of
2085@code{ctl-arrow}, and tabs count as occupying a number of columns that
2086depends on the value of @code{tab-width} and on the column where the tab
2087begins. @xref{Usual Display}.
73804d4b
RS
2088
2089 Column number computations ignore the width of the window and the
2090amount of horizontal scrolling. Consequently, a column value can be
6fac48b3
RS
2091arbitrarily high. The first (or leftmost) column is numbered 0. They
2092also ignore overlays and text properties, aside from invisibility.
73804d4b
RS
2093
2094@defun current-column
2095This function returns the horizontal position of point, measured in
2096columns, counting from 0 at the left margin. The column position is the
2097sum of the widths of all the displayed representations of the characters
2098between the start of the current line and point.
2099
2100For an example of using @code{current-column}, see the description of
2101@code{count-lines} in @ref{Text Lines}.
2102@end defun
2103
2104@defun move-to-column column &optional force
2105This function moves point to @var{column} in the current line. The
2106calculation of @var{column} takes into account the widths of the
2107displayed representations of the characters between the start of the
2108line and point.
2109
2110If column @var{column} is beyond the end of the line, point moves to the
2111end of the line. If @var{column} is negative, point moves to the
2112beginning of the line.
2113
2114If it is impossible to move to column @var{column} because that is in
2115the middle of a multicolumn character such as a tab, point moves to the
2116end of that character. However, if @var{force} is non-@code{nil}, and
2117@var{column} is in the middle of a tab, then @code{move-to-column}
2118converts the tab into spaces so that it can move precisely to column
2119@var{column}. Other multicolumn characters can cause anomalies despite
2120@var{force}, since there is no way to split them.
2121
2122The argument @var{force} also has an effect if the line isn't long
8241495d
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2123enough to reach column @var{column}; if it is @code{t}, that means to
2124add whitespace at the end of the line to reach that column.
73804d4b
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2125
2126If @var{column} is not an integer, an error is signaled.
2127
2128The return value is the column number actually moved to.
2129@end defun
2130
2131@node Indentation
2132@section Indentation
2133@cindex indentation
2134
2135 The indentation functions are used to examine, move to, and change
2136whitespace that is at the beginning of a line. Some of the functions
2137can also change whitespace elsewhere on a line. Columns and indentation
2138count from zero at the left margin.
2139
2140@menu
2141* Primitive Indent:: Functions used to count and insert indentation.
2142* Mode-Specific Indent:: Customize indentation for different modes.
2143* Region Indent:: Indent all the lines in a region.
2144* Relative Indent:: Indent the current line based on previous lines.
2145* Indent Tabs:: Adjustable, typewriter-like tab stops.
2146* Motion by Indent:: Move to first non-blank character.
2147@end menu
2148
2149@node Primitive Indent
2150@subsection Indentation Primitives
2151
2152 This section describes the primitive functions used to count and
2153insert indentation. The functions in the following sections use these
969fe9b5 2154primitives. @xref{Width}, for related functions.
73804d4b
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2155
2156@defun current-indentation
2157@comment !!Type Primitive Function
2158@comment !!SourceFile indent.c
2159This function returns the indentation of the current line, which is
2160the horizontal position of the first nonblank character. If the
2161contents are entirely blank, then this is the horizontal position of the
2162end of the line.
2163@end defun
2164
2165@deffn Command indent-to column &optional minimum
2166@comment !!Type Primitive Function
2167@comment !!SourceFile indent.c
61cfa852
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2168This function indents from point with tabs and spaces until @var{column}
2169is reached. If @var{minimum} is specified and non-@code{nil}, then at
2170least that many spaces are inserted even if this requires going beyond
2171@var{column}. Otherwise the function does nothing if point is already
2172beyond @var{column}. The value is the column at which the inserted
2173indentation ends.
33acbad2
RS
2174
2175The inserted whitespace characters inherit text properties from the
2176surrounding text (usually, from the preceding text only). @xref{Sticky
2177Properties}.
73804d4b
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2178@end deffn
2179
2180@defopt indent-tabs-mode
2181@comment !!SourceFile indent.c
2182If this variable is non-@code{nil}, indentation functions can insert
2183tabs as well as spaces. Otherwise, they insert only spaces. Setting
969fe9b5 2184this variable automatically makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
73804d4b
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2185@end defopt
2186
2187@node Mode-Specific Indent
2188@subsection Indentation Controlled by Major Mode
2189
2190 An important function of each major mode is to customize the @key{TAB}
2191key to indent properly for the language being edited. This section
2192describes the mechanism of the @key{TAB} key and how to control it.
2193The functions in this section return unpredictable values.
2194
2195@defvar indent-line-function
2196This variable's value is the function to be used by @key{TAB} (and
2197various commands) to indent the current line. The command
2198@code{indent-according-to-mode} does no more than call this function.
2199
2200In Lisp mode, the value is the symbol @code{lisp-indent-line}; in C
2201mode, @code{c-indent-line}; in Fortran mode, @code{fortran-indent-line}.
2202In Fundamental mode, Text mode, and many other modes with no standard
2203for indentation, the value is @code{indent-to-left-margin} (which is the
2204default value).
2205@end defvar
2206
2207@deffn Command indent-according-to-mode
2208This command calls the function in @code{indent-line-function} to
2209indent the current line in a way appropriate for the current major mode.
2210@end deffn
2211
2212@deffn Command indent-for-tab-command
2213This command calls the function in @code{indent-line-function} to indent
a9f0a989
RS
2214the current line; however, if that function is
2215@code{indent-to-left-margin}, @code{insert-tab} is called instead. (That
61cfa852 2216is a trivial command that inserts a tab character.)
73804d4b
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2217@end deffn
2218
73804d4b
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2219@deffn Command newline-and-indent
2220@comment !!SourceFile simple.el
2221This function inserts a newline, then indents the new line (the one
2222following the newline just inserted) according to the major mode.
2223
2224It does indentation by calling the current @code{indent-line-function}.
2225In programming language modes, this is the same thing @key{TAB} does,
2226but in some text modes, where @key{TAB} inserts a tab,
2227@code{newline-and-indent} indents to the column specified by
2228@code{left-margin}.
2229@end deffn
2230
2231@deffn Command reindent-then-newline-and-indent
2232@comment !!SourceFile simple.el
2233This command reindents the current line, inserts a newline at point,
1911e6e5 2234and then indents the new line (the one following the newline just
73804d4b
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2235inserted).
2236
2237This command does indentation on both lines according to the current
2238major mode, by calling the current value of @code{indent-line-function}.
2239In programming language modes, this is the same thing @key{TAB} does,
2240but in some text modes, where @key{TAB} inserts a tab,
2241@code{reindent-then-newline-and-indent} indents to the column specified
2242by @code{left-margin}.
2243@end deffn
2244
2245@node Region Indent
2246@subsection Indenting an Entire Region
2247
61cfa852 2248 This section describes commands that indent all the lines in the
73804d4b
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2249region. They return unpredictable values.
2250
2251@deffn Command indent-region start end to-column
2252This command indents each nonblank line starting between @var{start}
2253(inclusive) and @var{end} (exclusive). If @var{to-column} is
2254@code{nil}, @code{indent-region} indents each nonblank line by calling
2255the current mode's indentation function, the value of
2256@code{indent-line-function}.
2257
2258If @var{to-column} is non-@code{nil}, it should be an integer
2259specifying the number of columns of indentation; then this function
2260gives each line exactly that much indentation, by either adding or
2261deleting whitespace.
2262
2263If there is a fill prefix, @code{indent-region} indents each line
2264by making it start with the fill prefix.
2265@end deffn
2266
2267@defvar indent-region-function
2268The value of this variable is a function that can be used by
a9f0a989
RS
2269@code{indent-region} as a short cut. It should take two arguments, the
2270start and end of the region. You should design the function so
73804d4b
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2271that it will produce the same results as indenting the lines of the
2272region one by one, but presumably faster.
2273
2274If the value is @code{nil}, there is no short cut, and
2275@code{indent-region} actually works line by line.
2276
61cfa852 2277A short-cut function is useful in modes such as C mode and Lisp mode,
73804d4b 2278where the @code{indent-line-function} must scan from the beginning of
61cfa852
RS
2279the function definition: applying it to each line would be quadratic in
2280time. The short cut can update the scan information as it moves through
2281the lines indenting them; this takes linear time. In a mode where
2282indenting a line individually is fast, there is no need for a short cut.
73804d4b 2283
61cfa852
RS
2284@code{indent-region} with a non-@code{nil} argument @var{to-column} has
2285a different meaning and does not use this variable.
73804d4b
RS
2286@end defvar
2287
2288@deffn Command indent-rigidly start end count
2289@comment !!SourceFile indent.el
2290This command indents all lines starting between @var{start}
2291(inclusive) and @var{end} (exclusive) sideways by @var{count} columns.
2292This ``preserves the shape'' of the affected region, moving it as a
2293rigid unit. Consequently, this command is useful not only for indenting
2294regions of unindented text, but also for indenting regions of formatted
2295code.
2296
2297For example, if @var{count} is 3, this command adds 3 columns of
2298indentation to each of the lines beginning in the region specified.
2299
2300In Mail mode, @kbd{C-c C-y} (@code{mail-yank-original}) uses
2301@code{indent-rigidly} to indent the text copied from the message being
2302replied to.
2303@end deffn
2304
2305@defun indent-code-rigidly start end columns &optional nochange-regexp
2306This is like @code{indent-rigidly}, except that it doesn't alter lines
2307that start within strings or comments.
2308
2309In addition, it doesn't alter a line if @var{nochange-regexp} matches at
2310the beginning of the line (if @var{nochange-regexp} is non-@code{nil}).
2311@end defun
2312
2313@node Relative Indent
2314@subsection Indentation Relative to Previous Lines
2315
61cfa852 2316 This section describes two commands that indent the current line
73804d4b
RS
2317based on the contents of previous lines.
2318
2319@deffn Command indent-relative &optional unindented-ok
2320This command inserts whitespace at point, extending to the same
2321column as the next @dfn{indent point} of the previous nonblank line. An
2322indent point is a non-whitespace character following whitespace. The
2323next indent point is the first one at a column greater than the current
2324column of point. For example, if point is underneath and to the left of
2325the first non-blank character of a line of text, it moves to that column
2326by inserting whitespace.
2327
2328If the previous nonblank line has no next indent point (i.e., none at a
2329great enough column position), @code{indent-relative} either does
2330nothing (if @var{unindented-ok} is non-@code{nil}) or calls
2331@code{tab-to-tab-stop}. Thus, if point is underneath and to the right
2332of the last column of a short line of text, this command ordinarily
2333moves point to the next tab stop by inserting whitespace.
2334
2335The return value of @code{indent-relative} is unpredictable.
2336
2337In the following example, point is at the beginning of the second
2338line:
2339
2340@example
2341@group
2342 This line is indented twelve spaces.
2343@point{}The quick brown fox jumped.
2344@end group
2345@end example
2346
2347@noindent
2348Evaluation of the expression @code{(indent-relative nil)} produces the
2349following:
2350
2351@example
2352@group
2353 This line is indented twelve spaces.
2354 @point{}The quick brown fox jumped.
2355@end group
2356@end example
2357
f9f59935 2358 In this next example, point is between the @samp{m} and @samp{p} of
73804d4b
RS
2359@samp{jumped}:
2360
2361@example
2362@group
2363 This line is indented twelve spaces.
2364The quick brown fox jum@point{}ped.
2365@end group
2366@end example
2367
2368@noindent
2369Evaluation of the expression @code{(indent-relative nil)} produces the
2370following:
2371
2372@example
2373@group
2374 This line is indented twelve spaces.
2375The quick brown fox jum @point{}ped.
2376@end group
2377@end example
2378@end deffn
2379
2380@deffn Command indent-relative-maybe
2381@comment !!SourceFile indent.el
f9f59935
RS
2382This command indents the current line like the previous nonblank line,
2383by calling @code{indent-relative} with @code{t} as the
2384@var{unindented-ok} argument. The return value is unpredictable.
73804d4b
RS
2385
2386If the previous nonblank line has no indent points beyond the current
2387column, this command does nothing.
2388@end deffn
2389
2390@node Indent Tabs
2391@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2392@subsection Adjustable ``Tab Stops''
2393@cindex tabs stops for indentation
2394
2395 This section explains the mechanism for user-specified ``tab stops''
61cfa852 2396and the mechanisms that use and set them. The name ``tab stops'' is
73804d4b
RS
2397used because the feature is similar to that of the tab stops on a
2398typewriter. The feature works by inserting an appropriate number of
2399spaces and tab characters to reach the next tab stop column; it does not
2400affect the display of tab characters in the buffer (@pxref{Usual
2401Display}). Note that the @key{TAB} character as input uses this tab
2402stop feature only in a few major modes, such as Text mode.
b8f5396a 2403@xref{Tab Stops,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
73804d4b
RS
2404
2405@deffn Command tab-to-tab-stop
f9f59935
RS
2406This command inserts spaces or tabs before point, up to the next tab
2407stop column defined by @code{tab-stop-list}. It searches the list for
2408an element greater than the current column number, and uses that element
2409as the column to indent to. It does nothing if no such element is
2410found.
73804d4b
RS
2411@end deffn
2412
2413@defopt tab-stop-list
2414This variable is the list of tab stop columns used by
2415@code{tab-to-tab-stops}. The elements should be integers in increasing
2416order. The tab stop columns need not be evenly spaced.
2417
2418Use @kbd{M-x edit-tab-stops} to edit the location of tab stops
2419interactively.
2420@end defopt
2421
2422@node Motion by Indent
2423@subsection Indentation-Based Motion Commands
2424
2425 These commands, primarily for interactive use, act based on the
2426indentation in the text.
2427
177c0ea7 2428@deffn Command back-to-indentation
73804d4b
RS
2429@comment !!SourceFile simple.el
2430This command moves point to the first non-whitespace character in the
2431current line (which is the line in which point is located). It returns
2432@code{nil}.
2433@end deffn
2434
2b42d12a 2435@deffn Command backward-to-indentation &optional arg
73804d4b
RS
2436@comment !!SourceFile simple.el
2437This command moves point backward @var{arg} lines and then to the
2438first nonblank character on that line. It returns @code{nil}.
2b42d12a 2439If @var{arg} is omitted or @code{nil}, it defaults to 1.
73804d4b
RS
2440@end deffn
2441
2b42d12a 2442@deffn Command forward-to-indentation &optional arg
73804d4b
RS
2443@comment !!SourceFile simple.el
2444This command moves point forward @var{arg} lines and then to the first
2445nonblank character on that line. It returns @code{nil}.
2b42d12a 2446If @var{arg} is omitted or @code{nil}, it defaults to 1.
73804d4b
RS
2447@end deffn
2448
2449@node Case Changes
2450@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2451@section Case Changes
969fe9b5 2452@cindex case conversion in buffers
73804d4b
RS
2453
2454 The case change commands described here work on text in the current
969fe9b5
RS
2455buffer. @xref{Case Conversion}, for case conversion functions that work
2456on strings and characters. @xref{Case Tables}, for how to customize
73804d4b
RS
2457which characters are upper or lower case and how to convert them.
2458
2459@deffn Command capitalize-region start end
2460This function capitalizes all words in the region defined by
2461@var{start} and @var{end}. To capitalize means to convert each word's
2462first character to upper case and convert the rest of each word to lower
2463case. The function returns @code{nil}.
2464
2465If one end of the region is in the middle of a word, the part of the
2466word within the region is treated as an entire word.
2467
2468When @code{capitalize-region} is called interactively, @var{start} and
2469@var{end} are point and the mark, with the smallest first.
2470
2471@example
2472@group
2473---------- Buffer: foo ----------
2474This is the contents of the 5th foo.
2475---------- Buffer: foo ----------
2476@end group
2477
2478@group
2479(capitalize-region 1 44)
2480@result{} nil
2481
2482---------- Buffer: foo ----------
2483This Is The Contents Of The 5th Foo.
2484---------- Buffer: foo ----------
2485@end group
2486@end example
2487@end deffn
2488
2489@deffn Command downcase-region start end
2490This function converts all of the letters in the region defined by
2491@var{start} and @var{end} to lower case. The function returns
2492@code{nil}.
2493
2494When @code{downcase-region} is called interactively, @var{start} and
2495@var{end} are point and the mark, with the smallest first.
2496@end deffn
2497
2498@deffn Command upcase-region start end
2499This function converts all of the letters in the region defined by
2500@var{start} and @var{end} to upper case. The function returns
2501@code{nil}.
2502
2503When @code{upcase-region} is called interactively, @var{start} and
2504@var{end} are point and the mark, with the smallest first.
2505@end deffn
2506
2507@deffn Command capitalize-word count
2508This function capitalizes @var{count} words after point, moving point
2509over as it does. To capitalize means to convert each word's first
2510character to upper case and convert the rest of each word to lower case.
2511If @var{count} is negative, the function capitalizes the
2512@minus{}@var{count} previous words but does not move point. The value
2513is @code{nil}.
2514
61cfa852
RS
2515If point is in the middle of a word, the part of the word before point
2516is ignored when moving forward. The rest is treated as an entire word.
73804d4b
RS
2517
2518When @code{capitalize-word} is called interactively, @var{count} is
2519set to the numeric prefix argument.
2520@end deffn
2521
2522@deffn Command downcase-word count
2523This function converts the @var{count} words after point to all lower
2524case, moving point over as it does. If @var{count} is negative, it
2525converts the @minus{}@var{count} previous words but does not move point.
2526The value is @code{nil}.
2527
2528When @code{downcase-word} is called interactively, @var{count} is set
2529to the numeric prefix argument.
2530@end deffn
2531
2532@deffn Command upcase-word count
2533This function converts the @var{count} words after point to all upper
2534case, moving point over as it does. If @var{count} is negative, it
2535converts the @minus{}@var{count} previous words but does not move point.
2536The value is @code{nil}.
2537
2538When @code{upcase-word} is called interactively, @var{count} is set to
2539the numeric prefix argument.
2540@end deffn
2541
2542@node Text Properties
2543@section Text Properties
2544@cindex text properties
2545@cindex attributes of text
2546@cindex properties of text
2547
2548 Each character position in a buffer or a string can have a @dfn{text
2549property list}, much like the property list of a symbol (@pxref{Property
2550Lists}). The properties belong to a particular character at a
2551particular place, such as, the letter @samp{T} at the beginning of this
2552sentence or the first @samp{o} in @samp{foo}---if the same character
d735cf50 2553occurs in two different places, the two occurrences in general have
73804d4b
RS
2554different properties.
2555
2556 Each property has a name and a value. Both of these can be any Lisp
d735cf50
RS
2557object, but the name is normally a symbol. Typically each property
2558name symbol is used for a particular purpose; for instance, the text
2559property @code{face} specifies the faces for displaying the character
2560(@pxref{Special Properties}). The usual way to access the property
2561list is to specify a name and ask what value corresponds to it.
73804d4b
RS
2562
2563 If a character has a @code{category} property, we call it the
0bec517f
RS
2564@dfn{property category} of the character. It should be a symbol. The
2565properties of the symbol serve as defaults for the properties of the
2566character.
73804d4b
RS
2567
2568 Copying text between strings and buffers preserves the properties
2569along with the characters; this includes such diverse functions as
2570@code{substring}, @code{insert}, and @code{buffer-substring}.
2571
2572@menu
a6b73788
RS
2573* Examining Properties:: Looking at the properties of one character.
2574* Changing Properties:: Setting the properties of a range of text.
2575* Property Search:: Searching for where a property changes value.
2576* Special Properties:: Particular properties with special meanings.
2577* Format Properties:: Properties for representing formatting of text.
2578* Sticky Properties:: How inserted text gets properties from
2579 neighboring text.
2580* Saving Properties:: Saving text properties in files, and reading
2581 them back.
2582* Lazy Properties:: Computing text properties in a lazy fashion
2583 only when text is examined.
2584* Clickable Text:: Using text properties to make regions of text
2585 do something when you click on them.
5364b27c 2586* Links and Mouse-1:: How to make @key{Mouse-1} follow a link.
a6b73788
RS
2587* Fields:: The @code{field} property defines
2588 fields within the buffer.
2589* Not Intervals:: Why text properties do not use
2590 Lisp-visible text intervals.
73804d4b
RS
2591@end menu
2592
2593@node Examining Properties
2594@subsection Examining Text Properties
2595
2596 The simplest way to examine text properties is to ask for the value of
2597a particular property of a particular character. For that, use
2598@code{get-text-property}. Use @code{text-properties-at} to get the
2599entire property list of a character. @xref{Property Search}, for
2600functions to examine the properties of a number of characters at once.
2601
2602 These functions handle both strings and buffers. Keep in mind that
2603positions in a string start from 0, whereas positions in a buffer start
2604from 1.
2605
2606@defun get-text-property pos prop &optional object
2607This function returns the value of the @var{prop} property of the
2608character after position @var{pos} in @var{object} (a buffer or
2609string). The argument @var{object} is optional and defaults to the
2610current buffer.
2611
2612If there is no @var{prop} property strictly speaking, but the character
0bec517f 2613has a property category that is a symbol, then @code{get-text-property} returns
73804d4b
RS
2614the @var{prop} property of that symbol.
2615@end defun
2616
6fac48b3 2617@defun get-char-property position prop &optional object
73804d4b
RS
2618This function is like @code{get-text-property}, except that it checks
2619overlays first and then text properties. @xref{Overlays}.
2620
2621The argument @var{object} may be a string, a buffer, or a window. If it
2622is a window, then the buffer displayed in that window is used for text
2623properties and overlays, but only the overlays active for that window
2624are considered. If @var{object} is a buffer, then all overlays in that
2625buffer are considered, as well as text properties. If @var{object} is a
2626string, only text properties are considered, since strings never have
2627overlays.
2628@end defun
2629
6fac48b3
RS
2630@defun get-char-property-and-overlay position prop &optional object
2631This is like @code{get-char-property}, but gives extra information
2632about the overlay that the property value comes from.
2633
2634Its value is a cons cell whose @sc{car} is the property value, the
2635same value @code{get-char-property} would return with the same
2636arguments. Its @sc{cdr} is the overlay in which the property was
2637found, or @code{nil}, if it was found as a text property or not found
2638at all.
2639
2640If @var{position} is at the end of @var{object}, both the @sc{car} and
2641the @sc{cdr} of the value are @code{nil}.
2642@end defun
2643
1f63f814
CW
2644@defvar char-property-alias-alist
2645This variable holds an alist which maps property names to a list of
2646alternative property names. If a character does not specify a direct
2647value for a property, the alternative property names are consulted in
74eee906 2648order; the first non-@code{nil} value is used. This variable takes
1f63f814
CW
2649precedence over @code{default-text-properties}, and @code{category}
2650properties take precedence over this variable.
2651@end defvar
2652
73804d4b
RS
2653@defun text-properties-at position &optional object
2654This function returns the entire property list of the character at
2655@var{position} in the string or buffer @var{object}. If @var{object} is
2656@code{nil}, it defaults to the current buffer.
2657@end defun
2658
22697dac
KH
2659@defvar default-text-properties
2660This variable holds a property list giving default values for text
2661properties. Whenever a character does not specify a value for a
1f63f814
CW
2662property, neither directly, through a category symbol, or through
2663@code{char-property-alias-alist}, the value stored in this list is
2664used instead. Here is an example:
22697dac
KH
2665
2666@example
1f63f814
CW
2667(setq default-text-properties '(foo 69)
2668 char-property-alias-alist nil)
22697dac
KH
2669;; @r{Make sure character 1 has no properties of its own.}
2670(set-text-properties 1 2 nil)
2671;; @r{What we get, when we ask, is the default value.}
2672(get-text-property 1 'foo)
2673 @result{} 69
2674@end example
2675@end defvar
2676
73804d4b
RS
2677@node Changing Properties
2678@subsection Changing Text Properties
2679
2680 The primitives for changing properties apply to a specified range of
e78ea3db
RS
2681text in a buffer or string. The function @code{set-text-properties}
2682(see end of section) sets the entire property list of the text in that
2683range; more often, it is useful to add, change, or delete just certain
2684properties specified by name.
73804d4b 2685
e78ea3db 2686 Since text properties are considered part of the contents of the
9a36dd51
RS
2687buffer (or string), and can affect how a buffer looks on the screen,
2688any change in buffer text properties marks the buffer as modified.
2689Buffer text property changes are undoable also (@pxref{Undo}).
2690Positions in a string start from 0, whereas positions in a buffer
2691start from 1.
73804d4b 2692
bfe721d1
KH
2693@defun put-text-property start end prop value &optional object
2694This function sets the @var{prop} property to @var{value} for the text
2695between @var{start} and @var{end} in the string or buffer @var{object}.
2696If @var{object} is @code{nil}, it defaults to the current buffer.
2697@end defun
2698
73804d4b 2699@defun add-text-properties start end props &optional object
f9f59935 2700This function adds or overrides text properties for the text between
73804d4b
RS
2701@var{start} and @var{end} in the string or buffer @var{object}. If
2702@var{object} is @code{nil}, it defaults to the current buffer.
2703
f9f59935
RS
2704The argument @var{props} specifies which properties to add. It should
2705have the form of a property list (@pxref{Property Lists}): a list whose
2706elements include the property names followed alternately by the
73804d4b
RS
2707corresponding values.
2708
2709The return value is @code{t} if the function actually changed some
2710property's value; @code{nil} otherwise (if @var{props} is @code{nil} or
2711its values agree with those in the text).
2712
2713For example, here is how to set the @code{comment} and @code{face}
2714properties of a range of text:
2715
2716@example
2717(add-text-properties @var{start} @var{end}
2718 '(comment t face highlight))
2719@end example
2720@end defun
2721
73804d4b
RS
2722@defun remove-text-properties start end props &optional object
2723This function deletes specified text properties from the text between
2724@var{start} and @var{end} in the string or buffer @var{object}. If
2725@var{object} is @code{nil}, it defaults to the current buffer.
2726
2727The argument @var{props} specifies which properties to delete. It
2728should have the form of a property list (@pxref{Property Lists}): a list
2729whose elements are property names alternating with corresponding values.
2730But only the names matter---the values that accompany them are ignored.
2731For example, here's how to remove the @code{face} property.
2732
2733@example
2734(remove-text-properties @var{start} @var{end} '(face nil))
2735@end example
2736
2737The return value is @code{t} if the function actually changed some
2738property's value; @code{nil} otherwise (if @var{props} is @code{nil} or
2739if no character in the specified text had any of those properties).
e78ea3db
RS
2740
2741To remove all text properties from certain text, use
2742@code{set-text-properties} and specify @code{nil} for the new property
2743list.
73804d4b
RS
2744@end defun
2745
d73eac4d 2746@defun remove-list-of-text-properties start end list-of-properties &optional object
d69ea7ab 2747Like @code{remove-text-properties} except that
7fdc81ab 2748@var{list-of-properties} is a list of property names only, not an
d69ea7ab 2749alternating list of property names and values.
d73eac4d
RS
2750@end defun
2751
73804d4b
RS
2752@defun set-text-properties start end props &optional object
2753This function completely replaces the text property list for the text
2754between @var{start} and @var{end} in the string or buffer @var{object}.
2755If @var{object} is @code{nil}, it defaults to the current buffer.
2756
2757The argument @var{props} is the new property list. It should be a list
2758whose elements are property names alternating with corresponding values.
2759
2760After @code{set-text-properties} returns, all the characters in the
2761specified range have identical properties.
2762
2763If @var{props} is @code{nil}, the effect is to get rid of all properties
2764from the specified range of text. Here's an example:
2765
2766@example
2767(set-text-properties @var{start} @var{end} nil)
2768@end example
19bb7940
RS
2769
2770Do not rely on the return value of this function.
a40d4712
PR
2771@end defun
2772
2773 The easiest way to make a string with text properties
2774is with @code{propertize}:
2775
2776@defun propertize string &rest properties
a40d4712
PR
2777This function returns a copy of @var{string} which has the text
2778properties @var{properties}. These properties apply to all the
2779characters in the string that is returned. Here is an example that
2780constructs a string with a @code{face} property and a @code{mouse-face}
2781property:
2782
2783@smallexample
2784(propertize "foo" 'face 'italic
2785 'mouse-face 'bold-italic)
2786 @result{} #("foo" 0 3 (mouse-face bold-italic face italic))
2787@end smallexample
2788
2789To put different properties on various parts of a string, you can
2790construct each part with @code{propertize} and then combine them with
2791@code{concat}:
2792
2793@smallexample
2794(concat
2795 (propertize "foo" 'face 'italic
2796 'mouse-face 'bold-italic)
2797 " and "
2798 (propertize "bar" 'face 'italic
2799 'mouse-face 'bold-italic))
2800 @result{} #("foo and bar"
2801 0 3 (face italic mouse-face bold-italic)
2802 3 8 nil
2803 8 11 (face italic mouse-face bold-italic))
2804@end smallexample
73804d4b
RS
2805@end defun
2806
f9f59935 2807 See also the function @code{buffer-substring-no-properties}
22697dac
KH
2808(@pxref{Buffer Contents}) which copies text from the buffer
2809but does not copy its properties.
2810
73804d4b 2811@node Property Search
f9f59935 2812@subsection Text Property Search Functions
73804d4b 2813
f9f59935 2814 In typical use of text properties, most of the time several or many
73804d4b
RS
2815consecutive characters have the same value for a property. Rather than
2816writing your programs to examine characters one by one, it is much
2817faster to process chunks of text that have the same property value.
2818
f9f59935 2819 Here are functions you can use to do this. They use @code{eq} for
bfe721d1
KH
2820comparing property values. In all cases, @var{object} defaults to the
2821current buffer.
73804d4b 2822
f9f59935 2823 For high performance, it's very important to use the @var{limit}
73804d4b 2824argument to these functions, especially the ones that search for a
bfe721d1
KH
2825single property---otherwise, they may spend a long time scanning to the
2826end of the buffer, if the property you are interested in does not change.
73804d4b 2827
f9f59935
RS
2828 These functions do not move point; instead, they return a position (or
2829@code{nil}). Remember that a position is always between two characters;
2830the position returned by these functions is between two characters with
2831different properties.
61cfa852 2832
73804d4b
RS
2833@defun next-property-change pos &optional object limit
2834The function scans the text forward from position @var{pos} in the
2835string or buffer @var{object} till it finds a change in some text
2836property, then returns the position of the change. In other words, it
2837returns the position of the first character beyond @var{pos} whose
2838properties are not identical to those of the character just after
2839@var{pos}.
2840
2841If @var{limit} is non-@code{nil}, then the scan ends at position
177c0ea7 2842@var{limit}. If there is no property change before that point,
73804d4b
RS
2843@code{next-property-change} returns @var{limit}.
2844
2845The value is @code{nil} if the properties remain unchanged all the way
61cfa852
RS
2846to the end of @var{object} and @var{limit} is @code{nil}. If the value
2847is non-@code{nil}, it is a position greater than or equal to @var{pos}.
2848The value equals @var{pos} only when @var{limit} equals @var{pos}.
73804d4b
RS
2849
2850Here is an example of how to scan the buffer by chunks of text within
2851which all properties are constant:
2852
2853@smallexample
2854(while (not (eobp))
2855 (let ((plist (text-properties-at (point)))
2856 (next-change
2857 (or (next-property-change (point) (current-buffer))
2858 (point-max))))
2859 @r{Process text from point to @var{next-change}@dots{}}
2860 (goto-char next-change)))
2861@end smallexample
2862@end defun
2863
d735cf50
RS
2864@defun previous-property-change pos &optional object limit
2865This is like @code{next-property-change}, but scans back from @var{pos}
2866instead of forward. If the value is non-@code{nil}, it is a position
2867less than or equal to @var{pos}; it equals @var{pos} only if @var{limit}
2868equals @var{pos}.
2869@end defun
2870
73804d4b 2871@defun next-single-property-change pos prop &optional object limit
d735cf50
RS
2872The function scans text for a change in the @var{prop} property, then
2873returns the position of the change. The scan goes forward from
2874position @var{pos} in the string or buffer @var{object}. In other
2875words, this function returns the position of the first character
2876beyond @var{pos} whose @var{prop} property differs from that of the
2877character just after @var{pos}.
73804d4b
RS
2878
2879If @var{limit} is non-@code{nil}, then the scan ends at position
177c0ea7 2880@var{limit}. If there is no property change before that point,
73804d4b
RS
2881@code{next-single-property-change} returns @var{limit}.
2882
2883The value is @code{nil} if the property remains unchanged all the way to
2884the end of @var{object} and @var{limit} is @code{nil}. If the value is
2885non-@code{nil}, it is a position greater than or equal to @var{pos}; it
2886equals @var{pos} only if @var{limit} equals @var{pos}.
2887@end defun
2888
73804d4b 2889@defun previous-single-property-change pos prop &optional object limit
61cfa852
RS
2890This is like @code{next-single-property-change}, but scans back from
2891@var{pos} instead of forward. If the value is non-@code{nil}, it is a
2892position less than or equal to @var{pos}; it equals @var{pos} only if
2893@var{limit} equals @var{pos}.
73804d4b
RS
2894@end defun
2895
9db3a582 2896@defun next-char-property-change pos &optional limit
f9f59935 2897This is like @code{next-property-change} except that it considers
9db3a582
MB
2898overlay properties as well as text properties, and if no change is
2899found before the end of the buffer, it returns the maximum buffer
2900position rather than @code{nil} (in this sense, it resembles the
2901corresponding overlay function @code{next-overlay-change}, rather than
2902@code{next-property-change}). There is no @var{object} operand
2903because this function operates only on the current buffer. It returns
2904the next address at which either kind of property changes.
f9f59935
RS
2905@end defun
2906
9db3a582 2907@defun previous-char-property-change pos &optional limit
f9f59935 2908This is like @code{next-char-property-change}, but scans back from
9db3a582
MB
2909@var{pos} instead of forward, and returns the minimum buffer
2910position if no change is found.
2911@end defun
2912
2913@defun next-single-char-property-change pos prop &optional object limit
2914This is like @code{next-single-property-change} except that it
2915considers overlay properties as well as text properties, and if no
2916change is found before the end of the @var{object}, it returns the
2917maximum valid position in @var{object} rather than @code{nil}. Unlike
2918@code{next-char-property-change}, this function @emph{does} have an
2919@var{object} operand; if @var{object} is not a buffer, only
2920text-properties are considered.
2921@end defun
2922
2923@defun previous-single-char-property-change pos prop &optional object limit
2924This is like @code{next-single-char-property-change}, but scans back
2925from @var{pos} instead of forward, and returns the minimum valid
2926position in @var{object} if no change is found.
f9f59935
RS
2927@end defun
2928
73804d4b
RS
2929@defun text-property-any start end prop value &optional object
2930This function returns non-@code{nil} if at least one character between
2931@var{start} and @var{end} has a property @var{prop} whose value is
2932@var{value}. More precisely, it returns the position of the first such
2933character. Otherwise, it returns @code{nil}.
2934
2935The optional fifth argument, @var{object}, specifies the string or
2936buffer to scan. Positions are relative to @var{object}. The default
2937for @var{object} is the current buffer.
2938@end defun
2939
2940@defun text-property-not-all start end prop value &optional object
2941This function returns non-@code{nil} if at least one character between
f9f59935
RS
2942@var{start} and @var{end} does not have a property @var{prop} with value
2943@var{value}. More precisely, it returns the position of the first such
2944character. Otherwise, it returns @code{nil}.
73804d4b
RS
2945
2946The optional fifth argument, @var{object}, specifies the string or
2947buffer to scan. Positions are relative to @var{object}. The default
2948for @var{object} is the current buffer.
2949@end defun
2950
2951@node Special Properties
2952@subsection Properties with Special Meanings
2953
bfe721d1 2954 Here is a table of text property names that have special built-in
969fe9b5
RS
2955meanings. The following sections list a few additional special property
2956names that control filling and property inheritance. All other names
2957have no standard meaning, and you can use them as you like.
bfe721d1 2958
73804d4b 2959@table @code
0bec517f 2960@cindex property category of text character
73804d4b
RS
2961@kindex category @r{(text property)}
2962@item category
2963If a character has a @code{category} property, we call it the
0bec517f
RS
2964@dfn{property category} of the character. It should be a symbol. The
2965properties of this symbol serve as defaults for the properties of the
2966character.
73804d4b
RS
2967
2968@item face
2969@cindex face codes of text
2970@kindex face @r{(text property)}
2971You can use the property @code{face} to control the font and color of
8241495d
RS
2972text. @xref{Faces}, for more information.
2973
2974In the simplest case, the value is a face name. It can also be a list;
2975then each element can be any of these possibilities;
2976
2977@itemize @bullet
2978@item
2979A face name (a symbol or string).
f9f59935 2980
8241495d 2981@item
de968ddb 2982A property list of face attributes. This has the
8241495d
RS
2983form (@var{keyword} @var{value} @dots{}), where each @var{keyword} is a
2984face attribute name and @var{value} is a meaningful value for that
2985attribute. With this feature, you do not need to create a face each
2986time you want to specify a particular attribute for certain text.
2987@xref{Face Attributes}.
2988
2989@item
cd64b8f1 2990A cons cell with the form @code{(foreground-color . @var{color-name})} or
8241495d 2991@code{(background-color . @var{color-name})}. These elements specify
69164016
EZ
2992just the foreground color or just the background color. @xref{Color
2993Names}, for the supported forms of @var{color-name}.
8241495d 2994
cd64b8f1
KB
2995A cons cell of @code{(foreground-color . @var{color-name})} is equivalent to
2996specifying @code{(:foreground @var{color-name})}; likewise for the
342fd6cd 2997background.
8241495d 2998@end itemize
f9f59935 2999
1f63f814
CW
3000You can use Font Lock Mode (@pxref{Font Lock Mode}), to dynamically
3001update @code{face} properties based on the contents of the text.
3002
3003@item font-lock-face
3004@kindex font-lock-face @r{(text property)}
3005The @code{font-lock-face} property is the same in all respects as the
3006@code{face} property, but its state of activation is controlled by
3007@code{font-lock-mode}. This can be advantageous for special buffers
3008which are not intended to be user-editable, or for static areas of
3009text which are always fontified in the same way.
3010@xref{Precalculated Fontification}.
3011
3012Strictly speaking, @code{font-lock-face} is not a built-in text
3013property; rather, it is implemented in Font Lock mode using
3014@code{char-property-alias-alist}. @xref{Examining Properties}.
3015
bf247b6e 3016This property is new in Emacs 22.1.
73804d4b
RS
3017
3018@item mouse-face
3019@kindex mouse-face @r{(text property)}
3020The property @code{mouse-face} is used instead of @code{face} when the
3021mouse is on or near the character. For this purpose, ``near'' means
3022that all text between the character and where the mouse is have the same
3023@code{mouse-face} property value.
3024
8241495d
RS
3025@item fontified
3026@kindex fontified @r{(text property)}
f0b99db0
NR
3027This property says whether the character has a face assigned to it by font
3028locking. The display engine tests it to decide whether a buffer
e91d4202 3029portion needs refontifying before display. @xref{Auto Faces}. It
f0b99db0 3030takes one of three values:
e91d4202
AM
3031
3032@table @asis
3033@item @code{nil}
f0b99db0
NR
3034Font locking is disabled, or the character's @code{face} property, if
3035any, is invalid.
e91d4202 3036
f0b99db0 3037@item @code{defer}
c9abd530
NR
3038This value is only used when ``just in time'' font locking is enabled
3039and it means that the character's @code{face} property is invalid and
3040needs deferred fontification.
e91d4202
AM
3041
3042@item @code{t}
f0b99db0 3043The character's @code{face} property, or absence of one, is valid.
e91d4202 3044@end table
8241495d
RS
3045
3046@item display
8241495d
RS
3047This property activates various features that change the
3048way text is displayed. For example, it can make text appear taller
75708135 3049or shorter, higher or lower, wider or narrow, or replaced with an image.
8241495d
RS
3050@xref{Display Property}.
3051
3052@item help-echo
3053@kindex help-echo @r{(text property)}
85378c3f 3054@cindex tooltip
b6dd5963 3055@anchor{Text help-echo}
8241495d
RS
3056If text has a string as its @code{help-echo} property, then when you
3057move the mouse onto that text, Emacs displays that string in the echo
85378c3f
RS
3058area, or in the tooltip window (@pxref{Tooltips,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs
3059Manual}).
b6dd5963 3060
05cae5d0 3061If the value of the @code{help-echo} property is a function, that
b6dd5963 3062function is called with three arguments, @var{window}, @var{object} and
ef6938c5 3063@var{pos} and should return a help string or @code{nil} for
b6dd5963
DL
3064none. The first argument, @var{window} is the window in which
3065the help was found. The second, @var{object}, is the buffer, overlay or
ef6938c5 3066string which had the @code{help-echo} property. The @var{pos}
b6dd5963
DL
3067argument is as follows:
3068
3069@itemize @bullet{}
3070@item
f0b99db0 3071If @var{object} is a buffer, @var{pos} is the position in the buffer.
b6dd5963
DL
3072@item
3073If @var{object} is an overlay, that overlay has a @code{help-echo}
f0b99db0 3074property, and @var{pos} is the position in the overlay's buffer.
b6dd5963
DL
3075@item
3076If @var{object} is a string (an overlay string or a string displayed
05cae5d0 3077with the @code{display} property), @var{pos} is the position in that
f0b99db0 3078string.
b6dd5963
DL
3079@end itemize
3080
3081If the value of the @code{help-echo} property is neither a function nor
3082a string, it is evaluated to obtain a help string.
3083
05cae5d0
DL
3084You can alter the way help text is displayed by setting the variable
3085@code{show-help-function} (@pxref{Help display}).
b6dd5963 3086
2e46cd09 3087This feature is used in the mode line and for other active text.
8241495d 3088
0b3da4ec 3089@item keymap
1bd2023a 3090@cindex keymap of character
0b3da4ec 3091@kindex keymap @r{(text property)}
1bd2023a 3092The @code{keymap} property specifies an additional keymap for
b8f5396a
CY
3093commands. When this keymap applies, it is used for key lookup before
3094the minor mode keymaps and before the buffer's local map.
3095@xref{Active Keymaps}. If the property value is a symbol, the
3096symbol's function definition is used as the keymap.
3097
3098The property's value for the character before point applies if it is
3099non-@code{nil} and rear-sticky, and the property's value for the
3100character after point applies if it is non-@code{nil} and
6fac48b3 3101front-sticky. (For mouse clicks, the position of the click is used
b8f5396a 3102instead of the position of point.)
1bd2023a
RS
3103
3104@item local-map
3105@kindex local-map @r{(text property)}
41332983
RS
3106This property works like @code{keymap} except that it specifies a
3107keymap to use @emph{instead of} the buffer's local map. For most
b8f5396a
CY
3108purposes (perhaps all purposes), it is better to use the @code{keymap}
3109property.
0b3da4ec 3110
f9f59935
RS
3111@item syntax-table
3112The @code{syntax-table} property overrides what the syntax table says
3113about this particular character. @xref{Syntax Properties}.
73804d4b
RS
3114
3115@item read-only
3116@cindex read-only character
3117@kindex read-only @r{(text property)}
3118If a character has the property @code{read-only}, then modifying that
2468d0c0 3119character is not allowed. Any command that would do so gets an error,
55111a56
RS
3120@code{text-read-only}. If the property value is a string, that string
3121is used as the error message.
73804d4b
RS
3122
3123Insertion next to a read-only character is an error if inserting
3124ordinary text there would inherit the @code{read-only} property due to
3125stickiness. Thus, you can control permission to insert next to
3126read-only text by controlling the stickiness. @xref{Sticky Properties}.
3127
3128Since changing properties counts as modifying the buffer, it is not
3129possible to remove a @code{read-only} property unless you know the
3130special trick: bind @code{inhibit-read-only} to a non-@code{nil} value
3131and then remove the property. @xref{Read Only Buffers}.
3132
3133@item invisible
3134@kindex invisible @r{(text property)}
22697dac
KH
3135A non-@code{nil} @code{invisible} property can make a character invisible
3136on the screen. @xref{Invisible Text}, for details.
73804d4b 3137
72654a3c
RS
3138@item intangible
3139@kindex intangible @r{(text property)}
22697dac
KH
3140If a group of consecutive characters have equal and non-@code{nil}
3141@code{intangible} properties, then you cannot place point between them.
bfe721d1
KH
3142If you try to move point forward into the group, point actually moves to
3143the end of the group. If you try to move point backward into the group,
22697dac
KH
3144point actually moves to the start of the group.
3145
3146When the variable @code{inhibit-point-motion-hooks} is non-@code{nil},
3147the @code{intangible} property is ignored.
72654a3c 3148
2468d0c0
DL
3149@item field
3150@kindex field @r{(text property)}
3151Consecutive characters with the same @code{field} property constitute a
3152@dfn{field}. Some motion functions including @code{forward-word} and
3153@code{beginning-of-line} stop moving at a field boundary.
3154@xref{Fields}.
3155
a10db310
KS
3156@item cursor
3157@kindex cursor @r{(text property)}
3158Normally, the cursor is displayed at the end of any overlay and text
7d252e6b
RS
3159property strings present at the current window position. You can
3160place the cursor on any desired character of these strings by giving
a10db310
KS
3161that character a non-@code{nil} @var{cursor} text property.
3162
3163@item pointer
3164@kindex pointer @r{(text property)}
3165This specifies a specific pointer shape when the mouse pointer is over
9d42ffaa
LK
3166this text or image. @xref{Pointer Shape}, for possible pointer
3167shapes.
a10db310 3168
7d252e6b
RS
3169@item line-spacing
3170@kindex line-spacing @r{(text property)}
4676d6f3
RS
3171A newline can have a @code{line-spacing} text or overlay property that
3172controls the height of the display line ending with that newline. The
3173property value overrides the default frame line spacing and the buffer
a71fe68f 3174local @code{line-spacing} variable. @xref{Line Height}.
7d252e6b 3175
a10db310
KS
3176@item line-height
3177@kindex line-height @r{(text property)}
7d252e6b 3178A newline can have a @code{line-height} text or overlay property that
4676d6f3 3179controls the total height of the display line ending in that newline.
a71fe68f 3180@xref{Line Height}.
a10db310 3181
73804d4b
RS
3182@item modification-hooks
3183@cindex change hooks for a character
3184@cindex hooks for changing a character
3185@kindex modification-hooks @r{(text property)}
3186If a character has the property @code{modification-hooks}, then its
3187value should be a list of functions; modifying that character calls all
3188of those functions. Each function receives two arguments: the beginning
3189and end of the part of the buffer being modified. Note that if a
3190particular modification hook function appears on several characters
3191being modified by a single primitive, you can't predict how many times
3192the function will be called.
3193
fbbad95f
RS
3194If these functions modify the buffer, they should bind
3195@code{inhibit-modification-hooks} to @code{t} around doing so, to
3196avoid confusing the internal mechanism that calls these hooks.
3197
9cd4bb44
RS
3198Overlays also support the @code{modification-hooks} property, but the
3199details are somewhat different (@pxref{Overlay Properties}).
3200
73804d4b
RS
3201@item insert-in-front-hooks
3202@itemx insert-behind-hooks
3203@kindex insert-in-front-hooks @r{(text property)}
3204@kindex insert-behind-hooks @r{(text property)}
9ea65df9
RS
3205The operation of inserting text in a buffer also calls the functions
3206listed in the @code{insert-in-front-hooks} property of the following
3207character and in the @code{insert-behind-hooks} property of the
3208preceding character. These functions receive two arguments, the
3209beginning and end of the inserted text. The functions are called
3210@emph{after} the actual insertion takes place.
73804d4b
RS
3211
3212See also @ref{Change Hooks}, for other hooks that are called
3213when you change text in a buffer.
3214
3215@item point-entered
3216@itemx point-left
3217@cindex hooks for motion of point
3218@kindex point-entered @r{(text property)}
3219@kindex point-left @r{(text property)}
3220The special properties @code{point-entered} and @code{point-left}
3221record hook functions that report motion of point. Each time point
3222moves, Emacs compares these two property values:
3223
3224@itemize @bullet
3225@item
3226the @code{point-left} property of the character after the old location,
3227and
3228@item
3229the @code{point-entered} property of the character after the new
3230location.
3231@end itemize
3232
3233@noindent
3234If these two values differ, each of them is called (if not @code{nil})
3235with two arguments: the old value of point, and the new one.
3236
3237The same comparison is made for the characters before the old and new
3238locations. The result may be to execute two @code{point-left} functions
3239(which may be the same function) and/or two @code{point-entered}
61cfa852
RS
3240functions (which may be the same function). In any case, all the
3241@code{point-left} functions are called first, followed by all the
3242@code{point-entered} functions.
73804d4b 3243
2a233172
RS
3244It is possible with @code{char-after} to examine characters at various
3245buffer positions without moving point to those positions. Only an
3246actual change in the value of point runs these hook functions.
73804d4b
RS
3247
3248@defvar inhibit-point-motion-hooks
3249When this variable is non-@code{nil}, @code{point-left} and
22697dac 3250@code{point-entered} hooks are not run, and the @code{intangible}
f9f59935
RS
3251property has no effect. Do not set this variable globally; bind it with
3252@code{let}.
73804d4b
RS
3253@end defvar
3254
b6dd5963 3255@defvar show-help-function
05cae5d0
DL
3256@anchor{Help display} If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it specifies a
3257function called to display help strings. These may be @code{help-echo}
3258properties, menu help strings (@pxref{Simple Menu Items},
3259@pxref{Extended Menu Items}), or tool bar help strings (@pxref{Tool
3260Bar}). The specified function is called with one argument, the help
0b2fb045
WL
3261string to display. Tooltip mode (@pxref{Tooltips,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs
3262Manual}) provides an example.
b6dd5963
DL
3263@end defvar
3264
e159624d
KH
3265@item composition
3266@kindex composition @r{(text property)}
3267This text property is used to display a sequence of characters as a
31a3fb49 3268single glyph composed from components. For instance, in Thai a base
e159624d 3269consonant is composed with the following combining vowel as a single
31a3fb49
RS
3270glyph. The value should be a character or a sequence (vector, list,
3271or string) of integers.
e159624d 3272
31a3fb49
RS
3273@itemize @bullet
3274@item
3275If it is a character, it means to display that character instead of
3276the text in the region.
e159624d 3277
31a3fb49
RS
3278@item
3279If it is a string, it means to display that string's contents instead
e159624d
KH
3280of the text in the region.
3281
31a3fb49
RS
3282@item
3283If it is a vector or list, the elements are characters interleaved
3284with internal codes specifying how to compose the following character
3285with the previous one.
3286@end itemize
e159624d
KH
3287@end table
3288
22697dac 3289@node Format Properties
bfe721d1 3290@subsection Formatted Text Properties
22697dac
KH
3291
3292 These text properties affect the behavior of the fill commands. They
bfe721d1
KH
3293are used for representing formatted text. @xref{Filling}, and
3294@ref{Margins}.
22697dac 3295
bfe721d1 3296@table @code
22697dac
KH
3297@item hard
3298If a newline character has this property, it is a ``hard'' newline.
3299The fill commands do not alter hard newlines and do not move words
b471b8e9
RS
3300across them. However, this property takes effect only if the
3301@code{use-hard-newlines} minor mode is enabled. @xref{Hard and Soft
3302Newlines,, Hard and Soft Newlines, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
22697dac
KH
3303
3304@item right-margin
bfe721d1 3305This property specifies an extra right margin for filling this part of the
22697dac
KH
3306text.
3307
3308@item left-margin
bfe721d1 3309This property specifies an extra left margin for filling this part of the
22697dac
KH
3310text.
3311
3312@item justification
3313This property specifies the style of justification for filling this part
3314of the text.
3315@end table
3316
73804d4b
RS
3317@node Sticky Properties
3318@subsection Stickiness of Text Properties
3319@cindex sticky text properties
3320@cindex inheritance of text properties
3321
3322 Self-inserting characters normally take on the same properties as the
3323preceding character. This is called @dfn{inheritance} of properties.
3324
3325 In a Lisp program, you can do insertion with inheritance or without,
3326depending on your choice of insertion primitive. The ordinary text
3327insertion functions such as @code{insert} do not inherit any properties.
3328They insert text with precisely the properties of the string being
3329inserted, and no others. This is correct for programs that copy text
61cfa852
RS
3330from one context to another---for example, into or out of the kill ring.
3331To insert with inheritance, use the special primitives described in this
3332section. Self-inserting characters inherit properties because they work
3333using these primitives.
73804d4b
RS
3334
3335 When you do insertion with inheritance, @emph{which} properties are
2468d0c0
DL
3336inherited, and from where, depends on which properties are @dfn{sticky}.
3337Insertion after a character inherits those of its properties that are
73804d4b 3338@dfn{rear-sticky}. Insertion before a character inherits those of its
2468d0c0
DL
3339properties that are @dfn{front-sticky}. When both sides offer different
3340sticky values for the same property, the previous character's value
3341takes precedence.
3342
3343 By default, a text property is rear-sticky but not front-sticky; thus,
3344the default is to inherit all the properties of the preceding character,
3345and nothing from the following character.
3346
3347 You can control the stickiness of various text properties with two
3348specific text properties, @code{front-sticky} and @code{rear-nonsticky},
3349and with the variable @code{text-property-default-nonsticky}. You can
3350use the variable to specify a different default for a given property.
3351You can use those two text properties to make any specific properties
3352sticky or nonsticky in any particular part of the text.
73804d4b
RS
3353
3354 If a character's @code{front-sticky} property is @code{t}, then all
3355its properties are front-sticky. If the @code{front-sticky} property is
3356a list, then the sticky properties of the character are those whose
3357names are in the list. For example, if a character has a
3358@code{front-sticky} property whose value is @code{(face read-only)},
3359then insertion before the character can inherit its @code{face} property
3360and its @code{read-only} property, but no others.
3361
75708135
RS
3362 The @code{rear-nonsticky} property works the opposite way. Most
3363properties are rear-sticky by default, so the @code{rear-nonsticky}
3364property says which properties are @emph{not} rear-sticky. If a
3365character's @code{rear-nonsticky} property is @code{t}, then none of its
3366properties are rear-sticky. If the @code{rear-nonsticky} property is a
3367list, properties are rear-sticky @emph{unless} their names are in the
3368list.
73804d4b 3369
2468d0c0 3370@defvar text-property-default-nonsticky
2468d0c0
DL
3371This variable holds an alist which defines the default rear-stickiness
3372of various text properties. Each element has the form
3373@code{(@var{property} . @var{nonstickiness})}, and it defines the
3374stickiness of a particular text property, @var{property}.
3375
3376If @var{nonstickiness} is non-@code{nil}, this means that the property
3377@var{property} is rear-nonsticky by default. Since all properties are
3378front-nonsticky by default, this makes @var{property} nonsticky in both
3379directions by default.
3380
3381The text properties @code{front-sticky} and @code{rear-nonsticky}, when
8b6c1445 3382used, take precedence over the default @var{nonstickiness} specified in
2468d0c0
DL
3383@code{text-property-default-nonsticky}.
3384@end defvar
73804d4b
RS
3385
3386 Here are the functions that insert text with inheritance of properties:
3387
3388@defun insert-and-inherit &rest strings
3389Insert the strings @var{strings}, just like the function @code{insert},
3390but inherit any sticky properties from the adjoining text.
3391@end defun
3392
3393@defun insert-before-markers-and-inherit &rest strings
3394Insert the strings @var{strings}, just like the function
3395@code{insert-before-markers}, but inherit any sticky properties from the
3396adjoining text.
3397@end defun
3398
f9f59935
RS
3399 @xref{Insertion}, for the ordinary insertion functions which do not
3400inherit.
3401
73804d4b 3402@node Saving Properties
61cfa852 3403@subsection Saving Text Properties in Files
73804d4b
RS
3404@cindex text properties in files
3405@cindex saving text properties
3406
f9f59935
RS
3407 You can save text properties in files (along with the text itself),
3408and restore the same text properties when visiting or inserting the
3409files, using these two hooks:
73804d4b 3410
bfe721d1 3411@defvar write-region-annotate-functions
73804d4b
RS
3412This variable's value is a list of functions for @code{write-region} to
3413run to encode text properties in some fashion as annotations to the text
3414being written in the file. @xref{Writing to Files}.
3415
3416Each function in the list is called with two arguments: the start and
3417end of the region to be written. These functions should not alter the
3418contents of the buffer. Instead, they should return lists indicating
3419annotations to write in the file in addition to the text in the
3420buffer.
3421
3422Each function should return a list of elements of the form
3423@code{(@var{position} . @var{string})}, where @var{position} is an
f9f59935
RS
3424integer specifying the relative position within the text to be written,
3425and @var{string} is the annotation to add there.
73804d4b
RS
3426
3427Each list returned by one of these functions must be already sorted in
3428increasing order by @var{position}. If there is more than one function,
3429@code{write-region} merges the lists destructively into one sorted list.
3430
3431When @code{write-region} actually writes the text from the buffer to the
3432file, it intermixes the specified annotations at the corresponding
3433positions. All this takes place without modifying the buffer.
3434@end defvar
3435
3436@defvar after-insert-file-functions
3437This variable holds a list of functions for @code{insert-file-contents}
3438to call after inserting a file's contents. These functions should scan
3439the inserted text for annotations, and convert them to the text
3440properties they stand for.
3441
3442Each function receives one argument, the length of the inserted text;
3443point indicates the start of that text. The function should scan that
3444text for annotations, delete them, and create the text properties that
3445the annotations specify. The function should return the updated length
3446of the inserted text, as it stands after those changes. The value
3447returned by one function becomes the argument to the next function.
3448
3449These functions should always return with point at the beginning of
3450the inserted text.
3451
3452The intended use of @code{after-insert-file-functions} is for converting
3453some sort of textual annotations into actual text properties. But other
3454uses may be possible.
3455@end defvar
3456
3457We invite users to write Lisp programs to store and retrieve text
3458properties in files, using these hooks, and thus to experiment with
177c0ea7 3459various data formats and find good ones. Eventually we hope users
73804d4b
RS
3460will produce good, general extensions we can install in Emacs.
3461
f9f59935
RS
3462We suggest not trying to handle arbitrary Lisp objects as text property
3463names or values---because a program that general is probably difficult
3464to write, and slow. Instead, choose a set of possible data types that
3465are reasonably flexible, and not too hard to encode.
73804d4b 3466
bfe721d1
KH
3467@xref{Format Conversion}, for a related feature.
3468
3469@c ??? In next edition, merge this info Format Conversion.
3470
61ee3601
RS
3471@node Lazy Properties
3472@subsection Lazy Computation of Text Properties
3473
3474 Instead of computing text properties for all the text in the buffer,
3475you can arrange to compute the text properties for parts of the text
3476when and if something depends on them.
3477
3478 The primitive that extracts text from the buffer along with its
3479properties is @code{buffer-substring}. Before examining the properties,
3480this function runs the abnormal hook @code{buffer-access-fontify-functions}.
3481
3482@defvar buffer-access-fontify-functions
3483This variable holds a list of functions for computing text properties.
3484Before @code{buffer-substring} copies the text and text properties for a
3485portion of the buffer, it calls all the functions in this list. Each of
3486the functions receives two arguments that specify the range of the
3487buffer being accessed. (The buffer itself is always the current
3488buffer.)
3489@end defvar
3490
3491 The function @code{buffer-substring-no-properties} does not call these
3492functions, since it ignores text properties anyway.
3493
3494 In order to prevent the hook functions from being called more than
3495once for the same part of the buffer, you can use the variable
3496@code{buffer-access-fontified-property}.
3497
3498@defvar buffer-access-fontified-property
d95c8be3 3499If this variable's value is non-@code{nil}, it is a symbol which is used
61ee3601
RS
3500as a text property name. A non-@code{nil} value for that text property
3501means, ``the other text properties for this character have already been
3502computed.''
3503
3504If all the characters in the range specified for @code{buffer-substring}
3505have a non-@code{nil} value for this property, @code{buffer-substring}
3506does not call the @code{buffer-access-fontify-functions} functions. It
3507assumes these characters already have the right text properties, and
3508just copies the properties they already have.
3509
3510The normal way to use this feature is that the
3511@code{buffer-access-fontify-functions} functions add this property, as
3512well as others, to the characters they operate on. That way, they avoid
3513being called over and over for the same text.
3514@end defvar
3515
f9f59935
RS
3516@node Clickable Text
3517@subsection Defining Clickable Text
3518@cindex clickable text
3519
b8f5396a
CY
3520 @dfn{Clickable text} is text that can be clicked, with either the
3521the mouse or via keyboard commands, to produce some result. Many
3522major modes use clickable text to implement features such as
3523hyper-links. The @code{button} package provides an easy way to insert
3524and manipulate clickable text. @xref{Buttons}.
3525
3526 In this section, we will explain how to manually set up clickable
3527text in a buffer using text properties. This involves two things: (1)
3528indicating clickability when the mouse moves over the text, and (2)
3529making @kbd{RET} or a mouse click on that text do something.
f9f59935 3530
fc0ba1d0
TTN
3531 Indicating clickability usually involves highlighting the text, and
3532often involves displaying helpful information about the action, such
3533as which mouse button to press, or a short summary of the action.
3534This can be done with the @code{mouse-face} and @code{help-echo}
3535text properties. @xref{Special Properties}.
3536Here is an example of how Dired does it:
f9f59935
RS
3537
3538@smallexample
3539(condition-case nil
3540 (if (dired-move-to-filename)
fc0ba1d0
TTN
3541 (add-text-properties
3542 (point)
3543 (save-excursion
3544 (dired-move-to-end-of-filename)
3545 (point))
3546 '(mouse-face highlight
3547 help-echo "mouse-2: visit this file in other window")))
f9f59935
RS
3548 (error nil))
3549@end smallexample
3550
3551@noindent
fc0ba1d0 3552The first two arguments to @code{add-text-properties} specify the
f9f59935
RS
3553beginning and end of the text.
3554
3555 The usual way to make the mouse do something when you click it
3556on this text is to define @code{mouse-2} in the major mode's
3557keymap. The job of checking whether the click was on clickable text
3558is done by the command definition. Here is how Dired does it:
3559
3560@smallexample
3561(defun dired-mouse-find-file-other-window (event)
fc0ba1d0 3562 "In Dired, visit the file or directory name you click on."
f9f59935 3563 (interactive "e")
fc0ba1d0 3564 (let (window pos file)
f9f59935 3565 (save-excursion
fc0ba1d0
TTN
3566 (setq window (posn-window (event-end event))
3567 pos (posn-point (event-end event)))
3568 (if (not (windowp window))
3569 (error "No file chosen"))
3570 (set-buffer (window-buffer window))
3571 (goto-char pos)
3572 (setq file (dired-get-file-for-visit)))
3573 (if (file-directory-p file)
3574 (or (and (cdr dired-subdir-alist)
3575 (dired-goto-subdir file))
3576 (progn
3577 (select-window window)
3578 (dired-other-window file)))
3579 (select-window window)
3580 (find-file-other-window (file-name-sans-versions file t)))))
f9f59935
RS
3581@end smallexample
3582
3583@noindent
fc0ba1d0
TTN
3584The reason for the @code{save-excursion} construct is to avoid
3585changing the current buffer. In this case,
3586Dired uses the functions @code{posn-window} and @code{posn-point}
3587to determine which buffer the click happened in and where, and
3588in that buffer, @code{dired-get-file-for-visit} to determine which
3589file to visit.
f9f59935
RS
3590
3591 Instead of defining a mouse command for the major mode, you can define
c26a99e8 3592a key binding for the clickable text itself, using the @code{keymap}
ce75fd23 3593text property:
f9f59935
RS
3594
3595@example
3596(let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
c26a99e8 3597 (define-key map [mouse-2] 'operate-this-button)
f9f59935
RS
3598 (put-text-property (point)
3599 (save-excursion
3600 (dired-move-to-end-of-filename)
3601 (point))
c26a99e8 3602 'keymap map))
f9f59935
RS
3603@end example
3604
3605@noindent
3606This method makes it possible to define different commands for various
3607clickable pieces of text. Also, the major mode definition (or the
3608global definition) remains available for the rest of the text in the
3609buffer.
3610
5364b27c
KS
3611@node Links and Mouse-1
3612@subsection Links and Mouse-1
9bcb9ab0 3613@cindex follow links
5364b27c 3614@cindex mouse-1
9bcb9ab0 3615
b503de76
RS
3616 The normal Emacs command for activating text in read-only buffers is
3617@key{Mouse-2}, which includes following textual links. However, most
3618graphical applications use @key{Mouse-1} for following links. For
3619compatibility, @key{Mouse-1} follows links in Emacs too, when you
3620click on a link quickly without moving the mouse. The user can
f3b11af5 3621customize this behavior through the variable
b503de76
RS
3622@code{mouse-1-click-follows-link}.
3623
5364b27c 3624 To define text as a link at the Lisp level, you should bind the
cf819102
RS
3625@code{mouse-2} event to a command to follow the link. Then, to indicate that
3626@key{Mouse-1} should also follow the link, you should specify a
3627@code{follow-link} condition either as a text property or as a key
3628binding:
9bcb9ab0
KS
3629
3630@table @asis
b503de76
RS
3631@item @code{follow-link} property
3632If the clickable text has a non-@code{nil} @code{follow-link} text or overlay
cf819102 3633property, that specifies the condition.
9bcb9ab0 3634
b503de76 3635@item @code{follow-link} event
cf819102
RS
3636If there is a binding for the @code{follow-link} event, either on the
3637clickable text or in the local keymap, the binding is the condition.
b503de76 3638@end table
9bcb9ab0 3639
cf819102
RS
3640 Regardless of how you set the @code{follow-link} condition, its
3641value is used as follows to determine whether the given position is
3642inside a link, and (if so) to compute an @dfn{action code} saying how
3643@key{Mouse-1} should handle the link.
9bcb9ab0 3644
b503de76
RS
3645@table @asis
3646@item @code{mouse-face}
cf819102 3647If the condition is @code{mouse-face}, a position is inside a link if
b503de76
RS
3648there is a non-@code{nil} @code{mouse-face} property at that position.
3649The action code is always @code{t}.
9bcb9ab0 3650
b503de76 3651For example, here is how Info mode handles @key{Mouse-1}:
9bcb9ab0 3652
342fd6cd 3653@smallexample
9bcb9ab0 3654(define-key Info-mode-map [follow-link] 'mouse-face)
342fd6cd 3655@end smallexample
9bcb9ab0
KS
3656
3657@item a function
cf819102
RS
3658If the condition is a valid function, @var{func}, then a position
3659@var{pos} is inside a link if @code{(@var{func} @var{pos})} evaluates
3660to non-@code{nil}. The value returned by @var{func} serves as the
3661action code.
9bcb9ab0 3662
b503de76
RS
3663For example, here is how pcvs enables @key{Mouse-1} to follow links on
3664file names only:
9bcb9ab0 3665
342fd6cd 3666@smallexample
9bcb9ab0
KS
3667(define-key map [follow-link]
3668 (lambda (pos)
342fd6cd
RS
3669 (eq (get-char-property pos 'face) 'cvs-filename-face)))
3670@end smallexample
9bcb9ab0 3671
b503de76 3672@item anything else
cf819102
RS
3673If the condition value is anything else, then the position is inside a
3674link and the condition itself is the action code. Clearly you should
3675only specify this kind of condition on the text that constitutes a
3676link.
9bcb9ab0
KS
3677@end table
3678
3679@noindent
cf819102 3680The action code tells @key{Mouse-1} how to follow the link:
9bcb9ab0
KS
3681
3682@table @asis
1b1c49e1 3683@item a string or vector
cf819102
RS
3684If the action code is a string or vector, the @key{Mouse-1} event is
3685translated into the first element of the string or vector; i.e., the
3686action of the @key{Mouse-1} click is the local or global binding of
1b1c49e1 3687that character or symbol. Thus, if the action code is @code{"foo"},
cf819102
RS
3688@key{Mouse-1} translates into @kbd{f}. If it is @code{[foo]},
3689@key{Mouse-1} translates into @key{foo}.
b503de76
RS
3690
3691@item anything else
3692For any other non-@code{nil} action code, the @code{mouse-1} event is
3693translated into a @code{mouse-2} event at the same position.
9bcb9ab0
KS
3694@end table
3695
b503de76
RS
3696 To define @key{Mouse-1} to activate a button defined with
3697@code{define-button-type}, give the button a @code{follow-link}
3698property with a value as specified above to determine how to follow
5364b27c
KS
3699the link. For example, here is how Help mode handles @key{Mouse-1}:
3700
3701@smallexample
3702(define-button-type 'help-xref
3703 'follow-link t
3704 'action #'help-button-action)
3705@end smallexample
9bcb9ab0 3706
b503de76
RS
3707 To define @key{Mouse-1} on a widget defined with
3708@code{define-widget}, give the widget a @code{:follow-link} property
3709with a value as specified above to determine how to follow the link.
5364b27c
KS
3710
3711For example, here is how the @code{link} widget specifies that
3712a @key{Mouse-1} click shall be translated to @key{RET}:
3713
3714@smallexample
3715(define-widget 'link 'item
3716 "An embedded link."
3717 :button-prefix 'widget-link-prefix
3718 :button-suffix 'widget-link-suffix
3719 :follow-link "\C-m"
3720 :help-echo "Follow the link."
3721 :format "%[%t%]")
3722@end smallexample
9bcb9ab0
KS
3723
3724@defun mouse-on-link-p pos
b503de76 3725This function returns non-@code{nil} if position @var{pos} in the
faad80bf
TTN
3726current buffer is on a link. @var{pos} can also be a mouse event
3727location, as returned by @code{event-start} (@pxref{Accessing Events}).
9bcb9ab0
KS
3728@end defun
3729
2468d0c0
DL
3730@node Fields
3731@subsection Defining and Using Fields
3732@cindex fields
3733
3734 A field is a range of consecutive characters in the buffer that are
3735identified by having the same value (comparing with @code{eq}) of the
35627f72
MB
3736@code{field} property (either a text-property or an overlay property).
3737This section describes special functions that are available for
3738operating on fields.
2468d0c0
DL
3739
3740 You specify a field with a buffer position, @var{pos}. We think of
3741each field as containing a range of buffer positions, so the position
3742you specify stands for the field containing that position.
3743
3744 When the characters before and after @var{pos} are part of the same
3745field, there is no doubt which field contains @var{pos}: the one those
3746characters both belong to. When @var{pos} is at a boundary between
3747fields, which field it belongs to depends on the stickiness of the
3748@code{field} properties of the two surrounding characters (@pxref{Sticky
3749Properties}). The field whose property would be inherited by text
3750inserted at @var{pos} is the field that contains @var{pos}.
3751
3752 There is an anomalous case where newly inserted text at @var{pos}
3753would not inherit the @code{field} property from either side. This
3754happens if the previous character's @code{field} property is not
3755rear-sticky, and the following character's @code{field} property is not
3756front-sticky. In this case, @var{pos} belongs to neither the preceding
3757field nor the following field; the field functions treat it as belonging
3758to an empty field whose beginning and end are both at @var{pos}.
3759
3760 In all of these functions, if @var{pos} is omitted or @code{nil}, the
04668363
TTN
3761value of point is used by default. If narrowing is in effect, then
3762@var{pos} should fall within the accessible portion. @xref{Narrowing}.
2468d0c0 3763
9c7fce05 3764@defun field-beginning &optional pos escape-from-edge limit
2468d0c0
DL
3765This function returns the beginning of the field specified by @var{pos}.
3766
35627f72
MB
3767If @var{pos} is at the beginning of its field, and
3768@var{escape-from-edge} is non-@code{nil}, then the return value is
3769always the beginning of the preceding field that @emph{ends} at @var{pos},
3770regardless of the stickiness of the @code{field} properties around
3771@var{pos}.
9c7fce05
MB
3772
3773If @var{limit} is non-@code{nil}, it is a buffer position; if the
3774beginning of the field is before @var{limit}, then @var{limit} will be
3775returned instead.
2468d0c0
DL
3776@end defun
3777
9c7fce05 3778@defun field-end &optional pos escape-from-edge limit
2468d0c0
DL
3779This function returns the end of the field specified by @var{pos}.
3780
35627f72
MB
3781If @var{pos} is at the end of its field, and @var{escape-from-edge} is
3782non-@code{nil}, then the return value is always the end of the following
3783field that @emph{begins} at @var{pos}, regardless of the stickiness of
3784the @code{field} properties around @var{pos}.
9c7fce05
MB
3785
3786If @var{limit} is non-@code{nil}, it is a buffer position; if the end
3787of the field is after @var{limit}, then @var{limit} will be returned
3788instead.
2468d0c0
DL
3789@end defun
3790
3791@defun field-string &optional pos
2468d0c0
DL
3792This function returns the contents of the field specified by @var{pos},
3793as a string.
3794@end defun
3795
3796@defun field-string-no-properties &optional pos
2468d0c0
DL
3797This function returns the contents of the field specified by @var{pos},
3798as a string, discarding text properties.
3799@end defun
3800
3801@defun delete-field &optional pos
2468d0c0
DL
3802This function deletes the text of the field specified by @var{pos}.
3803@end defun
3804
35627f72 3805@defun constrain-to-field new-pos old-pos &optional escape-from-edge only-in-line inhibit-capture-property
2468d0c0
DL
3806This function ``constrains'' @var{new-pos} to the field that
3807@var{old-pos} belongs to---in other words, it returns the position
3808closest to @var{new-pos} that is in the same field as @var{old-pos}.
3809
3810If @var{new-pos} is @code{nil}, then @code{constrain-to-field} uses
a0c489f1
RS
3811the value of point instead, and moves point to the resulting position
3812as well as returning it.
2468d0c0 3813
75708135 3814If @var{old-pos} is at the boundary of two fields, then the acceptable
a0c489f1
RS
3815final positions depend on the argument @var{escape-from-edge}. If
3816@var{escape-from-edge} is @code{nil}, then @var{new-pos} must be in
3817the field whose @code{field} property equals what new characters
3818inserted at @var{old-pos} would inherit. (This depends on the
35627f72
MB
3819stickiness of the @code{field} property for the characters before and
3820after @var{old-pos}.) If @var{escape-from-edge} is non-@code{nil},
a0c489f1 3821@var{new-pos} can be anywhere in the two adjacent fields.
35627f72 3822Additionally, if two fields are separated by another field with the
a0c489f1
RS
3823special value @code{boundary}, then any point within this special
3824field is also considered to be ``on the boundary.''
3825
3826Commands like @kbd{C-a} with no argumemt, that normally move backward
3827to a specific kind of location and stay there once there, probably
3828should specify @code{nil} for @var{escape-from-edge}. Other motion
3829commands that check fields should probably pass @code{t}.
2468d0c0
DL
3830
3831If the optional argument @var{only-in-line} is non-@code{nil}, and
3832constraining @var{new-pos} in the usual way would move it to a different
3833line, @var{new-pos} is returned unconstrained. This used in commands
3834that move by line, such as @code{next-line} and
3835@code{beginning-of-line}, so that they respect field boundaries only in
3836the case where they can still move to the right line.
35627f72
MB
3837
3838If the optional argument @var{inhibit-capture-property} is
3839non-@code{nil}, and @var{old-pos} has a non-@code{nil} property of that
3840name, then any field boundaries are ignored.
3841
3842You can cause @code{constrain-to-field} to ignore all field boundaries
3843(and so never constrain anything) by binding the variable
74eee906 3844@code{inhibit-field-text-motion} to a non-@code{nil} value.
2468d0c0
DL
3845@end defun
3846
73804d4b
RS
3847@node Not Intervals
3848@subsection Why Text Properties are not Intervals
3849@cindex intervals
3850
3851 Some editors that support adding attributes to text in the buffer do
3852so by letting the user specify ``intervals'' within the text, and adding
3853the properties to the intervals. Those editors permit the user or the
3854programmer to determine where individual intervals start and end. We
3855deliberately provided a different sort of interface in Emacs Lisp to
3856avoid certain paradoxical behavior associated with text modification.
3857
3858 If the actual subdivision into intervals is meaningful, that means you
3859can distinguish between a buffer that is just one interval with a
3860certain property, and a buffer containing the same text subdivided into
3861two intervals, both of which have that property.
3862
3863 Suppose you take the buffer with just one interval and kill part of
3864the text. The text remaining in the buffer is one interval, and the
3865copy in the kill ring (and the undo list) becomes a separate interval.
3866Then if you yank back the killed text, you get two intervals with the
3867same properties. Thus, editing does not preserve the distinction
3868between one interval and two.
3869
3870 Suppose we ``fix'' this problem by coalescing the two intervals when
3871the text is inserted. That works fine if the buffer originally was a
3872single interval. But suppose instead that we have two adjacent
3873intervals with the same properties, and we kill the text of one interval
3874and yank it back. The same interval-coalescence feature that rescues
3875the other case causes trouble in this one: after yanking, we have just
3876one interval. One again, editing does not preserve the distinction
3877between one interval and two.
3878
3879 Insertion of text at the border between intervals also raises
3880questions that have no satisfactory answer.
3881
3882 However, it is easy to arrange for editing to behave consistently for
3883questions of the form, ``What are the properties of this character?''
3884So we have decided these are the only questions that make sense; we have
3885not implemented asking questions about where intervals start or end.
3886
f9f59935 3887 In practice, you can usually use the text property search functions in
73804d4b
RS
3888place of explicit interval boundaries. You can think of them as finding
3889the boundaries of intervals, assuming that intervals are always
3890coalesced whenever possible. @xref{Property Search}.
3891
3892 Emacs also provides explicit intervals as a presentation feature; see
3893@ref{Overlays}.
3894
3895@node Substitution
3896@section Substituting for a Character Code
3897
3898 The following functions replace characters within a specified region
3899based on their character codes.
3900
3901@defun subst-char-in-region start end old-char new-char &optional noundo
3902@cindex replace characters
3903This function replaces all occurrences of the character @var{old-char}
3904with the character @var{new-char} in the region of the current buffer
3905defined by @var{start} and @var{end}.
3906
73804d4b 3907@cindex undo avoidance
bfe721d1
KH
3908If @var{noundo} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{subst-char-in-region} does
3909not record the change for undo and does not mark the buffer as modified.
2468d0c0
DL
3910This was useful for controlling the old selective display feature
3911(@pxref{Selective Display}).
73804d4b
RS
3912
3913@code{subst-char-in-region} does not move point and returns
3914@code{nil}.
3915
3916@example
3917@group
3918---------- Buffer: foo ----------
3919This is the contents of the buffer before.
3920---------- Buffer: foo ----------
3921@end group
3922
3923@group
3924(subst-char-in-region 1 20 ?i ?X)
3925 @result{} nil
3926
3927---------- Buffer: foo ----------
3928ThXs Xs the contents of the buffer before.
3929---------- Buffer: foo ----------
3930@end group
3931@end example
3932@end defun
3933
3934@defun translate-region start end table
3935This function applies a translation table to the characters in the
3936buffer between positions @var{start} and @var{end}.
3937
902e1cde
KH
3938The translation table @var{table} is a string or a char-table;
3939@code{(aref @var{table} @var{ochar})} gives the translated character
3940corresponding to @var{ochar}. If @var{table} is a string, any
73804d4b
RS
3941characters with codes larger than the length of @var{table} are not
3942altered by the translation.
3943
3944The return value of @code{translate-region} is the number of
61cfa852
RS
3945characters that were actually changed by the translation. This does
3946not count characters that were mapped into themselves in the
73804d4b 3947translation table.
73804d4b
RS
3948@end defun
3949
3950@node Registers
3951@section Registers
3952@cindex registers
3953
3954 A register is a sort of variable used in Emacs editing that can hold a
969fe9b5 3955variety of different kinds of values. Each register is named by a
ad800164 3956single character. All @acronym{ASCII} characters and their meta variants
75708135
RS
3957(but with the exception of @kbd{C-g}) can be used to name registers.
3958Thus, there are 255 possible registers. A register is designated in
3959Emacs Lisp by the character that is its name.
73804d4b
RS
3960
3961@defvar register-alist
3962This variable is an alist of elements of the form @code{(@var{name} .
3963@var{contents})}. Normally, there is one element for each Emacs
3964register that has been used.
3965
3966The object @var{name} is a character (an integer) identifying the
969fe9b5 3967register.
73804d4b
RS
3968@end defvar
3969
969fe9b5
RS
3970 The @var{contents} of a register can have several possible types:
3971
3972@table @asis
3973@item a number
3974A number stands for itself. If @code{insert-register} finds a number
3975in the register, it converts the number to decimal.
3976
3977@item a marker
3978A marker represents a buffer position to jump to.
3979
3980@item a string
3981A string is text saved in the register.
3982
3983@item a rectangle
3984A rectangle is represented by a list of strings.
3985
3986@item @code{(@var{window-configuration} @var{position})}
3987This represents a window configuration to restore in one frame, and a
3988position to jump to in the current buffer.
3989
3990@item @code{(@var{frame-configuration} @var{position})}
3991This represents a frame configuration to restore, and a position
3992to jump to in the current buffer.
3993
3994@item (file @var{filename})
3995This represents a file to visit; jumping to this value visits file
3996@var{filename}.
3997
3998@item (file-query @var{filename} @var{position})
3999This represents a file to visit and a position in it; jumping to this
4000value visits file @var{filename} and goes to buffer position
4001@var{position}. Restoring this type of position asks the user for
4002confirmation first.
4003@end table
4004
4005 The functions in this section return unpredictable values unless
4006otherwise stated.
4007
73804d4b
RS
4008@defun get-register reg
4009This function returns the contents of the register
4010@var{reg}, or @code{nil} if it has no contents.
4011@end defun
4012
4013@defun set-register reg value
4014This function sets the contents of register @var{reg} to @var{value}.
4015A register can be set to any value, but the other register functions
4016expect only certain data types. The return value is @var{value}.
4017@end defun
4018
4019@deffn Command view-register reg
4020This command displays what is contained in register @var{reg}.
4021@end deffn
4022
4023@ignore
4024@deffn Command point-to-register reg
4025This command stores both the current location of point and the current
4026buffer in register @var{reg} as a marker.
4027@end deffn
4028
4029@deffn Command jump-to-register reg
4030@deffnx Command register-to-point reg
4031@comment !!SourceFile register.el
4032This command restores the status recorded in register @var{reg}.
4033
4034If @var{reg} contains a marker, it moves point to the position stored in
4035the marker. Since both the buffer and the location within the buffer
4036are stored by the @code{point-to-register} function, this command can
4037switch you to another buffer.
4038
4039If @var{reg} contains a window configuration or a frame configuration.
4040@code{jump-to-register} restores that configuration.
4041@end deffn
4042@end ignore
4043
4044@deffn Command insert-register reg &optional beforep
4045This command inserts contents of register @var{reg} into the current
4046buffer.
4047
4048Normally, this command puts point before the inserted text, and the
4049mark after it. However, if the optional second argument @var{beforep}
4050is non-@code{nil}, it puts the mark before and point after.
4051You can pass a non-@code{nil} second argument @var{beforep} to this
4052function interactively by supplying any prefix argument.
4053
4054If the register contains a rectangle, then the rectangle is inserted
4055with its upper left corner at point. This means that text is inserted
4056in the current line and underneath it on successive lines.
4057
4058If the register contains something other than saved text (a string) or
4059a rectangle (a list), currently useless things happen. This may be
4060changed in the future.
4061@end deffn
4062
4063@ignore
4064@deffn Command copy-to-register reg start end &optional delete-flag
4065This command copies the region from @var{start} to @var{end} into
4066register @var{reg}. If @var{delete-flag} is non-@code{nil}, it deletes
4067the region from the buffer after copying it into the register.
4068@end deffn
4069
4070@deffn Command prepend-to-register reg start end &optional delete-flag
4071This command prepends the region from @var{start} to @var{end} into
4072register @var{reg}. If @var{delete-flag} is non-@code{nil}, it deletes
4073the region from the buffer after copying it to the register.
4074@end deffn
4075
4076@deffn Command append-to-register reg start end &optional delete-flag
4077This command appends the region from @var{start} to @var{end} to the
4078text already in register @var{reg}. If @var{delete-flag} is
4079non-@code{nil}, it deletes the region from the buffer after copying it
4080to the register.
4081@end deffn
4082
4083@deffn Command copy-rectangle-to-register reg start end &optional delete-flag
4084This command copies a rectangular region from @var{start} to @var{end}
4085into register @var{reg}. If @var{delete-flag} is non-@code{nil}, it
4086deletes the region from the buffer after copying it to the register.
4087@end deffn
4088
4089@deffn Command window-configuration-to-register reg
4090This function stores the window configuration of the selected frame in
4091register @var{reg}.
4092@end deffn
4093
4094@deffn Command frame-configuration-to-register reg
4095This function stores the current frame configuration in register
4096@var{reg}.
4097@end deffn
4098@end ignore
4099
b22f3a19
RS
4100@node Transposition
4101@section Transposition of Text
4102
4103 This subroutine is used by the transposition commands.
4104
4105@defun transpose-regions start1 end1 start2 end2 &optional leave-markers
4106This function exchanges two nonoverlapping portions of the buffer.
4107Arguments @var{start1} and @var{end1} specify the bounds of one portion
4108and arguments @var{start2} and @var{end2} specify the bounds of the
4109other portion.
4110
4111Normally, @code{transpose-regions} relocates markers with the transposed
4112text; a marker previously positioned within one of the two transposed
4113portions moves along with that portion, thus remaining between the same
4114two characters in their new position. However, if @var{leave-markers}
4115is non-@code{nil}, @code{transpose-regions} does not do this---it leaves
4116all markers unrelocated.
4117@end defun
4118
b6954afd
RS
4119@node Base 64
4120@section Base 64 Encoding
4121@cindex base 64 encoding
4122
ae9b6b4a 4123 Base 64 code is used in email to encode a sequence of 8-bit bytes as
ad800164 4124a longer sequence of @acronym{ASCII} graphic characters. It is defined in
944351c0
EZ
4125Internet RFC@footnote{
4126An RFC, an acronym for @dfn{Request for Comments}, is a numbered
4127Internet informational document describing a standard. RFCs are
4128usually written by technical experts acting on their own initiative,
4129and are traditionally written in a pragmatic, experience-driven
4130manner.
4131}2045. This section describes the functions for
ae9b6b4a 4132converting to and from this code.
b6954afd
RS
4133
4134@defun base64-encode-region beg end &optional no-line-break
b25e2fb5
DL
4135This function converts the region from @var{beg} to @var{end} into base
413664 code. It returns the length of the encoded text. An error is
4137signaled if a character in the region is multibyte, i.e.@: in a
4138multibyte buffer the region must contain only characters from the
4139charsets @code{ascii}, @code{eight-bit-control} and
4140@code{eight-bit-graphic}.
b6954afd
RS
4141
4142Normally, this function inserts newline characters into the encoded
4143text, to avoid overlong lines. However, if the optional argument
4144@var{no-line-break} is non-@code{nil}, these newlines are not added, so
4145the output is just one long line.
4146@end defun
4147
4148@defun base64-encode-string string &optional no-line-break
b6954afd 4149This function converts the string @var{string} into base 64 code. It
b25e2fb5
DL
4150returns a string containing the encoded text. As for
4151@code{base64-encode-region}, an error is signaled if a character in the
4152string is multibyte.
b6954afd
RS
4153
4154Normally, this function inserts newline characters into the encoded
4155text, to avoid overlong lines. However, if the optional argument
4156@var{no-line-break} is non-@code{nil}, these newlines are not added, so
4157the result string is just one long line.
4158@end defun
4159
4160@defun base64-decode-region beg end
b6954afd
RS
4161This function converts the region from @var{beg} to @var{end} from base
416264 code into the corresponding decoded text. It returns the length of
4163the decoded text.
4164
4165The decoding functions ignore newline characters in the encoded text.
4166@end defun
4167
4168@defun base64-decode-string string
b6954afd 4169This function converts the string @var{string} from base 64 code into
54f7f2a4 4170the corresponding decoded text. It returns a unibyte string containing the
b6954afd
RS
4171decoded text.
4172
4173The decoding functions ignore newline characters in the encoded text.
4174@end defun
4175
944351c0
EZ
4176@node MD5 Checksum
4177@section MD5 Checksum
4178@cindex MD5 checksum
4179@cindex message digest computation
4180
4181 MD5 cryptographic checksums, or @dfn{message digests}, are 128-bit
4182``fingerprints'' of a document or program. They are used to verify
4183that you have an exact and unaltered copy of the data. The algorithm
4184to calculate the MD5 message digest is defined in Internet
4185RFC@footnote{
4186For an explanation of what is an RFC, see the footnote in @ref{Base
418764}.
4188}1321. This section describes the Emacs facilities for computing
4189message digests.
4190
4191@defun md5 object &optional start end coding-system noerror
4192This function returns the MD5 message digest of @var{object}, which
4193should be a buffer or a string.
4194
4195The two optional arguments @var{start} and @var{end} are character
4196positions specifying the portion of @var{object} to compute the
4197message digest for. If they are @code{nil} or omitted, the digest is
4198computed for the whole of @var{object}.
4199
4200The function @code{md5} does not compute the message digest directly
4201from the internal Emacs representation of the text (@pxref{Text
4202Representations}). Instead, it encodes the text using a coding
4203system, and computes the message digest from the encoded text. The
4204optional fourth argument @var{coding-system} specifies which coding
4205system to use for encoding the text. It should be the same coding
4206system that you used to read the text, or that you used or will use
4207when saving or sending the text. @xref{Coding Systems}, for more
4208information about coding systems.
4209
4210If @var{coding-system} is @code{nil} or omitted, the default depends
4211on @var{object}. If @var{object} is a buffer, the default for
4212@var{coding-system} is whatever coding system would be chosen by
4213default for writing this text into a file. If @var{object} is a
4214string, the user's most preferred coding system (@pxref{Recognize
4215Coding, prefer-coding-system, the description of
4216@code{prefer-coding-system}, emacs, GNU Emacs Manual}) is used.
4217
4218Normally, @code{md5} signals an error if the text can't be encoded
4219using the specified or chosen coding system. However, if
4220@var{noerror} is non-@code{nil}, it silently uses @code{raw-text}
4221coding instead.
4222@end defun
4223
d73eac4d
RS
4224@node Atomic Changes
4225@section Atomic Change Groups
4226@cindex atomic changes
4227
4228 In data base terminology, an @dfn{atomic} change is an indivisible
4229change---it can succeed entirely or it can fail entirely, but it
4230cannot partly succeed. A Lisp program can make a series of changes to
4231one or several buffers as an @dfn{atomic change group}, meaning that
4232either the entire series of changes will be installed in their buffers
4233or, in case of an error, none of them will be.
4234
4235 To do this for one buffer, the one already current, simply write a
4236call to @code{atomic-change-group} around the code that makes the
4237changes, like this:
4238
4239@example
4240(atomic-change-group
4241 (insert foo)
4242 (delete-region x y))
4243@end example
4244
4245@noindent
4246If an error (or other nonlocal exit) occurs inside the body of
4247@code{atomic-change-group}, it unmakes all the changes in that buffer
4248that were during the execution of the body. This kind of change group
4810d170 4249has no effect on any other buffers---any such changes remain.
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RS
4250
4251 If you need something more sophisticated, such as to make changes in
4252various buffers constitute one atomic group, you must directly call
4253lower-level functions that @code{atomic-change-group} uses.
4254
4255@defun prepare-change-group &optional buffer
4256This function sets up a change group for buffer @var{buffer}, which
4257defaults to the current buffer. It returns a ``handle'' that
4258represents the change group. You must use this handle to activate the
4259change group and subsequently to finish it.
4260@end defun
4261
4262 To use the change group, you must @dfn{activate} it. You must do
4263this before making any changes in the text of @var{buffer}.
4264
4265@defun activate-change-group handle
4266This function activates the change group that @var{handle} designates.
4267@end defun
4268
4269 After you activate the change group, any changes you make in that
4270buffer become part of it. Once you have made all the desired changes
4271in the buffer, you must @dfn{finish} the change group. There are two
4272ways to do this: you can either accept (and finalize) all the changes,
4273or cancel them all.
4274
4275@defun accept-change-group handle
4276This function accepts all the changes in the change group specified by
4277@var{handle}, making them final.
4278@end defun
4279
4280@defun cancel-change-group handle
4281This function cancels and undoes all the changes in the change group
4282specified by @var{handle}.
4283@end defun
4284
4285 Your code should use @code{unwind-protect} to make sure the group is
4286always finished. The call to @code{activate-change-group} should be
4287inside the @code{unwind-protect}, in case the user types @kbd{C-g}
4288just after it runs. (This is one reason why
4289@code{prepare-change-group} and @code{activate-change-group} are
4290separate functions, because normally you would call
4291@code{prepare-change-group} before the start of that
4292@code{unwind-protect}.) Once you finish the group, don't use the
4293handle again---in particular, don't try to finish the same group
4294twice.
4295
4296 To make a multibuffer change group, call @code{prepare-change-group}
4297once for each buffer you want to cover, then use @code{nconc} to
4298combine the returned values, like this:
4299
4300@example
4301(nconc (prepare-change-group buffer-1)
4302 (prepare-change-group buffer-2))
4303@end example
4304
4305You can then activate the multibuffer change group with a single call
4306to @code{activate-change-group}, and finish it with a single call to
4307@code{accept-change-group} or @code{cancel-change-group}.
4308
4309 Nested use of several change groups for the same buffer works as you
4310would expect. Non-nested use of change groups for the same buffer
4311will get Emacs confused, so don't let it happen; the first change
4312group you start for any given buffer should be the last one finished.
4313
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RS
4314@node Change Hooks
4315@section Change Hooks
4316@cindex change hooks
4317@cindex hooks for text changes
4318
4319 These hook variables let you arrange to take notice of all changes in
4320all buffers (or in a particular buffer, if you make them buffer-local).
4321See also @ref{Special Properties}, for how to detect changes to specific
4322parts of the text.
4323
4324 The functions you use in these hooks should save and restore the match
4325data if they do anything that uses regular expressions; otherwise, they
4326will interfere in bizarre ways with the editing operations that call
4327them.
4328
72654a3c 4329@defvar before-change-functions
f9f59935 4330This variable holds a list of functions to call before any buffer
72654a3c
RS
4331modification. Each function gets two arguments, the beginning and end
4332of the region that is about to change, represented as integers. The
4333buffer that is about to change is always the current buffer.
4334@end defvar
4335
4336@defvar after-change-functions
f9f59935 4337This variable holds a list of functions to call after any buffer
72654a3c
RS
4338modification. Each function receives three arguments: the beginning and
4339end of the region just changed, and the length of the text that existed
584b8104
RS
4340before the change. All three arguments are integers. The buffer that's
4341about to change is always the current buffer.
4342
1911e6e5 4343The length of the old text is the difference between the buffer positions
a9f0a989
RS
4344before and after that text as it was before the change. As for the
4345changed text, its length is simply the difference between the first two
4346arguments.
72654a3c
RS
4347@end defvar
4348
af1996b5 4349 Output of messages into the @samp{*Messages*} buffer does not
74eee906
RS
4350call these functions.
4351
80be8042 4352@defmac combine-after-change-calls body@dots{}
f9f59935
RS
4353The macro executes @var{body} normally, but arranges to call the
4354after-change functions just once for a series of several changes---if
4355that seems safe.
4356
4357If a program makes several text changes in the same area of the buffer,
4358using the macro @code{combine-after-change-calls} around that part of
4359the program can make it run considerably faster when after-change hooks
969fe9b5
RS
4360are in use. When the after-change hooks are ultimately called, the
4361arguments specify a portion of the buffer including all of the changes
4362made within the @code{combine-after-change-calls} body.
f9f59935
RS
4363
4364@strong{Warning:} You must not alter the values of
b6dd5963 4365@code{after-change-functions} within
f9f59935 4366the body of a @code{combine-after-change-calls} form.
969fe9b5 4367
6142d1d0 4368@strong{Warning:} if the changes you combine occur in widely scattered
969fe9b5
RS
4369parts of the buffer, this will still work, but it is not advisable,
4370because it may lead to inefficient behavior for some change hook
4371functions.
f9f59935
RS
4372@end defmac
4373
b6dd5963 4374The two variables above are temporarily bound to @code{nil} during the
72654a3c 4375time that any of these functions is running. This means that if one of
73804d4b 4376these functions changes the buffer, that change won't run these
72654a3c
RS
4377functions. If you do want a hook function to make changes that run
4378these functions, make it bind these variables back to their usual
73804d4b
RS
4379values.
4380
b22f3a19
RS
4381One inconvenient result of this protective feature is that you cannot
4382have a function in @code{after-change-functions} or
4383@code{before-change-functions} which changes the value of that variable.
4384But that's not a real limitation. If you want those functions to change
4385the list of functions to run, simply add one fixed function to the hook,
4386and code that function to look in another variable for other functions
4387to call. Here is an example:
4388
4389@example
4390(setq my-own-after-change-functions nil)
4391(defun indirect-after-change-function (beg end len)
4392 (let ((list my-own-after-change-functions))
4393 (while list
4394 (funcall (car list) beg end len)
4395 (setq list (cdr list)))))
969fe9b5
RS
4396
4397@group
b22f3a19
RS
4398(add-hooks 'after-change-functions
4399 'indirect-after-change-function)
969fe9b5 4400@end group
b22f3a19
RS
4401@end example
4402
73804d4b
RS
4403@defvar first-change-hook
4404This variable is a normal hook that is run whenever a buffer is changed
4405that was previously in the unmodified state.
4406@end defvar
8241495d
RS
4407
4408@defvar inhibit-modification-hooks
8241495d
RS
4409If this variable is non-@code{nil}, all of the change hooks are
4410disabled; none of them run. This affects all the hook variables
4411described above in this section, as well as the hooks attached to
4412certain special text properties (@pxref{Special Properties}) and overlay
4413properties (@pxref{Overlay Properties}).
8241495d 4414@end defvar
ab5796a9
MB
4415
4416@ignore
4417 arch-tag: 3721e738-a1cb-4085-bc1a-6cb8d8e1d32b
4418@end ignore