Mercurial > emacs
changeset 52800:d738115b4197
(Faces for Font Lock): Fix typo.
(Hooks): Explain how buffer-local hook variables can refer to
global hook variables.
Various minor clarifications.
author | Lute Kamstra <lute@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 07 Oct 2003 12:10:57 +0000 |
parents | 482664d12a27 |
children | 5bc2a255c70c |
files | lispref/modes.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 47 insertions(+), 27 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lispref/modes.texi Tue Oct 07 07:33:22 2003 +0000 +++ b/lispref/modes.texi Tue Oct 07 12:10:57 2003 +0000 @@ -1850,7 +1850,7 @@ Selecting a special element performs: @example -(funcall @var{function} +(funcall @var{function} @var{index-name} @var{index-position} @var{arguments}@dots{}) @end example @@ -2331,8 +2331,8 @@ @vindex font-lock-constant-face Used (typically) for constant names. -@item font-locl-preprocessor-face -@vindex font-locl-preprocessor-face +@item font-lock-preprocessor-face +@vindex font-lock-preprocessor-face Used (typically) for preprocessor commands. @item font-lock-warning-face @@ -2436,6 +2436,18 @@ a Function}). Most normal hook variables are initially void; @code{add-hook} knows how to deal with this. +With @code{add-hook}, you can also add hook functions to the +buffer-local value of a hook variable. If necessary, @code{add-hook} +first makes the hook variable buffer-local and adds @code{t} to the +buffer-local value. The element @code{t} in the buffer-local value of +a hook variable acts as a signal for the various functions that run +hooks to run the default value of the hook variable as well; @code{t} +is basically substituted with the elements of the default value of a +hook variable. Since @code{add-hook} normally adds hook functions to +the front of hook variables, this means that the hook functions in the +buffer-local value are called before the hook functions in the default +value of hook variables. + @cindex abnormal hook If the hook variable's name does not end with @samp{-hook}, that indicates it is probably an @dfn{abnormal hook}. Then you should look at its @@ -2465,9 +2477,10 @@ been added with @code{add-hook}. @defun run-hooks &rest hookvars -This function takes one or more hook variable names as arguments, and -runs each hook in turn. Each argument should be a symbol that is a hook -variable. These arguments are processed in the order specified. +This function takes one or more normal hook variable names as +arguments, and runs each hook in turn. Each argument should be a +symbol that is a hook variable. These arguments are processed in the +order specified. If a hook variable has a non-@code{nil} value, that value may be a function or a list of functions. If the value is a function (either a @@ -2497,33 +2510,33 @@ @end defmac @defun run-hook-with-args hook &rest args -This function is the way to run an abnormal hook which passes arguments -to the hook functions. It calls each of the hook functions, passing -each of them the arguments @var{args}. +This function is the way to run an abnormal hook. It calls each of +the hook functions, passing each of them the arguments @var{args}. @end defun @defun run-hook-with-args-until-failure hook &rest args -This function is the way to run an abnormal hook which passes arguments -to the hook functions, and stops as soon as any hook function fails. It -calls each of the hook functions, passing each of them the arguments -@var{args}, until some hook function returns @code{nil}. Then it stops, -and returns @code{nil} if some hook function returned @code{nil}. -Otherwise it returns a non-@code{nil} value. +This function is the way to run an abnormal hook until one of the hook +functions fails. It calls each of the hook functions, passing each of +them the arguments @var{args}, until some hook function returns +@code{nil}. It then stops and returns @code{nil}. If none of the +hook functions return @code{nil}, it returns a non-@code{nil} value. @end defun @defun run-hook-with-args-until-success hook &rest args -This function is the way to run an abnormal hook which passes arguments -to the hook functions, and stops as soon as any hook function succeeds. -It calls each of the hook functions, passing each of them the arguments -@var{args}, until some hook function returns non-@code{nil}. Then it -stops, and returns whatever was returned by the last hook function -that was called. +This function is the way to run an abnormal hook until a hook function +succeeds. It calls each of the hook functions, passing each of them +the arguments @var{args}, until some hook function returns +non-@code{nil}. Then it stops, and returns whatever was returned by +the last hook function that was called. If all hook functions return +@code{nil}, it returns @code{nil} as well. @end defun @defun add-hook hook function &optional append local This function is the handy way to add function @var{function} to hook -variable @var{hook}. The argument @var{function} may be any valid Lisp -function with the proper number of arguments. For example, +variable @var{hook}. The argument @var{function} is not added if it +is already present on @var{hook} (comparisons are performed with +@code{equal}; @pxref{Equality Predicates}). @var{function} may be any +valid Lisp function with the proper number of arguments. For example, @example (add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'my-text-hook-function) @@ -2537,18 +2550,25 @@ It is best to design your hook functions so that the order in which they are executed does not matter. Any dependence on the order is ``asking -for trouble.'' However, the order is predictable: normally, +for trouble''. However, the order is predictable: normally, @var{function} goes at the front of the hook list, so it will be executed first (barring another @code{add-hook} call). If the optional argument @var{append} is non-@code{nil}, the new hook function goes at the end of the hook list and will be executed last. -If @var{local} is non-@code{nil}, that says to add @var{function} -to the buffer-local hook list instead of to the global hook list. +If @var{local} is non-@code{nil}, that says to add @var{function} to +the buffer-local hook list instead of to the global hook list. If +needed, this makes the hook buffer-local and adds @code{t} to the +buffer-local value. The latter acts as a flag to run the hook +functions in the default value as well as in the local value. @end defun @defun remove-hook hook function &optional local -This function removes @var{function} from the hook variable @var{hook}. +This function removes @var{function} from the hook variable +@var{hook}. The argument @var{function} is compared with elements of +@var{hook} by means of @code{equal} (@pxref{Equality Predicates}). +This means that you can remove symbols with a function definition as +well as lambda expressions. If @var{local} is non-@code{nil}, that says to remove @var{function} from the buffer-local hook list instead of from the global hook list.