doc/lispref/modes.texi (Region to Fontify): Fix typo.
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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, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2001,
5df4f04c 4@c 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
b8d4c8d0 5@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6336d8c3 6@setfilename ../../info/modes
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7@node Modes, Documentation, Keymaps, Top
8@chapter Major and Minor Modes
9@cindex mode
10
11 A @dfn{mode} is a set of definitions that customize Emacs and can be
12turned on and off while you edit. There are two varieties of modes:
13@dfn{major modes}, which are mutually exclusive and used for editing
14particular kinds of text, and @dfn{minor modes}, which provide features
15that users can enable individually.
16
17 This chapter describes how to write both major and minor modes, how to
18indicate them in the mode line, and how they run hooks supplied by the
19user. For related topics such as keymaps and syntax tables, see
20@ref{Keymaps}, and @ref{Syntax Tables}.
21
22@menu
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23* Hooks:: How to use hooks; how to write code that provides hooks.
24* Major Modes:: Defining major modes.
25* Minor Modes:: Defining minor modes.
26* Mode Line Format:: Customizing the text that appears in the mode line.
5dcb4c4e 27* Imenu:: How a mode can provide a menu
b8d4c8d0 28 of definitions in the buffer.
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29* Font Lock Mode:: How modes can highlight text according to syntax.
30* Auto-Indentation:: How to teach Emacs to indent for a major mode.
31* Desktop Save Mode:: How modes can have buffer state saved between
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32 Emacs sessions.
33@end menu
34
35@node Hooks
36@section Hooks
37@cindex hooks
38
39 A @dfn{hook} is a variable where you can store a function or functions
40to be called on a particular occasion by an existing program. Emacs
41provides hooks for the sake of customization. Most often, hooks are set
42up in the init file (@pxref{Init File}), but Lisp programs can set them also.
43@xref{Standard Hooks}, for a list of standard hook variables.
44
45@cindex normal hook
46 Most of the hooks in Emacs are @dfn{normal hooks}. These variables
47contain lists of functions to be called with no arguments. By
48convention, whenever the hook name ends in @samp{-hook}, that tells
49you it is normal. We try to make all hooks normal, as much as
50possible, so that you can use them in a uniform way.
51
52 Every major mode function is supposed to run a normal hook called
53the @dfn{mode hook} as the one of the last steps of initialization.
54This makes it easy for a user to customize the behavior of the mode,
55by overriding the buffer-local variable assignments already made by
56the mode. Most minor mode functions also run a mode hook at the end.
57But hooks are used in other contexts too. For example, the hook
58@code{suspend-hook} runs just before Emacs suspends itself
59(@pxref{Suspending Emacs}).
60
61 The recommended way to add a hook function to a normal hook is by
62calling @code{add-hook} (see below). The hook functions may be any of
63the valid kinds of functions that @code{funcall} accepts (@pxref{What
64Is a Function}). Most normal hook variables are initially void;
65@code{add-hook} knows how to deal with this. You can add hooks either
66globally or buffer-locally with @code{add-hook}.
67
68@cindex abnormal hook
69 If the hook variable's name does not end with @samp{-hook}, that
70indicates it is probably an @dfn{abnormal hook}. That means the hook
71functions are called with arguments, or their return values are used
72in some way. The hook's documentation says how the functions are
73called. You can use @code{add-hook} to add a function to an abnormal
74hook, but you must write the function to follow the hook's calling
75convention.
76
77 By convention, abnormal hook names end in @samp{-functions} or
78@samp{-hooks}. If the variable's name ends in @samp{-function}, then
79its value is just a single function, not a list of functions.
80
fd9a7a58 81@menu
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82* Running Hooks:: How to run a hook.
83* Setting Hooks:: How to put functions on a hook, or remove them.
fd9a7a58 84@end menu
b8d4c8d0 85
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86@node Running Hooks
87@subsection Running Hooks
b8d4c8d0 88
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89 At the appropriate times, Emacs uses the @code{run-hooks} function
90and the other functions below to run particular hooks.
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91
92@defun run-hooks &rest hookvars
93This function takes one or more normal hook variable names as
94arguments, and runs each hook in turn. Each argument should be a
95symbol that is a normal hook variable. These arguments are processed
96in the order specified.
97
98If a hook variable has a non-@code{nil} value, that value should be a
99list of functions. @code{run-hooks} calls all the functions, one by
100one, with no arguments.
101
102The hook variable's value can also be a single function---either a
103lambda expression or a symbol with a function definition---which
104@code{run-hooks} calls. But this usage is obsolete.
105@end defun
106
107@defun run-hook-with-args hook &rest args
108This function is the way to run an abnormal hook and always call all
109of the hook functions. It calls each of the hook functions one by
110one, passing each of them the arguments @var{args}.
111@end defun
112
113@defun run-hook-with-args-until-failure hook &rest args
114This function is the way to run an abnormal hook until one of the hook
115functions fails. It calls each of the hook functions, passing each of
116them the arguments @var{args}, until some hook function returns
117@code{nil}. It then stops and returns @code{nil}. If none of the
118hook functions return @code{nil}, it returns a non-@code{nil} value.
119@end defun
120
121@defun run-hook-with-args-until-success hook &rest args
122This function is the way to run an abnormal hook until a hook function
123succeeds. It calls each of the hook functions, passing each of them
124the arguments @var{args}, until some hook function returns
125non-@code{nil}. Then it stops, and returns whatever was returned by
126the last hook function that was called. If all hook functions return
127@code{nil}, it returns @code{nil} as well.
128@end defun
129
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130@node Setting Hooks
131@subsection Setting Hooks
132
133 Here's an example that uses a mode hook to turn on Auto Fill mode when
134in Lisp Interaction mode:
135
136@example
137(add-hook 'lisp-interaction-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)
138@end example
139
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140@defun add-hook hook function &optional append local
141This function is the handy way to add function @var{function} to hook
142variable @var{hook}. You can use it for abnormal hooks as well as for
143normal hooks. @var{function} can be any Lisp function that can accept
144the proper number of arguments for @var{hook}. For example,
145
146@example
147(add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'my-text-hook-function)
148@end example
149
150@noindent
151adds @code{my-text-hook-function} to the hook called @code{text-mode-hook}.
152
153If @var{function} is already present in @var{hook} (comparing using
154@code{equal}), then @code{add-hook} does not add it a second time.
155
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156If @var{function} has a non-@code{nil} property
157@code{permanent-local-hook}, then @code{kill-all-local-variables} (or
158changing major modes) won't delete it from the hook variable's local
159value.
160
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161It is best to design your hook functions so that the order in which
162they are executed does not matter. Any dependence on the order is
163asking for trouble. However, the order is predictable: normally,
b8d4c8d0 164@var{function} goes at the front of the hook list, so it will be
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165executed first (barring another @code{add-hook} call). If the
166optional argument @var{append} is non-@code{nil}, the new hook
167function goes at the end of the hook list and will be executed last.
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168
169@code{add-hook} can handle the cases where @var{hook} is void or its
170value is a single function; it sets or changes the value to a list of
171functions.
172
173If @var{local} is non-@code{nil}, that says to add @var{function} to
174the buffer-local hook list instead of to the global hook list. If
175needed, this makes the hook buffer-local and adds @code{t} to the
176buffer-local value. The latter acts as a flag to run the hook
177functions in the default value as well as in the local value.
178@end defun
179
180@defun remove-hook hook function &optional local
181This function removes @var{function} from the hook variable
182@var{hook}. It compares @var{function} with elements of @var{hook}
183using @code{equal}, so it works for both symbols and lambda
184expressions.
185
186If @var{local} is non-@code{nil}, that says to remove @var{function}
187from the buffer-local hook list instead of from the global hook list.
188@end defun
189
190@node Major Modes
191@section Major Modes
192@cindex major mode
193
194 Major modes specialize Emacs for editing particular kinds of text.
195Each buffer has only one major mode at a time. For each major mode
196there is a function to switch to that mode in the current buffer; its
197name should end in @samp{-mode}. These functions work by setting
198buffer-local variable bindings and other data associated with the
199buffer, such as a local keymap. The effect lasts until you switch
200to another major mode in the same buffer.
201
202@menu
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203* Major Mode Basics::
204* Major Mode Conventions:: Coding conventions for keymaps, etc.
205* Auto Major Mode:: How Emacs chooses the major mode automatically.
206* Mode Help:: Finding out how to use a mode.
207* Derived Modes:: Defining a new major mode based on another major
b8d4c8d0 208 mode.
769741e3 209* Generic Modes:: Defining a simple major mode that supports
b8d4c8d0 210 comment syntax and Font Lock mode.
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211* Mode Hooks:: Hooks run at the end of major mode functions.
212* Example Major Modes:: Text mode and Lisp modes.
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213@end menu
214
215@node Major Mode Basics
216@subsection Major Mode Basics
217@cindex Fundamental mode
218
219 The least specialized major mode is called @dfn{Fundamental mode}.
220This mode has no mode-specific definitions or variable settings, so each
221Emacs command behaves in its default manner, and each option is in its
222default state. All other major modes redefine various keys and options.
223For example, Lisp Interaction mode provides special key bindings for
224@kbd{C-j} (@code{eval-print-last-sexp}), @key{TAB}
225(@code{lisp-indent-line}), and other keys.
226
227 When you need to write several editing commands to help you perform a
228specialized editing task, creating a new major mode is usually a good
229idea. In practice, writing a major mode is easy (in contrast to
230writing a minor mode, which is often difficult).
231
232 If the new mode is similar to an old one, it is often unwise to
233modify the old one to serve two purposes, since it may become harder
234to use and maintain. Instead, copy and rename an existing major mode
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235definition and alter the copy---or use the @code{define-derived-mode}
236macro to define a @dfn{derived mode} (@pxref{Derived Modes}). For
237example, Rmail Edit mode is a major mode that is very similar to Text
238mode except that it provides two additional commands. Its definition
239is distinct from that of Text mode, but uses that of Text mode.
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240
241 Even if the new mode is not an obvious derivative of any other mode,
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242we recommend to use @code{define-derived-mode}, since it automatically
243enforces the most important coding conventions for you.
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244
245 For a very simple programming language major mode that handles
246comments and fontification, you can use @code{define-generic-mode}.
247@xref{Generic Modes}.
248
249 Rmail Edit mode offers an example of changing the major mode
250temporarily for a buffer, so it can be edited in a different way (with
251ordinary Emacs commands rather than Rmail commands). In such cases, the
252temporary major mode usually provides a command to switch back to the
253buffer's usual mode (Rmail mode, in this case). You might be tempted to
254present the temporary redefinitions inside a recursive edit and restore
255the usual ones when the user exits; but this is a bad idea because it
256constrains the user's options when it is done in more than one buffer:
257recursive edits must be exited most-recently-entered first. Using an
258alternative major mode avoids this limitation. @xref{Recursive
259Editing}.
260
261 The standard GNU Emacs Lisp library directory tree contains the code
262for several major modes, in files such as @file{text-mode.el},
263@file{texinfo.el}, @file{lisp-mode.el}, @file{c-mode.el}, and
264@file{rmail.el}. They are found in various subdirectories of the
265@file{lisp} directory. You can study these libraries to see how modes
266are written. Text mode is perhaps the simplest major mode aside from
267Fundamental mode. Rmail mode is a complicated and specialized mode.
268
269@node Major Mode Conventions
270@subsection Major Mode Conventions
271@cindex major mode conventions
272@cindex conventions for writing major modes
273
274 The code for existing major modes follows various coding conventions,
275including conventions for local keymap and syntax table initialization,
276global names, and hooks. Please follow these conventions when you
277define a new major mode. (Fundamental mode is an exception to many
278of these conventions, because its definition is to present the global
279state of Emacs.)
280
281 This list of conventions is only partial, because each major mode
282should aim for consistency in general with other Emacs major modes.
283This makes Emacs as a whole more coherent. It is impossible to list
284here all the possible points where this issue might come up; if the
285Emacs developers point out an area where your major mode deviates from
286the usual conventions, please make it compatible.
287
288@itemize @bullet
289@item
290Define a command whose name ends in @samp{-mode}, with no arguments,
291that switches to the new mode in the current buffer. This command
292should set up the keymap, syntax table, and buffer-local variables in an
293existing buffer, without changing the buffer's contents.
294
295@item
296Write a documentation string for this command that describes the
297special commands available in this mode. @kbd{C-h m}
298(@code{describe-mode}) in your mode will display this string.
299
300The documentation string may include the special documentation
301substrings, @samp{\[@var{command}]}, @samp{\@{@var{keymap}@}}, and
302@samp{\<@var{keymap}>}, which enable the documentation to adapt
303automatically to the user's own key bindings. @xref{Keys in
304Documentation}.
305
306@item
307The major mode command should start by calling
308@code{kill-all-local-variables}. This runs the normal hook
309@code{change-major-mode-hook}, then gets rid of the buffer-local
310variables of the major mode previously in effect. @xref{Creating
311Buffer-Local}.
312
313@item
314The major mode command should set the variable @code{major-mode} to the
315major mode command symbol. This is how @code{describe-mode} discovers
316which documentation to print.
317
318@item
319The major mode command should set the variable @code{mode-name} to the
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320``pretty'' name of the mode, usually a string (but see @ref{Mode Line
321Data}, for other possible forms). The name of the mode appears
322in the mode line.
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323
324@item
325@cindex functions in modes
326Since all global names are in the same name space, all the global
327variables, constants, and functions that are part of the mode should
328have names that start with the major mode name (or with an abbreviation
329of it if the name is long). @xref{Coding Conventions}.
330
331@item
332In a major mode for editing some kind of structured text, such as a
333programming language, indentation of text according to structure is
334probably useful. So the mode should set @code{indent-line-function}
335to a suitable function, and probably customize other variables
5dcb4c4e 336for indentation. @xref{Auto-Indentation}.
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337
338@item
339@cindex keymaps in modes
340The major mode should usually have its own keymap, which is used as the
341local keymap in all buffers in that mode. The major mode command should
342call @code{use-local-map} to install this local map. @xref{Active
343Keymaps}, for more information.
344
345This keymap should be stored permanently in a global variable named
346@code{@var{modename}-mode-map}. Normally the library that defines the
347mode sets this variable.
348
349@xref{Tips for Defining}, for advice about how to write the code to set
350up the mode's keymap variable.
351
352@item
353The key sequences bound in a major mode keymap should usually start with
354@kbd{C-c}, followed by a control character, a digit, or @kbd{@{},
355@kbd{@}}, @kbd{<}, @kbd{>}, @kbd{:} or @kbd{;}. The other punctuation
356characters are reserved for minor modes, and ordinary letters are
357reserved for users.
358
359A major mode can also rebind the keys @kbd{M-n}, @kbd{M-p} and
360@kbd{M-s}. The bindings for @kbd{M-n} and @kbd{M-p} should normally
361be some kind of ``moving forward and backward,'' but this does not
362necessarily mean cursor motion.
363
364It is legitimate for a major mode to rebind a standard key sequence if
365it provides a command that does ``the same job'' in a way better
366suited to the text this mode is used for. For example, a major mode
367for editing a programming language might redefine @kbd{C-M-a} to
368``move to the beginning of a function'' in a way that works better for
369that language.
370
371It is also legitimate for a major mode to rebind a standard key
372sequence whose standard meaning is rarely useful in that mode. For
373instance, minibuffer modes rebind @kbd{M-r}, whose standard meaning is
374rarely of any use in the minibuffer. Major modes such as Dired or
375Rmail that do not allow self-insertion of text can reasonably redefine
376letters and other printing characters as special commands.
377
378@item
867d4bb3 379Major modes for editing text should not define @key{RET} to do
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380anything other than insert a newline. However, it is ok for
381specialized modes for text that users don't directly edit, such as
382Dired and Info modes, to redefine @key{RET} to do something entirely
383different.
384
385@item
386Major modes should not alter options that are primarily a matter of user
387preference, such as whether Auto-Fill mode is enabled. Leave this to
388each user to decide. However, a major mode should customize other
389variables so that Auto-Fill mode will work usefully @emph{if} the user
390decides to use it.
391
392@item
393@cindex syntax tables in modes
394The mode may have its own syntax table or may share one with other
395related modes. If it has its own syntax table, it should store this in
396a variable named @code{@var{modename}-mode-syntax-table}. @xref{Syntax
397Tables}.
398
399@item
400If the mode handles a language that has a syntax for comments, it should
401set the variables that define the comment syntax. @xref{Options for
402Comments,, Options Controlling Comments, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
403
404@item
405@cindex abbrev tables in modes
406The mode may have its own abbrev table or may share one with other
407related modes. If it has its own abbrev table, it should store this
408in a variable named @code{@var{modename}-mode-abbrev-table}. If the
409major mode command defines any abbrevs itself, it should pass @code{t}
410for the @var{system-flag} argument to @code{define-abbrev}.
411@xref{Defining Abbrevs}.
412
413@item
414The mode should specify how to do highlighting for Font Lock mode, by
415setting up a buffer-local value for the variable
416@code{font-lock-defaults} (@pxref{Font Lock Mode}).
417
418@item
419The mode should specify how Imenu should find the definitions or
420sections of a buffer, by setting up a buffer-local value for the
421variable @code{imenu-generic-expression}, for the two variables
422@code{imenu-prev-index-position-function} and
423@code{imenu-extract-index-name-function}, or for the variable
424@code{imenu-create-index-function} (@pxref{Imenu}).
425
426@item
427The mode can specify a local value for
428@code{eldoc-documentation-function} to tell ElDoc mode how to handle
429this mode.
430
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431@item
432The mode can specify how to complete various keywords by adding
433to the special hook @code{completion-at-point-functions}.
434
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435@item
436Use @code{defvar} or @code{defcustom} to set mode-related variables, so
437that they are not reinitialized if they already have a value. (Such
438reinitialization could discard customizations made by the user.)
439
440@item
441@cindex buffer-local variables in modes
442To make a buffer-local binding for an Emacs customization variable, use
443@code{make-local-variable} in the major mode command, not
444@code{make-variable-buffer-local}. The latter function would make the
445variable local to every buffer in which it is subsequently set, which
446would affect buffers that do not use this mode. It is undesirable for a
447mode to have such global effects. @xref{Buffer-Local Variables}.
448
449With rare exceptions, the only reasonable way to use
450@code{make-variable-buffer-local} in a Lisp package is for a variable
451which is used only within that package. Using it on a variable used by
452other packages would interfere with them.
453
454@item
455@cindex mode hook
456@cindex major mode hook
457Each major mode should have a normal @dfn{mode hook} named
458@code{@var{modename}-mode-hook}. The very last thing the major mode command
459should do is to call @code{run-mode-hooks}. This runs the mode hook,
460and then runs the normal hook @code{after-change-major-mode-hook}.
461@xref{Mode Hooks}.
462
463@item
464The major mode command may start by calling some other major mode
465command (called the @dfn{parent mode}) and then alter some of its
466settings. A mode that does this is called a @dfn{derived mode}. The
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467recommended way to define one is to use the @code{define-derived-mode}
468macro, but this is not required. Such a mode should call the parent
469mode command inside a @code{delay-mode-hooks} form. (Using
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470@code{define-derived-mode} does this automatically.) @xref{Derived
471Modes}, and @ref{Mode Hooks}.
472
473@item
474If something special should be done if the user switches a buffer from
475this mode to any other major mode, this mode can set up a buffer-local
476value for @code{change-major-mode-hook} (@pxref{Creating Buffer-Local}).
477
478@item
479If this mode is appropriate only for specially-prepared text, then the
480major mode command symbol should have a property named @code{mode-class}
481with value @code{special}, put on as follows:
482
483@kindex mode-class @r{(property)}
484@cindex @code{special}
485@example
486(put 'funny-mode 'mode-class 'special)
487@end example
488
489@noindent
490This tells Emacs that new buffers created while the current buffer is
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491in Funny mode should not inherit Funny mode, in case the default value
492of @code{major-mode} is @code{nil}. Modes such as Dired, Rmail,
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493and Buffer List use this feature.
494
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495The @code{define-derived-mode} macro automatically marks the derived
496mode as special if the parent mode is special. The special mode
497@code{special-mode} provides a convenient parent for other special
498modes to inherit from; it sets @code{buffer-read-only} to @code{t},
769741e3 499and does little else.
41633740 500
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501@item
502If you want to make the new mode the default for files with certain
503recognizable names, add an element to @code{auto-mode-alist} to select
504the mode for those file names (@pxref{Auto Major Mode}). If you
505define the mode command to autoload, you should add this element in
506the same file that calls @code{autoload}. If you use an autoload
507cookie for the mode command, you can also use an autoload cookie for
508the form that adds the element (@pxref{autoload cookie}). If you do
509not autoload the mode command, it is sufficient to add the element in
510the file that contains the mode definition.
511
512@item
513In the comments that document the file, you should provide a sample
514@code{autoload} form and an example of how to add to
515@code{auto-mode-alist}, that users can include in their init files
516(@pxref{Init File}).
517
518@item
519@cindex mode loading
520The top-level forms in the file defining the mode should be written so
521that they may be evaluated more than once without adverse consequences.
522Even if you never load the file more than once, someone else will.
523@end itemize
524
525@node Auto Major Mode
526@subsection How Emacs Chooses a Major Mode
527@cindex major mode, automatic selection
528
529 Based on information in the file name or in the file itself, Emacs
530automatically selects a major mode for the new buffer when a file is
531visited. It also processes local variables specified in the file text.
532
533@deffn Command fundamental-mode
534 Fundamental mode is a major mode that is not specialized for anything
535in particular. Other major modes are defined in effect by comparison
536with this one---their definitions say what to change, starting from
537Fundamental mode. The @code{fundamental-mode} function does @emph{not}
538run any mode hooks; you're not supposed to customize it. (If you want Emacs
539to behave differently in Fundamental mode, change the @emph{global}
540state of Emacs.)
541@end deffn
542
543@deffn Command normal-mode &optional find-file
544This function establishes the proper major mode and buffer-local variable
545bindings for the current buffer. First it calls @code{set-auto-mode}
546(see below), then it runs @code{hack-local-variables} to parse, and
547bind or evaluate as appropriate, the file's local variables
548(@pxref{File Local Variables}).
549
550If the @var{find-file} argument to @code{normal-mode} is non-@code{nil},
551@code{normal-mode} assumes that the @code{find-file} function is calling
552it. In this case, it may process local variables in the @samp{-*-}
553line or at the end of the file. The variable
554@code{enable-local-variables} controls whether to do so. @xref{File
555Variables, , Local Variables in Files, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual},
556for the syntax of the local variables section of a file.
557
558If you run @code{normal-mode} interactively, the argument
559@var{find-file} is normally @code{nil}. In this case,
560@code{normal-mode} unconditionally processes any file local variables.
561
562If @code{normal-mode} processes the local variables list and this list
563specifies a major mode, that mode overrides any mode chosen by
564@code{set-auto-mode}. If neither @code{set-auto-mode} nor
565@code{hack-local-variables} specify a major mode, the buffer stays in
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566the major mode determined by the default value of @code{major-mode}
567(see below).
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568
569@cindex file mode specification error
570@code{normal-mode} uses @code{condition-case} around the call to the
571major mode function, so errors are caught and reported as a @samp{File
572mode specification error}, followed by the original error message.
573@end deffn
574
575@defun set-auto-mode &optional keep-mode-if-same
576@cindex visited file mode
577 This function selects the major mode that is appropriate for the
578current buffer. It bases its decision (in order of precedence) on
579the @w{@samp{-*-}} line, on the @w{@samp{#!}} line (using
580@code{interpreter-mode-alist}), on the text at the beginning of the
581buffer (using @code{magic-mode-alist}), and finally on the visited
582file name (using @code{auto-mode-alist}). @xref{Choosing Modes, , How
583Major Modes are Chosen, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. However, this
584function does not look for the @samp{mode:} local variable near the
585end of a file; the @code{hack-local-variables} function does that.
586If @code{enable-local-variables} is @code{nil}, @code{set-auto-mode}
587does not check the @w{@samp{-*-}} line for a mode tag either.
588
589If @var{keep-mode-if-same} is non-@code{nil}, this function does not
590call the mode command if the buffer is already in the proper major
591mode. For instance, @code{set-visited-file-name} sets this to
592@code{t} to avoid killing buffer local variables that the user may
593have set.
594@end defun
595
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596@defopt major-mode
597The buffer-local value of this variable holds the major mode
598currently active. The default value of this variable holds the
599default major mode for new buffers. The standard default value is
600@code{fundamental-mode}.
b8d4c8d0 601
4e3b4528 602If the default value of @code{major-mode} is @code{nil}, Emacs uses
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603the (previously) current buffer's major mode as the default major mode
604of a new buffer. However, if that major mode symbol has a @code{mode-class}
605property with value @code{special}, then it is not used for new buffers;
606Fundamental mode is used instead. The modes that have this property are
607those such as Dired and Rmail that are useful only with text that has
608been specially prepared.
609@end defopt
610
611@defun set-buffer-major-mode buffer
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612This function sets the major mode of @var{buffer} to the default value of
613@code{major-mode}; if that is @code{nil}, it uses the
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614current buffer's major mode (if that is suitable). As an exception,
615if @var{buffer}'s name is @samp{*scratch*}, it sets the mode to
616@code{initial-major-mode}.
617
618The low-level primitives for creating buffers do not use this function,
619but medium-level commands such as @code{switch-to-buffer} and
620@code{find-file-noselect} use it whenever they create buffers.
621@end defun
622
623@defopt initial-major-mode
624@cindex @samp{*scratch*}
625The value of this variable determines the major mode of the initial
626@samp{*scratch*} buffer. The value should be a symbol that is a major
627mode command. The default value is @code{lisp-interaction-mode}.
628@end defopt
629
630@defvar interpreter-mode-alist
631This variable specifies major modes to use for scripts that specify a
632command interpreter in a @samp{#!} line. Its value is an alist with
633elements of the form @code{(@var{interpreter} . @var{mode})}; for
634example, @code{("perl" . perl-mode)} is one element present by
635default. The element says to use mode @var{mode} if the file
636specifies an interpreter which matches @var{interpreter}.
637@end defvar
638
639@defvar magic-mode-alist
640This variable's value is an alist with elements of the form
641@code{(@var{regexp} . @var{function})}, where @var{regexp} is a
642regular expression and @var{function} is a function or @code{nil}.
643After visiting a file, @code{set-auto-mode} calls @var{function} if
644the text at the beginning of the buffer matches @var{regexp} and
645@var{function} is non-@code{nil}; if @var{function} is @code{nil},
646@code{auto-mode-alist} gets to decide the mode.
647@end defvar
648
649@defvar magic-fallback-mode-alist
650This works like @code{magic-mode-alist}, except that it is handled
651only if @code{auto-mode-alist} does not specify a mode for this file.
652@end defvar
653
654@defvar auto-mode-alist
655This variable contains an association list of file name patterns
656(regular expressions) and corresponding major mode commands. Usually,
657the file name patterns test for suffixes, such as @samp{.el} and
658@samp{.c}, but this need not be the case. An ordinary element of the
659alist looks like @code{(@var{regexp} . @var{mode-function})}.
660
661For example,
662
663@smallexample
664@group
665(("\\`/tmp/fol/" . text-mode)
666 ("\\.texinfo\\'" . texinfo-mode)
667 ("\\.texi\\'" . texinfo-mode)
668@end group
669@group
670 ("\\.el\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode)
671 ("\\.c\\'" . c-mode)
672 ("\\.h\\'" . c-mode)
673 @dots{})
674@end group
675@end smallexample
676
677When you visit a file whose expanded file name (@pxref{File Name
678Expansion}), with version numbers and backup suffixes removed using
679@code{file-name-sans-versions} (@pxref{File Name Components}), matches
680a @var{regexp}, @code{set-auto-mode} calls the corresponding
681@var{mode-function}. This feature enables Emacs to select the proper
682major mode for most files.
683
684If an element of @code{auto-mode-alist} has the form @code{(@var{regexp}
685@var{function} t)}, then after calling @var{function}, Emacs searches
686@code{auto-mode-alist} again for a match against the portion of the file
687name that did not match before. This feature is useful for
688uncompression packages: an entry of the form @code{("\\.gz\\'"
689@var{function} t)} can uncompress the file and then put the uncompressed
690file in the proper mode according to the name sans @samp{.gz}.
691
692Here is an example of how to prepend several pattern pairs to
693@code{auto-mode-alist}. (You might use this sort of expression in your
694init file.)
695
696@smallexample
697@group
698(setq auto-mode-alist
699 (append
700 ;; @r{File name (within directory) starts with a dot.}
701 '(("/\\.[^/]*\\'" . fundamental-mode)
702 ;; @r{File name has no dot.}
2674569b 703 ("/[^\\./]*\\'" . fundamental-mode)
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704 ;; @r{File name ends in @samp{.C}.}
705 ("\\.C\\'" . c++-mode))
706 auto-mode-alist))
707@end group
708@end smallexample
709@end defvar
710
711@node Mode Help
712@subsection Getting Help about a Major Mode
713@cindex mode help
714@cindex help for major mode
715@cindex documentation for major mode
716
717 The @code{describe-mode} function is used to provide information
718about major modes. It is normally called with @kbd{C-h m}. The
719@code{describe-mode} function uses the value of @code{major-mode},
720which is why every major mode function needs to set the
721@code{major-mode} variable.
722
723@deffn Command describe-mode
724This function displays the documentation of the current major mode.
725
726The @code{describe-mode} function calls the @code{documentation}
727function using the value of @code{major-mode} as an argument. Thus, it
728displays the documentation string of the major mode function.
729(@xref{Accessing Documentation}.)
730@end deffn
731
732@defvar major-mode
733This buffer-local variable holds the symbol for the current buffer's
734major mode. This symbol should have a function definition that is the
735command to switch to that major mode. The @code{describe-mode}
736function uses the documentation string of the function as the
737documentation of the major mode.
738@end defvar
739
740@node Derived Modes
741@subsection Defining Derived Modes
742@cindex derived mode
743
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744 The recommended way to define a new major mode is to derive it
745from an existing one using @code{define-derived-mode}. If there is no
746closely related mode, you can inherit from @code{text-mode},
747@code{special-mode}, or in the worst case @code{fundamental-mode}.
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748
749@defmac define-derived-mode variant parent name docstring keyword-args@dots{} body@dots{}
c986813b 750This macro defines @var{variant} as a major mode command, using
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751@var{name} as the string form of the mode name. @var{variant} and
752@var{parent} should be unquoted symbols.
753
754The new command @var{variant} is defined to call the function
755@var{parent}, then override certain aspects of that parent mode:
756
757@itemize @bullet
758@item
759The new mode has its own sparse keymap, named
760@code{@var{variant}-map}. @code{define-derived-mode}
761makes the parent mode's keymap the parent of the new map, unless
762@code{@var{variant}-map} is already set and already has a parent.
763
764@item
765The new mode has its own syntax table, kept in the variable
766@code{@var{variant}-syntax-table}, unless you override this using the
767@code{:syntax-table} keyword (see below). @code{define-derived-mode}
768makes the parent mode's syntax-table the parent of
769@code{@var{variant}-syntax-table}, unless the latter is already set
770and already has a parent different from the standard syntax table.
771
772@item
773The new mode has its own abbrev table, kept in the variable
774@code{@var{variant}-abbrev-table}, unless you override this using the
775@code{:abbrev-table} keyword (see below).
776
777@item
778The new mode has its own mode hook, @code{@var{variant}-hook}. It
779runs this hook, after running the hooks of its ancestor modes, with
780@code{run-mode-hooks}, as the last thing it does. @xref{Mode Hooks}.
781@end itemize
782
783In addition, you can specify how to override other aspects of
784@var{parent} with @var{body}. The command @var{variant}
785evaluates the forms in @var{body} after setting up all its usual
786overrides, just before running the mode hooks.
787
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788If @var{parent} has a non-@code{nil} @code{mode-class} symbol
789property, then @code{define-derived-mode} sets the @code{mode-class}
790property of @var{variant} to the same value. This ensures, for
791example, that if @var{parent} is a special mode, then @var{variant} is
792also a special mode (@pxref{Major Mode Conventions}).
793
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794You can also specify @code{nil} for @var{parent}. This gives the new
795mode no parent. Then @code{define-derived-mode} behaves as described
796above, but, of course, omits all actions connected with @var{parent}.
797
798The argument @var{docstring} specifies the documentation string for
799the new mode. @code{define-derived-mode} adds some general
800information about the mode's hook, followed by the mode's keymap, at
801the end of this docstring. If you omit @var{docstring},
802@code{define-derived-mode} generates a documentation string.
803
804The @var{keyword-args} are pairs of keywords and values. The values
805are evaluated. The following keywords are currently supported:
806
807@table @code
808@item :syntax-table
809You can use this to explicitly specify a syntax table for the new
810mode. If you specify a @code{nil} value, the new mode uses the same
811syntax table as @var{parent}, or the standard syntax table if
812@var{parent} is @code{nil}. (Note that this does @emph{not} follow
813the convention used for non-keyword arguments that a @code{nil} value
814is equivalent with not specifying the argument.)
815
816@item :abbrev-table
817You can use this to explicitly specify an abbrev table for the new
818mode. If you specify a @code{nil} value, the new mode uses the same
819abbrev table as @var{parent}, or @code{fundamental-mode-abbrev-table}
820if @var{parent} is @code{nil}. (Again, a @code{nil} value is
821@emph{not} equivalent to not specifying this keyword.)
822
823@item :group
824If this is specified, the value should be the customization group for
825this mode. (Not all major modes have one.) Only the (still
826experimental and unadvertised) command @code{customize-mode} currently
827uses this. @code{define-derived-mode} does @emph{not} automatically
828define the specified customization group.
829@end table
830
831Here is a hypothetical example:
832
833@example
834(define-derived-mode hypertext-mode
835 text-mode "Hypertext"
836 "Major mode for hypertext.
837\\@{hypertext-mode-map@}"
838 (setq case-fold-search nil))
839
840(define-key hypertext-mode-map
841 [down-mouse-3] 'do-hyper-link)
842@end example
843
844Do not write an @code{interactive} spec in the definition;
845@code{define-derived-mode} does that automatically.
846@end defmac
847
848@node Generic Modes
849@subsection Generic Modes
850@cindex generic mode
851
852 @dfn{Generic modes} are simple major modes with basic support for
853comment syntax and Font Lock mode. To define a generic mode, use the
854macro @code{define-generic-mode}. See the file @file{generic-x.el}
855for some examples of the use of @code{define-generic-mode}.
856
857@defmac define-generic-mode mode comment-list keyword-list font-lock-list auto-mode-list function-list &optional docstring
858This macro defines a generic mode command named @var{mode} (a symbol,
859not quoted). The optional argument @var{docstring} is the
860documentation for the mode command. If you do not supply it,
861@code{define-generic-mode} generates one by default.
862
863The argument @var{comment-list} is a list in which each element is
864either a character, a string of one or two characters, or a cons cell.
865A character or a string is set up in the mode's syntax table as a
866``comment starter.'' If the entry is a cons cell, the @sc{car} is set
867up as a ``comment starter'' and the @sc{cdr} as a ``comment ender.''
868(Use @code{nil} for the latter if you want comments to end at the end
869of the line.) Note that the syntax table mechanism has limitations
870about what comment starters and enders are actually possible.
871@xref{Syntax Tables}.
872
873The argument @var{keyword-list} is a list of keywords to highlight
874with @code{font-lock-keyword-face}. Each keyword should be a string.
875Meanwhile, @var{font-lock-list} is a list of additional expressions to
876highlight. Each element of this list should have the same form as an
877element of @code{font-lock-keywords}. @xref{Search-based
878Fontification}.
879
880The argument @var{auto-mode-list} is a list of regular expressions to
881add to the variable @code{auto-mode-alist}. They are added by the execution
882of the @code{define-generic-mode} form, not by expanding the macro call.
883
884Finally, @var{function-list} is a list of functions for the mode
885command to call for additional setup. It calls these functions just
886before it runs the mode hook variable @code{@var{mode}-hook}.
887@end defmac
888
889@node Mode Hooks
890@subsection Mode Hooks
891
892 Every major mode function should finish by running its mode hook and
893the mode-independent normal hook @code{after-change-major-mode-hook}.
894It does this by calling @code{run-mode-hooks}. If the major mode is a
895derived mode, that is if it calls another major mode (the parent mode)
896in its body, it should do this inside @code{delay-mode-hooks} so that
897the parent won't run these hooks itself. Instead, the derived mode's
898call to @code{run-mode-hooks} runs the parent's mode hook too.
899@xref{Major Mode Conventions}.
900
901 Emacs versions before Emacs 22 did not have @code{delay-mode-hooks}.
902When user-implemented major modes have not been updated to use it,
903they won't entirely follow these conventions: they may run the
904parent's mode hook too early, or fail to run
905@code{after-change-major-mode-hook}. If you encounter such a major
906mode, please correct it to follow these conventions.
907
908 When you defined a major mode using @code{define-derived-mode}, it
909automatically makes sure these conventions are followed. If you
910define a major mode ``by hand,'' not using @code{define-derived-mode},
911use the following functions to handle these conventions automatically.
912
913@defun run-mode-hooks &rest hookvars
914Major modes should run their mode hook using this function. It is
915similar to @code{run-hooks} (@pxref{Hooks}), but it also runs
916@code{after-change-major-mode-hook}.
917
918When this function is called during the execution of a
919@code{delay-mode-hooks} form, it does not run the hooks immediately.
920Instead, it arranges for the next call to @code{run-mode-hooks} to run
921them.
922@end defun
923
924@defmac delay-mode-hooks body@dots{}
925When one major mode command calls another, it should do so inside of
926@code{delay-mode-hooks}.
927
928This macro executes @var{body}, but tells all @code{run-mode-hooks}
929calls during the execution of @var{body} to delay running their hooks.
930The hooks will actually run during the next call to
931@code{run-mode-hooks} after the end of the @code{delay-mode-hooks}
932construct.
933@end defmac
934
935@defvar after-change-major-mode-hook
936This is a normal hook run by @code{run-mode-hooks}. It is run at the
937very end of every properly-written major mode function.
938@end defvar
939
940@node Example Major Modes
941@subsection Major Mode Examples
942
943 Text mode is perhaps the simplest mode besides Fundamental mode.
944Here are excerpts from @file{text-mode.el} that illustrate many of
945the conventions listed above:
946
947@smallexample
948@group
949;; @r{Create the syntax table for this mode.}
950(defvar text-mode-syntax-table
951 (let ((st (make-syntax-table)))
952 (modify-syntax-entry ?\" ". " st)
953 (modify-syntax-entry ?\\ ". " st)
954 ;; Add `p' so M-c on `hello' leads to `Hello', not `hello'.
955 (modify-syntax-entry ?' "w p" st)
956 st)
957 "Syntax table used while in `text-mode'.")
958@end group
959
960;; @r{Create the keymap for this mode.}
961@group
962(defvar text-mode-map
963 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
964 (define-key map "\e\t" 'ispell-complete-word)
965 (define-key map "\es" 'center-line)
966 (define-key map "\eS" 'center-paragraph)
967 map)
968 "Keymap for `text-mode'.
969Many other modes, such as Mail mode, Outline mode
970and Indented Text mode, inherit all the commands
971defined in this map.")
972@end group
973@end smallexample
974
975 Here is how the actual mode command is defined now:
976
977@smallexample
978@group
979(define-derived-mode text-mode nil "Text"
980 "Major mode for editing text written for humans to read.
981In this mode, paragraphs are delimited only by blank or white lines.
982You can thus get the full benefit of adaptive filling
983 (see the variable `adaptive-fill-mode').
984\\@{text-mode-map@}
985Turning on Text mode runs the normal hook `text-mode-hook'."
986@end group
987@group
769741e3 988 (set (make-local-variable 'text-mode-variant) t)
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989 ;; @r{These two lines are a feature added recently.}
990 (set (make-local-variable 'require-final-newline)
991 mode-require-final-newline)
992 (set (make-local-variable 'indent-line-function) 'indent-relative))
993@end group
994@end smallexample
995
996@noindent
997(The last line is redundant nowadays, since @code{indent-relative} is
998the default value, and we'll delete it in a future version.)
999
1000 Here is how it was defined formerly, before
1001@code{define-derived-mode} existed:
1002
1003@smallexample
1004@group
1005;; @r{This isn't needed nowadays, since @code{define-derived-mode} does it.}
769741e3 1006(define-abbrev-table 'text-mode-abbrev-table ()
b8d4c8d0 1007 "Abbrev table used while in text mode.")
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1008@end group
1009
1010@group
1011(defun text-mode ()
1012 "Major mode for editing text intended for humans to read...
1013 Special commands: \\@{text-mode-map@}
1014@end group
1015@group
1016Turning on text-mode runs the hook `text-mode-hook'."
1017 (interactive)
1018 (kill-all-local-variables)
1019 (use-local-map text-mode-map)
1020@end group
1021@group
1022 (setq local-abbrev-table text-mode-abbrev-table)
1023 (set-syntax-table text-mode-syntax-table)
1024@end group
1025@group
1026 ;; @r{These four lines are absent from the current version}
1027 ;; @r{not because this is done some other way, but rather}
1028 ;; @r{because nowadays Text mode uses the normal definition of paragraphs.}
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1029 (set (make-local-variable 'paragraph-start)
1030 (concat "[ \t]*$\\|" page-delimiter))
1031 (set (make-local-variable 'paragraph-separate) paragraph-start)
1032 (set (make-local-variable 'indent-line-function) 'indent-relative-maybe)
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1033@end group
1034@group
1035 (setq mode-name "Text")
1036 (setq major-mode 'text-mode)
1037 (run-mode-hooks 'text-mode-hook)) ; @r{Finally, this permits the user to}
1038 ; @r{customize the mode with a hook.}
1039@end group
1040@end smallexample
1041
1042@cindex @file{lisp-mode.el}
1043 The three Lisp modes (Lisp mode, Emacs Lisp mode, and Lisp
1044Interaction mode) have more features than Text mode and the code is
1045correspondingly more complicated. Here are excerpts from
1046@file{lisp-mode.el} that illustrate how these modes are written.
1047
1048@cindex syntax table example
1049@smallexample
1050@group
1051;; @r{Create mode-specific table variables.}
1052(defvar lisp-mode-syntax-table nil "")
1053(defvar lisp-mode-abbrev-table nil "")
1054@end group
1055
1056@group
1057(defvar emacs-lisp-mode-syntax-table
1058 (let ((table (make-syntax-table)))
1059 (let ((i 0))
1060@end group
1061
1062@group
1063 ;; @r{Set syntax of chars up to @samp{0} to say they are}
1064 ;; @r{part of symbol names but not words.}
1065 ;; @r{(The digit @samp{0} is @code{48} in the @acronym{ASCII} character set.)}
1066 (while (< i ?0)
2f3725cd
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1067 (modify-syntax-entry i "_ " table)
1068 (setq i (1+ i)))
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1069 ;; @r{@dots{} similar code follows for other character ranges.}
1070@end group
1071@group
1072 ;; @r{Then set the syntax codes for characters that are special in Lisp.}
1073 (modify-syntax-entry ? " " table)
1074 (modify-syntax-entry ?\t " " table)
1075 (modify-syntax-entry ?\f " " table)
1076 (modify-syntax-entry ?\n "> " table)
1077@end group
1078@group
1079 ;; @r{Give CR the same syntax as newline, for selective-display.}
1080 (modify-syntax-entry ?\^m "> " table)
1081 (modify-syntax-entry ?\; "< " table)
1082 (modify-syntax-entry ?` "' " table)
1083 (modify-syntax-entry ?' "' " table)
1084 (modify-syntax-entry ?, "' " table)
1085@end group
1086@group
1087 ;; @r{@dots{}likewise for many other characters@dots{}}
1088 (modify-syntax-entry ?\( "() " table)
1089 (modify-syntax-entry ?\) ")( " table)
1090 (modify-syntax-entry ?\[ "(] " table)
1091 (modify-syntax-entry ?\] ")[ " table))
1092 table))
1093@end group
1094@group
1095;; @r{Create an abbrev table for lisp-mode.}
1096(define-abbrev-table 'lisp-mode-abbrev-table ())
1097@end group
1098@end smallexample
1099
1100 The three modes for Lisp share much of their code. For instance,
1101each calls the following function to set various variables:
1102
1103@smallexample
1104@group
1105(defun lisp-mode-variables (lisp-syntax)
1106 (when lisp-syntax
1107 (set-syntax-table lisp-mode-syntax-table))
1108 (setq local-abbrev-table lisp-mode-abbrev-table)
1109 @dots{}
1110@end group
1111@end smallexample
1112
1113 In Lisp and most programming languages, we want the paragraph
1114commands to treat only blank lines as paragraph separators. And the
1115modes should understand the Lisp conventions for comments. The rest of
1116@code{lisp-mode-variables} sets this up:
1117
1118@smallexample
1119@group
769741e3
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1120 (set (make-local-variable 'paragraph-start) (concat page-delimiter "\\|$" ))
1121 (set (make-local-variable 'paragraph-separate) paragraph-start)
b8d4c8d0
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1122 @dots{}
1123@end group
1124@group
769741e3 1125 (set (make-local-variable 'comment-indent-function) 'lisp-comment-indent))
b8d4c8d0
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1126 @dots{}
1127@end group
1128@end smallexample
1129
1130 Each of the different Lisp modes has a slightly different keymap. For
1131example, Lisp mode binds @kbd{C-c C-z} to @code{run-lisp}, but the other
1132Lisp modes do not. However, all Lisp modes have some commands in
1133common. The following code sets up the common commands:
1134
1135@smallexample
1136@group
769741e3
SM
1137(defvar shared-lisp-mode-map
1138 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
1139 (define-key shared-lisp-mode-map "\e\C-q" 'indent-sexp)
1140 (define-key shared-lisp-mode-map "\177"
1141 'backward-delete-char-untabify)
1142 map)
b8d4c8d0 1143 "Keymap for commands shared by all sorts of Lisp modes.")
b8d4c8d0
GM
1144@end group
1145@end smallexample
1146
1147@noindent
1148And here is the code to set up the keymap for Lisp mode:
1149
1150@smallexample
1151@group
769741e3
SM
1152(defvar lisp-mode-map
1153 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
1154 (set-keymap-parent map shared-lisp-mode-map)
1155 (define-key map "\e\C-x" 'lisp-eval-defun)
1156 (define-key map "\C-c\C-z" 'run-lisp)
1157 map)
b8d4c8d0 1158 "Keymap for ordinary Lisp mode...")
b8d4c8d0
GM
1159@end group
1160@end smallexample
1161
1162 Finally, here is the complete major mode function definition for
1163Lisp mode.
1164
1165@smallexample
1166@group
1167(defun lisp-mode ()
1168 "Major mode for editing Lisp code for Lisps other than GNU Emacs Lisp.
1169Commands:
1170Delete converts tabs to spaces as it moves back.
1171Blank lines separate paragraphs. Semicolons start comments.
1172\\@{lisp-mode-map@}
1173Note that `run-lisp' may be used either to start an inferior Lisp job
1174or to switch back to an existing one.
1175@end group
1176
1177@group
1178Entry to this mode calls the value of `lisp-mode-hook'
1179if that value is non-nil."
1180 (interactive)
1181 (kill-all-local-variables)
1182@end group
1183@group
1184 (use-local-map lisp-mode-map) ; @r{Select the mode's keymap.}
1185 (setq major-mode 'lisp-mode) ; @r{This is how @code{describe-mode}}
1186 ; @r{finds out what to describe.}
1187 (setq mode-name "Lisp") ; @r{This goes into the mode line.}
1188 (lisp-mode-variables t) ; @r{This defines various variables.}
769741e3
SM
1189 (set (make-local-variable 'comment-start-skip)
1190 "\\(\\(^\\|[^\\\\\n]\\)\\(\\\\\\\\\\)*\\)\\(;+\\|#|\\) *")
1191 (set (make-local-variable 'font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search) t)
b8d4c8d0
GM
1192@end group
1193@group
1194 (setq imenu-case-fold-search t)
1195 (set-syntax-table lisp-mode-syntax-table)
1196 (run-mode-hooks 'lisp-mode-hook)) ; @r{This permits the user to use a}
1197 ; @r{hook to customize the mode.}
1198@end group
1199@end smallexample
1200
1201@node Minor Modes
1202@section Minor Modes
1203@cindex minor mode
1204
1205 A @dfn{minor mode} provides features that users may enable or disable
1206independently of the choice of major mode. Minor modes can be enabled
1207individually or in combination. Minor modes would be better named
1208``generally available, optional feature modes,'' except that such a name
1209would be unwieldy.
1210
1211 A minor mode is not usually meant as a variation of a single major mode.
1212Usually they are general and can apply to many major modes. For
1213example, Auto Fill mode works with any major mode that permits text
1214insertion. To be general, a minor mode must be effectively independent
1215of the things major modes do.
1216
1217 A minor mode is often much more difficult to implement than a major
1218mode. One reason is that you should be able to activate and deactivate
1219minor modes in any order. A minor mode should be able to have its
1220desired effect regardless of the major mode and regardless of the other
1221minor modes in effect.
1222
1223 Often the biggest problem in implementing a minor mode is finding a
1224way to insert the necessary hook into the rest of Emacs. Minor mode
1225keymaps make this easier than it used to be.
1226
1227@defvar minor-mode-list
1228The value of this variable is a list of all minor mode commands.
1229@end defvar
1230
1231@menu
1232* Minor Mode Conventions:: Tips for writing a minor mode.
1233* Keymaps and Minor Modes:: How a minor mode can have its own keymap.
1234* Defining Minor Modes:: A convenient facility for defining minor modes.
1235@end menu
1236
1237@node Minor Mode Conventions
1238@subsection Conventions for Writing Minor Modes
1239@cindex minor mode conventions
1240@cindex conventions for writing minor modes
1241
1242 There are conventions for writing minor modes just as there are for
1243major modes. Several of the major mode conventions apply to minor
1244modes as well: those regarding the name of the mode initialization
1245function, the names of global symbols, the use of a hook at the end of
1246the initialization function, and the use of keymaps and other tables.
1247
1248 In addition, there are several conventions that are specific to
1249minor modes. (The easiest way to follow all the conventions is to use
1250the macro @code{define-minor-mode}; @ref{Defining Minor Modes}.)
1251
1252@itemize @bullet
1253@item
1254@cindex mode variable
1255Make a variable whose name ends in @samp{-mode} to control the minor
1256mode. We call this the @dfn{mode variable}. The minor mode command
1257should set this variable (@code{nil} to disable; anything else to
1258enable).
1259
1260If possible, implement the mode so that setting the variable
1261automatically enables or disables the mode. Then the minor mode command
1262does not need to do anything except set the variable.
1263
1264This variable is used in conjunction with the @code{minor-mode-alist} to
1265display the minor mode name in the mode line. It can also enable
1266or disable a minor mode keymap. Individual commands or hooks can also
1267check the variable's value.
1268
1269If you want the minor mode to be enabled separately in each buffer,
1270make the variable buffer-local.
1271
1272@item
1273Define a command whose name is the same as the mode variable.
1274Its job is to enable and disable the mode by setting the variable.
1275
1276The command should accept one optional argument. If the argument is
1277@code{nil}, it should toggle the mode (turn it on if it is off, and
1278off if it is on). It should turn the mode on if the argument is a
1279positive integer, the symbol @code{t}, or a list whose @sc{car} is one
1280of those. It should turn the mode off if the argument is a negative
1281integer or zero, the symbol @code{-}, or a list whose @sc{car} is a
1282negative integer or zero. The meaning of other arguments is not
1283specified.
1284
1285Here is an example taken from the definition of @code{transient-mark-mode}.
1286It shows the use of @code{transient-mark-mode} as a variable that enables or
1287disables the mode's behavior, and also shows the proper way to toggle,
1288enable or disable the minor mode based on the raw prefix argument value.
1289
1290@smallexample
1291@group
1292(setq transient-mark-mode
1293 (if (null arg) (not transient-mark-mode)
1294 (> (prefix-numeric-value arg) 0)))
1295@end group
1296@end smallexample
1297
1298@item
1299Add an element to @code{minor-mode-alist} for each minor mode
1300(@pxref{Definition of minor-mode-alist}), if you want to indicate the
1301minor mode in the mode line. This element should be a list of the
1302following form:
1303
1304@smallexample
1305(@var{mode-variable} @var{string})
1306@end smallexample
1307
1308Here @var{mode-variable} is the variable that controls enabling of the
1309minor mode, and @var{string} is a short string, starting with a space,
1310to represent the mode in the mode line. These strings must be short so
1311that there is room for several of them at once.
1312
1313When you add an element to @code{minor-mode-alist}, use @code{assq} to
1314check for an existing element, to avoid duplication. For example:
1315
1316@smallexample
1317@group
1318(unless (assq 'leif-mode minor-mode-alist)
1319 (setq minor-mode-alist
1320 (cons '(leif-mode " Leif") minor-mode-alist)))
1321@end group
1322@end smallexample
1323
1324@noindent
1325or like this, using @code{add-to-list} (@pxref{List Variables}):
1326
1327@smallexample
1328@group
1329(add-to-list 'minor-mode-alist '(leif-mode " Leif"))
1330@end group
1331@end smallexample
1332@end itemize
1333
1334 Global minor modes distributed with Emacs should if possible support
1335enabling and disabling via Custom (@pxref{Customization}). To do this,
1336the first step is to define the mode variable with @code{defcustom}, and
0fc76035 1337specify @code{:type 'boolean}.
b8d4c8d0
GM
1338
1339 If just setting the variable is not sufficient to enable the mode, you
1340should also specify a @code{:set} method which enables the mode by
1341invoking the mode command. Note in the variable's documentation string that
1342setting the variable other than via Custom may not take effect.
1343
1344 Also mark the definition with an autoload cookie (@pxref{autoload cookie}),
1345and specify a @code{:require} so that customizing the variable will load
1346the library that defines the mode. This will copy suitable definitions
1347into @file{loaddefs.el} so that users can use @code{customize-option} to
1348enable the mode. For example:
1349
1350@smallexample
1351@group
1352
1353;;;###autoload
1354(defcustom msb-mode nil
1355 "Toggle msb-mode.
1356Setting this variable directly does not take effect;
1357use either \\[customize] or the function `msb-mode'."
1358 :set 'custom-set-minor-mode
1359 :initialize 'custom-initialize-default
1360 :version "20.4"
1361 :type 'boolean
1362 :group 'msb
1363 :require 'msb)
1364@end group
1365@end smallexample
1366
1367@node Keymaps and Minor Modes
1368@subsection Keymaps and Minor Modes
1369
1370 Each minor mode can have its own keymap, which is active when the mode
1371is enabled. To set up a keymap for a minor mode, add an element to the
1372alist @code{minor-mode-map-alist}. @xref{Definition of minor-mode-map-alist}.
1373
1374@cindex @code{self-insert-command}, minor modes
1375 One use of minor mode keymaps is to modify the behavior of certain
1376self-inserting characters so that they do something else as well as
1377self-insert. In general, this is the only way to do that, since the
1378facilities for customizing @code{self-insert-command} are limited to
1379special cases (designed for abbrevs and Auto Fill mode). (Do not try
1380substituting your own definition of @code{self-insert-command} for the
1381standard one. The editor command loop handles this function specially.)
1382
1383The key sequences bound in a minor mode should consist of @kbd{C-c}
1384followed by one of @kbd{.,/?`'"[]\|~!#$%^&*()-_+=}. (The other
1385punctuation characters are reserved for major modes.)
1386
1387@node Defining Minor Modes
1388@subsection Defining Minor Modes
1389
1390 The macro @code{define-minor-mode} offers a convenient way of
1391implementing a mode in one self-contained definition.
1392
1393@defmac define-minor-mode mode doc [init-value [lighter [keymap]]] keyword-args@dots{} body@dots{}
1394This macro defines a new minor mode whose name is @var{mode} (a
1395symbol). It defines a command named @var{mode} to toggle the minor
1396mode, with @var{doc} as its documentation string. It also defines a
1397variable named @var{mode}, which is set to @code{t} or @code{nil} by
1398enabling or disabling the mode. The variable is initialized to
1399@var{init-value}. Except in unusual circumstances (see below), this
1400value must be @code{nil}.
1401
1402The string @var{lighter} says what to display in the mode line
1403when the mode is enabled; if it is @code{nil}, the mode is not displayed
1404in the mode line.
1405
bc7d7ea6
CY
1406The optional argument @var{keymap} specifies the keymap for the minor
1407mode. If non-@code{nil}, it should be a variable name (whose value is
1408a keymap), a keymap, or an alist of the form
b8d4c8d0
GM
1409
1410@example
1411(@var{key-sequence} . @var{definition})
1412@end example
1413
bc7d7ea6
CY
1414@noindent
1415where each @var{key-sequence} and @var{definition} are arguments
1416suitable for passing to @code{define-key} (@pxref{Changing Key
1417Bindings}). If @var{keymap} is a keymap or an alist, this also
1418defines the variable @code{@var{mode}-map}.
1419
b8d4c8d0
GM
1420The above three arguments @var{init-value}, @var{lighter}, and
1421@var{keymap} can be (partially) omitted when @var{keyword-args} are
1422used. The @var{keyword-args} consist of keywords followed by
1423corresponding values. A few keywords have special meanings:
1424
1425@table @code
1426@item :group @var{group}
1427Custom group name to use in all generated @code{defcustom} forms.
1428Defaults to @var{mode} without the possible trailing @samp{-mode}.
1429@strong{Warning:} don't use this default group name unless you have
1430written a @code{defgroup} to define that group properly. @xref{Group
1431Definitions}.
1432
1433@item :global @var{global}
1434If non-@code{nil}, this specifies that the minor mode should be global
1435rather than buffer-local. It defaults to @code{nil}.
1436
1437One of the effects of making a minor mode global is that the
1438@var{mode} variable becomes a customization variable. Toggling it
1439through the Custom interface turns the mode on and off, and its value
1440can be saved for future Emacs sessions (@pxref{Saving
1441Customizations,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. For the saved
1442variable to work, you should ensure that the @code{define-minor-mode}
1443form is evaluated each time Emacs starts; for packages that are not
1444part of Emacs, the easiest way to do this is to specify a
1445@code{:require} keyword.
1446
1447@item :init-value @var{init-value}
1448This is equivalent to specifying @var{init-value} positionally.
1449
1450@item :lighter @var{lighter}
1451This is equivalent to specifying @var{lighter} positionally.
1452
1453@item :keymap @var{keymap}
1454This is equivalent to specifying @var{keymap} positionally.
1455@end table
1456
1457Any other keyword arguments are passed directly to the
1458@code{defcustom} generated for the variable @var{mode}.
1459
1460The command named @var{mode} first performs the standard actions such
1461as setting the variable named @var{mode} and then executes the
1462@var{body} forms, if any. It finishes by running the mode hook
1463variable @code{@var{mode}-hook}.
1464@end defmac
1465
1466 The initial value must be @code{nil} except in cases where (1) the
1467mode is preloaded in Emacs, or (2) it is painless for loading to
1468enable the mode even though the user did not request it. For
1469instance, if the mode has no effect unless something else is enabled,
1470and will always be loaded by that time, enabling it by default is
1471harmless. But these are unusual circumstances. Normally, the
1472initial value must be @code{nil}.
1473
1474@findex easy-mmode-define-minor-mode
1475 The name @code{easy-mmode-define-minor-mode} is an alias
1476for this macro.
1477
1478 Here is an example of using @code{define-minor-mode}:
1479
1480@smallexample
1481(define-minor-mode hungry-mode
1482 "Toggle Hungry mode.
1483With no argument, this command toggles the mode.
1484Non-null prefix argument turns on the mode.
1485Null prefix argument turns off the mode.
1486
1487When Hungry mode is enabled, the control delete key
1488gobbles all preceding whitespace except the last.
1489See the command \\[hungry-electric-delete]."
1490 ;; The initial value.
1491 nil
1492 ;; The indicator for the mode line.
1493 " Hungry"
1494 ;; The minor mode bindings.
e8bf5266 1495 '(([C-backspace] . hungry-electric-delete))
b8d4c8d0
GM
1496 :group 'hunger)
1497@end smallexample
1498
1499@noindent
1500This defines a minor mode named ``Hungry mode,'' a command named
1501@code{hungry-mode} to toggle it, a variable named @code{hungry-mode}
1502which indicates whether the mode is enabled, and a variable named
1503@code{hungry-mode-map} which holds the keymap that is active when the
1504mode is enabled. It initializes the keymap with a key binding for
1505@kbd{C-@key{DEL}}. It puts the variable @code{hungry-mode} into
1506custom group @code{hunger}. There are no @var{body} forms---many
1507minor modes don't need any.
1508
1509 Here's an equivalent way to write it:
1510
1511@smallexample
1512(define-minor-mode hungry-mode
1513 "Toggle Hungry mode.
1514With no argument, this command toggles the mode.
1515Non-null prefix argument turns on the mode.
1516Null prefix argument turns off the mode.
1517
1518When Hungry mode is enabled, the control delete key
1519gobbles all preceding whitespace except the last.
1520See the command \\[hungry-electric-delete]."
1521 ;; The initial value.
1522 :init-value nil
1523 ;; The indicator for the mode line.
1524 :lighter " Hungry"
1525 ;; The minor mode bindings.
1526 :keymap
e8bf5266
JB
1527 '(([C-backspace] . hungry-electric-delete)
1528 ([C-M-backspace]
b8d4c8d0
GM
1529 . (lambda ()
1530 (interactive)
1531 (hungry-electric-delete t))))
1532 :group 'hunger)
1533@end smallexample
1534
1535@defmac define-globalized-minor-mode global-mode mode turn-on keyword-args@dots{}
1536This defines a global toggle named @var{global-mode} whose meaning is
1537to enable or disable the buffer-local minor mode @var{mode} in all
1538buffers. To turn on the minor mode in a buffer, it uses the function
1539@var{turn-on}; to turn off the minor mode, it calls @code{mode} with
1540@minus{}1 as argument.
1541
1542Globally enabling the mode also affects buffers subsequently created
1543by visiting files, and buffers that use a major mode other than
1544Fundamental mode; but it does not detect the creation of a new buffer
1545in Fundamental mode.
1546
1547This defines the customization option @var{global-mode} (@pxref{Customization}),
1548which can be toggled in the Custom interface to turn the minor mode on
1549and off. As with @code{define-minor-mode}, you should ensure that the
1550@code{define-globalized-minor-mode} form is evaluated each time Emacs
1551starts, for example by providing a @code{:require} keyword.
1552
1553Use @code{:group @var{group}} in @var{keyword-args} to specify the
1554custom group for the mode variable of the global minor mode.
1555@end defmac
1556
1557@node Mode Line Format
1558@section Mode-Line Format
1559@cindex mode line
1560
1561 Each Emacs window (aside from minibuffer windows) typically has a mode
1562line at the bottom, which displays status information about the buffer
1563displayed in the window. The mode line contains information about the
1564buffer, such as its name, associated file, depth of recursive editing,
1565and major and minor modes. A window can also have a @dfn{header
1566line}, which is much like the mode line but appears at the top of the
1567window.
1568
1569 This section describes how to control the contents of the mode line
1570and header line. We include it in this chapter because much of the
1571information displayed in the mode line relates to the enabled major and
1572minor modes.
1573
1574@menu
769741e3
SM
1575* Base: Mode Line Basics. Basic ideas of mode line control.
1576* Data: Mode Line Data. The data structure that controls the mode line.
1577* Top: Mode Line Top. The top level variable, mode-line-format.
1578* Mode Line Variables:: Variables used in that data structure.
1579* %-Constructs:: Putting information into a mode line.
1580* Properties in Mode:: Using text properties in the mode line.
1581* Header Lines:: Like a mode line, but at the top.
1582* Emulating Mode Line:: Formatting text as the mode line would.
b8d4c8d0
GM
1583@end menu
1584
1585@node Mode Line Basics
1586@subsection Mode Line Basics
1587
1588 @code{mode-line-format} is a buffer-local variable that holds a
1589@dfn{mode line construct}, a kind of template, which controls what is
1590displayed on the mode line of the current buffer. The value of
1591@code{header-line-format} specifies the buffer's header line in the
1592same way. All windows for the same buffer use the same
1593@code{mode-line-format} and @code{header-line-format}.
1594
1595 For efficiency, Emacs does not continuously recompute the mode
1596line and header line of a window. It does so when circumstances
1597appear to call for it---for instance, if you change the window
1598configuration, switch buffers, narrow or widen the buffer, scroll, or
1599change the buffer's modification status. If you modify any of the
1600variables referenced by @code{mode-line-format} (@pxref{Mode Line
1601Variables}), or any other variables and data structures that affect
1602how text is displayed (@pxref{Display}), you may want to force an
1603update of the mode line so as to display the new information or
1604display it in the new way.
1605
1606@defun force-mode-line-update &optional all
1607Force redisplay of the current buffer's mode line and header line.
1608The next redisplay will update the mode line and header line based on
1609the latest values of all relevant variables. With optional
1610non-@code{nil} @var{all}, force redisplay of all mode lines and header
1611lines.
1612
1613This function also forces recomputation of the menu bar menus
1614and the frame title.
1615@end defun
1616
1617 The selected window's mode line is usually displayed in a different
1618color using the face @code{mode-line}. Other windows' mode lines
1619appear in the face @code{mode-line-inactive} instead. @xref{Faces}.
1620
1621@node Mode Line Data
1622@subsection The Data Structure of the Mode Line
1623@cindex mode-line construct
1624
1625 The mode-line contents are controlled by a data structure called a
1626@dfn{mode-line construct}, made up of lists, strings, symbols, and
1627numbers kept in buffer-local variables. Each data type has a specific
1628meaning for the mode-line appearance, as described below. The same
1629data structure is used for constructing frame titles (@pxref{Frame
1630Titles}) and header lines (@pxref{Header Lines}).
1631
1632 A mode-line construct may be as simple as a fixed string of text,
1633but it usually specifies how to combine fixed strings with variables'
1634values to construct the text. Many of these variables are themselves
1635defined to have mode-line constructs as their values.
1636
1637 Here are the meanings of various data types as mode-line constructs:
1638
1639@table @code
1640@cindex percent symbol in mode line
1641@item @var{string}
1642A string as a mode-line construct appears verbatim except for
1643@dfn{@code{%}-constructs} in it. These stand for substitution of
1644other data; see @ref{%-Constructs}.
1645
1646If parts of the string have @code{face} properties, they control
1647display of the text just as they would text in the buffer. Any
1648characters which have no @code{face} properties are displayed, by
1649default, in the face @code{mode-line} or @code{mode-line-inactive}
1650(@pxref{Standard Faces,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}). The
1651@code{help-echo} and @code{local-map} properties in @var{string} have
1652special meanings. @xref{Properties in Mode}.
1653
1654@item @var{symbol}
1655A symbol as a mode-line construct stands for its value. The value of
1656@var{symbol} is used as a mode-line construct, in place of @var{symbol}.
1657However, the symbols @code{t} and @code{nil} are ignored, as is any
1658symbol whose value is void.
1659
1660There is one exception: if the value of @var{symbol} is a string, it is
1661displayed verbatim: the @code{%}-constructs are not recognized.
1662
1663Unless @var{symbol} is marked as ``risky'' (i.e., it has a
1664non-@code{nil} @code{risky-local-variable} property), all text
1665properties specified in @var{symbol}'s value are ignored. This
1666includes the text properties of strings in @var{symbol}'s value, as
1667well as all @code{:eval} and @code{:propertize} forms in it. (The
1668reason for this is security: non-risky variables could be set
1669automatically from file variables without prompting the user.)
1670
1671@item (@var{string} @var{rest}@dots{})
1672@itemx (@var{list} @var{rest}@dots{})
1673A list whose first element is a string or list means to process all the
1674elements recursively and concatenate the results. This is the most
1675common form of mode-line construct.
1676
1677@item (:eval @var{form})
1678A list whose first element is the symbol @code{:eval} says to evaluate
1679@var{form}, and use the result as a string to display. Make sure this
1680evaluation cannot load any files, as doing so could cause infinite
1681recursion.
1682
1683@item (:propertize @var{elt} @var{props}@dots{})
1684A list whose first element is the symbol @code{:propertize} says to
1685process the mode-line construct @var{elt} recursively, then add the text
1686properties specified by @var{props} to the result. The argument
1687@var{props} should consist of zero or more pairs @var{text-property}
1688@var{value}. (This feature is new as of Emacs 22.1.)
1689
1690@item (@var{symbol} @var{then} @var{else})
1691A list whose first element is a symbol that is not a keyword specifies
1692a conditional. Its meaning depends on the value of @var{symbol}. If
1693@var{symbol} has a non-@code{nil} value, the second element,
1694@var{then}, is processed recursively as a mode-line element.
1695Otherwise, the third element, @var{else}, is processed recursively.
1696You may omit @var{else}; then the mode-line element displays nothing
1697if the value of @var{symbol} is @code{nil} or void.
1698
1699@item (@var{width} @var{rest}@dots{})
1700A list whose first element is an integer specifies truncation or
1701padding of the results of @var{rest}. The remaining elements
1702@var{rest} are processed recursively as mode-line constructs and
1703concatenated together. When @var{width} is positive, the result is
1704space filled on the right if its width is less than @var{width}. When
1705@var{width} is negative, the result is truncated on the right to
1706@minus{}@var{width} columns if its width exceeds @minus{}@var{width}.
1707
1708For example, the usual way to show what percentage of a buffer is above
1709the top of the window is to use a list like this: @code{(-3 "%p")}.
1710@end table
1711
1712@node Mode Line Top
1713@subsection The Top Level of Mode Line Control
1714
1715 The variable in overall control of the mode line is
1716@code{mode-line-format}.
1717
01f17ae2 1718@defopt mode-line-format
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1719The value of this variable is a mode-line construct that controls the
1720contents of the mode-line. It is always buffer-local in all buffers.
1721
1722If you set this variable to @code{nil} in a buffer, that buffer does
1723not have a mode line. (A window that is just one line tall never
1724displays a mode line.)
01f17ae2 1725@end defopt
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1726
1727 The default value of @code{mode-line-format} is designed to use the
1728values of other variables such as @code{mode-line-position} and
1729@code{mode-line-modes} (which in turn incorporates the values of the
1730variables @code{mode-name} and @code{minor-mode-alist}). Very few
1731modes need to alter @code{mode-line-format} itself. For most
1732purposes, it is sufficient to alter some of the variables that
1733@code{mode-line-format} either directly or indirectly refers to.
1734
1735 If you do alter @code{mode-line-format} itself, the new value should
1736use the same variables that appear in the default value (@pxref{Mode
1737Line Variables}), rather than duplicating their contents or displaying
1738the information in another fashion. This way, customizations made by
1739the user or by Lisp programs (such as @code{display-time} and major
1740modes) via changes to those variables remain effective.
1741
1742 Here is an example of a @code{mode-line-format} that might be
1743useful for @code{shell-mode}, since it contains the host name and default
1744directory.
1745
1746@example
1747@group
1748(setq mode-line-format
1749 (list "-"
1750 'mode-line-mule-info
1751 'mode-line-modified
1752 'mode-line-frame-identification
1753 "%b--"
1754@end group
1755@group
1756 ;; @r{Note that this is evaluated while making the list.}
1757 ;; @r{It makes a mode-line construct which is just a string.}
1758 (getenv "HOST")
1759@end group
1760 ":"
1761 'default-directory
1762 " "
1763 'global-mode-string
1764 " %[("
1765 '(:eval (mode-line-mode-name))
1766 'mode-line-process
1767 'minor-mode-alist
1768 "%n"
1769 ")%]--"
1770@group
1771 '(which-func-mode ("" which-func-format "--"))
1772 '(line-number-mode "L%l--")
1773 '(column-number-mode "C%c--")
1774 '(-3 "%p")
1775 "-%-"))
1776@end group
1777@end example
1778
1779@noindent
1780(The variables @code{line-number-mode}, @code{column-number-mode}
1781and @code{which-func-mode} enable particular minor modes; as usual,
1782these variable names are also the minor mode command names.)
1783
1784@node Mode Line Variables
1785@subsection Variables Used in the Mode Line
1786
1787 This section describes variables incorporated by the standard value
1788of @code{mode-line-format} into the text of the mode line. There is
1789nothing inherently special about these variables; any other variables
1790could have the same effects on the mode line if
1791@code{mode-line-format}'s value were changed to use them. However,
1792various parts of Emacs set these variables on the understanding that
1793they will control parts of the mode line; therefore, practically
1794speaking, it is essential for the mode line to use them.
1795
1796@defvar mode-line-mule-info
1797This variable holds the value of the mode-line construct that displays
1798information about the language environment, buffer coding system, and
1799current input method. @xref{Non-ASCII Characters}.
1800@end defvar
1801
1802@defvar mode-line-modified
1803This variable holds the value of the mode-line construct that displays
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1804whether the current buffer is modified. Its default value displays
1805@samp{**} if the buffer is modified, @samp{--} if the buffer is not
1806modified, @samp{%%} if the buffer is read only, and @samp{%*} if the
1807buffer is read only and modified.
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1808
1809Changing this variable does not force an update of the mode line.
1810@end defvar
1811
1812@defvar mode-line-frame-identification
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1813This variable identifies the current frame. Its default value
1814displays @code{" "} if you are using a window system which can show
1815multiple frames, or @code{"-%F "} on an ordinary terminal which shows
1816only one frame at a time.
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1817@end defvar
1818
1819@defvar mode-line-buffer-identification
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1820This variable identifies the buffer being displayed in the window.
1821Its default value displays the buffer name, padded with spaces to at
1822least 12 columns.
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1823@end defvar
1824
01f17ae2 1825@defopt mode-line-position
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1826This variable indicates the position in the buffer. Its default value
1827displays the buffer percentage and, optionally, the buffer size, the
1828line number and the column number.
01f17ae2 1829@end defopt
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1830
1831@defvar vc-mode
1832The variable @code{vc-mode}, buffer-local in each buffer, records
1833whether the buffer's visited file is maintained with version control,
1834and, if so, which kind. Its value is a string that appears in the mode
1835line, or @code{nil} for no version control.
1836@end defvar
1837
01f17ae2 1838@defopt mode-line-modes
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1839This variable displays the buffer's major and minor modes. Its
1840default value also displays the recursive editing level, information
1841on the process status, and whether narrowing is in effect.
01f17ae2 1842@end defopt
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1843
1844 The following three variables are used in @code{mode-line-modes}:
1845
1846@defvar mode-name
1847This buffer-local variable holds the ``pretty'' name of the current
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1848buffer's major mode. Each major mode should set this variable so that
1849the mode name will appear in the mode line. The value does not have
1850to be a string, but can use any of the data types valid in a mode-line
1851construct (@pxref{Mode Line Data}). To compute the string that will
1852identify the mode name in the mode line, use @code{format-mode-line}
1853(@pxref{Emulating Mode Line}).
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1854@end defvar
1855
1856@defvar mode-line-process
1857This buffer-local variable contains the mode-line information on process
1858status in modes used for communicating with subprocesses. It is
1859displayed immediately following the major mode name, with no intervening
1860space. For example, its value in the @samp{*shell*} buffer is
1861@code{(":%s")}, which allows the shell to display its status along
1862with the major mode as: @samp{(Shell:run)}. Normally this variable
1863is @code{nil}.
1864@end defvar
1865
1866@defvar minor-mode-alist
1867@anchor{Definition of minor-mode-alist}
1868This variable holds an association list whose elements specify how the
1869mode line should indicate that a minor mode is active. Each element of
1870the @code{minor-mode-alist} should be a two-element list:
1871
1872@example
1873(@var{minor-mode-variable} @var{mode-line-string})
1874@end example
1875
1876More generally, @var{mode-line-string} can be any mode-line spec. It
1877appears in the mode line when the value of @var{minor-mode-variable}
1878is non-@code{nil}, and not otherwise. These strings should begin with
1879spaces so that they don't run together. Conventionally, the
1880@var{minor-mode-variable} for a specific mode is set to a
1881non-@code{nil} value when that minor mode is activated.
1882
1883@code{minor-mode-alist} itself is not buffer-local. Each variable
1884mentioned in the alist should be buffer-local if its minor mode can be
1885enabled separately in each buffer.
1886@end defvar
1887
1888@defvar global-mode-string
1889This variable holds a mode-line spec that, by default, appears in the
1890mode line just after the @code{which-func-mode} minor mode if set,
1891else after @code{mode-line-modes}. The command @code{display-time}
1892sets @code{global-mode-string} to refer to the variable
1893@code{display-time-string}, which holds a string containing the time
1894and load information.
1895
1896The @samp{%M} construct substitutes the value of
1897@code{global-mode-string}, but that is obsolete, since the variable is
1898included in the mode line from @code{mode-line-format}.
1899@end defvar
1900
b8d4c8d0 1901Here is a simplified version of the default value of
4e3b4528 1902@code{mode-line-format}. The real default value also
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1903specifies addition of text properties.
1904
1905@example
1906@group
1907("-"
1908 mode-line-mule-info
1909 mode-line-modified
1910 mode-line-frame-identification
1911 mode-line-buffer-identification
1912@end group
1913 " "
1914 mode-line-position
1915 (vc-mode vc-mode)
1916 " "
1917@group
1918 mode-line-modes
1919 (which-func-mode ("" which-func-format "--"))
1920 (global-mode-string ("--" global-mode-string))
1921 "-%-")
1922@end group
1923@end example
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1924
1925@node %-Constructs
1926@subsection @code{%}-Constructs in the Mode Line
1927
1928 Strings used as mode-line constructs can use certain
1929@code{%}-constructs to substitute various kinds of data. Here is a
1930list of the defined @code{%}-constructs, and what they mean. In any
1931construct except @samp{%%}, you can add a decimal integer after the
1932@samp{%} to specify a minimum field width. If the width is less, the
1933field is padded with spaces to the right.
1934
1935@table @code
1936@item %b
1937The current buffer name, obtained with the @code{buffer-name} function.
1938@xref{Buffer Names}.
1939
1940@item %c
1941The current column number of point.
1942
1943@item %e
1944When Emacs is nearly out of memory for Lisp objects, a brief message
1945saying so. Otherwise, this is empty.
1946
1947@item %f
1948The visited file name, obtained with the @code{buffer-file-name}
1949function. @xref{Buffer File Name}.
1950
1951@item %F
1952The title (only on a window system) or the name of the selected frame.
1953@xref{Basic Parameters}.
1954
1955@item %i
1956The size of the accessible part of the current buffer; basically
1957@code{(- (point-max) (point-min))}.
1958
1959@item %I
1960Like @samp{%i}, but the size is printed in a more readable way by using
1961@samp{k} for 10^3, @samp{M} for 10^6, @samp{G} for 10^9, etc., to
1962abbreviate.
1963
1964@item %l
1965The current line number of point, counting within the accessible portion
1966of the buffer.
1967
1968@item %n
1969@samp{Narrow} when narrowing is in effect; nothing otherwise (see
1970@code{narrow-to-region} in @ref{Narrowing}).
1971
1972@item %p
1973The percentage of the buffer text above the @strong{top} of window, or
1974@samp{Top}, @samp{Bottom} or @samp{All}. Note that the default
1975mode-line specification truncates this to three characters.
1976
1977@item %P
1978The percentage of the buffer text that is above the @strong{bottom} of
1979the window (which includes the text visible in the window, as well as
1980the text above the top), plus @samp{Top} if the top of the buffer is
1981visible on screen; or @samp{Bottom} or @samp{All}.
1982
1983@item %s
1984The status of the subprocess belonging to the current buffer, obtained with
1985@code{process-status}. @xref{Process Information}.
1986
1987@item %t
1988Whether the visited file is a text file or a binary file. This is a
1989meaningful distinction only on certain operating systems (@pxref{MS-DOS
1990File Types}).
1991
1992@item %z
1993The mnemonics of keyboard, terminal, and buffer coding systems.
1994
1995@item %Z
1996Like @samp{%z}, but including the end-of-line format.
1997
1998@item %*
1999@samp{%} if the buffer is read only (see @code{buffer-read-only}); @*
2000@samp{*} if the buffer is modified (see @code{buffer-modified-p}); @*
2001@samp{-} otherwise. @xref{Buffer Modification}.
2002
2003@item %+
2004@samp{*} if the buffer is modified (see @code{buffer-modified-p}); @*
2005@samp{%} if the buffer is read only (see @code{buffer-read-only}); @*
2006@samp{-} otherwise. This differs from @samp{%*} only for a modified
2007read-only buffer. @xref{Buffer Modification}.
2008
2009@item %&
2010@samp{*} if the buffer is modified, and @samp{-} otherwise.
2011
2012@item %[
2013An indication of the depth of recursive editing levels (not counting
2014minibuffer levels): one @samp{[} for each editing level.
2015@xref{Recursive Editing}.
2016
2017@item %]
2018One @samp{]} for each recursive editing level (not counting minibuffer
2019levels).
2020
2021@item %-
2022Dashes sufficient to fill the remainder of the mode line.
2023
2024@item %%
2025The character @samp{%}---this is how to include a literal @samp{%} in a
2026string in which @code{%}-constructs are allowed.
2027@end table
2028
2029The following two @code{%}-constructs are still supported, but they are
2030obsolete, since you can get the same results with the variables
2031@code{mode-name} and @code{global-mode-string}.
2032
2033@table @code
2034@item %m
2035The value of @code{mode-name}.
2036
2037@item %M
2038The value of @code{global-mode-string}.
2039@end table
2040
2041@node Properties in Mode
2042@subsection Properties in the Mode Line
2043@cindex text properties in the mode line
2044
2045 Certain text properties are meaningful in the
2046mode line. The @code{face} property affects the appearance of text; the
2047@code{help-echo} property associates help strings with the text, and
2048@code{local-map} can make the text mouse-sensitive.
2049
2050 There are four ways to specify text properties for text in the mode
2051line:
2052
2053@enumerate
2054@item
2055Put a string with a text property directly into the mode-line data
2056structure.
2057
2058@item
2059Put a text property on a mode-line %-construct such as @samp{%12b}; then
2060the expansion of the %-construct will have that same text property.
2061
2062@item
2063Use a @code{(:propertize @var{elt} @var{props}@dots{})} construct to
2064give @var{elt} a text property specified by @var{props}.
2065
2066@item
2067Use a list containing @code{:eval @var{form}} in the mode-line data
2068structure, and make @var{form} evaluate to a string that has a text
2069property.
2070@end enumerate
2071
2072 You can use the @code{local-map} property to specify a keymap. This
2073keymap only takes real effect for mouse clicks; binding character keys
2074and function keys to it has no effect, since it is impossible to move
2075point into the mode line.
2076
2077 When the mode line refers to a variable which does not have a
2078non-@code{nil} @code{risky-local-variable} property, any text
2079properties given or specified within that variable's values are
2080ignored. This is because such properties could otherwise specify
2081functions to be called, and those functions could come from file
2082local variables.
2083
2084@node Header Lines
2085@subsection Window Header Lines
2086@cindex header line (of a window)
2087@cindex window header line
2088
2089 A window can have a @dfn{header line} at the
2090top, just as it can have a mode line at the bottom. The header line
2091feature works just like the mode-line feature, except that it's
2092controlled by different variables.
2093
2094@defvar header-line-format
2095This variable, local in every buffer, specifies how to display the
2096header line, for windows displaying the buffer. The format of the value
2097is the same as for @code{mode-line-format} (@pxref{Mode Line Data}).
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2098It is normally @code{nil}, so that ordinary buffers have no header line.
2099@end defvar
2100
2101 A window that is just one line tall never displays a header line. A
2102window that is two lines tall cannot display both a mode line and a
2103header line at once; if it has a mode line, then it does not display a
2104header line.
2105
2106@node Emulating Mode Line
2107@subsection Emulating Mode-Line Formatting
2108
2109 You can use the function @code{format-mode-line} to compute
2110the text that would appear in a mode line or header line
2111based on a certain mode-line specification.
2112
2113@defun format-mode-line format &optional face window buffer
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2114This function formats a line of text according to @var{format} as if it
2115were generating the mode line for @var{window}, but it also returns the
2116text as a string. The argument @var{window} defaults to the selected
2117window. If @var{buffer} is non-@code{nil}, all the information used is
2118taken from @var{buffer}; by default, it comes from @var{window}'s
2119buffer.
b8d4c8d0
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2120
2121The value string normally has text properties that correspond to the
2e4ab211
EZ
2122faces, keymaps, etc., that the mode line would have. Any character for
2123which no @code{face} property is specified by @var{format} gets a
2124default value determined by @var{face}. If @var{face} is @code{t}, that
2125stands for either @code{mode-line} if @var{window} is selected,
2126otherwise @code{mode-line-inactive}. If @var{face} is @code{nil} or
2127omitted, that stands for the default face. If @var{face} is an integer,
2128the value returned by this function will have no text properties.
b8d4c8d0 2129
287e63bb 2130You can also specify other valid faces as the value of @var{face}.
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2131If specified, that face provides the @code{face} property for characters
2132whose face is not specified by @var{format}.
287e63bb
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2133
2134Note that using @code{mode-line}, @code{mode-line-inactive}, or
2135@code{header-line} as @var{face} will actually redisplay the mode line
2136or the header line, respectively, using the current definitions of the
2137corresponding face, in addition to returning the formatted string.
2138(Other faces do not cause redisplay.)
2139
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2140For example, @code{(format-mode-line header-line-format)} returns the
2141text that would appear in the selected window's header line (@code{""}
2142if it has no header line). @code{(format-mode-line header-line-format
2143'header-line)} returns the same text, with each character
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2144carrying the face that it will have in the header line itself, and also
2145redraws the header line.
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2146@end defun
2147
2148@node Imenu
2149@section Imenu
2150
2151@cindex Imenu
2152 @dfn{Imenu} is a feature that lets users select a definition or
2153section in the buffer, from a menu which lists all of them, to go
2154directly to that location in the buffer. Imenu works by constructing
2155a buffer index which lists the names and buffer positions of the
2156definitions, or other named portions of the buffer; then the user can
2157choose one of them and move point to it. Major modes can add a menu
2158bar item to use Imenu using @code{imenu-add-to-menubar}.
2159
2160@defun imenu-add-to-menubar name
2161This function defines a local menu bar item named @var{name}
2162to run Imenu.
2163@end defun
2164
2165 The user-level commands for using Imenu are described in the Emacs
2166Manual (@pxref{Imenu,, Imenu, emacs, the Emacs Manual}). This section
2167explains how to customize Imenu's method of finding definitions or
2168buffer portions for a particular major mode.
2169
2170 The usual and simplest way is to set the variable
2171@code{imenu-generic-expression}:
2172
2173@defvar imenu-generic-expression
2174This variable, if non-@code{nil}, is a list that specifies regular
2175expressions for finding definitions for Imenu. Simple elements of
2176@code{imenu-generic-expression} look like this:
2177
2178@example
2179(@var{menu-title} @var{regexp} @var{index})
2180@end example
2181
2182Here, if @var{menu-title} is non-@code{nil}, it says that the matches
2183for this element should go in a submenu of the buffer index;
2184@var{menu-title} itself specifies the name for the submenu. If
2185@var{menu-title} is @code{nil}, the matches for this element go directly
2186in the top level of the buffer index.
2187
2188The second item in the list, @var{regexp}, is a regular expression
2189(@pxref{Regular Expressions}); anything in the buffer that it matches
2190is considered a definition, something to mention in the buffer index.
2191The third item, @var{index}, is a non-negative integer that indicates
2192which subexpression in @var{regexp} matches the definition's name.
2193
2194An element can also look like this:
2195
2196@example
2197(@var{menu-title} @var{regexp} @var{index} @var{function} @var{arguments}@dots{})
2198@end example
2199
2200Each match for this element creates an index item, and when the index
2201item is selected by the user, it calls @var{function} with arguments
2202consisting of the item name, the buffer position, and @var{arguments}.
2203
2204For Emacs Lisp mode, @code{imenu-generic-expression} could look like
2205this:
2206
2207@c should probably use imenu-syntax-alist and \\sw rather than [-A-Za-z0-9+]
2208@example
2209@group
2210((nil "^\\s-*(def\\(un\\|subst\\|macro\\|advice\\)\
2211\\s-+\\([-A-Za-z0-9+]+\\)" 2)
2212@end group
2213@group
2214 ("*Vars*" "^\\s-*(def\\(var\\|const\\)\
2215\\s-+\\([-A-Za-z0-9+]+\\)" 2)
2216@end group
2217@group
2218 ("*Types*"
2219 "^\\s-*\
2220(def\\(type\\|struct\\|class\\|ine-condition\\)\
2221\\s-+\\([-A-Za-z0-9+]+\\)" 2))
2222@end group
2223@end example
2224
2225Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2226@end defvar
2227
2228@defvar imenu-case-fold-search
2229This variable controls whether matching against the regular
2230expressions in the value of @code{imenu-generic-expression} is
2231case-sensitive: @code{t}, the default, means matching should ignore
2232case.
2233
2234Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2235@end defvar
2236
2237@defvar imenu-syntax-alist
2238This variable is an alist of syntax table modifiers to use while
2239processing @code{imenu-generic-expression}, to override the syntax table
2240of the current buffer. Each element should have this form:
2241
2242@example
2243(@var{characters} . @var{syntax-description})
2244@end example
2245
2246The @sc{car}, @var{characters}, can be either a character or a string.
2247The element says to give that character or characters the syntax
2248specified by @var{syntax-description}, which is passed to
2249@code{modify-syntax-entry} (@pxref{Syntax Table Functions}).
2250
2251This feature is typically used to give word syntax to characters which
2252normally have symbol syntax, and thus to simplify
2253@code{imenu-generic-expression} and speed up matching.
2254For example, Fortran mode uses it this way:
2255
2256@example
2257(setq imenu-syntax-alist '(("_$" . "w")))
2258@end example
2259
2260The @code{imenu-generic-expression} regular expressions can then use
2261@samp{\\sw+} instead of @samp{\\(\\sw\\|\\s_\\)+}. Note that this
2262technique may be inconvenient when the mode needs to limit the initial
2263character of a name to a smaller set of characters than are allowed in
2264the rest of a name.
2265
2266Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2267@end defvar
2268
2269 Another way to customize Imenu for a major mode is to set the
2270variables @code{imenu-prev-index-position-function} and
2271@code{imenu-extract-index-name-function}:
2272
2273@defvar imenu-prev-index-position-function
2274If this variable is non-@code{nil}, its value should be a function that
2275finds the next ``definition'' to put in the buffer index, scanning
2276backward in the buffer from point. It should return @code{nil} if it
2277doesn't find another ``definition'' before point. Otherwise it should
2278leave point at the place it finds a ``definition'' and return any
2279non-@code{nil} value.
2280
2281Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2282@end defvar
2283
2284@defvar imenu-extract-index-name-function
2285If this variable is non-@code{nil}, its value should be a function to
2286return the name for a definition, assuming point is in that definition
2287as the @code{imenu-prev-index-position-function} function would leave
2288it.
2289
2290Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2291@end defvar
2292
2293 The last way to customize Imenu for a major mode is to set the
2294variable @code{imenu-create-index-function}:
2295
2296@defvar imenu-create-index-function
2297This variable specifies the function to use for creating a buffer
2298index. The function should take no arguments, and return an index
2299alist for the current buffer. It is called within
2300@code{save-excursion}, so where it leaves point makes no difference.
2301
2302The index alist can have three types of elements. Simple elements
2303look like this:
2304
2305@example
2306(@var{index-name} . @var{index-position})
2307@end example
2308
2309Selecting a simple element has the effect of moving to position
2310@var{index-position} in the buffer. Special elements look like this:
2311
2312@example
2313(@var{index-name} @var{index-position} @var{function} @var{arguments}@dots{})
2314@end example
2315
2316Selecting a special element performs:
2317
2318@example
2319(funcall @var{function}
2320 @var{index-name} @var{index-position} @var{arguments}@dots{})
2321@end example
2322
2323A nested sub-alist element looks like this:
2324
2325@example
2326(@var{menu-title} @var{sub-alist})
2327@end example
2328
2329It creates the submenu @var{menu-title} specified by @var{sub-alist}.
2330
2331The default value of @code{imenu-create-index-function} is
2332@code{imenu-default-create-index-function}. This function calls the
2333value of @code{imenu-prev-index-position-function} and the value of
2334@code{imenu-extract-index-name-function} to produce the index alist.
2335However, if either of these two variables is @code{nil}, the default
2336function uses @code{imenu-generic-expression} instead.
2337
2338Setting this variable makes it buffer-local in the current buffer.
2339@end defvar
2340
2341@node Font Lock Mode
2342@section Font Lock Mode
2343@cindex Font Lock mode
2344
2345 @dfn{Font Lock mode} is a feature that automatically attaches
2346@code{face} properties to certain parts of the buffer based on their
2347syntactic role. How it parses the buffer depends on the major mode;
2348most major modes define syntactic criteria for which faces to use in
2349which contexts. This section explains how to customize Font Lock for a
2350particular major mode.
2351
2352 Font Lock mode finds text to highlight in two ways: through
2353syntactic parsing based on the syntax table, and through searching
2354(usually for regular expressions). Syntactic fontification happens
2355first; it finds comments and string constants and highlights them.
2356Search-based fontification happens second.
2357
2358@menu
2359* Font Lock Basics:: Overview of customizing Font Lock.
2360* Search-based Fontification:: Fontification based on regexps.
2361* Customizing Keywords:: Customizing search-based fontification.
2362* Other Font Lock Variables:: Additional customization facilities.
2363* Levels of Font Lock:: Each mode can define alternative levels
2364 so that the user can select more or less.
769741e3 2365* Precalculated Fontification:: How Lisp programs that produce the buffer
b8d4c8d0
GM
2366 contents can also specify how to fontify it.
2367* Faces for Font Lock:: Special faces specifically for Font Lock.
2368* Syntactic Font Lock:: Fontification based on syntax tables.
2369* Setting Syntax Properties:: Defining character syntax based on context
2370 using the Font Lock mechanism.
2371* Multiline Font Lock:: How to coerce Font Lock into properly
2372 highlighting multiline constructs.
2373@end menu
2374
2375@node Font Lock Basics
2376@subsection Font Lock Basics
2377
2378 There are several variables that control how Font Lock mode highlights
2379text. But major modes should not set any of these variables directly.
2380Instead, they should set @code{font-lock-defaults} as a buffer-local
2381variable. The value assigned to this variable is used, if and when Font
2382Lock mode is enabled, to set all the other variables.
2383
2384@defvar font-lock-defaults
2385This variable is set by major modes, as a buffer-local variable, to
2386specify how to fontify text in that mode. It automatically becomes
2387buffer-local when you set it. If its value is @code{nil}, Font-Lock
2388mode does no highlighting, and you can use the @samp{Faces} menu
2389(under @samp{Edit} and then @samp{Text Properties} in the menu bar) to
2390assign faces explicitly to text in the buffer.
2391
2392If non-@code{nil}, the value should look like this:
2393
2394@example
2395(@var{keywords} [@var{keywords-only} [@var{case-fold}
2396 [@var{syntax-alist} [@var{syntax-begin} @var{other-vars}@dots{}]]]])
2397@end example
2398
2399The first element, @var{keywords}, indirectly specifies the value of
2400@code{font-lock-keywords} which directs search-based fontification.
2401It can be a symbol, a variable or a function whose value is the list
2402to use for @code{font-lock-keywords}. It can also be a list of
2403several such symbols, one for each possible level of fontification.
caef3ed2
GM
2404The first symbol specifies the @samp{mode default} level of
2405fontification, the next symbol level 1 fontification, the next level 2,
2406and so on. The @samp{mode default} level is normally the same as level
24071. It is used when @code{font-lock-maximum-decoration} has a @code{nil}
2408value. @xref{Levels of Font Lock}.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2409
2410The second element, @var{keywords-only}, specifies the value of the
2411variable @code{font-lock-keywords-only}. If this is omitted or
2412@code{nil}, syntactic fontification (of strings and comments) is also
2413performed. If this is non-@code{nil}, such fontification is not
2414performed. @xref{Syntactic Font Lock}.
2415
2416The third element, @var{case-fold}, specifies the value of
2417@code{font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search}. If it is non-@code{nil},
2418Font Lock mode ignores case when searching as directed by
2419@code{font-lock-keywords}.
2420
2421If the fourth element, @var{syntax-alist}, is non-@code{nil}, it
2422should be a list of cons cells of the form @code{(@var{char-or-string}
2423. @var{string})}. These are used to set up a syntax table for
2424syntactic fontification (@pxref{Syntax Table Functions}). The
2425resulting syntax table is stored in @code{font-lock-syntax-table}.
2426
2427The fifth element, @var{syntax-begin}, specifies the value of
2428@code{font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function}. We recommend setting
2429this variable to @code{nil} and using @code{syntax-begin-function}
2430instead.
2431
2432All the remaining elements (if any) are collectively called
2433@var{other-vars}. Each of these elements should have the form
2434@code{(@var{variable} . @var{value})}---which means, make
2435@var{variable} buffer-local and then set it to @var{value}. You can
2436use these @var{other-vars} to set other variables that affect
2437fontification, aside from those you can control with the first five
2438elements. @xref{Other Font Lock Variables}.
2439@end defvar
2440
2441 If your mode fontifies text explicitly by adding
2442@code{font-lock-face} properties, it can specify @code{(nil t)} for
2443@code{font-lock-defaults} to turn off all automatic fontification.
2444However, this is not required; it is possible to fontify some things
2445using @code{font-lock-face} properties and set up automatic
2446fontification for other parts of the text.
2447
2448@node Search-based Fontification
2449@subsection Search-based Fontification
2450
2451 The most important variable for customizing Font Lock mode is
2452@code{font-lock-keywords}. It specifies the search criteria for
2453search-based fontification. You should specify the value of this
2454variable with @var{keywords} in @code{font-lock-defaults}.
2455
2456@defvar font-lock-keywords
2457This variable's value is a list of the keywords to highlight. Be
2458careful when composing regular expressions for this list; a poorly
2459written pattern can dramatically slow things down!
2460@end defvar
2461
2462 Each element of @code{font-lock-keywords} specifies how to find
2463certain cases of text, and how to highlight those cases. Font Lock mode
2464processes the elements of @code{font-lock-keywords} one by one, and for
2465each element, it finds and handles all matches. Ordinarily, once
2466part of the text has been fontified already, this cannot be overridden
2467by a subsequent match in the same text; but you can specify different
2468behavior using the @var{override} element of a @var{subexp-highlighter}.
2469
2470 Each element of @code{font-lock-keywords} should have one of these
2471forms:
2472
2473@table @code
2474@item @var{regexp}
2475Highlight all matches for @var{regexp} using
2476@code{font-lock-keyword-face}. For example,
2477
2478@example
2479;; @r{Highlight occurrences of the word @samp{foo}}
2480;; @r{using @code{font-lock-keyword-face}.}
2481"\\<foo\\>"
2482@end example
2483
2484The function @code{regexp-opt} (@pxref{Regexp Functions}) is useful
2485for calculating optimal regular expressions to match a number of
2486different keywords.
2487
2488@item @var{function}
2489Find text by calling @var{function}, and highlight the matches
2490it finds using @code{font-lock-keyword-face}.
2491
2492When @var{function} is called, it receives one argument, the limit of
2493the search; it should begin searching at point, and not search beyond the
2494limit. It should return non-@code{nil} if it succeeds, and set the
2495match data to describe the match that was found. Returning @code{nil}
2496indicates failure of the search.
2497
2498Fontification will call @var{function} repeatedly with the same limit,
2499and with point where the previous invocation left it, until
2500@var{function} fails. On failure, @var{function} need not reset point
2501in any particular way.
2502
2503@item (@var{matcher} . @var{subexp})
2504In this kind of element, @var{matcher} is either a regular
2505expression or a function, as described above. The @sc{cdr},
2506@var{subexp}, specifies which subexpression of @var{matcher} should be
2507highlighted (instead of the entire text that @var{matcher} matched).
2508
2509@example
2510;; @r{Highlight the @samp{bar} in each occurrence of @samp{fubar},}
2511;; @r{using @code{font-lock-keyword-face}.}
2512("fu\\(bar\\)" . 1)
2513@end example
2514
2515If you use @code{regexp-opt} to produce the regular expression
2516@var{matcher}, you can use @code{regexp-opt-depth} (@pxref{Regexp
2517Functions}) to calculate the value for @var{subexp}.
2518
2519@item (@var{matcher} . @var{facespec})
2520In this kind of element, @var{facespec} is an expression whose value
2521specifies the face to use for highlighting. In the simplest case,
2522@var{facespec} is a Lisp variable (a symbol) whose value is a face
2523name.
2524
2525@example
2526;; @r{Highlight occurrences of @samp{fubar},}
2527;; @r{using the face which is the value of @code{fubar-face}.}
2528("fubar" . fubar-face)
2529@end example
2530
2531However, @var{facespec} can also evaluate to a list of this form:
2532
2533@example
2534(face @var{face} @var{prop1} @var{val1} @var{prop2} @var{val2}@dots{})
2535@end example
2536
2537@noindent
2538to specify the face @var{face} and various additional text properties
2539to put on the text that matches. If you do this, be sure to add the
2540other text property names that you set in this way to the value of
2541@code{font-lock-extra-managed-props} so that the properties will also
2542be cleared out when they are no longer appropriate. Alternatively,
2543you can set the variable @code{font-lock-unfontify-region-function} to
2544a function that clears these properties. @xref{Other Font Lock
2545Variables}.
2546
2547@item (@var{matcher} . @var{subexp-highlighter})
2548In this kind of element, @var{subexp-highlighter} is a list
2549which specifies how to highlight matches found by @var{matcher}.
2550It has the form:
2551
2552@example
e6c815ae 2553(@var{subexp} @var{facespec} [@var{override} [@var{laxmatch}]])
b8d4c8d0
GM
2554@end example
2555
2556The @sc{car}, @var{subexp}, is an integer specifying which subexpression
2557of the match to fontify (0 means the entire matching text). The second
2558subelement, @var{facespec}, is an expression whose value specifies the
2559face, as described above.
2560
2561The last two values in @var{subexp-highlighter}, @var{override} and
2562@var{laxmatch}, are optional flags. If @var{override} is @code{t},
2563this element can override existing fontification made by previous
2564elements of @code{font-lock-keywords}. If it is @code{keep}, then
2565each character is fontified if it has not been fontified already by
2566some other element. If it is @code{prepend}, the face specified by
2567@var{facespec} is added to the beginning of the @code{font-lock-face}
2568property. If it is @code{append}, the face is added to the end of the
2569@code{font-lock-face} property.
2570
2571If @var{laxmatch} is non-@code{nil}, it means there should be no error
2572if there is no subexpression numbered @var{subexp} in @var{matcher}.
2573Obviously, fontification of the subexpression numbered @var{subexp} will
2574not occur. However, fontification of other subexpressions (and other
2575regexps) will continue. If @var{laxmatch} is @code{nil}, and the
2576specified subexpression is missing, then an error is signaled which
2577terminates search-based fontification.
2578
2579Here are some examples of elements of this kind, and what they do:
2580
2581@smallexample
2582;; @r{Highlight occurrences of either @samp{foo} or @samp{bar}, using}
2583;; @r{@code{foo-bar-face}, even if they have already been highlighted.}
2584;; @r{@code{foo-bar-face} should be a variable whose value is a face.}
2585("foo\\|bar" 0 foo-bar-face t)
2586
2587;; @r{Highlight the first subexpression within each occurrence}
2588;; @r{that the function @code{fubar-match} finds,}
2589;; @r{using the face which is the value of @code{fubar-face}.}
2590(fubar-match 1 fubar-face)
2591@end smallexample
2592
2593@item (@var{matcher} . @var{anchored-highlighter})
2594In this kind of element, @var{anchored-highlighter} specifies how to
2595highlight text that follows a match found by @var{matcher}. So a
2596match found by @var{matcher} acts as the anchor for further searches
2597specified by @var{anchored-highlighter}. @var{anchored-highlighter}
2598is a list of the following form:
2599
2600@example
2601(@var{anchored-matcher} @var{pre-form} @var{post-form}
2602 @var{subexp-highlighters}@dots{})
2603@end example
2604
2605Here, @var{anchored-matcher}, like @var{matcher}, is either a regular
2606expression or a function. After a match of @var{matcher} is found,
2607point is at the end of the match. Now, Font Lock evaluates the form
2608@var{pre-form}. Then it searches for matches of
2609@var{anchored-matcher} and uses @var{subexp-highlighters} to highlight
2610these. A @var{subexp-highlighter} is as described above. Finally,
2611Font Lock evaluates @var{post-form}.
2612
2613The forms @var{pre-form} and @var{post-form} can be used to initialize
2614before, and cleanup after, @var{anchored-matcher} is used. Typically,
2615@var{pre-form} is used to move point to some position relative to the
2616match of @var{matcher}, before starting with @var{anchored-matcher}.
2617@var{post-form} might be used to move back, before resuming with
2618@var{matcher}.
2619
2620After Font Lock evaluates @var{pre-form}, it does not search for
2621@var{anchored-matcher} beyond the end of the line. However, if
2622@var{pre-form} returns a buffer position that is greater than the
2623position of point after @var{pre-form} is evaluated, then the position
2624returned by @var{pre-form} is used as the limit of the search instead.
2625It is generally a bad idea to return a position greater than the end
2626of the line; in other words, the @var{anchored-matcher} search should
2627not span lines.
2628
2629For example,
2630
2631@smallexample
2632;; @r{Highlight occurrences of the word @samp{item} following}
2633;; @r{an occurrence of the word @samp{anchor} (on the same line)}
2634;; @r{in the value of @code{item-face}.}
2635("\\<anchor\\>" "\\<item\\>" nil nil (0 item-face))
2636@end smallexample
2637
2638Here, @var{pre-form} and @var{post-form} are @code{nil}. Therefore
2639searching for @samp{item} starts at the end of the match of
2640@samp{anchor}, and searching for subsequent instances of @samp{anchor}
2641resumes from where searching for @samp{item} concluded.
2642
2643@item (@var{matcher} @var{highlighters}@dots{})
2644This sort of element specifies several @var{highlighter} lists for a
2645single @var{matcher}. A @var{highlighter} list can be of the type
2646@var{subexp-highlighter} or @var{anchored-highlighter} as described
2647above.
2648
2649For example,
2650
2651@smallexample
2652;; @r{Highlight occurrences of the word @samp{anchor} in the value}
2653;; @r{of @code{anchor-face}, and subsequent occurrences of the word}
2654;; @r{@samp{item} (on the same line) in the value of @code{item-face}.}
2655("\\<anchor\\>" (0 anchor-face)
2656 ("\\<item\\>" nil nil (0 item-face)))
2657@end smallexample
2658
2659@item (eval . @var{form})
2660Here @var{form} is an expression to be evaluated the first time
2661this value of @code{font-lock-keywords} is used in a buffer.
2662Its value should have one of the forms described in this table.
2663@end table
2664
2665@strong{Warning:} Do not design an element of @code{font-lock-keywords}
2666to match text which spans lines; this does not work reliably.
2667For details, see @xref{Multiline Font Lock}.
2668
2669You can use @var{case-fold} in @code{font-lock-defaults} to specify
2670the value of @code{font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search} which says
2671whether search-based fontification should be case-insensitive.
2672
2673@defvar font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search
2674Non-@code{nil} means that regular expression matching for the sake of
2675@code{font-lock-keywords} should be case-insensitive.
2676@end defvar
2677
2678@node Customizing Keywords
2679@subsection Customizing Search-Based Fontification
2680
2681 You can use @code{font-lock-add-keywords} to add additional
2682search-based fontification rules to a major mode, and
867d4bb3 2683@code{font-lock-remove-keywords} to remove rules.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2684
2685@defun font-lock-add-keywords mode keywords &optional how
2686This function adds highlighting @var{keywords}, for the current buffer
2687or for major mode @var{mode}. The argument @var{keywords} should be a
2688list with the same format as the variable @code{font-lock-keywords}.
2689
2690If @var{mode} is a symbol which is a major mode command name, such as
2691@code{c-mode}, the effect is that enabling Font Lock mode in
2692@var{mode} will add @var{keywords} to @code{font-lock-keywords}.
2693Calling with a non-@code{nil} value of @var{mode} is correct only in
2694your @file{~/.emacs} file.
2695
2696If @var{mode} is @code{nil}, this function adds @var{keywords} to
2697@code{font-lock-keywords} in the current buffer. This way of calling
2698@code{font-lock-add-keywords} is usually used in mode hook functions.
2699
2700By default, @var{keywords} are added at the beginning of
2701@code{font-lock-keywords}. If the optional argument @var{how} is
2702@code{set}, they are used to replace the value of
2703@code{font-lock-keywords}. If @var{how} is any other non-@code{nil}
2704value, they are added at the end of @code{font-lock-keywords}.
2705
2706Some modes provide specialized support you can use in additional
2707highlighting patterns. See the variables
2708@code{c-font-lock-extra-types}, @code{c++-font-lock-extra-types},
2709and @code{java-font-lock-extra-types}, for example.
2710
2711@strong{Warning:} major mode functions must not call
2712@code{font-lock-add-keywords} under any circumstances, either directly
2713or indirectly, except through their mode hooks. (Doing so would lead
2714to incorrect behavior for some minor modes.) They should set up their
2715rules for search-based fontification by setting
2716@code{font-lock-keywords}.
2717@end defun
2718
2719@defun font-lock-remove-keywords mode keywords
2720This function removes @var{keywords} from @code{font-lock-keywords}
2721for the current buffer or for major mode @var{mode}. As in
2722@code{font-lock-add-keywords}, @var{mode} should be a major mode
2723command name or @code{nil}. All the caveats and requirements for
2724@code{font-lock-add-keywords} apply here too.
2725@end defun
2726
2727 For example, this code
2728
2729@smallexample
2730(font-lock-add-keywords 'c-mode
2731 '(("\\<\\(FIXME\\):" 1 font-lock-warning-face prepend)
2732 ("\\<\\(and\\|or\\|not\\)\\>" . font-lock-keyword-face)))
2733@end smallexample
2734
2735@noindent
2736adds two fontification patterns for C mode: one to fontify the word
2737@samp{FIXME}, even in comments, and another to fontify the words
2738@samp{and}, @samp{or} and @samp{not} as keywords.
2739
2740@noindent
2741That example affects only C mode proper. To add the same patterns to
2742C mode @emph{and} all modes derived from it, do this instead:
2743
2744@smallexample
2745(add-hook 'c-mode-hook
2746 (lambda ()
2747 (font-lock-add-keywords nil
2748 '(("\\<\\(FIXME\\):" 1 font-lock-warning-face prepend)
2749 ("\\<\\(and\\|or\\|not\\)\\>" .
2750 font-lock-keyword-face)))))
2751@end smallexample
2752
2753@node Other Font Lock Variables
2754@subsection Other Font Lock Variables
2755
2756 This section describes additional variables that a major mode can
2757set by means of @var{other-vars} in @code{font-lock-defaults}
2758(@pxref{Font Lock Basics}).
2759
2760@defvar font-lock-mark-block-function
2761If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it should be a function that is
2762called with no arguments, to choose an enclosing range of text for
2763refontification for the command @kbd{M-o M-o}
2764(@code{font-lock-fontify-block}).
2765
2766The function should report its choice by placing the region around it.
2767A good choice is a range of text large enough to give proper results,
2768but not too large so that refontification becomes slow. Typical values
2769are @code{mark-defun} for programming modes or @code{mark-paragraph} for
2770textual modes.
2771@end defvar
2772
2773@defvar font-lock-extra-managed-props
2774This variable specifies additional properties (other than
2775@code{font-lock-face}) that are being managed by Font Lock mode. It
2776is used by @code{font-lock-default-unfontify-region}, which normally
2777only manages the @code{font-lock-face} property. If you want Font
2778Lock to manage other properties as well, you must specify them in a
2779@var{facespec} in @code{font-lock-keywords} as well as add them to
2780this list. @xref{Search-based Fontification}.
2781@end defvar
2782
2783@defvar font-lock-fontify-buffer-function
2784Function to use for fontifying the buffer. The default value is
2785@code{font-lock-default-fontify-buffer}.
2786@end defvar
2787
2788@defvar font-lock-unfontify-buffer-function
2789Function to use for unfontifying the buffer. This is used when
2790turning off Font Lock mode. The default value is
2791@code{font-lock-default-unfontify-buffer}.
2792@end defvar
2793
2794@defvar font-lock-fontify-region-function
2795Function to use for fontifying a region. It should take two
2796arguments, the beginning and end of the region, and an optional third
2797argument @var{verbose}. If @var{verbose} is non-@code{nil}, the
2798function should print status messages. The default value is
2799@code{font-lock-default-fontify-region}.
2800@end defvar
2801
2802@defvar font-lock-unfontify-region-function
2803Function to use for unfontifying a region. It should take two
2804arguments, the beginning and end of the region. The default value is
2805@code{font-lock-default-unfontify-region}.
2806@end defvar
2807
e070558d
CY
2808@defun jit-lock-register function &optional contextual
2809This function tells Font Lock mode to run the Lisp function
2810@var{function} any time it has to fontify or refontify part of the
2811current buffer. It calls @var{function} before calling the default
2812fontification functions, and gives it two arguments, @var{start} and
2813@var{end}, which specify the region to be fontified or refontified.
2814
2815The optional argument @var{contextual}, if non-@code{nil}, forces Font
2816Lock mode to always refontify a syntactically relevant part of the
2817buffer, and not just the modified lines. This argument can usually be
2818omitted.
2819@end defun
2820
2821@defun jit-lock-unregister function
2822If @var{function} was previously registered as a fontification
2823function using @code{jit-lock-register}, this function unregisters it.
2824@end defun
b8d4c8d0
GM
2825
2826@node Levels of Font Lock
2827@subsection Levels of Font Lock
2828
2829 Many major modes offer three different levels of fontification. You
2830can define multiple levels by using a list of symbols for @var{keywords}
2831in @code{font-lock-defaults}. Each symbol specifies one level of
caef3ed2
GM
2832fontification; it is up to the user to choose one of these levels,
2833normally by setting @code{font-lock-maximum-decoration} (@pxref{Font
2834Lock,,, emacs, the GNU Emacs Manual}). The chosen level's symbol
2835value is used to initialize @code{font-lock-keywords}.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2836
2837 Here are the conventions for how to define the levels of
2838fontification:
2839
2840@itemize @bullet
2841@item
2842Level 1: highlight function declarations, file directives (such as include or
2843import directives), strings and comments. The idea is speed, so only
2844the most important and top-level components are fontified.
2845
2846@item
2847Level 2: in addition to level 1, highlight all language keywords,
2848including type names that act like keywords, as well as named constant
2849values. The idea is that all keywords (either syntactic or semantic)
2850should be fontified appropriately.
2851
2852@item
2853Level 3: in addition to level 2, highlight the symbols being defined in
2854function and variable declarations, and all builtin function names,
2855wherever they appear.
2856@end itemize
2857
2858@node Precalculated Fontification
2859@subsection Precalculated Fontification
2860
eae7d8f8
RS
2861 Some major modes such as @code{list-buffers} and @code{occur}
2862construct the buffer text programmatically. The easiest way for them
2863to support Font Lock mode is to specify the faces of text when they
2864insert the text in the buffer.
2865
2866 The way to do this is to specify the faces in the text with the
2867special text property @code{font-lock-face} (@pxref{Special
2868Properties}). When Font Lock mode is enabled, this property controls
2869the display, just like the @code{face} property. When Font Lock mode
2870is disabled, @code{font-lock-face} has no effect on the display.
2871
2872 It is ok for a mode to use @code{font-lock-face} for some text and
2873also use the normal Font Lock machinery. But if the mode does not use
2874the normal Font Lock machinery, it should not set the variable
2875@code{font-lock-defaults}.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2876
2877@node Faces for Font Lock
2878@subsection Faces for Font Lock
2879@cindex faces for font lock
2880@cindex font lock faces
2881
2882 You can make Font Lock mode use any face, but several faces are
2883defined specifically for Font Lock mode. Each of these symbols is both
2884a face name, and a variable whose default value is the symbol itself.
2885Thus, the default value of @code{font-lock-comment-face} is
2886@code{font-lock-comment-face}. This means you can write
2887@code{font-lock-comment-face} in a context such as
2888@code{font-lock-keywords} where a face-name-valued expression is used.
2889
2890@table @code
2891@item font-lock-comment-face
2892@vindex font-lock-comment-face
2893Used (typically) for comments.
2894
2895@item font-lock-comment-delimiter-face
2896@vindex font-lock-comment-delimiter-face
2897Used (typically) for comments delimiters.
2898
2899@item font-lock-doc-face
2900@vindex font-lock-doc-face
2901Used (typically) for documentation strings in the code.
2902
2903@item font-lock-string-face
2904@vindex font-lock-string-face
2905Used (typically) for string constants.
2906
2907@item font-lock-keyword-face
2908@vindex font-lock-keyword-face
2909Used (typically) for keywords---names that have special syntactic
2910significance, like @code{for} and @code{if} in C.
2911
2912@item font-lock-builtin-face
2913@vindex font-lock-builtin-face
2914Used (typically) for built-in function names.
2915
2916@item font-lock-function-name-face
2917@vindex font-lock-function-name-face
2918Used (typically) for the name of a function being defined or declared,
2919in a function definition or declaration.
2920
2921@item font-lock-variable-name-face
2922@vindex font-lock-variable-name-face
2923Used (typically) for the name of a variable being defined or declared,
2924in a variable definition or declaration.
2925
2926@item font-lock-type-face
2927@vindex font-lock-type-face
2928Used (typically) for names of user-defined data types,
2929where they are defined and where they are used.
2930
2931@item font-lock-constant-face
2932@vindex font-lock-constant-face
2933Used (typically) for constant names.
2934
2935@item font-lock-preprocessor-face
2936@vindex font-lock-preprocessor-face
2937Used (typically) for preprocessor commands.
2938
2939@item font-lock-negation-char-face
2940@vindex font-lock-negation-char-face
2941Used (typically) for easily-overlooked negation characters.
2942
2943@item font-lock-warning-face
2944@vindex font-lock-warning-face
2945Used (typically) for constructs that are peculiar, or that greatly
2946change the meaning of other text. For example, this is used for
2947@samp{;;;###autoload} cookies in Emacs Lisp, and for @code{#error}
2948directives in C.
2949@end table
2950
2951@node Syntactic Font Lock
2952@subsection Syntactic Font Lock
2953@cindex syntactic font lock
2954
2955Syntactic fontification uses the syntax table to find comments and
2956string constants (@pxref{Syntax Tables}). It highlights them using
2957@code{font-lock-comment-face} and @code{font-lock-string-face}
2958(@pxref{Faces for Font Lock}), or whatever
2959@code{font-lock-syntactic-face-function} chooses. There are several
2960variables that affect syntactic fontification; you should set them by
2961means of @code{font-lock-defaults} (@pxref{Font Lock Basics}).
2962
2963@defvar font-lock-keywords-only
2964Non-@code{nil} means Font Lock should not do syntactic fontification;
2965it should only fontify based on @code{font-lock-keywords}. The normal
2966way for a mode to set this variable to @code{t} is with
2967@var{keywords-only} in @code{font-lock-defaults}.
2968@end defvar
2969
2970@defvar font-lock-syntax-table
2971This variable holds the syntax table to use for fontification of
2972comments and strings. Specify it using @var{syntax-alist} in
2973@code{font-lock-defaults}. If this is @code{nil}, fontification uses
2974the buffer's syntax table.
2975@end defvar
2976
2977@defvar font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function
2978If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it should be a function to move
2979point back to a position that is syntactically at ``top level'' and
2980outside of strings or comments. Font Lock uses this when necessary
2981to get the right results for syntactic fontification.
2982
2983This function is called with no arguments. It should leave point at
2984the beginning of any enclosing syntactic block. Typical values are
2985@code{beginning-of-line} (used when the start of the line is known to
2986be outside a syntactic block), or @code{beginning-of-defun} for
2987programming modes, or @code{backward-paragraph} for textual modes.
2988
2989If the value is @code{nil}, Font Lock uses
2990@code{syntax-begin-function} to move back outside of any comment,
2991string, or sexp. This variable is semi-obsolete; we recommend setting
2992@code{syntax-begin-function} instead.
2993
2994Specify this variable using @var{syntax-begin} in
2995@code{font-lock-defaults}.
2996@end defvar
2997
2998@defvar font-lock-syntactic-face-function
2999A function to determine which face to use for a given syntactic
3000element (a string or a comment). The function is called with one
3001argument, the parse state at point returned by
3002@code{parse-partial-sexp}, and should return a face. The default
3003value returns @code{font-lock-comment-face} for comments and
3004@code{font-lock-string-face} for strings.
3005
3006This can be used to highlighting different kinds of strings or
3007comments differently. It is also sometimes abused together with
3008@code{font-lock-syntactic-keywords} to highlight constructs that span
3009multiple lines, but this is too esoteric to document here.
3010
3011Specify this variable using @var{other-vars} in
3012@code{font-lock-defaults}.
3013@end defvar
3014
3015@node Setting Syntax Properties
3016@subsection Setting Syntax Properties
3017
3018 Font Lock mode can be used to update @code{syntax-table} properties
3019automatically (@pxref{Syntax Properties}). This is useful in
3020languages for which a single syntax table by itself is not sufficient.
3021
3022@defvar font-lock-syntactic-keywords
3023This variable enables and controls updating @code{syntax-table}
3024properties by Font Lock. Its value should be a list of elements of
3025this form:
3026
3027@example
3028(@var{matcher} @var{subexp} @var{syntax} @var{override} @var{laxmatch})
3029@end example
3030
3031The parts of this element have the same meanings as in the corresponding
3032sort of element of @code{font-lock-keywords},
3033
3034@example
3035(@var{matcher} @var{subexp} @var{facespec} @var{override} @var{laxmatch})
3036@end example
3037
3038However, instead of specifying the value @var{facespec} to use for the
3039@code{face} property, it specifies the value @var{syntax} to use for
3040the @code{syntax-table} property. Here, @var{syntax} can be a string
3041(as taken by @code{modify-syntax-entry}), a syntax table, a cons cell
3042(as returned by @code{string-to-syntax}), or an expression whose value
3043is one of those two types. @var{override} cannot be @code{prepend} or
3044@code{append}.
3045
3046For example, an element of the form:
3047
3048@example
3049("\\$\\(#\\)" 1 ".")
3050@end example
3051
3052highlights syntactically a hash character when following a dollar
3053character, with a SYNTAX of @code{"."} (meaning punctuation syntax).
3054Assuming that the buffer syntax table specifies hash characters to
3055have comment start syntax, the element will only highlight hash
3056characters that do not follow dollar characters as comments
3057syntactically.
3058
3059An element of the form:
3060
3061@example
3062 ("\\('\\).\\('\\)"
3063 (1 "\"")
3064 (2 "\""))
3065@end example
3066
3067highlights syntactically both single quotes which surround a single
3068character, with a SYNTAX of @code{"\""} (meaning string quote syntax).
3069Assuming that the buffer syntax table does not specify single quotes
3070to have quote syntax, the element will only highlight single quotes of
3071the form @samp{'@var{c}'} as strings syntactically. Other forms, such
3072as @samp{foo'bar} or @samp{'fubar'}, will not be highlighted as
3073strings.
3074
3075Major modes normally set this variable with @var{other-vars} in
3076@code{font-lock-defaults}.
3077@end defvar
3078
3079@node Multiline Font Lock
3080@subsection Multiline Font Lock Constructs
3081@cindex multiline font lock
3082
3083 Normally, elements of @code{font-lock-keywords} should not match
3084across multiple lines; that doesn't work reliably, because Font Lock
3085usually scans just part of the buffer, and it can miss a multi-line
3086construct that crosses the line boundary where the scan starts. (The
3087scan normally starts at the beginning of a line.)
3088
3089 Making elements that match multiline constructs work properly has
3090two aspects: correct @emph{identification} and correct
3091@emph{rehighlighting}. The first means that Font Lock finds all
3092multiline constructs. The second means that Font Lock will correctly
3093rehighlight all the relevant text when a multiline construct is
3094changed---for example, if some of the text that was previously part of
3095a multiline construct ceases to be part of it. The two aspects are
3096closely related, and often getting one of them to work will appear to
3097make the other also work. However, for reliable results you must
3098attend explicitly to both aspects.
3099
3100 There are three ways to ensure correct identification of multiline
3101constructs:
3102
3103@itemize
3104@item
3105Add a function to @code{font-lock-extend-region-functions} that does
3106the @emph{identification} and extends the scan so that the scanned
3107text never starts or ends in the middle of a multiline construct.
3108@item
3109Use the @code{font-lock-fontify-region-function} hook similarly to
3110extend the scan so that the scanned text never starts or ends in the
3111middle of a multiline construct.
3112@item
3113Somehow identify the multiline construct right when it gets inserted
3114into the buffer (or at any point after that but before font-lock
3115tries to highlight it), and mark it with a @code{font-lock-multiline}
3116which will instruct font-lock not to start or end the scan in the
3117middle of the construct.
3118@end itemize
3119
3120 There are three ways to do rehighlighting of multiline constructs:
3121
3122@itemize
3123@item
3124Place a @code{font-lock-multiline} property on the construct. This
3125will rehighlight the whole construct if any part of it is changed. In
3126some cases you can do this automatically by setting the
3127@code{font-lock-multiline} variable, which see.
3128@item
3129Make sure @code{jit-lock-contextually} is set and rely on it doing its
3130job. This will only rehighlight the part of the construct that
3131follows the actual change, and will do it after a short delay.
3132This only works if the highlighting of the various parts of your
3133multiline construct never depends on text in subsequent lines.
3134Since @code{jit-lock-contextually} is activated by default, this can
3135be an attractive solution.
3136@item
3137Place a @code{jit-lock-defer-multiline} property on the construct.
3138This works only if @code{jit-lock-contextually} is used, and with the
3139same delay before rehighlighting, but like @code{font-lock-multiline},
3140it also handles the case where highlighting depends on
3141subsequent lines.
3142@end itemize
3143
3144@menu
fe42c16a 3145* Font Lock Multiline:: Marking multiline chunks with a text property.
b8d4c8d0
GM
3146* Region to Fontify:: Controlling which region gets refontified
3147 after a buffer change.
3148@end menu
3149
3150@node Font Lock Multiline
3151@subsubsection Font Lock Multiline
3152
3153 One way to ensure reliable rehighlighting of multiline Font Lock
3154constructs is to put on them the text property @code{font-lock-multiline}.
3155It should be present and non-@code{nil} for text that is part of a
3156multiline construct.
3157
3158 When Font Lock is about to highlight a range of text, it first
3159extends the boundaries of the range as necessary so that they do not
3160fall within text marked with the @code{font-lock-multiline} property.
3161Then it removes any @code{font-lock-multiline} properties from the
3162range, and highlights it. The highlighting specification (mostly
3163@code{font-lock-keywords}) must reinstall this property each time,
3164whenever it is appropriate.
3165
3166 @strong{Warning:} don't use the @code{font-lock-multiline} property
3167on large ranges of text, because that will make rehighlighting slow.
3168
3169@defvar font-lock-multiline
3170If the @code{font-lock-multiline} variable is set to @code{t}, Font
3171Lock will try to add the @code{font-lock-multiline} property
3172automatically on multiline constructs. This is not a universal
3173solution, however, since it slows down Font Lock somewhat. It can
3174miss some multiline constructs, or make the property larger or smaller
3175than necessary.
3176
3177For elements whose @var{matcher} is a function, the function should
3178ensure that submatch 0 covers the whole relevant multiline construct,
3179even if only a small subpart will be highlighted. It is often just as
3180easy to add the @code{font-lock-multiline} property by hand.
3181@end defvar
3182
3183 The @code{font-lock-multiline} property is meant to ensure proper
3184refontification; it does not automatically identify new multiline
3185constructs. Identifying the requires that Font-Lock operate on large
3186enough chunks at a time. This will happen by accident on many cases,
3187which may give the impression that multiline constructs magically work.
3188If you set the @code{font-lock-multiline} variable non-@code{nil},
3189this impression will be even stronger, since the highlighting of those
3190constructs which are found will be properly updated from then on.
3191But that does not work reliably.
3192
3193 To find multiline constructs reliably, you must either manually
3194place the @code{font-lock-multiline} property on the text before
3195Font-Lock looks at it, or use
3196@code{font-lock-fontify-region-function}.
3197
3198@node Region to Fontify
3199@subsubsection Region to Fontify after a Buffer Change
3200
3201 When a buffer is changed, the region that Font Lock refontifies is
3202by default the smallest sequence of whole lines that spans the change.
3203While this works well most of the time, sometimes it doesn't---for
3204example, when a change alters the syntactic meaning of text on an
3205earlier line.
3206
3207 You can enlarge (or even reduce) the region to fontify by setting
e6dc6206 3208the following variable:
b8d4c8d0
GM
3209
3210@defvar font-lock-extend-after-change-region-function
3211This buffer-local variable is either @code{nil} or a function for
3212Font-Lock to call to determine the region to scan and fontify.
3213
3214The function is given three parameters, the standard @var{beg},
3215@var{end}, and @var{old-len} from after-change-functions
3216(@pxref{Change Hooks}). It should return either a cons of the
3217beginning and end buffer positions (in that order) of the region to
3218fontify, or @code{nil} (which means choose the region in the standard
3219way). This function needs to preserve point, the match-data, and the
3220current restriction. The region it returns may start or end in the
3221middle of a line.
3222
3223Since this function is called after every buffer change, it should be
3224reasonably fast.
3225@end defvar
3226
5dcb4c4e
SM
3227@node Auto-Indentation
3228@section Auto-indention of code
3229
3230For programming languages, an important feature of a major mode is to
3231provide automatic indentation. This is controlled in Emacs by
3232@code{indent-line-function} (@pxref{Mode-Specific Indent}).
3233Writing a good indentation function can be difficult and to a large
3234extent it is still a black art.
3235
3236Many major mode authors will start by writing a simple indentation
3237function that works for simple cases, for example by comparing with the
3238indentation of the previous text line. For most programming languages
3239that are not really line-based, this tends to scale very poorly:
3240improving such a function to let it handle more diverse situations tends
3241to become more and more difficult, resulting in the end with a large,
3242complex, unmaintainable indentation function which nobody dares to touch.
3243
3244A good indentation function will usually need to actually parse the
3245text, according to the syntax of the language. Luckily, it is not
3246necessary to parse the text in as much detail as would be needed
3247for a compiler, but on the other hand, the parser embedded in the
3248indentation code will want to be somewhat friendly to syntactically
3249incorrect code.
3250
3251Good maintainable indentation functions usually fall into 2 categories:
3252either parsing forward from some ``safe'' starting point until the
3253position of interest, or parsing backward from the position of interest.
3254Neither of the two is a clearly better choice than the other: parsing
3255backward is often more difficult than parsing forward because
3256programming languages are designed to be parsed forward, but for the
3257purpose of indentation it has the advantage of not needing to
3258guess a ``safe'' starting point, and it generally enjoys the property
3259that only a minimum of text will be analyzed to decide the indentation
3260of a line, so indentation will tend to be unaffected by syntax errors in
3261some earlier unrelated piece of code. Parsing forward on the other hand
3262is usually easier and has the advantage of making it possible to
3263reindent efficiently a whole region at a time, with a single parse.
3264
3265Rather than write your own indentation function from scratch, it is
3266often preferable to try and reuse some existing ones or to rely
3267on a generic indentation engine. There are sadly few such
3268engines. The CC-mode indentation code (used with C, C++, Java, Awk
3269and a few other such modes) has been made more generic over the years,
3270so if your language seems somewhat similar to one of those languages,
3271you might try to use that engine. @c FIXME: documentation?
3272Another one is SMIE which takes an approach in the spirit
3273of Lisp sexps and adapts it to non-Lisp languages.
3274
3275@menu
3276* SMIE:: A simple minded indentation engine
3277@end menu
3278
3279@node SMIE
3280@subsection Simple Minded Indentation Engine
3281
3282SMIE is a package that provides a generic navigation and indentation
3283engine. Based on a very simple parser using an ``operator precedence
3284grammar'', it lets major modes extend the sexp-based navigation of Lisp
3285to non-Lisp languages as well as provide a simple to use but reliable
3286auto-indentation.
3287
3288Operator precedence grammar is a very primitive technology for parsing
3289compared to some of the more common techniques used in compilers.
3290It has the following characteristics: its parsing power is very limited,
3291and it is largely unable to detect syntax errors, but it has the
3292advantage of being algorithmically efficient and able to parse forward
3293just as well as backward. In practice that means that SMIE can use it
3294for indentation based on backward parsing, that it can provide both
3295@code{forward-sexp} and @code{backward-sexp} functionality, and that it
3296will naturally work on syntactically incorrect code without any extra
3297effort. The downside is that it also means that most programming
3298languages cannot be parsed correctly using SMIE, at least not without
3299resorting to some special tricks (@pxref{SMIE Tricks}).
3300
3301@menu
3302* SMIE setup:: SMIE setup and features
3303* Operator Precedence Grammars:: A very simple parsing technique
3304* SMIE Grammar:: Defining the grammar of a language
3305* SMIE Lexer:: Defining tokens
3306* SMIE Tricks:: Working around the parser's limitations
3307* SMIE Indentation:: Specifying indentation rules
3308* SMIE Indentation Helpers:: Helper functions for indentation rules
3309* SMIE Indentation Example:: Sample indentation rules
3310@end menu
3311
3312@node SMIE setup
3313@subsubsection SMIE Setup and Features
3314
3315SMIE is meant to be a one-stop shop for structural navigation and
3316various other features which rely on the syntactic structure of code, in
3317particular automatic indentation. The main entry point is
3318@code{smie-setup} which is a function typically called while setting
3319up a major mode.
3320
3321@defun smie-setup grammar rules-function &rest keywords
3322Setup SMIE navigation and indentation.
3323@var{grammar} is a grammar table generated by @code{smie-prec2->grammar}.
3324@var{rules-function} is a set of indentation rules for use on
3325@code{smie-rules-function}.
3326@var{keywords} are additional arguments, which can include the following
3327keywords:
3328@itemize
3329@item
3330@code{:forward-token} @var{fun}: Specify the forward lexer to use.
3331@item
3332@code{:backward-token} @var{fun}: Specify the backward lexer to use.
3333@end itemize
3334@end defun
3335
3336Calling this function is sufficient to make commands such as
3337@code{forward-sexp}, @code{backward-sexp}, and @code{transpose-sexps} be
3338able to properly handle structural elements other than just the paired
3339parentheses already handled by syntax tables. For example, if the
3340provided grammar is precise enough, @code{transpose-sexps} can correctly
3341transpose the two arguments of a @code{+} operator, taking into account
3342the precedence rules of the language.
3343
3344Calling `smie-setup' is also sufficient to make TAB indentation work in
3345the expected way, and provides some commands that you can bind in the
3346major mode keymap.
3347
3348@deffn Command smie-close-block
3349This command closes the most recently opened (and not yet closed) block.
3350@end deffn
3351
3352@deffn Command smie-down-list &optional arg
3353This command is like @code{down-list} but it also pays attention to
3354nesting of tokens other than parentheses, such as @code{begin...end}.
3355@end deffn
3356
3357@node Operator Precedence Grammars
3358@subsubsection Operator Precedence Grammars
3359
3360SMIE's precedence grammars simply give to each token a pair of
3361precedences: the left-precedence and the right-precedence. We say
3362@code{T1 < T2} if the right-precedence of token @code{T1} is less than
3363the left-precedence of token @code{T2}. A good way to read this
3364@code{<} is as a kind of parenthesis: if we find @code{... T1 something
3365T2 ...} then that should be parsed as @code{... T1 (something T2 ...}
3366rather than as @code{... T1 something) T2 ...}. The latter
3367interpretation would be the case if we had @code{T1 > T2}. If we have
3368@code{T1 = T2}, it means that token T2 follows token T1 in the same
3369syntactic construction, so typically we have @code{"begin" = "end"}.
3370Such pairs of precedences are sufficient to express left-associativity
3371or right-associativity of infix operators, nesting of tokens like
3372parentheses and many other cases.
3373
3374@c ¡Let's leave this undocumented to leave it more open for change!
3375@c @defvar smie-grammar
3376@c The value of this variable is an alist specifying the left and right
3377@c precedence of each token. It is meant to be initialized by using one of
3378@c the functions below.
3379@c @end defvar
3380
3381@defun smie-prec2->grammar table
3382This function takes a @emph{prec2} grammar @var{table} and returns an
3383alist suitable for use in @code{smie-setup}. The @emph{prec2}
3384@var{table} is itself meant to be built by one of the functions below.
3385@end defun
3386
3387@defun smie-merge-prec2s &rest tables
3388This function takes several @emph{prec2} @var{tables} and merges them
3389into a new @emph{prec2} table.
3390@end defun
3391
3392@defun smie-precs->prec2 precs
3393This function builds a @emph{prec2} table from a table of precedences
3394@var{precs}. @var{precs} should be a list, sorted by precedence (for
3395example @code{"+"} will come before @code{"*"}), of elements of the form
3396@code{(@var{assoc} @var{op} ...)}, where each @var{op} is a token that
3397acts as an operator; @var{assoc} is their associativity, which can be
3398either @code{left}, @code{right}, @code{assoc}, or @code{nonassoc}.
3399All operators in a given element share the same precedence level
3400and associativity.
3401@end defun
3402
3403@defun smie-bnf->prec2 bnf &rest resolvers
3404This function lets you specify the grammar using a BNF notation.
3405It accepts a @var{bnf} description of the grammar along with a set of
3406conflict resolution rules @var{resolvers}, and
3407returns a @emph{prec2} table.
3408
3409@var{bnf} is a list of nonterminal definitions of the form
3410@code{(@var{nonterm} @var{rhs1} @var{rhs2} ...)} where each @var{rhs}
3411is a (non-empty) list of terminals (aka tokens) or non-terminals.
3412
3413Not all grammars are accepted:
3414@itemize
3415@item
3416An @var{rhs} cannot be an empty list (an empty list is never needed,
3417since SMIE allows all non-terminals to match the empty string anyway).
3418@item
3419An @var{rhs} cannot have 2 consecutive non-terminals: each pair of
3420non-terminals needs to be separated by a terminal (aka token).
3421This is a fundamental limitation of operator precedence grammars.
3422@end itemize
3423
3424Additionally, conflicts can occur:
3425@itemize
3426@item
3427The returned @emph{prec2} table holds constraints between pairs of tokens, and
3428for any given pair only one constraint can be present: T1 < T2,
3429T1 = T2, or T1 > T2.
3430@item
3431A token can be an @code{opener} (something similar to an open-paren),
3432a @code{closer} (like a close-paren), or @code{neither} of the two
3433(e.g. an infix operator, or an inner token like @code{"else"}).
3434@end itemize
3435
3436Precedence conflicts can be resolved via @var{resolvers}, which
3437is a list of @emph{precs} tables (see @code{smie-precs->prec2}): for
3438each precedence conflict, if those @code{precs} tables
3439specify a particular constraint, then the conflict is resolved by using
3440this constraint instead, else a conflict is reported and one of the
3441conflicting constraints is picked arbitrarily and the others are
3442simply ignored.
3443@end defun
3444
3445@node SMIE Grammar
3446@subsubsection Defining the Grammar of a Language
3447
3448The usual way to define the SMIE grammar of a language is by
3449defining a new global variable that holds the precedence table by
3450giving a set of BNF rules.
3451For example, the grammar definition for a small Pascal-like language
3452could look like:
3453@example
3454@group
3455(require 'smie)
3456(defvar sample-smie-grammar
3457 (smie-prec2->grammar
3458 (smie-bnf->prec2
3459@end group
3460@group
3461 '((id)
3462 (inst ("begin" insts "end")
3463 ("if" exp "then" inst "else" inst)
3464 (id ":=" exp)
3465 (exp))
3466 (insts (insts ";" insts) (inst))
3467 (exp (exp "+" exp)
3468 (exp "*" exp)
3469 ("(" exps ")"))
3470 (exps (exps "," exps) (exp)))
3471@end group
3472@group
3473 '((assoc ";"))
3474 '((assoc ","))
3475 '((assoc "+") (assoc "*")))))
3476@end group
3477@end example
3478
3479@noindent
3480A few things to note:
3481
3482@itemize
3483@item
3484The above grammar does not explicitly mention the syntax of function
3485calls: SMIE will automatically allow any sequence of sexps, such as
3486identifiers, balanced parentheses, or @code{begin ... end} blocks
3487to appear anywhere anyway.
3488@item
3489The grammar category @code{id} has no right hand side: this does not
3490mean that it can match only the empty string, since as mentioned any
3491sequence of sexps can appear anywhere anyway.
3492@item
3493Because non terminals cannot appear consecutively in the BNF grammar, it
3494is difficult to correctly handle tokens that act as terminators, so the
3495above grammar treats @code{";"} as a statement @emph{separator} instead,
3496which SMIE can handle very well.
3497@item
3498Separators used in sequences (such as @code{","} and @code{";"} above)
3499are best defined with BNF rules such as @code{(foo (foo "separator" foo) ...)}
3500which generate precedence conflicts which are then resolved by giving
3501them an explicit @code{(assoc "separator")}.
3502@item
3503The @code{("(" exps ")")} rule was not needed to pair up parens, since
3504SMIE will pair up any characters that are marked as having paren syntax
3505in the syntax table. What this rule does instead (together with the
3506definition of @code{exps}) is to make it clear that @code{","} should
3507not appear outside of parentheses.
3508@item
3509Rather than have a single @emph{precs} table to resolve conflicts, it is
3510preferable to have several tables, so as to let the BNF part of the
3511grammar specify relative precedences where possible.
3512@item
3513Unless there is a very good reason to prefer @code{left} or
3514@code{right}, it is usually preferable to mark operators as associative,
3515using @code{assoc}. For that reason @code{"+"} and @code{"*"} are
3516defined above as @code{assoc}, although the language defines them
3517formally as left associative.
3518@end itemize
3519
3520@node SMIE Lexer
3521@subsubsection Defining Tokens
3522
3523SMIE comes with a predefined lexical analyzer which uses syntax tables
3524in the following way: any sequence of characters that have word or
3525symbol syntax is considered a token, and so is any sequence of
3526characters that have punctuation syntax. This default lexer is
3527often a good starting point but is rarely actually correct for any given
3528language. For example, it will consider @code{"2,+3"} to be composed
3529of 3 tokens: @code{"2"}, @code{",+"}, and @code{"3"}.
3530
3531To describe the lexing rules of your language to SMIE, you need
35322 functions, one to fetch the next token, and another to fetch the
3533previous token. Those functions will usually first skip whitespace and
3534comments and then look at the next chunk of text to see if it
3535is a special token. If so it should skip the token and
3536return a description of this token. Usually this is simply the string
3537extracted from the buffer, but it can be anything you want.
3538For example:
3539@example
3540@group
3541(defvar sample-keywords-regexp
3542 (regexp-opt '("+" "*" "," ";" ">" ">=" "<" "<=" ":=" "=")))
3543@end group
3544@group
3545(defun sample-smie-forward-token ()
3546 (forward-comment (point-max))
3547 (cond
3548 ((looking-at sample-keywords-regexp)
3549 (goto-char (match-end 0))
3550 (match-string-no-properties 0))
3551 (t (buffer-substring-no-properties
3552 (point)
3553 (progn (skip-syntax-forward "w_")
3554 (point))))))
3555@end group
3556@group
3557(defun sample-smie-backward-token ()
3558 (forward-comment (- (point)))
3559 (cond
3560 ((looking-back sample-keywords-regexp (- (point) 2) t)
3561 (goto-char (match-beginning 0))
3562 (match-string-no-properties 0))
3563 (t (buffer-substring-no-properties
3564 (point)
3565 (progn (skip-syntax-backward "w_")
3566 (point))))))
3567@end group
3568@end example
3569
3570Notice how those lexers return the empty string when in front of
3571parentheses. This is because SMIE automatically takes care of the
3572parentheses defined in the syntax table. More specifically if the lexer
3573returns nil or an empty string, SMIE tries to handle the corresponding
3574text as a sexp according to syntax tables.
3575
3576@node SMIE Tricks
3577@subsubsection Living With a Weak Parser
3578
3579The parsing technique used by SMIE does not allow tokens to behave
3580differently in different contexts. For most programming languages, this
3581manifests itself by precedence conflicts when converting the
3582BNF grammar.
3583
3584Sometimes, those conflicts can be worked around by expressing the
3585grammar slightly differently. For example, for Modula-2 it might seem
3586natural to have a BNF grammar that looks like this:
3587
3588@example
3589 ...
3590 (inst ("IF" exp "THEN" insts "ELSE" insts "END")
3591 ("CASE" exp "OF" cases "END")
3592 ...)
3593 (cases (cases "|" cases) (caselabel ":" insts) ("ELSE" insts))
3594 ...
3595@end example
3596
3597But this will create conflicts for @code{"ELSE"}: on the one hand, the
3598IF rule implies (among many other things) that @code{"ELSE" = "END"};
3599but on the other hand, since @code{"ELSE"} appears within @code{cases},
3600which appears left of @code{"END"}, we also have @code{"ELSE" > "END"}.
3601We can solve the conflict either by using:
3602@example
3603 ...
3604 (inst ("IF" exp "THEN" insts "ELSE" insts "END")
3605 ("CASE" exp "OF" cases "END")
3606 ("CASE" exp "OF" cases "ELSE" insts "END")
3607 ...)
3608 (cases (cases "|" cases) (caselabel ":" insts))
3609 ...
3610@end example
3611or
3612@example
3613 ...
3614 (inst ("IF" exp "THEN" else "END")
3615 ("CASE" exp "OF" cases "END")
3616 ...)
3617 (else (insts "ELSE" insts))
3618 (cases (cases "|" cases) (caselabel ":" insts) (else))
3619 ...
3620@end example
3621
3622Reworking the grammar to try and solve conflicts has its downsides, tho,
3623because SMIE assumes that the grammar reflects the logical structure of
3624the code, so it is preferable to keep the BNF closer to the intended
3625abstract syntax tree.
3626
3627Other times, after careful consideration you may conclude that those
3628conflicts are not serious and simply resolve them via the
3629@var{resolvers} argument of @code{smie-bnf->prec2}. Usually this is
3630because the grammar is simply ambiguous: the conflict does not affect
3631the set of programs described by the grammar, but only the way those
3632programs are parsed. This is typically the case for separators and
3633associative infix operators, where you want to add a resolver like
3634@code{'((assoc "|"))}. Another case where this can happen is for the
3635classic @emph{dangling else} problem, where you will use @code{'((assoc
3636"else" "then"))}. It can also happen for cases where the conflict is
3637real and cannot really be resolved, but it is unlikely to pose a problem
3638in practice.
3639
3640Finally, in many cases some conflicts will remain despite all efforts to
3641restructure the grammar. Do not despair: while the parser cannot be
3642made more clever, you can make the lexer as smart as you want. So, the
3643solution is then to look at the tokens involved in the conflict and to
3644split one of those tokens into 2 (or more) different tokens. E.g. if
3645the grammar needs to distinguish between two incompatible uses of the
3646token @code{"begin"}, make the lexer return different tokens (say
3647@code{"begin-fun"} and @code{"begin-plain"}) depending on which kind of
3648@code{"begin"} it finds. This pushes the work of distinguishing the
3649different cases to the lexer, which will thus have to look at the
3650surrounding text to find ad-hoc clues.
3651
3652@node SMIE Indentation
3653@subsubsection Specifying Indentation Rules
3654
3655Based on the provided grammar, SMIE will be able to provide automatic
3656indentation without any extra effort. But in practice, this default
3657indentation style will probably not be good enough. You will want to
3658tweak it in many different cases.
3659
3660SMIE indentation is based on the idea that indentation rules should be
3661as local as possible. To this end, it relies on the idea of
3662@emph{virtual} indentation, which is the indentation that a particular
3663program point would have if it were at the beginning of a line.
3664Of course, if that program point is indeed at the beginning of a line,
3665its virtual indentation is its current indentation. But if not, then
3666SMIE uses the indentation algorithm to compute the virtual indentation
3667of that point. Now in practice, the virtual indentation of a program
3668point does not have to be identical to the indentation it would have if
3669we inserted a newline before it. To see how this works, the SMIE rule
3670for indentation after a @code{@{} in C does not care whether the
3671@code{@{} is standing on a line of its own or is at the end of the
3672preceding line. Instead, these different cases are handled in the
3673indentation rule that decides how to indent before a @code{@{}.
3674
3675Another important concept is the notion of @emph{parent}: The
3676@emph{parent} of a token, is the head token of the nearest enclosing
3677syntactic construct. For example, the parent of an @code{else} is the
3678@code{if} to which it belongs, and the parent of an @code{if}, in turn,
3679is the lead token of the surrounding construct. The command
3680@code{backward-sexp} jumps from a token to its parent, but there are
3681some caveats: for @emph{openers} (tokens which start a construct, like
3682@code{if}), you need to start with point before the token, while for
3683others you need to start with point after the token.
3684@code{backward-sexp} stops with point before the parent token if that is
3685the @emph{opener} of the token of interest, and otherwise it stops with
3686point after the parent token.
3687
3688SMIE indentation rules are specified using a function that takes two
3689arguments @var{method} and @var{arg} where the meaning of @var{arg} and the
3690expected return value depend on @var{method}.
3691
3692@var{method} can be:
3693@itemize
3694@item
3695@code{:after}, in which case @var{arg} is a token and the function
3696should return the @var{offset} to use for indentation after @var{arg}.
3697@item
3698@code{:before}, in which case @var{arg} is a token and the function
3699should return the @var{offset} to use to indent @var{arg} itself.
3700@item
3701@code{:elem}, in which case the function should return either the offset
3702to use to indent function arguments (if @var{arg} is the symbol
3703@code{arg}) or the basic indentation step (if @var{arg} is the symbol
3704@code{basic}).
3705@item
3706@code{:list-intro}, in which case @var{arg} is a token and the function
3707should return non-@code{nil} if the token is followed by a list of
3708expressions (not separated by any token) rather than an expression.
3709@end itemize
3710
3711When @var{arg} is a token, the function is called with point just before
3712that token. A return value of nil always means to fallback on the
3713default behavior, so the function should return nil for arguments it
3714does not expect.
3715
3716@var{offset} can be:
3717@itemize
3718@item
3719@code{nil}: use the default indentation rule.
3720@item
3721@code{(column . @var{column})}: indent to column @var{column}.
3722@item
3723@var{number}: offset by @var{number}, relative to a base token which is
3724the current token for @code{:after} and its parent for @code{:before}.
3725@end itemize
3726
3727@node SMIE Indentation Helpers
3728@subsubsection Helper Functions for Indentation Rules
3729
3730SMIE provides various functions designed specifically for use in the
3731indentation rules function (several of those functions break if used in
3732another context). These functions all start with the prefix
3733@code{smie-rule-}.
3734
3735@defun smie-rule-bolp
3736Return non-@code{nil} if the current token is the first on the line.
3737@end defun
3738
3739@defun smie-rule-hanging-p
3740Return non-@code{nil} if the current token is @emph{hanging}.
3741A token is @emph{hanging} if it is the last token on the line
3742and if it is preceded by other tokens: a lone token on a line is not
3743hanging.
3744@end defun
3745
3746@defun smie-rule-next-p &rest tokens
3747Return non-@code{nil} if the next token is among @var{tokens}.
3748@end defun
3749
3750@defun smie-rule-prev-p &rest tokens
3751Return non-@code{nil} if the previous token is among @var{tokens}.
3752@end defun
3753
3754@defun smie-rule-parent-p &rest parents
3755Return non-@code{nil} if the current token's parent is among @var{parents}.
3756@end defun
3757
3758@defun smie-rule-sibling-p
3759Return non-nil if the current token's parent is actually a sibling.
3760This is the case for example when the parent of a @code{","} is just the
3761previous @code{","}.
3762@end defun
3763
3764@defun smie-rule-parent &optional offset
3765Return the proper offset to align the current token with the parent.
3766If non-@code{nil}, @var{offset} should be an integer giving an
3767additional offset to apply.
3768@end defun
3769
3770@defun smie-rule-separator method
3771Indent current token as a @emph{separator}.
3772
3773By @emph{separator}, we mean here a token whose sole purpose is to
3774separate various elements within some enclosing syntactic construct, and
3775which does not have any semantic significance in itself (i.e. it would
3776typically not exist as a node in an abstract syntax tree).
3777
3778Such a token is expected to have an associative syntax and be closely
3779tied to its syntactic parent. Typical examples are @code{","} in lists
3780of arguments (enclosed inside parentheses), or @code{";"} in sequences
3781of instructions (enclosed in a @code{@{...@}} or @code{begin...end}
3782block).
3783
3784@var{method} should be the method name that was passed to
3785`smie-rules-function'.
3786@end defun
3787
3788@node SMIE Indentation Example
3789@subsubsection Sample Indentation Rules
3790
3791Here is an example of an indentation function:
3792
3793@example
3794(eval-when-compile (require 'cl)) ;For the `case' macro.
3795(defun sample-smie-rules (kind token)
3796 (case kind
3797 (:elem (case token
3798 (basic sample-indent-basic)))
3799 (:after
3800 (cond
3801 ((equal token ",") (smie-rule-separator kind))
3802 ((equal token ":=") sample-indent-basic)))
3803 (:before
3804 (cond
3805 ((equal token ",") (smie-rule-separator kind))
3806 ((member token '("begin" "(" "@{"))
3807 (if (smie-rule-hanging-p) (smie-rule-parent)))
3808 ((equal token "if")
3809 (and (not (smie-rule-bolp)) (smie-rule-prev-p "else")
3810 (smie-rule-parent)))))))
3811@end example
3812
3813@noindent
3814A few things to note:
3815
3816@itemize
3817@item
3818The first case indicates the basic indentation increment to use.
3819If @code{sample-indent-basic} is nil, then SMIE uses the global
3820setting @code{smie-indent-basic}. The major mode could have set
3821@code{smie-indent-basic} buffer-locally instead, but that
3822is discouraged.
3823
3824@item
3825The two (identical) rules for the token @code{","} make SMIE try to be
3826more clever when the comma separator is placed at the beginning of
3827lines. It tries to outdent the separator so as to align the code after
3828the comma; for example:
3829
3830@example
3831x = longfunctionname (
3832 arg1
3833 , arg2
3834 );
3835@end example
3836
3837@item
3838The rule for indentation after @code{":="} exists because otherwise
3839SMIE would treat @code{":="} as an infix operator and would align the
3840right argument with the left one.
3841
3842@item
3843The rule for indentation before @code{"begin"} is an example of the use
3844of virtual indentation: This rule is used only when @code{"begin"} is
3845hanging, which can happen only when @code{"begin"} is not at the
3846beginning of a line. So this is not used when indenting
3847@code{"begin"} itself but only when indenting something relative to this
3848@code{"begin"}. Concretely, this rule changes the indentation from:
3849
3850@example
3851 if x > 0 then begin
3852 dosomething(x);
3853 end
3854@end example
3855to
3856@example
3857 if x > 0 then begin
3858 dosomething(x);
3859 end
3860@end example
3861
3862@item
3863The rule for indentation before @code{"if"} is similar to the one for
3864@code{"begin"}, but where the purpose is to treat @code{"else if"}
3865as a single unit, so as to align a sequence of tests rather than indent
3866each test further to the right. This function does this only in the
3867case where the @code{"if"} is not placed on a separate line, hence the
3868@code{smie-rule-bolp} test.
3869
3870If we know that the @code{"else"} is always aligned with its @code{"if"}
3871and is always at the beginning of a line, we can use a more efficient
3872rule:
3873@example
3874((equal token "if")
3875 (and (not (smie-rule-bolp)) (smie-rule-prev-p "else")
3876 (save-excursion
3877 (sample-smie-backward-token) ;Jump before the "else".
3878 (cons 'column (current-column)))))
3879@end example
3880
3881The advantage of this formulation is that it reuses the indentation of
3882the previous @code{"else"}, rather than going all the way back to the
3883first @code{"if"} of the sequence.
3884@end itemize
3885
b8d4c8d0
GM
3886@node Desktop Save Mode
3887@section Desktop Save Mode
3888@cindex desktop save mode
3889
3890@dfn{Desktop Save Mode} is a feature to save the state of Emacs from
3891one session to another. The user-level commands for using Desktop
3892Save Mode are described in the GNU Emacs Manual (@pxref{Saving Emacs
3893Sessions,,, emacs, the GNU Emacs Manual}). Modes whose buffers visit
3894a file, don't have to do anything to use this feature.
3895
3896For buffers not visiting a file to have their state saved, the major
3897mode must bind the buffer local variable @code{desktop-save-buffer} to
3898a non-@code{nil} value.
3899
3900@defvar desktop-save-buffer
3901If this buffer-local variable is non-@code{nil}, the buffer will have
3902its state saved in the desktop file at desktop save. If the value is
3903a function, it is called at desktop save with argument
3904@var{desktop-dirname}, and its value is saved in the desktop file along
3905with the state of the buffer for which it was called. When file names
3906are returned as part of the auxiliary information, they should be
3907formatted using the call
3908
3909@example
3910(desktop-file-name @var{file-name} @var{desktop-dirname})
3911@end example
3912
3913@end defvar
3914
3915For buffers not visiting a file to be restored, the major mode must
3916define a function to do the job, and that function must be listed in
3917the alist @code{desktop-buffer-mode-handlers}.
3918
3919@defvar desktop-buffer-mode-handlers
3920Alist with elements
3921
3922@example
3923(@var{major-mode} . @var{restore-buffer-function})
3924@end example
3925
3926The function @var{restore-buffer-function} will be called with
3927argument list
3928
3929@example
3930(@var{buffer-file-name} @var{buffer-name} @var{desktop-buffer-misc})
3931@end example
3932
3933and it should return the restored buffer.
3934Here @var{desktop-buffer-misc} is the value returned by the function
3935optionally bound to @code{desktop-save-buffer}.
3936@end defvar
3937
3938@ignore
769741e3
SM
3939 Local Variables:
3940 fill-column: 72
3941 End:
b8d4c8d0 3942@end ignore