Mercurial > emacs
changeset 84219:f3aedd5bded4
Move here from ../../man
author | Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 06 Sep 2007 04:43:48 +0000 |
parents | 86daa3df94b0 |
children | cd7f91c126c5 |
files | doc/emacs/abbrevs.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 457 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/doc/emacs/abbrevs.texi Thu Sep 06 04:43:48 2007 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,457 @@ +@c This is part of the Emacs manual. +@c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003, +@c 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +@c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions. +@node Abbrevs +@chapter Abbrevs +@cindex abbrevs +@cindex expansion (of abbrevs) + + A defined @dfn{abbrev} is a word which @dfn{expands}, if you insert +it, into some different text. Abbrevs are defined by the user to expand +in specific ways. For example, you might define @samp{foo} as an abbrev +expanding to @samp{find outer otter}. Then you could insert +@samp{find outer otter } into the buffer by typing @kbd{f o o +@key{SPC}}. + + A second kind of abbreviation facility is called @dfn{dynamic abbrev +expansion}. You use dynamic abbrev expansion with an explicit command +to expand the letters in the buffer before point by looking for other +words in the buffer that start with those letters. @xref{Dynamic +Abbrevs}. + + ``Hippie'' expansion generalizes abbreviation expansion. +@xref{Hippie Expand, , Hippie Expansion, autotype, Features for +Automatic Typing}. + +@menu +* Abbrev Concepts:: Fundamentals of defined abbrevs. +* Defining Abbrevs:: Defining an abbrev, so it will expand when typed. +* Expanding Abbrevs:: Controlling expansion: prefixes, canceling expansion. +* Editing Abbrevs:: Viewing or editing the entire list of defined abbrevs. +* Saving Abbrevs:: Saving the entire list of abbrevs for another session. +* Dynamic Abbrevs:: Abbreviations for words already in the buffer. +* Dabbrev Customization:: What is a word, for dynamic abbrevs. Case handling. +@end menu + +@node Abbrev Concepts +@section Abbrev Concepts + + An @dfn{abbrev} is a word which has been defined to @dfn{expand} into +a specified @dfn{expansion}. When you insert a word-separator character +following the abbrev, that expands the abbrev---replacing the abbrev +with its expansion. For example, if @samp{foo} is defined as an abbrev +expanding to @samp{find outer otter}, then you can insert @samp{find +outer otter.} into the buffer by typing @kbd{f o o .}. + +@findex abbrev-mode +@vindex abbrev-mode +@cindex Abbrev mode +@cindex mode, Abbrev + Abbrevs expand only when Abbrev mode (a minor mode) is enabled. +Disabling Abbrev mode does not cause abbrev definitions to be forgotten, +but they do not expand until Abbrev mode is enabled again. The command +@kbd{M-x abbrev-mode} toggles Abbrev mode; with a numeric argument, it +turns Abbrev mode on if the argument is positive, off otherwise. +@xref{Minor Modes}. @code{abbrev-mode} is also a variable; Abbrev mode is +on when the variable is non-@code{nil}. The variable @code{abbrev-mode} +automatically becomes local to the current buffer when it is set. + + Abbrevs can have @dfn{mode-specific} definitions, active only in one major +mode. Abbrevs can also have @dfn{global} definitions that are active in +all major modes. The same abbrev can have a global definition and various +mode-specific definitions for different major modes. A mode-specific +definition for the current major mode overrides a global definition. + + You can define abbrevs interactively during the editing session. You +can also save lists of abbrev definitions in files for use in later +sessions. Some users keep extensive lists of abbrevs that they load +in every session. + +@node Defining Abbrevs +@section Defining Abbrevs + +@table @kbd +@item C-x a g +Define an abbrev, using one or more words before point as its expansion +(@code{add-global-abbrev}). +@item C-x a l +Similar, but define an abbrev specific to the current major mode +(@code{add-mode-abbrev}). +@item C-x a i g +Define a word in the buffer as an abbrev (@code{inverse-add-global-abbrev}). +@item C-x a i l +Define a word in the buffer as a mode-specific abbrev +(@code{inverse-add-mode-abbrev}). +@item M-x define-global-abbrev @key{RET} @var{abbrev} @key{RET} @var{exp} @key{RET} +Define @var{abbrev} as an abbrev expanding into @var{exp}. +@item M-x define-mode-abbrev @key{RET} @var{abbrev} @key{RET} @var{exp} @key{RET} +Define @var{abbrev} as a mode-specific abbrev expanding into @var{exp}. +@item M-x kill-all-abbrevs +Discard all abbrev definitions, leaving a blank slate. +@end table + +@kindex C-x a g +@findex add-global-abbrev + The usual way to define an abbrev is to enter the text you want the +abbrev to expand to, position point after it, and type @kbd{C-x a g} +(@code{add-global-abbrev}). This reads the abbrev itself using the +minibuffer, and then defines it as an abbrev for one or more words before +point. Use a numeric argument to say how many words before point should be +taken as the expansion. For example, to define the abbrev @samp{foo} as +mentioned above, insert the text @samp{find outer otter} and then type +@kbd{C-u 3 C-x a g f o o @key{RET}}. + + An argument of zero to @kbd{C-x a g} means to use the contents of the +region as the expansion of the abbrev being defined. + +@kindex C-x a l +@findex add-mode-abbrev + The command @kbd{C-x a l} (@code{add-mode-abbrev}) is similar, but +defines a mode-specific abbrev. Mode-specific abbrevs are active only in a +particular major mode. @kbd{C-x a l} defines an abbrev for the major mode +in effect at the time @kbd{C-x a l} is typed. The arguments work the same +as for @kbd{C-x a g}. + +@kindex C-x a i g +@findex inverse-add-global-abbrev +@kindex C-x a i l +@findex inverse-add-mode-abbrev + If the abbrev text itself is already in the buffer, you can use the +commands @kbd{C-x a i g} (@code{inverse-add-global-abbrev}) and +@kbd{C-x a i l} (@code{inverse-add-mode-abbrev}) to define it as an +abbrev by specify the expansion in the minibuffer. These commands are +called ``inverse'' because they invert the meaning of the two text +strings they use (one from the buffer and one read with the +minibuffer). + +@findex define-mode-abbrev +@findex define-global-abbrev + You can define an abbrev without inserting either the abbrev or its +expansion in the buffer using the command @code{define-global-abbrev}. +It reads two arguments---the abbrev, and its expansion. The command +@code{define-mode-abbrev} does likewise for a mode-specific abbrev. + + To change the definition of an abbrev, just define a new definition. +When the abbrev has a prior definition, the abbrev definition commands +ask for confirmation before replacing it. + +@findex kill-all-abbrevs + To remove an abbrev definition, give a negative argument to the +abbrev definition command: @kbd{C-u - C-x a g} or @kbd{C-u - C-x a l}. +The former removes a global definition, while the latter removes a +mode-specific definition. @kbd{M-x kill-all-abbrevs} removes all +abbrev definitions, both global and local. + +@node Expanding Abbrevs +@section Controlling Abbrev Expansion + + When Abbrev mode is enabled, an abbrev expands whenever it is +present in the buffer just before point and you type a self-inserting +whitespace or punctuation character (@key{SPC}, comma, etc.@:). More +precisely, any character that is not a word constituent expands an +abbrev, and any word-constituent character can be part of an abbrev. +The most common way to use an abbrev is to insert it and then insert a +punctuation or whitespace character to expand it. + +@vindex abbrev-all-caps + Abbrev expansion preserves case; thus, @samp{foo} expands into @samp{find +outer otter}; @samp{Foo} into @samp{Find outer otter}, and @samp{FOO} into +@samp{FIND OUTER OTTER} or @samp{Find Outer Otter} according to the +variable @code{abbrev-all-caps} (setting it non-@code{nil} specifies +@samp{FIND OUTER OTTER}). + + These commands are used to control abbrev expansion: + +@table @kbd +@item M-' +Separate a prefix from a following abbrev to be expanded +(@code{abbrev-prefix-mark}). +@item C-x a e +@findex expand-abbrev +Expand the abbrev before point (@code{expand-abbrev}). +This is effective even when Abbrev mode is not enabled. +@item M-x expand-region-abbrevs +Expand some or all abbrevs found in the region. +@end table + +@kindex M-' +@findex abbrev-prefix-mark + You may wish to expand an abbrev and attach a prefix to the expansion; +for example, if @samp{cnst} expands into @samp{construction}, you might want +to use it to enter @samp{reconstruction}. It does not work to type +@kbd{recnst}, because that is not necessarily a defined abbrev. What +you can do is use the command @kbd{M-'} (@code{abbrev-prefix-mark}) in +between the prefix @samp{re} and the abbrev @samp{cnst}. First, insert +@samp{re}. Then type @kbd{M-'}; this inserts a hyphen in the buffer to +indicate that it has done its work. Then insert the abbrev @samp{cnst}; +the buffer now contains @samp{re-cnst}. Now insert a non-word character +to expand the abbrev @samp{cnst} into @samp{construction}. This +expansion step also deletes the hyphen that indicated @kbd{M-'} had been +used. The result is the desired @samp{reconstruction}. + + If you actually want the text of the abbrev in the buffer, rather than +its expansion, you can accomplish this by inserting the following +punctuation with @kbd{C-q}. Thus, @kbd{foo C-q ,} leaves @samp{foo,} in +the buffer, not expanding it. + +@findex unexpand-abbrev + If you expand an abbrev by mistake, you can undo the expansion and +bring back the abbrev itself by typing @kbd{C-_} to undo (@pxref{Undo}). +This also undoes the insertion of the non-word character that expanded +the abbrev. If the result you want is the terminating non-word +character plus the unexpanded abbrev, you must reinsert the terminating +character, quoting it with @kbd{C-q}. You can also use the command +@kbd{M-x unexpand-abbrev} to cancel the last expansion without +deleting the terminating character. + +@findex expand-region-abbrevs + @kbd{M-x expand-region-abbrevs} searches through the region for defined +abbrevs, and for each one found offers to replace it with its expansion. +This command is useful if you have typed in text using abbrevs but forgot +to turn on Abbrev mode first. It may also be useful together with a +special set of abbrev definitions for making several global replacements at +once. This command is effective even if Abbrev mode is not enabled. + + Expanding any abbrev first runs the hook @code{pre-abbrev-expand-hook} +(@pxref{Hooks}). + +@need 1500 +@node Editing Abbrevs +@section Examining and Editing Abbrevs + +@table @kbd +@item M-x list-abbrevs +Display a list of all abbrev definitions. With a numeric argument, list +only local abbrevs. +@item M-x edit-abbrevs +Edit a list of abbrevs; you can add, alter or remove definitions. +@end table + +@findex list-abbrevs + The output from @kbd{M-x list-abbrevs} looks like this: + +@example +@var{various other tables@dots{}} +(lisp-mode-abbrev-table) +"dk" 0 "define-key" +(global-abbrev-table) +"dfn" 0 "definition" +@end example + +@noindent +(Some blank lines of no semantic significance, and some other abbrev +tables, have been omitted.) + + A line containing a name in parentheses is the header for abbrevs in a +particular abbrev table; @code{global-abbrev-table} contains all the global +abbrevs, and the other abbrev tables that are named after major modes +contain the mode-specific abbrevs. + + Within each abbrev table, each nonblank line defines one abbrev. The +word at the beginning of the line is the abbrev. The number that +follows is the number of times the abbrev has been expanded. Emacs +keeps track of this to help you see which abbrevs you actually use, so +that you can eliminate those that you don't use often. The string at +the end of the line is the expansion. + + Some abbrevs are marked with @samp{(sys)}. These ``system'' abbrevs +(@pxref{Abbrevs,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}) are +pre-defined by various modes, and are not saved to your abbrev file. +To disable a ``system'' abbrev, define an abbrev of the same name that +expands to itself, and save it to your abbrev file. + +@findex edit-abbrevs +@kindex C-c C-c @r{(Edit Abbrevs)} + @kbd{M-x edit-abbrevs} allows you to add, change or kill abbrev +definitions by editing a list of them in an Emacs buffer. The list has +the same format described above. The buffer of abbrevs is called +@samp{*Abbrevs*}, and is in Edit-Abbrevs mode. Type @kbd{C-c C-c} in +this buffer to install the abbrev definitions as specified in the +buffer---and delete any abbrev definitions not listed. + + The command @code{edit-abbrevs} is actually the same as +@code{list-abbrevs} except that it selects the buffer @samp{*Abbrevs*} +whereas @code{list-abbrevs} merely displays it in another window. + +@node Saving Abbrevs +@section Saving Abbrevs + + These commands allow you to keep abbrev definitions between editing +sessions. + +@table @kbd +@item M-x write-abbrev-file @key{RET} @var{file} @key{RET} +Write a file @var{file} describing all defined abbrevs. +@item M-x read-abbrev-file @key{RET} @var{file} @key{RET} +Read the file @var{file} and define abbrevs as specified therein. +@item M-x quietly-read-abbrev-file @key{RET} @var{file} @key{RET} +Similar but do not display a message about what is going on. +@item M-x define-abbrevs +Define abbrevs from definitions in current buffer. +@item M-x insert-abbrevs +Insert all abbrevs and their expansions into current buffer. +@end table + +@findex write-abbrev-file + @kbd{M-x write-abbrev-file} reads a file name using the minibuffer and +then writes a description of all current abbrev definitions into that +file. This is used to save abbrev definitions for use in a later +session. The text stored in the file is a series of Lisp expressions +that, when executed, define the same abbrevs that you currently have. + +@findex read-abbrev-file +@findex quietly-read-abbrev-file +@vindex abbrev-file-name + @kbd{M-x read-abbrev-file} reads a file name using the minibuffer +and then reads the file, defining abbrevs according to the contents of +the file. The function @code{quietly-read-abbrev-file} is similar +except that it does not display a message in the echo area; you cannot +invoke it interactively, and it is used primarily in the @file{.emacs} +file. If either of these functions is called with @code{nil} as the +argument, it uses the file name specified in the variable +@code{abbrev-file-name}, which is by default @code{"~/.abbrev_defs"}. +That file is your standard abbrev definition file, and Emacs loads +abbrevs from it automatically when it starts up. + +@vindex save-abbrevs + Emacs will offer to save abbrevs automatically if you have changed +any of them, whenever it offers to save all files (for @kbd{C-x s} or +@kbd{C-x C-c}). It saves them in the file specified by +@code{abbrev-file-name}. This feature can be inhibited by setting the +variable @code{save-abbrevs} to @code{nil}. + +@findex insert-abbrevs +@findex define-abbrevs + The commands @kbd{M-x insert-abbrevs} and @kbd{M-x define-abbrevs} are +similar to the previous commands but work on text in an Emacs buffer. +@kbd{M-x insert-abbrevs} inserts text into the current buffer after point, +describing all current abbrev definitions; @kbd{M-x define-abbrevs} parses +the entire current buffer and defines abbrevs accordingly. + +@node Dynamic Abbrevs +@section Dynamic Abbrev Expansion + + The abbrev facility described above operates automatically as you +insert text, but all abbrevs must be defined explicitly. By contrast, +@dfn{dynamic abbrevs} allow the meanings of abbreviations to be +determined automatically from the contents of the buffer, but dynamic +abbrev expansion happens only when you request it explicitly. + +@kindex M-/ +@kindex C-M-/ +@findex dabbrev-expand +@findex dabbrev-completion +@table @kbd +@item M-/ +Expand the word in the buffer before point as a @dfn{dynamic abbrev}, +by searching in the buffer for words starting with that abbreviation +(@code{dabbrev-expand}). + +@item C-M-/ +Complete the word before point as a dynamic abbrev +(@code{dabbrev-completion}). +@end table + +@vindex dabbrev-limit + For example, if the buffer contains @samp{does this follow } and you +type @kbd{f o M-/}, the effect is to insert @samp{follow} because that +is the last word in the buffer that starts with @samp{fo}. A numeric +argument to @kbd{M-/} says to take the second, third, etc.@: distinct +expansion found looking backward from point. Repeating @kbd{M-/} +searches for an alternative expansion by looking farther back. After +scanning all the text before point, it searches the text after point. +The variable @code{dabbrev-limit}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies how far +away in the buffer to search for an expansion. + +@vindex dabbrev-check-all-buffers + After scanning the current buffer, @kbd{M-/} normally searches other +buffers, unless you have set @code{dabbrev-check-all-buffers} to +@code{nil}. + +@vindex dabbrev-ignored-buffer-regexps + For finer control over which buffers to scan, customize the variable +@code{dabbrev-ignored-buffer-regexps}. Its value is a list of regular +expressions. If a buffer's name matches any of these regular +expressions, dynamic abbrev expansion skips that buffer. + + A negative argument to @kbd{M-/}, as in @kbd{C-u - M-/}, says to +search first for expansions after point, then other buffers, and +consider expansions before point only as a last resort. If you repeat +the @kbd{M-/} to look for another expansion, do not specify an +argument. Repeating @kbd{M-/} cycles through all the expansions after +point and then the expansions before point. + + After you have expanded a dynamic abbrev, you can copy additional +words that follow the expansion in its original context. Simply type +@kbd{@key{SPC} M-/} for each additional word you want to copy. The +spacing and punctuation between words is copied along with the words. + + The command @kbd{C-M-/} (@code{dabbrev-completion}) performs +completion of a dynamic abbrev. Instead of trying the possible +expansions one by one, it finds all of them, then inserts the text +that they have in common. If they have nothing in common, @kbd{C-M-/} +displays a list of completions, from which you can select a choice in +the usual manner. @xref{Completion}. + + Dynamic abbrev expansion is completely independent of Abbrev mode; the +expansion of a word with @kbd{M-/} is completely independent of whether +it has a definition as an ordinary abbrev. + +@node Dabbrev Customization +@section Customizing Dynamic Abbreviation + + Normally, dynamic abbrev expansion ignores case when searching for +expansions. That is, the expansion need not agree in case with the word +you are expanding. + +@vindex dabbrev-case-fold-search + This feature is controlled by the variable +@code{dabbrev-case-fold-search}. If it is @code{t}, case is ignored in +this search; if it is @code{nil}, the word and the expansion must match +in case. If the value of @code{dabbrev-case-fold-search} is +@code{case-fold-search}, which is true by default, then the variable +@code{case-fold-search} controls whether to ignore case while searching +for expansions. + +@vindex dabbrev-case-replace + Normally, dynamic abbrev expansion preserves the case pattern +@emph{of the dynamic abbrev you are expanding}, by converting the +expansion to that case pattern. + +@vindex dabbrev-case-fold-search + The variable @code{dabbrev-case-replace} controls whether to +preserve the case pattern of the dynamic abbrev. If it is @code{t}, +the dynamic abbrev's case pattern is preserved in most cases; if it is +@code{nil}, the expansion is always copied verbatim. If the value of +@code{dabbrev-case-replace} is @code{case-replace}, which is true by +default, then the variable @code{case-replace} controls whether to +copy the expansion verbatim. + + However, if the expansion contains a complex mixed case pattern, and +the dynamic abbrev matches this pattern as far as it goes, then the +expansion is always copied verbatim, regardless of those variables. +Thus, for example, if the buffer contains +@code{variableWithSillyCasePattern}, and you type @kbd{v a M-/}, it +copies the expansion verbatim including its case pattern. + +@vindex dabbrev-abbrev-char-regexp + The variable @code{dabbrev-abbrev-char-regexp}, if non-@code{nil}, +controls which characters are considered part of a word, for dynamic expansion +purposes. The regular expression must match just one character, never +two or more. The same regular expression also determines which +characters are part of an expansion. The value @code{nil} has a special +meaning: dynamic abbrevs are made of word characters, but expansions are +made of word and symbol characters. + +@vindex dabbrev-abbrev-skip-leading-regexp + In shell scripts and makefiles, a variable name is sometimes prefixed +with @samp{$} and sometimes not. Major modes for this kind of text can +customize dynamic abbrev expansion to handle optional prefixes by setting +the variable @code{dabbrev-abbrev-skip-leading-regexp}. Its value +should be a regular expression that matches the optional prefix that +dynamic abbrev expression should ignore. + +@ignore + arch-tag: 638e0079-9540-48ec-9166-414083e16445 +@end ignore