Mercurial > emacs
changeset 98954:576242ffca27
(Choosing Modes): Make mode selection sequence more obvious by
describing the steps in order of priority. Note that magic-mode-alist
is nil by default. Document magic-fallback-mode-alist.
author | Chong Yidong <cyd@stupidchicken.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 21 Oct 2008 03:21:29 +0000 |
parents | 8563e8eb90fe |
children | 696800e083e7 |
files | doc/emacs/major.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 102 insertions(+), 85 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/doc/emacs/major.texi Tue Oct 21 03:21:15 2008 +0000 +++ b/doc/emacs/major.texi Tue Oct 21 03:21:29 2008 +0000 @@ -71,11 +71,91 @@ executing @kbd{M-x lisp-mode}. @vindex auto-mode-alist - When you visit a file, Emacs usually chooses the right major mode based -on the file's name. For example, files whose names end in @samp{.c} are -edited in C mode. The correspondence between file names and major modes is -controlled by the variable @code{auto-mode-alist}. Its value is a list in -which each element has this form, + When you visit a file, Emacs usually chooses the right major mode +automatically. Normally, the choice is made based on the file +name---for example, files whose names end in @samp{.c} are normally +edited in C mode---but sometimes the major mode is selected using the +contents of the file. Here is the exact procedure: + + First, Emacs checks whether the file contains a file-local variable +that specifies the major mode. If so, it uses that major mode, +ignoring all other criteria. @xref{File Variables}. There are +several methods to specify a major mode using a file-local variable; +the simplest is to put the mode name in the first nonblank line, +preceded and followed by @samp{-*-}. Other text may appear on the +line as well. For example, + +@example +; -*-Lisp-*- +@end example + +@noindent +tells Emacs to use Lisp mode. Note how the semicolon is used to make +Lisp treat this line as a comment. Alternatively, you could write + +@example +; -*- mode: Lisp;-*- +@end example + +@noindent +The latter format allows you to specify local variables as well, like +this: + +@example +; -*- mode: Lisp; tab-width: 4; -*- +@end example + +@vindex interpreter-mode-alist + Secondly, Emacs checks whether the file's contents begin with +@samp{#!}. If so, that indicates that the file can serve as an +executable shell command, which works by running an interpreter named +on the file's first line (the rest of the file is used as input to the +interpreter). Therefore, Emacs tries to use the interpreter name to +choose a mode. For instance, a file that begins with +@samp{#!/usr/bin/perl} is opened in Perl mode. The variable +@code{interpreter-mode-alist} specifies the correspondence between +interpreter program names and major modes. + + When the first line starts with @samp{#!}, you usually cannot use +the @samp{-*-} feature on the first line, because the system would get +confused when running the interpreter. So Emacs looks for @samp{-*-} +on the second line in such files as well as on the first line. The +same is true for man pages which start with the magic string +@samp{'\"} to specify a list of troff preprocessors. + +@vindex magic-mode-alist + Thirdly, Emacs tries to determine the major mode by looking at the +text at the start of the buffer, based on the variable +@code{magic-mode-alist}. By default, this variable is @code{nil} (an +empty list), so Emacs skips this step; however, you can customize it +in your init file (@pxref{Init File}). The value should be a list of +elements of the form + +@example +(@var{regexp} . @var{mode-function}) +@end example + +@noindent +where @var{regexp} is a regular expression (@pxref{Regexps}), and +@var{mode-function} is a Lisp function that toggles a major mode. If +the text at the beginning of the file matches @var{regexp}, Emacs +chooses the major mode specified by @var{mode-function}. + +Alternatively, an element of @code{magic-mode-alist} may have the form + +@example +(@var{match-function} . @var{mode-function}) +@end example + +@noindent +where @var{match-function} is a Lisp function that is called at the +beginning of the buffer; if the function returns non-@code{nil}, Emacs +set the major mode wit @var{mode-function}. + + Fourthly---if Emacs still hasn't found a suitable major mode---it +looks at the file's name. The correspondence between file names and +major modes is controlled by the variable @code{auto-mode-alist}. Its +value is a list in which each element has this form, @example (@var{regexp} . @var{mode-function}) @@ -99,93 +179,30 @@ @var{mode-function}, Emacs discards the suffix that matched @var{regexp} and searches the list again for another match. -@vindex magic-mode-alist - Sometimes the major mode is determined from the way the file's text -begins. The variable @code{magic-mode-alist} controls this. Its value -is a list of elements of these forms: - -@example -(@var{regexp} . @var{mode-function}) -(@var{match-function} . @var{mode-function}) -@end example - -@noindent -The first form looks like an element of @code{auto-mode-alist}, but it -doesn't work the same: this @var{regexp} is matched against the text -at the start of the buffer, not against the file name. Likewise, the -second form calls @var{match-function} at the beginning of the buffer, -and if the function returns non-@code{nil}, the @var{mode-function} is -called. @code{magic-mode-alist} takes priority over -@code{auto-mode-alist}. - - You can specify the major mode to use for editing a certain file by -special text in the first nonblank line of the file. The -mode name should appear in this line both preceded and followed by -@samp{-*-}. Other text may appear on the line as well. For example, - -@example -;-*-Lisp-*- -@end example - -@noindent -tells Emacs to use Lisp mode. Such an explicit specification overrides -any defaults based on the file name. Note how the semicolon is used -to make Lisp treat this line as a comment. - - Another format of mode specification is - -@example --*- mode: @var{modename};-*- -@end example +@vindex auto-mode-case-fold + On systems with case-insensitive file names, such as Microsoft +Windows, Emacs performs a single case-insensitive search through +@code{auto-mode-alist}. On other systems, Emacs normally performs a +single case-sensitive search through the alist. However, if you +change the variable @code{auto-mode-case-fold} to @code{t}, Emacs +performs a second case-insensitive search if the first search fails. -@noindent -which allows you to specify local variables as well, like this: - -@example --*- mode: @var{modename}; @var{var}: @var{value}; @dots{} -*- -@end example - -@noindent -@xref{File Variables}, for more information about this. - -@vindex auto-mode-case-fold - On systems with case-insensitive file names, only a single -case-insensitive search through the @code{auto-mode-alist} is made. -On other systems, Emacs normally performs a single case-sensitive -search through the alist, but if you set this variable to a -non-@code{nil} value, Emacs will perform a second case-insensitive -search if the first search fails. - -@vindex interpreter-mode-alist - When a file's contents begin with @samp{#!}, it can serve as an -executable shell command, which works by running an interpreter named on -the file's first line. The rest of the file is used as input to the -interpreter. - - When you visit such a file in Emacs, if the file's name does not -specify a major mode, Emacs uses the interpreter name on the first line -to choose a mode. If the first line is the name of a recognized -interpreter program, such as @samp{perl} or @samp{tcl}, Emacs uses a -mode appropriate for programs for that interpreter. The variable -@code{interpreter-mode-alist} specifies the correspondence between -interpreter program names and major modes. - - When the first line starts with @samp{#!}, you cannot (on many -systems) use the @samp{-*-} feature on the first line, because the -system would get confused when running the interpreter. So Emacs looks -for @samp{-*-} on the second line in such files as well as on the -first line. The same is true for man pages which start with the magic -string @samp{'\"} to specify a list of troff preprocessors (not all do, -however). - +@vindex magic-fallback-mode-alist + Finally, if Emacs @emph{still} hasn't found a major mode to use, it +compares the text at the start of the buffer to the variable +@code{magic-fallback-mode-alist}. This variable works like +@code{magic-mode-alist}, described above, except that is consulted +only after @code{auto-mode-alist}. By default, +@code{magic-fallback-mode-alist} contains forms that check for image +files, HTML/XML/SGML files, and Postscript files. @vindex default-major-mode When you visit a file that does not specify a major mode to use, or when you create a new buffer with @kbd{C-x b}, the variable @code{default-major-mode} specifies which major mode to use. Normally its value is the symbol @code{fundamental-mode}, which specifies -Fundamental mode. If @code{default-major-mode} is @code{nil}, the major -mode is taken from the previously current buffer. +Fundamental mode. If @code{default-major-mode} is @code{nil}, the +major mode is taken from the previously current buffer. @findex normal-mode If you change the major mode of a buffer, you can go back to the major