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6bf7aab6 1@c This is part of the Emacs manual.
62eda0e2 2@c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003,
5df4f04c 3@c 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6bf7aab6 4@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
622a113e 5@node Abbrevs
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6@chapter Abbrevs
7@cindex abbrevs
8@cindex expansion (of abbrevs)
9
10 A defined @dfn{abbrev} is a word which @dfn{expands}, if you insert
11it, into some different text. Abbrevs are defined by the user to expand
12in specific ways. For example, you might define @samp{foo} as an abbrev
3f7ba267 13expanding to @samp{find outer otter}. Then you could insert
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14@samp{find outer otter } into the buffer by typing @kbd{f o o
15@key{SPC}}.
16
17 A second kind of abbreviation facility is called @dfn{dynamic abbrev
18expansion}. You use dynamic abbrev expansion with an explicit command
19to expand the letters in the buffer before point by looking for other
20words in the buffer that start with those letters. @xref{Dynamic
21Abbrevs}.
22
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23 ``Hippie'' expansion generalizes abbreviation expansion.
24@xref{Hippie Expand, , Hippie Expansion, autotype, Features for
25Automatic Typing}.
9d9f0f85 26
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27@menu
28* Abbrev Concepts:: Fundamentals of defined abbrevs.
29* Defining Abbrevs:: Defining an abbrev, so it will expand when typed.
30* Expanding Abbrevs:: Controlling expansion: prefixes, canceling expansion.
31* Editing Abbrevs:: Viewing or editing the entire list of defined abbrevs.
32* Saving Abbrevs:: Saving the entire list of abbrevs for another session.
33* Dynamic Abbrevs:: Abbreviations for words already in the buffer.
34* Dabbrev Customization:: What is a word, for dynamic abbrevs. Case handling.
35@end menu
36
37@node Abbrev Concepts
38@section Abbrev Concepts
39
40 An @dfn{abbrev} is a word which has been defined to @dfn{expand} into
41a specified @dfn{expansion}. When you insert a word-separator character
42following the abbrev, that expands the abbrev---replacing the abbrev
43with its expansion. For example, if @samp{foo} is defined as an abbrev
44expanding to @samp{find outer otter}, then you can insert @samp{find
45outer otter.} into the buffer by typing @kbd{f o o .}.
46
47@findex abbrev-mode
48@vindex abbrev-mode
49@cindex Abbrev mode
50@cindex mode, Abbrev
51 Abbrevs expand only when Abbrev mode (a minor mode) is enabled.
52Disabling Abbrev mode does not cause abbrev definitions to be forgotten,
53but they do not expand until Abbrev mode is enabled again. The command
54@kbd{M-x abbrev-mode} toggles Abbrev mode; with a numeric argument, it
55turns Abbrev mode on if the argument is positive, off otherwise.
56@xref{Minor Modes}. @code{abbrev-mode} is also a variable; Abbrev mode is
57on when the variable is non-@code{nil}. The variable @code{abbrev-mode}
58automatically becomes local to the current buffer when it is set.
59
3f7ba267 60 Abbrevs can have @dfn{mode-specific} definitions, active only in one major
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61mode. Abbrevs can also have @dfn{global} definitions that are active in
62all major modes. The same abbrev can have a global definition and various
63mode-specific definitions for different major modes. A mode-specific
64definition for the current major mode overrides a global definition.
65
8a75579f 66 You can define abbrevs interactively during the editing session. You
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67can also save lists of abbrev definitions in files for use in later
68sessions. Some users keep extensive lists of abbrevs that they load
69in every session.
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70
71@node Defining Abbrevs
72@section Defining Abbrevs
73
74@table @kbd
75@item C-x a g
76Define an abbrev, using one or more words before point as its expansion
77(@code{add-global-abbrev}).
78@item C-x a l
79Similar, but define an abbrev specific to the current major mode
80(@code{add-mode-abbrev}).
81@item C-x a i g
82Define a word in the buffer as an abbrev (@code{inverse-add-global-abbrev}).
83@item C-x a i l
84Define a word in the buffer as a mode-specific abbrev
85(@code{inverse-add-mode-abbrev}).
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86@item M-x define-global-abbrev @key{RET} @var{abbrev} @key{RET} @var{exp} @key{RET}
87Define @var{abbrev} as an abbrev expanding into @var{exp}.
88@item M-x define-mode-abbrev @key{RET} @var{abbrev} @key{RET} @var{exp} @key{RET}
89Define @var{abbrev} as a mode-specific abbrev expanding into @var{exp}.
6bf7aab6 90@item M-x kill-all-abbrevs
3f7ba267 91Discard all abbrev definitions, leaving a blank slate.
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92@end table
93
94@kindex C-x a g
95@findex add-global-abbrev
96 The usual way to define an abbrev is to enter the text you want the
97abbrev to expand to, position point after it, and type @kbd{C-x a g}
98(@code{add-global-abbrev}). This reads the abbrev itself using the
99minibuffer, and then defines it as an abbrev for one or more words before
100point. Use a numeric argument to say how many words before point should be
101taken as the expansion. For example, to define the abbrev @samp{foo} as
102mentioned above, insert the text @samp{find outer otter} and then type
103@kbd{C-u 3 C-x a g f o o @key{RET}}.
104
105 An argument of zero to @kbd{C-x a g} means to use the contents of the
106region as the expansion of the abbrev being defined.
107
108@kindex C-x a l
109@findex add-mode-abbrev
110 The command @kbd{C-x a l} (@code{add-mode-abbrev}) is similar, but
111defines a mode-specific abbrev. Mode-specific abbrevs are active only in a
112particular major mode. @kbd{C-x a l} defines an abbrev for the major mode
113in effect at the time @kbd{C-x a l} is typed. The arguments work the same
114as for @kbd{C-x a g}.
115
116@kindex C-x a i g
117@findex inverse-add-global-abbrev
118@kindex C-x a i l
119@findex inverse-add-mode-abbrev
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120 If the abbrev text itself is already in the buffer, you can use the
121commands @kbd{C-x a i g} (@code{inverse-add-global-abbrev}) and
122@kbd{C-x a i l} (@code{inverse-add-mode-abbrev}) to define it as an
123abbrev by specify the expansion in the minibuffer. These commands are
124called ``inverse'' because they invert the meaning of the two text
125strings they use (one from the buffer and one read with the
126minibuffer).
6bf7aab6 127
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128@findex define-mode-abbrev
129@findex define-global-abbrev
130 You can define an abbrev without inserting either the abbrev or its
131expansion in the buffer using the command @code{define-global-abbrev}.
110c9495 132It reads two arguments---the abbrev, and its expansion. The command
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133@code{define-mode-abbrev} does likewise for a mode-specific abbrev.
134
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135 To change the definition of an abbrev, just define a new definition.
136When the abbrev has a prior definition, the abbrev definition commands
58fa012d 137ask for confirmation before replacing it.
6bf7aab6 138
6bf7aab6 139@findex kill-all-abbrevs
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140 To remove an abbrev definition, give a negative argument to the
141abbrev definition command: @kbd{C-u - C-x a g} or @kbd{C-u - C-x a l}.
142The former removes a global definition, while the latter removes a
143mode-specific definition. @kbd{M-x kill-all-abbrevs} removes all
144abbrev definitions, both global and local.
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145
146@node Expanding Abbrevs
147@section Controlling Abbrev Expansion
148
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149 When Abbrev mode is enabled, an abbrev expands whenever it is
150present in the buffer just before point and you type a self-inserting
151whitespace or punctuation character (@key{SPC}, comma, etc.@:). More
152precisely, any character that is not a word constituent expands an
153abbrev, and any word-constituent character can be part of an abbrev.
154The most common way to use an abbrev is to insert it and then insert a
155punctuation or whitespace character to expand it.
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156
157@vindex abbrev-all-caps
158 Abbrev expansion preserves case; thus, @samp{foo} expands into @samp{find
159outer otter}; @samp{Foo} into @samp{Find outer otter}, and @samp{FOO} into
160@samp{FIND OUTER OTTER} or @samp{Find Outer Otter} according to the
e319d017 161variable @code{abbrev-all-caps} (setting it non-@code{nil} specifies
82d3c425 162@samp{FIND OUTER OTTER}).
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163
164 These commands are used to control abbrev expansion:
165
166@table @kbd
167@item M-'
168Separate a prefix from a following abbrev to be expanded
169(@code{abbrev-prefix-mark}).
170@item C-x a e
171@findex expand-abbrev
172Expand the abbrev before point (@code{expand-abbrev}).
173This is effective even when Abbrev mode is not enabled.
174@item M-x expand-region-abbrevs
175Expand some or all abbrevs found in the region.
176@end table
177
178@kindex M-'
179@findex abbrev-prefix-mark
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180 You may wish to expand an abbrev and attach a prefix to the expansion;
181for example, if @samp{cnst} expands into @samp{construction}, you might want
182to use it to enter @samp{reconstruction}. It does not work to type
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183@kbd{recnst}, because that is not necessarily a defined abbrev. What
184you can do is use the command @kbd{M-'} (@code{abbrev-prefix-mark}) in
185between the prefix @samp{re} and the abbrev @samp{cnst}. First, insert
186@samp{re}. Then type @kbd{M-'}; this inserts a hyphen in the buffer to
187indicate that it has done its work. Then insert the abbrev @samp{cnst};
188the buffer now contains @samp{re-cnst}. Now insert a non-word character
189to expand the abbrev @samp{cnst} into @samp{construction}. This
190expansion step also deletes the hyphen that indicated @kbd{M-'} had been
191used. The result is the desired @samp{reconstruction}.
192
193 If you actually want the text of the abbrev in the buffer, rather than
194its expansion, you can accomplish this by inserting the following
195punctuation with @kbd{C-q}. Thus, @kbd{foo C-q ,} leaves @samp{foo,} in
3f7ba267 196the buffer, not expanding it.
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197
198@findex unexpand-abbrev
199 If you expand an abbrev by mistake, you can undo the expansion and
200bring back the abbrev itself by typing @kbd{C-_} to undo (@pxref{Undo}).
201This also undoes the insertion of the non-word character that expanded
202the abbrev. If the result you want is the terminating non-word
203character plus the unexpanded abbrev, you must reinsert the terminating
204character, quoting it with @kbd{C-q}. You can also use the command
205@kbd{M-x unexpand-abbrev} to cancel the last expansion without
206deleting the terminating character.
207
208@findex expand-region-abbrevs
209 @kbd{M-x expand-region-abbrevs} searches through the region for defined
210abbrevs, and for each one found offers to replace it with its expansion.
211This command is useful if you have typed in text using abbrevs but forgot
212to turn on Abbrev mode first. It may also be useful together with a
213special set of abbrev definitions for making several global replacements at
214once. This command is effective even if Abbrev mode is not enabled.
215
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216 Expanding any abbrev runs @code{abbrev-expand-functions}, a special
217hook. Functions in this special hook can make arbitrary changes to
218the abbrev expansion. @xref{Abbrev Expansion,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp
219Reference Manual}.
6bf7aab6 220
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221@node Editing Abbrevs
222@section Examining and Editing Abbrevs
223
224@table @kbd
225@item M-x list-abbrevs
58fa012d 226Display a list of all abbrev definitions. With a numeric argument, list
bc3d8689 227only local abbrevs.
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228@item M-x edit-abbrevs
229Edit a list of abbrevs; you can add, alter or remove definitions.
230@end table
231
232@findex list-abbrevs
233 The output from @kbd{M-x list-abbrevs} looks like this:
234
235@example
3f7ba267 236@var{various other tables@dots{}}
6bf7aab6 237(lisp-mode-abbrev-table)
8838673e 238"dk" 0 "define-key"
6bf7aab6 239(global-abbrev-table)
8838673e 240"dfn" 0 "definition"
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241@end example
242
243@noindent
244(Some blank lines of no semantic significance, and some other abbrev
245tables, have been omitted.)
246
247 A line containing a name in parentheses is the header for abbrevs in a
248particular abbrev table; @code{global-abbrev-table} contains all the global
249abbrevs, and the other abbrev tables that are named after major modes
250contain the mode-specific abbrevs.
251
252 Within each abbrev table, each nonblank line defines one abbrev. The
253word at the beginning of the line is the abbrev. The number that
254follows is the number of times the abbrev has been expanded. Emacs
255keeps track of this to help you see which abbrevs you actually use, so
256that you can eliminate those that you don't use often. The string at
257the end of the line is the expansion.
258
dc12b2be 259 Some abbrevs are marked with @samp{(sys)}. These ``system'' abbrevs
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260(@pxref{Abbrevs,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}) are
261pre-defined by various modes, and are not saved to your abbrev file.
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262To disable a ``system'' abbrev, define an abbrev of the same name that
263expands to itself, and save it to your abbrev file.
c4ad63f6 264
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265@findex edit-abbrevs
266@kindex C-c C-c @r{(Edit Abbrevs)}
267 @kbd{M-x edit-abbrevs} allows you to add, change or kill abbrev
268definitions by editing a list of them in an Emacs buffer. The list has
269the same format described above. The buffer of abbrevs is called
270@samp{*Abbrevs*}, and is in Edit-Abbrevs mode. Type @kbd{C-c C-c} in
271this buffer to install the abbrev definitions as specified in the
272buffer---and delete any abbrev definitions not listed.
273
274 The command @code{edit-abbrevs} is actually the same as
275@code{list-abbrevs} except that it selects the buffer @samp{*Abbrevs*}
276whereas @code{list-abbrevs} merely displays it in another window.
277
278@node Saving Abbrevs
279@section Saving Abbrevs
280
281 These commands allow you to keep abbrev definitions between editing
282sessions.
283
284@table @kbd
285@item M-x write-abbrev-file @key{RET} @var{file} @key{RET}
286Write a file @var{file} describing all defined abbrevs.
287@item M-x read-abbrev-file @key{RET} @var{file} @key{RET}
288Read the file @var{file} and define abbrevs as specified therein.
289@item M-x quietly-read-abbrev-file @key{RET} @var{file} @key{RET}
290Similar but do not display a message about what is going on.
291@item M-x define-abbrevs
292Define abbrevs from definitions in current buffer.
293@item M-x insert-abbrevs
294Insert all abbrevs and their expansions into current buffer.
295@end table
296
297@findex write-abbrev-file
298 @kbd{M-x write-abbrev-file} reads a file name using the minibuffer and
299then writes a description of all current abbrev definitions into that
300file. This is used to save abbrev definitions for use in a later
301session. The text stored in the file is a series of Lisp expressions
302that, when executed, define the same abbrevs that you currently have.
303
304@findex read-abbrev-file
305@findex quietly-read-abbrev-file
306@vindex abbrev-file-name
444faccc 307@cindex abbrev file
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308 @kbd{M-x read-abbrev-file} reads a file name using the minibuffer
309and then reads the file, defining abbrevs according to the contents of
310the file. The function @code{quietly-read-abbrev-file} is similar
311except that it does not display a message in the echo area; you cannot
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312invoke it interactively, and it is used primarily in your init file
313(@pxref{Init File}). If either of these functions is called with
314@code{nil} as the argument, it uses the file given by the variable
315@code{abbrev-file-name}, which is @file{~/.emacs.d/abbrev_defs} by
316default. This is your standard abbrev definition file, and Emacs
317loads abbrevs from it automatically when it starts up. (As an
318exception, Emacs does not load the abbrev file when it is started in
319batch mode. @xref{Initial Options}, for a description of batch mode.)
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320
321@vindex save-abbrevs
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322 Emacs will offer to save abbrevs automatically if you have changed
323any of them, whenever it offers to save all files (for @kbd{C-x s} or
324@kbd{C-x C-c}). It saves them in the file specified by
325@code{abbrev-file-name}. This feature can be inhibited by setting the
326variable @code{save-abbrevs} to @code{nil}.
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327
328@findex insert-abbrevs
329@findex define-abbrevs
330 The commands @kbd{M-x insert-abbrevs} and @kbd{M-x define-abbrevs} are
331similar to the previous commands but work on text in an Emacs buffer.
6a080ff1 332@kbd{M-x insert-abbrevs} inserts text into the current buffer after point,
6bf7aab6 333describing all current abbrev definitions; @kbd{M-x define-abbrevs} parses
3f7ba267 334the entire current buffer and defines abbrevs accordingly.
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335
336@node Dynamic Abbrevs
337@section Dynamic Abbrev Expansion
338
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339 The abbrev facility described above operates automatically as you
340insert text, but all abbrevs must be defined explicitly. By contrast,
341@dfn{dynamic abbrevs} allow the meanings of abbreviations to be
342determined automatically from the contents of the buffer, but dynamic
343abbrev expansion happens only when you request it explicitly.
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344
345@kindex M-/
346@kindex C-M-/
347@findex dabbrev-expand
348@findex dabbrev-completion
349@table @kbd
350@item M-/
351Expand the word in the buffer before point as a @dfn{dynamic abbrev},
352by searching in the buffer for words starting with that abbreviation
353(@code{dabbrev-expand}).
354
355@item C-M-/
356Complete the word before point as a dynamic abbrev
357(@code{dabbrev-completion}).
358@end table
359
360@vindex dabbrev-limit
361 For example, if the buffer contains @samp{does this follow } and you
362type @kbd{f o M-/}, the effect is to insert @samp{follow} because that
363is the last word in the buffer that starts with @samp{fo}. A numeric
364argument to @kbd{M-/} says to take the second, third, etc.@: distinct
365expansion found looking backward from point. Repeating @kbd{M-/}
366searches for an alternative expansion by looking farther back. After
367scanning all the text before point, it searches the text after point.
368The variable @code{dabbrev-limit}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies how far
3f7ba267 369away in the buffer to search for an expansion.
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370
371@vindex dabbrev-check-all-buffers
372 After scanning the current buffer, @kbd{M-/} normally searches other
373buffers, unless you have set @code{dabbrev-check-all-buffers} to
374@code{nil}.
375
78cab5d8 376@vindex dabbrev-ignored-buffer-regexps
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377 For finer control over which buffers to scan, customize the variable
378@code{dabbrev-ignored-buffer-regexps}. Its value is a list of regular
379expressions. If a buffer's name matches any of these regular
380expressions, dynamic abbrev expansion skips that buffer.
0a396e5a 381
6bf7aab6 382 A negative argument to @kbd{M-/}, as in @kbd{C-u - M-/}, says to
6a080ff1 383search first for expansions after point, then other buffers, and
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384consider expansions before point only as a last resort. If you repeat
385the @kbd{M-/} to look for another expansion, do not specify an
386argument. Repeating @kbd{M-/} cycles through all the expansions after
387point and then the expansions before point.
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388
389 After you have expanded a dynamic abbrev, you can copy additional
390words that follow the expansion in its original context. Simply type
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391@kbd{@key{SPC} M-/} for each additional word you want to copy. The
392spacing and punctuation between words is copied along with the words.
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393
394 The command @kbd{C-M-/} (@code{dabbrev-completion}) performs
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395completion of a dynamic abbrev. Instead of trying the possible
396expansions one by one, it finds all of them, then inserts the text
397that they have in common. If they have nothing in common, @kbd{C-M-/}
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398displays a list of completions, from which you can select a choice in
399the usual manner. @xref{Completion}.
400
401 Dynamic abbrev expansion is completely independent of Abbrev mode; the
402expansion of a word with @kbd{M-/} is completely independent of whether
403it has a definition as an ordinary abbrev.
404
405@node Dabbrev Customization
406@section Customizing Dynamic Abbreviation
407
408 Normally, dynamic abbrev expansion ignores case when searching for
409expansions. That is, the expansion need not agree in case with the word
410you are expanding.
411
412@vindex dabbrev-case-fold-search
413 This feature is controlled by the variable
414@code{dabbrev-case-fold-search}. If it is @code{t}, case is ignored in
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415this search; if it is @code{nil}, the word and the expansion must match
416in case. If the value of @code{dabbrev-case-fold-search} is
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417@code{case-fold-search}, which is true by default, then the variable
418@code{case-fold-search} controls whether to ignore case while searching
419for expansions.
420
421@vindex dabbrev-case-replace
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422 Normally, dynamic abbrev expansion preserves the case pattern
423@emph{of the dynamic abbrev you are expanding}, by converting the
424expansion to that case pattern.
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425
426@vindex dabbrev-case-fold-search
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427 The variable @code{dabbrev-case-replace} controls whether to
428preserve the case pattern of the dynamic abbrev. If it is @code{t},
429the dynamic abbrev's case pattern is preserved in most cases; if it is
430@code{nil}, the expansion is always copied verbatim. If the value of
431@code{dabbrev-case-replace} is @code{case-replace}, which is true by
432default, then the variable @code{case-replace} controls whether to
433copy the expansion verbatim.
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434
435 However, if the expansion contains a complex mixed case pattern, and
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436the dynamic abbrev matches this pattern as far as it goes, then the
437expansion is always copied verbatim, regardless of those variables.
438Thus, for example, if the buffer contains
439@code{variableWithSillyCasePattern}, and you type @kbd{v a M-/}, it
440copies the expansion verbatim including its case pattern.
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441
442@vindex dabbrev-abbrev-char-regexp
443 The variable @code{dabbrev-abbrev-char-regexp}, if non-@code{nil},
444controls which characters are considered part of a word, for dynamic expansion
445purposes. The regular expression must match just one character, never
446two or more. The same regular expression also determines which
447characters are part of an expansion. The value @code{nil} has a special
3f7ba267 448meaning: dynamic abbrevs are made of word characters, but expansions are
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449made of word and symbol characters.
450
451@vindex dabbrev-abbrev-skip-leading-regexp
452 In shell scripts and makefiles, a variable name is sometimes prefixed
453with @samp{$} and sometimes not. Major modes for this kind of text can
3f7ba267 454customize dynamic abbrev expansion to handle optional prefixes by setting
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455the variable @code{dabbrev-abbrev-skip-leading-regexp}. Its value
456should be a regular expression that matches the optional prefix that
3f7ba267 457dynamic abbrev expression should ignore.
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458
459@ignore
460 arch-tag: 638e0079-9540-48ec-9166-414083e16445
461@end ignore