# HG changeset patch # User Glenn Morris # Date 1189052435 0 # Node ID d42a0d7a4893a2c8cdc70db9c0b86991cf8aab45 # Parent 2b28589bd6621c7809f44f27c435a90643524cbe Move here from ../../lispref diff -r 2b28589bd662 -r d42a0d7a4893 doc/lispref/help.texi --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/doc/lispref/help.texi Thu Sep 06 04:20:35 2007 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,699 @@ +@c -*-texinfo-*- +@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. +@c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2001, +@c 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions. +@setfilename ../info/help +@node Documentation, Files, Modes, Top +@chapter Documentation +@cindex documentation strings + + GNU Emacs Lisp has convenient on-line help facilities, most of which +derive their information from the documentation strings associated with +functions and variables. This chapter describes how to write good +documentation strings for your Lisp programs, as well as how to write +programs to access documentation. + + Note that the documentation strings for Emacs are not the same thing +as the Emacs manual. Manuals have their own source files, written in +the Texinfo language; documentation strings are specified in the +definitions of the functions and variables they apply to. A collection +of documentation strings is not sufficient as a manual because a good +manual is not organized in that fashion; it is organized in terms of +topics of discussion. + + For commands to display documentation strings, see @ref{Help, , +Help, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. For the conventions for writing +documentation strings, see @ref{Documentation Tips}. + +@menu +* Documentation Basics:: Good style for doc strings. + Where to put them. How Emacs stores them. +* Accessing Documentation:: How Lisp programs can access doc strings. +* Keys in Documentation:: Substituting current key bindings. +* Describing Characters:: Making printable descriptions of + non-printing characters and key sequences. +* Help Functions:: Subroutines used by Emacs help facilities. +@end menu + +@node Documentation Basics +@comment node-name, next, previous, up +@section Documentation Basics +@cindex documentation conventions +@cindex writing a documentation string +@cindex string, writing a doc string + + A documentation string is written using the Lisp syntax for strings, +with double-quote characters surrounding the text of the string. This +is because it really is a Lisp string object. The string serves as +documentation when it is written in the proper place in the definition +of a function or variable. In a function definition, the documentation +string follows the argument list. In a variable definition, the +documentation string follows the initial value of the variable. + + When you write a documentation string, make the first line a +complete sentence (or two complete sentences) since some commands, +such as @code{apropos}, show only the first line of a multi-line +documentation string. Also, you should not indent the second line of +a documentation string, if it has one, because that looks odd when you +use @kbd{C-h f} (@code{describe-function}) or @kbd{C-h v} +(@code{describe-variable}) to view the documentation string. There +are many other conventions for doc strings; see @ref{Documentation +Tips}. + + Documentation strings can contain several special substrings, which +stand for key bindings to be looked up in the current keymaps when the +documentation is displayed. This allows documentation strings to refer +to the keys for related commands and be accurate even when a user +rearranges the key bindings. (@xref{Keys in Documentation}.) + +@vindex emacs-lisp-docstring-fill-column + Emacs Lisp mode fills documentation strings to the width +specified by @code{emacs-lisp-docstring-fill-column}. + + In Emacs Lisp, a documentation string is accessible through the +function or variable that it describes: + +@itemize @bullet +@item +@kindex function-documentation +The documentation for a function is usually stored in the function +definition itself (@pxref{Lambda Expressions}). The function +@code{documentation} knows how to extract it. You can also put +function documentation in the @code{function-documentation} property +of the function name. That is useful with definitions such as +keyboard macros that can't hold a documentation string. + +@item +@kindex variable-documentation +The documentation for a variable is stored in the variable's property +list under the property name @code{variable-documentation}. The +function @code{documentation-property} knows how to retrieve it. +@end itemize + +@cindex @file{DOC-@var{version}} (documentation) file +To save space, the documentation for preloaded functions and variables +(including primitive functions and autoloaded functions) is stored in +the file @file{emacs/etc/DOC-@var{version}}---not inside Emacs. The +documentation strings for functions and variables loaded during the +Emacs session from byte-compiled files are stored in those files +(@pxref{Docs and Compilation}). + +The data structure inside Emacs has an integer offset into the file, or +a list containing a file name and an integer, in place of the +documentation string. The functions @code{documentation} and +@code{documentation-property} use that information to fetch the +documentation string from the appropriate file; this is transparent to +the user. + +@c Wordy to prevent overfull hbox. --rjc 15mar92 + The @file{emacs/lib-src} directory contains two utilities that you can +use to print nice-looking hardcopy for the file +@file{emacs/etc/DOC-@var{version}}. These are @file{sorted-doc} and +@file{digest-doc}. + +@node Accessing Documentation +@section Access to Documentation Strings + +@defun documentation-property symbol property &optional verbatim +This function returns the documentation string that is recorded in +@var{symbol}'s property list under property @var{property}. It +retrieves the text from a file if the value calls for that. If the +property value isn't @code{nil}, isn't a string, and doesn't refer to +text in a file, then it is evaluated to obtain a string. + +The last thing this function does is pass the string through +@code{substitute-command-keys} to substitute actual key bindings, +unless @var{verbatim} is non-@code{nil}. + +@smallexample +@group +(documentation-property 'command-line-processed + 'variable-documentation) + @result{} "Non-nil once command line has been processed" +@end group +@group +(symbol-plist 'command-line-processed) + @result{} (variable-documentation 188902) +@end group +@group +(documentation-property 'emacs 'group-documentation) + @result{} "Customization of the One True Editor." +@end group +@end smallexample +@end defun + +@defun documentation function &optional verbatim +This function returns the documentation string of @var{function}. +@code{documentation} handles macros, named keyboard macros, and +special forms, as well as ordinary functions. + +If @var{function} is a symbol, this function first looks for the +@code{function-documentation} property of that symbol; if that has a +non-@code{nil} value, the documentation comes from that value (if the +value is not a string, it is evaluated). If @var{function} is not a +symbol, or if it has no @code{function-documentation} property, then +@code{documentation} extracts the documentation string from the actual +function definition, reading it from a file if called for. + +Finally, unless @var{verbatim} is non-@code{nil}, it calls +@code{substitute-command-keys} so as to return a value containing the +actual (current) key bindings. + +The function @code{documentation} signals a @code{void-function} error +if @var{function} has no function definition. However, it is OK if +the function definition has no documentation string. In that case, +@code{documentation} returns @code{nil}. +@end defun + +@defun face-documentation face +This function returns the documentation string of @var{face} as a +face. +@end defun + +@c Wordy to prevent overfull hboxes. --rjc 15mar92 +Here is an example of using the two functions, @code{documentation} and +@code{documentation-property}, to display the documentation strings for +several symbols in a @samp{*Help*} buffer. + +@anchor{describe-symbols example} +@smallexample +@group +(defun describe-symbols (pattern) + "Describe the Emacs Lisp symbols matching PATTERN. +All symbols that have PATTERN in their name are described +in the `*Help*' buffer." + (interactive "sDescribe symbols matching: ") + (let ((describe-func + (function + (lambda (s) +@end group +@group + ;; @r{Print description of symbol.} + (if (fboundp s) ; @r{It is a function.} + (princ + (format "%s\t%s\n%s\n\n" s + (if (commandp s) + (let ((keys (where-is-internal s))) + (if keys + (concat + "Keys: " + (mapconcat 'key-description + keys " ")) + "Keys: none")) + "Function") +@end group +@group + (or (documentation s) + "not documented")))) + + (if (boundp s) ; @r{It is a variable.} +@end group +@group + (princ + (format "%s\t%s\n%s\n\n" s + (if (user-variable-p s) + "Option " "Variable") +@end group +@group + (or (documentation-property + s 'variable-documentation) + "not documented"))))))) + sym-list) +@end group + +@group + ;; @r{Build a list of symbols that match pattern.} + (mapatoms (function + (lambda (sym) + (if (string-match pattern (symbol-name sym)) + (setq sym-list (cons sym sym-list)))))) +@end group + +@group + ;; @r{Display the data.} + (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Help*" + (mapcar describe-func (sort sym-list 'string<)) + (print-help-return-message)))) +@end group +@end smallexample + + The @code{describe-symbols} function works like @code{apropos}, +but provides more information. + +@smallexample +@group +(describe-symbols "goal") + +---------- Buffer: *Help* ---------- +goal-column Option +*Semipermanent goal column for vertical motion, as set by @dots{} +@end group +@c Do not blithely break or fill these lines. +@c That makes them incorrect. + +@group +set-goal-column Keys: C-x C-n +Set the current horizontal position as a goal for C-n and C-p. +@end group +@c DO NOT put a blank line here! That is factually inaccurate! +@group +Those commands will move to this position in the line moved to +rather than trying to keep the same horizontal position. +With a non-nil argument, clears out the goal column +so that C-n and C-p resume vertical motion. +The goal column is stored in the variable `goal-column'. +@end group + +@group +temporary-goal-column Variable +Current goal column for vertical motion. +It is the column where point was +at the start of current run of vertical motion commands. +When the `track-eol' feature is doing its job, the value is 9999. +---------- Buffer: *Help* ---------- +@end group +@end smallexample + +The asterisk @samp{*} as the first character of a variable's doc string, +as shown above for the @code{goal-column} variable, means that it is a +user option; see the description of @code{defvar} in @ref{Defining +Variables}. + +@defun Snarf-documentation filename +@anchor{Definition of Snarf-documentation} +This function is used only during Emacs initialization, just before +the runnable Emacs is dumped. It finds the file offsets of the +documentation strings stored in the file @var{filename}, and records +them in the in-core function definitions and variable property lists in +place of the actual strings. @xref{Building Emacs}. + +Emacs reads the file @var{filename} from the @file{emacs/etc} directory. +When the dumped Emacs is later executed, the same file will be looked +for in the directory @code{doc-directory}. Usually @var{filename} is +@code{"DOC-@var{version}"}. +@end defun + +@c Emacs 19 feature +@defvar doc-directory +This variable holds the name of the directory which should contain the +file @code{"DOC-@var{version}"} that contains documentation strings for +built-in and preloaded functions and variables. + +In most cases, this is the same as @code{data-directory}. They may be +different when you run Emacs from the directory where you built it, +without actually installing it. @xref{Definition of data-directory}. + +In older Emacs versions, @code{exec-directory} was used for this. +@end defvar + +@node Keys in Documentation +@section Substituting Key Bindings in Documentation +@cindex documentation, keys in +@cindex keys in documentation strings +@cindex substituting keys in documentation + + When documentation strings refer to key sequences, they should use the +current, actual key bindings. They can do so using certain special text +sequences described below. Accessing documentation strings in the usual +way substitutes current key binding information for these special +sequences. This works by calling @code{substitute-command-keys}. You +can also call that function yourself. + + Here is a list of the special sequences and what they mean: + +@table @code +@item \[@var{command}] +stands for a key sequence that will invoke @var{command}, or @samp{M-x +@var{command}} if @var{command} has no key bindings. + +@item \@{@var{mapvar}@} +stands for a summary of the keymap which is the value of the variable +@var{mapvar}. The summary is made using @code{describe-bindings}. + +@item \<@var{mapvar}> +stands for no text itself. It is used only for a side effect: it +specifies @var{mapvar}'s value as the keymap for any following +@samp{\[@var{command}]} sequences in this documentation string. + +@item \= +quotes the following character and is discarded; thus, @samp{\=\[} puts +@samp{\[} into the output, and @samp{\=\=} puts @samp{\=} into the +output. +@end table + +@strong{Please note:} Each @samp{\} must be doubled when written in a +string in Emacs Lisp. + +@defun substitute-command-keys string +This function scans @var{string} for the above special sequences and +replaces them by what they stand for, returning the result as a string. +This permits display of documentation that refers accurately to the +user's own customized key bindings. +@end defun + + Here are examples of the special sequences: + +@smallexample +@group +(substitute-command-keys + "To abort recursive edit, type: \\[abort-recursive-edit]") +@result{} "To abort recursive edit, type: C-]" +@end group + +@group +(substitute-command-keys + "The keys that are defined for the minibuffer here are: + \\@{minibuffer-local-must-match-map@}") +@result{} "The keys that are defined for the minibuffer here are: +@end group + +? minibuffer-completion-help +SPC minibuffer-complete-word +TAB minibuffer-complete +C-j minibuffer-complete-and-exit +RET minibuffer-complete-and-exit +C-g abort-recursive-edit +" + +@group +(substitute-command-keys + "To abort a recursive edit from the minibuffer, type\ +\\\\[abort-recursive-edit].") +@result{} "To abort a recursive edit from the minibuffer, type C-g." +@end group +@end smallexample + + There are other special conventions for the text in documentation +strings---for instance, you can refer to functions, variables, and +sections of this manual. @xref{Documentation Tips}, for details. + +@node Describing Characters +@section Describing Characters for Help Messages +@cindex describe characters and events + + These functions convert events, key sequences, or characters to +textual descriptions. These descriptions are useful for including +arbitrary text characters or key sequences in messages, because they +convert non-printing and whitespace characters to sequences of printing +characters. The description of a non-whitespace printing character is +the character itself. + +@defun key-description sequence &optional prefix +@cindex Emacs event standard notation +This function returns a string containing the Emacs standard notation +for the input events in @var{sequence}. If @var{prefix} is +non-@code{nil}, it is a sequence of input events leading up to +@var{sequence} and is included in the return value. Both arguments +may be strings, vectors or lists. @xref{Input Events}, for more +information about valid events. + +@smallexample +@group +(key-description [?\M-3 delete]) + @result{} "M-3 " +@end group +@group +(key-description [delete] "\M-3") + @result{} "M-3 " +@end group +@end smallexample + + See also the examples for @code{single-key-description}, below. +@end defun + +@defun single-key-description event &optional no-angles +@cindex event printing +@cindex character printing +@cindex control character printing +@cindex meta character printing +This function returns a string describing @var{event} in the standard +Emacs notation for keyboard input. A normal printing character +appears as itself, but a control character turns into a string +starting with @samp{C-}, a meta character turns into a string starting +with @samp{M-}, and space, tab, etc.@: appear as @samp{SPC}, +@samp{TAB}, etc. A function key symbol appears inside angle brackets +@samp{<@dots{}>}. An event that is a list appears as the name of the +symbol in the @sc{car} of the list, inside angle brackets. + +If the optional argument @var{no-angles} is non-@code{nil}, the angle +brackets around function keys and event symbols are omitted; this is +for compatibility with old versions of Emacs which didn't use the +brackets. + +@smallexample +@group +(single-key-description ?\C-x) + @result{} "C-x" +@end group +@group +(key-description "\C-x \M-y \n \t \r \f123") + @result{} "C-x SPC M-y SPC C-j SPC TAB SPC RET SPC C-l 1 2 3" +@end group +@group +(single-key-description 'delete) + @result{} "" +@end group +@group +(single-key-description 'C-mouse-1) + @result{} "" +@end group +@group +(single-key-description 'C-mouse-1 t) + @result{} "C-mouse-1" +@end group +@end smallexample +@end defun + +@defun text-char-description character +This function returns a string describing @var{character} in the +standard Emacs notation for characters that appear in text---like +@code{single-key-description}, except that control characters are +represented with a leading caret (which is how control characters in +Emacs buffers are usually displayed). Another difference is that +@code{text-char-description} recognizes the 2**7 bit as the Meta +character, whereas @code{single-key-description} uses the 2**27 bit +for Meta. + +@smallexample +@group +(text-char-description ?\C-c) + @result{} "^C" +@end group +@group +(text-char-description ?\M-m) + @result{} "\xed" +@end group +@group +(text-char-description ?\C-\M-m) + @result{} "\x8d" +@end group +@group +(text-char-description (+ 128 ?m)) + @result{} "M-m" +@end group +@group +(text-char-description (+ 128 ?\C-m)) + @result{} "M-^M" +@end group +@end smallexample +@end defun + +@defun read-kbd-macro string &optional need-vector +This function is used mainly for operating on keyboard macros, but it +can also be used as a rough inverse for @code{key-description}. You +call it with a string containing key descriptions, separated by spaces; +it returns a string or vector containing the corresponding events. +(This may or may not be a single valid key sequence, depending on what +events you use; @pxref{Key Sequences}.) If @var{need-vector} is +non-@code{nil}, the return value is always a vector. +@end defun + +@node Help Functions +@section Help Functions + + Emacs provides a variety of on-line help functions, all accessible to +the user as subcommands of the prefix @kbd{C-h}. For more information +about them, see @ref{Help, , Help, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. Here +we describe some program-level interfaces to the same information. + +@deffn Command apropos pattern &optional do-all +This function finds all ``meaningful'' symbols whose names contain a +match for the apropos pattern @var{pattern}. An apropos pattern is +either a word to match, a space-separated list of words of which at +least two must match, or a regular expression (if any special regular +expression characters occur). A symbol is ``meaningful'' if it has a +definition as a function, variable, or face, or has properties. + +The function returns a list of elements that look like this: + +@example +(@var{symbol} @var{score} @var{fn-doc} @var{var-doc} + @var{plist-doc} @var{widget-doc} @var{face-doc} @var{group-doc}) +@end example + +Here, @var{score} is an integer measure of how important the symbol +seems to be as a match, and the remaining elements are documentation +strings for @var{symbol}'s various roles (or @code{nil}). + +It also displays the symbols in a buffer named @samp{*Apropos*}, each +with a one-line description taken from the beginning of its +documentation string. + +@c Emacs 19 feature +If @var{do-all} is non-@code{nil}, or if the user option +@code{apropos-do-all} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{apropos} also +shows key bindings for the functions that are found; it also shows +@emph{all} interned symbols, not just meaningful ones (and it lists +them in the return value as well). +@end deffn + +@defvar help-map +The value of this variable is a local keymap for characters following the +Help key, @kbd{C-h}. +@end defvar + +@deffn {Prefix Command} help-command +This symbol is not a function; its function definition cell holds the +keymap known as @code{help-map}. It is defined in @file{help.el} as +follows: + +@smallexample +@group +(define-key global-map (char-to-string help-char) 'help-command) +(fset 'help-command help-map) +@end group +@end smallexample +@end deffn + +@defun print-help-return-message &optional function +This function builds a string that explains how to restore the previous +state of the windows after a help command. After building the message, +it applies @var{function} to it if @var{function} is non-@code{nil}. +Otherwise it calls @code{message} to display it in the echo area. + +This function expects to be called inside a +@code{with-output-to-temp-buffer} special form, and expects +@code{standard-output} to have the value bound by that special form. +For an example of its use, see the long example in @ref{Accessing +Documentation}. +@end defun + +@defvar help-char +The value of this variable is the help character---the character that +Emacs recognizes as meaning Help. By default, its value is 8, which +stands for @kbd{C-h}. When Emacs reads this character, if +@code{help-form} is a non-@code{nil} Lisp expression, it evaluates that +expression, and displays the result in a window if it is a string. + +Usually the value of @code{help-form} is @code{nil}. Then the +help character has no special meaning at the level of command input, and +it becomes part of a key sequence in the normal way. The standard key +binding of @kbd{C-h} is a prefix key for several general-purpose help +features. + +The help character is special after prefix keys, too. If it has no +binding as a subcommand of the prefix key, it runs +@code{describe-prefix-bindings}, which displays a list of all the +subcommands of the prefix key. +@end defvar + +@defvar help-event-list +The value of this variable is a list of event types that serve as +alternative ``help characters.'' These events are handled just like the +event specified by @code{help-char}. +@end defvar + +@defvar help-form +If this variable is non-@code{nil}, its value is a form to evaluate +whenever the character @code{help-char} is read. If evaluating the form +produces a string, that string is displayed. + +A command that calls @code{read-event} or @code{read-char} probably +should bind @code{help-form} to a non-@code{nil} expression while it +does input. (The time when you should not do this is when @kbd{C-h} has +some other meaning.) Evaluating this expression should result in a +string that explains what the input is for and how to enter it properly. + +Entry to the minibuffer binds this variable to the value of +@code{minibuffer-help-form} (@pxref{Definition of minibuffer-help-form}). +@end defvar + +@defvar prefix-help-command +This variable holds a function to print help for a prefix key. The +function is called when the user types a prefix key followed by the help +character, and the help character has no binding after that prefix. The +variable's default value is @code{describe-prefix-bindings}. +@end defvar + +@defun describe-prefix-bindings +This function calls @code{describe-bindings} to display a list of all +the subcommands of the prefix key of the most recent key sequence. The +prefix described consists of all but the last event of that key +sequence. (The last event is, presumably, the help character.) +@end defun + + The following two functions are meant for modes that want to provide +help without relinquishing control, such as the ``electric'' modes. +Their names begin with @samp{Helper} to distinguish them from the +ordinary help functions. + +@deffn Command Helper-describe-bindings +This command pops up a window displaying a help buffer containing a +listing of all of the key bindings from both the local and global keymaps. +It works by calling @code{describe-bindings}. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command Helper-help +This command provides help for the current mode. It prompts the user +in the minibuffer with the message @samp{Help (Type ? for further +options)}, and then provides assistance in finding out what the key +bindings are, and what the mode is intended for. It returns @code{nil}. + +This can be customized by changing the map @code{Helper-help-map}. +@end deffn + +@c Emacs 19 feature +@defvar data-directory +@anchor{Definition of data-directory} +This variable holds the name of the directory in which Emacs finds +certain documentation and text files that come with Emacs. In older +Emacs versions, @code{exec-directory} was used for this. +@end defvar + +@c Emacs 19 feature +@defmac make-help-screen fname help-line help-text help-map +This macro defines a help command named @var{fname} that acts like a +prefix key that shows a list of the subcommands it offers. + +When invoked, @var{fname} displays @var{help-text} in a window, then +reads and executes a key sequence according to @var{help-map}. The +string @var{help-text} should describe the bindings available in +@var{help-map}. + +The command @var{fname} is defined to handle a few events itself, by +scrolling the display of @var{help-text}. When @var{fname} reads one of +those special events, it does the scrolling and then reads another +event. When it reads an event that is not one of those few, and which +has a binding in @var{help-map}, it executes that key's binding and +then returns. + +The argument @var{help-line} should be a single-line summary of the +alternatives in @var{help-map}. In the current version of Emacs, this +argument is used only if you set the option @code{three-step-help} to +@code{t}. + +This macro is used in the command @code{help-for-help} which is the +binding of @kbd{C-h C-h}. +@end defmac + +@defopt three-step-help +If this variable is non-@code{nil}, commands defined with +@code{make-help-screen} display their @var{help-line} strings in the +echo area at first, and display the longer @var{help-text} strings only +if the user types the help character again. +@end defopt + +@ignore + arch-tag: ba36b4c2-e60f-49e2-bc25-61158fdcd815 +@end ignore