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annotate doc/lispref/keymaps.texi @ 88074:94a8c6fb63da
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author | Juanma Barranquero <lekktu@gmail.com> |
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date | Wed, 30 Jan 2008 00:18:44 +0000 |
parents | 107ccd98fa12 |
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84078 | 1 @c -*-texinfo-*- |
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. | |
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, | |
87649 | 4 @c 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
84078 | 5 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions. |
84116
0ba80d073e27
(setfilename): Go up one more level to ../../info.
Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org>
parents:
84078
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6 @setfilename ../../info/keymaps |
84078 | 7 @node Keymaps, Modes, Command Loop, Top |
8 @chapter Keymaps | |
9 @cindex keymap | |
10 | |
11 The command bindings of input events are recorded in data structures | |
12 called @dfn{keymaps}. Each entry in a keymap associates (or | |
13 @dfn{binds}) an individual event type, either to another keymap or to | |
14 a command. When an event type is bound to a keymap, that keymap is | |
15 used to look up the next input event; this continues until a command | |
16 is found. The whole process is called @dfn{key lookup}. | |
17 | |
18 @menu | |
19 * Key Sequences:: Key sequences as Lisp objects. | |
20 * Keymap Basics:: Basic concepts of keymaps. | |
21 * Format of Keymaps:: What a keymap looks like as a Lisp object. | |
22 * Creating Keymaps:: Functions to create and copy keymaps. | |
23 * Inheritance and Keymaps:: How one keymap can inherit the bindings | |
24 of another keymap. | |
25 * Prefix Keys:: Defining a key with a keymap as its definition. | |
26 * Active Keymaps:: How Emacs searches the active keymaps | |
27 for a key binding. | |
28 * Searching Keymaps:: A pseudo-Lisp summary of searching active maps. | |
29 * Controlling Active Maps:: Each buffer has a local keymap | |
30 to override the standard (global) bindings. | |
31 A minor mode can also override them. | |
32 * Key Lookup:: Finding a key's binding in one keymap. | |
33 * Functions for Key Lookup:: How to request key lookup. | |
34 * Changing Key Bindings:: Redefining a key in a keymap. | |
35 * Remapping Commands:: A keymap can translate one command to another. | |
36 * Translation Keymaps:: Keymaps for translating sequences of events. | |
37 * Key Binding Commands:: Interactive interfaces for redefining keys. | |
38 * Scanning Keymaps:: Looking through all keymaps, for printing help. | |
39 * Menu Keymaps:: Defining a menu as a keymap. | |
40 @end menu | |
41 | |
42 @node Key Sequences | |
43 @section Key Sequences | |
44 @cindex key | |
45 @cindex keystroke | |
46 @cindex key sequence | |
47 | |
48 A @dfn{key sequence}, or @dfn{key} for short, is a sequence of one | |
49 or more input events that form a unit. Input events include | |
50 characters, function keys, and mouse actions (@pxref{Input Events}). | |
51 The Emacs Lisp representation for a key sequence is a string or | |
52 vector. Unless otherwise stated, any Emacs Lisp function that accepts | |
53 a key sequence as an argument can handle both representations. | |
54 | |
55 In the string representation, alphanumeric characters ordinarily | |
56 stand for themselves; for example, @code{"a"} represents @kbd{a} | |
57 and @code{"2"} represents @kbd{2}. Control character events are | |
58 prefixed by the substring @code{"\C-"}, and meta characters by | |
59 @code{"\M-"}; for example, @code{"\C-x"} represents the key @kbd{C-x}. | |
60 In addition, the @key{TAB}, @key{RET}, @key{ESC}, and @key{DEL} events | |
61 are represented by @code{"\t"}, @code{"\r"}, @code{"\e"}, and | |
62 @code{"\d"} respectively. The string representation of a complete key | |
63 sequence is the concatenation of the string representations of the | |
64 constituent events; thus, @code{"\C-xl"} represents the key sequence | |
65 @kbd{C-x l}. | |
66 | |
67 Key sequences containing function keys, mouse button events, or | |
68 non-ASCII characters such as @kbd{C-=} or @kbd{H-a} cannot be | |
69 represented as strings; they have to be 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 @defmac kbd keyseq-text | |
79 This macro 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 describe the key sequence using almost the same | |
82 syntax used in this manual. More precisely, it uses the same syntax | |
83 that Edit Macro mode uses for editing keyboard macros (@pxref{Edit | |
84 Keyboard Macro,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}); you must surround | |
85 function key names with @samp{<@dots{}>}. | |
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 | |
98 This macro is not meant for use with arguments that vary---only | |
99 with string constants. | |
100 @end defmac | |
101 | |
102 @node Keymap Basics | |
103 @section Keymap Basics | |
104 @cindex key binding | |
105 @cindex binding of a key | |
106 @cindex complete key | |
107 @cindex undefined key | |
108 | |
109 A keymap is a Lisp data structure that specifies @dfn{key bindings} | |
110 for various key sequences. | |
111 | |
112 A single keymap directly specifies definitions for individual | |
113 events. When a key sequence consists of a single event, its binding | |
114 in a keymap is the keymap's definition for that event. The binding of | |
115 a longer key sequence is found by an iterative process: first find the | |
116 definition of the first event (which must itself be a keymap); then | |
117 find the second event's definition in that keymap, and so on until all | |
118 the events in the key sequence have been processed. | |
119 | |
120 If the binding of a key sequence is a keymap, we call the key sequence | |
121 a @dfn{prefix key}. Otherwise, we call it a @dfn{complete key} (because | |
122 no more events can be added to it). If the binding is @code{nil}, | |
123 we call the key @dfn{undefined}. Examples of prefix keys are @kbd{C-c}, | |
124 @kbd{C-x}, and @kbd{C-x 4}. Examples of defined complete keys are | |
125 @kbd{X}, @key{RET}, and @kbd{C-x 4 C-f}. Examples of undefined complete | |
126 keys are @kbd{C-x C-g}, and @kbd{C-c 3}. @xref{Prefix Keys}, for more | |
127 details. | |
128 | |
129 The rule for finding the binding of a key sequence assumes that the | |
130 intermediate bindings (found for the events before the last) are all | |
131 keymaps; if this is not so, the sequence of events does not form a | |
132 unit---it is not really one key sequence. In other words, removing one | |
133 or more events from the end of any valid key sequence must always yield | |
134 a prefix key. For example, @kbd{C-f C-n} is not a key sequence; | |
135 @kbd{C-f} is not a prefix key, so a longer sequence starting with | |
136 @kbd{C-f} cannot be a key sequence. | |
137 | |
138 The set of possible multi-event key sequences depends on the bindings | |
139 for prefix keys; therefore, it can be different for different keymaps, | |
140 and can change when bindings are changed. However, a one-event sequence | |
141 is always a key sequence, because it does not depend on any prefix keys | |
142 for its well-formedness. | |
143 | |
144 At any time, several primary keymaps are @dfn{active}---that is, in | |
145 use for finding key bindings. These are the @dfn{global map}, which is | |
146 shared by all buffers; the @dfn{local keymap}, which is usually | |
147 associated with a specific major mode; and zero or more @dfn{minor mode | |
148 keymaps}, which belong to currently enabled minor modes. (Not all minor | |
149 modes have keymaps.) The local keymap bindings shadow (i.e., take | |
150 precedence over) the corresponding global bindings. The minor mode | |
151 keymaps shadow both local and global keymaps. @xref{Active Keymaps}, | |
152 for details. | |
153 | |
154 @node Format of Keymaps | |
155 @section Format of Keymaps | |
156 @cindex format of keymaps | |
157 @cindex keymap format | |
158 @cindex full keymap | |
159 @cindex sparse keymap | |
160 | |
161 Each keymap is a list whose @sc{car} is the symbol @code{keymap}. The | |
162 remaining elements of the list define the key bindings of the keymap. | |
163 A symbol whose function definition is a keymap is also a keymap. Use | |
164 the function @code{keymapp} (see below) to test whether an object is a | |
165 keymap. | |
166 | |
167 Several kinds of elements may appear in a keymap, after the symbol | |
168 @code{keymap} that begins it: | |
169 | |
170 @table @code | |
171 @item (@var{type} .@: @var{binding}) | |
172 This specifies one binding, for events of type @var{type}. Each | |
173 ordinary binding applies to events of a particular @dfn{event type}, | |
174 which is always a character or a symbol. @xref{Classifying Events}. | |
175 In this kind of binding, @var{binding} is a command. | |
176 | |
177 @item (@var{type} @var{item-name} @r{[}@var{cache}@r{]} .@: @var{binding}) | |
178 This specifies a binding which is also a simple menu item that | |
179 displays as @var{item-name} in the menu. @var{cache}, if present, | |
180 caches certain information for display in the menu. @xref{Simple Menu | |
181 Items}. | |
182 | |
183 @item (@var{type} @var{item-name} @var{help-string} @r{[}@var{cache}@r{]} .@: @var{binding}) | |
184 This is a simple menu item with help string @var{help-string}. | |
185 | |
186 @item (@var{type} menu-item .@: @var{details}) | |
187 This specifies a binding which is also an extended menu item. This | |
188 allows use of other features. @xref{Extended Menu Items}. | |
189 | |
190 @item (t .@: @var{binding}) | |
191 @cindex default key binding | |
192 This specifies a @dfn{default key binding}; any event not bound by other | |
193 elements of the keymap is given @var{binding} as its binding. Default | |
194 bindings allow a keymap to bind all possible event types without having | |
195 to enumerate all of them. A keymap that has a default binding | |
196 completely masks any lower-precedence keymap, except for events | |
197 explicitly bound to @code{nil} (see below). | |
198 | |
199 @item @var{char-table} | |
200 If an element of a keymap is a char-table, it counts as holding | |
201 bindings for all character events with no modifier bits | |
202 (@pxref{modifier bits}): element @var{n} is the binding for the | |
203 character with code @var{n}. This is a compact way to record lots of | |
204 bindings. A keymap with such a char-table is called a @dfn{full | |
205 keymap}. Other keymaps are called @dfn{sparse keymaps}. | |
206 | |
207 @item @var{string} | |
208 @cindex keymap prompt string | |
209 @cindex overall prompt string | |
210 @cindex prompt string of keymap | |
211 Aside from elements that specify bindings for keys, a keymap can also | |
212 have a string as an element. This is called the @dfn{overall prompt | |
213 string} and makes it possible to use the keymap as a menu. | |
214 @xref{Defining Menus}. | |
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} and @key{TAB}, plus @kbd{C-c | |
239 C-l}, @kbd{M-C-q}, and @kbd{M-C-x}. | |
240 | |
241 @example | |
242 @group | |
243 lisp-mode-map | |
244 @result{} | |
245 @end group | |
246 @group | |
247 (keymap | |
248 (3 keymap | |
249 ;; @kbd{C-c C-z} | |
250 (26 . run-lisp)) | |
251 @end group | |
252 @group | |
253 (27 keymap | |
254 ;; @r{@kbd{M-C-x}, treated as @kbd{@key{ESC} C-x}} | |
255 (24 . lisp-send-defun) | |
256 keymap | |
257 ;; @r{@kbd{M-C-q}, treated as @kbd{@key{ESC} C-q}} | |
258 (17 . indent-sexp)) | |
259 @end group | |
260 @group | |
261 ;; @r{This part is inherited from @code{lisp-mode-shared-map}.} | |
262 keymap | |
263 ;; @key{DEL} | |
264 (127 . backward-delete-char-untabify) | |
265 @end group | |
266 @group | |
267 (27 keymap | |
268 ;; @r{@kbd{M-C-q}, treated as @kbd{@key{ESC} C-q}} | |
269 (17 . indent-sexp)) | |
270 (9 . lisp-indent-line)) | |
271 @end group | |
272 @end example | |
273 | |
274 @defun keymapp object | |
275 This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a keymap, @code{nil} | |
276 otherwise. More precisely, this function tests for a list whose | |
277 @sc{car} is @code{keymap}, or for a symbol whose function definition | |
278 satisfies @code{keymapp}. | |
279 | |
280 @example | |
281 @group | |
282 (keymapp '(keymap)) | |
283 @result{} t | |
284 @end group | |
285 @group | |
286 (fset 'foo '(keymap)) | |
287 (keymapp 'foo) | |
288 @result{} t | |
289 @end group | |
290 @group | |
291 (keymapp (current-global-map)) | |
292 @result{} t | |
293 @end group | |
294 @end example | |
295 @end defun | |
296 | |
297 @node Creating Keymaps | |
298 @section Creating Keymaps | |
299 @cindex creating keymaps | |
300 | |
301 Here we describe the functions for creating keymaps. | |
302 | |
303 @defun make-sparse-keymap &optional prompt | |
304 This function creates and returns a new sparse keymap with no entries. | |
305 (A sparse keymap is the kind of keymap you usually want.) The new | |
306 keymap does not contain a char-table, unlike @code{make-keymap}, and | |
307 does not bind any events. | |
308 | |
309 @example | |
310 @group | |
311 (make-sparse-keymap) | |
312 @result{} (keymap) | |
313 @end group | |
314 @end example | |
315 | |
316 If you specify @var{prompt}, that becomes the overall prompt string | |
317 for the keymap. You should specify this only for menu keymaps | |
318 (@pxref{Defining Menus}). A keymap with an overall prompt string will | |
319 always present a mouse menu or a keyboard menu if it is active for | |
320 looking up the next input event. Don't specify an overall prompt string | |
321 for the main map of a major or minor mode, because that would cause | |
322 the command loop to present a keyboard menu every time. | |
323 @end defun | |
324 | |
325 @defun make-keymap &optional prompt | |
326 This function creates and returns a new full keymap. That keymap | |
327 contains a char-table (@pxref{Char-Tables}) with slots for all | |
328 characters without modifiers. The new keymap initially binds all | |
329 these characters to @code{nil}, and does not bind any other kind of | |
330 event. The argument @var{prompt} specifies a | |
331 prompt string, as in @code{make-sparse-keymap}. | |
332 | |
333 @example | |
334 @group | |
335 (make-keymap) | |
336 @result{} (keymap #^[t nil nil nil @dots{} nil nil keymap]) | |
337 @end group | |
338 @end example | |
339 | |
340 A full keymap is more efficient than a sparse keymap when it holds | |
341 lots of bindings; for just a few, the sparse keymap is better. | |
342 @end defun | |
343 | |
344 @defun copy-keymap keymap | |
345 This function returns a copy of @var{keymap}. Any keymaps that | |
346 appear directly as bindings in @var{keymap} are also copied recursively, | |
347 and so on to any number of levels. However, recursive copying does not | |
348 take place when the definition of a character is a symbol whose function | |
349 definition is a keymap; the same symbol appears in the new copy. | |
350 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
351 | |
352 @example | |
353 @group | |
354 (setq map (copy-keymap (current-local-map))) | |
355 @result{} (keymap | |
356 @end group | |
357 @group | |
358 ;; @r{(This implements meta characters.)} | |
359 (27 keymap | |
360 (83 . center-paragraph) | |
361 (115 . center-line)) | |
362 (9 . tab-to-tab-stop)) | |
363 @end group | |
364 | |
365 @group | |
366 (eq map (current-local-map)) | |
367 @result{} nil | |
368 @end group | |
369 @group | |
370 (equal map (current-local-map)) | |
371 @result{} t | |
372 @end group | |
373 @end example | |
374 @end defun | |
375 | |
376 @node Inheritance and Keymaps | |
377 @section Inheritance and Keymaps | |
378 @cindex keymap inheritance | |
379 @cindex inheriting a keymap's bindings | |
380 | |
381 A keymap can inherit the bindings of another keymap, which we call the | |
382 @dfn{parent keymap}. Such a keymap looks like this: | |
383 | |
384 @example | |
385 (keymap @var{elements}@dots{} . @var{parent-keymap}) | |
386 @end example | |
387 | |
388 @noindent | |
389 The effect is that this keymap inherits all the bindings of | |
390 @var{parent-keymap}, whatever they may be at the time a key is looked up, | |
391 but can add to them or override them with @var{elements}. | |
392 | |
393 If you change the bindings in @var{parent-keymap} using | |
394 @code{define-key} or other key-binding functions, these changed | |
395 bindings are visible in the inheriting keymap, unless shadowed by the | |
396 bindings made by @var{elements}. The converse is not true: if you use | |
397 @code{define-key} to change bindings in the inheriting keymap, these | |
398 changes are recorded in @var{elements}, but have no effect on | |
399 @var{parent-keymap}. | |
400 | |
401 The proper way to construct a keymap with a parent is to use | |
402 @code{set-keymap-parent}; if you have code that directly constructs a | |
403 keymap with a parent, please convert the program to use | |
404 @code{set-keymap-parent} instead. | |
405 | |
406 @defun keymap-parent keymap | |
407 This returns the parent keymap of @var{keymap}. If @var{keymap} | |
408 has no parent, @code{keymap-parent} returns @code{nil}. | |
409 @end defun | |
410 | |
411 @defun set-keymap-parent keymap parent | |
412 This sets the parent keymap of @var{keymap} to @var{parent}, and returns | |
413 @var{parent}. If @var{parent} is @code{nil}, this function gives | |
414 @var{keymap} no parent at all. | |
415 | |
416 If @var{keymap} has submaps (bindings for prefix keys), they too receive | |
417 new parent keymaps that reflect what @var{parent} specifies for those | |
418 prefix keys. | |
419 @end defun | |
420 | |
421 Here is an example showing how to make a keymap that inherits | |
422 from @code{text-mode-map}: | |
423 | |
424 @example | |
425 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap))) | |
426 (set-keymap-parent map text-mode-map) | |
427 map) | |
428 @end example | |
429 | |
430 A non-sparse keymap can have a parent too, but this is not very | |
431 useful. A non-sparse keymap always specifies something as the binding | |
432 for every numeric character code without modifier bits, even if it is | |
433 @code{nil}, so these character's bindings are never inherited from | |
434 the parent keymap. | |
435 | |
436 @node Prefix Keys | |
437 @section Prefix Keys | |
438 @cindex prefix key | |
439 | |
440 A @dfn{prefix key} is a key sequence whose binding is a keymap. The | |
441 keymap defines what to do with key sequences that extend the prefix key. | |
442 For example, @kbd{C-x} is a prefix key, and it uses a keymap that is | |
443 also stored in the variable @code{ctl-x-map}. This keymap defines | |
444 bindings for key sequences starting with @kbd{C-x}. | |
445 | |
446 Some of the standard Emacs prefix keys use keymaps that are | |
447 also found in Lisp variables: | |
448 | |
449 @itemize @bullet | |
450 @item | |
451 @vindex esc-map | |
452 @findex ESC-prefix | |
453 @code{esc-map} is the global keymap for the @key{ESC} prefix key. Thus, | |
454 the global definitions of all meta characters are actually found here. | |
455 This map is also the function definition of @code{ESC-prefix}. | |
456 | |
457 @item | |
458 @cindex @kbd{C-h} | |
459 @code{help-map} is the global keymap for the @kbd{C-h} prefix key. | |
460 | |
461 @item | |
462 @cindex @kbd{C-c} | |
463 @vindex mode-specific-map | |
464 @code{mode-specific-map} is the global keymap for the prefix key | |
465 @kbd{C-c}. This map is actually global, not mode-specific, but its name | |
466 provides useful information about @kbd{C-c} in the output of @kbd{C-h b} | |
467 (@code{display-bindings}), since the main use of this prefix key is for | |
468 mode-specific bindings. | |
469 | |
470 @item | |
471 @cindex @kbd{C-x} | |
472 @vindex ctl-x-map | |
473 @findex Control-X-prefix | |
474 @code{ctl-x-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x} prefix key. | |
475 This map is found via the function cell of the symbol | |
476 @code{Control-X-prefix}. | |
477 | |
478 @item | |
479 @cindex @kbd{C-x @key{RET}} | |
480 @vindex mule-keymap | |
481 @code{mule-keymap} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x @key{RET}} | |
482 prefix key. | |
483 | |
484 @item | |
485 @cindex @kbd{C-x 4} | |
486 @vindex ctl-x-4-map | |
487 @code{ctl-x-4-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x 4} prefix | |
488 key. | |
489 | |
490 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
491 @item | |
492 @cindex @kbd{C-x 5} | |
493 @vindex ctl-x-5-map | |
494 @code{ctl-x-5-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x 5} prefix | |
495 key. | |
496 | |
497 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
498 @item | |
499 @cindex @kbd{C-x 6} | |
500 @vindex 2C-mode-map | |
501 @code{2C-mode-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x 6} prefix | |
502 key. | |
503 | |
504 @item | |
505 @cindex @kbd{C-x v} | |
506 @vindex vc-prefix-map | |
507 @code{vc-prefix-map} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{C-x v} prefix | |
508 key. | |
509 | |
510 @item | |
511 @cindex @kbd{M-o} | |
512 @vindex facemenu-keymap | |
513 @code{facemenu-keymap} is the global keymap used for the @kbd{M-o} | |
514 prefix key. | |
515 | |
516 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
517 @item | |
518 The other Emacs prefix keys are @kbd{M-g}, @kbd{C-x @@}, @kbd{C-x a i}, | |
519 @kbd{C-x @key{ESC}} and @kbd{@key{ESC} @key{ESC}}. They use keymaps | |
520 that have no special names. | |
521 @end itemize | |
522 | |
523 The keymap binding of a prefix key is used for looking up the event | |
524 that follows the prefix key. (It may instead be a symbol whose function | |
525 definition is a keymap. The effect is the same, but the symbol serves | |
526 as a name for the prefix key.) Thus, the binding of @kbd{C-x} is the | |
527 symbol @code{Control-X-prefix}, whose function cell holds the keymap | |
528 for @kbd{C-x} commands. (The same keymap is also the value of | |
529 @code{ctl-x-map}.) | |
530 | |
531 Prefix key definitions can appear in any active keymap. The | |
532 definitions of @kbd{C-c}, @kbd{C-x}, @kbd{C-h} and @key{ESC} as prefix | |
533 keys appear in the global map, so these prefix keys are always | |
534 available. Major and minor modes can redefine a key as a prefix by | |
535 putting a prefix key definition for it in the local map or the minor | |
536 mode's map. @xref{Active Keymaps}. | |
537 | |
538 If a key is defined as a prefix in more than one active map, then its | |
539 various definitions are in effect merged: the commands defined in the | |
540 minor mode keymaps come first, followed by those in the local map's | |
541 prefix definition, and then by those from the global map. | |
542 | |
543 In the following example, we make @kbd{C-p} a prefix key in the local | |
544 keymap, in such a way that @kbd{C-p} is identical to @kbd{C-x}. Then | |
545 the binding for @kbd{C-p C-f} is the function @code{find-file}, just | |
546 like @kbd{C-x C-f}. The key sequence @kbd{C-p 6} is not found in any | |
547 active keymap. | |
548 | |
549 @example | |
550 @group | |
551 (use-local-map (make-sparse-keymap)) | |
552 @result{} nil | |
553 @end group | |
554 @group | |
555 (local-set-key "\C-p" ctl-x-map) | |
556 @result{} nil | |
557 @end group | |
558 @group | |
559 (key-binding "\C-p\C-f") | |
560 @result{} find-file | |
561 @end group | |
562 | |
563 @group | |
564 (key-binding "\C-p6") | |
565 @result{} nil | |
566 @end group | |
567 @end example | |
568 | |
569 @defun define-prefix-command symbol &optional mapvar prompt | |
570 @cindex prefix command | |
571 @anchor{Definition of define-prefix-command} | |
572 This function prepares @var{symbol} for use as a prefix key's binding: | |
573 it creates a sparse keymap and stores it as @var{symbol}'s function | |
574 definition. Subsequently binding a key sequence to @var{symbol} will | |
575 make that key sequence into a prefix key. The return value is @code{symbol}. | |
576 | |
577 This function also sets @var{symbol} as a variable, with the keymap as | |
578 its value. But if @var{mapvar} is non-@code{nil}, it sets @var{mapvar} | |
579 as a variable instead. | |
580 | |
581 If @var{prompt} is non-@code{nil}, that becomes the overall prompt | |
582 string for the keymap. The prompt string should be given for menu keymaps | |
583 (@pxref{Defining Menus}). | |
584 @end defun | |
585 | |
586 @node Active Keymaps | |
587 @section Active Keymaps | |
588 @cindex active keymap | |
589 @cindex global keymap | |
590 @cindex local keymap | |
591 | |
592 Emacs normally contains many keymaps; at any given time, just a few | |
593 of them are @dfn{active}, meaning that they participate in the | |
594 interpretation of user input. All the active keymaps are used | |
595 together to determine what command to execute when a key is entered. | |
596 | |
597 Normally the active keymaps are the @code{keymap} property keymap, | |
598 the keymaps of any enabled minor modes, the current buffer's local | |
599 keymap, and the global keymap, in that order. Emacs searches for each | |
600 input key sequence in all these keymaps. @xref{Searching Keymaps}, | |
601 for more details of this procedure. | |
602 | |
603 When the key sequence starts with a mouse event (optionally preceded | |
604 by a symbolic prefix), the active keymaps are determined based on the | |
605 position in that event. If the event happened on a string embedded | |
606 with a @code{display}, @code{before-string}, or @code{after-string} | |
607 property (@pxref{Special Properties}), the non-@code{nil} map | |
608 properties of the string override those of the buffer. | |
609 | |
610 The @dfn{global keymap} holds the bindings of keys that are defined | |
611 regardless of the current buffer, such as @kbd{C-f}. The variable | |
612 @code{global-map} holds this keymap, which is always active. | |
613 | |
614 Each buffer may have another keymap, its @dfn{local keymap}, which | |
615 may contain new or overriding definitions for keys. The current | |
616 buffer's local keymap is always active except when | |
617 @code{overriding-local-map} overrides it. The @code{local-map} text | |
618 or overlay property can specify an alternative local keymap for certain | |
619 parts of the buffer; see @ref{Special Properties}. | |
620 | |
621 Each minor mode can have a keymap; if it does, the keymap is active | |
622 when the minor mode is enabled. Modes for emulation can specify | |
623 additional active keymaps through the variable | |
624 @code{emulation-mode-map-alists}. | |
625 | |
626 The highest precedence normal keymap comes from the @code{keymap} | |
627 text or overlay property. If that is non-@code{nil}, it is the first | |
628 keymap to be processed, in normal circumstances. | |
629 | |
630 However, there are also special ways for programs to substitute | |
631 other keymaps for some of those. The variable | |
632 @code{overriding-local-map}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies a keymap | |
633 that replaces all the usual active keymaps except the global keymap. | |
634 Another way to do this is with @code{overriding-terminal-local-map}; | |
635 it operates on a per-terminal basis. These variables are documented | |
636 below. | |
637 | |
638 @cindex major mode keymap | |
639 Since every buffer that uses the same major mode normally uses the | |
640 same local keymap, you can think of the keymap as local to the mode. A | |
641 change to the local keymap of a buffer (using @code{local-set-key}, for | |
642 example) is seen also in the other buffers that share that keymap. | |
643 | |
644 The local keymaps that are used for Lisp mode and some other major | |
645 modes exist even if they have not yet been used. These local keymaps are | |
646 the values of variables such as @code{lisp-mode-map}. For most major | |
647 modes, which are less frequently used, the local keymap is constructed | |
648 only when the mode is used for the first time in a session. | |
649 | |
650 The minibuffer has local keymaps, too; they contain various completion | |
651 and exit commands. @xref{Intro to Minibuffers}. | |
652 | |
653 Emacs has other keymaps that are used in a different way---translating | |
654 events within @code{read-key-sequence}. @xref{Translation Keymaps}. | |
655 | |
656 @xref{Standard Keymaps}, for a list of standard keymaps. | |
657 | |
658 @defun current-active-maps &optional olp position | |
659 This returns the list of active keymaps that would be used by the | |
660 command loop in the current circumstances to look up a key sequence. | |
661 Normally it ignores @code{overriding-local-map} and | |
662 @code{overriding-terminal-local-map}, but if @var{olp} is non-@code{nil} | |
663 then it pays attention to them. @var{position} can optionally be either | |
664 an event position as returned by @code{event-start} or a buffer | |
665 position, and may change the keymaps as described for | |
666 @code{key-binding}. | |
667 @end defun | |
668 | |
669 @defun key-binding key &optional accept-defaults no-remap position | |
670 This function returns the binding for @var{key} according to the | |
671 current active keymaps. The result is @code{nil} if @var{key} is | |
672 undefined in the keymaps. | |
673 | |
674 The argument @var{accept-defaults} controls checking for default | |
675 bindings, as in @code{lookup-key} (@pxref{Functions for Key Lookup}). | |
676 | |
677 When commands are remapped (@pxref{Remapping Commands}), | |
678 @code{key-binding} normally processes command remappings so as to | |
679 returns the remapped command that will actually be executed. However, | |
680 if @var{no-remap} is non-@code{nil}, @code{key-binding} ignores | |
681 remappings and returns the binding directly specified for @var{key}. | |
682 | |
683 If @var{key} starts with a mouse event (perhaps following a prefix | |
684 event), the maps to be consulted are determined based on the event's | |
685 position. Otherwise, they are determined based on the value of point. | |
686 However, you can override either of them by specifying @var{position}. | |
687 If @var{position} is non-@code{nil}, it should be either a buffer | |
688 position or an event position like the value of @code{event-start}. | |
689 Then the maps consulted are determined based on @var{position}. | |
690 | |
691 An error is signaled if @var{key} is not a string or a vector. | |
692 | |
693 @example | |
694 @group | |
695 (key-binding "\C-x\C-f") | |
696 @result{} find-file | |
697 @end group | |
698 @end example | |
699 @end defun | |
700 | |
701 @node Searching Keymaps | |
702 @section Searching the Active Keymaps | |
703 @cindex searching active keymaps for keys | |
704 | |
705 After translation of event subsequences (@pxref{Translation | |
706 Keymaps}) Emacs looks for them in the active keymaps. Here is a | |
707 pseudo-Lisp description of the order and conditions for searching | |
708 them: | |
709 | |
710 @lisp | |
711 (or (if overriding-terminal-local-map | |
712 (@var{find-in} overriding-terminal-local-map) | |
713 (if overriding-local-map | |
714 (@var{find-in} overriding-local-map) | |
715 (or (@var{find-in} (get-char-property (point) 'keymap)) | |
716 (@var{find-in-any} emulation-mode-map-alists) | |
717 (@var{find-in-any} minor-mode-overriding-map-alist) | |
718 (@var{find-in-any} minor-mode-map-alist) | |
719 (if (get-text-property (point) 'local-map) | |
720 (@var{find-in} (get-char-property (point) 'local-map)) | |
721 (@var{find-in} (current-local-map)))))) | |
722 (@var{find-in} (current-global-map))) | |
723 @end lisp | |
724 | |
725 @noindent | |
726 The @var{find-in} and @var{find-in-any} are pseudo functions that | |
727 search in one keymap and in an alist of keymaps, respectively. | |
728 (Searching a single keymap for a binding is called @dfn{key lookup}; | |
729 see @ref{Key Lookup}.) If the key sequence starts with a mouse event, | |
730 or a symbolic prefix event followed by a mouse event, that event's | |
731 position is used instead of point and the current buffer. Mouse | |
732 events on an embedded string use non-@code{nil} text properties from | |
733 that string instead of the buffer. | |
734 | |
735 @enumerate | |
736 @item | |
737 The function finally found may be remapped | |
738 (@pxref{Remapping Commands}). | |
739 | |
740 @item | |
741 Characters that are bound to @code{self-insert-command} are translated | |
742 according to @code{translation-table-for-input} before insertion. | |
743 | |
744 @item | |
745 @code{current-active-maps} returns a list of the | |
746 currently active keymaps at point. | |
747 | |
748 @item | |
749 When a match is found (@pxref{Key Lookup}), if the binding in the | |
750 keymap is a function, the search is over. However if the keymap entry | |
751 is a symbol with a value or a string, Emacs replaces the input key | |
752 sequences with the variable's value or the string, and restarts the | |
753 search of the active keymaps. | |
754 @end enumerate | |
755 | |
756 @node Controlling Active Maps | |
757 @section Controlling the Active Keymaps | |
758 | |
759 @defvar global-map | |
760 This variable contains the default global keymap that maps Emacs | |
761 keyboard input to commands. The global keymap is normally this | |
762 keymap. The default global keymap is a full keymap that binds | |
763 @code{self-insert-command} to all of the printing characters. | |
764 | |
765 It is normal practice to change the bindings in the global keymap, but you | |
766 should not assign this variable any value other than the keymap it starts | |
767 out with. | |
768 @end defvar | |
769 | |
770 @defun current-global-map | |
771 This function returns the current global keymap. This is the | |
772 same as the value of @code{global-map} unless you change one or the | |
773 other. | |
774 | |
775 @example | |
776 @group | |
777 (current-global-map) | |
778 @result{} (keymap [set-mark-command beginning-of-line @dots{} | |
779 delete-backward-char]) | |
780 @end group | |
781 @end example | |
782 @end defun | |
783 | |
784 @defun current-local-map | |
785 This function returns the current buffer's local keymap, or @code{nil} | |
786 if it has none. In the following example, the keymap for the | |
787 @samp{*scratch*} buffer (using Lisp Interaction mode) is a sparse keymap | |
788 in which the entry for @key{ESC}, @acronym{ASCII} code 27, is another sparse | |
789 keymap. | |
790 | |
791 @example | |
792 @group | |
793 (current-local-map) | |
794 @result{} (keymap | |
795 (10 . eval-print-last-sexp) | |
796 (9 . lisp-indent-line) | |
797 (127 . backward-delete-char-untabify) | |
798 @end group | |
799 @group | |
800 (27 keymap | |
801 (24 . eval-defun) | |
802 (17 . indent-sexp))) | |
803 @end group | |
804 @end example | |
805 @end defun | |
806 | |
807 @defun current-minor-mode-maps | |
808 This function returns a list of the keymaps of currently enabled minor modes. | |
809 @end defun | |
810 | |
811 @defun use-global-map keymap | |
812 This function makes @var{keymap} the new current global keymap. It | |
813 returns @code{nil}. | |
814 | |
815 It is very unusual to change the global keymap. | |
816 @end defun | |
817 | |
818 @defun use-local-map keymap | |
819 This function makes @var{keymap} the new local keymap of the current | |
820 buffer. If @var{keymap} is @code{nil}, then the buffer has no local | |
821 keymap. @code{use-local-map} returns @code{nil}. Most major mode | |
822 commands use this function. | |
823 @end defun | |
824 | |
825 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
826 @defvar minor-mode-map-alist | |
827 @anchor{Definition of minor-mode-map-alist} | |
828 This variable is an alist describing keymaps that may or may not be | |
829 active according to the values of certain variables. Its elements look | |
830 like this: | |
831 | |
832 @example | |
833 (@var{variable} . @var{keymap}) | |
834 @end example | |
835 | |
836 The keymap @var{keymap} is active whenever @var{variable} has a | |
837 non-@code{nil} value. Typically @var{variable} is the variable that | |
838 enables or disables a minor mode. @xref{Keymaps and Minor Modes}. | |
839 | |
840 Note that elements of @code{minor-mode-map-alist} do not have the same | |
841 structure as elements of @code{minor-mode-alist}. The map must be the | |
842 @sc{cdr} of the element; a list with the map as the second element will | |
843 not do. The @sc{cdr} can be either a keymap (a list) or a symbol whose | |
844 function definition is a keymap. | |
845 | |
846 When more than one minor mode keymap is active, the earlier one in | |
847 @code{minor-mode-map-alist} takes priority. But you should design | |
848 minor modes so that they don't interfere with each other. If you do | |
849 this properly, the order will not matter. | |
850 | |
851 See @ref{Keymaps and Minor Modes}, for more information about minor | |
852 modes. See also @code{minor-mode-key-binding} (@pxref{Functions for Key | |
853 Lookup}). | |
854 @end defvar | |
855 | |
856 @defvar minor-mode-overriding-map-alist | |
857 This variable allows major modes to override the key bindings for | |
858 particular minor modes. The elements of this alist look like the | |
859 elements of @code{minor-mode-map-alist}: @code{(@var{variable} | |
860 . @var{keymap})}. | |
861 | |
862 If a variable appears as an element of | |
863 @code{minor-mode-overriding-map-alist}, the map specified by that | |
864 element totally replaces any map specified for the same variable in | |
865 @code{minor-mode-map-alist}. | |
866 | |
867 @code{minor-mode-overriding-map-alist} is automatically buffer-local in | |
868 all buffers. | |
869 @end defvar | |
870 | |
871 @defvar overriding-local-map | |
872 If non-@code{nil}, this variable holds a keymap to use instead of the | |
873 buffer's local keymap, any text property or overlay keymaps, and any | |
874 minor mode keymaps. This keymap, if specified, overrides all other | |
875 maps that would have been active, except for the current global map. | |
876 @end defvar | |
877 | |
878 @defvar overriding-terminal-local-map | |
879 If non-@code{nil}, this variable holds a keymap to use instead of | |
880 @code{overriding-local-map}, the buffer's local keymap, text property | |
881 or overlay keymaps, and all the minor mode keymaps. | |
882 | |
883 This variable is always local to the current terminal and cannot be | |
884 buffer-local. @xref{Multiple Displays}. It is used to implement | |
885 incremental search mode. | |
886 @end defvar | |
887 | |
888 @defvar overriding-local-map-menu-flag | |
889 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, the value of | |
890 @code{overriding-local-map} or @code{overriding-terminal-local-map} can | |
891 affect the display of the menu bar. The default value is @code{nil}, so | |
892 those map variables have no effect on the menu bar. | |
893 | |
894 Note that these two map variables do affect the execution of key | |
895 sequences entered using the menu bar, even if they do not affect the | |
896 menu bar display. So if a menu bar key sequence comes in, you should | |
897 clear the variables before looking up and executing that key sequence. | |
898 Modes that use the variables would typically do this anyway; normally | |
899 they respond to events that they do not handle by ``unreading'' them and | |
900 exiting. | |
901 @end defvar | |
902 | |
903 @defvar special-event-map | |
904 This variable holds a keymap for special events. If an event type has a | |
905 binding in this keymap, then it is special, and the binding for the | |
906 event is run directly by @code{read-event}. @xref{Special Events}. | |
907 @end defvar | |
908 | |
909 @defvar emulation-mode-map-alists | |
910 This variable holds a list of keymap alists to use for emulations | |
911 modes. It is intended for modes or packages using multiple minor-mode | |
912 keymaps. Each element is a keymap alist which has the same format and | |
913 meaning as @code{minor-mode-map-alist}, or a symbol with a variable | |
914 binding which is such an alist. The ``active'' keymaps in each alist | |
915 are used before @code{minor-mode-map-alist} and | |
916 @code{minor-mode-overriding-map-alist}. | |
917 @end defvar | |
918 | |
919 @node Key Lookup | |
920 @section Key Lookup | |
921 @cindex key lookup | |
922 @cindex keymap entry | |
923 | |
924 @dfn{Key lookup} is the process of finding the binding of a key | |
925 sequence from a given keymap. The execution or use of the binding is | |
926 not part of key lookup. | |
927 | |
928 Key lookup uses just the event type of each event in the key sequence; | |
929 the rest of the event is ignored. In fact, a key sequence used for key | |
930 lookup may designate a mouse event with just its types (a symbol) | |
931 instead of the entire event (a list). @xref{Input Events}. Such | |
932 a ``key sequence'' is insufficient for @code{command-execute} to run, | |
933 but it is sufficient for looking up or rebinding a key. | |
934 | |
935 When the key sequence consists of multiple events, key lookup | |
936 processes the events sequentially: the binding of the first event is | |
937 found, and must be a keymap; then the second event's binding is found in | |
938 that keymap, and so on until all the events in the key sequence are used | |
939 up. (The binding thus found for the last event may or may not be a | |
940 keymap.) Thus, the process of key lookup is defined in terms of a | |
941 simpler process for looking up a single event in a keymap. How that is | |
942 done depends on the type of object associated with the event in that | |
943 keymap. | |
944 | |
945 Let's use the term @dfn{keymap entry} to describe the value found by | |
946 looking up an event type in a keymap. (This doesn't include the item | |
947 string and other extra elements in a keymap element for a menu item, because | |
948 @code{lookup-key} and other key lookup functions don't include them in | |
949 the returned value.) While any Lisp object may be stored in a keymap | |
950 as a keymap entry, not all make sense for key lookup. Here is a table | |
951 of the meaningful types of keymap entries: | |
952 | |
953 @table @asis | |
954 @item @code{nil} | |
955 @cindex @code{nil} in keymap | |
956 @code{nil} means that the events used so far in the lookup form an | |
957 undefined key. When a keymap fails to mention an event type at all, and | |
958 has no default binding, that is equivalent to a binding of @code{nil} | |
959 for that event type. | |
960 | |
961 @item @var{command} | |
962 @cindex command in keymap | |
963 The events used so far in the lookup form a complete key, | |
964 and @var{command} is its binding. @xref{What Is a Function}. | |
965 | |
966 @item @var{array} | |
967 @cindex string in keymap | |
968 The array (either a string or a vector) is a keyboard macro. The events | |
969 used so far in the lookup form a complete key, and the array is its | |
970 binding. See @ref{Keyboard Macros}, for more information. | |
971 | |
972 @item @var{keymap} | |
973 @cindex keymap in keymap | |
974 The events used so far in the lookup form a prefix key. The next | |
975 event of the key sequence is looked up in @var{keymap}. | |
976 | |
977 @item @var{list} | |
978 @cindex list in keymap | |
979 The meaning of a list depends on what it contains: | |
980 | |
981 @itemize @bullet | |
982 @item | |
983 If the @sc{car} of @var{list} is the symbol @code{keymap}, then the list | |
984 is a keymap, and is treated as a keymap (see above). | |
985 | |
986 @item | |
987 @cindex @code{lambda} in keymap | |
988 If the @sc{car} of @var{list} is @code{lambda}, then the list is a | |
989 lambda expression. This is presumed to be a function, and is treated | |
990 as such (see above). In order to execute properly as a key binding, | |
991 this function must be a command---it must have an @code{interactive} | |
992 specification. @xref{Defining Commands}. | |
993 | |
994 @item | |
995 If the @sc{car} of @var{list} is a keymap and the @sc{cdr} is an event | |
996 type, then this is an @dfn{indirect entry}: | |
997 | |
998 @example | |
999 (@var{othermap} . @var{othertype}) | |
1000 @end example | |
1001 | |
1002 When key lookup encounters an indirect entry, it looks up instead the | |
1003 binding of @var{othertype} in @var{othermap} and uses that. | |
1004 | |
1005 This feature permits you to define one key as an alias for another key. | |
1006 For example, an entry whose @sc{car} is the keymap called @code{esc-map} | |
1007 and whose @sc{cdr} is 32 (the code for @key{SPC}) means, ``Use the global | |
1008 binding of @kbd{Meta-@key{SPC}}, whatever that may be.'' | |
1009 @end itemize | |
1010 | |
1011 @item @var{symbol} | |
1012 @cindex symbol in keymap | |
1013 The function definition of @var{symbol} is used in place of | |
1014 @var{symbol}. If that too is a symbol, then this process is repeated, | |
1015 any number of times. Ultimately this should lead to an object that is | |
1016 a keymap, a command, or a keyboard macro. A list is allowed if it is a | |
1017 keymap or a command, but indirect entries are not understood when found | |
1018 via symbols. | |
1019 | |
1020 Note that keymaps and keyboard macros (strings and vectors) are not | |
1021 valid functions, so a symbol with a keymap, string, or vector as its | |
1022 function definition is invalid as a function. It is, however, valid as | |
1023 a key binding. If the definition is a keyboard macro, then the symbol | |
1024 is also valid as an argument to @code{command-execute} | |
1025 (@pxref{Interactive Call}). | |
1026 | |
1027 @cindex @code{undefined} in keymap | |
1028 The symbol @code{undefined} is worth special mention: it means to treat | |
1029 the key as undefined. Strictly speaking, the key is defined, and its | |
1030 binding is the command @code{undefined}; but that command does the same | |
1031 thing that is done automatically for an undefined key: it rings the bell | |
1032 (by calling @code{ding}) but does not signal an error. | |
1033 | |
1034 @cindex preventing prefix key | |
1035 @code{undefined} is used in local keymaps to override a global key | |
1036 binding and make the key ``undefined'' locally. A local binding of | |
1037 @code{nil} would fail to do this because it would not override the | |
1038 global binding. | |
1039 | |
1040 @item @var{anything else} | |
1041 If any other type of object is found, the events used so far in the | |
1042 lookup form a complete key, and the object is its binding, but the | |
1043 binding is not executable as a command. | |
1044 @end table | |
1045 | |
1046 In short, a keymap entry may be a keymap, a command, a keyboard macro, | |
1047 a symbol that leads to one of them, or an indirection or @code{nil}. | |
1048 Here is an example of a sparse keymap with two characters bound to | |
1049 commands and one bound to another keymap. This map is the normal value | |
1050 of @code{emacs-lisp-mode-map}. Note that 9 is the code for @key{TAB}, | |
1051 127 for @key{DEL}, 27 for @key{ESC}, 17 for @kbd{C-q} and 24 for | |
1052 @kbd{C-x}. | |
1053 | |
1054 @example | |
1055 @group | |
1056 (keymap (9 . lisp-indent-line) | |
1057 (127 . backward-delete-char-untabify) | |
1058 (27 keymap (17 . indent-sexp) (24 . eval-defun))) | |
1059 @end group | |
1060 @end example | |
1061 | |
1062 @node Functions for Key Lookup | |
1063 @section Functions for Key Lookup | |
1064 | |
1065 Here are the functions and variables pertaining to key lookup. | |
1066 | |
1067 @defun lookup-key keymap key &optional accept-defaults | |
1068 This function returns the definition of @var{key} in @var{keymap}. All | |
1069 the other functions described in this chapter that look up keys use | |
1070 @code{lookup-key}. Here are examples: | |
1071 | |
1072 @example | |
1073 @group | |
1074 (lookup-key (current-global-map) "\C-x\C-f") | |
1075 @result{} find-file | |
1076 @end group | |
1077 @group | |
1078 (lookup-key (current-global-map) (kbd "C-x C-f")) | |
1079 @result{} find-file | |
1080 @end group | |
1081 @group | |
1082 (lookup-key (current-global-map) "\C-x\C-f12345") | |
1083 @result{} 2 | |
1084 @end group | |
1085 @end example | |
1086 | |
1087 If the string or vector @var{key} is not a valid key sequence according | |
1088 to the prefix keys specified in @var{keymap}, it must be ``too long'' | |
1089 and have extra events at the end that do not fit into a single key | |
1090 sequence. Then the value is a number, the number of events at the front | |
1091 of @var{key} that compose a complete key. | |
1092 | |
1093 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
1094 If @var{accept-defaults} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{lookup-key} | |
1095 considers default bindings as well as bindings for the specific events | |
1096 in @var{key}. Otherwise, @code{lookup-key} reports only bindings for | |
1097 the specific sequence @var{key}, ignoring default bindings except when | |
1098 you explicitly ask about them. (To do this, supply @code{t} as an | |
1099 element of @var{key}; see @ref{Format of Keymaps}.) | |
1100 | |
1101 If @var{key} contains a meta character (not a function key), that | |
1102 character is implicitly replaced by a two-character sequence: the value | |
1103 of @code{meta-prefix-char}, followed by the corresponding non-meta | |
1104 character. Thus, the first example below is handled by conversion into | |
1105 the second example. | |
1106 | |
1107 @example | |
1108 @group | |
1109 (lookup-key (current-global-map) "\M-f") | |
1110 @result{} forward-word | |
1111 @end group | |
1112 @group | |
1113 (lookup-key (current-global-map) "\ef") | |
1114 @result{} forward-word | |
1115 @end group | |
1116 @end example | |
1117 | |
1118 Unlike @code{read-key-sequence}, this function does not modify the | |
1119 specified events in ways that discard information (@pxref{Key Sequence | |
1120 Input}). In particular, it does not convert letters to lower case and | |
1121 it does not change drag events to clicks. | |
1122 @end defun | |
1123 | |
1124 @deffn Command undefined | |
1125 Used in keymaps to undefine keys. It calls @code{ding}, but does | |
1126 not cause an error. | |
1127 @end deffn | |
1128 | |
1129 @defun local-key-binding key &optional accept-defaults | |
1130 This function returns the binding for @var{key} in the current | |
1131 local keymap, or @code{nil} if it is undefined there. | |
1132 | |
1133 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
1134 The argument @var{accept-defaults} controls checking for default bindings, | |
1135 as in @code{lookup-key} (above). | |
1136 @end defun | |
1137 | |
1138 @defun global-key-binding key &optional accept-defaults | |
1139 This function returns the binding for command @var{key} in the | |
1140 current global keymap, or @code{nil} if it is undefined there. | |
1141 | |
1142 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
1143 The argument @var{accept-defaults} controls checking for default bindings, | |
1144 as in @code{lookup-key} (above). | |
1145 @end defun | |
1146 | |
1147 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
1148 @defun minor-mode-key-binding key &optional accept-defaults | |
1149 This function returns a list of all the active minor mode bindings of | |
1150 @var{key}. More precisely, it returns an alist of pairs | |
1151 @code{(@var{modename} . @var{binding})}, where @var{modename} is the | |
1152 variable that enables the minor mode, and @var{binding} is @var{key}'s | |
1153 binding in that mode. If @var{key} has no minor-mode bindings, the | |
1154 value is @code{nil}. | |
1155 | |
1156 If the first binding found is not a prefix definition (a keymap or a | |
1157 symbol defined as a keymap), all subsequent bindings from other minor | |
1158 modes are omitted, since they would be completely shadowed. Similarly, | |
1159 the list omits non-prefix bindings that follow prefix bindings. | |
1160 | |
1161 The argument @var{accept-defaults} controls checking for default | |
1162 bindings, as in @code{lookup-key} (above). | |
1163 @end defun | |
1164 | |
1165 @defvar meta-prefix-char | |
1166 @cindex @key{ESC} | |
1167 This variable is the meta-prefix character code. It is used for | |
1168 translating a meta character to a two-character sequence so it can be | |
1169 looked up in a keymap. For useful results, the value should be a | |
1170 prefix event (@pxref{Prefix Keys}). The default value is 27, which is | |
1171 the @acronym{ASCII} code for @key{ESC}. | |
1172 | |
1173 As long as the value of @code{meta-prefix-char} remains 27, key lookup | |
1174 translates @kbd{M-b} into @kbd{@key{ESC} b}, which is normally defined | |
1175 as the @code{backward-word} command. However, if you were to set | |
1176 @code{meta-prefix-char} to 24, the code for @kbd{C-x}, then Emacs will | |
1177 translate @kbd{M-b} into @kbd{C-x b}, whose standard binding is the | |
1178 @code{switch-to-buffer} command. (Don't actually do this!) Here is an | |
1179 illustration of what would happen: | |
1180 | |
1181 @smallexample | |
1182 @group | |
1183 meta-prefix-char ; @r{The default value.} | |
1184 @result{} 27 | |
1185 @end group | |
1186 @group | |
1187 (key-binding "\M-b") | |
1188 @result{} backward-word | |
1189 @end group | |
1190 @group | |
1191 ?\C-x ; @r{The print representation} | |
1192 @result{} 24 ; @r{of a character.} | |
1193 @end group | |
1194 @group | |
1195 (setq meta-prefix-char 24) | |
1196 @result{} 24 | |
1197 @end group | |
1198 @group | |
1199 (key-binding "\M-b") | |
1200 @result{} switch-to-buffer ; @r{Now, typing @kbd{M-b} is} | |
1201 ; @r{like typing @kbd{C-x b}.} | |
1202 | |
1203 (setq meta-prefix-char 27) ; @r{Avoid confusion!} | |
1204 @result{} 27 ; @r{Restore the default value!} | |
1205 @end group | |
1206 @end smallexample | |
1207 | |
1208 This translation of one event into two happens only for characters, not | |
1209 for other kinds of input events. Thus, @kbd{M-@key{F1}}, a function | |
1210 key, is not converted into @kbd{@key{ESC} @key{F1}}. | |
1211 @end defvar | |
1212 | |
1213 @node Changing Key Bindings | |
1214 @section Changing Key Bindings | |
1215 @cindex changing key bindings | |
1216 @cindex rebinding | |
1217 | |
1218 The way to rebind a key is to change its entry in a keymap. If you | |
1219 change a binding in the global keymap, the change is effective in all | |
1220 buffers (though it has no direct effect in buffers that shadow the | |
1221 global binding with a local one). If you change the current buffer's | |
1222 local map, that usually affects all buffers using the same major mode. | |
1223 The @code{global-set-key} and @code{local-set-key} functions are | |
1224 convenient interfaces for these operations (@pxref{Key Binding | |
1225 Commands}). You can also use @code{define-key}, a more general | |
1226 function; then you must specify explicitly the map to change. | |
1227 | |
1228 When choosing the key sequences for Lisp programs to rebind, please | |
1229 follow the Emacs conventions for use of various keys (@pxref{Key | |
1230 Binding Conventions}). | |
1231 | |
1232 @cindex meta character key constants | |
1233 @cindex control character key constants | |
1234 In writing the key sequence to rebind, it is good to use the special | |
1235 escape sequences for control and meta characters (@pxref{String Type}). | |
1236 The syntax @samp{\C-} means that the following character is a control | |
1237 character and @samp{\M-} means that the following character is a meta | |
1238 character. Thus, the string @code{"\M-x"} is read as containing a | |
1239 single @kbd{M-x}, @code{"\C-f"} is read as containing a single | |
1240 @kbd{C-f}, and @code{"\M-\C-x"} and @code{"\C-\M-x"} are both read as | |
1241 containing a single @kbd{C-M-x}. You can also use this escape syntax in | |
1242 vectors, as well as others that aren't allowed in strings; one example | |
1243 is @samp{[?\C-\H-x home]}. @xref{Character Type}. | |
1244 | |
1245 The key definition and lookup functions accept an alternate syntax for | |
1246 event types in a key sequence that is a vector: you can use a list | |
1247 containing modifier names plus one base event (a character or function | |
1248 key name). For example, @code{(control ?a)} is equivalent to | |
1249 @code{?\C-a} and @code{(hyper control left)} is equivalent to | |
1250 @code{C-H-left}. One advantage of such lists is that the precise | |
1251 numeric codes for the modifier bits don't appear in compiled files. | |
1252 | |
1253 The functions below signal an error if @var{keymap} is not a keymap, | |
1254 or if @var{key} is not a string or vector representing a key sequence. | |
1255 You can use event types (symbols) as shorthand for events that are | |
1256 lists. The @code{kbd} macro (@pxref{Key Sequences}) is a convenient | |
1257 way to specify the key sequence. | |
1258 | |
1259 @defun define-key keymap key binding | |
1260 This function sets the binding for @var{key} in @var{keymap}. (If | |
1261 @var{key} is more than one event long, the change is actually made | |
1262 in another keymap reached from @var{keymap}.) The argument | |
1263 @var{binding} can be any Lisp object, but only certain types are | |
1264 meaningful. (For a list of meaningful types, see @ref{Key Lookup}.) | |
1265 The value returned by @code{define-key} is @var{binding}. | |
1266 | |
1267 If @var{key} is @code{[t]}, this sets the default binding in | |
1268 @var{keymap}. When an event has no binding of its own, the Emacs | |
1269 command loop uses the keymap's default binding, if there is one. | |
1270 | |
1271 @cindex invalid prefix key error | |
1272 @cindex key sequence error | |
1273 Every prefix of @var{key} must be a prefix key (i.e., bound to a keymap) | |
1274 or undefined; otherwise an error is signaled. If some prefix of | |
1275 @var{key} is undefined, then @code{define-key} defines it as a prefix | |
1276 key so that the rest of @var{key} can be defined as specified. | |
1277 | |
1278 If there was previously no binding for @var{key} in @var{keymap}, the | |
1279 new binding is added at the beginning of @var{keymap}. The order of | |
1280 bindings in a keymap makes no difference for keyboard input, but it | |
1281 does matter for menu keymaps (@pxref{Menu Keymaps}). | |
1282 @end defun | |
1283 | |
1284 This example creates a sparse keymap and makes a number of | |
1285 bindings in it: | |
1286 | |
1287 @smallexample | |
1288 @group | |
1289 (setq map (make-sparse-keymap)) | |
1290 @result{} (keymap) | |
1291 @end group | |
1292 @group | |
1293 (define-key map "\C-f" 'forward-char) | |
1294 @result{} forward-char | |
1295 @end group | |
1296 @group | |
1297 map | |
1298 @result{} (keymap (6 . forward-char)) | |
1299 @end group | |
1300 | |
1301 @group | |
1302 ;; @r{Build sparse submap for @kbd{C-x} and bind @kbd{f} in that.} | |
1303 (define-key map (kbd "C-x f") 'forward-word) | |
1304 @result{} forward-word | |
1305 @end group | |
1306 @group | |
1307 map | |
1308 @result{} (keymap | |
1309 (24 keymap ; @kbd{C-x} | |
1310 (102 . forward-word)) ; @kbd{f} | |
1311 (6 . forward-char)) ; @kbd{C-f} | |
1312 @end group | |
1313 | |
1314 @group | |
1315 ;; @r{Bind @kbd{C-p} to the @code{ctl-x-map}.} | |
1316 (define-key map (kbd "C-p") ctl-x-map) | |
1317 ;; @code{ctl-x-map} | |
1318 @result{} [nil @dots{} find-file @dots{} backward-kill-sentence] | |
1319 @end group | |
1320 | |
1321 @group | |
1322 ;; @r{Bind @kbd{C-f} to @code{foo} in the @code{ctl-x-map}.} | |
1323 (define-key map (kbd "C-p C-f") 'foo) | |
1324 @result{} 'foo | |
1325 @end group | |
1326 @group | |
1327 map | |
1328 @result{} (keymap ; @r{Note @code{foo} in @code{ctl-x-map}.} | |
1329 (16 keymap [nil @dots{} foo @dots{} backward-kill-sentence]) | |
1330 (24 keymap | |
1331 (102 . forward-word)) | |
1332 (6 . forward-char)) | |
1333 @end group | |
1334 @end smallexample | |
1335 | |
1336 @noindent | |
1337 Note that storing a new binding for @kbd{C-p C-f} actually works by | |
1338 changing an entry in @code{ctl-x-map}, and this has the effect of | |
1339 changing the bindings of both @kbd{C-p C-f} and @kbd{C-x C-f} in the | |
1340 default global map. | |
1341 | |
1342 The function @code{substitute-key-definition} scans a keymap for | |
1343 keys that have a certain binding and rebinds them with a different | |
1344 binding. Another feature which is cleaner and can often produce the | |
1345 same results to remap one command into another (@pxref{Remapping | |
1346 Commands}). | |
1347 | |
1348 @defun substitute-key-definition olddef newdef keymap &optional oldmap | |
1349 @cindex replace bindings | |
1350 This function replaces @var{olddef} with @var{newdef} for any keys in | |
1351 @var{keymap} that were bound to @var{olddef}. In other words, | |
1352 @var{olddef} is replaced with @var{newdef} wherever it appears. The | |
1353 function returns @code{nil}. | |
1354 | |
1355 For example, this redefines @kbd{C-x C-f}, if you do it in an Emacs with | |
1356 standard bindings: | |
1357 | |
1358 @smallexample | |
1359 @group | |
1360 (substitute-key-definition | |
1361 'find-file 'find-file-read-only (current-global-map)) | |
1362 @end group | |
1363 @end smallexample | |
1364 | |
1365 @c Emacs 19 feature | |
1366 If @var{oldmap} is non-@code{nil}, that changes the behavior of | |
1367 @code{substitute-key-definition}: the bindings in @var{oldmap} determine | |
1368 which keys to rebind. The rebindings still happen in @var{keymap}, not | |
1369 in @var{oldmap}. Thus, you can change one map under the control of the | |
1370 bindings in another. For example, | |
1371 | |
1372 @smallexample | |
1373 (substitute-key-definition | |
1374 'delete-backward-char 'my-funny-delete | |
1375 my-map global-map) | |
1376 @end smallexample | |
1377 | |
1378 @noindent | |
1379 puts the special deletion command in @code{my-map} for whichever keys | |
1380 are globally bound to the standard deletion command. | |
1381 | |
1382 Here is an example showing a keymap before and after substitution: | |
1383 | |
1384 @smallexample | |
1385 @group | |
1386 (setq map '(keymap | |
1387 (?1 . olddef-1) | |
1388 (?2 . olddef-2) | |
1389 (?3 . olddef-1))) | |
1390 @result{} (keymap (49 . olddef-1) (50 . olddef-2) (51 . olddef-1)) | |
1391 @end group | |
1392 | |
1393 @group | |
1394 (substitute-key-definition 'olddef-1 'newdef map) | |
1395 @result{} nil | |
1396 @end group | |
1397 @group | |
1398 map | |
1399 @result{} (keymap (49 . newdef) (50 . olddef-2) (51 . newdef)) | |
1400 @end group | |
1401 @end smallexample | |
1402 @end defun | |
1403 | |
1404 @defun suppress-keymap keymap &optional nodigits | |
1405 @cindex @code{self-insert-command} override | |
1406 This function changes the contents of the full keymap @var{keymap} by | |
1407 remapping @code{self-insert-command} to the command @code{undefined} | |
1408 (@pxref{Remapping Commands}). This has the effect of undefining all | |
1409 printing characters, thus making ordinary insertion of text impossible. | |
1410 @code{suppress-keymap} returns @code{nil}. | |
1411 | |
1412 If @var{nodigits} is @code{nil}, then @code{suppress-keymap} defines | |
1413 digits to run @code{digit-argument}, and @kbd{-} to run | |
1414 @code{negative-argument}. Otherwise it makes them undefined like the | |
1415 rest of the printing characters. | |
1416 | |
1417 @cindex yank suppression | |
1418 @cindex @code{quoted-insert} suppression | |
1419 The @code{suppress-keymap} function does not make it impossible to | |
1420 modify a buffer, as it does not suppress commands such as @code{yank} | |
1421 and @code{quoted-insert}. To prevent any modification of a buffer, make | |
1422 it read-only (@pxref{Read Only Buffers}). | |
1423 | |
1424 Since this function modifies @var{keymap}, you would normally use it | |
1425 on a newly created keymap. Operating on an existing keymap | |
1426 that is used for some other purpose is likely to cause trouble; for | |
1427 example, suppressing @code{global-map} would make it impossible to use | |
1428 most of Emacs. | |
1429 | |
1430 Most often, @code{suppress-keymap} is used to initialize local | |
1431 keymaps of modes such as Rmail and Dired where insertion of text is not | |
1432 desirable and the buffer is read-only. Here is an example taken from | |
1433 the file @file{emacs/lisp/dired.el}, showing how the local keymap for | |
1434 Dired mode is set up: | |
1435 | |
1436 @smallexample | |
1437 @group | |
1438 (setq dired-mode-map (make-keymap)) | |
1439 (suppress-keymap dired-mode-map) | |
1440 (define-key dired-mode-map "r" 'dired-rename-file) | |
1441 (define-key dired-mode-map "\C-d" 'dired-flag-file-deleted) | |
1442 (define-key dired-mode-map "d" 'dired-flag-file-deleted) | |
1443 (define-key dired-mode-map "v" 'dired-view-file) | |
1444 (define-key dired-mode-map "e" 'dired-find-file) | |
1445 (define-key dired-mode-map "f" 'dired-find-file) | |
1446 @dots{} | |
1447 @end group | |
1448 @end smallexample | |
1449 @end defun | |
1450 | |
1451 @node Remapping Commands | |
1452 @section Remapping Commands | |
1453 @cindex remapping commands | |
1454 | |
1455 A special kind of key binding, using a special ``key sequence'' | |
1456 which includes a command name, has the effect of @dfn{remapping} that | |
1457 command into another. Here's how it works. You make a key binding | |
1458 for a key sequence that starts with the dummy event @code{remap}, | |
1459 followed by the command name you want to remap. Specify the remapped | |
1460 definition as the definition in this binding. The remapped definition | |
1461 is usually a command name, but it can be any valid definition for | |
1462 a key binding. | |
1463 | |
1464 Here's an example. Suppose that My mode uses special commands | |
1465 @code{my-kill-line} and @code{my-kill-word}, which should be invoked | |
1466 instead of @code{kill-line} and @code{kill-word}. It can establish | |
1467 this by making these two command-remapping bindings in its keymap: | |
1468 | |
1469 @smallexample | |
1470 (define-key my-mode-map [remap kill-line] 'my-kill-line) | |
1471 (define-key my-mode-map [remap kill-word] 'my-kill-word) | |
1472 @end smallexample | |
1473 | |
1474 Whenever @code{my-mode-map} is an active keymap, if the user types | |
1475 @kbd{C-k}, Emacs will find the standard global binding of | |
1476 @code{kill-line} (assuming nobody has changed it). But | |
1477 @code{my-mode-map} remaps @code{kill-line} to @code{my-kill-line}, | |
1478 so instead of running @code{kill-line}, Emacs runs | |
1479 @code{my-kill-line}. | |
1480 | |
1481 Remapping only works through a single level. In other words, | |
1482 | |
1483 @smallexample | |
1484 (define-key my-mode-map [remap kill-line] 'my-kill-line) | |
1485 (define-key my-mode-map [remap my-kill-line] 'my-other-kill-line) | |
1486 @end smallexample | |
1487 | |
1488 @noindent | |
1489 does not have the effect of remapping @code{kill-line} into | |
1490 @code{my-other-kill-line}. If an ordinary key binding specifies | |
1491 @code{kill-line}, this keymap will remap it to @code{my-kill-line}; | |
1492 if an ordinary binding specifies @code{my-kill-line}, this keymap will | |
1493 remap it to @code{my-other-kill-line}. | |
1494 | |
1495 @defun command-remapping command &optional position keymaps | |
1496 This function returns the remapping for @var{command} (a symbol), | |
1497 given the current active keymaps. If @var{command} is not remapped | |
1498 (which is the usual situation), or not a symbol, the function returns | |
1499 @code{nil}. @code{position} can optionally specify a buffer position | |
1500 or an event position to determine the keymaps to use, as in | |
1501 @code{key-binding}. | |
1502 | |
1503 If the optional argument @code{keymaps} is non-@code{nil}, it | |
1504 specifies a list of keymaps to search in. This argument is ignored if | |
1505 @code{position} is non-@code{nil}. | |
1506 @end defun | |
1507 | |
1508 @node Translation Keymaps | |
1509 @section Keymaps for Translating Sequences of Events | |
1510 @cindex keymaps for translating events | |
1511 | |
1512 This section describes keymaps that are used during reading a key | |
1513 sequence, to translate certain event sequences into others. | |
1514 @code{read-key-sequence} checks every subsequence of the key sequence | |
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Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca>
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changeset
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1515 being read, as it is read, against @code{input-decode-map}, then |
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1516 @code{function-key-map}, and then against @code{key-translation-map}. |
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1517 |
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1518 @defvar input-decode-map |
84078 | 1519 This variable holds a keymap that describes the character sequences sent |
1520 by function keys on an ordinary character terminal. This keymap has the | |
1521 same structure as other keymaps, but is used differently: it specifies | |
1522 translations to make while reading key sequences, rather than bindings | |
1523 for key sequences. | |
1524 | |
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1525 If @code{input-decode-map} ``binds'' a key sequence @var{k} to a vector |
84078 | 1526 @var{v}, then when @var{k} appears as a subsequence @emph{anywhere} in a |
1527 key sequence, it is replaced with the events in @var{v}. | |
1528 | |
1529 For example, VT100 terminals send @kbd{@key{ESC} O P} when the | |
1530 keypad @key{PF1} key is pressed. Therefore, we want Emacs to translate | |
1531 that sequence of events into the single event @code{pf1}. We accomplish | |
1532 this by ``binding'' @kbd{@key{ESC} O P} to @code{[pf1]} in | |
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1533 @code{input-decode-map}, when using a VT100. |
84078 | 1534 |
1535 Thus, typing @kbd{C-c @key{PF1}} sends the character sequence @kbd{C-c | |
1536 @key{ESC} O P}; later the function @code{read-key-sequence} translates | |
1537 this back into @kbd{C-c @key{PF1}}, which it returns as the vector | |
1538 @code{[?\C-c pf1]}. | |
1539 | |
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1540 The value of @code{input-decode-map} is usually set up automatically |
84078 | 1541 according to the terminal's Terminfo or Termcap entry, but sometimes |
1542 those need help from terminal-specific Lisp files. Emacs comes with | |
1543 terminal-specific files for many common terminals; their main purpose is | |
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1544 to make entries in @code{input-decode-map} beyond those that can be |
84078 | 1545 deduced from Termcap and Terminfo. @xref{Terminal-Specific}. |
1546 @end defvar | |
1547 | |
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1548 @defvar function-key-map |
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1549 This variable holds a keymap similar to @code{input-decode-map} except |
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1550 that it describes key sequences which should be translated to |
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1551 alternative interpretations that are usually preferred. It applies |
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1552 after @code{input-decode-map} and before @code{key-translation-map}. |
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1553 |
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1554 Entries in @code{function-key-map} are ignored if they conflict with |
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1555 bindings made in the minor mode, local, or global keymaps. I.e. |
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1556 the remapping only applies if the original key sequence would |
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1557 otherwise not have any binding. |
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1558 @end defvar |
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1559 |
84078 | 1560 @defvar key-translation-map |
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1561 This variable is another keymap used just like @code{input-decode-map} |
84078 | 1562 to translate input events into other events. It differs from |
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1563 @code{input-decode-map} in that it goes to work after |
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1564 @code{function-key-map} is finished rather than before; it receives |
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1565 the results of translation by @code{function-key-map}. |
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1566 |
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1567 Just like @code{input-decode-map}, but unlike @code{function-key-map}, |
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1568 this keymap is applied regardless of whether the input key-sequence |
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1569 has a normal binding. Note however that actual key bindings can have |
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1570 an effect on @code{key-translation-map}, even though they are |
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1571 overridden by it. Indeed, actual key bindings override |
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1572 @code{function-key-map} and thus may alter the key sequence that |
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1573 @code{key-translation-map} receives. Clearly, it is better to avoid |
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1574 this type of situation. |
84078 | 1575 |
1576 The intent of @code{key-translation-map} is for users to map one | |
1577 character set to another, including ordinary characters normally bound | |
1578 to @code{self-insert-command}. | |
1579 @end defvar | |
1580 | |
1581 @cindex key translation function | |
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1582 You can use @code{input-decode-map}, @code{function-key-map}, or |
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1583 @code{key-translation-map} for |
84078 | 1584 more than simple aliases, by using a function, instead of a key |
1585 sequence, as the ``translation'' of a key. Then this function is called | |
1586 to compute the translation of that key. | |
1587 | |
1588 The key translation function receives one argument, which is the prompt | |
1589 that was specified in @code{read-key-sequence}---or @code{nil} if the | |
1590 key sequence is being read by the editor command loop. In most cases | |
1591 you can ignore the prompt value. | |
1592 | |
1593 If the function reads input itself, it can have the effect of altering | |
1594 the event that follows. For example, here's how to define @kbd{C-c h} | |
1595 to turn the character that follows into a Hyper character: | |
1596 | |
1597 @example | |
1598 @group | |
1599 (defun hyperify (prompt) | |
1600 (let ((e (read-event))) | |
1601 (vector (if (numberp e) | |
1602 (logior (lsh 1 24) e) | |
1603 (if (memq 'hyper (event-modifiers e)) | |
1604 e | |
1605 (add-event-modifier "H-" e)))))) | |
1606 | |
1607 (defun add-event-modifier (string e) | |
1608 (let ((symbol (if (symbolp e) e (car e)))) | |
1609 (setq symbol (intern (concat string | |
1610 (symbol-name symbol)))) | |
1611 @end group | |
1612 @group | |
1613 (if (symbolp e) | |
1614 symbol | |
1615 (cons symbol (cdr e))))) | |
1616 | |
1617 (define-key function-key-map "\C-ch" 'hyperify) | |
1618 @end group | |
1619 @end example | |
1620 | |
1621 If you have enabled keyboard character set decoding using | |
1622 @code{set-keyboard-coding-system}, decoding is done after the | |
1623 translations listed above. @xref{Terminal I/O Encoding}. However, in | |
1624 future Emacs versions, character set decoding may be done at an | |
1625 earlier stage. | |
1626 | |
1627 @node Key Binding Commands | |
1628 @section Commands for Binding Keys | |
1629 | |
1630 This section describes some convenient interactive interfaces for | |
1631 changing key bindings. They work by calling @code{define-key}. | |
1632 | |
1633 People often use @code{global-set-key} in their init files | |
1634 (@pxref{Init File}) for simple customization. For example, | |
1635 | |
1636 @smallexample | |
1637 (global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-\\") 'next-line) | |
1638 @end smallexample | |
1639 | |
1640 @noindent | |
1641 or | |
1642 | |
1643 @smallexample | |
1644 (global-set-key [?\C-x ?\C-\\] 'next-line) | |
1645 @end smallexample | |
1646 | |
1647 @noindent | |
1648 or | |
1649 | |
1650 @smallexample | |
1651 (global-set-key [(control ?x) (control ?\\)] 'next-line) | |
1652 @end smallexample | |
1653 | |
1654 @noindent | |
1655 redefines @kbd{C-x C-\} to move down a line. | |
1656 | |
1657 @smallexample | |
1658 (global-set-key [M-mouse-1] 'mouse-set-point) | |
1659 @end smallexample | |
1660 | |
1661 @noindent | |
1662 redefines the first (leftmost) mouse button, entered with the Meta key, to | |
1663 set point where you click. | |
1664 | |
1665 @cindex non-@acronym{ASCII} text in keybindings | |
1666 Be careful when using non-@acronym{ASCII} text characters in Lisp | |
1667 specifications of keys to bind. If these are read as multibyte text, as | |
1668 they usually will be in a Lisp file (@pxref{Loading Non-ASCII}), you | |
1669 must type the keys as multibyte too. For instance, if you use this: | |
1670 | |
1671 @smallexample | |
1672 (global-set-key "@"o" 'my-function) ; bind o-umlaut | |
1673 @end smallexample | |
1674 | |
1675 @noindent | |
1676 or | |
1677 | |
1678 @smallexample | |
1679 (global-set-key ?@"o 'my-function) ; bind o-umlaut | |
1680 @end smallexample | |
1681 | |
1682 @noindent | |
1683 and your language environment is multibyte Latin-1, these commands | |
1684 actually bind the multibyte character with code 2294, not the unibyte | |
1685 Latin-1 character with code 246 (@kbd{M-v}). In order to use this | |
1686 binding, you need to enter the multibyte Latin-1 character as keyboard | |
1687 input. One way to do this is by using an appropriate input method | |
1688 (@pxref{Input Methods, , Input Methods, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}). | |
1689 | |
1690 If you want to use a unibyte character in the key binding, you can | |
1691 construct the key sequence string using @code{multibyte-char-to-unibyte} | |
1692 or @code{string-make-unibyte} (@pxref{Converting Representations}). | |
1693 | |
1694 @deffn Command global-set-key key binding | |
1695 This function sets the binding of @var{key} in the current global map | |
1696 to @var{binding}. | |
1697 | |
1698 @smallexample | |
1699 @group | |
1700 (global-set-key @var{key} @var{binding}) | |
1701 @equiv{} | |
1702 (define-key (current-global-map) @var{key} @var{binding}) | |
1703 @end group | |
1704 @end smallexample | |
1705 @end deffn | |
1706 | |
1707 @deffn Command global-unset-key key | |
1708 @cindex unbinding keys | |
1709 This function removes the binding of @var{key} from the current | |
1710 global map. | |
1711 | |
1712 One use of this function is in preparation for defining a longer key | |
1713 that uses @var{key} as a prefix---which would not be allowed if | |
1714 @var{key} has a non-prefix binding. For example: | |
1715 | |
1716 @smallexample | |
1717 @group | |
1718 (global-unset-key "\C-l") | |
1719 @result{} nil | |
1720 @end group | |
1721 @group | |
1722 (global-set-key "\C-l\C-l" 'redraw-display) | |
1723 @result{} nil | |
1724 @end group | |
1725 @end smallexample | |
1726 | |
1727 This function is implemented simply using @code{define-key}: | |
1728 | |
1729 @smallexample | |
1730 @group | |
1731 (global-unset-key @var{key}) | |
1732 @equiv{} | |
1733 (define-key (current-global-map) @var{key} nil) | |
1734 @end group | |
1735 @end smallexample | |
1736 @end deffn | |
1737 | |
1738 @deffn Command local-set-key key binding | |
1739 This function sets the binding of @var{key} in the current local | |
1740 keymap to @var{binding}. | |
1741 | |
1742 @smallexample | |
1743 @group | |
1744 (local-set-key @var{key} @var{binding}) | |
1745 @equiv{} | |
1746 (define-key (current-local-map) @var{key} @var{binding}) | |
1747 @end group | |
1748 @end smallexample | |
1749 @end deffn | |
1750 | |
1751 @deffn Command local-unset-key key | |
1752 This function removes the binding of @var{key} from the current | |
1753 local map. | |
1754 | |
1755 @smallexample | |
1756 @group | |
1757 (local-unset-key @var{key}) | |
1758 @equiv{} | |
1759 (define-key (current-local-map) @var{key} nil) | |
1760 @end group | |
1761 @end smallexample | |
1762 @end deffn | |
1763 | |
1764 @node Scanning Keymaps | |
1765 @section Scanning Keymaps | |
1766 | |
1767 This section describes functions used to scan all the current keymaps | |
1768 for the sake of printing help information. | |
1769 | |
1770 @defun accessible-keymaps keymap &optional prefix | |
1771 This function returns a list of all the keymaps that can be reached (via | |
1772 zero or more prefix keys) from @var{keymap}. The value is an | |
1773 association list with elements of the form @code{(@var{key} .@: | |
1774 @var{map})}, where @var{key} is a prefix key whose definition in | |
1775 @var{keymap} is @var{map}. | |
1776 | |
1777 The elements of the alist are ordered so that the @var{key} increases | |
1778 in length. The first element is always @code{([] .@: @var{keymap})}, | |
1779 because the specified keymap is accessible from itself with a prefix of | |
1780 no events. | |
1781 | |
1782 If @var{prefix} is given, it should be a prefix key sequence; then | |
1783 @code{accessible-keymaps} includes only the submaps whose prefixes start | |
1784 with @var{prefix}. These elements look just as they do in the value of | |
1785 @code{(accessible-keymaps)}; the only difference is that some elements | |
1786 are omitted. | |
1787 | |
1788 In the example below, the returned alist indicates that the key | |
1789 @key{ESC}, which is displayed as @samp{^[}, is a prefix key whose | |
1790 definition is the sparse keymap @code{(keymap (83 .@: center-paragraph) | |
1791 (115 .@: foo))}. | |
1792 | |
1793 @smallexample | |
1794 @group | |
1795 (accessible-keymaps (current-local-map)) | |
1796 @result{}(([] keymap | |
1797 (27 keymap ; @r{Note this keymap for @key{ESC} is repeated below.} | |
1798 (83 . center-paragraph) | |
1799 (115 . center-line)) | |
1800 (9 . tab-to-tab-stop)) | |
1801 @end group | |
1802 | |
1803 @group | |
1804 ("^[" keymap | |
1805 (83 . center-paragraph) | |
1806 (115 . foo))) | |
1807 @end group | |
1808 @end smallexample | |
1809 | |
1810 In the following example, @kbd{C-h} is a prefix key that uses a sparse | |
1811 keymap starting with @code{(keymap (118 . describe-variable)@dots{})}. | |
1812 Another prefix, @kbd{C-x 4}, uses a keymap which is also the value of | |
1813 the variable @code{ctl-x-4-map}. The event @code{mode-line} is one of | |
1814 several dummy events used as prefixes for mouse actions in special parts | |
1815 of a window. | |
1816 | |
1817 @smallexample | |
1818 @group | |
1819 (accessible-keymaps (current-global-map)) | |
1820 @result{} (([] keymap [set-mark-command beginning-of-line @dots{} | |
1821 delete-backward-char]) | |
1822 @end group | |
1823 @group | |
1824 ("^H" keymap (118 . describe-variable) @dots{} | |
1825 (8 . help-for-help)) | |
1826 @end group | |
1827 @group | |
1828 ("^X" keymap [x-flush-mouse-queue @dots{} | |
1829 backward-kill-sentence]) | |
1830 @end group | |
1831 @group | |
1832 ("^[" keymap [mark-sexp backward-sexp @dots{} | |
1833 backward-kill-word]) | |
1834 @end group | |
1835 ("^X4" keymap (15 . display-buffer) @dots{}) | |
1836 @group | |
1837 ([mode-line] keymap | |
1838 (S-mouse-2 . mouse-split-window-horizontally) @dots{})) | |
1839 @end group | |
1840 @end smallexample | |
1841 | |
1842 @noindent | |
1843 These are not all the keymaps you would see in actuality. | |
1844 @end defun | |
1845 | |
1846 @defun map-keymap function keymap | |
1847 The function @code{map-keymap} calls @var{function} once | |
1848 for each binding in @var{keymap}. It passes two arguments, | |
1849 the event type and the value of the binding. If @var{keymap} | |
1850 has a parent, the parent's bindings are included as well. | |
1851 This works recursively: if the parent has itself a parent, then the | |
1852 grandparent's bindings are also included and so on. | |
1853 | |
1854 This function is the cleanest way to examine all the bindings | |
1855 in a keymap. | |
1856 @end defun | |
1857 | |
1858 @defun where-is-internal command &optional keymap firstonly noindirect no-remap | |
1859 This function is a subroutine used by the @code{where-is} command | |
1860 (@pxref{Help, , Help, emacs,The GNU Emacs Manual}). It returns a list | |
1861 of all key sequences (of any length) that are bound to @var{command} in a | |
1862 set of keymaps. | |
1863 | |
1864 The argument @var{command} can be any object; it is compared with all | |
1865 keymap entries using @code{eq}. | |
1866 | |
1867 If @var{keymap} is @code{nil}, then the maps used are the current active | |
1868 keymaps, disregarding @code{overriding-local-map} (that is, pretending | |
1869 its value is @code{nil}). If @var{keymap} is a keymap, then the | |
1870 maps searched are @var{keymap} and the global keymap. If @var{keymap} | |
1871 is a list of keymaps, only those keymaps are searched. | |
1872 | |
1873 Usually it's best to use @code{overriding-local-map} as the expression | |
1874 for @var{keymap}. Then @code{where-is-internal} searches precisely the | |
1875 keymaps that are active. To search only the global map, pass | |
1876 @code{(keymap)} (an empty keymap) as @var{keymap}. | |
1877 | |
1878 If @var{firstonly} is @code{non-ascii}, then the value is a single | |
1879 vector representing the first key sequence found, rather than a list of | |
1880 all possible key sequences. If @var{firstonly} is @code{t}, then the | |
1881 value is the first key sequence, except that key sequences consisting | |
1882 entirely of @acronym{ASCII} characters (or meta variants of @acronym{ASCII} | |
1883 characters) are preferred to all other key sequences and that the | |
1884 return value can never be a menu binding. | |
1885 | |
1886 If @var{noindirect} is non-@code{nil}, @code{where-is-internal} doesn't | |
1887 follow indirect keymap bindings. This makes it possible to search for | |
1888 an indirect definition itself. | |
1889 | |
1890 When command remapping is in effect (@pxref{Remapping Commands}), | |
1891 @code{where-is-internal} figures out when a command will be run due to | |
1892 remapping and reports keys accordingly. It also returns @code{nil} if | |
1893 @var{command} won't really be run because it has been remapped to some | |
1894 other command. However, if @var{no-remap} is non-@code{nil}. | |
1895 @code{where-is-internal} ignores remappings. | |
1896 | |
1897 @smallexample | |
1898 @group | |
1899 (where-is-internal 'describe-function) | |
1900 @result{} ([8 102] [f1 102] [help 102] | |
1901 [menu-bar help-menu describe describe-function]) | |
1902 @end group | |
1903 @end smallexample | |
1904 @end defun | |
1905 | |
1906 @deffn Command describe-bindings &optional prefix buffer-or-name | |
1907 This function creates a listing of all current key bindings, and | |
1908 displays it in a buffer named @samp{*Help*}. The text is grouped by | |
1909 modes---minor modes first, then the major mode, then global bindings. | |
1910 | |
1911 If @var{prefix} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a prefix key; then the | |
1912 listing includes only keys that start with @var{prefix}. | |
1913 | |
1914 The listing describes meta characters as @key{ESC} followed by the | |
1915 corresponding non-meta character. | |
1916 | |
1917 When several characters with consecutive @acronym{ASCII} codes have the | |
1918 same definition, they are shown together, as | |
1919 @samp{@var{firstchar}..@var{lastchar}}. In this instance, you need to | |
1920 know the @acronym{ASCII} codes to understand which characters this means. | |
1921 For example, in the default global map, the characters @samp{@key{SPC} | |
1922 ..@: ~} are described by a single line. @key{SPC} is @acronym{ASCII} 32, | |
1923 @kbd{~} is @acronym{ASCII} 126, and the characters between them include all | |
1924 the normal printing characters, (e.g., letters, digits, punctuation, | |
1925 etc.@:); all these characters are bound to @code{self-insert-command}. | |
1926 | |
1927 If @var{buffer-or-name} is non-@code{nil}, it should be a buffer or a | |
1928 buffer name. Then @code{describe-bindings} lists that buffer's bindings, | |
1929 instead of the current buffer's. | |
1930 @end deffn | |
1931 | |
1932 @node Menu Keymaps | |
1933 @section Menu Keymaps | |
1934 @cindex menu keymaps | |
1935 | |
1936 A keymap can operate as a menu as well as defining bindings for | |
1937 keyboard keys and mouse buttons. Menus are usually actuated with the | |
1938 mouse, but they can function with the keyboard also. If a menu keymap | |
1939 is active for the next input event, that activates the keyboard menu | |
1940 feature. | |
1941 | |
1942 @menu | |
1943 * Defining Menus:: How to make a keymap that defines a menu. | |
1944 * Mouse Menus:: How users actuate the menu with the mouse. | |
1945 * Keyboard Menus:: How users actuate the menu with the keyboard. | |
1946 * Menu Example:: Making a simple menu. | |
1947 * Menu Bar:: How to customize the menu bar. | |
1948 * Tool Bar:: A tool bar is a row of images. | |
1949 * Modifying Menus:: How to add new items to a menu. | |
1950 @end menu | |
1951 | |
1952 @node Defining Menus | |
1953 @subsection Defining Menus | |
1954 @cindex defining menus | |
1955 @cindex menu prompt string | |
1956 @cindex prompt string (of menu) | |
1957 | |
1958 A keymap acts as a menu if it has an @dfn{overall prompt string}, | |
1959 which is a string that appears as an element of the keymap. | |
1960 (@xref{Format of Keymaps}.) The string should describe the purpose of | |
1961 the menu's commands. Emacs displays the overall prompt string as the | |
1962 menu title in some cases, depending on the toolkit (if any) used for | |
1963 displaying menus.@footnote{It is required for menus which do not use a | |
1964 toolkit, e.g.@: under MS-DOS.} Keyboard menus also display the | |
1965 overall prompt string. | |
1966 | |
1967 The easiest way to construct a keymap with a prompt string is to | |
1968 specify the string as an argument when you call @code{make-keymap}, | |
1969 @code{make-sparse-keymap} (@pxref{Creating Keymaps}), or | |
1970 @code{define-prefix-command} (@pxref{Definition of | |
1971 define-prefix-command}). If you do not want the keymap to operate as | |
1972 a menu, don't specify a prompt string for it. | |
1973 | |
1974 @defun keymap-prompt keymap | |
1975 This function returns the overall prompt string of @var{keymap}, | |
1976 or @code{nil} if it has none. | |
1977 @end defun | |
1978 | |
1979 The menu's items are the bindings in the keymap. Each binding | |
1980 associates an event type to a definition, but the event types have no | |
1981 significance for the menu appearance. (Usually we use pseudo-events, | |
1982 symbols that the keyboard cannot generate, as the event types for menu | |
1983 item bindings.) The menu is generated entirely from the bindings that | |
1984 correspond in the keymap to these events. | |
1985 | |
1986 The order of items in the menu is the same as the order of bindings in | |
1987 the keymap. Since @code{define-key} puts new bindings at the front, you | |
1988 should define the menu items starting at the bottom of the menu and | |
1989 moving to the top, if you care about the order. When you add an item to | |
1990 an existing menu, you can specify its position in the menu using | |
1991 @code{define-key-after} (@pxref{Modifying Menus}). | |
1992 | |
1993 @menu | |
1994 * Simple Menu Items:: A simple kind of menu key binding, | |
1995 limited in capabilities. | |
1996 * Extended Menu Items:: More powerful menu item definitions | |
1997 let you specify keywords to enable | |
1998 various features. | |
1999 * Menu Separators:: Drawing a horizontal line through a menu. | |
2000 * Alias Menu Items:: Using command aliases in menu items. | |
2001 @end menu | |
2002 | |
2003 @node Simple Menu Items | |
2004 @subsubsection Simple Menu Items | |
2005 | |
2006 The simpler (and original) way to define a menu item is to bind some | |
2007 event type (it doesn't matter what event type) to a binding like this: | |
2008 | |
2009 @example | |
2010 (@var{item-string} . @var{real-binding}) | |
2011 @end example | |
2012 | |
2013 @noindent | |
2014 The @sc{car}, @var{item-string}, is the string to be displayed in the | |
2015 menu. It should be short---preferably one to three words. It should | |
2016 describe the action of the command it corresponds to. Note that it is | |
2017 not generally possible to display non-@acronym{ASCII} text in menus. It will | |
2018 work for keyboard menus and will work to a large extent when Emacs is | |
2019 built with the Gtk+ toolkit.@footnote{In this case, the text is first | |
2020 encoded using the @code{utf-8} coding system and then rendered by the | |
2021 toolkit as it sees fit.} | |
2022 | |
2023 You can also supply a second string, called the help string, as follows: | |
2024 | |
2025 @example | |
2026 (@var{item-string} @var{help} . @var{real-binding}) | |
2027 @end example | |
2028 | |
2029 @noindent | |
2030 @var{help} specifies a ``help-echo'' string to display while the mouse | |
2031 is on that item in the same way as @code{help-echo} text properties | |
2032 (@pxref{Help display}). | |
2033 | |
2034 As far as @code{define-key} is concerned, @var{item-string} and | |
2035 @var{help-string} are part of the event's binding. However, | |
2036 @code{lookup-key} returns just @var{real-binding}, and only | |
2037 @var{real-binding} is used for executing the key. | |
2038 | |
2039 If @var{real-binding} is @code{nil}, then @var{item-string} appears in | |
2040 the menu but cannot be selected. | |
2041 | |
2042 If @var{real-binding} is a symbol and has a non-@code{nil} | |
2043 @code{menu-enable} property, that property is an expression that | |
2044 controls whether the menu item is enabled. Every time the keymap is | |
2045 used to display a menu, Emacs evaluates the expression, and it enables | |
2046 the menu item only if the expression's value is non-@code{nil}. When a | |
2047 menu item is disabled, it is displayed in a ``fuzzy'' fashion, and | |
2048 cannot be selected. | |
2049 | |
2050 The menu bar does not recalculate which items are enabled every time you | |
2051 look at a menu. This is because the X toolkit requires the whole tree | |
2052 of menus in advance. To force recalculation of the menu bar, call | |
2053 @code{force-mode-line-update} (@pxref{Mode Line Format}). | |
2054 | |
2055 You've probably noticed that menu items show the equivalent keyboard key | |
2056 sequence (if any) to invoke the same command. To save time on | |
2057 recalculation, menu display caches this information in a sublist in the | |
2058 binding, like this: | |
2059 | |
2060 @c This line is not too long--rms. | |
2061 @example | |
2062 (@var{item-string} @r{[}@var{help}@r{]} (@var{key-binding-data}) . @var{real-binding}) | |
2063 @end example | |
2064 | |
2065 @noindent | |
2066 Don't put these sublists in the menu item yourself; menu display | |
2067 calculates them automatically. Don't mention keyboard equivalents in | |
2068 the item strings themselves, since that is redundant. | |
2069 | |
2070 @node Extended Menu Items | |
2071 @subsubsection Extended Menu Items | |
2072 @kindex menu-item | |
2073 | |
2074 An extended-format menu item is a more flexible and also cleaner | |
2075 alternative to the simple format. You define an event type with a | |
2076 binding that's a list starting with the symbol @code{menu-item}. | |
2077 For a non-selectable string, the binding looks like this: | |
2078 | |
2079 @example | |
2080 (menu-item @var{item-name}) | |
2081 @end example | |
2082 | |
2083 @noindent | |
2084 A string starting with two or more dashes specifies a separator line; | |
2085 see @ref{Menu Separators}. | |
2086 | |
2087 To define a real menu item which can be selected, the extended format | |
2088 binding looks like this: | |
2089 | |
2090 @example | |
2091 (menu-item @var{item-name} @var{real-binding} | |
2092 . @var{item-property-list}) | |
2093 @end example | |
2094 | |
2095 @noindent | |
2096 Here, @var{item-name} is an expression which evaluates to the menu item | |
2097 string. Thus, the string need not be a constant. The third element, | |
2098 @var{real-binding}, is the command to execute. The tail of the list, | |
2099 @var{item-property-list}, has the form of a property list which contains | |
2100 other information. | |
2101 | |
2102 When an equivalent keyboard key binding is cached, the extended menu | |
2103 item binding looks like this: | |
2104 | |
2105 @example | |
2106 (menu-item @var{item-name} @var{real-binding} (@var{key-binding-data}) | |
2107 . @var{item-property-list}) | |
2108 @end example | |
2109 | |
2110 Here is a table of the properties that are supported: | |
2111 | |
2112 @table @code | |
2113 @item :enable @var{form} | |
2114 The result of evaluating @var{form} determines whether the item is | |
2115 enabled (non-@code{nil} means yes). If the item is not enabled, | |
2116 you can't really click on it. | |
2117 | |
2118 @item :visible @var{form} | |
2119 The result of evaluating @var{form} determines whether the item should | |
2120 actually appear in the menu (non-@code{nil} means yes). If the item | |
2121 does not appear, then the menu is displayed as if this item were | |
2122 not defined at all. | |
2123 | |
2124 @item :help @var{help} | |
2125 The value of this property, @var{help}, specifies a ``help-echo'' string | |
2126 to display while the mouse is on that item. This is displayed in the | |
2127 same way as @code{help-echo} text properties (@pxref{Help display}). | |
2128 Note that this must be a constant string, unlike the @code{help-echo} | |
2129 property for text and overlays. | |
2130 | |
2131 @item :button (@var{type} . @var{selected}) | |
2132 This property provides a way to define radio buttons and toggle buttons. | |
2133 The @sc{car}, @var{type}, says which: it should be @code{:toggle} or | |
2134 @code{:radio}. The @sc{cdr}, @var{selected}, should be a form; the | |
2135 result of evaluating it says whether this button is currently selected. | |
2136 | |
2137 A @dfn{toggle} is a menu item which is labeled as either ``on'' or ``off'' | |
2138 according to the value of @var{selected}. The command itself should | |
2139 toggle @var{selected}, setting it to @code{t} if it is @code{nil}, | |
2140 and to @code{nil} if it is @code{t}. Here is how the menu item | |
2141 to toggle the @code{debug-on-error} flag is defined: | |
2142 | |
2143 @example | |
2144 (menu-item "Debug on Error" toggle-debug-on-error | |
2145 :button (:toggle | |
2146 . (and (boundp 'debug-on-error) | |
2147 debug-on-error))) | |
2148 @end example | |
2149 | |
2150 @noindent | |
2151 This works because @code{toggle-debug-on-error} is defined as a command | |
2152 which toggles the variable @code{debug-on-error}. | |
2153 | |
2154 @dfn{Radio buttons} are a group of menu items, in which at any time one | |
2155 and only one is ``selected.'' There should be a variable whose value | |
2156 says which one is selected at any time. The @var{selected} form for | |
2157 each radio button in the group should check whether the variable has the | |
2158 right value for selecting that button. Clicking on the button should | |
2159 set the variable so that the button you clicked on becomes selected. | |
2160 | |
2161 @item :key-sequence @var{key-sequence} | |
2162 This property specifies which key sequence is likely to be bound to the | |
2163 same command invoked by this menu item. If you specify the right key | |
2164 sequence, that makes preparing the menu for display run much faster. | |
2165 | |
2166 If you specify the wrong key sequence, it has no effect; before Emacs | |
2167 displays @var{key-sequence} in the menu, it verifies that | |
2168 @var{key-sequence} is really equivalent to this menu item. | |
2169 | |
2170 @item :key-sequence nil | |
2171 This property indicates that there is normally no key binding which is | |
2172 equivalent to this menu item. Using this property saves time in | |
2173 preparing the menu for display, because Emacs does not need to search | |
2174 the keymaps for a keyboard equivalent for this menu item. | |
2175 | |
2176 However, if the user has rebound this item's definition to a key | |
2177 sequence, Emacs ignores the @code{:keys} property and finds the keyboard | |
2178 equivalent anyway. | |
2179 | |
2180 @item :keys @var{string} | |
2181 This property specifies that @var{string} is the string to display | |
2182 as the keyboard equivalent for this menu item. You can use | |
2183 the @samp{\\[...]} documentation construct in @var{string}. | |
2184 | |
2185 @item :filter @var{filter-fn} | |
2186 This property provides a way to compute the menu item dynamically. | |
2187 The property value @var{filter-fn} should be a function of one argument; | |
2188 when it is called, its argument will be @var{real-binding}. The | |
2189 function should return the binding to use instead. | |
2190 | |
2191 Emacs can call this function at any time that it does redisplay or | |
2192 operates on menu data structures, so you should write it so it can | |
2193 safely be called at any time. | |
2194 @end table | |
2195 | |
2196 @node Menu Separators | |
2197 @subsubsection Menu Separators | |
2198 @cindex menu separators | |
2199 | |
2200 A menu separator is a kind of menu item that doesn't display any | |
2201 text---instead, it divides the menu into subparts with a horizontal line. | |
2202 A separator looks like this in the menu keymap: | |
2203 | |
2204 @example | |
2205 (menu-item @var{separator-type}) | |
2206 @end example | |
2207 | |
2208 @noindent | |
2209 where @var{separator-type} is a string starting with two or more dashes. | |
2210 | |
2211 In the simplest case, @var{separator-type} consists of only dashes. | |
2212 That specifies the default kind of separator. (For compatibility, | |
2213 @code{""} and @code{-} also count as separators.) | |
2214 | |
2215 Certain other values of @var{separator-type} specify a different | |
2216 style of separator. Here is a table of them: | |
2217 | |
2218 @table @code | |
2219 @item "--no-line" | |
2220 @itemx "--space" | |
2221 An extra vertical space, with no actual line. | |
2222 | |
2223 @item "--single-line" | |
2224 A single line in the menu's foreground color. | |
2225 | |
2226 @item "--double-line" | |
2227 A double line in the menu's foreground color. | |
2228 | |
2229 @item "--single-dashed-line" | |
2230 A single dashed line in the menu's foreground color. | |
2231 | |
2232 @item "--double-dashed-line" | |
2233 A double dashed line in the menu's foreground color. | |
2234 | |
2235 @item "--shadow-etched-in" | |
2236 A single line with a 3D sunken appearance. This is the default, | |
2237 used separators consisting of dashes only. | |
2238 | |
2239 @item "--shadow-etched-out" | |
2240 A single line with a 3D raised appearance. | |
2241 | |
2242 @item "--shadow-etched-in-dash" | |
2243 A single dashed line with a 3D sunken appearance. | |
2244 | |
2245 @item "--shadow-etched-out-dash" | |
2246 A single dashed line with a 3D raised appearance. | |
2247 | |
2248 @item "--shadow-double-etched-in" | |
2249 Two lines with a 3D sunken appearance. | |
2250 | |
2251 @item "--shadow-double-etched-out" | |
2252 Two lines with a 3D raised appearance. | |
2253 | |
2254 @item "--shadow-double-etched-in-dash" | |
2255 Two dashed lines with a 3D sunken appearance. | |
2256 | |
2257 @item "--shadow-double-etched-out-dash" | |
2258 Two dashed lines with a 3D raised appearance. | |
2259 @end table | |
2260 | |
2261 You can also give these names in another style, adding a colon after | |
2262 the double-dash and replacing each single dash with capitalization of | |
2263 the following word. Thus, @code{"--:singleLine"}, is equivalent to | |
2264 @code{"--single-line"}. | |
2265 | |
2266 Some systems and display toolkits don't really handle all of these | |
2267 separator types. If you use a type that isn't supported, the menu | |
2268 displays a similar kind of separator that is supported. | |
2269 | |
2270 @node Alias Menu Items | |
2271 @subsubsection Alias Menu Items | |
2272 | |
2273 Sometimes it is useful to make menu items that use the ``same'' | |
2274 command but with different enable conditions. The best way to do this | |
2275 in Emacs now is with extended menu items; before that feature existed, | |
2276 it could be done by defining alias commands and using them in menu | |
2277 items. Here's an example that makes two aliases for | |
2278 @code{toggle-read-only} and gives them different enable conditions: | |
2279 | |
2280 @example | |
2281 (defalias 'make-read-only 'toggle-read-only) | |
2282 (put 'make-read-only 'menu-enable '(not buffer-read-only)) | |
2283 (defalias 'make-writable 'toggle-read-only) | |
2284 (put 'make-writable 'menu-enable 'buffer-read-only) | |
2285 @end example | |
2286 | |
2287 When using aliases in menus, often it is useful to display the | |
2288 equivalent key bindings for the ``real'' command name, not the aliases | |
2289 (which typically don't have any key bindings except for the menu | |
2290 itself). To request this, give the alias symbol a non-@code{nil} | |
2291 @code{menu-alias} property. Thus, | |
2292 | |
2293 @example | |
2294 (put 'make-read-only 'menu-alias t) | |
2295 (put 'make-writable 'menu-alias t) | |
2296 @end example | |
2297 | |
2298 @noindent | |
2299 causes menu items for @code{make-read-only} and @code{make-writable} to | |
2300 show the keyboard bindings for @code{toggle-read-only}. | |
2301 | |
2302 @node Mouse Menus | |
2303 @subsection Menus and the Mouse | |
2304 | |
2305 The usual way to make a menu keymap produce a menu is to make it the | |
2306 definition of a prefix key. (A Lisp program can explicitly pop up a | |
2307 menu and receive the user's choice---see @ref{Pop-Up Menus}.) | |
2308 | |
2309 If the prefix key ends with a mouse event, Emacs handles the menu keymap | |
2310 by popping up a visible menu, so that the user can select a choice with | |
2311 the mouse. When the user clicks on a menu item, the event generated is | |
2312 whatever character or symbol has the binding that brought about that | |
2313 menu item. (A menu item may generate a series of events if the menu has | |
2314 multiple levels or comes from the menu bar.) | |
2315 | |
2316 It's often best to use a button-down event to trigger the menu. Then | |
2317 the user can select a menu item by releasing the button. | |
2318 | |
2319 A single keymap can appear as multiple menu panes, if you explicitly | |
2320 arrange for this. The way to do this is to make a keymap for each pane, | |
2321 then create a binding for each of those maps in the main keymap of the | |
2322 menu. Give each of these bindings an item string that starts with | |
2323 @samp{@@}. The rest of the item string becomes the name of the pane. | |
2324 See the file @file{lisp/mouse.el} for an example of this. Any ordinary | |
2325 bindings with @samp{@@}-less item strings are grouped into one pane, | |
2326 which appears along with the other panes explicitly created for the | |
2327 submaps. | |
2328 | |
2329 X toolkit menus don't have panes; instead, they can have submenus. | |
2330 Every nested keymap becomes a submenu, whether the item string starts | |
2331 with @samp{@@} or not. In a toolkit version of Emacs, the only thing | |
2332 special about @samp{@@} at the beginning of an item string is that the | |
2333 @samp{@@} doesn't appear in the menu item. | |
2334 | |
2335 Multiple keymaps that define the same menu prefix key produce | |
2336 separate panes or separate submenus. | |
2337 | |
2338 @node Keyboard Menus | |
2339 @subsection Menus and the Keyboard | |
2340 | |
2341 When a prefix key ending with a keyboard event (a character or | |
2342 function key) has a definition that is a menu keymap, the keymap | |
2343 operates as a keyboard menu; the user specifies the next event by | |
2344 choosing a menu item with the keyboard. | |
2345 | |
2346 Emacs displays the keyboard menu with the map's overall prompt | |
2347 string, followed by the alternatives (the item strings of the map's | |
2348 bindings), in the echo area. If the bindings don't all fit at once, | |
2349 the user can type @key{SPC} to see the next line of alternatives. | |
2350 Successive uses of @key{SPC} eventually get to the end of the menu and | |
2351 then cycle around to the beginning. (The variable | |
2352 @code{menu-prompt-more-char} specifies which character is used for | |
2353 this; @key{SPC} is the default.) | |
2354 | |
2355 When the user has found the desired alternative from the menu, he or | |
2356 she should type the corresponding character---the one whose binding is | |
2357 that alternative. | |
2358 | |
2359 @ignore | |
2360 In a menu intended for keyboard use, each menu item must clearly | |
2361 indicate what character to type. The best convention to use is to make | |
2362 the character the first letter of the item string---that is something | |
2363 users will understand without being told. We plan to change this; by | |
2364 the time you read this manual, keyboard menus may explicitly name the | |
2365 key for each alternative. | |
2366 @end ignore | |
2367 | |
2368 This way of using menus in an Emacs-like editor was inspired by the | |
2369 Hierarkey system. | |
2370 | |
2371 @defvar menu-prompt-more-char | |
2372 This variable specifies the character to use to ask to see | |
2373 the next line of a menu. Its initial value is 32, the code | |
2374 for @key{SPC}. | |
2375 @end defvar | |
2376 | |
2377 @node Menu Example | |
2378 @subsection Menu Example | |
2379 @cindex menu definition example | |
2380 | |
2381 Here is a complete example of defining a menu keymap. It is the | |
2382 definition of the @samp{Replace} submenu in the @samp{Edit} menu in | |
2383 the menu bar, and it uses the extended menu item format | |
2384 (@pxref{Extended Menu Items}). First we create the keymap, and give | |
2385 it a name: | |
2386 | |
2387 @smallexample | |
2388 (defvar menu-bar-replace-menu (make-sparse-keymap "Replace")) | |
2389 @end smallexample | |
2390 | |
2391 @noindent | |
2392 Next we define the menu items: | |
2393 | |
2394 @smallexample | |
2395 (define-key menu-bar-replace-menu [tags-repl-continue] | |
2396 '(menu-item "Continue Replace" tags-loop-continue | |
2397 :help "Continue last tags replace operation")) | |
2398 (define-key menu-bar-replace-menu [tags-repl] | |
2399 '(menu-item "Replace in tagged files" tags-query-replace | |
2400 :help "Interactively replace a regexp in all tagged files")) | |
2401 (define-key menu-bar-replace-menu [separator-replace-tags] | |
2402 '(menu-item "--")) | |
2403 ;; @r{@dots{}} | |
2404 @end smallexample | |
2405 | |
2406 @noindent | |
2407 Note the symbols which the bindings are ``made for''; these appear | |
2408 inside square brackets, in the key sequence being defined. In some | |
2409 cases, this symbol is the same as the command name; sometimes it is | |
2410 different. These symbols are treated as ``function keys,'' but they are | |
2411 not real function keys on the keyboard. They do not affect the | |
2412 functioning of the menu itself, but they are ``echoed'' in the echo area | |
2413 when the user selects from the menu, and they appear in the output of | |
2414 @code{where-is} and @code{apropos}. | |
2415 | |
2416 The menu in this example is intended for use with the mouse. If a | |
2417 menu is intended for use with the keyboard, that is, if it is bound to | |
2418 a key sequence ending with a keyboard event, then the menu items | |
2419 should be bound to characters or ``real'' function keys, that can be | |
2420 typed with the keyboard. | |
2421 | |
2422 The binding whose definition is @code{("--")} is a separator line. | |
2423 Like a real menu item, the separator has a key symbol, in this case | |
2424 @code{separator-replace-tags}. If one menu has two separators, they | |
2425 must have two different key symbols. | |
2426 | |
2427 Here is how we make this menu appear as an item in the parent menu: | |
2428 | |
2429 @example | |
2430 (define-key menu-bar-edit-menu [replace] | |
2431 (list 'menu-item "Replace" menu-bar-replace-menu)) | |
2432 @end example | |
2433 | |
2434 @noindent | |
2435 Note that this incorporates the submenu keymap, which is the value of | |
2436 the variable @code{menu-bar-replace-menu}, rather than the symbol | |
2437 @code{menu-bar-replace-menu} itself. Using that symbol in the parent | |
2438 menu item would be meaningless because @code{menu-bar-replace-menu} is | |
2439 not a command. | |
2440 | |
2441 If you wanted to attach the same replace menu to a mouse click, you | |
2442 can do it this way: | |
2443 | |
2444 @example | |
2445 (define-key global-map [C-S-down-mouse-1] | |
2446 menu-bar-replace-menu) | |
2447 @end example | |
2448 | |
2449 @node Menu Bar | |
2450 @subsection The Menu Bar | |
2451 @cindex menu bar | |
2452 | |
2453 Most window systems allow each frame to have a @dfn{menu bar}---a | |
2454 permanently displayed menu stretching horizontally across the top of the | |
2455 frame. The items of the menu bar are the subcommands of the fake | |
2456 ``function key'' @code{menu-bar}, as defined in the active keymaps. | |
2457 | |
2458 To add an item to the menu bar, invent a fake ``function key'' of your | |
2459 own (let's call it @var{key}), and make a binding for the key sequence | |
2460 @code{[menu-bar @var{key}]}. Most often, the binding is a menu keymap, | |
2461 so that pressing a button on the menu bar item leads to another menu. | |
2462 | |
2463 When more than one active keymap defines the same fake function key | |
2464 for the menu bar, the item appears just once. If the user clicks on | |
2465 that menu bar item, it brings up a single, combined menu containing | |
2466 all the subcommands of that item---the global subcommands, the local | |
2467 subcommands, and the minor mode subcommands. | |
2468 | |
2469 The variable @code{overriding-local-map} is normally ignored when | |
2470 determining the menu bar contents. That is, the menu bar is computed | |
2471 from the keymaps that would be active if @code{overriding-local-map} | |
2472 were @code{nil}. @xref{Active Keymaps}. | |
2473 | |
2474 In order for a frame to display a menu bar, its @code{menu-bar-lines} | |
2475 parameter must be greater than zero. Emacs uses just one line for the | |
2476 menu bar itself; if you specify more than one line, the other lines | |
2477 serve to separate the menu bar from the windows in the frame. We | |
2478 recommend 1 or 2 as the value of @code{menu-bar-lines}. @xref{Layout | |
2479 Parameters}. | |
2480 | |
2481 Here's an example of setting up a menu bar item: | |
2482 | |
2483 @example | |
2484 @group | |
2485 (modify-frame-parameters (selected-frame) | |
2486 '((menu-bar-lines . 2))) | |
2487 @end group | |
2488 | |
2489 @group | |
2490 ;; @r{Make a menu keymap (with a prompt string)} | |
2491 ;; @r{and make it the menu bar item's definition.} | |
2492 (define-key global-map [menu-bar words] | |
2493 (cons "Words" (make-sparse-keymap "Words"))) | |
2494 @end group | |
2495 | |
2496 @group | |
2497 ;; @r{Define specific subcommands in this menu.} | |
2498 (define-key global-map | |
2499 [menu-bar words forward] | |
2500 '("Forward word" . forward-word)) | |
2501 @end group | |
2502 @group | |
2503 (define-key global-map | |
2504 [menu-bar words backward] | |
2505 '("Backward word" . backward-word)) | |
2506 @end group | |
2507 @end example | |
2508 | |
2509 A local keymap can cancel a menu bar item made by the global keymap by | |
2510 rebinding the same fake function key with @code{undefined} as the | |
2511 binding. For example, this is how Dired suppresses the @samp{Edit} menu | |
2512 bar item: | |
2513 | |
2514 @example | |
2515 (define-key dired-mode-map [menu-bar edit] 'undefined) | |
2516 @end example | |
2517 | |
2518 @noindent | |
2519 @code{edit} is the fake function key used by the global map for the | |
2520 @samp{Edit} menu bar item. The main reason to suppress a global | |
2521 menu bar item is to regain space for mode-specific items. | |
2522 | |
2523 @defvar menu-bar-final-items | |
2524 Normally the menu bar shows global items followed by items defined by the | |
2525 local maps. | |
2526 | |
2527 This variable holds a list of fake function keys for items to display at | |
2528 the end of the menu bar rather than in normal sequence. The default | |
2529 value is @code{(help-menu)}; thus, the @samp{Help} menu item normally appears | |
2530 at the end of the menu bar, following local menu items. | |
2531 @end defvar | |
2532 | |
2533 @defvar menu-bar-update-hook | |
2534 This normal hook is run by redisplay to update the menu bar contents, | |
2535 before redisplaying the menu bar. You can use it to update submenus | |
2536 whose contents should vary. Since this hook is run frequently, we | |
2537 advise you to ensure that the functions it calls do not take much time | |
2538 in the usual case. | |
2539 @end defvar | |
2540 | |
2541 @node Tool Bar | |
2542 @subsection Tool bars | |
2543 @cindex tool bar | |
2544 | |
2545 A @dfn{tool bar} is a row of icons at the top of a frame, that execute | |
2546 commands when you click on them---in effect, a kind of graphical menu | |
2547 bar. | |
2548 | |
2549 The frame parameter @code{tool-bar-lines} (X resource @samp{toolBar}) | |
2550 controls how many lines' worth of height to reserve for the tool bar. A | |
2551 zero value suppresses the tool bar. If the value is nonzero, and | |
2552 @code{auto-resize-tool-bars} is non-@code{nil}, the tool bar expands and | |
2553 contracts automatically as needed to hold the specified contents. | |
2554 | |
2555 If the value of @code{auto-resize-tool-bars} is @code{grow-only}, | |
2556 the tool bar expands automatically, but does not contract automatically. | |
2557 To contract the tool bar, the user has to redraw the frame by entering | |
2558 @kbd{C-l}. | |
2559 | |
2560 The tool bar contents are controlled by a menu keymap attached to a | |
2561 fake ``function key'' called @code{tool-bar} (much like the way the menu | |
2562 bar is controlled). So you define a tool bar item using | |
2563 @code{define-key}, like this: | |
2564 | |
2565 @example | |
2566 (define-key global-map [tool-bar @var{key}] @var{item}) | |
2567 @end example | |
2568 | |
2569 @noindent | |
2570 where @var{key} is a fake ``function key'' to distinguish this item from | |
2571 other items, and @var{item} is a menu item key binding (@pxref{Extended | |
2572 Menu Items}), which says how to display this item and how it behaves. | |
2573 | |
2574 The usual menu keymap item properties, @code{:visible}, | |
2575 @code{:enable}, @code{:button}, and @code{:filter}, are useful in | |
2576 tool bar bindings and have their normal meanings. The @var{real-binding} | |
2577 in the item must be a command, not a keymap; in other words, it does not | |
2578 work to define a tool bar icon as a prefix key. | |
2579 | |
2580 The @code{:help} property specifies a ``help-echo'' string to display | |
2581 while the mouse is on that item. This is displayed in the same way as | |
2582 @code{help-echo} text properties (@pxref{Help display}). | |
2583 | |
2584 In addition, you should use the @code{:image} property; | |
2585 this is how you specify the image to display in the tool bar: | |
2586 | |
2587 @table @code | |
2588 @item :image @var{image} | |
2589 @var{images} is either a single image specification or a vector of four | |
2590 image specifications. If you use a vector of four, | |
2591 one of them is used, depending on circumstances: | |
2592 | |
2593 @table @asis | |
2594 @item item 0 | |
2595 Used when the item is enabled and selected. | |
2596 @item item 1 | |
2597 Used when the item is enabled and deselected. | |
2598 @item item 2 | |
2599 Used when the item is disabled and selected. | |
2600 @item item 3 | |
2601 Used when the item is disabled and deselected. | |
2602 @end table | |
2603 @end table | |
2604 | |
2605 If @var{image} is a single image specification, Emacs draws the tool bar | |
2606 button in disabled state by applying an edge-detection algorithm to the | |
2607 image. | |
2608 | |
2609 The default tool bar is defined so that items specific to editing do not | |
2610 appear for major modes whose command symbol has a @code{mode-class} | |
2611 property of @code{special} (@pxref{Major Mode Conventions}). Major | |
2612 modes may add items to the global bar by binding @code{[tool-bar | |
2613 @var{foo}]} in their local map. It makes sense for some major modes to | |
2614 replace the default tool bar items completely, since not many can be | |
2615 accommodated conveniently, and the default bindings make this easy by | |
2616 using an indirection through @code{tool-bar-map}. | |
2617 | |
2618 @defvar tool-bar-map | |
2619 By default, the global map binds @code{[tool-bar]} as follows: | |
2620 @example | |
2621 (global-set-key [tool-bar] | |
2622 '(menu-item "tool bar" ignore | |
2623 :filter (lambda (ignore) tool-bar-map))) | |
2624 @end example | |
2625 @noindent | |
2626 Thus the tool bar map is derived dynamically from the value of variable | |
2627 @code{tool-bar-map} and you should normally adjust the default (global) | |
2628 tool bar by changing that map. Major modes may replace the global bar | |
2629 completely by making @code{tool-bar-map} buffer-local and set to a | |
2630 keymap containing only the desired items. Info mode provides an | |
2631 example. | |
2632 @end defvar | |
2633 | |
2634 There are two convenience functions for defining tool bar items, as | |
2635 follows. | |
2636 | |
2637 @defun tool-bar-add-item icon def key &rest props | |
2638 This function adds an item to the tool bar by modifying | |
2639 @code{tool-bar-map}. The image to use is defined by @var{icon}, which | |
2640 is the base name of an XPM, XBM or PBM image file to be located by | |
2641 @code{find-image}. Given a value @samp{"exit"}, say, @file{exit.xpm}, | |
2642 @file{exit.pbm} and @file{exit.xbm} would be searched for in that order | |
2643 on a color display. On a monochrome display, the search order is | |
2644 @samp{.pbm}, @samp{.xbm} and @samp{.xpm}. The binding to use is the | |
2645 command @var{def}, and @var{key} is the fake function key symbol in the | |
2646 prefix keymap. The remaining arguments @var{props} are additional | |
2647 property list elements to add to the menu item specification. | |
2648 | |
2649 To define items in some local map, bind @code{tool-bar-map} with | |
2650 @code{let} around calls of this function: | |
2651 @example | |
2652 (defvar foo-tool-bar-map | |
2653 (let ((tool-bar-map (make-sparse-keymap))) | |
2654 (tool-bar-add-item @dots{}) | |
2655 @dots{} | |
2656 tool-bar-map)) | |
2657 @end example | |
2658 @end defun | |
2659 | |
2660 @defun tool-bar-add-item-from-menu command icon &optional map &rest props | |
2661 This function is a convenience for defining tool bar items which are | |
2662 consistent with existing menu bar bindings. The binding of | |
2663 @var{command} is looked up in the menu bar in @var{map} (default | |
2664 @code{global-map}) and modified to add an image specification for | |
2665 @var{icon}, which is found in the same way as by | |
2666 @code{tool-bar-add-item}. The resulting binding is then placed in | |
2667 @code{tool-bar-map}, so use this function only for global tool bar | |
2668 items. | |
2669 | |
2670 @var{map} must contain an appropriate keymap bound to | |
2671 @code{[menu-bar]}. The remaining arguments @var{props} are additional | |
2672 property list elements to add to the menu item specification. | |
2673 @end defun | |
2674 | |
2675 @defun tool-bar-local-item-from-menu command icon in-map &optional from-map &rest props | |
2676 This function is used for making non-global tool bar items. Use it | |
2677 like @code{tool-bar-add-item-from-menu} except that @var{in-map} | |
2678 specifies the local map to make the definition in. The argument | |
2679 @var{from-map} is like the @var{map} argument of | |
2680 @code{tool-bar-add-item-from-menu}. | |
2681 @end defun | |
2682 | |
2683 @defvar auto-resize-tool-bar | |
2684 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, the tool bar automatically resizes to | |
2685 show all defined tool bar items---but not larger than a quarter of the | |
2686 frame's height. | |
2687 | |
2688 If the value is @code{grow-only}, the tool bar expands automatically, | |
2689 but does not contract automatically. To contract the tool bar, the | |
2690 user has to redraw the frame by entering @kbd{C-l}. | |
2691 @end defvar | |
2692 | |
2693 @defvar auto-raise-tool-bar-buttons | |
2694 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, tool bar items display | |
2695 in raised form when the mouse moves over them. | |
2696 @end defvar | |
2697 | |
2698 @defvar tool-bar-button-margin | |
2699 This variable specifies an extra margin to add around tool bar items. | |
2700 The value is an integer, a number of pixels. The default is 4. | |
2701 @end defvar | |
2702 | |
2703 @defvar tool-bar-button-relief | |
2704 This variable specifies the shadow width for tool bar items. | |
2705 The value is an integer, a number of pixels. The default is 1. | |
2706 @end defvar | |
2707 | |
2708 @defvar tool-bar-border | |
2709 This variable specifies the height of the border drawn below the tool | |
2710 bar area. An integer value specifies height as a number of pixels. | |
2711 If the value is one of @code{internal-border-width} (the default) or | |
2712 @code{border-width}, the tool bar border height corresponds to the | |
2713 corresponding frame parameter. | |
2714 @end defvar | |
2715 | |
2716 You can define a special meaning for clicking on a tool bar item with | |
2717 the shift, control, meta, etc., modifiers. You do this by setting up | |
2718 additional items that relate to the original item through the fake | |
2719 function keys. Specifically, the additional items should use the | |
2720 modified versions of the same fake function key used to name the | |
2721 original item. | |
2722 | |
2723 Thus, if the original item was defined this way, | |
2724 | |
2725 @example | |
2726 (define-key global-map [tool-bar shell] | |
2727 '(menu-item "Shell" shell | |
2728 :image (image :type xpm :file "shell.xpm"))) | |
2729 @end example | |
2730 | |
2731 @noindent | |
2732 then here is how you can define clicking on the same tool bar image with | |
2733 the shift modifier: | |
2734 | |
2735 @example | |
2736 (define-key global-map [tool-bar S-shell] 'some-command) | |
2737 @end example | |
2738 | |
2739 @xref{Function Keys}, for more information about how to add modifiers to | |
2740 function keys. | |
2741 | |
2742 @node Modifying Menus | |
2743 @subsection Modifying Menus | |
2744 | |
2745 When you insert a new item in an existing menu, you probably want to | |
2746 put it in a particular place among the menu's existing items. If you | |
2747 use @code{define-key} to add the item, it normally goes at the front of | |
2748 the menu. To put it elsewhere in the menu, use @code{define-key-after}: | |
2749 | |
2750 @defun define-key-after map key binding &optional after | |
2751 Define a binding in @var{map} for @var{key}, with value @var{binding}, | |
2752 just like @code{define-key}, but position the binding in @var{map} after | |
2753 the binding for the event @var{after}. The argument @var{key} should be | |
2754 of length one---a vector or string with just one element. But | |
2755 @var{after} should be a single event type---a symbol or a character, not | |
2756 a sequence. The new binding goes after the binding for @var{after}. If | |
2757 @var{after} is @code{t} or is omitted, then the new binding goes last, at | |
2758 the end of the keymap. However, new bindings are added before any | |
2759 inherited keymap. | |
2760 | |
2761 Here is an example: | |
2762 | |
2763 @example | |
2764 (define-key-after my-menu [drink] | |
2765 '("Drink" . drink-command) 'eat) | |
2766 @end example | |
2767 | |
2768 @noindent | |
2769 makes a binding for the fake function key @key{DRINK} and puts it | |
2770 right after the binding for @key{EAT}. | |
2771 | |
2772 Here is how to insert an item called @samp{Work} in the @samp{Signals} | |
2773 menu of Shell mode, after the item @code{break}: | |
2774 | |
2775 @example | |
2776 (define-key-after | |
2777 (lookup-key shell-mode-map [menu-bar signals]) | |
2778 [work] '("Work" . work-command) 'break) | |
2779 @end example | |
2780 @end defun | |
2781 | |
2782 @ignore | |
2783 arch-tag: cfb87287-9364-4e46-9e93-6c2f7f6ae794 | |
2784 @end ignore |