Mercurial > emacs
changeset 28329:6e740f27f255
(Programs): Mention outline features.
(Program Modes): Mention more. Xrefs to separate manuals.
(Hideshow): New.
(Documentation): Info-lookup: list modes supported.
(Imenu): New.
author | Dave Love <fx@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 26 Mar 2000 18:19:01 +0000 |
parents | d1e81f2b036f |
children | 14e88614bc8e |
files | man/programs.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 132 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/man/programs.texi Sun Mar 26 18:11:33 2000 +0000 +++ b/man/programs.texi Sun Mar 26 18:19:01 2000 +0000 @@ -36,11 +36,19 @@ provide useful chunks of text for the paragraph commands to work on. +@cindex selective display +@cindex outline +@cindex folding +@findex outline-minor-mode +@cindex outlines The selective display feature is useful for looking at the overall structure of a function (@pxref{Selective Display}). This feature causes only the lines that are indented less than a specified amount to -appear on the screen. Programming modes often support outline minor -mode (@pxref{Outline Mode}). +appear on the screen. Programming modes often support Outline minor +mode (@pxref{Outline Mode}). The Foldout package (@pxref{Foldout}) can +provide convenient folding-editor features on top of the minor mode. +The Hideshow package (@pxref{Hideshow}) can also be used to display +bocks of code selectively. The `automatic typing' features may be useful when writing programs. @xref{Top, Autotyping, autotype, Features for Automatic Typing}. @@ -57,15 +65,17 @@ * Balanced Editing:: Inserting two matching parentheses at once, etc. * Symbol Completion:: Completion on symbol names of your program or language. * Which Function:: Which Function mode shows which function you are in. +* Hideshow:: Displaying blocks selectively. * Documentation:: Getting documentation of functions you plan to call. * Change Log:: Maintaining a change history for your program. * Tags:: Go direct to any function in your program in one command. Tags remembers which file it is in. +* Imenu:: Making buffer indexes as menus. * Emerge:: A convenient way of merging two versions of a program. * C Modes:: Special commands of C, C++, Objective-C, Java, and Pike modes. -* Fortran:: Fortran mode and its special features. -* Asm Mode:: Asm mode and its special features. +* Fortran:: Fortran mode and its special features. +* Asm Mode:: Asm mode and its special features. @end menu @node Program Modes @@ -88,12 +98,21 @@ @cindex M4 mode @cindex Shell-script mode Emacs also has major modes for the programming languages Lisp, Scheme -(a variant of Lisp) and the Scheme-based DSSSL expression language, Awk, -C, C++, Fortran (free and fixed format), Icon, Java, Metafont (@TeX{}'s -+companion for font creation), Modula2, Objective-C, Octave, Pascal, -Perl, Pike, Prolog, Simula, VHDL, CORBA IDL, and Tcl. There is also a -major mode for makefiles, called Makefile mode. An alternative mode for -Perl is called CPerl mode. +(a variant of Lisp) and the Scheme-based DSSSL expression language, Ada, +Awk, C, C++, Fortran (free and fixed format), Icon, IDLWAVE, +Java, Metafont (@TeX{}'s companion for font creation), Modula2, +Objective-C, Octave, Pascal, Perl, Pike, Prolog, Simula, VHDL, CORBA +IDL, and Tcl. There is also a major mode for makefiles, called Makefile +mode. An alternative mode for Perl is called CPerl mode. Modes +are available for scripts for the common Unix shells, VMS DCL and +MS-DOS/MS-Windows `BAT' files. In a similar fashion to programming +languages, modes are provided for editing various sorts of configuration +files. + +Separate manuals are available for th modes for Ada (@pxref{Top, , Ada Mode, +ada-mode, Ada Mode}), C/C++/Objective C/Java/Corba IDL (@pxref{Top, , CC Mode, +ccmode, CC Mode}) and the IDLWAVE modes (@pxref{Top, , IDLWAVE, +idlwave, IDLWAVE User Manual}). Ideally, a major mode should be implemented for each programming language that you might want to edit with Emacs; but often the mode for @@ -132,7 +151,6 @@ @vindex emacs-lisp-mode-hook @vindex lisp-interaction-mode-hook @vindex scheme-mode-hook -@vindex muddle-mode-hook Turning on a major mode runs a normal hook called the @dfn{mode hook}, which is the value of a Lisp variable. Each major mode has a mode hook, and the hook's name is always made from the mode command's name by @@ -1455,7 +1473,57 @@ mode applies to all major modes that know how to support it---which are the major modes that support Imenu.) -@node Documentation +@node Hideshow +@section Hideshow minor mode + +@findex hs-minor-mode +Hideshow minor mode provides selective display of blocks. Use @kbd{M-x +hs-minor-mode} to toggle the mode or add @code{hs-minor-mode} to the +hook for major modes with which you want to use it and which support it. + +Blocks are defined dependent on the mode. In C mode or C++ mode, they +are delimited by braces, while in Lisp-ish modes they are delimited by +parens. Multi-line comments can also be hidden. + +@findex hs-hide-all +@findex hs-hide-block +@findex hs-show-all +@findex hs-show-block +@findex hs-show-region +@findex hs-hide-level +@findex hs-minor-mode +@kindex C-c h +@kindex C-c s +@kindex C-c H +@kindex C-c S +@kindex C-c R +@kindex C-c L +@kindex S-mouse-2 +The mode provides the commands @kbd{C-c h} (@kbd{M-x hs-hide-all}), +@kbd{C-c s} (@kbd{M-x hs-hide-block}), @kbd{C-c H} (@kbd{M-x +hs-show-all}), @kbd{C-c S} (@kbd{M-x hs-show-block}), @kbd{C-c R} +(@kbd{M-x hs-show-region}) and @kbd{C-c L} (@kbd{M-x hs-hide-level}) +with obvious functions and @kbd{S-mouse-2} toggles hiding of a block +with the mouse. + +@vindex hs-hide-comments-when-hiding-all +@vindex hs-show-hidden-short-form +@vindex hs-isearch-open +@vindex hs-special-modes-alist +Hideshow is customized by the variables +@table @code +@item hs-hide-comments-when-hiding-all +Specifies whether @kbd{hs-hide-all} should hide comments too. +@item hs-show-hidden-short-form +Specifies whether or not the last line in a form is omitted (saving +screen space). +@item hs-isearch-open +Specifies what kind of hidden blocks to open in Isearch mode. +@item hs-special-modes-alist +Initializes Hideshow variables for different modes. +@end table + +@node Documentation, Change Log, Hideshow, Programs @section Documentation Commands As you edit Lisp code to be run in Emacs, the commands @kbd{C-h f} @@ -1487,7 +1555,11 @@ symbol that appears in the buffer at point. The major mode determines where to look for documentation for the symbol---which Info files and which indices. You can also use @kbd{M-x info-lookup-file} to look for -documentation for a file name. +documentation for a file name. Currently the modes supported by +Info-lookup are: Awk, Autoconf, Bison, C, Emacs Lisp, LaTeX, M4, +Makefile, Octave, Perl, Scheme and Texinfo. The relevant Info files +mostly must be obtained separately, typically from the appropriate GNU +package. @findex manual-entry You can read the ``man page'' for an operating system command, library @@ -2218,7 +2290,50 @@ You can also perform completion in the buffer on the name space of tag names in the current tags tables. @xref{Symbol Completion}. -@node Emerge +@node Imenu +@section Imenu +@cindex indexes of buffer contents +@cindex buffer content indexes +@cindex tags + +The Imenu package provides mode-specific indexes of the contents of +single buffers and provides selection from a menu. Selecting a menu +item takes you to the indexed point in the buffer, in a similar way to +the Tags facility. Indexing is typically by names of program routines +and variables but in Texinfo mode, for instance, node names are indexed. +Most major modes for which it is appropriate have Imenu support. + +@findex imenu +@findex imenu-add-menu-bar-index +@kbd{M-x imenu} builds the index if necessary and presents you with an +electric buffer menu from which to select an entry (with completion). +You can add an index menubar on the menubar with +@kbd{imenu-add-menu-bar-index}. + +Some major modes provide facilities for invoking Imenu; otherwise you +could add @code{imenu-add-menu-bar-index} to a major mode's hook to +generate an index for each buffer created in that mode. (If you do +that, it takes sime time to generate the index when finding a file, +depending on the file's size and the complexity of the indexing function +for that mode.) + +@vindex imenu-auto-rescan +The index should be regenerated (via the @samp{*Rescan*} menu item) when +indexable items are added to or deleted from the buffer. Rescanning is +done when a menu selction is requested if the option +@code{imenu-auto-rescan} is set. By default buffer positions are in +terms of markers, so that changing non-indexable text doesn't require +rescanning. + +@vindex imenu-sort-function +The way the menus are sorted can be customized via the option +@code{imenu-sort-function}. By default names are ordered as they occur +in the buffer; alphabetic sorting is provided as an alternative. + +Imenu provides the information used by Which Function mode (@pxref{Which +Function}). It may also be used by Speedbar (@pxref{Hyperlinking}). + +@node Emerge, C Modes, Imenu, Programs @section Merging Files with Emerge @cindex Emerge @cindex merging files @@ -2625,6 +2740,9 @@ Objective-C, Java, CORBA IDL, and Pike modes. When we say ``C mode and related modes,'' those are the modes we mean. +Additional information is available in the separate manual for these +modes. @xref{Top, CC Mode, ccmode, , CC Mode}. + @menu * Motion in C:: * Electric C::