Use Cweb, not bison as an example of etags using #line.
[bpt/emacs.git] / man / maintaining.texi
1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985,86,87,93,94,95,97,99,00,2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
4 @node Maintaining, Abbrevs, Building, Top
5 @chapter Maintaining Programs
6 @cindex Lisp editing
7 @cindex C editing
8 @cindex program editing
9
10 This chapter describes Emacs features for maintaining programs. The
11 version control features (@pxref{Version Control}) are also
12 particularly useful for this purpose.
13
14 @menu
15 * Change Log:: Maintaining a change history for your program.
16 * Tags:: Go direct to any function in your program in one
17 command. Tags remembers which file it is in.
18 * Emerge:: A convenient way of merging two versions of a program.
19 @end menu
20
21 @node Change Log
22 @section Change Logs
23
24 @cindex change log
25 @kindex C-x 4 a
26 @findex add-change-log-entry-other-window
27 The Emacs command @kbd{C-x 4 a} adds a new entry to the change log
28 file for the file you are editing
29 (@code{add-change-log-entry-other-window}). If that file is actually
30 a backup file, it makes an entry appropriate for the file's
31 parent---that is useful for making log entries for functions that
32 have been deleted in the current version.
33
34 A change log file contains a chronological record of when and why you
35 have changed a program, consisting of a sequence of entries describing
36 individual changes. Normally it is kept in a file called
37 @file{ChangeLog} in the same directory as the file you are editing, or
38 one of its parent directories. A single @file{ChangeLog} file can
39 record changes for all the files in its directory and all its
40 subdirectories.
41
42 You should put a copyright notice and permission notice at the
43 end of the change log file. Here is an example:
44
45 @example
46 Copyright 1997, 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
47 Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are
48 permitted provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved.
49 @end example
50
51 @noindent
52 Of course, you should substitute the proper years and copyright holder.
53
54 A change log entry starts with a header line that contains the
55 current date, your name, and your email address (taken from the
56 variable @code{user-mail-address}). Aside from these header lines,
57 every line in the change log starts with a space or a tab. The bulk
58 of the entry consists of @dfn{items}, each of which starts with a line
59 starting with whitespace and a star. Here are two entries, both dated
60 in May 1993, each with two items:
61
62 @iftex
63 @medbreak
64 @end iftex
65 @smallexample
66 1993-05-25 Richard Stallman <rms@@gnu.org>
67
68 * man.el: Rename symbols `man-*' to `Man-*'.
69 (manual-entry): Make prompt string clearer.
70
71 * simple.el (blink-matching-paren-distance):
72 Change default to 12,000.
73
74 1993-05-24 Richard Stallman <rms@@gnu.org>
75
76 * vc.el (minor-mode-map-alist): Don't use it if it's void.
77 (vc-cancel-version): Doc fix.
78 @end smallexample
79
80 One entry can describe several changes; each change should have its
81 own item. Normally there should be a blank line between items. When
82 items are related (parts of the same change, in different places), group
83 them by leaving no blank line between them. The second entry above
84 contains two items grouped in this way.
85
86 @kbd{C-x 4 a} visits the change log file and creates a new entry
87 unless the most recent entry is for today's date and your name. It
88 also creates a new item for the current file. For many languages, it
89 can even guess the name of the function or other object that was
90 changed.
91
92 @vindex add-log-keep-changes-together
93 When the option @code{add-log-keep-changes-together} is
94 non-@code{nil}, @kbd{C-x 4 a} adds to any existing entry for the file
95 rather than starting a new entry.
96
97 @vindex change-log-version-info-enabled
98 @vindex change-log-version-number-regexp-list
99 @cindex file version in change log entries
100 If the value of the variable @code{change-log-version-info-enabled}
101 is non-@code{nil}, @kbd{C-x 4 a} adds the file's version number to the
102 change log entry. It finds the version number by searching the first
103 ten percent of the file, using regular expressions from the variable
104 @code{change-log-version-number-regexp-list}.
105
106 @cindex Change Log mode
107 @findex change-log-mode
108 The change log file is visited in Change Log mode. In this major
109 mode, each bunch of grouped items counts as one paragraph, and each
110 entry is considered a page. This facilitates editing the entries.
111 @kbd{C-j} and auto-fill indent each new line like the previous line;
112 this is convenient for entering the contents of an entry.
113
114 @findex change-log-merge
115 You can use the command @kbd{M-x change-log-merge} to merge other
116 log files into a buffer in Change Log Mode, preserving the date
117 ordering of entries.
118
119 @findex change-log-redate
120 @cindex converting change log date style
121 Versions of Emacs before 20.1 used a different format for the time of
122 the change log entry:
123
124 @smallexample
125 Fri May 25 11:23:23 1993 Richard Stallman <rms@@gnu.org>
126 @end smallexample
127
128 @noindent
129 The @kbd{M-x change-log-redate} command converts all the old-style
130 date entries in the change log file visited in the current buffer to
131 the new format, to make the file uniform in style. This is handy when
132 entries are contributed by many different people, some of whom use old
133 versions of Emacs.
134
135 Version control systems are another way to keep track of changes in your
136 program and keep a change log. @xref{Log Buffer}.
137
138 @ignore
139 @c This is commented out because the command is specific
140 @c to maintenance of Emacs itself.
141
142 @node Authors
143 @section @file{AUTHORS} files
144 @cindex @file{AUTHORS} file
145
146 Programs which have many contributors usually include a file named
147 @file{AUTHORS} in their distribution, which lists the individual
148 contributions. Emacs has a special command for maintaining the
149 @file{AUTHORS} file that is part of the Emacs distribution.
150
151 @findex authors
152 The @kbd{M-x authors} command prompts for the name of the root of the
153 Emacs source directory. It then scans @file{ChangeLog} files and Lisp
154 source files under that directory for information about authors of
155 individual packages, and people who made changes in source files, and
156 puts the information it gleans into a buffer named @samp{*Authors*}.
157 You can then edit the contents of that buffer and merge it with the
158 existing @file{AUTHORS} file.
159
160 Do not assume that this command finds all the contributors; don't
161 assume that a person not listed in the output was not a contributor.
162 If you merged in someone's contribution and did not put his name
163 in the change log, he won't show up in @kbd{M-x authors} either.
164 @end ignore
165
166 @node Tags
167 @section Tags Tables
168 @cindex tags table
169
170 A @dfn{tags table} is a description of how a multi-file program is
171 broken up into files. It lists the names of the component files and the
172 names and positions of the functions (or other named subunits) in each
173 file. Grouping the related files makes it possible to search or replace
174 through all the files with one command. Recording the function names
175 and positions makes possible the @kbd{M-.} command which finds the
176 definition of a function by looking up which of the files it is in.
177
178 Tags tables are stored in files called @dfn{tags table files}. The
179 conventional name for a tags table file is @file{TAGS}.
180
181 Each entry in the tags table records the name of one tag, the name of the
182 file that the tag is defined in (implicitly), and the position in that
183 file of the tag's definition. When a file parsed by @code{etags} is
184 generated from a different source file, like a C file generated from a
185 Cweb source file, the tags of the parsed file reference the source
186 file.
187
188 Just what names from the described files are recorded in the tags table
189 depends on the programming language of the described file. They
190 normally include all file names, functions and subroutines, and may
191 also include global variables, data types, and anything else
192 convenient. Each name recorded is called a @dfn{tag}.
193
194 @cindex C++ class browser, tags
195 @cindex tags, C++
196 @cindex class browser, C++
197 @cindex Ebrowse
198 See also the Ebrowse facility, which is tailored for C++.
199 @xref{Top,, Ebrowse, ebrowse, Ebrowse User's Manual}.
200
201 @menu
202 * Tag Syntax:: Tag syntax for various types of code and text files.
203 * Create Tags Table:: Creating a tags table with @code{etags}.
204 * Etags Regexps:: Create arbitrary tags using regular expressions.
205 * Select Tags Table:: How to visit a tags table.
206 * Find Tag:: Commands to find the definition of a specific tag.
207 * Tags Search:: Using a tags table for searching and replacing.
208 * List Tags:: Listing and finding tags defined in a file.
209 @end menu
210
211 @node Tag Syntax
212 @subsection Source File Tag Syntax
213
214 Here is how tag syntax is defined for the most popular languages:
215
216 @itemize @bullet
217 @item
218 In C code, any C function or typedef is a tag, and so are definitions of
219 @code{struct}, @code{union} and @code{enum}.
220 @code{#define} macro definitions and @code{enum} constants are also
221 tags, unless you specify @samp{--no-defines} when making the tags table.
222 Similarly, global variables are tags, unless you specify
223 @samp{--no-globals}. Use of @samp{--no-globals} and @samp{--no-defines}
224 can make the tags table file much smaller.
225
226 You can tag function declarations and external variables in addition
227 to function definitions by giving the @samp{--declarations} option to
228 @code{etags}.
229
230 @item
231 In C++ code, in addition to all the tag constructs of C code, member
232 functions are also recognized, and optionally member variables if you
233 use the @samp{--members} option. Tags for variables and functions in
234 classes are named @samp{@var{class}::@var{variable}} and
235 @samp{@var{class}::@var{function}}. @code{operator} definitions have
236 tag names like @samp{operator+}.
237
238 @item
239 In Java code, tags include all the constructs recognized in C++, plus
240 the @code{interface}, @code{extends} and @code{implements} constructs.
241 Tags for variables and functions in classes are named
242 @samp{@var{class}.@var{variable}} and @samp{@var{class}.@var{function}}.
243
244 @item
245 In La@TeX{} text, the argument of any of the commands @code{\chapter},
246 @code{\section}, @code{\subsection}, @code{\subsubsection},
247 @code{\eqno}, @code{\label}, @code{\ref}, @code{\cite}, @code{\bibitem},
248 @code{\part}, @code{\appendix}, @code{\entry}, or @code{\index}, is a
249 tag.@refill
250
251 Other commands can make tags as well, if you specify them in the
252 environment variable @env{TEXTAGS} before invoking @code{etags}. The
253 value of this environment variable should be a colon-separated list of
254 command names. For example,
255
256 @example
257 TEXTAGS="def:newcommand:newenvironment"
258 export TEXTAGS
259 @end example
260
261 @noindent
262 specifies (using Bourne shell syntax) that the commands @samp{\def},
263 @samp{\newcommand} and @samp{\newenvironment} also define tags.
264
265 @item
266 In Lisp code, any function defined with @code{defun}, any variable
267 defined with @code{defvar} or @code{defconst}, and in general the first
268 argument of any expression that starts with @samp{(def} in column zero, is
269 a tag.
270
271 @item
272 In Scheme code, tags include anything defined with @code{def} or with a
273 construct whose name starts with @samp{def}. They also include variables
274 set with @code{set!} at top level in the file.
275 @end itemize
276
277 Several other languages are also supported:
278
279 @itemize @bullet
280
281 @item
282 In Ada code, functions, procedures, packages, tasks, and types are
283 tags. Use the @samp{--packages-only} option to create tags for
284 packages only.
285
286 In Ada, the same name can be used for different kinds of entity
287 (e.g.@:, for a procedure and for a function). Also, for things like
288 packages, procedures and functions, there is the spec (i.e.@: the
289 interface) and the body (i.e.@: the implementation). To make it
290 easier to pick the definition you want, Ada tag name have suffixes
291 indicating the type of entity:
292
293 @table @samp
294 @item /b
295 package body.
296 @item /f
297 function.
298 @item /k
299 task.
300 @item /p
301 procedure.
302 @item /s
303 package spec.
304 @item /t
305 type.
306 @end table
307
308 Thus, @kbd{M-x find-tag @key{RET} bidule/b @key{RET}} will go
309 directly to the body of the package @code{bidule}, while @kbd{M-x
310 find-tag @key{RET} bidule @key{RET}} will just search for any tag
311 @code{bidule}.
312
313 @item
314 In assembler code, labels appearing at the beginning of a line,
315 followed by a colon, are tags.
316
317 @item
318 In Bison or Yacc input files, each rule defines as a tag the nonterminal
319 it constructs. The portions of the file that contain C code are parsed
320 as C code.
321
322 @item
323 In Cobol code, tags are paragraph names; that is, any word starting in
324 column 8 and followed by a period.
325
326 @item
327 In Erlang code, the tags are the functions, records, and macros defined
328 in the file.
329
330 @item
331 In Fortran code, functions, subroutines and block data are tags.
332
333 @item
334 In makefiles, targets are tags.
335
336 @item
337 In Objective C code, tags include Objective C definitions for classes,
338 class categories, methods, and protocols. Tags for variables and
339 functions in classes are named @samp{@var{class}::@var{variable}} and
340 @samp{@var{class}::@var{function}}.
341
342 @item
343 In Pascal code, the tags are the functions and procedures defined in
344 the file.
345
346 @item
347 In Perl code, the tags are the packages, subroutines and variables
348 defined by the @code{package}, @code{sub}, @code{my} and @code{local}
349 keywords. Use @samp{--globals} if you want to tag global variables.
350 Tags for subroutines are named @samp{@var{package}::@var{sub}}. The
351 name for subroutines defined in the default package is
352 @samp{main::@var{sub}}.
353
354 @item
355 In PHP code, tags are functions, classes and defines. When using the
356 @samp{--members} option, vars are tags too.
357
358 @item
359 In PostScript code, the tags are the functions.
360
361 @item
362 In Prolog code, tags are predicates and rules at the beginning of
363 line.
364
365 @item
366 In Python code, @code{def} or @code{class} at the beginning of a line
367 generate a tag.
368 @end itemize
369
370 You can also generate tags based on regexp matching (@pxref{Etags
371 Regexps}) to handle other formats and languages.
372
373 @node Create Tags Table
374 @subsection Creating Tags Tables
375 @cindex @code{etags} program
376
377 The @code{etags} program is used to create a tags table file. It knows
378 the syntax of several languages, as described in
379 @iftex
380 the previous section.
381 @end iftex
382 @ifinfo
383 @ref{Tag Syntax}.
384 @end ifinfo
385 Here is how to run @code{etags}:
386
387 @example
388 etags @var{inputfiles}@dots{}
389 @end example
390
391 @noindent
392 The @code{etags} program reads the specified files, and writes a tags
393 table named @file{TAGS} in the current working directory.
394
395 If the specified files don't exist, @code{etags} looks for
396 compressed versions of them and uncompresses them to read them. Under
397 MS-DOS, @code{etags} also looks for file names like @file{mycode.cgz}
398 if it is given @samp{mycode.c} on the command line and @file{mycode.c}
399 does not exist.
400
401 @code{etags} recognizes the language used in an input file based on
402 its file name and contents. You can specify the language with the
403 @samp{--language=@var{name}} option, described below.
404
405 If the tags table data become outdated due to changes in the files
406 described in the table, the way to update the tags table is the same
407 way it was made in the first place. If the tags table fails to record
408 a tag, or records it for the wrong file, then Emacs cannot possibly
409 find its definition until you update the tags table. However, if the
410 position recorded in the tags table becomes a little bit wrong (due to
411 other editing), the only consequence is a slight delay in finding the
412 tag. Even if the stored position is very far wrong, Emacs will still
413 find the tag, after searching most of the file for it. Even that
414 delay is hardly noticeable with today's computers.
415
416 So you should update a tags table when you define new tags that you want
417 to have listed, or when you move tag definitions from one file to another,
418 or when changes become substantial. Normally there is no need to update
419 the tags table after each edit, or even every day.
420
421 One tags table can virtually include another. Specify the included
422 tags file name with the @samp{--include=@var{file}} option when
423 creating the file that is to include it. The latter file then acts as
424 if it covered all the source files specified in the included file, as
425 well as the files it directly contains.
426
427 If you specify the source files with relative file names when you run
428 @code{etags}, the tags file will contain file names relative to the
429 directory where the tags file was initially written. This way, you can
430 move an entire directory tree containing both the tags file and the
431 source files, and the tags file will still refer correctly to the source
432 files.
433
434 If you specify absolute file names as arguments to @code{etags}, then
435 the tags file will contain absolute file names. This way, the tags file
436 will still refer to the same files even if you move it, as long as the
437 source files remain in the same place. Absolute file names start with
438 @samp{/}, or with @samp{@var{device}:/} on MS-DOS and MS-Windows.
439
440 When you want to make a tags table from a great number of files, you
441 may have problems listing them on the command line, because some systems
442 have a limit on its length. The simplest way to circumvent this limit
443 is to tell @code{etags} to read the file names from its standard input,
444 by typing a dash in place of the file names, like this:
445
446 @smallexample
447 find . -name "*.[chCH]" -print | etags -
448 @end smallexample
449
450 Use the option @samp{--language=@var{name}} to specify the language
451 explicitly. You can intermix these options with file names; each one
452 applies to the file names that follow it. Specify
453 @samp{--language=auto} to tell @code{etags} to resume guessing the
454 language from the file names and file contents. Specify
455 @samp{--language=none} to turn off language-specific processing
456 entirely; then @code{etags} recognizes tags by regexp matching alone
457 (@pxref{Etags Regexps}).
458
459 @samp{etags --help} prints the list of the languages @code{etags}
460 knows, and the file name rules for guessing the language. It also prints
461 a list of all the available @code{etags} options, together with a short
462 explanation.
463
464 @node Etags Regexps
465 @subsection Etags Regexps
466
467 The @samp{--regex} option provides a general way of recognizing tags
468 based on regexp matching. You can freely intermix it with file names.
469 Each @samp{--regex} option adds to the preceding ones, and applies only
470 to the following files. The syntax is:
471
472 @smallexample
473 --regex=/@var{tagregexp}[/@var{nameregexp}]/
474 @end smallexample
475
476 @noindent
477 where @var{tagregexp} is used to match the lines to tag. It is always
478 anchored, that is, it behaves as if preceded by @samp{^}. If you want
479 to account for indentation, just match any initial number of blanks by
480 beginning your regular expression with @samp{[ \t]*}. In the regular
481 expressions, @samp{\} quotes the next character, and @samp{\t} stands
482 for the tab character. Note that @code{etags} does not handle the other
483 C escape sequences for special characters.
484
485 The syntax of regular expressions in @code{etags} is the same as in
486 Emacs. However, non-greedy operators and shy groups are not
487 available.
488
489 You should not match more characters with @var{tagregexp} than that
490 needed to recognize what you want to tag. If the match is such that
491 more characters than needed are unavoidably matched by @var{tagregexp}
492 (as will usually be the case), you should add a @var{nameregexp}, to
493 pick out just the tag. This will enable Emacs to find tags more
494 accurately and to do completion on tag names more reliably. You can
495 find some examples below.
496
497 The option @samp{--ignore-case-regex} (or @samp{-c}) works like
498 @samp{--regex}, except that matching ignores case. This is
499 appropriate for certain programming languages.
500
501 The @samp{-R} option deletes all the regexps defined with
502 @samp{--regex} options. It applies to the file names following it, as
503 you can see from the following example:
504
505 @smallexample
506 etags --regex=/@var{reg1}/ voo.doo --regex=/@var{reg2}/ \
507 bar.ber -R --lang=lisp los.er
508 @end smallexample
509
510 @noindent
511 Here @code{etags} chooses the parsing language for @file{voo.doo} and
512 @file{bar.ber} according to their contents. @code{etags} also uses
513 @var{reg1} to recognize additional tags in @file{voo.doo}, and both
514 @var{reg1} and @var{reg2} to recognize additional tags in
515 @file{bar.ber}. @code{etags} uses the Lisp tags rules, and no regexp
516 matching, to recognize tags in @file{los.er}.
517
518 You can specify a regular expression for a particular language, by
519 writing @samp{@{lang@}} in front of it. Then @code{etags} will use
520 the regular expression only for files of that language. (@samp{etags
521 --help} prints the list of languages recognized by @code{etags}.) The
522 following example tags the @code{DEFVAR} macros in the Emacs source
523 files, for the C language only:
524
525 @smallexample
526 --regex='@{c@}/[ \t]*DEFVAR_[A-Z_ \t(]+"\([^"]+\)"/'
527 @end smallexample
528
529 @noindent
530 This feature is particularly useful when you store a list of regular
531 expressions in a file. The following option syntax instructs
532 @code{etags} to read two files of regular expressions. The regular
533 expressions contained in the second file are matched without regard to
534 case.
535
536 @smallexample
537 --regex=@@first-file --ignore-case-regex=@@second-file
538 @end smallexample
539
540 @noindent
541 A regex file contains one regular expressions per line. Empty lines,
542 and lines beginning with space or tab are ignored. When the first
543 character in a line is @samp{@@}, @code{etags} assumes that the rest
544 of the line is the name of a file of regular expressions; thus, one
545 such file can include another file. All the other lines are taken to
546 be regular expressions. If the first non-whitespace text on the line
547 is @samp{--}, that line is a comment.
548
549 For example, one can create a file called @samp{emacs.tags} with the
550 following contents:
551
552 @smallexample
553 -- This is for GNU Emacs C source files
554 @{c@}/[ \t]*DEFVAR_[A-Z_ \t(]+"\([^"]+\)"/\1/
555 @end smallexample
556
557 @noindent
558 and then use it like this:
559
560 @smallexample
561 etags --regex=@@emacs.tags *.[ch] */*.[ch]
562 @end smallexample
563
564 Here are some more examples. The regexps are quoted to protect them
565 from shell interpretation.
566
567 @itemize @bullet
568
569 @item
570 Tag Octave files:
571
572 @smallexample
573 etags --language=none \
574 --regex='/[ \t]*function.*=[ \t]*\([^ \t]*\)[ \t]*(/\1/' \
575 --regex='/###key \(.*\)/\1/' \
576 --regex='/[ \t]*global[ \t].*/' \
577 *.m
578 @end smallexample
579
580 @noindent
581 Note that tags are not generated for scripts, so that you have to add
582 a line by yourself of the form @samp{###key @var{scriptname}} if you
583 want to jump to it.
584
585 @item
586 Tag Tcl files:
587
588 @smallexample
589 etags --language=none --regex='/proc[ \t]+\([^ \t]+\)/\1/' *.tcl
590 @end smallexample
591
592 @item
593 Tag VHDL files:
594
595 @smallexample
596 etags --language=none \
597 --regex='/[ \t]*\(ARCHITECTURE\|CONFIGURATION\) +[^ ]* +OF/' \
598 --regex='/[ \t]*\(ATTRIBUTE\|ENTITY\|FUNCTION\|PACKAGE\
599 \( BODY\)?\|PROCEDURE\|PROCESS\|TYPE\)[ \t]+\([^ \t(]+\)/\3/'
600 @end smallexample
601 @end itemize
602
603 @node Select Tags Table
604 @subsection Selecting a Tags Table
605
606 @vindex tags-file-name
607 @findex visit-tags-table
608 Emacs has at any time one @dfn{selected} tags table, and all the commands
609 for working with tags tables use the selected one. To select a tags table,
610 type @kbd{M-x visit-tags-table}, which reads the tags table file name as an
611 argument. The name @file{TAGS} in the default directory is used as the
612 default file name.
613
614 All this command does is store the file name in the variable
615 @code{tags-file-name}. Emacs does not actually read in the tags table
616 contents until you try to use them. Setting this variable yourself is just
617 as good as using @code{visit-tags-table}. The variable's initial value is
618 @code{nil}; that value tells all the commands for working with tags tables
619 that they must ask for a tags table file name to use.
620
621 Using @code{visit-tags-table} when a tags table is already loaded
622 gives you a choice: you can add the new tags table to the current list
623 of tags tables, or start a new list. The tags commands use all the tags
624 tables in the current list. If you start a new list, the new tags table
625 is used @emph{instead} of others. If you add the new table to the
626 current list, it is used @emph{as well as} the others. When the tags
627 commands scan the list of tags tables, they don't always start at the
628 beginning of the list; they start with the first tags table (if any)
629 that describes the current file, proceed from there to the end of the
630 list, and then scan from the beginning of the list until they have
631 covered all the tables in the list.
632
633 @vindex tags-table-list
634 You can specify a precise list of tags tables by setting the variable
635 @code{tags-table-list} to a list of strings, like this:
636
637 @c keep this on two lines for formatting in smallbook
638 @example
639 @group
640 (setq tags-table-list
641 '("~/emacs" "/usr/local/lib/emacs/src"))
642 @end group
643 @end example
644
645 @noindent
646 This tells the tags commands to look at the @file{TAGS} files in your
647 @file{~/emacs} directory and in the @file{/usr/local/lib/emacs/src}
648 directory. The order depends on which file you are in and which tags
649 table mentions that file, as explained above.
650
651 Do not set both @code{tags-file-name} and @code{tags-table-list}.
652
653 @node Find Tag
654 @subsection Finding a Tag
655
656 The most important thing that a tags table enables you to do is to find
657 the definition of a specific tag.
658
659 @table @kbd
660 @item M-.@: @var{tag} @key{RET}
661 Find first definition of @var{tag} (@code{find-tag}).
662 @item C-u M-.
663 Find next alternate definition of last tag specified.
664 @item C-u - M-.
665 Go back to previous tag found.
666 @item C-M-. @var{pattern} @key{RET}
667 Find a tag whose name matches @var{pattern} (@code{find-tag-regexp}).
668 @item C-u C-M-.
669 Find the next tag whose name matches the last pattern used.
670 @item C-x 4 .@: @var{tag} @key{RET}
671 Find first definition of @var{tag}, but display it in another window
672 (@code{find-tag-other-window}).
673 @item C-x 5 .@: @var{tag} @key{RET}
674 Find first definition of @var{tag}, and create a new frame to select the
675 buffer (@code{find-tag-other-frame}).
676 @item M-*
677 Pop back to where you previously invoked @kbd{M-.} and friends.
678 @end table
679
680 @kindex M-.
681 @findex find-tag
682 @kbd{M-.}@: (@code{find-tag}) is the command to find the definition of
683 a specified tag. It searches through the tags table for that tag, as a
684 string, and then uses the tags table info to determine the file that the
685 definition is in and the approximate character position in the file of
686 the definition. Then @code{find-tag} visits that file, moves point to
687 the approximate character position, and searches ever-increasing
688 distances away to find the tag definition.
689
690 If an empty argument is given (just type @key{RET}), the balanced
691 expression in the buffer before or around point is used as the
692 @var{tag} argument. @xref{Expressions}.
693
694 You don't need to give @kbd{M-.} the full name of the tag; a part
695 will do. This is because @kbd{M-.} finds tags in the table which
696 contain @var{tag} as a substring. However, it prefers an exact match
697 to a substring match. To find other tags that match the same
698 substring, give @code{find-tag} a numeric argument, as in @kbd{C-u
699 M-.}; this does not read a tag name, but continues searching the tags
700 table's text for another tag containing the same substring last used.
701 If you have a real @key{META} key, @kbd{M-0 M-.}@: is an easier
702 alternative to @kbd{C-u M-.}.
703
704 @kindex C-x 4 .
705 @findex find-tag-other-window
706 @kindex C-x 5 .
707 @findex find-tag-other-frame
708 Like most commands that can switch buffers, @code{find-tag} has a
709 variant that displays the new buffer in another window, and one that
710 makes a new frame for it. The former is @kbd{C-x 4 .}, which invokes
711 the command @code{find-tag-other-window}. The latter is @kbd{C-x 5 .},
712 which invokes @code{find-tag-other-frame}.
713
714 To move back to places you've found tags recently, use @kbd{C-u -
715 M-.}; more generally, @kbd{M-.} with a negative numeric argument. This
716 command can take you to another buffer. @kbd{C-x 4 .} with a negative
717 argument finds the previous tag location in another window.
718
719 @kindex M-*
720 @findex pop-tag-mark
721 @vindex find-tag-marker-ring-length
722 As well as going back to places you've found tags recently, you can go
723 back to places @emph{from where} you found them. Use @kbd{M-*}, which
724 invokes the command @code{pop-tag-mark}, for this. Typically you would
725 find and study the definition of something with @kbd{M-.} and then
726 return to where you were with @kbd{M-*}.
727
728 Both @kbd{C-u - M-.} and @kbd{M-*} allow you to retrace your steps to
729 a depth determined by the variable @code{find-tag-marker-ring-length}.
730
731 @findex find-tag-regexp
732 @kindex C-M-.
733 The command @kbd{C-M-.} (@code{find-tag-regexp}) visits the tags that
734 match a specified regular expression. It is just like @kbd{M-.} except
735 that it does regexp matching instead of substring matching.
736
737 @node Tags Search
738 @subsection Searching and Replacing with Tags Tables
739 @cindex search and replace in multiple files
740 @cindex multiple-file search and replace
741
742 The commands in this section visit and search all the files listed in the
743 selected tags table, one by one. For these commands, the tags table serves
744 only to specify a sequence of files to search.
745
746 @table @kbd
747 @item M-x tags-search @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET}
748 Search for @var{regexp} through the files in the selected tags
749 table.
750 @item M-x tags-query-replace @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET} @var{replacement} @key{RET}
751 Perform a @code{query-replace-regexp} on each file in the selected tags table.
752 @item M-,
753 Restart one of the commands above, from the current location of point
754 (@code{tags-loop-continue}).
755 @end table
756
757 @findex tags-search
758 @kbd{M-x tags-search} reads a regexp using the minibuffer, then
759 searches for matches in all the files in the selected tags table, one
760 file at a time. It displays the name of the file being searched so you
761 can follow its progress. As soon as it finds an occurrence,
762 @code{tags-search} returns.
763
764 @kindex M-,
765 @findex tags-loop-continue
766 Having found one match, you probably want to find all the rest. To find
767 one more match, type @kbd{M-,} (@code{tags-loop-continue}) to resume the
768 @code{tags-search}. This searches the rest of the current buffer, followed
769 by the remaining files of the tags table.@refill
770
771 @findex tags-query-replace
772 @kbd{M-x tags-query-replace} performs a single
773 @code{query-replace-regexp} through all the files in the tags table. It
774 reads a regexp to search for and a string to replace with, just like
775 ordinary @kbd{M-x query-replace-regexp}. It searches much like @kbd{M-x
776 tags-search}, but repeatedly, processing matches according to your
777 input. @xref{Replace}, for more information on query replace.
778
779 @vindex tags-case-fold-search
780 @cindex case-sensitivity and tags search
781 You can control the case-sensitivity of tags search commands by
782 customizing the value of the variable @code{tags-case-fold-search}. The
783 default is to use the same setting as the value of
784 @code{case-fold-search} (@pxref{Search Case}).
785
786 It is possible to get through all the files in the tags table with a
787 single invocation of @kbd{M-x tags-query-replace}. But often it is
788 useful to exit temporarily, which you can do with any input event that
789 has no special query replace meaning. You can resume the query replace
790 subsequently by typing @kbd{M-,}; this command resumes the last tags
791 search or replace command that you did.
792
793 The commands in this section carry out much broader searches than the
794 @code{find-tag} family. The @code{find-tag} commands search only for
795 definitions of tags that match your substring or regexp. The commands
796 @code{tags-search} and @code{tags-query-replace} find every occurrence
797 of the regexp, as ordinary search commands and replace commands do in
798 the current buffer.
799
800 These commands create buffers only temporarily for the files that they
801 have to search (those which are not already visited in Emacs buffers).
802 Buffers in which no match is found are quickly killed; the others
803 continue to exist.
804
805 It may have struck you that @code{tags-search} is a lot like
806 @code{grep}. You can also run @code{grep} itself as an inferior of
807 Emacs and have Emacs show you the matching lines one by one. This works
808 much like running a compilation; finding the source locations of the
809 @code{grep} matches works like finding the compilation errors.
810 @xref{Compilation}.
811
812 @node List Tags
813 @subsection Tags Table Inquiries
814
815 @table @kbd
816 @item M-x list-tags @key{RET} @var{file} @key{RET}
817 Display a list of the tags defined in the program file @var{file}.
818 @item M-x tags-apropos @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET}
819 Display a list of all tags matching @var{regexp}.
820 @end table
821
822 @findex list-tags
823 @kbd{M-x list-tags} reads the name of one of the files described by
824 the selected tags table, and displays a list of all the tags defined in
825 that file. The ``file name'' argument is really just a string to
826 compare against the file names recorded in the tags table; it is read as
827 a string rather than as a file name. Therefore, completion and
828 defaulting are not available, and you must enter the file name the same
829 way it appears in the tags table. Do not include a directory as part of
830 the file name unless the file name recorded in the tags table includes a
831 directory.
832
833 @findex tags-apropos
834 @vindex tags-apropos-verbose
835 @kbd{M-x tags-apropos} is like @code{apropos} for tags
836 (@pxref{Apropos}). It finds all the tags in the selected tags table
837 whose entries match @var{regexp}, and displays them. If the variable
838 @code{tags-apropos-verbose} is non-@code{nil}, it displays the names
839 of the tags files together with the tag names.
840
841 @vindex tags-tag-face
842 @vindex tags-apropos-additional-actions
843 You can customize the appearance of the output with the face
844 @code{tags-tag-face}. You can display additional output with @kbd{M-x
845 tags-apropos} by customizing the variable
846 @code{tags-apropos-additional-actions}---see its documentation for
847 details.
848
849 You can also use the collection of tag names to complete a symbol
850 name in the buffer. @xref{Symbol Completion}.
851
852 @node Emerge
853 @section Merging Files with Emerge
854 @cindex Emerge
855 @cindex merging files
856
857 It's not unusual for programmers to get their signals crossed and modify
858 the same program in two different directions. To recover from this
859 confusion, you need to merge the two versions. Emerge makes this
860 easier. See also @ref{Comparing Files}, for commands to compare
861 in a more manual fashion, and @ref{Top, Ediff,, ediff, The Ediff Manual}.
862
863 @menu
864 * Overview of Emerge:: How to start Emerge. Basic concepts.
865 * Submodes of Emerge:: Fast mode vs. Edit mode.
866 Skip Prefers mode and Auto Advance mode.
867 * State of Difference:: You do the merge by specifying state A or B
868 for each difference.
869 * Merge Commands:: Commands for selecting a difference,
870 changing states of differences, etc.
871 * Exiting Emerge:: What to do when you've finished the merge.
872 * Combining in Emerge:: How to keep both alternatives for a difference.
873 * Fine Points of Emerge:: Misc.
874 @end menu
875
876 @node Overview of Emerge
877 @subsection Overview of Emerge
878
879 To start Emerge, run one of these four commands:
880
881 @table @kbd
882 @item M-x emerge-files
883 @findex emerge-files
884 Merge two specified files.
885
886 @item M-x emerge-files-with-ancestor
887 @findex emerge-files-with-ancestor
888 Merge two specified files, with reference to a common ancestor.
889
890 @item M-x emerge-buffers
891 @findex emerge-buffers
892 Merge two buffers.
893
894 @item M-x emerge-buffers-with-ancestor
895 @findex emerge-buffers-with-ancestor
896 Merge two buffers with reference to a common ancestor in a third
897 buffer.
898 @end table
899
900 @cindex merge buffer (Emerge)
901 @cindex A and B buffers (Emerge)
902 The Emerge commands compare two files or buffers, and display the
903 comparison in three buffers: one for each input text (the @dfn{A buffer}
904 and the @dfn{B buffer}), and one (the @dfn{merge buffer}) where merging
905 takes place. The merge buffer shows the full merged text, not just the
906 differences. Wherever the two input texts differ, you can choose which
907 one of them to include in the merge buffer.
908
909 The Emerge commands that take input from existing buffers use only the
910 accessible portions of those buffers, if they are narrowed
911 (@pxref{Narrowing}).
912
913 If a common ancestor version is available, from which the two texts to
914 be merged were both derived, Emerge can use it to guess which
915 alternative is right. Wherever one current version agrees with the
916 ancestor, Emerge presumes that the other current version is a deliberate
917 change which should be kept in the merged version. Use the
918 @samp{with-ancestor} commands if you want to specify a common ancestor
919 text. These commands read three file or buffer names---variant A,
920 variant B, and the common ancestor.
921
922 After the comparison is done and the buffers are prepared, the
923 interactive merging starts. You control the merging by typing special
924 @dfn{merge commands} in the merge buffer. The merge buffer shows you a
925 full merged text, not just differences. For each run of differences
926 between the input texts, you can choose which one of them to keep, or
927 edit them both together.
928
929 The merge buffer uses a special major mode, Emerge mode, with commands
930 for making these choices. But you can also edit the buffer with
931 ordinary Emacs commands.
932
933 At any given time, the attention of Emerge is focused on one
934 particular difference, called the @dfn{selected} difference. This
935 difference is marked off in the three buffers like this:
936
937 @example
938 vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
939 @var{text that differs}
940 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
941 @end example
942
943 @noindent
944 Emerge numbers all the differences sequentially and the mode
945 line always shows the number of the selected difference.
946
947 Normally, the merge buffer starts out with the A version of the text.
948 But when the A version of a difference agrees with the common ancestor,
949 then the B version is initially preferred for that difference.
950
951 Emerge leaves the merged text in the merge buffer when you exit. At
952 that point, you can save it in a file with @kbd{C-x C-w}. If you give a
953 numeric argument to @code{emerge-files} or
954 @code{emerge-files-with-ancestor}, it reads the name of the output file
955 using the minibuffer. (This is the last file name those commands read.)
956 Then exiting from Emerge saves the merged text in the output file.
957
958 Normally, Emerge commands save the output buffer in its file when you
959 exit. If you abort Emerge with @kbd{C-]}, the Emerge command does not
960 save the output buffer, but you can save it yourself if you wish.
961
962 @node Submodes of Emerge
963 @subsection Submodes of Emerge
964
965 You can choose between two modes for giving merge commands: Fast mode
966 and Edit mode. In Fast mode, basic merge commands are single
967 characters, but ordinary Emacs commands are disabled. This is
968 convenient if you use only merge commands. In Edit mode, all merge
969 commands start with the prefix key @kbd{C-c C-c}, and the normal Emacs
970 commands are also available. This allows editing the merge buffer, but
971 slows down Emerge operations.
972
973 Use @kbd{e} to switch to Edit mode, and @kbd{C-c C-c f} to switch to
974 Fast mode. The mode line indicates Edit and Fast modes with @samp{E}
975 and @samp{F}.
976
977 Emerge has two additional submodes that affect how particular merge
978 commands work: Auto Advance mode and Skip Prefers mode.
979
980 If Auto Advance mode is in effect, the @kbd{a} and @kbd{b} commands
981 advance to the next difference. This lets you go through the merge
982 faster as long as you simply choose one of the alternatives from the
983 input. The mode line indicates Auto Advance mode with @samp{A}.
984
985 If Skip Prefers mode is in effect, the @kbd{n} and @kbd{p} commands
986 skip over differences in states prefer-A and prefer-B (@pxref{State of
987 Difference}). Thus you see only differences for which neither version
988 is presumed ``correct.'' The mode line indicates Skip Prefers mode with
989 @samp{S}.
990
991 @findex emerge-auto-advance-mode
992 @findex emerge-skip-prefers-mode
993 Use the command @kbd{s a} (@code{emerge-auto-advance-mode}) to set or
994 clear Auto Advance mode. Use @kbd{s s}
995 (@code{emerge-skip-prefers-mode}) to set or clear Skip Prefers mode.
996 These commands turn on the mode with a positive argument, turns it off
997 with a negative or zero argument, and toggle the mode with no argument.
998
999 @node State of Difference
1000 @subsection State of a Difference
1001
1002 In the merge buffer, a difference is marked with lines of @samp{v} and
1003 @samp{^} characters. Each difference has one of these seven states:
1004
1005 @table @asis
1006 @item A
1007 The difference is showing the A version. The @kbd{a} command always
1008 produces this state; the mode line indicates it with @samp{A}.
1009
1010 @item B
1011 The difference is showing the B version. The @kbd{b} command always
1012 produces this state; the mode line indicates it with @samp{B}.
1013
1014 @item default-A
1015 @itemx default-B
1016 The difference is showing the A or the B state by default, because you
1017 haven't made a choice. All differences start in the default-A state
1018 (and thus the merge buffer is a copy of the A buffer), except those for
1019 which one alternative is ``preferred'' (see below).
1020
1021 When you select a difference, its state changes from default-A or
1022 default-B to plain A or B. Thus, the selected difference never has
1023 state default-A or default-B, and these states are never displayed in
1024 the mode line.
1025
1026 The command @kbd{d a} chooses default-A as the default state, and @kbd{d
1027 b} chooses default-B. This chosen default applies to all differences
1028 which you haven't ever selected and for which no alternative is preferred.
1029 If you are moving through the merge sequentially, the differences you
1030 haven't selected are those following the selected one. Thus, while
1031 moving sequentially, you can effectively make the A version the default
1032 for some sections of the merge buffer and the B version the default for
1033 others by using @kbd{d a} and @kbd{d b} between sections.
1034
1035 @item prefer-A
1036 @itemx prefer-B
1037 The difference is showing the A or B state because it is
1038 @dfn{preferred}. This means that you haven't made an explicit choice,
1039 but one alternative seems likely to be right because the other
1040 alternative agrees with the common ancestor. Thus, where the A buffer
1041 agrees with the common ancestor, the B version is preferred, because
1042 chances are it is the one that was actually changed.
1043
1044 These two states are displayed in the mode line as @samp{A*} and @samp{B*}.
1045
1046 @item combined
1047 The difference is showing a combination of the A and B states, as a
1048 result of the @kbd{x c} or @kbd{x C} commands.
1049
1050 Once a difference is in this state, the @kbd{a} and @kbd{b} commands
1051 don't do anything to it unless you give them a numeric argument.
1052
1053 The mode line displays this state as @samp{comb}.
1054 @end table
1055
1056 @node Merge Commands
1057 @subsection Merge Commands
1058
1059 Here are the Merge commands for Fast mode; in Edit mode, precede them
1060 with @kbd{C-c C-c}:
1061
1062 @table @kbd
1063 @item p
1064 Select the previous difference.
1065
1066 @item n
1067 Select the next difference.
1068
1069 @item a
1070 Choose the A version of this difference.
1071
1072 @item b
1073 Choose the B version of this difference.
1074
1075 @item C-u @var{n} j
1076 Select difference number @var{n}.
1077
1078 @item .
1079 Select the difference containing point. You can use this command in the
1080 merge buffer or in the A or B buffer.
1081
1082 @item q
1083 Quit---finish the merge.
1084
1085 @item C-]
1086 Abort---exit merging and do not save the output.
1087
1088 @item f
1089 Go into Fast mode. (In Edit mode, this is actually @kbd{C-c C-c f}.)
1090
1091 @item e
1092 Go into Edit mode.
1093
1094 @item l
1095 Recenter (like @kbd{C-l}) all three windows.
1096
1097 @item -
1098 Specify part of a prefix numeric argument.
1099
1100 @item @var{digit}
1101 Also specify part of a prefix numeric argument.
1102
1103 @item d a
1104 Choose the A version as the default from here down in
1105 the merge buffer.
1106
1107 @item d b
1108 Choose the B version as the default from here down in
1109 the merge buffer.
1110
1111 @item c a
1112 Copy the A version of this difference into the kill ring.
1113
1114 @item c b
1115 Copy the B version of this difference into the kill ring.
1116
1117 @item i a
1118 Insert the A version of this difference at point.
1119
1120 @item i b
1121 Insert the B version of this difference at point.
1122
1123 @item m
1124 Put point and mark around the difference.
1125
1126 @item ^
1127 Scroll all three windows down (like @kbd{M-v}).
1128
1129 @item v
1130 Scroll all three windows up (like @kbd{C-v}).
1131
1132 @item <
1133 Scroll all three windows left (like @kbd{C-x <}).
1134
1135 @item >
1136 Scroll all three windows right (like @kbd{C-x >}).
1137
1138 @item |
1139 Reset horizontal scroll on all three windows.
1140
1141 @item x 1
1142 Shrink the merge window to one line. (Use @kbd{C-u l} to restore it
1143 to full size.)
1144
1145 @item x c
1146 Combine the two versions of this difference (@pxref{Combining in
1147 Emerge}).
1148
1149 @item x f
1150 Show the names of the files/buffers Emerge is operating on, in a Help
1151 window. (Use @kbd{C-u l} to restore windows.)
1152
1153 @item x j
1154 Join this difference with the following one.
1155 (@kbd{C-u x j} joins this difference with the previous one.)
1156
1157 @item x s
1158 Split this difference into two differences. Before you use this
1159 command, position point in each of the three buffers at the place where
1160 you want to split the difference.
1161
1162 @item x t
1163 Trim identical lines off the top and bottom of the difference.
1164 Such lines occur when the A and B versions are
1165 identical but differ from the ancestor version.
1166 @end table
1167
1168 @node Exiting Emerge
1169 @subsection Exiting Emerge
1170
1171 The @kbd{q} command (@code{emerge-quit}) finishes the merge, storing
1172 the results into the output file if you specified one. It restores the
1173 A and B buffers to their proper contents, or kills them if they were
1174 created by Emerge and you haven't changed them. It also disables the
1175 Emerge commands in the merge buffer, since executing them later could
1176 damage the contents of the various buffers.
1177
1178 @kbd{C-]} aborts the merge. This means exiting without writing the
1179 output file. If you didn't specify an output file, then there is no
1180 real difference between aborting and finishing the merge.
1181
1182 If the Emerge command was called from another Lisp program, then its
1183 return value is @code{t} for successful completion, or @code{nil} if you
1184 abort.
1185
1186 @node Combining in Emerge
1187 @subsection Combining the Two Versions
1188
1189 Sometimes you want to keep @emph{both} alternatives for a particular
1190 difference. To do this, use @kbd{x c}, which edits the merge buffer
1191 like this:
1192
1193 @example
1194 @group
1195 #ifdef NEW
1196 @var{version from A buffer}
1197 #else /* not NEW */
1198 @var{version from B buffer}
1199 #endif /* not NEW */
1200 @end group
1201 @end example
1202
1203 @noindent
1204 @vindex emerge-combine-versions-template
1205 While this example shows C preprocessor conditionals delimiting the two
1206 alternative versions, you can specify the strings to use by setting
1207 the variable @code{emerge-combine-versions-template} to a string of your
1208 choice. In the string, @samp{%a} says where to put version A, and
1209 @samp{%b} says where to put version B. The default setting, which
1210 produces the results shown above, looks like this:
1211
1212 @example
1213 @group
1214 "#ifdef NEW\n%a#else /* not NEW */\n%b#endif /* not NEW */\n"
1215 @end group
1216 @end example
1217
1218 @node Fine Points of Emerge
1219 @subsection Fine Points of Emerge
1220
1221 During the merge, you mustn't try to edit the A and B buffers yourself.
1222 Emerge modifies them temporarily, but ultimately puts them back the way
1223 they were.
1224
1225 You can have any number of merges going at once---just don't use any one
1226 buffer as input to more than one merge at once, since the temporary
1227 changes made in these buffers would get in each other's way.
1228
1229 Starting Emerge can take a long time because it needs to compare the
1230 files fully. Emacs can't do anything else until @code{diff} finishes.
1231 Perhaps in the future someone will change Emerge to do the comparison in
1232 the background when the input files are large---then you could keep on
1233 doing other things with Emacs until Emerge is ready to accept
1234 commands.
1235
1236 @vindex emerge-startup-hook
1237 After setting up the merge, Emerge runs the hook
1238 @code{emerge-startup-hook} (@pxref{Hooks}).