* facemenu.el (facemenu-listed-faces): New var.
[bpt/emacs.git] / man / text.texi
CommitLineData
6bf7aab6 1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
b65d8176 2@c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2000, 2001,
8d99e09d 3@c 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6bf7aab6
DL
4@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5@node Text, Programs, Indentation, Top
6@chapter Commands for Human Languages
7@cindex text
8@cindex manipulating text
9
10 The term @dfn{text} has two widespread meanings in our area of the
11computer field. One is data that is a sequence of characters. Any file
12that you edit with Emacs is text, in this sense of the word. The other
13meaning is more restrictive: a sequence of characters in a human language
14for humans to read (possibly after processing by a text formatter), as
5f4d6585
RS
15opposed to a program or binary data. This chapter is concerned with
16editing text in the narrower sense.
6bf7aab6
DL
17
18 Human languages have syntactic/stylistic conventions that can be
19supported or used to advantage by editor commands: conventions involving
20words, sentences, paragraphs, and capital letters. This chapter
21describes Emacs commands for all of these things. There are also
22commands for @dfn{filling}, which means rearranging the lines of a
23paragraph to be approximately equal in length. The commands for moving
24over and killing words, sentences and paragraphs, while intended
25primarily for editing text, are also often useful for editing programs.
26
27 Emacs has several major modes for editing human-language text. If the
28file contains text pure and simple, use Text mode, which customizes
29Emacs in small ways for the syntactic conventions of text. Outline mode
30provides special commands for operating on text with an outline
31structure.
32@iftex
33@xref{Outline Mode}.
34@end iftex
35
36 For text which contains embedded commands for text formatters, Emacs
37has other major modes, each for a particular text formatter. Thus, for
38input to @TeX{}, you would use @TeX{}
39@iftex
40mode (@pxref{TeX Mode}).
41@end iftex
4b45d5d1 42@ifnottex
6bf7aab6 43mode.
4b45d5d1 44@end ifnottex
5f4d6585 45For input to groff or nroff, use Nroff mode.
6bf7aab6
DL
46
47 Instead of using a text formatter, you can edit formatted text in
48WYSIWYG style (``what you see is what you get''), with Enriched mode.
49Then the formatting appears on the screen in Emacs while you edit.
50@iftex
51@xref{Formatted Text}.
52@end iftex
53
e0fc8fa2
CY
54@cindex ASCII art
55 If you need to edit pictures made out of text characters (commonly
56referred to as ``ASCII art''), use @kbd{M-x edit-picture} to enter
57Picture mode, a special major mode for editing such pictures.
bbdb68b6 58@iftex
9dc999d3 59@xref{Picture Mode,,, emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}.
bbdb68b6
EZ
60@end iftex
61@ifnottex
62@xref{Picture Mode}.
63@end ifnottex
64
e0fc8fa2 65
13656d2e
RS
66@cindex skeletons
67@cindex templates
68@cindex autotyping
69@cindex automatic typing
2e6d3a80 70 The ``automatic typing'' features may be useful when writing text.
304c3173 71@inforef{Top,, autotype}.
dbab15b9 72
6bf7aab6
DL
73@menu
74* Words:: Moving over and killing words.
75* Sentences:: Moving over and killing sentences.
76* Paragraphs:: Moving over paragraphs.
77* Pages:: Moving over pages.
78* Filling:: Filling or justifying text.
79* Case:: Changing the case of text.
80* Text Mode:: The major modes for editing text files.
81* Outline Mode:: Editing outlines.
82* TeX Mode:: Editing input to the formatter TeX.
fcd5c9aa 83* HTML Mode:: Editing HTML, SGML, and XML files.
6bf7aab6
DL
84* Nroff Mode:: Editing input to the formatter nroff.
85* Formatted Text:: Editing formatted text directly in WYSIWYG fashion.
6100c21d 86* Text Based Tables:: Editing text-based tables in WYSIWYG fashion.
6bf7aab6
DL
87@end menu
88
89@node Words
90@section Words
91@cindex words
92@cindex Meta commands and words
93
94 Emacs has commands for moving over or operating on words. By convention,
95the keys for them are all Meta characters.
96
6bf7aab6
DL
97@table @kbd
98@item M-f
99Move forward over a word (@code{forward-word}).
100@item M-b
101Move backward over a word (@code{backward-word}).
102@item M-d
103Kill up to the end of a word (@code{kill-word}).
104@item M-@key{DEL}
105Kill back to the beginning of a word (@code{backward-kill-word}).
106@item M-@@
107Mark the end of the next word (@code{mark-word}).
108@item M-t
109Transpose two words or drag a word across other words
110(@code{transpose-words}).
111@end table
112
113 Notice how these keys form a series that parallels the character-based
114@kbd{C-f}, @kbd{C-b}, @kbd{C-d}, @key{DEL} and @kbd{C-t}. @kbd{M-@@} is
115cognate to @kbd{C-@@}, which is an alias for @kbd{C-@key{SPC}}.
116
117@kindex M-f
118@kindex M-b
119@findex forward-word
120@findex backward-word
121 The commands @kbd{M-f} (@code{forward-word}) and @kbd{M-b}
122(@code{backward-word}) move forward and backward over words. These
123Meta characters are thus analogous to the corresponding control
124characters, @kbd{C-f} and @kbd{C-b}, which move over single characters
125in the text. The analogy extends to numeric arguments, which serve as
126repeat counts. @kbd{M-f} with a negative argument moves backward, and
127@kbd{M-b} with a negative argument moves forward. Forward motion
128stops right after the last letter of the word, while backward motion
5f4d6585 129stops right before the first letter.
6bf7aab6
DL
130
131@kindex M-d
132@findex kill-word
133 @kbd{M-d} (@code{kill-word}) kills the word after point. To be
134precise, it kills everything from point to the place @kbd{M-f} would
135move to. Thus, if point is in the middle of a word, @kbd{M-d} kills
136just the part after point. If some punctuation comes between point and the
137next word, it is killed along with the word. (If you wish to kill only the
138next word but not the punctuation before it, simply do @kbd{M-f} to get
139the end, and kill the word backwards with @kbd{M-@key{DEL}}.)
140@kbd{M-d} takes arguments just like @kbd{M-f}.
141
142@findex backward-kill-word
143@kindex M-DEL
144 @kbd{M-@key{DEL}} (@code{backward-kill-word}) kills the word before
145point. It kills everything from point back to where @kbd{M-b} would
5f4d6585
RS
146move to. For instance, if point is after the space in @w{@samp{FOO,
147BAR}}, it kills @w{@samp{FOO, }}. If you wish to kill just
148@samp{FOO}, and not the comma and the space, use @kbd{M-b M-d} instead
149of @kbd{M-@key{DEL}}.
6bf7aab6 150
4946337d
EZ
151@c Don't index M-t and transpose-words here, they are indexed in
152@c fixit.texi, in the node "Transpose".
153@c @kindex M-t
154@c @findex transpose-words
6bf7aab6
DL
155 @kbd{M-t} (@code{transpose-words}) exchanges the word before or
156containing point with the following word. The delimiter characters between
157the words do not move. For example, @w{@samp{FOO, BAR}} transposes into
158@w{@samp{BAR, FOO}} rather than @samp{@w{BAR FOO,}}. @xref{Transpose}, for
159more on transposition and on arguments to transposition commands.
160
161@kindex M-@@
162@findex mark-word
163 To operate on the next @var{n} words with an operation which applies
164between point and mark, you can either set the mark at point and then move
165over the words, or you can use the command @kbd{M-@@} (@code{mark-word})
166which does not move point, but sets the mark where @kbd{M-f} would move
167to. @kbd{M-@@} accepts a numeric argument that says how many words to
168scan for the place to put the mark. In Transient Mark mode, this command
169activates the mark.
170
5f4d6585
RS
171 The word commands' understanding of word boundaries is controlled
172by the syntax table. Any character can, for example, be declared to
173be a word delimiter. @xref{Syntax}.
6bf7aab6
DL
174
175@node Sentences
176@section Sentences
177@cindex sentences
178@cindex manipulating sentences
179
180 The Emacs commands for manipulating sentences and paragraphs are mostly
181on Meta keys, so as to be like the word-handling commands.
182
183@table @kbd
184@item M-a
185Move back to the beginning of the sentence (@code{backward-sentence}).
186@item M-e
187Move forward to the end of the sentence (@code{forward-sentence}).
188@item M-k
189Kill forward to the end of the sentence (@code{kill-sentence}).
190@item C-x @key{DEL}
191Kill back to the beginning of the sentence (@code{backward-kill-sentence}).
192@end table
193
194@kindex M-a
195@kindex M-e
196@findex backward-sentence
197@findex forward-sentence
198 The commands @kbd{M-a} and @kbd{M-e} (@code{backward-sentence} and
199@code{forward-sentence}) move to the beginning and end of the current
200sentence, respectively. They were chosen to resemble @kbd{C-a} and
3a55fb34
RS
201@kbd{C-e}, which move to the beginning and end of a line. Unlike
202them, @kbd{M-a} and @kbd{M-e} move over successive sentences if
203repeated.
6bf7aab6
DL
204
205 Moving backward over a sentence places point just before the first
206character of the sentence; moving forward places point right after the
207punctuation that ends the sentence. Neither one moves over the
208whitespace at the sentence boundary.
209
210@kindex M-k
211@kindex C-x DEL
212@findex kill-sentence
213@findex backward-kill-sentence
214 Just as @kbd{C-a} and @kbd{C-e} have a kill command, @kbd{C-k}, to go
215with them, so @kbd{M-a} and @kbd{M-e} have a corresponding kill command
216@kbd{M-k} (@code{kill-sentence}) which kills from point to the end of
217the sentence. With minus one as an argument it kills back to the
218beginning of the sentence. Larger arguments serve as a repeat count.
219There is also a command, @kbd{C-x @key{DEL}}
220(@code{backward-kill-sentence}), for killing back to the beginning of a
221sentence. This command is useful when you change your mind in the
5f4d6585 222middle of composing text.
6bf7aab6
DL
223
224 The sentence commands assume that you follow the American typist's
225convention of putting two spaces at the end of a sentence; they consider
226a sentence to end wherever there is a @samp{.}, @samp{?} or @samp{!}
227followed by the end of a line or two spaces, with any number of
228@samp{)}, @samp{]}, @samp{'}, or @samp{"} characters allowed in between.
229A sentence also begins or ends wherever a paragraph begins or ends.
5f4d6585
RS
230It is useful to follow this convention, because it makes a distinction
231between periods that end a sentence and periods that indicate
232abbreviations; that enables the Emacs sentence commands to distinguish,
233too. These commands to not stop for periods that indicate abbreviations.
6bf7aab6 234
5f4d6585
RS
235@vindex sentence-end-double-space
236 If you want to use just one space between sentences, you can set the
237variable @code{sentence-end-double-space} to @code{nil} to make the
238sentence commands stop for single spaces. However, this mode has a
239drawback: there is no way to distinguish between periods that end
240sentences and those that indicate abbreviations. For convenient and
241reliable editing, we therefore recommend you follow the two-space
242convention. The variable @code{sentence-end-double-space} also
243affects filling (@pxref{Fill Commands}) in related ways.
6bf7aab6 244
5f4d6585
RS
245@vindex sentence-end
246 The variable @code{sentence-end} controls how to recognize the end
247of a sentence. If non-@code{nil}, it is a regexp that matches the
248last few characters of a sentence, together with the whitespace
249following the sentence. If the value is @code{nil}, the default, then
250Emacs computes the regexp according to various criteria such as the
251value of @code{sentence-end-double-space}. @xref{Regexp Example}, for
252a detailed explanation of one of the regular expressions Emacs uses
253for this purpose.
6bf7aab6 254
5f4d6585
RS
255@vindex sentence-end-without-period
256 Some languages do not use period to indicate end of sentence. For
257example, a sentence in Thai text ends with double space but without a
258period. Set the variable @code{sentence-end-without-period} to
259@code{t} to tell the sentence commands that a period is not necessary.
6bf7aab6
DL
260
261@node Paragraphs
262@section Paragraphs
263@cindex paragraphs
264@cindex manipulating paragraphs
265@kindex M-@{
266@kindex M-@}
267@findex backward-paragraph
268@findex forward-paragraph
269
270 The Emacs commands for manipulating paragraphs are also Meta keys.
271
272@table @kbd
273@item M-@{
274Move back to previous paragraph beginning (@code{backward-paragraph}).
275@item M-@}
276Move forward to next paragraph end (@code{forward-paragraph}).
277@item M-h
278Put point and mark around this or next paragraph (@code{mark-paragraph}).
279@end table
280
281 @kbd{M-@{} moves to the beginning of the current or previous
282paragraph, while @kbd{M-@}} moves to the end of the current or next
283paragraph. Blank lines and text-formatter command lines separate
5f4d6585
RS
284paragraphs and are not considered part of any paragraph. If there is
285a blank line before the paragraph, @kbd{M-@{} moves to the blank line,
286because that is convenient in practice.
287
288 In Text mode, an indented line is not a paragraph break. If you
289want indented lines to have this effect, use Paragraph-Indent Text
290mode instead. @xref{Text Mode}.
6bf7aab6
DL
291
292 In major modes for programs, paragraphs begin and end only at blank
5f4d6585
RS
293lines. This makes the paragraph commands useful, even though there
294are no paragraphs as such in a program.
6bf7aab6 295
5f4d6585
RS
296 When you have set a fill prefix, then paragraphs are delimited by
297all lines which don't start with the fill prefix. @xref{Filling}.
6bf7aab6
DL
298
299@kindex M-h
300@findex mark-paragraph
301 When you wish to operate on a paragraph, you can use the command
302@kbd{M-h} (@code{mark-paragraph}) to set the region around it. Thus,
303for example, @kbd{M-h C-w} kills the paragraph around or after point.
304The @kbd{M-h} command puts point at the beginning and mark at the end of
305the paragraph point was in. In Transient Mark mode, it activates the
306mark. If point is between paragraphs (in a run of blank lines, or at a
307boundary), the paragraph following point is surrounded by point and
308mark. If there are blank lines preceding the first line of the
309paragraph, one of these blank lines is included in the region.
310
311@vindex paragraph-start
312@vindex paragraph-separate
313 The precise definition of a paragraph boundary is controlled by the
314variables @code{paragraph-separate} and @code{paragraph-start}. The
315value of @code{paragraph-start} is a regexp that should match any line
316that either starts or separates paragraphs. The value of
317@code{paragraph-separate} is another regexp that should match only lines
318that separate paragraphs without being part of any paragraph (for
319example, blank lines). Lines that start a new paragraph and are
320contained in it must match only @code{paragraph-start}, not
304c3173
LT
321@code{paragraph-separate}. Each regular expression must match at the
322left margin. For example, in Fundamental mode, @code{paragraph-start}
323is @w{@code{"\f\\|[ \t]*$"}}, and @code{paragraph-separate} is
324@w{@code{"[ \t\f]*$"}}.
6bf7aab6
DL
325
326 Normally it is desirable for page boundaries to separate paragraphs.
327The default values of these variables recognize the usual separator for
328pages.
329
330@node Pages
331@section Pages
332
333@cindex pages
334@cindex formfeed
335 Files are often thought of as divided into @dfn{pages} by the
304c3173
LT
336@dfn{formfeed} character (@acronym{ASCII} control-L, octal code 014).
337When you print hardcopy for a file, this character forces a page break;
338thus, each page of the file goes on a separate page on paper. Most Emacs
6bf7aab6
DL
339commands treat the page-separator character just like any other
340character: you can insert it with @kbd{C-q C-l}, and delete it with
341@key{DEL}. Thus, you are free to paginate your file or not. However,
342since pages are often meaningful divisions of the file, Emacs provides
343commands to move over them and operate on them.
344
6bf7aab6
DL
345@table @kbd
346@item C-x [
347Move point to previous page boundary (@code{backward-page}).
348@item C-x ]
349Move point to next page boundary (@code{forward-page}).
350@item C-x C-p
351Put point and mark around this page (or another page) (@code{mark-page}).
352@item C-x l
353Count the lines in this page (@code{count-lines-page}).
354@end table
355
356@kindex C-x [
357@kindex C-x ]
358@findex forward-page
359@findex backward-page
360 The @kbd{C-x [} (@code{backward-page}) command moves point to immediately
361after the previous page delimiter. If point is already right after a page
362delimiter, it skips that one and stops at the previous one. A numeric
363argument serves as a repeat count. The @kbd{C-x ]} (@code{forward-page})
364command moves forward past the next page delimiter.
365
366@kindex C-x C-p
367@findex mark-page
368 The @kbd{C-x C-p} command (@code{mark-page}) puts point at the
369beginning of the current page and the mark at the end. The page
370delimiter at the end is included (the mark follows it). The page
b2683503
RS
371delimiter at the front is excluded (point follows it). In Transient
372Mark mode, this command activates the mark.
373
374 @kbd{C-x C-p C-w} is a handy way to kill a page to move it
375elsewhere. If you move to another page delimiter with @kbd{C-x [} and
376@kbd{C-x ]}, then yank the killed page, all the pages will be properly
377delimited once again. The reason @kbd{C-x C-p} includes only the
378following page delimiter in the region is to ensure that.
6bf7aab6
DL
379
380 A numeric argument to @kbd{C-x C-p} is used to specify which page to go
381to, relative to the current one. Zero means the current page. One means
382the next page, and @minus{}1 means the previous one.
383
384@kindex C-x l
385@findex count-lines-page
386 The @kbd{C-x l} command (@code{count-lines-page}) is good for deciding
1ba2ce68 387where to break a page in two. It displays in the echo area the total number
6bf7aab6
DL
388of lines in the current page, and then divides it up into those preceding
389the current line and those following, as in
390
391@example
392Page has 96 (72+25) lines
393@end example
394
395@noindent
396 Notice that the sum is off by one; this is correct if point is not at the
397beginning of a line.
398
399@vindex page-delimiter
400 The variable @code{page-delimiter} controls where pages begin. Its
401value is a regexp that matches the beginning of a line that separates
b2683503 402pages. The normal value of this variable is @code{"^\f"}, which
6bf7aab6
DL
403matches a formfeed character at the beginning of a line.
404
405@node Filling
406@section Filling Text
407@cindex filling text
408
409 @dfn{Filling} text means breaking it up into lines that fit a
410specified width. Emacs does filling in two ways. In Auto Fill mode,
411inserting text with self-inserting characters also automatically fills
412it. There are also explicit fill commands that you can use when editing
413text leaves it unfilled. When you edit formatted text, you can specify
414a style of filling for each portion of the text (@pxref{Formatted
415Text}).
416
417@menu
418* Auto Fill:: Auto Fill mode breaks long lines automatically.
419* Fill Commands:: Commands to refill paragraphs and center lines.
420* Fill Prefix:: Filling paragraphs that are indented
421 or in a comment, etc.
422* Adaptive Fill:: How Emacs can determine the fill prefix automatically.
5f4d6585 423* Refill:: Keeping paragraphs filled.
19e7dd23 424* Longlines:: Editing text with very long lines.
6bf7aab6
DL
425@end menu
426
427@node Auto Fill
428@subsection Auto Fill Mode
429@cindex Auto Fill mode
430@cindex mode, Auto Fill
6bf7aab6
DL
431
432 @dfn{Auto Fill} mode is a minor mode in which lines are broken
433automatically when they become too wide. Breaking happens only when
434you type a @key{SPC} or @key{RET}.
435
436@table @kbd
437@item M-x auto-fill-mode
438Enable or disable Auto Fill mode.
439@item @key{SPC}
440@itemx @key{RET}
441In Auto Fill mode, break lines when appropriate.
442@end table
443
444@findex auto-fill-mode
445 @kbd{M-x auto-fill-mode} turns Auto Fill mode on if it was off, or off
446if it was on. With a positive numeric argument it always turns Auto
447Fill mode on, and with a negative argument always turns it off. You can
448see when Auto Fill mode is in effect by the presence of the word
449@samp{Fill} in the mode line, inside the parentheses. Auto Fill mode is
450a minor mode which is enabled or disabled for each buffer individually.
451@xref{Minor Modes}.
452
453 In Auto Fill mode, lines are broken automatically at spaces when they
454get longer than the desired width. Line breaking and rearrangement
455takes place only when you type @key{SPC} or @key{RET}. If you wish to
456insert a space or newline without permitting line-breaking, type
457@kbd{C-q @key{SPC}} or @kbd{C-q C-j} (recall that a newline is really a
458control-J). Also, @kbd{C-o} inserts a newline without line breaking.
459
460 Auto Fill mode works well with programming-language modes, because it
461indents new lines with @key{TAB}. If a line ending in a comment gets
462too long, the text of the comment is split into two comment lines.
463Optionally, new comment delimiters are inserted at the end of the first
464line and the beginning of the second so that each line is a separate
465comment; the variable @code{comment-multi-line} controls the choice
466(@pxref{Comments}).
467
01c7beb9 468 Adaptive filling (@pxref{Adaptive Fill}) works for Auto Filling as
6bf7aab6
DL
469well as for explicit fill commands. It takes a fill prefix
470automatically from the second or first line of a paragraph.
471
472 Auto Fill mode does not refill entire paragraphs; it can break lines but
473cannot merge lines. So editing in the middle of a paragraph can result in
474a paragraph that is not correctly filled. The easiest way to make the
475paragraph properly filled again is usually with the explicit fill commands.
4b45d5d1 476@ifnottex
6bf7aab6 477@xref{Fill Commands}.
4b45d5d1 478@end ifnottex
6bf7aab6
DL
479
480 Many users like Auto Fill mode and want to use it in all text files.
481The section on init files says how to arrange this permanently for yourself.
482@xref{Init File}.
483
484@node Fill Commands
485@subsection Explicit Fill Commands
486
487@table @kbd
488@item M-q
489Fill current paragraph (@code{fill-paragraph}).
490@item C-x f
491Set the fill column (@code{set-fill-column}).
492@item M-x fill-region
493Fill each paragraph in the region (@code{fill-region}).
494@item M-x fill-region-as-paragraph
495Fill the region, considering it as one paragraph.
496@item M-s
497Center a line.
498@end table
499
500@kindex M-q
501@findex fill-paragraph
502 To refill a paragraph, use the command @kbd{M-q}
503(@code{fill-paragraph}). This operates on the paragraph that point is
504inside, or the one after point if point is between paragraphs.
505Refilling works by removing all the line-breaks, then inserting new ones
506where necessary.
507
508@findex fill-region
509 To refill many paragraphs, use @kbd{M-x fill-region}, which
5f4d6585 510finds the paragraphs in the region and fills each of them.
6bf7aab6
DL
511
512@findex fill-region-as-paragraph
513 @kbd{M-q} and @code{fill-region} use the same criteria as @kbd{M-h}
514for finding paragraph boundaries (@pxref{Paragraphs}). For more
515control, you can use @kbd{M-x fill-region-as-paragraph}, which refills
5f4d6585
RS
516everything between point and mark as a single paragraph. This command
517deletes any blank lines within the region, so separate blocks of text
518end up combined into one block.
6bf7aab6
DL
519
520@cindex justification
5f4d6585
RS
521 A numeric argument to @kbd{M-q} tells it to @dfn{justify} the text
522as well as filling it. This means that extra spaces are inserted to
523make the right margin line up exactly at the fill column. To remove
524the extra spaces, use @kbd{M-q} with no argument. (Likewise for
6bf7aab6 525@code{fill-region}.) Another way to control justification, and choose
5f4d6585
RS
526other styles of filling, is with the @code{justification} text
527property; see @ref{Format Justification}.
6bf7aab6
DL
528
529@kindex M-s @r{(Text mode)}
530@cindex centering
531@findex center-line
532 The command @kbd{M-s} (@code{center-line}) centers the current line
533within the current fill column. With an argument @var{n}, it centers
e93a29b0
RS
534@var{n} lines individually and moves past them. This binding is
535made by Text mode and is available only in that and related modes
536(@pxref{Text Mode}).
6bf7aab6
DL
537
538@vindex fill-column
539@kindex C-x f
540@findex set-fill-column
541 The maximum line width for filling is in the variable
542@code{fill-column}. Altering the value of @code{fill-column} makes it
543local to the current buffer; until that time, the default value is in
544effect. The default is initially 70. @xref{Locals}. The easiest way
545to set @code{fill-column} is to use the command @kbd{C-x f}
546(@code{set-fill-column}). With a numeric argument, it uses that as the
547new fill column. With just @kbd{C-u} as argument, it sets
548@code{fill-column} to the current horizontal position of point.
549
550 Emacs commands normally consider a period followed by two spaces or by
551a newline as the end of a sentence; a period followed by just one space
552indicates an abbreviation and not the end of a sentence. To preserve
553the distinction between these two ways of using a period, the fill
554commands do not break a line after a period followed by just one space.
555
6bf7aab6
DL
556 If the variable @code{sentence-end-double-space} is @code{nil}, the
557fill commands expect and leave just one space at the end of a sentence.
558Ordinarily this variable is @code{t}, so the fill commands insist on
559two spaces for the end of a sentence, as explained above. @xref{Sentences}.
560
561@vindex colon-double-space
562 If the variable @code{colon-double-space} is non-@code{nil}, the
563fill commands put two spaces after a colon.
564
0fa5497c 565@vindex fill-nobreak-predicate
b4b2135b
EZ
566 The variable @code{fill-nobreak-predicate} is a hook (an abnormal
567hook, @pxref{Hooks}) specifying additional conditions where
568line-breaking is not allowed. Each function is called with no
5f4d6585 569arguments, with point at a place where Emacs is considering breaking
b4b2135b 570the line. If a function returns a non-@code{nil} value, then that's
5f4d6585 571a bad place to break the line. Two standard functions you can use are
0fa5497c
RS
572@code{fill-single-word-nobreak-p} (don't break after the first word of
573a sentence or before the last) and @code{fill-french-nobreak-p} (don't
574break after @samp{(} or before @samp{)}, @samp{:} or @samp{?}).
575
6bf7aab6
DL
576@node Fill Prefix
577@subsection The Fill Prefix
578
579@cindex fill prefix
580 To fill a paragraph in which each line starts with a special marker
581(which might be a few spaces, giving an indented paragraph), you can use
582the @dfn{fill prefix} feature. The fill prefix is a string that Emacs
583expects every line to start with, and which is not included in filling.
584You can specify a fill prefix explicitly; Emacs can also deduce the
585fill prefix automatically (@pxref{Adaptive Fill}).
586
587@table @kbd
588@item C-x .
589Set the fill prefix (@code{set-fill-prefix}).
590@item M-q
591Fill a paragraph using current fill prefix (@code{fill-paragraph}).
592@item M-x fill-individual-paragraphs
593Fill the region, considering each change of indentation as starting a
594new paragraph.
595@item M-x fill-nonuniform-paragraphs
596Fill the region, considering only paragraph-separator lines as starting
597a new paragraph.
598@end table
599
600@kindex C-x .
601@findex set-fill-prefix
304c3173
LT
602 To specify a fill prefix for the current buffer, move to a line that
603starts with the desired prefix, put point at the end of the prefix,
5f4d6585
RS
604and type @w{@kbd{C-x .}}@: (@code{set-fill-prefix}). (That's a period
605after the @kbd{C-x}.) To turn off the fill prefix, specify an empty
606prefix: type @w{@kbd{C-x .}}@: with point at the beginning of a line.
6bf7aab6
DL
607
608 When a fill prefix is in effect, the fill commands remove the fill
5f4d6585
RS
609prefix from each line of the paragraph before filling and insert it on
610each line after filling. (The beginning of the first line of the
611paragraph is left unchanged, since often that is intentionally
612different.) Auto Fill mode also inserts the fill prefix automatically
613when it makes a new line. The @kbd{C-o} command inserts the fill
614prefix on new lines it creates, when you use it at the beginning of a
615line (@pxref{Blank Lines}). Conversely, the command @kbd{M-^} deletes
616the prefix (if it occurs) after the newline that it deletes
617(@pxref{Indentation}).
6bf7aab6
DL
618
619 For example, if @code{fill-column} is 40 and you set the fill prefix
620to @samp{;; }, then @kbd{M-q} in the following text
621
622@example
623;; This is an
624;; example of a paragraph
625;; inside a Lisp-style comment.
626@end example
627
628@noindent
629produces this:
630
631@example
632;; This is an example of a paragraph
633;; inside a Lisp-style comment.
634@end example
635
636 Lines that do not start with the fill prefix are considered to start
637paragraphs, both in @kbd{M-q} and the paragraph commands; this gives
638good results for paragraphs with hanging indentation (every line
639indented except the first one). Lines which are blank or indented once
640the prefix is removed also separate or start paragraphs; this is what
641you want if you are writing multi-paragraph comments with a comment
642delimiter on each line.
643
644@findex fill-individual-paragraphs
645 You can use @kbd{M-x fill-individual-paragraphs} to set the fill
646prefix for each paragraph automatically. This command divides the
647region into paragraphs, treating every change in the amount of
648indentation as the start of a new paragraph, and fills each of these
649paragraphs. Thus, all the lines in one ``paragraph'' have the same
650amount of indentation. That indentation serves as the fill prefix for
651that paragraph.
652
653@findex fill-nonuniform-paragraphs
654 @kbd{M-x fill-nonuniform-paragraphs} is a similar command that divides
655the region into paragraphs in a different way. It considers only
656paragraph-separating lines (as defined by @code{paragraph-separate}) as
657starting a new paragraph. Since this means that the lines of one
658paragraph may have different amounts of indentation, the fill prefix
659used is the smallest amount of indentation of any of the lines of the
660paragraph. This gives good results with styles that indent a paragraph's
661first line more or less that the rest of the paragraph.
662
663@vindex fill-prefix
664 The fill prefix is stored in the variable @code{fill-prefix}. Its value
665is a string, or @code{nil} when there is no fill prefix. This is a
666per-buffer variable; altering the variable affects only the current buffer,
667but there is a default value which you can change as well. @xref{Locals}.
668
669 The @code{indentation} text property provides another way to control
670the amount of indentation paragraphs receive. @xref{Format Indentation}.
671
672@node Adaptive Fill
673@subsection Adaptive Filling
674
675@cindex adaptive filling
676 The fill commands can deduce the proper fill prefix for a paragraph
677automatically in certain cases: either whitespace or certain punctuation
678characters at the beginning of a line are propagated to all lines of the
679paragraph.
680
681 If the paragraph has two or more lines, the fill prefix is taken from
682the paragraph's second line, but only if it appears on the first line as
683well.
684
685 If a paragraph has just one line, fill commands @emph{may} take a
686prefix from that line. The decision is complicated because there are
687three reasonable things to do in such a case:
688
689@itemize @bullet
690@item
691Use the first line's prefix on all the lines of the paragraph.
692
693@item
694Indent subsequent lines with whitespace, so that they line up under the
695text that follows the prefix on the first line, but don't actually copy
696the prefix from the first line.
697
698@item
699Don't do anything special with the second and following lines.
700@end itemize
701
702 All three of these styles of formatting are commonly used. So the
703fill commands try to determine what you would like, based on the prefix
704that appears and on the major mode. Here is how.
705
706@vindex adaptive-fill-first-line-regexp
707 If the prefix found on the first line matches
708@code{adaptive-fill-first-line-regexp}, or if it appears to be a
709comment-starting sequence (this depends on the major mode), then the
710prefix found is used for filling the paragraph, provided it would not
711act as a paragraph starter on subsequent lines.
712
713 Otherwise, the prefix found is converted to an equivalent number of
714spaces, and those spaces are used as the fill prefix for the rest of the
715lines, provided they would not act as a paragraph starter on subsequent
716lines.
717
718 In Text mode, and other modes where only blank lines and page
719delimiters separate paragraphs, the prefix chosen by adaptive filling
720never acts as a paragraph starter, so it can always be used for filling.
721
722@vindex adaptive-fill-mode
723@vindex adaptive-fill-regexp
724 The variable @code{adaptive-fill-regexp} determines what kinds of line
725beginnings can serve as a fill prefix: any characters at the start of
726the line that match this regular expression are used. If you set the
727variable @code{adaptive-fill-mode} to @code{nil}, the fill prefix is
728never chosen automatically.
729
730@vindex adaptive-fill-function
731 You can specify more complex ways of choosing a fill prefix
732automatically by setting the variable @code{adaptive-fill-function} to a
733function. This function is called with point after the left margin of a
734line, and it should return the appropriate fill prefix based on that
de1924a1
RS
735line. If it returns @code{nil}, @code{adaptive-fill-regexp} gets
736a chance to find a prefix.
6bf7aab6 737
5f4d6585
RS
738@node Refill
739@subsection Refill Mode
740@cindex refilling text, word processor style
741@cindex modes, Refill
742@cindex Refill minor mode
743
744 Refill minor mode provides support for keeping paragraphs filled as
745you type or modify them in other ways. It provides an effect similar
746to typical word processor behavior. This works by running a
747paragraph-filling command at suitable times.
748
749 To toggle the use of Refill mode in the current buffer, type
750@kbd{M-x refill-mode}. When you are typing text, only characters
751which normally trigger auto filling, like the space character, will
752trigger refilling. This is to avoid making it too slow. Apart from
753self-inserting characters, other commands which modify the text cause
754refilling.
755
756 The current implementation is preliminary and not robust. You can
757get better ``line wrapping'' behavior using Longlines mode.
758@xref{Longlines}. However, Longlines mode has an important
759side-effect: the newlines that it inserts for you are not saved to
760disk, so the files that you make with Longlines mode will appear to be
761completely unfilled if you edit them without Longlines mode.
762
19e7dd23
RS
763@node Longlines
764@subsection Long Lines Mode
765@cindex refilling text, word processor style
766@cindex modes, Long Lines
767@cindex word wrap
768@cindex Long Lines minor mode
769
770 Long Lines mode is a minor mode for @dfn{word wrapping}; it lets you
771edit ``unfilled'' text files, which Emacs would normally display as a
772bunch of extremely long lines. Many text editors, such as those built
773into many web browsers, normally do word wrapping.
774
775@findex longlines-mode
776 To enable Long Lines mode, type @kbd{M-x longlines-mode}. If the
777text is full of long lines, this will ``wrap'' them
778immediately---i.e., break up to fit in the window. As you edit the
779text, Long Lines mode automatically re-wraps lines by inserting or
780deleting @dfn{soft newlines} as necessary (@pxref{Hard and Soft
781Newlines}.) These soft newlines won't show up when you save the
782buffer into a file, or when you copy the text into the kill ring,
783clipboard, or a register.
784
785@findex longlines-auto-wrap
786 Word wrapping is @emph{not} the same as ordinary filling
787(@pxref{Fill Commands}). It does not contract multiple spaces into a
788single space, recognize fill prefixes (@pxref{Fill Prefix}), or
789perform adaptive filling (@pxref{Adaptive Fill}). The reason for this
790is that a wrapped line is still, conceptually, a single line. Each
791soft newline is equivalent to exactly one space in that long line, and
792vice versa. However, you can still call filling functions such as
793@kbd{M-q}, and these will work as expected, inserting soft newlines
794that won't show up on disk or when the text is copied. You can even
795rely entirely on the normal fill commands by turning off automatic
796line wrapping, with @kbd{C-u M-x longlines-auto-wrap}. To turn
797automatic line wrapping back on, type @kbd{M-x longlines-auto-wrap}.
798
799@findex longlines-show-hard-newlines
5f4d6585
RS
800 Type @kbd{RET} to insert a hard newline, one which automatic
801refilling will not remove. If you want to see where all the hard
802newlines are, type @kbd{M-x longlines-show-hard-newlines}. This will
803mark each hard newline with a special symbol. The same command with a
804prefix argument turns this display off.
19e7dd23
RS
805
806 Long Lines mode does not change normal text files that are already
807filled, since the existing newlines are considered hard newlines.
808Before Long Lines can do anything, you need to transform each
809paragraph into a long line. One way is to set @code{fill-column} to a
810large number (e.g., @kbd{C-u 9999 C-x f}), re-fill all the paragraphs,
811and then set @code{fill-column} back to its original value.
812
6bf7aab6
DL
813@node Case
814@section Case Conversion Commands
815@cindex case conversion
816
817 Emacs has commands for converting either a single word or any arbitrary
818range of text to upper case or to lower case.
819
6bf7aab6
DL
820@table @kbd
821@item M-l
822Convert following word to lower case (@code{downcase-word}).
823@item M-u
824Convert following word to upper case (@code{upcase-word}).
825@item M-c
826Capitalize the following word (@code{capitalize-word}).
827@item C-x C-l
828Convert region to lower case (@code{downcase-region}).
829@item C-x C-u
830Convert region to upper case (@code{upcase-region}).
831@end table
832
833@kindex M-l
834@kindex M-u
835@kindex M-c
836@cindex words, case conversion
837@cindex converting text to upper or lower case
838@cindex capitalizing words
839@findex downcase-word
840@findex upcase-word
841@findex capitalize-word
842 The word conversion commands are the most useful. @kbd{M-l}
843(@code{downcase-word}) converts the word after point to lower case, moving
844past it. Thus, repeating @kbd{M-l} converts successive words.
845@kbd{M-u} (@code{upcase-word}) converts to all capitals instead, while
846@kbd{M-c} (@code{capitalize-word}) puts the first letter of the word
847into upper case and the rest into lower case. All these commands convert
848several words at once if given an argument. They are especially convenient
849for converting a large amount of text from all upper case to mixed case,
850because you can move through the text using @kbd{M-l}, @kbd{M-u} or
851@kbd{M-c} on each word as appropriate, occasionally using @kbd{M-f} instead
852to skip a word.
853
854 When given a negative argument, the word case conversion commands apply
855to the appropriate number of words before point, but do not move point.
856This is convenient when you have just typed a word in the wrong case: you
857can give the case conversion command and continue typing.
858
5f4d6585
RS
859 If a word case conversion command is given in the middle of a word,
860it applies only to the part of the word which follows point. (This is
861comparable to what @kbd{M-d} (@code{kill-word}) does.) With a
862negative argument, case conversion applies only to the part of the
863word before point.
6bf7aab6
DL
864
865@kindex C-x C-l
866@kindex C-x C-u
867@findex downcase-region
868@findex upcase-region
869 The other case conversion commands are @kbd{C-x C-u}
870(@code{upcase-region}) and @kbd{C-x C-l} (@code{downcase-region}), which
871convert everything between point and mark to the specified case. Point and
872mark do not move.
873
874 The region case conversion commands @code{upcase-region} and
875@code{downcase-region} are normally disabled. This means that they ask
876for confirmation if you try to use them. When you confirm, you may
877enable the command, which means it will not ask for confirmation again.
878@xref{Disabling}.
879
880@node Text Mode
881@section Text Mode
882@cindex Text mode
883@cindex mode, Text
884@findex text-mode
885
886 When you edit files of text in a human language, it's more convenient
887to use Text mode rather than Fundamental mode. To enter Text mode, type
888@kbd{M-x text-mode}.
889
890 In Text mode, only blank lines and page delimiters separate
891paragraphs. As a result, paragraphs can be indented, and adaptive
892filling determines what indentation to use when filling a paragraph.
893@xref{Adaptive Fill}.
894
895@kindex TAB @r{(Text mode)}
896 Text mode defines @key{TAB} to run @code{indent-relative}
897(@pxref{Indentation}), so that you can conveniently indent a line like
304c3173 898the previous line.
6bf7aab6
DL
899
900 Text mode turns off the features concerned with comments except when
304c3173
LT
901you explicitly invoke them. It changes the syntax table so that
902single-quotes are considered part of words. However, if a word starts
5f4d6585
RS
903with single-quotes, these are treated as a prefix for purposes such as
904capitalization. That is, @kbd{M-c} will convert @samp{'hello'} into
905@samp{'Hello'}, as expected.
6bf7aab6
DL
906
907@cindex Paragraph-Indent Text mode
908@cindex mode, Paragraph-Indent Text
909@findex paragraph-indent-text-mode
dbab15b9 910@findex paragraph-indent-minor-mode
6bf7aab6 911 If you indent the first lines of paragraphs, then you should use
5f4d6585
RS
912Paragraph-Indent Text mode rather than Text mode. In this mode, you
913do not need to have blank lines between paragraphs, because the
914first-line indentation is sufficient to start a paragraph; however
915paragraphs in which every line is indented are not supported. Use
916@kbd{M-x paragraph-indent-text-mode} to enter this mode. Use @kbd{M-x
917paragraph-indent-minor-mode} to enable an equivalent minor mode in
918situations where you can't change the major mode---in mail
919composition, for instance.
6bf7aab6
DL
920
921@kindex M-TAB @r{(Text mode)}
f579d4fb
RS
922 Text mode, and all the modes based on it, define @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}
923as the command @code{ispell-complete-word}, which performs completion
924of the partial word in the buffer before point, using the spelling
925dictionary as the space of possible words. @xref{Spelling}. If your
926window manager defines @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} to switch windows, you can
d89c6c9f 927type @kbd{@key{ESC} @key{TAB}} or @kbd{C-M-i}.
6bf7aab6
DL
928
929@vindex text-mode-hook
930 Entering Text mode runs the hook @code{text-mode-hook}. Other major
931modes related to Text mode also run this hook, followed by hooks of
932their own; this includes Paragraph-Indent Text mode, Nroff mode, @TeX{}
933mode, Outline mode, and Mail mode. Hook functions on
934@code{text-mode-hook} can look at the value of @code{major-mode} to see
935which of these modes is actually being entered. @xref{Hooks}.
936
4b45d5d1 937@ifnottex
6bf7aab6
DL
938 Emacs provides two other modes for editing text that is to be passed
939through a text formatter to produce fancy formatted printed output.
940@xref{Nroff Mode}, for editing input to the formatter nroff.
941@xref{TeX Mode}, for editing input to the formatter TeX.
942
943 Another mode is used for editing outlines. It allows you to view the
944text at various levels of detail. You can view either the outline
945headings alone or both headings and text; you can also hide some of the
946headings at lower levels from view to make the high level structure more
947visible. @xref{Outline Mode}.
4b45d5d1 948@end ifnottex
6bf7aab6
DL
949
950@node Outline Mode
951@section Outline Mode
952@cindex Outline mode
953@cindex mode, Outline
6bf7aab6
DL
954@cindex invisible lines
955
956@findex outline-mode
957@findex outline-minor-mode
958@vindex outline-minor-mode-prefix
959 Outline mode is a major mode much like Text mode but intended for
960editing outlines. It allows you to make parts of the text temporarily
961invisible so that you can see the outline structure. Type @kbd{M-x
962outline-mode} to switch to Outline mode as the major mode of the current
963buffer.
964
3a55fb34
RS
965 When Outline mode makes a line invisible, the line does not appear
966on the screen. The screen appears exactly as if the invisible line
967were deleted, except that an ellipsis (three periods in a row) appears
968at the end of the previous visible line. (Multiple consecutive
969invisible lines produce just one ellipsis.)
6bf7aab6
DL
970
971 Editing commands that operate on lines, such as @kbd{C-n} and
972@kbd{C-p}, treat the text of the invisible line as part of the previous
304c3173
LT
973visible line. Killing the ellipsis at the end of a visible line
974really kills all the following invisible lines.
6bf7aab6
DL
975
976 Outline minor mode provides the same commands as the major mode,
977Outline mode, but you can use it in conjunction with other major modes.
978Type @kbd{M-x outline-minor-mode} to enable the Outline minor mode in
979the current buffer. You can also specify this in the text of a file,
980with a file local variable of the form @samp{mode: outline-minor}
981(@pxref{File Variables}).
982
983@kindex C-c @@ @r{(Outline minor mode)}
984 The major mode, Outline mode, provides special key bindings on the
985@kbd{C-c} prefix. Outline minor mode provides similar bindings with
986@kbd{C-c @@} as the prefix; this is to reduce the conflicts with the
987major mode's special commands. (The variable
988@code{outline-minor-mode-prefix} controls the prefix used.)
989
990@vindex outline-mode-hook
991 Entering Outline mode runs the hook @code{text-mode-hook} followed by
992the hook @code{outline-mode-hook} (@pxref{Hooks}).
993
994@menu
995* Format: Outline Format. What the text of an outline looks like.
996* Motion: Outline Motion. Special commands for moving through
177c0ea7 997 outlines.
6bf7aab6
DL
998* Visibility: Outline Visibility. Commands to control what is visible.
999* Views: Outline Views. Outlines and multiple views.
3a55fb34 1000* Foldout:: Folding means zooming in on outlines.
6bf7aab6
DL
1001@end menu
1002
1003@node Outline Format
1004@subsection Format of Outlines
1005
1006@cindex heading lines (Outline mode)
1007@cindex body lines (Outline mode)
1008 Outline mode assumes that the lines in the buffer are of two types:
1009@dfn{heading lines} and @dfn{body lines}. A heading line represents a
1010topic in the outline. Heading lines start with one or more stars; the
1011number of stars determines the depth of the heading in the outline
1012structure. Thus, a heading line with one star is a major topic; all the
1013heading lines with two stars between it and the next one-star heading
1014are its subtopics; and so on. Any line that is not a heading line is a
1015body line. Body lines belong with the preceding heading line. Here is
1016an example:
1017
1018@example
1019* Food
1020This is the body,
1021which says something about the topic of food.
1022
1023** Delicious Food
1024This is the body of the second-level header.
1025
1026** Distasteful Food
1027This could have
1028a body too, with
1029several lines.
1030
1031*** Dormitory Food
1032
1033* Shelter
1034Another first-level topic with its header line.
1035@end example
1036
1037 A heading line together with all following body lines is called
1038collectively an @dfn{entry}. A heading line together with all following
1039deeper heading lines and their body lines is called a @dfn{subtree}.
1040
1041@vindex outline-regexp
1042 You can customize the criterion for distinguishing heading lines
1043by setting the variable @code{outline-regexp}. Any line whose
1044beginning has a match for this regexp is considered a heading line.
1045Matches that start within a line (not at the left margin) do not count.
1046The length of the matching text determines the level of the heading;
1047longer matches make a more deeply nested level. Thus, for example,
1048if a text formatter has commands @samp{@@chapter}, @samp{@@section}
1049and @samp{@@subsection} to divide the document into chapters and
1050sections, you could make those lines count as heading lines by
1051setting @code{outline-regexp} to @samp{"@@chap\\|@@\\(sub\\)*section"}.
1052Note the trick: the two words @samp{chapter} and @samp{section} are equally
1053long, but by defining the regexp to match only @samp{chap} we ensure
1054that the length of the text matched on a chapter heading is shorter,
1055so that Outline mode will know that sections are contained in chapters.
1056This works as long as no other command starts with @samp{@@chap}.
1057
1058@vindex outline-level
2e6d3a80
RS
1059 You can change the rule for calculating the level of a heading line
1060by setting the variable @code{outline-level}. The value of
6bf7aab6
DL
1061@code{outline-level} should be a function that takes no arguments and
1062returns the level of the current heading. Some major modes such as C,
2e6d3a80
RS
1063Nroff, and Emacs Lisp mode set this variable and @code{outline-regexp}
1064in order to work with Outline minor mode.
6bf7aab6
DL
1065
1066@node Outline Motion
1067@subsection Outline Motion Commands
1068
1069 Outline mode provides special motion commands that move backward and
1070forward to heading lines.
1071
1072@table @kbd
1073@item C-c C-n
1074Move point to the next visible heading line
1075(@code{outline-next-visible-heading}).
1076@item C-c C-p
1077Move point to the previous visible heading line
1078(@code{outline-previous-visible-heading}).
1079@item C-c C-f
1080Move point to the next visible heading line at the same level
1081as the one point is on (@code{outline-forward-same-level}).
1082@item C-c C-b
1083Move point to the previous visible heading line at the same level
1084(@code{outline-backward-same-level}).
1085@item C-c C-u
1086Move point up to a lower-level (more inclusive) visible heading line
1087(@code{outline-up-heading}).
1088@end table
1089
1090@findex outline-next-visible-heading
1091@findex outline-previous-visible-heading
1092@kindex C-c C-n @r{(Outline mode)}
1093@kindex C-c C-p @r{(Outline mode)}
1094 @kbd{C-c C-n} (@code{outline-next-visible-heading}) moves down to the next
1095heading line. @kbd{C-c C-p} (@code{outline-previous-visible-heading}) moves
1096similarly backward. Both accept numeric arguments as repeat counts. The
1097names emphasize that invisible headings are skipped, but this is not really
1098a special feature. All editing commands that look for lines ignore the
5f4d6585 1099invisible lines automatically.
6bf7aab6
DL
1100
1101@findex outline-up-heading
1102@findex outline-forward-same-level
1103@findex outline-backward-same-level
1104@kindex C-c C-f @r{(Outline mode)}
1105@kindex C-c C-b @r{(Outline mode)}
1106@kindex C-c C-u @r{(Outline mode)}
1107 More powerful motion commands understand the level structure of headings.
1108@kbd{C-c C-f} (@code{outline-forward-same-level}) and
1109@kbd{C-c C-b} (@code{outline-backward-same-level}) move from one
1110heading line to another visible heading at the same depth in
1111the outline. @kbd{C-c C-u} (@code{outline-up-heading}) moves
1112backward to another heading that is less deeply nested.
1113
1114@node Outline Visibility
1115@subsection Outline Visibility Commands
1116
1117 The other special commands of outline mode are used to make lines visible
1118or invisible. Their names all start with @code{hide} or @code{show}.
1119Most of them fall into pairs of opposites. They are not undoable; instead,
1120you can undo right past them. Making lines visible or invisible is simply
1121not recorded by the undo mechanism.
1122
8613ded1
RS
1123 Many of these commands act on the ``current'' heading line. If
1124point is on a heading line, that is the current heading line; if point
1125is on a body line, the current heading line is the nearest preceding
1126header line.
1127
6bf7aab6 1128@table @kbd
8613ded1
RS
1129@item C-c C-c
1130Make the current heading line's body invisible (@code{hide-entry}).
1131@item C-c C-e
1132Make the current heading line's body visible (@code{show-entry}).
6bf7aab6 1133@item C-c C-d
8613ded1 1134Make everything under the current heading invisible, not including the
6bf7aab6
DL
1135heading itself (@code{hide-subtree}).
1136@item C-c C-s
8613ded1 1137Make everything under the current heading visible, including body,
6bf7aab6
DL
1138subheadings, and their bodies (@code{show-subtree}).
1139@item C-c C-l
8613ded1 1140Make the body of the current heading line, and of all its subheadings,
6bf7aab6
DL
1141invisible (@code{hide-leaves}).
1142@item C-c C-k
8613ded1
RS
1143Make all subheadings of the current heading line, at all levels,
1144visible (@code{show-branches}).
6bf7aab6 1145@item C-c C-i
8613ded1
RS
1146Make immediate subheadings (one level down) of the current heading
1147line visible (@code{show-children}).
1148@item C-c C-t
1149Make all body lines in the buffer invisible (@code{hide-body}).
1150@item C-c C-a
1151Make all lines in the buffer visible (@code{show-all}).
6bf7aab6
DL
1152@item C-c C-q
1153Hide everything except the top @var{n} levels of heading lines
1154(@code{hide-sublevels}).
1155@item C-c C-o
1156Hide everything except for the heading or body that point is in, plus
1157the headings leading up from there to the top level of the outline
1158(@code{hide-other}).
1159@end table
1160
1161@findex hide-entry
1162@findex show-entry
1163@kindex C-c C-c @r{(Outline mode)}
1164@kindex C-c C-e @r{(Outline mode)}
1165 Two commands that are exact opposites are @kbd{C-c C-c}
8613ded1
RS
1166(@code{hide-entry}) and @kbd{C-c C-e} (@code{show-entry}). They apply
1167to the body lines directly following the current heading line.
1168Subheadings and their bodies are not affected.
6bf7aab6
DL
1169
1170@findex hide-subtree
1171@findex show-subtree
1172@kindex C-c C-s @r{(Outline mode)}
1173@kindex C-c C-d @r{(Outline mode)}
1174@cindex subtree (Outline mode)
8613ded1
RS
1175 Two more powerful opposites are @kbd{C-c C-d} (@code{hide-subtree})
1176and @kbd{C-c C-s} (@code{show-subtree}). Both apply to the current
1177heading line's @dfn{subtree}: its body, all its subheadings, both
1178direct and indirect, and all of their bodies. In other words, the
1179subtree contains everything following the current heading line, up to
5f4d6585 1180and not including the next heading of the same or higher rank.
6bf7aab6
DL
1181
1182@findex hide-leaves
1183@findex show-branches
1184@kindex C-c C-l @r{(Outline mode)}
1185@kindex C-c C-k @r{(Outline mode)}
1186 Intermediate between a visible subtree and an invisible one is having
1187all the subheadings visible but none of the body. There are two
1188commands for doing this, depending on whether you want to hide the
1189bodies or make the subheadings visible. They are @kbd{C-c C-l}
1190(@code{hide-leaves}) and @kbd{C-c C-k} (@code{show-branches}).
1191
1192@kindex C-c C-i @r{(Outline mode)}
1193@findex show-children
1194 A little weaker than @code{show-branches} is @kbd{C-c C-i}
1195(@code{show-children}). It makes just the direct subheadings
1196visible---those one level down. Deeper subheadings remain invisible, if
5f4d6585 1197they were invisible.
6bf7aab6
DL
1198
1199@findex hide-body
1200@findex show-all
1201@kindex C-c C-t @r{(Outline mode)}
1202@kindex C-c C-a @r{(Outline mode)}
1203 Two commands have a blanket effect on the whole file. @kbd{C-c C-t}
1204(@code{hide-body}) makes all body lines invisible, so that you see just
8613ded1
RS
1205the outline structure (as a special exception, it will not hide lines
1206at the top of the file, preceding the first header line, even though
1207these are technically body lines). @kbd{C-c C-a} (@code{show-all})
1208makes all lines visible. These commands can be thought of as a pair
1209of opposites even though @kbd{C-c C-a} applies to more than just body
1210lines.
6bf7aab6
DL
1211
1212@findex hide-sublevels
1213@kindex C-c C-q @r{(Outline mode)}
1214 The command @kbd{C-c C-q} (@code{hide-sublevels}) hides all but the
1215top level headings. With a numeric argument @var{n}, it hides everything
1216except the top @var{n} levels of heading lines.
1217
1218@findex hide-other
1219@kindex C-c C-o @r{(Outline mode)}
1220 The command @kbd{C-c C-o} (@code{hide-other}) hides everything except
304c3173
LT
1221the heading and body text that point is in, plus its parents (the headers
1222leading up from there to top level in the outline) and the top level
1223headings.
6bf7aab6 1224
beb0e974 1225@findex reveal-mode
6bf7aab6
DL
1226 When incremental search finds text that is hidden by Outline mode,
1227it makes that part of the buffer visible. If you exit the search
beb0e974
SM
1228at that position, the text remains visible. You can also
1229automatically make text visible as you navigate in it by using
1230@kbd{M-x reveal-mode}.
6bf7aab6
DL
1231
1232@node Outline Views
1233@subsection Viewing One Outline in Multiple Views
1234
1235@cindex multiple views of outline
1236@cindex views of an outline
1237@cindex outline with multiple views
1238@cindex indirect buffers and outlines
1239 You can display two views of a single outline at the same time, in
1240different windows. To do this, you must create an indirect buffer using
1241@kbd{M-x make-indirect-buffer}. The first argument of this command is
1242the existing outline buffer name, and its second argument is the name to
1243use for the new indirect buffer. @xref{Indirect Buffers}.
1244
1245 Once the indirect buffer exists, you can display it in a window in the
1246normal fashion, with @kbd{C-x 4 b} or other Emacs commands. The Outline
1247mode commands to show and hide parts of the text operate on each buffer
1248independently; as a result, each buffer can have its own view. If you
1249want more than two views on the same outline, create additional indirect
1250buffers.
1251
9577aa62 1252@node Foldout
2e6d3a80 1253@subsection Folding Editing
9577aa62
DL
1254
1255@cindex folding editing
2e6d3a80
RS
1256 The Foldout package extends Outline mode and Outline minor mode with
1257``folding'' commands. The idea of folding is that you zoom in on a
1258nested portion of the outline, while hiding its relatives at higher
1259levels.
ef940469 1260
304c3173 1261 Consider an Outline mode buffer with all the text and subheadings under
9577aa62 1262level-1 headings hidden. To look at what is hidden under one of these
2e6d3a80
RS
1263headings, you could use @kbd{C-c C-e} (@kbd{M-x show-entry}) to expose
1264the body, or @kbd{C-c C-i} to expose the child (level-2) headings.
9577aa62
DL
1265
1266@kindex C-c C-z
1267@findex foldout-zoom-subtree
2e6d3a80
RS
1268 With Foldout, you use @kbd{C-c C-z} (@kbd{M-x foldout-zoom-subtree}).
1269This exposes the body and child subheadings, and narrows the buffer so
b2683503 1270that only the @w{level-1} heading, the body and the level-2 headings are
9577aa62
DL
1271visible. Now to look under one of the level-2 headings, position the
1272cursor on it and use @kbd{C-c C-z} again. This exposes the level-2 body
1273and its level-3 child subheadings and narrows the buffer again. Zooming
1274in on successive subheadings can be done as much as you like. A string
47d7776c 1275in the mode line shows how deep you've gone.
9577aa62 1276
2e6d3a80 1277 When zooming in on a heading, to see only the child subheadings specify
9577aa62
DL
1278a numeric argument: @kbd{C-u C-c C-z}. The number of levels of children
1279can be specified too (compare @kbd{M-x show-children}), e.g.@: @kbd{M-2
1280C-c C-z} exposes two levels of child subheadings. Alternatively, the
47d7776c 1281body can be specified with a negative argument: @kbd{M-- C-c C-z}. The
9577aa62
DL
1282whole subtree can be expanded, similarly to @kbd{C-c C-s} (@kbd{M-x
1283show-subtree}), by specifying a zero argument: @kbd{M-0 C-c C-z}.
1284
2e6d3a80 1285 While you're zoomed in, you can still use Outline mode's exposure and
9577aa62 1286hiding functions without disturbing Foldout. Also, since the buffer is
2e6d3a80 1287narrowed, ``global'' editing actions will only affect text under the
9577aa62
DL
1288zoomed-in heading. This is useful for restricting changes to a
1289particular chapter or section of your document.
1290
1291@kindex C-c C-x
1292@findex foldout-exit-fold
2e6d3a80 1293 To unzoom (exit) a fold, use @kbd{C-c C-x} (@kbd{M-x foldout-exit-fold}).
9577aa62
DL
1294This hides all the text and subheadings under the top-level heading and
1295returns you to the previous view of the buffer. Specifying a numeric
304c3173
LT
1296argument exits that many levels of folds. Specifying a zero argument
1297exits all folds.
9577aa62 1298
2e6d3a80
RS
1299 To cancel the narrowing of a fold without hiding the text and
1300subheadings, specify a negative argument. For example, @kbd{M--2 C-c
1301C-x} exits two folds and leaves the text and subheadings exposed.
1302
1303 Foldout mode also provides mouse commands for entering and exiting
1304folds, and for showing and hiding text:
9577aa62 1305
9577aa62 1306@table @asis
687b844f 1307@item @kbd{C-M-Mouse-1} zooms in on the heading clicked on
b2683503
RS
1308@itemize @asis
1309@item
1310single click: expose body.
1311@item
1312double click: expose subheadings.
1313@item
1314triple click: expose body and subheadings.
1315@item
1316quad click: expose entire subtree.
1317@end itemize
687b844f 1318@item @kbd{C-M-Mouse-2} exposes text under the heading clicked on
dba66452
RS
1319@itemize @asis
1320@item
1321single click: expose body.
1322@item
1323double click: expose subheadings.
1324@item
1325triple click: expose body and subheadings.
1326@item
1327quad click: expose entire subtree.
1328@end itemize
687b844f 1329@item @kbd{C-M-Mouse-3} hides text under the heading clicked on or exits fold
dba66452
RS
1330@itemize @asis
1331@item
1332single click: hide subtree.
1333@item
1334double click: exit fold and hide text.
1335@item
1336triple click: exit fold without hiding text.
1337@item
1338quad click: exit all folds and hide text.
1339@end itemize
9577aa62
DL
1340@end table
1341
1342@vindex foldout-mouse-modifiers
2e6d3a80
RS
1343 You can specify different modifier keys (instead of
1344@kbd{Control-Meta-}) by setting @code{foldout-mouse-modifiers}; but if
1345you have already loaded the @file{foldout.el} library, you must reload
1346it in order for this to take effect.
1347
1348 To use the Foldout package, you can type @kbd{M-x load-library
1349@key{RET} foldout @key{RET}}; or you can arrange for to do that
1350automatically by putting this in your @file{.emacs} file:
1351
1352@example
1353(eval-after-load "outline" '(require 'foldout))
1354@end example
9577aa62 1355
7598274b 1356@node TeX Mode
6bf7aab6
DL
1357@section @TeX{} Mode
1358@cindex @TeX{} mode
1359@cindex La@TeX{} mode
1360@cindex Sli@TeX{} mode
8613ded1 1361@cindex Doc@TeX{} mode
6bf7aab6
DL
1362@cindex mode, @TeX{}
1363@cindex mode, La@TeX{}
1364@cindex mode, Sli@TeX{}
8613ded1 1365@cindex mode, Doc@TeX{}
6bf7aab6
DL
1366@findex tex-mode
1367@findex plain-tex-mode
1368@findex latex-mode
1369@findex slitex-mode
8613ded1 1370@findex doctex-mode
6bf7aab6 1371
5f4d6585
RS
1372 @TeX{} is a powerful text formatter written by Donald Knuth; it is
1373also free software, like GNU Emacs. La@TeX{} is a simplified input
1374format for @TeX{}, implemented by @TeX{} macros; it comes with @TeX{}.
1375Sli@TeX{} is a special form of La@TeX{}.@footnote{Sli@TeX{} is
1376obsoleted by the @samp{slides} document class in recent La@TeX{}
1377versions.} Doc@TeX{} (@file{.dtx}) is a special file format in which
1378the La@TeX{} sources are written, combining sources with
1379documentation.
6bf7aab6
DL
1380
1381 Emacs has a special @TeX{} mode for editing @TeX{} input files.
1382It provides facilities for checking the balance of delimiters and for
1383invoking @TeX{} on all or part of the file.
1384
1385@vindex tex-default-mode
8613ded1
RS
1386 @TeX{} mode has four variants: Plain @TeX{} mode, La@TeX{} mode,
1387Sli@TeX{} mode, and Doc@TeX{} mode (these distinct major modes differ
1388only slightly). They are designed for editing the four different
1389formats. The command @kbd{M-x tex-mode} looks at the contents of the
1390buffer to determine whether the contents appear to be either La@TeX{}
1391input, Sli@TeX{}, or Doc@TeX{} input; if so, it selects the
1392appropriate mode. If the file contents do not appear to be La@TeX{},
1393Sli@TeX{} or Doc@TeX{}, it selects Plain @TeX{} mode. If the contents
1394are insufficient to determine this, the variable
6bf7aab6
DL
1395@code{tex-default-mode} controls which mode is used.
1396
1397 When @kbd{M-x tex-mode} does not guess right, you can use the commands
8613ded1
RS
1398@kbd{M-x plain-tex-mode}, @kbd{M-x latex-mode}, @kbd{M-x slitex-mode},
1399and @kbd{doctex-mode} to select explicitly the particular variants of
1400@TeX{} mode.
6bf7aab6 1401
6bf7aab6
DL
1402@menu
1403* Editing: TeX Editing. Special commands for editing in TeX mode.
1404* LaTeX: LaTeX Editing. Additional commands for LaTeX input files.
1405* Printing: TeX Print. Commands for printing part of a file with TeX.
2e6d3a80 1406* Misc: TeX Misc. Customization of TeX mode, and related features.
6bf7aab6
DL
1407@end menu
1408
1409@node TeX Editing
1410@subsection @TeX{} Editing Commands
1411
1412 Here are the special commands provided in @TeX{} mode for editing the
1413text of the file.
1414
1415@table @kbd
1416@item "
1417Insert, according to context, either @samp{``} or @samp{"} or
1418@samp{''} (@code{tex-insert-quote}).
1419@item C-j
1420Insert a paragraph break (two newlines) and check the previous
1421paragraph for unbalanced braces or dollar signs
1422(@code{tex-terminate-paragraph}).
1423@item M-x tex-validate-region
1424Check each paragraph in the region for unbalanced braces or dollar signs.
1425@item C-c @{
1426Insert @samp{@{@}} and position point between them (@code{tex-insert-braces}).
1427@item C-c @}
1428Move forward past the next unmatched close brace (@code{up-list}).
1429@end table
1430
1431@findex tex-insert-quote
1432@kindex " @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1433 In @TeX{}, the character @samp{"} is not normally used; we use
1434@samp{``} to start a quotation and @samp{''} to end one. To make
1435editing easier under this formatting convention, @TeX{} mode overrides
1436the normal meaning of the key @kbd{"} with a command that inserts a pair
1437of single-quotes or backquotes (@code{tex-insert-quote}). To be
1438precise, this command inserts @samp{``} after whitespace or an open
1439brace, @samp{"} after a backslash, and @samp{''} after any other
1440character.
1441
1442 If you need the character @samp{"} itself in unusual contexts, use
1443@kbd{C-q} to insert it. Also, @kbd{"} with a numeric argument always
1444inserts that number of @samp{"} characters. You can turn off the
1445feature of @kbd{"} expansion by eliminating that binding in the local
1446map (@pxref{Key Bindings}).
1447
1448 In @TeX{} mode, @samp{$} has a special syntax code which attempts to
1449understand the way @TeX{} math mode delimiters match. When you insert a
1450@samp{$} that is meant to exit math mode, the position of the matching
1451@samp{$} that entered math mode is displayed for a second. This is the
1452same feature that displays the open brace that matches a close brace that
1453is inserted. However, there is no way to tell whether a @samp{$} enters
1454math mode or leaves it; so when you insert a @samp{$} that enters math
1455mode, the previous @samp{$} position is shown as if it were a match, even
1456though they are actually unrelated.
1457
1458@findex tex-insert-braces
1459@kindex C-c @{ @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1460@findex up-list
1461@kindex C-c @} @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1462 @TeX{} uses braces as delimiters that must match. Some users prefer
1463to keep braces balanced at all times, rather than inserting them
1464singly. Use @kbd{C-c @{} (@code{tex-insert-braces}) to insert a pair of
1465braces. It leaves point between the two braces so you can insert the
1466text that belongs inside. Afterward, use the command @kbd{C-c @}}
1467(@code{up-list}) to move forward past the close brace.
1468
1469@findex tex-validate-region
1470@findex tex-terminate-paragraph
1471@kindex C-j @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1472 There are two commands for checking the matching of braces. @kbd{C-j}
1473(@code{tex-terminate-paragraph}) checks the paragraph before point, and
1ba2ce68 1474inserts two newlines to start a new paragraph. It outputs a message in
6bf7aab6
DL
1475the echo area if any mismatch is found. @kbd{M-x tex-validate-region}
1476checks a region, paragraph by paragraph. The errors are listed in the
1477@samp{*Occur*} buffer, and you can use @kbd{C-c C-c} or @kbd{Mouse-2} in
1478that buffer to go to a particular mismatch.
1479
1480 Note that Emacs commands count square brackets and parentheses in
1481@TeX{} mode, not just braces. This is not strictly correct for the
1482purpose of checking @TeX{} syntax. However, parentheses and square
1483brackets are likely to be used in text as matching delimiters and it is
1484useful for the various motion commands and automatic match display to
1485work with them.
1486
1487@node LaTeX Editing
1488@subsection La@TeX{} Editing Commands
1489
1490 La@TeX{} mode, and its variant, Sli@TeX{} mode, provide a few extra
1491features not applicable to plain @TeX{}.
1492
1493@table @kbd
1494@item C-c C-o
1495Insert @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} for La@TeX{} block and position
1496point on a line between them (@code{tex-latex-block}).
1497@item C-c C-e
1498Close the innermost La@TeX{} block not yet closed
1499(@code{tex-close-latex-block}).
1500@end table
1501
1502@findex tex-latex-block
1503@kindex C-c C-o @r{(La@TeX{} mode)}
1504@vindex latex-block-names
1505 In La@TeX{} input, @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} commands are used to
1506group blocks of text. To insert a @samp{\begin} and a matching
1507@samp{\end} (on a new line following the @samp{\begin}), use @kbd{C-c
1508C-o} (@code{tex-latex-block}). A blank line is inserted between the
1509two, and point is left there. You can use completion when you enter the
1510block type; to specify additional block type names beyond the standard
1511list, set the variable @code{latex-block-names}. For example, here's
1512how to add @samp{theorem}, @samp{corollary}, and @samp{proof}:
1513
1514@example
1515(setq latex-block-names '("theorem" "corollary" "proof"))
1516@end example
1517
1518@findex tex-close-latex-block
1519@kindex C-c C-e @r{(La@TeX{} mode)}
1520 In La@TeX{} input, @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} commands must
1521balance. You can use @kbd{C-c C-e} (@code{tex-close-latex-block}) to
1522insert automatically a matching @samp{\end} to match the last unmatched
1523@samp{\begin}. It indents the @samp{\end} to match the corresponding
1524@samp{\begin}. It inserts a newline after @samp{\end} if point is at
1525the beginning of a line.
1526
1527@node TeX Print
1528@subsection @TeX{} Printing Commands
1529
1530 You can invoke @TeX{} as an inferior of Emacs on either the entire
1531contents of the buffer or just a region at a time. Running @TeX{} in
1532this way on just one chapter is a good way to see what your changes
1533look like without taking the time to format the entire file.
1534
1535@table @kbd
1536@item C-c C-r
1537Invoke @TeX{} on the current region, together with the buffer's header
1538(@code{tex-region}).
1539@item C-c C-b
1540Invoke @TeX{} on the entire current buffer (@code{tex-buffer}).
1541@item C-c @key{TAB}
1542Invoke Bib@TeX{} on the current file (@code{tex-bibtex-file}).
1543@item C-c C-f
1544Invoke @TeX{} on the current file (@code{tex-file}).
1545@item C-c C-l
1546Recenter the window showing output from the inferior @TeX{} so that
1547the last line can be seen (@code{tex-recenter-output-buffer}).
1548@item C-c C-k
1549Kill the @TeX{} subprocess (@code{tex-kill-job}).
1550@item C-c C-p
1551Print the output from the last @kbd{C-c C-r}, @kbd{C-c C-b}, or @kbd{C-c
1552C-f} command (@code{tex-print}).
1553@item C-c C-v
1554Preview the output from the last @kbd{C-c C-r}, @kbd{C-c C-b}, or @kbd{C-c
1555C-f} command (@code{tex-view}).
1556@item C-c C-q
1557Show the printer queue (@code{tex-show-print-queue}).
f88761e2
RS
1558@item C-c C-c
1559Invoke some other compilation command on the entire current buffer
1560(@code{tex-compile}).
6bf7aab6
DL
1561@end table
1562
1563@findex tex-buffer
1564@kindex C-c C-b @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1565@findex tex-print
1566@kindex C-c C-p @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1567@findex tex-view
1568@kindex C-c C-v @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1569@findex tex-show-print-queue
1570@kindex C-c C-q @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1571 You can pass the current buffer through an inferior @TeX{} by means of
1572@kbd{C-c C-b} (@code{tex-buffer}). The formatted output appears in a
1573temporary file; to print it, type @kbd{C-c C-p} (@code{tex-print}).
1574Afterward, you can use @kbd{C-c C-q} (@code{tex-show-print-queue}) to
1575view the progress of your output towards being printed. If your terminal
1576has the ability to display @TeX{} output files, you can preview the
1577output on the terminal with @kbd{C-c C-v} (@code{tex-view}).
1578
60a96371 1579@cindex @env{TEXINPUTS} environment variable
6bf7aab6
DL
1580@vindex tex-directory
1581 You can specify the directory to use for running @TeX{} by setting the
1582variable @code{tex-directory}. @code{"."} is the default value. If
60a96371 1583your environment variable @env{TEXINPUTS} contains relative directory
6bf7aab6
DL
1584names, or if your files contains @samp{\input} commands with relative
1585file names, then @code{tex-directory} @emph{must} be @code{"."} or you
1586will get the wrong results. Otherwise, it is safe to specify some other
1587directory, such as @code{"/tmp"}.
1588
1589@vindex tex-run-command
1590@vindex latex-run-command
1591@vindex slitex-run-command
1592@vindex tex-dvi-print-command
1593@vindex tex-dvi-view-command
1594@vindex tex-show-queue-command
1595 If you want to specify which shell commands are used in the inferior @TeX{},
1596you can do so by setting the values of the variables @code{tex-run-command},
1597@code{latex-run-command}, @code{slitex-run-command},
1598@code{tex-dvi-print-command}, @code{tex-dvi-view-command}, and
4d4acba2 1599@code{tex-show-queue-command}. The default values may
6bf7aab6
DL
1600(or may not) be appropriate for your system.
1601
1602 Normally, the file name given to these commands comes at the end of
1603the command string; for example, @samp{latex @var{filename}}. In some
1604cases, however, the file name needs to be embedded in the command; an
1605example is when you need to provide the file name as an argument to one
1606command whose output is piped to another. You can specify where to put
1607the file name with @samp{*} in the command string. For example,
1608
1609@example
1610(setq tex-dvi-print-command "dvips -f * | lpr")
1611@end example
1612
1613@findex tex-kill-job
1614@kindex C-c C-k @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1615@findex tex-recenter-output-buffer
1616@kindex C-c C-l @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1617 The terminal output from @TeX{}, including any error messages, appears
1618in a buffer called @samp{*tex-shell*}. If @TeX{} gets an error, you can
1619switch to this buffer and feed it input (this works as in Shell mode;
1620@pxref{Interactive Shell}). Without switching to this buffer you can
1621scroll it so that its last line is visible by typing @kbd{C-c
1622C-l}.
1623
1624 Type @kbd{C-c C-k} (@code{tex-kill-job}) to kill the @TeX{} process if
1625you see that its output is no longer useful. Using @kbd{C-c C-b} or
5f4d6585 1626@kbd{C-c C-r} also kills any @TeX{} process still running.
6bf7aab6
DL
1627
1628@findex tex-region
1629@kindex C-c C-r @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1630 You can also pass an arbitrary region through an inferior @TeX{} by typing
1631@kbd{C-c C-r} (@code{tex-region}). This is tricky, however, because most files
1632of @TeX{} input contain commands at the beginning to set parameters and
1633define macros, without which no later part of the file will format
1634correctly. To solve this problem, @kbd{C-c C-r} allows you to designate a
1635part of the file as containing essential commands; it is included before
1636the specified region as part of the input to @TeX{}. The designated part
1637of the file is called the @dfn{header}.
1638
1639@cindex header (@TeX{} mode)
1640 To indicate the bounds of the header in Plain @TeX{} mode, you insert two
1641special strings in the file. Insert @samp{%**start of header} before the
1642header, and @samp{%**end of header} after it. Each string must appear
1643entirely on one line, but there may be other text on the line before or
1644after. The lines containing the two strings are included in the header.
1645If @samp{%**start of header} does not appear within the first 100 lines of
1646the buffer, @kbd{C-c C-r} assumes that there is no header.
1647
1648 In La@TeX{} mode, the header begins with @samp{\documentclass} or
1649@samp{\documentstyle} and ends with @samp{\begin@{document@}}. These
1650are commands that La@TeX{} requires you to use in any case, so nothing
1651special needs to be done to identify the header.
1652
1653@findex tex-file
1654@kindex C-c C-f @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1655 The commands (@code{tex-buffer}) and (@code{tex-region}) do all of their
1656work in a temporary directory, and do not have available any of the auxiliary
1657files needed by @TeX{} for cross-references; these commands are generally
1658not suitable for running the final copy in which all of the cross-references
1659need to be correct.
1660
1661 When you want the auxiliary files for cross references, use @kbd{C-c
1662C-f} (@code{tex-file}) which runs @TeX{} on the current buffer's file,
1663in that file's directory. Before running @TeX{}, it offers to save any
1664modified buffers. Generally, you need to use (@code{tex-file}) twice to
1665get the cross-references right.
1666
ca5c586c
RS
1667@vindex tex-start-options
1668 The value of the variable @code{tex-start-options} specifies
1669options for the @TeX{} run.
1670
1671@vindex tex-start-commands
1672 The value of the variable @code{tex-start-commands} specifies @TeX{}
1673commands for starting @TeX{}. The default value causes @TeX{} to run
1674in nonstop mode. To run @TeX{} interactively, set the variable to
1675@code{""}.
6bf7aab6
DL
1676
1677@vindex tex-main-file
1678 Large @TeX{} documents are often split into several files---one main
1679file, plus subfiles. Running @TeX{} on a subfile typically does not
1680work; you have to run it on the main file. In order to make
1681@code{tex-file} useful when you are editing a subfile, you can set the
1682variable @code{tex-main-file} to the name of the main file. Then
1683@code{tex-file} runs @TeX{} on that file.
1684
1685 The most convenient way to use @code{tex-main-file} is to specify it
1686in a local variable list in each of the subfiles. @xref{File
1687Variables}.
1688
1689@findex tex-bibtex-file
1690@kindex C-c TAB @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1691@vindex tex-bibtex-command
1692 For La@TeX{} files, you can use Bib@TeX{} to process the auxiliary
1693file for the current buffer's file. Bib@TeX{} looks up bibliographic
1694citations in a data base and prepares the cited references for the
ee6c21a7 1695bibliography section. The command @kbd{C-c @key{TAB}}
6bf7aab6
DL
1696(@code{tex-bibtex-file}) runs the shell command
1697(@code{tex-bibtex-command}) to produce a @samp{.bbl} file for the
1698current buffer's file. Generally, you need to do @kbd{C-c C-f}
1699(@code{tex-file}) once to generate the @samp{.aux} file, then do
ee6c21a7 1700@kbd{C-c @key{TAB}} (@code{tex-bibtex-file}), and then repeat @kbd{C-c C-f}
6bf7aab6
DL
1701(@code{tex-file}) twice more to get the cross-references correct.
1702
f88761e2
RS
1703@findex tex-compile
1704@kindex C-c C-c @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1705 To invoke some other compilation program on the current @TeX{}
1706buffer, type @kbd{C-c C-c} (@code{tex-compile}). This command knows
1707how to pass arguments to many common programs, including
1708@file{pdflatex}, @file{yap}, @file{xdvi}, and @file{dvips}. You can
1709select your desired compilation program using the standard completion
1710keys (@pxref{Completion}).
1711
2e6d3a80
RS
1712@node TeX Misc
1713@subsection @TeX{} Mode Miscellany
1714
1715@vindex tex-shell-hook
1716@vindex tex-mode-hook
1717@vindex latex-mode-hook
1718@vindex slitex-mode-hook
1719@vindex plain-tex-mode-hook
1720 Entering any variant of @TeX{} mode runs the hooks
1721@code{text-mode-hook} and @code{tex-mode-hook}. Then it runs either
1722@code{plain-tex-mode-hook}, @code{latex-mode-hook}, or
1723@code{slitex-mode-hook}, whichever is appropriate. Starting the
1724@TeX{} shell runs the hook @code{tex-shell-hook}. @xref{Hooks}.
1725
1726@findex iso-iso2tex
1727@findex iso-tex2iso
1728@findex iso-iso2gtex
1729@findex iso-gtex2iso
1730@cindex Latin-1 @TeX{} encoding
304c3173 1731@cindex @TeX{} encoding
2e6d3a80
RS
1732 The commands @kbd{M-x iso-iso2tex}, @kbd{M-x iso-tex2iso}, @kbd{M-x
1733iso-iso2gtex} and @kbd{M-x iso-gtex2iso} can be used to convert
1734between Latin-1 encoded files and @TeX{}-encoded equivalents.
1735@ignore
1736@c Too cryptic to be useful, too cryptic for me to make it better -- rms.
1737 They
1738are included by default in the @code{format-alist} variable, so they
1739can be used with @kbd{M-x format-find-file}, for instance.
1740@end ignore
1741
1742@ignore @c Not worth documenting if it is only for Czech -- rms.
1743@findex tildify-buffer
1744@findex tildify-region
1745@cindex ties, @TeX{}, inserting
1746@cindex hard spaces, @TeX{}, inserting
2e6d3a80
RS
1747 The commands @kbd{M-x tildify-buffer} and @kbd{M-x tildify-region}
1748insert @samp{~} (@dfn{tie}) characters where they are conventionally
1749required. This is set up for Czech---customize the group
1750@samp{tildify} for other languages or for other sorts of markup.
1751@end ignore
1752
1753@cindex Ref@TeX{} package
1754@cindex references, La@TeX{}
1755@cindex La@TeX{} references
1756 For managing all kinds of references for La@TeX{}, you can use
304c3173 1757Ref@TeX{}. @inforef{Top,, reftex}.
2e6d3a80 1758
0fa5497c 1759@node HTML Mode
fcd5c9aa 1760@section SGML, XML, and HTML Modes
0fa5497c
RS
1761
1762 The major modes for SGML and HTML include indentation support and
1763commands to operate on tags. This section describes the special
1764commands of these modes. (HTML mode is a slightly customized variant
1765of SGML mode.)
1766
1767@table @kbd
1768@item C-c C-n
1769@kindex C-c C-n @r{(SGML mode)}
1770@findex sgml-name-char
1771Interactively specify a special character and insert the SGML
1772@samp{&}-command for that character.
1773
1774@item C-c C-t
1775@kindex C-c C-t @r{(SGML mode)}
1776@findex sgml-tag
1777Interactively specify a tag and its attributes (@code{sgml-tag}).
1778This command asks you for a tag name and for the attribute values,
1779then inserts both the opening tag and the closing tag, leaving point
1780between them.
1781
1782With a prefix argument @var{n}, the command puts the tag around the
1783@var{n} words already present in the buffer after point. With
1784@minus{}1 as argument, it puts the tag around the region. (In
1785Transient Mark mode, it does this whenever a region is active.)
1786
1787@item C-c C-a
1788@kindex C-c C-a @r{(SGML mode)}
1789@findex sgml-attributes
1790Interactively insert attribute values for the current tag
1791(@code{sgml-attributes}).
1792
1793@item C-c C-f
1794@kindex C-c C-f @r{(SGML mode)}
1795@findex sgml-skip-tag-forward
1796Skip across a balanced tag group (which extends from an opening tag
1797through its corresponding closing tag) (@code{sgml-skip-tag-forward}).
1798A numeric argument acts as a repeat count.
1799
1800@item C-c C-b
1801@kindex C-c C-b @r{(SGML mode)}
1802@findex sgml-skip-tag-backward
1803Skip backward across a balanced tag group (which extends from an
1804opening tag through its corresponding closing tag)
1805(@code{sgml-skip-tag-forward}). A numeric argument acts as a repeat
1806count.
1807
1808@item C-c C-d
1809@kindex C-c C-d @r{(SGML mode)}
1810@findex sgml-delete-tag
1811Delete the tag at or after point, and delete the matching tag too
1812(@code{sgml-delete-tag}). If the tag at or after point is an opening
1813tag, delete the closing tag too; if it is a closing tag, delete the
1814opening tag too.
1815
1816@item C-c ? @var{tag} @key{RET}
1817@kindex C-c ? @r{(SGML mode)}
1818@findex sgml-tag-help
1819Display a description of the meaning of tag @var{tag}
1820(@code{sgml-tag-help}). If the argument @var{tag} is empty, describe
1821the tag at point.
1822
1823@item C-c /
1824@kindex C-c / @r{(SGML mode)}
1825@findex sgml-close-tag
fcd5c9aa
SM
1826Insert a close tag for the innermost unterminated tag
1827(@code{sgml-close-tag}). If called from within a tag or a comment,
1828close this element instead of inserting a close tag.
0fa5497c
RS
1829
1830@item C-c 8
1831@kindex C-c 8 @r{(SGML mode)}
1832@findex sgml-name-8bit-mode
1833Toggle a minor mode in which Latin-1 characters insert the
1834corresponding SGML commands that stand for them, instead of the
1835characters themselves (@code{sgml-name-8bit-mode}).
1836
1837@item C-c C-v
1838@kindex C-c C-v @r{(SGML mode)}
1839@findex sgml-validate
1840Run a shell command (which you must specify) to validate the current
1841buffer as SGML (@code{sgml-validate}).
0fa5497c 1842
fcd5c9aa
SM
1843@item C-x TAB
1844@kindex C-c TAB @r{(SGML mode)}
1845@findex sgml-tags-invisible
1846Toggle the visibility of existing tags in the buffer. This can be
1847used as a cheap preview.
740fd9d8 1848@end table
fcd5c9aa 1849
0fa5497c
RS
1850@vindex sgml-xml-mode
1851 SGML mode and HTML mode support XML also. In XML, every opening tag
1852must have an explicit closing tag. When @code{sgml-xml-mode} is
5f4d6585 1853non-@code{nil}, SGML mode and HTML mode always insert explicit
0fa5497c
RS
1854closing tags. When you visit a file, these modes determine from the
1855file contents whether it is XML or not, and set @code{sgml-xml-mode}
fcd5c9aa 1856accordingly, so that they do the right thing for the file in either
0fa5497c
RS
1857case.
1858
6bf7aab6
DL
1859@node Nroff Mode
1860@section Nroff Mode
1861
1862@cindex nroff
1863@findex nroff-mode
1864 Nroff mode is a mode like Text mode but modified to handle nroff commands
1865present in the text. Invoke @kbd{M-x nroff-mode} to enter this mode. It
1866differs from Text mode in only a few ways. All nroff command lines are
1867considered paragraph separators, so that filling will never garble the
1868nroff commands. Pages are separated by @samp{.bp} commands. Comments
1869start with backslash-doublequote. Also, three special commands are
1870provided that are not in Text mode:
1871
1872@findex forward-text-line
1873@findex backward-text-line
1874@findex count-text-lines
1875@kindex M-n @r{(Nroff mode)}
1876@kindex M-p @r{(Nroff mode)}
1877@kindex M-? @r{(Nroff mode)}
1878@table @kbd
1879@item M-n
1880Move to the beginning of the next line that isn't an nroff command
1881(@code{forward-text-line}). An argument is a repeat count.
1882@item M-p
1883Like @kbd{M-n} but move up (@code{backward-text-line}).
1884@item M-?
1ba2ce68 1885Displays in the echo area the number of text lines (lines that are not
6bf7aab6
DL
1886nroff commands) in the region (@code{count-text-lines}).
1887@end table
1888
1889@findex electric-nroff-mode
1890 The other feature of Nroff mode is that you can turn on Electric Nroff
1891mode. This is a minor mode that you can turn on or off with @kbd{M-x
1892electric-nroff-mode} (@pxref{Minor Modes}). When the mode is on, each
1893time you use @key{RET} to end a line that contains an nroff command that
1894opens a kind of grouping, the matching nroff command to close that
1895grouping is automatically inserted on the following line. For example,
1896if you are at the beginning of a line and type @kbd{.@: ( b @key{RET}},
1897this inserts the matching command @samp{.)b} on a new line following
1898point.
1899
1900 If you use Outline minor mode with Nroff mode (@pxref{Outline Mode}),
1901heading lines are lines of the form @samp{.H} followed by a number (the
1902header level).
1903
1904@vindex nroff-mode-hook
1905 Entering Nroff mode runs the hook @code{text-mode-hook}, followed by
1906the hook @code{nroff-mode-hook} (@pxref{Hooks}).
1907
1908@node Formatted Text
1909@section Editing Formatted Text
1910
1911@cindex Enriched mode
1912@cindex mode, Enriched
1913@cindex formatted text
1914@cindex WYSIWYG
1915@cindex word processing
1916 @dfn{Enriched mode} is a minor mode for editing files that contain
1917formatted text in WYSIWYG fashion, as in a word processor. Currently,
1918formatted text in Enriched mode can specify fonts, colors, underlining,
1919margins, and types of filling and justification. In the future, we plan
1920to implement other formatting features as well.
1921
b2683503
RS
1922 Enriched mode is a minor mode (@pxref{Minor Modes}). It is
1923typically used in conjunction with Text mode (@pxref{Text Mode}), but
1924you can also use it with other major modes such as Outline mode and
6bf7aab6
DL
1925Paragraph-Indent Text mode.
1926
ef940469 1927@cindex text/enriched MIME format
6bf7aab6
DL
1928 Potentially, Emacs can store formatted text files in various file
1929formats. Currently, only one format is implemented: @dfn{text/enriched}
1930format, which is defined by the MIME protocol. @xref{Format
1931Conversion,, Format Conversion, elisp, the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual},
1932for details of how Emacs recognizes and converts file formats.
1933
1934 The Emacs distribution contains a formatted text file that can serve as
1935an example. Its name is @file{etc/enriched.doc}. It contains samples
1936illustrating all the features described in this section. It also
1937contains a list of ideas for future enhancements.
1938
1939@menu
1940* Requesting Formatted Text:: Entering and exiting Enriched mode.
1941* Hard and Soft Newlines:: There are two different kinds of newlines.
1942* Editing Format Info:: How to edit text properties.
1943* Faces: Format Faces. Bold, italic, underline, etc.
1944* Color: Format Colors. Changing the color of text.
1945* Indent: Format Indentation. Changing the left and right margins.
1946* Justification: Format Justification.
177c0ea7 1947 Centering, setting text flush with the
6bf7aab6
DL
1948 left or right margin, etc.
1949* Other: Format Properties. The "special" text properties submenu.
1950* Forcing Enriched Mode:: How to force use of Enriched mode.
1951@end menu
1952
1953@node Requesting Formatted Text
1954@subsection Requesting to Edit Formatted Text
1955
ca5c586c
RS
1956 Whenever you visit a file that Emacs saved in the text/enriched
1957format, Emacs automatically converts the formatting information in the
1958file into Emacs's own internal format (known as @dfn{text
1959properties}), and turns on Enriched mode.
6bf7aab6
DL
1960
1961@findex enriched-mode
1962 To create a new file of formatted text, first visit the nonexistent
1963file, then type @kbd{M-x enriched-mode} before you start inserting text.
1964This command turns on Enriched mode. Do this before you begin inserting
1965text, to ensure that the text you insert is handled properly.
1966
1967 More generally, the command @code{enriched-mode} turns Enriched mode
1968on if it was off, and off if it was on. With a prefix argument, this
1969command turns Enriched mode on if the argument is positive, and turns
1970the mode off otherwise.
1971
1972 When you save a buffer while Enriched mode is enabled in it, Emacs
1973automatically converts the text to text/enriched format while writing it
1974into the file. When you visit the file again, Emacs will automatically
1975recognize the format, reconvert the text, and turn on Enriched mode
1976again.
1977
6bf7aab6
DL
1978@vindex enriched-translations
1979 You can add annotations for saving additional text properties, which
1980Emacs normally does not save, by adding to @code{enriched-translations}.
1981Note that the text/enriched standard requires any non-standard
1982annotations to have names starting with @samp{x-}, as in
1983@samp{x-read-only}. This ensures that they will not conflict with
1984standard annotations that may be added later.
1985
ca5c586c
RS
1986 @xref{Text Properties,,, elisp, the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual},
1987for more information about text properties.
1988
6bf7aab6
DL
1989@node Hard and Soft Newlines
1990@subsection Hard and Soft Newlines
1991@cindex hard newline
1992@cindex soft newline
1993@cindex newlines, hard and soft
1994
3a55fb34 1995@cindex use-hard-newlines
6bf7aab6 1996 In formatted text, Emacs distinguishes between two different kinds of
3a55fb34
RS
1997newlines, @dfn{hard} newlines and @dfn{soft} newlines. (You can enable
1998or disable this feature separately in any buffer with the command
1999@code{use-hard-newlines}.)
6bf7aab6
DL
2000
2001 Hard newlines are used to separate paragraphs, or items in a list, or
2002anywhere that there should always be a line break regardless of the
2003margins. The @key{RET} command (@code{newline}) and @kbd{C-o}
2004(@code{open-line}) insert hard newlines.
2005
2006 Soft newlines are used to make text fit between the margins. All the
2007fill commands, including Auto Fill, insert soft newlines---and they
2008delete only soft newlines.
2009
2010 Although hard and soft newlines look the same, it is important to bear
2011the difference in mind. Do not use @key{RET} to break lines in the
2012middle of filled paragraphs, or else you will get hard newlines that are
2013barriers to further filling. Instead, let Auto Fill mode break lines,
2014so that if the text or the margins change, Emacs can refill the lines
2015properly. @xref{Auto Fill}.
2016
2017 On the other hand, in tables and lists, where the lines should always
2018remain as you type them, you can use @key{RET} to end lines. For these
2019lines, you may also want to set the justification style to
2020@code{unfilled}. @xref{Format Justification}.
2021
2022@node Editing Format Info
2023@subsection Editing Format Information
2024
2025 There are two ways to alter the formatting information for a formatted
2026text file: with keyboard commands, and with the mouse.
2027
62aa2563 2028 The easiest way to add properties to your document is with the Text
6bf7aab6 2029Properties menu. You can get to this menu in two ways: from the Edit
9bfaa84d
RS
2030menu in the menu bar (use @kbd{@key{F10} e t} if you have no mouse),
2031or with @kbd{C-Mouse-2} (hold the @key{CTRL} key and press the middle
2032mouse button). There are also keyboard commands described in the
2033following section.
6bf7aab6
DL
2034
2035 Most of the items in the Text Properties menu lead to other submenus.
2036These are described in the sections that follow. Some items run
2037commands directly:
2038
2039@table @code
b1b4f768
RS
2040@findex facemenu-remove-face-props
2041@item Remove Face Properties
304c3173
LT
2042Delete from the region all face and color text properties
2043(@code{facemenu-remove-face-props}).
6bf7aab6
DL
2044
2045@findex facemenu-remove-all
304c3173 2046@item Remove Text Properties
6bf7aab6
DL
2047Delete @emph{all} text properties from the region
2048(@code{facemenu-remove-all}).
2049
304c3173 2050@findex describe-text-properties
d4f6b304
EZ
2051@cindex text properties of characters
2052@cindex overlays at character position
2053@cindex widgets at buffer position
2054@cindex buttons at buffer position
304c3173 2055@item Describe Properties
d4f6b304 2056List all the text properties, widgets, buttons, and overlays of the
304c3173 2057character following point (@code{describe-text-properties}).
6bf7aab6
DL
2058
2059@item Display Faces
b1b4f768 2060Display a list of all the defined faces (@code{list-faces-display}).
6bf7aab6
DL
2061
2062@item Display Colors
b1b4f768 2063Display a list of all the defined colors (@code{list-colors-display}).
6bf7aab6 2064@end table
d4f6b304 2065
6bf7aab6
DL
2066@node Format Faces
2067@subsection Faces in Formatted Text
2068
2069 The Faces submenu lists various Emacs faces including @code{bold},
2070@code{italic}, and @code{underline}. Selecting one of these adds the
2071chosen face to the region. @xref{Faces}. You can also specify a face
2072with these keyboard commands:
2073
2074@table @kbd
b91cc27c 2075@kindex M-o d @r{(Enriched mode)}
6bf7aab6 2076@findex facemenu-set-default
b91cc27c 2077@item M-o d
6bf7aab6
DL
2078Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the @code{default} face
2079(@code{facemenu-set-default}).
b91cc27c 2080@kindex M-o b @r{(Enriched mode)}
6bf7aab6 2081@findex facemenu-set-bold
b91cc27c 2082@item M-o b
6bf7aab6
DL
2083Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the @code{bold} face
2084(@code{facemenu-set-bold}).
b91cc27c 2085@kindex M-o i @r{(Enriched mode)}
6bf7aab6 2086@findex facemenu-set-italic
b91cc27c 2087@item M-o i
6bf7aab6
DL
2088Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the @code{italic} face
2089(@code{facemenu-set-italic}).
b91cc27c 2090@kindex M-o l @r{(Enriched mode)}
6bf7aab6 2091@findex facemenu-set-bold-italic
b91cc27c 2092@item M-o l
6bf7aab6
DL
2093Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the @code{bold-italic} face
2094(@code{facemenu-set-bold-italic}).
b91cc27c 2095@kindex M-o u @r{(Enriched mode)}
6bf7aab6 2096@findex facemenu-set-underline
b91cc27c 2097@item M-o u
6bf7aab6
DL
2098Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the @code{underline} face
2099(@code{facemenu-set-underline}).
b91cc27c 2100@kindex M-o o @r{(Enriched mode)}
6bf7aab6 2101@findex facemenu-set-face
b91cc27c 2102@item M-o o @var{face} @key{RET}
6bf7aab6
DL
2103Set the region, or the next inserted character, to the face @var{face}
2104(@code{facemenu-set-face}).
2105@end table
2106
2107 If you use these commands with a prefix argument---or, in Transient Mark
2108mode, if the region is not active---then these commands specify a face
304c3173
LT
2109to use for any immediately following self-inserting input.
2110@xref{Transient Mark}. This applies to both the keyboard commands and
2111the menu commands.
2112
2113 Specifying the @code{default} face also resets foreground and
2114background color to their defaults.(@pxref{Format Colors}).
2115
2116 Any self-inserting character you type inherits, by default, the face
2117properties (as well as most other text properties) of the preceding
2118character. Specifying any face property, including foreground or
2119background color, for your next self-inserting character will prevent
2120it from inheriting any face properties from the preceding character,
2121although it will still inherit other text properties. Characters
2122inserted by yanking do not inherit text properties.
6bf7aab6
DL
2123
2124 Enriched mode defines two additional faces: @code{excerpt} and
2125@code{fixed}. These correspond to codes used in the text/enriched file
2126format.
2127
2128 The @code{excerpt} face is intended for quotations. This face is the
2129same as @code{italic} unless you customize it (@pxref{Face Customization}).
2130
83eceec0 2131 The @code{fixed} face means, ``Use a fixed-width font for this part
304c3173
LT
2132of the text.'' Applying the @code{fixed} face to a part of the text
2133will cause that part of the text to appear in a fixed-width font, even
2134if the default font is variable-width. This applies to Emacs and to
2135other systems that display text/enriched format. So if you
2136specifically want a certain part of the text to use a fixed-width
2137font, you should specify the @code{fixed} face for that part.
2138
2139 By default, the @code{fixed} face looks the same as @code{bold}.
2140This is an attempt to distinguish it from @code{default}. You may
2141wish to customize @code{fixed} to some other fixed-width medium font.
2142@xref{Face Customization}.
6bf7aab6 2143
83eceec0
RS
2144 If your terminal cannot display different faces, you will not be
2145able to see them, but you can still edit documents containing faces,
2146and even add faces and colors to documents. The faces you specify
2147will be visible when the file is viewed on a terminal that can display
2148them.
6bf7aab6
DL
2149
2150@node Format Colors
2151@subsection Colors in Formatted Text
2152
2153 You can specify foreground and background colors for portions of the
2154text. There is a menu for specifying the foreground color and a menu
2155for specifying the background color. Each color menu lists all the
2156colors that you have used in Enriched mode in the current Emacs session.
2157
304c3173
LT
2158 If you specify a color with a prefix argument---or, in Transient
2159Mark mode, if the region is not active---then it applies to any
2160immediately following self-inserting input. @xref{Transient Mark}.
2161Otherwise, the command applies to the region.
6bf7aab6
DL
2162
2163 Each color menu contains one additional item: @samp{Other}. You can use
2164this item to specify a color that is not listed in the menu; it reads
304c3173 2165the color name with the minibuffer. To display a list of available colors
6bf7aab6
DL
2166and their names, use the @samp{Display Colors} menu item in the Text
2167Properties menu (@pxref{Editing Format Info}).
2168
2169 Any color that you specify in this way, or that is mentioned in a
304c3173
LT
2170formatted text file that you read in, is added to the corresponding
2171color menu for the duration of the Emacs session.
6bf7aab6
DL
2172
2173@findex facemenu-set-foreground
2174@findex facemenu-set-background
2175 There are no key bindings for specifying colors, but you can do so
2176with the extended commands @kbd{M-x facemenu-set-foreground} and
2177@kbd{M-x facemenu-set-background}. Both of these commands read the name
2178of the color with the minibuffer.
2179
2180@node Format Indentation
2181@subsection Indentation in Formatted Text
2182
2183 When editing formatted text, you can specify different amounts of
2184indentation for the right or left margin of an entire paragraph or a
2185part of a paragraph. The margins you specify automatically affect the
2186Emacs fill commands (@pxref{Filling}) and line-breaking commands.
2187
2188 The Indentation submenu provides a convenient interface for specifying
2189these properties. The submenu contains four items:
2190
2191@table @code
2192@kindex C-x TAB @r{(Enriched mode)}
2193@findex increase-left-margin
2194@item Indent More
2195Indent the region by 4 columns (@code{increase-left-margin}). In
2196Enriched mode, this command is also available on @kbd{C-x @key{TAB}}; if
2197you supply a numeric argument, that says how many columns to add to the
2198margin (a negative argument reduces the number of columns).
2199
2200@item Indent Less
2201Remove 4 columns of indentation from the region.
2202
2203@item Indent Right More
2204Make the text narrower by indenting 4 columns at the right margin.
2205
2206@item Indent Right Less
2207Remove 4 columns of indentation from the right margin.
2208@end table
2209
2210 You can use these commands repeatedly to increase or decrease the
2211indentation.
2212
304c3173
LT
2213 The most common way to use them is to change the indentation of an
2214entire paragraph. For other uses, the effects of refilling can be
2215hard to predict, except in some special cases like the one described
2216next.
6bf7aab6 2217
304c3173
LT
2218 The most common other use is to format paragraphs with @dfn{hanging
2219indents}, which means that the first line is indented less than
2220subsequent lines. To set up a hanging indent, increase the
2221indentation of the region starting after the first word of the
2222paragraph and running until the end of the paragraph.
6bf7aab6
DL
2223
2224 Indenting the first line of a paragraph is easier. Set the margin for
2225the whole paragraph where you want it to be for the body of the
2226paragraph, then indent the first line by inserting extra spaces or tabs.
2227
6bf7aab6
DL
2228@vindex standard-indent
2229 The variable @code{standard-indent} specifies how many columns these
2230commands should add to or subtract from the indentation. The default
2231value is 4. The overall default right margin for Enriched mode is
2232controlled by the variable @code{fill-column}, as usual.
2233
304c3173
LT
2234@kindex C-c [ @r{(Enriched mode)}
2235@kindex C-c ] @r{(Enriched mode)}
2236@findex set-left-margin
2237@findex set-right-margin
2238 There are also two commands for setting the left or right margin of
2239the region absolutely: @code{set-left-margin} and
2240@code{set-right-margin}. Enriched mode binds these commands to
2241@kbd{C-c [} and @kbd{C-c ]}, respectively. You can specify the
2242margin width either with a numeric argument or in the minibuffer.
2243
2244 Sometimes, as a result of editing, the filling of a paragraph becomes
2245messed up---parts of the paragraph may extend past the left or right
2246margins. When this happens, use @kbd{M-q} (@code{fill-paragraph}) to
2247refill the paragraph.
2248
6bf7aab6
DL
2249 The fill prefix, if any, works in addition to the specified paragraph
2250indentation: @kbd{C-x .} does not include the specified indentation's
2251whitespace in the new value for the fill prefix, and the fill commands
2252look for the fill prefix after the indentation on each line. @xref{Fill
2253Prefix}.
2254
2255@node Format Justification
2256@subsection Justification in Formatted Text
177c0ea7 2257
6bf7aab6
DL
2258 When editing formatted text, you can specify various styles of
2259justification for a paragraph. The style you specify automatically
2260affects the Emacs fill commands.
2261
2262 The Justification submenu provides a convenient interface for specifying
2263the style. The submenu contains five items:
2264
2265@table @code
304c3173 2266@item Left
6bf7aab6
DL
2267This is the most common style of justification (at least for English).
2268Lines are aligned at the left margin but left uneven at the right.
2269
304c3173 2270@item Right
6bf7aab6
DL
2271This aligns each line with the right margin. Spaces and tabs are added
2272on the left, if necessary, to make lines line up on the right.
2273
2274@item Full
2275This justifies the text, aligning both edges of each line. Justified
2276text looks very nice in a printed book, where the spaces can all be
2277adjusted equally, but it does not look as nice with a fixed-width font
2278on the screen. Perhaps a future version of Emacs will be able to adjust
2279the width of spaces in a line to achieve elegant justification.
2280
2281@item Center
2282This centers every line between the current margins.
2283
304c3173 2284@item Unfilled
6bf7aab6
DL
2285This turns off filling entirely. Each line will remain as you wrote it;
2286the fill and auto-fill functions will have no effect on text which has
2287this setting. You can, however, still indent the left margin. In
2288unfilled regions, all newlines are treated as hard newlines (@pxref{Hard
2289and Soft Newlines}) .
2290@end table
2291
2292 In Enriched mode, you can also specify justification from the keyboard
2293using the @kbd{M-j} prefix character:
2294
2295@table @kbd
2296@kindex M-j l @r{(Enriched mode)}
2297@findex set-justification-left
2298@item M-j l
2299Make the region left-filled (@code{set-justification-left}).
2300@kindex M-j r @r{(Enriched mode)}
2301@findex set-justification-right
2302@item M-j r
2303Make the region right-filled (@code{set-justification-right}).
304c3173 2304@kindex M-j b @r{(Enriched mode)}
6bf7aab6 2305@findex set-justification-full
304c3173 2306@item M-j b
4581649e 2307Make the region fully justified (@code{set-justification-full}).
6bf7aab6
DL
2308@kindex M-j c @r{(Enriched mode)}
2309@kindex M-S @r{(Enriched mode)}
2310@findex set-justification-center
2311@item M-j c
2312@itemx M-S
2313Make the region centered (@code{set-justification-center}).
2314@kindex M-j u @r{(Enriched mode)}
2315@findex set-justification-none
2316@item M-j u
2317Make the region unfilled (@code{set-justification-none}).
2318@end table
2319
2320 Justification styles apply to entire paragraphs. All the
2321justification-changing commands operate on the paragraph containing
2322point, or, if the region is active, on all paragraphs which overlap the
2323region.
2324
2325@vindex default-justification
2326 The default justification style is specified by the variable
2327@code{default-justification}. Its value should be one of the symbols
2328@code{left}, @code{right}, @code{full}, @code{center}, or @code{none}.
304c3173
LT
2329This is a per-buffer variable. Setting the variable directly affects
2330only the current buffer. However, customizing it in a Custom buffer
2331sets (as always) the default value for buffers that do not override it.
2332@xref{Locals}, and @ref{Easy Customization}.
177c0ea7 2333
6bf7aab6
DL
2334@node Format Properties
2335@subsection Setting Other Text Properties
2336
304c3173 2337 The Special Properties menu lets you add or remove three other useful text
6bf7aab6
DL
2338properties: @code{read-only}, @code{invisible} and @code{intangible}.
2339The @code{intangible} property disallows moving point within the text,
2340the @code{invisible} text property hides text from display, and the
2341@code{read-only} property disallows alteration of the text.
2342
2343 Each of these special properties has a menu item to add it to the
2344region. The last menu item, @samp{Remove Special}, removes all of these
2345special properties from the text in the region.
2346
2347 Currently, the @code{invisible} and @code{intangible} properties are
2348@emph{not} saved in the text/enriched format. The @code{read-only}
2349property is saved, but it is not a standard part of the text/enriched
2350format, so other editors may not respect it.
2351
2352@node Forcing Enriched Mode
2353@subsection Forcing Enriched Mode
2354
2355 Normally, Emacs knows when you are editing formatted text because it
2356recognizes the special annotations used in the file that you visited.
2357However, there are situations in which you must take special actions
2358to convert file contents or turn on Enriched mode:
2359
2360@itemize @bullet
2361@item
2362When you visit a file that was created with some other editor, Emacs may
2363not recognize the file as being in the text/enriched format. In this
2364case, when you visit the file you will see the formatting commands
2365rather than the formatted text. Type @kbd{M-x format-decode-buffer} to
304c3173 2366translate it. This also automatically turns on Enriched mode.
6bf7aab6
DL
2367
2368@item
304c3173 2369When you @emph{insert} a file into a buffer, rather than visiting it,
6bf7aab6
DL
2370Emacs does the necessary conversions on the text which you insert, but
2371it does not enable Enriched mode. If you wish to do that, type @kbd{M-x
2372enriched-mode}.
177c0ea7 2373@end itemize
6bf7aab6
DL
2374
2375 The command @code{format-decode-buffer} translates text in various
2376formats into Emacs's internal format. It asks you to specify the format
2377to translate from; however, normally you can type just @key{RET}, which
2378tells Emacs to guess the format.
2379
2380@findex format-find-file
304c3173 2381 If you wish to look at a text/enriched file in its raw form, as a
6bf7aab6
DL
2382sequence of characters rather than as formatted text, use the @kbd{M-x
2383find-file-literally} command. This visits a file, like
2384@code{find-file}, but does not do format conversion. It also inhibits
2385character code conversion (@pxref{Coding Systems}) and automatic
2386uncompression (@pxref{Compressed Files}). To disable format conversion
2387but allow character code conversion and/or automatic uncompression if
2388appropriate, use @code{format-find-file} with suitable arguments.
2389
6100c21d
EZ
2390@node Text Based Tables
2391@section Editing Text-based Tables
2392@cindex table mode
2393@cindex text-based tables
2394
5f4d6585 2395 Table mode provides an easy and intuitive way to create and edit WYSIWYG
6100c21d
EZ
2396text-based tables. Here is an example of such a table:
2397
2398@smallexample
2399+-----------------+--------------------------------+-----------------+
2400| Command | Description | Key Binding |
2401+-----------------+--------------------------------+-----------------+
2402| forward-char |Move point right N characters | C-f |
2403| |(left if N is negative). | |
2404| | | |
2405| |On reaching end of buffer, stop | |
2406| |and signal error. | |
2407+-----------------+--------------------------------+-----------------+
2408| backward-char |Move point left N characters | C-b |
2409| |(right if N is negative). | |
2410| | | |
2411| |On attempt to pass beginning or | |
2412| |end of buffer, stop and signal | |
2413| |error. | |
2414+-----------------+--------------------------------+-----------------+
2415@end smallexample
2416
5f4d6585 2417 Table mode allows the contents of the table such as this one to be
6100c21d
EZ
2418easily manipulated by inserting or deleting characters inside a cell.
2419A cell is effectively a localized rectangular edit region and edits to
11741689 2420a cell do not affect the contents of the surrounding cells. If the
6100c21d
EZ
2421contents do not fit into a cell, then the cell is automatically
2422expanded in the vertical and/or horizontal directions and the rest of
2423the table is restructured and reformatted in accordance with the
2424growth of the cell.
2425
2426@menu
2427* Table Definition:: What is a text based table.
2428* Table Creation:: How to create a table.
2429* Table Recognition:: How to activate and deactivate tables.
2430* Cell Commands:: Cell-oriented commands in a table.
2431* Cell Justification:: Justifying cell contents.
2432* Row Commands:: Manipulating rows of table cell.
2433* Column Commands:: Manipulating columns of table cell.
2434* Fixed Width Mode:: Fixing cell width.
2435* Table Conversion:: Converting between plain text and tables.
2436* Measuring Tables:: Analyzing table dimension.
2437* Table Misc:: Table miscellany.
2438@end menu
2439
2440@node Table Definition
2441@subsection What is a Text-based Table?
2442
5f4d6585
RS
2443 Keep the following examples of valid tables in mind as a reference
2444while you read this section:
6100c21d
EZ
2445
2446@example
2447 +--+----+---+ +-+ +--+-----+
2448 | | | | | | | | |
2449 +--+----+---+ +-+ | +--+--+
2450 | | | | | | | |
2451 +--+----+---+ +--+--+ |
2452 | | |
2453 +-----+--+
2454@end example
2455
5f4d6585
RS
2456 A table consists of a rectangular frame whose inside is divided into
2457cells. Each cell must be at least one character wide and one
2458character high, not counting its border lines. A cell can be
2459subdivided into multiple rectangular cells, but cells cannot overlap.
6100c21d 2460
5f4d6585
RS
2461 The table frame and cell border lines are made of three special
2462characters. These variables specify those characters:
6100c21d
EZ
2463
2464@table @code
2465@vindex table-cell-vertical-char
2466@item table-cell-vertical-char
2467Holds the character used for vertical lines. The default value is
2468@samp{|}.
2469
2470@vindex table-cell-horizontal-char
2471@item table-cell-horizontal-char
2472Holds the character used for horizontal lines. The default value is
2473@samp{-}.
2474
2475@vindex table-cell-intersection-char
2476@item table-cell-intersection-char
2477Holds the character used at where horizontal line and vertical line
2478meet. The default value is @samp{+}.
2479@end table
2480
2481@noindent
2482Based on this definition, the following five tables are examples of invalid
2483tables:
2484
2485@example
2486 +-----+ +-----+ +--+ +-++--+ ++
2487 | | | | | | | || | ++
2488 | +-+ | | | | | | || |
2489 | | | | +--+ | +--+--+ +-++--+
2490 | +-+ | | | | | | | +-++--+
2491 | | | | | | | | | || |
2492 +-----+ +--+--+ +--+--+ +-++--+
2493 a b c d e
2494@end example
2495
2496From left to right:
2497
2498@enumerate a
2499@item
11741689 2500Overlapped cells or non-rectangular cells are not allowed.
6100c21d 2501@item
5f4d6585
RS
2502Same as a.
2503@item
11741689 2504The border must be rectangular.
6100c21d
EZ
2505@item
2506Cells must have a minimum width/height of one character.
2507@item
2508Same as d.
2509@end enumerate
2510
2511@node Table Creation
2512@subsection How to Create a Table?
2513@cindex create a text-based table
2514@cindex table creation
2515
2516@findex table-insert
2517 The command to create a table is @code{table-insert}. When called
2518interactively, it asks for the number of columns, number of rows, cell
5f4d6585
RS
2519width and cell height. The number of columns is the number of cells
2520horizontally side by side. The number of rows is the number of cells
2521vertically within the table's height. The cell width is a number of
2522characters that each cell holds, left to right. The cell height is a
2523number of lines each cell holds. The cell width and the cell height
2524can be either an integer (when the value is constant across the table)
2525or a series of integer, separated by spaces or commas, where each
2526number corresponds to the next cell within a row from left to right,
2527or the next cell within a column from top to bottom.
6100c21d
EZ
2528
2529@node Table Recognition
2530@subsection Table Recognition
2531@cindex table recognition
2532
2533@findex table-recognize
2534@findex table-unrecognize
5f4d6585 2535 Table mode maintains special text properties in the buffer to allow
6100c21d
EZ
2536editing in a convenient fashion. When a buffer with tables is saved
2537to its file, these text properties are lost, so when you visit this
2538file again later, Emacs does not see a table, but just formatted text.
2539To resurrect the table text properties, issue the @kbd{M-x
2540table-recognize} command. It scans the current buffer, recognizes
2541valid table cells, and attaches appropriate text properties to allow
2542for table editing. The converse command, @code{table-unrecognize}, is
5f4d6585 2543used to remove the special text properties and convert the buffer back
6100c21d
EZ
2544to plain text.
2545
5f4d6585 2546 Special commands exist to enable or disable tables within a region,
6100c21d
EZ
2547enable or disable individual tables, and enable/disable individual
2548cells. These commands are:
2549
2550@table @kbd
2551@findex table-recognize-region
2552@item M-x table-recognize-region
2553Recognize tables within the current region and activate them.
2554@findex table-unrecognize-region
2555@item M-x table-unrecognize-region
2556Deactivate tables within the current region.
2557@findex table-recognize-table
2558@item M-x table-recognize-table
2559Recognize the table under point and activate it.
2560@findex table-unrecognize-table
2561@item M-x table-unrecognize-table
2562Deactivate the table under point.
2563@findex table-recognize-cell
2564@item M-x table-recognize-cell
2565Recognize the cell under point and activate it.
2566@findex table-unrecognize-cell
2567@item M-x table-unrecognize-cell
2568Deactivate the cell under point.
2569@end table
2570
2571 For another way of converting text into tables, see @ref{Table
2572Conversion}.
2573
2574@node Cell Commands
2575@subsection Commands for Table Cells
2576
2577@findex table-forward-cell
2578@findex table-backward-cell
2579 The commands @code{table-forward-cell} and
2580@code{table-backward-cell} move point from the current cell to an
2581adjacent cell forward and backward respectively. The order of the
5f4d6585
RS
2582cells is cyclic: when point is in the last cell of a table, typing
2583@kbd{M-x table-forward-cell} moves to the first cell in the table.
2584Likewise @kbd{M-x table-backward-cell} from the first cell in a table
2585moves to the last cell.
6100c21d
EZ
2586
2587@findex table-span-cell
401b2885
RS
2588 The command @code{table-span-cell} merges the current cell with the
2589adjacent cell in a specified direction---right, left, above or below.
2590You specify the direction with the minibuffer. It does not allow
2591merges which don't result in a legitimate cell layout.
6100c21d
EZ
2592
2593@findex table-split-cell
2594@cindex text-based tables, split a cell
2595@cindex split table cell
2596 The command @code{table-split-cell} splits the current cell
2597vertically or horizontally. This command is a wrapper to the
2598direction specific commands @code{table-split-cell-vertically} and
401b2885
RS
2599@code{table-split-cell-horizontally}. You specify the direction with
2600a minibuffer argument.
6100c21d
EZ
2601
2602@findex table-split-cell-vertically
2603 The command @code{table-split-cell-vertically} splits the current
2604cell vertically and creates a pair of cells above and below where
2605point is located. The content in the original cell is split as well.
2606
2607@findex table-split-cell-horizontally
2608 The command @code{table-split-cell-horizontally} splits the current
2609cell horizontally and creates a pair of cells right and left of where
5f4d6585
RS
2610point is located. If the cell being split is not empty, this asks you
2611how to handle the cell contents. The three options are: @code{split},
2612@code{left}, or @code{right}. @code{split} splits the contents at
2613point literally, while the @code{left} and @code{right} options move
2614the entire contents into the left or right cell respectively.
6100c21d
EZ
2615
2616@cindex enlarge a table cell
2617@cindex shrink a table cell
5f4d6585
RS
2618 The next four commands enlarge or shrink a cell. They use numeric
2619arguments (@pxref{Arguments}) to specify how many columns or rows to
2620enlarge or shrink a particular table.
6100c21d
EZ
2621
2622@table @kbd
2623@findex table-heighten-cell
2624@item M-x table-heighten-cell
2625Enlarge the current cell vertically.
2626@findex table-shorten-cell
2627@item M-x table-shorten-cell
2628Shrink the current cell vertically.
2629@findex table-widen-cell
2630@item M-x table-widen-cell
2631Enlarge the current cell horizontally.
2632@findex table-narrow-cell
2633@item M-x table-narrow-cell
2634Shrink the current cell horizontally.
2635@end table
2636
2637@node Cell Justification
2638@subsection Cell Justification
2639@cindex cell text justification
2640
2641 You can specify text justification for each cell. The justification
2642is remembered independently for each cell and the subsequent editing
2643of cell contents is subject to the specified justification.
2644
2645@findex table-justify
5f4d6585
RS
2646 The command @code{table-justify} ask you to specify what to justify:
2647a cell, a column, or a row. If you select cell justification, this
2648command sets the justification only for the current cell. Selecting
2649column or row justification sets the justification for all the cells
2650within a column or row respectively. The command then ask you which
2651kind of justification to apply: @code{left}, @code{center},
2652@code{right}, @code{top}, @code{middle}, @code{bottom}, or
2653@code{none}. Horizontal justification and vertical justification are
2654specified independently. The options @code{left}, @code{center}, and
6100c21d
EZ
2655@code{right} specify horizontal justification while the options
2656@code{top}, @code{middle}, @code{bottom}, and @code{none} specify
2657vertical justification. The vertical justification @code{none}
5f4d6585
RS
2658effectively removes vertical justification. Horizontal justification
2659must be one of @code{left}, @code{center}, or @code{right}.
6100c21d
EZ
2660
2661@vindex table-detect-cell-alignment
2662 Justification information is stored in the buffer as a part of text
2663property. Therefore, this information is ephemeral and does not
2664survive through the loss of the buffer (closing the buffer and
2665revisiting the buffer erase any previous text properties). To
2666countermand for this, the command @code{table-recognize} and other
2667recognition commands (@pxref{Table Recognition}) are equipped with a
2668convenience feature (turned on by default). During table recognition,
2669the contents of a cell are examined to determine which justification
2670was originally applied to the cell and then applies this justification
4079cf9f 2671to the cell. This is a speculative algorithm and is therefore not
6100c21d 2672perfect, however, the justification is deduced correctly most of the
5f4d6585
RS
2673time. To disable this feature, customize the variable
2674@code{table-detect-cell-alignment} and set it to @code{nil}.
6100c21d
EZ
2675
2676@node Row Commands
2677@subsection Commands for Table Rows
2678@cindex table row commands
2679
2680@cindex insert row in table
2681@findex table-insert-row
2682 The command @code{table-insert-row} inserts a row of cells before
2683the current row in a table. The current row where point is located is
2684pushed down after the newly inserted row. A numeric prefix argument
2685specifies the number of rows to insert. Note that in order to insert
2686rows @emph{after} the last row at the bottom of a table, you must
5f4d6585 2687place point below the table---that is, outside the table---prior to
6100c21d
EZ
2688invoking this command.
2689
2690@cindex delete row in table
2691@findex table-delete-row
2692 The command @code{table-delete-row} deletes a row of cells at point.
2693A numeric prefix argument specifies the number of rows to delete.
2694
2695@node Column Commands
2696@subsection Commands for Table Columns
2697@cindex table column commands
2698
2699@cindex insert column in table
2700@findex table-insert-column
2701 The command @code{table-insert-column} inserts a column of cells to
5f4d6585
RS
2702the left of the current row in a table. This pushes the current
2703column to the right. To insert a column to the right side of the
2704rightmost column, place point to the right of the rightmost column,
2705which is outside of the table, prior to invoking this command. A
2706numeric prefix argument specifies the number of columns to insert.
6100c21d
EZ
2707
2708@cindex delete column in table
2709 A command @code{table-delete-column} deletes a column of cells at
2710point. A numeric prefix argument specifies the number of columns to
2711delete.
2712
2713@node Fixed Width Mode
2714@subsection Fix Width of Cells
2715@cindex fix width of table cells
2716
2717@findex table-fixed-width-mode
2718 The command @code{table-fixed-width-mode} toggles fixed width mode
5f4d6585 2719on and off. When fixed width mode is turned on, editing inside a
6100c21d
EZ
2720cell never changes the cell width; when it is off, the cell width
2721expands automatically in order to prevent a word from being folded
5f4d6585 2722into multiple lines. By default, fixed width mode is disabled.
6100c21d
EZ
2723
2724@node Table Conversion
2725@subsection Conversion Between Plain Text and Tables
2726@cindex text to table
2727@cindex table to text
2728
2729@findex table-capture
2730 The command @code{table-capture} captures plain text in a region and
2731turns it into a table. Unlike @code{table-recognize} (@pxref{Table
2732Recognition}), the original text does not have a table appearance but
2733may hold a logical table structure. For example, some elements
2734separated by known patterns form a two dimensional structure which can
5f4d6585
RS
2735be turned into a table.
2736
2737 Here's an example of data that @code{table-capture} can operate on.
2738The numbers are horizontally separated by a comma and vertically
2739separated by a newline character.
6100c21d
EZ
2740
2741@example
27421, 2, 3, 4
27435, 6, 7, 8
2744, 9, 10
2745@end example
2746
2747@noindent
5f4d6585 2748Invoking @kbd{M-x table-capture} on that text produces this table:
6100c21d
EZ
2749
2750@example
2751+-----+-----+-----+-----+
2752|1 |2 |3 |4 |
2753+-----+-----+-----+-----+
2754|5 |6 |7 |8 |
2755+-----+-----+-----+-----+
2756| |9 |10 | |
2757+-----+-----+-----+-----+
2758@end example
2759
2760@noindent
5f4d6585
RS
2761The conversion uses @samp{,} for the column delimiter and newline for
2762a row delimiter, cells are left justified, and minimum cell width is
27635.
6100c21d
EZ
2764
2765@findex table-release
2766 The command @code{table-release} does the opposite of
2767@code{table-capture}. It releases a table by removing the table frame
2768and cell borders. This leaves the table contents as plain text. One
2769of the useful applications of @code{table-capture} and
2770@code{table-release} is to edit a text in layout. Look at the
2771following three paragraphs (the latter two are indented with header
2772lines):
2773
2774@example
2775@samp{table-capture} is a powerful command however mastering its power
5f4d6585 2776requires some practice. Here are some things it can do:
6100c21d
EZ
2777
2778Parse Cell Items By using column delimiter regular
2779 expression and raw delimiter regular
2780 expression, it parses the specified text
2781 area and extracts cell items from
2782 non-table text and then forms a table out
2783 of them.
2784
2785Capture Text Area When no delimiters are specified it
2786 creates a single cell table. The text in
2787 the specified region is placed in that
2788 cell.
2789@end example
2790
2791@noindent
2792Applying @code{table-capture} to a region containing the above three
2793paragraphs, with empty strings for column delimiter regexp and row
2794delimiter regexp, creates a table with a single cell like the
2795following one.
2796
2797@c The first line's right-hand frame in the following two examples
11741689 2798@c sticks out to accommodate for the removal of @samp in the
6100c21d
EZ
2799@c produced output!!
2800@example
2801+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
5f4d6585
RS
2802|@samp{table-capture} is a powerful command, but mastering its |
2803|power requires some practice. Here are some things it can do: |
6100c21d
EZ
2804| |
2805|Parse Cell Items By using column delimiter regular |
2806| expression and raw delimiter regular |
2807| expression, it parses the specified text |
2808| area and extracts cell items from |
2809| non-table text and then forms a table out |
2810| of them. |
2811| |
2812|Capture Text Area When no delimiters are specified it |
2813| creates a single cell table. The text in |
2814| the specified region is placed in that |
2815| cell. |
2816+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
2817@end example
2818
2819@noindent
2820By splitting the cell appropriately we now have a table consisting of
2821paragraphs occupying its own cell. Each cell can now be edited
2822independently without affecting the layout of other cells.
2823
2824@example
2825+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
5f4d6585
RS
2826|@samp{table-capture} is a powerful command, but mastering its |
2827|power requires some practice. Here are some things it can do: |
6100c21d
EZ
2828+---------------------+-------------------------------------------+
2829|Parse Cell Items |By using column delimiter regular |
2830| |expression and raw delimiter regular |
2831| |expression, it parses the specified text |
2832| |area and extracts cell items from |
2833| |non-table text and then forms a table out |
2834| |of them. |
2835+---------------------+-------------------------------------------+
2836|Capture Text Area |When no delimiters are specified it |
2837| |creates a single cell table. The text in |
2838| |the specified region is placed in that |
2839| |cell. |
2840+---------------------+-------------------------------------------+
2841@end example
2842
2843@noindent
2844By applying @code{table-release}, which does the opposite process, the
2845contents become once again plain text. @code{table-release} works as
2846a companion command to @code{table-capture}.
2847
2848@node Measuring Tables
2849@subsection Analyzing Table Dimensions
2850@cindex table dimensions
2851
2852@findex table-query-dimension
2853 The command @code{table-query-dimension} analyzes a table structure
2854and reports information regarding its dimensions. In case of the
2855above example table, the @code{table-query-dimension} command displays
2856in echo area:
2857
2858@smallexample
2859Cell: (21w, 6h), Table: (67w, 16h), Dim: (2c, 3r), Total Cells: 5
2860@end smallexample
2861
2862@noindent
2863This indicates that the current cell is 21 character wide and 6 lines
2864high, the entire table is 67 characters wide and 16 lines high. The
2865table has 2 columns and 3 rows. It has a total of 5 cells, since the
2866first row has a spanned cell.
2867
2868@node Table Misc
2869@subsection Table Miscellany
2870
2871@cindex insert string into table cells
2872@findex table-insert-sequence
2873 The command @code{table-insert-sequence} inserts a string into each
2874cell. Each string is a part of a sequence i.e.@: a series of
2875increasing integer numbers.
2876
2877@cindex table in language format
2878@cindex table for HTML and LaTeX
2879@findex table-generate-source
5f4d6585 2880 The command @code{table-generate-source} generates a table formatted
6100c21d
EZ
2881for a specific markup language. It asks for a language (which must be
2882one of @code{html}, @code{latex}, or @code{cals}), a destination
2883buffer where to put the result, and the table caption (a string), and
2884then inserts the generated table in the proper syntax into the
2885destination buffer. The default destination buffer is
2886@code{table.@var{lang}}, where @var{lang} is the language you
2887specified.
2888
ab5796a9
MB
2889@ignore
2890 arch-tag: 8db54ed8-2036-49ca-b0df-23811d03dc70
2891@end ignore