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author | Henrik Enberg <henrik.enberg@telia.com> |
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date | Mon, 16 Jan 2006 21:06:36 +0000 |
parents | d7ddb3e565de |
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25829 | 1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual. |
88155 | 2 @c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2002, 2003, |
3 @c 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | |
25829 | 4 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions. |
5 @node Indentation, Text, Major Modes, Top | |
6 @chapter Indentation | |
7 @cindex indentation | |
8 @cindex columns (indentation) | |
9 | |
10 This chapter describes the Emacs commands that add, remove, or | |
11 adjust indentation. | |
12 | |
13 @table @kbd | |
14 @item @key{TAB} | |
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15 Indent the current line ``appropriately'' in a mode-dependent fashion. |
25829 | 16 @item @kbd{C-j} |
17 Perform @key{RET} followed by @key{TAB} (@code{newline-and-indent}). | |
18 @item M-^ | |
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19 Merge the previous and the current line (@code{delete-indentation}). |
88155 | 20 This would cancel the effect of a preceding @kbd{C-j}. |
25829 | 21 @item C-M-o |
38490 | 22 Split the current line at point; text on the line after point becomes a |
23 new line indented to the same column where point is located | |
24 (@code{split-line}). | |
25829 | 25 @item M-m |
26 Move (forward or back) to the first nonblank character on the current | |
27 line (@code{back-to-indentation}). | |
28 @item C-M-\ | |
88155 | 29 Indent lines in the region to the same column (@code{indent-region}). |
25829 | 30 @item C-x @key{TAB} |
88155 | 31 Shift lines in the region rigidly right or left (@code{indent-rigidly}). |
25829 | 32 @item M-i |
33 Indent from point to the next prespecified tab stop column | |
34 (@code{tab-to-tab-stop}). | |
35 @item M-x indent-relative | |
36 Indent from point to under an indentation point in the previous line. | |
37 @end table | |
38 | |
88155 | 39 Emacs supports four general categories of operations that could all |
40 be called `indentation': | |
41 | |
42 @enumerate | |
43 @item | |
44 Insert a tab character. You can type @kbd{C-q @key{TAB}} to do this. | |
45 | |
46 A tab character is displayed as a stretch of whitespace which extends | |
47 to the next display tab stop position, and the default width of a tab | |
48 stop is eight. @xref{Display Custom}, for more details. | |
49 | |
50 @item | |
51 Insert whitespace up to the next tab stop. You can set tab stops at | |
52 your choice of column positions, then type @kbd{M-i} to advance to the | |
53 next tab stop. The default tab stop settings have a tab stop every | |
54 eight columns, which means by default @kbd{M-i} inserts a tab | |
55 character. To set the tab stops, use @kbd{M-x edit-tab-stops}. | |
56 | |
57 @item | |
58 Align a line with the previous line. More precisely, the command | |
59 @kbd{M-x indent-relative} indents the current line under the beginning | |
60 of some word in the previous line. In Fundamental mode and in Text | |
61 mode, @key{TAB} runs the command @code{indent-relative}. | |
62 | |
63 @item | |
64 The most sophisticated method is @dfn{syntax-driven indentation}. | |
65 Most programming languages have an indentation convention. For Lisp | |
66 code, lines are indented according to their nesting in parentheses. C | |
67 code uses the same general idea, but many details are different. | |
25829 | 68 |
69 @kindex TAB | |
88155 | 70 Type @key{TAB} to do syntax-driven indentation, in a mode that |
71 supports it. It realigns the current line according with the syntax | |
72 of the preceding lines. No matter where in the line you are when you | |
73 type @key{TAB}, it aligns the line as a whole. | |
74 @end enumerate | |
25829 | 75 |
88155 | 76 Normally, most of the above methods insert an optimal mix of tabs and |
77 spaces to align to the desired column. @xref{Just Spaces}, for how to | |
78 disable use of tabs. However, @kbd{C-q @key{TAB}} always inserts a | |
79 tab, even when tabs are disabled for the indentation commands. | |
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80 |
25829 | 81 @menu |
82 * Indentation Commands:: Various commands and techniques for indentation. | |
83 * Tab Stops:: You can set arbitrary "tab stops" and then | |
84 indent to the next tab stop when you want to. | |
85 * Just Spaces:: You can request indentation using just spaces. | |
86 @end menu | |
87 | |
88 @node Indentation Commands, Tab Stops, Indentation, Indentation | |
89 @section Indentation Commands and Techniques | |
90 | |
91 @kindex M-m | |
92 @findex back-to-indentation | |
93 To move over the indentation on a line, do @kbd{M-m} | |
94 (@code{back-to-indentation}). This command, given anywhere on a line, | |
88155 | 95 positions point at the first nonblank character on the line, if any, |
96 or else at the end of the line. | |
25829 | 97 |
98 To insert an indented line before the current line, do @kbd{C-a C-o | |
99 @key{TAB}}. To make an indented line after the current line, use | |
100 @kbd{C-e C-j}. | |
101 | |
102 If you just want to insert a tab character in the buffer, you can type | |
103 @kbd{C-q @key{TAB}}. | |
104 | |
105 @kindex C-M-o | |
106 @findex split-line | |
107 @kbd{C-M-o} (@code{split-line}) moves the text from point to the end of | |
108 the line vertically down, so that the current line becomes two lines. | |
109 @kbd{C-M-o} first moves point forward over any spaces and tabs. Then it | |
110 inserts after point a newline and enough indentation to reach the same | |
111 column point is on. Point remains before the inserted newline; in this | |
112 regard, @kbd{C-M-o} resembles @kbd{C-o}. | |
113 | |
114 @kindex M-^ | |
115 @findex delete-indentation | |
116 To join two lines cleanly, use the @kbd{M-^} | |
117 (@code{delete-indentation}) command. It deletes the indentation at the | |
118 front of the current line, and the line boundary as well, replacing them | |
119 with a single space. As a special case (useful for Lisp code) the | |
120 single space is omitted if the characters to be joined are consecutive | |
121 open parentheses or closing parentheses, or if the junction follows | |
122 another newline. To delete just the indentation of a line, go to the | |
123 beginning of the line and use @kbd{M-\} | |
124 (@code{delete-horizontal-space}), which deletes all spaces and tabs | |
125 around the cursor. | |
126 | |
127 If you have a fill prefix, @kbd{M-^} deletes the fill prefix if it | |
128 appears after the newline that is deleted. @xref{Fill Prefix}. | |
129 | |
130 @kindex C-M-\ | |
131 @kindex C-x TAB | |
132 @findex indent-region | |
133 @findex indent-rigidly | |
134 There are also commands for changing the indentation of several lines | |
88155 | 135 at once. They apply to all the lines that begin in the region. |
136 @kbd{C-M-\} (@code{indent-region}) indents each line in the ``usual'' | |
137 way, as if you had typed @key{TAB} at the beginning of the line. A | |
138 numeric argument specifies the column to indent to, and each line is | |
139 shifted left or right so that its first nonblank character appears in | |
140 that column. @kbd{C-x @key{TAB}} (@code{indent-rigidly}) moves all of | |
141 the lines in the region right by its argument (left, for negative | |
25829 | 142 arguments). The whole group of lines moves rigidly sideways, which is |
143 how the command gets its name.@refill | |
144 | |
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145 @cindex remove indentation |
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146 If you want to remove all indentation from all of the line in the |
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147 region, invoke @kbd{C-x @key{TAB}} with a large negative argument, |
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148 such as -1000. |
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149 |
25829 | 150 @findex indent-relative |
151 @kbd{M-x indent-relative} indents at point based on the previous line | |
152 (actually, the last nonempty line). It inserts whitespace at point, moving | |
88155 | 153 point, until it is underneath the next indentation point in the previous line. |
25829 | 154 An indentation point is the end of a sequence of whitespace or the end of |
155 the line. If point is farther right than any indentation point in the | |
88155 | 156 previous line, @code{indent-relative} runs @code{tab-to-tab-stop} |
25829 | 157 @ifinfo |
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158 (@pxref{Tab Stops}), |
25829 | 159 @end ifinfo |
160 @iftex | |
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161 (see next section), |
25829 | 162 @end iftex |
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163 unless it is called with a numeric argument, in which case it does |
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164 nothing. |
25829 | 165 |
166 @xref{Format Indentation}, for another way of specifying the | |
167 indentation for part of your text. | |
168 | |
169 @node Tab Stops, Just Spaces, Indentation Commands, Indentation | |
170 @section Tab Stops | |
171 | |
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172 @cindex tab stops |
25829 | 173 @cindex using tab stops in making tables |
174 @cindex tables, indentation for | |
175 @kindex M-i | |
176 @findex tab-to-tab-stop | |
88155 | 177 For typing in tables, you can use @kbd{M-i} (@code{tab-to-tab-stop}). |
178 This command inserts indentation before point, enough to reach the | |
179 next tab stop column. | |
25829 | 180 |
181 @findex edit-tab-stops | |
182 @findex edit-tab-stops-note-changes | |
183 @kindex C-c C-c @r{(Edit Tab Stops)} | |
184 @vindex tab-stop-list | |
185 You can specify the tab stops used by @kbd{M-i}. They are stored in a | |
186 variable called @code{tab-stop-list}, as a list of column-numbers in | |
187 increasing order. | |
188 | |
189 The convenient way to set the tab stops is with @kbd{M-x | |
190 edit-tab-stops}, which creates and selects a buffer containing a | |
191 description of the tab stop settings. You can edit this buffer to | |
192 specify different tab stops, and then type @kbd{C-c C-c} to make those | |
88155 | 193 new tab stops take effect. The buffer uses Overwrite mode |
194 (@pxref{Minor Modes}). @code{edit-tab-stops} records which buffer was | |
195 current when you invoked it, and stores the tab stops back in that | |
196 buffer; normally all buffers share the same tab stops and changing | |
197 them in one buffer affects all, but if you happen to make | |
25829 | 198 @code{tab-stop-list} local in one buffer then @code{edit-tab-stops} in |
199 that buffer will edit the local settings. | |
200 | |
201 Here is what the text representing the tab stops looks like for ordinary | |
202 tab stops every eight columns. | |
203 | |
204 @example | |
205 : : : : : : | |
206 0 1 2 3 4 | |
207 0123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678 | |
208 To install changes, type C-c C-c | |
209 @end example | |
210 | |
211 The first line contains a colon at each tab stop. The remaining lines | |
212 are present just to help you see where the colons are and know what to do. | |
213 | |
214 Note that the tab stops that control @code{tab-to-tab-stop} have nothing | |
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215 to do with displaying tab characters in the buffer. @xref{Display Custom}, |
25829 | 216 for more information on that. |
217 | |
218 @node Just Spaces,, Tab Stops, Indentation | |
219 @section Tabs vs. Spaces | |
220 | |
221 @vindex indent-tabs-mode | |
37420 | 222 Emacs normally uses both tabs and spaces to indent lines. If you |
223 prefer, all indentation can be made from spaces only. To request | |
224 this, set @code{indent-tabs-mode} to @code{nil}. This is a per-buffer | |
225 variable, so altering the variable affects only the current buffer, | |
226 but there is a default value which you can change as well. | |
227 @xref{Locals}. | |
25829 | 228 |
88155 | 229 A tab is not always displayed in the same way. By default, tabs are |
230 eight columns wide, but some people like to customize their tools to | |
231 use a different tab width. So by using spaces only, you can make sure | |
232 that your file looks the same regardless of the tab width setting. | |
233 | |
25829 | 234 @findex tabify |
235 @findex untabify | |
236 There are also commands to convert tabs to spaces or vice versa, always | |
237 preserving the columns of all nonblank text. @kbd{M-x tabify} scans the | |
88155 | 238 region for sequences of spaces, and converts sequences of at least two |
25829 | 239 spaces to tabs if that can be done without changing indentation. @kbd{M-x |
240 untabify} changes all tabs in the region to appropriate numbers of spaces. | |
88155 | 241 |
242 @ignore | |
243 arch-tag: acc07de7-ae11-4ee8-a159-cb59c473f0fb | |
244 @end ignore |