declare smobs in alloc.c
[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / lispref / markers.texi
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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
ba318903 3@c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-1999, 2001-2014 Free Software
ab422c4d 4@c Foundation, Inc.
b8d4c8d0 5@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
ecc6530d 6@node Markers
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7@chapter Markers
8@cindex markers
9
10 A @dfn{marker} is a Lisp object used to specify a position in a buffer
11relative to the surrounding text. A marker changes its offset from the
12beginning of the buffer automatically whenever text is inserted or
13deleted, so that it stays with the two characters on either side of it.
14
15@menu
16* Overview of Markers:: The components of a marker, and how it relocates.
17* Predicates on Markers:: Testing whether an object is a marker.
18* Creating Markers:: Making empty markers or markers at certain places.
19* Information from Markers:: Finding the marker's buffer or character position.
20* Marker Insertion Types:: Two ways a marker can relocate when you
21 insert where it points.
22* Moving Markers:: Moving the marker to a new buffer or position.
23* The Mark:: How "the mark" is implemented with a marker.
24* The Region:: How to access "the region".
25@end menu
26
27@node Overview of Markers
28@section Overview of Markers
29
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30 A marker specifies a buffer and a position in that buffer. A
31marker can be used to represent a position in functions that
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32require one, just as an integer could be used. In that case, the
33marker's buffer is normally ignored. Of course, a marker used in this
34way usually points to a position in the buffer that the function
35operates on, but that is entirely the programmer's responsibility.
36@xref{Positions}, for a complete description of positions.
37
38 A marker has three attributes: the marker position, the marker
39buffer, and the insertion type. The marker position is an integer
40that is equivalent (at a given time) to the marker as a position in
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41that buffer. But the marker's position value can change during
42the life of the marker, and often does. Insertion and deletion of
43text in the buffer relocate the marker. The idea is that a marker
44positioned between two characters remains between those two characters
45despite insertion and deletion elsewhere in the buffer. Relocation
46changes the integer equivalent of the marker.
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47
48@cindex marker relocation
49 Deleting text around a marker's position leaves the marker between the
50characters immediately before and after the deleted text. Inserting
51text at the position of a marker normally leaves the marker either in
52front of or after the new text, depending on the marker's @dfn{insertion
53type} (@pxref{Marker Insertion Types})---unless the insertion is done
54with @code{insert-before-markers} (@pxref{Insertion}).
55
56@cindex marker garbage collection
57 Insertion and deletion in a buffer must check all the markers and
58relocate them if necessary. This slows processing in a buffer with a
59large number of markers. For this reason, it is a good idea to make a
60marker point nowhere if you are sure you don't need it any more.
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61Markers that can no longer be accessed are eventually removed
62(@pxref{Garbage Collection}).
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63
64@cindex markers as numbers
65 Because it is common to perform arithmetic operations on a marker
2ad80941 66position, most of these operations (including @code{+} and
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67@code{-}) accept markers as arguments. In such cases, the marker
68stands for its current position.
69
70Here are examples of creating markers, setting markers, and moving point
71to markers:
72
73@example
74@group
75;; @r{Make a new marker that initially does not point anywhere:}
76(setq m1 (make-marker))
77 @result{} #<marker in no buffer>
78@end group
79
80@group
81;; @r{Set @code{m1} to point between the 99th and 100th characters}
82;; @r{in the current buffer:}
83(set-marker m1 100)
84 @result{} #<marker at 100 in markers.texi>
85@end group
86
87@group
88;; @r{Now insert one character at the beginning of the buffer:}
89(goto-char (point-min))
90 @result{} 1
91(insert "Q")
92 @result{} nil
93@end group
94
95@group
96;; @r{@code{m1} is updated appropriately.}
97m1
98 @result{} #<marker at 101 in markers.texi>
99@end group
100
101@group
102;; @r{Two markers that point to the same position}
103;; @r{are not @code{eq}, but they are @code{equal}.}
104(setq m2 (copy-marker m1))
105 @result{} #<marker at 101 in markers.texi>
106(eq m1 m2)
107 @result{} nil
108(equal m1 m2)
109 @result{} t
110@end group
111
112@group
113;; @r{When you are finished using a marker, make it point nowhere.}
114(set-marker m1 nil)
115 @result{} #<marker in no buffer>
116@end group
117@end example
118
119@node Predicates on Markers
120@section Predicates on Markers
121
122 You can test an object to see whether it is a marker, or whether it is
123either an integer or a marker. The latter test is useful in connection
124with the arithmetic functions that work with both markers and integers.
125
126@defun markerp object
127This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a marker, @code{nil}
128otherwise. Note that integers are not markers, even though many
129functions will accept either a marker or an integer.
130@end defun
131
132@defun integer-or-marker-p object
133This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is an integer or a marker,
134@code{nil} otherwise.
135@end defun
136
137@defun number-or-marker-p object
138This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a number (either
139integer or floating point) or a marker, @code{nil} otherwise.
140@end defun
141
142@node Creating Markers
143@section Functions that Create Markers
144
145 When you create a new marker, you can make it point nowhere, or point
146to the present position of point, or to the beginning or end of the
147accessible portion of the buffer, or to the same place as another given
148marker.
149
150The next four functions all return markers with insertion type
151@code{nil}. @xref{Marker Insertion Types}.
152
153@defun make-marker
154This function returns a newly created marker that does not point
155anywhere.
156
157@example
158@group
159(make-marker)
160 @result{} #<marker in no buffer>
161@end group
162@end example
163@end defun
164
165@defun point-marker
166This function returns a new marker that points to the present position
167of point in the current buffer. @xref{Point}. For an example, see
168@code{copy-marker}, below.
169@end defun
170
171@defun point-min-marker
172This function returns a new marker that points to the beginning of the
173accessible portion of the buffer. This will be the beginning of the
174buffer unless narrowing is in effect. @xref{Narrowing}.
175@end defun
176
177@defun point-max-marker
178This function returns a new marker that points to the end of the
179accessible portion of the buffer. This will be the end of the buffer
180unless narrowing is in effect. @xref{Narrowing}.
181
182Here are examples of this function and @code{point-min-marker}, shown in
183a buffer containing a version of the source file for the text of this
184chapter.
185
186@example
187@group
188(point-min-marker)
189 @result{} #<marker at 1 in markers.texi>
190(point-max-marker)
2ad80941 191 @result{} #<marker at 24080 in markers.texi>
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192@end group
193
194@group
195(narrow-to-region 100 200)
196 @result{} nil
197@end group
198@group
199(point-min-marker)
200 @result{} #<marker at 100 in markers.texi>
201@end group
202@group
203(point-max-marker)
204 @result{} #<marker at 200 in markers.texi>
205@end group
206@end example
207@end defun
208
0b128ac4 209@defun copy-marker &optional marker-or-integer insertion-type
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210If passed a marker as its argument, @code{copy-marker} returns a
211new marker that points to the same place and the same buffer as does
212@var{marker-or-integer}. If passed an integer as its argument,
213@code{copy-marker} returns a new marker that points to position
214@var{marker-or-integer} in the current buffer.
215
216The new marker's insertion type is specified by the argument
217@var{insertion-type}. @xref{Marker Insertion Types}.
218
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219@c This behavior used to be documented until 2013/08.
220@ignore
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221If passed an integer argument less than 1, @code{copy-marker} returns a
222new marker that points to the beginning of the current buffer. If
223passed an integer argument greater than the length of the buffer,
224@code{copy-marker} returns a new marker that points to the end of the
225buffer.
2bede2ed 226@end ignore
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227
228@example
229@group
230(copy-marker 0)
231 @result{} #<marker at 1 in markers.texi>
232@end group
233
234@group
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235(copy-marker 90000)
236 @result{} #<marker at 24080 in markers.texi>
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237@end group
238@end example
239
240An error is signaled if @var{marker} is neither a marker nor an
241integer.
242@end defun
243
244 Two distinct markers are considered @code{equal} (even though not
245@code{eq}) to each other if they have the same position and buffer, or
246if they both point nowhere.
247
248@example
249@group
250(setq p (point-marker))
251 @result{} #<marker at 2139 in markers.texi>
252@end group
253
254@group
255(setq q (copy-marker p))
256 @result{} #<marker at 2139 in markers.texi>
257@end group
258
259@group
260(eq p q)
261 @result{} nil
262@end group
263
264@group
265(equal p q)
266 @result{} t
267@end group
268@end example
269
270@node Information from Markers
271@section Information from Markers
272
273 This section describes the functions for accessing the components of a
274marker object.
275
276@defun marker-position marker
277This function returns the position that @var{marker} points to, or
278@code{nil} if it points nowhere.
279@end defun
280
281@defun marker-buffer marker
282This function returns the buffer that @var{marker} points into, or
283@code{nil} if it points nowhere.
284
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285@c FIXME: The `buffer' argument of `set-marker' already defaults to
286@c the current buffer, why use `(current-buffer)' explicitly here?
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287@example
288@group
289(setq m (make-marker))
290 @result{} #<marker in no buffer>
291@end group
292@group
293(marker-position m)
294 @result{} nil
295@end group
296@group
297(marker-buffer m)
298 @result{} nil
299@end group
300
301@group
302(set-marker m 3770 (current-buffer))
303 @result{} #<marker at 3770 in markers.texi>
304@end group
305@group
306(marker-buffer m)
307 @result{} #<buffer markers.texi>
308@end group
309@group
310(marker-position m)
311 @result{} 3770
312@end group
313@end example
314@end defun
315
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316@node Marker Insertion Types
317@section Marker Insertion Types
318
319@cindex insertion type of a marker
320 When you insert text directly at the place where a marker points,
321there are two possible ways to relocate that marker: it can point before
322the inserted text, or point after it. You can specify which one a given
323marker should do by setting its @dfn{insertion type}. Note that use of
324@code{insert-before-markers} ignores markers' insertion types, always
325relocating a marker to point after the inserted text.
326
327@defun set-marker-insertion-type marker type
328This function sets the insertion type of marker @var{marker} to
329@var{type}. If @var{type} is @code{t}, @var{marker} will advance when
330text is inserted at its position. If @var{type} is @code{nil},
331@var{marker} does not advance when text is inserted there.
332@end defun
333
334@defun marker-insertion-type marker
335This function reports the current insertion type of @var{marker}.
336@end defun
337
338Most functions that create markers, without an argument allowing to
339specify the insertion type, create them with insertion type
340@code{nil}. Also, the mark has, by default, insertion type
341@code{nil}.
342
343@node Moving Markers
344@section Moving Marker Positions
345
346 This section describes how to change the position of an existing
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347marker. When you do this, be sure you know whether the marker is used
348outside of your program, and, if so, what effects will result from
349moving it---otherwise, confusing things may happen in other parts of
350Emacs.
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351
352@defun set-marker marker position &optional buffer
353This function moves @var{marker} to @var{position}
354in @var{buffer}. If @var{buffer} is not provided, it defaults to
355the current buffer.
356
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357@c This behavior used to be documented until 2013/08.
358@ignore
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359If @var{position} is less than 1, @code{set-marker} moves @var{marker}
360to the beginning of the buffer. If @var{position} is greater than the
52404181 361size of the buffer (@pxref{Point}), @code{set-marker} moves marker to
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362the end of the buffer.
363@end ignore
364If @var{position} is @code{nil} or a marker that points nowhere, then
365@var{marker} is set to point nowhere.
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366
367The value returned is @var{marker}.
368
369@example
370@group
371(setq m (point-marker))
372 @result{} #<marker at 4714 in markers.texi>
373@end group
374@group
375(set-marker m 55)
376 @result{} #<marker at 55 in markers.texi>
377@end group
378@group
379(setq b (get-buffer "foo"))
380 @result{} #<buffer foo>
381@end group
382@group
383(set-marker m 0 b)
384 @result{} #<marker at 1 in foo>
385@end group
386@end example
387@end defun
388
389@defun move-marker marker position &optional buffer
390This is another name for @code{set-marker}.
391@end defun
392
393@node The Mark
394@section The Mark
395@cindex mark, the
7510a061 396@c @cindex the mark?
b8d4c8d0 397
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398 Each buffer has a special marker, which is designated @dfn{the
399mark}. When a buffer is newly created, this marker exists but does
400not point anywhere; this means that the mark ``doesn't exist'' in that
401buffer yet. Subsequent commands can set the mark.
402
403 The mark specifies a position to bound a range of text for many
404commands, such as @code{kill-region} and @code{indent-rigidly}. These
405commands typically act on the text between point and the mark, which
406is called the @dfn{region}. If you are writing a command that
407operates on the region, don't examine the mark directly; instead, use
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408@code{interactive} with the @samp{r} specification. This provides the
409values of point and the mark as arguments to the command in an
410interactive call, but permits other Lisp programs to specify arguments
411explicitly. @xref{Interactive Codes}.
412
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413 Some commands set the mark as a side-effect. Commands should do
414this only if it has a potential use to the user, and never for their
415own internal purposes. For example, the @code{replace-regexp} command
416sets the mark to the value of point before doing any replacements,
417because this enables the user to move back there conveniently after
418the replace is finished.
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419
420 Once the mark ``exists'' in a buffer, it normally never ceases to
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421exist. However, it may become @dfn{inactive}, if Transient Mark mode
422is enabled. The buffer-local variable @code{mark-active}, if
423non-@code{nil}, means that the mark is active. A command can call the
424function @code{deactivate-mark} to deactivate the mark directly, or it
425can request deactivation of the mark upon return to the editor command
426loop by setting the variable @code{deactivate-mark} to a
427non-@code{nil} value.
428
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429 If Transient Mark mode is enabled, certain editing commands that
430normally apply to text near point, apply instead to the region when
431the mark is active. This is the main motivation for using Transient
432Mark mode. (Another is that this enables highlighting of the region
433when the mark is active. @xref{Display}.)
b8d4c8d0 434
7cbbcaa0 435@cindex mark ring
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436 In addition to the mark, each buffer has a @dfn{mark ring} which is a
437list of markers containing previous values of the mark. When editing
438commands change the mark, they should normally save the old value of the
439mark on the mark ring. The variable @code{mark-ring-max} specifies the
440maximum number of entries in the mark ring; once the list becomes this
441long, adding a new element deletes the last element.
442
443 There is also a separate global mark ring, but that is used only in a
444few particular user-level commands, and is not relevant to Lisp
445programming. So we do not describe it here.
446
447@defun mark &optional force
448@cindex current buffer mark
449This function returns the current buffer's mark position as an integer,
450or @code{nil} if no mark has ever been set in this buffer.
451
452If Transient Mark mode is enabled, and @code{mark-even-if-inactive} is
453@code{nil}, @code{mark} signals an error if the mark is inactive.
454However, if @var{force} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{mark} disregards
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455inactivity of the mark, and returns the mark position (or @code{nil})
456anyway.
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457@end defun
458
459@defun mark-marker
460This function returns the marker that represents the current buffer's
461mark. It is not a copy, it is the marker used internally. Therefore,
462changing this marker's position will directly affect the buffer's
463mark. Don't do that unless that is the effect you want.
464
465@example
466@group
467(setq m (mark-marker))
468 @result{} #<marker at 3420 in markers.texi>
469@end group
470@group
471(set-marker m 100)
472 @result{} #<marker at 100 in markers.texi>
473@end group
474@group
475(mark-marker)
476 @result{} #<marker at 100 in markers.texi>
477@end group
478@end example
479
480Like any marker, this marker can be set to point at any buffer you
481like. If you make it point at any buffer other than the one of which
482it is the mark, it will yield perfectly consistent, but rather odd,
483results. We recommend that you not do it!
484@end defun
485
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486@defun set-mark position
487This function sets the mark to @var{position}, and activates the mark.
488The old value of the mark is @emph{not} pushed onto the mark ring.
489
490@strong{Please note:} Use this function only if you want the user to
491see that the mark has moved, and you want the previous mark position to
492be lost. Normally, when a new mark is set, the old one should go on the
493@code{mark-ring}. For this reason, most applications should use
494@code{push-mark} and @code{pop-mark}, not @code{set-mark}.
495
496Novice Emacs Lisp programmers often try to use the mark for the wrong
497purposes. The mark saves a location for the user's convenience. An
498editing command should not alter the mark unless altering the mark is
499part of the user-level functionality of the command. (And, in that
500case, this effect should be documented.) To remember a location for
501internal use in the Lisp program, store it in a Lisp variable. For
502example:
503
504@example
505@group
506(let ((beg (point)))
507 (forward-line 1)
508 (delete-region beg (point))).
509@end group
510@end example
511@end defun
512
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513@defun push-mark &optional position nomsg activate
514This function sets the current buffer's mark to @var{position}, and
515pushes a copy of the previous mark onto @code{mark-ring}. If
516@var{position} is @code{nil}, then the value of point is used.
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517@c Doesn't seem relevant.
518@c @code{push-mark} returns @code{nil}.
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519
520The function @code{push-mark} normally @emph{does not} activate the
521mark. To do that, specify @code{t} for the argument @var{activate}.
522
523A @samp{Mark set} message is displayed unless @var{nomsg} is
524non-@code{nil}.
525@end defun
526
527@defun pop-mark
528This function pops off the top element of @code{mark-ring} and makes
529that mark become the buffer's actual mark. This does not move point in
530the buffer, and it does nothing if @code{mark-ring} is empty. It
531deactivates the mark.
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532@c
533@c Seems even less relevant.
534@c The return value is not meaningful.
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535@end defun
536
537@defopt transient-mark-mode
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538This variable, if non-@code{nil}, enables Transient Mark mode. In
539Transient Mark mode, every buffer-modifying primitive sets
540@code{deactivate-mark}. As a consequence, most commands that modify
541the buffer also deactivate the mark.
b8d4c8d0 542
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543When Transient Mark mode is enabled and the mark is active, many
544commands that normally apply to the text near point instead apply to
545the region. Such commands should use the function @code{use-region-p}
546to test whether they should operate on the region. @xref{The Region}.
2de17c73 547
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548Lisp programs can set @code{transient-mark-mode} to non-@code{nil},
549non-@code{t} values to enable Transient Mark mode temporarily. If the
66e3cca6 550value is @code{lambda}, Transient Mark mode is automatically turned
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551off after any action, such as buffer modification, that would normally
552deactivate the mark. If the value is @w{@code{(only . @var{oldval})}},
553then @code{transient-mark-mode} is set to the value @var{oldval} after
554any subsequent command that moves point and is not shift-translated
555(@pxref{Key Sequence Input, shift-translation}), or after any other
556action that would normally deactivate the mark.
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557@end defopt
558
559@defopt mark-even-if-inactive
560If this is non-@code{nil}, Lisp programs and the Emacs user can use the
561mark even when it is inactive. This option affects the behavior of
562Transient Mark mode. When the option is non-@code{nil}, deactivation of
563the mark turns off region highlighting, but commands that use the mark
564behave as if the mark were still active.
565@end defopt
566
567@defvar deactivate-mark
568If an editor command sets this variable non-@code{nil}, then the editor
569command loop deactivates the mark after the command returns (if
570Transient Mark mode is enabled). All the primitives that change the
571buffer set @code{deactivate-mark}, to deactivate the mark when the
572command is finished.
573
574To write Lisp code that modifies the buffer without causing
575deactivation of the mark at the end of the command, bind
576@code{deactivate-mark} to @code{nil} around the code that does the
577modification. For example:
578
579@example
580(let (deactivate-mark)
581 (insert " "))
582@end example
583@end defvar
584
6bbd4600 585@defun deactivate-mark &optional force
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586If Transient Mark mode is enabled or @var{force} is non-@code{nil},
587this function deactivates the mark and runs the normal hook
588@code{deactivate-mark-hook}. Otherwise, it does nothing.
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589@end defun
590
591@defvar mark-active
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592The mark is active when this variable is non-@code{nil}. This
593variable is always buffer-local in each buffer. Do @emph{not} use the
594value of this variable to decide whether a command that normally
595operates on text near point should operate on the region instead. Use
47af2f4b 596the function @code{use-region-p} for that (@pxref{The Region}).
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597@end defvar
598
599@defvar activate-mark-hook
600@defvarx deactivate-mark-hook
601These normal hooks are run, respectively, when the mark becomes active
602and when it becomes inactive. The hook @code{activate-mark-hook} is
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603also run at the end of the command loop if the mark is active and it
604is possible that the region may have changed.
605@ignore
606This piece of command_loop_1, run unless deactivating the mark:
607 if (current_buffer != prev_buffer || MODIFF != prev_modiff)
608 {
609 Lisp_Object hook = intern ("activate-mark-hook");
610 Frun_hooks (1, &hook);
611 }
612@end ignore
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613@end defvar
614
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615@defun handle-shift-selection
616This function implements the ``shift-selection'' behavior of
617point-motion commands. @xref{Shift Selection,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs
618Manual}. It is called automatically by the Emacs command loop
619whenever a command with a @samp{^} character in its @code{interactive}
620spec is invoked, before the command itself is executed
621(@pxref{Interactive Codes, ^}).
622
623If @code{shift-select-mode} is non-@code{nil} and the current command
624was invoked via shift translation (@pxref{Key Sequence Input,
625shift-translation}), this function sets the mark and temporarily
626activates the region, unless the region was already temporarily
627activated in this way. Otherwise, if the region has been activated
628temporarily, it deactivates the mark and restores the variable
629@code{transient-mark-mode} to its earlier value.
630@end defun
631
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632@defvar mark-ring
633The value of this buffer-local variable is the list of saved former
634marks of the current buffer, most recent first.
635
636@example
637@group
638mark-ring
639@result{} (#<marker at 11050 in markers.texi>
640 #<marker at 10832 in markers.texi>
641 @dots{})
642@end group
643@end example
644@end defvar
645
646@defopt mark-ring-max
647The value of this variable is the maximum size of @code{mark-ring}. If
648more marks than this are pushed onto the @code{mark-ring},
649@code{push-mark} discards an old mark when it adds a new one.
650@end defopt
651
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652@c There is also global-mark-ring-max, but this chapter explicitly
653@c does not talk about the global mark.
654
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655@node The Region
656@section The Region
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657@c The index entry must be just ``region'' to make it the first hit
658@c when the user types ``i region RET'', because otherwise the Info
659@c reader will present substring matches in alphabetical order,
660@c putting this one near the end, with something utterly unrelated as
661@c the first hit.
662@cindex region
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663
664 The text between point and the mark is known as @dfn{the region}.
665Various functions operate on text delimited by point and the mark, but
666only those functions specifically related to the region itself are
667described here.
668
669The next two functions signal an error if the mark does not point
670anywhere. If Transient Mark mode is enabled and
671@code{mark-even-if-inactive} is @code{nil}, they also signal an error
672if the mark is inactive.
673
674@defun region-beginning
675This function returns the position of the beginning of the region (as
676an integer). This is the position of either point or the mark,
677whichever is smaller.
678@end defun
679
680@defun region-end
681This function returns the position of the end of the region (as an
682integer). This is the position of either point or the mark, whichever is
683larger.
684@end defun
685
7cbbcaa0 686@c FIXME: Mention it in tips.texi?
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687 Instead of using @code{region-beginning} and @code{region-end}, a
688command designed to operate on a region should normally use
689@code{interactive} with the @samp{r} specification to find the
690beginning and end of the region. This lets other Lisp programs
691specify the bounds explicitly as arguments. @xref{Interactive Codes}.
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693@defun use-region-p
694This function returns @code{t} if Transient Mark mode is enabled, the
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695mark is active, and there is a valid region in the buffer. This
696function is intended to be used by commands that operate on the
697region, instead of on text near point, when the mark is active.
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699@cindex empty region
700@vindex use-empty-active-region
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701A region is valid if it has a non-zero size, or if the user option
702@code{use-empty-active-region} is non-@code{nil} (by default, it is
703@code{nil}). The function @code{region-active-p} is similar to
704@code{use-region-p}, but considers all regions as valid. In most
705cases, you should not use @code{region-active-p}, since if the region
706is empty it is often more appropriate to operate on point.
47af2f4b 707@end defun
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