* indent.el (indent-for-tab-command): Fix typo in docstring.
[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / lispref / abbrevs.texi
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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3@c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003,
6ed161e1 4@c 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
b8d4c8d0 5@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6336d8c3 6@setfilename ../../info/abbrevs
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7@node Abbrevs, Processes, Syntax Tables, Top
8@chapter Abbrevs and Abbrev Expansion
9@cindex abbrev
10@c @cindex abbrev table Redundant with "abbrev".
11
12 An abbreviation or @dfn{abbrev} is a string of characters that may be
13expanded to a longer string. The user can insert the abbrev string and
14find it replaced automatically with the expansion of the abbrev. This
15saves typing.
16
17 The set of abbrevs currently in effect is recorded in an @dfn{abbrev
18table}. Each buffer has a local abbrev table, but normally all buffers
19in the same major mode share one abbrev table. There is also a global
20abbrev table. Normally both are used.
21
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22 An abbrev table is represented as an obarray. @xref{Creating
23Symbols}, for information about obarrays. Each abbreviation is
24represented by a symbol in the obarray. The symbol's name is the
25abbreviation; its value is the expansion; its function definition is
26the hook function for performing the expansion (@pxref{Defining
27Abbrevs}); and its property list cell contains various additional
28properties, including the use count and the number of times the
29abbreviation has been expanded (@pxref{Abbrev Properties}).
30
31@cindex system abbrev
32 Certain abbrevs, called @dfn{system abbrevs}, are defined by a major
33mode instead of the user. A system abbrev is identified by its
34non-@code{nil} @code{:system} property (@pxref{Abbrev Properties}).
35When abbrevs are saved to an abbrev file, system abbrevs are omitted.
36@xref{Abbrev Files}.
37
38 Because the symbols used for abbrevs are not interned in the usual
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39obarray, they will never appear as the result of reading a Lisp
40expression; in fact, normally they are never used except by the code
41that handles abbrevs. Therefore, it is safe to use them in an
925672cd 42extremely nonstandard way.
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43
44 For the user-level commands for abbrevs, see @ref{Abbrevs,, Abbrev
45Mode, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
46
47@menu
48* Abbrev Mode:: Setting up Emacs for abbreviation.
49* Tables: Abbrev Tables. Creating and working with abbrev tables.
50* Defining Abbrevs:: Specifying abbreviations and their expansions.
51* Files: Abbrev Files. Saving abbrevs in files.
52* Expansion: Abbrev Expansion. Controlling expansion; expansion subroutines.
53* Standard Abbrev Tables:: Abbrev tables used by various major modes.
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54* Abbrev Properties:: How to read and set abbrev properties.
55 Which properties have which effect.
56* Abbrev Table Properties:: How to read and set abbrev table properties.
57 Which properties have which effect.
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58@end menu
59
60@node Abbrev Mode, Abbrev Tables, Abbrevs, Abbrevs
61@comment node-name, next, previous, up
62@section Setting Up Abbrev Mode
63
925672cd 64 Abbrev mode is a minor mode controlled by the variable
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65@code{abbrev-mode}.
66
67@defvar abbrev-mode
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68If this variable is non-@code{nil}, abbrevs are automatically expanded
69in the buffer. If the value is @code{nil}, abbrevs may be defined,
70but they are not expanded automatically.
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71
72This variable automatically becomes buffer-local when set in any fashion.
73@end defvar
74
75@defvar default-abbrev-mode
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76This is the value of @code{abbrev-mode} for buffers that do not
77override it. It is the same as @code{(default-value 'abbrev-mode)}.
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78@end defvar
79
80@node Abbrev Tables, Defining Abbrevs, Abbrev Mode, Abbrevs
81@section Abbrev Tables
82
83 This section describes how to create and manipulate abbrev tables.
84
e047f448 85@defun make-abbrev-table &rest props
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86This function creates and returns a new, empty abbrev table---an
87obarray containing no symbols. It is a vector filled with zeros.
88@var{props} is a property list that is applied to the new table
79415279 89(@pxref{Abbrev Table Properties}).
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90@end defun
91
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92@defun abbrev-table-p object
93This function returns a non-@code{nil} value if @var{object} is an
94abbrev table.
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95@end defun
96
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97@defun clear-abbrev-table abbrev-table
98This function undefines all the abbrevs in @var{abbrev-table}, leaving
99it empty. It always returns @code{nil}.
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100@end defun
101
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102@defun copy-abbrev-table abbrev-table
103This function returns a copy of @var{abbrev-table}---a new abbrev
104table containing the same abbrev definitions. There is one difference
105between the contents of @var{abbrev-table} and the returned copy: all
106abbrevs in the latter have their property lists set to @code{nil}.
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107@end defun
108
e047f448 109@defun define-abbrev-table tabname definitions &optional docstring &rest props
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110This function defines @var{tabname} (a symbol) as an abbrev table
111name, i.e., as a variable whose value is an abbrev table. It defines
112abbrevs in the table according to @var{definitions}, a list of
113elements of the form @code{(@var{abbrevname} @var{expansion}
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114[@var{hook}] [@var{props}...])}. These elements are passed as
115arguments to @code{define-abbrev}. The return value is always
116@code{nil}.
117
118The optional string @var{docstring} is the documentation string of the
119variable @var{tabname}. The property list @var{props} is applied to
120the abbrev table (@pxref{Abbrev Table Properties}).
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121
122If this function is called more than once for the same @var{tabname},
123subsequent calls add the definitions in @var{definitions} to
124@var{tabname}, rather than overriding the entire original contents.
125(A subsequent call only overrides abbrevs explicitly redefined or
126undefined in @var{definitions}.)
127@end defun
128
129@defvar abbrev-table-name-list
130This is a list of symbols whose values are abbrev tables.
131@code{define-abbrev-table} adds the new abbrev table name to this list.
132@end defvar
133
134@defun insert-abbrev-table-description name &optional human
135This function inserts before point a description of the abbrev table
136named @var{name}. The argument @var{name} is a symbol whose value is an
137abbrev table. The return value is always @code{nil}.
138
139If @var{human} is non-@code{nil}, the description is human-oriented.
140System abbrevs are listed and identified as such. Otherwise the
141description is a Lisp expression---a call to @code{define-abbrev-table}
142that would define @var{name} as it is currently defined, but without
143the system abbrevs. (The mode or package using @var{name} is supposed
144to add these to @var{name} separately.)
145@end defun
146
147@node Defining Abbrevs, Abbrev Files, Abbrev Tables, Abbrevs
148@comment node-name, next, previous, up
149@section Defining Abbrevs
925672cd 150
b8d4c8d0 151 @code{define-abbrev} is the low-level basic function for defining an
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152abbrev in an abbrev table.
153
154 When a major mode defines a system abbrev, it should call
155@code{define-abbrev} and specify a @code{t} for the @code{:system}
156property. Be aware that any saved non-``system'' abbrevs are restored
157at startup, i.e. before some major modes are loaded. Therefore, major
158modes should not assume that their abbrev tables are empty when they
159are first loaded.
160
161@defun define-abbrev abbrev-table name expansion &optional hook &rest props
162This function defines an abbrev named @var{name}, in
163@var{abbrev-table}, to expand to @var{expansion} and call @var{hook},
164with properties @var{props} (@pxref{Abbrev Properties}). The return
165value is @var{name}. The @code{:system} property in @var{props} is
166treated specially here: if it has the value @code{force}, then it will
167overwrite an existing definition even for a non-``system'' abbrev of
168the same name.
169
170@var{name} should be a string. The argument @var{expansion} is
171normally the desired expansion (a string), or @code{nil} to undefine
172the abbrev. If it is anything but a string or @code{nil}, then the
173abbreviation ``expands'' solely by running @var{hook}.
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174
175The argument @var{hook} is a function or @code{nil}. If @var{hook} is
176non-@code{nil}, then it is called with no arguments after the abbrev is
177replaced with @var{expansion}; point is located at the end of
178@var{expansion} when @var{hook} is called.
179
180@cindex @code{no-self-insert} property
181If @var{hook} is a non-@code{nil} symbol whose @code{no-self-insert}
182property is non-@code{nil}, @var{hook} can explicitly control whether
183to insert the self-inserting input character that triggered the
184expansion. If @var{hook} returns non-@code{nil} in this case, that
185inhibits insertion of the character. By contrast, if @var{hook}
186returns @code{nil}, @code{expand-abbrev} also returns @code{nil}, as
187if expansion had not really occurred.
188
925672cd 189Normally, @code{define-abbrev} sets the variable
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190@code{abbrevs-changed} to @code{t}, if it actually changes the abbrev.
191(This is so that some commands will offer to save the abbrevs.) It
925672cd 192does not do this for a system abbrev, since those aren't saved anyway.
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193@end defun
194
195@defopt only-global-abbrevs
196If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it means that the user plans to use
197global abbrevs only. This tells the commands that define mode-specific
198abbrevs to define global ones instead. This variable does not alter the
199behavior of the functions in this section; it is examined by their
200callers.
201@end defopt
202
203@node Abbrev Files, Abbrev Expansion, Defining Abbrevs, Abbrevs
204@section Saving Abbrevs in Files
205
206 A file of saved abbrev definitions is actually a file of Lisp code.
207The abbrevs are saved in the form of a Lisp program to define the same
208abbrev tables with the same contents. Therefore, you can load the file
209with @code{load} (@pxref{How Programs Do Loading}). However, the
210function @code{quietly-read-abbrev-file} is provided as a more
211convenient interface.
212
213 User-level facilities such as @code{save-some-buffers} can save
214abbrevs in a file automatically, under the control of variables
215described here.
216
217@defopt abbrev-file-name
218This is the default file name for reading and saving abbrevs.
219@end defopt
220
221@defun quietly-read-abbrev-file &optional filename
222This function reads abbrev definitions from a file named @var{filename},
223previously written with @code{write-abbrev-file}. If @var{filename} is
224omitted or @code{nil}, the file specified in @code{abbrev-file-name} is
225used. @code{save-abbrevs} is set to @code{t} so that changes will be
226saved.
227
228This function does not display any messages. It returns @code{nil}.
229@end defun
230
231@defopt save-abbrevs
232A non-@code{nil} value for @code{save-abbrevs} means that Emacs should
233offer the user to save abbrevs when files are saved. If the value is
234@code{silently}, Emacs saves the abbrevs without asking the user.
235@code{abbrev-file-name} specifies the file to save the abbrevs in.
236@end defopt
237
238@defvar abbrevs-changed
239This variable is set non-@code{nil} by defining or altering any
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240abbrevs (except system abbrevs). This serves as a flag for various
241Emacs commands to offer to save your abbrevs.
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242@end defvar
243
244@deffn Command write-abbrev-file &optional filename
925672cd 245Save all abbrev definitions (except system abbrevs), for all abbrev
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246tables listed in @code{abbrev-table-name-list}, in the file
247@var{filename}, in the form of a Lisp program that when loaded will
248define the same abbrevs. If @var{filename} is @code{nil} or omitted,
249@code{abbrev-file-name} is used. This function returns @code{nil}.
250@end deffn
251
252@node Abbrev Expansion, Standard Abbrev Tables, Abbrev Files, Abbrevs
253@comment node-name, next, previous, up
254@section Looking Up and Expanding Abbreviations
255
256 Abbrevs are usually expanded by certain interactive commands,
257including @code{self-insert-command}. This section describes the
258subroutines used in writing such commands, as well as the variables they
259use for communication.
260
261@defun abbrev-symbol abbrev &optional table
262This function returns the symbol representing the abbrev named
263@var{abbrev}. The value returned is @code{nil} if that abbrev is not
264defined. The optional second argument @var{table} is the abbrev table
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265in which to look it up. If @var{table} is @code{nil}, this function
266tries first the current buffer's local abbrev table, and second the
267global abbrev table.
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268@end defun
269
270@defun abbrev-expansion abbrev &optional table
271This function returns the string that @var{abbrev} would expand into (as
272defined by the abbrev tables used for the current buffer). If
273@var{abbrev} is not a valid abbrev, the function returns @code{nil}.
274The optional argument @var{table} specifies the abbrev table to use,
275as in @code{abbrev-symbol}.
276@end defun
277
278@deffn Command expand-abbrev
279This command expands the abbrev before point, if any. If point does not
280follow an abbrev, this command does nothing. The command returns the
281abbrev symbol if it did expansion, @code{nil} otherwise.
282
283If the abbrev symbol has a hook function which is a symbol whose
284@code{no-self-insert} property is non-@code{nil}, and if the hook
285function returns @code{nil} as its value, then @code{expand-abbrev}
286returns @code{nil} even though expansion did occur.
287@end deffn
288
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289@deffn abbrev-insert abbrev &optional name start end
290This function inserts the abbrev expansion of @code{abbrev}, replacing
291the text between @code{start} and @code{end}. If @code{start} is
292omitted, it defaults to point. @code{name}, if non-@code{nil}, should
293be the name by which this abbrev was found (a string); it is used to
294figure out whether to adjust the capitalization of the expansion. The
295function returns @code{abbrev} if the abbrev was successfully
296inserted.
297@end deffn
298
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299@deffn Command abbrev-prefix-mark &optional arg
300This command marks the current location of point as the beginning of
301an abbrev. The next call to @code{expand-abbrev} will use the text
302from here to point (where it is then) as the abbrev to expand, rather
303than using the previous word as usual.
304
305First, this command expands any abbrev before point, unless @var{arg}
306is non-@code{nil}. (Interactively, @var{arg} is the prefix argument.)
307Then it inserts a hyphen before point, to indicate the start of the
308next abbrev to be expanded. The actual expansion removes the hyphen.
309@end deffn
310
311@defopt abbrev-all-caps
312When this is set non-@code{nil}, an abbrev entered entirely in upper
313case is expanded using all upper case. Otherwise, an abbrev entered
314entirely in upper case is expanded by capitalizing each word of the
315expansion.
316@end defopt
317
318@defvar abbrev-start-location
319The value of this variable is a buffer position (an integer or a marker)
320for @code{expand-abbrev} to use as the start of the next abbrev to be
321expanded. The value can also be @code{nil}, which means to use the
322word before point instead. @code{abbrev-start-location} is set to
323@code{nil} each time @code{expand-abbrev} is called. This variable is
324also set by @code{abbrev-prefix-mark}.
325@end defvar
326
327@defvar abbrev-start-location-buffer
328The value of this variable is the buffer for which
329@code{abbrev-start-location} has been set. Trying to expand an abbrev
330in any other buffer clears @code{abbrev-start-location}. This variable
331is set by @code{abbrev-prefix-mark}.
332@end defvar
333
334@defvar last-abbrev
335This is the @code{abbrev-symbol} of the most recent abbrev expanded. This
336information is left by @code{expand-abbrev} for the sake of the
337@code{unexpand-abbrev} command (@pxref{Expanding Abbrevs,, Expanding
338Abbrevs, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
339@end defvar
340
341@defvar last-abbrev-location
342This is the location of the most recent abbrev expanded. This contains
343information left by @code{expand-abbrev} for the sake of the
344@code{unexpand-abbrev} command.
345@end defvar
346
347@defvar last-abbrev-text
348This is the exact expansion text of the most recent abbrev expanded,
349after case conversion (if any). Its value is @code{nil} if the abbrev
350has already been unexpanded. This contains information left by
351@code{expand-abbrev} for the sake of the @code{unexpand-abbrev} command.
352@end defvar
353
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354@defvar abbrev-expand-functions
355This is a special hook run @emph{around} the @code{expand-abbrev}
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356function. Each function on this hook is called with a single
357argument: a function that performs the normal abbrev expansion. The
358hook function can hence do anything it wants before and after
359performing the expansion. It can also choose not to call its
360argument, thus overriding the default behavior; or it may even call it
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361several times. The function should return the abbrev symbol if
362expansion took place.
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363@end defvar
364
365 The following sample code shows a simple use of
e047f448 366@code{abbrev-expand-functions}. It assumes that @code{foo-mode} is a
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367mode for editing certain files in which lines that start with @samp{#}
368are comments. You want to use Text mode abbrevs for those lines. The
369regular local abbrev table, @code{foo-mode-abbrev-table} is
370appropriate for all other lines. Then you can put the following code
371in your @file{.emacs} file. @xref{Standard Abbrev Tables}, for the
372definitions of @code{local-abbrev-table} and @code{text-mode-abbrev-table}.
373
374@smallexample
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375(defun foo-mode-abbrev-expand-function (expand)
376 (if (not (save-excursion (forward-line 0) (eq (char-after) ?#)))
377 ;; Performs normal expansion.
378 (funcall expand)
379 ;; We're inside a comment: use the text-mode abbrevs.
380 (let ((local-abbrev-table text-mode-abbrev-table))
381 (funcall expand))))
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382
383(add-hook 'foo-mode-hook
384 #'(lambda ()
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385 (add-hook 'abbrev-expand-functions
386 'foo-mode-abbrev-expand-function
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387 nil t)))
388@end smallexample
389
e047f448 390@node Standard Abbrev Tables, Abbrev Properties, Abbrev Expansion, Abbrevs
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391@comment node-name, next, previous, up
392@section Standard Abbrev Tables
393
394 Here we list the variables that hold the abbrev tables for the
395preloaded major modes of Emacs.
396
397@defvar global-abbrev-table
398This is the abbrev table for mode-independent abbrevs. The abbrevs
399defined in it apply to all buffers. Each buffer may also have a local
400abbrev table, whose abbrev definitions take precedence over those in the
401global table.
402@end defvar
403
404@defvar local-abbrev-table
405The value of this buffer-local variable is the (mode-specific)
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406abbreviation table of the current buffer. It can also be a list of
407such tables.
408@end defvar
409
410@defvar abbrev-minor-mode-table-alist
411The value of this variable is a list of elements of the form
412@code{(@var{mode} . @var{abbrev-table})} where @var{mode} is the name
413of a variable: if the variable is bound to a non-@code{nil} value,
414then the @var{abbrev-table} is active, otherwise it is ignored.
415@var{abbrev-table} can also be a list of abbrev tables.
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416@end defvar
417
418@defvar fundamental-mode-abbrev-table
419This is the local abbrev table used in Fundamental mode; in other words,
420it is the local abbrev table in all buffers in Fundamental mode.
421@end defvar
422
423@defvar text-mode-abbrev-table
424This is the local abbrev table used in Text mode.
425@end defvar
426
427@defvar lisp-mode-abbrev-table
428This is the local abbrev table used in Lisp mode and Emacs Lisp mode.
429@end defvar
430
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431@node Abbrev Properties, Abbrev Table Properties, Standard Abbrev Tables, Abbrevs
432@section Abbrev Properties
433
434Abbrevs have properties, some of which influence the way they work.
79415279 435You can provide them as arguments to @code{define-abbrev} and you can
925672cd 436manipulate them with the following functions:
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437
438@defun abbrev-put abbrev prop val
925672cd 439Set the property @var{prop} of @var{abbrev} to value @var{val}.
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440@end defun
441
442@defun abbrev-get abbrev prop
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443Return the property @var{prop} of @var{abbrev}, or @code{nil} if the
444abbrev has no such property.
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445@end defun
446
925672cd 447The following properties have special meanings:
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448
449@table @code
79415279 450@item :count
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451This property counts the number of times the abbrev has
452been expanded. If not explicitly set, it is initialized to 0 by
453@code{define-abbrev}.
454
79415279 455@item :system
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456If non-@code{nil}, this property marks the abbrev as a system abbrev.
457Such abbrevs are not saved (@pxref{Abbrev Files}).
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458
459@item :enable-function
79415279 460If non-@code{nil}, this property should be a function of no
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461arguments which returns @code{nil} if the abbrev should not be used
462and @code{t} otherwise.
463
464@item :case-fixed
465If non-@code{nil}, this property indicates that the case of the
466abbrev's name is significant and should only match a text with the
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467same pattern of capitalization. It also disables the code that
468modifies the capitalization of the expansion.
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469@end table
470
471@node Abbrev Table Properties, , Abbrev Properties, Abbrevs
472@section Abbrev Table Properties
473
bc5cde4b 474Like abbrevs, abbrev tables have properties, some of which influence
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475the way they work. You can provide them as arguments to
476@code{define-abbrev-table} and you can manipulate them with the
477functions:
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478
479@defun abbrev-table-put table prop val
480Set the property @var{prop} of abbrev table @var{table} to value @var{val}.
481@end defun
482
483@defun abbrev-table-get table prop
484Return the property @var{prop} of abbrev table @var{table}, or @code{nil}
485if the abbrev has no such property.
486@end defun
487
488The following properties have special meaning:
489
490@table @code
491@item :enable-function
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492This is like the @code{:enable-function} abbrev property except that
493it applies to all abbrevs in the table and is used even before trying
494to find the abbrev before point so it can dynamically modify the
495abbrev table.
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496
497@item :case-fixed
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498This is like the @code{:case-fixed} abbrev property except that it
499applies to all abbrevs in the table.
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500
501@item :regexp
502If non-@code{nil}, this property is a regular expression that
503indicates how to extract the name of the abbrev before point before
504looking it up in the table. When the regular expression matches
505before point, the abbrev name is expected to be in submatch 1.
79415279 506If this property is @code{nil}, @code{expand-function} defaults to
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507@code{"\\<\\(\\w+\\)\\W"}. This property allows the use of abbrevs
508whose name contains characters of non-word syntax.
509
510@item :parents
511This property holds the list of tables from which to inherit
512other abbrevs.
513
514@item :abbrev-table-modiff
515This property holds a counter incremented each time a new abbrev is
516added to the table.
517
518@end table
519
520
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521@ignore
522 arch-tag: 5ffdbe08-2cd4-48ec-a5a8-080f95756eec
523@end ignore