comparison man/custom.texi @ 25829:ac7e9e5e2ccb

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author Dave Love <fx@gnu.org>
date Wed, 29 Sep 1999 15:17:24 +0000
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1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985, 86, 87, 93, 94, 95, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
4 @node Customization, Quitting, Amusements, Top
5 @chapter Customization
6 @cindex customization
7
8 This chapter talks about various topics relevant to adapting the
9 behavior of Emacs in minor ways. See @cite{The Emacs Lisp Reference
10 Manual} for how to make more far-reaching changes.
11
12 All kinds of customization affect only the particular Emacs session
13 that you do them in. They are completely lost when you kill the Emacs
14 session, and have no effect on other Emacs sessions you may run at the
15 same time or later. The only way an Emacs session can affect anything
16 outside of it is by writing a file; in particular, the only way to make
17 a customization ``permanent'' is to put something in your @file{.emacs}
18 file or other appropriate file to do the customization in each session.
19 @xref{Init File}.
20
21 @menu
22 * Minor Modes:: Each minor mode is one feature you can turn on
23 independently of any others.
24 * Variables:: Many Emacs commands examine Emacs variables
25 to decide what to do; by setting variables,
26 you can control their functioning.
27 * Keyboard Macros:: A keyboard macro records a sequence of
28 keystrokes to be replayed with a single
29 command.
30 * Key Bindings:: The keymaps say what command each key runs.
31 By changing them, you can "redefine keys".
32 * Keyboard Translations::
33 If your keyboard passes an undesired code
34 for a key, you can tell Emacs to
35 substitute another code.
36 * Syntax:: The syntax table controls how words and
37 expressions are parsed.
38 * Init File:: How to write common customizations in the
39 @file{.emacs} file.
40 @end menu
41
42 @node Minor Modes
43 @section Minor Modes
44 @cindex minor modes
45 @cindex mode, minor
46
47 Minor modes are optional features which you can turn on or off. For
48 example, Auto Fill mode is a minor mode in which @key{SPC} breaks lines
49 between words as you type. All the minor modes are independent of each
50 other and of the selected major mode. Most minor modes say in the mode
51 line when they are on; for example, @samp{Fill} in the mode line means
52 that Auto Fill mode is on.
53
54 Append @code{-mode} to the name of a minor mode to get the name of a
55 command function that turns the mode on or off. Thus, the command to
56 enable or disable Auto Fill mode is called @kbd{M-x auto-fill-mode}. These
57 commands are usually invoked with @kbd{M-x}, but you can bind keys to them
58 if you wish. With no argument, the function turns the mode on if it was
59 off and off if it was on. This is known as @dfn{toggling}. A positive
60 argument always turns the mode on, and an explicit zero argument or a
61 negative argument always turns it off.
62
63 Enabling or disabling some minor modes applies only to the current
64 buffer; each buffer is independent of the other buffers. Therefore, you
65 can enable the mode in particular buffers and disable it in others. The
66 per-buffer minor modes include Abbrev mode, Auto Fill mode, Auto Save
67 mode, Font-Lock mode, Hscroll mode, ISO Accents mode, Outline minor
68 mode, Overwrite mode, and Binary Overwrite mode.
69
70 Abbrev mode allows you to define abbreviations that automatically expand
71 as you type them. For example, @samp{amd} might expand to @samp{abbrev
72 mode}. @xref{Abbrevs}, for full information.
73
74 Auto Fill mode allows you to enter filled text without breaking lines
75 explicitly. Emacs inserts newlines as necessary to prevent lines from
76 becoming too long. @xref{Filling}.
77
78 Auto Save mode causes the contents of a buffer to be saved
79 periodically to reduce the amount of work you can lose in case of a
80 system crash. @xref{Auto Save}.
81
82 Enriched mode enables editing and saving of formatted text.
83 @xref{Formatted Text}.
84
85 Flyspell mode automatically highlights misspelled words.
86 @xref{Spelling}.
87
88 Font-Lock mode automatically highlights certain textual units found in
89 programs, such as comments, strings, and function names being defined.
90 This requires a window system that can display multiple fonts.
91 @xref{Faces}.
92
93 Hscroll mode performs horizontal scrolling automatically
94 to keep point on the screen. @xref{Horizontal Scrolling}.
95
96 ISO Accents mode makes the characters @samp{`}, @samp{'}, @samp{"},
97 @samp{^}, @samp{/} and @samp{~} combine with the following letter, to
98 produce an accented letter in the ISO Latin-1 character set.
99 @xref{Single-Byte European Support}.
100
101 Outline minor mode provides the same facilities as the major mode
102 called Outline mode; but since it is a minor mode instead, you can
103 combine it with any major mode. @xref{Outline Mode}.
104
105 @cindex Overwrite mode
106 @cindex mode, Overwrite
107 @findex overwrite-mode
108 @findex binary-overwrite-mode
109 Overwrite mode causes ordinary printing characters to replace existing
110 text instead of shoving it to the right. For example, if point is in
111 front of the @samp{B} in @samp{FOOBAR}, then in Overwrite mode typing a
112 @kbd{G} changes it to @samp{FOOGAR}, instead of producing @samp{FOOGBAR}
113 as usual. In Overwrite mode, the command @kbd{C-q} inserts the next
114 character whatever it may be, even if it is a digit---this gives you a
115 way to insert a character instead of replacing an existing character.
116
117 Binary Overwrite mode is a variant of Overwrite mode for editing
118 binary files; it treats newlines and tabs like other characters, so that
119 they overwrite other characters and can be overwritten by them.
120
121 The following minor modes normally apply to all buffers at once.
122 Since each is enabled or disabled by the value of a variable, you
123 @emph{can} set them differently for particular buffers, by explicitly
124 making the corresponding variables local in those buffers.
125 @xref{Locals}.
126
127 Icomplete mode displays an indication of available completions when
128 you are in the minibuffer and completion is active. @xref{Completion
129 Options}.
130
131 Line Number mode enables continuous display in the mode line of the
132 line number of point. @xref{Mode Line}.
133
134 Resize-Minibuffer mode makes the minibuffer expand as necessary to
135 hold the text that you put in it. @xref{Minibuffer Edit}.
136
137 Scroll Bar mode gives each window a scroll bar (@pxref{Scroll Bars}).
138 Menu Bar mode gives each frame a menu bar (@pxref{Menu Bars}). Both of
139 these modes are enabled by default when you use the X Window System.
140
141 In Transient Mark mode, every change in the buffer contents
142 ``deactivates'' the mark, so that commands that operate on the region
143 will get an error. This means you must either set the mark, or
144 explicitly ``reactivate'' it, before each command that uses the region.
145 The advantage of Transient Mark mode is that Emacs can display the
146 region highlighted (currently only when using X). @xref{Setting Mark}.
147
148 For most minor modes, the command name is also the name of a variable
149 which directly controls the mode. The mode is enabled whenever this
150 variable's value is non-@code{nil}, and the minor-mode command works by
151 setting the variable. For example, the command
152 @code{outline-minor-mode} works by setting the value of
153 @code{outline-minor-mode} as a variable; it is this variable that
154 directly turns Outline minor mode on and off. To check whether a given
155 minor mode works this way, use @kbd{C-h v} to ask for documentation on
156 the variable name.
157
158 These minor-mode variables provide a good way for Lisp programs to turn
159 minor modes on and off; they are also useful in a file's local variables
160 list. But please think twice before setting minor modes with a local
161 variables list, because most minor modes are matter of user
162 preference---other users editing the same file might not want the same
163 minor modes you prefer.
164
165 @node Variables
166 @section Variables
167 @cindex variable
168 @cindex option, user
169 @cindex user option
170
171 A @dfn{variable} is a Lisp symbol which has a value. The symbol's
172 name is also called the name of the variable. A variable name can
173 contain any characters that can appear in a file, but conventionally
174 variable names consist of words separated by hyphens. A variable can
175 have a documentation string which describes what kind of value it should
176 have and how the value will be used.
177
178 Lisp allows any variable to have any kind of value, but most variables
179 that Emacs uses require a value of a certain type. Often the value should
180 always be a string, or should always be a number. Sometimes we say that a
181 certain feature is turned on if a variable is ``non-@code{nil},'' meaning
182 that if the variable's value is @code{nil}, the feature is off, but the
183 feature is on for @emph{any} other value. The conventional value to use to
184 turn on the feature---since you have to pick one particular value when you
185 set the variable---is @code{t}.
186
187 Emacs uses many Lisp variables for internal record keeping, as any
188 Lisp program must, but the most interesting variables for you are the
189 ones that exist for the sake of customization. Emacs does not (usually)
190 change the values of these variables; instead, you set the values, and
191 thereby alter and control the behavior of certain Emacs commands. These
192 variables are called @dfn{user options}. Most user options are
193 documented in this manual, and appear in the Variable Index
194 (@pxref{Variable Index}).
195
196 One example of a variable which is a user option is @code{fill-column}, which
197 specifies the position of the right margin (as a number of characters from
198 the left margin) to be used by the fill commands (@pxref{Filling}).
199
200 @menu
201 * Examining:: Examining or setting one variable's value.
202 * Easy Customization::
203 Convenient and easy customization of variables.
204 * Hooks:: Hook variables let you specify programs for parts
205 of Emacs to run on particular occasions.
206 * Locals:: Per-buffer values of variables.
207 * File Variables:: How files can specify variable values.
208 @end menu
209
210 @node Examining
211 @subsection Examining and Setting Variables
212 @cindex setting variables
213
214 @table @kbd
215 @item C-h v @var{var} @key{RET}
216 Display the value and documentation of variable @var{var}
217 (@code{describe-variable}).
218 @item M-x set-variable @key{RET} @var{var} @key{RET} @var{value} @key{RET}
219 Change the value of variable @var{var} to @var{value}.
220 @end table
221
222 To examine the value of a single variable, use @kbd{C-h v}
223 (@code{describe-variable}), which reads a variable name using the
224 minibuffer, with completion. It displays both the value and the
225 documentation of the variable. For example,
226
227 @example
228 C-h v fill-column @key{RET}
229 @end example
230
231 @noindent
232 displays something like this:
233
234 @smallexample
235 fill-column's value is 75
236
237 Documentation:
238 *Column beyond which automatic line-wrapping should happen.
239 Automatically becomes buffer-local when set in any fashion.
240 @end smallexample
241
242 @noindent
243 The star at the beginning of the documentation indicates that this
244 variable is a user option. @kbd{C-h v} is not restricted to user
245 options; it allows any variable name.
246
247 @findex set-variable
248 The most convenient way to set a specific user option is with @kbd{M-x
249 set-variable}. This reads the variable name with the minibuffer (with
250 completion), and then reads a Lisp expression for the new value using
251 the minibuffer a second time. For example,
252
253 @example
254 M-x set-variable @key{RET} fill-column @key{RET} 75 @key{RET}
255 @end example
256
257 @noindent
258 sets @code{fill-column} to 75.
259
260 @kbd{M-x set-variable} is limited to user option variables, but you can
261 set any variable with a Lisp expression, using the function @code{setq}.
262 Here is a @code{setq} expression to set @code{fill-column}:
263
264 @example
265 (setq fill-column 75)
266 @end example
267
268 To execute an expression like this one, go to the @samp{*scratch*}
269 buffer, type in the expression, and then type @kbd{C-j}. @xref{Lisp
270 Interaction}.
271
272 Setting variables, like all means of customizing Emacs except where
273 otherwise stated, affects only the current Emacs session.
274
275 @node Easy Customization
276 @subsection Easy Customization Interface
277
278 @findex customize
279 @cindex customization buffer
280 A convenient way to find the user option variables that you want to
281 change, and then change them, is with @kbd{M-x customize}. This command
282 creates a @dfn{customization buffer} with which you can browse through
283 the Emacs user options in a logically organized structure, then edit and
284 set their values. You can also use the customization buffer to save
285 settings permanently. (Not all Emacs user options are included in this
286 structure as of yet, but we are adding the rest.)
287
288 @menu
289 * Groups: Customization Groups.
290 How options are classified in a structure.
291 * Changing an Option:: How to edit a value and set an option.
292 * Face Customization:: How to edit the attributes of a face.
293 * Specific Customization:: Making a customization buffer for specific
294 options, faces, or groups.
295 @end menu
296
297 @node Customization Groups
298 @subsubsection Customization Groups
299 @cindex customization groups
300
301 For customization purposes, user options are organized into
302 @dfn{groups} to help you find them. Groups are collected into bigger
303 groups, all the way up to a master group called @code{Emacs}.
304
305 @kbd{M-x customize} creates a customization buffer that shows the
306 top-level @code{Emacs} group and the second-level groups immediately
307 under it. It looks like this, in part:
308
309 @smallexample
310 /- Emacs group: ---------------------------------------------------\
311 [State]: visible group members are all at standard settings.
312 Customization of the One True Editor.
313 See also [Manual].
314
315 Editing group: [Go to Group]
316 Basic text editing facilities.
317
318 External group: [Go to Group]
319 Interfacing to external utilities.
320
321 @var{more second-level groups}
322
323 \- Emacs group end ------------------------------------------------/
324
325 @end smallexample
326
327 @noindent
328 This says that the buffer displays the contents of the @code{Emacs}
329 group. The other groups are listed because they are its contents. But
330 they are listed differently, without indentation and dashes, because
331 @emph{their} contents are not included. Each group has a single-line
332 documentation string; the @code{Emacs} group also has a @samp{[State]}
333 line.
334
335 @cindex editable fields (customization buffer)
336 @cindex active fields (customization buffer)
337 Most of the text in the customization buffer is read-only, but it
338 typically includes some @dfn{editable fields} that you can edit. There
339 are also @dfn{active fields}; this means a field that does something
340 when you @dfn{invoke} it. To invoke an active field, either click on it
341 with @kbd{Mouse-1}, or move point to it and type @key{RET}.
342
343 For example, the phrase @samp{[Go to Group]} that appears in a
344 second-level group is an active field. Invoking the @samp{[Go to
345 Group]} field for a group creates a new customization buffer, which
346 shows that group and its contents. This field is a kind of hypertext
347 link to another group.
348
349 The @code{Emacs} group does not include any user options itself, but
350 other groups do. By examining various groups, you will eventually find
351 the options and faces that belong to the feature you are interested in
352 customizing. Then you can use the customization buffer to set them.
353
354 @findex customize-browse
355 You can view the structure of customization groups on a larger scale
356 with @kbd{M-x customize-browse}. This command creates a special kind of
357 customization buffer which shows only the names of the groups (and
358 options and faces), and their structure.
359
360 In this buffer, you can show the contents of a group by invoking
361 @samp{[+]}. When the group contents are visible, this button changes to
362 @samp{[-]}; invoking that hides the group contents.
363
364 Each group, option or face name in this buffer has an active field
365 which says @samp{[Group]}, @samp{[Option]} or @samp{[Face]}. Invoking
366 that active field creates an ordinary customization buffer showing just
367 that group and its contents, just that option, or just that face.
368 This is the way to set values in it.
369
370 @node Changing an Option
371 @subsubsection Changing an Option
372
373 Here is an example of what a user option looks like in the
374 customization buffer:
375
376 @smallexample
377 Kill Ring Max: [Hide] 30
378 [State]: this option is unchanged from its standard setting.
379 Maximum length of kill ring before oldest elements are thrown away.
380 @end smallexample
381
382 The text following @samp{[Hide]}, @samp{30} in this case, indicates
383 the current value of the option. If you see @samp{[Show]} instead of
384 @samp{[Hide]}, it means that the value is hidden; the customization
385 buffer initially hides values that take up several lines. Invoke
386 @samp{[Show]} to show the value.
387
388 The line after the option name indicates the @dfn{customization state}
389 of the option: in the example above, it says you have not changed the
390 option yet. The word @samp{[State]} at the beginning of this line is
391 active; you can get a menu of various operations by invoking it with
392 @kbd{Mouse-1} or @key{RET}. These operations are essential for
393 customizing the variable.
394
395 The line after the @samp{[State]} line displays the beginning of the
396 option's documentation string. If there are more lines of
397 documentation, this line ends with @samp{[More]}; invoke this to show
398 the full documentation string.
399
400 To enter a new value for @samp{Kill Ring Max}, move point to the value
401 and edit it textually. For example, you can type @kbd{M-d}, then insert
402 another number.
403
404 When you begin to alter the text, you will see the @samp{[State]} line
405 change to say that you have edited the value:
406
407 @smallexample
408 [State]: you have edited the value as text, but not set the option.
409 @end smallexample
410
411 @cindex setting option value
412 Editing the value does not actually set the option variable. To do
413 that, you must @dfn{set} the option. To do this, invoke the word
414 @samp{[State]} and choose @samp{Set for Current Session}.
415
416 The state of the option changes visibly when you set it:
417
418 @smallexample
419 [State]: you have set this option, but not saved it for future sessions.
420 @end smallexample
421
422 You don't have to worry about specifying a value that is not valid;
423 setting the option checks for validity and will not really install an
424 unacceptable value.
425
426 @kindex M-TAB @r{(customization buffer)}
427 @findex widget-complete
428 While editing a value or field that is a file name, directory name,
429 command name, or anything else for which completion is defined, you can
430 type @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} (@code{widget-complete}) to do completion.
431
432 Some options have a small fixed set of possible legitimate values.
433 These options don't let you edit the value textually. Instead, an
434 active field @samp{[Value Menu]} appears before the value; invoke this
435 field to edit the value. For a boolean ``on or off'' value, the active
436 field says @samp{[Toggle]}, and it changes to the other value.
437 @samp{[Value Menu]} and @samp{[Toggle]} edit the buffer; the changes
438 take effect when you use the @samp{Set for Current Session} operation.
439
440 Some options have values with complex structure. For example, the
441 value of @code{load-path} is a list of directories. Here is how it
442 appears in the customization buffer:
443
444 @smallexample
445 Load Path:
446 [INS] [DEL] [Current dir?]: /usr/local/share/emacs/20.3/site-lisp
447 [INS] [DEL] [Current dir?]: /usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp
448 [INS] [DEL] [Current dir?]: /usr/local/share/emacs/20.3/leim
449 [INS] [DEL] [Current dir?]: /usr/local/share/emacs/20.3/lisp
450 [INS] [DEL] [Current dir?]: /build/emacs/e20/lisp
451 [INS] [DEL] [Current dir?]: /build/emacs/e20/lisp/gnus
452 [INS]
453 [State]: this item has been changed outside the customization buffer.
454 List of directories to search for files to load....
455 @end smallexample
456
457 @noindent
458 Each directory in the list appears on a separate line, and each line has
459 several editable or active fields.
460
461 You can edit any of the directory names. To delete a directory from
462 the list, invoke @samp{[DEL]} on that line. To insert a new directory in
463 the list, invoke @samp{[INS]} at the point where you want to insert it.
464
465 You can also invoke @samp{[Current dir?]} to switch between including
466 a specific named directory in the path, and including @code{nil} in the
467 path. (@code{nil} in a search path means ``try the current
468 directory.'')
469
470 @kindex TAB @r{(customization buffer)}
471 @kindex S-TAB @r{(customization buffer)}
472 @findex widget-forward
473 @findex widget-backward
474 Two special commands, @key{TAB} and @kbd{S-@key{TAB}}, are useful for
475 moving through the customization buffer. @key{TAB}
476 (@code{widget-forward}) moves forward to the next active or editable
477 field; @kbd{S-@key{TAB}} (@code{widget-backward}) moves backward to the
478 previous active or editable field.
479
480 Typing @key{RET} on an editable field also moves forward, just like
481 @key{TAB}. The reason for this is that people have a tendency to type
482 @key{RET} when they are finished editing a field. If you have occasion
483 to insert a newline in an editable field, use @kbd{C-o} or @kbd{C-q
484 C-j}.
485
486 @cindex saving option value
487 Setting the option changes its value in the current Emacs session;
488 @dfn{saving} the value changes it for future sessions as well. This
489 works by writing code into your @file{~/.emacs} file so as to set the
490 option variable again each time you start Emacs. To save the option,
491 invoke @samp{[State]} and select the @samp{Save for Future Sessions}
492 operation.
493
494 You can also restore the option to its standard value by invoking
495 @samp{[State]} and selecting the @samp{Reset to Standard Settings}
496 operation. There are actually three reset operations:
497
498 @table @samp
499 @item Reset
500 If you have made some modifications and not yet set the option,
501 this restores the text in the customization buffer to match
502 the actual value.
503
504 @item Reset to Saved
505 This restores the value of the option to the last saved value,
506 and updates the text accordingly.
507
508 @item Reset to Standard Settings
509 This sets the option to its standard value, and updates the text
510 accordingly. This also eliminates any saved value for the option,
511 so that you will get the standard value in future Emacs sessions.
512 @end table
513
514 The state of a group indicates whether anything in that group has been
515 edited, set or saved. You can select @samp{Set for Current Session},
516 @samp{Save for Future Sessions} and the various kinds of @samp{Reset}
517 operation for the group; these operations on the group apply to all
518 options in the group and its subgroups.
519
520 Near the top of the customization buffer there are two lines
521 containing several active fields:
522
523 @smallexample
524 [Set for Current Session] [Save for Future Sessions]
525 [Reset] [Reset to Saved] [Reset to Standard] [Bury Buffer]
526 @end smallexample
527
528 @noindent
529 Invoking @samp{[Bury Buffer]} buries this customization buffer. Each of
530 the other fields performs an operation---set, save or reset---on each of
531 the items in the buffer that could meaningfully be set, saved or reset.
532
533 @node Face Customization
534 @subsubsection Customizing Faces
535 @cindex customizing faces
536 @cindex bold font
537 @cindex italic font
538 @cindex fonts and faces
539
540 In addition to user options, some customization groups also include
541 faces. When you show the contents of a group, both the user options and
542 the faces in the group appear in the customization buffer. Here is an
543 example of how a face looks:
544
545 @smallexample
546 Custom Changed Face: (sample)
547 [State]: this face is unchanged from its standard setting.
548 Face used when the customize item has been changed.
549 Attributes: [ ] Bold: [toggle] off
550 [X] Italic: [toggle] on
551 [ ] Underline: [toggle] off
552 [ ] Inverse-Video: [toggle] on
553 [ ] Foreground: black (sample)
554 [ ] Background: white (sample)
555 [ ] Stipple:
556 @end smallexample
557
558 Each face attribute has its own line. The @samp{[@var{x}]} field
559 before the attribute name indicates whether the attribute is
560 @dfn{enabled}; @samp{X} means that it is. You can enable or disable the
561 attribute by invoking that field. When the attribute is enabled, you
562 can change the attribute value in the usual ways.
563
564 On a black-and-white display, the colors you can use for the
565 background are @samp{black}, @samp{white}, @samp{gray}, @samp{gray1},
566 and @samp{gray3}. Emacs supports these shades of gray by using
567 background stipple patterns instead of a color.
568
569 Setting, saving and resetting a face work like the same operations for
570 options (@pxref{Changing an Option}).
571
572 A face can specify different appearances for different types of
573 display. For example, a face can make text red on a color display, but
574 use a bold font on a monochrome display. To specify multiple
575 appearances for a face, select @samp{Show Display Types} in the menu you
576 get from invoking @samp{[State]}.
577
578 @findex modify-face
579 Another more basic way to set the attributes of a specific face is
580 with @kbd{M-x modify-face}. This command reads the name of a face, then
581 reads the attributes one by one. For the color and stipple attributes,
582 the attribute's current value is the default---type just @key{RET} if
583 you don't want to change that attribute. Type @samp{none} if you want
584 to clear out the attribute.
585
586 @node Specific Customization
587 @subsubsection Customizing Specific Items
588
589 Instead of finding the options you want to change by moving down
590 through the structure of groups, you can specify the particular option,
591 face or group that you want to customize.
592
593 @table @kbd
594 @item M-x customize-option @key{RET} @var{option} @key{RET}
595 Set up a customization buffer with just one option, @var{option}.
596 @item M-x customize-face @key{RET} @var{face} @key{RET}
597 Set up a customization buffer with just one face, @var{face}.
598 @item M-x customize-group @key{RET} @var{group} @key{RET}
599 Set up a customization buffer with just one group, @var{group}.
600 @item M-x customize-apropos @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET}
601 Set up a customization buffer with all the options, faces and groups
602 that match @var{regexp}.
603 @item M-x customize-changed-options @key{RET} @var{version} @key{RET}
604 Set up a customization buffer with all the options, faces and groups
605 whose meaning has changed since Emacs version @var{version}.
606 @item M-x customize-saved
607 Set up a customization buffer containing all options and faces that you
608 have saved with customization buffers.
609 @item M-x customize-customized
610 Set up a customization buffer containing all options and faces that you
611 have customized but not saved.
612 @end table
613
614 @findex customize-option
615 If you want to alter a particular user option variable with the
616 customization buffer, and you know its name, you can use the command
617 @kbd{M-x customize-option} and specify the option name. This sets up
618 the customization buffer with just one option---the one that you asked
619 for. Editing, setting and saving the value work as described above, but
620 only for the specified option.
621
622 @findex customize-face
623 Likewise, you can modify a specific face, chosen by name, using
624 @kbd{M-x customize-face}.
625
626 @findex customize-group
627 You can also set up the customization buffer with a specific group,
628 using @kbd{M-x customize-group}. The immediate contents of the chosen
629 group, including option variables, faces, and other groups, all appear
630 as well. However, these subgroups' own contents start out hidden. You
631 can show their contents in the usual way, by invoking @samp{[Show]}.
632
633 @findex customize-apropos
634 To control more precisely what to customize, you can use @kbd{M-x
635 customize-apropos}. You specify a regular expression as argument; then
636 all options, faces and groups whose names match this regular expression
637 are set up in the customization buffer. If you specify an empty regular
638 expression, this includes @emph{all} groups, options and faces in the
639 customization buffer (but that takes a long time).
640
641 @findex customize-changed-options
642 When you upgrade to a new Emacs version, you might want to customize
643 new options and options whose meanings or default values have changed.
644 To do this, use @kbd{M-x customize-changed-options} and specify a
645 previous Emacs version number using the minibuffer. It creates a
646 customization buffer which shows all the options (and groups) whose
647 definitions have been changed since the specified version.
648
649 @findex customize-saved
650 @findex customize-customized
651 If you change option values and then decide the change was a mistake,
652 you can use two special commands to revisit your previous changes. Use
653 @kbd{customize-saved} to look at the options and faces that you have
654 saved. Use @kbd{M-x customize-customized} to look at the options and
655 faces that you have set but not saved.
656
657 @node Hooks
658 @subsection Hooks
659 @cindex hook
660 @cindex hook function
661 @cindex running a hook
662
663 @dfn{Hooks} are an important mechanism for customization of Emacs. A
664 hook is a Lisp variable which holds a list of functions, to be called on
665 some well-defined occasion. (This is called @dfn{running the hook}.)
666 The individual functions in the list are called the @dfn{hook functions}
667 of the hook. With rare exceptions, hooks in Emacs are empty when Emacs
668 starts up, so the only hook functions in any given hook are the ones you
669 explicitly put there as customization.
670
671 Most major modes run one or more @dfn{mode hooks} as the last step of
672 initialization. This makes it easy for you to customize the behavior of
673 the mode, by setting up a hook function to override the local variable
674 assignments already made by the mode. But hooks are also used in other
675 contexts. For example, the hook @code{suspend-hook} runs just before
676 Emacs suspends itself (@pxref{Exiting}).
677
678 @cindex normal hook
679 Most Emacs hooks are @dfn{normal hooks}. This means that running the
680 hook operates by calling all the hook functions, unconditionally, with
681 no arguments. We have made an effort to keep most hooks normal so that
682 you can use them in a uniform way. Every variable in Emacs whose name
683 ends in @samp{-hook} is a normal hook.
684
685 @cindex abnormal hook
686 There are also a few @dfn{abnormal hooks}. These variables' names end
687 in @samp{-hooks} or @samp{-functions}, instead of @samp{-hook}. What
688 makes these hooks abnormal is that there is something peculiar about the
689 way its functions are called---perhaps they are given arguments, or
690 perhaps the values they return are used in some way. For example,
691 @code{find-file-not-found-hooks} (@pxref{Visiting}) is abnormal because
692 as soon as one hook function returns a non-@code{nil} value, the rest
693 are not called at all. The documentation of each abnormal hook variable
694 explains in detail what is peculiar about it.
695
696 The recommended way to add a hook function to a hook (either normal or
697 abnormal) is by calling @code{add-hook}. You can use any valid Lisp
698 function as the hook function, provided it can handle the proper number
699 of arguments (zero arguments, in the case of a normal hook). Of course,
700 not every Lisp function is @emph{useful} in any particular hook.
701
702 For example, here's how to set up a hook to turn on Auto Fill mode
703 when entering Text mode and other modes based on Text mode:
704
705 @example
706 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)
707 @end example
708
709 The next example shows how to use a hook to customize the indentation
710 of C code. (People often have strong personal preferences for one
711 format compared to another.) Here the hook function is an anonymous
712 lambda expression.
713
714 @example
715 @group
716 (setq my-c-style
717 '((c-comment-only-line-offset . 4)
718 @end group
719 @group
720 (c-cleanup-list . (scope-operator
721 empty-defun-braces
722 defun-close-semi))
723 @end group
724 @group
725 (c-offsets-alist . ((arglist-close . c-lineup-arglist)
726 (substatement-open . 0)))))
727 @end group
728
729 @group
730 (add-hook 'c-mode-common-hook
731 (function (lambda ()
732 (c-add-style "my-style" my-c-style t))))
733 @end group
734 @end example
735
736 It is best to design your hook functions so that the order in which
737 they are executed does not matter. Any dependence on the order is
738 ``asking for trouble.'' However, the order is predictable: the most
739 recently added hook functions are executed first.
740
741 @node Locals
742 @subsection Local Variables
743
744 @table @kbd
745 @item M-x make-local-variable @key{RET} @var{var} @key{RET}
746 Make variable @var{var} have a local value in the current buffer.
747 @item M-x kill-local-variable @key{RET} @var{var} @key{RET}
748 Make variable @var{var} use its global value in the current buffer.
749 @item M-x make-variable-buffer-local @key{RET} @var{var} @key{RET}
750 Mark variable @var{var} so that setting it will make it local to the
751 buffer that is current at that time.
752 @end table
753
754 @cindex local variables
755 Almost any variable can be made @dfn{local} to a specific Emacs
756 buffer. This means that its value in that buffer is independent of its
757 value in other buffers. A few variables are always local in every
758 buffer. Every other Emacs variable has a @dfn{global} value which is in
759 effect in all buffers that have not made the variable local.
760
761 @findex make-local-variable
762 @kbd{M-x make-local-variable} reads the name of a variable and makes it
763 local to the current buffer. Further changes in this buffer will not
764 affect others, and further changes in the global value will not affect this
765 buffer.
766
767 @findex make-variable-buffer-local
768 @cindex per-buffer variables
769 @kbd{M-x make-variable-buffer-local} reads the name of a variable and
770 changes the future behavior of the variable so that it will become local
771 automatically when it is set. More precisely, once a variable has been
772 marked in this way, the usual ways of setting the variable automatically
773 do @code{make-local-variable} first. We call such variables
774 @dfn{per-buffer} variables.
775
776 Major modes (@pxref{Major Modes}) always make variables local to the
777 buffer before setting the variables. This is why changing major modes
778 in one buffer has no effect on other buffers. Minor modes also work by
779 setting variables---normally, each minor mode has one controlling
780 variable which is non-@code{nil} when the mode is enabled (@pxref{Minor
781 Modes}). For most minor modes, the controlling variable is per buffer.
782
783 Emacs contains a number of variables that are always per-buffer.
784 These include @code{abbrev-mode}, @code{auto-fill-function},
785 @code{case-fold-search}, @code{comment-column}, @code{ctl-arrow},
786 @code{fill-column}, @code{fill-prefix}, @code{indent-tabs-mode},
787 @code{left-margin}, @code{mode-line-format}, @code{overwrite-mode},
788 @code{selective-display-ellipses}, @code{selective-display},
789 @code{tab-width}, and @code{truncate-lines}. Some other variables are
790 always local in every buffer, but they are used for internal
791 purposes.@refill
792
793 A few variables cannot be local to a buffer because they are always
794 local to each display instead (@pxref{Multiple Displays}). If you try to
795 make one of these variables buffer-local, you'll get an error message.
796
797 @findex kill-local-variable
798 @kbd{M-x kill-local-variable} reads the name of a variable and makes
799 it cease to be local to the current buffer. The global value of the
800 variable henceforth is in effect in this buffer. Setting the major mode
801 kills all the local variables of the buffer except for a few variables
802 specially marked as @dfn{permanent locals}.
803
804 @findex setq-default
805 To set the global value of a variable, regardless of whether the
806 variable has a local value in the current buffer, you can use the Lisp
807 construct @code{setq-default}. This construct is used just like
808 @code{setq}, but it sets variables' global values instead of their local
809 values (if any). When the current buffer does have a local value, the
810 new global value may not be visible until you switch to another buffer.
811 Here is an example:
812
813 @example
814 (setq-default fill-column 75)
815 @end example
816
817 @noindent
818 @code{setq-default} is the only way to set the global value of a variable
819 that has been marked with @code{make-variable-buffer-local}.
820
821 @findex default-value
822 Lisp programs can use @code{default-value} to look at a variable's
823 default value. This function takes a symbol as argument and returns its
824 default value. The argument is evaluated; usually you must quote it
825 explicitly. For example, here's how to obtain the default value of
826 @code{fill-column}:
827
828 @example
829 (default-value 'fill-column)
830 @end example
831
832 @node File Variables
833 @subsection Local Variables in Files
834 @cindex local variables in files
835 @cindex file local variables
836
837 A file can specify local variable values for use when you edit the
838 file with Emacs. Visiting the file checks for local variable
839 specifications; it automatically makes these variables local to the
840 buffer, and sets them to the values specified in the file.
841
842 There are two ways to specify local variable values: in the first
843 line, or with a local variables list. Here's how to specify them in the
844 first line:
845
846 @example
847 -*- mode: @var{modename}; @var{var}: @var{value}; @dots{} -*-
848 @end example
849
850 @noindent
851 You can specify any number of variables/value pairs in this way, each
852 pair with a colon and semicolon as shown above. @code{mode:
853 @var{modename};} specifies the major mode; this should come first in the
854 line. The @var{value}s are not evaluated; they are used literally.
855 Here is an example that specifies Lisp mode and sets two variables with
856 numeric values:
857
858 @smallexample
859 ;; -*-mode: Lisp; fill-column: 75; comment-column: 50; -*-
860 @end smallexample
861
862 You can also specify the coding system for a file in this way: just
863 specify a value for the ``variable'' named @code{coding}. The ``value''
864 must be a coding system name that Emacs recognizes. @xref{Coding
865 Systems}.
866
867 A @dfn{local variables list} goes near the end of the file, in the
868 last page. (It is often best to put it on a page by itself.) The local
869 variables list starts with a line containing the string @samp{Local
870 Variables:}, and ends with a line containing the string @samp{End:}. In
871 between come the variable names and values, one set per line, as
872 @samp{@var{variable}:@: @var{value}}. The @var{value}s are not
873 evaluated; they are used literally. If a file has both a local
874 variables list and a @samp{-*-} line, Emacs processes @emph{everything}
875 in the @samp{-*-} line first, and @emph{everything} in the local
876 variables list afterward.
877
878 Here is an example of a local variables list:
879
880 @example
881 ;;; Local Variables: ***
882 ;;; mode:lisp ***
883 ;;; comment-column:0 ***
884 ;;; comment-start: ";;; " ***
885 ;;; comment-end:"***" ***
886 ;;; End: ***
887 @end example
888
889 As you see, each line starts with the prefix @samp{;;; } and each line
890 ends with the suffix @samp{ ***}. Emacs recognizes these as the prefix
891 and suffix based on the first line of the list, by finding them
892 surrounding the magic string @samp{Local Variables:}; then it
893 automatically discards them from the other lines of the list.
894
895 The usual reason for using a prefix and/or suffix is to embed the
896 local variables list in a comment, so it won't confuse other programs
897 that the file is intended as input for. The example above is for a
898 language where comment lines start with @samp{;;; } and end with
899 @samp{***}; the local values for @code{comment-start} and
900 @code{comment-end} customize the rest of Emacs for this unusual syntax.
901 Don't use a prefix (or a suffix) if you don't need one.
902
903 Two ``variable names'' have special meanings in a local variables
904 list: a value for the variable @code{mode} really sets the major mode,
905 and a value for the variable @code{eval} is simply evaluated as an
906 expression and the value is ignored. @code{mode} and @code{eval} are
907 not real variables; setting variables named @code{mode} and @code{eval}
908 in any other context has no special meaning. If @code{mode} is used to
909 set a major mode, it should be the first ``variable'' in the list.
910
911 You can use the @code{mode} ``variable'' to set minor modes as well as
912 major modes; in fact, you can use it more than once, first to set the
913 major mode and then to set minor modes which are specific to particular
914 buffers. But most minor modes should not be specified in the file in
915 any fashion, because they represent user preferences.
916
917 For example, you may be tempted to try to turn on Auto Fill mode with
918 a local variable list. That is a mistake. The choice of Auto Fill mode
919 or not is a matter of individual taste, not a matter of the contents of
920 particular files. If you want to use Auto Fill, set up major mode hooks
921 with your @file{.emacs} file to turn it on (when appropriate) for you
922 alone (@pxref{Init File}). Don't use a local variable list to impose
923 your taste on everyone.
924
925 The start of the local variables list must be no more than 3000
926 characters from the end of the file, and must be in the last page if the
927 file is divided into pages. Otherwise, Emacs will not notice it is
928 there. The purpose of this rule is so that a stray @samp{Local
929 Variables:}@: not in the last page does not confuse Emacs, and so that
930 visiting a long file that is all one page and has no local variables
931 list need not take the time to search the whole file.
932
933 Use the command @code{normal-mode} to reset the local variables and
934 major mode of a buffer according to the file name and contents,
935 including the local variables list if any. @xref{Choosing Modes}.
936
937 @findex enable-local-variables
938 The variable @code{enable-local-variables} controls whether to process
939 local variables in files, and thus gives you a chance to override them.
940 Its default value is @code{t}, which means do process local variables in
941 files. If you set the value to @code{nil}, Emacs simply ignores local
942 variables in files. Any other value says to query you about each file
943 that has local variables, showing you the local variable specifications
944 so you can judge.
945
946 @findex enable-local-eval
947 The @code{eval} ``variable,'' and certain actual variables, create a
948 special risk; when you visit someone else's file, local variable
949 specifications for these could affect your Emacs in arbitrary ways.
950 Therefore, the option @code{enable-local-eval} controls whether Emacs
951 processes @code{eval} variables, as well variables with names that end
952 in @samp{-hook}, @samp{-hooks}, @samp{-function} or @samp{-functions},
953 and certain other variables. The three possibilities for the option's
954 value are @code{t}, @code{nil}, and anything else, just as for
955 @code{enable-local-variables}. The default is @code{maybe}, which is
956 neither @code{t} nor @code{nil}, so normally Emacs does ask for
957 confirmation about file settings for these variables.
958
959 @node Keyboard Macros
960 @section Keyboard Macros
961
962 @cindex defining keyboard macros
963 @cindex keyboard macro
964 A @dfn{keyboard macro} is a command defined by the user to stand for
965 another sequence of keys. For example, if you discover that you are
966 about to type @kbd{C-n C-d} forty times, you can speed your work by
967 defining a keyboard macro to do @kbd{C-n C-d} and calling it with a
968 repeat count of forty.
969
970 @c widecommands
971 @table @kbd
972 @item C-x (
973 Start defining a keyboard macro (@code{start-kbd-macro}).
974 @item C-x )
975 End the definition of a keyboard macro (@code{end-kbd-macro}).
976 @item C-x e
977 Execute the most recent keyboard macro (@code{call-last-kbd-macro}).
978 @item C-u C-x (
979 Re-execute last keyboard macro, then add more keys to its definition.
980 @item C-x q
981 When this point is reached during macro execution, ask for confirmation
982 (@code{kbd-macro-query}).
983 @item M-x name-last-kbd-macro
984 Give a command name (for the duration of the session) to the most
985 recently defined keyboard macro.
986 @item M-x insert-kbd-macro
987 Insert in the buffer a keyboard macro's definition, as Lisp code.
988 @item C-x C-k
989 Edit a previously defined keyboard macro (@code{edit-kbd-macro}).
990 @item M-x apply-macro-to-region-lines
991 Run the last keyboard macro on each complete line in the region.
992 @end table
993
994 Keyboard macros differ from ordinary Emacs commands in that they are
995 written in the Emacs command language rather than in Lisp. This makes it
996 easier for the novice to write them, and makes them more convenient as
997 temporary hacks. However, the Emacs command language is not powerful
998 enough as a programming language to be useful for writing anything
999 intelligent or general. For such things, Lisp must be used.
1000
1001 You define a keyboard macro while executing the commands which are the
1002 definition. Put differently, as you define a keyboard macro, the
1003 definition is being executed for the first time. This way, you can see
1004 what the effects of your commands are, so that you don't have to figure
1005 them out in your head. When you are finished, the keyboard macro is
1006 defined and also has been, in effect, executed once. You can then do the
1007 whole thing over again by invoking the macro.
1008
1009 @menu
1010 * Basic Kbd Macro:: Defining and running keyboard macros.
1011 * Save Kbd Macro:: Giving keyboard macros names; saving them in files.
1012 * Kbd Macro Query:: Making keyboard macros do different things each time.
1013 @end menu
1014
1015 @node Basic Kbd Macro
1016 @subsection Basic Use
1017
1018 @kindex C-x (
1019 @kindex C-x )
1020 @kindex C-x e
1021 @findex start-kbd-macro
1022 @findex end-kbd-macro
1023 @findex call-last-kbd-macro
1024 To start defining a keyboard macro, type the @kbd{C-x (} command
1025 (@code{start-kbd-macro}). From then on, your keys continue to be
1026 executed, but also become part of the definition of the macro. @samp{Def}
1027 appears in the mode line to remind you of what is going on. When you are
1028 finished, the @kbd{C-x )} command (@code{end-kbd-macro}) terminates the
1029 definition (without becoming part of it!). For example,
1030
1031 @example
1032 C-x ( M-f foo C-x )
1033 @end example
1034
1035 @noindent
1036 defines a macro to move forward a word and then insert @samp{foo}.
1037
1038 The macro thus defined can be invoked again with the @kbd{C-x e}
1039 command (@code{call-last-kbd-macro}), which may be given a repeat count
1040 as a numeric argument to execute the macro many times. @kbd{C-x )} can
1041 also be given a repeat count as an argument, in which case it repeats
1042 the macro that many times right after defining it, but defining the
1043 macro counts as the first repetition (since it is executed as you define
1044 it). Therefore, giving @kbd{C-x )} an argument of 4 executes the macro
1045 immediately 3 additional times. An argument of zero to @kbd{C-x e} or
1046 @kbd{C-x )} means repeat the macro indefinitely (until it gets an error
1047 or you type @kbd{C-g} or, on MS-DOS, @kbd{C-@key{BREAK}}).
1048
1049 If you wish to repeat an operation at regularly spaced places in the
1050 text, define a macro and include as part of the macro the commands to move
1051 to the next place you want to use it. For example, if you want to change
1052 each line, you should position point at the start of a line, and define a
1053 macro to change that line and leave point at the start of the next line.
1054 Then repeating the macro will operate on successive lines.
1055
1056 After you have terminated the definition of a keyboard macro, you can add
1057 to the end of its definition by typing @kbd{C-u C-x (}. This is equivalent
1058 to plain @kbd{C-x (} followed by retyping the whole definition so far. As
1059 a consequence it re-executes the macro as previously defined.
1060
1061 You can use function keys in a keyboard macro, just like keyboard
1062 keys. You can even use mouse events, but be careful about that: when
1063 the macro replays the mouse event, it uses the original mouse position
1064 of that event, the position that the mouse had while you were defining
1065 the macro. The effect of this may be hard to predict. (Using the
1066 current mouse position would be even less predictable.)
1067
1068 One thing that doesn't always work well in a keyboard macro is the
1069 command @kbd{C-M-c} (@code{exit-recursive-edit}). When this command
1070 exits a recursive edit that started within the macro, it works as you'd
1071 expect. But if it exits a recursive edit that started before you
1072 invoked the keyboard macro, it also necessarily exits the keyboard macro
1073 as part of the process.
1074
1075 @findex edit-kbd-macro
1076 @kindex C-x C-k
1077 You can edit a keyboard macro already defined by typing @kbd{C-x C-k}
1078 (@code{edit-kbd-macro}). Follow that with the keyboard input that you
1079 would use to invoke the macro---@kbd{C-x e} or @kbd{M-x @var{name}} or
1080 some other key sequence. This formats the macro definition in a buffer
1081 and enters a specialized major mode for editing it. Type @kbd{C-h m}
1082 once in that buffer to display details of how to edit the macro. When
1083 you are finished editing, type @kbd{C-c C-c}.
1084
1085 @findex apply-macro-to-region-lines
1086 The command @kbd{M-x apply-macro-to-region-lines} repeats the last
1087 defined keyboard macro on each complete line within the current region.
1088 It does this line by line, by moving point to the beginning of the line
1089 and then executing the macro.
1090
1091 @node Save Kbd Macro
1092 @subsection Naming and Saving Keyboard Macros
1093
1094 @cindex saving keyboard macros
1095 @findex name-last-kbd-macro
1096 If you wish to save a keyboard macro for longer than until you define the
1097 next one, you must give it a name using @kbd{M-x name-last-kbd-macro}.
1098 This reads a name as an argument using the minibuffer and defines that name
1099 to execute the macro. The macro name is a Lisp symbol, and defining it in
1100 this way makes it a valid command name for calling with @kbd{M-x} or for
1101 binding a key to with @code{global-set-key} (@pxref{Keymaps}). If you
1102 specify a name that has a prior definition other than another keyboard
1103 macro, an error message is printed and nothing is changed.
1104
1105 @findex insert-kbd-macro
1106 Once a macro has a command name, you can save its definition in a file.
1107 Then it can be used in another editing session. First, visit the file
1108 you want to save the definition in. Then use this command:
1109
1110 @example
1111 M-x insert-kbd-macro @key{RET} @var{macroname} @key{RET}
1112 @end example
1113
1114 @noindent
1115 This inserts some Lisp code that, when executed later, will define the
1116 same macro with the same definition it has now. (You need not
1117 understand Lisp code to do this, because @code{insert-kbd-macro} writes
1118 the Lisp code for you.) Then save the file. You can load the file
1119 later with @code{load-file} (@pxref{Lisp Libraries}). If the file you
1120 save in is your init file @file{~/.emacs} (@pxref{Init File}) then the
1121 macro will be defined each time you run Emacs.
1122
1123 If you give @code{insert-kbd-macro} a numeric argument, it makes
1124 additional Lisp code to record the keys (if any) that you have bound to the
1125 keyboard macro, so that the macro will be reassigned the same keys when you
1126 load the file.
1127
1128 @node Kbd Macro Query
1129 @subsection Executing Macros with Variations
1130
1131 @kindex C-x q
1132 @findex kbd-macro-query
1133 Using @kbd{C-x q} (@code{kbd-macro-query}), you can get an effect
1134 similar to that of @code{query-replace}, where the macro asks you each
1135 time around whether to make a change. While defining the macro,
1136 type @kbd{C-x q} at the point where you want the query to occur. During
1137 macro definition, the @kbd{C-x q} does nothing, but when you run the
1138 macro later, @kbd{C-x q} asks you interactively whether to continue.
1139
1140 The valid responses when @kbd{C-x q} asks are @key{SPC} (or @kbd{y}),
1141 @key{DEL} (or @kbd{n}), @key{RET} (or @kbd{q}), @kbd{C-l} and @kbd{C-r}.
1142 The answers are the same as in @code{query-replace}, though not all of
1143 the @code{query-replace} options are meaningful.
1144
1145 These responses include @key{SPC} to continue, and @key{DEL} to skip
1146 the remainder of this repetition of the macro and start right away with
1147 the next repetition. @key{RET} means to skip the remainder of this
1148 repetition and cancel further repetitions. @kbd{C-l} redraws the screen
1149 and asks you again for a character to say what to do.
1150
1151 @kbd{C-r} enters a recursive editing level, in which you can perform
1152 editing which is not part of the macro. When you exit the recursive
1153 edit using @kbd{C-M-c}, you are asked again how to continue with the
1154 keyboard macro. If you type a @key{SPC} at this time, the rest of the
1155 macro definition is executed. It is up to you to leave point and the
1156 text in a state such that the rest of the macro will do what you
1157 want.@refill
1158
1159 @kbd{C-u C-x q}, which is @kbd{C-x q} with a numeric argument,
1160 performs a completely different function. It enters a recursive edit
1161 reading input from the keyboard, both when you type it during the
1162 definition of the macro, and when it is executed from the macro. During
1163 definition, the editing you do inside the recursive edit does not become
1164 part of the macro. During macro execution, the recursive edit gives you
1165 a chance to do some particularized editing on each repetition.
1166 @xref{Recursive Edit}.
1167
1168 Another way to vary the behavior of a keyboard macro is to use a
1169 register as a counter, incrementing it on each repetition of the macro.
1170 @xref{RegNumbers}.
1171
1172 @node Key Bindings
1173 @section Customizing Key Bindings
1174 @cindex key bindings
1175
1176 This section describes @dfn{key bindings}, which map keys to commands,
1177 and @dfn{keymaps}, which record key bindings. It also explains how
1178 to customize key bindings.
1179
1180 Recall that a command is a Lisp function whose definition provides for
1181 interactive use. Like every Lisp function, a command has a function
1182 name which usually consists of lower-case letters and hyphens.
1183
1184 @menu
1185 * Keymaps:: Generalities. The global keymap.
1186 * Prefix Keymaps:: Keymaps for prefix keys.
1187 * Local Keymaps:: Major and minor modes have their own keymaps.
1188 * Minibuffer Maps:: The minibuffer uses its own local keymaps.
1189 * Rebinding:: How to redefine one key's meaning conveniently.
1190 * Init Rebinding:: Rebinding keys with your init file, @file{.emacs}.
1191 * Function Keys:: Rebinding terminal function keys.
1192 * Named ASCII Chars:: Distinguishing @key{TAB} from @kbd{C-i}, and so on.
1193 * Non-ASCII Rebinding:: Rebinding non-ASCII characters such as Latin-1.
1194 * Mouse Buttons:: Rebinding mouse buttons in Emacs.
1195 * Disabling:: Disabling a command means confirmation is required
1196 before it can be executed. This is done to protect
1197 beginners from surprises.
1198 @end menu
1199
1200 @node Keymaps
1201 @subsection Keymaps
1202 @cindex keymap
1203
1204 The bindings between key sequences and command functions are recorded
1205 in data structures called @dfn{keymaps}. Emacs has many of these, each
1206 used on particular occasions.
1207
1208 Recall that a @dfn{key sequence} (@dfn{key}, for short) is a sequence
1209 of @dfn{input events} that have a meaning as a unit. Input events
1210 include characters, function keys and mouse buttons---all the inputs
1211 that you can send to the computer with your terminal. A key sequence
1212 gets its meaning from its @dfn{binding}, which says what command it
1213 runs. The function of keymaps is to record these bindings.
1214
1215 @cindex global keymap
1216 The @dfn{global} keymap is the most important keymap because it is
1217 always in effect. The global keymap defines keys for Fundamental mode;
1218 most of these definitions are common to most or all major modes. Each
1219 major or minor mode can have its own keymap which overrides the global
1220 definitions of some keys.
1221
1222 For example, a self-inserting character such as @kbd{g} is
1223 self-inserting because the global keymap binds it to the command
1224 @code{self-insert-command}. The standard Emacs editing characters such
1225 as @kbd{C-a} also get their standard meanings from the global keymap.
1226 Commands to rebind keys, such as @kbd{M-x global-set-key}, actually work
1227 by storing the new binding in the proper place in the global map.
1228 @xref{Rebinding}.
1229
1230 Meta characters work differently; Emacs translates each Meta
1231 character into a pair of characters starting with @key{ESC}. When you
1232 type the character @kbd{M-a} in a key sequence, Emacs replaces it with
1233 @kbd{@key{ESC} a}. A meta key comes in as a single input event, but
1234 becomes two events for purposes of key bindings. The reason for this is
1235 historical, and we might change it someday.
1236
1237 @cindex function key
1238 Most modern keyboards have function keys as well as character keys.
1239 Function keys send input events just as character keys do, and keymaps
1240 can have bindings for them.
1241
1242 On many terminals, typing a function key actually sends the computer a
1243 sequence of characters; the precise details of the sequence depends on
1244 which function key and on the model of terminal you are using. (Often
1245 the sequence starts with @kbd{@key{ESC} [}.) If Emacs understands your
1246 terminal type properly, it recognizes the character sequences forming
1247 function keys wherever they occur in a key sequence (not just at the
1248 beginning). Thus, for most purposes, you can pretend the function keys
1249 reach Emacs directly and ignore their encoding as character sequences.
1250
1251 @cindex mouse
1252 Mouse buttons also produce input events. These events come with other
1253 data---the window and position where you pressed or released the button,
1254 and a time stamp. But only the choice of button matters for key
1255 bindings; the other data matters only if a command looks at it.
1256 (Commands designed for mouse invocation usually do look at the other
1257 data.)
1258
1259 A keymap records definitions for single events. Interpreting a key
1260 sequence of multiple events involves a chain of keymaps. The first
1261 keymap gives a definition for the first event; this definition is
1262 another keymap, which is used to look up the second event in the
1263 sequence, and so on.
1264
1265 Key sequences can mix function keys and characters. For example,
1266 @kbd{C-x @key{SELECT}} is meaningful. If you make @key{SELECT} a prefix
1267 key, then @kbd{@key{SELECT} C-n} makes sense. You can even mix mouse
1268 events with keyboard events, but we recommend against it, because such
1269 sequences are inconvenient to type in.
1270
1271 As a user, you can redefine any key; but it might be best to stick to
1272 key sequences that consist of @kbd{C-c} followed by a letter. These
1273 keys are ``reserved for users,'' so they won't conflict with any
1274 properly designed Emacs extension. The function keys @key{F5} through
1275 @key{F9} are also reserved for users. If you redefine some other key,
1276 your definition may be overridden by certain extensions or major modes
1277 which redefine the same key.
1278
1279 @node Prefix Keymaps
1280 @subsection Prefix Keymaps
1281
1282 A prefix key such as @kbd{C-x} or @key{ESC} has its own keymap,
1283 which holds the definition for the event that immediately follows
1284 that prefix.
1285
1286 The definition of a prefix key is usually the keymap to use for
1287 looking up the following event. The definition can also be a Lisp
1288 symbol whose function definition is the following keymap; the effect is
1289 the same, but it provides a command name for the prefix key that can be
1290 used as a description of what the prefix key is for. Thus, the binding
1291 of @kbd{C-x} is the symbol @code{Ctl-X-Prefix}, whose function
1292 definition is the keymap for @kbd{C-x} commands. The definitions of
1293 @kbd{C-c}, @kbd{C-x}, @kbd{C-h} and @key{ESC} as prefix keys appear in
1294 the global map, so these prefix keys are always available.
1295
1296 Aside from ordinary prefix keys, there is a fictitious ``prefix key''
1297 which represents the menu bar; see @ref{Menu Bar,,,elisp, The Emacs Lisp
1298 Reference Manual}, for special information about menu bar key bindings.
1299 Mouse button events that invoke pop-up menus are also prefix keys; see
1300 @ref{Menu Keymaps,,,elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for more
1301 details.
1302
1303 Some prefix keymaps are stored in variables with names:
1304
1305 @itemize @bullet
1306 @item
1307 @vindex ctl-x-map
1308 @code{ctl-x-map} is the variable name for the map used for characters that
1309 follow @kbd{C-x}.
1310 @item
1311 @vindex help-map
1312 @code{help-map} is for characters that follow @kbd{C-h}.
1313 @item
1314 @vindex esc-map
1315 @code{esc-map} is for characters that follow @key{ESC}. Thus, all Meta
1316 characters are actually defined by this map.
1317 @item
1318 @vindex ctl-x-4-map
1319 @code{ctl-x-4-map} is for characters that follow @kbd{C-x 4}.
1320 @item
1321 @vindex mode-specific-map
1322 @code{mode-specific-map} is for characters that follow @kbd{C-c}.
1323 @end itemize
1324
1325 @node Local Keymaps
1326 @subsection Local Keymaps
1327
1328 @cindex local keymap
1329 So far we have explained the ins and outs of the global map. Major
1330 modes customize Emacs by providing their own key bindings in @dfn{local
1331 keymaps}. For example, C mode overrides @key{TAB} to make it indent the
1332 current line for C code. Portions of text in the buffer can specify
1333 their own keymaps to substitute for the keymap of the buffer's major
1334 mode.
1335
1336 @cindex minor mode keymap
1337 Minor modes can also have local keymaps. Whenever a minor mode is
1338 in effect, the definitions in its keymap override both the major
1339 mode's local keymap and the global keymap.
1340
1341 @vindex c-mode-map
1342 @vindex lisp-mode-map
1343 The local keymaps for Lisp mode and several other major modes always
1344 exist even when not in use. These are kept in variables named
1345 @code{lisp-mode-map} and so on. For major modes less often used, the
1346 local keymap is normally constructed only when the mode is used for the
1347 first time in a session. This is to save space. If you wish to change
1348 one of these keymaps, you must use the major mode's @dfn{mode
1349 hook}---see below.
1350
1351 All minor mode keymaps are created in advance. There is no way to
1352 defer their creation until the first time the minor mode is enabled.
1353
1354 A local keymap can locally redefine a key as a prefix key by defining
1355 it as a prefix keymap. If the key is also defined globally as a prefix,
1356 then its local and global definitions (both keymaps) effectively
1357 combine: both of them are used to look up the event that follows the
1358 prefix key. Thus, if the mode's local keymap defines @kbd{C-c} as
1359 another keymap, and that keymap defines @kbd{C-z} as a command, this
1360 provides a local meaning for @kbd{C-c C-z}. This does not affect other
1361 sequences that start with @kbd{C-c}; if those sequences don't have their
1362 own local bindings, their global bindings remain in effect.
1363
1364 Another way to think of this is that Emacs handles a multi-event key
1365 sequence by looking in several keymaps, one by one, for a binding of the
1366 whole key sequence. First it checks the minor mode keymaps for minor
1367 modes that are enabled, then it checks the major mode's keymap, and then
1368 it checks the global keymap. This is not precisely how key lookup
1369 works, but it's good enough for understanding ordinary circumstances.
1370
1371 @cindex rebinding major mode keys
1372 To change the local bindings of a major mode, you must change the
1373 mode's local keymap. Normally you must wait until the first time the
1374 mode is used, because most major modes don't create their keymaps until
1375 then. If you want to specify something in your @file{~/.emacs} file to
1376 change a major mode's bindings, you must use the mode's mode hook to
1377 delay the change until the mode is first used.
1378
1379 For example, the command @code{texinfo-mode} to select Texinfo mode
1380 runs the hook @code{texinfo-mode-hook}. Here's how you can use the hook
1381 to add local bindings (not very useful, we admit) for @kbd{C-c n} and
1382 @kbd{C-c p} in Texinfo mode:
1383
1384 @example
1385 (add-hook 'texinfo-mode-hook
1386 '(lambda ()
1387 (define-key texinfo-mode-map
1388 "\C-cp"
1389 'backward-paragraph)
1390 (define-key texinfo-mode-map
1391 "\C-cn"
1392 'forward-paragraph)
1393 ))
1394 @end example
1395
1396 @xref{Hooks}.
1397
1398 @node Minibuffer Maps
1399 @subsection Minibuffer Keymaps
1400
1401 @cindex minibuffer keymaps
1402 @vindex minibuffer-local-map
1403 @vindex minibuffer-local-ns-map
1404 @vindex minibuffer-local-completion-map
1405 @vindex minibuffer-local-must-match-map
1406 The minibuffer has its own set of local keymaps; they contain various
1407 completion and exit commands.
1408
1409 @itemize @bullet
1410 @item
1411 @code{minibuffer-local-map} is used for ordinary input (no completion).
1412 @item
1413 @code{minibuffer-local-ns-map} is similar, except that @key{SPC} exits
1414 just like @key{RET}. This is used mainly for Mocklisp compatibility.
1415 @item
1416 @code{minibuffer-local-completion-map} is for permissive completion.
1417 @item
1418 @code{minibuffer-local-must-match-map} is for strict completion and
1419 for cautious completion.
1420 @end itemize
1421
1422 @node Rebinding
1423 @subsection Changing Key Bindings Interactively
1424 @cindex key rebinding, this session
1425 @cindex rebinding keys, this session
1426
1427 The way to redefine an Emacs key is to change its entry in a keymap.
1428 You can change the global keymap, in which case the change is effective in
1429 all major modes (except those that have their own overriding local
1430 definitions for the same key). Or you can change the current buffer's
1431 local map, which affects all buffers using the same major mode.
1432
1433 @findex global-set-key
1434 @findex local-set-key
1435 @findex global-unset-key
1436 @findex local-unset-key
1437 @table @kbd
1438 @item M-x global-set-key @key{RET} @var{key} @var{cmd} @key{RET}
1439 Define @var{key} globally to run @var{cmd}.
1440 @item M-x local-set-key @key{RET} @var{key} @var{cmd} @key{RET}
1441 Define @var{key} locally (in the major mode now in effect) to run
1442 @var{cmd}.
1443 @item M-x global-unset-key @key{RET} @var{key}
1444 Make @var{key} undefined in the global map.
1445 @item M-x local-unset-key @key{RET} @var{key}
1446 Make @var{key} undefined locally (in the major mode now in effect).
1447 @end table
1448
1449 For example, suppose you like to execute commands in a subshell within
1450 an Emacs buffer, instead of suspending Emacs and executing commands in
1451 your login shell. Normally, @kbd{C-z} is bound to the function
1452 @code{suspend-emacs} (when not using the X Window System), but you can
1453 change @kbd{C-z} to invoke an interactive subshell within Emacs, by
1454 binding it to @code{shell} as follows:
1455
1456 @example
1457 M-x global-set-key @key{RET} C-z shell @key{RET}
1458 @end example
1459
1460 @noindent
1461 @code{global-set-key} reads the command name after the key. After you
1462 press the key, a message like this appears so that you can confirm that
1463 you are binding the key you want:
1464
1465 @example
1466 Set key C-z to command:
1467 @end example
1468
1469 You can redefine function keys and mouse events in the same way; just
1470 type the function key or click the mouse when it's time to specify the
1471 key to rebind.
1472
1473 You can rebind a key that contains more than one event in the same
1474 way. Emacs keeps reading the key to rebind until it is a complete key
1475 (that is, not a prefix key). Thus, if you type @kbd{C-f} for
1476 @var{key}, that's the end; the minibuffer is entered immediately to
1477 read @var{cmd}. But if you type @kbd{C-x}, another character is read;
1478 if that is @kbd{4}, another character is read, and so on. For
1479 example,
1480
1481 @example
1482 M-x global-set-key @key{RET} C-x 4 $ spell-other-window @key{RET}
1483 @end example
1484
1485 @noindent
1486 redefines @kbd{C-x 4 $} to run the (fictitious) command
1487 @code{spell-other-window}.
1488
1489 The two-character keys consisting of @kbd{C-c} followed by a letter
1490 are reserved for user customizations. Lisp programs are not supposed to
1491 define these keys, so the bindings you make for them will be available
1492 in all major modes and will never get in the way of anything.
1493
1494 You can remove the global definition of a key with
1495 @code{global-unset-key}. This makes the key @dfn{undefined}; if you
1496 type it, Emacs will just beep. Similarly, @code{local-unset-key} makes
1497 a key undefined in the current major mode keymap, which makes the global
1498 definition (or lack of one) come back into effect in that major mode.
1499
1500 If you have redefined (or undefined) a key and you subsequently wish
1501 to retract the change, undefining the key will not do the job---you need
1502 to redefine the key with its standard definition. To find the name of
1503 the standard definition of a key, go to a Fundamental mode buffer and
1504 use @kbd{C-h c}. The documentation of keys in this manual also lists
1505 their command names.
1506
1507 If you want to prevent yourself from invoking a command by mistake, it
1508 is better to disable the command than to undefine the key. A disabled
1509 command is less work to invoke when you really want to.
1510 @xref{Disabling}.
1511
1512 @node Init Rebinding
1513 @subsection Rebinding Keys in Your Init File
1514
1515 @findex define-key
1516 @findex substitute-key-definition
1517 If you have a set of key bindings that you like to use all the time,
1518 you can specify them in your @file{.emacs} file by using their Lisp
1519 syntax.
1520
1521 The simplest method for doing this works for ASCII characters and
1522 Meta-modified ASCII characters only. This method uses a string to
1523 represent the key sequence you want to rebind. For example, here's how
1524 to bind @kbd{C-z} to @code{shell}:
1525
1526 @example
1527 (global-set-key "\C-z" 'shell)
1528 @end example
1529
1530 @noindent
1531 This example uses a string constant containing one character, @kbd{C-z}.
1532 The single-quote before the command name, @code{shell}, marks it as a
1533 constant symbol rather than a variable. If you omit the quote, Emacs
1534 would try to evaluate @code{shell} immediately as a variable. This
1535 probably causes an error; it certainly isn't what you want.
1536
1537 Here is another example that binds a key sequence two characters long:
1538
1539 @example
1540 (global-set-key "\C-xl" 'make-symbolic-link)
1541 @end example
1542
1543 When the key sequence includes function keys or mouse button events,
1544 or non-ASCII characters such as @code{C-=} or @code{H-a}, you must use
1545 the more general method of rebinding, which uses a vector to specify the
1546 key sequence.
1547
1548 The way to write a vector in Emacs Lisp is with square brackets around
1549 the vector elements. Use spaces to separate the elements. If an
1550 element is a symbol, simply write the symbol's name---no other
1551 delimiters or punctuation are needed. If a vector element is a
1552 character, write it as a Lisp character constant: @samp{?} followed by
1553 the character as it would appear in a string.
1554
1555 Here are examples of using vectors to rebind @kbd{C-=} (a control
1556 character outside of ASCII), @kbd{H-a} (a Hyper character; ASCII doesn't
1557 have Hyper at all), @key{F7} (a function key), and @kbd{C-Mouse-1} (a
1558 keyboard-modified mouse button):
1559
1560 @example
1561 (global-set-key [?\C-=] 'make-symbolic-link)
1562 (global-set-key [?\H-a] 'make-symbolic-link)
1563 (global-set-key [f7] 'make-symbolic-link)
1564 (global-set-key [C-mouse-1] 'make-symbolic-link)
1565 @end example
1566
1567 You can use a vector for the simple cases too. Here's how to rewrite
1568 the first two examples, above, to use vectors:
1569
1570 @example
1571 (global-set-key [?\C-z] 'shell)
1572
1573 (global-set-key [?\C-x ?l] 'make-symbolic-link)
1574 @end example
1575
1576 @node Function Keys
1577 @subsection Rebinding Function Keys
1578
1579 Key sequences can contain function keys as well as ordinary
1580 characters. Just as Lisp characters (actually integers) represent
1581 keyboard characters, Lisp symbols represent function keys. If the
1582 function key has a word as its label, then that word is also the name of
1583 the corresponding Lisp symbol. Here are the conventional Lisp names for
1584 common function keys:
1585
1586 @table @asis
1587 @item @code{left}, @code{up}, @code{right}, @code{down}
1588 Cursor arrow keys.
1589
1590 @item @code{begin}, @code{end}, @code{home}, @code{next}, @code{prior}
1591 Other cursor repositioning keys.
1592
1593 @item @code{select}, @code{print}, @code{execute}, @code{backtab}
1594 @itemx @code{insert}, @code{undo}, @code{redo}, @code{clearline}
1595 @itemx @code{insertline}, @code{deleteline}, @code{insertchar}, @code{deletechar},
1596 Miscellaneous function keys.
1597
1598 @item @code{f1}, @code{f2}, @dots{} @code{f35}
1599 Numbered function keys (across the top of the keyboard).
1600
1601 @item @code{kp-add}, @code{kp-subtract}, @code{kp-multiply}, @code{kp-divide}
1602 @itemx @code{kp-backtab}, @code{kp-space}, @code{kp-tab}, @code{kp-enter}
1603 @itemx @code{kp-separator}, @code{kp-decimal}, @code{kp-equal}
1604 Keypad keys (to the right of the regular keyboard), with names or punctuation.
1605
1606 @item @code{kp-0}, @code{kp-1}, @dots{} @code{kp-9}
1607 Keypad keys with digits.
1608
1609 @item @code{kp-f1}, @code{kp-f2}, @code{kp-f3}, @code{kp-f4}
1610 Keypad PF keys.
1611 @end table
1612
1613 These names are conventional, but some systems (especially when using
1614 X windows) may use different names. To make certain what symbol is used
1615 for a given function key on your terminal, type @kbd{C-h c} followed by
1616 that key.
1617
1618 A key sequence which contains function key symbols (or anything but
1619 ASCII characters) must be a vector rather than a string. The vector
1620 syntax uses spaces between the elements, and square brackets around the
1621 whole vector. Thus, to bind function key @samp{f1} to the command
1622 @code{rmail}, write the following:
1623
1624 @example
1625 (global-set-key [f1] 'rmail)
1626 @end example
1627
1628 @noindent
1629 To bind the right-arrow key to the command @code{forward-char}, you can
1630 use this expression:
1631
1632 @example
1633 (global-set-key [right] 'forward-char)
1634 @end example
1635
1636 @noindent
1637 This uses the Lisp syntax for a vector containing the symbol
1638 @code{right}. (This binding is present in Emacs by default.)
1639
1640 @xref{Init Rebinding}, for more information about using vectors for
1641 rebinding.
1642
1643 You can mix function keys and characters in a key sequence. This
1644 example binds @kbd{C-x @key{NEXT}} to the command @code{forward-page}.
1645
1646 @example
1647 (global-set-key [?\C-x next] 'forward-page)
1648 @end example
1649
1650 @noindent
1651 where @code{?\C-x} is the Lisp character constant for the character
1652 @kbd{C-x}. The vector element @code{next} is a symbol and therefore
1653 does not take a question mark.
1654
1655 You can use the modifier keys @key{CTRL}, @key{META}, @key{HYPER},
1656 @key{SUPER}, @key{ALT} and @key{SHIFT} with function keys. To represent
1657 these modifiers, add the strings @samp{C-}, @samp{M-}, @samp{H-},
1658 @samp{s-}, @samp{A-} and @samp{S-} at the front of the symbol name.
1659 Thus, here is how to make @kbd{Hyper-Meta-@key{RIGHT}} move forward a
1660 word:
1661
1662 @example
1663 (global-set-key [H-M-right] 'forward-word)
1664 @end example
1665
1666 @node Named ASCII Chars
1667 @subsection Named ASCII Control Characters
1668
1669 @key{TAB}, @key{RET}, @key{BS}, @key{LFD}, @key{ESC} and @key{DEL}
1670 started out as names for certain ASCII control characters, used so often
1671 that they have special keys of their own. Later, users found it
1672 convenient to distinguish in Emacs between these keys and the ``same''
1673 control characters typed with the @key{CTRL} key.
1674
1675 Emacs distinguishes these two kinds of input, when used with the X
1676 Window System. It treats the ``special'' keys as function keys named
1677 @code{tab}, @code{return}, @code{backspace}, @code{linefeed},
1678 @code{escape}, and @code{delete}. These function keys translate
1679 automatically into the corresponding ASCII characters @emph{if} they
1680 have no bindings of their own. As a result, neither users nor Lisp
1681 programs need to pay attention to the distinction unless they care to.
1682
1683 If you do not want to distinguish between (for example) @key{TAB} and
1684 @kbd{C-i}, make just one binding, for the ASCII character @key{TAB}
1685 (octal code 011). If you do want to distinguish, make one binding for
1686 this ASCII character, and another for the ``function key'' @code{tab}.
1687
1688 With an ordinary ASCII terminal, there is no way to distinguish
1689 between @key{TAB} and @kbd{C-i} (and likewise for other such pairs),
1690 because the terminal sends the same character in both cases.
1691
1692 @node Non-ASCII Rebinding
1693 @subsection Non-ASCII Characters on the Keyboard
1694
1695 If your keyboard has keys that send non-ASCII characters, such as
1696 accented letters, rebinding these keys is a bit tricky. There are
1697 two solutions you can use. One is to specify a keyboard coding system,
1698 using @code{set-keyboard-coding-system} (@pxref{Specify Coding}).
1699 Then you can bind these keys in the usual way, but writing
1700
1701 @example
1702 (global-set-key [?@var{char}] 'some-function)
1703 @end example
1704
1705 @noindent
1706 and typing the key you want to bind to insert @var{char}.
1707
1708 If you don't specify the keyboard coding system, that approach won't
1709 work. Instead, you need to find out the actual code that the terminal
1710 sends. The easiest way to do this in Emacs is to create an empty buffer
1711 with @kbd{C-x b temp @key{RET}}, make it unibyte with @kbd{M-x
1712 toggle-enable-multibyte-characters @key{RET}}, then type the key to
1713 insert the character into this buffer.
1714
1715 Move point before the character, then type @kbd{C-x =}. This
1716 displays a message in the minibuffer, showing the character code in
1717 three ways, octal, decimal and hexadecimal, all within a set of
1718 parentheses. Use the second of the three numbers, the decimal one,
1719 inside the vector to bind:
1720
1721 @example
1722 (global-set-key [@var{decimal-code}] 'some-function)
1723 @end example
1724
1725 @node Mouse Buttons
1726 @subsection Rebinding Mouse Buttons
1727 @cindex mouse button events
1728 @cindex rebinding mouse buttons
1729 @cindex click events
1730 @cindex drag events
1731 @cindex down events
1732 @cindex button down events
1733
1734 Emacs uses Lisp symbols to designate mouse buttons, too. The ordinary
1735 mouse events in Emacs are @dfn{click} events; these happen when you
1736 press a button and release it without moving the mouse. You can also
1737 get @dfn{drag} events, when you move the mouse while holding the button
1738 down. Drag events happen when you finally let go of the button.
1739
1740 The symbols for basic click events are @code{mouse-1} for the leftmost
1741 button, @code{mouse-2} for the next, and so on. Here is how you can
1742 redefine the second mouse button to split the current window:
1743
1744 @example
1745 (global-set-key [mouse-2] 'split-window-vertically)
1746 @end example
1747
1748 The symbols for drag events are similar, but have the prefix
1749 @samp{drag-} before the word @samp{mouse}. For example, dragging the
1750 first button generates a @code{drag-mouse-1} event.
1751
1752 You can also define bindings for events that occur when a mouse button
1753 is pressed down. These events start with @samp{down-} instead of
1754 @samp{drag-}. Such events are generated only if they have key bindings.
1755 When you get a button-down event, a corresponding click or drag event
1756 will always follow.
1757
1758 @cindex double clicks
1759 @cindex triple clicks
1760 If you wish, you can distinguish single, double, and triple clicks. A
1761 double click means clicking a mouse button twice in approximately the
1762 same place. The first click generates an ordinary click event. The
1763 second click, if it comes soon enough, generates a double-click event
1764 instead. The event type for a double-click event starts with
1765 @samp{double-}: for example, @code{double-mouse-3}.
1766
1767 This means that you can give a special meaning to the second click at
1768 the same place, but it must act on the assumption that the ordinary
1769 single click definition has run when the first click was received.
1770
1771 This constrains what you can do with double clicks, but user interface
1772 designers say that this constraint ought to be followed in any case. A
1773 double click should do something similar to the single click, only
1774 ``more so.'' The command for the double-click event should perform the
1775 extra work for the double click.
1776
1777 If a double-click event has no binding, it changes to the
1778 corresponding single-click event. Thus, if you don't define a
1779 particular double click specially, it executes the single-click command
1780 twice.
1781
1782 Emacs also supports triple-click events whose names start with
1783 @samp{triple-}. Emacs does not distinguish quadruple clicks as event
1784 types; clicks beyond the third generate additional triple-click events.
1785 However, the full number of clicks is recorded in the event list, so you
1786 can distinguish if you really want to. We don't recommend distinct
1787 meanings for more than three clicks, but sometimes it is useful for
1788 subsequent clicks to cycle through the same set of three meanings, so
1789 that four clicks are equivalent to one click, five are equivalent to
1790 two, and six are equivalent to three.
1791
1792 Emacs also records multiple presses in drag and button-down events.
1793 For example, when you press a button twice, then move the mouse while
1794 holding the button, Emacs gets a @samp{double-drag-} event. And at the
1795 moment when you press it down for the second time, Emacs gets a
1796 @samp{double-down-} event (which is ignored, like all button-down
1797 events, if it has no binding).
1798
1799 @vindex double-click-time
1800 The variable @code{double-click-time} specifies how long may elapse
1801 between clicks that are recognized as a pair. Its value is measured
1802 in milliseconds. If the value is @code{nil}, double clicks are not
1803 detected at all. If the value is @code{t}, then there is no time
1804 limit.
1805
1806 The symbols for mouse events also indicate the status of the modifier
1807 keys, with the usual prefixes @samp{C-}, @samp{M-}, @samp{H-},
1808 @samp{s-}, @samp{A-} and @samp{S-}. These always precede @samp{double-}
1809 or @samp{triple-}, which always precede @samp{drag-} or @samp{down-}.
1810
1811 A frame includes areas that don't show text from the buffer, such as
1812 the mode line and the scroll bar. You can tell whether a mouse button
1813 comes from a special area of the screen by means of dummy ``prefix
1814 keys.'' For example, if you click the mouse in the mode line, you get
1815 the prefix key @code{mode-line} before the ordinary mouse-button symbol.
1816 Thus, here is how to define the command for clicking the first button in
1817 a mode line to run @code{scroll-up}:
1818
1819 @example
1820 (global-set-key [mode-line mouse-1] 'scroll-up)
1821 @end example
1822
1823 Here is the complete list of these dummy prefix keys and their
1824 meanings:
1825
1826 @table @code
1827 @item mode-line
1828 The mouse was in the mode line of a window.
1829 @item vertical-line
1830 The mouse was in the vertical line separating side-by-side windows. (If
1831 you use scroll bars, they appear in place of these vertical lines.)
1832 @item vertical-scroll-bar
1833 The mouse was in a vertical scroll bar. (This is the only kind of
1834 scroll bar Emacs currently supports.)
1835 @ignore
1836 @item horizontal-scroll-bar
1837 The mouse was in a horizontal scroll bar. Horizontal scroll bars do
1838 horizontal scrolling, and people don't use them often.
1839 @end ignore
1840 @end table
1841
1842 You can put more than one mouse button in a key sequence, but it isn't
1843 usual to do so.
1844
1845 @node Disabling
1846 @subsection Disabling Commands
1847 @cindex disabled command
1848
1849 Disabling a command marks the command as requiring confirmation before it
1850 can be executed. The purpose of disabling a command is to prevent
1851 beginning users from executing it by accident and being confused.
1852
1853 An attempt to invoke a disabled command interactively in Emacs
1854 displays a window containing the command's name, its documentation, and
1855 some instructions on what to do immediately; then Emacs asks for input
1856 saying whether to execute the command as requested, enable it and
1857 execute it, or cancel. If you decide to enable the command, you are
1858 asked whether to do this permanently or just for the current session.
1859 Enabling permanently works by automatically editing your @file{.emacs}
1860 file.
1861
1862 The direct mechanism for disabling a command is to put a
1863 non-@code{nil} @code{disabled} property on the Lisp symbol for the
1864 command. Here is the Lisp program to do this:
1865
1866 @example
1867 (put 'delete-region 'disabled t)
1868 @end example
1869
1870 If the value of the @code{disabled} property is a string, that string
1871 is included in the message printed when the command is used:
1872
1873 @example
1874 (put 'delete-region 'disabled
1875 "It's better to use `kill-region' instead.\n")
1876 @end example
1877
1878 @findex disable-command
1879 @findex enable-command
1880 You can make a command disabled either by editing the @file{.emacs}
1881 file directly or with the command @kbd{M-x disable-command}, which edits
1882 the @file{.emacs} file for you. Likewise, @kbd{M-x enable-command}
1883 edits @file{.emacs} to enable a command permanently. @xref{Init File}.
1884
1885 Whether a command is disabled is independent of what key is used to
1886 invoke it; disabling also applies if the command is invoked using
1887 @kbd{M-x}. Disabling a command has no effect on calling it as a
1888 function from Lisp programs.
1889
1890 @node Keyboard Translations
1891 @section Keyboard Translations
1892
1893 Some keyboards do not make it convenient to send all the special
1894 characters that Emacs uses. The most common problem case is the
1895 @key{DEL} character. Some keyboards provide no convenient way to type
1896 this very important character---usually because they were designed to
1897 expect the character @kbd{C-h} to be used for deletion. On these
1898 keyboards, if you press the key normally used for deletion, Emacs handles
1899 the @kbd{C-h} as a prefix character and offers you a list of help
1900 options, which is not what you want.
1901
1902 @cindex keyboard translations
1903 @findex keyboard-translate
1904 You can work around this problem within Emacs by setting up keyboard
1905 translations to turn @kbd{C-h} into @key{DEL} and @key{DEL} into
1906 @kbd{C-h}, as follows:
1907
1908 @example
1909 ;; @r{Translate @kbd{C-h} to @key{DEL}.}
1910 (keyboard-translate ?\C-h ?\C-?)
1911
1912 @need 3000
1913 ;; @r{Translate @key{DEL} to @kbd{C-h}.}
1914 (keyboard-translate ?\C-? ?\C-h)
1915 @end example
1916
1917 Keyboard translations are not the same as key bindings in keymaps
1918 (@pxref{Keymaps}). Emacs contains numerous keymaps that apply in
1919 different situations, but there is only one set of keyboard
1920 translations, and it applies to every character that Emacs reads from
1921 the terminal. Keyboard translations take place at the lowest level of
1922 input processing; the keys that are looked up in keymaps contain the
1923 characters that result from keyboard translation.
1924
1925 Under X, the keyboard key named @key{DELETE} is a function key and is
1926 distinct from the ASCII character named @key{DEL}. @xref{Named ASCII
1927 Chars}. Keyboard translations affect only ASCII character input, not
1928 function keys; thus, the above example used under X does not affect the
1929 @key{DELETE} key. However, the translation above isn't necessary under
1930 X, because Emacs can also distinguish between the @key{BACKSPACE} key
1931 and @kbd{C-h}; and it normally treats @key{BACKSPACE} as @key{DEL}.
1932
1933 For full information about how to use keyboard translations, see
1934 @ref{Translating Input,,,elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
1935
1936 @node Syntax
1937 @section The Syntax Table
1938 @cindex syntax table
1939
1940 All the Emacs commands which parse words or balance parentheses are
1941 controlled by the @dfn{syntax table}. The syntax table says which
1942 characters are opening delimiters, which are parts of words, which are
1943 string quotes, and so on. Each major mode has its own syntax table
1944 (though sometimes related major modes use the same one) which it
1945 installs in each buffer that uses that major mode. The syntax table
1946 installed in the current buffer is the one that all commands use, so we
1947 call it ``the'' syntax table. A syntax table is a Lisp object, a
1948 char-table, whose elements are numbers.
1949
1950 @kindex C-h s
1951 @findex describe-syntax
1952 To display a description of the contents of the current syntax table,
1953 type @kbd{C-h s} (@code{describe-syntax}). The description of each
1954 character includes both the string you would have to give to
1955 @code{modify-syntax-entry} to set up that character's current syntax,
1956 and some English to explain that string if necessary.
1957
1958 For full information on the syntax table, see @ref{Syntax Tables,,
1959 Syntax Tables, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
1960
1961 @node Init File
1962 @section The Init File, @file{~/.emacs}
1963 @cindex init file
1964 @cindex Emacs initialization file
1965 @cindex key rebinding, permanent
1966 @cindex rebinding keys, permanently
1967 @cindex startup (init file)
1968
1969 When Emacs is started, it normally loads a Lisp program from the file
1970 @file{.emacs} or @file{.emacs.el} in your home directory. We call this
1971 file your @dfn{init file} because it specifies how to initialize Emacs
1972 for you. You can use the command line switch @samp{-q} to prevent
1973 loading your init file, and @samp{-u} (or @samp{--user}) to specify a
1974 different user's init file (@pxref{Entering Emacs}).
1975
1976 There can also be a @dfn{default init file}, which is the library
1977 named @file{default.el}, found via the standard search path for
1978 libraries. The Emacs distribution contains no such library; your site
1979 may create one for local customizations. If this library exists, it is
1980 loaded whenever you start Emacs (except when you specify @samp{-q}).
1981 But your init file, if any, is loaded first; if it sets
1982 @code{inhibit-default-init} non-@code{nil}, then @file{default} is not
1983 loaded.
1984
1985 Your site may also have a @dfn{site startup file}; this is named
1986 @file{site-start.el}, if it exists. Emacs loads this library before it
1987 loads your init file. To inhibit loading of this library, use the
1988 option @samp{-no-site-file}.
1989
1990 If you have a large amount of code in your @file{.emacs} file, you
1991 should rename it to @file{~/.emacs.el}, and byte-compile it. @xref{Byte
1992 Compilation,, Byte Compilation, elisp, the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual},
1993 for more information about compiling Emacs Lisp programs.
1994
1995 If you are going to write actual Emacs Lisp programs that go beyond
1996 minor customization, you should read the @cite{Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
1997 @ifinfo
1998 @xref{Top, Emacs Lisp, Emacs Lisp, elisp, the Emacs Lisp Reference
1999 Manual}.
2000 @end ifinfo
2001
2002 @menu
2003 * Init Syntax:: Syntax of constants in Emacs Lisp.
2004 * Init Examples:: How to do some things with an init file.
2005 * Terminal Init:: Each terminal type can have an init file.
2006 * Find Init:: How Emacs finds the init file.
2007 @end menu
2008
2009 @node Init Syntax
2010 @subsection Init File Syntax
2011
2012 The @file{.emacs} file contains one or more Lisp function call
2013 expressions. Each of these consists of a function name followed by
2014 arguments, all surrounded by parentheses. For example, @code{(setq
2015 fill-column 60)} calls the function @code{setq} to set the variable
2016 @code{fill-column} (@pxref{Filling}) to 60.
2017
2018 The second argument to @code{setq} is an expression for the new value of
2019 the variable. This can be a constant, a variable, or a function call
2020 expression. In @file{.emacs}, constants are used most of the time. They can be:
2021
2022 @table @asis
2023 @item Numbers:
2024 Numbers are written in decimal, with an optional initial minus sign.
2025
2026 @item Strings:
2027 @cindex Lisp string syntax
2028 @cindex string syntax
2029 Lisp string syntax is the same as C string syntax with a few extra
2030 features. Use a double-quote character to begin and end a string constant.
2031
2032 In a string, you can include newlines and special characters literally.
2033 But often it is cleaner to use backslash sequences for them: @samp{\n}
2034 for newline, @samp{\b} for backspace, @samp{\r} for carriage return,
2035 @samp{\t} for tab, @samp{\f} for formfeed (control-L), @samp{\e} for
2036 escape, @samp{\\} for a backslash, @samp{\"} for a double-quote, or
2037 @samp{\@var{ooo}} for the character whose octal code is @var{ooo}.
2038 Backslash and double-quote are the only characters for which backslash
2039 sequences are mandatory.
2040
2041 @samp{\C-} can be used as a prefix for a control character, as in
2042 @samp{\C-s} for ASCII control-S, and @samp{\M-} can be used as a prefix for
2043 a Meta character, as in @samp{\M-a} for @kbd{Meta-A} or @samp{\M-\C-a} for
2044 @kbd{Control-Meta-A}.@refill
2045
2046 @item Characters:
2047 Lisp character constant syntax consists of a @samp{?} followed by
2048 either a character or an escape sequence starting with @samp{\}.
2049 Examples: @code{?x}, @code{?\n}, @code{?\"}, @code{?\)}. Note that
2050 strings and characters are not interchangeable in Lisp; some contexts
2051 require one and some contexts require the other.
2052
2053 @item True:
2054 @code{t} stands for `true'.
2055
2056 @item False:
2057 @code{nil} stands for `false'.
2058
2059 @item Other Lisp objects:
2060 Write a single-quote (') followed by the Lisp object you want.
2061 @end table
2062
2063 @node Init Examples
2064 @subsection Init File Examples
2065
2066 Here are some examples of doing certain commonly desired things with
2067 Lisp expressions:
2068
2069 @itemize @bullet
2070 @item
2071 Make @key{TAB} in C mode just insert a tab if point is in the middle of a
2072 line.
2073
2074 @example
2075 (setq c-tab-always-indent nil)
2076 @end example
2077
2078 Here we have a variable whose value is normally @code{t} for `true'
2079 and the alternative is @code{nil} for `false'.
2080
2081 @item
2082 Make searches case sensitive by default (in all buffers that do not
2083 override this).
2084
2085 @example
2086 (setq-default case-fold-search nil)
2087 @end example
2088
2089 This sets the default value, which is effective in all buffers that do
2090 not have local values for the variable. Setting @code{case-fold-search}
2091 with @code{setq} affects only the current buffer's local value, which
2092 is not what you probably want to do in an init file.
2093
2094 @item
2095 @vindex user-mail-address
2096 Specify your own email address, if Emacs can't figure it out correctly.
2097
2098 @example
2099 (setq user-mail-address "coon@@yoyodyne.com")
2100 @end example
2101
2102 Various Emacs packages that need your own email address use the value of
2103 @code{user-mail-address}.
2104
2105 @item
2106 Make Text mode the default mode for new buffers.
2107
2108 @example
2109 (setq default-major-mode 'text-mode)
2110 @end example
2111
2112 Note that @code{text-mode} is used because it is the command for
2113 entering Text mode. The single-quote before it makes the symbol a
2114 constant; otherwise, @code{text-mode} would be treated as a variable
2115 name.
2116
2117 @need 1500
2118 @item
2119 Set up defaults for the Latin-1 character set
2120 which supports most of the languages of Western Europe.
2121
2122 @example
2123 (set-language-environment "Latin-1")
2124 @end example
2125
2126 @need 1500
2127 @item
2128 Turn on Auto Fill mode automatically in Text mode and related modes.
2129
2130 @example
2131 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook
2132 '(lambda () (auto-fill-mode 1)))
2133 @end example
2134
2135 This shows how to add a hook function to a normal hook variable
2136 (@pxref{Hooks}). The function we supply is a list starting with
2137 @code{lambda}, with a single-quote in front of it to make it a list
2138 constant rather than an expression.
2139
2140 It's beyond the scope of this manual to explain Lisp functions, but for
2141 this example it is enough to know that the effect is to execute
2142 @code{(auto-fill-mode 1)} when Text mode is entered. You can replace
2143 that with any other expression that you like, or with several
2144 expressions in a row.
2145
2146 Emacs comes with a function named @code{turn-on-auto-fill} whose
2147 definition is @code{(lambda () (auto-fill-mode 1))}. Thus, a simpler
2148 way to write the above example is as follows:
2149
2150 @example
2151 (add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)
2152 @end example
2153
2154 @item
2155 Load the installed Lisp library named @file{foo} (actually a file
2156 @file{foo.elc} or @file{foo.el} in a standard Emacs directory).
2157
2158 @example
2159 (load "foo")
2160 @end example
2161
2162 When the argument to @code{load} is a relative file name, not starting
2163 with @samp{/} or @samp{~}, @code{load} searches the directories in
2164 @code{load-path} (@pxref{Lisp Libraries}).
2165
2166 @item
2167 Load the compiled Lisp file @file{foo.elc} from your home directory.
2168
2169 @example
2170 (load "~/foo.elc")
2171 @end example
2172
2173 Here an absolute file name is used, so no searching is done.
2174
2175 @item
2176 Rebind the key @kbd{C-x l} to run the function @code{make-symbolic-link}.
2177
2178 @example
2179 (global-set-key "\C-xl" 'make-symbolic-link)
2180 @end example
2181
2182 or
2183
2184 @example
2185 (define-key global-map "\C-xl" 'make-symbolic-link)
2186 @end example
2187
2188 Note once again the single-quote used to refer to the symbol
2189 @code{make-symbolic-link} instead of its value as a variable.
2190
2191 @item
2192 Do the same thing for Lisp mode only.
2193
2194 @example
2195 (define-key lisp-mode-map "\C-xl" 'make-symbolic-link)
2196 @end example
2197
2198 @item
2199 Redefine all keys which now run @code{next-line} in Fundamental mode
2200 so that they run @code{forward-line} instead.
2201
2202 @example
2203 (substitute-key-definition 'next-line 'forward-line
2204 global-map)
2205 @end example
2206
2207 @item
2208 Make @kbd{C-x C-v} undefined.
2209
2210 @example
2211 (global-unset-key "\C-x\C-v")
2212 @end example
2213
2214 One reason to undefine a key is so that you can make it a prefix.
2215 Simply defining @kbd{C-x C-v @var{anything}} will make @kbd{C-x C-v} a
2216 prefix, but @kbd{C-x C-v} must first be freed of its usual non-prefix
2217 definition.
2218
2219 @item
2220 Make @samp{$} have the syntax of punctuation in Text mode.
2221 Note the use of a character constant for @samp{$}.
2222
2223 @example
2224 (modify-syntax-entry ?\$ "." text-mode-syntax-table)
2225 @end example
2226
2227 @item
2228 Enable the use of the command @code{narrow-to-region} without confirmation.
2229
2230 @example
2231 (put 'narrow-to-region 'disabled nil)
2232 @end example
2233 @end itemize
2234
2235 @node Terminal Init
2236 @subsection Terminal-specific Initialization
2237
2238 Each terminal type can have a Lisp library to be loaded into Emacs when
2239 it is run on that type of terminal. For a terminal type named
2240 @var{termtype}, the library is called @file{term/@var{termtype}} and it is
2241 found by searching the directories @code{load-path} as usual and trying the
2242 suffixes @samp{.elc} and @samp{.el}. Normally it appears in the
2243 subdirectory @file{term} of the directory where most Emacs libraries are
2244 kept.@refill
2245
2246 The usual purpose of the terminal-specific library is to map the
2247 escape sequences used by the terminal's function keys onto more
2248 meaningful names, using @code{function-key-map}. See the file
2249 @file{term/lk201.el} for an example of how this is done. Many function
2250 keys are mapped automatically according to the information in the
2251 Termcap data base; the terminal-specific library needs to map only the
2252 function keys that Termcap does not specify.
2253
2254 When the terminal type contains a hyphen, only the part of the name
2255 before the first hyphen is significant in choosing the library name.
2256 Thus, terminal types @samp{aaa-48} and @samp{aaa-30-rv} both use
2257 the library @file{term/aaa}. The code in the library can use
2258 @code{(getenv "TERM")} to find the full terminal type name.@refill
2259
2260 @vindex term-file-prefix
2261 The library's name is constructed by concatenating the value of the
2262 variable @code{term-file-prefix} and the terminal type. Your @file{.emacs}
2263 file can prevent the loading of the terminal-specific library by setting
2264 @code{term-file-prefix} to @code{nil}.
2265
2266 @vindex term-setup-hook
2267 Emacs runs the hook @code{term-setup-hook} at the end of
2268 initialization, after both your @file{.emacs} file and any
2269 terminal-specific library have been read in. Add hook functions to this
2270 hook if you wish to override part of any of the terminal-specific
2271 libraries and to define initializations for terminals that do not have a
2272 library. @xref{Hooks}.
2273
2274 @node Find Init
2275 @subsection How Emacs Finds Your Init File
2276
2277 Normally Emacs uses the environment variable @code{HOME} to find
2278 @file{.emacs}; that's what @samp{~} means in a file name. But if you
2279 have done @code{su}, Emacs tries to find your own @file{.emacs}, not
2280 that of the user you are currently pretending to be. The idea is
2281 that you should get your own editor customizations even if you are
2282 running as the super user.
2283
2284 More precisely, Emacs first determines which user's init file to use.
2285 It gets the user name from the environment variables @code{LOGNAME} and
2286 @code{USER}; if neither of those exists, it uses effective user-ID.
2287 If that user name matches the real user-ID, then Emacs uses @code{HOME};
2288 otherwise, it looks up the home directory corresponding to that user
2289 name in the system's data base of users.
2290 @c LocalWords: backtab