Mercurial > emacs
changeset 98744:f92a9c4d4746
(Low-Level Kill Ring): interprogram-paste-function can now return a list
of strings.
author | Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 15 Oct 2008 14:43:23 +0000 |
parents | dd700be84287 |
children | e1e777eb4b16 |
files | doc/lispref/text.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 20 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/doc/lispref/text.texi Wed Oct 15 12:49:11 2008 +0000 +++ b/doc/lispref/text.texi Wed Oct 15 14:43:23 2008 +0000 @@ -1054,12 +1054,13 @@ @code{current-kill} calls the value of @code{interprogram-paste-function} (documented below) before consulting the kill ring. If that value is a function and calling it -returns a string, @code{current-kill} pushes that string onto the kill -ring and returns it. It also sets the yanking pointer to point to -that new entry, regardless of the value of @var{do-not-move}. -Otherwise, @code{current-kill} does not treat a zero value for @var{n} -specially: it returns the entry pointed at by the yanking pointer and -does not move the yanking pointer. +returns a string or a list of several string, @code{current-kill} +pushes the strings onto the kill ring and returns the first string. +It also sets the yanking pointer to point to that new entry, +regardless of the value of @var{do-not-move}. Otherwise, +@code{current-kill} does not treat a zero value for @var{n} specially: +it returns the entry pointed at by the yanking pointer and does not +move the yanking pointer. @end defun @defun kill-new string &optional replace yank-handler @@ -1102,9 +1103,19 @@ then that value is used as the ``most recent kill.'' If it returns @code{nil}, then the front of the kill ring is used. -The normal use of this hook is to get the window system's primary +To facilitate support for window systems that support multiple +selections, this function may also return a list of strings. In that +case, the first string is used as the ``most recent kill'', and all +the other strings are pushed onto the kill ring, for easy access by +@code{yank-pop}. + +The normal use of this function is to get the window system's primary selection as the most recent kill, even if the selection belongs to -another application. @xref{Window System Selections}. +another application. @xref{Window System Selections}. However, if +the selection was provided by the current Emacs session, this function +should return @code{nil}. (If it is hard to tell whether Emacs or +some other program provided the selection, it should be good enough to +use @code{string=} to compare it with the last text Emacs provided.) @end defvar @defvar interprogram-cut-function @@ -1118,7 +1129,7 @@ argument to @code{x-set-cut-buffer} (@pxref{Definition of x-set-cut-buffer}) and only affects the second and later cut buffers. -The normal use of this hook is to set the window system's primary +The normal use of this function is to set the window system's primary selection (and first cut buffer) from the newly killed text. @xref{Window System Selections}. @end defvar