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[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / lispref / positions.texi
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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
ba318903 3@c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
b8d4c8d0 4@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
ecc6530d 5@node Positions
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6@chapter Positions
7@cindex position (in buffer)
c5074806 8@cindex buffer position
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9
10 A @dfn{position} is the index of a character in the text of a buffer.
11More precisely, a position identifies the place between two characters
12(or before the first character, or after the last character), so we can
13speak of the character before or after a given position. However, we
14often speak of the character ``at'' a position, meaning the character
15after that position.
16
17 Positions are usually represented as integers starting from 1, but
18can also be represented as @dfn{markers}---special objects that
19relocate automatically when text is inserted or deleted so they stay
20with the surrounding characters. Functions that expect an argument to
21be a position (an integer), but accept a marker as a substitute,
22normally ignore which buffer the marker points into; they convert the
23marker to an integer, and use that integer, exactly as if you had
24passed the integer as the argument, even if the marker points to the
25``wrong'' buffer. A marker that points nowhere cannot convert to an
26integer; using it instead of an integer causes an error.
27@xref{Markers}.
28
29 See also the ``field'' feature (@pxref{Fields}), which provides
30functions that are used by many cursor-motion commands.
31
32@menu
33* Point:: The special position where editing takes place.
34* Motion:: Changing point.
35* Excursions:: Temporary motion and buffer changes.
36* Narrowing:: Restricting editing to a portion of the buffer.
37@end menu
38
39@node Point
40@section Point
41@cindex point
42
43 @dfn{Point} is a special buffer position used by many editing
44commands, including the self-inserting typed characters and text
45insertion functions. Other commands move point through the text
46to allow editing and insertion at different places.
47
48 Like other positions, point designates a place between two characters
49(or before the first character, or after the last character), rather
50than a particular character. Usually terminals display the cursor over
51the character that immediately follows point; point is actually before
52the character on which the cursor sits.
53
54@cindex point with narrowing
55 The value of point is a number no less than 1, and no greater than the
56buffer size plus 1. If narrowing is in effect (@pxref{Narrowing}), then
57point is constrained to fall within the accessible portion of the buffer
58(possibly at one end of it).
59
60 Each buffer has its own value of point, which is independent of the
61value of point in other buffers. Each window also has a value of point,
62which is independent of the value of point in other windows on the same
63buffer. This is why point can have different values in various windows
64that display the same buffer. When a buffer appears in only one window,
65the buffer's point and the window's point normally have the same value,
66so the distinction is rarely important. @xref{Window Point}, for more
67details.
68
69@defun point
70@cindex current buffer position
71This function returns the value of point in the current buffer,
72as an integer.
73
74@need 700
75@example
76@group
77(point)
78 @result{} 175
79@end group
80@end example
81@end defun
82
83@defun point-min
84This function returns the minimum accessible value of point in the
85current buffer. This is normally 1, but if narrowing is in effect, it
86is the position of the start of the region that you narrowed to.
87(@xref{Narrowing}.)
88@end defun
89
90@defun point-max
91This function returns the maximum accessible value of point in the
92current buffer. This is @code{(1+ (buffer-size))}, unless narrowing is
93in effect, in which case it is the position of the end of the region
94that you narrowed to. (@xref{Narrowing}.)
95@end defun
96
97@defun buffer-end flag
98This function returns @code{(point-max)} if @var{flag} is greater than
990, @code{(point-min)} otherwise. The argument @var{flag} must be a
100number.
101@end defun
102
103@defun buffer-size &optional buffer
104This function returns the total number of characters in the current
105buffer. In the absence of any narrowing (@pxref{Narrowing}),
106@code{point-max} returns a value one larger than this.
107
108If you specify a buffer, @var{buffer}, then the value is the
109size of @var{buffer}.
110
111@example
112@group
113(buffer-size)
114 @result{} 35
115@end group
116@group
117(point-max)
118 @result{} 36
119@end group
120@end example
121@end defun
122
123@node Motion
124@section Motion
125@cindex motion by chars, words, lines, lists
126
127 Motion functions change the value of point, either relative to the
128current value of point, relative to the beginning or end of the buffer,
129or relative to the edges of the selected window. @xref{Point}.
130
131@menu
132* Character Motion:: Moving in terms of characters.
133* Word Motion:: Moving in terms of words.
134* Buffer End Motion:: Moving to the beginning or end of the buffer.
135* Text Lines:: Moving in terms of lines of text.
136* Screen Lines:: Moving in terms of lines as displayed.
137* List Motion:: Moving by parsing lists and sexps.
138* Skipping Characters:: Skipping characters belonging to a certain set.
139@end menu
140
141@node Character Motion
142@subsection Motion by Characters
143
144 These functions move point based on a count of characters.
145@code{goto-char} is the fundamental primitive; the other functions use
146that.
147
148@deffn Command goto-char position
149This function sets point in the current buffer to the value
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150@var{position}.
151@c This behavior used to be documented until 2013/08.
152@ignore
153If @var{position} is less than 1, it moves point to the beginning of
154the buffer. If @var{position} is greater than the length of the
155buffer, it moves point to the end.
156@end ignore
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157
158If narrowing is in effect, @var{position} still counts from the
159beginning of the buffer, but point cannot go outside the accessible
160portion. If @var{position} is out of range, @code{goto-char} moves
161point to the beginning or the end of the accessible portion.
162
163When this function is called interactively, @var{position} is the
164numeric prefix argument, if provided; otherwise it is read from the
165minibuffer.
166
167@code{goto-char} returns @var{position}.
168@end deffn
169
170@deffn Command forward-char &optional count
171@c @kindex beginning-of-buffer
172@c @kindex end-of-buffer
173This function moves point @var{count} characters forward, towards the
174end of the buffer (or backward, towards the beginning of the buffer, if
175@var{count} is negative). If @var{count} is @code{nil}, the default
176is 1.
177
178If this attempts to move past the beginning or end of the buffer (or
179the limits of the accessible portion, when narrowing is in effect), it
180signals an error with error symbol @code{beginning-of-buffer} or
181@code{end-of-buffer}.
182
183In an interactive call, @var{count} is the numeric prefix argument.
184@end deffn
185
186@deffn Command backward-char &optional count
187This is just like @code{forward-char} except that it moves
188in the opposite direction.
189@end deffn
190
191@node Word Motion
192@subsection Motion by Words
193
194 These functions for parsing words use the syntax table to decide
195whether a given character is part of a word. @xref{Syntax Tables}.
196
197@deffn Command forward-word &optional count
198This function moves point forward @var{count} words (or backward if
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199@var{count} is negative). If @var{count} is omitted or @code{nil}, it
200defaults to 1.
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201
202``Moving one word'' means moving until point crosses a
203word-constituent character and then encounters a word-separator
204character. However, this function cannot move point past the boundary
205of the accessible portion of the buffer, or across a field boundary
206(@pxref{Fields}). The most common case of a field boundary is the end
207of the prompt in the minibuffer.
208
209If it is possible to move @var{count} words, without being stopped
210prematurely by the buffer boundary or a field boundary, the value is
211@code{t}. Otherwise, the return value is @code{nil} and point stops at
212the buffer boundary or field boundary.
213
214If @code{inhibit-field-text-motion} is non-@code{nil},
215this function ignores field boundaries.
216
217In an interactive call, @var{count} is specified by the numeric prefix
f73f4ce6 218argument.
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219@end deffn
220
221@deffn Command backward-word &optional count
222This function is just like @code{forward-word}, except that it moves
223backward until encountering the front of a word, rather than forward.
224@end deffn
225
01f17ae2 226@defopt words-include-escapes
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227@c Emacs 19 feature
228This variable affects the behavior of @code{forward-word} and everything
229that uses it. If it is non-@code{nil}, then characters in the
230``escape'' and ``character quote'' syntax classes count as part of
231words. Otherwise, they do not.
01f17ae2 232@end defopt
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233
234@defvar inhibit-field-text-motion
235If this variable is non-@code{nil}, certain motion functions including
236@code{forward-word}, @code{forward-sentence}, and
237@code{forward-paragraph} ignore field boundaries.
238@end defvar
239
240@node Buffer End Motion
241@subsection Motion to an End of the Buffer
242@cindex move to beginning or end of buffer
243
244 To move point to the beginning of the buffer, write:
245
246@example
247@group
248(goto-char (point-min))
249@end group
250@end example
251
252@noindent
253Likewise, to move to the end of the buffer, use:
254
255@example
256@group
257(goto-char (point-max))
258@end group
259@end example
260
261 Here are two commands that users use to do these things. They are
262documented here to warn you not to use them in Lisp programs, because
263they set the mark and display messages in the echo area.
264
265@deffn Command beginning-of-buffer &optional n
266This function moves point to the beginning of the buffer (or the limits
267of the accessible portion, when narrowing is in effect), setting the
268mark at the previous position (except in Transient Mark mode, if
269the mark is already active, it does not set the mark.)
270
271If @var{n} is non-@code{nil}, then it puts point @var{n} tenths of the
272way from the beginning of the accessible portion of the buffer. In an
273interactive call, @var{n} is the numeric prefix argument, if provided;
274otherwise @var{n} defaults to @code{nil}.
275
276@strong{Warning:} Don't use this function in Lisp programs!
277@end deffn
278
279@deffn Command end-of-buffer &optional n
280This function moves point to the end of the buffer (or the limits of
281the accessible portion, when narrowing is in effect), setting the mark
282at the previous position (except in Transient Mark mode when the mark
283is already active). If @var{n} is non-@code{nil}, then it puts point
284@var{n} tenths of the way from the end of the accessible portion of
285the buffer.
286
287In an interactive call, @var{n} is the numeric prefix argument,
288if provided; otherwise @var{n} defaults to @code{nil}.
289
290@strong{Warning:} Don't use this function in Lisp programs!
291@end deffn
292
293@node Text Lines
294@subsection Motion by Text Lines
295@cindex lines
296
297 Text lines are portions of the buffer delimited by newline characters,
298which are regarded as part of the previous line. The first text line
299begins at the beginning of the buffer, and the last text line ends at
300the end of the buffer whether or not the last character is a newline.
301The division of the buffer into text lines is not affected by the width
302of the window, by line continuation in display, or by how tabs and
303control characters are displayed.
304
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305@deffn Command beginning-of-line &optional count
306This function moves point to the beginning of the current line. With an
307argument @var{count} not @code{nil} or 1, it moves forward
308@var{count}@minus{}1 lines and then to the beginning of the line.
309
310This function does not move point across a field boundary
311(@pxref{Fields}) unless doing so would move beyond there to a
312different line; therefore, if @var{count} is @code{nil} or 1, and
313point starts at a field boundary, point does not move. To ignore
314field boundaries, either bind @code{inhibit-field-text-motion} to
315@code{t}, or use the @code{forward-line} function instead. For
316instance, @code{(forward-line 0)} does the same thing as
317@code{(beginning-of-line)}, except that it ignores field boundaries.
318
319If this function reaches the end of the buffer (or of the accessible
320portion, if narrowing is in effect), it positions point there. No error
321is signaled.
322@end deffn
323
324@defun line-beginning-position &optional count
325Return the position that @code{(beginning-of-line @var{count})}
326would move to.
327@end defun
328
329@deffn Command end-of-line &optional count
330This function moves point to the end of the current line. With an
331argument @var{count} not @code{nil} or 1, it moves forward
332@var{count}@minus{}1 lines and then to the end of the line.
333
334This function does not move point across a field boundary
335(@pxref{Fields}) unless doing so would move beyond there to a
336different line; therefore, if @var{count} is @code{nil} or 1, and
337point starts at a field boundary, point does not move. To ignore
338field boundaries, bind @code{inhibit-field-text-motion} to @code{t}.
339
340If this function reaches the end of the buffer (or of the accessible
341portion, if narrowing is in effect), it positions point there. No error
342is signaled.
343@end deffn
344
345@defun line-end-position &optional count
346Return the position that @code{(end-of-line @var{count})}
347would move to.
348@end defun
349
350@deffn Command forward-line &optional count
351@cindex beginning of line
352This function moves point forward @var{count} lines, to the beginning of
353the line. If @var{count} is negative, it moves point
354@minus{}@var{count} lines backward, to the beginning of a line. If
355@var{count} is zero, it moves point to the beginning of the current
356line. If @var{count} is @code{nil}, that means 1.
357
358If @code{forward-line} encounters the beginning or end of the buffer (or
359of the accessible portion) before finding that many lines, it sets point
360there. No error is signaled.
361
362@code{forward-line} returns the difference between @var{count} and the
363number of lines actually moved. If you attempt to move down five lines
364from the beginning of a buffer that has only three lines, point stops at
365the end of the last line, and the value will be 2.
366
367In an interactive call, @var{count} is the numeric prefix argument.
368@end deffn
369
370@defun count-lines start end
371@cindex lines in region
372@anchor{Definition of count-lines}
373This function returns the number of lines between the positions
374@var{start} and @var{end} in the current buffer. If @var{start} and
375@var{end} are equal, then it returns 0. Otherwise it returns at least
3761, even if @var{start} and @var{end} are on the same line. This is
377because the text between them, considered in isolation, must contain at
378least one line unless it is empty.
ef959d3a 379@end defun
b8d4c8d0 380
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381@deffn Command count-words start end
382@cindex words in region
383This function returns the number of words between the positions
384@var{start} and @var{end} in the current buffer.
b8d4c8d0 385
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386This function can also be called interactively. In that case, it
387prints a message reporting the number of lines, words, and characters
388in the buffer, or in the region if the region is active.
389@end deffn
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390
391@defun line-number-at-pos &optional pos
392@cindex line number
393This function returns the line number in the current buffer
394corresponding to the buffer position @var{pos}. If @var{pos} is @code{nil}
395or omitted, the current buffer position is used.
396@end defun
397
398@ignore
399@c ================
400The @code{previous-line} and @code{next-line} commands are functions
401that should not be used in programs. They are for users and are
402mentioned here only for completeness.
403
404@deffn Command previous-line count
405@cindex goal column
406This function moves point up @var{count} lines (down if @var{count}
407is negative). In moving, it attempts to keep point in the ``goal column''
408(normally the same column that it was at the beginning of the move).
409
410If there is no character in the target line exactly under the current
411column, point is positioned after the character in that line which
412spans this column, or at the end of the line if it is not long enough.
413
414If it attempts to move beyond the top or bottom of the buffer (or clipped
415region), then point is positioned in the goal column in the top or
416bottom line. No error is signaled.
417
418In an interactive call, @var{count} will be the numeric
419prefix argument.
420
421The command @code{set-goal-column} can be used to create a semipermanent
422goal column to which this command always moves. Then it does not try to
423move vertically.
424
425If you are thinking of using this in a Lisp program, consider using
426@code{forward-line} with a negative argument instead. It is usually easier
427to use and more reliable (no dependence on goal column, etc.).
428@end deffn
429
430@deffn Command next-line count
431This function moves point down @var{count} lines (up if @var{count}
432is negative). In moving, it attempts to keep point in the ``goal column''
433(normally the same column that it was at the beginning of the move).
434
435If there is no character in the target line exactly under the current
436column, point is positioned after the character in that line which
437spans this column, or at the end of the line if it is not long enough.
438
439If it attempts to move beyond the top or bottom of the buffer (or clipped
440region), then point is positioned in the goal column in the top or
441bottom line. No error is signaled.
442
443In the case where the @var{count} is 1, and point is on the last
444line of the buffer (or clipped region), a new empty line is inserted at the
445end of the buffer (or clipped region) and point moved there.
446
447In an interactive call, @var{count} will be the numeric
448prefix argument.
449
450The command @code{set-goal-column} can be used to create a semipermanent
451goal column to which this command always moves. Then it does not try to
452move vertically.
453
454If you are thinking of using this in a Lisp program, consider using
455@code{forward-line} instead. It is usually easier
456to use and more reliable (no dependence on goal column, etc.).
457@end deffn
458
459@c ================
460@end ignore
461
462 Also see the functions @code{bolp} and @code{eolp} in @ref{Near Point}.
463These functions do not move point, but test whether it is already at the
464beginning or end of a line.
465
466@node Screen Lines
467@subsection Motion by Screen Lines
468
469 The line functions in the previous section count text lines, delimited
470only by newline characters. By contrast, these functions count screen
471lines, which are defined by the way the text appears on the screen. A
472text line is a single screen line if it is short enough to fit the width
473of the selected window, but otherwise it may occupy several screen
474lines.
475
476 In some cases, text lines are truncated on the screen rather than
477continued onto additional screen lines. In these cases,
478@code{vertical-motion} moves point much like @code{forward-line}.
479@xref{Truncation}.
480
481 Because the width of a given string depends on the flags that control
482the appearance of certain characters, @code{vertical-motion} behaves
483differently, for a given piece of text, depending on the buffer it is
484in, and even on the selected window (because the width, the truncation
485flag, and display table may vary between windows). @xref{Usual
486Display}.
487
488 These functions scan text to determine where screen lines break, and
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489thus take time proportional to the distance scanned.
490@ignore
491If you intend to use them heavily, Emacs provides caches which may
492improve the performance of your code. @xref{Truncation, cache-long-scans}.
493@end ignore
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494
495@defun vertical-motion count &optional window
496This function moves point to the start of the screen line @var{count}
497screen lines down from the screen line containing point. If @var{count}
498is negative, it moves up instead.
499
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500The @var{count} argument can be a cons cell, @code{(@var{cols}
501. @var{lines})}, instead of an integer. Then the function moves by
502@var{lines} screen lines, and puts point @var{cols} columns from the
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503visual start of that screen line. Note that @var{cols} are counted
504from the @emph{visual} start of the line; if the window is scrolled
505horizontally (@pxref{Horizontal Scrolling}), the column on which point
506will end is in addition to the number of columns by which the text is
507scrolled.
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508
509The return value is the number of screen lines over which point was
510moved. The value may be less in absolute value than @var{count} if
511the beginning or end of the buffer was reached.
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512
513The window @var{window} is used for obtaining parameters such as the
514width, the horizontal scrolling, and the display table. But
515@code{vertical-motion} always operates on the current buffer, even if
516@var{window} currently displays some other buffer.
517@end defun
518
519@defun count-screen-lines &optional beg end count-final-newline window
520This function returns the number of screen lines in the text from
521@var{beg} to @var{end}. The number of screen lines may be different
522from the number of actual lines, due to line continuation, the display
523table, etc. If @var{beg} and @var{end} are @code{nil} or omitted,
524they default to the beginning and end of the accessible portion of the
525buffer.
526
527If the region ends with a newline, that is ignored unless the optional
528third argument @var{count-final-newline} is non-@code{nil}.
529
530The optional fourth argument @var{window} specifies the window for
531obtaining parameters such as width, horizontal scrolling, and so on.
532The default is to use the selected window's parameters.
533
534Like @code{vertical-motion}, @code{count-screen-lines} always uses the
535current buffer, regardless of which buffer is displayed in
536@var{window}. This makes possible to use @code{count-screen-lines} in
537any buffer, whether or not it is currently displayed in some window.
538@end defun
539
540@deffn Command move-to-window-line count
541This function moves point with respect to the text currently displayed
542in the selected window. It moves point to the beginning of the screen
543line @var{count} screen lines from the top of the window. If
544@var{count} is negative, that specifies a position
545@w{@minus{}@var{count}} lines from the bottom (or the last line of the
546buffer, if the buffer ends above the specified screen position).
547
548If @var{count} is @code{nil}, then point moves to the beginning of the
549line in the middle of the window. If the absolute value of @var{count}
550is greater than the size of the window, then point moves to the place
551that would appear on that screen line if the window were tall enough.
552This will probably cause the next redisplay to scroll to bring that
553location onto the screen.
554
555In an interactive call, @var{count} is the numeric prefix argument.
556
557The value returned is the window line number point has moved to, with
558the top line in the window numbered 0.
559@end deffn
560
561@defun compute-motion from frompos to topos width offsets window
562This function scans the current buffer, calculating screen positions.
563It scans the buffer forward from position @var{from}, assuming that is
564at screen coordinates @var{frompos}, to position @var{to} or coordinates
565@var{topos}, whichever comes first. It returns the ending buffer
566position and screen coordinates.
567
568The coordinate arguments @var{frompos} and @var{topos} are cons cells of
569the form @code{(@var{hpos} . @var{vpos})}.
570
571The argument @var{width} is the number of columns available to display
572text; this affects handling of continuation lines. @code{nil} means
573the actual number of usable text columns in the window, which is
574equivalent to the value returned by @code{(window-width window)}.
575
576The argument @var{offsets} is either @code{nil} or a cons cell of the
577form @code{(@var{hscroll} . @var{tab-offset})}. Here @var{hscroll} is
578the number of columns not being displayed at the left margin; most
579callers get this by calling @code{window-hscroll}. Meanwhile,
580@var{tab-offset} is the offset between column numbers on the screen and
581column numbers in the buffer. This can be nonzero in a continuation
582line, when the previous screen lines' widths do not add up to a multiple
583of @code{tab-width}. It is always zero in a non-continuation line.
584
585The window @var{window} serves only to specify which display table to
586use. @code{compute-motion} always operates on the current buffer,
587regardless of what buffer is displayed in @var{window}.
588
589The return value is a list of five elements:
590
591@example
592(@var{pos} @var{hpos} @var{vpos} @var{prevhpos} @var{contin})
593@end example
594
595@noindent
596Here @var{pos} is the buffer position where the scan stopped, @var{vpos}
597is the vertical screen position, and @var{hpos} is the horizontal screen
598position.
599
600The result @var{prevhpos} is the horizontal position one character back
601from @var{pos}. The result @var{contin} is @code{t} if the last line
602was continued after (or within) the previous character.
603
604For example, to find the buffer position of column @var{col} of screen line
605@var{line} of a certain window, pass the window's display start location
606as @var{from} and the window's upper-left coordinates as @var{frompos}.
607Pass the buffer's @code{(point-max)} as @var{to}, to limit the scan to
608the end of the accessible portion of the buffer, and pass @var{line} and
609@var{col} as @var{topos}. Here's a function that does this:
610
611@example
612(defun coordinates-of-position (col line)
613 (car (compute-motion (window-start)
614 '(0 . 0)
615 (point-max)
616 (cons col line)
617 (window-width)
618 (cons (window-hscroll) 0)
619 (selected-window))))
620@end example
621
622When you use @code{compute-motion} for the minibuffer, you need to use
623@code{minibuffer-prompt-width} to get the horizontal position of the
624beginning of the first screen line. @xref{Minibuffer Contents}.
625@end defun
626
627@node List Motion
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628@subsection Moving over Balanced Expressions
629@cindex sexp motion
630@cindex Lisp expression motion
631@cindex list motion
632@cindex balanced parenthesis motion
633
634 Here are several functions concerned with balanced-parenthesis
635expressions (also called @dfn{sexps} in connection with moving across
636them in Emacs). The syntax table controls how these functions interpret
637various characters; see @ref{Syntax Tables}. @xref{Parsing
638Expressions}, for lower-level primitives for scanning sexps or parts of
639sexps. For user-level commands, see @ref{Parentheses,, Commands for
640Editing with Parentheses, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
641
642@deffn Command forward-list &optional arg
643This function moves forward across @var{arg} (default 1) balanced groups of
644parentheses. (Other syntactic entities such as words or paired string
645quotes are ignored.)
646@end deffn
647
648@deffn Command backward-list &optional arg
649This function moves backward across @var{arg} (default 1) balanced groups of
650parentheses. (Other syntactic entities such as words or paired string
651quotes are ignored.)
652@end deffn
653
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654@deffn Command up-list &optional arg escape-strings no-syntax-crossing
655This function moves forward out of @var{arg} (default 1) levels of
656parentheses. A negative argument means move backward but still to a
657less deep spot. If @var{escape-strings} is non-nil (as it is
658interactively), move out of enclosing strings as well. If
659@var{no-syntax-crossing} is non-nil (as it is interactively), prefer
660to break out of any enclosing string instead of moving to the start of
661a list broken across multiple strings. On error, location of point is
662unspecified.
663@end deffn
664
665@deffn Command backward-up-list &optional arg escape-strings no-syntax-crossing
666This function is just like @code{up-list}, but with a negated argument.
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667@end deffn
668
669@deffn Command down-list &optional arg
670This function moves forward into @var{arg} (default 1) levels of
671parentheses. A negative argument means move backward but still go
672deeper in parentheses (@minus{}@var{arg} levels).
673@end deffn
674
675@deffn Command forward-sexp &optional arg
676This function moves forward across @var{arg} (default 1) balanced expressions.
677Balanced expressions include both those delimited by parentheses and
678other kinds, such as words and string constants.
679@xref{Parsing Expressions}. For example,
680
681@example
682@group
683---------- Buffer: foo ----------
684(concat@point{} "foo " (car x) y z)
685---------- Buffer: foo ----------
686@end group
687
688@group
689(forward-sexp 3)
690 @result{} nil
691
692---------- Buffer: foo ----------
693(concat "foo " (car x) y@point{} z)
694---------- Buffer: foo ----------
695@end group
696@end example
697@end deffn
698
699@deffn Command backward-sexp &optional arg
700This function moves backward across @var{arg} (default 1) balanced expressions.
701@end deffn
702
703@deffn Command beginning-of-defun &optional arg
704This function moves back to the @var{arg}th beginning of a defun. If
705@var{arg} is negative, this actually moves forward, but it still moves
706to the beginning of a defun, not to the end of one. @var{arg} defaults
707to 1.
708@end deffn
709
710@deffn Command end-of-defun &optional arg
711This function moves forward to the @var{arg}th end of a defun. If
712@var{arg} is negative, this actually moves backward, but it still moves
713to the end of a defun, not to the beginning of one. @var{arg} defaults
714to 1.
715@end deffn
716
717@defopt defun-prompt-regexp
718If non-@code{nil}, this buffer-local variable holds a regular
719expression that specifies what text can appear before the
720open-parenthesis that starts a defun. That is to say, a defun begins
721on a line that starts with a match for this regular expression,
722followed by a character with open-parenthesis syntax.
723@end defopt
724
725@defopt open-paren-in-column-0-is-defun-start
726If this variable's value is non-@code{nil}, an open parenthesis in
727column 0 is considered to be the start of a defun. If it is
728@code{nil}, an open parenthesis in column 0 has no special meaning.
729The default is @code{t}.
730@end defopt
731
732@defvar beginning-of-defun-function
733If non-@code{nil}, this variable holds a function for finding the
734beginning of a defun. The function @code{beginning-of-defun}
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735calls this function instead of using its normal method, passing it its
736optional argument. If the argument is non-@code{nil}, the function
737should move back by that many functions, like
738@code{beginning-of-defun} does.
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739@end defvar
740
741@defvar end-of-defun-function
742If non-@code{nil}, this variable holds a function for finding the end of
743a defun. The function @code{end-of-defun} calls this function instead
744of using its normal method.
745@end defvar
746
747@node Skipping Characters
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748@subsection Skipping Characters
749@cindex skipping characters
750
751 The following two functions move point over a specified set of
752characters. For example, they are often used to skip whitespace. For
753related functions, see @ref{Motion and Syntax}.
754
755These functions convert the set string to multibyte if the buffer is
756multibyte, and they convert it to unibyte if the buffer is unibyte, as
757the search functions do (@pxref{Searching and Matching}).
758
759@defun skip-chars-forward character-set &optional limit
760This function moves point in the current buffer forward, skipping over a
761given set of characters. It examines the character following point,
762then advances point if the character matches @var{character-set}. This
763continues until it reaches a character that does not match. The
764function returns the number of characters moved over.
765
766The argument @var{character-set} is a string, like the inside of a
767@samp{[@dots{}]} in a regular expression except that @samp{]} does not
768terminate it, and @samp{\} quotes @samp{^}, @samp{-} or @samp{\}.
769Thus, @code{"a-zA-Z"} skips over all letters, stopping before the
770first nonletter, and @code{"^a-zA-Z"} skips nonletters stopping before
771the first letter. See @xref{Regular Expressions}. Character classes
1df7defd 772can also be used, e.g., @code{"[:alnum:]"}. See @pxref{Char Classes}.
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773
774If @var{limit} is supplied (it must be a number or a marker), it
775specifies the maximum position in the buffer that point can be skipped
776to. Point will stop at or before @var{limit}.
777
778In the following example, point is initially located directly before the
779@samp{T}. After the form is evaluated, point is located at the end of
780that line (between the @samp{t} of @samp{hat} and the newline). The
781function skips all letters and spaces, but not newlines.
782
783@example
784@group
785---------- Buffer: foo ----------
786I read "@point{}The cat in the hat
787comes back" twice.
788---------- Buffer: foo ----------
789@end group
790
791@group
792(skip-chars-forward "a-zA-Z ")
5c8ad206 793 @result{} 18
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794
795---------- Buffer: foo ----------
796I read "The cat in the hat@point{}
797comes back" twice.
798---------- Buffer: foo ----------
799@end group
800@end example
801@end defun
802
803@defun skip-chars-backward character-set &optional limit
804This function moves point backward, skipping characters that match
805@var{character-set}, until @var{limit}. It is just like
806@code{skip-chars-forward} except for the direction of motion.
807
808The return value indicates the distance traveled. It is an integer that
809is zero or less.
810@end defun
811
812@node Excursions
813@section Excursions
814@cindex excursion
815
816 It is often useful to move point ``temporarily'' within a localized
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817portion of the program. This is called an @dfn{excursion}, and it is
818done with the @code{save-excursion} special form. This construct
819remembers the initial identity of the current buffer, and its values
820of point and the mark, and restores them after the excursion
821completes. It is the standard way to move point within one part of a
822program and avoid affecting the rest of the program, and is used
823thousands of times in the Lisp sources of Emacs.
824
825 If you only need to save and restore the identity of the current
826buffer, use @code{save-current-buffer} or @code{with-current-buffer}
827instead (@pxref{Current Buffer}). If you need to save or restore
828window configurations, see the forms described in @ref{Window
7510a061 829Configurations} and in @ref{Frame Configurations}. @c frameset?
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830
831@defspec save-excursion body@dots{}
832@cindex mark excursion
833@cindex point excursion
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834This special form saves the identity of the current buffer and the
835values of point and the mark in it, evaluates @var{body}, and finally
836restores the buffer and its saved values of point and the mark. All
837three saved values are restored even in case of an abnormal exit via
838@code{throw} or error (@pxref{Nonlocal Exits}).
b8d4c8d0 839
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840The value returned by @code{save-excursion} is the result of the last
841form in @var{body}, or @code{nil} if no body forms were given.
842@end defspec
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844 Because @code{save-excursion} only saves point and mark for the
845buffer that was current at the start of the excursion, any changes
846made to point and/or mark in other buffers, during the excursion, will
847remain in effect afterward. This frequently leads to unintended
848consequences, so the byte compiler warns if you call @code{set-buffer}
849during an excursion:
b8d4c8d0 850
c1bcd0d5 851@example
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852Warning: Use `with-current-buffer' rather than
853 save-excursion+set-buffer
c1bcd0d5 854@end example
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856@noindent
857To avoid such problems, you should call @code{save-excursion} only
858after setting the desired current buffer, as in the following example:
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859
860@example
861@group
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862(defun append-string-to-buffer (string buffer)
863 "Append STRING to the end of BUFFER."
864 (with-current-buffer buffer
865 (save-excursion
866 (goto-char (point-max))
867 (insert string))))
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868@end group
869@end example
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870
871@cindex window excursions
872 Likewise, @code{save-excursion} does not restore window-buffer
873correspondences altered by functions such as @code{switch-to-buffer}.
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874
875 @strong{Warning:} Ordinary insertion of text adjacent to the saved
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876point value relocates the saved value, just as it relocates all
877markers. More precisely, the saved value is a marker with insertion
878type @code{nil}. @xref{Marker Insertion Types}. Therefore, when the
879saved point value is restored, it normally comes before the inserted
880text.
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881
882 Although @code{save-excursion} saves the location of the mark, it does
883not prevent functions which modify the buffer from setting
884@code{deactivate-mark}, and thus causing the deactivation of the mark
885after the command finishes. @xref{The Mark}.
886
887@node Narrowing
888@section Narrowing
889@cindex narrowing
890@cindex restriction (in a buffer)
891@cindex accessible portion (of a buffer)
892
893 @dfn{Narrowing} means limiting the text addressable by Emacs editing
894commands to a limited range of characters in a buffer. The text that
895remains addressable is called the @dfn{accessible portion} of the
896buffer.
897
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898 Narrowing is specified with two buffer positions, which become the
899beginning and end of the accessible portion. For most editing
900commands and primitives, these positions replace the values of the
901beginning and end of the buffer. While narrowing is in effect, no
902text outside the accessible portion is displayed, and point cannot
903move outside the accessible portion. Note that narrowing does not
904alter actual buffer positions (@pxref{Point}); it only determines
905which positions are considered the accessible portion of the buffer.
906Most functions refuse to operate on text that is outside the
907accessible portion.
908
909 Commands for saving buffers are unaffected by narrowing; they save
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910the entire buffer regardless of any narrowing.
911
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912 If you need to display in a single buffer several very different
913types of text, consider using an alternative facility described in
914@ref{Swapping Text}.
915
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916@deffn Command narrow-to-region start end
917This function sets the accessible portion of the current buffer to start
918at @var{start} and end at @var{end}. Both arguments should be character
919positions.
920
921In an interactive call, @var{start} and @var{end} are set to the bounds
922of the current region (point and the mark, with the smallest first).
923@end deffn
924
925@deffn Command narrow-to-page &optional move-count
926This function sets the accessible portion of the current buffer to
927include just the current page. An optional first argument
928@var{move-count} non-@code{nil} means to move forward or backward by
929@var{move-count} pages and then narrow to one page. The variable
930@code{page-delimiter} specifies where pages start and end
931(@pxref{Standard Regexps}).
932
933In an interactive call, @var{move-count} is set to the numeric prefix
934argument.
935@end deffn
936
937@deffn Command widen
938@cindex widening
939This function cancels any narrowing in the current buffer, so that the
940entire contents are accessible. This is called @dfn{widening}.
941It is equivalent to the following expression:
942
943@example
944(narrow-to-region 1 (1+ (buffer-size)))
945@end example
946@end deffn
947
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948@defun buffer-narrowed-p
949This function returns non-@code{nil} if the buffer is narrowed, and
950@code{nil} otherwise.
951@end defun
952
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953@defspec save-restriction body@dots{}
954This special form saves the current bounds of the accessible portion,
955evaluates the @var{body} forms, and finally restores the saved bounds,
956thus restoring the same state of narrowing (or absence thereof) formerly
957in effect. The state of narrowing is restored even in the event of an
958abnormal exit via @code{throw} or error (@pxref{Nonlocal Exits}).
959Therefore, this construct is a clean way to narrow a buffer temporarily.
960
961The value returned by @code{save-restriction} is that returned by the
962last form in @var{body}, or @code{nil} if no body forms were given.
963
964@c Wordy to avoid overfull hbox. --rjc 16mar92
965@strong{Caution:} it is easy to make a mistake when using the
966@code{save-restriction} construct. Read the entire description here
967before you try it.
968
969If @var{body} changes the current buffer, @code{save-restriction} still
970restores the restrictions on the original buffer (the buffer whose
971restrictions it saved from), but it does not restore the identity of the
972current buffer.
973
974@code{save-restriction} does @emph{not} restore point and the mark; use
975@code{save-excursion} for that. If you use both @code{save-restriction}
976and @code{save-excursion} together, @code{save-excursion} should come
977first (on the outside). Otherwise, the old point value would be
978restored with temporary narrowing still in effect. If the old point
979value were outside the limits of the temporary narrowing, this would
980fail to restore it accurately.
981
982Here is a simple example of correct use of @code{save-restriction}:
983
984@example
985@group
986---------- Buffer: foo ----------
987This is the contents of foo
988This is the contents of foo
989This is the contents of foo@point{}
990---------- Buffer: foo ----------
991@end group
992
993@group
994(save-excursion
995 (save-restriction
996 (goto-char 1)
997 (forward-line 2)
998 (narrow-to-region 1 (point))
999 (goto-char (point-min))
1000 (replace-string "foo" "bar")))
1001
1002---------- Buffer: foo ----------
1003This is the contents of bar
1004This is the contents of bar
1005This is the contents of foo@point{}
1006---------- Buffer: foo ----------
1007@end group
1008@end example
1009@end defspec