86e205cf14dbae0466ec64095be950cd05f5c79c
[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / lispref / keymaps.texi
1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990-1994, 1998-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
5 @node Keymaps
6 @chapter Keymaps
7 @cindex keymap
8
9 The command bindings of input events are recorded in data structures
10 called @dfn{keymaps}. Each entry in a keymap associates (or
11 @dfn{binds}) an individual event type, either to another keymap or to
12 a command. When an event type is bound to a keymap, that keymap is
13 used to look up the next input event; this continues until a command
14 is found. The whole process is called @dfn{key lookup}.
15
16 @menu
17 * Key Sequences:: Key sequences as Lisp objects.
18 * Keymap Basics:: Basic concepts of keymaps.
19 * Format of Keymaps:: What a keymap looks like as a Lisp object.
20 * Creating Keymaps:: Functions to create and copy keymaps.
21 * Inheritance and Keymaps:: How one keymap can inherit the bindings
22 of another keymap.
23 * Prefix Keys:: Defining a key with a keymap as its definition.
24 * Active Keymaps:: How Emacs searches the active keymaps
25 for a key binding.
26 * Searching Keymaps:: A pseudo-Lisp summary of searching active maps.
27 * Controlling Active Maps:: Each buffer has a local keymap
28 to override the standard (global) bindings.
29 A minor mode can also override them.
30 * Key Lookup:: Finding a key's binding in one keymap.
31 * Functions for Key Lookup:: How to request key lookup.
32 * Changing Key Bindings:: Redefining a key in a keymap.
33 * Remapping Commands:: A keymap can translate one command to another.
34 * Translation Keymaps:: Keymaps for translating sequences of events.
35 * Key Binding Commands:: Interactive interfaces for redefining keys.
36 * Scanning Keymaps:: Looking through all keymaps, for printing help.
37 * Menu Keymaps:: Defining a menu as a keymap.
38 @end menu
39
40 @node Key Sequences
41 @section Key Sequences
42 @cindex key
43 @cindex keystroke
44 @cindex key sequence
45
46 A @dfn{key sequence}, or @dfn{key} for short, is a sequence of one
47 or more input events that form a unit. Input events include
48 characters, function keys, mouse actions, or system events external to
49 Emacs, such as @code{iconify-frame} (@pxref{Input Events}).
50 The Emacs Lisp representation for a key sequence is a string or
51 vector. Unless otherwise stated, any Emacs Lisp function that accepts
52 a key sequence as an argument can handle both representations.
53
54 In the string representation, alphanumeric characters ordinarily
55 stand for themselves; for example, @code{"a"} represents @kbd{a}
56 and @code{"2"} represents @kbd{2}. Control character events are
57 prefixed by the substring @code{"\C-"}, and meta characters by
58 @code{"\M-"}; for example, @code{"\C-x"} represents the key @kbd{C-x}.
59 In addition, the @key{TAB}, @key{RET}, @key{ESC}, and @key{DEL} events
60 are represented by @code{"\t"}, @code{"\r"}, @code{"\e"}, and
61 @code{"\d"} respectively. The string representation of a complete key
62 sequence is the concatenation of the string representations of the
63 constituent events; thus, @code{"\C-xl"} represents the key sequence
64 @kbd{C-x l}.
65
66 Key sequences containing function keys, mouse button events, system
67 events, or non-@acronym{ASCII} characters such as @kbd{C-=} or
68 @kbd{H-a} cannot be represented as strings; they have to be
69 represented as vectors.
70
71 In the vector representation, each element of the vector represents
72 an input event, in its Lisp form. @xref{Input Events}. For example,
73 the vector @code{[?\C-x ?l]} represents the key sequence @kbd{C-x l}.
74
75 For examples of key sequences written in string and vector
76 representations, @ref{Init Rebinding,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
77
78 @defun kbd keyseq-text
79 This function converts the text @var{keyseq-text} (a string constant)
80 into a key sequence (a string or vector constant). The contents of
81 @var{keyseq-text} should use the same syntax as in the buffer invoked
82 by the @kbd{C-x C-k @key{RET}} (@code{kmacro-edit-macro}) command; in
83 particular, you must surround function key names with
84 @samp{<@dots{}>}. @xref{Edit Keyboard Macro,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs
85 Manual}.
86
87 @example
88 (kbd "C-x") @result{} "\C-x"
89 (kbd "C-x C-f") @result{} "\C-x\C-f"
90 (kbd "C-x 4 C-f") @result{} "\C-x4\C-f"
91 (kbd "X") @result{} "X"
92 (kbd "RET") @result{} "\^M"
93 (kbd "C-c SPC") @result{} "\C-c@ "
94 (kbd "<f1> SPC") @result{} [f1 32]
95 (kbd "C-M-<down>") @result{} [C-M-down]
96 @end example
97 @end defun
98
99 @node Keymap Basics
100 @section Keymap Basics
101 @cindex key binding
102 @cindex binding of a key
103 @cindex complete key
104 @cindex undefined key
105
106 A keymap is a Lisp data structure that specifies @dfn{key bindings}
107 for various key sequences.
108
109 A single keymap directly specifies definitions for individual
110 events. When a key sequence consists of a single event, its binding
111 in a keymap is the keymap's definition for that event. The binding of
112 a longer key sequence is found by an iterative process: first find the
113 definition of the first event (which must itself be a keymap); then
114 find the second event's definition in that keymap, and so on until all
115 the events in the key sequence have been processed.
116
117 If the binding of a key sequence is a keymap, we call the key sequence
118 a @dfn{prefix key}. Otherwise, we call it a @dfn{complete key} (because
119 no more events can be added to it). If the binding is @code{nil},
120 we call the key @dfn{undefined}. Examples of prefix keys are @kbd{C-c},
121 @kbd{C-x}, and @kbd{C-x 4}. Examples of defined complete keys are
122 @kbd{X}, @key{RET}, and @kbd{C-x 4 C-f}. Examples of undefined complete
123 keys are @kbd{C-x C-g}, and @kbd{C-c 3}. @xref{Prefix Keys}, for more
124 details.
125
126 The rule for finding the binding of a key sequence assumes that the
127 intermediate bindings (found for the events before the last) are all
128 keymaps; if this is not so, the sequence of events does not form a
129 unit---it is not really one key sequence. In other words, removing one
130 or more events from the end of any valid key sequence must always yield
131 a prefix key. For example, @kbd{C-f C-n} is not a key sequence;
132 @kbd{C-f} is not a prefix key, so a longer sequence starting with
133 @kbd{C-f} cannot be a key sequence.
134
135 The set of possible multi-event key sequences depends on the bindings
136 for prefix keys; therefore, it can be different for different keymaps,
137 and can change when bindings are changed. However, a one-event sequence
138 is always a key sequence, because it does not depend on any prefix keys
139 for its well-formedness.
140
141 At any time, several primary keymaps are @dfn{active}---that is, in
142 use for finding key bindings. These are the @dfn{global map}, which is
143 shared by all buffers; the @dfn{local keymap}, which is usually
144 associated with a specific major mode; and zero or more @dfn{minor mode
145 keymaps}, which belong to currently enabled minor modes. (Not all minor
146 modes have keymaps.) The local keymap bindings shadow (i.e., take
147 precedence over) the corresponding global bindings. The minor mode
148 keymaps shadow both local and global keymaps. @xref{Active Keymaps},
149 for details.
150
151 @node Format of Keymaps
152 @section Format of Keymaps
153 @cindex format of keymaps
154 @cindex keymap format
155 @cindex full keymap
156 @cindex sparse keymap
157
158 Each keymap is a list whose @sc{car} is the symbol @code{keymap}. The
159 remaining elements of the list define the key bindings of the keymap.
160 A symbol whose function definition is a keymap is also a keymap. Use
161 the function @code{keymapp} (see below) to test whether an object is a
162 keymap.
163
164 Several kinds of elements may appear in a keymap, after the symbol
165 @code{keymap} that begins it:
166
167 @table @code
168 @item (@var{type} .@: @var{binding})
169 This specifies one binding, for events of type @var{type}. Each
170 ordinary binding applies to events of a particular @dfn{event type},
171 which is always a character or a symbol. @xref{Classifying Events}.
172 In this kind of binding, @var{binding} is a command.
173
174 @item (@var{type} @var{item-name} .@: @var{binding})
175 This specifies a binding which is also a simple menu item that
176 displays as @var{item-name} in the menu. @xref{Simple Menu Items}.
177
178 @item (@var{type} @var{item-name} @var{help-string} .@: @var{binding})
179 This is a simple menu item with help string @var{help-string}.
180
181 @item (@var{type} menu-item .@: @var{details})
182 This specifies a binding which is also an extended menu item. This
183 allows use of other features. @xref{Extended Menu Items}.
184
185 @item (t .@: @var{binding})
186 @cindex default key binding
187 This specifies a @dfn{default key binding}; any event not bound by other
188 elements of the keymap is given @var{binding} as its binding. Default
189 bindings allow a keymap to bind all possible event types without having
190 to enumerate all of them. A keymap that has a default binding
191 completely masks any lower-precedence keymap, except for events
192 explicitly bound to @code{nil} (see below).
193
194 @item @var{char-table}
195 If an element of a keymap is a char-table, it counts as holding
196 bindings for all character events with no modifier bits
197 (@pxref{modifier bits}): element @var{n} is the binding for the
198 character with code @var{n}. This is a compact way to record lots of
199 bindings. A keymap with such a char-table is called a @dfn{full
200 keymap}. Other keymaps are called @dfn{sparse keymaps}.
201
202 @item @var{string}
203 @cindex keymap prompt string
204 @cindex overall prompt string
205 @cindex prompt string of keymap
206 Aside from elements that specify bindings for keys, a keymap can also
207 have a string as an element. This is called the @dfn{overall prompt
208 string} and makes it possible to use the keymap as a menu.
209 @xref{Defining Menus}.
210
211 @item (keymap @dots{})
212 If an element of a keymap is itself a keymap, it counts as if this inner keymap
213 were inlined in the outer keymap. This is used for multiple-inheritance, such
214 as in @code{make-composed-keymap}.
215 @end table
216
217 When the binding is @code{nil}, it doesn't constitute a definition
218 but it does take precedence over a default binding or a binding in the
219 parent keymap. On the other hand, a binding of @code{nil} does
220 @emph{not} override lower-precedence keymaps; thus, if the local map
221 gives a binding of @code{nil}, Emacs uses the binding from the
222 global map.
223
224 @cindex meta characters lookup
225 Keymaps do not directly record bindings for the meta characters.
226 Instead, meta characters are regarded for purposes of key lookup as
227 sequences of two characters, the first of which is @key{ESC} (or
228 whatever is currently the value of @code{meta-prefix-char}). Thus, the
229 key @kbd{M-a} is internally represented as @kbd{@key{ESC} a}, and its
230 global binding is found at the slot for @kbd{a} in @code{esc-map}
231 (@pxref{Prefix Keys}).
232
233 This conversion applies only to characters, not to function keys or
234 other input events; thus, @kbd{M-@key{end}} has nothing to do with
235 @kbd{@key{ESC} @key{end}}.
236
237 Here as an example is the local keymap for Lisp mode, a sparse
238 keymap. It defines bindings for @key{DEL}, @kbd{C-c C-z},
239 @kbd{C-M-q}, and @kbd{C-M-x} (the actual value also contains a menu
240 binding, which is omitted here for the sake of brevity).
241
242 @example
243 @group
244 lisp-mode-map
245 @result{}
246 @end group
247 @group
248 (keymap
249 (3 keymap
250 ;; @kbd{C-c C-z}
251 (26 . run-lisp))
252 @end group
253 @group
254 (27 keymap
255 ;; @r{@kbd{C-M-x}, treated as @kbd{@key{ESC} C-x}}
256 (24 . lisp-send-defun))
257 @end group
258 @group
259 ;; @r{This part is inherited from @code{lisp-mode-shared-map}.}
260 keymap
261 ;; @key{DEL}
262 (127 . backward-delete-char-untabify)
263 @end group
264 @group
265 (27 keymap
266 ;; @r{@kbd{C-M-q}, treated as @kbd{@key{ESC} C-q}}
267 (17 . indent-sexp)))
268 @end group
269 @end example
270
271 @defun keymapp object
272 This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a keymap, @code{nil}
273 otherwise. More precisely, this function tests for a list whose
274 @sc{car} is @code{keymap}, or for a symbol whose function definition
275 satisfies @code{keymapp}.
276
277 @example
278 @group
279 (keymapp '(keymap))
280 @result{} t
281 @end group
282 @group
283 (fset 'foo '(keymap))
284 (keymapp 'foo)
285 @result{} t
286 @end group
287 @group
288 (keymapp (current-global-map))
289 @result{} t
290 @end group
291 @end example
292 @end defun
293
294 @node Creating Keymaps
295 @section Creating Keymaps
296 @cindex creating keymaps
297
298 Here we describe the functions for creating keymaps.
299
300 @defun make-sparse-keymap &optional prompt
301 This function creates and returns a new sparse keymap with no entries.
302 (A sparse keymap is the kind of keymap you usually want.) The new
303 keymap does not contain a char-table, unlike @code{make-keymap}, and
304 does not bind any events.
305
306 @example
307 @group
308 (make-sparse-keymap)
309 @result{} (keymap)
310 @end group
311 @end example
312
313 If you specify @var{prompt}, that becomes the overall prompt string
314 for the keymap. You should specify this only for menu keymaps
315 (@pxref{Defining Menus}). A keymap with an overall prompt string will
316 always present a mouse menu or a keyboard menu if it is active for
317 looking up the next input event. Don't specify an overall prompt string
318 for the main map of a major or minor mode, because that would cause
319 the command loop to present a keyboard menu every time.
320 @end defun
321
322 @defun make-keymap &optional prompt
323 This function creates and returns a new full keymap. That keymap
324 contains a char-table (@pxref{Char-Tables}) with slots for all
325 characters without modifiers. The new keymap initially binds all
326 these characters to @code{nil}, and does not bind any other kind of
327 event. The argument @var{prompt} specifies a
328 prompt string, as in @code{make-sparse-keymap}.
329
330 @c This example seems kind of pointless, but I guess it serves
331 @c to contrast the result with make-sparse-keymap above.
332 @example
333 @group
334 (make-keymap)
335 @result{} (keymap #^[nil nil keymap nil nil nil @dots{}])
336 @end group
337 @end example
338
339 A full keymap is more efficient than a sparse keymap when it holds
340 lots of bindings; for just a few, the sparse keymap is better.
341 @end defun
342
343 @defun copy-keymap keymap
344 This function returns a copy of @var{keymap}. Any keymaps that
345 appear directly as bindings in @var{keymap} are also copied recursively,
346 and so on to any number of levels. However, recursive copying does not
347 take place when the definition of a character is a symbol whose function
348 definition is a keymap; the same symbol appears in the new copy.
349 @c Emacs 19 feature
350
351 @example
352 @group
353 (setq map (copy-keymap (current-local-map)))
354 @result{} (keymap
355 @end group
356 @group
357 ;; @r{(This implements meta characters.)}
358 (27 keymap
359 (83 . center-paragraph)
360 (115 . center-line))
361 (9 . tab-to-tab-stop))
362 @end group
363
364 @group
365 (eq map (current-local-map))
366 @result{} nil
367 @end group
368 @group
369 (equal map (current-local-map))
370 @result{} t
371 @end group
372 @end example
373 @end defun
374
375 @node Inheritance and Keymaps
376 @section Inheritance and Keymaps
377 @cindex keymap inheritance
378 @cindex inheritance, keymap
379
380 A keymap can inherit the bindings of another keymap, which we call the
381 @dfn{parent keymap}. Such a keymap looks like this:
382
383 @example
384 (keymap @var{elements}@dots{} . @var{parent-keymap})
385 @end example
386
387 @noindent
388 The effect is that this keymap inherits all the bindings of
389 @var{parent-keymap}, whatever they may be at the time a key is looked up,
390 but can add to them or override them with @var{elements}.
391
392 If you change the bindings in @var{parent-keymap} using
393 @code{define-key} or other key-binding functions, these changed
394 bindings are visible in the inheriting keymap, unless shadowed by the
395 bindings made by @var{elements}. The converse is not true: if you use
396 @code{define-key} to change bindings in the inheriting keymap, these
397 changes are recorded in @var{elements}, but have no effect on
398 @var{parent-keymap}.
399
400 The proper way to construct a keymap with a parent is to use
401 @code{set-keymap-parent}; if you have code that directly constructs a
402 keymap with a parent, please convert the program to use
403 @code{set-keymap-parent} instead.
404
405 @defun keymap-parent keymap
406 This returns the parent keymap of @var{keymap}. If @var{keymap}
407 has no parent, @code{keymap-parent} returns @code{nil}.
408 @end defun
409
410 @defun set-keymap-parent keymap parent
411 This sets the parent keymap of @var{keymap} to @var{parent}, and returns
412 @var{parent}. If @var{parent} is @code{nil}, this function gives
413 @var{keymap} no parent at all.
414
415 If @var{keymap} has submaps (bindings for prefix keys), they too receive
416 new parent keymaps that reflect what @var{parent} specifies for those
417 prefix keys.
418 @end defun
419
420 Here is an example showing how to make a keymap that inherits
421 from @code{text-mode-map}:
422
423 @example
424 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
425 (set-keymap-parent map text-mode-map)
426 map)
427 @end example
428
429 A non-sparse keymap can have a parent too, but this is not very
430 useful. A non-sparse keymap always specifies something as the binding
431 for every numeric character code without modifier bits, even if it is
432 @code{nil}, so these character's bindings are never inherited from
433 the parent keymap.
434
435 @cindex keymap inheritance from multiple maps
436 Sometimes you want to make a keymap that inherits from more than one
437 map. You can use the function @code{make-composed-keymap} for this.
438
439 @defun make-composed-keymap maps &optional parent
440 This function returns a new keymap composed of the existing keymap(s)
441 @var{maps}, and optionally inheriting from a parent keymap
442 @var{parent}. @var{maps} can be a single keymap or a list of more
443 than one. When looking up a key in the resulting new map, Emacs
444 searches in each of the @var{maps} in turn, and then in @var{parent},
445 stopping at the first match. A @code{nil} binding in any one of
446 @var{maps} overrides any binding in @var{parent}, but it does not
447 override any non-@code{nil} binding in any other of the @var{maps}.
448 @end defun
449
450 @noindent For example, here is how Emacs sets the parent of
451 @code{help-mode-map}, such that it inherits from both
452 @code{button-buffer-map} and @code{special-mode-map}:
453
454 @example
455 (defvar help-mode-map
456 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
457 (set-keymap-parent map
458 (make-composed-keymap button-buffer-map special-mode-map))
459 ... map) ... )
460 @end example
461
462
463 @node Prefix Keys
464 @section Prefix Keys
465 @cindex prefix key
466
467 A @dfn{prefix key} is a key sequence whose binding is a keymap. The
468 keymap defines what to do with key sequences that extend the prefix key.
469 For example, @kbd{C-x} is a prefix key, and it uses a keymap that is
470 also stored in the variable @code{ctl-x-map}. This keymap defines
471 bindings for key sequences starting with @kbd{C-x}.
472
473 Some of the standard Emacs prefix keys use keymaps that are
474 also found in Lisp variables:
475
476 @itemize @bullet
477 @item
478 @vindex esc-map
479 @findex ESC-prefix
480 @code{esc-map} is the global keymap for the @key{ESC} prefix key. Thus,
481 the global definitions of all meta characters are actually found here.
482 This map is also the function definition of @code{ESC-prefix}.
483
484 @item
485 @cindex @kbd{C-h}
486 @code{help-map} is the global keymap for the @kbd{C-h} prefix key.
487
488 @item
489 @cindex @kbd{C-c}
490 @vindex mode-specific-map
491 @code{mode-specific-map} is the global keymap for the prefix key
492 @kbd{C-c}. This map is actually global, not mode-specific, but its name
493 provides useful information about @kbd{C-c} in the output of @kbd{C-h b}
494 (@code{display-bindings}), since the main use of this prefix key is for
495 mode-specific bindings.
496
497 @item
498 @cindex @kbd{C-x}
499 @vindex ctl-x-map
500 @findex Control-X-prefix
501 @code{ctl-x-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x} prefix key.
502 This map is found via the function cell of the symbol
503 @code{Control-X-prefix}.
504
505 @item
506 @cindex @kbd{C-x @key{RET}}
507 @vindex mule-keymap
508 @code{mule-keymap} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x @key{RET}}
509 prefix key.
510
511 @item
512 @cindex @kbd{C-x 4}
513 @vindex ctl-x-4-map
514 @code{ctl-x-4-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x 4} prefix
515 key.
516
517 @item
518 @cindex @kbd{C-x 5}
519 @vindex ctl-x-5-map
520 @code{ctl-x-5-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x 5} prefix
521 key.
522
523 @item
524 @cindex @kbd{C-x 6}
525 @vindex 2C-mode-map
526 @code{2C-mode-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x 6} prefix
527 key.
528
529 @item
530 @cindex @kbd{C-x v}
531 @vindex vc-prefix-map
532 @code{vc-prefix-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x v} prefix
533 key.
534
535 @item
536 @cindex @kbd{M-g}
537 @vindex goto-map
538 @code{goto-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{M-g} prefix
539 key.
540
541 @item
542 @cindex @kbd{M-s}
543 @vindex search-map
544 @code{search-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{M-s} prefix
545 key.
546
547 @item
548 @cindex @kbd{M-o}
549 @vindex facemenu-keymap
550 @code{facemenu-keymap} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{M-o}
551 prefix key.
552
553 @item
554 The other Emacs prefix keys are @kbd{C-x @@}, @kbd{C-x a i}, @kbd{C-x
555 @key{ESC}} and @kbd{@key{ESC} @key{ESC}}. They use keymaps that have
556 no special names.
557 @end itemize
558
559 The keymap binding of a prefix key is used for looking up the event
560 that follows the prefix key. (It may instead be a symbol whose function
561 definition is a keymap. The effect is the same, but the symbol serves
562 as a name for the prefix key.) Thus, the binding of @kbd{C-x} is the
563 symbol @code{Control-X-prefix}, whose function cell holds the keymap
564 for @kbd{C-x} commands. (The same keymap is also the value of
565 @code{ctl-x-map}.)
566
567 Prefix key definitions can appear in any active keymap. The
568 definitions of @kbd{C-c}, @kbd{C-x}, @kbd{C-h} and @key{ESC} as prefix
569 keys appear in the global map, so these prefix keys are always
570 available. Major and minor modes can redefine a key as a prefix by
571 putting a prefix key definition for it in the local map or the minor
572 mode's map. @xref{Active Keymaps}.
573
574 If a key is defined as a prefix in more than one active map, then its
575 various definitions are in effect merged: the commands defined in the
576 minor mode keymaps come first, followed by those in the local map's
577 prefix definition, and then by those from the global map.
578
579 In the following example, we make @kbd{C-p} a prefix key in the local
580 keymap, in such a way that @kbd{C-p} is identical to @kbd{C-x}. Then
581 the binding for @kbd{C-p C-f} is the function @code{find-file}, just
582 like @kbd{C-x C-f}. The key sequence @kbd{C-p 6} is not found in any
583 active keymap.
584
585 @example
586 @group
587 (use-local-map (make-sparse-keymap))
588 @result{} nil
589 @end group
590 @group
591 (local-set-key "\C-p" ctl-x-map)
592 @result{} nil
593 @end group
594 @group
595 (key-binding "\C-p\C-f")
596 @result{} find-file
597 @end group
598
599 @group
600 (key-binding "\C-p6")
601 @result{} nil
602 @end group
603 @end example
604
605 @defun define-prefix-command symbol &optional mapvar prompt
606 @cindex prefix command
607 @anchor{Definition of define-prefix-command}
608 This function prepares @var{symbol} for use as a prefix key's binding:
609 it creates a sparse keymap and stores it as @var{symbol}'s function
610 definition. Subsequently binding a key sequence to @var{symbol} will
611 make that key sequence into a prefix key. The return value is @code{symbol}.
612
613 This function also sets @var{symbol} as a variable, with the keymap as
614 its value. But if @var{mapvar} is non-@code{nil}, it sets @var{mapvar}
615 as a variable instead.
616
617 If @var{prompt} is non-@code{nil}, that becomes the overall prompt
618 string for the keymap. The prompt string should be given for menu keymaps
619 (@pxref{Defining Menus}).
620 @end defun
621
622 @node Active Keymaps
623 @section Active Keymaps
624 @cindex active keymap
625 @cindex global keymap
626 @cindex local keymap
627
628 Emacs normally contains many keymaps; at any given time, just a few
629 of them are @dfn{active}, meaning that they participate in the
630 interpretation of user input. All the active keymaps are used
631 together to determine what command to execute when a key is entered.
632
633 Normally the active keymaps are the @code{keymap} property keymap,
634 the keymaps of any enabled minor modes, the current buffer's local
635 keymap, and the global keymap, in that order. Emacs searches for each
636 input key sequence in all these keymaps. @xref{Searching Keymaps},
637 for more details of this procedure.
638
639 When the key sequence starts with a mouse event,
640 the active keymaps are determined based on the
641 position in that event. If the event happened on a string embedded
642 with a @code{display}, @code{before-string}, or @code{after-string}
643 property (@pxref{Special Properties}), the non-@code{nil} map
644 properties of the string override those of the buffer (if the
645 underlying buffer text contains map properties in its text properties
646 or overlays, they are ignored).
647
648 The @dfn{global keymap} holds the bindings of keys that are defined
649 regardless of the current buffer, such as @kbd{C-f}. The variable
650 @code{global-map} holds this keymap, which is always active.
651
652 Each buffer may have another keymap, its @dfn{local keymap}, which
653 may contain new or overriding definitions for keys. The current
654 buffer's local keymap is always active except when
655 @code{overriding-local-map} overrides it. The @code{local-map} text
656 or overlay property can specify an alternative local keymap for certain
657 parts of the buffer; see @ref{Special Properties}.
658
659 Each minor mode can have a keymap; if it does, the keymap is active
660 when the minor mode is enabled. Modes for emulation can specify
661 additional active keymaps through the variable
662 @code{emulation-mode-map-alists}.
663
664 The highest precedence normal keymap comes from the @code{keymap}
665 text or overlay property. If that is non-@code{nil}, it is the first
666 keymap to be processed, in normal circumstances.
667
668 However, there are also special ways for programs to substitute
669 other keymaps for some of those. The variable
670 @code{overriding-local-map}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies a keymap
671 that replaces all the usual active keymaps except the global keymap.
672
673 The very highest precedence keymap comes from
674 @code{overriding-terminal-local-map}; it operates on a per-terminal basis and
675 is normally used for modal/transient keybindings.
676
677 @cindex major mode keymap
678 Since every buffer that uses the same major mode normally uses the
679 same local keymap, you can think of the keymap as local to the mode. A
680 change to the local keymap of a buffer (using @code{local-set-key}, for
681 example) is seen also in the other buffers that share that keymap.
682
683 The local keymaps that are used for Lisp mode and some other major
684 modes exist even if they have not yet been used. These local keymaps are
685 the values of variables such as @code{lisp-mode-map}. For most major
686 modes, which are less frequently used, the local keymap is constructed
687 only when the mode is used for the first time in a session.
688
689 The minibuffer has local keymaps, too; they contain various completion
690 and exit commands. @xref{Intro to Minibuffers}.
691
692 Emacs has other keymaps that are used in a different way---translating
693 events within @code{read-key-sequence}. @xref{Translation Keymaps}.
694
695 @xref{Standard Keymaps}, for a list of some standard keymaps.
696
697 @defun current-active-maps &optional olp position
698 This returns the list of active keymaps that would be used by the
699 command loop in the current circumstances to look up a key sequence.
700 Normally it ignores @code{overriding-local-map} and
701 @code{overriding-terminal-local-map}, but if @var{olp} is non-@code{nil}
702 then it pays attention to them. @var{position} can optionally be either
703 an event position as returned by @code{event-start} or a buffer
704 position, and may change the keymaps as described for
705 @code{key-binding}.
706 @end defun
707
708 @defun key-binding key &optional accept-defaults no-remap position
709 This function returns the binding for @var{key} according to the
710 current active keymaps. The result is @code{nil} if @var{key} is
711 undefined in the keymaps.
712
713 The argument @var{accept-defaults} controls checking for default
714 bindings, as in @code{lookup-key} (@pxref{Functions for Key Lookup}).
715
716 When commands are remapped (@pxref{Remapping Commands}),
717 @code{key-binding} normally processes command remappings so as to
718 return the remapped command that will actually be executed. However,
719 if @var{no-remap} is non-@code{nil}, @code{key-binding} ignores
720 remappings and returns the binding directly specified for @var{key}.
721
722 If @var{key} starts with a mouse event (perhaps following a prefix
723 event), the maps to be consulted are determined based on the event's
724 position. Otherwise, they are determined based on the value of point.
725 However, you can override either of them by specifying @var{position}.
726 If @var{position} is non-@code{nil}, it should be either a buffer
727 position or an event position like the value of @code{event-start}.
728 Then the maps consulted are determined based on @var{position}.
729
730 An error is signaled if @var{key} is not a string or a vector.
731
732 @example
733 @group
734 (key-binding "\C-x\C-f")
735 @result{} find-file
736 @end group
737 @end example
738 @end defun
739
740 @node Searching Keymaps
741 @section Searching the Active Keymaps
742 @cindex searching active keymaps for keys
743
744 After translation of event subsequences (@pxref{Translation
745 Keymaps}) Emacs looks for them in the active keymaps. Here is a
746 pseudo-Lisp description of the order and conditions for searching
747 them:
748
749 @lisp
750 (or (@var{find-in} @var{transient-map})
751 (cond
752 (overriding-terminal-local-map
753 (@var{find-in} overriding-terminal-local-map))
754 (overriding-local-map
755 (@var{find-in} overriding-local-map))
756 ((or (@var{find-in} (get-char-property (point) 'keymap))
757 (@var{find-in-any} emulation-mode-map-alists)
758 (@var{find-in-any} minor-mode-overriding-map-alist)
759 (@var{find-in-any} minor-mode-map-alist)
760 (if (get-text-property (point) 'local-map)
761 (@var{find-in} (get-char-property (point) 'local-map))
762 (@var{find-in} (current-local-map))))))
763 (@var{find-in} (current-global-map)))
764 @end lisp
765
766 @noindent
767 Here, @var{find-in} and @var{find-in-any} are pseudo functions that
768 search in one keymap and in an alist of keymaps, respectively.
769 (Searching a single keymap for a binding is called @dfn{key lookup};
770 see @ref{Key Lookup}.) @var{transient-map} is a pseudo variable that
771 represents the effect of a @code{set-transient-map} call
772 (@pxref{Controlling Active Maps}).
773
774 In the above pseudo-code, if a key sequence starts with a mouse
775 event, that event's position is used instead of point and the current
776 buffer. Mouse events on an embedded string use non-@code{nil} text
777 properties from that string instead of the buffer.
778
779 When a match is found (@pxref{Key Lookup}), if the binding in the
780 keymap is a function, the search is over. However if the keymap entry
781 is a symbol with a value or a string, Emacs replaces the input key
782 sequences with the variable's value or the string, and restarts the
783 search of the active keymaps.
784
785 The function finally found might also be remapped. @xref{Remapping
786 Commands}.
787
788 @node Controlling Active Maps
789 @section Controlling the Active Keymaps
790
791 @defvar global-map
792 This variable contains the default global keymap that maps Emacs
793 keyboard input to commands. The global keymap is normally this
794 keymap. The default global keymap is a full keymap that binds
795 @code{self-insert-command} to all of the printing characters.
796
797 It is normal practice to change the bindings in the global keymap, but you
798 should not assign this variable any value other than the keymap it starts
799 out with.
800 @end defvar
801
802 @defun current-global-map
803 This function returns the current global keymap. This is the same as
804 the value of @code{global-map} unless you change one or the other.
805 The return value is a reference, not a copy; if you use
806 @code{define-key} or other functions on it you will alter global
807 bindings.
808
809 @example
810 @group
811 (current-global-map)
812 @result{} (keymap [set-mark-command beginning-of-line @dots{}
813 delete-backward-char])
814 @end group
815 @end example
816 @end defun
817
818 @defun current-local-map
819 This function returns the current buffer's local keymap, or @code{nil}
820 if it has none. In the following example, the keymap for the
821 @file{*scratch*} buffer (using Lisp Interaction mode) is a sparse keymap
822 in which the entry for @key{ESC}, @acronym{ASCII} code 27, is another sparse
823 keymap.
824
825 @example
826 @group
827 (current-local-map)
828 @result{} (keymap
829 (10 . eval-print-last-sexp)
830 (9 . lisp-indent-line)
831 (127 . backward-delete-char-untabify)
832 @end group
833 @group
834 (27 keymap
835 (24 . eval-defun)
836 (17 . indent-sexp)))
837 @end group
838 @end example
839 @end defun
840
841 @code{current-local-map} returns a reference to the local keymap, not
842 a copy of it; if you use @code{define-key} or other functions on it
843 you will alter local bindings.
844
845 @defun current-minor-mode-maps
846 This function returns a list of the keymaps of currently enabled minor modes.
847 @end defun
848
849 @defun use-global-map keymap
850 This function makes @var{keymap} the new current global keymap. It
851 returns @code{nil}.
852
853 It is very unusual to change the global keymap.
854 @end defun
855
856 @defun use-local-map keymap
857 This function makes @var{keymap} the new local keymap of the current
858 buffer. If @var{keymap} is @code{nil}, then the buffer has no local
859 keymap. @code{use-local-map} returns @code{nil}. Most major mode
860 commands use this function.
861 @end defun
862
863 @c Emacs 19 feature
864 @defvar minor-mode-map-alist
865 @anchor{Definition of minor-mode-map-alist}
866 This variable is an alist describing keymaps that may or may not be
867 active according to the values of certain variables. Its elements look
868 like this:
869
870 @example
871 (@var{variable} . @var{keymap})
872 @end example
873
874 The keymap @var{keymap} is active whenever @var{variable} has a
875 non-@code{nil} value. Typically @var{variable} is the variable that
876 enables or disables a minor mode. @xref{Keymaps and Minor Modes}.
877
878 Note that elements of @code{minor-mode-map-alist} do not have the same
879 structure as elements of @code{minor-mode-alist}. The map must be the
880 @sc{cdr} of the element; a list with the map as the second element will
881 not do. The @sc{cdr} can be either a keymap (a list) or a symbol whose
882 function definition is a keymap.
883
884 When more than one minor mode keymap is active, the earlier one in
885 @code{minor-mode-map-alist} takes priority. But you should design
886 minor modes so that they don't interfere with each other. If you do
887 this properly, the order will not matter.
888
889 See @ref{Keymaps and Minor Modes}, for more information about minor
890 modes. See also @code{minor-mode-key-binding} (@pxref{Functions for Key
891 Lookup}).
892 @end defvar
893
894 @defvar minor-mode-overriding-map-alist
895 This variable allows major modes to override the key bindings for
896 particular minor modes. The elements of this alist look like the
897 elements of @code{minor-mode-map-alist}: @code{(@var{variable}
898 . @var{keymap})}.
899
900 If a variable appears as an element of
901 @code{minor-mode-overriding-map-alist}, the map specified by that
902 element totally replaces any map specified for the same variable in
903 @code{minor-mode-map-alist}.
904
905 @code{minor-mode-overriding-map-alist} is automatically buffer-local in
906 all buffers.
907 @end defvar
908
909 @defvar overriding-local-map
910 If non-@code{nil}, this variable holds a keymap to use instead of the
911 buffer's local keymap, any text property or overlay keymaps, and any
912 minor mode keymaps. This keymap, if specified, overrides all other
913 maps that would have been active, except for the current global map.
914 @end defvar
915
916 @defvar overriding-terminal-local-map
917 If non-@code{nil}, this variable holds a keymap to use instead of
918 @code{overriding-local-map}, the buffer's local keymap, text property
919 or overlay keymaps, and all the minor mode keymaps.
920
921 This variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be
922 buffer-local. @xref{Multiple Terminals}. It is used to implement
923 incremental search mode.
924 @end defvar
925
926 @defvar overriding-local-map-menu-flag
927 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, the value of
928 @code{overriding-local-map} or @code{overriding-terminal-local-map} can
929 affect the display of the menu bar. The default value is @code{nil}, so
930 those map variables have no effect on the menu bar.
931
932 Note that these two map variables do affect the execution of key
933 sequences entered using the menu bar, even if they do not affect the
934 menu bar display. So if a menu bar key sequence comes in, you should
935 clear the variables before looking up and executing that key sequence.
936 Modes that use the variables would typically do this anyway; normally
937 they respond to events that they do not handle by ``unreading'' them and
938 exiting.
939 @end defvar
940
941 @defvar special-event-map
942 This variable holds a keymap for special events. If an event type has a
943 binding in this keymap, then it is special, and the binding for the
944 event is run directly by @code{read-event}. @xref{Special Events}.
945 @end defvar
946
947 @defvar emulation-mode-map-alists
948 This variable holds a list of keymap alists to use for emulations
949 modes. It is intended for modes or packages using multiple minor-mode
950 keymaps. Each element is a keymap alist which has the same format and
951 meaning as @code{minor-mode-map-alist}, or a symbol with a variable
952 binding which is such an alist. The ``active'' keymaps in each alist
953 are used before @code{minor-mode-map-alist} and
954 @code{minor-mode-overriding-map-alist}.
955 @end defvar
956
957 @cindex transient keymap
958 @defun set-transient-map keymap &optional keep
959 This function adds @var{keymap} as a @dfn{transient} keymap, which
960 takes precedence over other keymaps for one (or more) subsequent keys.
961
962 Normally, @var{keymap} is used just once, to look up the very next
963 key. If the optional argument @var{pred} is @code{t}, the map stays
964 active as long as the user types keys defined in @var{keymap}; when
965 the user types a key that is not in @var{keymap}, the transient keymap
966 is deactivated and normal key lookup continues for that key.
967
968 The @var{pred} argument can also be a function. In that case, the
969 function is called with no arguments, prior to running each command,
970 while @var{keymap} is active; it should return non-@code{nil} if
971 @var{keymap} should stay active.
972
973 The transient keymap takes precedence over the ``overriding'' maps
974 (see above); and unlike them, if no match for a key is found in
975 @var{keymap}, the key lookup process continues. For a pseudo-Lisp
976 description of exactly how and when this keymap applies,
977 @xref{Searching Keymaps}.
978 @end defun
979
980 @node Key Lookup
981 @section Key Lookup
982 @cindex key lookup
983 @cindex keymap entry
984
985 @dfn{Key lookup} is the process of finding the binding of a key
986 sequence from a given keymap. The execution or use of the binding is
987 not part of key lookup.
988
989 Key lookup uses just the event type of each event in the key sequence;
990 the rest of the event is ignored. In fact, a key sequence used for key
991 lookup may designate a mouse event with just its types (a symbol)
992 instead of the entire event (a list). @xref{Input Events}. Such
993 a ``key sequence'' is insufficient for @code{command-execute} to run,
994 but it is sufficient for looking up or rebinding a key.
995
996 When the key sequence consists of multiple events, key lookup
997 processes the events sequentially: the binding of the first event is
998 found, and must be a keymap; then the second event's binding is found in
999 that keymap, and so on until all the events in the key sequence are used
1000 up. (The binding thus found for the last event may or may not be a
1001 keymap.) Thus, the process of key lookup is defined in terms of a
1002 simpler process for looking up a single event in a keymap. How that is
1003 done depends on the type of object associated with the event in that
1004 keymap.
1005
1006 Let's use the term @dfn{keymap entry} to describe the value found by
1007 looking up an event type in a keymap. (This doesn't include the item
1008 string and other extra elements in a keymap element for a menu item, because
1009 @code{lookup-key} and other key lookup functions don't include them in
1010 the returned value.) While any Lisp object may be stored in a keymap
1011 as a keymap entry, not all make sense for key lookup. Here is a table
1012 of the meaningful types of keymap entries:
1013
1014 @table @asis
1015 @item @code{nil}
1016 @cindex @code{nil} in keymap
1017 @code{nil} means that the events used so far in the lookup form an
1018 undefined key. When a keymap fails to mention an event type at all, and
1019 has no default binding, that is equivalent to a binding of @code{nil}
1020 for that event type.
1021
1022 @item @var{command}
1023 @cindex command in keymap
1024 The events used so far in the lookup form a complete key,
1025 and @var{command} is its binding. @xref{What Is a Function}.
1026
1027 @item @var{array}
1028 @cindex string in keymap
1029 The array (either a string or a vector) is a keyboard macro. The events
1030 used so far in the lookup form a complete key, and the array is its
1031 binding. See @ref{Keyboard Macros}, for more information.
1032
1033 @item @var{keymap}
1034 @cindex keymap in keymap
1035 The events used so far in the lookup form a prefix key. The next
1036 event of the key sequence is looked up in @var{keymap}.
1037
1038 @item @var{list}
1039 @cindex list in keymap
1040 The meaning of a list depends on what it contains:
1041
1042 @itemize @bullet
1043 @item
1044 If the @sc{car} of @var{list} is the symbol @code{keymap}, then the list
1045 is a keymap, and is treated as a keymap (see above).
1046
1047 @item
1048 @cindex @code{lambda} in keymap
1049 If the @sc{car} of @var{list} is @code{lambda}, then the list is a
1050 lambda expression. This is presumed to be a function, and is treated
1051 as such (see above). In order to execute properly as a key binding,
1052 this function must be a command---it must have an @code{interactive}
1053 specification. @xref{Defining Commands}.
1054
1055 @item
1056 If the @sc{car} of @var{list} is a keymap and the @sc{cdr} is an event
1057 type, then this is an @dfn{indirect entry}:
1058
1059 @example
1060 (@var{othermap} . @var{othertype})
1061 @end example
1062
1063 When key lookup encounters an indirect entry, it looks up instead the
1064 binding of @var{othertype} in @var{othermap} and uses that.
1065
1066 This feature permits you to define one key as an alias for another key.
1067 For example, an entry whose @sc{car} is the keymap called @code{esc-map}
1068 and whose @sc{cdr} is 32 (the code for @key{SPC}) means, ``Use the global
1069 binding of @kbd{Meta-@key{SPC}}, whatever that may be''.
1070 @end itemize
1071
1072 @item @var{symbol}
1073 @cindex symbol in keymap
1074 The function definition of @var{symbol} is used in place of
1075 @var{symbol}. If that too is a symbol, then this process is repeated,
1076 any number of times. Ultimately this should lead to an object that is
1077 a keymap, a command, or a keyboard macro. A list is allowed if it is a
1078 keymap or a command, but indirect entries are not understood when found
1079 via symbols.
1080
1081 Note that keymaps and keyboard macros (strings and vectors) are not
1082 valid functions, so a symbol with a keymap, string, or vector as its
1083 function definition is invalid as a function. It is, however, valid as
1084 a key binding. If the definition is a keyboard macro, then the symbol
1085 is also valid as an argument to @code{command-execute}
1086 (@pxref{Interactive Call}).
1087
1088 @cindex @code{undefined} in keymap
1089 The symbol @code{undefined} is worth special mention: it means to treat
1090 the key as undefined. Strictly speaking, the key is defined, and its
1091 binding is the command @code{undefined}; but that command does the same
1092 thing that is done automatically for an undefined key: it rings the bell
1093 (by calling @code{ding}) but does not signal an error.
1094
1095 @cindex preventing prefix key
1096 @code{undefined} is used in local keymaps to override a global key
1097 binding and make the key ``undefined'' locally. A local binding of
1098 @code{nil} would fail to do this because it would not override the
1099 global binding.
1100
1101 @item @var{anything else}
1102 If any other type of object is found, the events used so far in the
1103 lookup form a complete key, and the object is its binding, but the
1104 binding is not executable as a command.
1105 @end table
1106
1107 In short, a keymap entry may be a keymap, a command, a keyboard
1108 macro, a symbol that leads to one of them, or an indirection or
1109 @code{nil}.
1110
1111 @node Functions for Key Lookup
1112 @section Functions for Key Lookup
1113
1114 Here are the functions and variables pertaining to key lookup.
1115
1116 @defun lookup-key keymap key &optional accept-defaults
1117 This function returns the definition of @var{key} in @var{keymap}. All
1118 the other functions described in this chapter that look up keys use
1119 @code{lookup-key}. Here are examples:
1120
1121 @example
1122 @group
1123 (lookup-key (current-global-map) "\C-x\C-f")
1124 @result{} find-file
1125 @end group
1126 @group
1127 (lookup-key (current-global-map) (kbd "C-x C-f"))
1128 @result{} find-file
1129 @end group
1130 @group
1131 (lookup-key (current-global-map) "\C-x\C-f12345")
1132 @result{} 2
1133 @end group
1134 @end example
1135
1136 If the string or vector @var{key} is not a valid key sequence according
1137 to the prefix keys specified in @var{keymap}, it must be ``too long''
1138 and have extra events at the end that do not fit into a single key
1139 sequence. Then the value is a number, the number of events at the front
1140 of @var{key} that compose a complete key.
1141
1142 @c Emacs 19 feature
1143 If @var{accept-defaults} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{lookup-key}
1144 considers default bindings as well as bindings for the specific events
1145 in @var{key}. Otherwise, @code{lookup-key} reports only bindings for
1146 the specific sequence @var{key}, ignoring default bindings except when
1147 you explicitly ask about them. (To do this, supply @code{t} as an
1148 element of @var{key}; see @ref{Format of Keymaps}.)
1149
1150 If @var{key} contains a meta character (not a function key), that
1151 character is implicitly replaced by a two-character sequence: the value
1152 of @code{meta-prefix-char}, followed by the corresponding non-meta
1153 character. Thus, the first example below is handled by conversion into
1154 the second example.
1155
1156 @example
1157 @group
1158 (lookup-key (current-global-map) "\M-f")
1159 @result{} forward-word
1160 @end group
1161 @group
1162 (lookup-key (current-global-map) "\ef")
1163 @result{} forward-word
1164 @end group
1165 @end example
1166
1167 Unlike @code{read-key-sequence}, this function does not modify the
1168 specified events in ways that discard information (@pxref{Key Sequence
1169 Input}). In particular, it does not convert letters to lower case and
1170 it does not change drag events to clicks.
1171 @end defun
1172
1173 @deffn Command undefined
1174 Used in keymaps to undefine keys. It calls @code{ding}, but does
1175 not cause an error.
1176 @end deffn
1177
1178 @defun local-key-binding key &optional accept-defaults
1179 This function returns the binding for @var{key} in the current
1180 local keymap, or @code{nil} if it is undefined there.
1181
1182 @c Emacs 19 feature
1183 The argument @var{accept-defaults} controls checking for default bindings,
1184 as in @code{lookup-key} (above).
1185 @end defun
1186
1187 @defun global-key-binding key &optional accept-defaults
1188 This function returns the binding for command @var{key} in the
1189 current global keymap, or @code{nil} if it is undefined there.
1190
1191 @c Emacs 19 feature
1192 The argument @var{accept-defaults} controls checking for default bindings,
1193 as in @code{lookup-key} (above).
1194 @end defun
1195
1196 @c Emacs 19 feature
1197 @defun minor-mode-key-binding key &optional accept-defaults
1198 This function returns a list of all the active minor mode bindings of
1199 @var{key}. More precisely, it returns an alist of pairs
1200 @code{(@var{modename} . @var{binding})}, where @var{modename} is the
1201 variable that enables the minor mode, and @var{binding} is @var{key}'s
1202 binding in that mode. If @var{key} has no minor-mode bindings, the
1203 value is @code{nil}.
1204
1205 If the first binding found is not a prefix definition (a keymap or a
1206 symbol defined as a keymap), all subsequent bindings from other minor
1207 modes are omitted, since they would be completely shadowed. Similarly,
1208 the list omits non-prefix bindings that follow prefix bindings.
1209
1210 The argument @var{accept-defaults} controls checking for default
1211 bindings, as in @code{lookup-key} (above).
1212 @end defun
1213
1214 @defopt meta-prefix-char
1215 @cindex @key{ESC}
1216 This variable is the meta-prefix character code. It is used for
1217 translating a meta character to a two-character sequence so it can be
1218 looked up in a keymap. For useful results, the value should be a
1219 prefix event (@pxref{Prefix Keys}). The default value is 27, which is
1220 the @acronym{ASCII} code for @key{ESC}.
1221
1222 As long as the value of @code{meta-prefix-char} remains 27, key lookup
1223 translates @kbd{M-b} into @kbd{@key{ESC} b}, which is normally defined
1224 as the @code{backward-word} command. However, if you were to set
1225 @code{meta-prefix-char} to 24, the code for @kbd{C-x}, then Emacs will
1226 translate @kbd{M-b} into @kbd{C-x b}, whose standard binding is the
1227 @code{switch-to-buffer} command. (Don't actually do this!) Here is an
1228 illustration of what would happen:
1229
1230 @smallexample
1231 @group
1232 meta-prefix-char ; @r{The default value.}
1233 @result{} 27
1234 @end group
1235 @group
1236 (key-binding "\M-b")
1237 @result{} backward-word
1238 @end group
1239 @group
1240 ?\C-x ; @r{The print representation}
1241 @result{} 24 ; @r{of a character.}
1242 @end group
1243 @group
1244 (setq meta-prefix-char 24)
1245 @result{} 24
1246 @end group
1247 @group
1248 (key-binding "\M-b")
1249 @result{} switch-to-buffer ; @r{Now, typing @kbd{M-b} is}
1250 ; @r{like typing @kbd{C-x b}.}
1251
1252 (setq meta-prefix-char 27) ; @r{Avoid confusion!}
1253 @result{} 27 ; @r{Restore the default value!}
1254 @end group
1255 @end smallexample
1256
1257 This translation of one event into two happens only for characters, not
1258 for other kinds of input events. Thus, @kbd{M-@key{F1}}, a function
1259 key, is not converted into @kbd{@key{ESC} @key{F1}}.
1260 @end defopt
1261
1262 @node Changing Key Bindings
1263 @section Changing Key Bindings
1264 @cindex changing key bindings
1265 @cindex rebinding
1266
1267 The way to rebind a key is to change its entry in a keymap. If you
1268 change a binding in the global keymap, the change is effective in all
1269 buffers (though it has no direct effect in buffers that shadow the
1270 global binding with a local one). If you change the current buffer's
1271 local map, that usually affects all buffers using the same major mode.
1272 The @code{global-set-key} and @code{local-set-key} functions are
1273 convenient interfaces for these operations (@pxref{Key Binding
1274 Commands}). You can also use @code{define-key}, a more general
1275 function; then you must explicitly specify the map to change.
1276
1277 When choosing the key sequences for Lisp programs to rebind, please
1278 follow the Emacs conventions for use of various keys (@pxref{Key
1279 Binding Conventions}).
1280
1281 @cindex meta character key constants
1282 @cindex control character key constants
1283 In writing the key sequence to rebind, it is good to use the special
1284 escape sequences for control and meta characters (@pxref{String Type}).
1285 The syntax @samp{\C-} means that the following character is a control
1286 character and @samp{\M-} means that the following character is a meta
1287 character. Thus, the string @code{"\M-x"} is read as containing a
1288 single @kbd{M-x}, @code{"\C-f"} is read as containing a single
1289 @kbd{C-f}, and @code{"\M-\C-x"} and @code{"\C-\M-x"} are both read as
1290 containing a single @kbd{C-M-x}. You can also use this escape syntax in
1291 vectors, as well as others that aren't allowed in strings; one example
1292 is @samp{[?\C-\H-x home]}. @xref{Character Type}.
1293
1294 The key definition and lookup functions accept an alternate syntax for
1295 event types in a key sequence that is a vector: you can use a list
1296 containing modifier names plus one base event (a character or function
1297 key name). For example, @code{(control ?a)} is equivalent to
1298 @code{?\C-a} and @code{(hyper control left)} is equivalent to
1299 @code{C-H-left}. One advantage of such lists is that the precise
1300 numeric codes for the modifier bits don't appear in compiled files.
1301
1302 The functions below signal an error if @var{keymap} is not a keymap,
1303 or if @var{key} is not a string or vector representing a key sequence.
1304 You can use event types (symbols) as shorthand for events that are
1305 lists. The @code{kbd} function (@pxref{Key Sequences}) is a
1306 convenient way to specify the key sequence.
1307
1308 @defun define-key keymap key binding
1309 This function sets the binding for @var{key} in @var{keymap}. (If
1310 @var{key} is more than one event long, the change is actually made
1311 in another keymap reached from @var{keymap}.) The argument
1312 @var{binding} can be any Lisp object, but only certain types are
1313 meaningful. (For a list of meaningful types, see @ref{Key Lookup}.)
1314 The value returned by @code{define-key} is @var{binding}.
1315
1316 If @var{key} is @code{[t]}, this sets the default binding in
1317 @var{keymap}. When an event has no binding of its own, the Emacs
1318 command loop uses the keymap's default binding, if there is one.
1319
1320 @cindex invalid prefix key error
1321 @cindex key sequence error
1322 Every prefix of @var{key} must be a prefix key (i.e., bound to a keymap)
1323 or undefined; otherwise an error is signaled. If some prefix of
1324 @var{key} is undefined, then @code{define-key} defines it as a prefix
1325 key so that the rest of @var{key} can be defined as specified.
1326
1327 If there was previously no binding for @var{key} in @var{keymap}, the
1328 new binding is added at the beginning of @var{keymap}. The order of
1329 bindings in a keymap makes no difference for keyboard input, but it
1330 does matter for menu keymaps (@pxref{Menu Keymaps}).
1331 @end defun
1332
1333 This example creates a sparse keymap and makes a number of
1334 bindings in it:
1335
1336 @smallexample
1337 @group
1338 (setq map (make-sparse-keymap))
1339 @result{} (keymap)
1340 @end group
1341 @group
1342 (define-key map "\C-f" 'forward-char)
1343 @result{} forward-char
1344 @end group
1345 @group
1346 map
1347 @result{} (keymap (6 . forward-char))
1348 @end group
1349
1350 @group
1351 ;; @r{Build sparse submap for @kbd{C-x} and bind @kbd{f} in that.}
1352 (define-key map (kbd "C-x f") 'forward-word)
1353 @result{} forward-word
1354 @end group
1355 @group
1356 map
1357 @result{} (keymap
1358 (24 keymap ; @kbd{C-x}
1359 (102 . forward-word)) ; @kbd{f}
1360 (6 . forward-char)) ; @kbd{C-f}
1361 @end group
1362
1363 @group
1364 ;; @r{Bind @kbd{C-p} to the @code{ctl-x-map}.}
1365 (define-key map (kbd "C-p") ctl-x-map)
1366 ;; @code{ctl-x-map}
1367 @result{} [nil @dots{} find-file @dots{} backward-kill-sentence]
1368 @end group
1369
1370 @group
1371 ;; @r{Bind @kbd{C-f} to @code{foo} in the @code{ctl-x-map}.}
1372 (define-key map (kbd "C-p C-f") 'foo)
1373 @result{} 'foo
1374 @end group
1375 @group
1376 map
1377 @result{} (keymap ; @r{Note @code{foo} in @code{ctl-x-map}.}
1378 (16 keymap [nil @dots{} foo @dots{} backward-kill-sentence])
1379 (24 keymap
1380 (102 . forward-word))
1381 (6 . forward-char))
1382 @end group
1383 @end smallexample
1384
1385 @noindent
1386 Note that storing a new binding for @kbd{C-p C-f} actually works by
1387 changing an entry in @code{ctl-x-map}, and this has the effect of
1388 changing the bindings of both @kbd{C-p C-f} and @kbd{C-x C-f} in the
1389 default global map.
1390
1391 The function @code{substitute-key-definition} scans a keymap for
1392 keys that have a certain binding and rebinds them with a different
1393 binding. Another feature which is cleaner and can often produce the
1394 same results to remap one command into another (@pxref{Remapping
1395 Commands}).
1396
1397 @defun substitute-key-definition olddef newdef keymap &optional oldmap
1398 @cindex replace bindings
1399 This function replaces @var{olddef} with @var{newdef} for any keys in
1400 @var{keymap} that were bound to @var{olddef}. In other words,
1401 @var{olddef} is replaced with @var{newdef} wherever it appears. The
1402 function returns @code{nil}.
1403
1404 For example, this redefines @kbd{C-x C-f}, if you do it in an Emacs with
1405 standard bindings:
1406
1407 @smallexample
1408 @group
1409 (substitute-key-definition
1410 'find-file 'find-file-read-only (current-global-map))
1411 @end group
1412 @end smallexample
1413
1414 @c Emacs 19 feature
1415 If @var{oldmap} is non-@code{nil}, that changes the behavior of
1416 @code{substitute-key-definition}: the bindings in @var{oldmap} determine
1417 which keys to rebind. The rebindings still happen in @var{keymap}, not
1418 in @var{oldmap}. Thus, you can change one map under the control of the
1419 bindings in another. For example,
1420
1421 @smallexample
1422 (substitute-key-definition
1423 'delete-backward-char 'my-funny-delete
1424 my-map global-map)
1425 @end smallexample
1426
1427 @noindent
1428 puts the special deletion command in @code{my-map} for whichever keys
1429 are globally bound to the standard deletion command.
1430
1431 Here is an example showing a keymap before and after substitution:
1432
1433 @smallexample
1434 @group
1435 (setq map '(keymap
1436 (?1 . olddef-1)
1437 (?2 . olddef-2)
1438 (?3 . olddef-1)))
1439 @result{} (keymap (49 . olddef-1) (50 . olddef-2) (51 . olddef-1))
1440 @end group
1441
1442 @group
1443 (substitute-key-definition 'olddef-1 'newdef map)
1444 @result{} nil
1445 @end group
1446 @group
1447 map
1448 @result{} (keymap (49 . newdef) (50 . olddef-2) (51 . newdef))
1449 @end group
1450 @end smallexample
1451 @end defun
1452
1453 @defun suppress-keymap keymap &optional nodigits
1454 @cindex @code{self-insert-command} override
1455 This function changes the contents of the full keymap @var{keymap} by
1456 remapping @code{self-insert-command} to the command @code{undefined}
1457 (@pxref{Remapping Commands}). This has the effect of undefining all
1458 printing characters, thus making ordinary insertion of text impossible.
1459 @code{suppress-keymap} returns @code{nil}.
1460
1461 If @var{nodigits} is @code{nil}, then @code{suppress-keymap} defines
1462 digits to run @code{digit-argument}, and @kbd{-} to run
1463 @code{negative-argument}. Otherwise it makes them undefined like the
1464 rest of the printing characters.
1465
1466 @cindex yank suppression
1467 @cindex @code{quoted-insert} suppression
1468 The @code{suppress-keymap} function does not make it impossible to
1469 modify a buffer, as it does not suppress commands such as @code{yank}
1470 and @code{quoted-insert}. To prevent any modification of a buffer, make
1471 it read-only (@pxref{Read Only Buffers}).
1472
1473 Since this function modifies @var{keymap}, you would normally use it
1474 on a newly created keymap. Operating on an existing keymap
1475 that is used for some other purpose is likely to cause trouble; for
1476 example, suppressing @code{global-map} would make it impossible to use
1477 most of Emacs.
1478
1479 This function can be used to initialize the local keymap of a major
1480 mode for which insertion of text is not desirable. But usually such a
1481 mode should be derived from @code{special-mode} (@pxref{Basic Major
1482 Modes}); then its keymap will automatically inherit from
1483 @code{special-mode-map}, which is already suppressed. Here is how
1484 @code{special-mode-map} is defined:
1485
1486 @smallexample
1487 @group
1488 (defvar special-mode-map
1489 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
1490 (suppress-keymap map)
1491 (define-key map "q" 'quit-window)
1492 @dots{}
1493 map))
1494 @end group
1495 @end smallexample
1496 @end defun
1497
1498 @node Remapping Commands
1499 @section Remapping Commands
1500 @cindex remapping commands
1501
1502 A special kind of key binding can be used to @dfn{remap} one command
1503 to another, without having to refer to the key sequence(s) bound to
1504 the original command. To use this feature, make a key binding for a
1505 key sequence that starts with the dummy event @code{remap}, followed
1506 by the command name you want to remap; for the binding, specify the
1507 new definition (usually a command name, but possibly any other valid
1508 definition for a key binding).
1509
1510 For example, suppose My mode provides a special command
1511 @code{my-kill-line}, which should be invoked instead of
1512 @code{kill-line}. To establish this, its mode keymap should contain
1513 the following remapping:
1514
1515 @smallexample
1516 (define-key my-mode-map [remap kill-line] 'my-kill-line)
1517 @end smallexample
1518
1519 @noindent
1520 Then, whenever @code{my-mode-map} is active, if the user types
1521 @kbd{C-k} (the default global key sequence for @code{kill-line}) Emacs
1522 will instead run @code{my-kill-line}.
1523
1524 Note that remapping only takes place through active keymaps; for
1525 example, putting a remapping in a prefix keymap like @code{ctl-x-map}
1526 typically has no effect, as such keymaps are not themselves active.
1527 In addition, remapping only works through a single level; in the
1528 following example,
1529
1530 @smallexample
1531 (define-key my-mode-map [remap kill-line] 'my-kill-line)
1532 (define-key my-mode-map [remap my-kill-line] 'my-other-kill-line)
1533 @end smallexample
1534
1535 @noindent
1536 @code{kill-line} is @emph{not} remapped to @code{my-other-kill-line}.
1537 Instead, if an ordinary key binding specifies @code{kill-line}, it is
1538 remapped to @code{my-kill-line}; if an ordinary binding specifies
1539 @code{my-kill-line}, it is remapped to @code{my-other-kill-line}.
1540
1541 To undo the remapping of a command, remap it to @code{nil}; e.g.,
1542
1543 @smallexample
1544 (define-key my-mode-map [remap kill-line] nil)
1545 @end smallexample
1546
1547 @defun command-remapping command &optional position keymaps
1548 This function returns the remapping for @var{command} (a symbol),
1549 given the current active keymaps. If @var{command} is not remapped
1550 (which is the usual situation), or not a symbol, the function returns
1551 @code{nil}. @code{position} can optionally specify a buffer position
1552 or an event position to determine the keymaps to use, as in
1553 @code{key-binding}.
1554
1555 If the optional argument @code{keymaps} is non-@code{nil}, it
1556 specifies a list of keymaps to search in. This argument is ignored if
1557 @code{position} is non-@code{nil}.
1558 @end defun
1559
1560 @node Translation Keymaps
1561 @section Keymaps for Translating Sequences of Events
1562 @cindex keymaps for translating events
1563
1564 This section describes keymaps that are used during reading a key
1565 sequence, to translate certain event sequences into others.
1566 @code{read-key-sequence} checks every subsequence of the key sequence
1567 being read, as it is read, against @code{input-decode-map}, then
1568 @code{local-function-key-map}, and then against @code{key-translation-map}.
1569
1570 These keymaps have the same structure as other keymaps, but they are used
1571 differently: they specify translations to make while reading key sequences,
1572 rather than bindings for key sequences.
1573
1574 If one of these keymaps ``binds'' a key sequence @var{k} to a vector
1575 @var{v}, then when @var{k} appears as a subsequence @emph{anywhere} in a
1576 key sequence, it is replaced with the events in @var{v}.
1577
1578 For example, VT100 terminals send @kbd{@key{ESC} O P} when the
1579 keypad @key{PF1} key is pressed. Therefore, we want Emacs to translate
1580 that sequence of events into the single event @code{pf1}. We accomplish
1581 this by ``binding'' @kbd{@key{ESC} O P} to @code{[pf1]} in
1582 @code{input-decode-map}, when using a VT100.
1583
1584 Thus, typing @kbd{C-c @key{PF1}} sends the character sequence @kbd{C-c
1585 @key{ESC} O P}; later the function @code{read-key-sequence} translates
1586 this back into @kbd{C-c @key{PF1}}, which it returns as the vector
1587 @code{[?\C-c pf1]}.
1588
1589 @defvar input-decode-map
1590 This variable holds a keymap that describes the character sequences sent
1591 by function keys on an ordinary character terminal.
1592
1593 The value of @code{input-decode-map} is usually set up automatically
1594 according to the terminal's Terminfo or Termcap entry, but sometimes
1595 those need help from terminal-specific Lisp files. Emacs comes with
1596 terminal-specific files for many common terminals; their main purpose is
1597 to make entries in @code{input-decode-map} beyond those that can be
1598 deduced from Termcap and Terminfo. @xref{Terminal-Specific}.
1599 @end defvar
1600
1601 @defvar local-function-key-map
1602 This variable holds a keymap similar to @code{input-decode-map} except
1603 that it describes key sequences which should be translated to
1604 alternative interpretations that are usually preferred. It applies
1605 after @code{input-decode-map} and before @code{key-translation-map}.
1606
1607 Entries in @code{local-function-key-map} are ignored if they conflict
1608 with bindings made in the minor mode, local, or global keymaps. I.e.,
1609 the remapping only applies if the original key sequence would
1610 otherwise not have any binding.
1611
1612 @code{local-function-key-map} inherits from @code{function-key-map},
1613 but the latter should not be used directly.
1614 @end defvar
1615
1616 @defvar key-translation-map
1617 This variable is another keymap used just like @code{input-decode-map}
1618 to translate input events into other events. It differs from
1619 @code{input-decode-map} in that it goes to work after
1620 @code{local-function-key-map} is finished rather than before; it
1621 receives the results of translation by @code{local-function-key-map}.
1622
1623 Just like @code{input-decode-map}, but unlike
1624 @code{local-function-key-map}, this keymap is applied regardless of
1625 whether the input key-sequence has a normal binding. Note however
1626 that actual key bindings can have an effect on
1627 @code{key-translation-map}, even though they are overridden by it.
1628 Indeed, actual key bindings override @code{local-function-key-map} and
1629 thus may alter the key sequence that @code{key-translation-map}
1630 receives. Clearly, it is better to avoid this type of situation.
1631
1632 The intent of @code{key-translation-map} is for users to map one
1633 character set to another, including ordinary characters normally bound
1634 to @code{self-insert-command}.
1635 @end defvar
1636
1637 @cindex key translation function
1638 You can use @code{input-decode-map}, @code{local-function-key-map},
1639 and @code{key-translation-map} for more than simple aliases, by using
1640 a function, instead of a key sequence, as the ``translation'' of a
1641 key. Then this function is called to compute the translation of that
1642 key.
1643
1644 The key translation function receives one argument, which is the prompt
1645 that was specified in @code{read-key-sequence}---or @code{nil} if the
1646 key sequence is being read by the editor command loop. In most cases
1647 you can ignore the prompt value.
1648
1649 If the function reads input itself, it can have the effect of altering
1650 the event that follows. For example, here's how to define @kbd{C-c h}
1651 to turn the character that follows into a Hyper character:
1652
1653 @example
1654 @group
1655 (defun hyperify (prompt)
1656 (let ((e (read-event)))
1657 (vector (if (numberp e)
1658 (logior (lsh 1 24) e)
1659 (if (memq 'hyper (event-modifiers e))
1660 e
1661 (add-event-modifier "H-" e))))))
1662
1663 (defun add-event-modifier (string e)
1664 (let ((symbol (if (symbolp e) e (car e))))
1665 (setq symbol (intern (concat string
1666 (symbol-name symbol))))
1667 (if (symbolp e)
1668 symbol
1669 (cons symbol (cdr e)))))
1670
1671 (define-key local-function-key-map "\C-ch" 'hyperify)
1672 @end group
1673 @end example
1674
1675 If you have enabled keyboard character set decoding using
1676 @code{set-keyboard-coding-system}, decoding is done before the
1677 translations listed above. @xref{Terminal I/O Encoding}.
1678
1679 @subsection Interaction with normal keymaps
1680
1681 The end of a key sequence is detected when that key sequence either is bound
1682 to a command, or when Emacs determines that no additional event can lead
1683 to a sequence that is bound to a command.
1684
1685 This means that, while @code{input-decode-map} and @code{key-translation-map}
1686 apply regardless of whether the original key sequence would have a binding, the
1687 presence of such a binding can still prevent translation from taking place.
1688 For example, let us return to our VT100 example above and add a binding for
1689 @kbd{C-c @key{ESC}} to the global map; now when the user hits @kbd{C-c
1690 @key{PF1}} Emacs will fail to decode @kbd{C-c @key{ESC} O P} into @kbd{C-c
1691 @key{PF1}} because it will stop reading keys right after @kbd{C-x @key{ESC}},
1692 leaving @kbd{O P} for later. This is in case the user really hit @kbd{C-c
1693 @key{ESC}}, in which case Emacs should not sit there waiting for the next key
1694 to decide whether the user really pressed @kbd{@key{ESC}} or @kbd{@key{PF1}}.
1695
1696 For that reason, it is better to avoid binding commands to key sequences where
1697 the end of the key sequence is a prefix of a key translation. The main such
1698 problematic suffixes/prefixes are @kbd{@key{ESC}}, @kbd{M-O} (which is really
1699 @kbd{@key{ESC} O}) and @kbd{M-[} (which is really @kbd{@key{ESC} [}).
1700
1701 @node Key Binding Commands
1702 @section Commands for Binding Keys
1703
1704 This section describes some convenient interactive interfaces for
1705 changing key bindings. They work by calling @code{define-key}.
1706
1707 People often use @code{global-set-key} in their init files
1708 (@pxref{Init File}) for simple customization. For example,
1709
1710 @smallexample
1711 (global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-\\") 'next-line)
1712 @end smallexample
1713
1714 @noindent
1715 or
1716
1717 @smallexample
1718 (global-set-key [?\C-x ?\C-\\] 'next-line)
1719 @end smallexample
1720
1721 @noindent
1722 or
1723
1724 @smallexample
1725 (global-set-key [(control ?x) (control ?\\)] 'next-line)
1726 @end smallexample
1727
1728 @noindent
1729 redefines @kbd{C-x C-\} to move down a line.
1730
1731 @smallexample
1732 (global-set-key [M-mouse-1] 'mouse-set-point)
1733 @end smallexample
1734
1735 @noindent
1736 redefines the first (leftmost) mouse button, entered with the Meta key, to
1737 set point where you click.
1738
1739 @cindex non-@acronym{ASCII} text in keybindings
1740 Be careful when using non-@acronym{ASCII} text characters in Lisp
1741 specifications of keys to bind. If these are read as multibyte text, as
1742 they usually will be in a Lisp file (@pxref{Loading Non-ASCII}), you
1743 must type the keys as multibyte too. For instance, if you use this:
1744
1745 @smallexample
1746 (global-set-key "@"o" 'my-function) ; bind o-umlaut
1747 @end smallexample
1748
1749 @noindent
1750 or
1751
1752 @smallexample
1753 (global-set-key ?@"o 'my-function) ; bind o-umlaut
1754 @end smallexample
1755
1756 @noindent
1757 and your language environment is multibyte Latin-1, these commands
1758 actually bind the multibyte character with code 246, not the byte
1759 code 246 (@kbd{M-v}) sent by a Latin-1 terminal. In order to use this
1760 binding, you need to teach Emacs how to decode the keyboard by using an
1761 appropriate input method (@pxref{Input Methods, , Input Methods, emacs, The GNU
1762 Emacs Manual}).
1763
1764 @deffn Command global-set-key key binding
1765 This function sets the binding of @var{key} in the current global map
1766 to @var{binding}.
1767
1768 @smallexample
1769 @group
1770 (global-set-key @var{key} @var{binding})
1771 @equiv{}
1772 (define-key (current-global-map) @var{key} @var{binding})
1773 @end group
1774 @end smallexample
1775 @end deffn
1776
1777 @deffn Command global-unset-key key
1778 @cindex unbinding keys
1779 This function removes the binding of @var{key} from the current
1780 global map.
1781
1782 One use of this function is in preparation for defining a longer key
1783 that uses @var{key} as a prefix---which would not be allowed if
1784 @var{key} has a non-prefix binding. For example:
1785
1786 @smallexample
1787 @group
1788 (global-unset-key "\C-l")
1789 @result{} nil
1790 @end group
1791 @group
1792 (global-set-key "\C-l\C-l" 'redraw-display)
1793 @result{} nil
1794 @end group
1795 @end smallexample
1796
1797 This function is equivalent to using @code{define-key} as follows:
1798
1799 @smallexample
1800 @group
1801 (global-unset-key @var{key})
1802 @equiv{}
1803 (define-key (current-global-map) @var{key} nil)
1804 @end group
1805 @end smallexample
1806 @end deffn
1807
1808 @deffn Command local-set-key key binding
1809 This function sets the binding of @var{key} in the current local
1810 keymap to @var{binding}.
1811
1812 @smallexample
1813 @group
1814 (local-set-key @var{key} @var{binding})
1815 @equiv{}
1816 (define-key (current-local-map) @var{key} @var{binding})
1817 @end group
1818 @end smallexample
1819 @end deffn
1820
1821 @deffn Command local-unset-key key
1822 This function removes the binding of @var{key} from the current
1823 local map.
1824
1825 @smallexample
1826 @group
1827 (local-unset-key @var{key})
1828 @equiv{}
1829 (define-key (current-local-map) @var{key} nil)
1830 @end group
1831 @end smallexample
1832 @end deffn
1833
1834 @node Scanning Keymaps
1835 @section Scanning Keymaps
1836
1837 This section describes functions used to scan all the current keymaps
1838 for the sake of printing help information.
1839
1840 @defun accessible-keymaps keymap &optional prefix
1841 This function returns a list of all the keymaps that can be reached (via
1842 zero or more prefix keys) from @var{keymap}. The value is an
1843 association list with elements of the form @code{(@var{key} .@:
1844 @var{map})}, where @var{key} is a prefix key whose definition in
1845 @var{keymap} is @var{map}.
1846
1847 The elements of the alist are ordered so that the @var{key} increases
1848 in length. The first element is always @code{([] .@: @var{keymap})},
1849 because the specified keymap is accessible from itself with a prefix of
1850 no events.
1851
1852 If @var{prefix} is given, it should be a prefix key sequence; then
1853 @code{accessible-keymaps} includes only the submaps whose prefixes start
1854 with @var{prefix}. These elements look just as they do in the value of
1855 @code{(accessible-keymaps)}; the only difference is that some elements
1856 are omitted.
1857
1858 In the example below, the returned alist indicates that the key
1859 @key{ESC}, which is displayed as @samp{^[}, is a prefix key whose
1860 definition is the sparse keymap @code{(keymap (83 .@: center-paragraph)
1861 (115 .@: foo))}.
1862
1863 @smallexample
1864 @group
1865 (accessible-keymaps (current-local-map))
1866 @result{}(([] keymap
1867 (27 keymap ; @r{Note this keymap for @key{ESC} is repeated below.}
1868 (83 . center-paragraph)
1869 (115 . center-line))
1870 (9 . tab-to-tab-stop))
1871 @end group
1872
1873 @group
1874 ("^[" keymap
1875 (83 . center-paragraph)
1876 (115 . foo)))
1877 @end group
1878 @end smallexample
1879
1880 In the following example, @kbd{C-h} is a prefix key that uses a sparse
1881 keymap starting with @code{(keymap (118 . describe-variable)@dots{})}.
1882 Another prefix, @kbd{C-x 4}, uses a keymap which is also the value of
1883 the variable @code{ctl-x-4-map}. The event @code{mode-line} is one of
1884 several dummy events used as prefixes for mouse actions in special parts
1885 of a window.
1886
1887 @smallexample
1888 @group
1889 (accessible-keymaps (current-global-map))
1890 @result{} (([] keymap [set-mark-command beginning-of-line @dots{}
1891 delete-backward-char])
1892 @end group
1893 @group
1894 ("^H" keymap (118 . describe-variable) @dots{}
1895 (8 . help-for-help))
1896 @end group
1897 @group
1898 ("^X" keymap [x-flush-mouse-queue @dots{}
1899 backward-kill-sentence])
1900 @end group
1901 @group
1902 ("^[" keymap [mark-sexp backward-sexp @dots{}
1903 backward-kill-word])
1904 @end group
1905 ("^X4" keymap (15 . display-buffer) @dots{})
1906 @group
1907 ([mode-line] keymap
1908 (S-mouse-2 . mouse-split-window-horizontally) @dots{}))
1909 @end group
1910 @end smallexample
1911
1912 @noindent
1913 These are not all the keymaps you would see in actuality.
1914 @end defun
1915
1916 @defun map-keymap function keymap
1917 The function @code{map-keymap} calls @var{function} once
1918 for each binding in @var{keymap}. It passes two arguments,
1919 the event type and the value of the binding. If @var{keymap}
1920 has a parent, the parent's bindings are included as well.
1921 This works recursively: if the parent has itself a parent, then the
1922 grandparent's bindings are also included and so on.
1923
1924 This function is the cleanest way to examine all the bindings
1925 in a keymap.
1926 @end defun
1927
1928 @defun where-is-internal command &optional keymap firstonly noindirect no-remap
1929 This function is a subroutine used by the @code{where-is} command
1930 (@pxref{Help, , Help, emacs,The GNU Emacs Manual}). It returns a list
1931 of all key sequences (of any length) that are bound to @var{command} in a
1932 set of keymaps.
1933
1934 The argument @var{command} can be any object; it is compared with all
1935 keymap entries using @code{eq}.
1936
1937 If @var{keymap} is @code{nil}, then the maps used are the current active
1938 keymaps, disregarding @code{overriding-local-map} (that is, pretending
1939 its value is @code{nil}). If @var{keymap} is a keymap, then the
1940 maps searched are @var{keymap} and the global keymap. If @var{keymap}
1941 is a list of keymaps, only those keymaps are searched.
1942
1943 Usually it's best to use @code{overriding-local-map} as the expression
1944 for @var{keymap}. Then @code{where-is-internal} searches precisely
1945 the keymaps that are active. To search only the global map, pass the
1946 value @code{(keymap)} (an empty keymap) as @var{keymap}.
1947
1948 If @var{firstonly} is @code{non-ascii}, then the value is a single
1949 vector representing the first key sequence found, rather than a list of
1950 all possible key sequences. If @var{firstonly} is @code{t}, then the
1951 value is the first key sequence, except that key sequences consisting
1952 entirely of @acronym{ASCII} characters (or meta variants of @acronym{ASCII}
1953 characters) are preferred to all other key sequences and that the
1954 return value can never be a menu binding.
1955
1956 If @var{noindirect} is non-@code{nil}, @code{where-is-internal} doesn't
1957 follow indirect keymap bindings. This makes it possible to search for
1958 an indirect definition itself.
1959
1960 The fifth argument, @var{no-remap}, determines how this function
1961 treats command remappings (@pxref{Remapping Commands}). There are two
1962 cases of interest:
1963
1964 @table @asis
1965 @item If a command @var{other-command} is remapped to @var{command}:
1966 If @var{no-remap} is @code{nil}, find the bindings for
1967 @var{other-command} and treat them as though they are also bindings
1968 for @var{command}. If @var{no-remap} is non-@code{nil}, include the
1969 vector @code{[remap @var{other-command}]} in the list of possible key
1970 sequences, instead of finding those bindings.
1971
1972 @item If @var{command} is remapped to @var{other-command}:
1973 If @var{no-remap} is @code{nil}, return the bindings for
1974 @var{other-command} rather than @var{command}. If @var{no-remap} is
1975 non-@code{nil}, return the bindings for @var{command}, ignoring the
1976 fact that it is remapped.
1977 @end table
1978 @end defun
1979
1980 @deffn Command describe-bindings &optional prefix buffer-or-name
1981 This function creates a listing of all current key bindings, and
1982 displays it in a buffer named @file{*Help*}. The text is grouped by
1983 modes---minor modes first, then the major mode, then global bindings.
1984
1985 If @var{prefix} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a prefix key; then the
1986 listing includes only keys that start with @var{prefix}.
1987
1988 When several characters with consecutive @acronym{ASCII} codes have the
1989 same definition, they are shown together, as
1990 @samp{@var{firstchar}..@var{lastchar}}. In this instance, you need to
1991 know the @acronym{ASCII} codes to understand which characters this means.
1992 For example, in the default global map, the characters @samp{@key{SPC}
1993 ..@: ~} are described by a single line. @key{SPC} is @acronym{ASCII} 32,
1994 @kbd{~} is @acronym{ASCII} 126, and the characters between them include all
1995 the normal printing characters, (e.g., letters, digits, punctuation,
1996 etc.@:); all these characters are bound to @code{self-insert-command}.
1997
1998 If @var{buffer-or-name} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a buffer or a
1999 buffer name. Then @code{describe-bindings} lists that buffer's bindings,
2000 instead of the current buffer's.
2001 @end deffn
2002
2003 @node Menu Keymaps
2004 @section Menu Keymaps
2005 @cindex menu keymaps
2006
2007 A keymap can operate as a menu as well as defining bindings for
2008 keyboard keys and mouse buttons. Menus are usually actuated with the
2009 mouse, but they can function with the keyboard also. If a menu keymap
2010 is active for the next input event, that activates the keyboard menu
2011 feature.
2012
2013 @menu
2014 * Defining Menus:: How to make a keymap that defines a menu.
2015 * Mouse Menus:: How users actuate the menu with the mouse.
2016 * Keyboard Menus:: How users actuate the menu with the keyboard.
2017 * Menu Example:: Making a simple menu.
2018 * Menu Bar:: How to customize the menu bar.
2019 * Tool Bar:: A tool bar is a row of images.
2020 * Modifying Menus:: How to add new items to a menu.
2021 * Easy Menu:: A convenience macro for making menus.
2022 @end menu
2023
2024 @node Defining Menus
2025 @subsection Defining Menus
2026 @cindex defining menus
2027 @cindex menu prompt string
2028 @cindex prompt string (of menu)
2029 @cindex menu item
2030
2031 A keymap acts as a menu if it has an @dfn{overall prompt string},
2032 which is a string that appears as an element of the keymap.
2033 (@xref{Format of Keymaps}.) The string should describe the purpose of
2034 the menu's commands. Emacs displays the overall prompt string as the
2035 menu title in some cases, depending on the toolkit (if any) used for
2036 displaying menus.@footnote{It is required for menus which do not use a
2037 toolkit, e.g., on a text terminal.} Keyboard menus also display the
2038 overall prompt string.
2039
2040 The easiest way to construct a keymap with a prompt string is to
2041 specify the string as an argument when you call @code{make-keymap},
2042 @code{make-sparse-keymap} (@pxref{Creating Keymaps}), or
2043 @code{define-prefix-command} (@pxref{Definition of
2044 define-prefix-command}). If you do not want the keymap to operate as
2045 a menu, don't specify a prompt string for it.
2046
2047 @defun keymap-prompt keymap
2048 This function returns the overall prompt string of @var{keymap},
2049 or @code{nil} if it has none.
2050 @end defun
2051
2052 The menu's items are the bindings in the keymap. Each binding
2053 associates an event type to a definition, but the event types have no
2054 significance for the menu appearance. (Usually we use pseudo-events,
2055 symbols that the keyboard cannot generate, as the event types for menu
2056 item bindings.) The menu is generated entirely from the bindings that
2057 correspond in the keymap to these events.
2058
2059 The order of items in the menu is the same as the order of bindings in
2060 the keymap. Since @code{define-key} puts new bindings at the front, you
2061 should define the menu items starting at the bottom of the menu and
2062 moving to the top, if you care about the order. When you add an item to
2063 an existing menu, you can specify its position in the menu using
2064 @code{define-key-after} (@pxref{Modifying Menus}).
2065
2066 @menu
2067 * Simple Menu Items:: A simple kind of menu key binding.
2068 * Extended Menu Items:: More complex menu item definitions.
2069 * Menu Separators:: Drawing a horizontal line through a menu.
2070 * Alias Menu Items:: Using command aliases in menu items.
2071 @end menu
2072
2073 @node Simple Menu Items
2074 @subsubsection Simple Menu Items
2075
2076 The simpler (and original) way to define a menu item is to bind some
2077 event type (it doesn't matter what event type) to a binding like this:
2078
2079 @example
2080 (@var{item-string} . @var{real-binding})
2081 @end example
2082
2083 @noindent
2084 The @sc{car}, @var{item-string}, is the string to be displayed in the
2085 menu. It should be short---preferably one to three words. It should
2086 describe the action of the command it corresponds to. Note that not
2087 all graphical toolkits can display non-@acronym{ASCII} text in menus
2088 (it will work for keyboard menus and will work to a large extent with
2089 the GTK+ toolkit).
2090
2091 You can also supply a second string, called the help string, as follows:
2092
2093 @example
2094 (@var{item-string} @var{help} . @var{real-binding})
2095 @end example
2096
2097 @noindent
2098 @var{help} specifies a ``help-echo'' string to display while the mouse
2099 is on that item in the same way as @code{help-echo} text properties
2100 (@pxref{Help display}).
2101
2102 As far as @code{define-key} is concerned, @var{item-string} and
2103 @var{help-string} are part of the event's binding. However,
2104 @code{lookup-key} returns just @var{real-binding}, and only
2105 @var{real-binding} is used for executing the key.
2106
2107 If @var{real-binding} is @code{nil}, then @var{item-string} appears in
2108 the menu but cannot be selected.
2109
2110 If @var{real-binding} is a symbol and has a non-@code{nil}
2111 @code{menu-enable} property, that property is an expression that
2112 controls whether the menu item is enabled. Every time the keymap is
2113 used to display a menu, Emacs evaluates the expression, and it enables
2114 the menu item only if the expression's value is non-@code{nil}. When a
2115 menu item is disabled, it is displayed in a ``fuzzy'' fashion, and
2116 cannot be selected.
2117
2118 The menu bar does not recalculate which items are enabled every time you
2119 look at a menu. This is because the X toolkit requires the whole tree
2120 of menus in advance. To force recalculation of the menu bar, call
2121 @code{force-mode-line-update} (@pxref{Mode Line Format}).
2122
2123 @node Extended Menu Items
2124 @subsubsection Extended Menu Items
2125 @kindex menu-item
2126 @cindex extended menu item
2127
2128 An extended-format menu item is a more flexible and also cleaner
2129 alternative to the simple format. You define an event type with a
2130 binding that's a list starting with the symbol @code{menu-item}.
2131 For a non-selectable string, the binding looks like this:
2132
2133 @example
2134 (menu-item @var{item-name})
2135 @end example
2136
2137 @noindent
2138 A string starting with two or more dashes specifies a separator line;
2139 see @ref{Menu Separators}.
2140
2141 To define a real menu item which can be selected, the extended format
2142 binding looks like this:
2143
2144 @example
2145 (menu-item @var{item-name} @var{real-binding}
2146 . @var{item-property-list})
2147 @end example
2148
2149 @noindent
2150 Here, @var{item-name} is an expression which evaluates to the menu item
2151 string. Thus, the string need not be a constant. The third element,
2152 @var{real-binding}, is the command to execute. The tail of the list,
2153 @var{item-property-list}, has the form of a property list which contains
2154 other information.
2155
2156 Here is a table of the properties that are supported:
2157
2158 @table @code
2159 @item :enable @var{form}
2160 The result of evaluating @var{form} determines whether the item is
2161 enabled (non-@code{nil} means yes). If the item is not enabled,
2162 you can't really click on it.
2163
2164 @item :visible @var{form}
2165 The result of evaluating @var{form} determines whether the item should
2166 actually appear in the menu (non-@code{nil} means yes). If the item
2167 does not appear, then the menu is displayed as if this item were
2168 not defined at all.
2169
2170 @item :help @var{help}
2171 The value of this property, @var{help}, specifies a ``help-echo'' string
2172 to display while the mouse is on that item. This is displayed in the
2173 same way as @code{help-echo} text properties (@pxref{Help display}).
2174 Note that this must be a constant string, unlike the @code{help-echo}
2175 property for text and overlays.
2176
2177 @item :button (@var{type} . @var{selected})
2178 This property provides a way to define radio buttons and toggle buttons.
2179 The @sc{car}, @var{type}, says which: it should be @code{:toggle} or
2180 @code{:radio}. The @sc{cdr}, @var{selected}, should be a form; the
2181 result of evaluating it says whether this button is currently selected.
2182
2183 A @dfn{toggle} is a menu item which is labeled as either ``on'' or ``off''
2184 according to the value of @var{selected}. The command itself should
2185 toggle @var{selected}, setting it to @code{t} if it is @code{nil},
2186 and to @code{nil} if it is @code{t}. Here is how the menu item
2187 to toggle the @code{debug-on-error} flag is defined:
2188
2189 @example
2190 (menu-item "Debug on Error" toggle-debug-on-error
2191 :button (:toggle
2192 . (and (boundp 'debug-on-error)
2193 debug-on-error)))
2194 @end example
2195
2196 @noindent
2197 This works because @code{toggle-debug-on-error} is defined as a command
2198 which toggles the variable @code{debug-on-error}.
2199
2200 @dfn{Radio buttons} are a group of menu items, in which at any time one
2201 and only one is ``selected''. There should be a variable whose value
2202 says which one is selected at any time. The @var{selected} form for
2203 each radio button in the group should check whether the variable has the
2204 right value for selecting that button. Clicking on the button should
2205 set the variable so that the button you clicked on becomes selected.
2206
2207 @item :key-sequence @var{key-sequence}
2208 This property specifies which key sequence is likely to be bound to the
2209 same command invoked by this menu item. If you specify the right key
2210 sequence, that makes preparing the menu for display run much faster.
2211
2212 If you specify the wrong key sequence, it has no effect; before Emacs
2213 displays @var{key-sequence} in the menu, it verifies that
2214 @var{key-sequence} is really equivalent to this menu item.
2215
2216 @item :key-sequence nil
2217 This property indicates that there is normally no key binding which is
2218 equivalent to this menu item. Using this property saves time in
2219 preparing the menu for display, because Emacs does not need to search
2220 the keymaps for a keyboard equivalent for this menu item.
2221
2222 However, if the user has rebound this item's definition to a key
2223 sequence, Emacs ignores the @code{:keys} property and finds the keyboard
2224 equivalent anyway.
2225
2226 @item :keys @var{string}
2227 This property specifies that @var{string} is the string to display
2228 as the keyboard equivalent for this menu item. You can use
2229 the @samp{\\[...]} documentation construct in @var{string}.
2230
2231 @item :filter @var{filter-fn}
2232 This property provides a way to compute the menu item dynamically.
2233 The property value @var{filter-fn} should be a function of one argument;
2234 when it is called, its argument will be @var{real-binding}. The
2235 function should return the binding to use instead.
2236
2237 Emacs can call this function at any time that it does redisplay or
2238 operates on menu data structures, so you should write it so it can
2239 safely be called at any time.
2240 @end table
2241
2242 @node Menu Separators
2243 @subsubsection Menu Separators
2244 @cindex menu separators
2245
2246 A menu separator is a kind of menu item that doesn't display any
2247 text---instead, it divides the menu into subparts with a horizontal line.
2248 A separator looks like this in the menu keymap:
2249
2250 @example
2251 (menu-item @var{separator-type})
2252 @end example
2253
2254 @noindent
2255 where @var{separator-type} is a string starting with two or more dashes.
2256
2257 In the simplest case, @var{separator-type} consists of only dashes.
2258 That specifies the default kind of separator. (For compatibility,
2259 @code{""} and @code{-} also count as separators.)
2260
2261 Certain other values of @var{separator-type} specify a different
2262 style of separator. Here is a table of them:
2263
2264 @table @code
2265 @item "--no-line"
2266 @itemx "--space"
2267 An extra vertical space, with no actual line.
2268
2269 @item "--single-line"
2270 A single line in the menu's foreground color.
2271
2272 @item "--double-line"
2273 A double line in the menu's foreground color.
2274
2275 @item "--single-dashed-line"
2276 A single dashed line in the menu's foreground color.
2277
2278 @item "--double-dashed-line"
2279 A double dashed line in the menu's foreground color.
2280
2281 @item "--shadow-etched-in"
2282 A single line with a 3D sunken appearance. This is the default,
2283 used separators consisting of dashes only.
2284
2285 @item "--shadow-etched-out"
2286 A single line with a 3D raised appearance.
2287
2288 @item "--shadow-etched-in-dash"
2289 A single dashed line with a 3D sunken appearance.
2290
2291 @item "--shadow-etched-out-dash"
2292 A single dashed line with a 3D raised appearance.
2293
2294 @item "--shadow-double-etched-in"
2295 Two lines with a 3D sunken appearance.
2296
2297 @item "--shadow-double-etched-out"
2298 Two lines with a 3D raised appearance.
2299
2300 @item "--shadow-double-etched-in-dash"
2301 Two dashed lines with a 3D sunken appearance.
2302
2303 @item "--shadow-double-etched-out-dash"
2304 Two dashed lines with a 3D raised appearance.
2305 @end table
2306
2307 You can also give these names in another style, adding a colon after
2308 the double-dash and replacing each single dash with capitalization of
2309 the following word. Thus, @code{"--:singleLine"}, is equivalent to
2310 @code{"--single-line"}.
2311
2312 You can use a longer form to specify keywords such as @code{:enable}
2313 and @code{:visible} for a menu separator:
2314
2315 @code{(menu-item @var{separator-type} nil . @var{item-property-list})}
2316
2317 For example:
2318
2319 @example
2320 (menu-item "--" nil :visible (boundp 'foo))
2321 @end example
2322
2323 Some systems and display toolkits don't really handle all of these
2324 separator types. If you use a type that isn't supported, the menu
2325 displays a similar kind of separator that is supported.
2326
2327 @node Alias Menu Items
2328 @subsubsection Alias Menu Items
2329
2330 Sometimes it is useful to make menu items that use the ``same''
2331 command but with different enable conditions. The best way to do this
2332 in Emacs now is with extended menu items; before that feature existed,
2333 it could be done by defining alias commands and using them in menu
2334 items. Here's an example that makes two aliases for
2335 @code{read-only-mode} and gives them different enable conditions:
2336
2337 @example
2338 (defalias 'make-read-only 'read-only-mode)
2339 (put 'make-read-only 'menu-enable '(not buffer-read-only))
2340 (defalias 'make-writable 'read-only-mode)
2341 (put 'make-writable 'menu-enable 'buffer-read-only)
2342 @end example
2343
2344 When using aliases in menus, often it is useful to display the
2345 equivalent key bindings for the ``real'' command name, not the aliases
2346 (which typically don't have any key bindings except for the menu
2347 itself). To request this, give the alias symbol a non-@code{nil}
2348 @code{menu-alias} property. Thus,
2349
2350 @example
2351 (put 'make-read-only 'menu-alias t)
2352 (put 'make-writable 'menu-alias t)
2353 @end example
2354
2355 @noindent
2356 causes menu items for @code{make-read-only} and @code{make-writable} to
2357 show the keyboard bindings for @code{read-only-mode}.
2358
2359 @node Mouse Menus
2360 @subsection Menus and the Mouse
2361
2362 The usual way to make a menu keymap produce a menu is to make it the
2363 definition of a prefix key. (A Lisp program can explicitly pop up a
2364 menu and receive the user's choice---see @ref{Pop-Up Menus}.)
2365
2366 If the prefix key ends with a mouse event, Emacs handles the menu keymap
2367 by popping up a visible menu, so that the user can select a choice with
2368 the mouse. When the user clicks on a menu item, the event generated is
2369 whatever character or symbol has the binding that brought about that
2370 menu item. (A menu item may generate a series of events if the menu has
2371 multiple levels or comes from the menu bar.)
2372
2373 It's often best to use a button-down event to trigger the menu. Then
2374 the user can select a menu item by releasing the button.
2375
2376 @cindex submenu
2377 If the menu keymap contains a binding to a nested keymap, the nested
2378 keymap specifies a @dfn{submenu}. There will be a menu item, labeled
2379 by the nested keymap's item string, and clicking on this item
2380 automatically pops up the specified submenu. As a special exception,
2381 if the menu keymap contains a single nested keymap and no other menu
2382 items, the menu shows the contents of the nested keymap directly, not
2383 as a submenu.
2384
2385 However, if Emacs is compiled without X toolkit support, or on text
2386 terminals, submenus are not supported. Each nested keymap is shown as
2387 a menu item, but clicking on it does not automatically pop up the
2388 submenu. If you wish to imitate the effect of submenus, you can do
2389 that by giving a nested keymap an item string which starts with
2390 @samp{@@}. This causes Emacs to display the nested keymap using a
2391 separate @dfn{menu pane}; the rest of the item string after the
2392 @samp{@@} is the pane label. If Emacs is compiled without X toolkit
2393 support, or if a menu is displayed on a text terminal, menu panes are
2394 not used; in that case, a @samp{@@} at the beginning of an item string
2395 is omitted when the menu label is displayed, and has no other effect.
2396
2397 @node Keyboard Menus
2398 @subsection Menus and the Keyboard
2399
2400 When a prefix key ending with a keyboard event (a character or
2401 function key) has a definition that is a menu keymap, the keymap
2402 operates as a keyboard menu; the user specifies the next event by
2403 choosing a menu item with the keyboard.
2404
2405 Emacs displays the keyboard menu with the map's overall prompt
2406 string, followed by the alternatives (the item strings of the map's
2407 bindings), in the echo area. If the bindings don't all fit at once,
2408 the user can type @key{SPC} to see the next line of alternatives.
2409 Successive uses of @key{SPC} eventually get to the end of the menu and
2410 then cycle around to the beginning. (The variable
2411 @code{menu-prompt-more-char} specifies which character is used for
2412 this; @key{SPC} is the default.)
2413
2414 When the user has found the desired alternative from the menu, he or
2415 she should type the corresponding character---the one whose binding is
2416 that alternative.
2417
2418 @defvar menu-prompt-more-char
2419 This variable specifies the character to use to ask to see
2420 the next line of a menu. Its initial value is 32, the code
2421 for @key{SPC}.
2422 @end defvar
2423
2424 @node Menu Example
2425 @subsection Menu Example
2426 @cindex menu definition example
2427
2428 Here is a complete example of defining a menu keymap. It is the
2429 definition of the @samp{Replace} submenu in the @samp{Edit} menu in
2430 the menu bar, and it uses the extended menu item format
2431 (@pxref{Extended Menu Items}). First we create the keymap, and give
2432 it a name:
2433
2434 @smallexample
2435 (defvar menu-bar-replace-menu (make-sparse-keymap "Replace"))
2436 @end smallexample
2437
2438 @noindent
2439 Next we define the menu items:
2440
2441 @smallexample
2442 (define-key menu-bar-replace-menu [tags-repl-continue]
2443 '(menu-item "Continue Replace" tags-loop-continue
2444 :help "Continue last tags replace operation"))
2445 (define-key menu-bar-replace-menu [tags-repl]
2446 '(menu-item "Replace in tagged files" tags-query-replace
2447 :help "Interactively replace a regexp in all tagged files"))
2448 (define-key menu-bar-replace-menu [separator-replace-tags]
2449 '(menu-item "--"))
2450 ;; @r{@dots{}}
2451 @end smallexample
2452
2453 @noindent
2454 Note the symbols which the bindings are ``made for''; these appear
2455 inside square brackets, in the key sequence being defined. In some
2456 cases, this symbol is the same as the command name; sometimes it is
2457 different. These symbols are treated as ``function keys'', but they are
2458 not real function keys on the keyboard. They do not affect the
2459 functioning of the menu itself, but they are ``echoed'' in the echo area
2460 when the user selects from the menu, and they appear in the output of
2461 @code{where-is} and @code{apropos}.
2462
2463 The menu in this example is intended for use with the mouse. If a
2464 menu is intended for use with the keyboard, that is, if it is bound to
2465 a key sequence ending with a keyboard event, then the menu items
2466 should be bound to characters or ``real'' function keys, that can be
2467 typed with the keyboard.
2468
2469 The binding whose definition is @code{("--")} is a separator line.
2470 Like a real menu item, the separator has a key symbol, in this case
2471 @code{separator-replace-tags}. If one menu has two separators, they
2472 must have two different key symbols.
2473
2474 Here is how we make this menu appear as an item in the parent menu:
2475
2476 @example
2477 (define-key menu-bar-edit-menu [replace]
2478 (list 'menu-item "Replace" menu-bar-replace-menu))
2479 @end example
2480
2481 @noindent
2482 Note that this incorporates the submenu keymap, which is the value of
2483 the variable @code{menu-bar-replace-menu}, rather than the symbol
2484 @code{menu-bar-replace-menu} itself. Using that symbol in the parent
2485 menu item would be meaningless because @code{menu-bar-replace-menu} is
2486 not a command.
2487
2488 If you wanted to attach the same replace menu to a mouse click, you
2489 can do it this way:
2490
2491 @example
2492 (define-key global-map [C-S-down-mouse-1]
2493 menu-bar-replace-menu)
2494 @end example
2495
2496 @node Menu Bar
2497 @subsection The Menu Bar
2498 @cindex menu bar
2499
2500 Emacs usually shows a @dfn{menu bar} at the top of each frame.
2501 @xref{Menu Bars,,,emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. Menu bar items are
2502 subcommands of the fake ``function key'' @code{menu-bar}, as defined
2503 in the active keymaps.
2504
2505 To add an item to the menu bar, invent a fake ``function key'' of your
2506 own (let's call it @var{key}), and make a binding for the key sequence
2507 @code{[menu-bar @var{key}]}. Most often, the binding is a menu keymap,
2508 so that pressing a button on the menu bar item leads to another menu.
2509
2510 When more than one active keymap defines the same ``function key''
2511 for the menu bar, the item appears just once. If the user clicks on
2512 that menu bar item, it brings up a single, combined menu containing
2513 all the subcommands of that item---the global subcommands, the local
2514 subcommands, and the minor mode subcommands.
2515
2516 The variable @code{overriding-local-map} is normally ignored when
2517 determining the menu bar contents. That is, the menu bar is computed
2518 from the keymaps that would be active if @code{overriding-local-map}
2519 were @code{nil}. @xref{Active Keymaps}.
2520
2521 Here's an example of setting up a menu bar item:
2522
2523 @example
2524 @group
2525 ;; @r{Make a menu keymap (with a prompt string)}
2526 ;; @r{and make it the menu bar item's definition.}
2527 (define-key global-map [menu-bar words]
2528 (cons "Words" (make-sparse-keymap "Words")))
2529 @end group
2530
2531 @group
2532 ;; @r{Define specific subcommands in this menu.}
2533 (define-key global-map
2534 [menu-bar words forward]
2535 '("Forward word" . forward-word))
2536 @end group
2537 @group
2538 (define-key global-map
2539 [menu-bar words backward]
2540 '("Backward word" . backward-word))
2541 @end group
2542 @end example
2543
2544 A local keymap can cancel a menu bar item made by the global keymap by
2545 rebinding the same fake function key with @code{undefined} as the
2546 binding. For example, this is how Dired suppresses the @samp{Edit} menu
2547 bar item:
2548
2549 @example
2550 (define-key dired-mode-map [menu-bar edit] 'undefined)
2551 @end example
2552
2553 @noindent
2554 Here, @code{edit} is the fake function key used by the global map for
2555 the @samp{Edit} menu bar item. The main reason to suppress a global
2556 menu bar item is to regain space for mode-specific items.
2557
2558 @defvar menu-bar-final-items
2559 Normally the menu bar shows global items followed by items defined by the
2560 local maps.
2561
2562 This variable holds a list of fake function keys for items to display at
2563 the end of the menu bar rather than in normal sequence. The default
2564 value is @code{(help-menu)}; thus, the @samp{Help} menu item normally appears
2565 at the end of the menu bar, following local menu items.
2566 @end defvar
2567
2568 @defvar menu-bar-update-hook
2569 This normal hook is run by redisplay to update the menu bar contents,
2570 before redisplaying the menu bar. You can use it to update submenus
2571 whose contents should vary. Since this hook is run frequently, we
2572 advise you to ensure that the functions it calls do not take much time
2573 in the usual case.
2574 @end defvar
2575
2576 Next to every menu bar item, Emacs displays a key binding that runs
2577 the same command (if such a key binding exists). This serves as a
2578 convenient hint for users who do not know the key binding. If a
2579 command has multiple bindings, Emacs normally displays the first one
2580 it finds. You can specify one particular key binding by assigning an
2581 @code{:advertised-binding} symbol property to the command. @xref{Keys
2582 in Documentation}.
2583
2584 @node Tool Bar
2585 @subsection Tool bars
2586 @cindex tool bar
2587
2588 A @dfn{tool bar} is a row of clickable icons at the top of a frame,
2589 just below the menu bar. @xref{Tool Bars,,,emacs, The GNU Emacs
2590 Manual}. Emacs normally shows a tool bar on graphical displays.
2591
2592 On each frame, the frame parameter @code{tool-bar-lines} controls
2593 how many lines' worth of height to reserve for the tool bar. A zero
2594 value suppresses the tool bar. If the value is nonzero, and
2595 @code{auto-resize-tool-bars} is non-@code{nil}, the tool bar expands
2596 and contracts automatically as needed to hold the specified contents.
2597 If the value is @code{grow-only}, the tool bar expands automatically,
2598 but does not contract automatically.
2599
2600 The tool bar contents are controlled by a menu keymap attached to a
2601 fake ``function key'' called @code{tool-bar} (much like the way the menu
2602 bar is controlled). So you define a tool bar item using
2603 @code{define-key}, like this:
2604
2605 @example
2606 (define-key global-map [tool-bar @var{key}] @var{item})
2607 @end example
2608
2609 @noindent
2610 where @var{key} is a fake ``function key'' to distinguish this item from
2611 other items, and @var{item} is a menu item key binding (@pxref{Extended
2612 Menu Items}), which says how to display this item and how it behaves.
2613
2614 The usual menu keymap item properties, @code{:visible},
2615 @code{:enable}, @code{:button}, and @code{:filter}, are useful in
2616 tool bar bindings and have their normal meanings. The @var{real-binding}
2617 in the item must be a command, not a keymap; in other words, it does not
2618 work to define a tool bar icon as a prefix key.
2619
2620 The @code{:help} property specifies a ``help-echo'' string to display
2621 while the mouse is on that item. This is displayed in the same way as
2622 @code{help-echo} text properties (@pxref{Help display}).
2623
2624 In addition, you should use the @code{:image} property;
2625 this is how you specify the image to display in the tool bar:
2626
2627 @table @code
2628 @item :image @var{image}
2629 @var{images} is either a single image specification or a vector of four
2630 image specifications. If you use a vector of four,
2631 one of them is used, depending on circumstances:
2632
2633 @table @asis
2634 @item item 0
2635 Used when the item is enabled and selected.
2636 @item item 1
2637 Used when the item is enabled and deselected.
2638 @item item 2
2639 Used when the item is disabled and selected.
2640 @item item 3
2641 Used when the item is disabled and deselected.
2642 @end table
2643 @end table
2644
2645 The GTK+ and NS versions of Emacs ignores items 1 to 3, because disabled and/or
2646 deselected images are autocomputed from item 0.
2647
2648 If @var{image} is a single image specification, Emacs draws the tool bar
2649 button in disabled state by applying an edge-detection algorithm to the
2650 image.
2651
2652 The @code{:rtl} property specifies an alternative image to use for
2653 right-to-left languages. Only the GTK+ version of Emacs supports this
2654 at present.
2655
2656 Like the menu bar, the tool bar can display separators (@pxref{Menu
2657 Separators}). Tool bar separators are vertical rather than
2658 horizontal, though, and only a single style is supported. They are
2659 represented in the tool bar keymap by @code{(menu-item "--")} entries;
2660 properties like @code{:visible} are not supported for tool bar
2661 separators. Separators are rendered natively in GTK+ and Nextstep
2662 tool bars; in the other cases, they are rendered using an image of a
2663 vertical line.
2664
2665 The default tool bar is defined so that items specific to editing do not
2666 appear for major modes whose command symbol has a @code{mode-class}
2667 property of @code{special} (@pxref{Major Mode Conventions}). Major
2668 modes may add items to the global bar by binding @code{[tool-bar
2669 @var{foo}]} in their local map. It makes sense for some major modes to
2670 replace the default tool bar items completely, since not many can be
2671 accommodated conveniently, and the default bindings make this easy by
2672 using an indirection through @code{tool-bar-map}.
2673
2674 @defvar tool-bar-map
2675 By default, the global map binds @code{[tool-bar]} as follows:
2676
2677 @example
2678 (global-set-key [tool-bar]
2679 `(menu-item ,(purecopy "tool bar") ignore
2680 :filter tool-bar-make-keymap))
2681 @end example
2682
2683 @noindent
2684 The function @code{tool-bar-make-keymap}, in turn, derives the actual
2685 tool bar map dynamically from the value of the variable
2686 @code{tool-bar-map}. Hence, you should normally adjust the default
2687 (global) tool bar by changing that map. Some major modes, such as
2688 Info mode, completely replace the global tool bar by making
2689 @code{tool-bar-map} buffer-local and setting it to a different keymap.
2690 @end defvar
2691
2692 There are two convenience functions for defining tool bar items, as
2693 follows.
2694
2695 @defun tool-bar-add-item icon def key &rest props
2696 This function adds an item to the tool bar by modifying
2697 @code{tool-bar-map}. The image to use is defined by @var{icon}, which
2698 is the base name of an XPM, XBM or PBM image file to be located by
2699 @code{find-image}. Given a value @samp{"exit"}, say, @file{exit.xpm},
2700 @file{exit.pbm} and @file{exit.xbm} would be searched for in that order
2701 on a color display. On a monochrome display, the search order is
2702 @samp{.pbm}, @samp{.xbm} and @samp{.xpm}. The binding to use is the
2703 command @var{def}, and @var{key} is the fake function key symbol in the
2704 prefix keymap. The remaining arguments @var{props} are additional
2705 property list elements to add to the menu item specification.
2706
2707 To define items in some local map, bind @code{tool-bar-map} with
2708 @code{let} around calls of this function:
2709 @example
2710 (defvar foo-tool-bar-map
2711 (let ((tool-bar-map (make-sparse-keymap)))
2712 (tool-bar-add-item @dots{})
2713 @dots{}
2714 tool-bar-map))
2715 @end example
2716 @end defun
2717
2718 @defun tool-bar-add-item-from-menu command icon &optional map &rest props
2719 This function is a convenience for defining tool bar items which are
2720 consistent with existing menu bar bindings. The binding of
2721 @var{command} is looked up in the menu bar in @var{map} (default
2722 @code{global-map}) and modified to add an image specification for
2723 @var{icon}, which is found in the same way as by
2724 @code{tool-bar-add-item}. The resulting binding is then placed in
2725 @code{tool-bar-map}, so use this function only for global tool bar
2726 items.
2727
2728 @var{map} must contain an appropriate keymap bound to
2729 @code{[menu-bar]}. The remaining arguments @var{props} are additional
2730 property list elements to add to the menu item specification.
2731 @end defun
2732
2733 @defun tool-bar-local-item-from-menu command icon in-map &optional from-map &rest props
2734 This function is used for making non-global tool bar items. Use it
2735 like @code{tool-bar-add-item-from-menu} except that @var{in-map}
2736 specifies the local map to make the definition in. The argument
2737 @var{from-map} is like the @var{map} argument of
2738 @code{tool-bar-add-item-from-menu}.
2739 @end defun
2740
2741 @defvar auto-resize-tool-bars
2742 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, the tool bar automatically resizes to
2743 show all defined tool bar items---but not larger than a quarter of the
2744 frame's height.
2745
2746 If the value is @code{grow-only}, the tool bar expands automatically,
2747 but does not contract automatically. To contract the tool bar, the
2748 user has to redraw the frame by entering @kbd{C-l}.
2749
2750 If Emacs is built with GTK or Nextstep, the tool bar can only show one
2751 line, so this variable has no effect.
2752 @end defvar
2753
2754 @defvar auto-raise-tool-bar-buttons
2755 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, tool bar items display
2756 in raised form when the mouse moves over them.
2757 @end defvar
2758
2759 @defvar tool-bar-button-margin
2760 This variable specifies an extra margin to add around tool bar items.
2761 The value is an integer, a number of pixels. The default is 4.
2762 @end defvar
2763
2764 @defvar tool-bar-button-relief
2765 This variable specifies the shadow width for tool bar items.
2766 The value is an integer, a number of pixels. The default is 1.
2767 @end defvar
2768
2769 @defvar tool-bar-border
2770 This variable specifies the height of the border drawn below the tool
2771 bar area. An integer value specifies height as a number of pixels.
2772 If the value is one of @code{internal-border-width} (the default) or
2773 @code{border-width}, the tool bar border height corresponds to the
2774 corresponding frame parameter.
2775 @end defvar
2776
2777 You can define a special meaning for clicking on a tool bar item with
2778 the shift, control, meta, etc., modifiers. You do this by setting up
2779 additional items that relate to the original item through the fake
2780 function keys. Specifically, the additional items should use the
2781 modified versions of the same fake function key used to name the
2782 original item.
2783
2784 Thus, if the original item was defined this way,
2785
2786 @example
2787 (define-key global-map [tool-bar shell]
2788 '(menu-item "Shell" shell
2789 :image (image :type xpm :file "shell.xpm")))
2790 @end example
2791
2792 @noindent
2793 then here is how you can define clicking on the same tool bar image with
2794 the shift modifier:
2795
2796 @example
2797 (define-key global-map [tool-bar S-shell] 'some-command)
2798 @end example
2799
2800 @xref{Function Keys}, for more information about how to add modifiers to
2801 function keys.
2802
2803 @node Modifying Menus
2804 @subsection Modifying Menus
2805
2806 When you insert a new item in an existing menu, you probably want to
2807 put it in a particular place among the menu's existing items. If you
2808 use @code{define-key} to add the item, it normally goes at the front of
2809 the menu. To put it elsewhere in the menu, use @code{define-key-after}:
2810
2811 @defun define-key-after map key binding &optional after
2812 Define a binding in @var{map} for @var{key}, with value @var{binding},
2813 just like @code{define-key}, but position the binding in @var{map} after
2814 the binding for the event @var{after}. The argument @var{key} should be
2815 of length one---a vector or string with just one element. But
2816 @var{after} should be a single event type---a symbol or a character, not
2817 a sequence. The new binding goes after the binding for @var{after}. If
2818 @var{after} is @code{t} or is omitted, then the new binding goes last, at
2819 the end of the keymap. However, new bindings are added before any
2820 inherited keymap.
2821
2822 Here is an example:
2823
2824 @example
2825 (define-key-after my-menu [drink]
2826 '("Drink" . drink-command) 'eat)
2827 @end example
2828
2829 @noindent
2830 makes a binding for the fake function key @key{DRINK} and puts it
2831 right after the binding for @key{EAT}.
2832
2833 Here is how to insert an item called @samp{Work} in the @samp{Signals}
2834 menu of Shell mode, after the item @code{break}:
2835
2836 @example
2837 (define-key-after
2838 (lookup-key shell-mode-map [menu-bar signals])
2839 [work] '("Work" . work-command) 'break)
2840 @end example
2841 @end defun
2842
2843 @node Easy Menu
2844 @subsection Easy Menu
2845
2846 The following macro provides a convenient way to define pop-up menus
2847 and/or menu bar menus.
2848
2849 @defmac easy-menu-define symbol maps doc menu
2850 This macro defines a pop-up menu and/or menu bar submenu, whose
2851 contents are given by @var{menu}.
2852
2853 If @var{symbol} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a symbol; then this
2854 macro defines @var{symbol} as a function for popping up the menu
2855 (@pxref{Pop-Up Menus}), with @var{doc} as its documentation string.
2856 @var{symbol} should not be quoted.
2857
2858 Regardless of the value of @var{symbol}, if @var{maps} is a keymap,
2859 the menu is added to that keymap, as a top-level menu for the menu bar
2860 (@pxref{Menu Bar}). It can also be a list of keymaps, in which case
2861 the menu is added separately to each of those keymaps.
2862
2863 The first element of @var{menu} must be a string, which serves as the
2864 menu label. It may be followed by any number of the following
2865 keyword-argument pairs:
2866
2867 @table @code
2868 @item :filter @var{function}
2869 @var{function} must be a function which, if called with one
2870 argument---the list of the other menu items---returns the actual items
2871 to be displayed in the menu.
2872
2873 @item :visible @var{include}
2874 @var{include} is an expression; if it evaluates to @code{nil}, the
2875 menu is made invisible. @code{:included} is an alias for
2876 @code{:visible}.
2877
2878 @item :active @var{enable}
2879 @var{enable} is an expression; if it evaluates to @code{nil}, the menu
2880 is not selectable. @code{:enable} is an alias for @code{:active}.
2881 @end table
2882
2883 The remaining elements in @var{menu} are menu items.
2884
2885 A menu item can be a vector of three elements, @code{[@var{name}
2886 @var{callback} @var{enable}]}. @var{name} is the menu item name (a
2887 string). @var{callback} is a command to run, or an expression to
2888 evaluate, when the item is chosen. @var{enable} is an expression; if
2889 it evaluates to @code{nil}, the item is disabled for selection.
2890
2891 Alternatively, a menu item may have the form:
2892
2893 @smallexample
2894 [ @var{name} @var{callback} [ @var{keyword} @var{arg} ]... ]
2895 @end smallexample
2896
2897 @noindent
2898 where @var{name} and @var{callback} have the same meanings as above,
2899 and each optional @var{keyword} and @var{arg} pair should be one of
2900 the following:
2901
2902 @table @code
2903 @item :keys @var{keys}
2904 @var{keys} is a keyboard equivalent to the menu item (a string). This
2905 is normally not needed, as keyboard equivalents are computed
2906 automatically. @var{keys} is expanded with
2907 @code{substitute-command-keys} before it is displayed (@pxref{Keys in
2908 Documentation}).
2909
2910 @item :key-sequence @var{keys}
2911 @var{keys} is a hint for speeding up Emacs's first display of the
2912 menu. It should be nil if you know that the menu item has no keyboard
2913 equivalent; otherwise it should be a string or vector specifying a
2914 keyboard equivalent for the menu item.
2915
2916 @item :active @var{enable}
2917 @var{enable} is an expression; if it evaluates to @code{nil}, the item
2918 is make unselectable.. @code{:enable} is an alias for @code{:active}.
2919
2920 @item :visible @var{include}
2921 @var{include} is an expression; if it evaluates to @code{nil}, the
2922 item is made invisible. @code{:included} is an alias for
2923 @code{:visible}.
2924
2925 @item :label @var{form}
2926 @var{form} is an expression that is evaluated to obtain a value which
2927 serves as the menu item's label (the default is @var{name}).
2928
2929 @item :suffix @var{form}
2930 @var{form} is an expression that is dynamically evaluated and whose
2931 value is concatenated with the menu entry's label.
2932
2933 @item :style @var{style}
2934 @var{style} is a symbol describing the type of menu item; it should be
2935 @code{toggle} (a checkbox), or @code{radio} (a radio button), or
2936 anything else (meaning an ordinary menu item).
2937
2938 @item :selected @var{selected}
2939 @var{selected} is an expression; the checkbox or radio button is
2940 selected whenever the expression's value is non-nil.
2941
2942 @item :help @var{help}
2943 @var{help} is a string describing the menu item.
2944 @end table
2945
2946 Alternatively, a menu item can be a string. Then that string appears
2947 in the menu as unselectable text. A string consisting of dashes is
2948 displayed as a separator (@pxref{Menu Separators}).
2949
2950 Alternatively, a menu item can be a list with the same format as
2951 @var{menu}. This is a submenu.
2952 @end defmac
2953
2954 Here is an example of using @code{easy-menu-define} to define a menu
2955 similar to the one defined in the example in @ref{Menu Bar}:
2956
2957 @example
2958 (easy-menu-define words-menu global-map
2959 "Menu for word navigation commands."
2960 '("Words"
2961 ["Forward word" forward-word]
2962 ["Backward word" backward-word]))
2963 @end example