* emacs/ack.texi, emacs/building.texi, emacs/calendar.texi
[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / emacs / text.texi
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8cf51b2c 1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
acaf905b 2@c Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1993-1995, 1997, 2000-2012
8838673e 3@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
8cf51b2c 4@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
abb9615e 5@node Text
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6@chapter Commands for Human Languages
7@cindex text
8@cindex manipulating text
9
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10 This chapter describes Emacs commands that act on @dfn{text}, by
11which we mean sequences of characters in a human language (as opposed
12to, say, a computer programming language). These commands act in ways
13that take into account the syntactic and stylistic conventions of
14human languages: conventions involving words, sentences, paragraphs,
15and capital letters. There are also commands for @dfn{filling}, which
16means rearranging the lines of a paragraph to be approximately equal
17in length. These commands, while intended primarily for editing text,
18are also often useful for editing programs.
19
20 Emacs has several major modes for editing human-language text. If
21the file contains ordinary text, use Text mode, which customizes Emacs
22in small ways for the syntactic conventions of text. Outline mode
8cf51b2c 23provides special commands for operating on text with an outline
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24structure. Org mode extends Outline mode and turn Emacs into a
25full-fledged organizer: you can manage TODO lists, store notes and
26publish them in many formats.
27
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28@iftex
29@xref{Outline Mode}.
30@end iftex
31
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32@cindex nXML mode
33@cindex mode, XML
34@cindex mode, nXML
35@findex nxml-mode
3a5244ab 36 Emacs has other major modes for text which contains ``embedded''
c1dabff0 37commands, such as @TeX{} and @LaTeX{} (@pxref{TeX Mode}); HTML and
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38SGML (@pxref{HTML Mode}); XML
39@ifinfo
40(@pxref{Top,The nXML Mode Manual,,nxml-mode, nXML Mode});
41@end ifinfo
42@ifnotinfo
43(see the nXML mode Info manual, which is distributed with Emacs);
44@end ifnotinfo
45and Groff and Nroff (@pxref{Nroff Mode}).
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46
47@cindex ASCII art
48 If you need to edit pictures made out of text characters (commonly
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49referred to as ``ASCII art''), use Picture mode, a special major mode
50for editing such pictures.
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51@iftex
52@xref{Picture Mode,,, emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}.
53@end iftex
54@ifnottex
55@xref{Picture Mode}.
56@end ifnottex
57
8863a584 58@ifinfo
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59@cindex skeletons
60@cindex templates
61@cindex autotyping
62@cindex automatic typing
63 The ``automatic typing'' features may be useful when writing text.
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64@inforef{Top,The Autotype Manual,autotype}.
65@end ifinfo
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66
67@menu
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68* Words:: Moving over and killing words.
69* Sentences:: Moving over and killing sentences.
70* Paragraphs:: Moving over paragraphs.
71* Pages:: Moving over pages.
72* Filling:: Filling or justifying text.
73* Case:: Changing the case of text.
74* Text Mode:: The major modes for editing text files.
8cf51b2c 75* Outline Mode:: Editing outlines.
5da6dcc8 76* Org Mode:: The Emacs organizer.
2d2f6581 77* TeX Mode:: Editing TeX and LaTeX files.
f67c5dd0 78* HTML Mode:: Editing HTML and SGML files.
2d2f6581 79* Nroff Mode:: Editing input to the nroff formatter.
775b55af 80* Enriched Text:: Editing text "enriched" with fonts, colors, etc.
8863a584 81* Text Based Tables:: Commands for editing text-based tables.
f404f8bc 82* Two-Column:: Splitting text columns into separate windows.
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83@end menu
84
85@node Words
86@section Words
87@cindex words
88@cindex Meta commands and words
89
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90 Emacs defines several commands for moving over or operating on
91words:
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92
93@table @kbd
94@item M-f
95Move forward over a word (@code{forward-word}).
96@item M-b
97Move backward over a word (@code{backward-word}).
98@item M-d
99Kill up to the end of a word (@code{kill-word}).
100@item M-@key{DEL}
101Kill back to the beginning of a word (@code{backward-kill-word}).
102@item M-@@
103Mark the end of the next word (@code{mark-word}).
104@item M-t
105Transpose two words or drag a word across others
106(@code{transpose-words}).
107@end table
108
109 Notice how these keys form a series that parallels the character-based
110@kbd{C-f}, @kbd{C-b}, @kbd{C-d}, @key{DEL} and @kbd{C-t}. @kbd{M-@@} is
111cognate to @kbd{C-@@}, which is an alias for @kbd{C-@key{SPC}}.
112
113@kindex M-f
114@kindex M-b
115@findex forward-word
116@findex backward-word
117 The commands @kbd{M-f} (@code{forward-word}) and @kbd{M-b}
118(@code{backward-word}) move forward and backward over words. These
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119@key{Meta}-based key sequences are analogous to the key sequences
120@kbd{C-f} and @kbd{C-b}, which move over single characters. The
121analogy extends to numeric arguments, which serve as repeat counts.
122@kbd{M-f} with a negative argument moves backward, and @kbd{M-b} with
123a negative argument moves forward. Forward motion stops right after
124the last letter of the word, while backward motion stops right before
125the first letter.
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126
127@kindex M-d
128@findex kill-word
129 @kbd{M-d} (@code{kill-word}) kills the word after point. To be
130precise, it kills everything from point to the place @kbd{M-f} would
131move to. Thus, if point is in the middle of a word, @kbd{M-d} kills
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132just the part after point. If some punctuation comes between point
133and the next word, it is killed along with the word. (If you wish to
134kill only the next word but not the punctuation before it, simply do
135@kbd{M-f} to get the end, and kill the word backwards with
136@kbd{M-@key{DEL}}.) @kbd{M-d} takes arguments just like @kbd{M-f}.
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137
138@findex backward-kill-word
139@kindex M-DEL
140 @kbd{M-@key{DEL}} (@code{backward-kill-word}) kills the word before
141point. It kills everything from point back to where @kbd{M-b} would
142move to. For instance, if point is after the space in @w{@samp{FOO,
143BAR}}, it kills @w{@samp{FOO, }}. If you wish to kill just
144@samp{FOO}, and not the comma and the space, use @kbd{M-b M-d} instead
145of @kbd{M-@key{DEL}}.
146
147@c Don't index M-t and transpose-words here, they are indexed in
148@c fixit.texi, in the node "Transpose".
149@c @kindex M-t
150@c @findex transpose-words
151 @kbd{M-t} (@code{transpose-words}) exchanges the word before or
152containing point with the following word. The delimiter characters between
153the words do not move. For example, @w{@samp{FOO, BAR}} transposes into
154@w{@samp{BAR, FOO}} rather than @samp{@w{BAR FOO,}}. @xref{Transpose}, for
155more on transposition.
156
157@kindex M-@@
158@findex mark-word
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159 To operate on words with an operation which acts on the region, use
160the command @kbd{M-@@} (@code{mark-word}). This command sets the mark
161where @kbd{M-f} would move to. @xref{Marking Objects}, for more
162information about this command.
8cf51b2c 163
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164 The word commands' understanding of word boundaries is controlled by
165the syntax table. Any character can, for example, be declared to be a
166word delimiter. @xref{Syntax Tables,, Syntax Tables, elisp, The Emacs
167Lisp Reference Manual}.
8cf51b2c 168
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169 In addition, see @ref{Position Info} for the @kbd{M-=}
170(@code{count-words-region}) and @kbd{M-x count-words} commands, which
171count and report the number of words in the region or buffer.
172
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173@node Sentences
174@section Sentences
175@cindex sentences
176@cindex manipulating sentences
177
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178 The Emacs commands for manipulating sentences and paragraphs are
179mostly on Meta keys, like the word-handling commands.
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180
181@table @kbd
182@item M-a
183Move back to the beginning of the sentence (@code{backward-sentence}).
184@item M-e
185Move forward to the end of the sentence (@code{forward-sentence}).
186@item M-k
187Kill forward to the end of the sentence (@code{kill-sentence}).
188@item C-x @key{DEL}
189Kill back to the beginning of the sentence (@code{backward-kill-sentence}).
190@end table
191
192@kindex M-a
193@kindex M-e
194@findex backward-sentence
195@findex forward-sentence
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196 The commands @kbd{M-a} (@code{backward-sentence}) and @kbd{M-e}
197(@code{forward-sentence}) move to the beginning and end of the current
198sentence, respectively. Their bindings were chosen to resemble
199@kbd{C-a} and @kbd{C-e}, which move to the beginning and end of a
200line. Unlike them, @kbd{M-a} and @kbd{M-e} move over successive
201sentences if repeated.
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202
203 Moving backward over a sentence places point just before the first
204character of the sentence; moving forward places point right after the
205punctuation that ends the sentence. Neither one moves over the
206whitespace at the sentence boundary.
207
208@kindex M-k
8cf51b2c 209@findex kill-sentence
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210 Just as @kbd{C-a} and @kbd{C-e} have a kill command, @kbd{C-k}, to
211go with them, @kbd{M-a} and @kbd{M-e} have a corresponding kill
212command: @kbd{M-k} (@code{kill-sentence}) kills from point to the end
213of the sentence. With a positive numeric argument @var{n}, it kills
214the next @var{n} sentences; with a negative argument @minus{}@var{n},
215it kills back to the beginning of the @var{n}th preceding sentence.
216
217@kindex C-x DEL
8cf51b2c 218@findex backward-kill-sentence
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219 The @kbd{C-x @key{DEL}} (@code{backward-kill-sentence}) kills back
220to the beginning of a sentence.
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221
222 The sentence commands assume that you follow the American typist's
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223convention of putting two spaces at the end of a sentence. That is, a
224sentence ends wherever there is a @samp{.}, @samp{?} or @samp{!}
8cf51b2c 225followed by the end of a line or two spaces, with any number of
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226@samp{)}, @samp{]}, @samp{'}, or @samp{"} characters allowed in
227between. A sentence also begins or ends wherever a paragraph begins
228or ends. It is useful to follow this convention, because it allows
229the Emacs sentence commands to distinguish between periods that end a
230sentence and periods that indicate abbreviations.
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231
232@vindex sentence-end-double-space
233 If you want to use just one space between sentences, you can set the
234variable @code{sentence-end-double-space} to @code{nil} to make the
44d9593e 235sentence commands stop for single spaces. However, this has a
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236drawback: there is no way to distinguish between periods that end
237sentences and those that indicate abbreviations. For convenient and
238reliable editing, we therefore recommend you follow the two-space
239convention. The variable @code{sentence-end-double-space} also
b22b1918 240affects filling (@pxref{Fill Commands}).
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241
242@vindex sentence-end
243 The variable @code{sentence-end} controls how to recognize the end
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244of a sentence. If non-@code{nil}, its value should be a regular
245expression, which is used to match the last few characters of a
246sentence, together with the whitespace following the sentence
247(@pxref{Regexps}). If the value is @code{nil}, the default, then
248Emacs computes sentence ends according to various criteria such as the
249value of @code{sentence-end-double-space}.
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250
251@vindex sentence-end-without-period
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252 Some languages, such as Thai, do not use periods to indicate the end
253of a sentence. Set the variable @code{sentence-end-without-period} to
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254@code{t} in such cases.
255
256@node Paragraphs
257@section Paragraphs
258@cindex paragraphs
259@cindex manipulating paragraphs
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260
261 The Emacs commands for manipulating paragraphs are also on Meta keys.
262
263@table @kbd
264@item M-@{
265Move back to previous paragraph beginning (@code{backward-paragraph}).
266@item M-@}
267Move forward to next paragraph end (@code{forward-paragraph}).
268@item M-h
269Put point and mark around this or next paragraph (@code{mark-paragraph}).
270@end table
271
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272@kindex M-@{
273@kindex M-@}
274@findex backward-paragraph
275@findex forward-paragraph
276 @kbd{M-@{} (@code{backward-paragraph}) moves to the beginning of the
277current or previous paragraph (see below for the definition of a
278paragraph). @kbd{M-@}} (@code{forward-paragraph}) moves to the end of
279the current or next paragraph. If there is a blank line before the
280paragraph, @kbd{M-@{} moves to the blank line.
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281
282@kindex M-h
283@findex mark-paragraph
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284 When you wish to operate on a paragraph, type @kbd{M-h}
285(@code{mark-paragraph}) to set the region around it. For example,
286@kbd{M-h C-w} kills the paragraph around or after point. @kbd{M-h}
287puts point at the beginning and mark at the end of the paragraph point
288was in. If point is between paragraphs (in a run of blank lines, or
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289at a boundary), @kbd{M-h} sets the region around the paragraph
290following point. If there are blank lines preceding the first line of
291the paragraph, one of these blank lines is included in the region. If
292the region is already active, the command sets the mark without
293changing point, and each subsequent @kbd{M-h} further advances the
44d9593e 294mark by one paragraph.
8cf51b2c 295
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296 The definition of a paragraph depends on the major mode. In
297Fundamental mode, as well as Text mode and related modes, a paragraph
298is separated each neighboring paragraph another by one or more
299@dfn{blank lines}---lines that are either empty, or consist solely of
300space, tab and/or formfeed characters. In programming language modes,
301paragraphs are usually defined in a similar way, so that you can use
302the paragraph commands even though there are no paragraphs as such in
303a program.
304
305 Note that an indented line is @emph{not} itself a paragraph break in
306Text mode. If you want indented lines to separate paragraphs, use
307Paragraph-Indent Text mode instead. @xref{Text Mode}.
308
309 If you set a fill prefix, then paragraphs are delimited by all lines
310which don't start with the fill prefix. @xref{Filling}.
311
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312@vindex paragraph-start
313@vindex paragraph-separate
314 The precise definition of a paragraph boundary is controlled by the
315variables @code{paragraph-separate} and @code{paragraph-start}. The
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316value of @code{paragraph-start} is a regular expression that should
317match lines that either start or separate paragraphs
318(@pxref{Regexps}). The value of @code{paragraph-separate} is another
319regular expression that should match lines that separate paragraphs
320without being part of any paragraph (for example, blank lines). Lines
321that start a new paragraph and are contained in it must match only
322@code{paragraph-start}, not @code{paragraph-separate}. For example,
323in Fundamental mode, @code{paragraph-start} is @w{@code{"\f\\|[
324\t]*$"}}, and @code{paragraph-separate} is @w{@code{"[ \t\f]*$"}}.
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325
326@node Pages
327@section Pages
328
329@cindex pages
44d9593e 330@cindex formfeed character
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331 Within some text files, text is divided into @dfn{pages} delimited
332by the @dfn{formfeed character} (@acronym{ASCII} code 12, also denoted
333as @key{control-L}), which is displayed in Emacs as the escape
334sequence @samp{^L} (@pxref{Text Display}). Traditionally, when such
335text files are printed to hardcopy, each formfeed character forces a
336page break. Most Emacs commands treat it just like any other
337character, so you can insert it with @kbd{C-q C-l}, delete it with
338@key{DEL}, etc. In addition, Emacs provides commands to move over
339pages and operate on them.
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340
341@table @kbd
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342@item M-x what-page
343Display the page number of point, and the line number within that page.
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344@item C-x [
345Move point to previous page boundary (@code{backward-page}).
346@item C-x ]
347Move point to next page boundary (@code{forward-page}).
348@item C-x C-p
349Put point and mark around this page (or another page) (@code{mark-page}).
350@item C-x l
351Count the lines in this page (@code{count-lines-page}).
352@end table
353
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354@findex what-page
355 @kbd{M-x what-page} counts pages from the beginning of the file, and
356counts lines within the page, showing both numbers in the echo area.
357
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358@kindex C-x [
359@kindex C-x ]
360@findex forward-page
361@findex backward-page
362 The @kbd{C-x [} (@code{backward-page}) command moves point to immediately
363after the previous page delimiter. If point is already right after a page
364delimiter, it skips that one and stops at the previous one. A numeric
365argument serves as a repeat count. The @kbd{C-x ]} (@code{forward-page})
366command moves forward past the next page delimiter.
367
368@kindex C-x C-p
369@findex mark-page
370 The @kbd{C-x C-p} command (@code{mark-page}) puts point at the
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371beginning of the current page (after that page delimiter at the
372front), and the mark at the end of the page (after the page delimiter
373at the end).
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374
375 @kbd{C-x C-p C-w} is a handy way to kill a page to move it
376elsewhere. If you move to another page delimiter with @kbd{C-x [} and
377@kbd{C-x ]}, then yank the killed page, all the pages will be properly
378delimited once again. The reason @kbd{C-x C-p} includes only the
379following page delimiter in the region is to ensure that.
380
44d9593e 381 A numeric argument to @kbd{C-x C-p} specifies which page to go to,
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382relative to the current one. Zero means the current page, one
383the next page, and @minus{}1 the previous one.
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384
385@kindex C-x l
386@findex count-lines-page
387 The @kbd{C-x l} command (@code{count-lines-page}) is good for deciding
388where to break a page in two. It displays in the echo area the total number
389of lines in the current page, and then divides it up into those preceding
390the current line and those following, as in
391
392@example
393Page has 96 (72+25) lines
394@end example
395
396@noindent
397 Notice that the sum is off by one; this is correct if point is not at the
398beginning of a line.
399
400@vindex page-delimiter
401 The variable @code{page-delimiter} controls where pages begin. Its
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402value is a regular expression that matches the beginning of a line
403that separates pages (@pxref{Regexps}). The normal value of this
404variable is @code{"^\f"}, which matches a formfeed character at the
405beginning of a line.
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406
407@node Filling
408@section Filling Text
409@cindex filling text
410
411 @dfn{Filling} text means breaking it up into lines that fit a
412specified width. Emacs does filling in two ways. In Auto Fill mode,
413inserting text with self-inserting characters also automatically fills
414it. There are also explicit fill commands that you can use when editing
eceeb5fc 415text.
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416
417@menu
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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 or in a comment, etc.
421* Adaptive Fill:: How Emacs can determine the fill prefix automatically.
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422@end menu
423
424@node Auto Fill
425@subsection Auto Fill Mode
426@cindex Auto Fill mode
427@cindex mode, Auto Fill
428
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429 @dfn{Auto Fill} mode is a buffer-local minor mode (@pxref{Minor
430Modes}) in which lines are broken automatically when they become too
431wide. Breaking happens only when you type a @key{SPC} or @key{RET}.
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432
433@table @kbd
434@item M-x auto-fill-mode
435Enable or disable Auto Fill mode.
436@item @key{SPC}
437@itemx @key{RET}
438In Auto Fill mode, break lines when appropriate.
439@end table
440
441@findex auto-fill-mode
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442 The mode command @kbd{M-x auto-fill-mode} toggles Auto Fill mode in
443the current buffer. With a positive numeric argument, it enables Auto
444Fill mode, and with a negative argument it disables it. If
445@code{auto-fill-mode} is called from Lisp with an omitted or
446@code{nil} argument, it enables Auto Fill mode. To enable Auto Fill
447mode automatically in certain major modes, add @code{auto-fill-mode}
448to the mode hooks (@pxref{Major Modes}). When Auto Fill mode is
449enabled, the mode indicator @samp{Fill} appears in the mode line
450(@pxref{Mode Line}).
451
452 Auto Fill mode breaks lines automatically at spaces whenever they
453get longer than the desired width. This line breaking occurs only
454when you type @key{SPC} or @key{RET}. If you wish to insert a space
455or newline without permitting line-breaking, type @kbd{C-q @key{SPC}}
456or @kbd{C-q C-j} respectively. Also, @kbd{C-o} inserts a newline
457without line breaking.
458
459 When Auto Fill mode breaks a line, it tries to obey the
460@dfn{adaptive fill prefix}: if a fill prefix can be deduced from the
461first and/or second line of the current paragraph, it is inserted into
462the new line (@pxref{Adaptive Fill}). Otherwise the new line is
463indented, as though you had typed @key{TAB} on it
464(@pxref{Indentation}). In a programming language mode, if a line is
465broken in the middle of a comment, the comment is split by inserting
466new comment delimiters as appropriate.
467
468 Auto Fill mode does not refill entire paragraphs; it breaks lines
469but does not merge lines. Therefore, editing in the middle of a
470paragraph can result in a paragraph that is not correctly filled. To
471fill it, call the explicit fill commands
472@iftex
473described in the next section.
474@end iftex
8cf51b2c 475@ifnottex
95ca9bc7 476(@pxref{Fill Commands}).
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477@end ifnottex
478
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479@node Fill Commands
480@subsection Explicit Fill Commands
481
482@table @kbd
483@item M-q
ad6d10b1 484Fill current paragraph (@code{fill-paragraph}).
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485@item C-x f
486Set the fill column (@code{set-fill-column}).
487@item M-x fill-region
488Fill each paragraph in the region (@code{fill-region}).
489@item M-x fill-region-as-paragraph
490Fill the region, considering it as one paragraph.
2e4667d1 491@item M-o M-s
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492Center a line.
493@end table
494
ad6d10b1 495@kindex M-q
8cf51b2c 496@findex fill-paragraph
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497 The command @kbd{M-q} (@code{fill-paragraph}) @dfn{fills} the
498current paragraph. It redistributes the line breaks within the
499paragraph, and deletes any excess space and tab characters occurring
500within the paragraph, in such a way that the lines end up fitting
501within a certain maximum width.
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502
503@findex fill-region
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504 Normally, @kbd{M-q} acts on the paragraph where point is, but if
505point is between paragraphs, it acts on the paragraph after point. If
506the region is active, it acts instead on the text in the region. You
507can also call @kbd{M-x fill-region} to specifically fill the text in
508the region.
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509
510@findex fill-region-as-paragraph
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511 @kbd{M-q} and @code{fill-region} use the usual Emacs criteria for
512finding paragraph boundaries (@pxref{Paragraphs}). For more control,
513you can use @kbd{M-x fill-region-as-paragraph}, which refills
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514everything between point and mark as a single paragraph. This command
515deletes any blank lines within the region, so separate blocks of text
516end up combined into one block.
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517
518@cindex justification
519 A numeric argument to @kbd{M-q} tells it to @dfn{justify} the text
520as well as filling it. This means that extra spaces are inserted to
521make the right margin line up exactly at the fill column. To remove
522the extra spaces, use @kbd{M-q} with no argument. (Likewise for
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523@code{fill-region}.)
524
525@vindex fill-column
526@kindex C-x f
527@findex set-fill-column
528 The maximum line width for filling is specified by the buffer-local
529variable @code{fill-column}. The default value (@pxref{Locals}) is
53070. The easiest way to set @code{fill-column} in the current buffer
531is to use the command @kbd{C-x f} (@code{set-fill-column}). With a
532numeric argument, it uses that as the new fill column. With just
533@kbd{C-u} as argument, it sets @code{fill-column} to the current
534horizontal position of point.
8cf51b2c 535
2e4667d1 536@kindex M-o M-s @r{(Text mode)}
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537@cindex centering
538@findex center-line
2e4667d1 539 The command @kbd{M-o M-s} (@code{center-line}) centers the current line
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540within the current fill column. With an argument @var{n}, it centers
541@var{n} lines individually and moves past them. This binding is
542made by Text mode and is available only in that and related modes
543(@pxref{Text Mode}).
544
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545 By default, Emacs considers a period followed by two spaces or by a
546newline as the end of a sentence; a period followed by just one space
547indicates an abbreviation, not the end of a sentence. Accordingly,
548the fill commands will not break a line after a period followed by
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549just one space. If you set the variable
550@code{sentence-end-double-space} to @code{nil}, the fill commands will
551break a line after a period followed by one space, and put just one
552space after each period. @xref{Sentences}, for other effects and
553possible drawbacks of this.
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554
555@vindex colon-double-space
556 If the variable @code{colon-double-space} is non-@code{nil}, the
557fill commands put two spaces after a colon.
558
559@vindex fill-nobreak-predicate
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560 To specify additional conditions where line-breaking is not allowed,
561customize the abnormal hook variable @code{fill-nobreak-predicate}
562(@pxref{Hooks}). Each function in this hook is called with no
563arguments, with point positioned where Emacs is considering breaking a
564line. If a function returns a non-@code{nil} value, Emacs will not
565break the line there. Two functions you can use are
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566@code{fill-single-word-nobreak-p} (don't break after the first word of
567a sentence or before the last) and @code{fill-french-nobreak-p} (don't
568break after @samp{(} or before @samp{)}, @samp{:} or @samp{?}).
569
570@node Fill Prefix
571@subsection The Fill Prefix
572
573@cindex fill prefix
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574 The @dfn{fill prefix} feature allows paragraphs to be filled so that
575each line starts with a special string of characters (such as a
576sequence of spaces, giving an indented paragraph). You can specify a
577fill prefix explicitly; otherwise, Emacs tries to deduce one
578automatically (@pxref{Adaptive Fill}).
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579
580@table @kbd
581@item C-x .
582Set the fill prefix (@code{set-fill-prefix}).
583@item M-q
ad6d10b1 584Fill a paragraph using current fill prefix (@code{fill-paragraph}).
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585@item M-x fill-individual-paragraphs
586Fill the region, considering each change of indentation as starting a
587new paragraph.
588@item M-x fill-nonuniform-paragraphs
589Fill the region, considering only paragraph-separator lines as starting
590a new paragraph.
591@end table
592
593@kindex C-x .
594@findex set-fill-prefix
595 To specify a fill prefix for the current buffer, move to a line that
596starts with the desired prefix, put point at the end of the prefix,
597and type @w{@kbd{C-x .}}@: (@code{set-fill-prefix}). (That's a period
598after the @kbd{C-x}.) To turn off the fill prefix, specify an empty
599prefix: type @w{@kbd{C-x .}}@: with point at the beginning of a line.
600
601 When a fill prefix is in effect, the fill commands remove the fill
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602prefix from each line of the paragraph before filling, and insert it
603on each line after filling. (The beginning of the first line of the
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604paragraph is left unchanged, since often that is intentionally
605different.) Auto Fill mode also inserts the fill prefix automatically
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606when it makes a new line (@pxref{Auto Fill}). The @kbd{C-o} command
607inserts the fill prefix on new lines it creates, when you use it at
608the beginning of a line (@pxref{Blank Lines}). Conversely, the
609command @kbd{M-^} deletes the prefix (if it occurs) after the newline
610that it deletes (@pxref{Indentation}).
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611
612 For example, if @code{fill-column} is 40 and you set the fill prefix
613to @samp{;; }, then @kbd{M-q} in the following text
614
615@example
616;; This is an
617;; example of a paragraph
618;; inside a Lisp-style comment.
619@end example
620
621@noindent
622produces this:
623
624@example
625;; This is an example of a paragraph
626;; inside a Lisp-style comment.
627@end example
628
629 Lines that do not start with the fill prefix are considered to start
630paragraphs, both in @kbd{M-q} and the paragraph commands; this gives
631good results for paragraphs with hanging indentation (every line
632indented except the first one). Lines which are blank or indented once
633the prefix is removed also separate or start paragraphs; this is what
634you want if you are writing multi-paragraph comments with a comment
635delimiter on each line.
636
637@findex fill-individual-paragraphs
638 You can use @kbd{M-x fill-individual-paragraphs} to set the fill
639prefix for each paragraph automatically. This command divides the
640region into paragraphs, treating every change in the amount of
641indentation as the start of a new paragraph, and fills each of these
642paragraphs. Thus, all the lines in one ``paragraph'' have the same
643amount of indentation. That indentation serves as the fill prefix for
644that paragraph.
645
646@findex fill-nonuniform-paragraphs
647 @kbd{M-x fill-nonuniform-paragraphs} is a similar command that divides
648the region into paragraphs in a different way. It considers only
649paragraph-separating lines (as defined by @code{paragraph-separate}) as
650starting a new paragraph. Since this means that the lines of one
651paragraph may have different amounts of indentation, the fill prefix
652used is the smallest amount of indentation of any of the lines of the
653paragraph. This gives good results with styles that indent a paragraph's
654first line more or less that the rest of the paragraph.
655
656@vindex fill-prefix
657 The fill prefix is stored in the variable @code{fill-prefix}. Its value
658is a string, or @code{nil} when there is no fill prefix. This is a
659per-buffer variable; altering the variable affects only the current buffer,
660but there is a default value which you can change as well. @xref{Locals}.
661
662 The @code{indentation} text property provides another way to control
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663the amount of indentation paragraphs receive. @xref{Enriched
664Indentation}.
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665
666@node Adaptive Fill
667@subsection Adaptive Filling
668
669@cindex adaptive filling
670 The fill commands can deduce the proper fill prefix for a paragraph
671automatically in certain cases: either whitespace or certain punctuation
672characters at the beginning of a line are propagated to all lines of the
673paragraph.
674
675 If the paragraph has two or more lines, the fill prefix is taken from
676the paragraph's second line, but only if it appears on the first line as
677well.
678
679 If a paragraph has just one line, fill commands @emph{may} take a
680prefix from that line. The decision is complicated because there are
681three reasonable things to do in such a case:
682
683@itemize @bullet
684@item
685Use the first line's prefix on all the lines of the paragraph.
686
687@item
688Indent subsequent lines with whitespace, so that they line up under the
689text that follows the prefix on the first line, but don't actually copy
690the prefix from the first line.
691
692@item
693Don't do anything special with the second and following lines.
694@end itemize
695
696 All three of these styles of formatting are commonly used. So the
697fill commands try to determine what you would like, based on the prefix
698that appears and on the major mode. Here is how.
699
700@vindex adaptive-fill-first-line-regexp
701 If the prefix found on the first line matches
702@code{adaptive-fill-first-line-regexp}, or if it appears to be a
703comment-starting sequence (this depends on the major mode), then the
704prefix found is used for filling the paragraph, provided it would not
705act as a paragraph starter on subsequent lines.
706
707 Otherwise, the prefix found is converted to an equivalent number of
708spaces, and those spaces are used as the fill prefix for the rest of the
709lines, provided they would not act as a paragraph starter on subsequent
710lines.
711
712 In Text mode, and other modes where only blank lines and page
713delimiters separate paragraphs, the prefix chosen by adaptive filling
714never acts as a paragraph starter, so it can always be used for filling.
715
716@vindex adaptive-fill-mode
717@vindex adaptive-fill-regexp
718 The variable @code{adaptive-fill-regexp} determines what kinds of line
719beginnings can serve as a fill prefix: any characters at the start of
720the line that match this regular expression are used. If you set the
721variable @code{adaptive-fill-mode} to @code{nil}, the fill prefix is
722never chosen automatically.
723
724@vindex adaptive-fill-function
725 You can specify more complex ways of choosing a fill prefix
726automatically by setting the variable @code{adaptive-fill-function} to a
727function. This function is called with point after the left margin of a
728line, and it should return the appropriate fill prefix based on that
729line. If it returns @code{nil}, @code{adaptive-fill-regexp} gets
730a chance to find a prefix.
731
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732@node Case
733@section Case Conversion Commands
734@cindex case conversion
735
736 Emacs has commands for converting either a single word or any arbitrary
737range of text to upper case or to lower case.
738
739@table @kbd
740@item M-l
741Convert following word to lower case (@code{downcase-word}).
742@item M-u
743Convert following word to upper case (@code{upcase-word}).
744@item M-c
745Capitalize the following word (@code{capitalize-word}).
746@item C-x C-l
747Convert region to lower case (@code{downcase-region}).
748@item C-x C-u
749Convert region to upper case (@code{upcase-region}).
750@end table
751
752@kindex M-l
753@kindex M-u
754@kindex M-c
755@cindex words, case conversion
756@cindex converting text to upper or lower case
757@cindex capitalizing words
758@findex downcase-word
759@findex upcase-word
760@findex capitalize-word
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761 @kbd{M-l} (@code{downcase-word}) converts the word after point to
762lower case, moving past it. Thus, repeating @kbd{M-l} converts
763successive words. @kbd{M-u} (@code{upcase-word}) converts to all
764capitals instead, while @kbd{M-c} (@code{capitalize-word}) puts the
765first letter of the word into upper case and the rest into lower case.
766All these commands convert several words at once if given an argument.
767They are especially convenient for converting a large amount of text
768from all upper case to mixed case, because you can move through the
769text using @kbd{M-l}, @kbd{M-u} or @kbd{M-c} on each word as
770appropriate, occasionally using @kbd{M-f} instead to skip a word.
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771
772 When given a negative argument, the word case conversion commands apply
773to the appropriate number of words before point, but do not move point.
774This is convenient when you have just typed a word in the wrong case: you
775can give the case conversion command and continue typing.
776
777 If a word case conversion command is given in the middle of a word,
778it applies only to the part of the word which follows point. (This is
779comparable to what @kbd{M-d} (@code{kill-word}) does.) With a
780negative argument, case conversion applies only to the part of the
781word before point.
782
783@kindex C-x C-l
784@kindex C-x C-u
785@findex downcase-region
786@findex upcase-region
787 The other case conversion commands are @kbd{C-x C-u}
788(@code{upcase-region}) and @kbd{C-x C-l} (@code{downcase-region}), which
789convert everything between point and mark to the specified case. Point and
790mark do not move.
791
792 The region case conversion commands @code{upcase-region} and
793@code{downcase-region} are normally disabled. This means that they ask
794for confirmation if you try to use them. When you confirm, you may
795enable the command, which means it will not ask for confirmation again.
796@xref{Disabling}.
797
798@node Text Mode
799@section Text Mode
800@cindex Text mode
801@cindex mode, Text
802@findex text-mode
803
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804 Text mode is a major mode for editing files of text in a human
805language. Files which have names ending in the extension @file{.txt}
806are usually opened in Text mode (@pxref{Choosing Modes}). To
807explicitly switch to Text mode, type @kbd{M-x text-mode}.
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808
809 In Text mode, only blank lines and page delimiters separate
810paragraphs. As a result, paragraphs can be indented, and adaptive
811filling determines what indentation to use when filling a paragraph.
812@xref{Adaptive Fill}.
813
814@kindex TAB @r{(Text mode)}
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815 In Text mode, the @key{TAB} (@code{indent-for-tab-command}) command
816usually inserts whitespace up to the next tab stop, instead of
817indenting the current line. @xref{Indentation}, for details.
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818
819 Text mode turns off the features concerned with comments except when
820you explicitly invoke them. It changes the syntax table so that
8863a584 821single-quotes are considered part of words (e.g.@: @samp{don't} is
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822considered one word). However, if a word starts with a single-quote,
823it is treated as a prefix for the purposes of capitalization
8863a584 824(e.g.@: @kbd{M-c} converts @samp{'hello'} into @samp{'Hello'}, as
95ca9bc7 825expected).
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826
827@cindex Paragraph-Indent Text mode
828@cindex mode, Paragraph-Indent Text
829@findex paragraph-indent-text-mode
830@findex paragraph-indent-minor-mode
831 If you indent the first lines of paragraphs, then you should use
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832Paragraph-Indent Text mode (@kbd{M-x paragraph-indent-text-mode})
833rather than Text mode. In that mode, you do not need to have blank
834lines between paragraphs, because the first-line indentation is
835sufficient to start a paragraph; however paragraphs in which every
836line is indented are not supported. Use @kbd{M-x
837paragraph-indent-minor-mode} to enable an equivalent minor mode for
838situations where you shouldn't change the major mode---in mail
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839composition, for instance.
840
841@kindex M-TAB @r{(Text mode)}
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842 Text mode binds @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} to @code{ispell-complete-word}.
843This command performs completion of the partial word in the buffer
844before point, using the spelling dictionary as the space of possible
845words. @xref{Spelling}. If your window manager defines
846@kbd{M-@key{TAB}} to switch windows, you can type @kbd{@key{ESC}
847@key{TAB}} or @kbd{C-M-i} instead.
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848
849@vindex text-mode-hook
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850 Entering Text mode runs the mode hook @code{text-mode-hook}
851(@pxref{Major Modes}).
852
853 The following sections describe several major modes that are
854@dfn{derived} from Text mode. These derivatives share most of the
855features of Text mode described above. In particular, derivatives of
856Text mode run @code{text-mode-hook} prior to running their own mode
857hooks.
8cf51b2c 858
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859@node Outline Mode
860@section Outline Mode
861@cindex Outline mode
862@cindex mode, Outline
863@cindex invisible lines
864
865@findex outline-mode
866@findex outline-minor-mode
867@vindex outline-minor-mode-prefix
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868@vindex outline-mode-hook
869 Outline mode is a major mode derived from Text mode, which is
870specialized for editing outlines. It provides commands to navigate
871between entries in the outline structure, and commands to make parts
872of a buffer temporarily invisible, so that the outline structure may
873be more easily viewed. Type @kbd{M-x outline-mode} to switch to
874Outline mode. Entering Outline mode runs the hook
875@code{text-mode-hook} followed by the hook @code{outline-mode-hook}
876(@pxref{Hooks}).
877
878 When you use an Outline mode command to make a line invisible
879(@pxref{Outline Visibility}), the line disappears from the screen. An
880ellipsis (three periods in a row) is displayed at the end of the
881previous visible line, to indicate the hidden text. Multiple
882consecutive invisible lines produce just one ellipsis.
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883
884 Editing commands that operate on lines, such as @kbd{C-n} and
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885@kbd{C-p}, treat the text of the invisible line as part of the
886previous visible line. Killing the ellipsis at the end of a visible
887line really kills all the following invisible text associated with the
888ellipsis.
889
890 Outline minor mode is a buffer-local minor mode which provides the
891same commands as the major mode, Outline mode, but can be used in
892conjunction with other major modes. You can type @kbd{M-x
893outline-minor-mode} to toggle Outline minor mode in the current
894buffer, or use a file-local variable setting to enable it in a
895specific file (@pxref{File Variables}).
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896
897@kindex C-c @@ @r{(Outline minor mode)}
898 The major mode, Outline mode, provides special key bindings on the
899@kbd{C-c} prefix. Outline minor mode provides similar bindings with
900@kbd{C-c @@} as the prefix; this is to reduce the conflicts with the
901major mode's special commands. (The variable
902@code{outline-minor-mode-prefix} controls the prefix used.)
903
8cf51b2c 904@menu
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905* Outline Format:: What the text of an outline looks like.
906* Outline Motion:: Special commands for moving through outlines.
907* Outline Visibility:: Commands to control what is visible.
908* Outline Views:: Outlines and multiple views.
909* Foldout:: Folding means zooming in on outlines.
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910@end menu
911
912@node Outline Format
913@subsection Format of Outlines
914
915@cindex heading lines (Outline mode)
916@cindex body lines (Outline mode)
917 Outline mode assumes that the lines in the buffer are of two types:
918@dfn{heading lines} and @dfn{body lines}. A heading line represents a
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919topic in the outline. Heading lines start with one or more asterisk
920(@samp{*}) characters; the number of asterisks determines the depth of
921the heading in the outline structure. Thus, a heading line with one
922@samp{*} is a major topic; all the heading lines with two @samp{*}s
923between it and the next one-@samp{*} heading are its subtopics; and so
924on. Any line that is not a heading line is a body line. Body lines
925belong with the preceding heading line. Here is an example:
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926
927@example
928* Food
929This is the body,
930which says something about the topic of food.
931
932** Delicious Food
933This is the body of the second-level header.
934
935** Distasteful Food
936This could have
937a body too, with
938several lines.
939
940*** Dormitory Food
941
942* Shelter
943Another first-level topic with its header line.
944@end example
945
946 A heading line together with all following body lines is called
947collectively an @dfn{entry}. A heading line together with all following
948deeper heading lines and their body lines is called a @dfn{subtree}.
949
950@vindex outline-regexp
951 You can customize the criterion for distinguishing heading lines by
952setting the variable @code{outline-regexp}. (The recommended ways to
953do this are in a major mode function or with a file local variable.)
954Any line whose beginning has a match for this regexp is considered a
955heading line. Matches that start within a line (not at the left
956margin) do not count.
957
958 The length of the matching text determines the level of the heading;
959longer matches make a more deeply nested level. Thus, for example, if
960a text formatter has commands @samp{@@chapter}, @samp{@@section} and
961@samp{@@subsection} to divide the document into chapters and sections,
962you could make those lines count as heading lines by setting
963@code{outline-regexp} to @samp{"@@chap\\|@@\\(sub\\)*section"}. Note
964the trick: the two words @samp{chapter} and @samp{section} are equally
965long, but by defining the regexp to match only @samp{chap} we ensure
966that the length of the text matched on a chapter heading is shorter,
967so that Outline mode will know that sections are contained in
968chapters. This works as long as no other command starts with
969@samp{@@chap}.
970
971@vindex outline-level
972 You can explicitly specify a rule for calculating the level of a
973heading line by setting the variable @code{outline-level}. The value
974of @code{outline-level} should be a function that takes no arguments
975and returns the level of the current heading. The recommended ways to
976set this variable are in a major mode command or with a file local
977variable.
978
979@node Outline Motion
980@subsection Outline Motion Commands
981
982 Outline mode provides special motion commands that move backward and
983forward to heading lines.
984
985@table @kbd
986@item C-c C-n
987Move point to the next visible heading line
988(@code{outline-next-visible-heading}).
989@item C-c C-p
990Move point to the previous visible heading line
991(@code{outline-previous-visible-heading}).
992@item C-c C-f
993Move point to the next visible heading line at the same level
994as the one point is on (@code{outline-forward-same-level}).
995@item C-c C-b
996Move point to the previous visible heading line at the same level
997(@code{outline-backward-same-level}).
998@item C-c C-u
999Move point up to a lower-level (more inclusive) visible heading line
1000(@code{outline-up-heading}).
1001@end table
1002
1003@findex outline-next-visible-heading
1004@findex outline-previous-visible-heading
1005@kindex C-c C-n @r{(Outline mode)}
1006@kindex C-c C-p @r{(Outline mode)}
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1007 @kbd{C-c C-n} (@code{outline-next-visible-heading}) moves down to
1008the next heading line. @kbd{C-c C-p}
1009(@code{outline-previous-visible-heading}) moves similarly backward.
1010Both accept numeric arguments as repeat counts.
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1011
1012@findex outline-up-heading
1013@findex outline-forward-same-level
1014@findex outline-backward-same-level
1015@kindex C-c C-f @r{(Outline mode)}
1016@kindex C-c C-b @r{(Outline mode)}
1017@kindex C-c C-u @r{(Outline mode)}
95ca9bc7 1018 The commands @kbd{C-c C-f} (@code{outline-forward-same-level}) and
8cf51b2c 1019@kbd{C-c C-b} (@code{outline-backward-same-level}) move from one
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1020heading line to another visible heading at the same depth in the
1021outline. @kbd{C-c C-u} (@code{outline-up-heading}) moves backward to
1022another heading that is less deeply nested.
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1023
1024@node Outline Visibility
1025@subsection Outline Visibility Commands
1026
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1027 Outline mode provides several commands for temporarily hiding or
1028revealing parts of the buffer, based on the outline structure. These
1029commands are not undoable; their effects are simply not recorded by
1030the undo mechanism, so you can undo right past them (@pxref{Undo}).
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1031
1032 Many of these commands act on the ``current'' heading line. If
1033point is on a heading line, that is the current heading line; if point
1034is on a body line, the current heading line is the nearest preceding
1035header line.
1036
1037@table @kbd
1038@item C-c C-c
1039Make the current heading line's body invisible (@code{hide-entry}).
1040@item C-c C-e
1041Make the current heading line's body visible (@code{show-entry}).
1042@item C-c C-d
1043Make everything under the current heading invisible, not including the
1044heading itself (@code{hide-subtree}).
1045@item C-c C-s
1046Make everything under the current heading visible, including body,
1047subheadings, and their bodies (@code{show-subtree}).
1048@item C-c C-l
1049Make the body of the current heading line, and of all its subheadings,
1050invisible (@code{hide-leaves}).
1051@item C-c C-k
1052Make all subheadings of the current heading line, at all levels,
1053visible (@code{show-branches}).
1054@item C-c C-i
1055Make immediate subheadings (one level down) of the current heading
1056line visible (@code{show-children}).
1057@item C-c C-t
1058Make all body lines in the buffer invisible (@code{hide-body}).
1059@item C-c C-a
1060Make all lines in the buffer visible (@code{show-all}).
1061@item C-c C-q
1062Hide everything except the top @var{n} levels of heading lines
1063(@code{hide-sublevels}).
1064@item C-c C-o
1065Hide everything except for the heading or body that point is in, plus
1066the headings leading up from there to the top level of the outline
1067(@code{hide-other}).
1068@end table
1069
1070@findex hide-entry
1071@findex show-entry
1072@kindex C-c C-c @r{(Outline mode)}
1073@kindex C-c C-e @r{(Outline mode)}
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1074 The simplest of these commands are @kbd{C-c C-c}
1075(@code{hide-entry}), which hides the body lines directly following the
1076current heading line, and @kbd{C-c C-e} (@code{show-entry}), which
1077reveals them. Subheadings and their bodies are not affected.
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1078
1079@findex hide-subtree
1080@findex show-subtree
1081@kindex C-c C-s @r{(Outline mode)}
1082@kindex C-c C-d @r{(Outline mode)}
1083@cindex subtree (Outline mode)
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1084 The commands @kbd{C-c C-d} (@code{hide-subtree}) and @kbd{C-c C-s}
1085(@code{show-subtree}) are more powerful. They apply to the current
1086heading line's @dfn{subtree}: its body, all of its subheadings, both
1087direct and indirect, and all of their bodies.
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1088
1089@findex hide-leaves
1090@findex show-branches
95ca9bc7 1091@findex show-children
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1092@kindex C-c C-l @r{(Outline mode)}
1093@kindex C-c C-k @r{(Outline mode)}
8cf51b2c 1094@kindex C-c C-i @r{(Outline mode)}
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1095 The command @kbd{C-c C-l} (@code{hide-leaves}) hides the body of the
1096current heading line as well as all the bodies in its subtree; the
1097subheadings themselves are left visible. The command @kbd{C-c C-k}
1098(@code{show-branches}) reveals the subheadings, if they had previously
8863a584 1099been hidden (e.g.@: by @kbd{C-c C-d}). The command @kbd{C-c C-i}
95ca9bc7 1100(@code{show-children}) is a weaker version of this; it reveals just
8863a584 1101the direct subheadings, i.e.@: those one level down.
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1102
1103@findex hide-other
1104@kindex C-c C-o @r{(Outline mode)}
1105 The command @kbd{C-c C-o} (@code{hide-other}) hides everything
1106except the entry that point is in, plus its parents (the headers
1107leading up from there to top level in the outline) and the top level
1108headings.
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1109
1110@findex hide-body
1111@findex show-all
1112@kindex C-c C-t @r{(Outline mode)}
1113@kindex C-c C-a @r{(Outline mode)}
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1114@findex hide-sublevels
1115@kindex C-c C-q @r{(Outline mode)}
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1116 The remaining commands affect the whole buffer. @kbd{C-c C-t}
1117(@code{hide-body}) makes all body lines invisible, so that you see
1118just the outline structure (as a special exception, it will not hide
1119lines at the top of the file, preceding the first header line, even
1120though these are technically body lines). @kbd{C-c C-a}
1121(@code{show-all}) makes all lines visible. @kbd{C-c C-q}
1122(@code{hide-sublevels}) hides all but the top level headings; with a
1123numeric argument @var{n}, it hides everything except the top @var{n}
1124levels of heading lines.
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1125
1126@findex reveal-mode
1127 When incremental search finds text that is hidden by Outline mode,
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1128it makes that part of the buffer visible. If you exit the search at
1129that position, the text remains visible. You can also automatically
1130make text visible as you navigate in it by using Reveal mode (@kbd{M-x
1131reveal-mode}), a buffer-local minor mode.
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1132
1133@node Outline Views
1134@subsection Viewing One Outline in Multiple Views
1135
1136@cindex multiple views of outline
1137@cindex views of an outline
1138@cindex outline with multiple views
1139@cindex indirect buffers and outlines
1140 You can display two views of a single outline at the same time, in
1141different windows. To do this, you must create an indirect buffer using
1142@kbd{M-x make-indirect-buffer}. The first argument of this command is
1143the existing outline buffer name, and its second argument is the name to
1144use for the new indirect buffer. @xref{Indirect Buffers}.
1145
1146 Once the indirect buffer exists, you can display it in a window in the
1147normal fashion, with @kbd{C-x 4 b} or other Emacs commands. The Outline
1148mode commands to show and hide parts of the text operate on each buffer
1149independently; as a result, each buffer can have its own view. If you
1150want more than two views on the same outline, create additional indirect
1151buffers.
1152
1153@node Foldout
1154@subsection Folding Editing
1155
1156@cindex folding editing
1157 The Foldout package extends Outline mode and Outline minor mode with
1158``folding'' commands. The idea of folding is that you zoom in on a
1159nested portion of the outline, while hiding its relatives at higher
1160levels.
1161
1162 Consider an Outline mode buffer with all the text and subheadings under
1163level-1 headings hidden. To look at what is hidden under one of these
1164headings, you could use @kbd{C-c C-e} (@kbd{M-x show-entry}) to expose
1165the body, or @kbd{C-c C-i} to expose the child (level-2) headings.
1166
1167@kindex C-c C-z
1168@findex foldout-zoom-subtree
1169 With Foldout, you use @kbd{C-c C-z} (@kbd{M-x foldout-zoom-subtree}).
1170This exposes the body and child subheadings, and narrows the buffer so
1171that only the @w{level-1} heading, the body and the level-2 headings are
1172visible. Now to look under one of the level-2 headings, position the
1173cursor on it and use @kbd{C-c C-z} again. This exposes the level-2 body
1174and its level-3 child subheadings and narrows the buffer again. Zooming
1175in on successive subheadings can be done as much as you like. A string
1176in the mode line shows how deep you've gone.
1177
1178 When zooming in on a heading, to see only the child subheadings specify
1179a numeric argument: @kbd{C-u C-c C-z}. The number of levels of children
1180can be specified too (compare @kbd{M-x show-children}), e.g.@: @kbd{M-2
1181C-c C-z} exposes two levels of child subheadings. Alternatively, the
1182body can be specified with a negative argument: @kbd{M-- C-c C-z}. The
1183whole subtree can be expanded, similarly to @kbd{C-c C-s} (@kbd{M-x
1184show-subtree}), by specifying a zero argument: @kbd{M-0 C-c C-z}.
1185
1186 While you're zoomed in, you can still use Outline mode's exposure and
1187hiding functions without disturbing Foldout. Also, since the buffer is
1188narrowed, ``global'' editing actions will only affect text under the
1189zoomed-in heading. This is useful for restricting changes to a
1190particular chapter or section of your document.
1191
1192@kindex C-c C-x
1193@findex foldout-exit-fold
1194 To unzoom (exit) a fold, use @kbd{C-c C-x} (@kbd{M-x foldout-exit-fold}).
1195This hides all the text and subheadings under the top-level heading and
1196returns you to the previous view of the buffer. Specifying a numeric
1197argument exits that many levels of folds. Specifying a zero argument
1198exits all folds.
1199
1200 To cancel the narrowing of a fold without hiding the text and
1201subheadings, specify a negative argument. For example, @kbd{M--2 C-c
1202C-x} exits two folds and leaves the text and subheadings exposed.
1203
1204 Foldout mode also provides mouse commands for entering and exiting
1205folds, and for showing and hiding text:
1206
1207@table @asis
1208@item @kbd{C-M-Mouse-1} zooms in on the heading clicked on
49ffdce8 1209@itemize @w{}
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1210@item
1211single click: expose body.
1212@item
1213double click: expose subheadings.
1214@item
1215triple click: expose body and subheadings.
1216@item
1217quad click: expose entire subtree.
1218@end itemize
1219@item @kbd{C-M-Mouse-2} exposes text under the heading clicked on
49ffdce8 1220@itemize @w{}
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1221@item
1222single click: expose body.
1223@item
1224double click: expose subheadings.
1225@item
1226triple click: expose body and subheadings.
1227@item
1228quad click: expose entire subtree.
1229@end itemize
1230@item @kbd{C-M-Mouse-3} hides text under the heading clicked on or exits fold
49ffdce8 1231@itemize @w{}
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1232@item
1233single click: hide subtree.
1234@item
1235double click: exit fold and hide text.
1236@item
1237triple click: exit fold without hiding text.
1238@item
1239quad click: exit all folds and hide text.
1240@end itemize
1241@end table
1242
eceeb5fc 1243@c FIXME not marked as a user variable
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1244@vindex foldout-mouse-modifiers
1245 You can specify different modifier keys (instead of
1246@kbd{Control-Meta-}) by setting @code{foldout-mouse-modifiers}; but if
1247you have already loaded the @file{foldout.el} library, you must reload
1248it in order for this to take effect.
1249
1250 To use the Foldout package, you can type @kbd{M-x load-library
1251@key{RET} foldout @key{RET}}; or you can arrange for to do that
eceeb5fc 1252automatically by putting the following in your init file:
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1253
1254@example
1255(eval-after-load "outline" '(require 'foldout))
1256@end example
1257
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1258@node Org Mode
1259@section Org Mode
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1260@cindex organizer
1261@cindex planner
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1262@findex Org mode
1263@findex mode, Org
5da6dcc8 1264
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1265@findex org-mode
1266 Org mode is a variant of Outline mode for using Emacs as an
1267organizer and/or authoring system. Files with names ending in the
1268extension @file{.org} are opened in Org mode (@pxref{Choosing Modes}).
1269To explicitly switch to Org mode, type @kbd{M-x org-mode}.
5da6dcc8 1270
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1271 In Org mode, as in Outline mode, each entry has a heading line that
1272starts with one or more @samp{*} characters. @xref{Outline Format}.
1273In addition, any line that begins with the @samp{#} character is
1274treated as a comment.
5da6dcc8 1275
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1276@kindex TAB @r{(Org Mode)}
1277@findex org-cycle
1278 Org mode provides commands for easily viewing and manipulating the
1279outline structure. The simplest of these commands is @key{TAB}
1280(@code{org-cycle}). If invoked on a heading line, it cycles through
1281the different visibility states of the subtree: (i) showing only that
1282heading line, (ii) showing only the heading line and the heading lines
1283of its direct children, if any, and (iii) showing the entire subtree.
1284If invoked in a body line, the global binding for @key{TAB} is
1285executed.
5da6dcc8 1286
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1287@kindex S-TAB @r{(Org Mode)}
1288@findex org-shifttab
1289 Typing @key{S-TAB} (@code{org-shifttab}) anywhere in an Org mode
1290buffer cycles the visibility of the entire outline structure, between
1291(i) showing only top-level heading lines, (ii) showing all heading
1292lines but no body lines, and (iii) showing everything.
5da6dcc8 1293
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1294@kindex M-<up> @r{(Org Mode)}
1295@kindex M-<down> @r{(Org Mode)}
1296@kindex M-<left> @r{(Org Mode)}
1297@kindex M-<right> @r{(Org Mode)}
1298@findex org-metaup
1299@findex org-metadown
1300@findex org-metaleft
1301@findex org-metaright
1302 You can move an entire entry up or down in the buffer, including its
1303body lines and subtree (if any), by typing @kbd{M-<up>}
1304(@code{org-metaup}) or @kbd{M-<down>} (@code{org-metadown}) on the
1305heading line. Similarly, you can promote or demote a heading line
1ef1990c 1306with @kbd{M-<left>} (@code{org-metaleft}) and @kbd{M-<right>}
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1307(@code{org-metaright}). These commands execute their global bindings
1308if invoked on a body line.
1309
1310 The following subsections give basic instructions for using Org mode
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1311as an organizer and as an authoring system. For details, @pxref{Top,
1312The Org Mode Manual, Introduction, org, The Org Manual}.
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1313
1314@menu
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1315* Org Organizer:: Managing TODO lists and agendas.
1316* Org Authoring:: Exporting Org buffers to various formats.
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1317@end menu
1318
0ed49f93 1319@node Org Organizer
5da6dcc8 1320@subsection Org as an organizer
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1321@cindex TODO item
1322@cindex Org agenda
5da6dcc8 1323
5da6dcc8 1324@kindex C-c C-t @r{(Org Mode)}
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1325@findex org-todo
1326@vindex org-todo-keywords
1327 You can tag an Org entry as a @dfn{TODO} item by typing @kbd{C-c
1328C-t} (@code{org-todo}) anywhere in the entry. This adds the keyword
1329@samp{TODO} to the heading line. Typing @kbd{C-c C-t} again switches
1330the keyword to @samp{DONE}; another @kbd{C-c C-t} removes the keyword
1331entirely, and so forth. You can customize the keywords used by
1332@kbd{C-c C-t} via the variable @code{org-todo-keywords}.
1333
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1334@kindex C-c C-s @r{(Org Mode)}
1335@kindex C-c C-d @r{(Org Mode)}
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1336@findex org-schedule
1337@findex org-deadline
1338 Apart from marking an entry as TODO, you can attach a date to it, by
1339typing @kbd{C-c C-s} (@code{org-schedule}) in the entry. This prompts
1340for a date by popping up the Emacs Calendar (@pxref{Calendar/Diary}),
1341and then adds the tag @samp{SCHEDULED}, together with the selected
1342date, beneath the heading line. The command @kbd{C-c C-d}
1343(@code{org-deadline}) has the same effect, except that it uses the tag
1344@code{DEADLINE}.
1345
1346@kindex C-c [ @r{(Org Mode)}
1347@findex org-agenda-file-to-front
1348@vindex org-agenda-files
1349 Once you have some TODO items planned in an Org file, you can add
1350that file to the list of @dfn{agenda files} by typing @kbd{C-c [}
1351(@code{org-agenda-file-to-front}). Org mode is designed to let you
1352easily maintain multiple agenda files, e.g.@: for organizing different
1353aspects of your life. The list of agenda files is stored in the
1354variable @code{org-agenda-files}.
1355
5da6dcc8 1356@findex org-agenda
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1357 To view items coming from your agenda files, type @kbd{M-x
1358org-agenda}. This command prompts for what you want to see: a list of
1359things to do this week, a list of TODO items with specific keywords,
1360etc.
1361@ifnottex
1362@xref{Agenda Views,,,org, The Org Manual}, for details.
1363@end ifnottex
1364
1365@node Org Authoring
5da6dcc8 1366@subsection Org as an authoring system
0ed49f93 1367@cindex Org exporting
5da6dcc8 1368
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1369@findex org-export
1370@kindex C-c C-e @r{(Org mode)}
1371 You may want to format your Org notes nicely and to prepare them for
1372export and publication. To export the current buffer, type @kbd{C-c
1373C-e} (@code{org-export}) anywhere in an Org buffer. This command
1374prompts for an export format; currently supported formats include
c1dabff0 1375HTML, @LaTeX{}, OpenDocument (@file{.odt}), and PDF. Some formats,
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1376such as PDF, require certain system tools to be installed.
1377
1378@vindex org-publish-project-alist
1379 To export several files at once to a specific directory, either
1380locally or over the network, you must define a list of projects
1381through the variable @code{org-publish-project-alist}. See its
1382documentation for details.
1383
1384 Org supports a simple markup scheme for applying text formatting to
1385exported documents:
5da6dcc8
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1386
1387@example
1388- This text is /emphasized/
0ed49f93 1389- This text is *in bold*
5da6dcc8
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1390- This text is _underlined_
1391- This text uses =a teletype font=
5da6dcc8 1392
5da6dcc8
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1393#+begin_quote
1394``This is a quote.''
1395#+end_quote
1396
1397#+begin_example
1398This is an example.
1399#+end_example
1400@end example
1401
0ed49f93 1402 For further details, see @ref{Exporting,,,org, The Org Manual} and
5da6dcc8
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1403@ref{Publishing,,,org, The Org Manual}.
1404
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1405@node TeX Mode
1406@section @TeX{} Mode
1407@cindex @TeX{} mode
c1dabff0 1408@cindex @LaTeX{} mode
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1409@cindex Sli@TeX{} mode
1410@cindex Doc@TeX{} mode
1411@cindex mode, @TeX{}
c1dabff0 1412@cindex mode, @LaTeX{}
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1413@cindex mode, Sli@TeX{}
1414@cindex mode, Doc@TeX{}
1415@findex tex-mode
1416@findex plain-tex-mode
1417@findex latex-mode
1418@findex slitex-mode
1419@findex doctex-mode
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1420@findex bibtex-mode
1421
1422 Emacs provides special major modes for editing files written in
1423@TeX{} and its related formats. @TeX{} is a powerful text formatter
1424written by Donald Knuth; like GNU Emacs, it is free software.
c1dabff0 1425@LaTeX{} is a simplified input format for @TeX{}, implemented using
3a5244ab 1426@TeX{} macros. Doc@TeX{} is a special file format in which the
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1427@LaTeX{} sources are written, combining sources with documentation.
1428Sli@TeX{} is an obsolete special form of @LaTeX{}.@footnote{It has
3a5244ab 1429been replaced by the @samp{slides} document class, which comes with
c1dabff0 1430@LaTeX{}.}
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1431
1432@vindex tex-default-mode
c1dabff0 1433 @TeX{} mode has four variants: Plain @TeX{} mode, @LaTeX{} mode,
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1434Doc@TeX{} mode, and Sli@TeX{} mode. These distinct major modes differ
1435only slightly, and are designed for editing the four different
1436formats. Emacs selects the appropriate mode by looking at the
1437contents of the buffer. (This is done by the @code{tex-mode} command,
1438which is normally called automatically when you visit a @TeX{}-like
1439file. @xref{Choosing Modes}.) If the contents are insufficient to
1440determine this, Emacs chooses the mode specified by the variable
1441@code{tex-default-mode}; its default value is @code{latex-mode}. If
1442Emacs does not guess right, you can select the correct variant of
1443@TeX{} mode using the command @kbd{M-x plain-tex-mode}, @kbd{M-x
1444latex-mode}, @kbd{M-x slitex-mode}, or @kbd{doctex-mode}.
1445
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1446 The following sections document the features of @TeX{} mode and its
1447variants. There are several other @TeX{}-related Emacs packages,
1448which are not documented in this manual:
1449
1450@itemize @bullet
1451@item
1452Bib@TeX{} mode is a major mode for Bib@TeX{} files, which are commonly
c1dabff0 1453used for keeping bibliographic references for @LaTeX{} documents. For
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1454more information, see the documentation string for the command
1455@code{bibtex-mode}.
1456
1457@item
a24bf23e 1458The Ref@TeX{} package provides a minor mode which can be used with
c1dabff0 1459@LaTeX{} mode to manage bibliographic references.
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1460@ifinfo
1461@xref{Top,The Ref@TeX{} Manual,,reftex}.
1462@end ifinfo
1463@ifnotinfo
1464For more information, see the Ref@TeX{} Info manual, which is
1465distributed with Emacs.
1466@end ifnotinfo
1467
1468@item
1469The AUC@TeX{} package provides more advanced features for editing
1470@TeX{} and its related formats, including the ability to preview
1471@TeX{} equations within Emacs buffers. Unlike Bib@TeX{} mode and the
1472Ref@TeX{} package, AUC@TeX{} is not distributed with Emacs by default.
1473It can be downloaded via the Package Menu (@pxref{Packages}); once
1474installed, see
1475@ifinfo
1476@ref{Top,The AUC@TeX{} Manual,,auctex}.
1477@end ifinfo
1478@ifnotinfo
1479the AUC@TeX{} manual, which is included with the package.
1480@end ifnotinfo
1481@end itemize
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1482
1483@menu
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1484* TeX Editing:: Special commands for editing in TeX mode.
1485* LaTeX Editing:: Additional commands for LaTeX input files.
1486* TeX Print:: Commands for printing part of a file with TeX.
1487* TeX Misc:: Customization of TeX mode, and related features.
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1488@end menu
1489
1490@node TeX Editing
1491@subsection @TeX{} Editing Commands
1492
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1493@table @kbd
1494@item "
1495Insert, according to context, either @samp{``} or @samp{"} or
1496@samp{''} (@code{tex-insert-quote}).
1497@item C-j
1498Insert a paragraph break (two newlines) and check the previous
1499paragraph for unbalanced braces or dollar signs
1500(@code{tex-terminate-paragraph}).
1501@item M-x tex-validate-region
1502Check each paragraph in the region for unbalanced braces or dollar signs.
1503@item C-c @{
1504Insert @samp{@{@}} and position point between them (@code{tex-insert-braces}).
1505@item C-c @}
1506Move forward past the next unmatched close brace (@code{up-list}).
1507@end table
1508
1509@findex tex-insert-quote
1510@kindex " @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
3a5244ab 1511 In @TeX{}, the character @samp{"} is not normally used; instead,
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1512quotations begin with @samp{``} and end with @samp{''}. @TeX{} mode
1513therefore binds the @kbd{"} key to the @code{tex-insert-quote}
1514command. This inserts @samp{``} after whitespace or an open brace,
1515@samp{"} after a backslash, and @samp{''} after any other character.
3a5244ab
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1516
1517 As a special exception, if you type @kbd{"} when the text before
1518point is either @samp{``} or @samp{''}, Emacs replaces that preceding
1519text with a single @samp{"} character. You can therefore type
1520@kbd{""} to insert @samp{"}, should you ever need to do so. (You can
1521also use @kbd{C-q "} to insert this character.)
1522
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1523 In @TeX{} mode, @samp{$} has a special syntax code which attempts to
1524understand the way @TeX{} math mode delimiters match. When you insert a
1525@samp{$} that is meant to exit math mode, the position of the matching
1526@samp{$} that entered math mode is displayed for a second. This is the
1527same feature that displays the open brace that matches a close brace that
1528is inserted. However, there is no way to tell whether a @samp{$} enters
1529math mode or leaves it; so when you insert a @samp{$} that enters math
1530mode, the previous @samp{$} position is shown as if it were a match, even
1531though they are actually unrelated.
1532
1533@findex tex-insert-braces
1534@kindex C-c @{ @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1535@findex up-list
1536@kindex C-c @} @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1537 @TeX{} uses braces as delimiters that must match. Some users prefer
1538to keep braces balanced at all times, rather than inserting them
1539singly. Use @kbd{C-c @{} (@code{tex-insert-braces}) to insert a pair of
1540braces. It leaves point between the two braces so you can insert the
1541text that belongs inside. Afterward, use the command @kbd{C-c @}}
1542(@code{up-list}) to move forward past the close brace.
1543
1544@findex tex-validate-region
1545@findex tex-terminate-paragraph
1546@kindex C-j @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
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1547 There are two commands for checking the matching of braces.
1548@kbd{C-j} (@code{tex-terminate-paragraph}) checks the paragraph before
1549point, and inserts two newlines to start a new paragraph. It outputs
1550a message in the echo area if any mismatch is found. @kbd{M-x
1551tex-validate-region} checks a region, paragraph by paragraph. The
1c64e6ed 1552errors are listed in an @file{*Occur*} buffer; you can use the usual
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1553Occur mode commands in that buffer, such as @kbd{C-c C-c}, to visit a
1554particular mismatch (@pxref{Other Repeating Search}).
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1555
1556 Note that Emacs commands count square brackets and parentheses in
1557@TeX{} mode, not just braces. This is not strictly correct for the
1558purpose of checking @TeX{} syntax. However, parentheses and square
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1559brackets are likely to be used in text as matching delimiters, and it
1560is useful for the various motion commands and automatic match display
1561to work with them.
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1562
1563@node LaTeX Editing
c1dabff0 1564@subsection @LaTeX{} Editing Commands
8cf51b2c 1565
c1dabff0 1566 @LaTeX{} mode provides a few extra features not applicable to plain
8863a584 1567@TeX{}:
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1568
1569@table @kbd
1570@item C-c C-o
c1dabff0 1571Insert @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} for @LaTeX{} block and position
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1572point on a line between them (@code{tex-latex-block}).
1573@item C-c C-e
c1dabff0 1574Close the innermost @LaTeX{} block not yet closed
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1575(@code{tex-close-latex-block}).
1576@end table
1577
1578@findex tex-latex-block
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1579@kindex C-c C-o @r{(@LaTeX{} mode)}
1580 In @LaTeX{} input, @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} tags are used to
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1581group blocks of text. To insert a block, type @kbd{C-c C-o}
1582(@code{tex-latex-block}). This prompts for a block type, and inserts
1583the appropriate matching @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} tags, leaving a
1584blank line between the two and moving point there.
8cf51b2c 1585
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1586@vindex latex-block-names
1587 When entering the block type argument to @kbd{C-c C-o}, you can use
1588the usual completion commands (@pxref{Completion}). The default
c1dabff0 1589completion list contains the standard @LaTeX{} block types. If you
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1590want additional block types for completion, customize the list
1591variable @code{latex-block-names}.
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1592
1593@findex tex-close-latex-block
c1dabff0 1594@kindex C-c C-e @r{(@LaTeX{} mode)}
e74e58c9 1595@findex latex-electric-env-pair-mode
c1dabff0 1596 In @LaTeX{} input, @samp{\begin} and @samp{\end} tags must balance.
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1597You can use @kbd{C-c C-e} (@code{tex-close-latex-block}) to insert an
1598@samp{\end} tag which matches the last unmatched @samp{\begin}. It
1599also indents the @samp{\end} to match the corresponding @samp{\begin},
1600and inserts a newline after the @samp{\end} tag if point is at the
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1601beginning of a line. The minor mode @code{latex-electric-env-pair-mode}
1602automatically inserts an @samp{\end} or @samp{\begin} tag for you
1603when you type the corresponding one.
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1604
1605@node TeX Print
1606@subsection @TeX{} Printing Commands
1607
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1608 You can invoke @TeX{} as an subprocess of Emacs, supplying either
1609the entire contents of the buffer or just part of it (e.g.@: one
1610chapter of a larger document).
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1611
1612@table @kbd
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1613@item C-c C-b
1614Invoke @TeX{} on the entire current buffer (@code{tex-buffer}).
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1615@item C-c C-r
1616Invoke @TeX{} on the current region, together with the buffer's header
1617(@code{tex-region}).
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1618@item C-c C-f
1619Invoke @TeX{} on the current file (@code{tex-file}).
8863a584 1620
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1621@item C-c C-v
1622Preview the output from the last @kbd{C-c C-r}, @kbd{C-c C-b}, or @kbd{C-c
1623C-f} command (@code{tex-view}).
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1624
1625@item C-c C-p
1626Print the output from the last @kbd{C-c C-b}, @kbd{C-c C-r}, or
1627@kbd{C-c C-f} command (@code{tex-print}).
1628
1629@item C-c @key{TAB}
1630Invoke Bib@TeX{} on the current file (@code{tex-bibtex-file}).
1631@item C-c C-l
1632Recenter the window showing output from @TeX{} so that the last line
1633can be seen (@code{tex-recenter-output-buffer}).
1634@item C-c C-k
1635Kill the @TeX{} subprocess (@code{tex-kill-job}).
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1636@item C-c C-c
1637Invoke some other compilation command on the entire current buffer
1638(@code{tex-compile}).
1639@end table
1640
1641@findex tex-buffer
1642@kindex C-c C-b @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
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1643@findex tex-view
1644@kindex C-c C-v @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
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1645@findex tex-print
1646@kindex C-c C-p @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1647 To pass the current buffer through @TeX{}, type @kbd{C-c C-b}
1648(@code{tex-buffer}). The formatted output goes in a temporary file,
1649normally a @file{.dvi} file. Afterwards, you can type @kbd{C-c C-v}
1650(@code{tex-view}) to launch an external program, such as
1651@command{xdvi}, to view this output file. You can also type @kbd{C-c
1652C-p} (@code{tex-print}) to print a hardcopy of the output file.
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1653
1654@cindex @env{TEXINPUTS} environment variable
1655@vindex tex-directory
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1656 By default, @kbd{C-c C-b} runs @TeX{} in the current directory. The
1657output of @TeX{} also goes in this directory. To run @TeX{} in a
1658different directory, change the variable @code{tex-directory} to the
1659desired directory name. If your environment variable @env{TEXINPUTS}
1660contains relative directory names, or if your files contains
1661@samp{\input} commands with relative file names, then
1662@code{tex-directory} @emph{must} be @code{"."} or you will get the
1663wrong results. Otherwise, it is safe to specify some other directory,
1664such as @code{"/tmp"}.
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1665
1666@vindex tex-run-command
1667@vindex latex-run-command
8cf51b2c 1668@vindex tex-dvi-view-command
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1669@vindex tex-dvi-print-command
1670 The buffer's @TeX{} variant determines what shell command @kbd{C-c
1671C-b} actually runs. In Plain @TeX{} mode, it is specified by the
1672variable @code{tex-run-command}, which defaults to @code{"tex"}. In
c1dabff0 1673@LaTeX{} mode, it is specified by @code{latex-run-command}, which
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1674defaults to @code{"latex"}. The shell command that @kbd{C-c C-v} runs
1675to view the @file{.dvi} output is determined by the variable
1676@code{tex-dvi-view-command}, regardless of the @TeX{} variant. The
1677shell command that @kbd{C-c C-p} runs to print the output is
1678determined by the variable @code{tex-dvi-print-command}.
1679
1680 Normally, Emacs automatically appends the output file name to the
1681shell command strings described in the preceding paragraph. For
1682example, if @code{tex-dvi-view-command} is @code{"xdvi"}, @kbd{C-c
1683C-v} runs @command{xdvi @var{output-file-name}}. In some cases,
1684however, the file name needs to be embedded in the command, e.g.@: if
1685you need to provide the file name as an argument to one command whose
1686output is piped to another. You can specify where to put the file
1687name with @samp{*} in the command string. For example,
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1688
1689@example
1690(setq tex-dvi-print-command "dvips -f * | lpr")
1691@end example
1692
1693@findex tex-kill-job
1694@kindex C-c C-k @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1695@findex tex-recenter-output-buffer
1696@kindex C-c C-l @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
8863a584 1697 The terminal output from @TeX{}, including any error messages,
1c64e6ed 1698appears in a buffer called @file{*tex-shell*}. If @TeX{} gets an
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1699error, you can switch to this buffer and feed it input (this works as
1700in Shell mode; @pxref{Interactive Shell}). Without switching to this
1701buffer you can scroll it so that its last line is visible by typing
1702@kbd{C-c C-l}.
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1703
1704 Type @kbd{C-c C-k} (@code{tex-kill-job}) to kill the @TeX{} process if
1705you see that its output is no longer useful. Using @kbd{C-c C-b} or
1706@kbd{C-c C-r} also kills any @TeX{} process still running.
1707
1708@findex tex-region
1709@kindex C-c C-r @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
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1710 You can also pass an arbitrary region through @TeX{} by typing
1711@kbd{C-c C-r} (@code{tex-region}). This is tricky, however, because
1712most files of @TeX{} input contain commands at the beginning to set
1713parameters and define macros, without which no later part of the file
1714will format correctly. To solve this problem, @kbd{C-c C-r} allows
1715you to designate a part of the file as containing essential commands;
1716it is included before the specified region as part of the input to
1717@TeX{}. The designated part of the file is called the @dfn{header}.
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1718
1719@cindex header (@TeX{} mode)
1720 To indicate the bounds of the header in Plain @TeX{} mode, you insert two
1721special strings in the file. Insert @samp{%**start of header} before the
1722header, and @samp{%**end of header} after it. Each string must appear
1723entirely on one line, but there may be other text on the line before or
1724after. The lines containing the two strings are included in the header.
1725If @samp{%**start of header} does not appear within the first 100 lines of
1726the buffer, @kbd{C-c C-r} assumes that there is no header.
1727
c1dabff0 1728 In @LaTeX{} mode, the header begins with @samp{\documentclass} or
8cf51b2c 1729@samp{\documentstyle} and ends with @samp{\begin@{document@}}. These
c1dabff0 1730are commands that @LaTeX{} requires you to use in any case, so nothing
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1731special needs to be done to identify the header.
1732
1733@findex tex-file
1734@kindex C-c C-f @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1735 The commands (@code{tex-buffer}) and (@code{tex-region}) do all of their
1736work in a temporary directory, and do not have available any of the auxiliary
1737files needed by @TeX{} for cross-references; these commands are generally
1738not suitable for running the final copy in which all of the cross-references
1739need to be correct.
1740
1741 When you want the auxiliary files for cross references, use @kbd{C-c
1742C-f} (@code{tex-file}) which runs @TeX{} on the current buffer's file,
1743in that file's directory. Before running @TeX{}, it offers to save any
1744modified buffers. Generally, you need to use (@code{tex-file}) twice to
1745get the cross-references right.
1746
1747@vindex tex-start-options
1748 The value of the variable @code{tex-start-options} specifies
1749options for the @TeX{} run.
1750
1751@vindex tex-start-commands
1752 The value of the variable @code{tex-start-commands} specifies @TeX{}
1753commands for starting @TeX{}. The default value causes @TeX{} to run
1754in nonstop mode. To run @TeX{} interactively, set the variable to
1755@code{""}.
1756
1757@vindex tex-main-file
1758 Large @TeX{} documents are often split into several files---one main
1759file, plus subfiles. Running @TeX{} on a subfile typically does not
1760work; you have to run it on the main file. In order to make
1761@code{tex-file} useful when you are editing a subfile, you can set the
1762variable @code{tex-main-file} to the name of the main file. Then
1763@code{tex-file} runs @TeX{} on that file.
1764
1765 The most convenient way to use @code{tex-main-file} is to specify it
1766in a local variable list in each of the subfiles. @xref{File
1767Variables}.
1768
1769@findex tex-bibtex-file
1770@kindex C-c TAB @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1771@vindex tex-bibtex-command
c1dabff0 1772 For @LaTeX{} files, you can use Bib@TeX{} to process the auxiliary
8cf51b2c
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1773file for the current buffer's file. Bib@TeX{} looks up bibliographic
1774citations in a data base and prepares the cited references for the
1775bibliography section. The command @kbd{C-c @key{TAB}}
1776(@code{tex-bibtex-file}) runs the shell command
1777(@code{tex-bibtex-command}) to produce a @samp{.bbl} file for the
1778current buffer's file. Generally, you need to do @kbd{C-c C-f}
1779(@code{tex-file}) once to generate the @samp{.aux} file, then do
1780@kbd{C-c @key{TAB}} (@code{tex-bibtex-file}), and then repeat @kbd{C-c C-f}
1781(@code{tex-file}) twice more to get the cross-references correct.
1782
1783@findex tex-compile
1784@kindex C-c C-c @r{(@TeX{} mode)}
1785 To invoke some other compilation program on the current @TeX{}
1786buffer, type @kbd{C-c C-c} (@code{tex-compile}). This command knows
1787how to pass arguments to many common programs, including
1788@file{pdflatex}, @file{yap}, @file{xdvi}, and @file{dvips}. You can
1789select your desired compilation program using the standard completion
1790keys (@pxref{Completion}).
1791
1792@node TeX Misc
1793@subsection @TeX{} Mode Miscellany
1794
1795@vindex tex-shell-hook
1796@vindex tex-mode-hook
1797@vindex latex-mode-hook
1798@vindex slitex-mode-hook
1799@vindex plain-tex-mode-hook
1800 Entering any variant of @TeX{} mode runs the hooks
1801@code{text-mode-hook} and @code{tex-mode-hook}. Then it runs either
1802@code{plain-tex-mode-hook}, @code{latex-mode-hook}, or
1803@code{slitex-mode-hook}, whichever is appropriate. Starting the
1804@TeX{} shell runs the hook @code{tex-shell-hook}. @xref{Hooks}.
1805
1806@findex iso-iso2tex
1807@findex iso-tex2iso
1808@findex iso-iso2gtex
1809@findex iso-gtex2iso
1810@cindex Latin-1 @TeX{} encoding
1811@cindex @TeX{} encoding
1812 The commands @kbd{M-x iso-iso2tex}, @kbd{M-x iso-tex2iso}, @kbd{M-x
1813iso-iso2gtex} and @kbd{M-x iso-gtex2iso} can be used to convert
1814between Latin-1 encoded files and @TeX{}-encoded equivalents.
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1815
1816@node HTML Mode
f67c5dd0 1817@section SGML and HTML Modes
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1818@cindex SGML mode
1819@cindex HTML mode
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1820@cindex mode, SGML
1821@cindex mode, HTML
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1822@findex sgml-mode
1823@findex html-mode
3a5244ab 1824
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1825 The major modes for SGML and HTML provide indentation support and
1826commands for operating on tags. HTML mode is a slightly customized
1827variant of SGML mode.
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1828
1829@table @kbd
1830@item C-c C-n
1831@kindex C-c C-n @r{(SGML mode)}
1832@findex sgml-name-char
1833Interactively specify a special character and insert the SGML
6e427e96 1834@samp{&}-command for that character (@code{sgml-name-char}).
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1835
1836@item C-c C-t
1837@kindex C-c C-t @r{(SGML mode)}
1838@findex sgml-tag
1839Interactively specify a tag and its attributes (@code{sgml-tag}).
1840This command asks you for a tag name and for the attribute values,
1841then inserts both the opening tag and the closing tag, leaving point
1842between them.
1843
1844With a prefix argument @var{n}, the command puts the tag around the
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1845@var{n} words already present in the buffer after point. Whenever a
1846region is active, it puts the tag around the region (when Transient
1847Mark mode is off, it does this when a numeric argument of @minus{}1 is
1848supplied.)
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1849
1850@item C-c C-a
1851@kindex C-c C-a @r{(SGML mode)}
1852@findex sgml-attributes
1853Interactively insert attribute values for the current tag
1854(@code{sgml-attributes}).
1855
1856@item C-c C-f
1857@kindex C-c C-f @r{(SGML mode)}
1858@findex sgml-skip-tag-forward
1859Skip across a balanced tag group (which extends from an opening tag
1860through its corresponding closing tag) (@code{sgml-skip-tag-forward}).
1861A numeric argument acts as a repeat count.
1862
1863@item C-c C-b
1864@kindex C-c C-b @r{(SGML mode)}
1865@findex sgml-skip-tag-backward
1866Skip backward across a balanced tag group (which extends from an
1867opening tag through its corresponding closing tag)
6e427e96 1868(@code{sgml-skip-tag-backward}). A numeric argument acts as a repeat
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1869count.
1870
1871@item C-c C-d
1872@kindex C-c C-d @r{(SGML mode)}
1873@findex sgml-delete-tag
1874Delete the tag at or after point, and delete the matching tag too
1875(@code{sgml-delete-tag}). If the tag at or after point is an opening
1876tag, delete the closing tag too; if it is a closing tag, delete the
1877opening tag too.
1878
1879@item C-c ? @var{tag} @key{RET}
1880@kindex C-c ? @r{(SGML mode)}
1881@findex sgml-tag-help
1882Display a description of the meaning of tag @var{tag}
1883(@code{sgml-tag-help}). If the argument @var{tag} is empty, describe
1884the tag at point.
1885
1886@item C-c /
1887@kindex C-c / @r{(SGML mode)}
1888@findex sgml-close-tag
1889Insert a close tag for the innermost unterminated tag
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1890(@code{sgml-close-tag}). If called within a tag or a comment,
1891close it instead of inserting a close tag.
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1892
1893@item C-c 8
1894@kindex C-c 8 @r{(SGML mode)}
1895@findex sgml-name-8bit-mode
1896Toggle a minor mode in which Latin-1 characters insert the
1897corresponding SGML commands that stand for them, instead of the
1898characters themselves (@code{sgml-name-8bit-mode}).
1899
1900@item C-c C-v
1901@kindex C-c C-v @r{(SGML mode)}
1902@findex sgml-validate
1903Run a shell command (which you must specify) to validate the current
1904buffer as SGML (@code{sgml-validate}).
1905
1906@item C-c TAB
1907@kindex C-c TAB @r{(SGML mode)}
1908@findex sgml-tags-invisible
1909Toggle the visibility of existing tags in the buffer. This can be
6e427e96 1910used as a cheap preview (@code{sgml-tags-invisible}).
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1911@end table
1912
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1913@cindex nXML mode
1914@cindex mode, nXML
1915@findex nxml-mode
1916@cindex XML schema
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1917 The major mode for editing XML documents is called nXML mode. This
1918is a powerful major mode that can recognize many existing XML schema
1919and use them to provide completion of XML elements via
1920@kbd{C-@key{RET}} or @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}, as well as ``on-the-fly'' XML
1921validation with error highlighting. To enable nXML mode in an
1922existing buffer, type @kbd{M-x nxml-mode}, or, equivalently, @kbd{M-x
1923xml-mode}. Emacs uses nXML mode for files which have the extension
1924@file{.xml}. For XHTML files, which have the extension @file{.xhtml},
1925Emacs uses HTML mode by default; you can make it use nXML mode by
1926customizing the variable @code{auto-mode-alist} (@pxref{Choosing
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1927Modes}).
1928@ifinfo
1929nXML mode is described in its own manual: @xref{Top, nXML
8863a584 1930Mode,,nxml-mode, nXML Mode}.
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1931@end ifinfo
1932@ifnotinfo
1933nXML mode is described in an Info manual, which is distributed with
1934Emacs.
1935@end ifnotinfo
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1936
1937@vindex sgml-xml-mode
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1938 You may choose to use the less powerful SGML mode for editing XML,
1939since XML is a strict subset of SGML. To enable SGML mode in an
1940existing buffer, type @kbd{M-x sgml-mode}. On enabling SGML mode,
1941Emacs examines the buffer to determine whether it is XML; if so, it
1942sets the variable @code{sgml-xml-mode} to a non-@code{nil} value.
1943This causes SGML mode's tag insertion commands, described above, to
1944always insert explicit closing tags as well.
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1945
1946@node Nroff Mode
1947@section Nroff Mode
1948
1949@cindex nroff
1950@findex nroff-mode
a24bf23e 1951@vindex nroff-mode-hook
eceeb5fc 1952 Nroff mode, a major mode derived from Text mode, is
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1953specialized for editing nroff files (e.g.@: Unix man pages). Type
1954@kbd{M-x nroff-mode} to enter this mode. Entering Nroff mode runs the
eceeb5fc 1955hook @code{text-mode-hook}, then @code{nroff-mode-hook}
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1956(@pxref{Hooks}).
1957
1958 In Nroff mode, nroff command lines are treated as paragraph
1959separators, pages are separated by @samp{.bp} commands, and comments
1960start with backslash-doublequote. It also defines these commands:
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1961
1962@findex forward-text-line
1963@findex backward-text-line
1964@findex count-text-lines
1965@kindex M-n @r{(Nroff mode)}
1966@kindex M-p @r{(Nroff mode)}
1967@kindex M-? @r{(Nroff mode)}
1968@table @kbd
1969@item M-n
1970Move to the beginning of the next line that isn't an nroff command
1971(@code{forward-text-line}). An argument is a repeat count.
1972@item M-p
1973Like @kbd{M-n} but move up (@code{backward-text-line}).
1974@item M-?
1975Displays in the echo area the number of text lines (lines that are not
1976nroff commands) in the region (@code{count-text-lines}).
1977@end table
1978
1979@findex electric-nroff-mode
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1980 Electric Nroff mode is a buffer-local minor mode that can be used
1981with Nroff mode. To toggle this minor mode, type @kbd{M-x
8cf51b2c 1982electric-nroff-mode} (@pxref{Minor Modes}). When the mode is on, each
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1983time you type @key{RET} to end a line containing an nroff command that
1984opens a kind of grouping, the nroff command to close that grouping is
1985automatically inserted on the following line.
8cf51b2c 1986
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1987 If you use Outline minor mode with Nroff mode (@pxref{Outline
1988Mode}), heading lines are lines of the form @samp{.H} followed by a
1989number (the header level).
8cf51b2c 1990
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1991@node Enriched Text
1992@section Enriched Text
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1993@cindex Enriched mode
1994@cindex mode, Enriched
8863a584 1995@cindex enriched text
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1996@cindex WYSIWYG
1997@cindex word processing
8863a584 1998@cindex text/enriched MIME format
8cf51b2c 1999
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2000 Enriched mode is a minor mode for editing formatted text files in a
2001WYSIWYG (``what you see is what you get'') fashion. When Enriched
2002mode is enabled, you can apply various formatting properties to the
2003text in the buffer, such as fonts and colors; upon saving the buffer,
2004those properties are saved together with the text, using the MIME
2005@samp{text/enriched} file format.
8cf51b2c 2006
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2007 Enriched mode is typically used with Text mode (@pxref{Text Mode}).
2008It is @emph{not} compatible with Font Lock mode, which is used by many
2009major modes, including most programming language modes, for syntax
2010highlighting (@pxref{Font Lock}). Unlike Enriched mode, Font Lock
2011mode assigns text properties automatically, based on the current
2012buffer contents; those properties are not saved to disk.
8cf51b2c 2013
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2014 The file @file{etc/enriched.doc} in the Emacs distribution serves as
2015an example of the features of Enriched mode.
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2016
2017@menu
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2018* Enriched Mode:: Entering and exiting Enriched mode.
2019* Hard and Soft Newlines:: There are two different kinds of newlines.
2020* Editing Format Info:: How to edit text properties.
2021* Enriched Faces:: Bold, italic, underline, etc.
2022* Enriched Indentation:: Changing the left and right margins.
2023* Enriched Justification:: Centering, setting text flush with the
2024 left or right margin, etc.
2025* Enriched Properties:: The "special" text properties submenu.
8cf51b2c
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2026@end menu
2027
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2028@node Enriched Mode
2029@subsection Enriched Mode
8cf51b2c 2030
8863a584
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2031 Enriched mode is a buffer-local minor mode (@pxref{Minor Modes}).
2032When you visit a file that has been saved in the @samp{text/enriched}
2033format, Emacs automatically enables Enriched mode, and applies the
2034formatting information in the file to the buffer text. When you save
2035a buffer with Enriched mode enabled, it is saved using the
2036@samp{text/enriched} format, including the formatting information.
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2037
2038@findex enriched-mode
8863a584
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2039 To create a new file of formatted text, visit the nonexistent file
2040and type @kbd{M-x enriched-mode}. This command actually toggles
2041Enriched mode. With a prefix argument, it enables Enriched mode if
2042the argument is positive, and disables Enriched mode otherwise. If
2043you disable Enriched mode, Emacs no longer saves the buffer using the
2044@samp{text/enriched} format; any formatting properties that have been
2045added to the buffer remain in the buffer, but they are not saved to
2046disk.
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2047
2048@vindex enriched-translations
8863a584
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2049 Enriched mode does not save all Emacs text properties, only those
2050specified in the variable @code{enriched-translations}. These include
2051properties for fonts, colors, indentation, and justification.
2052
2053@findex format-decode-buffer
2054 If you visit a file and Emacs fails to recognize that it is in the
2055@samp{text/enriched} format, type @kbd{M-x format-decode-buffer}.
2056This command prompts for a file format, and re-reads the file in that
2057format. Specifying the @samp{text/enriched} format automatically
2058enables Enriched mode.
2059
2060 To view a @samp{text/enriched} file in raw form (as plain text with
2061markup tags rather than formatted text), use @kbd{M-x
2062find-file-literally} (@pxref{Visiting}).
2063
2064 @xref{Format Conversion,, Format Conversion, elisp, the Emacs Lisp
2065Reference Manual}, for details of how Emacs recognizes and converts
2066file formats like @samp{text/enriched}. @xref{Text Properties,,,
2067elisp, the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for more information about
2068text properties.
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2069
2070@node Hard and Soft Newlines
2071@subsection Hard and Soft Newlines
2072@cindex hard newline
2073@cindex soft newline
2074@cindex newlines, hard and soft
2075
2076@cindex use-hard-newlines
8863a584
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2077 In Enriched mode, Emacs distinguishes between two different kinds of
2078newlines, @dfn{hard} newlines and @dfn{soft} newlines. You can also
2079enable or disable this feature in other buffers, by typing @kbd{M-x
2080use-hard-newlines}.
2081
2082 Hard newlines are used to separate paragraphs, or anywhere there
2083needs to be a line break regardless of how the text is filled; soft
2084newlines are used for filling. The @key{RET} (@code{newline}) and
2085@kbd{C-o} (@code{open-line}) commands insert hard newlines. The fill
2086commands, including Auto Fill (@pxref{Auto Fill}), insert only soft
2087newlines and delete only soft newlines, leaving hard newlines alone.
2088
2089 Thus, when editing with Enriched mode, you should not use @key{RET}
2090or @kbd{C-o} to break lines in the middle of filled paragraphs. Use
2091Auto Fill mode or explicit fill commands (@pxref{Fill Commands})
2092instead. Use @key{RET} or @kbd{C-o} where line breaks should always
2093remain, such as in tables and lists. For such lines, you may also
2094want to set the justification style to @code{unfilled}
2095(@pxref{Enriched Justification}).
8cf51b2c
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2096
2097@node Editing Format Info
2098@subsection Editing Format Information
2099
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2100 The easiest way to alter properties is with the Text Properties
2101menu. You can get to this menu from the Edit menu in the menu bar
2102(@pxref{Menu Bar}), or with @kbd{C-Mouse-2} (@pxref{Menu Mouse
2103Clicks}). Some of the commands in the Text Properties menu are listed
2104below (you can also invoke them with @kbd{M-x}):
8cf51b2c
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2105
2106@table @code
2107@findex facemenu-remove-face-props
2108@item Remove Face Properties
8863a584 2109Remove face properties from the region
8cf51b2c
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2110(@code{facemenu-remove-face-props}).
2111
2112@findex facemenu-remove-all
2113@item Remove Text Properties
8863a584 2114Remove all text properties from the region, including face properties
8cf51b2c
GM
2115(@code{facemenu-remove-all}).
2116
2117@findex describe-text-properties
2118@cindex text properties of characters
2119@cindex overlays at character position
2120@cindex widgets at buffer position
2121@cindex buttons at buffer position
2122@item Describe Properties
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2123List all text properties and other information about the character
2124following point (@code{describe-text-properties}).
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2125
2126@item Display Faces
8863a584
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2127Display a list of defined faces (@code{list-faces-display}).
2128@xref{Faces}.
8cf51b2c
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2129
2130@item Display Colors
8863a584
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2131Display a list of defined colors (@code{list-colors-display}).
2132@xref{Colors}.
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2133@end table
2134
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2135@noindent
2136The other menu entries are described in the following sections.
8cf51b2c 2137
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2138@node Enriched Faces
2139@subsection Faces in Enriched Text
9f9695a6 2140
8863a584
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2141 The following commands can be used to add or remove faces
2142(@pxref{Faces}). Each applies to the text in the region if the mark
2143is active, and to the next self-inserting character if the mark is
2144inactive. With a prefix argument, each command applies to the next
2145self-inserting character even if the region is active.
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2146
2147@table @kbd
2148@kindex M-o d @r{(Enriched mode)}
2149@findex facemenu-set-default
2150@item M-o d
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2151Remove all @code{face} properties (@code{facemenu-set-default}).
2152
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2153@kindex M-o b @r{(Enriched mode)}
2154@findex facemenu-set-bold
2155@item M-o b
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2156Apply the @code{bold} face (@code{facemenu-set-bold}).
2157
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2158@kindex M-o i @r{(Enriched mode)}
2159@findex facemenu-set-italic
2160@item M-o i
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2161Apply the @code{italic} face (@code{facemenu-set-italic}).
2162
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2163@kindex M-o l @r{(Enriched mode)}
2164@findex facemenu-set-bold-italic
2165@item M-o l
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2166Apply the @code{bold-italic} face (@code{facemenu-set-bold-italic}).
2167
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2168@kindex M-o u @r{(Enriched mode)}
2169@findex facemenu-set-underline
2170@item M-o u
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2171Apply the @code{underline} face (@code{facemenu-set-underline}).
2172
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2173@kindex M-o o @r{(Enriched mode)}
2174@findex facemenu-set-face
2175@item M-o o @var{face} @key{RET}
8863a584 2176Apply the face @var{face} (@code{facemenu-set-face}).
8cf51b2c 2177
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2178@findex facemenu-set-foreground
2179@item M-x facemenu-set-foreground
2180Prompt for a color (@pxref{Colors}), and apply it as a foreground
2181color.
8cf51b2c 2182
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2183@findex facemenu-set-background
2184@item M-x facemenu-set-background
2185Prompt for a color, and apply it as a background color.
2186@end table
8cf51b2c 2187
8863a584
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2188@noindent
2189These command are also available via the Text Properties menu.
8cf51b2c 2190
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2191 A self-inserting character normally inherits the face properties
2192(and most other text properties) from the preceding character in the
2193buffer. If you use one of the above commands to specify the face for
2194the next self-inserting character, that character will not inherit the
2195faces properties from the preceding character, but it will still
2196inherit other text properties.
8cf51b2c 2197
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2198 Enriched mode defines two additional faces: @code{excerpt} and
2199@code{fixed}. These correspond to codes used in the text/enriched
2200file format. The @code{excerpt} face is intended for quotations; by
2201default, it appears the same as @code{italic}. The @code{fixed} face
2202specifies fixed-width text; by default, it appears the same as
2203@code{bold}.
8cf51b2c 2204
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2205@node Enriched Indentation
2206@subsection Indentation in Enriched Text
8cf51b2c 2207
8863a584
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2208 In Enriched mode, you can specify different amounts of indentation
2209for the right or left margin of a paragraph or a part of a paragraph.
2210These margins also affect fill commands such as @kbd{M-q}
2211(@pxref{Filling}).
8cf51b2c 2212
eceeb5fc 2213 The Indentation submenu of Text Properties offers commands
8863a584 2214for specifying indentation:
8cf51b2c
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2215
2216@table @code
2217@kindex C-x TAB @r{(Enriched mode)}
2218@findex increase-left-margin
2219@item Indent More
2220Indent the region by 4 columns (@code{increase-left-margin}). In
2221Enriched mode, this command is also available on @kbd{C-x @key{TAB}}; if
2222you supply a numeric argument, that says how many columns to add to the
2223margin (a negative argument reduces the number of columns).
2224
2225@item Indent Less
2226Remove 4 columns of indentation from the region.
2227
2228@item Indent Right More
2229Make the text narrower by indenting 4 columns at the right margin.
2230
2231@item Indent Right Less
2232Remove 4 columns of indentation from the right margin.
2233@end table
2234
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2235@vindex standard-indent
2236 The variable @code{standard-indent} specifies how many columns these
2237commands should add to or subtract from the indentation. The default
8863a584
CY
2238value is 4. The default right margin for Enriched mode is controlled
2239by the variable @code{fill-column}, as usual.
8cf51b2c
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2240
2241@kindex C-c [ @r{(Enriched mode)}
2242@kindex C-c ] @r{(Enriched mode)}
2243@findex set-left-margin
2244@findex set-right-margin
8863a584
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2245 You can also type @kbd{C-c [} (@code{set-left-margin}) and @kbd{C-c
2246]} (@code{set-right-margin}) to set the left and right margins. You
2247can specify the margin width with a numeric argument; otherwise these
2248commands prompt for a value via the minibuffer.
8cf51b2c
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2249
2250 The fill prefix, if any, works in addition to the specified paragraph
2251indentation: @kbd{C-x .} does not include the specified indentation's
2252whitespace in the new value for the fill prefix, and the fill commands
2253look for the fill prefix after the indentation on each line. @xref{Fill
2254Prefix}.
2255
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2256@node Enriched Justification
2257@subsection Justification in Enriched Text
8cf51b2c 2258
8863a584
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2259 In Enriched mode, you can use the following commands to specify
2260various @dfn{justification styles} for filling. These commands apply
2261to the paragraph containing point, or, if the region is active, to all
2262paragraphs overlapping the region.
8cf51b2c
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2263
2264@table @kbd
2265@kindex M-j l @r{(Enriched mode)}
2266@findex set-justification-left
2267@item M-j l
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2268Align lines to the left margin (@code{set-justification-left}).
2269
8cf51b2c
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2270@kindex M-j r @r{(Enriched mode)}
2271@findex set-justification-right
2272@item M-j r
8863a584
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2273Align lines to the right margin (@code{set-justification-right}).
2274
8cf51b2c
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2275@kindex M-j b @r{(Enriched mode)}
2276@findex set-justification-full
2277@item M-j b
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2278Align lines to both margins, inserting spaces in the middle of the
2279line to achieve this (@code{set-justification-full}).
2280
8cf51b2c
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2281@kindex M-j c @r{(Enriched mode)}
2282@kindex M-S @r{(Enriched mode)}
2283@findex set-justification-center
2284@item M-j c
2285@itemx M-S
8863a584
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2286Center lines between the margins (@code{set-justification-center}).
2287
8cf51b2c
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2288@kindex M-j u @r{(Enriched mode)}
2289@findex set-justification-none
2290@item M-j u
8863a584
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2291Turn off filling entirely (@code{set-justification-none}). The fill
2292commands do nothing on text with this setting. You can, however,
2293still indent the left margin.
8cf51b2c
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2294@end table
2295
eceeb5fc 2296@vindex default-justification
8863a584
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2297 You can also specify justification styles using the Justification
2298submenu in the Text Properties menu.
8863a584
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2299 The default justification style is specified by the per-buffer
2300variable @code{default-justification}. Its value should be one of the
2301symbols @code{left}, @code{right}, @code{full}, @code{center}, or
2302@code{none}.
8cf51b2c 2303
8863a584
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2304@node Enriched Properties
2305@subsection Setting Other Text Properties
8cf51b2c 2306
8863a584
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2307 The Special Properties submenu of Text Properties has entries for
2308adding or removing three other text properties: @code{read-only},
2309(which disallows alteration of the text), @code{invisible} (which
2310hides text), and @code{intangible} (which disallows moving point
2311within the text). The @samp{Remove Special} menu item removes all of
2312these special properties from the text in the region.
8cf51b2c 2313
a24bf23e
CY
2314 The @code{invisible} and @code{intangible} properties are not saved
2315in the @samp{text/enriched} format.
8cf51b2c
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2316
2317@node Text Based Tables
2318@section Editing Text-based Tables
2319@cindex table mode
2320@cindex text-based tables
2321
a24bf23e
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2322 The @code{table} package provides commands to easily edit text-based
2323tables. Here is an example of what such a table looks like:
8cf51b2c
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2324
2325@smallexample
2326@group
2327+-----------------+--------------------------------+-----------------+
2328| Command | Description | Key Binding |
2329+-----------------+--------------------------------+-----------------+
2330| forward-char |Move point right N characters | C-f |
2331| |(left if N is negative). | |
2332| | | |
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2333+-----------------+--------------------------------+-----------------+
2334| backward-char |Move point left N characters | C-b |
2335| |(right if N is negative). | |
2336| | | |
8cf51b2c
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2337+-----------------+--------------------------------+-----------------+
2338@end group
2339@end smallexample
2340
a24bf23e
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2341 When Emacs recognizes such a stretch of text as a table
2342(@pxref{Table Recognition}), editing the contents of each table cell
2343will automatically resize the table, whenever the contents become too
2344large to fit in the cell. You can use the commands defined in the
2345following sections for navigating and editing the table layout.
2346
2347@findex table-fixed-width-mode
2348 To toggle the automatic table resizing feature, type @kbd{M-x
2349table-fixed-width-mode}.
8cf51b2c
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2350
2351@menu
2352* Table Definition:: What is a text based table.
2353* Table Creation:: How to create a table.
2354* Table Recognition:: How to activate and deactivate tables.
2355* Cell Commands:: Cell-oriented commands in a table.
2356* Cell Justification:: Justifying cell contents.
a24bf23e 2357* Table Rows and Columns:: Inserting and deleting rows and columns.
8cf51b2c 2358* Table Conversion:: Converting between plain text and tables.
8cf51b2c
GM
2359* Table Misc:: Table miscellany.
2360@end menu
2361
2362@node Table Definition
2363@subsection What is a Text-based Table?
a24bf23e 2364@cindex cells, for text-based tables
8cf51b2c 2365
a24bf23e
CY
2366 A @dfn{table} consists of a rectangular text area which is divided
2367into @dfn{cells}. Each cell must be at least one character wide and
2368one character high, not counting its border lines. A cell can be
2369subdivided into more cells, but they cannot overlap.
8cf51b2c 2370
a24bf23e
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2371 Cell border lines are drawn with three special characters, specified
2372by the following variables:
8cf51b2c
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2373
2374@table @code
2375@vindex table-cell-vertical-char
2376@item table-cell-vertical-char
a24bf23e 2377The character used for vertical lines. The default is @samp{|}.
8cf51b2c 2378
1b2679cf
SM
2379@vindex table-cell-horizontal-chars
2380@item table-cell-horizontal-chars
a24bf23e 2381The characters used for horizontal lines. The default is @samp{"-="}.
8cf51b2c
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2382
2383@vindex table-cell-intersection-char
2384@item table-cell-intersection-char
a24bf23e
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2385The character used for the intersection of horizontal and vertical
2386lines. The default is @samp{+}.
8cf51b2c
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2387@end table
2388
2389@noindent
a24bf23e 2390The following are examples of @emph{invalid} tables:
8cf51b2c
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2391
2392@example
a24bf23e
CY
2393 +-----+ +--+ +-++--+
2394 | | | | | || |
2395 | | | | | || |
2396 +--+ | +--+--+ +-++--+
2397 | | | | | | +-++--+
2398 | | | | | | | || |
2399 +--+--+ +--+--+ +-++--+
2400 a b c
8cf51b2c
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2401@end example
2402
a24bf23e 2403@noindent
8cf51b2c
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2404From left to right:
2405
2406@enumerate a
2407@item
2408Overlapped cells or non-rectangular cells are not allowed.
2409@item
8cf51b2c
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2410The border must be rectangular.
2411@item
2412Cells must have a minimum width/height of one character.
8cf51b2c
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2413@end enumerate
2414
2415@node Table Creation
a24bf23e 2416@subsection Creating a Table
8cf51b2c
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2417@cindex create a text-based table
2418@cindex table creation
2419
2420@findex table-insert
a24bf23e
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2421 To create a text-based table from scratch, type @kbd{M-x
2422table-insert}. This command prompts for the number of table columns,
2423the number of table rows, cell width and cell height. The cell width
2424and cell height do not include the cell borders; each can be specified
2425as a single integer (which means each cell is given the same
2426width/height), or as a sequence of integers separated by spaces or
2427commas (which specify the width/height of the individual table
2428columns/rows, counting from left to right for table columns and from
2429top to bottom for table rows). The specified table is then inserted
2430at point.
2431
2432 The table inserted by @kbd{M-x table-insert} contains special text
2433properties, which tell Emacs to treat it specially as a text-based
2434table. If you save the buffer to a file and visit it again later,
2435those properties are lost, and the table appears to Emacs as an
2436ordinary piece of text. See the next section, for how to convert it
2437back into a table.
8cf51b2c
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2438
2439@node Table Recognition
2440@subsection Table Recognition
2441@cindex table recognition
2442
2443@findex table-recognize
2444@findex table-unrecognize
a24bf23e
CY
2445 Existing text-based tables in a buffer, which lack the special text
2446properties applied by @kbd{M-x table-insert}, are not treated
2447specially as tables. To apply those text properties, type @kbd{M-x
2448table-recognize}. This command scans the current buffer,
2449@dfn{recognizes} valid table cells, and applies the relevant text
2450properties. Conversely, type @kbd{M-x table-unrecognize} to
2451@dfn{unrecognize} all tables in the current buffer, removing the
2452special text properties and converting tables back to plain text.
2453
2454 You can also use the following commands to selectively recognize or
2455unrecognize tables:
8cf51b2c
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2456
2457@table @kbd
2458@findex table-recognize-region
2459@item M-x table-recognize-region
a24bf23e
CY
2460Recognize tables within the current region.
2461
8cf51b2c
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2462@findex table-unrecognize-region
2463@item M-x table-unrecognize-region
a24bf23e
CY
2464Unrecognize tables within the current region.
2465
8cf51b2c
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2466@findex table-recognize-table
2467@item M-x table-recognize-table
d648feab 2468Recognize the table at point and activate it.
a24bf23e 2469
8cf51b2c
GM
2470@findex table-unrecognize-table
2471@item M-x table-unrecognize-table
d648feab 2472Deactivate the table at point.
a24bf23e 2473
8cf51b2c
GM
2474@findex table-recognize-cell
2475@item M-x table-recognize-cell
d648feab 2476Recognize the cell at point and activate it.
a24bf23e 2477
8cf51b2c
GM
2478@findex table-unrecognize-cell
2479@item M-x table-unrecognize-cell
d648feab 2480Deactivate the cell at point.
8cf51b2c
GM
2481@end table
2482
a24bf23e 2483 @xref{Table Conversion}, for another way to recognize a table.
8cf51b2c
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2484
2485@node Cell Commands
2486@subsection Commands for Table Cells
2487
2488@findex table-forward-cell
2489@findex table-backward-cell
a24bf23e
CY
2490 The commands @kbd{M-x table-forward-cell} and @kbd{M-x
2491table-backward-cell} move point from the current cell to an adjacent
2492cell. The order is cyclic: when point is in the last cell of a table,
2493@kbd{M-x table-forward-cell} moves to the first cell. Likewise, when
2494point is on the first cell, @kbd{M-x table-backward-cell} moves to the
2495last cell.
8cf51b2c
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2496
2497@findex table-span-cell
a24bf23e
CY
2498 @kbd{M-x table-span-cell} prompts for a direction---right, left,
2499above, or below---and merges the current cell with the adjacent cell
2500in that direction. This command signals an error if the merge would
2501result in an illegitimate cell layout.
8cf51b2c
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2502
2503@findex table-split-cell
8cf51b2c 2504@findex table-split-cell-vertically
8cf51b2c 2505@findex table-split-cell-horizontally
a24bf23e
CY
2506@cindex text-based tables, splitting cells
2507@cindex splitting table cells
2508 @kbd{M-x table-split-cell} splits the current cell vertically or
2509horizontally, prompting for the direction with the minibuffer. The
2510commands @kbd{M-x table-split-cell-vertically} and @kbd{M-x
2511table-split-cell-horizontally} split in a specific direction. When
2512splitting vertically, the old cell contents are automatically split
2513between the two new cells. When splitting horizontally, you are
2514prompted for how to divide the cell contents, if the cell is
2515non-empty; the options are @samp{split} (divide the contents at
2516point), @samp{left} (put all the contents in the left cell), and
2517@samp{right} (put all the contents in the right cell).
2518
2519 The following commands enlarge or shrink a cell. By default, they
2520resize by one row or column; if a numeric argument is supplied, that
2521specifies the number of rows or columns to resize by.
8cf51b2c
GM
2522
2523@table @kbd
2524@findex table-heighten-cell
2525@item M-x table-heighten-cell
2526Enlarge the current cell vertically.
a24bf23e 2527
8cf51b2c
GM
2528@findex table-shorten-cell
2529@item M-x table-shorten-cell
2530Shrink the current cell vertically.
a24bf23e 2531
8cf51b2c
GM
2532@findex table-widen-cell
2533@item M-x table-widen-cell
2534Enlarge the current cell horizontally.
a24bf23e 2535
8cf51b2c
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2536@findex table-narrow-cell
2537@item M-x table-narrow-cell
2538Shrink the current cell horizontally.
2539@end table
2540
2541@node Cell Justification
2542@subsection Cell Justification
a24bf23e 2543@cindex justification in text-based tables
8cf51b2c 2544
a24bf23e
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2545 The command @kbd{M-x table-justify} imposes @dfn{justification} on
2546one or more cells in a text-based table. Justification determines how
2547the text in the cell is aligned, relative to the edges of the cell.
2548Each cell in a table can be separately justified.
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2549
2550@findex table-justify
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2551 @kbd{M-x table-justify} first prompts for what to justify; the
2552options are @samp{cell} (just the current cell), @samp{column} (all
2553cells in the current table column) and @samp{row} (all cells in the
2554current table row). The command then prompts for the justification
2555style; the options are @code{left}, @code{center}, @code{right},
2556@code{top}, @code{middle}, @code{bottom}, or @code{none} (meaning no
2557vertical justification).
2558
2559 Horizontal and vertical justification styles are specified
2560independently, and both types can be in effect simultaneously; for
2561instance, you can call @kbd{M-x table-justify} twice, once to specify
2562@code{right} justification and once to specify @code{bottom}
2563justification, to align the contents of a cell to the bottom right.
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2564
2565@vindex table-detect-cell-alignment
a24bf23e
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2566 The justification style is stored in the buffer as a text property,
2567and is lost when you kill the buffer or exit Emacs. However, the
2568table recognition commands, such as @kbd{M-x table-recognize}
2569(@pxref{Table Recognition}), attempt to determine and re-apply each
2570cell's justification style, by examining its contents. To disable
2571this feature, change the variable @code{table-detect-cell-alignment}
2572to @code{nil}.
2573
2574@node Table Rows and Columns
2575@subsection Table Rows and Columns
2576@cindex inserting rows and columns in text-based tables
2577
8cf51b2c 2578@findex table-insert-row
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2579 @kbd{M-x table-insert-row} inserts a row of cells before the current
2580table row. The current row, together with point, is pushed down past
eceeb5fc 2581the new row. To insert a row after the last row at the bottom of a
a24bf23e 2582table, invoke this command with point below the table, just below the
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2583bottom edge. You can insert more than one row at a time by using a
2584numeric prefix argument.
2585
2586@c A numeric prefix argument specifies the number of rows to insert.
8cf51b2c 2587
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2588@findex table-insert-column
2589 Similarly, @kbd{M-x table-insert-column} inserts a column of cells
2590to the left of the current table column. To insert a column to the
2591right side of the rightmost column, invoke this command with point to
2592the right of the rightmost column, outside the table. A numeric
2593prefix argument specifies the number of columns to insert.
2594
2595@cindex deleting rows and column in text-based tables
2596 @kbd{M-x table-delete-column} deletes the column of cells at point.
2597Similarly, @kbd{M-x table-delete-row} deletes the row of cells at
2598point. A numeric prefix argument to either command specifies the
2599number of columns or rows to delete.
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2600
2601@node Table Conversion
a24bf23e 2602@subsection Converting Between Plain Text and Tables
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2603@cindex text to table
2604@cindex table to text
2605
2606@findex table-capture
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2607 The command @kbd{M-x table-capture} captures plain text in a region
2608and turns it into a table. Unlike @kbd{M-x table-recognize}
2609(@pxref{Table Recognition}), the original text does not need to have a
2610table appearance; it only needs to have a logical table-like
2611structure.
8cf51b2c 2612
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2613 For example, suppose we have the following numbers, which are
2614divided into three lines and separated horizontally by commas:
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2615
2616@example
26171, 2, 3, 4
26185, 6, 7, 8
2619, 9, 10
2620@end example
2621
2622@noindent
2623Invoking @kbd{M-x table-capture} on that text produces this table:
2624
2625@example
2626+-----+-----+-----+-----+
2627|1 |2 |3 |4 |
2628+-----+-----+-----+-----+
2629|5 |6 |7 |8 |
2630+-----+-----+-----+-----+
2631| |9 |10 | |
2632+-----+-----+-----+-----+
2633@end example
2634
8cf51b2c 2635@findex table-release
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2636 @kbd{M-x table-release} does the opposite: it converts a table back
2637to plain text, removing its cell borders.
2638
2639 One application of this pair of commands is to edit a text in
2640layout. Look at the following three paragraphs (the latter two are
2641indented with header lines):
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2642
2643@example
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2644table-capture is a powerful command.
2645Here are some things it can do:
2646
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2647Parse Cell Items Using row and column delimiter regexps,
2648 it parses the specified text area and
2649 extracts cell items into a table.
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2650@end example
2651
2652@noindent
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2653Applying @code{table-capture} to a region containing the above text,
2654with empty strings for the column and row delimiter regexps, creates a
2655table with a single cell like the following one.
2656
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2657@smallexample
2658@group
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2659+----------------------------------------------------------+
2660|table-capture is a powerful command. |
2661|Here are some things it can do: |
2662| |
2663|Parse Cell Items Using row and column delimiter regexps,|
2664| it parses the specified text area and |
2665| extracts cell items into a table. |
2666+----------------------------------------------------------+
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2667@end group
2668@end smallexample
2669
2670@noindent
a24bf23e
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2671We can then use the cell splitting commands (@pxref{Cell Commands}) to
2672subdivide the table so that each paragraph occupies a cell:
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2673
2674@smallexample
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2675+----------------------------------------------------------+
2676|table-capture is a powerful command. |
2677|Here are some things it can do: |
2678+-----------------+----------------------------------------+
2679|Parse Cell Items | Using row and column delimiter regexps,|
2680| | it parses the specified text area and |
2681| | extracts cell items into a table. |
2682+-----------------+----------------------------------------+
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2683@end smallexample
2684
2685@noindent
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2686Each cell can now be edited independently without affecting the layout
2687of other cells. When finished, we can invoke @kbd{M-x table-release}
2688to convert the table back to plain text.
8cf51b2c 2689
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2690@node Table Misc
2691@subsection Table Miscellany
8cf51b2c 2692
a24bf23e 2693@cindex table dimensions
8cf51b2c 2694@findex table-query-dimension
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2695 The command @code{table-query-dimension} reports the layout of the
2696table and table cell at point. Here is an example of its output:
8cf51b2c
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2697
2698@smallexample
2699Cell: (21w, 6h), Table: (67w, 16h), Dim: (2c, 3r), Total Cells: 5
2700@end smallexample
2701
2702@noindent
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2703This indicates that the current cell is 21 characters wide and 6 lines
2704high, the table is 67 characters wide and 16 lines high with 2 columns
2705and 3 rows, and a total of 5 cells.
8cf51b2c 2706
8cf51b2c 2707@findex table-insert-sequence
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2708 @kbd{M-x table-insert-sequence} inserts a string into each cell.
2709Each string is a part of a sequence i.e.@: a series of increasing
2710integer numbers.
8cf51b2c 2711
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2712@cindex table for HTML and LaTeX
2713@findex table-generate-source
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2714 @kbd{M-x table-generate-source} generates a table formatted for a
2715specific markup language. It asks for a language (which must be one
2716of @code{html}, @code{latex}, or @code{cals}), a destination buffer in
2717which to put the result, and a table caption, and then inserts the
2718generated table into the specified buffer. The default destination
2719buffer is @code{table.@var{lang}}, where @var{lang} is the language
2720you specified.
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2721
2722@node Two-Column
2723@section Two-Column Editing
2724@cindex two-column editing
2725@cindex splitting columns
2726@cindex columns, splitting
2727
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2728 Two-column mode lets you conveniently edit two side-by-side columns
2729of text. It uses two side-by-side windows, each showing its own
2730buffer. There are three ways to enter two-column mode:
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2731
2732@table @asis
2733@item @kbd{@key{F2} 2} or @kbd{C-x 6 2}
2734@kindex F2 2
2735@kindex C-x 6 2
2736@findex 2C-two-columns
2737Enter two-column mode with the current buffer on the left, and on the
2738right, a buffer whose name is based on the current buffer's name
2739(@code{2C-two-columns}). If the right-hand buffer doesn't already
2740exist, it starts out empty; the current buffer's contents are not
2741changed.
2742
2743This command is appropriate when the current buffer is empty or contains
2744just one column and you want to add another column.
2745
2746@item @kbd{@key{F2} s} or @kbd{C-x 6 s}
2747@kindex F2 s
2748@kindex C-x 6 s
2749@findex 2C-split
2750Split the current buffer, which contains two-column text, into two
2751buffers, and display them side by side (@code{2C-split}). The current
2752buffer becomes the left-hand buffer, but the text in the right-hand
2753column is moved into the right-hand buffer. The current column
2754specifies the split point. Splitting starts with the current line and
2755continues to the end of the buffer.
2756
2757This command is appropriate when you have a buffer that already contains
2758two-column text, and you wish to separate the columns temporarily.
2759
2760@item @kbd{@key{F2} b @var{buffer} @key{RET}}
2761@itemx @kbd{C-x 6 b @var{buffer} @key{RET}}
2762@kindex F2 b
2763@kindex C-x 6 b
2764@findex 2C-associate-buffer
2765Enter two-column mode using the current buffer as the left-hand buffer,
2766and using buffer @var{buffer} as the right-hand buffer
2767(@code{2C-associate-buffer}).
2768@end table
2769
2770 @kbd{@key{F2} s} or @kbd{C-x 6 s} looks for a column separator, which
2771is a string that appears on each line between the two columns. You can
2772specify the width of the separator with a numeric argument to
2773@kbd{@key{F2} s}; that many characters, before point, constitute the
2774separator string. By default, the width is 1, so the column separator
2775is the character before point.
2776
2777 When a line has the separator at the proper place, @kbd{@key{F2} s}
2778puts the text after the separator into the right-hand buffer, and
2779deletes the separator. Lines that don't have the column separator at
2780the proper place remain unsplit; they stay in the left-hand buffer, and
2781the right-hand buffer gets an empty line to correspond. (This is the
2782way to write a line that ``spans both columns while in two-column
2783mode'': write it in the left-hand buffer, and put an empty line in the
2784right-hand buffer.)
2785
2786@kindex F2 RET
2787@kindex C-x 6 RET
2788@findex 2C-newline
2789 The command @kbd{C-x 6 @key{RET}} or @kbd{@key{F2} @key{RET}}
2790(@code{2C-newline}) inserts a newline in each of the two buffers at
2791corresponding positions. This is the easiest way to add a new line to
2792the two-column text while editing it in split buffers.
2793
2794@kindex F2 1
2795@kindex C-x 6 1
2796@findex 2C-merge
2797 When you have edited both buffers as you wish, merge them with
2798@kbd{@key{F2} 1} or @kbd{C-x 6 1} (@code{2C-merge}). This copies the
2799text from the right-hand buffer as a second column in the other buffer.
2800To go back to two-column editing, use @kbd{@key{F2} s}.
2801
2802@kindex F2 d
2803@kindex C-x 6 d
2804@findex 2C-dissociate
2805 Use @kbd{@key{F2} d} or @kbd{C-x 6 d} to dissociate the two buffers,
2806leaving each as it stands (@code{2C-dissociate}). If the other buffer,
2807the one not current when you type @kbd{@key{F2} d}, is empty,
2808@kbd{@key{F2} d} kills it.